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The Exeter Times, 1921-3-10, Page 2•,••-••••-•••--•-•••-••••-•••-••-".••••••••••-^••••• PROBLE Mg HELEN rAw Address afl communicationa for ilea department ta; The grocer who recom= mends to you Red 11.ose Tea, on NVbiClil. he malies less profit than he does on other teas; can be trusted when he re= comnlen ss,other goods. hiss. Helen Law, 53 Lyail Ave., Toronto. Th Eequiaea: It le always NV/Se to grown shabby, retains a style that e jurIgi'ng by the way some ef the cheap are much inetre severe than test condi-. be taken to furnish recreations and, Before taking up o'ther agricultur- high a -teett. It Paysto be on the formerlY. niv _ Know About Seeds. of seed used and expeet to get a nor- better wages; better distribution of RURAL LIFE AND THE YOUNG FARMER Ocamtry life must be raised out of the morpojeley. It is not enough that. • a farmer ;should be able to . niale6• molar:rya , His life Ithowlci.be ptersonel•ly ; eatisfadtery. . ' b, the amenna The new farm life will' provide for Fon, *ts Every ,varmer ought to You could eimP Y den e essonI have always wondered 'why some troal stand • Corn is eostly to, repl•ant, 'work and mkniung home; educational farmers are content to use cheap and SO 'it doesn't pay to trifle with advantages widll be ,letprearee; else_ bi - '11 b 1 I ethical and ecoeomic standpoint. If a scantY Yields usualle result, and yet, cent. Rethember that field conditions 'ated 'by up-to-date Methods"; steps 'will Finally, consider the price from im seeds. Peor stands, weedy crops and 'seed cern that f.alls ninch below 95 per g'reea 'P .P targe Y aloes° a garment that is 'hi the the eheap one never had. fashion so that the next year or twe it will not grow too mach, out of style. The garment that is a'bree.st keep to that, but buy the latest model a careful choice of fabric, color, style 6, A.D. 29. An uppei• room in Jet-- Hie WO.rds, His teaching, IIis ectample, ehtoeruiznee. cafe side. Replanting is .ahnoet al- Although the. world's immediate, need for food is. indeed serious, h. style is the mesa becoming te you, A trustworthY house, a fair price, Time and Place--TharsdaY,„ APril that sacrifice and in that redemption. yalomv.vserwkitIb srieeasateivuenrals,eiondter of and finishing, a full-length try -on, . w°1 -11d become their s-Piriteal food. His Thinking there /nigleC be something; \1171:eYessts1110:Yret:°gsteitYsIt`l'ISittlill'eate.mxtrliagP'11:.°1‘eve't ib.r°a1(1 °°1elehe'siderl}ttielle off tihIc,..epulairrtlierrinig By conipariag the quality and style possibly a slight alteration -those are . and Luke all agree tha.t A was the them new life. Connecting P In the eirperience I gained I could cite nunierous exaMples invo'ves ma Links--Nfattl:law, 'Nark; silirit would enter into them and give eel ale. • PIA Rc Pi 13. St; Matt. 26: 14-30. &Men Text - 1 Cor. 1 : 26. seed. dealers are praertering, someone tions. A cold avet spell in, early spring arnusemeentse- the social side el rural, If you have determined that a certain would lose money. /Mist be Planting t,lie,se guilty &awls, might ro,t .eeeds that germinated very Al -w111-.1 celve inole attention then very good garmeet could be bought, The Lord's Suppe el the times is the happiest choice, for less than it is worth, some one of ga.rments you can learn to judge their relative values, A good plan is to observe extremes; look first at a very low-priced garment, then at a high-priced one. The aireience in the oreality of material, in tile design, in the and in the trinfmlng will be apparent to even ea DItrained eye, The choice of fabric is import,ant and must depend upon 'various things --on whether the garment is for business or Air social wear; -whether it is to be worn in the evening, after- noon, morning or for all purposes; 1,vhether you can give it rough use; whether the color suits your complex- ion. In short, you must determine v.