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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-04-22, Page 6IT.1 vlr 1 r.w.11.11.4r, pr.7,:rIF "II,1477 "11 si Mad*. in Pap- oeed housee by bed r.oelved *v.i Ths exualent seed of 1014 was harvested spite of wee: conditions end, What 'feta.% Grew, thottO delivers.* keys heart delay- . An itr,„„ths,,,,don col'eluetee by ed and transportation exoeilivie eha sead•Fia•w-nei--eilowe tea &bout most seta houses have received the enrestiaa or cora axe greater put if trot all of *err coo. wavws for ananao anted° sae tract orders. ,Camitclion seed ot , sad tissnY farrSeri know what viarsty they are plans; iag Late vette/tikes are being used In districts why" they 'will not ma- ters eons you in five to the glazing of the gr&W, ‚wlie s the neosimary eoaditioa to make tweet ensilage: Boras ordinary %mil ciOril imported free* the' Oentrat aatt Southern State' it used idr seedliteit of this is of * fats varietytooth* wireitecl to Canadian eonditioas and is efiemlniureil by heating. The followleg recommended- wee tette" of con arraned in order of their seeterity, qeo Yellow Vonglelient, Sandford Or Nortil Dakota. V ,,amstoft's Early. polclen dine eeerl. crops and to stook seed Geeworeekr-erehere otresein roots width would leormal4 be wooing Vagis #01$ itOr OVIn thia Terra, trir transplanting cow Norther* *Atria*, later- e *"' maturing, beavierlialiding vierietiee 1-Aa'ullutan farmera aria girdencra maw • he planted on warm sandy should give this must/able' situation ,Ta than on noord clayey oup,, The their **haus- consideration. The plroper motoring io essentiot soil and climatic conditions in elif- hegh. quality ensilage, and t,his ferent parts of Canada,. are vexedly *honer ee earned et „tee -although favorable if not superior to 'those an increased acreage needed to a 4*Eu.r.ehte; The growing of Shelia glee the desired quontity., ff,,eerisrm, quantity for,oniuonerea has There Are Mow livmg _in cities ,neen limited in Canada by the , many men with fairedeed families menet* priceoflabor and because who have had experience itt truck few farmers had experience with framing 0.04 egur, ere part as biennial seed' crops. , A few dozen house* of good iluemmal standutg are thus in a position to 'Parry over Sufficient eupplies meet very oonaiderable put. of 191.6 require., menta The quantity of' bald root and vegetable made diet may he Pro" <Weed in Europe during the preeent yemr or the next is highly tercels, - tore. work recommit much skilled labor Of Width there. omit be & 'marked shortage for '04000' 'tuna purpo000. "European Govern- Mentalohrection of Increased food production and ',relatively high prieee lot food crops will.deubtleee decrease,' Vhe *Me 414)."?.tefl; to OMR WEAPON II WO 1•10,100/14.1, • MIIIIVB WEAPONS, DEFEAT Or SCIENCE BY PRI1 Their rae in Battle Has Overeeme Ale* Armed 444 Skilled Verees. Mich as $200 per year rental r g or few huM4red Sound shapely roots set out this spring, may give house eee emu tea an egnally gs of land valuable experience which may be ood borne with 90 acre much needed as well as reac suitable for track fanning might raegooa seed be had in the country at lower rout- . Atimulletin on field root and etable seed at and be quite Anita capable or yiehjins vzproduction may be than woeld the city occu- ti,en#3 Branch, Ottawa, free for the even larger gust returns for the h application to the Publica- patiOns.-Seed Branch, Ottawa. asking. , Recording Cow fluality. -.Experimental Farins., The rifle and' the 4e -centimetre gun have not entirely misted more primitive weapons as reports fp= the 'front constantly remind us.. The Anglo-Saxon • for instance', always Loves to woe hi* fist*. One iitelein- cident 'occurred at Conipeigne, early in the 'war. The, °farrier of the Sixth Dragoon*, hearing the eliartet sounding i -embed from the forge, leaped to and dashed at tilt1 Germane, wielding the him. now With whit*. he had been. work- ing at the anvil with terrible effect upon the, foe• 0 • Among the the iiteMbers of the Lou- Scettiall who took part their fainous. Charge at Mesioner, Pri- vate' Ore*, ' "It was in the thiek of' the charge," he explained, "when hand-to-hand fighting was at lie height, that my rifle and' bayonet were knocked from my.. 