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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-03-02, Page 271,7, 7p,W;17477,7,7,:7711,iif 711:'Sli:47777,1:7:1,7",:i''' 777,, ::17,7;777; .1 ni Gras 3re4 ill very readen a this ,Ognie the , danger of :thin and adopt Mease elprotection oaoimal$, ecantions Should be taken ono to Arof,virtoo to prevet iefeetion of woun,d$ on or many a death occurs from blood-nolemiing and tetant-ms (lockjaw) 'tai niglit readily 'be preveoted by otopm, cleansing and disiefection of Jd Ivortnded 'part, A. mischievous gierin •known as 'Bac:Ohms necrophorns" is present in all places contaminated by hog ma- nure_ This germ is the cause of :glitter of the mouth in little pigs; bullpose or snuffles, -which distorts ' The bones of the smuts of swine and aasea difficelt loud breathing. in those anhymels, an intestinal disease akin to hog, cholera :old known by •Neterineirians as necrotic stomatitis, altd th.e. skin disease termed necrotic d'orinats ef b ' . This bacillus also causes the worst o.1". foot -rot in -sheep and cattle; eansee the td1s of pigs and' ealves to dr o p ofi.'; makes bla cit, s cabby eons on time Hee and legs of sheep; infects • the hoof -heads a horses, causing the Jeost severe fordof boila or furuncu- -Joeis. Thea, tOO, it nrifY invade little ebraeioos or lacerations of the tealiS of time con-, sow or ewe, arid induce a d'ti n that 'is' difficult 'to ro Or even ruirnthe Parts invaded. To n'revout diseases due to these germs, stocle barns must be kept clean, surlily and perfectly ventilated, for all _genus hath oleanlieess, sunshine and oxygen; indeed, germs • are killed quickly by the direct rays of the sun and by inee action of the oxygen of fresh air; cheap remedies, surely. Dirty teats eatiee mouth oatker in slew -born Pigs. Nayels may also, be- come invaded by g,ernis and pus abscesses result. Feed, must -come from idean troughs and other utensils. Hogs fed ear -corn from dirt -covered yerde contract necrotic enteritis, and getting, the in-fected filth upon- thein bodies -develop necrotic dermatitis, which causes sores and makes patches of skin slough off. The old filthy- hog - wallow is a fertile source •of such Sheep wound their lips and muzzles rating dry or fro•zen corn-stovere then the Bacillus necrophorus gets in its avorlt and causes sores. All ,feeding -floors, pens and. yards -ueed - by liveetoole on farnas should; where ,nossible,,be made of concrete, so that they can be kept clean, Eery Egg Before Setting. If there is one rule above all others Po be followed in hatching, it is this: llest every egg before •setting-. Set eerily the'eggs that are clear when held in front of the tester. Thirty-six • hours after the eggs are put_ under the 'Ilene, test out all infertile eggs -which look fresh. It is not hard to tell which eggs are Motile and which are infertile. A "yolk will ahotv in the fertile egg, but /110, Acetaldic 61. We:an loranta. it will look somewhat separated and to one side, and -will resemble a half- in-Ooli in shape, though not distinctly. if Veil 'can see a yolk when you roll the egg in ;front of the tester lene, that egg is fertile and will probably t ch. euit people win bear me ont in thia,:assertion. With a good egg-teste the Chictihlt ecu be, seen to Anove around in the Shell,' like a 11$11 in water, ate seven oe eight days cif -indeleation, pre-- rid:ea-the gerMa are,. strong, eneugh to he saved. If the egg is warm and the;gerin'tdeee- not nicare'ifi:,cely, reject it; the'egg will' never hatch, In a thin, white -shelled egg, such as a Leghern -egg, you oan sbinetitnesi see a •yolle, in a fresh egg, but there; will be a change after the eggs have been imden the hen