Loading...
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-04-22, Page 30/ - • Hints tor the -Home Selected. iteelpefe, • Begs with Tomatoes, -Chop one- half 'of A pound of fat mutton, and fry it. zero with Putter, - Add one pound's of tomatoes, that have' been peeled and out up. Season the ' tare with silt end pepper. When the meet and tomateee are Almost doneerAdd three eggs, and cook the whole a little longer., • • Sand Tarte -(PeatiutoelPai? one heaping eunita of butter tnt•o lour •• eopfule of tbear And two•euntine -- sager. -Moisten the 'Mese with, two, eggs well; beaten. Boll it thin on a. • tin eheeee and brush it over with egg. Sprinirte it with sugar, cin- namon, and poanded-pennuts. Cut it it hatneequaree"' And bake them un- til the'. are brown. Puree • , Pitree of •Dried Peae With Sen4 ; . nagesee-Pot the peas in -tie -014f Wee,. • terethe night before. Inhe morn - pet= the* into 'as Peteeith•,one "half,. •A,' pintr tepid 'reatert. and sseason them with salt, pepper and thyme. Add an onion and a little hae011; or. if, the bacon is not • heed,use butter. gook the mix - tare eIowiy lone -half, of an hour, crush it, „ strain • it,. and etee it with Small fried sausages. •--Arteetermy --Stewo--Setelet one ',red - pepper and remove the seed. Then, -ebeP the pePper, _One entail 'Onkel; • and a clove, of garlic legethe r fine, and mix them in B. pan with; one 'tablespoonful of butter.' • Add three • tablespoonfuls of or•temato• catchup, one ,tahlespoonful of 'Worcester- -Aare eit0e)..614.oge and .oii;hai1 tablespoonfuls of water. galeetleiS Mixtiire• into athick ,01,4VY, add cute e. up cold meat, and heat thoroughly. • SOft "Ciliketre::•Rilb One-half Pi 14 :pound, of butter and one-quart-er of pound tot sugar into a pound of • flour into which two teaspoonfuls of baking powder have been ,Well. eiftedee Add oneeterrepoonfol each • of ,greund uoteeee'and cinnamon;and currants or ,raisoies.- Stir' in eee. a Very little, milk, and enough pre- serve, juiee'et any deeirect flavor to make a batter •thee will •just pour. -Bake •the cakes in small, shallow • pans inea'hot oven. ' •• . Scallop. ChoWder.--Le. one quart • .of scallops perboiled twenty. , mm- titea in boiling neuter. Take- throe slicesof gait peek and two onions cat up very fine, and fey them to a • delicate •hresin. Tare six geode • :`eized potetees, and slice thein•thine • Pat the. peerk the onions, Alia the• ...potatoes into three opinte of milk, ,coek4hepa final the petatoes are sat,' add two table -spoonfuls of hut- - teeer-sielteandepopperetoetaetee',.:-Add the .strongest stra,tegie 40- eneee of the short but inervelously Proteeted German doeet eni the North Sea. The eea; however, is steadily wearing Heligoland away, In SQ,O A.D. it was 120 miles ia eircumfer- ence. BY 130Q it had deereased to a eireureference of orty-ilve miles, and by 1640 it covered only fou.r square miles. At present it scarcely one-third of onewelter mile in .are.. . The Dahlia. 'Now is the time to tend to one dahlia.'. If You already ' have the tubers, bring -them out of the sand in Which you etered•them, put them in a light, 'warm Piece and water them. . 7 'In It earprisingly, Short time there will be dozens of sprouts: • There Are two waye of planting „ the ePrOUtS; and bath .have' the stanch - e t enppertere. One is to eut a sprout about four lin,:hes long just below A leaf toiot at an 440e angle, tick the cutting, • sproat,. into eharpsand, keep Well watered. until it is ,reoted4aa. then plant in a pet of rich earth, Andneerer let` it:get tee'dey, , „T.lig'other is to cut *pieee of the tuber,allowing it to have.oniy One. spreut, and plant it in 4 Pot of hex rich earth, half sand.' While the second -method is e lit- tle the easier, better success May perhaps be had 'with theVrst meth'. calk . • 'Keep the pclte in 4 sunny window, or, better.etill,in a• :told 'frame. When the weather is warm and set -- tied, useally: from the loth to the: 20th of May, plane seeur dahlias w re g them (keep in the ground. . DeiVe a the equipment Wit w 1.