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The Clinton News Record, 1921-4-7, Page 2te,e."-ee're .1 • G. D, MeTAGGART M . D. McTAGGART Ons•—•..a Wieraggart Bros. BANHERSe---. A GENERAL BANKING BUSI•• NESS TRANSACTED. NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED: INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE. POSITS, wax NOTES PUB - CHASED. — II. T. RANCE -- NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY- ANCER, FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE AGENT, REPRESENT- ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. " DIVISION COURT CLINTON. OFFICE, V. I3RYDONE. , BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Ofilecie;-. Sloan Block —CLINTON DR.' J. C. GANDIER Office Hours: -1.30 to 3.80 p,to., 7.30 Lo 9.00 p.m. Sundays 12.30 to 1.80 P.m. Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residence—Victoria SL CHARLES B. HALE, Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Diarriage Licenses HERON STREET, — CLINTON. G EORG It ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly. nnswered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at Ths News-lterord, Clinton, or by ' calling Phone 203.. • Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. 51:4: —TIME TABLE,— Teams Win II 11'11'13 at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODER1CH DIV. !G 6.33 a.m. oing east, :lomat '•' 2.52 p.m. acing West ar. 11.10, dp.. 11.15 a.m. ale 6.05, dp. 8.47 pen. ar. 11.18 p.m. LONDON, HURON &r. BRUCE DIV. Going South, ar. 8.23, dp. 8.23 ado. 4.15 p.m, Going North d 6.40 p.m,epart' " 11.07, 11.11 a.m. The lIcKiliop Mutual lire Insurance Oompany Ilead Seaforth, Ont. -DIRECTORr Freeldent, Ja•nes Connolly, Gorierich; ,The., James Evan*, Seechwood; Sec. -Treasurer, Thos. IL Slays. Sas. Mirth. Direetotit George McCartney, Sea. North; D. F. McGreger, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Waltott; Wm. HMI, Sea. forth; M. DIcEwen, Clinton; Robert Terries, Harlock; John liennetveir, illrodhagen; Jae. Connolly, Goderich. Agents: Alex Leitch, Clinton; J. W. r e o , Goderich; Ed. Hinany, Seafortb; Pl. Chesney, Egmondvillo; R. G. Jae. meth, Brodhagen. Any money te be amid o rnay ha raid to Moorish Clothier, Co.. Clinton, Sr at Cutt's Grocery, Goderich. Potties desiri..g to select insurance ur transact other husizess will .ba promptly atteacled te on application t. any of the above efficers addreesed to their respective post office. Louse trqpixted :lir the director who live' t.earesc the seem Clinton News- Record CLINTON. ONTARIO. Terms of subscription—$2.00 per year, in advance to Canadian addresses; e2,50 to the 1.7.S. or other foreign countries. No paper diecontiemed antil all arrears are Paid unless at the option of the publisher. The date to which every subscrIptles ji paid it denoted on the label. .Advertesing tates—Translent miner. tisements, le recite per nonpareil lino for first insertion and 5 cents per line for each subsequent inset. 1.1011. Small advertisements not to c.cced one inch, such as "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., insert- ed oneo fir 35 cents, and cads subse.- quent insertion 15 cents. Communications intended for publics. tion must, as a guarantee of good faith, he accompanied by the panie of she writer, _ G. E. GALL AL R. CLARK. Proprietor. Editor. April Voices. Now you may hear frail voices in the Making melodious mower each to each, As sibyls did of old sylvaa speech; They are from Aprfi's childreo fresh and fair. "lbave just wakened," saki the mat. enehaite Replying o the whisper of the beech; "And 1," the enemone murmured, "do beseech Where this bee Is, If he has lett his lair?" "I," the stream tinkled, "intist away to be Part 01 (118 testlese and awaiting sea"; "I," the bird carolled, as it preeeed ' its breast, Intent upon mine fond apoloaching call, "Look for my mate; it 18 LoVe's time to nest!" And April smiled 10 hear and set them all,' 5 t?' ,14611,141„.. doal, • • Addreas communications • to Aoronoi-r-fist, 73.AcTelalcie St. Weet. reronte. Crops in Young Orchards, neceeenre et firet to hunt them vp and drive them home, but they Will The 810(80, and •tt _desire to berra an orchard is 6w' 1611931 b1) Tetirn handicapped by the length of time After the po.ults aro fully feather - necessary, to wins tree$ jut) att and have passed. throagli the bearing, A, re9neae. 10,0„0„, 15 no,_ "sheetirlo the red" Period, Which oceans