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The Exeter Advocate, 1922-8-31, Page 6
ler! • • Saving Hand -Work on the THE CHILDREN'S Seed Crop.. HOUR `So far as available farm help is congTned, we "seem• to bo just as hard _ •-----iasis up in this community as ,during war - what Can One Fellow Do? time. There seems to be plenty of "Paul_ wilt* didn't )11O., SPaak OatT,,hand's loafing• aroued. the local towns Onununicat➢oras. to A4ronsmtat, 73 Adetalde St. West.. Totems You do not thunk 'Sunday baseball is hese sati11 not work—and, if they a goad thing, yet you' would. Come Put in the eountrv, there P airy Farm Testa, i lifts hen was found to be unusually u 'let your club skill would probably show to best ad - Per breeding purposes, two -ye ar•o.dr heavth avosingle lemon te fin nPaul s moth er it withoutotk vantage with the. table fork. So we hens have been found best, .attiteaehl Tests made the past season n. alter= Qt ht i�epraachtttla after be he'd told have to use every means passible to atho= ' eh_.:Ks have been Produced from.,' noting mala birds for fedi:11 W, re' :ft the action of the club. save' hand -labor, Our method of hand. slex g ag , suited • as follov,-st Frons Januar I. to do.,: geoid would it have ling the ntamtt ere claves seed atop, :vearliegs. Palle 1 Mat. 1,' four males were assigned to 1 ye:thee, 1,‘"bat mai be of intermit, and helFfnl to ass a risk, n their"'n pen eus 3 a cavi* . e' 2 in Pen N9. 21 thel others witted t,t could eso�1 just kept lew dal All some, the ranging from six to nine months ofd re pens, That as, cock ]\a. l started eeet are more or 1 issue, 1 w1°a t go and play ti'e tele the grim binder, put in take eggs may hatch wen, thereis not tlta� as P acid in a ce canother! in the Sunday games, but I didn't see' off the5es chan that s rdrives iheartackers etta rise in the patine that le found an building. The next week cock l\lo, 11 any. use ;n 'sagsng a iSthtng, They! and take orf ane of the Parkers- 71 -at those from basset, vigaroas ttfourear-1, was Put in a cage, cook'_�To. 2 wxs ad. There' t change fmy ore felIo v,at cher packer will then Kira �dthe put zanzed ti pen Nee cask bit+. 3 vvent� kriosv,s fourteen in crus club, you• of the way. Take otr,' els , the trip old hero This has been demonstrated F l by a slew. arft,-T,1s, fad is a strong' to pen Nib. 2, and the cask that origin4a "Whist can one fellvsv do?:' repeal- that. regulates size sif bundles, This testis eeia t o the pithier of keeping. la 3, studs oally vitas in a n; h week. e VMS cA ter e ed h s ntotber, `flfinkl, I'll tel'1 3"ou shell t1 e ise . ino ipThe le a to ;tap ox a ;toll, ae4 -d e -s of ler :age, as xann what one fetlQw slid. utile paxttr 1 tate first cf May only three males were; in in a fine windrow weiek v'bll net be as s e is l sa'r'i Vigra s and s;e'ds' allowed for every three pens, but each,English re siton g utthroe e #hem,' in the way of e horses tb binder to a prefit.we�' 1 thank, were sitting rzu#side their tuna' Tess in meting show best fart wets F'eeywere c i a ; moved e e Ne. rzentz in Africa. one bet afteenorrie Sonne- the nets- round, Z'oo find abet by `'*o -hang stirred in the jungle, and then ting an n the forenoon, or afternoons, oonr g* amble et:caa, tie best xn:tt-' to pert No. 3, cock No: 2 ,rent to pen• out into the clearing before the vii- wo, sleet seed t is not Nano dry, fr it arehese aae' six vigorous females" No, le and rock No, 3 to pen to. 2.r lege there crept; a lithe of eighiv we shell less than by any atter a =''t an. 'otic male. When hetes are These changes avoided: favoritism and, - method. The binder cuts faster than r,3 , the mare aaam be a Cocoas$,; there Rca better a fertility. wretched ble, peapier cizatned to- the mower. The saving in aster than if teetered pa :e . ilea a emik,. hero after -e; :ir g s aria- s methods far' raa•la in they interior, were nand weree ired in; conne-eiit the bunt] sag, , For this we alae Vis are alternated ernat in a gen, breaking ftp broediress, the following Mein driven b a 'awl take one horse on a slump ,ala drive tars s^?€avv t3:at *sit females .a about was found to be the most humane anal traders y' t, whe a then, slave him belvveen t�^a. __, ,,_nvss, Sud. rake who prep�er =umber. mod fertility has satisfactory; Once n week all brew len, be gas t4 the coast, where they woad up two rows at +anco in ass neat piles been obtained in a rgar matings, and r t be solei, Put en a Slave sixip, and tax .r` found a the meats at night which ea.