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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-8-10, Page 20. , MoTAG GAUT M,19,SC:TACIGAltl' WicTAGGART BROS. (i BAKERS . general Banking Business transact, - ed, Notes Discounted, Drafts 11ented. Interest ,Allowed, ell, De Posits, Salo Netes Purchased, tt. T. RANCE. ' Notary Public, Conveyancer, Financial Real Estate and Fire In. sursztco Agent; Representing 14 Fire 11,1urande companies. „Dteeo Court Office, Clinton. • W. BRYDONE Barrister, So!Colter; Notary Public, etc. Office; SLOAN BLOCK CLINTON DR. J. C. GANDIER • • Office lieursi-1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30 to 9.01) p in. Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p111. - 401her hours by appointment- only. Office ond Residence -- Victoeia- St. DR. WOODS ' jo resuming practise at his residence, Baytleld. Office Hour: ---9 to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2 it.tn, Sundays, 1 to 2 pan., fOr con - G. S. ATKINSON D.D.S,, L.D.S. Graduate Royal College of Dental Sur- geons and Toronto University GENTAL, SURGEON 1-1aa office hours at Ilayfleld in old Post Office Building, Monday, Wed' n'esday, Friday and Saturday from 1. to.2.:30 p.m. • , 'CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Publid, Commil- sioner,' etc. , • TAAL ESTATE ANT) INSURANCE 'Issuer •of Marriage.'Llcenses, HURON STREET CLINTON '.GEORGEELLIOTT )1...icended Auctioneer for the. County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered.. !kattnediate arrangements can be made for ,Sales Date at 1'fie News -Record, tlinein, or by calling Phone 203. Charges .Ilfoclerate • and. Satisfaction . Guaranteed. fiv4Iieff, c,TAY:-Pr, TIME TABLE . Trains Will aerIve at and- depart from Clinton aS follows; Buffalo and Goderich Div. Going East depart 6.25 a.m Going West ar. 11.10 Op. 11,15 a.m. ar. 6.03 dp. 6.51 p.m. ar. 10.03 p.m LOndon, Huron & Druce Div. Gulug'Sbn.th, ar. s 60& 23 lt.m. " 4.15 p.m. Going North, depart 6.50 p.m '. 11.05 11.13 a in The MdUH�1i Mutual Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ont. DVRECTOFiVi 1President, James Coneolly, Goderich; !Vice., James Evans, Beechwood; Sec. Treasurer, Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth. •t Directors: George McCartney, Sea forth; D. la McGregor, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Walton; Wm. Ring, Seaforth; • SE McElwee, Clinton; Robert Ferries, flarlock; John Benneweir, Brodhagen; . Jas. Counolly, Goderich. Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; T. W. Yeo, Goderleh; Ed, •Ilinchray, Sea. forth; W. Cheseey, Eginoedville; R. ,G. Jaienutis Brodisagem Any money .to be pald in may be paid to Moorish Clothing Co., Clinton, or. at Cutt's Geocery, Gederich. Parties desiring to affect Insurance , or. transiect• other business will •be promptly attended•to on application to any,of Hie above Ofilders addressed to their respective post °Mc,. Losses inspected by the Director who Boo ceareet the scene. , C 1, 1-4 0 Ai S R Eta R D oeteiTON, ONTARIO ternsreof aubecription—$2.0O per year. to advance, to ,Cansdiatt addresses; :2.50 to the 136. zr other foreign 000 tries. No paperdiscontinued until all arrears me paid unless at lite 001100 of the publisher. The date to whi'cli every subscription Is paid 10 tieooted eu the label. Advertising Ra les -,..r.rsans len t a d ver- tisem e n ts, 10 scenes per 'nonpareil line for first thserticei end 5 cents per line fnr each subsequent inser- tion. Small advertisements not to exceed one inch, such as "Strayed," er "Stolen," etc., inserted once for 35 cents, and each subse- -quent insertion 15 cents, Conundnications intended for publi- cation must, as a guarantee *of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. 0. E. HALL, M. R, CLARK, Proptietor, Editor. The telophone-bell yang, and -the , . beck -keeper ansWered.11,, "Yes madam, this is, Wfildnee" 'This is Mr. want you. t6 know that the Byer 'you sent me •is most Mileatiefeetory. It's not °MN liver' at all; etat's liver is tondos' and "last a. moinenteeladani, end XIS otl11 the proprletoe." "What 5 t?" WT1ktnj aeleed, The boololeeeper Sittrendered the ,. telephone, "tetra llljank' Silo eald--"liver cont. plaint," Foe every .bushel of wheat Me pro. auced1 et one hundred pounds ' of , $1/4ddrikes communication; to*Agronist, re Adelaide at, West., Toronto Hot Weather Hints for Poultrymen. If they are required lor, breeding luta been eald ae to winter ether 'Year, nut them in a coop and practiceS is the poultry yards, but in /ewe thern Se pen ftway from the hens.i tee many caws, p„,ticamTly m form ft you do not need them, Put them oa eeeee,a ee,..