The Clinton News Record, 1922-9-7, Page 21.1
CTAGGAir
81. D,
MeTAGGOT 3ROS.
BANKERS
A general Banking Busi0e00 transact.
ed. Notes Discountai Drafts 18sue1l.
Interest Allowed on Veposits, Sale
Notes l'ureliased
H. T. RANCE •
Notary Public, Conveyancer,
naintial, Real Estate and li`lre In-
suranee Agent; ' rionreseating' 14 Plre
lheuranee companies'
.
IDlialon Court Oftic%
W. BRYDONE
Oarrister, Solicitor Notary Public, etc.
Office:
SLOAN f3LOCK CLINTON
DR. J. C. GAMIER .
()Oleo Hours —1.30 to 8.30 pan., 7,80
90 9.00 p.m. Sundays, 4230 to 1.30 pm,
Other boors by appointment MAY.
Office and Residence — Victoria St.
DR. WOODS
resuming practise at his residenee,
Office Houra:-9 to 10 am, and 1 to 2
PM, .Sundays, 1 to 2 pm., for con -
saltation,
G..S. ATKINSON
D.D.S., D.D.S.
Graduate Royal Cellege el Dente,: slir'
eeons and TorontoUniversity
DENTAL SURGEON
Has once 110U1^3 31t Bayfield In old
Post Oftee Bihflng, Monday,
nesday Friday and Saturday from 1
to 5.30 p.m.
CHARLES B. HALE
ConveYancer, NotarY Public, Commie-
COner, etc.
/1RM., ESTATE AND INSDRANCD
isatior Of Marriage Licenses.
fILIRON- STREET - CLINTON,
- GEORGE ELLIOTT -
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
, .
of Huron.
Correspondence promptly answered.
lunnediate arrangements can be made
for. 'Sales Date at The News -Record,
Clinton, or hi calling'Pbeee 203.
. .
charges Moderate and Satisfaction
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TIME TAE3LE
Trains will arrive at and denart from
Clinton as follows:
Euffalo and Godorich Div,
Goink East, depart 6.25 a.m.
Going Wost- ar. 11.10 '.am.
;11'. 0.08 dp. 6.51 pan.
- or. 10,04 p.m.
!cation, Huron & Eruce Div.
4.301i,.; South, a -r. 8.23 dp. 8.23 a.m.
'Coin?, No) th, depart 6.50 p.m.
" "•11.05, ' 11.13 a.m.
kKIop Mutual
Fite histiranee-Cornpaiiy
_
Head Office, Seaf000tj Ont.
DIRECTORY:
President, James Connolly, Goderich;
Vice., James. Evans, Beechemedi Sec. -
Treasurer, Thos. PI, Hays, Seafortb.'
Direetore: George MeCartney,,-Sea-
• teri,h; meGregor, Seaforth;.J. G.
-Grieve, Walton; Wna..RingSeaforth;
12. MeEweri, Clinton;. Robert Ferries,
flarlocki 'John Benneweir,,Bredhagen;
Jas; Connolly, Goderieh. .
Agents: Alex. Leitch, Clinton.; J, W.
Yeo, Goderich; Ed. Binchray,. Sea-.
, forth; W. Chesney, Egmondville; R.
Jarmuth, Brodhagen. .• ,
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ottat Cu tes. Grocery, Goderi ch.• '
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MO) Of the ebove (encore 'addressed to
_their yespeetive post tat- ,Losses
jespented. by 'the 'Director who lives,
nearest the scone.
. CLINTON .
NEWS -11,E CORO
CLINTON, ONTARIO
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' the Valte,r, ,
't, 11., „HALL, OL R. CL,AIIK,'
Proprietor, • Editor.
Plow deep for wteat. It pays.
1211' weatber fiz 0 test good feimirig
eeteti not fear.
It sometimes pays to let folks knew
WO Aft trInind 4008 it. 30 1U338 nee0SZArY
to 01 'IT 03)' the (bete to do it,
Semeone has isaith that the ehortest,
way to a man's pooket-hoelt 18thnough
his eteenech, whieh leads tri teesuggeat
that the ehorteet way to, daihy Preflte
ie throtigh the eavv'et etoiereehe
Fee the twelve rnmethS 430 APrias
022, Canada tenoned fish to the
valma a $20,003,131, of which code
foto repeeseerted $5,3/1,324 eed twined
41
d c communicotiona to egronomlet, 70 Adelalde et. West, Tyrant*
TilE CONTROL OV WIJEAT SPA CIT.
