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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-05-24, Page 7W "7••••,••••• a arm •• • • tf.P.td r-. ,1 ‘41 qt« 1!;st."'ip44-0i.P • .- - - „4.,), • 'atte• Conducted by Profeasor Henry G. Be% The object of this department Is to Pleee. tht Service of come farm readers the advice or on aok" Ptithority. on !Ili elteekierte Pertalning "Iiis'angt e_ • - Address -tilt questiona-taPreftelnat Henry G UsU, h% Care of The Walton Publishing Company, %-imitedo Te* " ronto, and anstvore WiI aPPear in •thistooteann in the enter vvhich they are received. As *pace le limited it is advleable ,where inuntallate reply la necessary that • a stamped and addressed envelopeabe etteleeed with the • Henry 0. Belle question, when the anewer will be mailed '€fireetto Question -T. A. .44 ---What is the plants, they infect the other planta best way for putting fertilizer on fpr With late blight disease. T. prevent. Potatoes and how muck fertilizer, this the potato grower should slimy would you put On a quarter of an acre? his crop with Bordeauz 'mixture five Should the fertilizer be mixed with to seven times during the growing sea - earth b`efore the ,Potatoe • are Put in; erten.Begin as Odon as potato' plant( or Would it be all right put in theare up three or four inches atal spray" bills with the seed 1 I have junt read at intervals of 10 days to; two weeks. It would burn seed. Bordeauxmixture is composed of, .karieverteeTwo hundreds pounds of lbs., of lime, 5 lbs. of copper stilphate fertilitser to the qu.ater-aere is a mod- and 50 gallons oft water. • Dissolve • crate application for Petatoes. This the lime and the copper sulphate fertilizer should analyze 2% ammonia, separately, then mix and dilute with 8 to 10% available phosphoric acid and the water. Apply the Bordeaux 1 to 2% potash, if obta4m.ble. ture immediately, :since the mixed ma In applying this, seater 100 pounds tonal will not retain its strength if over the quarter -acre when the ground allowed to stand any length *of time. has been dug or plowed. 'The harrow- The dissolved lime and dissolved cop- ing or raking of the ground Will work per sulphate may be stored untmiaed, this available plantrood into the soiland just saffieient for the spraying When the holes or drills for the pota- mixed up at the times desired; The toes are made',z,catter the remaining proper quantities can easily be calcul - hundred pounds df fertilizer in a light ated from the mixture given above. dust alo,ng the potato furrows, or into To prevent scab and to alsist in coo - the holes where the potatoes are to be teal of the spores of other diseases, it • dropped. Cover this with a •light le beneficial to dip potatoes in a mix:. • dusting of soil before dropping the •ture of corrosive sublimate, one part , potato pieces. . There Is no danger of to a thousand, by weight.- Dissolve a fertilizers'burning seed if care is take tablet in a quart of water, or an ounce en to mix the soil, and fertilizer as in 30. quarts Of water,. and soak the deseribed. When the foreaoing has potatoes for two hours. This material been done, drop the seed and cover a is very poisonous and must he handled -.usual. It h sometimes found highly with great care. Potatoes • which advantageous to scatter another light have been treated should never be used application of "'fertilizers around thefor human or animal food. potato hills or -along the rows when ' You can prevent . potato scab by the plants are up two, or theft niches : staking the potatoes in a' solutton of This can be worked late the roil who one .tint of formalhi to ao..gallorts.of the Potatoes are cultiVated. water. , They should Omeletut the Question -W. W. L: -Please • send telution about 20 minutes,. Formalin me full particulars how to treat.pota- is a gas 'dissolved in water., It ekills toes beforeplanting to prevent top the spores on the surface of