--el'd-twento 674'ff; Stoat fiveefoote'440 • beside, each cated for herd twe ty c9V(6. Aft -ilk strainers; eight eight -gallon plant.'13tealt -Off anee side- elio•otae...- here the „Iniesent- that appear until the plant is 119)014 the cheese factory, about all that eighteen inches tali;':'ilultiet it is necessary in a supplyief sanitary br4rIth. „as it peilse a • good, 'sanitary Tie it firmly to the stake, calti- strainer, and enough geed,. well- -vae it •tt'ecluentlY"that-ie stir `the nraele-tailb:esine-te-iihip the milk in; water during the dry .see004.....eere hold the cane', keeping them, half • •° the seellop$ (whiele.if ial'ge*shOuld be--cut-intoemall-pleces).,-"When. they are cooked:retie:me the dish fie= ihe-efir-e;.-poUr--theriehOwderin-- tol a. tureen; and Pitt. browned but- • ter crackers on top, ' This recipe . will make about three' quarts' of r • chowder.' , • ' , • .Pales(ine SOup.-Take,•three 46z - en fresh eabielieleest peel them, and put them at once into cold water. ,After they have stood a few Min- ' ides' place them in a steveParri' with • four onions, the 'outer stieltii of a • 'head of celery, and, three pinta Of white stock. Let the whole simmer gently for an hOur. Remove- the onions and ebrainethe artichokes , and the 'liquor thrOugh a :sieve ; put the puree back .into. the stevyPan, and when it is hot, stir in a pent of hot cream, or, if you prefer, a mit- , tare of creaxa and Mille. Season ; the soup with white pepper.' salt., and a little nutnieg.' Let it simmer' minute on' twiet.,_ and serve it. Send it to the table with fried le• -bread :-ctit- into-smalLdicee The, quantity is sufficient for six per- sons. - • *AO Traiisporting Pota toes Through Streets of Berlin in overnment Trains.: . Sine: he. Government has taken hold of eliefoed supply of Germany, there has been remarkable economy in provisions and foods in general. Net 4 particle of food is allowed to go to wast. By this, means ,Germany hopes to be able to combat FatglaneVe food blockade. The picture stems -three street ear tilted with bate of potatee$, on -the Way tea municipal food depot in Berlin. +MT^. retieereessireee ieatainetialetesot martentuve-pandeareseelfeeewarfeee.teeneeeeoetee 11017,,Ar, 1404,4A;(01 .496acititsite -`: laseoii-oroNio44.Emli:14,71eopoie.44 • Th .t ts. -14;siseds tear bottle -BaileiJek- tester, two e erpopmen • „ a as, a , must, lap adapted to eertain uum-- stater eaas; tbre'e tin pails, di her ef 'tows, end to certain other quart dipper, 'a' strainer dipper, eonditions. Should the Water ne- two /vire Mildie cream 'stirew' essar'Y to the dairy be supplied by A Windinill' by a iftneeline engine'? Many would find the first satisfae., tory, many ,would.prefer the lattek. If. the latter is to be chosen it is good business to have one large enough to do rt, lot of the •other work on. the:farm. In regard to four ounce graduated glass, a sup' ply •of dairy salt,''of' butter wrap- pers, and parehment, paper, sul- Pburie,iteitl; washing powder, leer brooms, scrub brus efr, etc., eoen- plete the equipine ecessary for the making .of bu er: For the 'other purposes of anailk house, the following itemized list of requisites hethey-arerpm' petting the first supposition, let as, take shoeld.he 'empty sufficient. soil around the roots of the plant, 'The cooler iS.a *At big enough to you will be rewarded with li a viealth submerged in in- cob:tempter .ieeneeese oaeheeeeinee - - Beside ,._ some, ,scriihbing Nethiei. In ilora`turi nieee brushes,, can and; , Pair-WaShing faeciieseeng than a eeee eatelogee Utensils. there. is ver' neees- and, the descriptions of the different Mn1r* Whenbutter"Thaking•Is af'1&' varieties of dehlias is like seeing some oriental pageant all glorious._ - with coleie DO 'buy :defervi'daliltaseehie----year, •• - eiteri though, -oil have' Mane', foi. eachyear they grow more beauti- ful ;, arid if you.follon; One of the : above• methecli your dahlias ".1 be. :reallY ;OS ibeantiftil as. the