or in the incubator for a few days. If a thermometer is laid on the eggs iO the incohator, the lertile-egge will have a higher temper- - ature than the infertile -ones. It takes more, heat. for infertile eggs, and if enough beat is applied to bring them up to, the required,- temperature, the fertile eggs will be overheated. Hence the •importaiace, of teating out infer - tiles (whiCh are cold eggs) at an early date. • An infertile egg is not hurt by three days of incubation, but a fertile egg is spoiled. for food purposes at this stage. Set two or three•hens at the same time you start the intcubatbr, and as the infertiles are tested out of the trays, replace t emvith er e egg from under the hens. Trays should alwayS be kept full of eggs. In ten days test again, taking out 11 sphilecl eggs, dead or Weak germs; and replacing again with good eggs from under the hens. If in ten days the germ does not move freely in the shell of a warm egg, it is too weak to be saved, and will never -live to hatch. Full trays of strong, live eggs will hatch strong ehicleet, that, barring an accident, will live. It is a waste of time to care for an incubator one- half or one-third futrof good eggs for three weeks (the rest being unhate,h- able)., In theend there will' be trays full +of spoiled eggs chicks dead in the shell,' just pipped on half out; those•tbat hatch may seem all right, but begin dying in two or three days -with bowel trouble, for which the incubator is not to blame. T,he trouble comes from spoiled eggs left in the incubator. These • eggs •throw off a poisonous gas; destroying, and weak- ening good-' eggs. There are, often half -developed chicks which die in the shell. If not tested out, a single egg , , will poison, an. entire hatch. • To detect a dead- chick, look for the red veins running from the germ to the different parts of the egg; if only a' 'black, blotch is seen, without red blood veins, it indicates a dead chick. In an egg subjeoted td ten clays 'or two weeks incubation, a ,dead chick leeks just llik-e what it ie—a big, black; lifeless body in the shell, when seen through the lens in the tester. , If the unhatehable eggs are tested out carefully with a tester which re - parts correctly, and the temperature kept between 103 and 104 deg., very few chicks will die in' the shell at pipping time, and there. will be no bowel trouble among the flock. That inipure eggs left in the incubator will poison the good eggs, I have learned • by actual experience, ancl almost all Were these directions •earried out) two incubators would be *Old where one is sold to -day, ae*the only objec- tions to the ineubatoi: would be removed, these • objections being: Chickdie in the heI1 at pip- ping , time, and of bowel trouble after hatching, which often takes -the entire flock. • A little practice and experimenting will enable one to test out all infertile eggs in thirty-six hours after the egg reachea the teinperatere of 103 deg, Have a good egg-te-ater, with a rnaginfjo fying lens attachment, which can be - used -in daylight. A pasteboard box with holes in it and a, coal -oil lamp, which must be used in a dark, hot room are only an excuse as this test- er does only part of the work neces- ,sary to a successful ha.tch. • Peeple will never know what the modern incubator can do until they attend more carefully to this import- ant feature of testing the eggs, in a reliable way. They will never be successful, in hatching and raising strong incubator chicks, unless more stress is put on keeping the trays full of good eggs, during iocubation. A poor hatch meana poor chickens, which, if grown to maturity, will 'be unprofitable. , • There are many ways of destroying the lice which