the pees- . a-• • • to, but does not injure the food value. . • Answer: -No pre-plailting treat- Question -C. D. E.: -Is ' fertilizer tient can be given to Potatoes to pre- that has been stored up in a day shed essential to a well-balanced life is now vent blight( If possible make sun for two years as good as fresh fertil- an almost established fact. Music, - that the potattesabeiogenied for .seedi Mere . . let itebeenoted; is the instinctive hut were not produced on a field that has Answertat-•If the fertilizer hai-b-ee-n railseeoft-the-: human -being from -the _ been infected with blight. The blight stored inta dry place, it will not have Winters' in .the tubers, and sende plantfood through 'storage. How- • fine threads, up through . the stalks ever, before . you use it, you should • v here they flower tot the surface of empty . it out on- t a hard floor and the leavea-of the plant , When the break it bar pounding, after which it disease matures it , sends, out large should: be Shoveled through a send cmantities of tiny scores. When these screen. This will put it in good con - spores light on other ,damp potato ditiore for drilling. • Wiilithns 4110 Zhe an° 3u-preme Choice. the Wort ets- Sehcl for attractive Portfolio MO WILLIAMS &AN° CO., Aro. oshawa, Ontario. ;'. 1 • A.; .., :•., • . 1.vi,e:. r ..- t si" .- The Educational Value, of Music -The Power of'Modern Musical ' InStruments to Reproduce and intrepret the Old Masters. ' .he T H :-1 It i net d form s goo to use , • - a way o e o -we , . any ink except 'blue' black for coves- . That some knowledge -of.. music- is Meangraphset.4 the player -piano and Phono- would -have been nothing but at MHO " * Inaemuch.as et would be ee priceless bearskin tug' I am afraid, i • • Rumble was faring no better'- The 9°11cleztqt. Seals. an letters are . en.-. Value to have such recordinge -at- thistennetnewete kit -I. -using his. legs, skeet. - tineee_present,dayepuetils andetegehers ing detin- the trail -a. seelta ratethat cradle up, and; it eeverberates the will find, and some have.already found .eeet. Rao* was shaken -almost hi a world. oyee. It •is the adorable gift from experience, • that '' the records telly. Eel:Berne! .kerfinnip! he pound - of God; which instinctively geeks to mare by some of our eminent artists . eci up and down upon the 'worn old express itselein temannermore funda.- m'entilly patellar perhaps, than speech itself. ' • • of musical Instoey• e -when :reviewing Who had not been attracted by the ing• his mouth, screamed and growled. epochs wad evehts, giving biographical cooing music 'of the cradled babe lang and roered•for all he was worth: One 'Ore it sought to letter a word. Dees'et seem natural to hattinctivelY eyave to express onc'e every sense (If feeling in sPeech-? ,-The chains of. mesre .for greater educational recognition are so The Story of Rumble and Greinibie. Rumble and Grumble were the sons of the Stubbletail Bears, who occupied a comfortable cave in the 'Yellowstone :Reservation. Rumble was stronger On voice than on his leg, and Grumble wag stronger on his legs than on his • voice but, anyway, they got along lnosatrably and-loved-each"other as only bear brothers can. /Mothers and daughters of all ages arir cordially invited to writs to thi department. Initials only will be published with each queetion and it answer as a means of identification, but full natal/ and address meell* given in each letter. Write on one side of paper only. Answers will he • mailed direct if stamped aod addressed envelope is enclosed. Address all cerrespondence fer this department to Mrs. Melon Law, 235 • Woodblno Ave., Toronto, ped away from their parents, who 06.06-04nw out anvItations to a wed -required- to a wedding tnnouncenient. were industriously picking berries, and Oiog. Announcements may be sent L. LI-. -A vegetarian diet includes One day Rumble and Grumble slip - :started off, by themselves, "We