„, us, Bummer eemus, tho the Market just as 00011 the bree2- h0ns aro alloWed to look out for them- ing 'g/eaSon is Oven BY keeping the selves, This is possibly due to the maleS out the eggs will be infertile 0)cso1'1etet, Preduotion received during and the germ win not develop. Thio an early summer which pomes withou is the cause of such heavy losses in extra exertion on the part of tho commercial eggs at this time of the farmer. We find, that at this time a Year, These fertile eggs will, hotd at seventy 62 eighty Ftench COOadIan Cattle Caro Rouge, The herd of Vreneb-Cenadien eatile at the Cap Ttouge, Quo., fixperimental Station may not ho the largest in existence toithout SiXty head a registered uai- -day, though it numbers male, but no other herd can boast a larger proportion of Record -of Per- formance females. There is not a eaWhaving passed two PeriaN 4tc- lotion which has not qualifieu and 110 heifer will remain at CapRouge which cannot do so. This rigid rule, how- ever has not eliminated many,heifers, in tter years, as proetieullY everY one or them qualifies.. This 1ieeiel iwnlepso'rlimitnitt elle) ss6iornic: 1w9e1 were andadew learnt in building it up. One of them tcon- was hat it is inmossible to do n a Phonograph, Recording Laboratory try hi ith, Artist Not many music lovers 'bother their ersl hande, 'without rtioVing pest - thin in ieaSt in front of the horn, (10O415,een't, understand. 11)o thinitit I Mean tw o go , sloer, 'se I nod the tempo slightly, This is only the first heads about the details in connection with the making of a phonograph res cord by an artist. They have, perhaPS, a faint conception a a singer, orates- tra,tor band standing befoie a horn time of trying it, and ten to ono it performing—but when it comes down will not he satisfactory, so the strain to knowing that in the case of an is Lot e0 great ilii When Yon kn(lw )'00 are malting 4 Master, or Matrix, from which the record win he JCS% and you feel you may allow yourself 'liberties in indicating tempo, and 80 011," The Wrong Time for COITUlleniA, gWe go, ma to the end. A silence, es, machine ,,,1,1,.,,.,.,,,,,„,1,1,.,,.,.,,,,,„,1,1,.,,.,.,,,,,a band orehestra 00154121metruirients are played by 'perfermera on very high stools while other e almost squat On the floor, or that 4* recording laboratory con- sists ef two rooms, one where the artist or artists eland and the other (the holy of holies) vvhere the record- Sear any hen will lay, but, the spirit a tealVerat ale• 0 . t t ,structive work itIM t 'hay' a 60 fitie linee as a selvage to your rib - of hard work is short-lived with the degrees Cc" -r a few 41°UrSi. St 1. n 'pro- . . 7 , '1'1.. !mg ,ME. ,infrequently. at Sea. , For the' bone- , „ , '. • , , .11 eulla, and they agaln, fall °a se June duce gernie, The heat is ineufficient ,kleaepeng the annuals in Mat hte.laasys ,2tio:iia4cheopmerpa,x0.etn?iev43.ceollte:siin) p.oliytielse ,f,orlooitira,,,oetti...trhlusg.135,,iu:4007eatnildne:emat:tinitgroluWally, and July, ,•• to continue the development and the I eith Ii_ow. can 'a caw be, a , v At this time of the ye ar the eung germ dies and decays, causing rotten producer tt sne, ,has not the full. vigor situation as outlined by. an arelst her- . ,was. Inst. S'Y g°°4, don't.you required' to give^ largo quantities of If ; • thmk? whieh is, or course, instantly little training and Study these un- This is a good time to look up ma.i.„ milk . Iow. ean a number of females , „I e„e „ , ,s si "accepted an en}.. raecn oortdheedr,lovniwthge6fQaditirlecorwdax, treiling be regular pro chieers` if Contagious •"'vet, she, ay, , , , ing 'machine is set uPthey are not profitable individuals ean be taken out kets for infertile eggs, aa good' eggs even. eingier. Those hens ShowhIg are ibatd to get 011 the average market lack of vitality, email round bodies, or At this time of the year. Get ih touch the big beefy type, will not Stand up with someone who will Pay it premium long in the .summer. 'The yellOw pig- for guaranteed eggs ant then produce ment returns to the beak ad shanks, a quality product. If you cciatinu,e to They go into ,an early moult and are sell on the m.arket in competition all through for arkother year. Get ac- with eggs produced earelesely, you qiminted •With the slacker -hen and will continue to lose ;minty,. You can - learn to cull these out. This will Ina- not afford to produce a good 'product torially decrease your cost of feeding and be penalized for the other "man's and also get the benefit of a better carelessnese and you cannot afford; to market. 