HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-11-01, Page 3" 117rM, '
"••••4"
THECARE On THE DAIRY CALF
.By W. F. Taylor
The dairy calf should be developed oats, too, are eXeellent, *heat bran and
forqtlie purpose for which he WAS middlings are both good. In fact, as
born into the world. It is highly im. we have said, nearly all the ;gable
portant that this purpose Should, be in grown, on the farm are adapted to thie
the mind of the man who cares tot her. purpose.
One reason why .so many men fail in Beet Roughage For Calf
. the Peeper growing of their, calves la
that they do not realize their 'possibili. BY the 'thee the can le weeks
ties. Many.ealVes are not worth feed., eld, we. rev begin' te teed' enell4kge'
ing; the best feeder in the world could Very .1 11 at first using care to
ewe that it is free from mold. In a
not meke Profitable cows ef them.
e The first demand On hehelf of the lttle the calf, will be able to con.
• deiry calf is that it should be well slime quite ir quantity of. ensilage and
born, JUL if the breedings right, ithen the amount Will increase as time ad.
it is deseavingeof. gead care, and the vances. The grain fed teethe' win
' higher appreciation its owner has of °um" always depend in a°111e degree
"• its possibilitiee the better ite is prepar- neon the Itind of roughaire"consumedt
Jus ice by it' along all POS" There is no better roughage than idr
falfa hay. It is easily digested. The
sible Imes of development. „ .
Whole Milk Esileattlia leaven of the alfalfa seem to eontain
a principle indispensable in the de-
•- The calf should first have whole Yelopment of the young 'animals and
_Atlas been provenbeyendenny not -present -ln.-..--_otheiz,roughage,-;--bli
q,uestionaihat iio other at in the alfalfa hay -alone is not good for a
world except that found in ego will
• take the place' of the fat in ,Mtlk,
1!. the Milk is very rich, however, a
:little skim -Milk May be added from the
first and MP any event after two or
. three weeke the newe. milk may be
, gradually substituted with skim -milk.
•• It is hest however, to give a little new
Milken the ration until the calf is six
•
or eight weeks. old. Many men are ine
dined to give too much, -Odin-milk!
There is, a • great difference in the
amount* of milk that different calves
will constime with profit, but the jer-
•sey or Guernsey calf Should receive no
more than eight or ten pounds per
day for the first six weeks and after
01*4
and possibly you will natqletect this imita.tion
the teArpot reveals it. Demand ,always the genuine
"Salado," in the sealed aluminum packet, and see
that you get It, it you want that unique flavour of
keisho' clean naves properly prepared and packed.
.
The Crat:..tiatiolia! i!ighyvay.
By Fretierich Wright, Editor of The Canadian Municipal ,
' We have for some time `peist been cost be divided into four parts, end
urging the Wilding of a national high- borne by the Federal authorities; the
vs,I4 acmes Canada, and atra, are plea- Provincial auth.orities; these munici-
ed. Jo note that our efforts are en- palities through Which the reads would
°waged-. by -Many ot env eei-IUtripOr' he Vii proportions -.one-half
IAPit.t-eatount lifigell lilalietallbscalittieie
aries. The special r by Federal money, one-quarter by the
whyh. "sees we give
such a transteentinental. , road eerovinces and the municipalities, and
calf. Taken in connection with elnate
milk the ration laatoo narrow, that IR should be built are: . First, it would :one-quarter by , public subscription.
to say, the amount of, protein as re.
find employment for our returned sot- :.The whole of the work to, be ender 4
ilnateflex-Vestsha aarbObYdretes-and fat iS
of the demands a the diers at as time, when our industries commission, made up principally of
animal. :This condition is corrected Will be dislocated and consequently the engineers, who should have the ab -
by the feeding of ensilage and •grain communities not able to wishnilate solute control of the route and the
like cora, rielt in carbohydrates. •three or four hundred thousand' men, manner in which the read Slieuld be
Second, it would be another .practical builte-materials, etc.—with one ex-
.
Kee Claves Growing ..,- link • . . .