are sure to be -present wherever hogs .are, unless sone effec- time measure is adopted ,to prevent. We used to think that if- we could once eliminate them entirely we woulel be free from thou ever after but ,the job of eliminating is still go- ing on. I sometimes thing they may be a felessinig in disguise, for in the, process of, destroying or preventing them, -the hog's body and his bedegets a renovating, that, in the absence of such an instigator, might be neglected. It matters little the method,. one uses, just so, he gets the lice. 1 have tried the dipping. tank, and found it effec- tive but almost impossible to ,get the hogs through it after the first ex- perience. I have seen dozens Of pa- tent hog oilers in operation, and where one of them has been giving seryiee the. other eleven have been dry. Some people fix a rubbing post and wrap it with gunny sacks which are saturated from time to time with dip or oil. I find an ordinary watering pot With the holes in the nozzle enlarged With a small nail, and a can of good coal tar dip handy to the water supply about the, easiest an,c1 surest method. One can do fa thorough job in a good-sized herd of hogs in less time fancl with Ines effort than it would take to put one willful pig into the dip, tank,' or clean up and reload one patent hog oiler. I like to go over the shoots while at the trough; or in a close pen. ,The big heavy hogs will flog down to rub theniselVes when the dip begins to bite a-ntd give one a good oppor- tunity to do a thorough job. • )L,,';?*;fie.:ite ( The Lead' •.ttra g ompan • of the Dominion 1921• THE MOST PROFITABLE YEAR IN TI -IE HISTORY OF TI -IE COMPANY • Results fo ASSETS Inc.reasc for year CASki INCOME Increase for year . SURPLUS over all liabilities and capital • Increase for year PROFITS paic,I or allotted to policyholders PAYMENTS to Policyholders, Death Claitns, etc, . 11„067,049.62 Year Ended 3ist Deeelnber $129,372,127.33 4,532,682.85 - 31,101,149.16 2,355,570,73 10,383,909.10 2:019,241.95 1,849,089.95 ASSURANCES IN FORCE 534,718,130.55 Increase for year , • 50O7689536 NEW ASSURANCES isauted and pd for i 90,030,035.66 i)1420i, NION"tkZAI, ^ Maple Sugar; Sugar ug Profits • A Propetiy. Hagli ,ed 'Sugar , Bush" Wilt Pa",:v.. BY E. A. WILLIAM'S. • The.' making of -maple sugar, and pos'sible contamination of the it t pro Lie syrup has ibecome but a memory to too in all stages of mannfacture. Noteonly many farmers where wood lots have -must thorough cleanliness be observed „given plade to cultivated fields , and but transforma.tion of the new sap to pastures: Upon hundreds of farms the finished product must be direct are found the best kind- of a auger and as speedy as possible. -- bugle yet the farmer is not -equipped The eugar house Of. a Modern plant to collect nature's liquid, sunshine, and is not only for malting ancl.,,putting -0P corn:Vert it into one of the most deli- the Products but also for -Storing buck- cious market products for which there ets, pails, spoute and other, equipment Is'an tinanseweenahlee, deinand atrpxohfit- ,from.. one season to the next. • One able' 'prices. This, too, in, view- of toe fact that one Season'.s good run, evould pay for the outfi.t, ,learVing a,, dozen. years' clear' profit for the future,, • • • On ntrany farms the sugar .Inish is simply the- woodlotr- that-, ,, been preserved to supply tfue•I for' the household,, to afford a, bit:' of beauty andsheltem in the inidet of -a Wind- swept ,country and to -.provide an an- „nual crop -of .sugar and, syrup to be ,eniPties by gravitation into the etoras a - dsed or soid ,ro regale,: age tank . and froin there into the ' customers •at Pricer Such hushes, ,evaporator. • It -has been a long