'Space will not pormit a long PlaY the role of the careless Producer. diseuesion culling.. Attend a cull- Have you cleaned, and put away all ing demonstration this ,aummer and the brooding ,equipment ready dor next learn how. . , Spring? Stoves and metalware Will The condition of the ,peultry house litst ,years longer if carefully cleaned in surroner should be giveis every at- up, oiled and put away 1n ae dry, place tention. A hot, stuffy house Is not when the. tbrooding %eased Is otter. conducive to health' and high produc- The main 'cbject with the young tion. Make some arrangement for stock should he to bring them along summer ventilation. This. can easily with no seabacks and have them in the be done by putting- ventilators at the pink of condition when fall comes. The top of ho -use to °eery the hot air off. early hatched cockerels, should be Bring fresh air in from "opened win- ready for the Market befere now. See - dews, -thus creating a constant circu- regate the best as soon as the sex can ration of air. In houses having ehed be detected, put thern on a separate rinfs, fresh air inlets can be placed range away from' the pullets. They will along the heels,' This can be done by do better and .the- pullets are much hinging the cornice Aboard so that it better alone, Particularly in the lighter Can be dropped, alloVving air to enter breeds. . ,between the rafters. This draft is The eackerels will make better gains prevented from striking the birds by when fed alone and supplied' with a lining up inside the house for a short moist' mash in addition to the dry distance. over; the roosts and down to Mash hopPerS. A good mash for the the dropping board. 'Phis allows air cockerels can 'be made .up of ground circulation over` the birds and keeps, 'corn, thiety pounds' „ ground onto the house' fresh and svveet.. • twenty pounds; bran, twenty pounds; Houses Which have high roofs' can mnidlingsetwenty pounds. use Stravr lofts to good advantage.' ' 'Phis Can, be .fecl dry, and also two These ean be made by placing some feed,s a dee; moistened withmilk, pre - loose boards over the joists and cover- ferably sour or ibatterinilic. Keep milk ing with a foot or fift.een inchee of !before them at all times. If:milk is ettnev. This acts as an insulator, pre- not available, ten per cent. meat scrap vents the suns rays beating 'down. on men be added. to give the necessary the roof, heating up the house, This Protein. straw can be used to equally good. ode Every eare should be given to pull - vantage in winter as it aids in ab- lets from now until See that„the eorbing the motsture from the house. roosting quarters are well Ventilated If windows are -wed uoder the drop- kept clean and freeliorn Mites. Sup, ping boeedes thee Should be opened tip, ply shade,. An ideal place to raise giving the house -every chance to stay pullets is in :.the orchard. ' The cOrn cool, particularly at night. . field, if not too. far away, is an ex- • Shade should be applied for -the cellent spot. It supplies shade and laying stock doting the day. If trees abundance of insect, 'life. Corn or are scarce, a pateh'of sunflowers can- sunflow'ers tan he'alown for shade if it be sewn and fenced Off until they get is not' convenient. tb- niceie the colony up to good size. -Corn sown in rows houses. to ' makes excellent shade. Hopper -feeding Sboth the mash- and • While it is true that the birde do grain feed is a great labor -saver, and not use the heueesa great .deal Miring giVes exeellent result% Outdoor hop - the summer it should miver be neglect- pore cell be constructed which will ed. Keep the &Roping boards cleaned shed the rain and hold, enough to last and watch for soites and lice. The for ,severel days. , nests and moot should be frequently Ife milk is available keep it 'before treated.. Crude oil applied. frequettly the birds all the time, if not, be sure to the perches and netts will eradicate they always have 41 supply of fresh, these blo.od-sucking mites. Lice, if olean water, and ten per cent. scrap well establiehed, wilo, reduce the pro- Can be added to, the mash. A very auction and cause an early moult. If good developing, mash can be made the fie& is lousy treat at 'once with fronteebran, twentyfive , parts; 'mid - Sodium fluoride. Thislis the' hest and (Rings twenty 'parts. ground oats most easily applied lice treatment and twenty parts -Corn, fifty parts; Wheat, will assure it clean flock for six months fifty parts, makes, ap excellent scratOh at least, feed which ale° can be fed, in hopper. It is ,good practice during the sum- As the pullets begin to develop; .mer