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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-1-6, Page 2Add PAYING THE PRICE 1 Trapping' Baits That ,Work. 1 Successful trappers generally find , that baits are a great help. However,1 one raust underetand when to use them and the knal to employ. Teo realty a, The Growing Chikl--.Artick Physical Defects Among.School Chikiren. + - Tiomb ane a eia e refel inv tia, the teeth become loose end eventually 9 vs neglect to learn the Wens et the „vas is tie§ have eliown that children lose a Hints on Preserving Good Teeth. .... doctor looked over his clase AO. wen- get vs fur. When We fall we arQ prat y lo'ti -ii to Agronositist, ?Adelaide St. West, Toronto. dered leaw much irAipre4sion he heel sure the decoy is at faelt, considerable part of the educational". le I portant it is to look after your chille The lesson was at an en& and the antmals and rely upon. 1:441Wtt'" tions bY competent medtcal autherit are lost t advantages open to them beau theY vious From what has been said in a pre- cDnuriun ° v.. made, The beys were just verging wrong, usualle, altheugh so= of the Lost Motion le Fermium etc., all without aetually redueiug raanhoed; some a them were in se -called patent seeets are not ell that suffer front uncerreeted phyeicel de t article, you will realize how hue rent farm intents aud at the sari . 1 some thev should be Success with decoys cr , t 0- cur the senior class ei 'high schoo fects auelt as decatied teeth, ettlareed (Irene teeth, train them to care for them p.•operly, anti bane dentrit theni /rani time to time to Make ,, err i a d aele - Ron" ie. undesirable itt fere, maebbe. time increasing the eateuee foh future were already out in the world ef bum.- depende almost wbelly upon our tonsil lease in all its bearings win -not ao Thizic it °Yell Plan Ittaw '1° en'' ut that the apostles bad iter- For eoevenienee, we may feet4 ea marsion auroatelths,:titienclee,utrgstnrteti O. Th b' d etech ia, Profits from the operation a the farm., Th I hadaboutthe kno ieclge of 1 imel life. . a mower or In er tt d . - t 0„ts ness. e eesoe a be n .11 classify as is this loss et eatueatione h le not as is tee su,ura DO detect te .overloaltere- all the lost enotion poseible ie. farming t ret l!s baits as natural end attlficial, In the nearly so serous to the child When, the (hider had. finished ex- former we have the feeds. aeteteeteeee of seat eueesteeted physi- grettentiree y?u*evert st°,1313,q '43 thieek hrr . , '• emirate P lu 0 , e - • Skunks awl civet cans may be drawn oal defeets on the child's physeal de"' veloprnent a the teeth? The imPOrt. o n snfluenee awe nee esti ene ae- tat eve 'h nassage ore boy looltee - ediflotent work. The power alnibed t° it is largely consmned in the opera- tion of the machine, instead a beiug delivered where it is needed tor effi- cient operetiou. This lost motion also greatly incresaes the wear and tear on the =clime, until et becomes a dis- couraging task to try to use ie end ample, we try to -melte good use of it is finally discarded. expensive grana anti meat food, that There 14 a valuable leeson in the we may get the best results, It ateli history of the old machete which has happens, however, that thiegs cesting aPPlicatiOn to the owners busMess,1 nothieg which are necessary to the f th ivls and operations, .The .Pealtry Pfeeset Meet of me value a posseseion ae- e-ording. to what- it eosta us in eeld caele Vilma feeeing poultry for ex - up uepairmgly. "Dr. Jamieson," he asked, "do you think anyone could perform miracles now?' "Unquestionably," replied the doe - with aheost 011Y kind a bloedy reed. velopraents „Many parents de not real- mete a a peeper dies ia meat gr,eater Ilse large ehuuks. Carbasses rab- be that neglect of the teeth may lead than most people realize. bits and inesianes will do. fleet for- to ineurable heart disease or etimpurig a When hay cemes into the world it , gee that flesh placed too siear dwell- rheumatism, that adenoids may ranee is apparently wetness. Nevertheless legs often lures dogs aiid cats instead net only in chronic nasal e,atarkb, but • at this time the Aret teeth axe pree- tor. of the animals intended. Furthe.rmore, in a permanent disfigurement a the tically compietely eormee, lying be, "Then why ,don't they de it'?" 