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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-11-9, Page 6; very good. The last few years! young threatened the very existence of t heifers have been added to the herd infant 'human race. Man thought of and have decreased the average pro- the beasts ef prey as his dangerous auction for the whole +herd, but did enemies; insects were nothing more to highest individual production was him than a continual annoyance. But made in 1921 when one cow produced he long ago won his battle with the 16,319 lb. milk and 603.9 lb. fat during repts es and the car/II-v.01a- He won • • th6. calendar year. I it with bow and spear, and the inven- In May of this 3, -ear mr. wait tion of firearms has made it -possible Neat to eontiumption there are more &Ohs eaused from peeurnoa than from any other forge of lune trouble, la feet, pneurnimia might be dosei•ibed aa "Luug Fever,' A ceugh is the earliest symptom, It is ;4 first frequeet and hacking, and aecompanied with a to -ugh, colorless expectoratioe widelt soon, however, be. eomes more opious and is of a thiek, rusty, red color. he breathing bo - comes. repid, the tempoilitture rises and the pulas is weakened frcau the failure a the heart's action. Miles are more commonly atteeked thee. females, and a previous attiick seems to give a speeial liability to an - ether, On the first sign of a cough or cold. you should get a bottle of Dr. 'Wood's Norwe,y- Peie Syrup and thas prevent the cold from developing into serious lung trouble, Mrs. W. Sell/mak, Beadle, Saske writes --"Just a few lines to tell you of the benefit I have had from your wonderful medicine, Two years ago I nearly lost my little girl who had 4euhle pneummea, bet after having given her a few bottles of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, I found that it erway Pure S-yrup, I found that it }zed completely relieved, her. I now alwaya tell other people to use it. Price 35e and 60e a bottle; put up only by The T. Arab= Co., Limited, t'eronio, Ont. T,he skeleton frame -work of the modern hog is quite different from that formerly grown for larger and s;tronge,r ;bone is generally wanted by swine men •to -day. To build such ee bones requires additional mineral ma- terial in the ration. The basic ration on for hogs, which is cern, lacks in these Sn mineral elements. H,o.gs fed a ration fo where the mineral elements are le±.. an big will usually net put on flesh as a rapidly nor grew so well as animarti that have aecess to limestone and, other mina -al consettients. In one test it was found that hogs receiving oeina and linseed meal gained only 82.5 per cent. as much as did other groups tsittleh had aocess to limestone and i stround rock pheaphate. One of the simplest mineral supplements for hogs t Ls sem/Teri through ining equal parts i of salt, bone meal and air -slaked t • The Sunday .:,NovvymE 1. on HOWne Herd Has Been Improved h,y This Mean& J us, the CIoreat Teacher, Luke 6:' 27-38. Golden Text—As. , BY -A. WHITE, sENT OR DAIRY PROMOTER.' ye would thht knell Aould do. to you, do ye also to them, Same eleven Yeare ago; J. G; Waits These t'ec°rcia are rer.'' c°11- , IL,kewise.,--Luke' 6 t at official Colborne, Ont., started to keep records sidering that they were made cluring • of produetion of saecei eow ie his here, Mr. Wait's first atte p ll'iole tihenit_like:aist,e..---Ltuke .6.1. ...1s+sonlatPariteis ,hlilorie that thie,Worled will res- ,Ited , mi.... „,,yaivo herd is all mita ;testing and, -were made 14y; cows will& eeeeon nctung--.1.n. (nu lo ee t 211 .trJne kloalen Rule seeks --- a.)-, - t have been ;bred and raised by.himself. je,sus in tiis taoria_wide signifiearice.1 Yonr reward shall be great. 'rho Gol'-• obtained eugh cew-testing where his crOl• "al 15 a g°` whiee eller givtes wide and age -long teacher. in simple I of response and an innnediate harvest ,,„„ 'This tinie he appeara as the World-- oden Rale will reap a gradual harvest dairy ee,oni„ds eae used by tate dairy_ wards visnoerveaserYodeapli:'flaction. tendsueha9; words of great authority-,—"VerilY, II 01 say tints you" --he claims the rIght to I follows it, Ye shall be the children inward blessing fee the eere that I i;itreed" illsgaanglid ifa:ocitionghi:n°d'i)selLteit710511. ill two silos on the farne thereby insuring !plenty of succulent feed, and he feeds broaden and amplify and fulfil the"' of the. Highest The Golden Rule is) At the end of the nest year of test_ 0 grain ration of bran, ehorts, oat teaching ef the Law and the