cata,-' 'tagite desCriptiotts: INANTED. , 11.'4 Tropical' Bain of Sheets We Wive had, piece - the-v.fare - ,garii a liberal education in. the .; matter "Of 'giving" So anany-de- mends have been eratedeeon public generosity that we hardly feel sur- prised, at any demand. hoevever. ? Cooling w Many of us; rendered almost The Northern Gibraltar. great. Notwithstanding, we' we/6 'breathless, when we saw the list ,elleapest .ways shipping cane one •:`covered eeoler, if there is Vater-preSsnreill dairy; one wafer tank, either gal- vanized iron, wood lined with gal- vanized iron, • or a cement -tank • large enough to -hold eight or tee eight -gallon etenseei . One Wash sink 20 ins. x 30 ins. ; one water beater With tankl• one Babcock tester complete.; two "wire. handle milk stirrers e fiver brooms, scrub brushes and washing powder., Sanitary Milking pails; sanitary of "needs" for the wuipment of ith a cOntintious stream of water 6 one of the best and to do it. The Who've illnetration. shows a convenient . • Way ,to accomplish this. ' ••,• • • • UniVersity. 'Bae ospital. • "tarhere " we atked "is th , 1 calls for an amplification of, ney to come from to ptirchase these r, • , . . „ -the. HO, and will • involve the in- Thenstal ation of a medium-sized cream a brilliant idea occurred'to separator, one, of about 800 lbs. to One, of the wOrkers. It was this ---•J .- not .1,000 lbs. capacity per hour. A '"Whrepot have a sheet shower, :.water heater,. with a tank, will* be only for-Terente-, -heir fief thePtee' required, and a, wash sink of about vince I" , ' 20 x 30 inchee.. Along with this Ours -ii, a provincial 'I university. will be *anted a twenty-five gallon Why should notove give the women "cream vat, with space for water and of Ontario an Opportunity to help with these furniihingst. ice. A small refrigerator for the 'storage of butter will suffice.' Be. , Opportunity is all that id need ed, ror there are ' thousands of fore installing such equipment, however, it is a .gOod• Oat to take mothers, wives, and sisters of past --ancleptesent Universitet students care Of. sanitation. Put in a eon- ereteeflooreehalie- prOvisiere nieteleefer who will be Only too glad to help. flashing. it off, and for ' drainage. --fluntiredni--perhapsi-wiltnot-have. time to send to buy sheets. They 'This forethought 'VIM save -'a lot -n-f will then' go tk, their'own wail_ trouble later on. ,, stocked Jinen.presses, and taking ' • There are still a lot e)f equipment necessary for the ;turning •out of some treasures, laid away in view 6 illness 4) their own a :first-class butter. - A good ehurn id e ;•t 'It is ably A quarter of a centary, *rites 'eontributor -the---Fielde- since Heligoland was an English • possession. A British lame seized --the- Waren -reekeein_ 180, detrite_egi hostilities_attitenemark, , which usecleter Own ite and such . was Ti' eliategieal iniportrineee 'that - Eng- land insisted err keeping It the end of' Of- the War. • Heligoland is pppesitethe mouths • of the Elbe' snide Weser:rivers, And is twenty-eight miles "helmet :he -near- est point on the mainland. -.There . are really two ielands, arid they are important because they, ,toramand the iappreatheer to Herat:mil and Bremen, and the • entrance .to the Kiel: Canal. - • , ' • The main island is a huge rock 'about a mile in'length some Ave herfdred yards wide witheeteed 11)1 STUDY, INTERATIONA LussoNi ,APIIII., 25. Leeson, IV. --- avid • end, Goliath. Same 17. Golden Text, Itom.d, $1. Verse etr.. And Saul clad David with his apparel -A military dress to which a sword was attached. It would seem that •Da,vid wee- almost as large as Saul. Otherwise ,SanI, • surely waolel not have put his ar- mor on the boy. David andoubt- e y •ra e .eareun And unwieldy corset -et; and .hellnet. This Was due rather' to his inexper- ience than to niiee - 39. I path/et go with these; for I • have net proved them •- David amount is to be grown it is edvis- lcap.* nothing about warriors' gar- -able to use - 4 for,qiizr tomits,. particularly' equiPment, :this quality, .