4 y01,1 will have difficulty with hawks, face, or that failure to correct malt dozen voices asked. crows, aneether birds unless. you use nutrition may dent the child's growth ue111.11 ti° gtuns" Ill fitet' under the "You. all IMAM! Something about brush or weeds to hideethe meat. 111111:Ice his 13°4 leA3re eetseel3t1hle t° grin4litittlVelfl tthileelpver:aeue4n3rtetaeaeYtht.liddendbee; these eiremestamites, you will under - Perhaps you 1744Y think that all this *terse that these teeth caneot develop ia of little interest to you. Your child, es they saeale if the lady is ette ante you believe p is Wen and strong. You pleed with a sufficient amount of the cannot be sure of this until a (Teeter's, neceesary building matelial. Hence in examination Prove* it to be a taete the feed of ;per child you should makes an ant this 'noses every farmer. There! eo• et u 4 th is a great deal of "lost motion"' in the firtetttlY affect the Pmata,, are negleetd "You know that physics," saki Dr. Jamieson slowly. Racoons wet eat almost anything. you can donvey a Comb honey, fish (fresh,. smoked or operation el the average farm, and et'. Sometimes we forget that the powerfel electric rrent hundreds of canned) clams, and corn can be ueedi tide "lost motion" ie a great factor— see has a tremendous effect en health miles from ite source and set it at The opossum can be cauget with pessibiy the greatest singte factor—m and productivity and do not 'keep the work virtually without loss." sardines. Use the kind put un de oil. determining the prefit roulting from. Itinelows of the PoultrY behtse clean .90 The boys riedeed. Small, plucked birds are also good, the operation of the business. that the sun can Nizirte in or unike sure "Noir, there are two thge to beae 'Muskrat and rebbit doh attvect that the windows are the right 51ZO in mind: the ttowtr that the dynamo edule, Tiny piecea are beet thoegh Loet reetien in the aneratiou of a and in the eight position. We should generates and the cable that trans,. eatinY People imagine the attracts* ferns. is et so many kinds that it is eeercely possibie to dessuy it, mealreniernber that germs of dieeese are mits the power. Let us asSuale thet ought to be large. Fhb, frogs, and leen to eatalegue it. But with his at- 'titt destroyed in most eeses, if the the dynamo has produced the neces- the like can be odepeteled upon at times .rest raya of the SIM bit' there and sary energy; what is requerea of the to fool this sly etimal, tention directed to it, any farmer an these earae rays warm and dry eable?" The head of a rabbit is ideal for "Why, it must be connected with the weasel. Bloody meat is alas used dynamo," said one of the boys. quite eeteneively, "Yes; but there is ecanetliing else." 'When after mueltrat do mit forget One el the boys said: "The cehle that this animal exists entirely wen meet be insulated." "Exactly; Awl the more nearly pm It the insulation the greater will diecover plenty of h by an a:nay=that the budding, externally and Internally, a Ids own business in .the 411t a and keep it not only cheerful but corn, vesily remembered expee. tenable. ia, in fact, the only hat trip through any fananeg section ing agent that we have which oasts nothing, and ntoet poultry keepers de- pend on it entirely for all the warmth the poultry house gets except that furnished by the fowls themselves. A poetry house which is so situated that the EMI does not strike its east, south and west sides during the day te not a preper place to keep the poul- y in winter. Praeticallet all poultry hous are without artifielal heat and the sun's rays cannot get in its work, there is no means of warming and drying these buildings and malt- ing them. comfortable for the fowls. not adapted to the sou, or en laud ito Hens do not perspire through the skim poor in this or $o poorly draizted as but throw off all the impurities that to preclude, the poesibitity 0 a profit go evith perspiration through the from them mouth. and nose with the exhaling breath. In this exhaled breath there These are typical examples of "lost motion" in farming which might be is et great deal of moisture, and this multiplied helefinitely. They arc woret moisture, congealed in the cold at thy of the careful thought and study InesPhere and. against the cold walls of every farmer. Obviously it is an the poultry house, forma frost an 'irreparable waste to expend time, the thing ot which life is inade up, in the development of lost motion if h can be avoided. Unforemately all the lost motion At almost any time during the crop - growing seas= will reveal striking exaMplea of thia wade resulting from Icht motion on every hand. One fann- er will have gone to the labor and ex- /mese a preparing a field and planting *meet. but due to the use of poor seed get a pear etand, thus limitiag the logosibuity a a profitable crop at the *these. Another will heve planted mere crops than he eat properly care for and is unable to till them proper- ly much the same result. Others have failee to fit the seedbed properly, and atill othere have plauted vroess cold rephts. This frost and damp- ness must be gotten rid of or it trill accumulate to the extent that the house -will be uncomfortable and un- healthful, the fowls will suffer and caamot be eliminated in even the most egg production will cease. perfect running maehine. But by cern-1 The sun offers the means of getting 'meson, the well adjusted, well