at about three menthe eeetteW from the tend to meet the ex - menses f the home, Apple trees 1-valilY of age, the young are hardy and may otake a Bong time to return to profit, allowed 'unlimited 'range' at en quitetleid'e even' peaches, Pews and Plums nines, A,s long eta they oren Secure have melee a bill 'charged, against them ;plenty of ;Insects while on range, they batene;tthey are ready to obaat V21:1 thr/VO 051 two meals:a day, ment. The young must lee' pheitered dur- ing rainestorms, Or they me likely to 1111° orethialtilist; rmISt re'aili" *left contract oolde which quickly develop the trees neusit oolne fleet. Otheewise into roup oe kindred eihneets, TheY it is waate of 'time to Ififent them- must not be allowed outd.o.ors in the The mops grown lie the wetland maist meaming until 'the dew is 'off the grasp, mete:rob the treee of fertilltY and 11S they suffer from the' slightest ,eold stunt their growth. Wiest srofs Oan Or dampness. For the eame reason, be grown at a pitofit between young the eeop ohmic', have a board floor. hull; trees without inini'ing thenr? After the poults are eix weeks old, Strawberries oan be grown 118 young the donee ee lees is preeteeeley wee, orchards. Cuerants and gooseberries young turkeys ,eleould be taught to have been profiewhey grown ski roost some distance from the ground. orchards in sections where there is ta The danger from foxes and other wild good market for such ,fruit, • animals end ;rodents is ever present, Melons and oneumbera awe often, emecially in newly settled sections .grown between yourug treeswith no when POURS WO' permitted to roost damage to the ;Uses, and the income on a rail fence or upon the groluid, from ;such -crops helps the orchardist In the course of several evenings -the to pay the bills while the trees are young turkeys ean ;be induced to walk increasing in value. Some orchardists uP along pole to the high.er branch7es grow corn in their youngordlearnits and of a tree, .until they will do this where the seil is fertile and fertility regularly of their OWA accord. For is constantlyadded, good crops of halfegroWn tuctiveye a high roost in corn tan 'be produced ;and the trees an ;open shed which faces the south is are not injored. Corn ethould net be preferred bo the closed house. Planted so.close that the yomeg trees • For the -first twenty-four heurs the Are shaded' or injusied by the horses newly-herbehed potable should not he vzhea the eorn is cultivated. A crop fed. Little and -often is the rule for of ;beans has made spending money feeding. Cooked food is preferred to front many a young ordhard. Being a uncooked, Young turkeys sometimes legume, the beans add a certain am- have greedy appetites and ;can not di - aunt of ferrbility to the soil. gest all the food they eat. In part Crops like pumpkins and neangels this may •be overcome by feeding little are fine far dairy and poultry feed •and often, and in poet by allowing during the winter and the fernier, with them to exercise and thus stimulate cows and hens ea11 often grow these bettee digestion. crops in the orchard and take the re- Peed on clean surnatese young 1:111303 from the land in milk and eggs. stock especially can not atand Possibly there is a danger af injuring Some poultry raisers mix a little sand fruit trees if the pracbitee of inter- in the soft food given to the young. cropping is .continued too long. This aids digestion. Water should be During the first five yule -a of a given in small shallow dishes. After tree's growth, intensive 'tillage is nee- turkeys are old enou,gh to turn Knit emery to build ta strong frame and on range it is a very foolish practice this tillage is expensive unless some tO stuff them with all 'scats 4:if mashes, of it is used to liaise other mops at' as overfeeding muses liver brouble, the same time ft is helifing the growth The best food, is chiefly grain, given of the trees. 