-hother it is the kind of fabric best suited to your needs. When you note the quality of: the taibric consider its surl'ace, its gloss, its weight, its body isn't worth Much. Have nothing to and its softness. do with him. Try to put yourself in Then theee is the outer finish of his wife'e place. Would it be fair to the garment, which includes the way th -which it has been stitched and peeesed, the kind of buttoes and. but - Lite essential things to observe w passover supper -which Jesus ate with you select a garment. His disciples on the last evening which they spent tog,ether. This WaS L. G.: What is the right way to the sacred feast held in memory of the great day of the deliverance of eat an egg? We presume You want to know about the breaking of a their fathers from Egypt (Exod. 12 - Jesus had made secret prepare - boiled egg. One should crack the top 13)* teens with a friend in Jerusalem to with the egg -spoon, and then res eat the passover in his house. He aP- move the shell with the spoon -tip and pears to have known of the plotting finger'. It is not correct to eut off of Judas to betray Him, and to have the top of an egg with a. knife. believed that Judas would melte known the place to His enemiee that . Rosalie: You say that an old lover theY inight come there in the night and seize Him. By His secret pre - has turned up in the town where you paretions the traitor's plan .for the live, but that he is married. He says time being was thwarted, and he had he has always thought more of .you to choose a later hour and another than anyone elie, and wants to meet place, you sometimes. Don't be foolish, Judas -.Sells His Master, vv. 14-16. Rosalie. A man who might have mar- _ N. 14. Judas I carhat The surname ried you ten years ago but didn't, and me.ana "man of Kerioth," a town in now makes such a proposal to you, the south of Judaea. Judas seems to her? Vivian; There are no schools here tonlioles, the cut, the position of the that conduct a correspondence course petikets and the •choice of trimmings. I! you can afford. it, buy a high- prieed g-arinent. It is high chiefly because it is well made, and it will almost always eetwear a less expen- sive garment. Then, too, a really good garment, even when it has in Eloeution. It would not seem pos- sible to acquire the art in that way. You can, of eourse, improve your speaking voice by careful reading aloud. you will send your address the calendar of an excellent 'School" will be mailed to you. Why He Failed. I was talking to a man the other clay who has farmed for fifteen years, has raised good C TOILS, and has made geed money, as people reckon in his aleighborhced. But he is doing his work as his father did 'before lime He is hi a rut, and he realizes. it. He said to sae: "I could make a better success el my farming, ina.ke more money, and '1-ve more conveniences, if I wasn't For instance •self-feede trB for my h,ogs would save me an kvar a day for extra work in the field, and my seeding and planting -could be finished sooner. My ten COWS' are just a.e.ying expen,ses. If I would put in a milking machine as I have been ad- -taieed, I could make a nice profit, be- Milee 1 could lake eare of six more epees -with less work. I have been ad- vised to drill my small arain instead al 'broadcasting it, and not doubt 1a.it it would pay me well, because of the extra yield, b-ut I have an old seeder, and hate to ser.ap It. I could get a nice thing eut of my orchand if only I would spray every year." And thus he named a dozen or more ap.preeed praetices which; if adiopted, would mean mere money from his f•arming. His wife and family could then have more comforts and 'conven- iences in their home. "Belt I en. just in a rut,'' he said. "All the people in this neighboalood are in a rut valid satisfied to stay there. Somebody ought to just 'yank us out' and etert es an the night made" ate -- Do not ce,nclude that pota.toes are too che•ap to -be worth planting this spring; by fall there may be a differ- ent story regarding their price. One of the best lormulas for feed- • ' f f 11 ,tirne tie come. Such a movement, if eh h f 1 Its mused by the • agr'cuature ceuntrY e or a L' Application. introduetion "of dangeraus weeds •sueli e arm u CSU there, 1, tell you •stame of the • h is doubtful . . . thinga which every seedman know's, . if we can imagine the d h. h 1 as thistle in teeecle of unknown gliali_tY.. an. w tic every ,aaaner oughtto - dismay which followed the annouuce- nb,nt ,,,,,,ae But, doubtless, you know of as aranY meet which Jesu made that on. f -if 1 -we-i-,e rjo--ihs-i ihe four most im_ as 1 do. Quality in seeds, like quality . s , 4..