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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-2-23, Page 6OUR 1922 GARDENS. Ilid the garden of las4 year cox:ta n all the kinds of vegetable. that the """ ', F family wanted, and enough of each e kind? Specialists of the Department Address canmunicattoant to ist}tcrnk- mtet„ ea Apetetd� $t, Wbst rarRataw g leaving oarl twee Textile germs, Setting a Heti. iter: are. tnferttie or have dead At .drat thought, setting a hen seems g y eggs. eo be a net sin g?e. soh. et, but when TheAe twenty eggs can then be put I hear of so many failures and poor under two irons, and a new sitting batches I find upou inquiring that very .heed under the third hen• few people know just liow to set a Ilea, or if they do, they seldom follow! Planting for Pollinafiott. the hest methodsr : For the last score of years. the pal - The first essential in starting in the lination question has been receiving business is to purchase eggs of some meth attention ley orchardists in gen good, reliable breeder who mates no- era', many of whom have said that, thing but strong, vigorous bards, Placa their trees bloom freely but set little', your order for the eggs, but de not fruit, There are a number of 'factors; have them shipped until you are ter- which may be responsible for this con tan you will have a broody hen when dition, among them being variety as they arrive. When they arrive do not well as the individual tree character= place thein under the hen, but place istie, general vigor of the tree., dis them in a enol, dry place, and do nota eases and weather conditions. disturb them for twenty-four hours. Thea .penin, the coutiitions seem ta, A nay or two aefora yon expert the) be ideal, splendid weather, trees ini eggs to arrive, arrange a place to set normal vigor, plenty of blossoms, but; the i.en, . Zt'ineu:ever a hen is allowed no fruit. The trouble here may be that to* steal her nest away, she usually '„ the ssrehard was not properly blocked,= e'e.?Ia a coa411331.p place* away frau ea as to fertilize through the blas-° the Heels, ee that site will :let be dis.i rano:. t'u e i. Thee e'";bates shoo?d bel Evert with all the eon'litions ideahl du=. eases; a� rearlyaa, Itj,s.l le LLlen a. passe is lA a.rg et; L..2•.t -1 for thy? he:R. as far as above mentioned, should You 1Z Ilea teity t few "tens etre to be eet s.04 may have a eery not set of fruit, •, it is not vsaLay.s ecin •en?ent to provide Ti,t, reason here is that your variety; repeal Ite co ar.cre ie: this a]ttir.^ hens,' i needs erostang with sante other bar- Of the, varier„ steeee of :Leet, for sit- lett before it will set its fruit 'eel :e r1," f 'I'a is to iuuaen i- Sn"' raae gropers have practiced spray - e3: z t:€t .an ir; ^e ing the trees while they are in blos-! eC1na e, fi tee: "1 :Ze high in bee!: awl " a ' A eam, TIrE e spray so,utions will in1ure� sides. mai with r .rel sit inches high tit bless—vine in many erases and wilie of Agriculture sag that, as a rule; not more than 15 .or 20 kinds should be tplanted in the average home garden. That's good advice for the "average" garden, but our garden" of 192„2 is to be more than average; it's to be the hest garden that we ever had. We will want a greater variety than we had last year, and perhaps larger quanti- ties of some of the kinds that we grew. If we haven't yet sent to our favorite eeedsmen for a 1922 catalog, or to two or three seed firms, if we liked, we should do so at once. A catalog fresh from the printer's is like a joy and a friend in time of need. With a catalog at hand, we are not likely to overlook anything when we examine last year's garden plan with a view to preparing 4 new plan for; the coming spring If certain vege- tables gave indifferent results last season, they should either be omitted ,, from the next planting list, making certain first that some essential to proper growth was not overlooked, or be substituted by some other variety or varieties of the sante class. If one's cabbage and onion patches wenn poor, for instance, the failures may have been caused by club -root disease or onion fly respectively. If the garden grew good crops of vege- tables ether than those named, it should grow salla es and onions sue- eeeefully, provided that the troubles mentioned or other possible causes of failure are remedied. Then again the nature of the season itself may have had much to do with poor results in growing certain crops, Perhaps the thing that failed would prove suc- ce sful the next thee tried. Otte