HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-7-7, Page 6Re d. Raspberry Culture.
Rod raeeberries are Tyroanced
wood. -v,e..V.Qh grows daring the
rrerelor,e year. Right after harvest
the cd canen should lie pruned out to
41"..,-ve the TIOW Ced a (titmice to de-
volep to better advantage. The Old
weed litho- •• s '• rst- awl tem cheese the averagefarmer. thinks
ixm"
gees diseases ae,d Ehe,vid be ,be,rned mediatety ef as elaborate factory With p.ennted togethfi er will be aPt to eavent a variety of food. There is a
e • 1, ,ct z I i Tiger rf •
to deet.eey them. Raspberry patches hige-Piece•a egtep, cm, St ch 1 'and Ills may ca -e erious b emr..hes cla ...enota ceding- them and find-,
,re, stante‘itree- beceuse eane reent although' lt mitleesi the work theft will injure the sale of the birds ing col,leetion of partially stunted
anthe'eenose er cane bo -ere ob.. easier is not essential. Experimental 1oa 1Yreedells. TheY can be allowed to births to go into ti e breedine, pee-
p, 0 6
traf'h a start. t It loays to control thr...,se work has shown that as good run wtlth a few inatan'.e liens end one next sering
mar. Itow vnith ie. product Con-
verted itiOo reedy cash?' 'Several
Means to tern skiinitii,:as I*0 ash
have beet tried hitt as, yet trcue „seem
,to corr.:0.0re with -the manufateture
some: form, of skint-mlik„ ellees•e.
- At the intention of manufactirring,
e,31.Waea tCrk'et 'aTO. 'EtaVE 'a brae:a
eequire felly •;rineli, attention
ae pellets as these males Mvcsrt also
make a 'steady, vigorous g-eowtli
they are -to „be the kind. of birds sult‘
able. Or Co,ciretele sireeld
e`c.'Otre..\, hot it sbeeriti cotaitinetel
. with lb-o,illrett'itate, 'talk al.74''15"110t
1;1",,rety {a be
ad, A.' .1.rty lattrh • c'entainline,
, :
large .qtra•ntl•ties. will to useful in pro-
, ,
:noting rt:pirl: growth, vrienne 'pone
and beef feettap.ere el Special -and
JULY 19.
verY ,111"%ce.Fil•nry,•-.. when there As net an Saul the Pilarisee, Acts 7; 54; 8: 3; ; 4 26: ,405, 9 10"
alitenternre, of, soar. new. ,.. errn Neal- Golden Tex.-- 1 Tim. 15
in:IPortant 1YDol'are comt etin Links—The T :wish se•dr. them. the ward. a life, the
story a 2- ague l'01.1"4.1";!:ar l'aVC 1.i.f.kci,
-death and tresurre,ctione The
was ritot. extinettiShed, ,but stirred and,
. .
epreaa intO a great, and evidelimg
flhrne 22: 3, 4. Zealous toward GeldIt
Wee Saran the steps, _of the eaStle: of
Ante nitt in TertisaleM, after he had
ben.; reseu.ed
Watild haVe taken 'his' lifee-thatl'Paill
spoke. these -wards. Ito give-s,„.his
'Seenteis' credit for being '4tztalptig t to,
e.nd were:victorious. indeward ,aost,,' -z•0,1,1)Qui§ for, th.et-J0Wl•Ph.
pecidence cit• fdrelign • power's, -1',VitS net beer, before
enough" for the zealtena defenriers , of, he .believect•in Oh-1,1st,, ree.alDS' hie
dowtisli law and, religion, and :they '6-tudentedays, and fhl's Mistaken teal;
eaor. found themselves ht cenfliet with and then tabs the story, the ainazing
• " - • • • • • ^ •
the new kirge of their awn eh:peeing:, ,story, his, poi -Ives -mon
As goad a Place an any man ever Two.parties .arose among,the patriots, 26: 4, After the Igtrilitest ;sect:
feend for praying for a geed lute-- the 4'4 ne standing for the Icing enrd The Pharisees were undfoubte,dly, very
b X • re • '
vest is „down ,on the knioos between eo,netituted autlioTityethe., other More 5141,0 OA, very nar :IN in • .1C rimer -
the /lbws tef gag. -den eteff,• zealous for rellgion.„ `The latter re, Pretation of religious duty, ter:put
culled frequentlY atter theY have a range deficient gmen ',of the, Pharisees to wbeca. Paul bee
reached the ,bretiler age ‹. I feed It tweet, be longed tad its origin in the second
ingsihotiki be COritineed' ration, .$4, aped the, 'growing, century, before Ohriste, ,he onposie
tth,e spawn., euti'l the birds relnalnitrtP ,is geed.for thtf: ea:tkerels and. tiOn 04 the Part .ef rnanyi . Who,. Weee
;eta ale g'-octd .entough fa° head breeding 4-ast bocee,se .are tcx ere,. strongly atta,oAtt to the
pens either on the home farm or tit deee eer,, ea ire-ron way they faith and law, to the, introduction
the hands of other Porultainen' ehould - r ti
It Is best not to isolate the coelrer-, coeliere7,,,e1.1,8!eperl\e'Yt 01111 glh. Gr T-114 'grew
en,tirely from the .mature hens or nations, There jo, little danger tineerver-
ntel"te'", A laree' flock el cockerels' leading gr owili--',,belcerels if they are 'c'cirjfKletf
armieS of the Greelc hines of Syria,
of GI eek d'.as reliedoil and
troubles as much as Persible bY results eam Obtained on the farm, en- more eoelt birds. The old etick
wil
with. the eon:tent available, as can keep down the fighting instincts of the
ebtained in the modern cheese 'fae- cockerels and they wi.il be more sob -
tory. The main reason for the good dued in disposition and more satifs,-
reliable product of the eheese factory factory as bi-eeders when they are
ds tlie extreme eare that as eximicised placed •wilth hens tie pullets in tlie
In ell eporatiorne. Ia. other words, the spring'. tIowever, a large flock of
human elem,ent is the controlling eackerels should not be perniltted to
toe dirt the production of good CT in,- range with, pullets whieh are -being
lerior cheese. developed ran/Idly as egg produce.To.