'At this time the crops dry, Avoid ,sloppy 'food. They must which can be heed help the farmer have something green every clay, and to ;obtain. an imm.e.cliate return for his also 501118 11/149* cd31: cooked lean meat work. . . • when they are confined. Aftee trees are five years old, the • During the first week feed with grower desires fruit bud' formation sifted rolled or ground oats, cooked and ha does not wieh to encourage a and .crumbled, and mixed with a large rank growth. Then the hoecl 'beaten egg. With this give -milk and crops, like vegetables, are not desir- able in the orehaved but sometimee the' farmer can produee Et grain ;crop among the trees. When the trees be- gin their period of heavy fruiting, they need all of the eeergy in the ea. The sail will vary in different sectione but in geneeal the trees will need fertility and if cover ereps are grown in the orchard .50 will pay to plow them utuder and not harvest them. During the time when the trees are producing profitable crops, most growers do not try ta .obtain any ad- ditional profit from any kind of inter - cropping. Of couree, the trees will shade such .crope and they will not do web.'. In addition, progressive fruit growers know that trees need much plan( food and there.is nothin.g gain- ed from .cocharcis When th,e trees will produce all that .can be expected if they are given the right treatment. How to Raise Turkeys. • The young penile must be .kept growing right from the Shell in order to keep them in peel condition, Early in life they must he taught to come home at night; once the habit is fixed with them they will return at a reg- ular hour. This may be done by feed- ing regularly in the morning and at night. If the yoeng are being brood- ed by' a turkey mother it may be curd. Feed five or six times a clay. During the second week put wheat 'and ground bone in boxes where the Y081185 can get at et, Give them three dellY feed's Of mixed: oatmeal, wheat, middlings and ground eats, all cooked together and neixed with chapped green food. Thereafter supply cool: - ad rice, or turnips, or potatoes. On- ion tops and lettuce, if ehopped fine, 'are relished by the young. After they. are a month olcl they OEM be fed crooked earn at night. After two months of age, two meals a day will be suflictiebt. Boiled eggs, fed exclusively, pro- duce constipation. The following diet is used by some turkey raisers.: Hard boiled eggs, with dandelion, lettuce Or onions chapped up with a smell ane. mount of brett'd ,crumbs; to this add a libtle rice, boiled in sweet milk, a little suet, and in wet or cold weathee litileeayenne pepper. The young must not be raised o18 ground that was Tomei:1y occupied by chickens infested with gape -worms. Young turkeys seem to be ready subjects to verinin, especially head lice. If the hens are quiet, catch and dust them thoroughly while sitting. If the youngsters seem weak and listless at two weelvs old, the reason is usually "lice." Anoint head, throat and vent with carbolated vaseline, and rub it in well. . Some old poultry houses Can be renovated 'and modernized and nvade suitable for housing a profeteble farm fleck, ev9n though they are now in poor condition, If you have 85101 EL house with a stop-ledclee roosting system it can be improved by remov- ing the old roasts. Then construct chopping -beards and place rooets over the besteds, This will inerease the seratching area on the floor a.nel make it easy to take ant the deeppings at le.ast a few ti11103 each week, depend- ing an the time given to the hone. Many of these old houees have glaze windows but rio open front. Such lemma A18 damp and full of oda& Take out patt of the windows and raver the opening with quarter -inch mesh wire. A muslin curtain or a curbain made of old sacks Call be used daring. severe storms. There need be no bad odors in a poultry 'house if the house te clean and .the 'air is fresh. The open front insures a suppiy of fresh ale and thee Iceeps tha house dry and the hens healthy. Old, dirty floot•s. become unclean and the soil should be removed awl re- placed with clean ..send. Never lot the level of the earth floor become lower than the outente ground or bhe floor will. be damp and possibly the melt- ing snows ma.y drain into the hoeee. Use only' porbable equipment the poultry house. Nests and hoppers that are spiked to the walls. are (Hifi- cult to elee.n, Have the mete to they eon isa terken out in small eectiono and sunned and s.prayeel. It will troop down mites end Mee end make poultry keeping mere profitable. What telling, your surplus stack, don't forgot that yeti will ward some, youreelf for bible use, Chileiccle3 May be .clarifl el as egg breede, meet breeds, general 'emptied breede and Taney or ornamental brood's, • When Hens Strike, "What's the re.ason hens, lene nearly every day when eggs are thirty cents a dozen and reftese to do their duty when the 'peke goes up to sixty tents?" I asked this queatien. of