will to thaf3e who do net attend the core- all the good grains, nuts, eggs, cheese, • be Perfectly safe," said Rumble, "for, mony. 2. It is perfectly good form milk, cream and. honey, besides all the V anything happens, I have only to to have no attendants at a quiet hontle fresh and dried fruits. This does .use my powerful voiee- and ,you your wedding. The wade may wear a veil not sound like • starvation, does it? powerful legs, and everything will be with a simple white dress and it is Rather like a generous, plenty.. Three • all • right "Quite' so!" growled not necessary to wear 'gloves 'when meals a.day with no ,iplecing".1S the Grumble, They were 'rather. Well- the 'sleeves are long. 3. Yes, have diet rule'. Plenty of fresh, pure Ws. , by the two little bear cubs very rough Peace, and stony. It was not long before natriotismt myrtle, beauty; olive, Maria Mule& Craik:(1826-1887)..She twist in the trail showed them a lit- delf-lovettmartgold, contempt; golden- every boy and girl would do well to legged visitors 'do, dear brother r sug.. two• brothem seeing that a crisis wae .and Write they were discussing it •gested Grumble, wiggling his ears the burro's •baelc:- Open • flew the nepl' te.te_It donkey's eyes, up flew his ears. The at hand, did that which teeth did best; spoken youhg bears; as you will notice music Very soft and sweet during the ter; except .with meals., 'Coffee and from their speech, owning in contact 'retemony. . do 7iTtetosuurnislah.sotthaenyd dthidel trail taken Rumbleoon him, mind, that his voice was. still hearty; tie mountain burro, fast asleep, with his head and. drooping down. 'Why should you not ride? as the two- ing he was tired. Grumble said never beast and ., we can thus get upon vier fidelity, pansy, thoughts; belie- deference. journey: then at..Grumble's suggestion climbed modesty, into a tree and dropped Plump upon that is to say, 'Rumble used his voice the crotch of a:tree jutting Out about the little cub so discomfited the burr() that he also used. 'his legs, and as Grumble wits quite peat, it ended' dis- theieeredipiee he bowled, bump! bump! gentlY. "I • will • lead - this .foolish and Grumble his legs. The roar of astrously few • :Over the edge of bump! And if he had. not caught in Rumble swung bashfully tp and. fro! .„ trope, devotion; sweet William, gal- t Obey. Obedience is the first dIty. sWahidichh!sisleagnsotWheerreVig-aoyinogfback " most commonly I " say- anemone, frailty, anticipation; • dart- . as the 'author of "John Halifax, ' blossom, preference; buttercup, rich* under the name of aigiss'iViulock" and should never be allowed to believe that life, Conserve the woods and flow - 'gin pride; geraniurn,• deceit; foxgloyoe, ,Be silent while your elders are ,stories of the gruceome or the super- Play rair. Eoul play is treachery. hold shows dr teched to. Certain flowers Oak, ."Green. Things Grewing" is. Dinah. love; lilase fastidiousness; narcissus, I M,: -Here is a set of rules Which rod, encouragement; majesty, follow, and which I hope will answer Purity, calla, magnificent beauty, for-, your requirements: • • lantty; candytuat, indifference; cow:- of every boy and girl. • derion; coquetry; • daffodil, unrequited Gentleman." get -me 13.0131)Y, oblivion; ! Be brave. Courage the noblest Of amarant y, gentian, vit.- i all gifts insincerity; hyacinth, sorroW; honey-, speaking, and otherwise show them darkness holds special teeroas. Per; era, and especially be ready to fight mit no one to frighten bitn by playtng wild fire in -forest or in town. "ghost!' Permit no one to tell him Word of honer is sacred. natural. But in spite of all your Be reverent, Worship the Greet slip, Youthful beauty, white vielet; Be clean. Both Yourself. and the child to- be afraid of the 'dark. He Be the friend of all harmless• wild precautions, if any one of the 'house.. Spirit and reepect all worship of Hun . dT.it. ad is likely to be noticed by the Be kind. Do at least one act of mi-' er that precept. • c and you know example iketreng- bargaining service every day. . :Virl'.13..r`--7Thecsneown _meanings at- R. Ire, -.The author of the Poem ivy, revelry; roses, love; apple, was in English novelist, beet known and stiowdeope friendship in place you live in. . a ead of the dark, this by others. ' M not iatural for your It is the temple of the Spirit are awe of the without them • ,tea are allowed, but it is better- to . Understand and respect your body. emBeketioye Be helpful. ,De your shard of the a,' • • • • .