stride from :the iron kettle, used in -Sugar inakir,xg bY our grandfathers, to the modern oval:- . • , . • orator that is necessary for the make -farmer wien one-toonsancietree mali , has a very satisfactory ,house. This is forty-two feet long by thirty feet wide. , The -walls are 'built of heeet. siding and painted; • the floor is of cement, and the ceiling of shingles , wood: It has a lean-to twelve feet wide on the east side fox, protecting the storage tank. It it built on -slop- ing ground so -that the gathering tank usually contaiii trees Pf 'Several, •var- ieties, but the maples arefthe last to THE CHILDREN'S HOUR11 • ,competition was in fall swing. neg. The At School of the Woods a great head teacher, Miss Browne, had, one month •previouS, received a letter from Sir Stephen Langton stating that the best eoniposition written on, "A Bird's Life” would be rewarded with $500 and a gold medal. OE all the girls Ro•seleen, Monarch was the most ex - 'cited, for composition was her hobby. Immediately the girls Set. to work with, great energy. The rules were levee bid- strict-. Each - girl must not get help from another. ,Eeele competitor must every night "I-m.ietre`enlyheimo-eiczooidnpositIon 'n led.• desk - , se- • Iloseleen once hontel up looks on the subject. • Her, intimate friend, Lenore 'Gray, Sound it hard to keep Tronordropping hints 'of what her essay contained.' • os eleen's d eno t geelv emy 43; OWING' ROSIFS, A140 SWEE1' PEAS 'lireet Pena can , meted ft$ 130 as the, ground thaWs, :411419,,,,1761 tog, amt. lie few fdostS- overt:VW operation, 'theY wlll do rt.0‘.P,001fl," harm, as thiS seed is quite, liardd seems to do , best, in cooll iveather. Choose a location where the 'eon' 311inea for the best part of the day; avoid 'Iocatitins in the, Shade- of, build- ings,. • A good plan tohnui the rowa north and South, so that the , sunt can saline oil both sider, ori the vines; Do rmot feel, discouraged if the seed - tinge fail to pcike their heads, above ground for a, couple of weeks. Fre- . 'quently they, tarie a month, if the , weather is cold, 'feat Meantime tlre-/ ,- EtrO _developing good, strong roots., This Means earlier flowers, better flowers and a longer blooming season • for -cithen the roots are deep the plants are betten: able to withstand. the 'heat and drought of 311111311014. Sweet- peae do tbdst in' soil that is inclined, to be ' heavy. The ground must 'be turned over pretty deep, at 'least twelve inches. Work in ,a supplY of manure in the bottom ot the crenoh, Plant the seed about an 'inch anoint', covering 'them with -two inches of soil. 'Later it may 'be necessary to thin tlie plants so that they' stolid =about 'two inches -apart, suppoets, or -trellis ' should be erected shortly after the -- Plants appear . ab wire gro rind, for the tendrils soon reach out for eoneetliin-g • to cling to, and growth is thereby en- couraged. &void Formation. of Seed' Pods e • . • The Spencer type of ettveettemeae are the /nest popular; these eome in the • early flowerin'g or long -season eerie - tics, and the regular summer flower- ing,. It is a good. plan to ,plemat,hotit., -sorts. They collie in many colors and t shadee. anti if propeai'y cultivated' _ - - - I there Simon d e ong- stems, with three b- ' " - I sbhlboapsmo nibs .e to op itcliesliena. All doyrers e:d from thb vine,s theyfarle, to -avoid the for'• - motion of seed pods, or the flowering season will be shortened.' • Cultivation is' needesery, 'core.e6, Keep the ground close to, the plants wli stirredoising a lioti about once a week, initilethe blosecine appearc:Lt in about one 0.sneelm;oela.11:Voifla es; ihrei issweaciway peas Ile-af,esiecttl clA the :stat IVaS Rose Green Ny'ao I-- p - wi not ilotirieo no wether t • fox her idoliesePretty clothes, 'arid he_ are cal-wea,theiplantsi .crbuse, she.