Although sone cheddar CT Can- These young males are rough around
adieu theese made from etkina-,mtak the feed hoppers and it le had fee, the
Cockerels need a balanced, ration.
They must have the kind 4:xf food
-whiCh produces bone and muscle as
well as fat. The poultryman wishes
his Cockerels to attain size in order
that they may transmit that eharac-
terifstie to their offspring. The large
quantity of feathers which the 'bird
grows need the material fin, a balanced
ration that the feathering process
will proceed rapidly Corn should not
•
be fed exclusively to the breeding
culture and the desteuction of die-
eaod and peste-tirlden canes.
gene blight eauses the fruiting
canes to wilt and (lie. It often oceurs
jetit before lietrvest time when there
are goettl proseects •i'f a crop. Such
cranes must be out off a`iese to the
ground and burned. We have 'seen
spreed half way down a
row, reod kill .crecry• fruiting ,cane. Antdis -
tilY) remainder of the row would bo
healthy and produce a heavy yield etf it is best ut.illized in the production of
fruit. The corat`,:ech .‘A this desease, its either the cottage cheese or the so-
called pimento cheese.
Iri t,he home manufacture ef cot-
tage Cheese the ele.an, wholesome
skim -milk its placed M sterile eontatin.
ers and remeved to a warm place, one
about seventy-two deg. F., and left
there until it is well curdled. It usu-
ally requires- a'bout fort,y-eight hours
for the milk to become -well curdled.
When the milk is well' curdled it is
broken up into small pieces ()T uni-
form size. The broken curd is t.ben.
placed on the stave and brought up to
about ninety deg. F. This heating
process should be very slow, f.,,aking
from thirty to forty minutes. When
the desired point, ninety degrees F.,
is reached the temperature is kept
constant until the whey appears eletarr.
;It requires about fifteen minutes far
the labey ,separate fr10111. the curd.
noe: fully understood and it 'makes ex-
ionnlve red raepbcrry groviing- rather
Anthracnose souses grayish spots
with purple margins near the base el
mace.. It is a eoremon trouble but we
have int seen it -appear as often as
cane Ir."right. Three applicatiom oaf
Illare-srulphrur have proven to be of
some vaine contrelling anthraenose.
A rnixture of two and a half gallons
of littneeruiphur to fifty gallons of
v,Tater is used when the leaves s-bart.
A mixture of one and- a quarter gal -
In fifty can he applied: when the
slitetotts are five or six inches thigh.
The suane is used again More Nos-
e:el Crel time.
About mune the female cane horar
inny purature raspberry Canoe near
the tips, and lay eggs in the ineastons. , , _
The little worms that hatoh burrow when. t'ne 'seParaticn` is e°1111V`the
down inlk) the Pith and cause the cense sv'heY "is wIthdl'awn and ''';11fe" curd
erc„. when infeeted,cmos placed in muslin seeks and allowed to
drain. The curd, when thoroughly
_drained, is salted at the rate of one
pound of salt ta one hundred pounds
of curd. If a better quality of product
Ls desired, cream should -be added to
the drained, curd at the rate of one
ounce to each pound of curd. This,
nii_abutre it then salted at the same
rate as the plain cheese.
The product, cottage cheese, is then
placed in own° manufactured con-
tainers or anouldedr into balls weigh -
beg cne pound and wra.eped in oiled
earper. In this form cottage Cheese
finds a ready market in practically all
g-raceries and meat markets at from
ten to fifteen cents per pound. At this
figure the utartulaeture -of . cottage
"cheese is profitable.
