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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1921-2-24, Page 2137 bus Lie Fertilizer x i 5* q i E It Pays to Fertilizeva Get your supply early; save labor 0 pr and make maximum profits w YI 'write for Booklet, Ti -JE SOIL AND CROP et IMPROVEMENT BUREAU 1MI 1111 Temple Building, TORONTO 11a11I AriwiA01104b IIIIIN lXXXXi1111/ 111II5 The Sunday School Lesson FERRUARY 27TH Rewards of Faithfulness, St. Matt. 25r 14.. i0. Golden Text —St. Matt. 25: 23, Time gird )dace=Tuesday, April 4, accomplish its ttesulte. Reckaneth AD. 29; lafount of Olives, with them; has a reeltoning .or settle. Conneetin to Links- The Parable of ment with them, that master and sea - the Taleiifa 15 Taira same die- vent may each receive the stipulated course ae, that of the Ten Virgins share of the profits. whoh ng it upplementa. There • Vs. 20, 21,' Five talents five is wprk to be done In the time of more. "The first 'servant gives his waiting far Christ's return, and even report; bringing five and five, he pre. the least talented are responsible for sante them to the owner. Behold; the use of their powers and oppar- as if inviting the owner to satisfy tunnies. himself ay counting. He does not T, The Trust, 14, 15, praise 'himself but Lets the fasts speak V, 14. For; links the Iesson with a. for him. Well done. The master 4e- 18, which deseribes the suddenness stows the well merited praise. Good; and unexpectedness of Christ's com- ing. We are now to be told of some- thing that will happen ° when He comes. The kingdom of heaven; Iit- erally, "it is," The parable pictures the way in which the Lord, when He comes again, will deal with his ser- vants. Travelling Into a far country; about to' go abroad, perhaps on some trading enteroriee. Travelling was ities. Enter .. joy of thy lord. The difficult in those days; and it was JOY which the lord possesses, the spir- necessary, therefore, to entrust some- itual joy of the realized kingdom, the one with the management of Ma climax of blessedness. money. Casted his own servants; V. 23. Well done. The second ser- slaves, personally his absolute pro- vent reoelves precisely the same perty, so that whatever they made praise and reward as the first. Fits was necessarily his, So Jesus Himself abilities were not so great, but his would soon depart for heaven, leaving goodness (devotion) and fidelity were His disciples to spread the gospel for equal to those of the first servant. He the saving of the world, henceforth was not responsible to his master for they would not see Him with the bod- his native endowments, or lack of ily eye, though he would still really endowments, but for a diligent and be with them. Delivered; not as their faithful use of his opportunities, He, property, but as trust to be used for too, receives promotion. Note, in the tbeir owner's advantage. His goods; case of the two faithful servants, that his capital. He c':vided his money the diligent use of natural abilities amongst carefully selected servants increases 'those abilities, and thus (that is, slaves); with the idea that brings fitness for higher, nobler ser - they would do their best to increase vice. it. This was not :austral in the an Vs. 24, 25. Came and said. He an- cient East. tieipated his lord's condemnation. An V. 15. Five talents two . , one. hard man; an inhuman tyrant, grasp - The talent was a weight, not a coin. ing, selfish, actuated wholly by self - A talent of silver was worth $1,200. interest end using his advantage to Several ability. The master judged squeeze the utmost possible out of each slave's capacity, and entrusted others. The falseness of this stands him with means proportionately. All, out after the words to the other two however, were regarded as trest- servants. Reaping where thou hest worthy, and more or less capalsle, not sown; taking a selfish advantage Even cne talent was a very consider- of the toil of others. Gathering able sum at a time when the average where thou hast not strewed; that is, day's wage was about 17e. Took his scattered with the fan as on an East - journey. This ends the account of the leen threshing floor. The produce of owner's action. 'his servant's labor he takes for him- hf. Tending, 16-18. , self. All work, no pay. The master is a robber, enriching himself at the Vs. I(1 -1R. Straightway (Rev. Ver.); expense of others. I was afraid. His' in the AuthorizedVersion placed in fear was that he might lose the talent i v. 10. The word denotes the zeal of if he traded with it, Thou hast that is the trader: Iie lost no time in meet- thine. He forgot that the earning` Ing opportua1Lie_ to increase his ma, , power of the talent, as well as the ter's money. Other five; 100 per cert.' 0 talent, belonged to the master. increase, 'Phe tro4ing '0'111 have sat; o- tendvr ed cr a lone time if this gains,, 's. 2 , {{:eked; inefficient, use - highly efficient and morally deserv- ing of praise. Faithful; loyal to his trust, to the interests of lib master, Over . a few things; few compared with what were about to be entrusted to him. Ruler over many things. Faithfulness in the use of our oppor- tunities, whether large or small, re- sults in more and larger opportune was Ir,m: Lnatc. The man with two .ass and a:so morally blameworthy. ence in a child's life is the approval talents ie egnatly industrious and Slothful; the real explanation of his of his associates. He is quick to de - equally s ,.'