a SAICCeSS- £ ul .poultrarnan, "Becalm:: they go on strike," he answered, without milling. "It's the truth," he continued, noting iny look of inetedel.ity. "They etrilce the same as wohumans do, but not foe mere wages, o•f course. They strike for bet- ter food. Hensemest have green f001.1 to make good layers, "When I fleet enteeedthe poultry business I teceiced this same thing, and I often wondered alt it. After ex- perimenting a While, I keened the eause. It was the kick of green food that kept the from laying Well in wineeta 00 I haVe, overcome this ley leaving .greene eivieys et 11111811 1) 08? feeding. "Cabbage .and beets are the beet, but a variety. le someeenes neceseaey. • have else fennel green -weed stilIalfa ot elover hay to be excellent, alter it him Sprouted oats 11181180 another geed food. Poe tho sake of varmar, -I often feed pumpkins to my 180118, This melees them produce. Beets and 'cabbage naist be Melted before they become .dty, and etered in a good culler or heeled in the grouted, I have had. 110. trauble in getting e ats to spectate as I have a good warm .oe4.dar. 5 soak the eats over night 'in water, then I spread them on the float of the celleur about ate heath deep. They clo not take long to prout in this way, and- in a eltert time I can begin feedir.g them.. To 5)01 1153 beet remits with greenecueed netelea. or Clover, e llen le up fine -airel boil IL Before feedieg, I Make sure that it is het moldy.. New is the time to eel...tinge foe a :good supply of green food for your hone neat winter," 1,1010 C1111'0 were fleet imported:Milo Englarel from Arneelea in. 1801. , Plant Trees in A's 80018 ae, young orehard treett Are reseiVed fram the nursery they &mid be unWrapPed and beeletlein, Most aurveryinon Attach Prinked Metre^ time to the prieltage of trees. If these Welt, earefelly. eellowerl a greet deal of leas weiticl be avoided, If the trees aye received ie freezing weather the Milano ehoeld not be opened at Onoe, but Mee111 be placed In a o'er', damp place to thaw out very gradually. i Heeling -in .eonsists simply in dig- ging' a long trench end laying the tmes in itt•ill slantine poeition, gen-, Malty with the Jove pointing Rattle . The earth ia then thee:v/11.'0qm' the, roots and worked thoroughly about (Ilene, firming it web.. Tlis details ef eetbing trees will very with the sikei of the orchard end the amount of.help at hand. Some *le neaY be saved ,by levying „the holes' dug beforreheruce ,However, the disadventage in that Nes lin the dry- ing out of the teeth which ;come& out of the hole. The most important thing ip to ;set the tree firmly, to set it exactly in the rigtht and to keep the roots from drying oet during the precess. Wihen a number of trees are to he planted puddling is done to prevent ;cluing of the roots, A hale about theee feet in dianreter and two to three feet deep is dug in a ;clayey spot, and enough water ispeared in and mixed with embh .to melte 08 thin mud. As the trees are taken from the heel- ing -in trench the roots me plunged into the muda-e.n armful of trees rat a time. The mud covers .and coats the roots and (prevents them from dry- ing while they are exposed! to the air during planting. All straggling roots end .broken or diseased roots ehould be pruned off before Or after the teees arre budded. Usually the whole reot system is shortened one-third by limning. The tree should be set several inch- es 'deeper than it stood in the nursery row. If exposed to •strong winds, lean the twee elightly in the direetion 0,1 the prevailing wince Peek the earth firmly about the roots, especially under the crown of the tree, where it is so easy to leave an air space. 13e careful not to bride and injure bhe roots. by tramping. Put the good top 'soil about the roots first, using the eoorer sail 'from the bottom of the hole for the tap filling. Leave a little loose earth on the surface to prevent deyirtg out. A'void having the trees too close. Crowding makesthe trees grow too high. Apple trees should not be eloper than thirty-five feet each evay. On strong. heavy soil from forty to fifty feet is better. It is neees..sary to prune to top of the tree 'before or After setting in order to balance the pruning of the roots when the trees are dug from the musery row. From eheee to five main branches should be left to form the supporting limbs for the tap. These should 'be as weli distributed around the trunk as possihle, and