The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-05-31, Page 247-Npzip,"1-..41 11r7 :-"Trusiwprr"
FOOD SHORTAGE smarms
The Food Value of Buckwheat is High, As It Is Both a Flesh ro.
ducer and a Heat and Energy Producer.
Ceedietad by Professor Henry G. Ben.
The eldest of this department Is to place at the
,
leere_les ef our farm metiers the advice of on *canoed.
weed authority ea all subjects portelnIng to mills *set
mops.
Address all questions, to Professor Henry mull. In
we of The Mime Publishing; Company, 1,1mIted• TP
mites *ad *sewers will appear In this column In,. the
order In wish* they are received. As spasm Is limited
It is advisable where Immediate reply Is necessere that
a stamped and addressed envelope be enclosed with tile
Remy G. Belk ituestion, when the answer will be molted direct.
, 0
-
Question -M. A. C.: -My seeding taken to see that the fertilizer dem
with grain last year,was a. failure. It not came in close contact with the
didnot catch. Would you recommend beans in the sod.
manuring and plowing the stubble for on,...,/
rttattlell thilt Year? • Would It do for teen acres -4i.
-'ttahtavisehaalTlyt le14111.-
heal* where Petatoee grew laid year? et' i th
It was a big growth of clover, also toplow"eu the low Id, ate°, and I .4101.11 wish
the wheat up on account of
nitanured* 'dwell under I": potatoes e-dPrertwatione of a high price next
planted. I want to reserve an old yearDo you thin): it would be ad -
meadow to plow • under for corn this *
visable to drag up there; low‘plecest and
year and will also have to plow last%could it all
Year's instate and corn ground for irate SPriug • wheat?
be harvested together?' If so 'please
this year? • tell me where seed could be procured
Answer: -The . land where your and haw and when it should be sown.
seeding failed, if plowed up and, them
good would
spring wheat is not advisable how
.„ carefully manured„ should make
■ _I 1 would either buckwheat or beans be?
Potato ground this year. I WOW% au- Answer: -If it is not already too
vise in addition to the manure able* late when you. read this answer and
400 pounds of fertilizer carrying 2 to you can secure the seed, I would ad-
d% ammonia, 8 to 12% available villa the sowing of spring wheat where
phosphoric acid and 1 to 2% Potash. the winter wheat has killed out. It
Scatter this, down the drill reeve when is almost impossible to tell whether
youare planting the potatoes. • A he spring wheat and winter wheat
good method of application is to drop tcould be harvested %together or not.
the seed pieces of potatoes and cover
This would depend" entirely on the
' them lightly with soil, and then dust weather and whether the two wheats
• the fertilizer along over the hill and ripen at the same, time. In fact, I
drills and, finish the covering. This should expect th.ein not to ripen to -
addition of available plantforel will
gether. - "You should OW the wheat at
„ Elite the crop a strong, vigorous start. once. • All that is necessary to do
'Thinland would do *well, for b.eade,
. would be to 'harrow or disk up the
also. • ground and drill in the wheat. Per -
Question -R. Ho --I have a piece of
land that has been run for years with- halm you will be able to secure siring
wheat seed in your, community or from
• out clover or manure. . This land is
some of the elevator men. Unless
quite Sandy and contain practically
you are able to get it close at hand it
no humus. Now, if I apply 12 good
which case,
be too late to sew it. In such
: loads of manure to the acre, winch case, either buckwheat, or beans will
Would be the most profitable cropfor
make a splendid crop. In fact, I
metot°0nrals,sim, ;arm' iurandvotuitir yeiarrat/rate would prefer the-tailed:Mg of beans as
they can be put in any time unto the
went 60 crates -to the acre, With,
last of June., jut so •they have time
manure. Would this ground hold enough to ripen off before frost; In
moisture' sufficient to grew a geed this casethe ground should, be thor-
, crop of potatoes? ' -
,• oughly disked_ or harrowed ' up and
Answer: -If You have potato seed, worked down, after which the beans
'. by all means potatoes would be the
may be planted in rows 21 Or 28 inches
most •profitable crop for you to grow apart. A grain detrarith part of the
on the. land in qUestion.; i would re- grain tubes stopped up offers the best
commend adding fertilizer to the MEM- means of planting the beans. When
• Ines as per answer to M. A. C. planted this way some fertilizer' can.