, between one Municipality and an- ception and that is that the whole of
Nov these calves should be 'kW
. other, and One province and another. the work be done ' by returned sol -
griming all the time. .They should not
be Crowded like calveE, designed for Third,. it would create a tourist trait (Hers under Military discipline, b -r
baby beef, but they ehould be kept fie that cannot bell:Pa.:but be a boom civilian pay: .. ,
grodek. They *mid, be, ,fed plenty to those inuniciatilities through whiqh This is A great task that we sug.
of good feed liPlyahich the mitritive the road *Old Palle. Fourth, it would gest to the people Of. Canada, and bne
'ration is right. : V „calves .Fcime the tap many Of our natteeal, resources that while might think inopportune at
- :that the allowance should be eery eau, the grain may be emitted in the that now lie dormant; hat waiting to this time, when ever y- dollar is re-
. .
slowly increased with the eye of the .fore pert of the summer -after they are beeetreloped. ; Fifth, it would be the quired, to finish the wee, but we be -
feeder always on calf tesee that it accustomed to graiisTnastril*...bUt the hest
incentive to athoae parts of the have that eve-weuld be remiss our
does not get too much. Now hear in time in whiehta calf changes from a
Poulin*, where '4, Md. IS . only a duty; it we failed to remind our fel..
Mind that the allowance of milk herein winter ration composed •of akimenilk,
a:19 for a the average calf. grainan eireelleat roughage eaten 'rename. ' The Sixtletthough not thelast low citizens that there is the after.,
suggesteci
. There Maybe one found now and then the Shelter of 4 comfortable stable,_ to reason; for we could Ow many more, Math_ Ohe thing certain, the larger
That will 'coastline a good deal niore Pe:stare grits?. cOnsumed. too Often -en is that ma a highway' would be the part of our present industries, which
and payloe it an 'meld growth, but wind and ram, is tie critical time and best monument that the people of are munitions, .will stop. . And what
. . • .
--theft-are the exceptions. , •• It is good the change should. be Made gradeally,
. Canada could. build in memory of those then? 'Tens of thmisaida ' of 'family'
practice to feed the tali three times -The calees shouldbe turned out ditYt splendid sone *habit:re' given up tir bread -winners will be thrown out of
'thine until it is three weeks old,- The times at first and sheltered nights and
lives in : her eliuse on the fielchil Of employment, and surely it: would be
„daily allawane'e, of milk divided into some:grain should be fed until theY. Flanders. Such a road would- be a suicidal to increase this large army of
' ethree .feeds Will give better results are aecustomed to the out-oftdoors,
' than whim the little animal. is fed' but then if the pasture is good, the 'grain. real peace monument. • The mile Out -of -works by another large army 0
. tviiie, • yl3e omitted es weehatrestride. he -stenel-wouldelietirewttness-to-an elerewhielreerould rea • . • ,
I I • ,, I
:-, Starting
with, Hay and ateate.„. jersey or Guernsey heifer may fresh- thousands who came. after . us that fact if rthe reterned' soldiers are dis-
en at two yeare sr ,ai'little,older.:' 'The 'Wade hid adtinea beraziti at MI :ended theiron-arrival . in Canada,
- • ..- a.• , ,
' ,As Soon ,as the calt'showS a desire Holstein may well postpone the begin -time of derhoerticy'a trial. . '. What then can we with the return -
for roughage it „should be, given *
little good hay; preferably clever - or h.ing -ea the reillttfig period .entit two Baa. Evoke national roatLwOuttleost ed- soldiers to. whom we as a nation
grata years and it half old.
' '' h-the4tdiVidtial
. . ulca,takeett500-mileseof-neweroa. e -One-of- the:ansurcirsettresuientind
Alfalfa. '' Semi, after a little -dry money. Our experts consider that it are :under special moral obligation?
0.4
3
1 • 1
1 -
.,.. .
can eat it. Sometimes calves manifest if freehening is to. occur duringthe link uP. thei Pad& and the Atlantic 'put the men in the building of such a
• a desire for grain at first, that will eae"'lea, a siibstantial grain ration Oceans, and would • cost in round national road as we have Urged, and
. lead them to ea too much of. it, in " -
should have been fed for some 'time figures $75,000,t100. -A huge sum, ikus use them in a great work at once
it
which case they .are opt to refuse t ..
previous. Remember, the thine we but hone too large for such a purpose -healthy sand ' profitable .to themselves
entirely and to give the feeder te good want to do .is to develop this 'young We have already suggested that the and the nation. . .
deal of trotiblda Only a very little .
