HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-3-10, Page 6i•
Addeo* communications to Afirenounist, 73 Adelaide St. West, "1'eropto,
Improving Your Poor ]~rust Trees, which will form the adhesion. A split
Almost every farmer will find al or tongue in both pieces will serve
knowledge of budding and grafting: still further: to hold them in exact,
Helpful. It may be to make over an' position. • have his neighbors know what poet'
apple tree from an inferior variety When I have to make over larger cows he bad. That is exactly what
into a palatable and salable sort. Or, trees, or add new varieties to a beare 13nppetyed, Smith azeraged these
ft may be to add a few new varieties; ing tree, i select a number of strong tests, giving each patron a sheetwith
any putting two or three kinds on one: new branches, an inch or two in dig- the reports for everyone on it, Ever}
tree. 1 meter. These are cut off clean and man could see how m:,.eh butterfat he
To describe t aeration of bud -square instead of slanting* Then they had sold each week, and how his cow
+.he operationsare eeeefully split across the en:oldie teeteaveraged, and whether is was
eine; and grafting. it is necessary, so that the two scions can be inserted. t 1t
first of all, to get straight on the better or worse than his neighbor. It
The ends of the scions are cut to a v,•as also reported regularly in the
meaning of 'ale terees.
"Budding is accomplished by ka}=1 slim, tapering wedge, so that they county paper.
3t' a bud fro one r in art ia= will fit snugly in the split, care being Dal they wake up' Well, I guess
ire;
another tree and t ;taken to place them flush V. e the; so. Soon the farriers m bunches be-
n athe' eiee, which is spo,ier, o outer edge of the split, so that the
ns the stock.' The stoat is usually' • gals to buy good dairy cows by the
ae±aly one to three years old, and :sir inner bark of both stock find scion; carload, Old Brindle wobbled down
oed om.':tr eonditdcnin will come together, i the lane for the last tinier and was
The grocer who recorn=
rands to you Red Rose Tea
o. n bic .he lie •less ro t
than he does on other teas,
can be trusted when he re=
commends
other goods.
means the least are the nnany new
hozues built from the proceeds.
There is keen competition between
the best farmers to see which one can
get the largest cream ehecks each
week, Record-keeping is still the lead-
ing feature of interest. It takes a
real force to handle the cream books
now, where, at the start, Smith could
handle it himself. Now he charges a
small fee for testing and making re-
ports to each one. They are glad to
pay lain to keep them posted on what
their cows are doing.
I wonder if there aren't other places
In both whip grafting and cleft $hipped to the packer. 1 wish 1 could ° that need a Smith to wake them up?
Gi+,ft,ng coi.snsea .n tat�tnt; a make „u visualize the changes that:
a tial brat's!:, :viiich :s spoken a as;. grafting the scions should be firmly+y -,. " 1
the "schen,' from one tree and faster.-}: bound fn place .as soon as inserted. have taken place in eta little corn...! If a button cosines off when you are
ing or grafting it onto another, in and the entire joint well covered with niumity. Many farmerri now bring in far from needle and thread, take a
au:li a sway teat t will an. The
grafting wax:. If both scions take. in one. two, three, and more gallon Bans • smolt piece of string of a suitable
eeionn is eneratl t am active' `i cleft graft, one may be cut off of ereamt every week. Smith has a color and, `corking from the under
g cu later. As the seions grow, the top fine business. but the fanners most; side, thrust it through the garment-,
geeing growt-s'I, ailout the size of ;t
3e a.l peneil. It laud be cut it ring.
r. iter et' in very early spring, Valle
aren e
the lay.h
-iE:S
til. c . Th cion a
s .. r.�itaia - e s
may bee kept ire ;;alma or soil, in a
br, rehea of the treo are removed; in all have a finer one, IN ny, cr bank hes, ` using a hairpin as you would a btrbin-
the ease of an older tree, a few each started where one never thought of et in fancy work; slip the button on
year, until the new growth replaces before! The farms are fairly begin- the string, work the string again
the old after three or four seasons,
nitre to
bloom since they Base been Through the goods and tie the two.
M l better #ed with cow manure, Silos ends firmly
together. This
is muehcPl3 r, or in an ice house.