'hands. At the same moment I found 'myself hemmed in by the. enemy, three of whom eonfroiated me with bayonets fixed. ' In a fit of desperation I seized the two outermost bay:mete in my heed and forced them away from me, immediately decking arid striking at :the third 'Man With MF fists. I/0w I Managed do not know, but the ease proved success- ful, fled in a few, moments I was back " aniongst ". our •own • men, though'myhands were .too badly mit to allow' of tnY participating further in the fighting at the time." b.:1 -many dairy sections in'04044, • The. "Nviirk and-scepe 'of '..the EV; it is quite possible judging' from Perimental ruins: and Stations officiall .figures, to find a hard of have 4:Developed to such an extent' cows -producing oak at, a, teed cost that it has been. found necessary of only sixty-two cents, or less, per for the sake of convenience to de - hundred pounds, while on a, farm vete two volumes Of nearly five hun- two miles away milk costs perhaps dre4 Pages each to themain or ninety scents or more per hundred aggregate report for the Year end - for feed. And On that farm ing March 31 1914- in the first Milk costs more, may often be found velum° is Presented the reports of ,a<uue dairy requisites, such a.4 a the Director and the Divisions of pure bread dairy sire, good ensilage Chemistry, Field Husbandry and etc. Other requisitee'May be lack- Animal aushandrY• It is by a „ing, well rounded dairy judgement., study of these chronicles that an Cow quality, idea can be obtained of the vast Solid' and lasting success is at- amount of work that is being dune tabard both easier and "weer by and an appreciation arrived at of a the intelligent use of dairy reeords, resultant good. This k just ,enanmon. eenseeeteeetem In the first few pages are given ot paying cows, instead of the in. the usual comparative tables of discriminate, boarding of "just grain yielde and prices and of. live .cowee The _individual cow ot-stook for thefive years extending good promise is qpiekly and unerr- -Irani-190T to -1913; eachofvhieh; /Ilex spotted by the use of simple excepting horses and swine, show dairy records and" fed for better a decrease in the Eastern Pro - production 'at less cost; while the `vinees. since 1910. In the Western antique sonvenir, Useless as a.pro. Provinces there was a deficiene3r•tif fit' maker, is beefed because she upwards of 300,000 cattle between lacks ability to produce milk at a, the same year and 1913, but an in - reasonable cost for feed. Crease of nearly half a million The man who raises his own horses and only a slight disparity calves can take qoitic strides in in sheep, which, however, are building up a good herd, for he *hawing a tendency inVrOire- keeps. only his best tows and knows merit,- Swine increased by upwards just what he has get.' The man of 500,000. In British Columbia who sells, often sells his best cows 'the numerical, 'eha-nges were eepi- for a song (this is the plain history ParatiCiel3r. light. Naturally ranch of some world -champion cows), space is given to reports of experi,- just because he does not ° know remits at the different farms and • whet good -cow eitaliti. he has . Stations, These experitaeuts,' it, is dairy records would have informed hardly necessary • to say, cover hni. every variety of grain fruit d A matter of ten minutes, per eow vegetable production as well aft sell. Per month pent in. recording will development, crop management, put surprising,, most' illuminating cultivation of forage. plants and results before Any herd owner, in- grasses, live stock beeedieg and dicative' of great- possibilities 'at dairYing• It would be be 1431P°'siiIie . present dormant in 1115dairy.cows.-to Overlestimatimportance the tiPertenee of Write to the Dairy Division, pOt- -the information - thus' furnis'hed-'' - lug - 1/1). - --- - 1-- ' ' - - --- tawa, for samples of record forms Of course at this time when the When - they -were ordered into and start to lower your cost ei value of increase by iMproveraent *Position for the battle they were ab - milk production through selecting of production is being strenuously solutely unarmed; and when the better cow quality.---,CF,w, urged, the reports are of . special ordet came "to clia,rge" they rush- . ' Tommy 'Atkins as Boxer. Many instances are On record where Tommy; with oily his bare fists to' defend himself, has dealt out severe punishment to his armed and fully, equipped enemies. Away bad; in the Crimea -we are told of an ..exploit which is but typical of many. others. An 'advancing body of Beak% infantry, bore down upon theinteripe of Germany, in a pant - a gun battery, of. which Lieutenant ,phlet entitled fl'he Wdrld War and Miller had: charge, when he was Its End," that- has just. been issued: without any support. Que- last The huge indemnity which the round ,:was's.i.