11)140 yor hAlnking smut or b3n1 of with Mee vkintings. With' Sering
c"L (11'11'31‘1$ 01-4.14Mou damage, wheat the leter plantIng$ wually 1000 t.
Stinking smot, eauses loss i» eerily faster growing porloiki heinie ica.
aY1,, • IL lesens the cirOP and 0nai18 verse condition holds, 'Thole is no
33.3 Qualit5, When it is present the mystery aboet the matter, Oldside the
fatmer gets bushel of wheet grate there. is 0, parasite growir)g
about 110. the market price, Yew when the g1ain eprouts Hd, devel0N-
8140)1010 or. mentefecturing placee 4r0 ing ae the grain grows. If it can
equipped with tievices to clean such grow to or be washed to the tender
s'Proui; it Olters and the stalk 40e00103
smutty waeat, se 83)5113 )5)1 crep pnly
11.1able Chi0liell 400d. When sieut- diseased.'
ted Srain is MiXed with a caeload Thmeubsecnieut story of the smut i3
of othervi$0 clean wheat, the bail 'ieteresting. Once inside the grain the
spoils the grade of the ,good—and the seart grows 9(3 140 grWrith, keeP-
whole • carload suffere, The federal .ing pece with the progress cf the de-
g/eiders sharply discriminate against veloping 2thoot, The iniacroS001,0
the -$11TuttY Product, aea)s the threade of tho fungus,' ill
The sooty grate of etinkieg smut the effected stalks, but Outwardly
With ita vile, fisby edor i$ well known there is nO visible sign. When the
beat stook, the smut grows 'eut into
the new s'noots eo that usually all
Imelda predueed from one' emutied
grain ere emutted.. The exception
COM0.8 when by sonae rare condition
the wheat in its groWth oulstrips the
parasite and accordingly wd. some
thrice find wheat with a stalk or two
clean ftlni 8110 test smutted or we nia5
find a head, half smutted and helf
sound.
The smut gives no evidence of its
presence until the wheat heaele and
grain begins to form, and then the hid-
den henerny takes possession of the
kernel,and makes smut powder instead
of .graire This powder distributed by
the thresher is ready again to infect'
next 'years' erep and. repeat the story
over and over to the disadvantage of
all treaded en every farm. Stinking
smut es a fungous disease. In the
fiOdt Wben the grain is in the milk
stage, the smutted stalks can he de-
tected by their peculiar gray -green
collar and by the slightly greater
Snread of the spikelees. But the sure
test M to shell out the grain which,
when stinking smut hes talcien posses-
sion, consists only of the swollen (lis-
tened hull. This puffy grain instead
of heing filled teitir etarelly "milli" as
111 the normal kernel, it filled with a
bleek smni, powder, Thig bleck mass
censists of the' fungous spores;
The Callao of the Disease.
Since control of stinking smut de-
pends upon our knowledge Of the life
hiStory of the fungus it is necessary
at 'the farmer understand thie life
storY Perfecelye The puffy grain of alin'er'
tinking smut dries as the grain, ma- The Control ± Stinking Smut.
tures and become$ a light smut ball, Since stinking. smut le &tided to the
filled with .seeres. The light walls of field in 84 grain, and gets in only. in
many ef these balls are easily hrok- the short period when grain sprouts
en 40, threshing -and the wheat be- are merging, a -method which will kill
comes dueted. with the smut d the smut on the grain without injury
Some ef the extra halls do not break to germinetion of the grain will pre -
until the.grain is drilled and as will vent emute In the ear/y daYs the
he seen this , is the most dangerous farmers -washed. the grain and got fair.
thhe of all, control. Sorne teed 'brine and re-
.
A smut ball under the microscope &Iced 'smut slightly, Then pickling
iz scent) teem with smut spores. A grain in copper sulphate or blue -
single mut bell' has been estima.ted stone - solution was intreduced with
to confain 600,000 spores; each one good success in smut dontrol,lut with
capable under the right conditions of bad effects on germination
reproducing. the smut A trace of formaldehyde was discov-
emut One year, distributed ie the (hist ered, to have 'value for -treating grain
at threshing time, liberally eats the aed farmers were edvised '40. soak
wheat kerneM. The spores lodge in whet:it in wealt formaldehyde solution
the gemove, and' on the germ- of the made with one ,piet of formaldehyde
wheat, and thus fairly elean seed one in fertyegallens of water, ski:Mining
year may become badly smutted -the off the smut balls which rise to the
next, toil., This gives perfect control, even
When 'wheat is planted the smut when the smuttiest cif -wheat' is treat -
gets in as the grain sprouts. This ed If the treated grain is dried and
• smut Gan only enter the tender speeet planted at once it gives along with
• OS it pushes out from the grain, The this •peraect centred of ernut little- in -
bulk of theenfeetien 000112'S before the jury to germination. '
v re heee-quarte.rs of. an inch This treatment has its drawbaelcs.
