HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-02-17, Page 2*
• -.9”,7,191.7.1771.TrIMT
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The Farm Barn --Your Factory
rowARD Dumpt..
;*
What do you went yOur barn for?
That's a tunny fpnitt9u, you $,Y.
But is it? No. Decidedly NO.
If more of us decided * lot of thole
foolish autetions beforehinal •we
would be better satisfied *ter on, but
we go, on and think we need a egre
Uhl Meg and we got it., Afto
While we wonder why in the Sam
Hill we ever got it -isn't it right?
Now, about Oda barn business. You
know you need a barn, and you have
an idea about what you want, but have
you ever gotten own and .figured
out -why you, waut all these things
•trott have planned on? °I guess so,"
:oueay, but honest, now, have tam.
*tired EVERYTHING?, Not ea
Milth, You havn't
• Big Canadian manufacturers of
barns,after twenty', years', experience
are still /earning. Bill Jones cornett
along and he says, "There's a farmer
.4:Alt neat where I live who bad his
barn burned 'alit year and he *media
ately built another -.--just the same
as he did before. Timber frame,
eievereil with wood. Well, the oth r
day lightning struck it and burn
it down. I asked him- why he didn't
build fire -proof, and he says to mop
l'never thought about it' New What
de You know about that?
• Yee," manufacturers are learning
new things every year and they're
Putting 'them into tbeir' pram if
they're geed and taking out the old
no account things ,which
t
pit a soMething you surely want to
have. You'll get ntoret vaitte out of
your manure by having it in a ,pit
where ell the chemicels can't leeelt
away. Any of the good cement cont.
Penies can give you inetructiens on
hudibrig 4 pit and the ettet le very low
--you'll eave Mort; in a year bYttlio
added value of the' manure than...the
whale thing will cost.
Perhape along dining the year when
the Work is idea youcould build
this yourselfaiadl ati so. put in a.eement.
feeding fleet in the yard,so that the
cattle will not trample the feed into the openings t1...along the
the dirt and wastelOt e.t it; The 'ran, tied in this Way fresh air chines
feed saved by feeding on a cement' la „behind the aniniels and fold air
floor Will sOon POT for • all the work leaVes the stable just above the side
and material. • .1aalls. This „avelde:drawing the' foul
Back a little way Irie, 'Were speak- air acres the mangers, where. the
-
ing about the sheltered yard for the animals would breathe • •pf. " Certain
stock, This contd. be .built with °eel emeant ef' It *Taking everything hie
to consideration, this is the Most -eco-
nomical and sanitary. ' stable t • the
farmer erect.. •
Now What Pam You
Build,.
After z•on• get ..the'tisize picked., out
; als4. there are leat stalt thaa
in the first type.
The third layout where an eta*
run erostwaye with the lawn. This
bon is wily adapted for .stack raise •
lag, because it. hi lelitteat int-PO.014W to• •
PrOPefly It Make it its: smile
tent as. is requirettfor 'a 4i4irr atabe
Thz tYPe,., when fettly *idea holds
tante a lorge minther of ;mitosis, but
it eau ,..never heanade as •satiefactory
as ..either ,of. the •ether types.-
The great beaufy Of, 4 barn with
two TWO d :stens. running lengthways
is,•that the .supporting gtrders• under
the burn .110ra can form . one Pon.'
1
flattens line 'from" end'to end, and
; every sepporting..post -will he in linet
: These ,can line -both • eroestvaya and.
lengthwayn with the. banns, and light
1•Con penetrato,-ta,•eve* pat -I.. ' • '.... - '
: Ventilation is also provided for by:
old boards you have ,around the plates
but if you have to buy new lumber,
it would hern, tick better. to buy cor-
rugated ' iron, as tt eat be erected
quiegera makes a much better leek-
iag fence - and will outlast wood'abeut twenty Years. • • • you inusttdeeide limn the most Ante
'Get n piece` of paper and lay out portal* question -the type of Wilde
yourbuilding" and show where the ing to 'rot/ •
other buildings. are... Then -4,9r• the • The old. log' bane isa thing df tho , •
next few days or Ylreelq you can figure Padexcept in new settleinents where •
any. little' ehangee you Went tio that there, is plenty- of timber, and evhefe
it ,is hard. to get out lumber. The
timber frame' barn is gradually los-
irig: its popularity, on account of the
hard work in getting suitable timbers
and on account ' of . the immense
amount of room taken, 'up inside' by
upright posts and cross timbers. Of
later' years the plank frame barn
has been very popular as all the main
you can have the b,uildingttust,'where
you want .ft and -where it is gIiii)g
to do _the most geed.
•
members an be built' up of two inch
plank and ,there afe „no cross timbers.
•aceouat of the millions of dol-
lars
let's loet by fires; eaused.by lightning
and sparks front threshing engines,
-steel has come fast very, general uee
in the buildifirof-farm batel and to- .
Strange British' Rations in Africa,
Two, British officer's of. the force inethe Camerons superintending
the phipments, of 'bananas as they are gathered ;rem the trees and pack- '
.ed off to the troops, advancing. on the .strongholds of the Germane hi the ••
"shorts" and sun helmets. . • .
• e .