&,L. and then . bidding author believes Will be demanded his men ''Draw eWords, and by Germany when: she 'dictetes charge!" lie rode ,out. under the peace terms London after two hail of bullets straight into the en.; :years of fighting, is estimated tie emy's midst.' The 'gunnegs followed . the basis of war costs et. thirty hot - to, a Man, Some armed. tvitli swords, liards -marks to be. oustained by others with ramroda, and:one- ef Germany, Austria, and Turkey, in 2:131-b17-s'A'asIts4331,*tuitshb-Wricrh-hreelYwinig,..s°eAelnY ,tspheeePtir4P1;,r-tti:in ot:'''1-6i 10 ' \"a'r'ui 4 're - to lay inanY.a Ittitsian law ••• ' AS German at the end of the Sword' atei;..- bayonet -.- have .'had -Franeo-Prussianer'wer ;Ma e the Many rough and ready substitutes French Pay two and one-half times in' war.'-Vheir .rarr:ier hat -it -Coat t conduct the-conflictr- instance; Was. raging in, Grelt Brit- so, the writer believes, Germany ainhundrede rizetics:-Makelied 'Qin 'make. the, ewes eree,simileriy- e -roprol*,* . re The QUI Hen WI A41waye Be trOttriot th the„ Gaitte-4 Valuable Mote! liateltittg4 • It la very diffieult to vette any - tit% new upon the subject- of no. , tural incubation, but es:I have had eoesiderable personal egperienee, 1 which t means co much Teethe poultry ' •VaInet I may be able to tiring out a taw pante that will be of Kane Vitluei, I keep about two hundred foirle, and always hatch *114 Can naturally. I also use .44W/et-era widen have a capacity of over 2,000 eggs. I use the Tahlaan style of Jenne, %fleet by 20 feet in dimen- . A Oise Pereet Set Vile Cenee4)...a German Poeitlea. , ITI ilituttrat.ion , from a, Genii= paper, -has' trpecial,intereet as 'affording an instance of the painstaking care the enemy take to con- ceal' cealtheir poeitiona of importance. The locality is stated to be in the Western war theatre." in order to create a background for the. trenches ett• that paint, and to serve as a screen 'for something else , behind, IP all likelihood a batteey of big guns a Sparsely growing copse of strangling fir' trees on the spot has been artifietalle thiekened byetransplentnic lir poles and trunks bretight from. elsewhere in Ole neighborhood. -45 teeuleof the Proceee is to produce the appearance at a short distance of 4 dense, close -set wood of growing firs inter- , speried Withelarehee -Which' are natarally hare in 'winter. ,. , Wen -4y near they emerged from ,theie Shelter and, dishing at the Mexicans, pat them to ignomin- ious flight. 4. PREDICTS GERMAN VICTORY. liaiser's Ex -Minister Iteprodueee a Peace Settlement.. A pieture of Europe Europe 'coinpletely reorganized, .with Germany and her allies dominating. everything and° lorYing upon their fallen rivals' a 'tribute of from $300c1,000,000 to $37,500,000,000, is drawn. by Ru- dolph Martin, former Minister of battle' carying scythes, pruning at,the end of the present war. Ia blacksmith's hammers;`and in the inauded for the support of depend - Smith African war it was said that ents of those killed. some of the. enterprising Boers ire- The 'Writer scoensgeletrhmeanyvrfie;nienlyt provised bayonets out of breora estabeihee a handles and swords or. daggers. - French coast, in position to con - An American Instance. - trol both London' aid Parisi; 'amid possessed of an. air fleet of many 'hooks, flai s„ pick and axes and iiklAition 15 , Will he de' At, least one regiment has gone into a fierce 'action armed with thonsandk of machines and 20,000 nothing more deadly than feet *and 41rrnen' He sees gland forced to fists; endewhat is more eemeereble consent to the construction- of a einne out of it almost unscathed. It tunnel :tinder the English Channel,. was in the American Civil war, cguipPed with, four railway tracks when the Federal movement from and an automobile roadway, at • both ends of which the :Gerinair, forces are in control. • • Russia lie pictures as completely dismembered, its territory divided up ainong neighboring:powers,. 