oiled rid of this moisture and these in - machine runs smoothly in comparison purities in the poultry house air. It to the neglected and wornout one. Nor warms the house so that the air takes can all the lost motion he eliminated up the moisture and dries the walls in the conduct:of a, farm. There aro and the additional warmth snakes it some natural handicaps which cannot possible to open the windows in the be foreseen or easily surmounted. But south side of the building. The foul if all the lost motion possible is elim- inated there will be much the same difference in the resulting efficiency— 'and the resulting profits—ae there is In the efficiency of the two types of machines with which every fernier is of fresh, vitalizing air for the fowls to breathe during the night. The need. of sufficient window space is readily seen, yet there is danger of getting too much, for glass (and we believe in glass in a poultry house) lets eut heat as fast as it lets it in and a house -which has too much glass cultivated traps, planted. on better warms up too much during a sunny prepared and fertilized soil, using bet- day and tools down too rapidly at ter seed and giving better care night. If the house has too little glass, throughout the growing seansn is a the sun's rays cannot get in sufficient - step in the right direction. This will , ly to be effective. A house which is in many eases make time available for of ordinary width (from 12 to 14 feet) 1 t'he improvement of land for future will require about one full-sized, two - cropping, as in the drainage of Wet, sash window, like those used in a areas, the attplication of lime or marl" awellieg house, for every 8 feet in where these soil amendments are length. Of course these windows must needed, the growing of green ma- be made to open up and down, to pro- nure crops to simply needed humus, vide the 'necessary ventilation. vegetables. Cern, potatoes, aPPles, and parsnips are good. When snow covers the ground some green decoy Neglected Teeth Cause Serious Illness. Due largely to the reveletiena of tbe X-ray, supplemented by =del examination pleyeiciane atul bac- teriologist, we know that neglect of the teeth and mouth are zesponsible for a number of serious infectioue clis- evre that tepectally those elements. which bulld bony etrue.ture, of whielt tee tooth la a typo, are supplied in sufficient quentities. This fact recog- nized, you will agree that proper .cttre of the child's teeth really begins earliest infancy, even before any teeth easea, whose ortgm. until recently was have appeared, and shovld be directed very °hectare. The more important of these conditions are diseases of the heart and arteries, infeCtiOnS Of the blood and infectious diseases of the joints. be the energy that is tratisnuttetl. is beat. Pareley, celery, tops of car- All modern up-to-date dertiets now Now, apiriteal power comes from God rots, and even a twig or two ef ever- make use of X-ray pictures whenever and is to be applied in some way—to green will do. they suspect any troeble with the healing the skit lir te liftiug film sin- Food, the natural bait, is aot alwaye rods of the teeth. Not only the .den- and moisture -laden air can, then escape and fresh, pure, outdoor air takes its place so that when the house must be closed again at neeht in se- vere weather, there is a good store ftunillaz How coa meet of this lost motion be eliminated? First, by careful thought and planning in advent° of the sea- son's campaign and second by constant vigilance during the producing season. In many cases a smaller acreage oi ner fallen by the wayside. We ATO effective. On the average farm there test, but the physician as well, bas th leles The first thing ie to Malec is usually an abundance of what the been astouished at whet thee° pictures °ow% later. After infenotr the diet a every child. elneeld fettled* a glass of milk with each meal, and in addition to tide there should be other sources of mineral salts. ouch as fruits, green vegetalca and pure water. But there is another important thing eePecieliy to the 174414'4 feedtegt Nureing at the brevet its by rail oddsthe beet way to etart the proper develop.. went. .ef the 'child% teeths who two Meet. importantelement* needed in thediet for hugakog .sound teeth a.reiat nfile and phosphoric acid, met for the growinirchil4 there: is not a better flOWV9.cjf thessfIrm milk; snothefe Milk in latency and -clean the commotion; the uext thing is to tur bearers eat. Furthermore, with have revealed to lime insulate the cables. That is what the competition keen among pelt hunters, Often they show that laus is pm- eomething better must be sought. The erit about the neck of the tooth, and that there are pochets extending down apostees did. Most of us lose spiritual power all along the line; we keep 'com- pany with people -who are worldly and