-: again to see their as possible --j bin #his, of eoizrse, :hat=N Alternating xko :stakes, but the tied to a house and ran in Sfita cls thrre' tied tsuay, never a when the seed Is a woe damp, Then chic wei rant ice as good condition. ' t native linage or any of their lc Yee t were no nests nus any ether fowis,4 oxaea, It was a to turn the reed so se to dry the under For y it hese our graarticea i£exar they were kept for a week, Iby;sji Piteous sight. Amoy side we take the rake and go aver the to male 4a:? rests of tolaaecen Stens inl which time they got over their brcoda-4 were wearg, faint, sack, yet faxeed to seed just the opposite way and tip the pz # crtTe re rytrsaw o. *ref oil er tree -1 rices and went to lasing again, Duce:` march on, Mani white people of elf- piles aver. This makes the piles more t< . and a's Q rti ,t Where how been u ,n a meat while there would be a at;sit- antifeent eir hearts had semi such a with compact, as Welt as tyrai a practic :1y no trouble with verinin4 horn hexa and she would have to re"' and -hear hearts had grown hot with side to the sun, and thin eed cis e.wi r flat hers or chicks. Toa:ac,.oann a saki, ,ation and pity. But they had s:c:us •.r4 used ice ;oath CIQ.ay ing and but s ch cases weree rarean. }reek,. raid, 'What can ane man do againsi: Lentntog t nQ a iork,u O 8 Lang incubating :nests. �9s tobacco stems F ;this great entrenched evil?' So they don, are not always avai'abie, tests vsera . Tei s made #o %ire out what effect, had kept Siil1 while the saves had end.---,--4,—,---- male }bv tieing aeag fax a stabstit ate, ffer11 sii�tthe So oi'ft feed ue eggs show ld have on gQEit sit this little anissianaryuGreenhouse Insects. y Pease 'itnie - , AP planta whether grown rndeors , twice on is When kens were set; Fmajor-4fine mala said, "We cannot let this Of', x31 the varioust situate conclusively flat in the .ypea of soil to ntent +over the lard, such eta a drag l;Ze ne,�sats tr:asse were bre#ed tlatsl quality the color is i:tfiu tnc d by thing go on.'situ are 'subject to the attar oaf do- pre - In ,.'?:143 , . , i . sit ,�a•rty srof the Toed given, butthat, The s)7#era qu%fly Weed' while :tt,arcttve rnseets Prefer aullotin 3Va, be found, none when props#rIy Itax><dled laarxasv, the surface soli svlll lee loosed- res:~�,, be•.,*re the eh,,s Were' l'aa; «n' i there °to individual lens that will con -1 hirn. So a yly, 9, dealing, as the �Gitle iznapul *s wi are taste rodm etre t n th 7 ed and ssrutatb3ed sufficiently to pree .Fre k+i.�. r'rs- 3 4F.':�+�:erya, '�tta-•.:ir - # �.. tltx'ee unartneri nten ti� anp I% d stir p ha. YilAr' Il.ev , , , . .+ .,setae tea #ata?u ace either restive or yslxow to tht+ 'elAve traders :Zeit Inseets AffectingGxeenlaoszse Pleats,"'v vent it from baking i into sleds. Vile I`. et! ;v as Urea on c4c ant of 4's yolked eggs regax'dlese of the feed.I of 1 d tie© rtanae prepared b the Dominion chivy, Tho cry fineness of these saris the crepe: moisture sena] maintainor frergll;,.e zr:zr.ty was practically ,., Bug star, they blade them set the N nl n Entamolaa• gives them a large voter-hald:ng4 the proper 1 Pease yo.1.s s rorniniest wi,,en hers arab elutes free. the trainers knew enough gist, Ottawa, and rho eteneeeloglst in it p,r moisturta condition for 8 t :� Mme �,s c :3a tiba 'S' 5#472W -'i- fel on asl.k, wheat, oats, bran and: of England to realize ° chs of Fruit Truett Invest; Corm, capacity, which will adapt them to the longer period. �'� -h¢tr� ";fir ¢ f x wl� este the x a °:a:^a nal ;large, and 3s�jlow* fi©l;:s when t a ` g her power. They at 'ine7ar rt-- of small gratin and firasses.i Clay soils are generally wet } h . did fret know how much authority the. no, Qat;, learn that the y awl •e + fe ,• l f?:as hies sees aaae'l ehesg .s liberally Ser on yellow tern. I missionaries microne comrnoreiall. Cultivated' m is tale �:zr3aag rl e p.aSt yE aR Tscs� crl+serva- ghl have, So they _ y under t Verso reeve Fa t .Yoar.0 save, eEerVa' It waa noticed that eggs with pale+scettered quickly into the jungle, theireasutoyer a space of six .�+% r es s theft Nate e r are no two consistency were more likely to have lesel guilty consciences perhaps hurrying 1920 were square sect at glass and in 1€ .. that re s` tsaetls alike in all a nsss.