'its Potato ..111mil Bread -Making: Baking experiments to teat the 'Value Of making bread, of potato - meal mixed with *heat flour 'are new being undertaken by the United States Department or Agri- culture's- Bureau of Chemistry. This is to test the etossibilities of the potatrein the same manner as Germany. and Ainstrju, are now ad- vising .their people to do. The in- creased. cost of living throughout the -World has empliatesed the fact 'that flour.madeof other substances sions capable. of. lenitext the west third' of ‘the feF then in coop, which have been pre- t. - ; inehun- 'before *there, and the lest one • get On Will walk along the row and will almost always take the. nein) that le 'left. Where the- nests are not on the floor, 'however, teve are apt to, got 90. a, nest, leaving oolite o them vacant All eta liens should be set at one time. If they are not, the hen that gets chicks first its, eery apt to havtr comprely: to ehare her riy1,, at the atm usually' leave their eggs., • • After the chicks are *all hatched, . I 'leave them in the nett ' about, deed'bena: have partitioned° 'at twenty-four hours, reel -gig them ray settingehene ,leaving the Nogg pared -before hand. I alv(Ne, for. the fowls- that are not hatch. to have the oelya, ere ate eievetion mg, on Wenn:eel • 1 Othervrise,- rain storniS-. floe d' thite.section eet.ehout ten %ern. Last" eirramer we bade', stern): hens. More might he: set, 'but Inters at Waleathat reghttered over have. better results ortlY.ten three xnehee .011 the level.,:., 'If the, . AiT sitting. together. The nestsare,coopS had been th,elevel:1 cer- about twelve itioheit equere,,and Dina tainly evteild hew,. bad trouble. As tieeltee high, all in al•row, endeare.i'it 'wee only one etiop, euffereth built up -oil the floor. In the baittora Iollt About ten chicks old twelve 'of these X pi& earth, Making Ore hundred 'were sheet three or. that the corners axe built and four days old at that erne: The:„ the centres slightly hollowed out, coops' should he Moved often to On this foil I, mitt put about two keep them in a Sanitary condition, inches 'of fine straw, out preferred, They should oleo he as tar away, or chaff. It is well to lee Over these friar): woed piles, rubbish heaps and • meets with a volution composed of buildings as poesible, is these are seven -0001e kerosene and One- great haritera for rats, skunks, etc.' eigthe carbolic using & white, If these encentee are around, sev- wash, brush to thoroughly. disinfect -eralehicks may be taken-, before the corners . and joints,. Another 'loss. noticed. , - Plan is .U0. 'whitewash the note oteeke enjoy cultivated CultiVate4 ground tion is taken mites are very apt to °pier the eleno'p Ietletgala"lesen714sttchP'' thoroughly. Unless great precan- bring destruction to the breedinwham, they can scratch for :worm than wheat,. Or of these substances Mixed With wheat, 'might provide people, with healthful food quite as nutritious as the pure :wheat flour, and at. the time cheaper. Austrian bakers are now compel- led by .law Tte use at least 30 per 'cent. potato -meal in making their bread, Vit Bureau of Chemistry's potatoemeal. bread :has been baked with from 95 to 50-pee•cent. potato' meal, and remaining percentage wheat. - •• The most: satisfactory loaves in, eprobiaing economy and appearance were those linade with the niiiiinmin percentage allowed in Austila or less. The loaves'niade ,with inorethan 30 per cent. petato- meal,- were not so- eatiifaktoeye*, they were heavier and less- attrae, tive form. The .. bread -2 has a rat -her texture and dark ap- pe ara.nea,`-hiit distinc- tive And 'agreeable flavor. It also railing moisture for a much longer Nashvtlle brought on. the 'sanguin- ely fight of Murfreesborough. Time 14th Mississippi Regiment, . which had been isolated. from the carat') tlirOugli an -attack tif measles, tiutt given up their, weapons •to arm the coffers'depleted to the point of shoals of recruits who were pour- bankruptcy, its inensee to the Ger- , interest; It is not alone with what -termedr-aetivities of the - farm proper that they deal, but also with building, with clearing, with readlnaking, with ornament -al gar- lioete-thee;eeperte con- stitute virtually' an eecyclopediaeof farming and .its branehes brought -tip to date. • ; as has been said., Volume leeted 'his cows carefully, study -mg One is devoted,_ to. the :review by the theit,e'Veeieus. preferences -Ana eapat- Director'and'sinA- reportsofthe Lii- eiticse. each one as ao. indiViduale -Melte Of -Ohernistry,-Field Husband - let raises heifers from. hibestry and, Animal Husbandry, Volume t coea; tour two-year-oldi gave hist T*.o.'prs'erits the -tepee% Of the year an average of 7,144.