-essfol. Rigged in the. conduct; he was unwilling to exert tact what is considered. "good earth; a ❑n 'r:n way :n an ient times; ermself. Thou oughtest .. exehang- in the group to which ha bongs form"r of keep":Ig r.'. y wifely. Hid his; rs; bankers who not only exchanged Tord's money. las 5vas rot dishonest.' money, but received 1t on deposit, J wishes to belong. The spirit of com- a nn Interest ! pet makes a strong appeal, safe. 'mut not erectable, The ,,wan'! payment of capital. The servant had) a boy will spur himself on to achieve could :,ave aid 't e nmalty for itiu•self,iaro acted like one who really believed, what others of his group have se - tib The tteekaning, 19-30. ,what he said about his master. WithIcomplished. This is one of the great F. 211 t long time. Sime the par -usury; literally, "with offspring" It' advantages of association in our nu - Mee dote with the har't's coming,! 1 coney. Banking was d arverp ancient trition classes. The. children ask each the c it Kicrm mpt:es that it will be other eagerly how much they have of then rt n I .ng )mei In wasthe story; An pgift whch Theistanott used passes gained, and one boy whose interest in of the r: -mete a tn^., deter nee his health had been hard to arouse -at home, when brought to one of our classes, at once said he wasn't going to let those other fellows get ahead of him. But even when the child is alone he has his own normal weight stand- ard with which to compete. For this reason the weekly weighing should 1 _. When your rover sells you a package ed nose Tea (Crimson Label) at 50 cents he makes. a little less profit than if he soldy u o. alaaekage of , tea. The extra price is all in the quality. ponsibility, This has been called by it is blinded, what a difference is made one writer, the "law of increasing re- to all of life! The folk who have only turns. Just as we save money by "one talent and do 'not improve it, thrift, and interest becomes com- or regard it as a sacred trust, arc pounded, so our knowledge and faith like the arenas among the bees. It is grow by being used, said that the working bees, have to 8. We hold everything in trust. No feed the drones, but the eunnner man can say, "I ran de as I like with season is closing :bey' turn them out of the hive to die, or else imprison them or sting :hent • to death, They are cast into the outer darkness. Be- cause they would not work, they must ah. 5, The unused talent was token from the faithieat employee, In like manner, any gift which we refuse to exercise will droop and starve and fin. ally die. sny own wealth, my own voice, or strength." We owe ail we have to the .world, and God entrusts us with it; we are stewards fn business, edu- cation, polities, as well as In religion. 4. The temptation of the poorly equipped man le to evade responsibil- ity and do nothing on the plea that he is utterly insignificant. The eye is a small member of the body, but if likFLUEN-diTHAT HAVE AN EFFECT ON YOUR CHILD'S HEALTH By WILLIAM EMERSON, M.D. By WILLIAM EMERSON, M.D. but she is careful not to allow it UT Unconscious suggestion often leads be wholly removed. ,to surprising results. The ten-year- In the complicated conditions of old son of a friend recently began to modern Iife parenthood is more than lose weight. Careful ingttiry failed ever an art Calling for great skill and for some time to bring any cause to judgment. Where bad control has light. When the mother finally insisted, existed for some time, it is some upon an explanation, she found the times necessary to separate a mother boy's teacher had chanced to say, "A. and child for a short period. We have fat person does not make a good had many cases in which children athlete," The boy had immediately failed to gain, or continued to lose, reduced the amount of food he was white under., the,: care of the mother, taking. Further investigation show- and began at once to climb to the ed that several of his mates had join- normal weight line as soon as an aunt ed in this dieting with equally bad or cousin or grandmother took them results. in charge. It was no easy matter to convince One mother brought her little boy them that they were in no danger of a long distance to see me. He had de- an obesity which would bar them from valoped such a temper that he would success in