• 0 • "Exteerling arrow" is the way the Portant things to consider in buying ' in anYthin, g 'els,e, can sehieni be bought His own ditsciple,s would betray Ilim. evangelist describes it. But it was ,s,s'eLds they would be: 'at, barg'ain Prices- " that Jesus made this startlin,g asser- 2. Freedom from weed seeds and , that are free of weeds and dirt, per - It is quite possible to buy seeds not merely' to arnate them with grief .t. High germinatien or vitality, Ilion:- In tones thrilling with sorrow impurities. feet in germination, and yet it would and love He eorellit to reach the heart 3. Correctness of variety. be pooreeeenonly to use them even if f W ould that. the Master knew what dreadful plans were in this heart would be:too ease resista.nce, . You want to buy earn that is adapted they were bought or song. of the traitor- ' urely the realization 4.' Breeding for high yields and die= xnuch for Judas. Even the most 'in- nocent of the disciples were moved by ere, buy most Of your seeds for field the statement to earnest heart- anil garden. Of .eouree, there are wheat at $2.50 a bushel that wouldn't imonY to the &any that you can profitably save yield over 25 bushels to the acre on -f I assum,e that „you like most 'arm °111Y.t° a warmer climate than that - of Ontario? Or would you -want seed searching. It is a test , the rich.est land, when $3 a bushel moral quality of the eleven that not yourself, such as corn, wheat, eats, one of them enquired if it were some- pedigreed b wheathito th.chlt few of the -garden, 'Seeds. If you de a would buy would yield 30 to 40 us e s e of sueh a moral lapse. And very right ea'nwlel clhesaert' toEved7sconiveain- thetaToieTibill:litlys. occasionally °J° -ver, soy beins' and save your own the most- iinporhnt abre on good land? Gemination and lin it It i very germiThstion mid' mechanical- purity wouldn't show the have been the only one of the twelve it eras that it should be so. "In every things to watch are who was not a Galilean. He must individual there lie coiled and dorm- pur y.tmi t ar,,,n difference in these two wheats. Their have had some education and samel ant, like hibernating snakes„ evils the holue_gakhseredsseeeds8esnpropa.orri;:-S0 difference goes deeper -it is due to aptitude for business, for he acted as: that a very slight rise in temperature that all weeds are elimintated. The purity of strain. One thas been bred treasurer for the little 'company ef will wake up into poi/0110w activity.' atorage place must be favorableas disciples. He had, no doubt, expected None of us shOuld.beast our freedom fr There highreryields, the other is a scrub. to temperature and moisture, so that efr,.. blier seeds just as there great things of Jesus, and had dream- from any Tenni of sin. All wickedness vitality will not be lost. A cool, but al -se re'"er eews' ed of places of great -wealth and pow- has one root and.essence. It is selfish-- er for those who were close to Hirn.never freezing, temperature is beat,Iness, living to one's self instead of to I Now he is disappointed in his selfish, God, and this may easily pass from and dry air is much better than moist. ambition. He has given up all impel one form to another. There is no - that Jesus will niake Himself a king.lthing more foolish than, for ally one It is possible, too, that he has been 1 to indulge in, the self-eonaidence that already pilfering from the common any forni -of evil has no dan,ger for ptu-se Which he carried. hia base him. and treacherous folly he new bargains I with the chief enemies of Jesus to deliver Him up to them secretly and quietly. For that -he is paid "thirty pieces of silver," equivalent to nine- teen er twenty dollars. or the ordin- ary price of a slave. 'flat Judas had in him the possibihty of better things is evident from the Master's choice of him, from the trust reposed in him by his i'ellow disciples, and from his late and bitter repentance. The Passover, vv. 17-30. The first day of the feast. This was the fourteenth day of the Jewish. month Nisen, and seems to have leen Thursday of the Passion -week (Ekod. 12: 17-18). The Jews were, and still are, very particular to remove all leaven and leave_ned bread or cakes from their houses a.t the beginning of this day. In the afternoon the paschal -lamb was killed ( ExOd.' 12 : 6) , and in the evening the pass,over meal was eaten. -It was on this day, there- fore, that the elliseiples a*eell the question, Where? and received the ing fowls rims something like this: answei• here recorded. Jesus had kept Feed a little of everything. Feed His secret well, and neither the tra.i- enough, but not too much. Feed regia- ter Judas nor the others knew where larly. they were to eat. Luke says that He sent Peter and John. The man- to whom they were sent would be found in a certain place at a