Another way of utilizing tbe skim -
rank profitably is to make creiam pi-
mento cheese. This cheese requires
-some nanufactueed peoducta such as
rennet ard orrtificial cheese coloring,
in its making. To make this variety
of Cheese, take about thirty pounds
of skini-milk---ears must be exercised.
to m•ake sure that the TM:1k is clean;
if any doubt exists it is best to pas-
teurize ,the milk—and bring it to a
tempera,ture about seventy-two de-
grees F. Add about half a pint of
dean sour milk and mix it "in thor-
oughly. Next take two cubic ce.sitri-
meters of cheese color endi mix it in
thoroughly. After the color has been
avixecl in, add ,one c. of rennet and
mix it in well. Allow the whole mix-
ture to coagulate overnight; the fol-
lowing anorning turn the coagulated
mixture in -to musan s and allow
it to drain When the turd has drain-
ed sufficiently, turn: it out of the
socks irnto a pan an cl mix with salt
arnel pepper to suit the -baste. One
small' can, of pimentos should then be
ground fine and mixed into the cheese.
This operation completes the prodaet.
It can then be placed in euitable con-
tainers ox sold by the,laulk. This vax-
iet3r of cheese is more profitable than
'cottage cheese as it hrlegs leom thirty
to forty cents per pound.
The ere= pimento cheese will keep
a long time even though it is not
placed on ice. However, both brands
of eheeie are much better if used) im-
rnedia.tely er at least as soon as they
Ate thortugt.lyegedoded,
-
it Occurs Every Day.
"Were you trying to -c,a,tch that train
str?" lie asked pompously.
The panting weula-be passenger
eyed him balefully for a second before.
he hissed in reply: "Oh, no; I merely
wanted to chase it nut of tile station."
eat: to wilt the tips centaining the
v emes sfhould be r.;ppettl toff end burn-
ed. The prerr.at burning of the. old
frkea after the fruiting season is oleo
et %rite def3troying the pest. Thema
ere several other insects and fungous
fisoases which slightly injure red,
raspberries but the above are the only
onos that have caused. us losses. It
seeme as if considerable more scien-
tific, ineestigation of raspberry insects
aril diseases will be necessary before
the production of herri. on a large
eaale vrill be attempted by the aver-
age farmer.
Red -Iasi:be-Ay canes wed grow
Vfi y Ork liCh Soil and they must be
tut back to a height of about five feet,
or ezieperted by a wire stretched be-
tween two aosta. IT they are not cut
lack they will produce heavier crop
for a slice -b time, but when they are
mined back the fruiting period ex-
brenas over a longer period. The
rarkers that grow between the rows
should be taken out cr the pat& will
aeon he a tangle of growth and the
frail very difficult to harvest.
VVIien red raspberries are grown in
hille all but about etix of the most
aturda cranes axe pruned out. If too
ma.rty came are Teft apt to result
a growth of spindly canes the next
yeae. and the fruit may be and
tacking in quallity. semetignes seems
kke a waste to take out any- of the
thick 'healthy canes capable of fruit-
ing the next year, but experience
proves that the crop does not pay as
well when this pruning is neglected
If the pruning is all clone in the
fall it saves work during the spring,
Er:It even them it pays to go through
the patch in the spring and note il any
of the canes are broken down er d-e-
eeased. If these are found they rnuert
%rery promptly be removed endt burn-
ed. If the canon are not headed back
ha the fell or properly supported,
reeny ef them may be broken dorwm.
by tretowe and heavy winds. In OUT
experience rabbits will not injuxe
rzepherry canes bat they are very
greedy for blackberry eames during
the winter and will often do severe
tury to therm.
Ainong the ea.,...tellies af red rasp-
Lo.rtnes tine Curteieertv meets
moot fever. The canes grow tall and
vigoroure ,arkd proiduce abundant crops
of large red 'berries. They are excel-
lent in flavor when eaten fresh arid
111Hake the, finest el jams for 'Winter.
POT the commercial berry patch it al
hard to beat and for this reason WO
would reconimepci it in prefererice to
all other varietiee.
The home berry patchrie of greater
value to the farmer. nvat eerne
drisi needed, on the farmer's table
-at all seasons, We know ef flew' crops
pf fruit that Can be produced quicker
:04 with mere pleattre than red raeP''
fhereiee. They are se expensive tho
roarket that a farmer will aeldern feel
fibile to buy thorn for icapnin* Anid
:Ito quality of the boxes whieb have
,a0en joetleel during trartspartatiforn le
#ovex equal. to tho holvo-To*K.1
sTberVicts 41,1114 10Pel4M' or breoldalst
t11:9
eiy7t04'‘' eVents their use,
alto Ow ,PaY,
MOM', 118)0,/ .f;n, 'the cheat
Ittrtwil 6'; 326rOdgct only it to be
to talaee hew', Rine, make$
tir,c, agent teed for tobese ananals but
fst does net la actual eash to the
Clovers are .ourr best -soil builders,
They enrich. the eoil while _getting a
lVvisog,tfrore
F.1011110 ',caws are not too ina.ny for
Ole werage farm—a hanthisaw 'for
,fino 'werik, one fon rough jobs, a good
buellt.-saw, and a saw for ‚big If
tho big logS are Many, add a, buzz -
Saw( to the list and make the number
five,
isa mating POlaalfttulie in the bairn
animals, an attraCtive plan
to trSe.the heavy woVen Wire Mann,.