- •• • of a king. Fr the moment . Darden peas-afe7.--easeee eto grow. ish pride was quickened 'as the king .They.l'ele be it iii.spring rattier than put his weapons in his hand- But the hotter months and also tlerive emir forethee ;moment...". He '.knew-, ieefell from late sown .EVen that he couldnotfight. thus weight- befate :freezing Weather is past ed ,down arid handicapped. :$° he peas niaybe sown. 'They should be put them off with the . respeetful planted from 3 to 5 inches {leen. The excuse to Saul that he had ,,not pea; is one thing that will thrive peeved, or. tried, such 'Coat. and best at a, soil that is not too eich; behnet, and sevord. , •40, Took his staff in his hand" tritge, se?eile'etenenclas'at°00,tha,.ekaee'rielaegs: --Noteto fight with, but because he SeWinge may be :made at ,-intervals 'T -aftto. 10 ds throughout the grow - if he did not iay it aside when he was ronak•10:ak hisestinge, would. tinrgo• season to obtain .i continuo.us .PEA Aislp 13t.N.N$4, • By freq., Spade. • No garden leo,complete vettheat peas and string beans. The. 'only difierence in ;the two, botanically, is that pea e aro, hatcher And a cool eeasen eropembite warmer weather is required' by the more tender hein.0 Atmospherienitrogen goes into tho making of toth, and if anY planting may follow the earlierono awl provide beans until hits in the year. The bush' beans are ,eown ilk drillsi rows being earely lees • than. inches apart. Tike planteiehould stand from -te`to 10 incheet apart in , the row. RAinsgE$ BEETS AND; OTHER ROOT ItOOT:C.ROPS. • By Prof. Spade. Root crops Are especially popelar with the smell gardener beeause no espevial shill, 15 required to grovr them. They are handy and require 'a octal' season: and a deep soil and 'ane eiewri indrille. • •• • • The principal root, erops. are the radish; beet,. carrot, turetp, `rata- -1)44e, parsnip, salsify, and- horse- radish. ,The ;of the refit depends.on: itistraightneneand syneinetiireTints it is, desirable that the gierdefor spade and loosen the Sell more than on the mere surface. The ;Small red spring radish end the longer and later one are the two best adapted to the beckyard. Theer'een be sown before= frost i$ out of the ground. They, 'can from the first planting be sown at , Vos or• from 7 to 19 days- 'supply the table through, the summer., For' " the later plantings select eeeler 7.5Pnt.At Abe..,.4arAens The lieet .SOWe Of‘''Xe STRAWOERRIES- The hacktard gardener'nlaY prepare thie year for straw- berries neXt': year. Plante 'can iron?: 'nu!' $eryniere-43,fla set, out late, to. ' the , season- On -the small geounds they are plageal ivory foot in 'rows two feet apart: ,Plantingeean be done' with • spatee trowoleir. The shonld be,placed so the bud is just above the surface. • During the first 'season the runners and, blcosoin stalks • should be removed. The see. , ond season. gives the big crop Although good plants Will pre - duce 'heavily in the' third year. Large ,groweve grow corn between the strawberry rows the first year. In the winter the bed most be cover- ed with a, straw mulch to the '-.4.--jeW-C2--,t1-elre71--eileetereeneeteer • rows and 1 • mph over the plants, help to The weight in one • F:1)°1. .aklY er69:t4Q."{1411f Vgr- be no impediment, -out rather a in aeaes are ideal. In handling the hand would balance the 'weight taller and later kinds the grtiwer: the other: ' • . • . Five smooth moues out of the will do well to practice pinching la •. . . . • brook-He'wassure of himself, but the excessive gr(Mtils-' This "."