should rneditate also upon ease tivation ani fertilizers. Deep eulti-' vatian with proper fertilizing. is th,• reel secret of sueeess an growing qual-t ity vegetebles. Was our garden pro perky cultivated and fertilized hest season? If it was not, we Should net' bleuie the vegetables for not produein - hest results; Bethel-, we should re- solve to do things and have things right next time. From the seed catalog, we might ogler a supply of garden fertilizers at the same time that we order our seeds. Having decided that our methods were right, or that we will make them right, we should make an outline reap of the new garden on paper, indicating the direction of the rows, the distances apart, the location and amount.of each kind of vegetable to be grown land, if desired, the approximate dates for sowing and setting. After the garden is thus planned, the seed catalog. should be consulted earnestly. We should remember that many varieties of vegetables have been greatly inn - proved in recent years, and that anany- have large urebards of single varieties,: fr 3 t to ea e n the testing n"a me ;be pcailen grains, tern : f r - f.dente eet. Before piecing e a nue, upon close examination.; t" rR -r'r :r .• in :1:e :ant eer :it:it,:• _x ',�- � =t prr netS;e {ran divide all fruits into two' w s c9 te::r nt:a a es t; , i•>: First, those which are self • - 4ra ea, ` _e t' 1 �' ee' of ga s seta ie-�thet as, those which will not: •c r" t t," ret fruit with their own l:olien; sand,! c , ,'.2 b it nte a e: +M1. time Curt will mature fruit' f c• a , cs ;• a ', er with their own pollen. And then, a" ',••' t., ! Pk tl:c' :� c a"Se 1 t 'of' Ti .na)e • ernita an one y ' par "w:'.n tarheY a1" I 7=lithre _ the country but fertile in another. viensier neet hatety e.r .•: t.,a After some c are£ui cbset•catione I' veil : i • i"�.•Sa�. as 2n"•'*F�t 'a list of apples that blzrsr�nr, veil it ?;3 .:need's -level. A -net! Fla ratc together. A Tattle ct► eaeaitaon at etre ‘e"-r....1%4t r'1 .::t^g elan fen a tan'1,--a toe heel to 1, er they were adapted for other distant 1 :,.soteir R ''haled. They pea =t tie I:€•i'a l s LL'• � ..: •rte ;,, ., c .gleet., as well.. rsn t,, .tent ).,err, e+n,+ n The varieties that work goad. to - The n tn.' air of. e�gge to place under gather are a$ follows: For early, the hen wall est goer, i upon her size hell Gravenstein, Oldenburg Iced Astra egge .are conshiered enough. However,I late varieties, Baldwin Ben Davis r n. 'u.' n . n. ♦.. , O.:4114 NL'i°: l're*; nt the eggs Preen proper time, would soon prove whethe t'1:e eeasan of than year. Lrsuul y fifteen char., Yellow Transparent, Wealthy; if the liens nee set early, it is better (;rimes Golden, Jonathan, 11IeIntosh, tI Cplace only thirteen eggs under Northern Spy, Rome Beauty, Spitzen burg, Wegener, and Yellow Bellflower.. Before the hen es R.t. she should be Regardless of whether a variety is • dusted with ;a good liee powder orsterile or fertile, we believe that it is sodium ffuorid. Then she is ready for benefited by erossi ig-•-that it will pay the eggs. It is well to repeat the dust- to plant more than one variety in a ing on the tenth and nineteenth daye. block. However, one need not make Then hens ehouid be relen ed and feri the mistake of planting a great many each day. Feed them close to their, varieties in the same orchard. Some nest, so they will have to hunt for the fruit growers are asking the question, read. Feed whole grains and water. how does pollination affect the fruit Avoid damp mash as they will unite that is snud? ere the nests dirty and require more time Many fruit growers claim that the entirely new varieties have conic into existence and general use. Although • it is. wise to stick to those sorts with which eve have had success, thele in y' be better varieties which will give headier yields and improved q"�ality.. For a home garden quality is really more important than quantity, but there are lots of .varieties ,available that yield both. On the pages of the catalog, cheek the varieties that have been; decided upon. Then calculate the amounts of each kind required according to the plan. It is usually best to order a little more of each kind than apparent- ly would be needed, to be. on the safe side and to have a few extra seeds for testing as to their power of growth. The list should be made out early anti sent to the seedsnen without delay. The earlier that seeds are ordered, the more certain the gardener is of se- curing fresh seed and exactly the hinds wanted. Insist upon having the