I like to do my grafting juet after' The Babcock Tester Who Woke UP' are to be seen on every farm. New better than trusting to the holding
the buds begin to swell in the spring,
Our Town. barns are common, and rot by any qualities of a pita.
that scions will. start to grow. s'si !gown here in a 1+ttle country town - --+ Noss he is disappointed in his_seifisli
soy?n as roes:&?e after grafting. Bud - d of southern Illinois, is a man who liasambition. Ho 11_45 el/ell up hope
ding may also be dote cit that stage,; starred up more interest in dairying;;
that Jesus will make Himself a king,
but I prefer doing it in late July or: than anyone here ever dreamed of,
August, after the buds for the next!, writes an Illinois fanner already pilfering from the common
season's growth have matured. O ° Our farmers had been shipping a The profits frani the hog crop form: and two -lay --four number one yellow, purse which he carr* ed. In his base
aiid treacherous folly he now bargains
course, elicit buds donee start to growl, little cream for some time• --just take; a very important item of the total', Inane rafters, tweutyefaur inches on with tha chief enemies of Jesus to
until the followirg spring, but they ing what milk the calves did not get; piofits from many+ farms. These centre, sheathed with one -by -four roof deliver Him a to them secret! a
ehemld unite wife die stock an three? and sellingthe cream, and that was" Profits depend in large nneasure upon boards, number two lumber spaced uietly. For that he is id 'thirty
cx !slur wee as. about ail.the care of the Bogs, anal good caret two inches apart if weed shingles are wieees of silver," equivalent to nine
1' budding sere ore three distinct; Aman here, owning a few acres, of the hogs veils for an tap -to -date and! used. If prepared roofing is used one- teen or twenty dollars, or the ordin-
L:c'ps. ' decided that he would like to buy'! sanitary hog house. 1 by -six dressed mid matched boards try price of a slave. That Judas had
i- �• 2 • d tv w Money* put into a gaol hog house should be used, A heavy three-ply en !mess the poseibility of better things
First, inmate vee ,shed. This is done cream ton some compan. + . He knew a es evident frons the llfastex'e ciroir
.,,. - is well invested ander any circum. prepared roofing covered with crush- e
.. o...ting a e,� arrant Buri. of the ver- vr•eam buyer in enothea town. and had
of him, from the trust reposed in him
sed "mitlite strip fir k learned h • to test cream. So he took' stances but when market hogs aro e i .elate will give a good roof for b h
iter repentance.
The Passover, vv. 17.50.
first day of the feast. This
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
MARCH 13,
Lord's Supper, St. Matt. 26: 1430. Golden Text -
1
Cox._ 11: 26.
Time and Mee•x•-.-Thursday, April
6, A.D. 29. An upper room in Jer-
usalem,
Connecting Links—Matthew, Mark. j
and Luke all agree that it was the
Passover supper which Jesus ate with
His disciples on the last evenings
whieh they spent together, This was!
the sacred feast held in memory of
the great day of the del3'erar.ee of
their fathers from Egypt (Exod, 12-
;13). Jesus bad made secret 'prepare-'
tioins with a friend in Jerusalem to
eat the passover in his house, He ap-1
pears to have known of the plotting
of Judas to betray Flinn, and to have
believed that Judas would tuake `.
known the place to His enemies; that;
they might come there in the night
end seize Hint. By His secret pre-
parations the traitor's plan' for the
tune being was thwarted, and he bad
to choose a later hour and another
place.
Judas l
ttr,
d s Sal s His �.a.
.e vv. 14-I
!i
v. 14; Judas Iscariot. The surname
means "man of Kerioth," a town in
the south of Judaea. Judas seems to
have been the Dilly one of the twelve
who was not a Galilean. He must
have had some education and some
aptitude for business, for he acted. as
treasurer for the little company of :
disciples. I•Ie had, zoo doubt. expected
great things of Jesus, and had dream-
ed of places of great wealth and pow-
er for those who were close to Him.