unbelieving; we have sordid am. bitions and frivolous pleasures. Thus when it comes to applying. God's pow- er conveyed through us—his faulty feed wires—there is no power to ap- bah that proves good at one time or place may not at another. Therefore, we must try to find out what will serve as beat at each new set. Strauge as it may seem, the roe. coon exhibits great curiosity over any- thing bright, and the muskrat is at. ply." traded by white object& By remem- "Do you mean, sir, that we must berieg this, we can often get pelts which, otherwise might not be added to our collections. I will treat the patent attractors His trede as a carpenter. But througbl very briefly. In fairness to all it must it all He had ono central purpose --to be said that most of the distaibutors being more abundant life to men, The try to put out good baits. SOMe of apostles followed the example of their therm however, are not very effective. Master; none of them ever lost eight Liquid scents do not, as a whole, of the one aim that they had in lira give good emits. You can prove that If you want to be a spiritual power, by pouring out a few drops'the same you must pay the price; you must as you would on the line. After five learn what the vital things in life areset six hours the odor will havotvan- nnd concentrate on them. Are we ished. SuPpose you made sets one day willing to pay Se price? The apostles were willing, and we know what they accomplished." have no pleasures? "Not at all. Christ made social visits. He traveled. He worked at Often the question conies up wheth- ._ 'heap a true- brood mare can be distill- gatiehed from a counterfeit and, inci- dentally. what is a fair price to place on a brood mare that promises to be or is aevaltiable producer. This ques- tion every man must answer for him- self. About all that can be said is that a good produeing mare, like other good farm animals, as a teile, is -worth all that her owner asks. It is a weak- ness with most breeders thaNhey can be blinded to the merits Or i4pe best individuale by a fairly good htt It would be comparatively en to determine the value ,of a brood re if bee offspring could be seen, but 14 is rarely possible,. In buying a m for breeding purposes the buyer must rely on his own judgment; 'hence, the better a judge he ia the better he is likely to fare in the bargain, . Men who have given careful study to brood -mare type are generally agreed that certain eltaraet,eristics are common to most profitable brood mares. Of first consideeation is eller- eater. Character is a terra that careen all qualities peculiar to an aiainal. ft Is the ceeelained effect ef general ap- pearance and disposition. Femininity is most important in a broed elate. It is not easy to apvathe, bat is indicated by the setting o tile ears, eeterseesion of eyes, shoe of head and face, fineness of eestrils, lipe, rieele and shoulders. The eritioel jecige cf brood -mare type no mattet what the bread, look a filet for e lelredY , (.1 k.po MO or, then oleo n- cut features, large, placid eyes, and a pleasing car- riage of the ears. In body conformation, depth and breadth are very essential, especially in the quarters for the development of the foal. Clean-cut limbs are an indi- cation of quality, and quality nearly always indicates a good suckler. In short, the kind of brood mare that makes good is the kind that a man with a natural love for animals likes best to hanele. There is a kind of brood mare that is anything :but a joy to her owner. A teview of her record usually in - Valves a hard -luck story. She is near- ly 'always a clumsy brute. That is the mildest term her owner could possibly ese in referring to her. Her clumsi- ness continually works against her welfare and that of her foal. She jams herself against doors and corn- ers, threatening the life of the foal before -and atter birth. More than likely she will step on her foal and break a Ihnb, or in some way injure it Her enilk is poor in quality, or perhaps lacking in quantity. Often she ie a poor feeder. - Care, of course, has much to do with the appearance of a brood mare; but, though she may be in everyday Clothes, her manner or disposition will he the seine. The brood mare that SbOnIcl be sought for her value as a produeer differ s from the stallion in having a ,ifghter head, neck, and fore quarters, but ie more roomy in the beerel. When theeopposite of these petite are present, and the mare is what le termed coarse ox xough, she is quite generally a poor producer of eats. If tem keep these things in A window pane is a lot better than an old hat to keep out the cold wind; nor is the cost of glass or setting it prohibitive. 1.