best, regardless of price. Buying cheap. seed is a gamble: In spraying materials,. we - might need a new sprayer of some kind. Ac- cording to size of garden, and whether or not it will be needed for fruit trees as well, there are hand sprayers, knap- sack sprayers, bucket sprayers and barrel sprayers from which to choose. Arsenate of lead, Paris green, emu - menial lime -sulphur, and Bordeaux mixture, or materials for snaking these letter two at home, tobacco eon coctions, and various proprietary come pounds are available in variety and quantities suitable to anyone's needs, In tool implements, there is a host of things old and new from which to seleet labor savers. In common tools, like the garden fork, spade, rake and hoe, the important thing to consider when choosing is strength. The so- called ladies' sets and individual tools often. are weak and unsound, A wo- man who gardens in earnest will of neee'sity put as much strength into the work as a man would; otherwise, rhe could not accomplish the opera- tion. Long' -handled tools should have the metal of the actual tool itself car- ried well up the handle and both metal and wood strong. Besides these tools, there are many novelties in weeders and cultivators that are a great help in any garden. Probably the best one all-round gar - lien tool—Ws really an implement --- is a du m ' e rbi .tion seed drill, wheel hoe, cultivator and plow, It is easily op- erated by hand and will last for years. So here's to the 1922 gardens. May they be fat and flourishing. Conclusions e" tests made at the O.A.C. indicate that good gable butter; can be made frons whey -cream, and of fair keeping quality if the whey -cream has been pasteurized. It Is more profitable to try out fertilizer elements separately on a farm to find out what its particular 'needs are than to use a mixed fertil- 1t izer containing possible ingredients that the soil does not require. THESUNDAY SCHOOL FEBRUARY 06 Elishn's Heavenly Defenders, 2 Kgs. G, 8'17, Golden Text —Ps. 34 7. Time --Between B.C. s33 and B.C.' then reeked back in terror." Tie early 800. rising of the servant ;poised the ele- 1'laee—Dothan, ten miles north of , ment of surprise in the Syrian's et. Samaria. i tack. How shall w do? a most nu - Connecting Links—In the two pre-`;tural question for one wl:- raw merely vious lessons we have had instances, the 3'i•ih1e foe ani' not the invisible of Kish 's extraordinary power a; a guardi us. p p e In those lessons he used that; V.: 16. Fear not, Ties would bo the power beneficently for certain indi-i counsel of a bragg anti if it were :sot vtdua's. Trj this lesson he used iti for ; for the statemen. vi -0 follc,ws, "Ti Israel as a whole. Vre should note the expulsion of a reasonable fear islean- growing importance of the prophet's ed only through a reasonable trust." position in Israel. In moment% of They sleet be t,ith u9. etc. 41'hat grave national danger he helpc.l iris >rtish;a meant of eourre, was not that people, and thereby be won t rear res- flee Israelite army was larger Ilan the peet and confidence. Syrian: army, but filet the people re I. A King's Plan, 8-10. God were surrounded by heavenly V. 8. The King, of Syria; the king of guardians, while the Syrians were not, the Aramean confederacy whose capi- As yet the servant would not under- tal city was Damascus: This kingdom stand Elisha for he had no idea of bordered on Israel on the north. The the heavenly guardians until his eyes ing's name is not mentioned but in were opened. Compare Paul's trine: - all probability Benhadad is referred' pliant claim; "If God be for us, who to, Warred against Israel. Syria and can he against us?" hone. 8: 311. Israel were frequently at war during V. 17. Open his eyes. Elisha did rot this period. (See 1 Kings 11: oo_or:• pray that a heavenl • host might d Kings : 32, , sentfor t ey wereht here already. His in cleaning. 