•Wee f' Roses isor-ewh^t pa -ti • ' is. not. from: these sniall leshenowrea:tsdeils6leilie.Aci ityoRosfeebenecd-fauSe th'e-soaeb-vd.sil_ttioonasni Whiet bliso mg -of a high-priced :product. - The . • modern evaporator is designedtfor ra,pid evap-oration and econOmy of fuel. groves that the geat mark,etable suP- It was the dile' before' "Coninetition to be 0.-tarl-Y, bat 'ti aus I- be Well dye -hie more rugged where the plow and . Day." Roseleen'Wentrio her 'desk in •dla.11111.1.ligniigterssto,ii'clelyc_aso,)eh:„Iiinn,P,rtorivedb,Y, ply iS secured, but , rather, from . the the harvester are. not, so l There are. ieveraI makes 'inguse but the s,elloolreern, leeked tre 1101' eonleo- crated.- - The groves ' as :folle'ands.i-iYn t°113he- eaullt,chaian-s'hisi,gnilarn; eivnai)Polltaoini,le'it isWhineil! lsivinithgi°1,1 afielladb. llev,-;:li-ta:t-;;I:thbafalti.E.....„.ieBx?Ol.,`a,:i,il'iSo.--, JJellecpinilsd .ebxeca7m-'7aot\eice1(.'111tc'et, dal-lgd''0-1.1)(''.11; tohle isn°Viol maple treee, the other kinds having‘ been...removed fol., fuel or" for, the saw% trhuilOspl.oane,i;aa_ncl the toking,care 0± 1141y principal s'ug,ar sections are chiefly' ' t . . - .. . • • Portant to pr.a-vide :cox expansion- of 0 was I alAY Pointe, eta-, •paide '0± i'e.?'. Pat th.e most f?rt5.1.". °f ,..,,},"'e t°1-3 the scifoolrocent oupbearcl. . ' - soil Co one sulei then take cut t,,,13 ree ,mTlaiinsyissetchtieoneso.ndition ., that -obtains. in believe', iir in..,0y-e\-hillineglc13teevnirl'eciceticoil'o' leTialkeeert leaAn •"efarTe, 3,011:X11)111Zotse:..paeletle'dsih_r, t3l!cf t.d' Oiolire, ' bfleal,111.11'13ixalee'l. '-%''vbittil'plifellitt;a1:0Y,S 'illcaarn:uis'el'"-0alall.1<.--11 rep a,ced. If 'possible, °latent SOMe Big Leaf Surface Nee.essary. dofi.ebaoitlrienegs stuaprfpaeccie. for every one huii- She glanee'd. hastily aiound a-nd, as I M • iss, Browne was ineide• the roomy loam fl" -'m •alluther source and dump The production of sap of a engar- making quality depends on a large leaf area. ,Frottn this it follows that the number of trees per acre noust be donsistent with the greatest crown de- velopment of each ,tre in the grove. A maple tree, Which is a forest species, growing under tins condition will pro- duce a good length of triank nindthis is necessary to a productiVe yield be - Cause the elaborated sugar is stored in the trunk of the tree for use durin-g the next season; ;Ins the' trunk be- comes a storage -tank. The typical tree for .sugar making is a tree with ample root system to supply an abundant amount of exude sap; a broad, spreading lop with big leaf surface to elaborate the sap and a big, Tong body in which the 'sap may be stored. • A sugar grove reqUires some atter.- tion to keep it fir cenditiOn. Apart from the maintaining of, road• - ways to facilitate collecting the' sal), thliming out may ili-ifel'eSsary froin time to time. In A usual mixture the trees .of species other than rgaple May • be gradually removed' and the repto- duction of the aple eneouraged. In making such thinning, the work should be done gradually, the trees vrhich 'Crowd the ,best maples being, taken out first, a few, trees from a plate at a ,time so as not to expose the largest maples to dana_.ex from wind storms. If the -maples themselves stand too thickly those • with 33=11 crowns or maSoundness should- be re- moved. The promising saplings should be given every opportunity for growth. More Valuable as Sap Producer. • Unfortunately the stripping Of even our 'rocky lands of their treesehas 'gone to an unprofitable degree. A maple tree that will cut two cord$ Of wood is