A Practical flog!louse
vs•.., a r -.e F rap o at' how e . ., _ • - y is fellow disciples, and frons his
r%'. eo-f,•urtlra of an hell to an inali' the examination and got a license to up around fifteen cents, good shelter twenty to twenty-five years without late and bi
.la<�r i knife sl oa+;3 he used, gest and buy cream. He made a tical'` is alt the snore important, The iioor• nni attention. This mates a yery T
over again till the fulfilment of it
in the reign of God." He knew that
the end of His earthly career was at
hand, and that for them as well as
for Him a new order of things was
about to begin. We who commemor-
ate this last gathering of the disciples.
with their Master in the Lent's supper
think of Him as present with us He
spiritual reality and power, sharing
with us the common meal.
One of you shall betray arse. They
were, amazed and grieved. With one
exception they were staunch and loyal.
friends. Not one of them would have
betrayed Him, save the traitor Judas,
who, with affected innocence, joined
the rest in. asking "Is it I?" The
answer of Jesus was indefinite. They
were all dipping, aeeordir_g to the
custom of the time, in the common
dish, and from time to time Jesus
recognized and honored cane or an-
other by dipping a morsel of bread
in the broth and handing it to hint.
In this way He seems to have inti-
mated to Judas that lie knew what
was in the traitor's .hear!, but the
others did not suspect him. If they
had they would hardly have let him
•
g°'
Eton as it is written. Although the
Jews did not commonly understand
the re, bee of the suffering servant
of Jehovah, in Ise. 63, as referring to
Christ, yet Christ Himself sats in it
a prevision of His awn suffering acid
death.
This is My body, Jesus is, o
course, a ea#in;• in figurative lan-
guage. He is comparing Himself,
about to be slain, to the lamb whose
flesh. lead been eaten, and whose
broken body and shed blood had been
the symbol of deliverance from
Egypt. So would Itis body be broken
and His blood shed, that He might
fulfill His mission, and bring redemp-
tion to humanity, and eeta•ablis'h God's
Kingdom in the wort! By faith they
would laeeome partakers with Hint in
that snerifiee argil in that rent: option.
His wor e, His teaching_ His eamnplin,
would beeomo their sgiirit,ael food. His
spirit would enter into them and give
talons new life.
Application.
It is doubttul if we can inrsgiue the
dismay which followed the announce.,
went which Jesaa inade that one of
His own disciples would betray IIinn.
"Exceeding sorrow" is the way the.
evangelist dei;crilies it. But it was
not merely to amaze then with grief
that Jesus male this startling asser-
tion. In tones thrilling with Borrow
and love He sought to reach the heart
of tho traitor. Surely the realization
that the Master knew what dreadfid
plans were in his heart would be toe
nnueh for Judas. Even the most in-
nocent of the disciples were moved by
the statement to earnest heart-
searching. It is a testimony to the
moral quality of the eleven that not
one of them enquired if it were sortie -
one else. Every man examined his
own heart to discover the possibility
of such a moral lapse. And very right
it was that it should be so. "Inn every
individual there lie coiled and dorm-
ant, like hibernating snakes, evils
that a very slight rise in temperature
will wake up into poisonous activity.'
None of us should boast our freedom
from any form of sin. All wickedness
has one root and essence. It is selfish-
ness, living to one's self instead of to
God, and this may easily pass from
one form to another. There is no-
thing more foolish than for any one
to indulge in the self-confidence that
any form- of evil Las no danger for
him.
plans here shown illu trate a popular warm roof for winter use.
, maze a3 :e:en eel, awl a' Tittle sliver with a certain company. and they sent The
tii€� svarai lata: be left sit the entree loin an outfit» arrangement which is proving verge The metal roof windows let the
was the fourteenth day of the Jewish
t e the marl:. The cream station was rigged up.� eatisf'actory an a great meow farms] sunshine strike every par: of the 'montla Nisar and seems to Have been
Second, neater ;e T -:,hared slit in the and :a little etearn began to corns in. throughout the earn belt. i building during the day. There is 110 Thursday of'the passion week Exod.