+eitcy than those with yell: svi them on. The eighty Slates were free. 19..0 were estimated to be of upwards re _' ts, nser ugn sorra►. hike a very yo k : Them+ Is. ho pale yoGks flattened They.ten on them knees weeping with c'-'1 �' to :t. VF:ut< El is is mere exempla the wh t The egg were broken and Joy, he same egg seemed "That is what one man did. Tw keel by the nature of the hens rthem to be thinner. Yellow yolks usually! others were readyto e °€a, Salne of ylre� bens quit .:swag' stand up round and full when thea titan hien so , • they began molting, while others is broken, ggi soon was he had taken a stand, but eat tends zed 'laying, more or Gess, during Bu en . ; small the number against a great fisc molting 1 geri€Aaz, ore kept in excel mb.e.faot (swellings on the feet; civil that you can yet call it a one- the ho;t'in and 'vigor.kapin excel o 101) s eenerally due to treading! man job. Every great reform, every the f ee2th some z White, hens had a sharp objects, rough ground, ete.j great work had its beginning in the ragged and deje4ted aplaezranee It is notcontagious, and for years it mind of one man, Don't be afraid, to ► has been adeocated that the pus in thel tackle a job because you are just one; gaothers in the the a flock molted sot bruise should be removed. This is ii you are sure the thing'ought gradually that the E.hange wits h teeny quite a task and not always success- done. Perhaps ifyou had s`ke to be noticed, and kept in the best of health fol. DuringtheP had spoken out, during the entire ,period. Some liens � past year a number qf!" half a dozen other boys might have eases developed. Believing that the stood with you. They were like you, c ing were resile sausage aha=n broody, while natter will right itself without treat -they hated to say anytlrin ;' otltera were eYleethngly good-naiure�i,g recommended, ed that t' Some would sit carefully and always met, nothing was done, but a careful "Mother, don't say another .ward, such fo tat y ys watch was made of the condition. I'm going to ask the fellows to recon tai deadly and had a eiesn-looking nest, while others After the swelling reached a certain i eider the vote at tomorrow's meeting, p were euro to break some of the eggs stage it began to dry up and kept on; And 1'11 say what 1 think about it and befoul the rest. Some he svexe growing small t'1 th It may not do declares if y time, while others in the vanished Further I event shark any good, think progeny of a single 1 •1 h ]d fall la ed to survive in I'm alone"th h nd ed d graved that the A method off d "That's ed when wet, they are apt to puddle been wheat I Ilk weight seven times the to p a r3 wrong, Nest out which eta hear my son. teeming pope- proved very satisfactory.. say," said his mother. nation 04 China. Consultation of the and bake. While it is necessary to eggs have no influence whatever in Instead of feeding y' bulletin referred to will impart a vast soils deeply, the depth coaxing a hen to ]ay In our trapnests in mash In rn the morn- should thesebe lowered gradually. The there is nothing but tobacco stem; g (allowing an iron spoonful to► amount of minute information cm the early working of these "ill'. in the every two fowls in the pen), nothing n his way home subject dealt with. and yet right in these nests the pullets at noon and a full f spring, is most important, Ths cuiti- Clay Soils and Their Management of three million dollars -he value, In. dealing with pests of this kind, grow- ers are advised to notice how the in- erts feed, as by that way the proper medy to apply can be ascertained. cots are divided into two classes y the nature of their attacking facil- ities. One ekes such as caterpillars bite and chem their food, and the other by means of their beaks, such. as the aphids, the true bugs, the scale in- sects, etc., sunk up their food. If the insect bike, fi stomach poison such as a soIution:If arsenate of lead is usual- ly applicable, but for seeking insects contact insecticides arer r instance as preparations con- taining tobacco. Bow populous these insects maybecome is 'exemplified by the fact that an expert axes the en rose aphid were allow see u o• class it would equal in The management of these ,oils pre_ 1 cold beaauee the water in the. ' sents special problems for consadera stantly *evaporating, and evalorat;:c tion, Their fineness gives them, a ten- is a cooling process.. It is the colds tAt deny to bake and to require mare of a poorly