Under normal conditions you should also be milled. The best way, prob-
. not have anytroubled from lack of ably is to stop up the fertilizer tube
moisture. • If You have to buy potato
• • directly over the retie containing: the
_ seed, at present prices. Amity be more,
profitable to grow corn, but this you
, .. will have to decide from, your own
local conditions. .1f youseed it to
corn, I would advise adding about 200
• 'pounds of fertilizer to the acre,
beans but allowing the -fertilize -tato
KM down the tubes on each side of the
one dropping the beans. '
ttnestioneed. B. H. :-Isn't it consid-
ered poor , to plant cora in
spreading it. broadcast and working it ground that grew sugar beets last
Into the ground before you plant the year, it only a light crop? There are
corn. It should carry from 2 to 8% two fields which are desired for corn
ammonia and 8 to 10% phosphoricand beans. One is sod and the oth-
acid. , ,ler grew beets last year, soil about the
eteestemt-ed A Co e„,4 would lute to same. Both corn and beans require
get your opinion in regards to plant- rich ground, which one will be heat to
•
-big beans in hills, planted 28 infollow beets? ches
each way. - Do. you think the yield
would be as good if they Weredrill,
ed? They could be worked both ways
'.: and kept cleaner and less seed
. would do. The seed Is high In price
this year it would be quite a saving in „
the come or thecrop. buehels. This would indicate that
Answer te,„} am very mull. In 'favor either' corn or beans could, be planted
of Planting beans in the hill, especial- in the ground that was in sugar beets.
ly on land that is likely to be weedy From these figures' we ought not to
or where disease has been prevalent. judgethat auger beets make the soil
a rule, the, yield will be almost as
high as if they Were drilled and fee-
quentIy better as disease -is not so like-
ly to spread from one plant to another.
• • I would --suggest the seed be tested to
learn what percentage will germinate,
and since seed is BO high-priced, that
the -drill be also tested to see if it
plants the quantity of seed desired. I
would also put on about 200 to 300
pounds of fertilizer to the dere. .The
fertilizer may be put on broadcast and
worked into the ground before the
benne are planted, or it may be put
on as the beaus are -planted if ,care • is
Answer: -Regarding beans ahd corn
following sugar, beets, the U. S. De-
partment of Aerrioalture studied 115
farms and foundthat, following sugar
beets, the yield Of corn was ipereased
b 12 bushels to the acre andtbeins 5
• toe • eve
Give each calf a chance to drink we-
" ter at least twice each day. • '
What the cream separator has done
for farmers in the way of improved
said labor-saving methods of dreaming
milk, the milk machine will do in milk-
' frig cows, which is onee of. the most
troublesome job e on a (laity farm. • .
• ' W.'' H. dohostone, Of Moose daw,
"et Sask.,- who uses -a three -unit milking
machine. says_ that two men ca run
machine, weigh milk and ateirt twenty
er hour. He used the machine
Mt thirty ewe the first morning.
A test of the whole herd does not
give the. needful Information, this
. matter of cow -testing it a strict quelt!
tien,of hidivideal ealiiteittt
Sixty *patrons of twoecreameries in
Prince Edward; Island "aver -aged 884
pounds oftfat per ,herd, after two
Tears of cow testing these sixty herds
everaged 955 pounds of fat; .this is a
-0 gain of eeventy-one pounds of fat per
lierd, or eight pelt...cent. •
rich in fertility ebut zather because
they are cultiyated during the summer
the soil, fa put lit better tilth for the
growing of the following crops I
would recommend that the sod ground
be put to corn and that beam be put
in the sugar beet land at beans do not -
do well on freshly turned sod or where
too Much fresh manure or . organic
matter Is added to the soil. • If about
ROO . pounds of fertilizer analyzing
high in phosphoric acid are used on the
corn land and probably 200 to 250 on
the bean fields good crops should be
...secured tbio year. •
- - -
When We consider thee a five -dollar
calf may grow into •d'hundiededollar
--174.---rtesteetdeertnAtte._
to the betcher. • • ••
ob inany-ftiffeedo
the feeding value of skim milk They
think that because the let has been re-
moved a much larger quantity of milk
should be fed. ' •As a result, the calves
are ofteneeverfed. . •
tFarining In the Old Lead.
-Iii-Enghtlid and Wales 300,000 acres
fagraseelandeliatte.Hiteenisrekeneuroto
melees grain in -the- present season. -
This
This is good, but the programme oi
the Nod Production Department for
1918 is much more ambitions • Sir Are
thin: Lee's atm is to have ii,00(000
acres of grass land under the plough
by neidttgetteltiltitett-BY the end of the
year Owe should be as great an acre-
age under grain as in the day. before
the great ,iagricultural depression
which set in between 40 and 40 years
ago Irish farniers are growing an
additional 750,000 atttes of potatctes
and eats. •
By Henry G. Bell, Agronemist.