Iwill be fed in Canada in ouchea tve3"
Canieraons. The pottier uniform of the British officer,in that cotintry is
•
,
%
The Farm
ta •
. • . .
• • la.neg.tneemxiteneinie ilziteeetdhee. danger of spread-•
• Samples that. ale suspected, ef eon- P
tabling vital weed seeds." will be ex- 11
amined and reported on .tree of r
Ohar6 by the Seed Branch,. Ottawa.
It. Dymond, Seed Laboratory,
Ottawa. •
Cost of Producing 'Milk:
Years go, they never figured nn sue -
light , and .ventilation helping any in
:the production of a good herd, and
here te-daythey're figuring -if there
isatt some -way that they can get
' more sunlight and more pure air into
• their st bib '
, In the old style bare, windows used - -1.1
1
to he set to the outside and the win- lj
dow lodge used for a storage, place n
for the brush and currycomb and for n
a lot of bottles. t wasn't long be-
fore the place was fall -of dirt and w
dust that get into the milk and we'd' 't
"get it" Xrorel the women folk when
''.. -sve got to the house with dirty milk,"
To day we have our storage chest
where we keep the bottles and the w
'cleaning outfits and we set the win- f
dows flush with the inside of the Nlifill 41
' SO that the dirt Can't find -a plaCe to a
settle down., a
• d
Picking Oat the Site. •
m
•
"Now, just where- ant I going to s
build that barn," you ti..y.. a
That's worth while giving a lot of k
',..••••••••••••
grain--thae-thee-old-4d •
the strongest typelenewn.
j, • 'Several hundred Of. this type of ',am
ong the mustarde.'atre wild, num:
,ithoitt "Getting. the Right Size ,
, barn. havp been erected in Ontario tard, hare's ear mustard, hall: mus-
Theboenchfierseetetliiintg, afetrh thc. site f bolas. and. Qtidehee f.,ing, .the last three tumbinig mutant
s
s o gete size .o. e ,yeats an are giving won u •sa isu worm -seed mustard; western .and
building. agured:,- Hew Meiji factIon. • Farmers'. find that they 'Can reund-seeded Commen pep-
hoW 'Malik there- expect eicips cheaper" and more kid
Cattle have .bow Marl get . lo. vier- insurance: •ratreeS;q1ulandyle, pergrassi• and the •w.allflowere: Some
• of these are, reeeigilized ainong our
raesttroubtesOine weeds' • ": • '• • j
The 'eletratera reclaim: is • rnuek of t
the clontestie•grain as possible to mix!
with -their feed grades.. :The larger
ProtiOrtiori of the remainder is ship;1
peette-thellnifed-States, bi-ft inech of ;
it finds its *ay into Pastern Canada,;
where it • mixed: With grain and.
ground up. a--rehop.•feed:
Mutt', of' the material constituting,
the screenings is of exeellent feedhig,
value,' as •shown -by ' the results of :
-f edi • --
day we, have what is praciiealry a Value of Grain Sereenin
.fi7TP1Sh'i.:.°te'rbeaill'Aiite.- the ii•L;:tlit ,..freme ‘. Durihg thp , fall 'and winter,%there
• .
Will be cleaned out of "western-groWn
tYpe, has_ no heavy solid tinihers 'but
, grain ak, the terminal elevator's at
is patta de up with two inch luniber.
Fort William 'and of,Peri---Artlittri-ma-
Steer trussee of heoaty eagle steel
terial amounting to probably 100,000
take the Place of all centre uprighte tons. These cleanitigs - consist Of
andattots timbers, givirig a. clear
:from 40 to 60 per' cent. of small and
space free.' end to end and from flcier.
-shrunken kergels of :wheat, oats, liar-
-to,- reef.. Ihis type TA -Far». -Will -hold
ley and flak. The rest is made ,up .Of
about thirty per cent. more hay or '
Lavestern-Weed4eedse-
Mild buckwheat, lamb% quartets, and
wild oats occur in largest -numbers;
1 The cost of prodUciug milk ob-
viously depends a great deal en the
milking capacity of the cows used.
Comparisen between eight' of the
,
best and eight of the peerer cows in
atiGntarie dairy record centre shows
-that •there was a aifferenee in 'prat
!per eow.„..d.....824.56„--the-eightr-Lhigh
yielding cows ,giving an • average pro -
i fit of $37.21, while the poorer cows
...returned a profit of only $12..65 per
!head. The milk in each 'cage • was
-ya. ue a . 0 per hunelfeitlicenia.
The difference would .no doubt have
been Very intret reduced had the feed-
,ing been the -same for all the' ani -
'nails: '. These that yielded the higher
profit were much better fed than the
otherea the average cost of , their
feed for the milking period being
$48.96 per head, while _the food re-
ceived by the less Profitable •aeimals
Nthe-vaitted-nt-13:33 per he -6d. -Cal-.
SUNPATS.C1f91-ffURKIII CARPETS!"
MADE IN IRELAND.
ewes
. INTERNATIONAL: LESSON,
FEBRUARY' 20.
•
Lemma VIII.-eibe Chrietian Brother-
• e.
'hood at trerueatein, Aete 4. 33 to
1,4, Golden, Text:, 1 Pot.