sports. The mother made actually attack his mother with fists an agreement with her boy under and use bad language if she dared to which she would pay him a dollar a displease him.' It did not seem pos- pound for his gains, but she was sible that a child of normal mentality !vise enough to include also a promise would conduct himself so badly, but from him that he would pay her at a mental examination showed that he the same rate for further Soares. As had no deficiency, and when he 'was a result the effect of the unfortunate placed in a special school, where he suggestion was quickly overcome. was taught to obey, his abnormalities Perhaps the most powerful influ-1 all disappeared. but indoles an.i amid. His action was; Paying g ares and guaranteeing re- P ppea , and ossessor. ois true m essery to, g.,e t'nte for the trndi. g to the physical, commerc ale intellectual and moral sphere. )into hinm which hath ten. The energetic worker se- cures the chances that are lost by the idle. Vs. 29, 80. Every one that hath .. shall have abundance. This is the law of the "multiplying power of capital." It holds in religion as well as in busi- ness. 1'nprofltable servant; that is, be made something of a ceremony, useless. Tbere is no place in this The father, as well as the mother, world, or In the kingdom, for the use- should show an interest in the child's less man; his place is in the outer progress, and the health program darkness. And the man who neglects through the week should in made his opportunities in any realm— busi- easier by being tied up with the re- neas, letters, religion—soon finds him- self "out of it"—in the outer dark - cord of the weight chart. nese. Wrong Methods of Punishment. HIDE WOOL -FURS tt yen here one hide or skin cr a dvc,.n, chip them along. Voe will va.celve payment at ! t o very highest market price.' Try u3 w'l.1 your next lot. WILLIAM STONE SONS LIMITED WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO ESTABLIStIED 1870 RMieitfish ti a ste i iY >. aAasmri% ef g etre •as What aStanley Merrill, Latnboth, got , 1a1 s front Fertilizing Pote.ta'es i ii p ,i Yfr-d Per Ace Fertilizer til M 1 3oi„ B . 3t per . t„rl /II • bu / G”, i i7 i87"uese1,000 lb.., / r r a t 71 760 tie, 10010e, Xi X of the Canadl,nFortitizerA,+ed,tion Application. Counter -suggestion is much more The parable of the talents was effective than repression. One should meant to encourage those who were never forget that punishment is slenderly endowed, not to lose heart al - because the kingdom was delayed. ways an individual probGnt. A little While this was its general purpose, a study of a child's nature will show number of other suggestions lie on how to be just and fair to him, Only the surface, on that basis can one retain the 1. There is inequality of endow- child's respect and affection. coon. After all, nothing is ;better than to make it easier for him to do what is best than to "bave his own way" and do himself harm. Wrong methods of punishment are frequently the cause of malnutrition. In ideal homes there is a healthy, normal attitude, which seems to keep a child away from sots that call for level. This 14 the fallacy of much punishment. When the need does present day agitation also. The facts come, it is met in n consiruet]ve spir- great variety are as indicatedetof endowment, One has in the parable—a it, with no evidence of retribution or the gifts of Lloyd George, the other bad temper, of Foch, the other of the obscure, but One of the most serious cruelties worthy school teacher in a Ruthenian practiced upon a child is withholding settlement in the West. an expected punishment until the foi- 1 Although there is diversity of lowing day. Punishment should be meator. what Paul calls "diversity of gifts." The danger of people who talk much about "democracy" is that they overlook this feet, and the nec- essity of specially qualified leader. ship. Even Gorky has turned against Lenin and Trotsky in Russia, because they have slaughtered so many of the intellectual leaders of the nation. They want to reduce all to a dead gifts there Is the sante reward for for doubt never sacrifice justice for faithfulness. The condemnation of the promptness. To punish Justly 'one "lord" was the same --further res- must know what the reactions of the IGGER &BET asi`'9.o to nv4 ime et-- atisisu es a ore f' ai? TOWE S 1,1143 'E1) -a ,. 