factured for reinforcement Concrete
Work, ' The wire is Strong enough' for
alltpurpoSeS, and the fOrpen, toloMry ef-
fect ereatesi in, the barn is liked
by those Vine haVe installed it. Ti'
. teived the,,,nanite of; .Phaniseest, or SePr''-bonn• 111P'341' ver ilesithi41
e prevent plants from drying dos'- thenteelyesi evert frau: the ecymnrou viol:411p, anthS.a.terifiee,flan cSabbath
•
aratiets, beeitnie the:y. elms; to hoki, ef of arti: and ritual,. upon. everT .. eature
_ . . , . „
ing a dk-ourgat,. cover ths. ground rin= -people,. govingemere :strict, ebserrvatice, keeping, and, tithe paying, 't10,T6e4,;"
Mediately around them with lawn to allthe "detroitle:and,reqtrirement,s.. a ing. the _law andformai, parifie4lonSsr
clippings.. 'These thould be remetved the law, The 'Seribtes-,were, theirlaw-, and PPP ef wou:dg, and' lohraseee. In alll
at'llsgait in: °Wet to allow the dew, er YE -r$ 41'0 .4.*her,P''', aAct.:01.3..!t4IPPA-gm0 these..E#16t:431)'S:'erTialliePa:' Patilhad bele4'
numbers, .ho,W,evere w,-..eret never. very that salvatien and it ght-liVing did ncirbt
giemaid. ' ' ' '' ., great, but their reap tation . for . strict deparidatpoiathene Mat '1,1poir. faith" and,
piety ,g.a.vg theriaauthoeity and -dignity folflOWtrng, the, exanrOre of Jesus ,Ohrist.,
, . • , .
in the eyes' ,of the people. 1 He hadaheree. -in -bondage to the .laWi
Acts 7: 84-:$ z 3. Wheee name. was 1, but rieW 'he'. was 'free. 'KO; -hO-)krote in,
: Saul.gaul, who at/opted the naine 1.ef Nall c°111-irlel.'9'J Ills°bIs' '''''ll'aii:sftril'ss';',"'stli'VJ'111)114 ff7:46f.:111en: clirkl-
after ae ise.oame,„ a ceeisetee * • , ;t fore and be . not 'entattigiefif 'again in
splotitfielideleeri.hut,.i7f, tsHh:eele:JP:iewn.0:i;,'snia.thtitl.:c11:aik6iivit'itc:otlhir th.,,e'lieataafis;ist.anhaia-e.,1 'air 'aT37:,,IlikeeelytFilaf'f- r'''ubliTill'es'efils7ag'nme(il:sli.t(it°Gwil''''f8.otr6:;,16t1tro)c'fbe're`er.,..-
Obriatiell maeltaa lia.a ,deoliated that dall_ig'137.74 Th'ilre€11:'11'ets Ihirill'eeilaYrinni,:darirgHtLyl'i3V!i
,,,„, b,„, ,.,,:se,,,.,,, -(0 the true ware: law$
temple ancl, law Were.' not, and never amcIll US Wt''° WCrPIA"' ''''14' ' 9' ''''''' 'b''' '-
clep.t evidence of 4,riitery- that the pee.- I cm'nri'4.--1141'•3 aTid
Their telltale -Ina is largely •made 'up of
ana rules about the Church.
prohibitions. Whiffe
Whip of Ged,and. had 1-showedi by the
ple of Iisra4-W.,1,,kan and ,,,kaiiil re,.:: our relies and laiv,s, put- eornmenels'arei
sisteth the 'tee.afMea wee ale ieredei-gaprothere limy be, good in tbeir
had 14.--elect4d,Jeste-, riSt. To a' strict' te' triM. fir'jt ac'e is f'c'' `TG(Itls
a possible shower, to ecalt up the inallene° arirm`g Theitrat$0.1 in,strlleter4t„ No be bad,' eolne; te PO)
When planting cucumbers, put a
few seeds of reasturtiurns in each hill.
This will keep all bugs anci lice front
the plants and also k,eEp moisture
around tile roots of cucumbers. I
have tried it for -three yeasa. Lest
year when everybody's pllants were
drying up during that hot, dry spell,
mine- were green and fresh.
Educational Value of Preparing
Exhibits for the Fair. ,
The Pairl What does it mean to
you? "Fair" is a very, old mane
With vaziations in ,spelling, it exists
In many languages. .
"Fair" is akin to the ancient "les-.
tue" and therefore Co*n. in some de-
gree to -the more modern 'leak" and
"festival"' and the Dike.
Always and everywhere it has car-
ried the away -from -work lidea. It has
always been pretty ninth what we
mean nowadays, by "holiday," though
not what that word meant orirajnallY•
"Holliday" Was "holy day/' and eacaaeci.
"Rae" hoes always been SeCalitalr-a
wholly human sort of thing.
Pair tirne is playtime; That ft ill: -
ways NV,a9, that ht aaVaays Mealit to
most people, that it etways will. he.