-pourele ,Divisions of Horticulture, Cereals,. • Milk, while his herd of ten gave ae -Botany, Entomology, Forage a verafreot 8,039 pounds of milk elle 'Plants Poultry and Tobacco. All 2:0 pounds of fat. -that:hits-been said of the-catapleki. • The neighbot considers it simplet itess in ite•contents of the .Atat vol. give the Russiano, a hot to hay just what` cows he can, he UMOOeUr he repeated of the second. time. , dots not raise any calves. Last Its too, is a, useful'. compilation and . Russians Hotly Received Year his .nine 'cows, Ali Upwards :6f. te- sample in detail of the benefit's' MI, 111. 4,110 .1.111ZSpl assault' Oen Geke .sik Years old, except' two heifete ' to be. derived from ementefie &net le 6 the Tekke,:itro ed a the enemy with "shouts and sogitlifkatis! they acquit Raising heifer themselves that wlien the battle The records 'of two heeds of claire ws, owned by :two neighbors fee- nish a striking example of the of dairy records to the man who, really ,,Wants to build up a' good herd,: The first.manhas been Cow testing .for, four Years And IMO se- men -empire joreyer-gotte. In th process of dismemberment' he pre- dicts the orgenization Of tieW states'. -Sweden, the author believes, Will receive Finland; Germany, the Ba!-' tie . provinces and Poland; Austria will take -the entire south of -Rus„-• -sia. including' Nieff and-Odatia,; '.vas over, nearly. every time the Turkey will receive the entire CAU - regiment was found' in. possession of -cams, including the gevernment. of weaeohawhichim-hadeweettedfrom earaterre-Beissia-will have-to:retire the et:witty or borrowed -froin fal- both from the Baltic, the Bleck, amid len friend:- • " the Caspian Seas. • . In 1078 a deluge of .seteke,': etetres, -eereie-i-sete go to and boiling water. made &the - geey. Egypt te Turkey; :esea- or siatiehave cause texemenaber _Whit _arebiela_ltonmania;.provided the 'presumptuous- - war. This Tatter ante° It4e1-itli was uudeubtedly one -of -the mo was when the great Russian moire Germany, Austria and and Turkey; and 1„,, every other state 'which sienilarly 0WIt.t5Ti7tOmate'eteleimelroe4'ebuYttirhee'vToalciu4s_ joins'thisgroup will be properly re-' eiorreeteen, women andchildren-werded. probably did •not exceed tetrede eeeeee, voe,,, Dweller. -stntle. -Thy- evereeablerait :lee* 44 - - f the strangest creatureq known to science is the pholas, or -boring elem. Whee still "Very Mita ntethe animal bores into the sand - 'Pew' t'• and insects. They do the corn" no Set the 'Rena After Dark. • „ anchit affords. them pod The -nests all should be got ready shade. This eheitee, especially in day time , and after dark..the necessary for late elnaek. hees should time, placed upon these rive just as the summer days greet:. gentle. No lights should' be used, hot. . . • e end they. should he -set 'upon china . A good plan is to sow genie let. - eggs 'eggs er.enfertile incubator eggs at tetee for the chicks. Thee' seed is first. After After that She should be left' 'eeteleeteif-;.bought by the ounce " • . alone for abOUt benne theeplantseare :'altveys, Until she really gets down to bus-.. werk into the retionewell after, the tiosi. After that these eggs may be grass gets dry and 'hard... Rap li And: taken' mit 'And hatching eggs set Swiss Chard are good peen foods . under here. About nine, out of tee also, and .are -easily raised: fioad„ hens will .13*k-to the job if good,- it a -good plan' to. hopper feed- OP quiet 'Ones have been 'ehtiitef, Leg- 'chicks just stem as they are .abla - borne itedatlett. In feet; I .litve ,to eitetiateegrain. , grown .• lied the 'best luck With the Lege fowl, the young chicks will "neeer horns, asthey- ere -so much -lighter get top fee. ' that they break 'vete few eggs. ',Teach_ °resin Chiet to Ito rt experience ,been that 1' 430 , g. : 8 °"" more c.hieks from thirteen eggs um- Get the Chinks to roost- aS 'soon der Legliorns than I from fifteen. as'. "eou..eae, They. -4.'6 far :better egg's ander the heavier breeds. than when trowacci in,small -coops,. • . hang hurler... lietWeee the hetele A good plan is to use a eel() ey big Iowa -and: 'time laying --es house built on ilinnere.,.which can ••• 'they are 'Very apt to tlearroli and- beedraien-altetit from piece to place., tobreakthe --eggs. -I.