months to reduce the 'grain and twenty per .cent. corn ear be added to neakethehirds eatMore mash:. They the mesh ,to insure good fleshing be. do not require a. feed rich In carlio- fore :they commence Thi will hydrates to keep up body, heat at this aid in preventing a fall moult in ,early time; but do need the stimulating con- Pullets.' stitutents of . mash. ` Sour milk OT Special' attention must be paid to buttermilk, 'if available, should be the green feeds. Pullets not reeeiving given at all times and the meat scrap ,plenty of.greens.will pot 'yellow up or kept up to ten er twelve per. cent, 30 develop as strong constitutions as no milk is available keep the scrap up' when given abundance. Oats are easily to twenty per tent, A good mash can 'sprouted, in 'summer and a patch of be mixed-- of equal parts of ground rape cam be soWn to provide this ele- oats, ground cern, bran, middlings end meta. A patch of alfalfa is .excelleot rne.at ecrap, and the birds will ao wen on a range •' Green feed is often neglected. Dur- of this kind. The old tough sod does. ing the hot vveather, the birds do not not.yield feed of.any Value during the range far and the.runS are very much hot, dry weeks' cif summer. * devoid of green feed. Sow somo rape, ,Iveep a line en the most Demising Ohineee cabbage or sprout some oats pullets and enier a pen in an egg - for summer. The addition or a little layitig conte.st. The sale of breeding green feed will aid in reterding the S'i.,001c Will be . greatly -increased by an moult and 'help hold up- production,. official record at an egg -laying, con - Be salve that all Melee ore remoVed teet and 'will help, to sell the eggs for from the laying. flock_at this season: hatching, Proper Bordeaux. the 'leaves are allowed to reinate in the ground, they carry the infection from year to year end when the, , con- ditions are, right shoot -the sesres lot6 Much of the value of Bordeaux mix - tore in spaying potatoes depends opon how the materials in the mixture are compoutided. The standard formula consists ef five peutids of l.slese or" topper sulphate, and five pounds of freshly burned lime inefifty gallons of Water. • The copper sulphate is cliseolved ,by placing it into a bag and etumeintings hs water. The lime is treated separ- ately. A little hot water is poured on the lime until it hecoines active. Then cold water is added, slovvly as the lime slakes; until a fairly thin white liquid results. • In mixing, either the cooper 51)1-- phate or the lime, should be fairly ails uted, It is better, eepeciallY where inixiog small amounts,- to pour , the ecpper selphate solollob into the milk of lima A heavy eedistent is Apt to result lf the oppoeite protess ie fol- lowed. Many potato growers lute° mix- ed it the wrong way and the results have been. of eoreparatively little ,...e.eeeset 4” Cherry' Leaf Spe3t Clean Miltivetion of cheiry orehaede le the best Means of preventing leaf. spot, next to spraying cherries. Where the orchard is free from weeds, the affectetfleaves from the previous year are disposed of, C'ultivaiion bnrioe. them and deetroye the fu»gens, by eXpOsing it to trio elotnonts. ',41hero the air, which Sighting...on an turepray- ed. cherry leaf, germirmte and produee leaf spot. Hence a very .important factor et eherry se,rowing is to 'dispose of the affected leaves, and keep the orchard clean. ' • Wheee the infection is bad this year it will rembably pay to plow the in- fected leaves under at nese, ,and sow to a cover crop, and then cliec the cover crop under early next seeing and lceep your cherry orchard free 'from weeds next year. Another very . . important fector in the' tontrol of the cherry leaf spot is to 'spray immedi. ately atter using either lime-sulphue 1-40 or Bordeaux mixture 4-4-50 with one pound of arsenate of lead to evisey fifty galione of mixture. The lead with She fongicide will control the slegs which work on the cherries. To suns up, clean, cultivation with proper sprayieg is essential for the cc,ntrol of leaf spot on cherries, 00 -alt cOlite Close to needing the most oil, and,, they get the least. Ten cows in milk would be about the number to keep up the fer- tility on a 100-aere farm wheee com. thereiel eertitiaers are used, and where there are three dry eovvO, Some Feting stock, and Seine horses. abettitta pleaeot in , the nera,,? Hrdly gagement to eing on the -afternoon of the —th,' I arrive ,at. the recording Oral . trong heifers' be raieed if calf SCOUTS ,saly, their vitality when young? 