• y of: being alive- . :„ et' ••- S. R.:-1. Between two and three tirely proper if they are, elite• smelt weeks before the ceremony is the time and nicely applied. 2. No answer 15 401Q0arii Pointers on Marketing, . . . Most of the market poultry' sold ' is, marketed in aboa `oneaglettle ot the , year, that is, in the autumn. . As a ,result prices suddenly fill when farni- ers are Omit' ready te. sell.,- The con- gestion 'mean's that part of it must be put into cold storage, and preclude • once' stored does not bring. so 'high a price tte the -fresh quality. This ..orne'ans layered prices,for the farmer'. - • The remedy lies with the producer. Be, should distribute his -produce over more of the twelve months than he food and keep: everything clean .and the-chicks.free from lice. --...... When convenient, bleeding and, dry plucking are- advised before selling, though, a the weather .is warm and local killing facilities not geed, it may Cay to ship' alive. • • ' Hens that have completed their second laying winter and; have , passed through 'the breeding laeasone shoutd be' marketed as soon as the breeding season is over rather than be. kept unt til the fall.. ' • Hens in June or July bring from 50 'to 100 .per cent, more, than, they do in October because they are then the' only roasters on the merkete • s. Green ducks, that is, • du les that of -to-day afford;possibly, unequall0 saddle, :clinging for dear life. and with facilities for acquiring certain phases the senses quite jolted out of him. But of musical 'knowledge. The 'teacher' , . . . . sudaenly he. remembered,. and, (men- sketchestof composers mai classifying palticularly-shrill seie'ech So ' alarmed the different , sehoels and forms, of the beer° that he. stopped. with a •eudt musice•wilt -find the:player. piano and denness that sent Rumble flying:over -phonograph, or either one, thevelemble _hie liew... ,.., ,Be landed :with. jin,fitt,. by 'deinalstrAiing,lbe record suitable pleasant thud, and the burro, giving the occasion. • When studying tam manifold that one wonders that it is fol.* one •outtaged white eyed ,look of not given more prominence and taught tonal. effects of the different instill. terror, ran clear out of the story: ' -inents„, the -phonograph record Would • For all I knew, Rumble stayed there mereethatoughly in our public schools. indeed. be verY helpful and highly in- ent rescited, by his doting patents or .• Whet Magnificent opportunities there are for the pupils of to -day to teresting. ' : - ' - . by Grumble, whose legs would surely While per naps being- efficient in the.enereepeeetn out ete hi a difficulty,- ' r only - enhance , their- musical education, • ,as " art of voice production there are ninny compared with the hard striving times know that they were somehow "re- tea-cluire who are far from being meet of the old' masters, who had to content stored to their family', because I Saw . themselves with ' such limited instrue tere ..ef interpretation, especielly. in them playipg rolyiely-slide-down- ments as the old harpsichord. ua . ,- e some Of the grand opera arias, for the the -hill in front Of Mrs. John Stubble- i reason that they have not had, the You imagineehow manifestly gratefel tail's Cave the* other morning. opportunity of witnessing', perforni- Baah, Hancrel and t other, old mestere would