11s a rule hens will re- color, flavor and general character- 2 Kt g 8 28 29 '10 33 18 8 h 1 os d to tarn to their nests before there is any' lytics of the fruit are changed by pal etc.) The consequences might; have prayer was that they might be weals; i- danger of the eggs shilling, but if ,lination. But after a more careful been more serious with Israel in these fest to his servant, "It was a moment - they do not ;o back in half an hour' " wars had not the Assyrians kept the any unveiling of what always was." that such we are obliged to conclude p O el't Rights of Our Children kingdom of Damascus busy defending.' The mountain. This was the hill on they should be put back. Do not re- that such Characteristics are not in P Y b' rr. their owls borders. In the following which Dothan stood. The Syrian hest caluo a the hen after the nineteenth' fluenced by pollination. The pollen story it was not a regular war but a, lead crept up the hill during the nigjtt affects the percentage of set, the size. BY EDITH RILAND CROSS. sort of guerilla campaign. His ser- (v. 14); but the heavenly host was The period of in+;ubtaion for liens' of specimens, anti there also seems to Are the property rights of our chit- dozen smoothpebbles are but art of°ants; his chief military commanders. there too. Horses and chariots of lire. eggs is twenty-one days. Usually orte • be a close connection between the dren respected in the hone'? Do we the miscellany in that drawer. p the camp. 'Some scholars would amend What was said in the note on e3: 11, el' the eggs hatch in the avenin ofy w the Heouew text to read: in such and tnay be repeated. The Hebrews g of fruit presence or seed and the weightced of the recognize their right to their things Occasionally' we clean out the draw- such a plate let us set `'an ambush." thought that Jehovah,as Lord of the twentieth day; it sometimes ha by poi as we wish then) to respect ours'? er, rearranging things and discarding .If that reading be correct the refer- Hosts, had a great heaenly army and Pers, however, that the hatch will run ;nation. Many changes that take place These are ques tions which have, those that have little value. This gives ence would be to a raiding band rather in this there would be a muster of over the' twenty-first day, especially can be attributed to pruning, fertilize- come t the t f the child an idea of the t • 1 than to a large arm .1 • t during cool weather. g time ttllHge and similar orchard man- The Welfare of the Home o ns in to raining o our two to presen value e army. c rano s, God was also thought to Examine elle nest and ergs and re -.;agement. and four -year -odd boys. of things, and be is the judge, with. tvell'9x 'The ;man of God; that is, the dwell in a fiery light and his army Every only suggestions as to what thing, man of God, Ensile,. In resembled, in appearance, this fiery move when necessary any broken eggs' In choosing the varieties of fruit to y ane knows how strong is the shall be thrown out. this instance Ensile shows the faculty substance. (See ch. 2: 11, Rab. 3: 8; and wash those that are soiled. If plant, we must bear the pollination ?stint of possession, and hob: early Ona d . h• of second sight. It was the special Pa, 08: 18.) the nesting material is soiled rep'ace question in mind. First, the varieties it manifests itself in the tendencies with clean chaff, hay or straw. Nests that we plant must bloom at the same of little children. in soon becomeich egg, have become broken time. Second, if you have but two Our oldest son, Jerome, is of a very nervous because th h ld With this infested with mites and' varieties, they should both be good cautious, deliberate. nature, prizing e bl faculty "the mess, did not see even the visible, In lice, which "4-'111 cause the hen to lee- 'very highly through drawer. was more to Israel than an this condition they were led from Do pollen producers. My observation al -g y everything that is given army. He used his supernatural gift than to Samaria where their eyes were come uneasy and leave the nest. This lows me to give a specific instance. to him.' So I decided, when he was But .1 soonreiliized that that, i to the preservation of Israel." opened, In antiquity •. conquered was his q yh ss- is likely to cause the lois of a bagel- The Winesap apple rarely produces two years old, to allow him to have own very .ersonal �-ro ert and other V. 10. If the raids were frequent—. army were generally treated ruthless- able sitting of eggs. When a nest is pollen, Therefore, if you s=hould plant one of the drawers in my own personal children or even pro y' r "not once' or twice" -so also was the ly and were often completeIy anniliil- ,nt , other members of a a ay, �v ren o ver t ildren were faculty of the seers, like Samuel, who playing in the house with our boys, could see what was taking place in I noticed that Jerome became very the distance. (See 1 Sam. 9: 1-10, 20.) e •c i d ren were i t remar 'a a " rummaging his t rawer. At first I thought it very selfish of him. In contrast to Elisha and itis ser- vant who saw the invisible are the Syrian host who, stricken with blind- .ested with mites the hen, if fasten- Rome or