11. may thus Well he said. that no con- structive breeding can be done unless 'healthy aniniale -ere used. , ' 'Another lesson which was brought distinctly to light is that it is ii111)03- 8ble to improve the, milking qualities of dairy cattle, however godd the le, melee mtry be, unless the sires are out of .heavy,producers. When starting the CO Bongo herd, a magelficent look- ing, bull was, bought, oee that could - have won. at all the shows, and more- over, an animal which, aecording to ordinary standards, *as of good <hark oonforniation,' But every one of his daughters over twentyefive;in nomber, had to be stet to the butcher, because peon milkers: A:ml, later on,. when ecene o.f the dams ef these poor Milk- ers were bred' to',Inills out of known heavy producers, -they gave heifers which easily qualified for Record' of Performance. Three of the_four, herd bulls 'were dropped'at Cap Rouge; the sire of two of them and the dams of all those have qualified for Record' of Performance. And the regularity evith which heifers quality show that breeding really count,. Now that the quantity of milk has been increeeedO other traits, such ae percentage! of fat, conforma- tion and , size, will be attended to, though the writer believes that ono at a time is enough to satisfy the arabi- tioh of any gond breeder.' • With the preeent tendency. every- where teebuy milk according to fat content, the' little French Canadian cow will come to her own. Of course, in loCalitien where other breeds have been used for a long time, it Would be better' to continue the improvernent with out othigher testing cows of the same breed, but in places Where etodt haS been mixed; 'or is moitly scrubby, it is sure that bulls of the French C.a..nadirifO breed, known for .its easy keeping qualities and the rich milk of its emirs, will -be a paying yropoeition. es ,., • • SntirtowerNartettes. , , Although: ssunflovvers have ebeen known, and i„used or Es. greats many years, it.. is onlY'in „recent years that the wide' agricultural possibilities of the crop have been recognized, es With the advent, of mixed farming in the former .strictly grain growing Mena of the conatry and the increased recognition. of -the 'value of the silo has come, the &Mend for sitageOcrops 'in ,areags'unsuited for 'corn growing. It is in this connection that sunflovrers Offer. the .greateSt ; •' 'As yet 'there has not been 'sufficient breeding work. cir testing- of varieties to warrant any definite statement re- garding' the' different ao called eom- Mercial varieties. As the sunflower is .,,an open fertnize , plant most com- mercial -seed is:a mixture of types. This fact, 'however, afforde Us a good chance of eventnally securing uniform varieties of thOr:most 'cleeirable" habit of .growth. At ithe present ,time the Forage C,rop . Division has , iielated a large ntimber of types ' of sunfletvers. These range in height fromthree feet to, seventeen' .feet and in ' hebit of growth from.. unterenched-tYpea haying .a single head totypeshavitig hiatichis at 'each ,prirnary leaf axle, and num- erous _heads. There is also a wide variation in habit .of branching from branches growing straight out to those that grow' almost parallel with the main stem. Sense of these types give considerable promise ef,becoming very "Tho orchestra leader taps'his batoe desirable commercial varieties. , after the' music is distributed, and The commercial -.verietice tested so they begin to rehearse. They try it far at the Central Experimental Farm have shown a variation in yield from 'as low as ten tops per acre - to as high as twenty-three'lmne. The,m6gt satis- factOry of these' varietiee available to the farmer ie the Mammoth ,111.15Siatl, The published reeults of other sun- flower experiments in Canada andlhe United. States are also fairly wen in ftccorcf, in recommending this variety- ae the sefeet propositMn at the pree-1 ent time for the man who desires -to grow sunflowers for silage. -- se Summer Rana. Ever 80 softly Comes 15 0,15 the IT Ill, BISS5111,g With 0001SCS.0 The hot' earth again. rooms 'fatally punctual be usual. The singer before me le 'still reeording, Her last effert is. being heard critic- ally by the orchestra leader and re- • "At the elose Of a test, the machine is stopped ,ancr the director climbs down from his box to hear the 'record. "He says, perhaps to the trombone, 'Those notes una-ha-um-ba must be more sustiained'; or, 'What did yen -0401 Po Not Neglect Your Bleoil 15 10 in abtiOrtoni 00bditr .1 01° lOnger you dOlUY.tiaing n 000 1110ed Ynedloine like need's Sarsaparilla, the longer it will take and the mere difficult it will be for you to get hack to "nornialoy,''' Not only boils, plan)l ee, et OPtieint, but headaches, 21e05000 SPells, gone" feelings, indigestion and loSS of appetite are tkeadily traced to itm 'pure blood. Thousands date getting ou the right road to health from the day they began taking flood's Sarsa- parilla, Why not try it? e , THE CHILDREN'S 11 HOUR Some 1VIoney-lidalcing Stunts. 