1851s=aHRSOLl. ONlAI%lo neurreezzemzermwee child will be, Unfortunately, umeh punishment is given as a matter of form, with little more than super- ficial results. It is well to keep to well -tried apd safe methods, but many mothers show -a aingulnr lack of im- agination when confronted by a situa- tion requiring discipline, Physical punishment is rarely, neeesaary, and should be used expert- " mentally, and as a last resort: When it is really )needed, and is well used,: it may prove very efteetive, The practice of sending a child to r bed without :upper is inexcusable, and is particularly unfortunate in the case' of the mainourisht'd child: fan the other hand, taking away privileges 1 ha" many adv ntage., One very son fhle mother requires her boy to go to bed at 1171 t.ulii:r liner then usuall when he needs (liicilrlme tsperielly3 f"'led conduct m11y be we -vetted l,y+- reducing the early -tatted sentence, ) The principles on which stocks and crops have been so wonderfully de- veloped are now carrying over into the organization of the farm home, the rural school, and other social units. Life on the farm has wonderful possi- bilities for the rising generation. Play is Necessary to Health. Nothing is more pathetic than the child who has never learned to play. Many nervous breakdowns are direct- ly caused by the failure to acquire the habit of play in chiidhood. The extent to which adults use .play in their own lives makes it easier for the child to start right and to keep on the right track. There is wonderful training for the growing child in play. In it the chil- dren learn to discipline themselves and each other. It develops initiative, self-confidence, and judgment. The same strategy worked out in games was found to be the basis of success in war manoeuvres. Games interfere 'with the farmer's plans, perhaps, yet since they are of value in the education and health of the boy, is it not worth while to make a place for them in 'the day's pro - 'gram? Nn achievement is of greater importance than to establish right ideals for a child to grow up to, and to afford him associations which he will carry through life with satisfac- tion and pride. I remember one •evening walking up the road in a Swiss village, and stop- ping to see the enjoyment a group of young farmhands were getting from some simple gymnastic appar- atus placed out of doors in time school - yard. Night after night they came there and went through stents and contests which brought into use mus- cles not exercised in the day's occu- pation. Twice a week, in the inn parlor, they joined with others in community singing that would have done credit to profeselonal groups., These experiences brought to mind the loafers around the corner store in some of our own rural communities --as fine young men, pabentially, as ane could know, but no one has pro- duced rho machinery to afford them the relaxation, fun, and healthy cher- eine that were so conducive to growth and development over there, A Renton for Every Act, There is an old story of an inland farm home from which one 5011 after another ran away to sea. The parents could not understand what there was in their life which led their boys to make this choice. One day a visitor, knowing what had happened, pointed to a picture on the wall of a chip at full snit, 'which, during the impres- sionable years of boyhood, had served to set up in their minds the idea of a life at sea as a relief from the monotony and drudgery which the boys stuttered in their home. Possibly there was even more need that thane parents should be ehmen what it was in tonne* that rhm boys, wished to escape' than the assoria- tirn, which ofl' Bred them 111e way out. When farm life is disagreeable it is ISSUE No, 8—'21, not .drudgery ciloite that makes it eo. There is , rudgery to be found in the North 5 oodxior in ]i lnouritaht mem - hog trip, t' t ip, wut rho boy has some idea of its otenning, and to 50111e extent it is Ma unposed, It le telemetry to awai,en the child's desire to have a conacians part in what is 'being done, and toot to take it merely as a mutter of routine mei obedience. It is worth much to the child to find its towenta genuinely Interested in the things they consider good far hint, end he will reciprocate by taking an interest in their aims and ischievententa if the home zanies- phere is one of eo-operation and good understanding, 'While yours is the final respells'. bility in bringing your child up to normal weight, he can be made an ac- tive agent in assisting you to put the program through. Put the -matter up to hint with perfect frankness. Tho child must take a peraonul interest 10 the subject. If he realizes that en- ergy is in proportioio to chest develop- ment, for instance, he will be ready to wore out the means to this end, Appeal to the Imagination through reading, and suggest tales of hardi- hood and vigor like "Lorna Doone" and Cooper's ''The Deerslayer." No- thing counts for more than the paint- ing of mental .pictures revealing pos- aibilities of strength, force, and at- tractiveness in such vivid form that the child is ready to work to matte them realities in his own case.' When you hitve adopted your health program, and so aroused the child's own interest that he is ready and anx- ious to do his part in snaking it a suc- cess, then only are you fully co-op- erating with that powerful force in nature which