Buckwheat pancakes may form a welcome eubstitute for breakfast wheat
weal and bread teast, while wheat ranges around the $2.50 a bushel mark. ,
Buckwheat characterlitice strongly recommend this crop for cereal pro-
duction.
Buckwheat is a dry grain which can be stored. After wheat, corn and
rye, buckwheat contains a maximum of food in a Minimum of volume,
Buckwheat ie strong in both flesh producer and in energy and heat Pro -
dueler, It compares with wheat :its foliowez
„
se
Croy
Buckwheat
Wheat
Percent. Percent,
Percent. Protein cargo -
(Mesh Pro- Tlydrates. Vat. • Store Ash
Water duper). Meat and
Bnergy Pro-
ducer).
9.0 58.7 1.5 15,0 1.8
.14.4 16.0 66.4
1.5
3.0
1.7
Buckwheat yields from 10 to 40 bushels per acre. •
Buckwheat requires from to 6 bushels of seed to the acre.
Buckwheat suits.. poor, light, dry land. It produces larger yields where
additional fertility is supplied, 200 winds per acre, of .fertilieer supply-
ing one Per cent. anorebnia,. 8 to 10 per cent phosphoric acid, gives gbod re-
eulte. This should ,be drilled, in when the, buckwheat As sown, or breed.
casted andovorked into the geedbed by disking and harrewinge, You cen,ine
crease the effectiveness of higneiriced farm labor by fertilieing the buck-
wheat. A yield of 20 to 30.hushels per acre uses the labor much more
profitably than a yield of 10 bushels per acre. .
• oFirially,
buckwheat ehould be sown later than coin and the smallegraiew:
It is therefore an excellent crop for 'Palling in" where other crops .
Buckwheat. is quoted in Chicago at $3.20' per bushel. .
Buckwheat dtrong- Points.
Strong food is compact volume. , Food suited to storage, therefore,
valuable for export. Thrives on ,tomparatifely poor suile ' Makes quick
and reasonably large returns. May be planted later than other crops;
hence can be used to fill in "where other crops fail." • • Buckwheat matures
in less than lee days'. t . •
INTERNATIONAL LESSON
JUNE 3'.
Lesson X. -Jesus Betrayed and Denied
• -John 18. 148. Golden
Text-Isa. 53., 3. -
Verse 1. • Brook -The term implies
a ravine that was dry except to .the
rams. Its Old Testament name Kid-
ron has been turned into a Greek
word, as if it meant" "Cedars Brook."
A garden -Aa orchard in "a eplace"
(Mark 14. 82) called Gethsemane the
scene of the agony, which John 'does
not record (The New. Century Bihle),
2. Probably Judas went first to the
house of the supper, and then. event
straight for Gethsemane. Jesus oft -
times resorted thither -This is one of
the instances ofJohntsexaet knowledge
of the incidents which :attended the
Jerusalem fife- of our Lord. All the
Evangelists narrate the corning a
Judas. John Only remembers that -
the
spottwas one belonging, it may be,
to a friend or disciple, where Jesus
was hi the habit of going with his dig -
deice, and that Judas therefore knew
the place and knew that he would-
troombmabelnytafiarytthem there (The Handy
3. The Magnitude of the preparation
made to overpower resistance was due
to the fear that the Galileans Would
rally to him. -Cohort (margin)-
Presumably- the Jewish leaders had
asked Pilate to put a company of his
soldiers at their disposal, to sorest a
dangerous character whom they would,
of course, bring to for trial. They
would be under their own chiliarch
(verse 12), but•judas was guide. Note
how eager the Jewish coalition was,
each section sending its own servants.
5. We have not sufficient informa-
tion to tell where the .traitor' hiss
comes in.: narrative is manifestly
independent, and the eye -witness who
writes here•does not seem to have seen
that incident, which 'was reported by
Peter through his pupil Mark. •
6. This is -told, to bring out . the
absolute Voluntarinees of his surrend-
er.. "Once before, the majesty of his
words had overwhelmed those who.
had come to arrest him. (John 7. 48)--;
and it would havp been.so now, had not
he willed to be taken!' (The, Cam-
bridge Bible). ' - •
8. This gives us the other side of the
record that they all forsook him and
fled, which Mark places after his
words, "But let the scriptures be ful-
filled."
• 9. The Evangelist sees the Master
purposed to keep his disciples out of
temptation, that he might deliver them
from evil and keep them for his work.
We must *nutria that he made them
understand it was his will that they
should hide from a very real danger:
nettling less, surely, will explain their
absence from Calvary. The one who;
with the best of motives, ran into
temptation unbidden,", gained nothing
but -bitter experience from doing so.