prephets.f but the earthly pattern of the heaven-, illg in 1911, the aveaage production of chop, eore, ea meel, mid cotter)! seed to -day we get ariatber •glininse ef 110 rewenti buitit hones fer resPOrlse+1 standing example of ,the results to be m w. ; ed d d •• With eqeal authority he sweeps aWaY rule. BUtit in nature and in graee, fourteen °cm's in this herd was onlY cake. These grains ancl emieentrates of the kingdom. He speaks the last word, He is new fects and new results, Ye shall and income has been raised from, ration aneaeaey! In the first part of the 'Sermon Ch• the rude in et-rr hea.rt, with all its blessings Dairy ree.ords ha-ve certainly proved a in the progress of this erel. At the authoritative. 'He speaks as. the king not be judged. The Goldea Rule prac- about 6500 in 1911 to over $3,000 in The value of using only good, pore - Mount he deals with the Beatitudes and compensations. teacher is personal. He aPPeals to no judged. Love withholds its verdict cf completely the narrow and obscearingl that is Gees policy, He sends his I ,r5,4ea3;t8 At that tiine a test with &over bay and silage make a well The one 5,10tive of the Kingdom,' just. .Tlie whole. mission of Ghrtsit is the average production of fifteen cows has helped in keening uP teac.her above himself. He ie final. condemnation. It waits hopefully for is an increase of nearly 100 Per cent., great- help in apportioning his grain teaching a Pharisee and seribe. ;rain and sun on the just and the Un- wee not made for butter fat. In 1921 balanced and palate -tide ration,„which jaawpeifeet embodiment of, the Divine was 10,080 lb. milk and 2713 fat duction, me, wait else believes in 27-3 Lave your enemies. ticed among men brings the Divine 1921, the office of ;the Dairy Branch. This has found the daily milk record a an increase of over 600 per eent. ;bred aires has been well demonstnated V, 27, I say unto you. Jesus as a V, 37. .Tudge not ye shall not be aceerding t° t'llP records rec10 eived' at feeding' according to production, and and show's that the blessedness of life V. 38. Give . . good ineaeure press- , en o IS man in his present time, it is comPoSed entirely running over. This figure is taken1 After the first year of this work, bnilt up from ;two or three foundation within the kifrgilem are. based +.m inward character, net en external conditions of life, It is -the poor, the meek, the perseeu,teti, who are blessed'. ed down, and shaken together, and business. ; of pure-bred Holsteles, and; has been from the nthaeurernent a grain, which—Mr. Wait found; some wide differences cows. daughters have proved to • maY be grudgingly exect or generous- in the rod t* ' • • • He sweeps away any thought of the:1y ;abundant. Into your bosom; the cows. The higHheet ,production. was BefOre seeing dee aa ilia grades, ma on of 1 11 ; ;be better producers than their dams:. kingdom as a kingdom, of world bless- I lo.ose fold of the .0e.ter •robe. 7,676 lb. milk while the lowest eves' Wait had seme very' high producin.g wines's'. Now Jesus proceed to lay ta a . 1 down the mo;tive that must actuate pp 'cation. 2,976 /he milks There were also Sev- grade ooWs in 'the herd 11\ a grade the operation. of the leingd.orn in the • Our. Lord has just aneouneed that eral other coWs which were not paying Hoiateins had ay e; • • world. The one eons -taxa motive is tO e t.his world all Christian folk would trsbulation. How they should he that of love asserting itself in ave action. The aggression of hate is to react to such uageneroue persecution be met with the aggression of love, I wo'„ualciaabee Here as elsewhere he sets himself thine enemies," he says. A of prime importarree. against the teaching of the scathes Roman by the name of Stela' new who said, "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." V. 28. Bless them that curse you. The motive of leve was to pervade the srpeeeh of Christ's followers. The hymn of hate was to he answered by hy-mn of love. Pray for them- a still higher step. They were not to call down God's wrath upon their enemies, bat °lessen a new principle, "Love thine enern Having enuncieited this most essen- tial principle of the kirigdorn, Jesus now proceeds to give a rough and ready rule for its application. "As ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to there likewise." for the feed consumed. These cows cards cf over 12,000 and 11,000 lb. p u were sold and others purehased to milk extending over a period of years. take their places and in 1913 the pro- Suck records as these