•••••••••••••••••••••••41•10•••••• 1 and expected to draw amrstals the next, just before dawn, when the fur bearers are most active. With the bait evafeiratecl, or practically so, you can- not hope for any great success. Most of the failures from liquid bait may be attributed to this one fault. There is yet another complaint -to THE SUNDAY SC11001,----"----1 THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON JANUARY 9TH Jesus Teaching Forgiveness—St. Matt. 18: 15-35. Golden Text, St. Matt. 6: 14. 21-22.1, Peter's Question. Compare Luke 11: O. The Jewish rabbis But the servant's prayer moved Ins lord to compassion, and he loosed him and forgave him the debt. Jesus in- tends to show by this the greatness of God's forgiveness. Human sin had piled up a debt humanity never couild pay. In answer to the prayer of peni- tence God forgives it all. Compare Exod. 34: 6-7, Nairn 103: 3-12, Isa. taught that one must forgive one s The tontrast betweeit the ten. thou - brother three times. Peter asked if it sand talents and the hundred pence is should be until seven times? The very great. For the latter paltry debt, answer of Jesus makes it practically amounting to eighteen or nineteen Coin -pare the boundless pas- dollars he who had been forgiven mil - sum for revenge m the sword song of Lamech, Gen. 4: 24. Forgiveness like love is boundless measureless. "Par the love of God is boundless, As the measure of man's mind; And the heart of the Eternal Is most wonderfully kind." 23-56. Pareble of the Wicked Ser- vant. The kingdom of heaven is here, as always in this 'Gospel, the new order of human brotherhood, the common- wealth of: kindly and hiving hearts, which Jesus sought to establish in the world. The meaning of the parable is very clear. , A certain king would take accountethat is (R. V.) "make a reckohing," or esettle up accounts," with hi servants. The defaulter, who owed euc.b. a la.rge eum, may have been one of the kingie ministers through whose hands taxes or 'customs duties passed. Ten thousand talents of sil- ver, at the lowest reckoning, would be between eleven and twelve millions of dollars. The talent was equivalent to 60 minas, and..the mina to 100 denarii. The last mentioned coin, which is translated "permr in our English ver- sion, was worth about 18 or 19 cents rof our motiey. In purchasing power, however, the mer.ey o/ those days was worth proportionately very much more than that of to -day. His lord coin - lions cast his fellowseevant int,o prison. He is rightly called' a -wicked servant, and is justly punished for his intoler- able meanness and cruelty. The par- able, therefore, teaches that God's for- giving graee extends to us only if we also have the forgiving spirit. "Im- agine a man," says a recent writer, "lifting one hand in prayer to God the Father of love, calling upon Him for mercy, while his other hand tightens its unmerciful grip on his brother's throat." • St. Paul writes a the habit and dis- position of the true Christian life in the memorable -words of Eph. 4: 31-32, "Let all bitterness and wrath, and anger, and claniour, and railing, be put away frolif you, viitla all malice; and be ye kind one to another, tender- hearted, forgiving each other, even as Cod also in Christ forgave you." ` With this par.able may be compared the parable of the prodigal son, which sets forth the weal& of love and tenderness and forgiving grace which is in the heart of the heavenly -Father. Ile not only forgives, but welcomes 'os.nd honors. The elder son, who did not share his father's pirit, represents the hard and unforgiving disposition of some otherwise good and upright men. Such men, mit justice over mantled him to be sold. It was not an against forgiveness. They exalt jus - uncommon thing in Bible times, for a tice, but forget that justice itself is man to be sold, or members of ,his- not satisfied with punishment. ,Tustice 'bandy, into slavery for debt. The slavery might be for a limited time or for life. The law of tExodus 20 pro- vided that a Hebrew slave ohould go out free at the end of six years. So toward the root.e which hold large quantities of putrid Material. The discharge of poison and gerros from these hidden abscesses at the exiote of to remember about the relation of the teeth and the consequent absorp. dood to geed teeth, and that i5 the mikler,Ce of exercise, hat as regular time from these and other local eau. cas at infection such as diseased toe. me of the MUSelee Makes the ITAUFeles sils are often tho real cause of some large, firm end titroett, tso regular usse obscure ill-defined &intent which, per., of the teeth for chewing helps to mithe baps, has baffled the attending Awl- stronger and better teeth. The food maxi for some time. Should therefore be presented. in such Certainly not all rheuino.tic or sye. a form that it will require cheivitate temic diseases are flue to pus around For this reason the diet eliouid in - the necks of the teeth, or from con- elude a -certain amount of coarse Ma- nor terial designed especially to eXerehte eealdel abscosees at their