1 haye lived on a, farm all my Ilte and am going to tell you how I mal 0 money. ' Itly 'father gave me a piece of' land and tells inc 1 ean put in any crap I want to, so I most ,gerierally put in potatoes. 'I will tell you what ntY sister and I,clid two years, ago. -Papa gave' us a small piece or land. together and we hail papa plow the acGrie'dsillitglinIngearstuenr4 inillitheeiTarilsttrl111011play end?, and so forth, - '111011,.. play, eornet, in the fifth bar from the ground. I dragged wm it and e arked- Through the clouds of cigarette stneke it. Then my sister and 1' plaritecl swine in the anteroom, • smoking hard.1 ' from the please! frothe recorder, potatoes. When they. came up papa seen the He inieve the swinging- zinc funnel cultivated them and my sister and 1 are dimly Poeitiaol7 No, and puts aneenee smeller one in its sprayed them, Well, we took care of know that oil place. ' With gis-them great care the test till in the fall, then we dug thera, 5501nusttlinveg' tshifonast. Theyisoften affeeted bY I run over and you listen with painful and put Them in the collar. In the heavy cigar smoke, and 8° "'areal in- 1 atterition, standing close to the horn. spring papa took them to town and dolge in that. luxury. You note mentally that that tone was sold them. How rnuch do you suppciee "From the room beyond—the re- to 'bright with its flat a -a, it cut too we got out of them? Well, we got $50 cording room—I hear a Jewish wail, deep in the wax for the soft eounde apiece, $100 altogether. My sister and marvellously reproduced in the ma- before and after it. That high note I took whet money we 'wanted to buy chine, 'EMI MB!' The girl's chest came very near being a blast -1 was clothes with„ and gave papa the rest 'voice is caviled up 'to mitkile 0 in de- too close." for giving us the tend and helping LlS fiance o'f vocal Methods,- but it sults Re -arranges the Orchestra, take ease of the potatoes, perfectly tho anguished lament. With , "A slight shifting of the orcheatro!s I think if all a the farm boys andl a last nasal cry of desolation the voice , stoOs• . - , keen p-racticed ear of the master re- like we girls would, put in a patelt of potatoee slid 3-051would hve fete of a several positiene takee Mace, for -the " `Ctoodll' 0 thisk• 'MY turn .nnW''''' efirde'T waS too ,doll in pee place, the,sPendEthgnumeY.—Edward C°Ienla'n" . . . All Set for the Horn ,. e brew too heavy in anether. The ago °urt een* "Not -at ail. Apparently they are maestro gives hie opinion, and the . not satisfied. The orchestra is called men who have left the roomI think tile most prontante way for —showing • back, and I hear the girl herself re- email intereet in the first test • —are the .you.ng farmers and farmee ettes to. do is to raise -poultry. Last 0112110100 raised. forty-two -chickens and two from the machine. After -1---. (vlour ter they elimb beck argl --------1. peating phrases I have just heard called back. With much talk and 'batt- 41,4141 ers a lym oc an 'six - repetitions she comes out—typical Russian Jewess, pale, with something mystic in her oyes belied by her 'Smart clothes And generally ready-made air. "All right, Miss Reward! That is 1.1 "I have grown a bit iteyed up by, waiting—always to rne one of the mot, did something funny,'R5 to the slaughter. °la& I has been a bit husky, justliiketaopprnimotee , the bank' This made me $108. trying incidents of life—and go e v donna,with a frog in her throat, The, eleget sold eiS5 a Pie'ee for my antics. mi, I hum o;,.. bit. 'Yee, the eut is stopped. There is .still room , ght of them and one drake. swirls and quirlc,s on their _instru- ments; the violinist jazzee the melody you have just been flinging, and a general smile relieves everybody. We begin again. " 'Ah -h, eay'—from the flute when he has finished his introduction—q teen ducks and two drakes. I had very good luck with all of them. I I sold twenty-one of my pullets apd. ono rooster for which I received four dollars apiece because they were full. bloods. That brought me $52. I pub this in the bank, I already had $20 in voiceds still up—that is, resonant and as I left it after my careful merrung ,"I enter the warm room. It 'Inset be kept warm because of the wax usecl for recierding, and of course the win- dows are closed. Some