song. This period and this only is the The grain. when soaked is hard to
danger time for the wheat. Every plant, and M trouble.some tie dry. If it
fermer has noticed that seme years melds, Sfirouts or freezes it Is inhired.
axe warse smut years then othees. A. It sows -unevenly and often gives a
had smut year for winter wheat ie one poor stand. If held More,than short
when the„Sall, is cold ,5nd wet and- the tiMe, :the formaldehyde spoils the
g sprouts Thie gives the ^germination3
smut eplendicb opportunity to get in. Many farmers -limply sprinkle the
Time of plaeting is important, Very grain with the weak 'formaldehyde
late planted wheat meets hod ?mow- eolution. This works almost as well
ing weather for wheat, which, how- as the soak and skim method provided
ever, is, geed growing weather for the grain is fanned before treatment
,s . ence smut is usually worse to remove smut belle,
Farm Wives I Know Who Are Earning
Extra Money •
By Nell B. Nichols
1 have talked with 81 great ina
Sarni housekeepers in the last f
months, and I find that, while they a
eager to economize, they are equa
eager to maintain a high standard
living, even though money is not
free as it 'WAS in. the after -the -w
period.
Many of these' women have ask
Me, as a farin woman who meets far
womee, to suggest how they may ea
money, I believe- farm women a
joining their 'city eistere in the mov
ment of doing seinething in 00/111
tiOrl with their'. housekeeping whi
will Ming an income. I have in
sevetalefarmworeen who are caehi
in on their outside efforts. For e
ample, one womart makes a, few hu
dm': dollars evify year selling eh
barb; another one grows gaaelen flo
ere, and markets them through
grocery store in the nearest city; o
has a uniqne cottage -cheese trade, an
still another renal evemen takes orde
for canned vegetablethancl fruits fro
city women who furnish the cane. I
this wa3r the garden 8)141 03702)0131 pro
ny markets, due to the parcel poet and
ew motor cars, there are many other
re avenues open to business, if the famin
15y woman wishes to make the adventure.
(133
so
ar
Growing Rhubarb and Onions.
In one district, for instanceea hesi-
ness-like houseite.eper is ,cepitalleing
the rhuberb greWS ill her 'gar-.
he
n,
rY
a
t -
s,
'Y
31
er
t-
is
ed den. Her 'business is quite renter
able in that she furnishes most of t
rhubarb consunied in the nearest tow
with about 4,500 inhabitants, eve
spring. While she s.elis directly to
few customers, most of her marke
ing is to the local grocery store
which makes :the week of deliver
ng
n- onions in'imuch the sarne way, only o
Another farm -woman is sellin
u- smaller Eeftle. 'The winter onion
"'" which eome as the first eene afte
a the last snowe and, before the all
ne garden, stuff' IS tip, are nrighty 'we
d come hi the town or city where ho
rs house yegetablos are eeerce and price
m are .high, thie farm woman pull
thuenseeh:e8e,,tui,linyd ,osenlitiosnst,herntiesin tthoewmn
local merchants.,
ducts are sold with very little deliver
enheaPe.. •
And here is another thing I, discov-
et': The woman who earn this money
buy home improvemente With it. They
have labor-saVing devices: I have
talked with a great many women who
want these Iltivicas, provided they will
pay fOr themselveS. Anything we can
do to point out that labor-saving de-
vices are net, a luxury, but an
economy, eines they save time, doe -
ton 2)115(3, 080., vvill do a mighty fine
service.
Almost every womarr has something
on her farin, or has the ability to
make something which will eel/. Ex-
neeience and observation, have led me
to believe that eellieg -to city or town
custornere—the people who liaVe the
highest value fOr the direet-frone4liet
1 -brings the greatest sue-
CeSSI. .