have been had they at their dts- antes by artists of the highest rank. In many vocal studios is • the 'phone- posat such high grade pianos; as graph •finding itself useful as a coach, manufactured ,tato-day, capable of ed- it is in the , homes of. matlY does. To do this requires different have just 'completed their` firs chat of sponding te•every•em4ion? It is dift pli:tispaillr methods of handling_his poultry than feathers, should be Marketed early ficult to conceive how it was poseible. t rather an e kept untilfall he for these old masters to wive . t the . than b T Itis cpreetionable that the.pateatal- he has practised hiathe past For t awa -ite -woirct -Alai' beautiful -and -7i reme%,tee,,,tties___sof_t_i_ieeplayer.-piano and phone - instance, instead of keeping the spring Experimental Firm' at Ott • - „ ports that 65 Young ducks sold at 101/4 works hendicapped, We ht sate "gt-tph. I.7e Eiiii-fully reelized. It was chicks all 'summer, some of theni - , might. be .marketed throughout ttrc. weeks •of :aee- broaglitt on- the; -local .withe'sacliiiiferioreinstrumentse Weite - - g I. an extremely -delicate mid difficult Season as broill ers. Broilers bring ab . _ marketout 200 per centmore than they in 'possession of such perfected matter to convince such . Artiste as twcie_or three Uinta' as much t Peie.iticost to feed them, • tl• t leme or in o ler words instruments as we have to ay, -.wit-0 P ty, 14telba,''' and - ether promineht they cot for feed $20 and at 101/4' could conjecture what- undiscovered artists f -It . *.btl't• ; th, • pound in May and earIyedune as .they • . Would bring as roaastere irethe fall. Weeks . of agebrought $60: form of music might have been handed ,:mch.op,. raphl a_s :likewise at was , adei e- - - Broilers are chickens weighing Un- et eintilar ducks that were sold in the &tem to us.IVItiszkowski, etc:, in re - der' 21/a. pounds: , The best way to fell did not pay for the cost a fee.g.. . Firm -4 • • • gard.to the playerepieao. It is Said ..feed broilers is totegive a palatable a . , the educational • standpoint that so highly are the master rolls and Market in June. how potential' would 'be the influence ' mash in a clean yard, mix the mash ' . . . records of some Of these masters Valea . with milk if possible, jive some green 1 All roosters, old hens, early broil- to day if the wonderful 'mechanical ed that they are carefelly stated away ers, green ducks. . • j ajNTBR.NATIONAL LESSOltee- • . MAY 21. Lesson' IX. -The Holy -Spirit and His •:Work -John 16. 26 to 16. 14: • -GOIden Text -John 147:26" Verse 26e. Pareclete (margin --We -teem driven to borrow the Greek word (as in the case of baptize, and a few others) to express what .one'Enge hsh word -will render, Comforter is grammatically wrong -the - form is passive -and far too narroW Advo- cate (margin) suits 1 John12..& exact:- ltr, and collies nearer than other terms here, but is hardly wide enough. The central point is' that • the Paraclete, "called in". (this is what the word means), to help us, performs the same part as the other Paraclete, Who has, gone to be our Representative • 'with the Father." It is actuEdlY impos- sible to 'mention any function assign- ed in Scripture to the Holy Spirit which is not. somewhere else- assigned to the .glorified Christ. Representa- tive fairly. joins this passage with that in the Epistle. . I well sende--That the Spit -it ,aproc'eedeth from the Father and the Son" is one. of the indat pal- pable a . 'facts hi New . Testament theology. What. the Eastern. church meant when it insisted on -dropping from the creed the Filisque, is an un- solved mystery.. . 27. -Bear ye also Witness (margin): this seems better. It is. significant that men are bidden to Odom- the same. function as the Divine Spirit, of cchirse by. his indwelling strength. There is a similar association in Acts 16. • • _ 7... Go away -.