• One. very oliVio,es. thing needs say.
, fug 4bout this 44perirsent reore.
Ittuniim. w.es the tutforeed. outeeme
T INDOSTRY GROWS: ALSO IN,
ERERAL.0
New PIO fet geptete *of tbe gacmy'S
, Trade in War' Time
Accorded.
Ireland le no, tenger ineuricus .0i' •
• af f4fr the P4rbti'Y'•11.ter. own. things, but . °nee in a while
brotherhood atimulatedby the convic.1010 son overlooks a,,liativo achieM
to tand ahllatv,t•OhreldAlydvaTrtaZsilaveielvtaY. Inveenrrel aboawEk
•
teMporary..--- It -worked badly,- in- that-manufactum
it brought out'o theeking consequence , would eleceiVe the elect el flenstaittle
ef the weakness of hunt= nature,' lpiroutliele, aia-reepondent
'Ture-Irish carpets. are now added to.
Tureirish elgaretes• la a -bola. hicl „
for.the capture of eneintt trade in war,
time, . Costly- earaete Tan hardly, be'
reaardea _as. Wer .ladueti•y; •thel,
Donegal ,-;frietories, froxii. • Whieh the '
even within tgMilytlic fatuity life. .
Veree 32. ItadnitudeeaThe regular
wont for the runli. and Ate of the
church, " They'realizeet Paul's ideal as
ex2P2r-e$:sWeda hi Phil.
re haiglia2i2;vhat „the U41;4
received as their one fitastilm, the Turearielt epecimetm come, are eon.t
gospel of the, resurrection jzichiding quoting the instinct of ecoainny by
sheer merit.. Evert new there are
enough orders to - keep the workers
'employed; The, Sittll and beauty et.
tbo work maken -steady progress •in.
the calm highlande. The "design and:
color of the carnet Which was exhibit- `
ed at tieneheater ravished tho expert
them?
?this)nurAiveuhudtreollu;gs '710t:t tulmir [eye, and we lie • told,. cliertued an
eraer, from ail' Egyptian connoisseur
38; • Barlialiesee-The detual origin . ,
.
of this _nettle is thought to be "son Of Carpel -Manufacture. '
Nebo," -the messenger' of the gods. .• ••
the Babylonian pantheon. But no. ve`7.t e2isindanbuofuate tu.firretetiefulialilt5da-erttiluftoeuilddp.001:ti:
doubt Jews 'who- could use it wneld
Coenty Donegel aiid has giv e 1 '
always assume it to mean "spa of ment to hundreds of peasants who u
prophecy," deriving it from the (cog-- have Inherited through all the trou-
nate) word regularly used for prophet bled ages of Irish Inetory the subtle` '
in the Old Testament. The Greeit flair, for forn-i and color that distin-
equivalent here is a combination Of guns ied Thole' Celtic ancestors. The '
exhortation and (margin) consolation
Xildare carpet factory, which was re-
-encouragement is fairly'. near. It •organiaed on a commercial sole about
s the first noun in Phil. 2. 1. Son of five years ago, has sucennthed to the
as its usual meaning, like son of ocaititsoof fwtahre..g9Irtgrepoevesittaluindedexionenlasrivg:
eace, children ,of wrath di etc. It is
s.ort which finds patrons in Annerleaa! .
oteworthy that Barnabas should have
eceived fgrom the apostles this , ap- interzational hotefs. • To -day alien'
• f •
the' delineatien of Iiis life, and words
who by that -resurrection was declared
to be "Lord" (compare Rom. 1. '4).
34 Por -A, striking link; titgreat
grace" collies when brotherly hive hive
had, its perfect work, Possessors-,
.relltioneirea and the Managers of
preciative sobriquet from his gifts ft, .these personages --and- Institutions ,ata . •
iIdhletielt:ioiendAhcyts t1h4e. 1.142yewtreefinned.wthiteh falter! I cloth.
cutting their carpets according to their
Se- the •Kitdare industry Ian-, • •
rnes-the Greek counterpart of Nebel guished, but it has ' 110W gome info '
-becausehe was the chief•speaker:" ' the hands; -of the firin. which deals
Cyprus -whither he. went hack (Acts. Mose -extensively idn wirilitea,aaopacdatirpaeot:...
his .parting' from Paul. ,
155.,•301). An:ar:m_issoriolin4a:yan',htlobur,a:•.ac:tmer:..
gle of, the Irish carpet Inch:Wig in war
and will be reopene
• . ing of capital. The suaceseful strug- ..
time AS made stilLinore noteworthy. by,
mon name 'meaning "grace of jehoe
Vahe . -.• ‘, _e.. • the Tact that like.- all ether textile
• industriee, it is -.Offering front the'
' 2.. .It is not expressly.-stakd that. scarcity .of..dyes.: •
they retained ...the be lk of. the ' money •• eraiugr-in
-Vit. themodlites . but the •certain. par Irelavd.., The Woollen faetortes are
that -they offer.L1, suggests this rather humming night and day. The • only:
.
• • . shadow on the, grqwth of the muni;' •
strongly.: • . • ..