But for every Play there niust be
players, and two kinds of them:too—
., •
players who play playfelAy and play-
er's Whaplay.laberieuela, Mere or' lea,
for the.enteatainment of the othera.
What They Go For.
And "the fair" has very different
meanling for the tWoelasses. The
ban& goes to have a goad time: tor be
care -free, to &rink red lemonade -and
throw confetti 'and -tacit tinsel'
Vo get the glint of twinkling horse
heels on a saffron treat; to see the
broacl-backed, cattle, the prettily- pack-
ed jellies and jams, the big pumpkins,
the intricate needlewoadr; the full -filled
ears of corn, and to mill around, go-
ing nowhere in particular andi not
carting especially if they never get
there. ,
But, with it all, they are getting a
sugar-coated alueatiort. The fair is a
university in which the fe,stive. stu-
dents soak up science unawares.
Then there must be the other kind
of players --the lemes who "put on the
show"—the professors and instruc-
tors and tutors in this most aeconerno-
dating of acarriemthes. And there has,
Vo be someWliere a sort of teachers'
college for these people. There are,
in fact, lets of normal' schools for fair
professors, but the Dominion Depart-
ment of A,griculture is the graduate' shipping. No \matter how mrueh the
college. And one a the queer things little rascal alias for mem, he must
is that any boy or girl still in the not be indulged. If he is led, he de
gramartar grades of the public school very likely to get eibele on the tmain
may be doing post -graduate work in and go 'through the whole r a
getting things ready for the fair. drooPY, drowsy, eirepriae• like looking
the ethilhit 'Made a National winner
• ot a ecirn:erop that was an
;me.' the:county fair,"
Manicuring the Pig.
Now,,the boy" Who cis preparing a pig
or caif for the fair has a more
plite.fute4 tailcethan. the OTTO 'who enters
same WW1 the corn boy, the
Is- selecting the right
care. With the Otheeli it is not only
oelefting -the 'eight individual, but do-
hvg a great ,mailer things to put that
individual:in the -best poseiblo form,
and -re keep it so.
Week t Or even months in advance
a -the fair, the boy must start getting
hic . calf ea -pig tame. At -a perticulax
time it may be nerceseary to pare tire
Pig's toenaile soetlaut he will et -endue
stnatightaaithont tee much bend at the
pasterns. Bat leeMutet, be careful not
‘tc."
Ip ire tbemo.Al.iiphtgpig
is net' likOir ;,te prizeaviianex.
Several weeks be`cf*- thp, fah. he
should trine flee hair out of the pigs
'earn, careful: to do it in suali
F Way-thett the eave, not lee ft-
regtiltar in outline. Heethosuld,Prolaide
a clean vaillova fee She Pig tOiceep the
heir and --akin soft .and Pliable--.-ereeal he
Ought to .larow that trick -of Ala trade
that .a little oil on the sterface of the
water helps a great deall; ,arlito that a
little lirseed meal, properly fed to the
aig„ pats a perculiangless ebethe hair,
He "mils. renreaaber to have tare
riot kind of cre.te -ready in •plenty ef
tithe: Many boys have .ladied to get.
their pigs to the fair, :beuse when
the tiame . came to ship, there Was no
Crate.. , The deptartMent has special
SetS "Of Specifications for crakes,
:Calf crates and °then:se- A veep im-
portant thing to remeathea in catnap -
ten -with the. elate. is that the pig
grows at a prettytrapid..elip. The
crate mast be :Nat big enough for
the 'pig, not whenitihe <Tote: is made,
buttallowing for gravathbett then
and fair tiane. Ansi it mast not bebig
emotigh to ipeamit 2 -the pig to teen
around. The hay naisterernember that
the pig ehould net be fed Just before
Ninaly
Importance of Getting Re,ady.
Prizes Are Not All.
Too many people, the Department --
experts say, -do not know how much Theseare juat a few of the things
depends on preparing exhibits in the t‘h-lat nillst oemenifberreerin Prellar-
right way, on getting the pig a'r eatlf ing a pig fOr :the fair. Ani there axe
or coraty. or canned stuff in. just the equallY as =rally with regard to. the
right eltalte rIo ,efliorw to the best atIL oeaIforn, eyrotlhethdlaie trYhinetZ,trovreothuicae ttwrY,
vantage. -One of the boys' club -work-
x
,soizturry 1,014,,bo.i..rd-.: the boy or ,giet, man or woman, Wants
hs," he siay5 to exhibit at the flair,:
"grew an acre of mighty good atim ' Even with at the eare posP,ibtl'a& the
and entered an exhibit in the conntY animal or other product may nottibe
fair. There were four prizes, but be pile winner. There can't be loal:z.es
couldn't get erven the fourth ont. The for every exhibitor:. The fair that
judge simplly tied On the ribbons and tries to arrange thaws so that eve.r7-
made no explanations, The boy was
aimappointed)—not rebeldibus, but he
wanted to know why his good corn
coulda't get a prize. I went over it
with brian,, Showed him that some of
his biggest ears had crooked rows and
iroW others bad other defects'. Pick-
ing out the best ear, I said, 'If yeti
had ten like this, you eauld win a
th14 1130.17 went hack home ancl
tient. dein, 6.3i, 00„0, sv...eih es now they:place, th4y must never take the .firct
and ziedlorirs, Pliarle like . rlst, and ,for, }Inn alone. tete as
su this ranat'.'have seeinrclittIe,iesis than fbeiVare ef i)hariiakan•
eena yea ,ene I • verily thought.