-also-darken .I`luese...,leeete...be *tilt very cheaply _ the 'front of this enclosure -with ber- and thechicks are Vetter in'theite- -lani-A*1. find they arelaetter' con: than when toosting with the . ,tent elf.npt 'too' light quarters. hens. They can be moVed Itt' -this enclosure I have a -dust the Other foWls"Wheii,WinteicOntes;- j3atli. -The •,he.iis;. alSot about& be after they have made their ;full holde -took' Stone ledgas'at extreme loW water, given a thoreogh dusting with in- grewth. period' than ordinary wheat bread, seet powder before the permanent The Bureau of Chemistry eseo eggs are put 'ander them, and again. the imported' ''potato in- just belere the chicks are hatched. some experiments,. and in others I give them strew litter to, en- dMreyailrignladpoterithesbY ,a,loineinagsiinmahlliseangle4,nidn. coliraigeeecith.tehMe toh-aetellixerenigseileanisso.tor.'n• mostly, as it tee more heating food than the others, -A little green food is'iiecesSa,ry eorkeep them healthy. They ,should also be supplied -with fresh water daily, Iola $hoina have plenty of . grit in front of them; at all times, . . • . I find that In a, pen of this kind it is hot necessary' -for a heti.. to it i laboratories. should be add- ed that such," Ordintily' . "potato -flour" as: is on our Amerema mar- kets ie. not- the Sante As the Ger- man ''potato' flake'' or ‘Walzmelile which' hits given such, satisfactory .restilts in the experiments. . The question has been. raised'. as MO Whether the ordinary 'cooked 'Po - The chicks can be taught toroost by moving, the =all coops , a little " every day until they. are just ma. front of the colony house ,door. Then, if the chops are taken away, they will go into the house 'them- selees. Otherwise, you might carry. them in twenty times and still ;thee, would go heek every, night to the - -In this article I' hitte only spoken' of hatching' Mitt the eur- iroundings which go toward talc,: tato might not be satisfactorily occupy the same nest -all die time. 'which would eeme under' another cessful ratings. I have; not spoken of the feeding of the young flock, P ShOUld they all. happen to get off heeding, -By L. G. Wert, in The substituted for the prepared pota- to -Meal. The experimenters 'be- at once, some will take to the nests Canadian Countryman. ; live that it might serve the same . - - - -- . , , • . - . . 'purpose if used in just' the Same rtion but this would be diffi- cult for the to determine as there is great dan- ger of using too muell'and produc- ing a yore soggy loaf. However, the custom of adding a very little po- tato' is already used by malty _housekeepers „ to keep their :bread Moist, and this practice ean very. well be recommended' for More gen- eral use. • • gaVe- ..an average of -*lily 2,940 painstaking researel 13'1 - * `- edle As .:V•treearlit-tite-eh"".1.1441,---5YhieY- d. e • the place On a blazing -nob y, . pornds of milk. This is, only just As in the wet mg.yearscharge 'down the, es replaced:by secretions, as it 'Ts , their infantrY about one-half AS Mitch railli" per Matta% dealt with in this Volume le ace. seemed atilt lee the egreee . were ewaY. leereetrates the rock • ,c.irdNv oci,kili: the arr4 ,he'zd. The bot Are divided into sections : (ti.), Giv. ... t_. teen all at once, ,oadea wee id: to ,.aedepth of timer eight inches, cow gave. orde '4056 pam4a,.. „less ing Precise information of the wore yeeee.. A gigantic haue..toelaue and 30110 -we out its %Mao* as it -in, ers.in the first her& Ile has- noel- ' ijivislons' referred to, VI ( struggle devekped,' ire:WI-deli 'teed creases in elan- • ShaP ea- roiAghlY 'than' the everag'e .of the four, lielf--' 4,_.,t--11-4P.erinterttal:Farniii-in the !'r"" , ing on which whieh to start building, up.e. Treating of the various and (b) aorr1011;rbinoe:,'WerriPh6 of 11:681",deistiesillihnaedn' . Iriokeekib'd'wtt°11% eitg6t)Deurkiforind". .eiVee4nv° jilts in4gmeht In . "picking e whInet,D throughout the eysteire- et is ex., troops in the world 'becanie pat wished, to do to. For food, it de.. good dairy. herd, unless: it :be hie eiperimentel work Wider Way . allite- judgment, by the way, does Plained that the latter seeti4;iri is antl,pareet of.* howling screeching Pends on the aninialculee that float • net appear to be of Al - quality. devised attl &Ahmed with e., view rabble' Women fought with sticks in 404 water, which it seiezes by. ,its . •The „Avner .of fite•ficist ,htr4,haa tha to ember the retteer. tuore direttv or Elena, or threw boiling water 'long -siphon, or tetegue. Thii Violas edvantage of feur . years of -airy in the details of Ids voeetion. ' It t6enyei4trheeenTafocerteeete,Mnignetecddeattl), 16esTettreet demand pettieteheeoatt,sticio6r ireorils, ereetically indispensable is 'worth3r of *WO ditributi4n- °°0° e ' ' its meat IS very tender, end makes to the t:eat dairy farmer, besides thing certain is that the nature, of 'matured, , judgmeet in haftaling the ititorte'ntakee• them deserving ,Cowee to 'bettee aTh,:entage. ' Cow or the • dogma utteution: tC(tiipicee• tion to the Poliiieetions Branch, embrace. No one aslcol foe quarter or geve leviaatheillussiens ektelient tont): The elates are tbs. 