3. • Peter ---:As in the Gospel 'storx, ttilioant .sphletibpisititstutciliye bfettneir aofaertIr Ftacehliplcrualends., . ' .
outhpieae-d4ho-twelve.--,--
eve in the next -ten -Or 'fifteen ye -ars'? j Save - money ,in ,.ereetien and have
on't•forget to look 'ahead. You May [ greater satisfaction. • .•
eed, a daientor -se nioe' -stills and i The outsideofthe: barn is entirely
ow is the:'atfneato 'make the, plaeset covered with' Metal,. corrugated* iron
he b st..iya-t<do is to get in teuch being ,commonly used ,for both roof
itir *staneone who knows just howAand'.eides/though theAnetal shingle -
o- plan n Vain iiid-KtiltinheW. • 7 ; Used on many roofs. .6.t the eaves
, Meal covers all :openings,.
'Layieg 'Out the Stahles.
, ' I metat ,eoVered .doors, metal; eaela -fit
''o-exPeris put- the correef tted with . fireproof glass and metal.
kith' d a, barn •at, from .36, to. .40' ventilators* ge.' to make .tip, the \ fell
ea; '-ThiS. gives room for two rows ;metal* covering, • So that not air ineh
f .aninv4:1")111tY entaide„ wood is, exposed..
hel i. i- 'the: SUnlight.",iCaelf; etear . These barns. are fireproof from alt
croso the 2.-Oom -from. the .side 'Win- 'eatside, causes and 'when fitted With
ows. ,Iforses'ilutuld 'neVer be stabled' ,ground connections- (a copper • cable.
the same yoom with ,dairy cotirs; running fromi the camera of the barn
o two TO'ws" fOr -Jhe Or.mg 0.00 tetthe ground pre are absolutely light-
IlaYon :•need. Of CoUrse if yeu eke fling 13i061„ • •
eeping an extraflaite.'herd The Meta) •• covered .barri-the one
TO lie to .the Holy Spirit -Put in, this trea. - Irisli agricaltara. Is andbYhig
blunt: Way,. the shearers could realise rolden hours.. Natura-lly,10wever, the -T
sinaller.and more arti,stic 'home Indus- •
th,,e stapWity., Of the cunning. TeitiptT
e Ala en. u the fields .and - 'work -
tries have- suffered, .1'he Men aro at-
• teol- s\ gestu tghees, toiorieleiit 4ets'egeernUeeCiressiOtyc,l,eaviledr * stliiope '.- i'Mtin; Of the- girls • are -Making'•
munitions,.
. . . . .
„ . : •
. ". Lace Industry Suffers.
. ,
'The demand forth° minor luxuries-
-or. lite .-le declining.. with every new ' '
the• money as well. • ,
4:- Peter's wcirds-bring out the ate
selutely voluntary character of th*
communism. They ,had all embraced
it, but orly bectuastathey wimtetiAo.
Ananias had simply to say that be
•••
eulating from the standpoint of cost
of, the Milk the eight cows with the
low -yields nnade-nnly 32 .cents profit
on a hundred. Pounds' of milk, while;
the higher Yielding cows -made ,54
cents profit from an equal _alninmt of
,
pamphlet that issues iron) the. Irish,
.
had brought 'part of the money, , and 'War Savings Committee. • There is '
the gift would have beep gratefully talk----of-a----commereial Blame factory..
aedepted. But that meant taking see-. in +Dublin,' but 'the little industries; in, '
mid plate after those who had given itaieet1 glass and enamels twee fallen'. • .
their all; .for in, this community the on evil days. The lace industry, al'
widows two :mites_ out -valued one of very_ 114M...tent -affair- in rural.lrelandL2H. -
6 . lig- eiiPeiiiiienti it the -Central. -
-slioum not, however, enc4in.age the; mote of' equal value is- Contained.in Dive's two. millions; And Ananias
and Sapphira were not the liat to
Eoaahneetai Failq• last ,winter. we! This information a-nd. a ,'gyeat deal
the recently issued annual report ., covet a good Position in a ,subscrip-
feeding of screenings in Eastern.Cart=4
ada if it is going to mean the spread ! the Dairy and Celd Storage Cemmise
of tion list beyond any act of generosity
of which their left band was not to
of the western weeds whose seek are eloper of the' Department of Agricul- ,
know. It should he noted. that Pet-
. , ; ture at Ottawa. This repert, in addi-.• er's reading of the man's thought was
Pet -
contained. in it. • '
f Sp7ading Weeds. -
• thin to the Dairy and*Cold Storage was the exercise . of a most Unusual
. g u ill 0 e nee a -wrder barn, and you can al- '
• 'Danger o
a with the wide -open, spaces ipside-is
. back yard• and 'walk around; Walk range for that in your plans.- neia ,•report, con- Ina wela•recognized hunlan fatuity;
, Commissioners' acneral 1 '
. • ' the One'for the nil:sclera fernier: With ; The 'danger of spreading Weeds; tain vel appendices which'. deal modern church (and even secular)
off 'o, couple, hundred yards and taketThe Success- of the barn as.afarin this ;type of ltain he runs net risk of through the use . of feeding " • stuffs : With the work of the Aiiistent Dairy history can afford reliable parallels.