should also be .clistributed theough as much verti- cal disbance as possible in -order to make , a strong "top. If ;convenient, When prunhig the top, out to en Out-. side bud to encourage 'spreading of the top. If two leaders leave de- veloped, one Amid be removed en- tirely to prevent the :forming of a ,bad crotch. If one -year-old trees are...set the pruning is usually a simple -matter and Consists merely of beading ba,ck the tap to about two-thirds of its length before dug. 5( 15 wise economy bo plant sivelter'- teats of evergreens, arbor -vitae, Nor - wary spruce, and balsam fir, a portion of each with a speinkling of other varieties to make a pleasant contrast. Thera is no dearth of kindness' in this world of CAM only in our blind, ness we gather thorns for flowers.— Gerald Massey. 1 Care of Seed Potatoes and Preparation for Muting, eelectioe—en er.raneine fee a E'OC4 'SAPI.PlY Of tubent fer one's sr, 31, the feet eleps gleaned he taken dulle the growing ecasow te fret the ece f tncln beelehy, vigorous, trarge-yielelea I When herveseing tiine 00.111.0,3 (10100 IrDle shoniel be genhered 5023:,1' t tely %reap the reet of the crop.'55)1 tabers elseuld, be sun dried ,and all showorg cute, bruises' cr 'dist:no of Now Nelded by Needy Every One to Puri:y the !Mood and Eluild Stronnth, row 'o'ne to till. to trying spring days Nitithenit 'weariness, doellil teat "tired tooling," caused in large part by !lemma de,vItallzed None, Ct, lige Of 1141110018 otten "(alma tho strength out ,rt me," BM lilIIY pooplo say. The tonie „and hlood verifier weeded. lo Hood's Sarsaparilla, It 42. dIse'els that exbeusted feellepe en' 1u the blood anti ben - em the mental, UEthir 10d nee, veue syeteree. In o, word, save a druggist, "Iloodes earertearilla our most dependeble restorative." Only the beet tonie end purify- ing ingretlictuta used.—roota, barks and borrioe, shell 88physi- mans ofton preneribe, .A. record oe 48 years sUcesssful nate It will do you good, Try It ties spring. A mild laxative, Hoorl'e Pills. any kind, Niemen out 'Such supply A P eart. thee lee ;eclat fee a eeid area for • 0 faz S ,s,,ilattria Irina • the foldowing treason. ' ; 13 THE IDEAL SPRING MEDICINE. Where the main mop is CLCS:tin 13:1 3101' ihiS eeed trade, equellye good me should he takenin the harvesting and seating before atone, mite winter stor- age. If the weather is bad et dig- ging limo, and the tethers Wive to be bdken wet from the field, they should be spread out to 'dry rbn is barn fine or other airy place and be re -sorted beeore going into stora.ge, Storage—The .boot sborage fox maintaining vitality of end tubers 1b515 not, so far- as the writer es aware, been absolutely determined., Seed from e 11%7 ;cellar with temperiatuee emitting fram 40 to 50 degrees hes been equally vigorous with that from a moist cellar at a temtperature of 34 to 38 clegreee, though, of coarse, .there weuld be .great loss' of bulk and weight an the former otuee. Potatoes kept in pits with excess of m,oislerre and mindinqm of ventilation have also giveneyigeraus plants: When potatoes aro first etored there ehould be free ventiletien bo merry off all latent heat and nvoesturre and to redrew tem/runt-are to below 40 deg. If the floor of storage is very damp the 'bin .had better be raised by a wooden floor. If it is dry there is nothing gained by the floor. If bine are very derep (aver sex feet) they had better be broken up by hollow paetitions planed not more then, tern feet apart; though the writer has 'seen potatoes keeping vele in very large, deep bine. The storage eleepld be eo eenstruct- ed as to keep cool in, the Spring. It should ;be possible to keep it below 40 degrees, to prevent epeoutring until such time QS the tubers are wanted. Forced Sprouting—Far an early crop, it is a common practice to bake the s,eoci tubers to a light roam of about (30 degrees temperatuee by the 20t58 Merole tro give 1).115111 femto six weeks to wenn urp and spront. A thick green sprput net more than a half inoh long is evented. The exact gain In growth from this treatment hare not been determined. In one treal at the Experimental Station, Prederioton, the .clifferertoe in growth as between eeed SO treated and seed taken im- mediately faun the cellar, was very slight. Planes film the sprouted eeed were only from t1150 'LC/ three days ahead ot the oilers. Disinfection—To kill any seems of common scab and, to some extent, Rhizootonia, the