The first thing in starting the busi-
ness, however, is to decide what, you
have 1.0 1)015, Specialize oe 'some peril-
ealarethinge Thate the grime, Thee
comee the prelylem' of finding the_mar-,
he and holding at. •
ern going to tell you 131)o,O4
waya the farM women I know are
Making a peed inewee Withoet negfeet,
ing homes,'
18,440,204)amellent Work, WItai the reernees 40• 'Pe
03172 cooree; the, old etarebbye, eblek-
eggseand II:dotter; nontInue to do
A farrn wernan, living within motor
car distance of a city having a popu
kitten of about 30,000, ishnaking sev
eral hereIrred defiers every summe
selling flowers.' She plants the beauti
ful 'garden varieties, asters, pinks
phlox, gladioli, and the like—the kit.
which require little care in her .cli
mate., She picks these two or thre
tirnesia week, arranges them in smal
bouquete, and takes them to one
the leirgest grocery stores in the city
where they sell for 10 or. 15 cents
buna1 l. is astonishing to rice how
rani* they dietypertr.
Two other fareworrierel know make
a specialty weilleg pansies rind eweet
peas in a similar manner, but oh a
smaller stale.
In a sparsely riettled distriet an ac-
quaintance of (nine mid her two.ehil-
dren are spending . their fee, spaye
hours derieg the summer, gathering
native' feree in the woods pn their.
faem, and sending these by pertel
310721 10 layge ;city greenieouees,
Ordinary hersceadish Offen possi-
biliitiee 10 the ambitious weream One
homemaker grinds these' re mixee
them 'with „vieeger, met hetblea Ole
produet, Which she zelle to stoiee arid
custbrnerae
Cettage elites -43 will, sell in Many
enntoes. Both store% reel
ueI eet,',e.iatee 134 .!--,"4-;;Io'. Ono or
,11
thie pr lkyt vi,i1ert 0404
to honFeIt,,e 1 ,teepgalt tha SleiWy
fheese InkleOttni,eoated palter'
glitaSes, ceVetilteg4litrn, fightlY,
This ;sanitary vvref Or handling 'ill?' fn'oe
duet' gives elle tif emmen the
le on the maticat.in her eontralinitY'.
Canning ,'don Truck. ,
In me ciwri neighberimod this lest
Surenaie feem wenoan 'who line ,:•had
'egg coeteniera t,own for several
:veers took eielere freer them file eerie
ned garden taamici neeticelarly string
beam; end eorn, She :has "caehed
on 'being able to,pielfiand ean the vege-
tables the seem daY,Ivillioh ie .iniTe:4-
sibie In the leity.
ed the eerie andihhh,ealtth,S.-fahnt Woman '
t0 1111 therm paylirgfaitetheilaher end
food. -11lio profit nu.00,:by,' 'Selling these
vegetables canned' 4.,Ottiethingttri he
Peorei of, :111(1 to*otik one do
- Fruits MaY 1;6'4:aped end thaeltein
edi eine the '.setheashion, but again'
Obsdreation 010.0110/10 s.110y,) 811fa
11101'0, Sirceeesrie'el4dined. when a Were-
amliae enecialty eorne partieulat,
frnit produet,
,
Ono feaTtl Weithan has, a lenge 'ttrade
for her delicious apple batter, An-
other houeekeeper, who' 'Byes on a
farm where gooseberniee grow ..rulau
antly, is 'doing •w 00th -while Armin
.sellieg• .gooseherrY:marmalade. T
(1,g.feY NOP,
nd- F,reVarir-filido mc.toijni' Inv elaye._x.flope thou're ffoind to ,34,31,0 Aer.do tits .90,14,3P 1
eSs ' Sydney Blillestin (Australia)
sale:of red elieraieei is onother won-
an'S method of boosting the incom
, Marmalades; jealfes, honey, nia
syrup, and fruit butters offer atbra
live possibilities when a .epecial
ket can ire developed', A tearoom or
YeStallnant,, 037 an e?"cclusive club, fe
quently desires te b31y each' feed
in m,any instanceis Wishing to eccu
them, in indlyidual paraflin-coat,
P311310 containers, I kn•olv a wom
who '.rnakes many .Clellare every ye
'selling home-made sausage to an e
elusive trade.
In some conneunities lbeated with
tram/rine or' ritotes-ear distance of
city 'having more than 20,000413)3)3151
ants, farm women are earning mane
by supplying meals; eerved by sired
order, to Parties motorisM hike.
who like -to get bade to the eouretry
occasionally, dirdp into an "honest -t
goodness"' farm borne, and hove
reel meal: '
Palm women can capitalize the a
mospbere of the open' fields and au
-turnnal woods, which, are, different t
city folks just as the theatres an
decorated. white .way. of the city a.
to you. • Oity persons can telephon
and ask for a dinner for six, enggest
ing that ehleken or chops, with th
usual trimmings .he served. One fern
woman has %been euecessful thi
kind of ft business venture,
, 'Winter Profits.