cow so that she can eyielcl milk in a ,..—., e --
grain should be given the calf at first , if• we have fed
and the -allowance should be increased Pre -n me quaY*
her liberally: the second winter- and
very slimly, always hemg sure not to she has been on good pasture during
the second summeir, she is a beautiful
-animal.:7:Notic-'1f-Tve-bigiiRoatfeectliaja -
grain about three months before she
freshens and gradually increase the
eatien until she is consuming four or
efiveepounde-of-graiir perday; with -on -
silage and good clover, the machinery
for the production of milk 'will have
been fully developed. For a few days
• •give .the calf too much. Care should
.--beused elsonotteefeectueorebaY than
the animal will consume in from one to
two hours. .The hay the calf does, not
eat -does it nogood and while it is not
so bad to feed hay-toeexcess-ae-to
' feed' too much grain, it is entirely use-
less to do se and should be avoided.
'Feed rain Dry ,
It is i:nportant that the calf should 'after _freshening, we are going to be
eat its grain dry. It isnot bad prac-. very careful with her. For three days
tice to scald a little linseed meal and we will give her no grain at all and
ut it into the Milk. Providing we jet then only a little, very 'gradually in-
• it settle to the bottom of the pen and and ereagingthe anionnt as the days go by.
' :allow the Self time to eat it - after Now • the quantity of grain that she . ..• • • 20, 11,
a drinking the milk, but it is not !laces- will. consume . :after the &et three
-Sark' and. it consumes time that inay weeks have passed, will depend upon
.' just Eis well be employed in some eth- the amount of milk she elves.. --A
.
i er way. Allow the calf to drink •its . pound of grain per day to every three
.. Milk straight and eat its grain at its or four peundsof milk produced, ac-
" leisiiret taking plenty of time to mase cording to the richness Of .the milk, is
--ticete it the saliva will be • mixed a. very good rule. Still there 'ate
thoroughly with the , grain, insuring many exceptions to this rule. When
_Much better; digestion. When the calf roughage is very 'cheap, and grain is
. • becomes accustomed to the graintliete :•exPeaseetia it is prealtable to -feed' an
. is no harm in giving it all it will clean excess of roughage and'a :smaller ka-
up ,with a relish, but until that time tion. of grain. Always watching the
• tomes constant care should be cot- individeel cow to see that she is not
At
, 12it f •I tli
else& Almost . any of the grains 'over -fed. At the same time weigh . this ponothe story e:
•lesson text begins. The defiant mes-
• grown blithe -fare. are good -for a calf. and teet the -milk thatewe-Mayeknove
sage �f 'Ahab: ' infiltrated Benhadad ; not -uncommon, — Sent—The --- text
,e,There is nothing better than corn and What she is actually doing and thus" be
who gave orders for an immediate, at should be changed so as to read: "And• •
the cal.Pwill eat it whole quite as able•to feed her enough to produce the
ag in any othet. way.. Indeed, I ha •milk and znaintain her Wye* ' , tack upon the city. '.Drinking --,Here, they sent and .told Benhadad"• -The
seen calves shell corn from the Or, e Now, ihila is the theory, the -suceeSs. tie in verse 16, the implication is that initiative was taken by the obser
-:vers
the drinking :incapacitated'. the .kiees tear the city wall. ' . Take them alive
it and thrive. as . well , as any ca i its application will depend upon the for intelligent 'action. In his drunk- —The 'arrogant boast of e drunken
t toad. ,• If We. wish to _feed it 1 m n. The longer I live, and the more en condition the king .weuld be more man wile, could not understand why he
'
way, there can be ao objeetai it I's e of dairies, . the more deril Yalue- . ,
easily stirred. up by the irritating should not have .his own 'Way. The
,,.. ; 7whatever.. .Experifeents 'dim Ara- th • individual Man in the success of words of Ahab. - Kings—The thirty- thought expressed in verses .19-21
eeet till* elieeele geeet-loss-iir-thefeed -progeam-oeedeveloptriezite-e-Ite is,
o v --kings airirfig--Benfhadtol nrs-to.--be. that the Ataximerenagave
• iiv: of. Whole corn ;to:older cattle,: lint great ainfig to 'be able to deveio a eject yr l --r4 they tlurtr: ,atter.tlert te--the. email b... -ad ea
-lktrty.-telieit..11,1.-1.11;W:=Tiffejlifait.).#0e(litlik-4477.k, arethe 76:143: ofecieleeeer--erl;f.diet epirlted. ' he - - " . ...1. '
calves eonsna
ued the rain. ' Whole . Worthy of confidenee and respeet ' ' tei•cts • '''. - ' • .1Iven,t7 -,mitt. ollit'atesmatittarf
subject to Damascus: Pavilions1 first. Whth
en e maih anny appeared,.