---Froin visible fellowt shitir't mg with you all the daysr-re- and thon- zo_aver ll surfaces again t t ,z3AttmagilOnArste..17404,PAY,Olir stables, dairies and octuitit-Y houses bright, cheerful and free. of lice, mites; fly eggs and- germs of roup, white diarehea, cholera, glanders, etc ? Such a method is a wake of time, money and labor:- TJse• Citrbolat instead -le does Ihettwo things at the same -time. alteis.a., disinfectant that dries out white -got daelt and coloelesS-And .gives mach better re -suite: must* _instruments, with their ap, .in specially constructed vaults in Paris During the first week in June, kill plianees, We now have, existed two .and elsewhere.fer revelation to .music off, dispose of or remove from the hundred and fifty years ago, thus en- - flock, theemale.birde.afteetthe breed, abling' Beell Handel, Haydn, -Mozart -magi; -the eabtleste-theeMost power-. kudents in years to come. , . ing season.. Their .presence in the s and other illustrious old masters to fui joy. of nee, that in wee seine is -flock after-this„elate-causes-a-loss of-,a-PosteritY-faithful.• repro- fige.n.,11 ' bin 4nan million dollars a year to Canadian I ductions of their Perirbrn:lances IV. it is dormant -it needs kindliag, anmeme .HtralegIPtiatteee-HAtt .r. - incubated and bad eggs in the produce f which is marketed. -All old hens should also be marketed at this date. Th., 011 tlY1 tr..lsrs..,`IiY0k n \ Capbola is a mineral' pigment. • combined' with a germicidb twenty _ 'limas stronger. than pure carbolic.acid.' Conies In powder form, ready' to dad as soon -us mixed With Water.' Applied with brush • or sprayer. Widl not clog friprayer.. Will not flake, blister or peel oft - nor spoil by standing. No • dis- agreeable odor. Absolutely non- poisonous, *Sold by fleetest EverywheresoirrAvtxt SONO lb CO., Ltd. Toronto - Cansida „. ateleoret-eaerifieti'anythelfertea/fafrotti ilret.class dairy cow- Cottoneeed-meal .a valuable feed in• connection with pasture. • It id a geedearearn-andebutter -feedra: ndathete .fertilitingterliltieoreatirheapasseciten to, the land. • • Give the tows it gobtl feeding of hay before turning the fresh pasture. • This will : prevent the eXcessive scouring that resultsefeont e too lib, oral' supply -of -fresh glass. The cows should be left' in the pas - turd only it -few hours the first day. - For several days they should. be left on green feed. only a half clay. . Calves can be raised perfectly on / 'skimmed milk. THE PLAY OF THE CHILD I)velops.the Physical Life' • of Our Young People and Stimulates Their Mental. and " Spiritual Faculties. " . . The play life of Et child iS iinportant from the standpoint. ef its physical, Mental .and' spirituel ,development, and the parent who neglects to. understand •what 'the, play, instinct means and to help to 'direct it into worthrvhile chan; Pets is 'More foolish than the `man who went 'away to -seek his fortune itt the .oil fields while his own Wm, was 'd• with. the. rich fluid_imd_bA mams..true: . The Father to whom he -gees.--is' eveeetinfinitel mare He that uS spiritua preeuce IS:.etter. 40.1.4130w.0:b4.1&$%11,sAilmitdmmkat,,•=, Tarffettilirrertirltericetert-riffiffiror e ,kosts4ItataPpxpd....4,-..r9P.o.13.4,,bP(v1,2% * 1 of its taste in the water r asheltered yard.. . ,• Play' Meade Health . . C • . Light work will not injure her, but It is necessary that the young child _ eomparatively few men have sufficient .Shoula.pley-end kick and' crow' 'CO de Foot pmrturesi caused by treading judgment to work a valuable breeding elop its .muecles and lungs an to upon sharp objects, result in lameness, mare with safety. . • help burn' up the largergusntity ' of and, in many eases, the nail or other Don't give the loceding mare Corn. body'binkling Mater il which must be spend the warm part of every day in • es. more intimate part. of the Man. The dietiples-iithad not have learnt hide- • pendente-e-and initiative: they Wolikr have always waited for