'eventually teemed fait and liedf font lodged great- numbers from -the. the eerful scene, leaving their AAA.' ledges-4,litre erSi 'of dynateite,--e4- lery behied. Stories arid thotigle it- polio -Ade te obtain them water fixed Geke Tepe in the Buse with tePick crowbar. , ;shin memory .iii• a vete ttutorget;. , able ittehion. . • Absurd • it freest appear, ,the Most Ilemoeratic COtibtry,. , humble domestic blanket upon one razil in one respect the most. oetasiotMeeided the blue- 0E4 hat,- de oeratic of all otienteee. Bra - tic -and tied to the complete rout of eilitiet • lave prohibit the establialt.° an army. It was generettort ago, tient of any tiniversity, beeeitse when the Indienel.sse -in re. "the conferring of .aeademic die - hellion against the Government Of tinetions is contrary -to trite deeto. /dekko, and the rebels Were at,last eraey.". There are • Many institti- hrouglitlace to face with the 'Alexi. tiovkin, Brazil where medieine and can army. When the Indians ad. are.taught, and these giant vented to the 'attack they Pent in certifitates of proficieney to pupils advance, tovoring line of men who complete the course. in tt sags - carrying a, buItearlt of wet blankette feetety trimmer. But however well In vain The **Teats tried. to <Th. qualified ;he may be, coo Trazilion troy this barrier with their Ini tan legtily ayle himself it Mi. owni t country,adoclor otlawo or of /nett :I . testing pays.-ee.r,W. ' • may. he ehtaitted by making apP ma - Veld. Boot and Vegetable. Seed DePttrtment Agikulfuro$ Ot- ' • Situation. • , laWay (Mt • ' • 14 -or- three months after' the 'out. . • • .iry .'break of war much anxiety 'was felt Clteerful, thienee throughout, Vortli -Anierica as to Itotit many great. mem ka.'ve• -- upplies of' field roof and vegetable 'testi- meth; that. 'COrile PrinciPally from fled that, their whole lives' liave bee • the warring cotmtries of ttireps. influ6110M bOlte r6nlar. The field,otheeru of the. Seed Branch made 'to 111°m• th(4? 160114"°4 devoted tufeh of thio t'hitte tee, study Alld Who cannot reealf.wofda spok- „ot the pomihnittea eattfing en to liiinSelf in his childhood to „ aleph/ ee carieeltan growa egAail for *MA perhapfthe speaker attach. loin punting, re, 14;04 Wv1041)/0 fan, linportallet,'Jhut witieb sank the autiimn to4glect ioad 41166411y .41gell and joirriovobisr intb his fl( store tur biennial roots to be trans-- orh and which have. never loet planted fi4 nptiug aettt prol their. power over Make sun. d'uotion. ' light! The world at be.st. is ,tlarl;., l'ortunatel,f; the- tnedtti t 41 enough, Do, what' you .can to trat,14e got Iv; 'Amide bluthet .%vite Deno of 1913 livrto, much atiov# the it, mero ehoeyttil anti 114,PPY. tuult when the Indians were.e.47 • The 'Mosquito _Steam trawlers play an important However,. theeperiseope seine - hut little-known pa'rt in "the present 'tithes of length -about eeventeen. war. Aeebrdiug to the Army and feet -to give partial erlety t IT-4-V3T fishing vessels are fiow engaged in mine sweeping; protecting bite -"Whips-se froMehoetile, :and in Military operations against the Germans shallows of he Belgian toattr, After the Gerniate ritirletr''''Setteboreugh -end other English east -coast town it in Decem- •bee aeon' trawlers' picked up no les than 1400 fleeting melee in a Week. • The work is dangeroese for .0,1021),,,,L$Lth6 'Acirnuok rhino -it,. with their bristling eontaet. points., . ev. plocle elle nets. "Nothing ntfOrcis. how, is &is& the pulley. -. • .