-eee--- —Literally; "ten*" probably • the the attackers were taken bysurprise
• group of tents, or, the camp. Set—a and , utterly defeated. Syrians—Or,
.A technicallnilitary tetni,meaning,. to eAraniaeans e'• .te • group .. of .- Semitic
prepare for an attack, either • by the tribes whieh ' settled near the upper
a .P Y up ra es as ear y as . e ,in cidle .
(see-theesecond millennium-Bea—The andatheefacebelowetheeyeseefteneeeneee
the:placing of.battering eneines- ,
margin), or both. , •• • I Testament is concerned chiefly with to a digeased Molar tooth which must
1345a Measures of 'defense. Prole.. the western Aramaeans, ^who had their be rembved. ' • • : • '
het—Like Isaiah, Jeremiah; and other , political tenter in Damasous. The
*later prophets, this - unnamed ,mes-t conflicts .of the Israelites were chiefly • When the trent teeth greatly overt
of royalty, It is worthy of ootethat name, ' aSyrians" le derived from -
lap the 'mei. teeth, twilling "parrot
seziger of Jehovah acts as an adviser] with this western group. • The moderni
the prophet Elijah, the outstanding ',Syr' ," h' h h b h mouth," the hOtse cat not graft. pre.
figuniduring the, reign ottAbab, doee'l thae.conetry.. for .cehturies. and ' inillen-lhY
perly. Correct tliNtin ?Curable eases,
, net eppear. Ahab --The son of,Orini, ',Minas. • . ' . . angle file across the front of the up-
per teeth, at the proper eight , then
Hew ,To Have Good Teeth, • • : Otherivise seethe to he fairly well, dew., nip, off the over -lapping portions by
' If parenta desire. their childier. to. ,netebegin tO cut his 'teeth at the usual means of strong, sharp pizicherse and
must begin to take precautions Jong for probably he is not getting the pro -I ' inc lower jaw, or, the floor Of the
1 before it is time for anyteeth to sp. per diet. ,: . • . "., '.. ".
-INTERNATIONAL LESSOal'-
.
NOVEMBER 4.
•CemarcrairlitY "felaAtedere late
Mothets and daughters of *11 ages ars vortilally Invited to writs t tlela
department. Initials only will be published with each question and its ;mower
es a means of Icientilicatien, but full naive and addrese must be Win in 'ache
letter. 'Writs on on* side ref paper only. Ansieere Will be melted direct ir
*teemed and addreseed envelope le encloied.
Address ail. vorrespondence for thie depertment to Mae 'Helen Law, 235
Woodbine Ave., Torento.
4 cups of flour utal(e pound or a
quart. _
2 cups of solid butter make a pound.
Butter the size of an eggequals 2
Ponces or ciphL, One heaping
tablespoonful the same.
2 cups of greeadated sugar lautte a
peund. • . .
.cups of powdered sugar make
a pound.
3-cupa of meal inalte-a'pound;
•pint of 'mills or water equals A
klorencei-1. Florence Nightingale
was an English terse who won eationt
wide fame for her untaralleled work
among the soldiers' in the Crimean
War. She was in, general superintend=
encetof all the hospitals In Bosphorus,
and had .at one time 10,000 'wounded
under her tharge. When she rettint
ed to London ,it: fund.of mop° was
raised fer her benefit': Thig was spent
in -founding , a home for traiphig
nurses. Miss Nightingale • was den
corated by Xing Edward VII. and un- pound,,
1
mortalized by peas. She died 1)11910; 16 ounces. Make a pound. • '
at the age of meetyee 2. The popela- Soldier's Sister; -1, There iire many
-tiettaattliitAtthjaeabbiltelebklalandettliingeettetchoeseefer.yeer.-brotfier-be-
Vrocujciet. lteotheette rfod ma
;—lo.Altitttelriacan
e n7er20 sides the knitted things ethilettifort
pee
bag, For instance, an ilectrie flash.
of salmon is protein VT tieslle-beilding. light, 'a khaki air Dillow, a pair of
More than 23 Per cent. of the food military hairbruphes or a 'trench mir-
maatter.of
in fihnn
anopf sardines in2
s contain
ror for shaving. 2. The best remedy
B
for sore throat is hot water. It ahould
per cent fat, 2. Probably the follow.. be applied outside and inside; outside,
intb
ahlee will a
l be dbunlrueatnoyou.; Int. by means of fonientatione for fifteen
might
thekitchen. •
4 quarts !make a gallon.