` Twosures a olra. threerger and- quicker -yield. ii-O-e_ha,--ehattaneceosiL: eieneetirrovroretwo-or-Atreee-2-The the-gfeWileg-eeason are usually, broOkenear _the scene of battle Was 61 -ea Peas. •They egn -be -Wye net bake over the s )t. t• hill of smooth. and rounded pebbles, rom to 8-:iirehes apartr-nrthe-Te'NveT a so, usr-h-econseiousirproteetek:-----:---- lhei.eny kirkl-Dairid,had-asecUmany, If the 4:11/.,p41, v-arieties are groan, freitre reds. Seeds of early, radish' doubtless-, in his mini: to-supportthe'ean-b''Irieni With • ••-• • ee, Hiseding-The• shepherds of Syria 'other. But .if the taller kinds are, ' Tnenipe are hardy and. seeds ger- were all used to the klieg. Even attempted, chicken wire betweea rairiate quickly. The • kOdItOb' left-handed Men were experts. In rows will. prove excellentesapporte large enough for table use within Jodg. O. '16 we read: "Among all The bush bean' and the pole bean six to ten. weeks eafter planting.° ' cliffeeb t l liglitei). crops and if weeds kept down while the plant i§ ' young, g� 'et-o•iils,ass-ore4,- this vegetable is one of the hardi- For carrots he -sine the 'laud do's FLOWERS. • In taking up -farming in the back yard the householder without., much more work greatly improves the appear- ance of his. plot by ehe-plant- ing of flowers, that Suit his fancy. Flowers, arranged strikingly, make but of a house a, home. They will re-. pay the grower for the atten- tion they require, 137 irePre.,v. ing the e appearance of the place. The planting of the flOwers need not be confined to /the front and side yards• gany backyard gardeners ea, close their vegetehle Plot in rectangleofRowers. - this people there were seven bun- are the common varieties, althoughRutabagas slight • dred chosen men left-handed; the former, requiring the less lee ing a dittle'more time for growt . strainer; • one separator 800 to every one could sling stones at a. bor; is 'the -more popular. As a gar- Parsnips 'take the 'fidl. growing eight . inches diameter,, 20 inches 11,900 lbs. capacity; two ereeni cans hair'e-breadth, lind not miss." den crop, bnitt • .hean$ are Used season. Salsify„ which is used for . separator; two wire handle tpream However, it the N;ouniplants of the sufficient number of eight- latter are thinned to 4 or 5 it:whoa , apart a,hardy.crop - that may. ,he • gallon.' shiPping cans to hotel bresnr ei eritil called for or delivered to the Ieft in the ground durineethe -win;- creamerY ;• tank for water and ice, ter Will result. .\\ either galvanized iron, wood lined with galvanized Won, or cement' tank in floor of dairy to hold ship- ping calla; wash,esink 20 ins: ec 30 ins... water heater with tank; One four -bottle tester complete; floor -b-roornseseruhehrushes'eand washing_ poWdee. . 00 bea-sWhe7fiekl--The 11,4 -Exitipment-suitiableT-for -the- eity Geliatle seemed. te drive him to the man's country home, where his a , use ocf, ipisoe::-rtt3e7.ntilioniotfeosiHoie,e1CtZkspotiet- jta is to keep his milk in. the best ea. fiance of Ajax in -Homer'e,'.`Iliad," possible way to supply his own' hie with eream, buttermilk, butter, 13. 831. Thy flesh', : e_S_Ii7strgalit.D.ft..imhe-e130..g_a71'. eariian 45:- I tohie to.thee "tithe name of Jehov,ah of hosts-. childlike •faith such as could be -the ifisPiration. of Ihe.Steeplietel Psalm. 46. That there _it_ik God irrelSra-e1 -A Gad 'who is worthy of Tdrael (see 1 Rings 18. 36). :_ :_ . • . 47. That Jehovah saveth not"with " A day- or so before the hatch sword and , spear -This was a eon- 0,01M•S ..illt we.give coop Whitee esh .9 victiob of the IStaelit4e4s:(6s!e71,ros_.._ 4, thorough .oteaning, d. deep, for coo ing fresh cream rom -, 41. And the inan that bare the mostly as "string" beans, the pal cooking' purposes mar, doee n10-, shield swent before him -Goliath was so heAyily- equipped that he -cookie:not-carry his _ ire plemente Of the battle: . 42. He disdained him -See Prey. •16. 18: "Pride goeth• before des- truction,' and a haughty, spirit he- fOre- a fall." 43. Ana a degse-The cleg even in Palestine is -111 esteented. 