demonstrate duetin per cow \MS increa•sed to 6,967 the value of the pure-bred sire even Ib. milk for elevenecows. In 1914 only ina rad herd, sleeps beneath a monument upon which is inecribed this legend, eight cows were in the herd fGr the Nor has Mr. Wait been alone in the "No full year and the average production matter of herd improvement. There friend ever did me so much good or for these cows was 9,328 lb. milk. are three or four other farmers in the enemy so much harm but I repaid him 'Thus after four years of careful se- same district who cen point to increas- with interest." The Jewish electors of lection of the best cows and a weed-' ed ,production due to selection, feed- -the Law construed their scriptures to mean, thou shalt love thy friends and Mg out of the poor producers, Mr. ing, and the use of purebred sires, hate thine enemies. But Jesus laid Wait had 'eight cows which produced and these men have been •cl cl • member them intercedmgly before e thrOTIO of God. They were to seek win, not destroy their enemies. V. 29. Unto him that smiteth thee the one cheek offer also the other. iiting on the face was a common Thi of insult the East It was, insult rather than an injury. "Even! slave would rather he scourged than buffeted. The law imposed a fine for the first buffet and a deuble fine for the second. This command of Jesus is not meant to prevent one from de- fending the weeir and helpless from the tyranny ef the violent. The blow that is struck in defence of the weak s not the .satue in seirit as the blow 01 wanton violence, Jesus means that the srpirit of the Christian is not to be he spirit of mere retaliation. There s to be a different motive. Him that elc ti e away thy cloke . . thy coat also. The law provided that the outer raiment of a debtor might be seized They Cut the Cost of Raising Calves. Many dairyman would lirce to know how the cost of raising calves might be lowered, Work recently complet- ed at an experiment station gives us seise° 'entere.stfing suggestione along this line. Six calves were raised aueceesfully by usimg.skina-raille powder in place of ordinary sisfiraemilk. At the age of three weeks, the calves were changed from whore -milk to sldno-neilk wd At the end of sixty days, the skim milk powder was gradually etrithdrawn -until in seventy days the calves wer on the ration of alfalfa hay and a standard grain mixture. These calves at the age of six months were slighly below normal, but had recovered fully in weight and height two months later. Ten pounds of powdered skim -milk added to ninety poends of water melees one hundred pounds of normal skim -milk. The grain ration fed the calves was eemporundecl by mixing four parts of corn, one of bran and one of linseed. The abject in this test was to raise! the calves with a minimum amount of' whole milk and the experimenters feelr; they have succeeded in another waY; also, inasmuch as the powdered milk; can be purchased at ten cents per, pound, and ten pounds produce one hundred pounds ef skim -milk. • _ Law is said to have demoralized his! -whole neighborhood by the literel ful- filment filment of this command. Jesus as-, isurnes that his followers will have ; common senseaas well as love, and ; that they will understand the differ- ence between meekness and weakness, , the difference between kindness and sefteess. Ile trusts them remem- ber his other corrective words—"Give I not that which is holy urderethe dogs,' ; neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under ; their feet, and turn again and rend • IL The One Pattern of the Kingdom, as a pledge, But Jesus says that if one took the eloke or outer robe from his follower, le is to let him have , his coat or inner gaement also. Again it is principle, not the particular cm-41- =nd that is important. Just as per- sonal rights -• are not the supreme so also legal rights must some- times he surrendered for love's sake.' V. 80. Give to wvery man . . ask, them not again. This command shows I still more clearly that Jeaus. is dealing with principles. A literal fulfilment of this command would involve indis- criminate giving with its inevitable reselts of evil. The saintlyW•11* 31-38. V. 31. As ye would that men shoul cI Westmount's War Monument. do to you. This is the Kingdom's Gol n u e. The Rabbi could go no 1 further than this—evhatsoever is clis- agreeable to th-yself do not to thy Cl neighbor. Christ's law is the law of ci the last mile and the overflowing cup.:, Or V. 32. If ye love them which love of you. Retaliation