companies' re- cord in a big, resonant, empty room; some in one planned to dull all extra sound vibrations. • As for myself; welcome the big vibrating emptiness, It helps your record, helps you on Big notes when, you sway hack front the horn and Mt the air waves pulsate with your VOWS. " "The orchestra is grouped -round you. It is small, of verse, and varies in size, frorn twelve to twenty men, say. There are some .strioge; a saxophone possibly, trombones, horns,. cornets, oboe, different woodwinds, and flute. Sometimes the violin has a queer metal horn, attached to its side. Thia focuses a brilliant tone on the record- ing horn and- allows the violinist to stand farther back. - "All the men are on different levels. Sense stand on blocks and little plat- forms, some sit on stools of different heights and .'built-up chairs. 'All are movable, and can be adjusted and re- adjusted with ease. Their music is suspended from a network of cords and wires near the ceiling—a little sheet in feont of each man's eyes. The men climb up, ehuffling their feet„and shoving their wooden stands about. The trombones are pushed back, the strings forward. •, "The flute is to play an obligate close, to ,my ex`r, toui is extremely -afraid that I will not let him come within- recording distance of the horn ,forbirseasol9urwehim • • "Iess and wie a smile. We all must record into that one horn somehow or other, and it is a 31110131belanced affair, requiring much nice adjusting to enable us to do 'so. • The Orchestra Rehearses. through once, A /instal:0 00 two 11) lithe notes --groans and whistIce 00 die- , gust. It is correeted, They try again. The maestro stands way above you, f . I ac ne ., v ou. s eyea en le ore.m4tra Iand you, He is behind mei is little to one side of the liorn. 'Afirltdacris put in pla' Aesh.m1,,vte, every- thing looked at, earefully—yee, all is ready. A moment of abeelute silence t (oily the whiier-ro; or the machine is hefted. The nectile,is put, en the wax, lifted from its put carefully haelc again, Then if the test 10 juSt, right -'11181. is, the, curling eel/ell (41 3 WAX hair be,..ies leaving the surfese wheee lIme needle travels delicately over 1 -- the assistant Vel:nr1181' 1101410 np lltS h MI, Whir -V-4,1' gem; the mach' fl,, and we are off. The atisick ie perhaps it 18:1rageed sI fired. , Deeps)! n g- fl ow n gently Through the tived trees, ' Singing a lullaby of peaee in the leaves, ICissing the greee With the Icise of a Fever, Blessing ihe monads That SST 50100415 cover. Lifting a fragrance un from 1150 god, Rich with the„lovieg Mercy of Goal • Wrongs do' net Off where they begin, Rut etill beget new mis.chiefe in 1)012, 'course. —Daniel. Bays Bain: 'It 3000 bey hankers otter city life; let him try tt on ono Oe 01080 real het, days. 13uild that eslo early, 'I' stand eine 'to 41 uspeueed zinci horn corning from the machine, shaped Uke h funnel, 1 must stand wills ono foot in froet of the other, ready to sway back oe forward at win., 'Fhe orchestra is thickly clustered behind me, and 11 I sWay too much to the right oe left, or too far backwrool, I bump a vieljn bow or a bit of music, aVv;)"S *hair. " • "The flete has the de in the intro- duction, so I yield him nsy place aloe° to ths horn, and either Mick clown cut o' hie. 'da 05 step noiselessly to one side, lzhe orchestra does net fellew me exactly, and I rasulve to ask a moment's leniency an 'sous tin Mel toujours Mow bo b1:511:,, mat the 's's' end th8''1"T1;eionrcil°seusluell'll'eeoiri l'es playing toe losul, coveeirsg 54447 worde no mat, tor how carefully I pronounce. 1 try to sign Usti to the leader with my eyes on the wax for a twelve -inch record, mre in the bank which brought my 1 40 we 'start again'. We swim 00' .g°n" 11;lank account up to $168. nais tu le pays," I am savirig the poultry that I A Flaw in the Wax. didn't gen for this summer, and am "We get about a third through. The, raising much snore. 1 thhile a,lot of man et the -Machine Melds up his hancitteny bank account, -- Dorothy Irene A hole in the wax --no good. 'A. hoie'iClark, age2 nine. sounds tremendous; he reality it is ai --..---0--- minute flaw, not to be seen by the 011 Buying Balloons. naked eye, hut the needle, has dis-", covered it Tiny as it is, it willaFeatc.