1131‘,:agi,ypaareitinetnelnarfilyli in
nn ,ttniieeiwr ienplr‘,ewinitob-.
sewing and fencywdrk. Crocheting
tatting, and embroidethifig are general
favoeites, and in sewing the making
of .haby clothes and, aprons axe most
peruke, largely bemuse there is no
fitting to he done: Tvvo women who
enade a good prat from this business
have excellent marketing places. One
has her sewing on 88333 3.31 a little shop
where 'machine hemstitching is clone,
and the other•eme hag',.ther fandy work
011 exhibit in I( ,rektroordof a arr.-
goods store. If ihe clerk's, in the store
sell the 1311001104010,3; they receive a
small iconunission for their help.
Home-mad,e .doughnirts from the
farm, direct to you, have an appeal,
just .as de fresh coffee cakes and
cookies, One farm woman has. a re-
markable cooky abrade,- especially fit
OhriStYnas time. These festive cookies
are made' by order, and a few are
sold 111 000T0S, •
Th,ey me cut in various shapes
-from those mpresenhing Ohrq.stru,als.'
trees, people, animals, and gine like,
to the plain round and etarelike enea,
'They are iced someehnes, end are de-
corated with red sugar, eurnatte,
raisins, citron cut- in shapes, amd. nut
After' a woman decides what ,ske
wisheS to sell, She is ready to 'consider
her Market. This may 'he obtained
by talking to friende.' who might be
interested and asking them to speak
to their neighboxe about your project.
If this brings, noitetuens; advertising
in the' local paper, taking up the pro-
jec11 with local merehents, or placing
exhibits in stoegia are pessible ways
90 arousing interest, '
'When the- customer's ere obtained,
the only way to hold them is to give
setiefection se/ling highequelity
goods, That bolds eld trade and
bringe neve beeinees. '
Essentials of a Good Wheat
Stand.,
If ve are plowing 1 etuble ground
(0.07 303)003. we like to do 80 at the
earliest 'poesible opportunity. Eerily
,plowieg. liberates Merit teed whieh is
neeetsary.for growing, 1,,111(9e crops of
wheat, and the earliei'it, ean be done
the better the resulte,
The greend ip their rolled and hare
roViecl' alternately -until a fine, thor-
oughly fitted eeed heti' •is prepared, SC,
firm that the horses feet will not sink
into -the, soil more than 11 inch or
Iwo while drilling,. Whe,re wheat fed,'
lows beans we often Staet fitting the
seed hod before the hearts are tei»oved
from the field: 1.101101137 03 couple het,
rowinge with the sprieg tooth har-
row is euffici.mit.' '•
Wheat 1 11T4',0 11080 01' readily avail- tS,
able plant food. Barrikard manure M
good hitt we like it hest 'on the new
seeding or for the cultivated etepts, so
what We can spare.for the wheat, goes
en -the higher ,speta: and is valued
chiefly for weinter protection, litre use
200, ,dlefiwor more of a !Nod eqmpie40
cornmereial fertilizer. Ne, doubt the
greatest profit comes from the /Ads- ,1;
phorous, ,but we like a little nitrogen .„,"
to give the' crop a gond kick off, and. '
Art convinced thet a little Pefeell grr
naYg,
Nothieg Init the best af 8n011,1POIS:1
55 eariety' that has been tried. end
proved. fe good enough. It itwot he
theroug,hdy'leltoned arid graded, 'treat- :t
ed to, 'emit germsy eown
at the hale, of; tv`vo ilmehels per
,
"Cleaelinese 'le mot to Gedlinefe,,," 111
kt in elk, efeential to goodemei te 'he
tlehite 3
Parents as Educators
Beans and oxes--By Mary Coffins "terry.
38 is often har0 for the mother to
find lasting and pleasant pastimes
fo'r hex litle child, Ile may he too
Ye'eng to erla. y .outdoors alone. Dur-
ing -the winter months manly hours a
dey meet be Event indoors',
My knowledge, of a two-year-old
child's play instincts and the use ef
hvaevre5 0041110117de4
vei,CPeil,-4;i"ev'ectell.e(911di oencluanite--
.'tkns which nitat be foiled useful and
helpful to *there.