44,. I will- give thy flesh: unto the birds of the heavens, and to the • being . plucked When two-thirds grown and both pori•and'beans eat - Plant only *hen the Weather liee become Settled. A late summer •••••••••""•••-•-•••••,••• .00 .,0t, .Yng Chicks. By Tem Brownft nearest dearest; will dedicate the'in to the' ereneoessetYe A teVenty-five- gallon. and tokeep these under the best --o-eoresteloid_ dearest eueetherseom barrel churn aitight to do:' • It may conditions.. The twee as butter - fair France. s 7be Aeaereee,e. byhand,-hale a gaste making e equipment. sise-eof'sePs- , 1* * o e of the* item.s of rator, churn and cream vat to suit number of cows herci. • Fen the millOicruee the above equipment sliould'he sufficient - in' every ,The- equipment. ad- vised .are those recommended by the Dairy Divigioi ate' Ottaw-d„-e- ntometer, a set' of counter scales, Canadian Counteyrnan. iirith-the:Floekt. in. Spring. e- • sotitt•S--,that,riie. terel4lite indeed feet Abeve dew level. "lt Channel a quar•L ..tsr inilt Wide separates the UL main rode from a IittreisleVzitled Islet- or Dunen-Insel, .The, -landieg plate le at the• 'Smith:east- corher oft -he Wand, Where seedy spit called the 'tinter -land' is elated With the top of the cliffs, or Oberland, by a 'long Bight of steps and an elevaeor. There is . resi- dent poptilatioe of nearly Tour , thousand, and during the summer :months forty thousandholiday,mak- vs visit Heligoland Aor the 'bath- ing from the "dope." , The I. Gorham. occupation dates from TOO. In that year the British Atka Germari.goireenratiite Matte an ,agreenicht whieh Germany .en.. *• loged to recognize a protectorate of Great Britain Owe the islands of .0tineibar' and Pemba., and the dn. nuinonn of the Sultan of 'Witu and the adjaonts territory titi to 'Clout.' To; and Great Pritoin 'eligaged to cede.Heligoland 'to Germany. The islandswere ,fortified in the diy! of the. British 'neettpation, but. the •,Germans line greatly 'strengthen,- ed the works since they got, possee- • eion of them. They have replaced • • the' British batteries by Armed tuf- rets 'elionnting guos of heavy call- ' ber,, 'and they have epent ler:renew 411 the Harbor worlit, Heligoland is The: size most, required is 60" x . they„reneebe•ageeleto the farm equipment, it Inv be turned and -so -may -the -cream -se Red Cross Society,. 77 King Street „lot. A lever ,butter -worker Toetento;; marked needed,' and so are some wooden. .4' lirwrmalaite'14-tr TN --6 '-'11rdleg, a butter printer and aelent- ' ''"e'""'Es""'""'"; ter, packer. A- fleatinideiry ther- -There• like the -present for ,keeping the new ma.itira. "Yro- it"1-1.1-• tein and 'Proeady"- earefulti in • It t S I Ten mind. Breeding .females t4 OtAid DOt• gelen "e uPP Y. • have liberal rations of it in. their , ThonSaild Bushels as Sel?d• . feeds.. It 'may pit_gmen•xn 02.0,forgi_ If the plans 'of the. Ontario po- ol bran, an ,article • that is bow ,',peeteeent Agribulure work out priced unusually high °rot shorts) sitoOthly, 45,000 Children Will. this eqatillY Vgb• Old process oil cake Surintice be 'bending their youthful eis it splendid 'form in which to feed; energies to raising "war potatoes'," iteto the pregnant from;the sale of which a fund will 'atme'eltlsS-SlteA•Aq4igs':-toe-•he-41'.t-tl•:ebe,previtttaqei•enhtieeepeette;•pnt sheep, horses or swine. .- °tie eineteete ang.. They will then he adverttaed and wilrb each fair for the best exhibit of potatoes; and as ,e epeeial induce- ment prizes* will be. offered fer the. -three largest yields in each county., Th v department is confident that at least 50;000 bushels' 'of poeatoes will gathered in the Fall. These will he ,sent to a ,depot in the ' near- est largest eentre, the present plan being, to ship to Londoe, Toronto, Ileatiltene-Peterbeeweaact-Oftava: Ta'ai by-eithilned-,e60 nee thet-sygeny of rural school - Sometimes, however, protein.'Si at home. Good ejoee r eose,o-r .altaj,:lairs WAS istablisliell the number. of 'fah-ay:4d richiiroteiri -43y -feed- and bounds. contestants has increased by leaps The department this int; At liberally to the ewes, the egi.. 