jia.solointotiki).e,Grt:11.071j331teiteio(iiinehgeairbsoouiliavieltrolielyloio:keu fsaitooAlny:yde_inPOii.indas pocanitihima 17Yeut 'clf, 70i, Jileasiiiitihhtmt‘is Aelialeisvitiot,iebeyt....ffierip.,_,; ahilie 'cuonetawiennintigy vliralii!dee.d*.Ase_fedas.rmti: 4 jolt ilieceowaaarmmissil%nern,dthcoeli"exttoernag,sioe_ndivioritmicrr: , "olLhIcrerwOrdastrnota. liedwsunroi oc,ai:tathent,Ailbutnutnatso;:
i.• stabTes-eal•tinie-and-always--give-littn-satiafa-ctio . Northern Allierta who has icep :his ete. Anuppendix ef unusual interest whose name is a byword for rag
_fs
want it and then figure eut if it will be divided up into three' divisions,, -Betiding a barn begins with plans .farm free of noxious weeds and who gives .statistics of the export and as that of Judas is for treachery,
'be hand:1-7.' /•Otti° ibthei buildiO6; You which -are. as folioWst The.. Stable -a-sO, get the right lilens. '11tere are is Making money .growing regicide pert trade in dairy' produce, whieh' ;lever "told a lie" at all. '
many' Metal companies who give barn seed, toldnie that he coUld not get a shows that. the exports :of butter in- 5. The sequel is Very easyto un,
service. Investigate thotourly and ineigliber to hileg his teeni ent-to his .creaied froln 19'47585 Ihs in 1800 •
oz• -4;i0
a,•0
ttleteat
•er
.11•90$7• -•*"41
• • deiptand: the tremendous shock an
get a barn which you • will a ways be farm in the spring to hel• p with 'his; to 2,724,013 in 1015, while during the surpriseof detection, ithere :they
:satisfied with.. ' seeding, because if he did, when her-. same period the exports of cheese in-- thought themselves perfectly safe,
. vest came he would find 'small creased from 94,264,187 lbs: to 137,- was :quite enough to cause death--
- .
• etches of *ild eats- and hall muetar 601,66i ' • .1- 'many a meitl'hits died beneath a-light-
G_S.RMANIC. BidGEST_ -P - - - - -
en his 'field - :Wherever . the liorse`
droppings fell.• • . • .• : • ,
An Ontario ,farmer *ho wanted to
take up the.Canadian• Seed Growers'
Association work get registered seed,
'Put in his best field and gave it a
dressing' of manure,. which he hauled -seasonal . migrations teke thein to detail a livery Stable where tvestere Northern leranee and Belgium return.
oats • had been. fed.. : The, result was ed abither *last year as usual, and
he. epeiled ,registered seed, and.. seemiagly urtafraid, nested, .reared
pL11.11:teLed'eAtvitwh'intilieiti, .ttliereirragyeO4nli:tiriedtheaang. 1h. inileein.than?anti
• ow... -.... er stroke. than this. And when Peter
,figures .how Allies Ildust Win ' in
the Lo -ng •Run.- • • • .sces the form,d 'this padgmenk.which
BIRDS ON THEBATTLEFIELD • . , he did not predict, it; was an easy
' • '
.has been hard hit,. and there is some
.depteesiMi In the famous centres" in,
Kerry, Cork'and Limerick. .
There is one cheerful feature in thee
outlook for Irish home industries and
It is mainly due to the 'enterprise'
and energy Of the ountry's educated
women. They have called a.iiew' in.
dustry into existenee to -redress the
balance of the old. In the notable
Irish number of the "Times", -Which
was published' on March 17, 1913, a,
witter wonclered...whit-Ifeland_--had
-never-ad:opted-the iedustryof-ter
making. aeon after the outbreak of
war„ the great millinery shops in
Dublin.: and Belfast were obliged to
diodes a large namber Of geamstrese.
eS and many .of these probably would
be destitute todatr. if a band of good
ladies-ineleding the leading suffrte'
gists-hae not &me to their heip,
Workshops for the. manufacture ,ot
-wf3:mteco-abfatuntde- dre diDublin and Belfdst. • ns- "
• of &hi are now. employed. and the ••
number- to inceetiping rapidly: For
lunately the financial results Are meat
encoereging, The industrial associla
tions, vihieh are the. barenieters of
Irish industry, say. that moist Of Mb!
new .totafaetories are selling us (pack-
ly as they can produce. One may hope •
that the toy industry is new firmly
establtshed in Ireland: • , •
• On the battle of arithmetic, "which Silo the Old Familiar • Woodland step to the intuition about Sapphire.
P " '
in thts worldr Col. Feyler, a mill- Strangely- enough,: the birds ,
tary -critic, endealrorerfo,prove to the whose is the Real Presenee that threw eAry
'Journal De- Geneve that. Germany and detail' of thee deeds into vividtrelief.
her falle.s, because of tiie eler-de- Ananias was like a murderer doing
his crime in the blackness of night,
hlight
is the only •thing ihitt never changes •Notes. : The central fact of the whole .story
creasing, number of men; .ean never
on whom- a powerful scare
hope to • einerge, victorious from the will hive his fleld
war,,•••• suddenly falls and pursuos' Iiite
"The longer the frolltri," says ,atol. Mr. Newman brought into the Seed'a tneadein. ifighlarid, 111,Kit/writ wrote
massed hi depth, the 'more rapid ' h d - • "
Feyler.• or the leas the .trpripp are Lalioretory .a. sample :of roHed Oats..