There are his beloved "l3e,ane." 140
has already spent days and days with
them .and still shows a ready, interest
when they appear from 400 shelf in
the pentry. A little eup ef beans, the
air red (31313100] beans, and a glees
dish were the extent of his materials
to begin with. Ile toyed tepourthese
out and refill his- tap, becoming ab-
sorbed in his occupation for az long
as thirty minutes at mie time. Later
I a.dcled a glees fruit jar, and mixed
with the red beans some large white
110137 ibeene for hum to sort out and
drop into his jrix. This also was ToUnd
to be a suecessful experiment, giving
training to hie powers to discriminate
in eolor air& mze.
Our "Beane lend thereselves 340
many occesions. They were the means
of keeping two little visitor0 happy
while the nrother, who had left them
in rny e,haeige, went to town.' She told
300 afterwaed that she has beerewed
th,e Idea for their playtime at home.
My son's irrepressible desire to pound
the chairs and tables or hammer on
the fueniture with almost ally artitile
he eould get 0101)10 33 led to another
oecuRation. The material this thne
consisted of -a-boxhehich the grocery
troy had left, a good eiCied. nail, End
the coveted household hammer. M -
'though he does not do ahything eo far
but fit the in an old nail bole e,nd
pound; he is safely gieing vent, to a.
r•-•vw,irig instinct to handle and wield,
40nr, tihr(Itietaetinanil s.0'feethuilsd °Iilectegv:enL,aairredr ettwi 1°,1
later a .4316 of board to ,nail to ithe
6qx anticipating future made but of..
Ifective toy making and caepentrY,
Speaking of boxes, I migi14, mention
our "toy, house" which was made 11).
nailing tog -ether two boxes ef the
earne size, one ehhvo the 'other; This
40 Icept in the kitchen because the
clren ai,e often playingthere during the
time that meals are under way or
kitchen work being- done, Thi e low
and eoniMmient place having been pro-
vided for them, toys formerly left dis-
treelecleon the floor are kept placed np
and etowecl away in the toy house. One
shelf holds a large basket of tail
things, "aim -cracks" 'of all descrip-
tions .so eesily lost and so dear to
eveey child'e heart. The rest of the
space is given to a box of 'blocks, dolls
and halls, -while a few old magazines
and picture books axe keet en the
top. The house is enjoyed hy the chil-
dreineand is ,a lidg help to Mother in
keeping her recline in general good
order.
THE CHILDREN'S
HOUR "'
The Little Girl and The Garden,
By Elizabeth Thorntom 'Burner. ,
The hollyho,cles grew in en everi ra
rh the little garden that leelenged
Ole vacant house. They stood so stiff
end atm/girt that their coloretl, ruffles
neVer get to seed 315 140 "silly bretzes,',
0)5 1)01(25 called the summer wind When
raindrop, drenched the garden the
hollyheelte lifte,d their heads high
above the spattering mad and sand,
Over in a earner grew the pansiee,
a elleertublittle colony, *always 'happy
and good-nalemed, •
The hollyhocks were always reprov-
ing them for their shartcominge; the
pansies were eterelese and uetiely, the
'Bart' le; -tru' e that the pansies' face
vrere often smudged. That was he
,eause they were 800' 01050 to th
ground to keep from being spattere
by the, mud and eeilen 'by, the dust
They eould net help themselves, ler
the, hollyhoelte not understand
A ,group ofihright nasturtiums peer-
ed anxiously from behind a snowball
bush, and a row a frilly pinks clucked
their heads and curtaied poitsay3 Ttho
hollyhocks, straight as soldiers, glanc-
ed over towaed, the COMM' to see if
the pansies were. in order.
"I should, like to sheice them!" the
to at the silly little thing hanging their
'qv 3tia:elafdel,sst.,,hollyhock snap "J t I
For the panaies, seddenly thy and
timid; were hiding their faces 'in the
grass. Already they leved the little
. . ,
g , u in them IleaTIS WIL0 Th0
thought: "What if we should not
please her!" ,
The dirndl danced merrily ep to the
raw of hollyhocks. "Hello, you nice
old thingel" ehe
The proutl 110W0TS stiffened. They
wondered whether she were treating
Y them with just the proper emount of
respeet.
She had a happy greeting for the
0- graceful lilies, foe the snowball bush,
fpohr11318,he eoses, the petenias and the
t' Then, all at 'once, she geve a little
cry. Ruening a corner cf the gar-
den, she clasped her hands and bent
10NV,
"Oh, you darlings!" she saki. "You
blessed little things! I hoped Yea
would be here, and, here you
An instant latershe was running to-
ward the heuse, "Mother," the flowers
heard her eall, "didn't I -say I knew
therm. vv,ould be parisies
That night when the pansice 11841
gone to sleep, each with a happy smile
oh its small face, the other flowers,
wakeftul, talked the matter over in the
moon ight.