8 quartS make a peck. '
4 saltspoonfuls of liquid Make one
teaspoopful. 1 • t '
- 4 teaspoonfte.s of liquid make sine
tablespoonful. '
4 tablespoonfuls of liquid make a
queirter ofa cup. .
3 teasPoonfuls of dry Material make
a tablespoonful, ' ' ' '
16 revel teaspoonful's of dry material
make a cupful. •• •
8 heaping tablespoonfuls of dryinat,
terial make acipful. '
2 cups or 4 gilli.make 'a pint, .
'minutes or half an hour .twice a day;
inside, by a gargle of hot water, as hot
as can be usecl, from. efteert minutes to
half an hour Fail relieved. Drink
plenty of lot water, in order to, in-
duce profuse Perspiration. If there
is fever cool the shin with sponge
baths. Iteeps thefeet 'warm.. If the
symptoms are severe apply ice in a
bag to the outside of the ,neck and
give the patient little pieces of •ice to
swallpw. A few hours of this treat-
ment will effect a cure in simple caw.
The inhaling of steam is a most effici-
ent means of relieving pain and in-
tlammation.' The application Of oils
'and grease' of all kinds to tite throat
is useless notwithstanding the popue
4 cups of liquid mike a pound. • lar opinion.
• •
•
Dannie's Qum.
Ufternoineset ssiouewaseneerly
over when Misi Stuart, the. teacher,
..paw that Datinie Luce was chewing
gum again.,
.• "Minnie Luce!" she exclaimed.
"Take out that gum this instant!"
Minnie promptly obeyed. Efe look -
and the most prominent ...Member .of ed. and felt very sheepish as he did
• histedynasty; . he Was.. king of _Israel so, for all the other pupils wailed, atat
frorn about B. Ce 875 te about B. C.. some of them giggled aloud. But he
- eteseeeetis,-noteelearetoewhat.-Period flair:Li-ow the gum into thivaste-
of his reign the etrents here deedribed
will prove that Jehovah • is in truth basket. Ha tucked it carefully into
a pocket for use -after school.
belenge Jehovah—The delivez•ance
-
theGod of Israel;: he is the saviour -Whentlie' dosing inn- fillallY- tang,
of his people now as he' has been in most Of the pupils promptly hurried
homeward. Three or. four boYs--
Dannie ainong them—were slower in
starting than the others, and they
were lingering neer the door when
Miss Stuart. came out. She had an
errarid to de and Was in "a; hurry to
•cateh a car on the aventie near by. • As
she cattle down.the Steps she took, a
dein from her purse; but she was in
suet' a hurry that the Coin slipped
from her hand and rolled through a
grating in the sidewalk.' .
-Miss Stuart gave alittle cry. "That
hadad—This name, meaning "Son of wsaaide,a'i'lanthdeIremme6stY gIohaddownwittvnmei,"wstel
the god) _HadadaLia-borneteby-three emeeeeyou-boys lend me five cents till
kings of Damascus ..narnedin , the pm to_morkowr, •
Testament '(dompare / Kings 15. 18 et, a •
and se Kings ' 13. 24). : Since Hadad
was h popular deity, personal names
containing his nanie as an element are
Lesson V.—Defeat Through Drunk-
' enness (World's Temperance
peeday)-4 Kings N). 1-21
'Golden Next, 1 Kings
Verses 1-11:, Benhadad proposed
terms of ,surrender. Ahab was ready
to accept the first proposal (verses 2-
4), but the second was sohumiliating
(verses 5, 6) that the king; with the
full endorsement of elders and•people,
^rejected it .(verses 7-9). • Whereupon
Benhadad threatened the complete'
destruction of the city, to which Ahab
replied: "Let not ban that girdeth on
his armor, 1boast himself as he that
putteth it off" (verses 10, 11). •
the past. . Young men—The personal
attendants, picked. men, Of • :the dis-
trict leaders. The districts are the
divisiohs of the kingdoms referred to
in 1 Kings 4. 7ff. Begin—Thatis,
marshal. the forces for the attack.