"As . ;morning was.' dawning, the
thiliegierang Of .. the war.-:-.Ge.rreank i al.-Y.8,1a gantritit te 1-2° 1,v•e°4' had eaptereta We ;heist' .to Make
lOat . her young Men, thee seine*haf:. seeds her Oitileir 94 of
contain
oldait eirtee, :Mini death .btgair? 'to iiiii`i ".,. Ontrir.'. .8thile-of -them had Ifeen. 'Zillah: dOper alai.. bitililing 'rho 'prifapet in ' . ' . . Seidler's,
them being iWild ourselyea." enore- eecure, ae. aigglog.tf.,athetici.a. arewell„ Note .61. -.4 .0.:,..11!.lah_
Widow! ,
e. grizghsd - heads... yieteryf' • tneaa:1; ed.-but...we picked 100' of them out of frontl'.s.,00Adee:ni:.hook3ineiting b.brs.!.t.03;tit; tiiiit:int„triidatoi14,14 ;Imo: oittileortow ..0,0t,fay4.;),!)ismnry Ellen Joyce,
.1 Oii.VPittg ;It:0kt the eeaett nt. her the eaniple' just as . they caine, _ and. lite
London soldioi'.
tatelAttatitatret.r. - ' . • a • . 'iniante.d them' in ..tioll-r4 ;proditeed. f4011g. ' • '.• ' ' ' • i ' .- • • '.„ . tent.) Ives litilial by atehell at the trent
e aattatItaateeta ; erfilie•atito suf4i plan : , .'.. :.•• - •1 Stecd ..aft is the- Iteitell anti wog': four in•oalits -raga, and only a. few
home'
testily. '
at a armers lub ha bought. An- oohmei.ted ini_tytejt to up,/ tredeb ",GOISI4 TOMMY." -
T ,
• the elfeaptiearaneeWthe, • •
•
'The Barn Whin Completed. •
pektlint'RE. Pro.vet: '91-1,:}1PY.;• • in .purehasing 'elevator
0,13103.10-4 .419. 7."44'47 feed, it it; essential to buy only bmTllsdastetees: end Germane lowing.pitiftil note; ' •
scrceiiings ,174,..hate,i°48fog, 11,113j: tr..,httf:.eir).xii:e.m.b.??4,0filaref4enfolu'et.teidnetihrtoepdi.,:i.d.
!' 1 To .;:he ITI'..ret, ',effort •
" 1-Vi.4.• • .1411.'"4- gnr45 c4-1"esned "sercenirigS. from , Whieh all! w'Sre brink all retilid, itritylmeattaltitihe .altayeteattra-this.. utother,-.17;w1sh
•
„ ,;:mr 477;6 , mon e ‘14 ha. 0, l'een ',qmeN"-elL mama ortatilittt-Willit arteatititiet., atto , te aaa •
ttaa.amataaterateheratatista eaythrugattiat saving-, , t • ' •. - • .rry tort gray • irrrprovq8 the palatabita one side, . peace and tranquillity; oelpromisecewit otety would follow
yr)r A • gariri • tO Ommy..
. .
• .`• wo yews* the sta. e with part 6 .t e "Poi. b 4, e
- steps when it comen to chore time. '
- --- "Hnlicrill-. 'yoting--illid---able----Eo.--gef , , i I f! 4e,1 ,t,..4. bi..f.ri j $„1 Jr j,,,,,,...of_the_feed, hut makes -At poseiblei the- 0t1re.r. b 00 sty,d and- riPalit.. ' .. mor attather; eteodtaye atJ everybody'
',:stallrk-rtinning -lengthwetya --Sind-WV out -of•-•acfkai :pr.1 Jtikrowrirr ,a1.31 frrx 'to7•oieesterry 1,he vitality or an or th 1 • Another soldier wrote; • - aid 141fr,k44,,,,
. 1
r
tav-01;1`•Imnillrr
gays you but you gruo,t running.cresitWays at one ersd,.and.the.' da'y on a firont of ?;:tO0 Liarik,10,4tain„ rindkng, ,
:noun ,
ar_ •Ailcie fro .be...,4s4,034t,any
stable divided up 140 'series_ •e41P41:f-; 1(04'9 • 11441.0-= 1.:4):6•1r4'• •
`Aare have -A: faVorlte 'irlef,eleldtkd Oral I .At,;. tirt,/,,,,.' r.r-i.v•
11,1-fif-fiertliti-.11.0fi;.i.i7iinT,I..ii.lirtiti;1.-.1iifleorte‘i)id,Ilittrirs-,';."-eill-r-s:4,10.01,:,i7:. 7,7'i* ---4--. - 3". Li;:lwitte•IjiLlt
.• "'al ('-4 lailV hPli Y3' 'th° .111.'ag ii i ' eid"et, 'l:4;14.‘ii.,09,4iIirliir*JarlY1;r.glinlan()Irf "wtitain.