certain time and would be expecting them. Mark .and Luke tell the story more fully at this poipt. When Jesus told them to- say "My time Is at hand," He must have been thinking of the approaching crisis which He knew would, end in His be- trayal and death, but they would naturally think only of the time of the Passover mea.l. - When the even was come. Luke tells of the first words of Jesus (22: 14- 18), which Moffatt translates as -Ra- lows: -I lave longed eagerly to eat this paisever with you (before I suffer, for I tell you I will never eat the pass - Oyer again till the fulfilment of it in the reign of God." He1knew that the end of His earthly career was at hand, and that for them as vaell for Him a new order ef thin,gs was about to begin. We who cominemor- ate this last gathering of the disciples with their Master in the Lord's supper think of Him as present with es isa spiritual reality and power, sharing with nue the eommen meal. Good home made bread is the finest 'food on earth, and the wife that is 4 good bread maker is a eeJ helpmate to the bread winn.er. Bread is th4 one food that perfectly combines in itself all the, el ments that give strength to the body. Children who eat lots of go dhom mad bre. d thrive' the best -they never get sick from eating good br ad. Bread making is a simple operation.- read made in the hom with oyal Yeast Cakes pose Sti a gr4ater degree of nourish. anent, a,nd will keep fresh longer than thM made with any other. Scientists highly reconunend yeast as a food and as a corrective agent for certain 'functional disarrangements, attributed to poor blood conditions. Soak a cake of RoYal Yeast for half tm hour in a cup of luke.vmon water ,with one teaspeon ,s‘wri. Then stir well and Strain once or It WW1, -thrini h rrinelha and drink the Ilquid.' I3ETredurte wilt be obtained ts y APOWing t 40 *oak over night and rinking half an hour before breakfast, Repeat ae often as desired, Send name and addrese for fret booklet entitled Oltoyal Yeaat for' Better Health.," Gillett Company i'a'rs,ited rforottio, Cortada Ai0 tkia‘qIn ctoewto, '4 . :4;:d41 7,44tti 4%104 ,tle .k0/:•• • 4•441SW ,;"`" ° ' *v." eve:ease -04.4 ere% ere e4aMe•44- 4'Nea.,'.4ei•Z't.ler.VeettAta ••• 07/44. It is surprising how much more interest one will telie in the farm flock of poultry if one keeps records. I keep an aeebunt of all eggs se - so that I Call compare year fee r how my production per hen has increased OT decreased. My re- cord talso shows t.he chicks batched and those raised; amount of poultry, eggs sold and Costs. My recerd feat the Iasi four years follows: ' 1917: 42 hens, 4,289 eggs, 107.2 per hen. Chicks latched, 463, raised 423. Eggs sold ....... $ 52.15 Poultry Add .......... 69.60 yea One of you shall betray Me. They were amazed and grieved. With one exception they were sta.unich and loyal friends. Not one of them would have betrayed Thm, save the traitor Judas, who, with affected innoeence,--joined the rest in asking "Is it I?" The answer of Jesus was indefinite. They were all dipping, ac.conding to the custom of the time, in the common dish, and from time to time Jesus recognized and honored one or an- other by dipping a mortsel of bread in the broth and handing it to Um. In this way He „seems( to have inti- mated to Judea that He knew what Was in the traitor's heart, but the athero did not)suspect him. If they had they -would lia.rdly have let him go. ' EVeila8 it hi written. Although the •Jews ai4 not commonly, understand the prophecyof the .suffering servant ef Jehovah, .Isa. 53, as referring to Christ, yet Christ Himself eaw in it , a, prean.son( of Hie own suffering and . death. This is My bay. Jesus is, of couree, speaking in figurative lan- guage, He is comparing Himself, about to he elain, to the larel whoga --sift had besi eeten and whose broken •bokly and shed blood had been the symbol of deliverance from Egypt. So would His body be broken and His blood ailed, that He might His mission, and, bring redemp- tion 10 hull: a ni ty, and es tabl ish (4od'e leinedore in the world. By faith they averild become partakers with IIim ili Expenses • • The future of a steer is made odnur- But no .matter :.how, carefully you ing 'tam 11,r4t,. _37e,ar eo have kept your seed stocks, do not gr-c:wthY'an'a-unru•tY: it takes'Jess em' tru•st them, Every lot: -should have a to maintain that condition.' germination test rather clese to Because there was a heavy crop of planting time to make sure