worth on. the atump for that purpose about $6 at the present price of' wood. The annual interest' on this sun). is thirty cents. The ttee 'left to grow into conSiderable vallie for IS If will yield an average of three pounds of sugar worth anywhere from fe..rty cents te. $.1f, -according to the intelli- gence of the 'maker. To clear Off the maple timber from stony land unstit- able for farining purposes is like hitt- ing time goose that Jays the gainer), hidden, „gave , it mao fh.,, ottom.. alung w.te lino ama- Cover Your Thickets.. ', • ...a.stloilgPh:0°t,:feirdre'eellaice,:fn-ldil'elI:olltsenitYediately elle went n,-uor.uei. a uloii-iff. neopeh.t.nart pot: .he .b.,.,5-1. . ' At the beglnning of the season all ., ' , 'unlocked itgwith a h „e at of ne- to soil whloh the sugar utensils shinild be eleanecl -cfnplinate key, took nut the 'redoes was removed and kept sePh/iate• . even' 'though they Were well Washed, essay, aria soon' had -copied it all out , IF sod was removed. to iriake, wuy driect-aedestacked away at the close -in an old. woe:k. ,booic. Maio 1!,.-owna-Ifor the bed,- it should lie -broken' lei of the, season previous for the dust which Collected during the year would bad: seen it an and -s'lle gave a g, asli of in.t'al 'I'lal.fil- -b'iStaihongand frn:x'-vSilth'tLI•l'a wiEld - aniazement. At first she decided to • , --. Inc-.. . ,n tell her, assistant and get Jadviee, but be left several incites higher than time damage the first run. 1 -laving dis- ,tti yina.pdlbaipall:hitifgo:poiemtSniliSenttahgberutwie:arelkl.elgtser, TrelialioenepvdseeaspItilh:gi alle. t:t forcedsp' r' tohsIf, hbo noeeiTei:awy,eexicisa:een:alfd-dtae;t.;n11.1:daxe;aet::_iy.dni,t,atelydise,liberriiiekg\ iv:se:v:0: tal,leev. rlaestael ilid.e. s c ttltilg . • ,. . out by internal pressure, and a very! Tho Sure, -causing the sap to flow: asrapi - until' after Rese's coiepogitiori had Care of Roots in Planting ' In Sr-tting oet dormant rose busites the work should be done as early Elk existing groni:d • level, to allow for uffy ciotcds, hung penet le, f I ey arc,. s riveled oi ai. " Sa.p , eolues from, the unip,14 Irla a very ditui.e, ecntain- ficern ninetY-fiVe to titinetyeiglit rfr ent. of water and abOut 'three neX cent, Of. soga.i at4 quantities,,of mined -at' eonstittiente. Tile making of maple- SYropt or 'sagareemiiiiets-prinie etrilY of -"boiling cut" ,t4e tipa Off time ,i!oreign matiier.. 'To make a good, .tu,gaitt. .a.Yriih„ neceilsarY therefer6 ±0inect which the 1e0$1 three-eighths, seven sixteenths alld' over -the surface of the sapphire sky. lected by frost, burY ' the piants, ,half-inCh hits -arie used. The At half past te-o, the conipositions branches and all, under moist soi1:fpx- mn shghtly'upward ',..a;beat '03), were to be read•be-fofie an assembled couple ..of days. This will restore the and' one-half inches in the mediuin- crowd, Soon after two -o'clock iiesec ohotoeled araaeoer 'oad,_ thaw out .he siied treeand Iwo inches in th.p,I,..ge leon, del:at-ye- simple muslin -frost,. .rivold ejiO,k1 thcihrootsteeto - e; The point of tapprng simomisi •-rydress, went arm m arm with, Lenore the alr when -planting, cep the-, p1 ns about . thirtY'inelles atklye the grcAP1',u1.'down .to the- ' 'Dien Miss in -a bueket of water; rent:toting them where the bark ha's, a healthY .1°°.agoBrown,e raagethe bell and the first girl as they are -required. IVIake .a lioto ikee still find' farni6r8' Wthi) (147 -nm callederead her essay, , All this time,, large enough to receiVeethe roots with think- that if paysjocover-theit SaP Roso,in. tho.vaiting room', was. eoPY- out crowding;. Place broken piece$,,,,A-- buckets. But One neighborhood 'uidjag down- and adding' io her, notes as pottei-y in thebottom for, graining; ostifehOvaergsoroad-Cednlitlryothatia°tnn'.