• ray' ) a e
t. eat • arneeed to lament! WO old mart.. .tioiniimli, • • ,. .
jilei:reAhe Orite.,,,elak..• They •ivairt4d 'to ' piqvgite 45..4.€4., Wii$ rim. arylniendod
IS 0.' • Wei i' 10. tbrr. (10.11/01119 ' iki791;9, • b111 tor. tho _ft 4' al . foir • a. retratritable
., . .
''‘it.:'' 111°r' 1111/•1'14ri`ja 1"4"?.'.6 17. l'eJi aboottng feu : , 'lie :-1411ed a 'Oettnaii
itt feadart infli bOtf,:v : iliY . 0)/(41.Pr. i)ttie,Or WWI WA's laying a emainunien
.1124 re, '-firrild ;in; a• rraek , frosty :wow) irdin vii,i,,. 41,14 , of( h another shot Hee.
"title fir red 'Well they ti ould. turn and vv.,' :rill! ' Wfrp, : • .
Si.44;11...again. to •Chatterahetit it milli ' .
• tee-- 4„.
:f
. step you save. adds a lit.tte hit to the .paesaaee with- ths,. aeineate ttaatteatatatt. met, out .tif ,t!opl,,t;9.,t, 4:4 • • ''' • ' • •
. letlgth of or life. sA, ,e at standing rowS atiosii the building,: """'"'" P '11.:1:49'7121,1 110. 140,0 *t Car Lots as Chop 'reed,
_
o stepsa r.
.• .ttAal• • "
• . • • •
. • - • • • •
• you'l be a lot., happier.. :ton get The ,:tirst ,of those. is 1)64 adapted . r.t1.1 of Lebo ltkerrItIr:te,'r*.• .1•
i'4 trd'44.kirlIig$41 "Peraihv
youe :work .quielter,and then yap 'for a- tleirti Stable, and, is of a widt#AJ t4 h with a riopriliiionl.rg.;4pyo..0., ,clevator;;' oft tkat,:o
ean sit down' •and read. ,your, paper. . from 30 It. t 42; f be' • 000 • loie5 ottlr MVP 111.9rd '"t• efelf," t'Y • 1.04' l• • 'd t•'•
* ' " t* ' 'ng the 6ixtitir. ta, 'three Ai es Joie. • On. a 400or faiid A it,anintal ttleatttor tet 'Pott
..._ . i: f. A re? -.1r4r • -. . ••4 • . .•- rr! • • 4w, .ete. mrf,a-
'•'" gow pick out . a Weil, drained site. ideal. width. This alloi've' for all the
,. front of .400 ktioinetetx kram 4! 'with Artleir. l'ii • 'j 53(1 Ecipitre4 stetnim.:
' and lny the bUitaiit4 out Mirth 'and animate :to be .easily • fed from 140.. 400,000 trthahltatit‘ ivithoot. t...ciont,, .110%4 nt..il,nuic four elostutur:;.thiu.04n.;
eetithand -you want to got all the auneT, ceptre feed: passage . A., .4rriker can i Ing . h.ex: :pitasiat PbPUIatien, lOstat, ter will he veciearied to remota.: the
light poiteibleaiiite the stable. • Sun- 'have a Via at one, or loth end, end 450.06 eheethreelundred-and-
. 2
',light will keep. sickness away -f by • it 1 : g.. about„.0 netieth, , .- •whole kernele of grain and the . One
your, stock and if: a little .foretlieught ftlie . cadre of .1the 4tOble every .,rrt i "'Lastly, • Great It ritaia; •Oft , a free t i 4114. of bioi,loo ,i,00to wid ..„.0.1 urgor
f weed seeds. The' reniainder, Consist-
' .tvill gat.it into the stitble.you'll save a Can ,her'• re -000 with. the t' .J '. s.:;••Of yteltottitetrst:Ixtlio,s.-1i tifteetbnormica-i ,•xeed, .we.,:ds,.. ehielly.. „mid :bite and
. lot ..ot .monWinVet-er-itiary- bills' -..and iiiibie• 'Steps. i. , ,‘ • ,:, •• , • ••• , - . ' . • . 'him a Yt t
that. 'sure ii).; woith while,, - • • . . .. , • ..._ 4).• lath:al; . or n thea,r'lInited It f n wind); '7i -it. ;:avlid huekWheak ,wifl' be pelverizetl
.„ , 1 The'Seeabd type, shoW0 part of ..the • elualve 'of the colonies.", .. - ' [und. sold in- ear' lots ite- elinp• feed. filds,
*1 . Eiteilitti .thElliat, yeti -ean•Ilttvq a .stiets-•', atallg„' lengthways .of the atable' iluld' -.With 41,tesee.-flgerea•-as a :fatale, alio; material IS Meelleht feeding value.
: ing ',no `that your .steelt can get out ',f,rian.ged-itt two :rttyi?J; with tt ' central Might .be ,abte to liold out. another ' feeders' tit 'moderate prices: This feed
.I
--tiered lard,to-titt-linutiot' .tho .turid- i'tInit , erooswii'Ys'. ' Tiii cows arO ar., minters'', observer floe GermanYt. a•nti alimild be aveilable 'to* easter»
'MI iiidenittrit*.daY'S in the IVititOr One. feed: passage!••• A., °roes, paegage.• is. Yeaf; Ftenee„ .after GermanY• WOUld ,ig tiuttidatttired.apd.,301,1 by tho-upard
,! 110:.sitte....inut .ha•VO thig: Wen 4frainea, tplcited .tietir ou, out spat in front of .i. Ve. bardePt. lii„, ' belinif i.akee 10 14.1: of ornin c ototomsionors. , t 01 man.