16-21. Defeat of • 'the Aiamaeans.
Noon—That is, during the intensely
hot period of the day. • In:the Orient
, the middle of the day is a time of rest;
•hence-an'attack at that hour would be
unexpected and, consequently, throw,
the enemy into confusion : Drinking
—In theliedriniketi-stuper the leaders
wete-, in not condition to. devise tide,
quate-plitts to meet thelttack. Ben-
.ficric,aegie
MOre Veterinary Notes. ..
Nuidding" of . hay, or pain (tooth-
ache), shown by holding the heacl to
one sideewhen drinking cold water or
Chewing feed, slobbering,' -et feel
smell from the mouth, uspally in-
icates-aesplit-orelecay.ed-back
All the boys felt eagerly in their
pockets. Their hands brought out
almost everythtng except money.
.Whilethe others wereatipg for
money, Dannie had run to the grating
and was on his knees, peering down
through it Then he -jumped ap, and
hiseeyes Were shining, •
."I see it, Miss Start,": he cried,
"and I can get.it, toe! I've thought of
a.wayV'
He ran back • irito the schoolhouse
and brought out a long pointer from
one of the blackboards. • And what
de you suppose ' he tdid next.? Miss
Stuart. opened her eyes wide as she
Watched hint. Be took from his poc-
ket •the -forbidden-piece-of-0mi wet it.
in bis mouth' and stuck it on the
small end of the pointer. Then he
lay flat on the iron grating and push-
- edthe painter, Vali the gum on the
. end of it, far down into the hole below.
An instant later he pulled the pointer
carefully back again—and there 'Was
Miss Stuarts' coin :sticking to the
gum. .
How they all applaudedandlaugh-
ed too,,, and Miss Stuart loudest of all,
as She thanked Minnie and Praised him
•
for his quick Wit.
But Donnie could not help shying,
"And now you see; Miss Stuart, how
hicky it. is .for you that I chew gum!"
• "Yes," laughed the teacher tis she
started- toward the avenue, "but in
sch9o1 hours keep it in . your pocket
where it will. be-' handr foresucheuses
as this." •• d •
-^,
math (bar) between the first incisor
and the first molar tooth, may be in-
jured by the bit in young or hard -
mouthed horses.The-jaw-bone may,
be chipped or splintered by the bit.' A.
raw..sere formes and gathers feed end
decaying saliva,.which soon give off
foul odor. Probing of the wound
diseovers exposed diseased bone which
flakes Off. (exfoliates) and should be
emeered. Thiais_hestelonabyeineenis
-eull:attivtivscau:t4mth eereeps. ebtree -01.1:±11)Oilvskr.1)(4x11Z0Tim•-fbroutnrte3tifIztukt ,mitt
.a hole made in the bone of the face disdovery. :
above the root of the tooth by means A discharging sore -(fistula) may
of a bone augur (trephine). Persist.: „form ender the jaw on the edge of the
ent discharge from one nostril, with bone: The diseased bone, due tO
taatkbeei3rlaemeeo_vedc,itetlasnesehettle.
formation of stormi g atties or b Eht 1 ' th 1 or Without bulging ef the bones of fintgactwiurae,n
motu•
sore in the mouth and the external
sore and pipe (sinus) by., syringing
with a two per eent. solidi= of pee-
enanganate of potash twice daily, lied
swab. with tincture of iodine on alter-
nate days until healed. sat
----Use-a tubbef fir leather -cov-
ered Straight bar bit. Do not use an
overhead check. Sintilar clisCharging
anuses, farther back, are often due to
diseased rower,. molar teeth whieh
must be extraeted. Fistula of the
salivary duet is located near by.
All weak trees and eveiagreens will
be beneated by feetilizing .with well
rotted stable manure.
HIGHEST PRICES- PAID
For POULTRY, GAME, ,
EGGS & FEATHERS
Please. wiete ter particulars.
p. PolltarY So CO
-as- Bonisoours Market, Montreal-
. .Market Calendar.
. Roasters (crate fed),: yining.: ducks,
young geese, and. some young turkeys
should be marketed in NoveMber.
By esyttematic fattening is meant
the petiedic seleation of those birds
Which, are nibst .mature and the . apt
pertioziment of the. fattening periods
to Meet the•enarkettreqiiirements.