makes for health. -(The. End.) ea— Ten Rules for Livestock Men. Be honest. Choose a breed and stick to it. Breed with the correct type in mind. Study pedigree for inherited chat!' acteristics, relative merit and value. Keep your herd or flock free from disease. Develop the young animals and maintain the breeding animals through wise feeding and manage. ment, Boost 'better livestock in your cam. Advertise judiciously. Exhibit at the county, provincial,. and other livestock shows. A satisfied purchaser is your bests advertisement. Therefore, be prompt' in registering and transferring ani- mals, and make good all guarantees. Now is the Time to Organize. Make a hotbed. Clean seed grains. Burn charcoal for pigs. Cut trees for fence -posts. Spray trees for San Jose scale. Order specials from seed catalogs. Swat the rats and English spar- t Peadthlet l,. ',V,:'"Several of my beet laying Ilene grow dreadfully large morns larder their feet., They hove Gott emelt to walk on all the time but they hobble about. Could you advise me what to do for them? ' • The swelling of the feet of your hews is rolled bumble -foot. It is com- mrondy caused by infection from a rut or a stone 'bruise or by frequently Jumping front a high perch to it ]hard floor. The swelling trill be found to con- tain a cheesy pas and musk be opened to ride, The horse ahfe(1 at emc- eed a raped out. It will not be of thing, threw the boy into a creek in liquid form and so will not drain out from a emelt ntelsion. A cut must be nmade and not just a prick in the wound, Then clean our the wound with a THE FAITH OF ;JOY STERRT'14 There is a lesson in the death et Joy Sterritt, form boy, which must not be loot. The story is a traffic one, With 11141n7 a tug upon the heart. . strings, . One night, in mid-December, ,Toy %spent rode out upon lits father's farin to round up some cattle, in pre- paration for a sale to bo held the next day. He redo u horse which )tie mother had expressly forbkkion him the pasture, breaking his epina. and paralyzing .)tis body front the hips down. Unable to, extrfoatc himself, Joy Storritt remained in the *reek, solution of iodine and lmandage. the' supported by the ice, all through that soot to pee out infection: Place the old, Deeemeer meat until mernutg . . p came, when his strength failed and • afflicted birds where the floor will be ha slipped down to his death, as eine ass ossible.. Tho wound can -ix,During be washed with a two per cant, cnr- a fleehlight, he wrote messages to hie Mete acid solution and then greased mother. As the hours passed, and he, with vaselino and, carefully bandaged. realized the end was approaching, I]:ealing will often take place in a these messages became even more short time and the trouble never ac- tender and laving. Through them all cur again if ilio cause ii ;'*moved, ran remorse, that he had brought this Small Fruits and Garden. upon upon himself and this grief upon others by disobedience, Like- Take time by the forelock 'wise there ran through them all an - And plan your garden now; conquerable faithin the God to wham When spring has come. there'll be no he turned in his misery, tints "Cott bless you,. mother, I would be Except for spalce and plow. better elf if T had always listened to Beware of fake seed dealers, Buy your advice," he wrote in the early seeds only from dealers that you hours of the night, "Don't worry know to be reliable; that stands hail: about one. for I feel sure that Gad is of their goods, or that advertise ]n with 000 to -night. Oh, mother, I am reliable farm papers, 1, so glad that I was brought up in a Try a few. specialties when order -1 Christian home," he wrote later on. ing farm and garden coed. Try one: As the hours wearily wore away, he new vegetable each year. ,described his position and his suffer - Hotbed If your hotbed is in a wet ing. Always he asked those who Toy - place, dig a trench around it to carry ed hint notto grieve. Always he was away the water: G. your excavation rensorseful because be toes disobedi- ntade, and 5vlmrn you ora ready to But' Always that fnitlt in God ran make your hotbed much time will be thrcup 1 the painfully scrawled lines. saved. I A Eltort time before morning, when Some nice day put on a pair of. the inatrt,.ble was almost upon him, long -wrested leather gloves and trim; he roused himself enough to write: the raspberries and'biaekberriee, Cuts Maalbo aoinobedy will see nay finolo- out all dead or unthrifty canes en./ light and 000112, I'in going to keep up tirely, and prune back the ether.; (mn-i 111 long as flume strength: I do -want eluding aide branches). about one -1 to see you all so mach. There is a third. Burn the trimmings and time verse keeps running through nhy )lead, get rid of disease anti pests, tand it is so beautiful: 'Gott so loved laTceesta atlelstaeird fontwo wboefdoirneneprlapullaitnet.' ;tohetietcvorSido,n,thtahtaIFsCvIgaaevoeeelis