First he endangered himself and his
comrades by hewing at fdalchus's
head. Then, to preserve his conceal-
ment,' he three times disowned his
Master._ Better. have "foreeken him
and fled." -as Meek plia it,' who had
himself probably done the same (Mark
14; 52): Of those -See John 17. 12.
The verb is. changed to the, active;
there it is "not one of them was lost."
10. Having a sword -See Luke 22.
88. The earlier Gospels do not „name
the aggressor, nor the officious slave
who thought to please his master by 0,
special -show, of zeal.., Peter fortun-
ately escaped doing mOie damage.- As
it was, he came very near being de-
tected (verse 26) and suffering for 'it.
The Jewish leaders were contemptu-
ously indifferent to the disciples: • if
they could :unite the shepherd, the
flock would be finally scattered! Dan-
ger to them cattle rather from the
that followed: '
11. Only Luke knows that Jesus
healed Matches. He get the detail-
s° the present writer believes -from
Paul, who was there and in the thick
of He heard and sleeted those last
terrible words"about "the dither -ad of
• darkness" (Luke 22. 53; C61. 1. 13).
The cup -John has not reported the
Master's earlier use of this phrase
_Mark 14. 86).
15. ' The other disciple was theauth-
or (John 21..24): •He was known unto
the high priest: the word is that of
Lake 23. '49; and implies more than
Mere casual acquaintance. , That he
was an eye -witness is much more im-
portant than that he should" be an
apostle. Court -The quadrangle round
which the houise was built. ;
17. • The maid -Compare Rhoda in
Acts 12: .13. Thou also -She there-
fore knew that John. was one.° ,"In
the original the question is put in a
form that suggests a,negative answer,
'Surely thou art not' ' (The New Cen-
tury Bible).. am not -Peter prob-
ably thought he would not be allowed
to stay 'to "see the end". (Matt: '26.
58): it was a typicaageample of doing
evil that good might
Market in June. ,
All roosters, old hens, early broil'.
ers, green ducks.
During the first week tit June,kill
off, dispose of or .remove from the
flocke the Male birds after the breed-
s of and cornmeal, and -half part •oe -beef -e tare- tht Etitto s al select strong, sturdy. plants aVoidino
,
OUR FLYING BOYS.
Gallant Young Cavalrymeu of the
of Cloud* Never Found Wanting.
"The, work of our a4rial observers,
says the Glasgow Herald, "is by no
means confined to signalling for the
artillery or blin4ing the eyes of the
enemy by driving back his aeroplane
screen from the fighting zone. The
actual =memento of both sides are
recorded, and our aviators are doing
excellent work in photographing areas
behind the enemy's lines.
"And all this is being done -the
destiny Jet Europe is probably being
decided -by youths the majerity of
COAce4eratehr .14170,X1E44..tagr
- Mothers and daughters of all ages aro cordially invited to 'write to, tht°
department. initials only will be published with each rquestion tni
answer alt mean* of identification,' but fun name and address must
given In each letter. Writs on one ride of paper Glee. Answers will Item
mulled direct if stamped and addressed envelope is enclosed
Address all correspondence for i this department to Mrs. Helen Low" 215
Weedbine Ave., Termite,
were still •at :school when the war be-
Yearii aga-SOme of whom, indeed,
cheapest. 2. Protect the young
' s e ;Bee: di :lc' : -4-it L EgLgoss sdhuorui n1 dg bme :et.;
whom were schoolboys five or six
April, May and dune, when they are
gide • with cucumber plants from the striped
ono business of flying beetle by covering them with Wire net -
most of them a nstural develis oPment emit
of boyielt testae and aptitudes, and , 01 lead Szsaoyonwiatl: .rhoerraialluxt;siairpenaater;
they work WI the better because their 'lig'
present duty has for them the zest of ain at the appearance. of the third
eef and a tefore tile plants
sport4114 hirime b
PlaY*- in t154141 11"re than:Itd t
begin to form rimners. See that the
in any other breech a Military ser -
Vice, the natural • initinets -Of the; asriol tstrpi,l.ies upnodreribtiihecalebabvaegseaws worm,
genial
British boy have found an ideally eon- ' duet with. tebacco it, pyre urn,
genial direction, and one which • Mae" Inet•eeore or, oprer
bring about' an automatic fiettloment eVith imamate of
ead or powder with 'dry arsenate;
of the queations.aa to the elace of • '
science isi our educational systentH Bat
--antaeLfOluaTori.e„priotniosuvnecreyd
for golf and football will seem of gee-
ondary interest .to a generation that' heornd of
Joffre by phonetice, but the J
to convey the exact pronouncia-
has tasted some of the sweets.of man's ti
conquest of Nature; I is soft and the re is hardly sounded
"Adventure and duty-pCietry
andat 1441 411
biirs,awlmitosbt atsh:thffoi:igha itmweares
science -go hand in hand in the ex -
Written
ploits of those gallant young cavalry- breath. ' Viviani is pronounced
men of the clouds, worthy descendants Viv-e-an'ele
of the volunteer shilors who harried d. D. Vo -The following are the
the Armada, and of the pioneers- Pf dates at which the several nations en -
Empire, who, with jests. or song:Jim tered the European War: --
their lips, pushed their prows Into. 1914, July 28, Austria and Serbia;
perilous seas in, leery lands forlorn!" August 1, •Gerniaaer and Russia; Au -
"'I will tell you,' Sir David Hens
demon, head of the Air Service, said
recently, "that these young men are
the very salt of the earth. • • %
." 'Although I may. be prejudtced
., I
put it to you that for cool courage, for
the -high spirit and enterprise that
seeks adventure, for self-sacrifice and
for devotion, there has beennothing
to °equal the Royal Flying Corps.' America; April 7, Cuba.