Spitzenberg alone with Wine- desk, It delighted the child, gave him ed in, will often be found standing sap the chances are that the traps of a place to keep some of his own pal: - over, rather than sitting on. the eggs. the two former would be very light, titularly personal things, and at the Frequently eggs that are laid in whereas the Winesap cibp plight be sante time aided his mother by keep - winter or early spring are infertile, splendid: in • out of sight the hundred •and one allowed to go torr It Jerome's drawer stratagem had • r one's enemies—to conquer theistwith little insignificant keepsakes g d repeatedly se miscarried. tat.. q andfor that reason it is advisable to The blooming periods will vary, The g psakes so dear without his peri, on. i Called itis' servants because lie sus mercy and kindness. sit several hens at one trine if pas- further gni-til we go, and the higlret to the heart of a child. When brother J l:n became two, 1+p y anion them.. Tie na- Application. petted treacltex g si'ble. After the egg:; have been in- the altitude we reach, the closer the One look into his drawer would aa,- gave hien the lower' : drawer in thesoli lly tltottght, that one of them was 1. A prophet unafraid io abated for from five to seven days, .t i tI u..h the depending yam, varieties seem to bloom together. The sure you •of the great necessity for deslc, and his rights asowner are ie nleyina into the hands of the Israel- odds were .against him. • p g somewhat on the color and list for early and late blooming vat-- such a place; for -there we find all of s ectad in the saran i iter: One Li reminded of Paul's victorious` thickness of the shells, they should be reties give above _ayill be a ass:' _ his Suede School ,a. r P l e way. �. 1?. Even. the Syrian soldiers ;hoot:`"If. Got be tested g , f is y p p s strung wiih Sgene of you ma •s• er th t t1' Tot us, who can he, f1' intervention of the prophet. aced. It was a fine touch, of kindness the family, had no right there: it A King's Anger, 11, 12, that Elisha showed talo Syrians when Since then, playmates may always V. 11. Sore troubled. The Heh.reev he ordered that they be given a nioal play with the many toys in the play here suggests anger rather: than agi- and then dismissed. In this Elisha corner near this de_le but they are not' tation,' Ile was enraged that his 'anticipated the Christian treatit.ent of the tnfertile and dead -germ tance in your plantings. An variety g' Y eggs removed, and the fertile eggs re- in the early Iist will pollinate' any turned to the hens. Thus in many °tiler• variety in the early list; like - cases all the eggs remaining under -wise, any variety in the late list will several hens may be placed under one pollenize "any other variety . in the. -or two, t iel the hens from which the same list, the Winesap, however, be - eggs were taken may be reset. For ing perhaps the single exception. You ' instance, thirty eggs are set under will fiend, however, in many regions' three hens at the same time; that is, that the Gravenstein, for example, is ten under each hen. At the end of overlapped bysome late varieties , i seven days, at which time the eggsdays, , by several which is � sufficient for should be tested, it may be found.that goad pollination. enecoaster'wagoii 'scissors, crayon, bits have good results .arid field . the •put• r''hase. economical. A great deal of ,Cheat can -,.be fed to poultry as scratch feed .encl very few poultrymen have any e rrpl us of wheat above their needs for that pur- pose. It will be fine for the growing stook next summer and it will -hardly pay to :have` any wheat' ground Lvhielz can be used :Car .scratc'h. grain. Bran contains very little nourishment and is only useful to gave bulk to the lien's ration and keep the digestive systena in' good order. A. farmer, with ruueli poultry to feed ...earl hardly afford to sell the 'wheat at present peaces and buy other feeds as the wheat ie about as big a 'bargain ht-poelttb' feed as it is oseible toft p (hal. --yw 7 i'1 s not -neglect of -t w c," �^ the tee lzgt-vest. yarn into a neat booklet. There, too, his small paper -covered books, such as • the ` miniature set of the'famous Jessie Wilcox South's Mother Goose; Two tiny silver fish received at Sun- day School :for bringing in new, scitol- ars repose in: the drawer, beside a small piece of an old bed -spring given to hive by a tens-yeareold boy, his idol' n the neighborhood. Toy paper money, Easter cards 'and Valentines, a box. of nuts, 'bolts and washers for fixing his