express com- mande. . The substitution of his .. .spiritual Representative ;brought the needful self-reliance; the true self is only complete when God is interfused deeplYee • ; 8. Convict -The -"world"--which in John nearly always means the world,. , as it ,Lsten rebelhon-fights against the true view of :all these great subjects. The Inspired disciples will reduce it to -helpless silence:, it cannot. "withstand - the wisdom and the Spirit -by which" they9. s speiank, e (Acts m etnsesr6. le0uy)..hr etire Nevi. Testament, is the failure to accept a positive duty,not the mere doing of: -something wrong. With us omission is treated lightly , as against commis- sion: And that is why we Italie failedet 'so grievously in our practical doctrine of sin. The work of God -for all those to wham the Gospel . has come -is to 'believe .on the • Sent of Go.d :(John 6. 29).'For this saving faith carries with it insepatably, the . fulfilment of all God's. law. 10.• The World condemned Jesus as a blasphemer and "unrighteous"; one recalls Plates great demonstration that if .dver an ideally righteous man appeared he would be counted as per - featly unrighteous -and: martyred • as such. His disappearance from men's twee, and enthronement at God's right • heed -evidenced by the resurrection, - and the mighty works of his Spirit in • Iris disciples, finally "justified"' him. a Ile Judged -As uual. of a• eon- - clemnatory judgment. The "World" has a '.'ruler" -of its ow choosing: compare Luke e4. 6. 12. There have 'been many bad geese:es as to the field in which these truths lie. Surely it must be mainly •in the meeting of his death, which' • they could not bear until the incredible wtreet supreme fact.. , I?. Paul's interpretation of Calvary is the greatest • of all instanced; see 12. .From himself, for • each Tergote in the Godheadspeaksfar the - Triune, ' • 14. GI • Into when use .of teo or irfatatair-h----6-1Y------ • .6 . , . from the attic 4 robe for the ptinCess. It is 'perfectly n.aturalt for ehildren to fill. out their 'lives with imaginings; and' it is a happy fatuity Which makes .thetn contented with what they have, develops their' teieurcefulnees and teits ttheie tatgenuity. oblectiaiisible'when thrfOotis'lifted• - -A .propetly-fitted collet will not rub Ilikoh, in-e-itilPlirgtettelier. years. It- ea- , Remove', foreign body,. pate Wall silk,. part a 'the shoulder'.• Collars. noticeabl4 that. animals •pley huit the shuld pt snugly on toand on the the oy p ', down to the sensitive partt 'fill right way which "will -make them opening with t 'part indrform to 6 sides,. . strong for then particular mode of partsehoracietotcid _and keep so email. life The .cetrepet and. jump! after mss. laenediteppearkethen. get -shod .. ••• t. .. '7' ' ' . thelialltaehaserits" own tall- titer de``' ' A.... with a leather shoe as for corn, Plan for a variety of horse feeds. Put the cows on the low ground aelopsea faculty for qUickne,ss in ()Met that it may catch birds -mud miee, and Barley is ' an excellent grata feraett Where the coarse geese springs up and hotSee also peas: These, of course, gerows ranklyt at the. eteet, If' this. the. young deer. leap' . and jumps and rens and makes its muscles strong. _ If the breeding mare is: inclined to hough amid will not be eaten at ill. should be crushed before feeding. graee is left ' uncropped it becomes . - - - . . .1, oieTkh:hielle, Tthhartoodgeielsi, ph iv tphl:ylmilsni itsi i have too little milk, feed her for • a Puntpkinsinade..excellent autumn ' stimulated for . children .love beet of month or six weeks before foaling, t et e -t • ''' i d ear .ouired in Prodattion is quite', 'linifted ' set oft blocka mekes Ix f i • terttatal. eteetteetertstrtrt.-t reetematat7arttetrerea7aa . • . dairycowe arid the labor 're- . . with this end _in • view. • Give her. f 'I f .s - as, rani ehteer-hey, wheat bran, oats an • - • - '-of cars, a few bits of. broilten crockery; totk Be sure that the has exorcise inA'...psropoitiori te the' ealue (4 the la .'aplendid set of. dishes, or a 'garment i in the open air every day, • She should er''.'" 