• see-.
"They have to take vett, serious e A. Jt Lee -4. In the partly libelled
risks and suffer very serious losses in location yeti describe, you should be
I
order to enable somebody else to make able to gee* lettuce, early or late cab-
ssuccessaThey have never been bage, cauliflower, or seinach. Do not
found wanting, and have never heel- try beans, eggplants, corn, tomatoes.
tided. '' They will go on facing . their I eDahlia roots need warm soil and
losses and doing their work as long , warm weather, so it is not safe to
as the wardasts." . , plant them at this time. .
"School Girl" :--The cause of the se -
'called "blackheads" is the clogging of
the pores 'with -dust and Keeps% which
harelefifeind Pits the face with tiny
black epecks. The firet step is to
thoroughly, 'cleanse the skin. Every
night wash thereughly with Warm
gust 8, France; August 4, Bele=
and Great Britain; August 8, Montene-
gro; August 28, Japan; Nevember d,
Turkey, , •
1915, May 23, Italy; June 3, 'San
Marino; October 14, Bulgaria.
•• 1916, March 8Portugal; Angsust 28,
Rumania. ,
19,17, April 8,' United States of
THE -BARBAROUS HINDENBURG.
••••*-d:e ---
Glories in Siam:Ater and in Meting
Slaves of His Foes.
I•first• met: General Hindenburg,.at a
dinner -party at the Foreign* Office in
Berlin about twelve dears ago, says a
recent Writer. I wAi introduced aeross
the table to him by., Prince Bulowewho
was sitting next to Itindenbette :The
general's mouth war full, ai-it usually
is when he is sitting with anything to.
eate before him: ,
H e grinned,.' and when he . had
swallowed 'Whit was in'hil Moe*
wag about to say something to, me
when he apparently changed his
mind, grinned at me again, and went
on with the business of eating
Hindenburg,-. bythe 'way, always
grins when amused..'. I :met him:. on'
several- occasions, but r. never heard
Inin laugh, no .matter how amused he
was at anything. He expresses his
• .Poultry roughly iiiiedled 'lose •confid
dance in their attendaat, end lose cif
confidence • in the hennery often haii a
bad effect upon the egg craw Besides,
any, method that points the least bit
toward e y e
permit-
ted. Gentleness is a virtue that even.
heTn5hea?mpraeshciaftoe; the chicks May
con -
ing 'season. Their peeseneeete tee sist of equal parts of bran, midcilinge.
•
A Question Of "I's" •
"Pink is proper color," the little
. - , • _
'rabbit politely, informed Aranunta
Jane.- They were having a Meet de-
lightful afternoon tea. -Dorothy Anne,
who had been feeding there dainties -
bits of aske, goosetea and crackers -
had. quite suddenly decided eta see
whether any of her flowers were up
and had left the white rabbit and the
grin, and about his grin_ there is a in the orchard.
china doll together under a large tree
sense of amusement always by
something distinctly satanic, tI am sure bluels the proper color,"
The only subject Hindenburg could , "contradicted, Still very
talk on with any degree a interest That was how it started! Both were
was Wei. It was 'easy, once he was sure they were right and- Soon they
made such a noise that a little•squirrel
eame to see what the trouble -was.