that they i coarse feed harvested last fall is no haven't "gene bad:" Seeds have a reason for -westing feed this winter. tricky habit of doing that. The best What is left over in the spring ea,n of them will sometimes became ahs°r1 always be used to advantage later. lutely worthless firein no apparent e. cause. On the other hand, many scads Carts eleuld be given only such am - are comma -may kept by eteetdsanen for cents of food as they will eat up several seasons without the slightest readily. Allowing them to gorge less in growing power. The main themselves is net only- expensive but thing is tio "feel their pulse" be -fore injurious as welq. laatch the colts planting them, by means of tla(e germ -1 appetite and regulate his food accord- gly. illation test. There are many kinds of gerinina- tors. Perhaps the sinr,olest, method for small seeds is to place the sample be- " tween two sthe,etts of blotting eaper, in a plate, keeping it moist and in a 'warm pl,ace. After a reatermable length of time, count the number of, seeds that do not sprout, and figure your germination percentage. Really geed seedewila 'often tea 98 'per cent. 121 orbetter. Anything over 90 per cent.will de; 80 to 90 per cent. is fair. If .•. HIDES 'NOM -FURS "With prices low, it is necessary that you _receive every cent pos- sibke -Cor what hides and skins you have. Make sure you get , same by shipping us your lot whether It is one hide or a hun- drod." - WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED WOODSTOCK.ONTARIO ESTABLISHE.0 1870 _ . .... ..ty.• • 73-87 they best under 80 per cent.,.I would - seriously consider the extra cost_ nec-' eseary to get a perfeet stend and the chances ef lasing the eretp before planting them. Of eourrsie, a good deal depends on the nature of the crop. It would not be serious if radithes, for the home garden, only germinated 60 per cent. Net ....... $ 47.88 1913: 118 hens, 15,336 eggs, 129 per hen. .• Chicks hatehed 600, raised 486. Eggs sold ..,............... $636.29 Poultry sold .... $271.56 $907.85 Expense .... .e 44425 Net. .. .....,. .-'. . . $436.60 19191 145 heree, 19,193eggs, 132.2 per hen. , Chicks hate -flea 431, raised 405. Eggs ,sold $720.94 Poultry sold • 348.91 Expe.nse • " • • •• • • • • $1,069.85 ... -655.80 Net. . . ....$ 414.05 1920: 242 hens, 32,539 eggs, 185.6 per hen. . , Chick- hatched 866 Teased 819. Eggs sold and ased Petiltne sold and used . ..... 680.71 Expense . • ... • ., $1,886.20 ... 1,285.71 Net gain each year sheruld be ereditetd with the exte'a 'pullets over size of flockthe .year lbefeee. Last year I had 2'29 extra pullets over number of hates. Nov. let, 1919. cull hens each year for better egg production. Lehip guaranteed ;strict- ly fresh eggs, in case lots to a tea roan, and getethe select price for same, shippinig nothing but infertile eggs in warm -weather. I keep very few hems through their second 'Winter and sell eackerele ats broilers at two poturotsv44iNvight; ehipping direct fa; near - chants. produce a large p4uion of the eggs vell in the fall and early wirtter when eggs are scarce and pTiCCG high. fuiaThciO7ypvimo:irttTkhoyehnerazawijzcxbooaus,a.rebwieerranf steac-teveeLl! :Each year there was "more leee feed 1 inventory en November 1 but it (lees not add a great (Leal to the total showing only abeht $160 in the tour years. MI feed grown on the fame is charged 'at market price, and all eggs and peul try used are 0---1410d at market price, Whalebone -was $10,000 a ton in the days ef stiffly -boned dress -bodices, l$SLIE No, 10-21. Vegetable,Faren,Flower, 'New Improved Strzins All tested. sure to drew Septikr Ceid/o,y itillefihnent ""'ASSMOS a Vt°114e STONZ SONS 1.1•UlTEED-.7: t` oNTARto He w a••,,•••:1-.••••••••, ' -•-•K "Use Imperial Mica Axle Grease and hniierial Eureka Harness 011." -Save your horses, your ,harness, your wagons. Imperial Mica Axe.: Grease lightens loads. It smooths the"surface of axles with a coating of mica flakes. It cushions the axles with a layer of long -wearing grease, and materially reduces friction. Use half as much as you Avould of ordinary grease. Imperial Eureka Harness Lel makes harness proof against diist, sweat and moisture. Keeps it soft and pliable. Pre- vents cracking and breaking of stitches. It pro- longs the life of harness and adds greatly to its appearance. Is easily applied and surprisingly economical. Both nye sold in convenient sizes dealers everywhere. - •.