roots, yet to infections of the tonsils. Yet the teeth. Coarse v,duile-grain breads, it is strongly siuspected that such hard tack, baked potatoes eaten with mouth infectious may often be the cause, or at least a contributing cause, of many diseases, such as tonsillitis, rheumatism, St. Vitus's dance, certain their jackets, fresh appler,--thase and aintilar articles included in the food will help to make good teeth. Decay of the teeth, also spoken of forms of heart and kidney theeases as "dental caries" is caused by the and obscure stomach ailments. action of germs or bacteria which Tartar Deposits. lodge upon the less exposed parts of the tooth. As a result of their growth One of the commonest results of the tooth structure is softened, allow - neglect ot teeth is an accumulation et tartar. The first sign of tartar is o. slight roughness, felt usually on the inside of the lower front teeth, Tide is caused by deposits from the saliva of a hard chalky substatee. The un- clean condition of the mouth resulting from tartar deposSts is a common cause of 'dead breath." Pyorrhea. ,is only -realized in human welfare, and therefore -only in the reclamation of tle lost. Forgiveness alone is not enough, "but it must be accompanied by regen- also Deut. 15. But a later law, pre- erating grace. There must be the de- served in Leviticus 25, provides that a sire and the power to put away, and ilebtew may not be held -as a slave, but cvnly as an hired servant, and that in the year of, jubilee, that is every, fietieth yeer, seeh persons Serving for debt (shall' be set free. The penalty, therefore, was, at the best, a -very heavy one, and in the case presented en the irtable would probably* have your mind when yen go out to buy, meant Oong bondage., for. 'both the You are not apt tO go very far wrong. wan and his family, as far as posslole make amends for, the wrong, and to begin a new life. There would be little use in forgiving a thief who continues steal, or a slanderer Who persists in slandering. forgOeness 14 'followed or az, companied by the transforming power of His Spirit. So also we would seek through the same grace to help a other t 0 belbet thin gs. The deposits of tartar where the teeth join the gums is a frequent cause, though not the only cause, of Rigg's disease, or pyorrhea. Tbe gums become irritated and infected by dis- ease -producing germs, the tissues are broken down and pus forms. Unless the pyorrhea sufferer is prompt ie putting his case in the hands oe a dentist the infection continued, rapid- ly dissolving the soft bone surround- ing th.r," teeth and destroying the at- tachment of the soft tissues of the gum to the teeth. In severe cases Ing the succeedmg generate= of bate teria to penetrate further into the sub- stance of the tooth. Much can be done to prevent this, decay of the teeth, and this accumula- tion of germs, by brushing and 'clean- ing the teeth regularly. Each child should be taught the proper use oe the tooth brush, and the mother should train her child to brush the teeth regu- larly after each meal. At the present time the proper use of the tooth brush is taught in nemy schools by means of the "tooth drill," but this will help but little if the mother does not ivake Sure that this teaching is actually applied in the home. Does your child brush his teeth regularly? 'Do you see that a god tooth brush and some pleasant tooth piste or ,other dentifrice is at lend ? Do you ever look at --your child's teeth? These are some of your res- ponsibilities. make against it. Water destroys the scent, and snow, sleet, and frost affect It. When trapping for mink, muskrat, raccoon, and opossum many sets must be baited close to a stream, or lake. Should the water rise, the liquid scent will .be destroyed. The -various paste baits have over- cointhe faults of the liquids. This decoy is very lasting. 11- we are com- pelled to keep away from traps for days—end this is often the case; esPecially with mink -ewe know that the paste can be depended Open to lure for a week.- Should there he rain, snow, sleet, or frost, we may rest as- sured that this new type of attrautor can be submerged, and when expozed to the air again it is appareetly ea strong as when squeezed from the tube. There are two them about baits to bear constantly in •mind. The most important, perhaps, ie that no decoy ought to be employed where sets can be made Without it. Ilernembole there are no ma& mixtures which actually drag animals irito traps. Generally spea,king, the season has not be= ene of =interrupted pros- perity for the fruit -grower, but it has certainly emphasized the need of co- operatiot. Too matey girls can play "The End of a perfect Day" on a talking ma- chine, but can't get up it thee the next morning to help, get bro/.1cfnaf ..zescoriettit sX-01t4g scvNis- ,--1,14014 efetedrelit Soul. brrtArtto ,e,17aZ%Va.