* 1312343 A baleen is..a half cenys worth,of the perfection of the record. A freeht P° 1" nn In 3' nil th • Is put 0u. .0,-rri, sometim.,-A hot-air. hecome.s ten "Th • - • e i or fLfteen CE:I/W 1W orkk accerdtng to - . , - ... - -t the nerve ef fil* s.lter '-'s.Thous h ", mia'ga-nilliraa,bsorenpterlat4rhap4se,liree' IMIg-at% eafittfl:,,tte,stlettc. adaM:'.' -17; 't't'r'Eg.'h' F:".91ereavtis" ...n.r., rterif= bait 'is, pleasing to a 'master' aPPmaeilitlr' 1 aliP a' taate e'hff'dfats faru.7. Tba," makes the bal- ing 'lozenge under my tongue. I have 1_17, bele:news it ,,,,,,,4 cra,.. for the not been -nervous so far in asordegree. el",":1,ere_hut, after a rtiorne''''emtur7piessure Habit and knowledge Etat in ail pm- ''"'•.' the buyer feels as "g he were stung. liability it will. have to be repeated eeet,, wizae tilik.gren buy cheap rub_ several time.s have iletract4 from tfte Bu S, ▪ of responsibility. Islow I gird ber balloons, grown folks buy 1110re ing record. A bit of Phea-at., tiny, un- axPenth." 0110&. nese are made e'f up my loins—thisnv e se ia -robabi- 1 h - - II" attractively celored stock certificates important on the eoncert platform or vh1ch "I'"3 /Awn 'up t(' their limit by the hot air of the salesman. And like e'n n - - - the ohikl's purchase, there is a ra0- operatic stage, where e say ex pectorate comfortably at will, seems mentary feeling of pride in owner - to float across nty chords. A burning ship but also, like the balloon, only too rage seizes ma I look up and shake 1 sny head, at the leader. Ile may not Often it ibursts and nothing is left but the paper certificate. I even have heard it, bat he taps his • ,baton—the "reheatra stops. 1 ‘,„ Balloon selaers ply a harmless trade sil''' compared to some stock sellers, ilo 'Isn't that mafklening? A miserable • The Last Atterept. 'They resume their' tuning uP and trilling while another wax is adjusted, Ott we go again. By now a tinge of 'boredom has erept into everyone at the many repetitions. This is as bless- ing in disguise, as one is automatical• iy less nervous on account of it -and -- at last We have made a master. "The Almost perfect, careful singiog you have done has put your voice in fine condition for. the next number, and you repeat the whole process. You are tired at the end of the 5.955400 ftorn, • shteaoetn.c:,thil,aiior gisoov,ylitnIgontee d spoot;atliitry i tvreorn't "Someldines 1 have Made a master record al the almond repetition. Some- times .11 taltes an hone to -get elle ae- coptabte reeoLd.:1„,_ • Little Tommy's Pun. we suggest it as wise to investigete he ore you invest, and take into your counsel min who can better judge whether the stock purchase ie a bal- loon er net. Some stocks are halloonb, others are investments. • Perhaps your banker can tell You wliiehii which. Two good ways to work alfalfa into , the rotation: Corn, oats alfalfa al. 1 Nita, Potatoes, wheat, alfalfa. Trade unions, EIS known in Americo, are illegal in Japan.. 141se,,dritwit tacos, the eines 10 the IlItIa 041105150 seltoot.rooni, wrestled with the insic their teacider had' set them, On P. hot esumemee day, P1111 1110son. vhithe tempting, ono 1,0 go ont in play, 111 MISS not oney to write a few nem, in, tee -Melee. the•ohrese, "A narrow shave." Little Tommy oright suddenly lett off chowiug his nen, A oramwave had struck tsite, and be tr.:unrolls stly dash- ed cat the fel:owing gem: "William Tell shot ut, the apple en son's, head and sont it in two. it P10 an arrow shave," Don'ttatibriNI 'WO 1011g, it will lead to chronic indigestion. In the meanwhile you suffer from Tniaerabie, sick headaches, ner- vousness, depre8. •sion and s al I o w complexion Jus 1 try Ott A MULRLAIN• wromACIlat LIVER TABLETS. They re- lieve fermentation, indigestion --- gently bot atwelttelonnee the eyetean and eern atomach wit! II vett n perfect n nine order. At of hfrneettta 55,.„ or by ,,,51b f,a,e IS Chentherini0 Viethein,e Co, Toronto tevertrate- --1,sataztono..emetemates . Demi These Antaxinit OviclicSztecessein e ou daeo 010,' Shiettn1011. Whtagyer your extlarionae ha3 been—whatever , --- , Whet 0050 Man haVo dent?, 3'4A non <ior In year SPAM' time at home yott 002,eaolly meter the. eeerete of eelling that make ,Storida of Buenos a Mt in wee year?. 'rhea get in teeth W011 rne at onto' I will prove to you you tray be aehse now—whothor, or not Yon thifik yon on eon— ' Pet 010,1001` this question t Arc you anibltiouo to earn $10,000 n 'without coo, or oblieetioo that' you oaa easily become s SI er Salcsisen. I vitt 01i605 50011 low the Aalestneeellip Tralnine Ond Fero renployrnott Service of the TI. 5.8', A,s111 helP Son to Ontoh same% In ellinit, $11O 900 A Year Selling,Secrets et ha& helottnenteat, ha trol04 by SO 11, 0. ,0)1I)'5 1,0,500,1* Anton) e,o4ot0o4,5t, o 11e1ave boltIMI tt out111 (5,414 010 '1,5281*ga$11051pny6rbt);0)y5113S4inbhlmro,w40nrl004,ina,4,,i10,01,10d14000,ix,,,,at BalasoMoPs Trarg.,Astieciatoto Canadian Mo . 1ion 000 ,