in evil and reel- preeity in good are not the fulfilment of the Golden Rule. The one is the fa common law between enemies. The „ other is the worldly rule between friends. The Golden Rule initiates oh and anticipates in lo V. 35. Love ye your enemies . . do good . lend, hoping for nothing again, The, last phrase is rather, never desrpairing, or despairing of no man. The policy of the Grylden Rule antici- almost the same amount of milk as their work by the milk record gin e in fourteen cows had produced during and Babcock tester. They have the year 1911. These results made for testing for some years and have more economical production as the tadned results In 1919 theage feedand labor costs were not so great, production ef 61 cows in 6 herds was while the income was nearly the same.) 8,623 lb. milk and 802.4 lb. fat; while The increase 'in production during, in 1921 the average production of 53 the first'few years, was due almost cows in four herds was 9,413 lb. milk entirely to weeding. out the poorer and 335.6 lb. fat, showing a decided cows, although pureabred sires had • e ast two or three y been used in herd. From this time on,; and an average production fully heifers from pure-bred sires were per cent greater than that of ell d tmoicin TODACCO f For lime and Country News from sheet the Branches and shawls of many colors and de.. eigns. Some of the girls dressed as grandin.others wi-bli dolmans, black lace caps, and powdered hair. At lunch, china was used which came on the first exprees 'carried on the Northern, now a branch of the Grand Trunk Railway, and a very__ ancient snuff -Ibex passed around. Each member resp,onded to the roll call by telling the history of her ap- parel or giving a quotation from a Canadian 'author. The District Presi- dent gave a talk on saxnplers she had seen, Caroline samplers, foaeign samplers, with references made to them by famous writers. Some interesting things are stored; away in farm homes and brought to light at such times• --one member !brought a heavy thick watch wound by means of a chain—undreamed of -bhings which have lain in boxes and 4i; drawers for years. Old time ,songs were sung and the afternoon erided with Auld Lang Syne. „been South Sinecoe Institutes are pleas- antly combining the useful and the entertaining in their 'work. The four Institetes near Bradford gave a deflation to the Fall Fair to be given as prizes to Women's In- stitutes for canned and fresli fruit and vegetables, the fruit and vege- tables to be grown in the „ orchards ealros6; and gardens of members of Women's airy Institutes. freshening and replacing the old cows' cows in Ontario or in 'Oeinaida, or those found to he -real boarders I Such are the results that can When records were first kept, this, secured through a wise use of herd was a grade herd similar to those, knowledge obtained by keeping a found on the majority of farms. They cord of ntil;k and fat Procluctien. Th were a nondescript bunch of cattle; Men are not Situated any more fa with all sorts of grades and 'crosses, ably than neanY -others, and have However, the pureabred cow appealed build as they go along. They to Mr. Wait and he started in early to purchase pure-bred Holstein cows,. One of these cows has a total produc- tion of over 100,000.1b. milk in eight years, or an average of 12,500 lb. milk per year, which is a very creditable recrd. Anoth;er foundation cow has a production of 54,656 lb. milk and 2,073.8 lb. fat in four years, an aver- age of 13,664 lb. milk and; 518.4 lb. fat per year. The Septem'ber fneeting of the be James Mills Branch was interesting' the and along progreestire lines.. The re- Senior Institute- •at Bond Head was e -se very_proud of the complete hand -sewn von- le.yette /mei° by the Junior Institute to there, also of the program planned by ave the girls. however, built on sane lines and have worked to reach a standard that they had set for themselves. Nor have they worked blindly and by guess work as - many farmers are deing., They knew each individual cow, Tea her according to productibn and used only such sires as they knew came from •stocic that could improve their herds. When such improvement can be obtained in ene herd, surely, cow -testing is worth while to all dairymen who are anxious to,improve their herds. After 1914 it was more difficult to obtain increases in production as it was impossible to buy -the higher pro- ducing 'cows except for exceptionally high prices and Mr. Wait was content to build up his -herd by using as good a sire as he