pertatoee should be treated with a disintfeetant. The eafest to uee is forma:line at the rate of a pint to 80 valves of water. The tubers .are best baggeci and then im- mersed foe tv,e? hours, Investigators are 71OW (tying out methedts of disinfection whereby the use of heat ancl greater strength of solution will materially ha.sten the procese of dieinfection. Cutting the Sets --Experiments hem proven quite clearly that the meet economical way to use Seed is to cu,t to sets weighing not lees then one mince and net more than ttyo ounces, with from two to three eyes to the mt. Cutting by a machine or a cut- ting board may be economical in large oommercial epentstrions, but as when using these the size ef sets end num- ber of eyes cannot be well regulated nor elimination of internal desearee carried out, the advantage of speed neay not .be geed economy. What I Learned on an English Dairy Farm By CHARLES E. THORNE. one of the ,very interesting side .during cur Shay in Enema, 881515 to an 800-eere dairy farm; keeled in southern Hertfordelilee, about 20 miles north of Lor.don, and operated by Samuel Wallace, Esq., for the pro- duction of milk for • the Landon inarloet. A luelfantle evenue of .century -old oaks leads from, the highway to a spenieue and elegantly furnished develrling, v..here we were met by Mr. Wallace, .41nd con:Net-eel tiret to the seablea which were substantial built, and equipered power and methrinery for vending feed, tutting roots -and ."eltraffilege' hey tenet etraw) One Rue of equipment thee would hove been found :on 1103' dairy farm el this eize and ,tharaeter Canada,— the silo—was denrepleuees •for its .eb- eerie°, Infrieet, We sew very. few fiilon Fille111110, the reeeen being that (me Irteran ihe 517011(8 11 of all feed, predneing emcee and which is bottee adrapeed to She tele than any other, cennet bo geown to Maturity in Eng- leni, and tile reee erope—mangees nerd turelps—whieb largely bake its place, need no silo Ur their peceervation, •Mo. 1Vallece nr.,:s eerie . imported corn for feeding, together 88 1111 cotborra seed- and liezeee cil ca(0e) and home - gleam barley tt-,5 I ccuid uolelvelp bet weielee, how - 'ovate ae I travelled -from ten% to teeth threngli the 1 elite -a: lerIlh af Eneettairl, fold oftw 0. ery whet e fielde of this team whether leire in*.ght tee be a ocanbination worthf of aiteraion at craft, The horse bean is planted in auturen, either etIOne ter with winter oats. It is a CAW, upeighe plane, greweng three 16 four feet high, and ie of same eervice 131 leelding up the oats. I eetild te.1 heee envying the Beitash earnerthe exclue.ve poseet, cion of this legume, which clout not thrive in oet <Minato. With this lionmegrown leamine; mix- ed with, _inverted • Core end all cake, and fed le etemereiret with roota, the Englieli dairyman le eardeled eo pee- lamen weldnuareed reteen of the higheet C500L'Is'c)1053, The drainage from Mr. Wallace's stables is led' to 5111 onesede reservoir, from whioh a put of it is .conducted by graVity to a lower lying field, on which ;cabbage has been grown every year for fifteen yams or 'longer, and which wee occupied by a luxuriant crop at the time of mt. vierit. Mr. Wallace keeps .about 100 eows, meetly of 08. milking etearin -of Short- hortle, theheed being headed by a $8.,000 boil, The eattere run 'on pas- awesthat are syseematioality treated with Wale slag, thus replacing the bone-fernmeg temente that me car- ried eNOily !rem the 'farm in the milk, arel at the :erne fime 'furnishing the neeeseery, 58,11 con:eV:ens fox the growla of whete cleeer, which car- peted the" a. Inxuriant growth. The 'clean, sleek caws bore Cele; tee:eine:my to tho wheleeemeneee cf their .eiel., arel anne ce them were melting VOI'l cre,eeteele reeceds„ In the 017:': 111 leteneing .e.f hie ra- t:017,3, ill do ezee at hie pae- tures, 11.11 141 1181 tetere'len geron to the'innorovemene cf tae productive eenaeity of le:e nee::!, Mr. Walleee is , peeling ineo principles writhe.). reit by selenee. In Eneend, as in Careecle, the aver- age einem for a aloe thee looked, askenee at the attempt to being ecionei1 ta the aid of aviculture, and preerreei 111 the .improvcen211t ef farm - Mg pare:ice been clieappoietingly low. This remit hes been portly doe to everenlihuo!asni, in seine cases,' on elle pert; ef ineeetigaters, cawing too broad a generalizareion from . quate eate, and pertly to too letgo an expeetaelonon the part of bhe Fenn- eeeeresulting in eisappointenen 1 when 0. teenetaion thee was fullyevertmeneed nnelee the eorate'arees of the experiment ss eatine ineepliereteire to leis euelitione. In both eaaneeees, letwever, there 11,15 115011 a ere •,31 but 9101 31113' 111,5 nembre tl fal`111040 whet field of vielen i$ breeder then the menage, ned who have had 11 treieing that hos en*leti lilem In eeneet erd reply in- ierieca'ely roefie r eeireelifie te- seerch 111 1.1 Is' GV:r. Terme.