coila„ itrifertaii';."..thert,,,,lbibe. was- •girk.- "eirer,-, and' "You' have child; les per.feetior
RECIPES
C0,101,n Anne AVPI, *USeil barring,
people bring ,their trenhlea,.to,dier:,
it did" not iictonielt itErr; to. halle '60
visitors her at. 41,11r9W. the- saint
time,
The first visitor was,,lga'rY
evesSf,cfOrTle4 frer:tit. '4Ier dfaft4
YOung` face, and her Nit,ale attittide
wee retliqlietps.„ dead
.and done With
s,!11.:*0..:Ps4h'er. , Pur4.
'Prrlae.
✓ ery. Wonderful to" bp, -deati.f," 6,
"If,.l.ife.herte; Is So ':"A'111‘laill
„and t.,'`,.nnt.Stfthenox
'step bet') „n(r
lI clon't"inearn that-NvarY," N.PPY lean
piledi billneY• mean beeal-lise
thing* eo, horrid'. here. We all
very well to ,taik bejug
amazing, arid but if yen rlircre
ehilinsk and AYWI-esii,.,ird and '''01-Y and
homely, when everyb.tidy else '1 your
farkily gootri-good and olevereand
Patin,.,y0,u..Werttifirn't think it any, furi
either.' •
",Probably I 'Shouldn't flifsei,"2, thoorsight
so sit yojir 'all4"e,'7,'Cip.itl5ini 'Anne ,agreed,
'bnl'narWL-well, I. Mirst.:tarchait that
ettiveY thegairte."
game?' Mary LOM agisrz
slifertlY„, '
• "The game the, .0:me ote- -
Petting' ofn:' 130,1311e,
Marl- Lou, what- the most popular,
thing' in, the world?" -
"Good loeles,"' Mary 'Lou replied bit.
tsr-
. ,
Consin An,rie shook ,her basil
"WrOng. Yeti didn't -Step to think.
YOu don't like people' for their looks.
.You know better than taie. Why do
SrOqi, lave 'Madeleine bent ?!'
Marry Low's dark eyes eeltenect.
014 Madeleine! You eark't help loving
hata, .she -s 'ea loveable." ,,.
"gaweity. Think it {year a bite When
I , yen that' you. carry -..yourself
beantifully end have levelY eyebrows,
yoill nte.?"
irwhy, Cousin- Anne!" Mary Lou
never Toile Steplifen'eargurnent, and ere f... -1P no: elcru t that 'he was. He tre.a-, thongh- i•tre. aside 'limn the '‘ t
G
cenrvietiOt hks 'or:-9A...i,eaet"dtittroy etlie' followers of, JeSurs. He
Lin.ev.".16,161autiiitieCI...14thwanege:Ntiti41.05-reit_tthicinDe'seata•nr:ellii1Crulfisidat-aninecli..rif6",„,:be:liia.rilit:at. W7114:.6S'7111erVi:217:11;Ge717E
p'81:tredi-.bsecul bliihtilcairfnl'all:011:raceadtt andre:,°:sfe:livatenuts1.1Pellircea'inijornirtl dYil'hai:rt'.11:e'itvhaer.e784'ainaTc2ne:rre
that in f'.s gal:id-tittle, it ,wratughlifl.:.-tlionght 'the efuight.. to persecute and porn
611 .611.8
now- began Ihe took an. active and lead-
1
mg part. He,. made havoc, of thei Application.
Church, seanchting bourse's, dragging' Canaciernce 4e not by any means an
men and wenten to, prieorm later In latInfellible guMe. gaud acted according
yearsi,reinembetring What he hid done, to the dictates of his eonecience, for
stritl, "I p,untished therm oft in every uncloubtoddy .he regarded the stippres-
synagog•ue, ansi cornpolled them to (or sion .ai Ohristianaty as a reagicete
rather, strove to make them) bliaa, duty. A conscience uninstructed may
ahemee, anti being exceedingly mad be as dad -gen. -Oil% as a conscience dise
a,gaiairst tilienr,1 persecuted therm even obeyed.- No ship sail's without a ccino-
t� cities" (ACts 11). And; pas, yet even a compass 'needs regu-
in his epiatlece he more than ewe re-. lation. There is no inagnetic-reedta
fere,. with deep ,soireow, end regret, to Which points with exactness taVearcie
these actsi of' pCrsecittion WhIch 'he the north. ' It ,..may. be &Vetted f -rem
says, he did- igeoearetly aext in- un- 4its proper direction by the magnetism
helW. 1 of the atmosphere, of the shrip's cargo
But the persecutiorna which -began or even by the eartle .the meets. 'SZ
with Stephen's death, only served to frosnatime to time the compass needs
hearten the slaved of the gospel, for attention and adjustment. Go the
thea that *are eeattoted -abroad 'went conaciance is not an- rireflilible Ode;
everywhere paeaohing theaeord... Mee- it needs to be adrtusted and enhaeht-
..,,
ing freni their aeasecutors, they car- ened.