1ark ,?f the :tock, and! slip the boli After a few month a few more' The outside dimensions of this` better disinfectant for a hog house, 12; 17-18), The Jews were, and still
eta tali, s+► it fit ru p buckets eaune in and occasionally
a ` house are twenty-four feet by thirty-! no more efficient destroyer of disease are, very particular to remove all
gay under the , a i o seven feet six inches. It contains° germs known, than plenty of bright leaven and leavened bread or cakes
?^.tt'ri. whole can. This man (1 will call him, g
Th rel, tie the bir11 firmly t. Smith although that is not Isis name),; twelve separate pens each six feet by sunlight. Plenty of sunshine is bet from thew houses at the beginning
R y over the t in' the clear, with air alley `ter and cheaper than buying medicine of this day. In the afternoon the
•a;aEl vsn,h raffia 4t' soft twine, to !sold having a pretty keen brain, began to' eight, y p y t paschal lamb !yeas killed (Extol, 12: 6),
• secure without cutting it, wonder if there wasn't a sway to gat; feet, ten hides wide, running the full i for the hogs, and in the evening the passover meal
In as few weelte or as .s on as b the fanner, to use more and better length of the building between the, Fresh air is also an essential fea- g h p v r n Yt a -
o t e was eaten. It ens on this clay, there-'
raisers have agreed that apen six'' house, Every farmer knows bow soon ?
to ship. His volume was so small that! � a pig
question, �'Vliene, and received the
the business was not paying very l by eight feet as large enough for ra th6•t.r in the ordinary pig shed be- answer here re•orded. Jesus had kept
we1I, so he suggested to his patrons Snw and her litter, indeed a five by < conies foul uhcn filled with hone.: His secret well, and neither the trai-
that they bringgiro a sample f eacln9 eight -foot is used by *-eine with good Hence to insure• healthy hogs some. tor Judas nor the others knew where
P results. .rovisaon must be made, This is pro: they were to eat. Luke says that He
COW'S milk and let him test it. Cine, l I . ,
t sentPeter and John. a h . Tho man to
would then know which were their q There i an outside door at e;tchi vieeed for by two ventilutort, These whom they were sent would be found
good carts and. which were their poor, enol of the alley. Then a door opens ` ventilators are especially valuable an a certain Place t certain time
one,. Three-fourths of them never outward into the alley frown each Pen„ during the cold neujiier in the vvanter1and would be expecting pecting them. Mark
lead thought of such a thing. But they: ~- and Luke tell the story more fully at
seta" 1 this point.
!eel grows Rist, cut the tics to prevend cows, so there would be more cream' two rows of pens. Practicaly* all hog l lure of any bell-co.nstn•ueted hog fore, that the dieiples reined the.
1
i e binding the growing steel:, The
•C'o.iiswing spring, when .growth starts,
-he stock as eut off clean, just above
-':e - growing bud, which forms the
new leader, nnaki*g'a new tree on the
otic! roots.
Grafting s of two i:ind4. If you
Litre a small tree or branch to make
•�.er. say as big as your finger. you
inn use a "whip graft. This consists all gladly brought .in their milk'
le cutting at yhe stock with a long, samples. Smith tested the milk with -
slanting cut, and eutting a scion of out charge, and insisted that theyi
the same size, and in the same way, bring a sample every week for a num- -
so that the two pieces will exactly fit ber of weeks, so he could get an aver -
together like a splice. The inner bark, age for a period of tinne,
or cambium of the two piece:+ must Now we come to the interesting
just at together, as this is the part part: Naturally, Jones didn't like to
' .i: 1l. ss›cp.v...'.+•�J ,'t' .41 X45*"+.'y;'ri,++M.+• , "•
'�� _...•�—�' ':-r' ti.+era.+..°' S
:YEAST CES - ;:
Good home made bread is
the finest food on earth, and
the wife that is a good bread
maker is a real helpmate to
the bread winner. Bread is
the one food that perfectly
combines in itself all the ele-
ments that .give strength to
the body. - Children who eat
lots of good home made bread
thrive the best—they never
get sick from eating good
bread. Bread making is a
simple operation. Bread
made in the home with Royal
Yea.st Cakes possesses a
greater degree of nourish-
ment, and will keep fresh
longer than that made with
any other.
Scientists - highly recommend 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 an hour in a cup of
luke - warm water with one teaspoon
sugar. Then stir well and strain once or
twice through muslin and drink' the
liqud. BETTER results will be obtained
by allowing it to soak over right and
drinking., half an hour before breakfast.