'"Brown!" he maintained Stoutly when
they tom him Of the 'argument. A
crow hopping after a. fat worm, stop-
comfortateld settled en his chair in
the • evening, and had his pipe. under
avast to Start him on the subject,
"War he said "is the natural:oc-
eupation or a soldier; when not en-
gaged in fighting,- however he may. be ped long enough to caw, "Black." And
oCcupied, occupied uselessly.- .He was upheld by the raven, who hip,
in like .a lefierister Without briefs or a ,penect along . soon after. • •
-surgeon witaut patients." . Then, "I'll go and ask the owl," offered the
;after a pause, and nutting at big ,squirrel 'after they, had argued them!.
ineerschaum pipeehe went on: •
-•.'"'"In the next European War you
will see' killing,' on the 'biggest scale
' Tomato, Culture. ,
Tomato seed sown boxes in the
you ever sawebefore. It will be '
war' not between ?nations; but between house in March will produce plants
It will that will fruit the same season. Plants
races -Teuton against Slay.
be a war without Mercy, as war ought ready to be set out can be purchased
war from seedsmen. In buying plants
to b . Barbarians understand
flock after this dateca se a oss a e an we peen . eer
•
4'5
vinter and a geed soap. Dry eldercare.,
fully, apply to the spots an eintmenli
made, of 1. ounce soap liniment -axed 1.1
ouncli ether well mixed, and allow it to,
remain on during the night. Wash:
off in the morning with warn water
and rinse with cold, " Continue
treatment until the blackheads bevel
disappeared. To contract the pores;
eWipeauiithe c ofizne ewitlirraeciliutetnletyalepoimbopla
appear witlathe blaeltheade, and whet,. '
this is the case make au' ointment 0A
the following ingredients, 2 granite',
beta "napthol, 20- grams .eulphur pr'-
cipitate,,29 gram potash soapi Mist
0o:roughly and apply to the pimpled'.
at night. This preparation, May bti
used at the same time as the blacke
head ointment. Do not be, discour:i -
aged if you see no improvement in
your complexion as the weeks slip by.t,
It sometimes' requires months to get,
rid of pimples and blackheads: ;
"Perplexed": -1. A felon is an ine
fection of the tiosue„around the finger.
nail. The constant application of xi:
wet, dressing, equal parts of alcohol ,
and water, may check it. If it pro -
grosses a 'surgeon should be consulted;
as the infection may cause great treat-
ble. 2. Worry can check the Peered
thetin oefrmgaalstioctijotinieoefsthane dstoalm"acihrilpi.
Greens and gteen vegetables are tint
best riource of iron for blood buildinsgt
4. The eyes elsould have a rest from
reading and front all kinds fine
work. Out-of-door recreation, ch a
gardening ilea almost any form ' out
door employment will be found bene
"Housewife": -e -Onions and wate
will remove the smell Of paint front
room. Slice several onions, pu
them in a pail of water and etand the
pail in the closed room over night
W. Ae-eProbably the reason bab
cries'when you lift him is that you
hurt him by not lifting. him properly.
In. lifting a baby, grasp' the clothing
juetlielocir the loot: -with -your righ
hand, slip the left hand under the hal
freto below upward! until the head 1' ,
reachea, supporting with- the - hand •
eyed lifting the child' on the left arm.
. .
selves hoarse Without coming to any
outagreement.48hue%1 ffromlClriii!we," •Bailricilibi cteyme.
dolls," Araininta sobbed. "Surely: ,
she must know, that' blee eyes are the
best!" . • . •
Beck tsciiinpered the 'little squirrel
"He says it's a question of Tr,r,". he •
announced hreathlessly. '
"Silly, hind that what we all know.
'Premien the proper color for eyes,"
Just -then back from the. garde
deuced Dorothy Anne .and Elizabeth
and Ruthie, her •little friends. "Oh
look at Dottie's new. dell. Aren't. no
eyes the most beautiful blue!" ex..
claimed Ruth, picking up Aramintal
and dancing up and down with her. -
"But look at the cutie .rabbit with • .
its cunning pink eyes -i". Elizabeth said;
"Dorothy, -what color do you think
oda tatiglieto be?" . •
Dorothy looked carefully at the big
brown'eyes of both her little:friend's',"
"I-!" she started to say. '
The little squirrel, 'who, had beer
Waiting to hear the *timer; suddenlii
chuckled ao himself. 'Wow I imolai
What the -Owl -meant"- he wh'liPereat -
•to ' the rabbit as he scampered pest
,himp.6- you? • :
scrap, but the compOsition is; more on, eo comae_ ;the tall drawn specimens that are fre-
million dollars' a year to Cimadiall haven() rules, no. 'code,.