was fit -lane -tally able to purchase. However, there was pro --1 gress each year, and the•highest aver- age production per cow was reached a in 1918 when eight mature •cows aver-; t - OUR INSECT ENEMIES aged 12,547 lb. milk and 439 1.b. fat Undoubtedly there was a time when This was the first year records of but- the sabre -teeth tiger and the ca ter fat were kept and the tests were bear •ancl the poisenous sarpen he; reach. It is probable that they can To the delightful September meet- ing at Churchill, menibers Came wear- ing old-tirne dresses, three wedding dresses made over' fifty years ego, old jewellery, gloves' kerchiefs, bon- nets, "litthe jem" hats, hand satchels, causes. That can be done only after a careful study of the condibions that favor or obstruct their breeding., arid then by -eterfering to produce condi- time that are u.nfavorable. The mal- aria mosqiiito, for example+, has been virtually exterminated in many places by covering all the pools of stagnant water with a film of oil. The larvae el' the insect die because they cannot rise to the surface through the oil. So, by ap.propriate measures, the cattle tick has been quite cleared -Out of no less than five hundred thousand square miles of territory. Creatures like the boll weevil and ts; theco borer axe more difficut to Weeding is as essential in the herd ex the fleck as in the garden. Getting rid of what is unnecessary is often the quickest way to profit. . Terrible Headaches And Dizzi ess Miss S. Raphael, 237 Kenilworth Ave. N., Hamilton, Out, writesi--"I peed to suffer from terrible headaches and dizziness. Last Summer, while I was walking up a side street, f„xot a dizzy spell and fell in. the middle of the road. An old gentleman helped me to get to where I was going and told. toe to get a vial of 'Milburn 's Lase - :Liver Pills. Well, .t did, and they did wonders for me. I don't know how to thank you, as I don't get headaches or dizzy spells any more." When. yout liver gets sluggish and in- active your whole health suffers, and the only way to keep well is to keep the liver active. and perrorming it proper funetions by- usieg Milbern 's Laxa- Liver Pine, Price 25e a veil at all dealers or ailed direct on receipt of price by The T, Milburn Limited, Toronto, Ont, aunts the monument erected by the I testing. He put four of his cows on branchedout and did some official for bun to exterminate any speci This beautifully designed group ,sur - that he th inks_it worth his evhile ty of Westrimunt in meniory of her the seven-day Record of Merit ;beet wipe out. Itistreai striggle to -day i tizens• who served. cverseas in the; and had the satisfaction of hoeing one with the swarming billions of tiny e3a4t0,01V00ara:ndItwwwasbeedenevteeiciledatsalloretolyst ' ‘°_,fitthhe.ani phrecadducithioeriiis'ot;f '°f7tirri1.7atutrbe. cm°3;st ' einassee'c.ot tahnrdePte'aeratsodtceosnstuhmate etharrepYladnits- and 26.81 lb. butter fat or 32.89 Mei othoZtforarte necessary to . his life and butter in seven days. The other cows ' 4. The youth's companien should be his ther; the girl's companion her did well and all had records of over! The mosquito, which spreads male other. rhe whole family should be 22 lb. butter in seven clays. His best- aria or yellow fever, the flea, virhieh ems. cow was also 00 R.o.p. test and ex:carries the bubonic plague; the louse, Success is more often accoinPlished 17,031 lb. milk and 760 lb. butter. Weevil' a• the 365 day period hacl a record of which -.ravages the cotton which transmits typhus fever, the boll by giving two thought to one action, fields, the corn borer, which menaces than one thought to two actions. This one of our greatest food crops, the Appetite scale insect, which kills our frui applies to fanning as well as other Lost FIer +occupations, t tree -se -those and other tiny creatures like them are the natural enemies of the human race, against which We meet be prepared to wage an une remitting warfare., &loll pests areso minute ancl so ire credibly prolific *rat at first it seems quite horPel'e'sls to rthink of exterminat- big thein, Saks a writer in YOuth's Cortipanien. But Dr. Felt, the state entornoileifet of Ne -dr York; seLyS that it is at least possible to keep down the ' numbers of most insects to a ;point where they can do little harm, nnd where,they a -re eVen in danger of complete extermination by natural .....