I wonder," solid the proudest holly-
hock of ell, "w,hy slie loved -the pansies
Some of the, other garden flower
thought the hollyhocks' a. little too
hard on their small eeiglibers, and said
se, But the ,hollybeclos expected
everyone else ±0 .3105,5 prim mid parti-
cular' as they were thenmelves.
, The pensies, laded hard to please
their tall, dignified neighbors, hut. they
vvould, 710, SCOner stand stiff and
straight than delve they Would go
once inere. Then if a shower herppen-
ed einne along, the hellybocks were
sheeked all ever. again.
One day it was rumored In the gar
den 621011 0. family was abeut to move
inte the little bravvn house, The eows
got reared somehow that in the family
there Was a little blue-esied girl. The
parisiesi fluttered with excitement When
they heard that, and even the holly -
becks looked interested.
On a gekleneiftetnoon jute there
Was a sbir and a' hustle in the small
honse. '
"The little girl vvill soon find her
patlera all the flowers said to, one
nether, -
"Now, pansies," the 'tallest holly-
ook said, "if you.' Went The ltttle
°like yeti, have your faces dee» ani
old up your heads as high as you enn.
Don't lean 037014 4111(1, Sniff the grass."
The pansiee promised to do their
eet. But when the cley eame theY
ere in such a flutter and' tabbed, abetzt
t such rate that they got their
ace% emudged with dust.
Every flower Was Yeady. The pink
eeee by tho gate were already reel-
ing a Welcome, bleesoecy busheS wore
in,ging th,eie golden belle, and the
a,deful lilies had practiced their limn-
ers perfectly. • Tho little pansies
adged one another end tried to keep
lore laughing alotel,
Saddenly the gate Wee flung open
rid o vofee cried, the garden, the
ear, dtar gardamii
There was, a /hitter Ofwhite ekitte
12)1 eprenetrnage, and,down.the gar-,
e jeyeue little girl mime 0't131
5134' The flowers khew )hy tho look
317"; '14 wo•j• j
if "S(Q1,1 A
tg
.itake Satitaparille,
Iii(111(49.s.fivo,nyt3Initileoewolf 1,41.41ireoltv'etituroolirnla:ilt.r'
)41
food -taste good," After (eking
three bettlee he eats 3 hearte 11100172
5 day, works 117331 mid sieepe311013, (3
tedflastirew000;4:40 bwore'litlienilgt,,, II -
'Who wish to be Made 'newt or wi(O
ftr0 troubled with that tired feeling!,
earnesqy receettnend ell weraeni.-
to tehe Hoed'S Sareeparille,
'wonderfully relieved rim of iieue
Get Hood's, told awy Heedhi,
So when they ,didn't even hold up their
h'(1...C111;,10c,401Trnr:ei1011t
eth'eIl1
T:"
.A811011&31S11/1Y. "I
qrw.:64 072 1:103;YilnYllvlee'p''iin"IQsitlerSilIlo(3)111 s
their head$,?—Youth's Coninanion,
'
A Hint for Fail Fairs,
A Ewe 1913063 exhibit -which 11119111 bei
oopieck at e37e037 fall fair in
eastern Canada was seen ,at tlpe
re-
.0ent Edmonton Exhibition. The mere-
m0b1127daria,'°t'eleatmeho;:tbilegaVneeto 1333101*433,3 'bi 33713-
t
good tied h40 typeof eattle, hogs end
sheep, ',9i(3byside mit/, each pen of
desirable etealt wae a pen of undesira-
ble, poorly -marketable stuff- The
plan wag explained in Ole "Market
Examiner". 0$ 15040w0
"A 'notice of stock breeders explain-
ed that the Edinontoe Live Stock Ex-
ehange were net advocating any parti-
euaar breed of beef cattle, hogs or
sheep, hut that they were emphasizing
the necessity of:
"1. Raising the highest grade of
eommercial stock 'by better breeding
methods; .
"2. Bettee finishing of stook before
marketing to command the top mar-
Icet prices;
r"313)
.ve1tfl7dng.elem'ket
at:n5D:imby 500370
tribution of chipmentethroughouthe
ye,v
So muchhas been written about
baeon type, hogs daring the pest year
that the hog eidtibit .of the Exchange
was even more attractive te the farm-
er than last year. Two hogs, Which
were Ispiendidly repeesentative of the
hest type had !been secured, and when
the pen in which ,t1my W6920' liaa0 real:l-
ed in the progress from the large
r.ough type, the contrast was moat
strilting. Over above tbie pair vvae
printed.: ' 'Grade select bacon type.