- To mice sure inlet no sets infecial 1 8002'1 11 of apples and ninety per cent evitth Black Lk*, Fueitrium Wile, leeee of then tipples wore free front disease Bligist and eetaer poeeible trouble"; are • or blight. Four unpruned, unsprayed planted., the, 'beet lirececlere is, first,. trees whieh Mr, Moyer left as an me- tre throw out NH clat and beeieel pertinent, produced a crop of no eont. tubers., cut a thin piece eff the ikon._ menial value and only ono per cent. of qua and then (Lenard eny tubers show- ' the apples from these trees were free ling. (Nepal:nation. Two knives should horn disease and blight, Year before ' be used, ,ene kept ettendeng in a can! last, and clueing all previous years , of fornualen eoluelon; immediately a since Mr. Moyer has owned the oreh- 1 diseelored potato is met, thelenifeueed ard, he has had to buy apples for his should be p8101518 the disinfectant ,enel winter use. Lest year Mr, Moyer's the other knife taken... . As the eett ,dry cub quithey when souwpnplyo.rehard furnished his winter cut and will heart if left in piles or barrels, they shoued be coated with! .Mr, Moyer inhelited the orchard. duet 'Gypsum, 01' land plaster, is one reroolP,tcavieticiltYtheyenaerisglit1boirsdsePeritucleejdusntio- of the ;best materials to use, and if fied in thinking that the land was from two to lour quartste spreadworth more than the orchard; but Mr. through the barrel cf seed the sets; Moyer read ne a few bulletins which will keep cool and Rem without ele-! he got from the county representative, bee-lora:Won for days .and even Weeks.concluded that he'd like to giee his Air-elaked lime is frequently used and oom,etimes road duet and sulphur. Liihe; if nee thoroughly slaked, ma ineurre the eyes and makes blue SOW i re' spraying tetTleasent to handle. Y.:I moved .along, kept busy with e.,,laar- : resentative for his help tied, as 'spring orchard a trial, asked the county rep - As one of hie tests he sprayed. three outfit. • Saved the Old Orchard., Wealthy treos four times and left a • fourth unsprayed. The three sprayed , "You'd better prune your orchard) trees had only one per cent bad fruit with a stump -puller," the neighborsand yielded $90 worth of apples. The told R. Moyer, a farper, when he said fourth tree had only one 'Per emit. last spring that lie was going to give; good fruit. pruning and spraying a ch•ance at his 1 4, orchard. In the fall four trees which had 1 The art of wither -weaving has been been'pruned and sprayed produced $95 a l'irancir induetry fir: 5,000 yenre. The Welfare of the Home Don't Say, "Stop That!" Without Saying. "You May Do ,This." 13y DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER. Tho grandmother who had brought up seven chfictren to vigorous, happy and, -weal-poised maturity dropped rin bo see her young daughter-in-law. She was greeted by the sound af sobs and howls from behind the closed doer, The young mother explained, her face set luard, "Elsie has been naughty. She is beteg punished." The grandmother sank into a chair, praying for WiAdA131. "I never man- is.hea ene ,02 mine in any such way in all my life," aloe advanced "anix.1 they never disobeyed me, eithee." "Why, Mother Beeten!" cried, the young mother ineredulously. "That's just impossible. What did you do when they dirket mind, when they acted a,s Elsie did just,now? She even eel naughty. You see (hat lavely sot of Stevenson? I told her three sep- erate thnes net to tondle it, but she pereisted 10 hamdling-the backs of the books with her seicky Httle fingere. What else could anybody do but pun- Liih her?" seed the grancirm.ether, "Let' e outsider this case. I always tried to put myself in the chileirenee place and tried to imagine why it was they wanted to do what seemed nsughty, vehat there was in It that ateraeted them. Let's Took at that Sbererueon set. Yes, isn't it a bealaty, ell red leather and gold lettering? Why I believe it' s Lhe bright coloolsig 