• itrittri 'LAM tailtPa ••• -4••%•:Q it is, to be effective, must be conducted: uneelfiehly, •giving 'due consideration to each and every „group -and eltasa.• that MAO tip our nation. Furthermore, it must be conduCtect along conetinetive ,lines: We' niustt, intereet ourselves with putting ,rnrai life tie a more attractiye 'and thither - plane 'rather than depreeating the reel, ' attractions of otheeseciety. 'It is up to the farmer netlovulnaftur and eollectiVely, to booist bueineSs. Agriculture must be advertised. We . need more rural literature. Very little: rural atmosphere can be diSeoverel. in popular„fietion, histories, biograph- ies ee'text -books: ,• There are very few real advantages, of the city that cannot be brought to, the raraliit, but the basic' funda- mental advantages ef free life in. God's open :country can never be, :transplanted into the city 'except -to a Very limited degree. For every ad- vantage of, .-the city- there are eorees- pon * te y thecountry. Per every' distadvantagi of the farm there are imniTnerable drawbacka , • * team The city worker gets, more- money than the farm labors-. • He likewise. spends more. The city man works fewer number Of hours than the ruralist -but `he tentsumes more time in going to and from his week. The. farmer lives out •arnong thehills and the meadows -the city man "exisita th the erowded fleshpots. The fa.rmer • gets his rent either free Or at cost - the city man pays a fee large enough to cover the profiteering of bath property owner and rental agent. The farmer may have a -crop isaaure on account of weather conditionst- but the city ch.ap often losesehas- without even a cloud or le weather eport to 'warn him of the Imeend'ing . , danger and frequently. the inivateriel empleyer is mare Sencertain er- aatie than the providential -control of the elements. :The farmer may obtain his food direct from the a.odl. In the cite° of the city dweller; the simple act of food distribution is thfinitely more complex and expensive than the basic process of production itself: Life in the country fosters indi- vidualism. The urbanite iS.merely cog in the wheel. The city real): is only one of the masses -the faeirree is received by his fellow-fiarmers oe his merits as a man. Country life makes for physical Land moral strength -the city is ',the grave- yard of our national physique. , In the final analysis, the farmer leas ' the upper bland. Agriculture it- the •meat sta.ble of all industrie2. Warts m,ey devastate, panics May bankrupt, markets may become..stagnent, but the farmer contimies to live More -or lese as usu•al. -Country life may lack seine of the zip and bustle of the metropolis, but competition for indivklutal proatigo• and advance.rne,nt is less keen in agri- culture than •in other thedragertlea. The fact that farm labor is scarce, with wages higher than ever- lasfeae,, makes it possible for the young man who is agrichlterallly inclined to start on the road toindepteniclenCe. With an equal •anwent of energy and teem:pi- . team, startintg without -edechtlesi or training, he '•can get his name an the bank direc-torate via the tagrimiturel roete quitelter• than by the eity ciffice We hear a great deal about hig-,11 wages in the city; but little is• sold con- cerning the liability aide 'of. the work- er's personal ledger. The pet balatece is the on, y bass upon which to com1- pare the incoine of the pity worker to that 'of the farmer. It id doubtful if there is a city anywhere Where a men care secure rooni rent, food anI dry. fol.' less than $17 a Week: Thus i the bare necessities 'ef.life east him at least $68 ea,eli month. T thee meet be added the .expertse of ultra fine clothing, con,t,inual effort to find ex, trenre enuAenient and the high cost o:f jant being a "geed fellow:" In the new era of,:agriculture, there will be inturnerable openings in, the line-o:e....special occupations and pro- fessions requiring a hasic knowledge of agriculture and country life steh as soi' experts, plant dryaors, health eceperts, pruning and spietyipe- ee- rie:its, :forest specialists, drainage and irrigation engineers, recreation.' streeters, market experts, etc. These conditions -and 01-,purbunii.,ies h cl oat all inducement to the young man who is Worvic, which sihr>ulfcl /lei; 1..)e paissad c.37,e-el'a'lly if he is -as Tro7-n, nd3i s, f:vrn h,:ls :Conclayneyi,tois, of n fuktr!'- cut] truya I traini ng, ilwcc aninini ot 80 W11 Wilh the grnin .1,n the op:t.ing' Iter --harvest letetuneee 10