drained soil as well as iha than the usual amount of labor in excess water that it contains that is cultivation. The lack of sufficient sur- responsible for the unsatisfactory growth of crops from theist. Drain- age carries cif this surplus water, makes the soil warmer, haetens ger- mination, allows air to enter the sell and brings about favorable conditions for bacterial life. To keep up the fertility of clay face or underdrainage makes `them cold and wet in the spring, and when there is a lack of vegetable or organic matter, they are hard to work and less productive. The methods of treatment here dis- cussed aro based on the results of field demonstrations and observations made sods and. to check their tendency to on. the'Dominion Illustration Stations bake, considerable vegetable matter in Quebec, Nev Brunswick and Nova ahould be added. This can bo done by Scotia. Ono of the great drawbacks applying strawy manure and' by plow - with this type of soil is the fineness ing under leguminous crops,. as clover, of the soil particles. To offset this Peas, vetches, etc. This can best be condition, the farm practice ehould be aceompllshed by following a definite so arrang d the operations willcrop rotation. By so doing each crisp systematically open up and make while being grown to its own greatest these soils more porous. Special at- advantage will be at the same time tention must be given to the time and preparing the soil for the reception of 'type of plowing and cultivation. Heavy the next. A. rotation of four years clay soils should be l plowed wen duration is giving very satisfactory the moisture content is right. If work- results on the Illustration Stations. Briefly this rotation is as follows: First year, Heed Crop—Corn, tura nips, nangels, or sunflowers. Second year, Grain and Seeded-8 lbs.lbs. red clover, 2 lbs, alsike and 10 lbs. of timothy. Third year, Clover Hay --1st cut,. the proper moisture condition is reach- clover hay; 2nd cut, claves seed, or ed, but never when the soil is at all hay. sticky. By passing some wide imple Fourth year, Mixed or Pasture. naturally t. er until alle trouble same nook are wild and nervous. any observations lop. The tra�pnest has be made should new eases develop. nest egg theory is allleading has tiled start to lay and keep it up in fine ) eed (a handful to shape during the year. Occasionally! eaCli fowl at night, the order was a hen will frequent the nest, but not lay. I noticed one hen get in the trap - nest and remain there for an hour or more almost every day, and yet she did not lay. The hen was killed and eery three (awls to pen; and in on being opened up was found to have the evening, an hour before dusk, a considerable fat accumulated around handful of grain is given to each fowl the egg organs. As a rule, every sim- in the pen. Noticing Thins. A city salesman a about 2.30 one morning, not Iong ago, noticed an automobile driven pest him changed as follows: In the morning, three times within one block. There grain (scratch feed) was thrown am- are plenty of cars cruising about ong straw—a handful for every five down -town streetseven at that hour, fowls in the pen; at noon the mash and rnost persons wouldn't have re - was given, allowing an iron spoonful -narked the repassing car. The sales for v man did, though, and told a policeman, who caught the drivers of the car in the alt of making off with a flue limousine that was narked in an alley about two blocks down the. street. The young man's habit of seeing the things he looked at saved someone about five thousand perfectly good dollars. The Bible (wise old book) says something about those who having eyes • see not, and those whohaving ears hear not; and it is safe to say Rock record was 281, laid bye a bird that not a day passes in the life of owned at Courtenay. The Wyandotte any individual without its opportun- record was 293, Laid by -a bird owned. ;ties tosave time, trouble, or money at Langley Prairie. Ontario had 44 by seeing what we look at and hear -'Leghorn, 11 Plymouth Rocks, and 18 ing what we hear. Wyandottes in the advanced class, the "' John Hays Hammond, Jr., tells the best record being; Leghorns, 282, made his appearance, one day, w :a fieri regular customers, 01 course, story of a mining engineer who was laid by, a bud owned at good residence district. He had with brought billets. Richmond him a erate of' eggs of gocxl size, clean, Bartley found that there was a mss offered a worked -out gold mine for a attractive arid, above all, genuinely ket for hampered 01 mixed vegetable's, fewvan bougedht dollars. Ile very eas `n- fressh. At each house he kat a single proportioned for family a over and me it, ,, sodt laughed d g at a fixed Y •use said solid ably. Then ;nen who sold it laughed egg- Attached to it by a stinker was' price. He made up a dollar at mins for buying it It wasn't mach a little card giving- his name, Thi basket which, one week might contain of a• gold: mine. But it proved ep a number. tomatoes and ov�ed to be one of the richest lead mines in the world, and put its purchaser in the way` of •becoming..a multimillionaire, The privilege ofseeing and hearing ,, nature's gifts to the. Then write breakfast and using air parcel ost and express ;as vast majority of human beings. They vte or phone me an order for very agencies, his cost nothing.That is one read. a regsxlar delivery- , 08 eggsown working time on his farm was not on they of a "so sett_ i are not -made better use of. If we had same gwality, ), xutercrupted. to buy out eyes and On truck orders he recriiiredears over the City delivery by truck on Fridays pay- counter two :or three menu on dielrivery, and•; on mail' orders lames a year, Parcel -past delivery on receipt .of so fax as , like our shoes, and pay taxes on them, orders possible, in advance, until we'd probably think more reliability was established. Where it And of o rd to My price is the regular retail price for seemed advisable he required t n ty the lawyerarbadts ,50O afford • to gilt -edge product. his week, 850 doz. are &Posats ho carer e cost of hanix theOay a young ,$l and a word for ..,. ors and of shipping, crates. In many P- the e c Stop, Look, and Listen" worth Avco7n n n this ' rade cr s' pa yn g sample were rases he persuaded his customers to a 4s tugs;'t any to •'semoney. an order card to be filled out,ndr ai1•. buy their own containers.at'leasdt $12,500 of.any `man's money Y envelope After a time he felt •it safe to agree to have this newspap-er write : this The single dsistributian of sample to monthly settle. some e mental grade chording signs for him: eggs brought Bartley enough orders hisli e3Uutos with of "See, Hear, Think and ,, 8 established milkomees. InAct. for a real start, and the` Take it on credit, if you bike and growth of mi�btimg the periodic statements, hovr- bu,sinete quickly took care of all his ever, he ailw•ays enclosed a self - eggs. &didires:sed ' staznped envelope. Ba the eggs simply opened the "Nuke fit as . eon shape. Abets ago other products. pay andt as Possibly P Whenever for -a customer to and he is like oteetoy lead poultry to s'e1l, or'garden to settle wii.-h fou &Z t," says Berthas,likely Egging Them on To Buy BY ERNEST L. THURSTON. John Bartley was developing a poul- try and .small truck farm. He had an idea that he could build up a select list of customers in a nearby city. He decided to make his experiment with eggs. As soon as his White Leghorn flock was big enough and.was laying he produce ready, an order card announc- ed the fact to his egg customers. The goods ordered were delivered oar the next weekly trip, or Shipped by post or express, if 'desired. He could market at a moderate retail price and et realize more than was poiasible under regular marketing machinery: Satis- vation should commence as soon as Advanced Poultry Records. So far as egg production is concern- ed, 'Beitish Columbia ranks as the banner poultry province, according to Report No. 2 of the Record of Per- formance eonducted by the Poultry di- vision of the Dominion Live Stack bnancli, The University of British Columbia makes the. ,beat showing of any institution or breeder. In that province Iast year 100 Leghrons, 25 Plymouth Reeks and 47 Wyandottes qualified f advanced certificates that are granted for birds that lay over 225 eggs in the 52 weeks. The highest Leghorn record was 297, laid by a bird owned by the Old People's Home, Vancouver. The Plymouth address and his telephone lettuce beans,corn. The card also stated; With: the change of . season and of crops, necessarily the contents This Is a Genuine Fresh Egg changed. Poach, boil, or fry it for to -morrow's Having only one truck delivery day is one of xl free When lambs which should be thrifty do not tltr'ive, scour badly and gradu- ally die, they are