Repeat<as often as desired. Send name
and, address for free booklet entitled
"Royal Yeast' for, Better Health,"
E. 7�! e' Gillett Corr p .ny Li 13n i
Toronto, Cat:6014
Made in Cars; tla..
y�
6 ; N DJ\ l D1U\L Q
F;0LLOiti TILL FLoojR
as e ALLe.Y
c r LE.L. T,A).1 s —, -
(LAU' T TROtJG S
61:VIIIOULPU.
Wti 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 meal,
When the even was come. Luke tells
of the first words of Jesus (22: 14-
18), which Moffatt translates as fol-
lows; "I have longed eagerly to eat
this passover with you before I suffer,
for I tell you. I will never eat the pass
FLOOlZ.PLAN
so that the hogs may be separated
and moved from one pen to 'another
with convenience inside the building.
Each pen is also supplied with an
outside door so that separate runs or
yards may be built on the outside for
each. In decent weathe_ this door
could be left open so that the pigs
could have the use of the outside run
and inside shelter at will;
These small doors should be twenty
four inches wide and thirty-six to
forty-two inches in the clear. In cold
weather a piece of ,burlap or ducking
hung at the toe of the door, with a
stick a little shorter than the width
of the :dont nailed across the bottom
to prevent the wird from blowing it.
back, will help materially to keep the
pigs warm. The pigs will soonlearn
to liftthe curtain when they want to
go through. The 'board doors would
not then need to be closed except in
very bac! -weather, or while the pigs
are very small.
The walls of the building may be of
three materials: woocl, .'hollow build-
ing tile, or concrete. The cost of these
different materials would be about the
same, provided a good warm building,
is constructed,
The hollow building tile is ;being
used by a great many with very good
results. On accclnt of the dead air
spaces in the tile, such a house will
not freeze if there is stock in it, .no
matter how cold the air is outside. The
hogs are more comfortable in cold
weather and do not require so imn+eh
fried to keep them in good condition,
\iooci' is the most commonly used
bocause of the case with which it is
‘iooked into a finished building•.' lint
a wood building is erns Oyu c :.ci. a,
o,0 i' 1' .as-one•built of ho:lo,v lilt, c•r
6diTf;'iet' blocks the cost wocild: pox
{i'_y bethe same or hies: or.
The root in all cases will be of 'wood
when the doors and windows are
closed for protection from the cold. •
Such a house is especially adapted
for brood sows during the farrowing
season. Each sow and litter can be
provided with a separate pen and out-
side run, until the 'pigs are old enough
to be together in a large lot. The
individual pens are also useful - for
weaning purposes. The pigs can be
shut in this pen and given special
care during the weaning period.
The partitions can be made remov-
able, and when the sows are through
f1•trrowing,• they can be removed and
it can -be •used for two large sleeping =~
ny s.S FE
"lrof ire*
c lQfl—AsstxrQs'a move
112.: STONE SONS ` L1MITEDD
It°aGERSOLL ONTARIO
floors for the shotes.
Altogether, this house has many
advantages which recommend it to
the average farmer. if the house is
too large or too,, small for the purpose
of any individual reader, he could- fol-
low the same, plan of construction and.
fit the size to his individual needs. -
Wheal He would sail -
Vedeisb1e, Farm.Flowee,
New Improved Strains
All testesl,sure todrow
SerrdforCe e/o,g
ae
a
1-
+4t'
}go. U
T afar pylae:s'
low, it 1: necessary
that you receive e ns y cent poa- •
Bible ' ftiti
or `rc1,t bides and
you have. Maul 21•e you [,;et
Sante -lilt' slziifolr a :',./our. lot
Whoth'el 1: Is, 01111 11140 o, ;,a loin- •
WILLIAM STONE SONS !..iii-iil"it
Woo .Oa'rock;OC#;,l.'4; 10
es-rAEtereFl.e0 11370
� , _: . ee
'.,iSG iJ c No. 14--• 2'I
"Use Imperial !Mica Axle Grease and
Imperial EurekaHarness'Oil."—ave
3 your horses, your harness, your wagons.
Imperial Mica Axle 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, mid materially reduces friction.
'arse half as much as you would of ordinary grease.
imperial Eureka Harness Oil 'makes harness proof against
dust, 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 '^l
` i
economical._
Both are sold in convenient. sizes
by dgales,a everywhere.
-Stet
grieve
•