91111-ke, c;iialt ass cot' -Whoa • 33.t1dtra. • 'Trains Character &tate toys are not popular'with chil- then Most little people would tether have ea, -1:Cttio4tir...4%'Wl'Ilchtheyeam- Operate than a mechanical contrivance whith leaees nothitgatO be done but to Watch it.. Children instinctively like the' • r4y...\'91tith-'.ie natural. and" taot. grotesque. Thee writer's ...little bey, while still In dresses would go intiethe how of' a neighbor end immediately turn a standing doll' with its face 't0 the Wall The doll was Medea on a „ bottle and had. a head 'covered with a- back stocking, woolly hair and Owe - button 'eyes'. .When tisw why he al - nays turned its face te.the wall, he re- ges can't bear the.pin eyestof,.. her." The shoebutton eyes. Were like' the' Week hatriin heads with which. he was familiar, and . he 'recognized that the "pin eyes" were not natural, • , The spiritual' aide- tRe'Clay life is • not to- be overlooked; 'for* is soon as . the .child igeold,enough to' have ;cent- '- paniens the elements of fair play, of altIttte.#5*•elltlAtdoi* . y9a..i.t1 '-- ilenehlappear,-.• Byer: young children are. often hard to boast absurdly in their, ' play, and 'here -moderation .of play,, speech,, honesty and 'kindllnes8' can be taught. • • •. : It has been said flint wenever really know. persons, even althougb we work with them, until we have played with them. This isttrue because Work may . . be :performed 'accordios. to :sottiebody else's -ideas, but ten. play life expresses our own ideals regAtel to amuse-.. meet and ehjoyment... , Take in /Merest. If parents would -keep the confidetice... of their children and undetstand them, they 'must take 'an interest ht thelr .6 • play. This doee dOes net mean that itsis enough to watch them play. 'We must get their, viewpoint, underetatul , a what it means to them and, if poesiblet . ply with them sometimes, . • At one time there 'WAS no place in • eroWded city life • .for children. ,ow . • .• the community has recognized that • they have solpe 'rights east pia grounds with kindly superviaors . • growing. More and more numerous.; • in the country there ie the beginning of development along the same linet; The nation will be richer in years to eome for thee providing for the plett life of its chiltiren.---E. Ge W. Give the. winter-hkiorahig house, plants a rest by withholding sunshine; and Water. - Cut to a good shape and • keep the buds pitkod,, HoWl b0\100 DO' MIS. DUPP4 . - imn mo oup -+s, nut I AM_VAE_R•r„,t4 ' * • PASTOR. 1 cm.i..e.o 004 oiLAD "rijAr mks. DutF in -116 MOR1,1114G AND Tkot4ur i wobi.o I.N.9s14°14:411.5iA: ,/, i fi / i 1 HEN TOM, WHEN ARttoe 60ING •-rd Bea THAI' DRieiKf e- HOW ORsi I Alti ae.R,DUFF CeRTA yuNNY Na's siewdD IS 114 1..`1 NIINEA.1 , PDUP# Met tasttme IRA tS Ne5 I DEED• f..N.GAGta AT Nts 605ielESS , WRING r•te DA4. I l'HiliN. I Am SURE' liej 1 .1 *NALL CALI. 0/1 a 11.4 At WILL BE PLEASED msoprice To Ilkie 400. II Am VAR Nev4PAstoR AND I'M Ott 4ES (I, MAKING, A Few cm.t.sTo GET I • A0QUANVED wrro Tim t °Ks RIGHT 11,4 II Dept, • ..... N AND %wire, . si01) ......- * ' ''' '44-4._ NOW triltril DID •THra. POKelt ! tir'-` Ar - cooGReextioti ,..,,, . tee., h 7 edi“,5.t t 0') to.1 ., iLr. !•40, .... A ff *P 0 • ta 4f NI 1, P.-- . p - mop • A '4-":7.4-.'" :, d . V dth- eAma t • • -; m....... LAsy-14164T ,:.•, .. NNW • i A. .1 i , I , „....4,,.. i...(.., '••• 1... NNW' • 6 ' ••• ee e . . • i.i ; • \ ' ell't . . a .ear A 0 /lir \ k . i e/ .- „. .1..,' . ,. • , -... •4•...:.,,:r. , _,...„_...... __......_ ;..,..,.",..7: 1:111111 -, ,..,- .... 1‘..1 1*r II gilt , list ' ''' 4- .----,--;',,-.. - - •-t 400:,,,,4 '-' ' '4.0 '...;,;.r 400.....,.... ‘...W. . ,/,-- _ .. . .:...t. .-, $1111 ..111T, 6 4 'GrArle • •