would tend to make Selfish chip t tis (know of Elisha's extraordinary faced- against as?" Paul encountered diffi sten, ty of second sight. In their contact culties enough; the. appcs•ition of his but in our case it has been just the with the isrealitee they had doubtlsas orbit• fellow -.aunt n7en the'indit) er- ry contrary, fer•these -boys are happy in learned the reason rvhy their maids eitec_.and conteiitpt of the 'cultured that they know where their things are. were being foiled. In their agitation races glide the Greer aucl f pall he Ala instead of having to hunt to the at •Iilislta's strange power, they credit- hetet his encs as a prisoner of Monte. bot;toiti of a basket of .toys far some' ed hies; with a goad deal. He could 2. The. most powerful forces m the trivial thing, they. go' at once to the even tell what elle king ;of Damascus world are hidden from our earthly was saying ; in. his _ private chamber. ' eyes, desk drawer,,, and find it Basil;,r. s , Su h :. nr;.n rias tiangeuou.,. Tnc grosses el Let us give our chtlda.•eit a definite d t tots of the Lord 'Hi:. ,n r�' ' x 1a place for their place for their own personal use, and themselves Manned by some mean e This is true oven in the realm l y -�.. c.thn of the see what a pride they take. in having of •• ETisha's whereabont. Ile is in •physical world. • Who has, seen the life their jown recognized rights in the Dothan. Eusebies;.the historian, states that grows 1n the 'blade of grass or a thrt. Dothan was twelve miles, north flower, or a leaf, or a stock of -wheat? af. Saivatia ;an a small_ plain through 'i`Vho• can measure with a yard' stick which easced, the -great ca•,ravan road or ' a gallon. measure: the tower of 1 from D r_ aactts to. Egypt" Joseph .love? We behold the effects of elec- was in Dothan when his brothers sold tricit.y. We"see. the proof% of life, hien to the )'tliciianite merchants, (See But our richest ' beliefs are about Gen. e 17.) things that eve csuti'ot see with our V. 19. If the'Syelan king had real- eyes and touch with our halide. son ed the, matter out perhaps he 3. A good urian Surrounded, with the would not, have sent -this great host. divine:, and an evil Man surrounded If . Eltslia knee the movements of a with the diabolical In the:lesson pas - small band, would he not also know sage we have this thrilling and sug- of, a huger army?. Yetiti his ngita- gestive story of Titan supported by the tion the Syrian Ming felt that so' dao- knowledge that God " es, and That he R. S.; now many turkey hens can a tom take care of? is whole wheat ground more economical to feed than to sell wheat and buy bran to feed; What per' cent, of protein is contained in whole wheat flour? A tom to every. four in six hens is the' usual plan . in mating- turkeys. 'Whole wheat flour -contains 13.8 pro- tein. in feeding:' poultry, ahalanced in.•is i is necessary 9ifrr`+best results in egg production. Tinder ordinary eiv- rumstaneee it pays to. sell whole wheat t and buy bran to mix with tile, egg mash which of course c , wilt contain other in • ped ients, Manypoultrymen. �• .� n buy the. eoixsnitreial mixes meshes• and and ar zng-s - evonge„-17. fill the air, if we have the spirit of thins, respect that V. 13. 'X'he Syrian officers kept faith to be eel -tale of their realit of string, yarn;' a blunt needle and a tome. Hogs That Sell at ,a Premium The'iilustr 'ria n shows two h .l ags which. are ol, the precise type i.o•y etch. the highest quality "Wiltshire si d, s ” for export, or i r wanted, ted, " the most desired cuts 10it dome -tic trade. it is the only single typewhich h el,aotly suits both inarleets..Ge the 'faro etich t go e i u d weigh Between 17 70 and 22ta l+bs: so as to be bete ecu 160 and 210 lbs. at the packing phut.. perones a Irian must he put out of the is very near.. 4. faith sees the rich harvest of our, present efforts. flow .Ream. have Chris tiair niissinnaties 'like' Morrison Liv- inyslone, Chalmers and 'many Morrison, sown the seed of theoe el and ,. ,�• P t been t content o abide God's . time :`for the full' harvest, Thiss 'i t irlino with the way. They cavae by night. Theis• pIao was to make a surprise attack. But that-wak the very kind of an, attack they''ouid,not tnai e `on Elisha. r' r 1The servant; the successor to 7.,li;,lta's fc,rther servant. ".Geh,azi, v. 27 l''isen earl andone forth. "A1paar -. •' ... 71• sly: he:had gone;out, of "bhe city' eat atiL t ,,� .cf <ie.:siC, lzitnolf' I a6' loree he discovered the besiegers and lifted' -lip; Will draw all inert• unto M41: