HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1922-11-30, Page 6Every d,+ait'tnxan has had has ex-
; er sake in breaking heifere to milk.
ISiany good row* have been pertially
S ruined three:gh improper hen .:ing the
esfetet='`� ;'f first few months following freihenifag.:
• • It a a sl.>s ai greet deal of tact ands
q-..�
Address cora menihceeoils to Agrom..nnist, 73 Adele file Bt, Test, Toronto, pat<<n e to prevent a heifer eozltriet-;
Buie -Made Apple Cider. [Mei veal eelse for the variety, normal', Mg notional habits when bre'a':siug heel
Mixed 'atener, Oxford Co.—Wel s .., ;,e, and not less. than 90 per emit.; in to mark. No set role ce.n be laid g .
bruises : down. I-leifere vary quite widely in
bare ra terga quantity of uladersf'ed fa Iran s ab, wormholes,. it,mperament and dis.pcailien, I have:
slid :l' erfect apples. >ale(i' e advisee:end cores defects. it a good plea
rete of :he beet way of eoevc: ting' A barrel "o s. 7 Bty un"
but4'0141115always
always oend study of glee cli za�:tora•e make:
these An into unte rs t e eider. • g art they l oil each heifer long beftl'e she comes'
��s � L r'.et-s there a Marge : various :airs—aalst 2s cone o#f h
enter lee tee ne gliberl' Cd a sr all , the tress, with all teals removed. An d f r s. heifer Q nervous disposition head e er ni 'a may +te- C ei 1.,r while . aveerage Darrel wild cotattln approxi-° f
tng the
ateeen ti11%. tiree r, who eserne merely 70 pee cent. one's and tvve's•-•^1 should be handled very kird'y.everei.-
ts- h' be c - t *.i Thera. may in'tance a ciereestrss' end three's. Th,si <^' d abusive 'neesi:res axe very likely.,
itatu,.e eteen v. :Wall= bras sea and is a very desirable grade' for benleito intensify the t'oabie. It }see tee
n.
esett-b,. fralt,1 small ard peerly use. In View of the feet that there my e'vperieeee th .t a ie ii goad praes
esteree seeetasett.Til Bert eine lral tea eerie' Ne. Ts ita ths bre it has;, bice to begin fran.tling helfele several
•,, _ tilt!. F..�.er i..:.eat a Fa-rms. to i tee -irked 0-rshar i, Pairs. Ns:. 3." I mimeo before they freshen. They
-barrel
No T, o c 1 11 MIS n mac . to take their plaza,
��G � , -t et' ... a,. _ p: gee s of this, '� :�zlr, c� �a '14 s contains no cul -s slnou.d be trained
de ,. ter ; t el ux' erd a , • aa:t a.. be o'f In the 'stable. U stabled regularly it
After r :nes•
e pe es through re less then ne rl,= rnediem size, and i is an e.._l, mat. r to work.
beel rat ted.
the 'r r or y't..:,,car, the petrel 'i: -tn some cola: fer the v a rietyr area. i them find. the udder slice"
n ,ee e.e.• preseed ov hand and thea rasa less than &a F=r cant. flee from! gelitla Ea the heifer will lzecone aC-„
ented to belag. hendled.
uta . * a T?. sug`l e, Eimer; ll"'A healer'- f Domestic's contains nojcnlThe heifer tlett. hes' been ar;ustcrl,r
yf w , E * iS Gf Cela , S:aal-
ia ; la - .. fr.a.,,,tory vottt n, to tate eft: s or neseu1 e apples. '.Must all be ed to being handled previous eo teethe.
ea s rn. i pulpy matte' The not less than medium Size fer the ening x'.oea not become so rervou.e
fl T : .rtst, a reesetal.lyt ar'iet\ (same as br:o. 1's), and not. when the udder bezomes inflamed, and
over etti vete then Mend in h..Arela less than SO per cent, free from worm) ate can be treated with. less iri.•it t'sen.
es n res;,, ,i a until r;etieset�aticn had l ales (r- ay be slightly affected with Indeed, 1 have f€sand that by keeping`
cr'*1-�;
at . The cider wee then run scab and o"the^ miller detests). the udder well greased be#ol fresh-:
it 1.c t,;tit1 etanp+wd by as hinai A barrel cif Net 3's /nest contain no (ening, inflainlasa;tor. anis, be kept out
ea , ' n; r ,1 4110 .Zn1 sialine iregie 1X1r.:. "C l's" mean finuit that is -j end the udiier free from celtiuse
to assi': t, ; ta^ a ref's: fereiteita : n. - Cl!'her ver l small for the yeeiety=� 1 •
bel?t.e in treating heifers very.
After a5 nen lea4b'.e exfsar m eetatien q(•lii-eetlye deformed, has 15 per cent.; kindly while being broke to milke
it v,,,.. -;F. r ..,,1 tim::, it -awe peseille eons-'. er mere of its surface ef'fe:ted byl However, it lute also been my ex-
plete:. t , .-s ret ft' ferulentation .at anT scab, insect injuries, cuts or bruises., p en a that Z honess est is n 'ot believe always
stage tenbasse ineetrieg its value.' etc., cr is immature.
vera methods in training heifers to
Eel -rase. tease };,a ve., is itta,..:;azyl-_,�--- milk, although at tines punishment',
in , -;, t-,• It r »,. f •l„^.•1 ,Fat:.
ti?c .� ° i n t,., ,, must Iv 1 < 1 at frons' -Corn Substitutes for Silage, afire t dealllillore an any otherkind
1' • if r,t r:.....� t vc gog X. k, , New Ontario --As as new-; of treatment. The use of the inure
13tt aha a tl s- _`.',-
ark „� 131 a t;, jhea ream is Iaal- eotalee to this district I desire to groweight on the hind lea;s wvill sometimes
li r^ A v a d:- v I" 9 aIe lvastcar• ensilage or winter feeding beef cat- ac amps :h i;cod results, A xa*p+a
1...>>..l s.. e n;=',:�� Te a' :eragth. ale, Corn canner be depended on here =Mild the sloes ' just in #rant of toe.
011 t-€a.3e reel' 'Ire l sl= *, :a*'fi .is. be t;vof to give satisfactory erop. What other' udder ttnd deawn tit 111 alyai cfFiahe
Lanza., teal the. I'e4: ess a c eet a : crops can be used, in its stead? geed results,
Af..• ca ., g rase 1•,Mtt:es (slaving" Answer --The results ci expexl- S��ane 1t r p an?aek veil, but tree,'
else t' tte ,r• aA tint one inzin. of the;, menta earners ,ee by the Dominion Ex eaess clartiiaie ambits that Makes at,
nasal p?alwe them. in a boiler kf wa�rtnl siert al panne Sy;;tem. go to shovel rather disaA ee ble to milk thetas, i
water ass! resat ..� ,<;y et; F. ' :. � z there are severs.; -practice kerning en era roma gestic
•
rat this. tesener:4a�ire f,:'r tevo haters,; be used for ensil:sge where corn can cows that stand evens and dive .hcir,dc'r'ain,znt spring v�he<':# in t�annda azad
t^E>as g �':+¢e that at lo' time cicea the not be depended on. milk dawn freely
There are coese in the `United .Saitte and lits enormously
te"-l-x-raala e alya,s. be+Ya�) 140 deg. Q�. Prebr.bly chief of theee, at least every herd, however, that are paled increased the reel wealth of the world
4t l.( k�i. of tile t.s( hoar periz•. t , from ;a tonnage standpoint, is the sun prcdueels, but milk hard rand scow. in the last tea years. Now our point
Irtea ale:' may be removed and kept bs flower. It is a compo atively neve' Heifers that possess such qualities ore Is sinsply that the liargaeis wvbeat is
$ * vent e t fear cf $ern-enta-- -tla"a crop which is gaining rapid Ilk i to give a great dotal of a fin c;(ample of evolgto n G oing an.
'den C �e short may favor in the West as at will grow l be' broke t0 mask and In X917 F
1 i' ' d " Inc^IS that tl' l crops that can heifers f f 1
a.t,anl,��v :.:�• �, ,�, M:ry likey u vw•ards of 250, 00, 00 bush.
.ten e eed in ro. Sonia ., r ' F trouble wen being b ro ,
li eFl ' the bottle rafter a few, R} xe corn will not Bron* and yields It they frequently be•ente els of this wheat were raised in North
chronic kickers,
From Single Grain. to Three
Hundred Million Bushels
in Sixteen Years.
A tribute was paid to the value of
Marquis wheat in an article in "The
Outlines of Science" recently publish-
ed under tine editor ,ip of Dr. J.
Arthur Thomson, Professor of Natur
al History of Aberdeen University.
An ex -tract from Dr. Thomson's article
follows:
"Dne of the factors that assisted
the Allies in overcoming the food
crisis in the darkest period of the war
was the virtue of Marquis wheat, a
very prolific, early ripening, bard red
spring wheat, with excellent milling
and baking qualities. It is now the
e ntatie in -. e e e i
as
al resu ey requan
vw•eet:s or even days, but this is enerelYi a. heavy tonnage of fairIy palatable America, and in 1918 upwards of
Huai precipitationof the portion of the, silage, though, in the 4aatter respect,
fruit juices and should be shaken upi it does not equal corn silage or even
wah the rest of the liquid before good pea and oat eilage. It takes the
dfrinking.
Grades For Apples.
Subscriber, Wellington Co.—'Will
you please publish the definition of
grades of apples according to the re-
quirements of the Fruit Marks Act?
Answer—A barrel of No. l's con-
Mine
ontains no culls or unsound apples. Must
an be cf not less than medium size
The worad'4
(treatest indust 343111ons
of automobiles neconstant
geniee' Millions of bat ed I%nd tutee
to repair; millions of Tarts to nese Tre•
menden opportunities await the trained mite-
tnobile Than 'Mat'e whY 1G pays to learn the
sutomebUo man, learn 7n Detroit, the
Indust; -where 79 acenter tbe o of the autos are' made. Auto
Melee $2,000io $10,0O0Yea>riy
—slave a Busing of Your Own
Thousands of our graduates are making.
big money in tiw auto business. Kuntz
(Sack.) making mora money than be ex-
pectedd: Pettigrew 1Oueber) appointed In-
structor et Tech. cheot; Corvette
(Alberta) In business end has
all he can do; Speckle (Penn.).
pelmar
wasgetting 5100 per Msyeee M)
save.') 5100 moath1y above ex-
penses: Toh,nson (Ob1n) lump-
ed Mom pencil pusher" at
513.80 weekly to auto me-
ehanlc at 342.10 per week.
Hundreds more like them.
Complete Course—
Endorsed by Big Auto Factories
Every branch of the auto business 1s taught;—
Construction, operation, up -keep and repairs of
autos, trucks, tractors term lighting plants and
ga.s engines. All teaching by
actual practice. 11IYe guess
work. Students Seam by
actual factorymethods. Big
auto factories helped outline
our Courses and give our
students fullest co-operation,
also heartily endorse our
School -
Special Courses in ii Batters,
o d bis hlo.9 e, l'riatl.ac.wddics
Good Poultices Await OM
Graduates—Factories, g
, and s.r*1ppa.utto oontlnu.ity
Ofarias
bh0: m.ar—iu cell . see day reomtlTy--
rt advancement. co.mens with lora pisses. end ase.'. n. ayytrtuNW.
for ndvanoemnnt, o: Ea Intl beaintu for yotr.a:,.
Como Now Dent Walt—The man who "gets
},Atm" moat rims "cM bmy.' Y on o, 'ban t bo
do Y'—but "Do y o wise to do,ow' Sf 0 do, ha:.'a Yo¢,
,bona. Curt l,cw1 W.31. Today 10 3BEe Cetoiw.
Michigan State Automobile School
5372 Auto Bldg., Detroit, flinch.
same place as torn in the rotation and
is planted, cultivated and harvested in
the same way, the tutting being donne
when the sunflowers are about 20 to
30 per cent. in bloom. If left till a
Iarger percentage is in bloom, the
palatability of the silage is not so
good as it is believed to be the heads
which cause the rather rancid taste
and odor peculiar to sunflower silage.
At the Central Experimental Farm in
1921 sunflowers gave the same ton-
nage,
onnage, and cost practically the same
per ton in the silo as did. earn. In a
feeding test with daily cows, they
gave almost equal results, 'though
learn had the advantage in every res-
pect. They should be equally well
suited to feeding beef cattle.
Other outstanding crops for silage
in place of corn are green oats er
peas,oats and vetch mixture, or in
fact a mixture of any of the cereals
such as wheat, oats, rye and Barley.
Even the clovers, including red clover
and sweet clover. and alftslfa have
been used when the season was such
that they tau d not be used as hay
or pasture. They are not, however,
as suitable as are the cereals. Pos-
sibly sweet 'clover, being the least
suitable for hay and yielding a heavy
tonnage, is best suited for silage pur-
poses. Cut sufficiently green and well
tramped into the silo, these crops, par-
ticularly the cereals, make an ' excel-
lent class of silage much relished by
the cattle, being more palatable than
sunflower silage. In districts suited
to corn or sunflowers, the cereals and
legumes mentioned would hardly yield
sufficiently heavy to e lnpete with
the former, but in most districts
where torn and sunflowers can rat be
grown, the cereals or sweet cloven"
would grow sufficiently heavy to yield
an economical crop. At the Cental
Experimental Pan -m, Ottawa,' a crop
of peas, oats and vetches sown at the
rate of 2 bushels oats, ee bushel peas
and , bushel vetches gave a yield of
6.14 tons .per acre at a cost, stored in
the site, of $3.32 per ton. This silage
was relished very mulch by the cattle.
Any cerealsor legumes used for sil-
age purposes can be grown in their
regular place in the rotation. They
should be cut whet just heading out
while -b'he stalks are ;still juicy, then
be put into the silo immediately. Be-
inghollow-stemmed crops; they 're
quire extra tramping in the silo to
exclude the .air in the stems and may
even require the addition of water if
natural moisture is lacking.
Are your horses cough -
or running at the
nose? If so, give them
"Snohn's." A valuable remedy -for
Coughs, Colds, Distemper, Influenza,
Pink Paye and Worms among horses
and mules. An occasional dose
"tones" them up. At all drug stores.
NEELOCK ENGINE
In good operating condition.
Fly -wheel 15' diameter x 26" face.
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
WE MUST HAVE THiS SPACE FOR OTHER PURPOSES
REAL ESTATES CORPORATION, 1.I IT1Ei
7,3 West Adelaide St., Torcouto. 'Phone. Adelaide, 3100
LATEST TYPE. ,
VALVE MOTION
Engine 18"x42"
300,000,000 bushels, yet the 'whet*
originated from a :single grain planted
in an experimental plot at Ottawa by
Dr. Charles E. Saunders, so recently
as the spring of 1903.
"Out of experiments, selections and
rejections, Marquis wheat emerged
rich in constructive possibilities and
probably the meet valuable food plant
in the world, The first crop of wheat
that was destined within a dozen years
to overtax the mightiest elevators of
the land was atored away in the win-
ter of 1904-5 in a paper packet no
larger than an envelope."
Think first, actnext, then rejoice.
Act first, think next, then regret.
The uncertainties of life are what
make it interesting.
Parents as Educators
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
DECEMBER 3
Jesus Sending Out Missionaries, Luke 10; 1,11, 17. Golden
Text—The harvest is plenteous, but the laborers are
few: pray ye therefore t to Lord of the harvest, that he
send forth laborers into the harvest.—Luke 10: 2 (Rev.
Ver.)
Lesson Setting --After leaving the V. 5. Into whatsoever house yo
scene of our last lesson, Jcsns coni enter. It wae to be a home to home
tinued his preaching activities in Gal- evangelization. Peace be to this house.
ilea, healing every sickness and every a customary Eastern salutation, but
disease among the people." Aa the with a new and d'eepee meaning.
multitudes thronged a around: him with V. 6. If the son of peace be there;
their needs, Jesus was "gripped in his "if a sen of peace." If the house own -
heart," concerning them. It was this er ware a man of peaceful 'and re -
sense of the urgency of the work that ceptive heart, he would receive the
made him send out the Twelve on a blessing of the good new3 they had to
mission eci'othed• with authority. Latta impart, If not, it shall turn to you.
when his Galilean ministry was fin- If the word of good news brought no
isle( and when he was setting his face blessing to the unreceptive listener, it.
steadfastly to go to Jerusalem and would bless only the speaker of the
1 the tl Oros% he send'., out the Seventy good meets
in advance to make a last appeal to V. 7. I11 the same house remain.
the Jewish people.
They we're to eezept the hospitality of
L The Need of Missionaries, 1, 2. the house as these who had something
V. 1. After these things. This marks ce give as welEating
es something to ee-
1
new stage in the ministry of Jesus, ceive. Eating and drinking such
Imitation—By Sophie Kitchener :when he leaves Galilee and -before lie things. as they give, If they were to
4 eat with a feeling of independence, so
begins what is called his Perean min -
also th contentment Go not from
"What -adult deed is there that chil-
dren will not at once imitate? There-
fore,
here
f e be careful you grown-up steeple,
themselves. A parent'sindulgence of�lsiry on the east side of the Jordnii house to house. Christ's representa,•
ems vee. Inn Appointed other seventy also.
Olives are to be courteous, independent
his children should not mance him will- . time is short and. many places must be and contented.
ing to sacrifice the child's future 'vi t and Chn?i'st must increase his • Vs 8 9, Into whatsoever city . . .
what you de in the presence of these standards to his present pleasure.' band of workers. Ilse number ` se -v- heal. Chrism here defines the duty of
Iattle ones. "—Froebel. With parents it is often Baa case of its' enter" represented, in the mind of the Seventy. They are to be healers.
The family is at breakfast, Mother, being harder to discipline themselves Jesus, the number of the members' of• Bay The kingdom of Gori is come
Daddy,and baby Betty. aged two. than •
to dlsclpllne elx c 1 en 1 f ekl h sen Jay Moyes k b d'ly
) th tw 1
Everything is very cheerful and happy
until baby decides she must have the
inside part of a roll. Now Mother
doesn't think that the soft het bread
is good for baby's youthful stomach
and so she says,' "No." Betty becomes
disgruntled and' turns to h'er usual
court of appeal—Daddy, It happens,
"however, that Daddy, knewinig that
Mother is right, is in a quandry. So
for the time being Betty wails in dis-
appointment. But_ Mother has to see
about something in the kitchen. As
soon as she 1s well out of the room
Daddy leans over to Betty, stuffs'fl►e
roll in her mouth, and. says, "I•Tere,
hurry and take" it' before your mother
comes back."
This illustration speaks for itself.
wha�t`kind of •a standard is Daddy set-
ting before his Betty; who is in truth
the pride of his heart? ` Children "learn
by imitation, and if the examples set
them are not. wrathy, they can't be
expected to invent worthy ones all`. by then to imitate.
their h'ldir . Be -,the eounri o •ere e o 'nigh As in ad Chrilst's war , o n
cause they want the full wealth of (Num. 11: 16 as tae twelve relxro-•
healing is s�uibordiaa:ted to the greaten
their child's love they buy . it with. rented the number of the Tribes f .healing
of bringing men into the right
Israel. Two and two; for mutual help i relations with God. Healing is a
weakness. As a result they receive and eneouragement. Before his face means, not an end.
a great deal of affection, provided the.; ovary city whither he would Vas. 10; 11. Into whatsoever city ye
chsld always gets what it wants, and conic,. The mission of the Twelve was enter, and they receive You not. In ch.
have a great deal of trouble when it_ confined to the lost sl>sep of the house 9: 52-56 we read ed a certain Samar -
doesn't. True, this little Betty loves' of Israel.. This reser fiction is net ap- itan village that refused to receive
her Daddy, and in any predicament or' plied to the week •of the Seventy: Th•e ,susweek John proposed vengeance .ease
childish hacauls always for mission of. the Twelve gave thein corn- their due rewaa�d...But Jesus rebuked
him, but should, he he proud es be plate authority, while that of the the spirit re heel. Go' your ways .
Seventy is only peepaira�tory to even the very dust. The:Jew, when
ria by the baby 11 1 h has Twelvel
bought p representatives.
Th harvest truly. great h d f God
and will warp her viewpoint --beyond I The figure of the sliapherdiess sheep,'is come nigh. The city which has re -
ala. For- since children do develops:emphas1zes the help2'essnesst of the fusee to receive 'them has refused a
' multitude. The fi�•ure of the harvest'
through imitation, Betty will probably' emphasizes the opportunity of that great oppontunse
be the sort of little glial who must have ly V• 17. The seventy returned with
what she wants regardless of every- i helplessness and,the urgency of im- joy..They had found the name of Jesus
mediate action. Pray ye therefore. work wondrous things, even to the
blains else; all because her -fatiller .The number of souls waiting to libel casetine out of demions.
tauight her how. `reaaped is out of .111 proportion to the a`Applicatfon:
Therefore it is wv,it for parents to number of- Teepees. Lord of the har-
illeid y e i a y w ose love a re r eye coming. The were his he stepped the Jewish soil, shook
ow ht wiles" pampering ntatives. The 'Seventy are his off the dust of the. uneitin Gentile
Whatt is more, such examples will advance agents.
lands 'through which he bad p;assecb
increasingly lower the baby's, stamina V. 2. a arves . ru y is Notwithstanding the
em o
watch first •their own weaknlesses• so vest This waiting harvest, this
there won't be so many for their 'chil- ' abundant harvest, abel,ongs to god. It
is to be gathered for lairs.. Send forth
laborers; ' millet, "derive forth liobor
ere." Send them forth under, the
s�tron compulsion of love for. God and
The great call . is that the world
shall be won for Christ: Dr. Haley
Emeiison Fosdick saips that too often
Christianity becomes 'like the.. streets
of a great city where all forms of
traffic josele each other and where
g
mean: These •aromdas of Jeeves, whale merchants in then- fine csa's, and hex -
bearing on a particular situation, are tem ,with theirpashwagons, eh hun-
dr'edi, of pedestrians andd little'thiltren
world-wide and age -long in their im-
plications. Need gives us the world
wide vision, love gives us the world-=
wide motive.
The 'Work of Missionaries, 3-11, •17:
{ Vs 3- 4. As lambs among wolves.
Jesus deoeis"net conceal the real nature
of the work. There - were dangers
oa,gainst which in themselves' they
would be powerless. Jesus never
1 sought to kindle the .enthusiasm which
l.was based on an ignorance of the real
I conditions of the work. Carry neither
purse, nor script, nor shoes. They
I were to plhovicie neither money, nor
I food in their wallet, nor equipment for
the journey. They were to travel light
and trust God for these things, aswell
as forprotection froom danger. Salute
no man by the way. -•They were phot to
lose time by the usual elaborate East-
ern salutation'', or by c.onversations
•
010
'go
\`
KICKED OUT, BUT HE LIT COMING QAC K
--Orr, in the Chicago TI;ibune.�'l by the Way,
all etrave .for a place. Then fire bieake
out, the heavy gong rings ;though the
streets. and quiek as a flash iihe streets
are cleared' so that the fire engine has
right of way. Sometimes Christians
have spent much time and temper dis-
cueeinig no'n-essentials', when the ua'g-
ent call for evangelization comes from
the nen-ChriSitian weoed.
"Distant pastures look the green-
est" because the idealistic "future al-
ways seams. more rosy than the grim
reality of the' present.
t"Made-in-Canadai' telephones win
be used in carrying out the program
of the new works and additions oat-
lined•:'by the post i LeD-general of
Austi"ri"!iu, according to report.
r