'fondles of the ease ought to be Met Year 'figures upon having well it will mean stronger frono upwards of e,450- Schools,. and fairly tied healthier drabs,. More vieoeees each entrant will be encouraged to offspeiyaeand less Mortality, _ item et least one bushel of note- Oottonioed meal is a good food tees, ter Patriotic purposes. For some time past the department, has for lambs. ,According to eopeel- Merits tarried out at Pardee Ex. been soundine leeetiment upon dee 'periment Station, one pound of cot. Prapasitien through the teachers tofi-seed meal for every eix baths is and ldbal echeol Aittboritiet, ' and s the right ration. In tbie experi- alutost witheut eideption the te- merit some lainbs‘were fed one-eixte sponse his been an enthusiaseie en• Mind, 'Whfle another lei Were eiorstition. In one little school a pound? In ettith Daudoi ColotY children lagAll°4 , 44, „ , , • tatees.! • e froth trucks' in the residential ted -one-quarter or ease the gains made were, e their radlitt'ss jte" '4!wat' 15°' The growing 6 of Potatoes 'will he Not the Saint. t; ett:ner.....4etir.don ine, mt, 1 • an added enterprise. The 2'45 01001 hut, is fairs will have 11 ' • 1 there another artist hi this buld- exhibits but every contestant, in ieneual variety <a_ ingl ' . ' ' addition' to his o her efforts, VI Artist --here' ie net. • There is b si l' ;I•i' i 11 e expecte,. to spi it 0110-ttgiltielt liOlVeVerl 0., Mall out Ae. fourth floor I o an acre to. potatoes. • The -seed who paints. • will be 'furnished In. the Depart- , milt, of•Agriculture. Which isun. No run to OW VP. derteking, throtigh the district re. Life is •not a dream, they rsay presentatives. to addickt the ehildeen. Nets no aver. • . As T rifle et break ol day, • Oft with it were, • oyell way, and :be oftering a, eine' for the best kept plot will neourage tireiri to d, their ' best., . tiiih3 set ions withoet, recourse 'file Russian COMmasider-ineChief. The Grand riuke Nicholas (writes visitor to North Berwick) has frequently played' golf there. I have heard Ole of his caddies ft - mark, "lie ism, &male o' a gowf- er ; we elinna. tale muelde notico'o' him. here." • Yet he is enthusiastic enough., wearing little else when he plays than e shirt and grey trou- sers. Owe the old plainspoken worthy who icept the ginger 'beer shanty on 'the links flew A, couple of gage in . honor' (as the duke. thought) of his prdsterte. • "it is very good of you," gratieusly said the duke, ' "to .pay me 't14 moat." "Na, na!" replied the Soot. "It's 'for you ; it's, for a- better man • tor you -.-it's for .Mr. Balfour-." Doabtlese the duke, who speak'; English welt Under. stood the drift, of this reply, whieh he took quite good-humoredly. . The highest "ambition of emee Olives is thicken roost. ' - ••••••••,, should be' placed in. theist. huge einnmer colony houses. It is wis- doM, at this time to 'separate the cockerels. twin the,pulfete, • Poultry.Notea. we t e , poultry. house a 'good eleaning, and spade up the _poultry_ yard at. scion As the, greued•caa.be worked. Sunlight.. and 'air inlatgetzradnti: ties are essential for' the health' and well-being of checks, pamp- ness-•andedtaft$ are tobe'avOiate. • • Do not. stiet your supply i and oyst'or shells. Yeer tioultty should have plenty available all the time. • ' Usually we hatch . chicks y natural process. We set our -bete' in •groups of three, in order that - one biddy May be given /flie 'week Of, mothering the entirejlatch. Fre- ' 'ently during the Itatehing period t„%hiciciies are thorbughly edested hei*Cet powder'. Mat date itg is given just -as biddy 'is- being put to business, and subSequently at least every week in order ellen not, a signeoiselelese or ,f a mite is to be found •about her. Cart of biddy -and her nest in Weepaatirea- lar saves 'trouble and' disappoint- • If you are hatching ieks under :for 'It •the ehieks• appear (lumpish, awl -in- - went later on.- their-- beetle , shinty. he ;greesed An. appliehtion of grease sheauld also be inede under the wings and Arbil-11cl the Vent. heused for this 'psi -pose... ente of. all who trust 'God. (See sprinkled•with' coarseti-, dry sid or the Boor of the' coop is thorougilly especially`e Core 1. 