farmers through the sale of partially
leas dependent on the feeds that are in anyquently offered. •Where tali, spindly
'
decateL
ateeadis
• roth rod= most available,. .
tions i ynjawarKill your
l;. ' preir nv0
plants of tomatoes must be used pinch
trjr-e "a_firs v 't9E71-11argE"--Itirglge-rn
-should-Oleo be -marketed- at this -date, •fted-md dining. 'he . tv•earaeofttliettile- eau no longer 1.611W -fon, en-
- ---.. ----- , ... ,..-- their- lives will prove a decided dist.:slive-TEfin-that,_ is the barbarian
The proper 'way to carry a fowl is 'appointment front, the etaiuldoint • of 'theory of War, and it. is the right
to place it under the arm, the heed their egg predeetaine • .
„
one":-. • . . '
,
e Meth
pointing to the, rear, and the feet held . The most effective ad for boded hen
Hindenburg hated Kussians. W
firmly by the hand. In this way the lice on hens is. the application- a a talking to me at 'Hinheim one even
-
bird can be deeded for, miles without .dilution of either mei curia! ointment Ing, he said : "I have never met a
the least discomfortt0it or 'the per- 6r. bide ointment MUctitiarointmett- Russian that I Should 4 not • take-- a
I
sort :carrying it. . contains fifty per cent of Metallic; pleasure dal killing, I. hate them, and
In former years, the Common prac- mercury. 13hie Ointment is a mix; •
, if I live t� command our armies
4,itia-,to-to,:carry-poultry_hyAhe_lega,:ture Consistin of sixty-seven'per cent ! against them. Rethe.'next we.i I hone
head banking downiscard,:-':'Ihia VAS- a--of4;meriurial ointment and 'of thirty-, I shall kill thousands- of them -4 leek
bad mode and one that never wasesed. three per cent. of vaseline and, there- ' fotweed to 'killing them with pleas -
by regular poultryMen. . When the fee% contains thirtyethree and one- r tire ..
. ,
.1 used to the rapid work 'of. the meter,
1
head is hanging downward there is 110- third per ceett, of mercury:.
thingto prevent a rush of blood to it, " • . ,
'
---e--ed--- . • . Iii theee days when fanners become
'and' 'it is the belief that manyseaees, of
vertigo cart b'e traced to such Rets of ' . e
Pi.sii. Pond For. The Form. ee .... 1, the " t 13 'ng" f horse-
. .-
. , a quick -s e pi arm tip
carelessness, • . .. e • . • .:
But still more cruel Is lifting the Why shouldn't a farmer raise ' dsh °Peals to master and man , alike. Slow
in otcler
body by their *wino. ,Shoteel the fowl as well at chickens? Given propar. 1101'80S make slow men, and
struggle When thus bulged, it is a. fresh water, supply and reasonable , to get the best work out of the labor
very easy:iiiiittei to snap the cords Of space for a pond, an aetenishing, en, and to encourage him, a good teem
unquestionably renders great serviee
the Wings and thus perreaneetly fn-Leeintiti may be had in two or three •
jure the bird. • yeare. . ' on the ,farm .
-o==.:cocsmm,----"er:zw•i311,11.F.Fessameettar=";trwevissirm&AT
• , ,
r growth t °rad] end give the'
plants an opportunity. of beceming
stronger, It -also.MIMS them to
411
414
Another system' is to set the plant
tinder trellises made by running. nar
row strips otwooctalong stakes about,
two and a half feet above. the atrial
of the 'ground. Two, strips are .ru
about two feet apart braced -with,.
cross sections very two feet to form!
a' rigid frame or trellis. The tomato
plants are set, out under the middle
-..
of ;this fraineworica !knee _km. 'fled' u
...trelteir:ree ....ggell.CM-f.,eile4Seppeee.-..e.e.---
lay.ing. the PlatTtetetheli they .are laden; t•
,
gnt y e
branch,
There are Several ay -Sterns f aw-
ing tomatoes. Some prefer the one
stein system; one or two stoma only
are trained to long stake. This
keeps the fruit off the ground and lets
the sunlight and air reach all sides of
the plants. .
with fruit.
; Anothei method is to make a trellia ,
the shape of a funnel, setting this over;
each plant. A burrs' hoop on -supporta
is another form of the same plan, .