boonlileyvebIeh Put a piece of moist blotting -paper : in I3int should not perish, but have in one plate, place some seeds on it,' ever]astng life.' " And then, at the put another piece of moist biotin -' 1a1., "Well, mother, dear. !::rill moon paper over the seeds, and invert tile be men I'm in a hurry to ge now. other plate over all, Ina fere clays, My oafer:ng will anon be over." remove the plate, turn buck the Met -O I1inel+edienee, how much elate - ting -paper, figure the pereeniage r f ing c +mss from thee!O Feat), i i,5v germinated seeds, and if below ninety rim ti `mince comet front thee! Die - per cent., buy new seeds. obedience sent Jo;' Slerritt to die in Garden calendar for Mambo Pre his father's mestere. But Faith bore pare manure for hotbed work. Wash, him up, in the zero hour of the early paint, and repair , old hotbedsash, 'tnorning, and took hint to his Father's Build hotbed; if you have 110, pit dug, home. a surface hotbed will do, When soil— emperttture in hotbed has droppedThat Neighborly Spirit. to 83 deg. la, sow cabbage cauliflow- er, head lettuce, and prize -taker or-, Some "new folds" moved into the ions; these may Ise sown in flats or neighhorhocd. They did not )lave rotes. Get up wood, so it 5vi11 season for next winter's use. • directly in soil of hotbed. in11011 to do with their neighbors for Drive a nail into the cork in the• •a long time, seeming to look an them bluing bottle and when bluing is When fettling gerundoats to yaang as superior fo11.3, who would not want wanted remove the nail and pour fluid to be neigeba`rly, pigs ft is better to sift the ants and Then the mother of the home got out through this small hole, throw out the italic' sick. The neighbor :folks heard of it and turned in to do all they could to make the siolt woman comfortab'e and to help an the man who was struggling all by himself evitit a lot of worrisome little ones. That cbanged things. Tho note folks and the old folks became time hest of Needs, It was the begin^.ing of a new life for the strangers, They began to me what real Canlianiza- tion,means, and from that time a'1 they climbed toward in t cantly pesl.t of good eitdzenshtp, This is rho kind of treat:hent we can all offer thee* men of the other Moot' evert Mitre about es; and it will pay. Memorial for Barnardo Boys. A m0ns('1ia1 will Le ere:toil ter the G,500 boys from the iswnwrdo Bolo, who onil !tel iib the C.E.F.Of those wee metal, 570 late their liven.' l Home Made Bread • Home made bread is without doubt the cheapest and most healthful food that can be produced for human con- sumption. It . is the most completely digested solid food in the world. over 90% of it being transformed into health and strength. It yields nearly twice ' as much nour- ishment as rice or potatoes, and is ten thnes as nourish- ing as an equal value of meat. No bread is more truly whole- some or more perfectly satis- factory than that baked at home in which Royal Yeast Cakes are used. -/Scientists hatve discovered a new and, truly wonderful use for Royal Yeast Cakes Phyalcians are prescribing it with remarkable success for conditions attri- buted to poor blood conditions. Soak a cake of Royal Yeast for half an hour in a cup of lupe-waren water with one tea- spoon sugar Then stir well and strain once or twice through muslin and drink the liquid, BETTER results will be ob- itained by allowing it to soak over night and drinking half an hour before break- fast. Repeat as often as desired. Send nalne and address for free booklet en- titled "Royal Yeast for Better Health."7 E. W. Gillett Company Limited Toronto, Canada Ms de ire Canaclaa. Tho front develop is often mai- used for the word fatten. Thin le a mistake. In melee to develop a pig Ile must have suitable 'food to hoop up a good growth of bone and muscle and regular exercise to give hint strength and vigor. There is a general opinion that all varieties of anal) fruit, such as peaches,., pears, plums, cherries, etc., will thrive 'better when set out en land that has a north or northeastern exposure. The reason for this `being so is that the buds will not start us early in the spring and get caught by the first frost after warm weather comes for a few days. Bread without flour is a new thing. The wheat first goes into a trough Out ooetaine loot water, where 1t is shaken until the husk is loosened, Thence it goes into a xeaervoih' of clean Cold water, where the'll+aalt and the kernel are separated, Hien t:.ei~ granito rolls -to be crushed into n fine htn1ogeneous dough. Bread is Made at once, direct from the dough, in the usuai way. The loaves appeal` exact- ly like ordinary loaves, but the di - gestate system at once recoguizes the diftereece, for the retrieval of the in. digestible husk and the retention ea lite valuable albuminous Matter-11,md in bran give the bread-We/cry superior quality,