__ ELLR.:00f% es to GIANT TREES OF BRITISI-1 COLUMBIA The natureAresources of priLish Columbia are almost tiniMalted, fisheriea, itined arei flere,,SO'yielding Into fortunes every year. The picture. shows the size of some of the `trees in the B.C. forests, and the way they are being out. SAT DOWN AT TABLE BUT COULD NOT, EAT 111. you 'have 'a variable appat-e, a faint gnawing feeling at the pit of the stomach, unsatisfied hunger, a loathing of food, rising and souring of 'food, headaches, etc., you nmst look to your' stomach at being the cause of your BURDOCK BLOOD FIITTER.S will regulate the stomach, stimulate se- cretion of the aiia gastric juice to faeilitate digestion, remove acidity, arid tone • up She entire system. Mrs. J. H. Barker, Gainford, Alia., writes:—"I was troubled with loss of appetite, and was badly rundown. I would sit down at the table, but cooler not cat ,anything, also I could not do any work. 1 tried Burdock Blood Bit- ters, and after taking half a bottle I found 1 was eatieg• bettor, and' after having Liken two bottles I could hard- ly get onoligit to eat. I certainly will praise 13. 13, 13.' Got the genuine; put up only by The T. Milburn Coq Limited,'Toronto, Ont. LIMITED g010,01101.°S 00-98 yoNoe ST. TORONTO ' Try them for your CHRISTMAS GIFTS Their Catalogue will be Sent on request, eeeaa,,areee.aaee.e.a..ieaeee eeeene, never be wiped out unless natur cornei to the aid of man with som !disease or blight that the insects car) I nut fesist. It has been suggested tha the boll weevil might be etarvel ou by the expedient of planting no cottoi at all for one year. It would be hard to get every planter to agree to that bet•if it were possible the plan inight be all ca ci outs. Persistent and thorough seraeing Capt. Re -aid Amandsen He will adapt modern inventieres to exploration, and will attempt to fly ' aerese he North Pole in the spring. ew ill overseen e some insec t enemies; the destrnction of trash hegee and undergrowth where they breed will keep other species under ,ontrol. Some, like the corn borer, presene a problem as yet unsolved. But the plan of campaign against all those tireless enemies of man is the same. There must be first a careful, scier,tifie study of the life history and the habitz of each species, then the widest possible publication of the results of that study, with instructions for attacking it in its breeding places, and finally the intelligent co-operation of .public authorities and private citizens in carryingout those Instructions. Not .many species can,be destroyed; at one blow. Againstenoet ;of them the war- fare must be continual, the vigilance unremitting'; but if afar., putslis inind and his will to tlie.„,work, he ean get th, better of hid insect enemies as -he has got the better --�f- ,the savage beasts. • An End of Grief A young woman, according to a con- temporary, was describing to one of her friends a great chagrin which sae had 'undergone. "I was Just almost killed by it," she said; "I could have cried myself to death." "Did you ern'?" asked the other. I just was just getting ready to 1When the- dinner -bell rang.", - WAS OVERSEAS 3 YEARS Returned To Canada AlrrAost A Wreck . Mr. F. • M. Blaquiore, 'Alta., writese--"After throe years ser - vise 'everseas I returned to Canada al- ' most a •completO wreck. 1, hita heen - gassed and was suffering froni shell shock and rIttennatism, and vas so nor,' , vou 1 could not sleep at night. 1 was SO bad in the' Tall' of 1919, iny hands' got so shake I could. scarcely, hold anything in them and it seem- etl•to inc • as 11 1 had a steel band press- ing on my. head-. The least exeitement would almost drive me into fits, and my whole sYstem seemed to be in dis- order. I had "cramps hi the calf of my logs,nettrly every night and hot ami cold chills 'running up and down my - back nearly all the time, One clay 1 decided to try Milbure's Heart and Nerve Pills, and after I had taken six boxes 1 boa ii to fool better. 1 kept oil tieing them and after a While Was con- plotelyi rolievocl. Now Ieleep like Tog, no -ver feel any pain, vveiglt 230 Ma. and woiii -overy day." Price 50e a box at all dealora or mailed direct n r.cd.kpt of prico The E. Milburn Co,,, Limit04,4 Toronto Liniment for Diphtheria. ' Obeying Orders. Going into hiS ' s -table one day, a farmer found his little son with a noteboolc and easel' in his hand, kilt - tine astride one of the -horses, "Why, Eddie, lie exclaimed, "what' ift.tho worlti ar,6 you doing?" "Writing a composition," replied lit. tle "Well, why- don't yoti write it in the hous-e?" t'ltheause," answered Eddlo, "tile teacher told, us to Write a composition on g horse.' getter ,ee....einewennenet'