, • .
If sheep raisere only realized tile
benefits and: satiefaction from diPping
their elieerpe ao compillsory law, would
be recwired to Make thein enthusiastic
and aeraistent the,ainectiee la -dip-
ping. •
The beaefits are tarofold; first, all
verinki and skim troubles, ean be
*Ile* eurea,ar prevented, velikii has
r4arleed effect in, improving the
health and 'feeding gfas.- of the fioek;
agid secend, the quality of the wool
is iml1300474'and its --I0O.F.th' stitnniated•
Shearing tests lea.ve demonstrated
that II -dipped sheep will give from
a pound to a pound and a half more
wool per • fleece tham if not thrived.
Whi'le. the spring dipping 'after
sheering with en anwnical dip is very
important to give the flock; including
the young lerabs, a clean bill, the
autumn dipping' as still mere rnapor-
tent' and should .ireeer be omitted.,
Care should be taken to follow the
directions which corn.e with the dip in
it e pree3arationa and Means taken to
see eat the whole sheep, with the
exception of eyes 'and nostrils, gets
a good application. There' in really
only one Way tO; dip, and that is by
submeasion in a tank sufficiently
deep to cover the animal standree
on its' feet. While for
small flock, as an emergency inea.-
pare, neoleases hogshead with a foot
eut Pa one en;i ma, he used, the
proper and aconoandeal veseel as a 'vat
halt about .8 inehes\wide at the bot-
tom, 81/2 feet dieep tand flaring to 20
inchele wide, With one end projecting
body can get a prize -does net amount to Mole an i'nelino up which the sheep
to aittella usualler, 'It deal not nrcan may walk afte-r isetbutersioa. A drain-
anYthing to 7fil peizeiwhen you aroling platform With tight bottom whieb
the orilY ex tor in'our "elass,, The' -will hold twe er theee aheep shatild lee
Prize is not eio main rthing, aftcr aid ;se arnang'ed tbat witol; tho Ordeit)
r4rnoabo4uniat,t. hwoh-460gtartothl,,,gizt-sizia7aur..., 0,,gtgistod: out uir,041 it the dolP fpom
tho fair ere confttibuting to an ednqa-
tthkinng,'(fo)rrl,jilltlIceil?lui 'itS11;!)-tili7fe"Cdtiltea.tiljoe 11;1'1111;
get for thentsielves:
yve,ol will -run :from the plated= back
i•nta, the tank. 'Phe eheala bo
made with, Warm -vertex afieleallowed ti�
eeel to 100 deg, F, before being used,
, Rkge,,r, adol rapid.17,
carrefull•y exalt:fined every •ea,a: a the "`Aq[keyar.t4-9., 001-40,8,t,,, say- filo 4,715, -time' after e•pteariber 1, a
ourn, 1-1 fon't,l,d1. Onl•T arl't "fer YOur own sake. You will ,good time to dip, A breezy bright
thought wore es gooll as t44 1 have a better rpip a bet -ter calf, a day is natu'rally best, but irf, free any
better pound a hatter, a better can of reason, dipping is delayed, further de-
pea.clies next year li.Y• reason of halt- lay wafting for just the righ.t day Is
ing exhibIrted this year, Whether you -,rinadvioable. Particularly when poilson
-win or rot. And with proper a-tten- dips are -used, "the el-te.ep should *be
tien to Preparation, the- pizes axe kept off around affer'ding any PaF-ture
had pointed out, He `went back
through the whole •pijo-- again 'and' fine
,all.y found the tcroni ear. He fiend
those ten ear§ the 'rs,-Tational
,sameary. when Treepeetiee buyers and won prize. 1),o you see?
K fh t sure to ee.me, too, 'Sre011er or lax:- lintel tisir fl.eeoea have 'coated, drip -
call, the animals show up well. new a little ow Darellaro
ping, three or four hours at least be-
ing require0. ,
rens of dipping t'2,11kS amcl full in-
formation as to c5ips anti/methods neay
be obtained tram the Sheep and Goats
DivilWore Live Steck Branele, Depart -
Meat A.griocPtre, Ottawa.
---ea---.
The Control of Late Bhght.
Spray -before Late Blight appears.
Once Night ban aifypearei, spraying is
af no rattle: Semi/ging once -is almest
as ueee'ress as 110t eprearing at all.
Spray five times, commeriaing about
the middle ef 'July; repeat end of July,
middle of August, end of August mad
middle of Gepternber. _
Spray
the spray-, mixture has thoroughily
dried on the le,erves it will not w-aeli
off.