: .14ti. that the'eattle. weal :liatte tfetaiiii ;the horge stalls and aneeters is e aoettjonlY 0 kcal% WI e usS an
a.rgatIwnrifaln ' would mat a Math' plea .ited lirteee, iiatuirice should ' be
• ...iti Mud 'after a . rain or'llitring•':vring 'stile's/. Thin 'arratigerribni,• 7tvliite he.' ,0'.;.,,,- -,er ...(..41 • pr,,viv,r r.'rkties. timt addretMed to Mi. C. L. Auethe. &met..
.. . . .
• • . thiap. • .,• . • • • • •,• , .' .„ . • . ling quite eeetirinliCal• In riPace and '. taaatat,"at ..taittt f , ( 'I, ;140114)1y ceterea intendent of GOVerhillerit Elated:ore at
. 1.,oeafo.: a plate 'for a intintite' pit 0o:saving: Miiiir -ntenti •• /Or' the. farmer, her, f,,,nt r, 49. ten, prattee hi went!, l'es.ort VVillfani. In ' time lt• : le lioPed
• that' you. will be: Ale ta.rtni the thttito i does not. prerlde ettflieleat light, and 'tout could too. nor place from '•tini that .fill of the material of good•feed-
tlif'ettrrier right; 'Ate Thig•inalitIrd the 410, eith only be arranged at one gt1.181 freirtior buyikirk,
•
, I , •
' .•
•
' • tng valee cleaned from western grain
NEW LIGAT.CUEE.
-_. •
Physicians Ate. Itetipent, Biit-Good Re-
- sults:Said ,to Be ...ertain. •
tkperlinents new light cure- ,
have been tarried but with apparent
success at ;St. Darthelemewtt
Iospl-
tal, and, although the doctors
aro catitiotie in their *eta:entente .i)w•
ing to the comparatively .viltort period '
of ithestigation they -have-found-the
pairs have produced excellent reaulte
inathe ,tr.etttlitentt 01 .ekin4Iiitaa_e_es and
rittoveirvtinalTate.*--7 pith.' of -If-p
The "Sinipson named after
its 4liscoverer, is based on the affinitY
Ittr:
Sirnnson had noted that the combus-
tion of :certain ores produced ,a light
having a eurative etfeet on the hands
of the workmen. He produced an elec.
tric aid lamp with these ores as clee:
trodes, notably tungstate ef iron and.
teolfreiti. Two kinds of rays are pro.
duced, visible and itivisible. The in-
visible aro heat ray e and nItta-Violet
rays, the latter dlffering somewhat
rom ultra -violet rays hitherto obtain.'
The Simpson Ultra -Violet' light itt'•
more intense than that given by'si
arbon are. like the Pinion lamp, It
sp in bet, Tichei in ulttaitvielet wave
1.11'llheArlY'in:tYhalellatliftotiniPiat $t Bartholo-
illeWqi Was made last July. The light
IS said t� have ptoduced molted' bene..'
ilts in the treatment of diseases of the
Mee and throat as Well an in the ease
of Ain diseases. The wiper 'from the
lamp alSo seems•, to help asthma, Al,
Carle Of obstinate ectenta Ana on ease
of lupus are reported apparently
cured. Ent it will take tirixe to nee
whether these cures are pernianetit4
s.•••••
they had picked up courage ter an,
:other try. •'Then the. eatne. -thing would
happen all over again,!'' ••• ,
And .tt ,Ineseber -Of 4110; I ;endow 1 Ion
orabte Artillery writeet, •
"luta 1)3, our. trenches there Iva
ivoods.anti. althouglx.lt.iiklatay 4.444led•-•
with shot and shell both • day an
night, you would be liurprised to Itholv
Itow,,full of life St is, ',Caere are two
or :three nightingales'that aing trient
l'ilthinglY, at least one pheasant, orm
green' woodpeeker; a tree creeper. and,
or iLourap, the nsnal thrtiehets and
hilleichirdo. •
"torn it strange that they aliould
Tlie0Se a . place like Met tit tient int
ilnt;iti is very 'comforting to hear (ho
0141 farntlJnr weedialid tioltie again,"
ifurose 'Dead Noakes Guard.
'A Coldstream Guardsman relates
that after lighting at LOOS a horse
Wen been standing for Om days be
tWeen the lines., ltilembers :of Ili
0
Guards• crawled' out 'to fetch hint and
found him unwounded standing' le.
side ,the corpse of his rider. At the
timelte refused to leave, but later the
men tried Again and suceeeded by
blindfolding hirn in leading hint aN741.Y.
0111111-TheY riay. that the codAsh
lays five thousand eggs a Year. 'Claude
--7,That'S nothing. Clara --.Nothing,
eh? I'd like CO see you do it.
0
• 44