'This isethe type that produ,ced, Witt -
shire bacon sides. In demaricl for ex -
Port teak. Will in future eommaed 31
prenriane. Why not raise this clase of
hop Select weight from 160 1, 220
pounds. Top market price—the kind
to raise, 220 pounds at 140—$28.
'Besedes theee in 33110 -next pen. Were
'found the light heavy :weight hogs
from 220 to 250 'pounds. The place/el
above again told, the market story that
this grade sells at $1,00 per cwt. less,
so that a 230 pound hog at $12 would
larin'g $27.50. The next grade—that
medium heavy weight—is from, 260
30.0 peende. This grade 'sells at
,00 pe,r cevte less and a 200 pound
gat 11c would bring 428.60. 131 33110
xt pen was an extra heavy weight
g. of 310' and over which ar the pre-
nt market ,price would bring 10e,
&a less
7)00 304)11)4' than the select. A
0 pound, hog would being but $8-1.
10 pmtinent question printed above:
thy produce the extra weight and
nothing for it?' 'goes a long way
,convincing the obeervee that there
no object in woo -king for nothing
d ,giving away the feed into the
bargain."
of
to
$2
ho
ne
5.0
Cr
81
TI
..11717
go
111
is
an
A doiey expert says that ropy milk
is eaused by an org,anism usually oc-
&tarring in stale water. These bac-
teria may gain access to the milk
through rinsing utensils in water
freen a tank, or they may adheee to
the bodies of the eoevz ag they wade
through stagnant pools end later deep
into the milk pails. -
Many people have misiinderstood
thie trouble and have dispose03 of eor-
tda cows thinkirig they weee tho
cause of it. But rinsing the utensils
in clear, fresh water' and steaMing,
scalding, loaning them will pre-
vent most of the'trouble. • Washing the
cows' flank s and udders in a mild silo -
infectant before milking should eli-
minate: the remainder of it
Most of this trouble teems at this
time 'of 'Ole year and will. eause• a
thickeni,ng of the »iiik in a few helms
se that it may be drawn out in long
'threads. The milk May ,be entdrelY
sweet, yet present this thick re ie. -
appearance.
Often a good growing of .11 otop 100
5(303 10(1 by a poet, harvesting and mar-
Itetieg of it..
"No more headache for you --take these"
nowt jtitit "mother" the headache without ornoying .tho (1)000.
Take' Churalierlain'e Stomach and Liver Tablotis. They not only cure
the headache but give you a buoyant, healthful feeling locauto thew
tone the liver, oweoten tho otomach and dome,' the bowel.), Tyy them.
All Doolittle, 2.5eio,or by wail
CHAMBERLAIN MEDICINE Co.
Tootite, OM. is
elbriekSucce\Rs„coiaii.iveBdono,ey.Yo.dprnry5: 57:th
Rod Theee Amulnit at home you can eanily intisidr tlic•cecreta of oiling that lobo
no
Stoloa of Sweets Star Saleemeni Whatevor your oaporlouce heen-ewhotever
O
io,,,et,t;,011! 0 T.. 0),.),.WitildUt cost or obligation the you 035 tautly Occona a Star
you may ha doing now,-whother or net you think you
18
370
Vat answer 018 quotient Are you ambitibUs le earn 310,000 n,
year) TONI got In touch With me 8105103 X will prove You
3o5054 0*0 "4 SaloWntin, 0 will 0105 3700 /IOW Eliti 03laattalualf11. TraialoK And
Fro Employment SorylcO of the 14, 8.0311, will 30721 3700 1o,,,141
touch in &Mills.
$10 000 A Year Selling Seaets
374, 4 MoC EAktonaneNti ec truicht hy the 13. 0. '0' Ai hoe
die1,ie4 thoonendsaolWol ovonlight, to 15815 wWOW 510 0/,5 the
0)83 oordi ray04olttel ey that toilnohere'No OattoV w&heedt gyeor}uac '08)0 thc 11M o1 03)03 Om you a 44 ,Pane, (to the AM,:
Cull 31, 04)30
.4341e5mex1'5 Traitling Asseeiatiot)
ema,dh.s 0000. n".. 165 011•611k0, Oat,