Bran and rolled aoats, well soaked
In milk, provide one of the cheapest
of 'poultry deeda. • • ,
• A supply of gravel for grit and
and for dusting should be oCeured
new-fer-use- by the -poultry -in -Winter.
The flock will be in better health
and more eggs will be secured if the
hens are provided with some itort of
green feed in 'winter. .
Plenty of fresh table scraps; liberal
amounts,ef bran and shorts and grant
feeds, should make up a 'large part
of the diet efepoultry this fall in con-
sideration of the high cost of grains,
but the scraps should hot contain an
extess of salt. •
"Send me :a ton .-of tog."' "What
size?" ,n two-thousancl-peund
ton would suit me, if that's not asking
too nigh
• . • . .
,MORE.:MONEY-
1,01101 TRW YOU TRAP'•
f.• *
„
ti
UNISTE
the•toiadri. krittuft
The bireesteitt Muse hi
warn 2 I. FU :il illittln 4 60 QS:
M. OX It other tra
sp.rC leo Os their fare
yPr after year eacauseithey
deal oar Lk* le vol teII
getinoramonlitaaa_ a
me Oa Walk amsets.ets.
coloraw. roe ths gene
ueirtigtslortiVatinu, 6ulit
ip
ritteleat
OVNITtenella itt."4
a maw at aeola.Me,
have sound and strohg teeth, they age,the should betaken to a physician,' die sinooth, •
co,
-pear. Bablee, like -the -rest of use --Scurvy rickete alliecl_teeerainary weese _
can only build hp their bogies from rickets, but is less eminent. It is8
round in :it, hie =Other . or -
such materialeae is ',given them. /f also a disease of wrong feeding, and pill:CIS:a 01r ellOidttOmnaakerid gaonstmiyalbau t clean
a baby's food is clefleient in quantity means that tbe child does not Intim en- `oughly wash the gums with a mild,
ough fresh vegetable feed. It also antiseptic tooth wash. As soon as
affects the formation ofothe .teeth by the'cliild can be taught to hold and to
making tho gums spongy and inclined use a stnall toothbrush, give him one
to ulcerute. Fresh fruit juipe, such and teach him to use it every night
as that ofeoranges, stied a little mashed...and morning and, if possible,, after
panto hi the child's milk will Work each rneal. • The ;night brushing is
wonders with this disorder. I most important of all, for germs and
Absolute eleanlineAs of the balty's particles of food lodge between the
or quality, that deficiency will cause
defecte in teeth and hair and nails, as
as a lack of bodily vigor.
The breast-fed baby has by far the
best ehance of having the rightsort of
bone trubstaiice, and therefore of hav-
ing good teeth. The disease known
as rickets is a form of malnutrition
that interferes with the proper growth. mouth find, gums and of evetything teeth end have time to, do much mis-
of the bones,, and the presence of that he is permitted to put into his chief during the lonihours sleep,'
eiekets sometimes first merfifests it. mouth is very important. TJntil n Sugar is bad for the teeth heceige
selL by delay in the appearance of the , child is eld enough to be tap,glatto_sugar three to en 'acid in the mouth
teeth. -If,' therefore, a child that I cleanse the mouth by relline a Mouth and that add works on and injures the
"I;rett, ""`
a
•
"err'
"But, Judith Macomber, aren't you
going to do a thing? Not Red Cron
work or knitting or a garden or any-
thing?"
Judith laughed.
"That soaring imagination of yours,
Clarice •Anateyi she said. "Will you
please tell me where I could make a -
garden? In a windowbox?"
"You might in the back yen], if the
children didn't have a whole zoo
there."'
"Mit tho :children have a zoo there!
tt's part of keeling them baPPY and
well' when they have to live in the city,
poor kiddies/ So that's' out of the
question. As fot Rerl'Orees,"—juditles
clear eyes' became dark for a moment,
__or did want to dreadfully; yea &int
know itew much, But I couldn't with-
out leaving thiliga for mother to do,
and I consider Mee aether as much
more valuable to my 'country than
am. 1 think Most of our mothers, ate
—they know so much more than we. I
satileft-alWfigured it'oiit +Me day.