When grown on large scale &ski
culture la tha Witternla•actised. The
plants are set out' in long, stinigh
tows; -cultivated- by., horse, and the
vines are given no support. This
stemtmaylseteseedtithiblerliatellegere
dens. •
Been Val bi C
beans have a two.fold• valeta They\
taming ii higher percentage of protehe
than wheat or oats, and even meatt
Beans are a;so of value from a so
cultural riapect"aS they 'belong to'
most impoidant eines of agricultur
plants termed legumes, which are ea
able of taking up. indirectly the-,
rank among thol valuable food, -con
nitrogen of the air and storing it in,
tebeecles . on the rtibt systain of the
pietas in a evitillible• forin plent
ge!313. 3111, -ca Rit.e) 'exLEZ .
food for fuetire crops.
•
•
The °last week of May or the first.
week' in Jane is usually the most
suitable tinriet for planting, although'
the time of plaPting may 'wiry slightlyi
ectording te district and. seas,oe, but
should net be delayed after the, soile
has become Warm end dry.
Some of the beet yielding varietlee
•
of iteklebeinee-Th reardes linPreVed:
Tree, Sehofield
Navy, ',Common 'White Pea and whit
Wonder 4, The 'Oviedo eteulie'
from 112 ea 115. deye in which
reach the proper stage dr maturity
for haeveeting.
•
Ileane that are 'to be baked should '
firSt be parboiled.
a.
Por walieg bottles of fruit ' or
I
' piekles an excellent Wax is obtained
by melting together equal papto of .‘
resin and beet Dud.
,.,
'
-..,opEti
1. Mai' A1501, OF
I HAVE •SOME.
sz,,......_
' _ ...,...- - .. ..." ..„
..
IAA,.
• de
iser7
.
TOM, dERE COMES
We•Id. GET THE
_ _
-t- '
.. . ..-.,,
1 ,i4el_t_ 1 pooq,, LE.T .5, ..
OUR. CAR. NEAT ONE. I WANT
'TO STOP IN TaiS
SARDINES AND sOME•
efEed rielE.
,
ee....• .._...e.e.,-.-.- .zreeer , •
j Hive A eitTte,
"-- • CI.Org' DUNflING
. kk,
cliaBse EP.,
-
.......m.........Gios........,....,..,,
. AIR ill ooze_
.
4 * OnLICATESSEN
/
tieleiDeeiei
NICE Add'
, RIPE..
so . .
ttr ie.
,
.
5
/./
/ i
f ow!
3
.
ert7.-• ..
A .........
.1•
4S OP
or
'
-
sSZ I..e•
wil po
- 0 IM
--! P i 0
ik 4,
„ 0,,,, _
•
,
; ,N
,
. .
I Ajkliii
•,„ 4 ,.
'NIA
- ...
i
•
.
----
•Iii6V
. % • 7
,
: •,,,.., 4,,../
,,,,
• ii--tr-frit,
A.INIF
...
.„---... - - ;,, - ---- •
1 -
,
.•. ...
• -:---..4:til
• -....
_
• . .,,,....•
... -4
.-,- -,ho ,, /
Itt •,.
-•°•4! ) t ,
•
.., ,...,
(a -A
71
•
r
..
-t, ,........"-".
-..-%..:,,----,
-,.1',.*W'.---1*.I.6 ....Wm.
--*"."........
7 .
- . ' . •
al r i SP ...!;.:
, Jain . • .
....
4 , •,, ill
-
',
It:1'. :T. i 7
• veldt I I "tilli:, 0 , ,
ftli psi
• 1
. -1! , . -•':''''-''.:7'. . -,..L-:.t---
.4,...,4 .....„---.
- , • , -
,
•I__ -,s? -
_.*.t.
-,,.• r - --,s,
lorti,_,ii,
_.,... tomer :„... .•.- ,.....,-,,- ,,.-
...At:
,..•
,-,
.V...-../
, •
.
64 obe
.....):: -
sve.- , I 447jp „- ,
' '
S. ,.• ''' ',f e/10-.4.44.1:0/
•
•
The °last week of May or the first.
week' in Jane is usually the most
suitable tinriet for planting, although'
the time of plaPting may 'wiry slightlyi
ectording te district and. seas,oe, but
should net be delayed after the, soile
has become Warm end dry.
Some of the beet yielding varietlee
•
of iteklebeinee-Th reardes linPreVed:
Tree, Sehofield
Navy, ',Common 'White Pea and whit
Wonder 4, The 'Oviedo eteulie'
from 112 ea 115. deye in which
reach the proper stage dr maturity
for haeveeting.
•
Ileane that are 'to be baked should '
firSt be parboiled.
a.
Por walieg bottles of fruit ' or
I
' piekles an excellent Wax is obtained
by melting together equal papto of .‘
resin and beet Dud.
,.,