Splay from the tops down and from
below 11111. Use good premure, cover
the whole plant. Half sipray?ng will
not pay; don't waste your time and
money proving it; •Experimental.
Farms have already proved it.
-Spraying pays a dividend every
year. It inereases the. yield.. It pre-
vents sterege mt. Lute Blight re-
duced the veep on the average daring
• five-yearte' period by 130% bushels
per sere. Late BlIght eaused a„ lpon
of 21.3 per cent. of the crop ,from deg-.
ging time to the following+ April. You
May ---the country cannot-100;rd to
do vvitheut spraying. Do your duty.
Don't try sareying, potatoes with
lime sulphur; it is worse than teselese,
Horne -made Bordeaux beats factotry-
made Bordeaux.
The etandarrd Bordeaux mixture
made by using 4 pountle to 6 pound's
blue-etene, 4 pounds linace to 40 „Un -
Partial ga.lions of water. (To Central
the potato beetle, add' to each 40 aal-
lon9 )304eakt* Inbatalre 8 ouneea PariS
green and 1,1/2 peunds arseeinte of lead
Paate.) Al* for Ovetions how to
Preloar-e BerdealuX
1-lanoi\-laarleying
an acre (four applie
ClatioeSI) eaets from $3 to $4 pea acre;
slYnt.LYing WWI oneagAiMIer horse
I'm- trying to make."
"You don't mean flattery!"
"No; I mean you to el':r3covea•
things other people and tell them
sometimere"
Mealy Lou vreirb off to think it oyer
Two minutes later 'Shirley came in.'
Though her lovely ',ey,es, -were not sole
lien; they were troubled.
"I don't know What I am going to
do about Mary Lou," she begen. "She
just grows inore difficult every day—
so blunt and av,drwarcl and ternpery.''
"I can give you,"" Cousin Anne re.,
plied, "a recipe warrented -to euro if
faithfully -applied'. Praise 'her. Give'
tier a genuine close every day for a •4
month. How should you feel,' Shirler,*
Granger, -if you thought that You were
dull and hoanely 'and awkward, and if
everyone found fault with: e-ou ell the
Conishi Awe! Is'it like that 7
we didn't rea,Ilize---"
Cousin Anne nodded. "I latow. But
it's time to realize."
Marvels of the Ear.
The external ear may be cut off and
Yet effect one's pciwer of hearing only -
to a, very limited degree. This fact is
made clear w -hen the construction of
the ear is, consMered.
The external ea,r acts as an ear
trumpet. It gathers. the sound waves
from the outer air, and, -by means, of
a passage, condutts them- to the mid-
dle ear or drum,. This passage is lined_
with hair to keep aut insects and dust,
ancLis stopped at the farther end by a
skin stretched tightly across! it, called
the membrane, or .skin of the drum,
behind which is the drum itself.
It is a common fallacy tb_at the ear
drum, if broken, produces deafness.
perms; caeca Medical men have established the fact
before rainy
pump cots $3,30 per 0C -re; while
spraying- with a two -cylinder hose
pump -coats $6.60 per acre, The use
of the dast resulted in a nett profit a
$41,02 per- acre. The most efficient
hand -sprayer ,viclided $26 profit per'
aces. The best sprayer to use. is the
oye that gives high pressure, if of
rigid construction, and laolvs
MIT eontplications.
that the entire absenee of the drum.,
.will not produce deafness, ' although it
does,- to a slight extent; affect the
,
hearing of small noises. , •
The drum is Connected with the
mouth by another preesage, and this is
the reason • w.hY, so many diseases
which , Originate in the mouth and
throat affect the ear also. The drum. •
le toliovved out of tbe none o -f the
'skull, and its- inner opening, called the
oval windovr, is closed by anothee skin.
Beyond this le the third and most
.importan.t part of the ear ---the
Initor-
nal ear ----which has in it little canals
,a,nd a widening passage like that of a.
, shell. The inner chamber Is-
tiaaed, with watery fluid in which
teats, the ,hearing nerve, made up ofa.
.`bundle of fine cards which are gather: -
ed. anallyinte one nerve leading to thee
brain,
The action of the ear, therefore, is
thlea A sound Is transmitted from
some position, causing a disturbance
in the Tais disturbance le eelleca
Qct- by the outer ear, passes clown. the
connecting paseage, ead atrikes - the
elan va the drum o,ausing it to ea
brete, .The drum in turn „ cemmunt-
(lacer Ite- vibratlene to 'the oval Win-
cl9W, Thence they travel to the liquid
ef. the Meer ear, and the hearingneree
gathei'S ,them up and tranernite them
„to the brasihne,ep of co Block,
moTahteatpoina-zaod,zottLaribi,,00tokhoe:,,sa,towthez
44,oirs, Sitelarnate p,.mnignini,stehaplaeutdtotliiiern, exclaimed,
"Well, as a matter of fAct," replied
the hutcher, "the sheet) born' iA
New 1.,e, land, But madam, lie dded
In triumph, "It is of Tertellea, ,pw.vit41,"