I -decided that R would be mother giv.
lug, and not 1, if I tooktime that
owed her and studied first aid. And
that wasn't fair, because mother was_
already giving ltob—" Judith's voice
broke suddenly. ,
, "Oh, I know there's Bob," Clarice
acknowledged awkwardly. '‘`I know,
of course, Judith. OnlyI thought
that weuldbe all theamore reason -t,"
"It is atl the more reason, judith
retorted! .steady again. "Pe cowl-
try'seeeing to need the children. • It's
my business to help mother Make them
the kina of men and women that the
country. can't get along without"
"Welt, 1 must say that I never heard
anyone else express it that way"
Clarice -depleted.' • •
But it was to be Clarices day for en-
lightenment, Five inimitee later Dr.
Campbell stepped 'his, car at sight of
her. Clarice waved her bag at him,
She and the doctor hadealways• been
good friehds.
"Fin getting ready to be your as-
sistant," she said gaYtY. ee,
But for once the, doctor did not re-
spond •
Clance will you ask youLneetheree„..
if she can go ever to Mrs. jeratiferte • e -ea
until chunt. up a nersel, 'Sbe's been
trying to do three women's wotk'sinett
that, daughter of tiers went, off to a •
service eittim,;aad.the natural result
aesome, Paris:Cited Therets abeeit
as Much patriotism bait as there 111
'foga in 'soda water. They want the
fize=that kind! If they were looking .
fer real service, they'd find it xigheat
horde.: A woman likers. Jennifer
knows more in a day tit her daugh-
ter will know in a year—to SO no-
thineofalieltiing :With those:splendid
-small hdes." " •
clanee,drew, alitard breath.
Igo hard to knew". she ctied.
The doctor shot a keen. &nee at
her. `'"No, it isn't hadtoknow—not .
if youeget outside your 'pwn.eironta:
Ask your mother to run up at. once, if
she can, Clarice." , And he Was gone, .
enamel coating of the teeth.- It wonld
be an excellent thing if all people, ad-
ults and children. alike, were careful
altvays to brush their teeth thoroughly
ad to use a tectuth wash after eating
candy.
Children should be taken regularly
t� the dentist, and 'nedecayed telnitor-
ary tooth should never be permitted to
rethain by the side of a permanent one,
lest it infect the sound tooth. .
Vegetables properly prepared tempt
the appetite. When they are soggily
cooked or poorly seasoned, much of
iem wilt beleft on the table.
The Right Work for Our Girls.
,
Mrs. Lloyd George is askmg. if the
time has net come when every girl,
like 'every. bey, should be trained for
some . profession? When the .war is
. over a great many occupations that
.girls are nevi engaged in Will be :drop-
p.ed and stores of youthful extergy,will
be lying unused. A very Ittrge, pee- ,
portion of the work our sgithe Imes
thrown themselves into leads nowhere.
These strange and uncengental tasks,
tifiteliaathe girls have inititetecrieithT
such ezithuetasin is one of the great e
exhibitions of pluek and sself-saceifice
which the war has preduced. •
Wis. Lloyd George is italcing that
some` erapjoymeot be found for all
this energy that it ina3r not run to
waste When the struggle ie ended. A
large eureber of the giris now Work-
ing simply for . patriotic duty will
never. be content to settle down at
home again and do nothing There
are a number of professions Open. to
eieMent-and-the vestrehas-apened up
Ire& ones. Ag ace:mutants, women
.rereapreviagegtereeteleueleeetieeeeefitt:—.:
before the war women accountants
Were rarely heard of, In banks, toci,
women will probably continue to hold
a place, and hi the older careers, Such. -
as nursing, teething, medicine,
tirehite_cture, gardening, ete, there is
scope for all, From among them all
Mrs.' Lloyd George selects teaching as.
the most honorable and the most apa
propelate. Trained teachers have a
great future' before then. • Schools
will be what those teachers.make tlietn •
and our CiOliatieri Open& mere Pie:
getting the right girls to‘teath than
upon any single factor that crin be
named..
1
e.
-4
Cause of -Low Crop Yields.
• Experimental Farm chemitts say
that to sPealtof soilg that need lime
as being "acid" is not correct What
is coMmohly called acidity they say .
as due to the absence of basic calcium
and magnesium and not to the pre.
teneb ot acid. Leaching and crop pro'
duction celiac, a gradual loss of the
hational supply of bases, calciumaid,
magnesium, in the soil and adeficiency
of these basic elements accounte foe
iow crop yields. When they are sup. •
plied by liming increased viol, yields
follow. •
No matter what the condition may
be stilled every farmer and gardener •
will do Well to keep _lifts land properly _
limed, and fertilized.
t.;