21, 28). .. • 48. Rail toward the 'army. -That eravel. The coop ils plated Wheie is; town -rd the battle line , of the . it is sheltered from north and 'west seu alert. expostrre. and where there is.a. warm Philistines. David did not":*ilit wind's' .for the 'giant to • apPtoaeli him.' The suddenness, as welle as the eta S. for. the Voting Chick. seeiftnest, of Da;vid's . movemetts ti" , must have taken Goliath at a great „Per the first three or four 'days isaeliantage ... „ .. , - , after • the chicks find the light of .--8-COnadteiNilniiiiimiff vitt sict 44-7--mtir-2,161'44.3 to 'keep -he him -David 'must he' struck some' warm and dry. -Abiellitelle ehoe -e mite of food is fed thein until the eed poet of „Golieth'S lieut.; Loyit.k.seea,r 1. °And when the •Philistinesesatt eie e alure'-bir441-4h-ree` diYa` eaat thate-earenefeeneeateedeati,-,they • old.. - Atelellitibitelitty- :have before, fled --In verses 4 and 23 the' wore. them • an abundance of water and used is "champion"' in our sense; fine grit' ' • ' The, 'strongest man tee here "ehainnion" me,oe ''mighty :. ,Then we begin feeding very gra- man.'', Philistine's had. As soon' as lie was dead hoer, left the , PhiliAirten a:pd.-they fled. 1. 7; Zech. 4..11). it is the expert- ; • r . • Wire Fencing and Trees. OCCASinnaliY, in running wire fen*: it is necessary to Attaeh the wires to troes. In doing this, it is bed prectice to use staptes to at - tea the wire direct]; tithe trees,' tjilts ensuring that the wire will be come overgrewn tenth imbedded in the 'Wood. Not only is the tree thereby ruined, or injured but, fitr- the?, it is impossible to remove the fenemg without cutting 'either ,the wire or the tree. , A •betteewAy. prooeting bah. the tree and the fence, in first to nail to lime tree a strip , of wood about four Indies wide and •ono ink thiek. of A length to suit theeheight of thee fence. The wire fenee cal theez.be stapled to this Strip and will en- terfere with the tree growth. . - . . ....... , • .• Sent . • • Dr. Walforil •Beclice who has gt- ready- offered two Of his •latest elee- trietil inventions to the 'British' Government -ea mine destroyer: and eubmariiii searehlight-- has Itist completed another invention, -which weeealbeeeeeneOn, that 'e -•••lien die. shell isi•Pea hean trench or amongst a regimett, the : es ,--althenrgli;perfectlyeltarenieite- -10, the '..•&neni,Vii 111.41COS. ,t;111711.-sik:r time hors de combat, making the• foe helpless long euouelt Lou the, fillies. to dish in and tette them quallY, for Or" or Nur days- A eVt0t4111 r•adi shell is powerful little raeked wheat ritel ai$ " our .ionai 104, or ont4. wok Qt. ten enough to evertenne teeet 500 teethe (liwernirient;and his ewn ser- ene* poveeed with chaff to de th clays the 'floor -of the ego') is Tiber, He bes_efiered this inventioh .;hreeeinches. Loring ,surtivi, vitgi'l'f()i. of two ortlila" 11'1114° "rit'' is liable to givz, trouble. The graite fed '-aniong the littereeneoureges scratching. Meanwhile the Aqiily of grit' is kept pp andpleiimeare taken to ,prevent the chicks from. ..geeting- 4liteWned in. *fie wat•ere Cautiously, by ,staalt additions, the •ration of the • eliititS is inereased ily the end of four weeks the eloeltej theinselves., VegetOles, geassy and a little skim milk or but- termilk, inake spleedid Additions' to the bill of fare. Until the elneks are twe inmate • sertoeint Note, beds,for an. emorgertcy hospital'.' • PtiMied 00 lire Thiene "She hesitated:a long while. ' wonder how she Axially eatne to de, eide to . •tatn-eethe matrimoniet plunge.' are peaty/ i•ahle to • find for, .0.111•11c ict4 $,„151.01 r• sisters pushed• her off. the dek,, so to speak:" old cave most be taken to keep . them i *sheltered from high . cold' winds., The, only time that a' hen e‘an stand.* draught witlifint ha.1111 id When in- the • 'market base- ., •s. • Slie--Verne'll are 111)..le TreSituree. ▪ tlihn men.. " st. ' thaVe Meer . get elothr.,9, Made t4 lot on the way to nlArket. After. his nhape, °but a ean get her eheeelticks Sht -weeks Old they , shape .mode ;to fit her clotivs.