1111181 faseinabect Eesie. There's nothing wicked in liking prebty, bright thieve. She'd be a litele dunce if ehe Why, if that hadhappened to me, I believe I'd have tried giving her ;penile - thing bright and shiny that sh,e could i) e1:11 INVwith her. It's stubbornness. Youilitt'h." "No, you don't understand Elsie," said, the young morther, "that wouldn't v caught to lueve seen her/ angry stha ji"'"klere4eL'lIt, perhaps you got hoe 'mad, up," suggested the grandmother, gent- ly. The young mother gave a s.cephical, impatient gesture,' "You ,ean try it and Z00 fur yourreelf." • The grandmother went quickly hex the kitc.lien w'nile the mother wee un- locking the duet door, and by t155 time the sobbing, exeiteel hed come out, she was b,aek evith an egg- beater and a bowl of soapy water. Elsie locked blackly at bee mother 1. and marched straight toward the for- bidden boob. "You see," breathed the mother triumphantly. "Ellie," called the grandmother brighbly, "just .seehere what I've got, Mother .says we may play with it, you and I. See, when you whirl the water .beeter areund, how it makes the weber. 1• al froth up. We as goad as beating r eggs. Came over 55084 try it" The egg,beabeets shiny blades slimes clearly as th,cy whierked about theough the glistening, foaming suds. Elsie was too little to contain more than 08111 idea at a time eepeeially when one of the ideas wive euth 11 beantiful one. She ran to the bowl and began to try to turn the bearbee. .At first Granny hed to hold the bevel steady, but in a moment (he dreet little fingers caught the trick, and wheekl haw the suds fumed upl She beamed Eie she beet, abeerbed, reel:ant, the liOblo eyes blurred with tears brightening,- the little, sullen, angry f ate softening to ,a smile, "It's lover- ly," she pron,ounced solemnly. Graney and Mother began to talk ,about the weathee and a 11E11' recipe for cookies. The misie VASS post. When Granny seeed up to go, half an hour laber, sh,e remarked casually to Elsie, "Oh, srayaclear, Mother jut loves these pretty red and geld books down there. And we axe afraid that if you tenth thern, you'll get them dirty. You'll try to remember about that, won't yeti? You wouldn't, like Mothee to spell your things." Elisie's small mind had gone a Irene dirsta.nee since net 'episode of the books. To her 51 seemed as though a long time had passed. And she cee- tainly cared nothing about them, now. She nodded peacefully, her eyes on the shilling water. "Oh, I don't are anything about .111e books," she SOH, "When I've got this," , 13 Many women with disfigured complexions never seem to think that they need an occasional cleansing inside as well tie outside. Yet neglect of this internal bathing shows itself in spotty, 1011118 1011080 complexions—as well as in dreadful headaches and biliousness. It's because the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accumulates which Nature cannot remove without assistance. The beet et.112P•11£3.2.5.0.... Ara , rem edyl Chamberlain's Stomach a id Liver Tablets, which stimulate tee 1(000 00 healthy activity, remove fermentation, gently cleanse the stomach and bowels and tone the whole digestive system.. Sure, safe and reliable. Take one at night and you feel bright and sunny in the morning. Got Chamberlain's today—druggists 25e., or by mail from Chamberlain Malebo Company, Toronto 13 1 gir,i;CA SUCCe80Sra, BeY ,FQ 51, CO What these mon hove dono, you can (lei 10 9,01' snare timo nt home you cnn coolly master thwsertrets of calling tied make Star Women. 1Vhataver your merlon has boon—whatever you mny be doing now—whother or not you think you Oen gat— Just nnower this question; Aro you roahltiota to oars $10,000 yenr 7 Then get in touch with 100 nt onol 1 will prove to you without cost or Agitation ittd; 3,611 an ontily become 0 Star Woman, 1,10 stow you 110141 0,, Sidenmanshirs Trnining and 111.5o thnnioyment Service Of 1110 10:, 9, T. A. will help you to quick mama In Selling,. $10 000 A Year Selling Secrets Rena These Amering Stories of Success pent,1 WI In Two W.t. ,11,0 grerois of War ncloomanallio nA intadit 1, tho N. O. 3", it. has minnled Ihnunollor Almost, haw:15K te Wive behind A» ow the ilnhlf tars, and 501011505 at hltal•nlIny Jahn tad And nantora. 140 tnnttor what 3.55 nro 110111 doing, tan 1101,1 at Om you a tog Munn, CM 60 beta. Can an 191.110 Nettiotai Sh1egtiU0t0 Training Association, Corindion 'Mgr, Box See Toronto, Oat.