-Itletite:ittite-typ, the -the' 410.4 of eubeiersibfce, een. nitrigdieseei 'oil fit Iteeferetee to. the more volatile, and Waite merge petrol, are used. These mow, chance that they 3ot in a gh.o.t. power, Per undetwater`navittittioe ab what the navy ealla *tin whater,r the itetial electfie Meters, are.utiiiz. ed. The. heavier oil, engines. are useful in •thesesees where the 'light- er fuel is- unobtainable. Wheettaso. itt used, as in setae ty,pes, the hdias-of:netion on thoesittine tpeett 'of nine 'kneel, .11, 1,44'0 tnite,e; while submerged it is .15miles -et the speed of 5 knOts per hour. , THE How the- Ender Water vessel Sees , „ , „the Eueriiy. , • • . The, cominander of a submarine , observes what is going. .tae --eurfeee-heMe-ani.T--OUFfiCe-:;1013-646; , hitt when that is subitiergedcheeeee nothing. And And if .11e. Moets his ves- sel 'white using ;tit periscepe. he leaves a;wilite flake oft-tifk'' cWite-f, which, exposes, hioi-46.4lie. enemy.. • ballast tanks can , emptied of and coin air very there? being a re-- servoir tee% Cubie feet capacity constantly maintained ender high 'trees -Ur° for this pitipetse. • A Neat Reply, . In "My Varied F. C. Philips tellsan amusing story . of theeEnglistheejudge,e George Henyienuie v4lio Wrote wretched 'hind.' -onti-.7eIntasio Sir George sent a ,Iiiite,t0 a friend among the 'lawyers seated:et the barrister' table. tin' l,oat ism Not beteg able to meke-- head or , unlike be aged by. an en- tail' of "ie the friend scribbled. entyte fire',, although If the perreetipe :46inething absolutely. undeeipher. eitandei to be *tiwttY Might able uPeir a half sheet of notepaper, • CAUSe A .fatii. leak, Also time suk, and passed it tip to the judge. Sir .. mating can .Generre looked- soraewhat-annoyed. ingeruddera are Mounted when he gleneed at itj and -*flee the' e..• _._ in Pens. one tet either -side :ifore-aed. rept rose lie to friend, eft, with ordinary Vertical ria-. an& said, "What do you Mean. by er the. stern for IateratSteering, this • I. asked you te tome . and Each motor' Set drives, reversible dine Withene . • , propeller.' The' 'aecomeneelatien "Yea", said thebaetister„ 'and • t. fotiLefm_twipthrig-,offiovro is in the renliekthrie I should' 'be' exiremly, conningitower, -while the quarters' glad to'elo- see" ;; _ ' such protection against ,submar. °Utile "6'cv- ten men "en "6 In '66 inn," SW' Array end _Tavj 3eurnal,' "as' centdrat travelere retied a fleet. The ettleitarieres mast COMe close to be effettive,, earl ea rising to•the surface to tegethe seopeyehey are easily deteete y the Crawlers. Therethe tersedevelopefrom gOOf to 20horse A large fleetoftrawlers will 'Moe lake part in the .Itelgian, Coast 'op- erations,- 'Mid ebine already 'eee .theee.eThe4eriery gun forward', another aft,, and two, Abeam, • The . weapone are tiniekefirete of 0*i-- paretively calibre, but the • bole, ,•oeiling. Anse in. „; under the lee - the ;geed dutiett. tied inereme ing the general volume .9f•ilte, help. to prevent efionit$101,a,ifront taieing a bast alorie the eta reekiete $ipecialo arrangements have- 'been made. to *wears an adequate atiOn of the interiors °Of the boats. 'Mentally Lazy, It-iereften-4ntirely the fault ' ol parents„thaelheir ions and dietgle • tors grow aft mentally lazy. They begin irt their bittiYhood to -hot for them,, to be responsible-ras, of course, they 'Witte -hut After baby: hood, 40 past, the paeents tentititio toeshoulder. all reeponsibility ly being too fret with advice, "Wh t shall I do, father?" asks the buy -of sixteen regarding Sante • iinpprtant matter. Nov it is much easier for the father to reply 441>o- thus" Anti An, my son,'' than to .spend 41,‘_half- hourt, an hour,, or perhaps aterieus day e and nights in Ihiekieg (int how -lie shall give ibis sun -1,,ntd" that will make the :ah reaaoh things for himself d for his own • goo(. • a direct target of•the bert raonttors, During surface operations the air . 4. a 4, and erasers." • isi•drawn in) Nora outside, When „ 001 Borrower, travelling submerged,. tha heated The borrower at the 'pllonot.' ' Much More. important,OittliopPhore 0f' -the ongtot and the this you, It-tia, pretty well. ` oldiaied tit* o the erew is drawn May.) 'Miller; I've gut half a, doze: -m, you f4r6 the press e t, e terouge tenteatorS which MAAS hocits ,of yours that you let MCI talt.'C'. tt3cnit for the college -filrls' play lt.through." ;various filtering, oxy. jast,r,pring, I wish you'd stop for 'Yee, /sni gettieg out some of the hl guff." gylnielittinitg iaanrdel-4.4;t°rtnileitd14 ite17,111x 4,0;78 ttYrill you j)tYo brAinug(1' otvileY; "What you. working ,,04,.,,the ectst and is tilt to be iliFeethed hgain, • telt of Plutarch and that eerie edi, of cbaracteral" • VariOus tefetY attltlianees. Ar6 At^ tin of Pepyi and your Preneh '''•fiatit, of chariteterg *Xo, no. ted to prevent the, eessel aionary4,' If 'l'.._ ,.i at liome You Nobodf edmo for t'l'at• .1149 .!8 the plactd hors de combat eithee eau leave tliem tumid. YePI, list of Pacironst:308.). hostile tire actident.:, Tbe weter , that's all. 400dby." ee-eeeeett