probably suffering from worms. For this the use of copper sulphate has proven very effec- tive. Before treating, the sheep In the central of the Colorado beetle stasuld beshut away from food for it has! been found that Paris green is the poison which will .give quickest results, but the disadvantages in its use are that It will not stay in sus- pension in waiter very wall mud may Those which have received an over- dose will lie apart from the flock and show symptoms of pain. These should be placed in a shady 'spot and given a teaspoonful of laudanum in a tumbler - full of water. Spraying for Potato Bugs. twenty-four hours. Then give doses of one ounce :of copper sulphate die` solered in two quarts 'of water as fol- lows: For a three -months -old lamb, two-thirds of a.fluicd ounce; far a six- cause damage to foliage of tender months -old lamb, one and one-half plants, even the potato plant when fluid ounces; for a mature stheep, three applied too strongly. and one-half fluid ounces.' - Calcium arsenate ants less violently The 'copper sulphate for this pur- and is less dangerous with reference pose should be of uniform blue color to foliage injury, 'but it also kills the and the weights and measures' should insects more slowly. ',Arsenate of lead be accurate: Have your druggist weigh acts ,still more slowly, but is very safe for plants which are susceptible to .foliage injury. It doesn't hurt to take advice; v , one is not obliged to use it. Hill; Plymouth Rocks, 277, land by a the blare store, and also have him bird owned at Kitchener, and Wyan-1 graduate the drenching 'bottle by dottes, 254, laid by. a bird owned at marking the doses with a file. Do not Stony Creek. allow the sheep to have access to water for several hours after dosing. Canadian Cattle Prices in Britain.. -- • While Irish bacon still retains its Parent as Educators position in the British market Irish cattle do not seen to be doing so Well, probably owing to the disturbed state of the country.' The Dominion Live Stock branch reported Irish bacon sell- Meal time parents and, an children,l and little detail o 'y f cheery, hula ay ing at from 159 shillings to 167 shill- can be an interesting 'combination, but days. Daddy could tell of -the ings the` -long hundredweight Danish win not be unless e;� ,eciall prepared he met, of .anything he people P �Y Prop y g saw made or at from 148 to 1.52 shilling's, Canadian for by the mother: Why not make it done in an unusual way, and relate • - at from 136 to 140 shilings and Un- one of the pleasantest time of the stories of "when I' was a bo " it'eed States at' from 115 to 120 shill`` day,and teadh the children at the same Mother cauid tall- about the e e pebple ings. On the other hand Canadian time to take their part in converse- who had'tele lie been nod,,, or been to the cattle commanded as high as 14e a tion with :sense and dignity? This can door, the Books she, ,had read or heard pound, hive weight, and Irish at from best be done by making it the time to,about, the'stories . - of when graiid2rtay 101/z to 7,21/z c� Prime Scotch "'ranged tell the pleasant things that each .ot,;>; was'>a Purl. at from 161/2 to 17Y c. has seen, heard, done, or read. En- In the morning, Regarding wool the Live l no ibhe nears froz t e Stock flares a rule that nothing disagreeable i the paper should mar the ,meal; The shall be talked over at meals, --this occasion would be the try.. one,' and - is not good for digestion we are told 'ever. ; tone would feel br(lghi-, owe its the money; for e 'k >keen Interest was being show;' j and- no ossip, _horrible affairs nos' Y, w 'know you !; p er if ive all .learned -to be the right will have the price some day, if, you Western products. cross wardss should be allowed. kind •of table talkers. It Bever too use the' sign, Even little chaldren'can learn to talk early to begin with the children: Even e, ,Says Sam„- Nature never intended about the picture they liked, the funny a baby will react -to ' '� Every shadow in' life is evidence a, ' ei gltt-hour d'ae ✓ ailk b ee frowns, x once of n g Y forfai-tners,'bpt she story the teacher told, the; dog that said o � � •. a sun siomewhere.Pau cheerful talk �rareeds kind, • surely i�nsists 'on, an eight-hour night. wagged at them on ; the way ivome, thoughtful docile, Table Talkers --By:. Lydia Lion .Roberts branchreports said the spring rise wens being maintained lnnd that a