°*-efarilhYealy•latilitl:11L-lealeci.c'ttnheer'galpirpfslai'n,esaelLetalaVI,'genreaRt°.,selSe"henei ,Wriihstrenibpultemetheb,:,:•-ar°eadtbeinsnro. 10 ham e the' all dirctmone allgal. Makers there novo have theni. A went blusbinglY i010711 th6 aisle to .soil come in closd •eontaet, With 'tlehevy ram i storm'.6.6'n° on an'd a 'Than I where Lenore wnt sittmg Thett cisc -route -when Militang in •Inc lmolc.. With a thousand trees tapped, ibu9-Ice.r-si whispered to ,Lenore; 'Oh; I hope .1 B:o.Se beds, should he locatedatva,-9 •eevered, was able to make siX hundredl get the Money- Jinnie; the gardener's from the influericd'ofola' rge tees 1 pounds...of iagar., while across the imime (laughter, is talmost blind and the $50() ..feet is a g-ood,width fo oth.embed will just cover the cost, for on op- onnwe three rows .• of plants.., spaced •• •emation Lioni eighteen to twenty-four ilioneq, Then came Rose's turn- and the an- an -art in the rows. Tbe'clue'sl.ldil . <4. Plait1§.e_ was deafen -h*, She ,cat „ a varieties -le a matter Of -choice, Climb' triurniitiant glance .4 Reseleen, who ing, roses, should „ find- favor'. aloig. t;led aineuirI tzlbei ""bPktieta 1311j1u° seet°x:Pligelentaet stosi ±(w1;h21; :117;e: 'trh*.led.'41peiteriepe4etl'Itduo fa'Ilsar.le'b°r°10.•\sv'tehla.enils.ii l''''Pd'aliaenciit't3' of the hush ,roses. whidh oorae in many colors;: then there are the hybrid tio an,d -,t,he tea roses, which( latter cAn be counted OD tO bloom the ntire „tmeason, the cevers., 'Passed, throvgh his bush -and einpt-ied aaapy water out , • luik Gie' .F"o":0,(INece,psary; 'Green .foodi eaainotbe given to the poultry in the form a ia.biets dis- solved in water. The value .of the , green food coxisi,ars io. itg 111 awhqoletias•hveo,haic,ed eti csaletc tedaoic•letrh0a .- „Spidei,eri,tolde ture and:such material is needed to of. mix 'with the amore concentrated feed. murinured ngainst the smmoak.:Rose_ Just as hunian beings need vegetables . az celery, roee$, ani „toe leen and .the cheers, circled,echoed henig, do, better if they ,haye-laang,eis and re-echoed. -through the room- for •bergrain ration and-beaf scrap. Certain • m•eanwinio•Rose was hastily taken chemical elements the green food, fbathllb° seli°91, by an angriv and in- dignant mother,,and. was seen no more Two weelcc litter Jbiiaio was talteii to a specialist, tile °Potation' perTorm- ea, and, ahe the recovered h, cot...sight, much to e joy ,o.f. Itoseleen.. • . I'm glad I., Won the prize, If 1 hadn't„j'iniiie wouldstill be Said RoSeleen a month, later,e—Written by Florence Dai,e, aged 14. • Bed cedars and apple orehard$ are poar- bedfellotfs.Out dot red cedar windbreaks iint1i kpple orehards. A grain ration may toiait <elhve uniesa you want rusty 'apples Ifr,)arts ground cat$, low!h,0149 1771144 , You. ••aail od iz bay ,gor kelltel.. the Most aPPOVed waYi plov a the might be in the -tabl= letS but the bui 'is .not there, •, , • Twenty -Or thirty miontea of drying is usual e otigh to maace ..licordeaux stick . -to the trees; evert in the rainiest Weather. DOI* let the presnect of rani delay spraydr4g. Only actual rain ,should stop it.. Iree,ding 'mates in:ifeati 3: give geode • rich in Mineral matter., Oats, ibran, eletver and. alfalfa, are ±0 be preferred,; iiiiltk-pg'peol pitcher' ticiej etiltiivate, till thet 'eta resnitif'Wherm fed the W517 jue't Olei.ie 'be thorns. and ,ithistqcs.. :you evolook ciaa, on q and: ;b:ellevo will •'0431:°.'g go, MAO 1110'2,",,i',$il:qrt. Yet Your hahreat will si cynics are simiers. n.d, Most Mos,t nners. are c3mics,. The ,man who is bothered, ,witinlmiS: horee-e gniaiving, the mattgerS , go to the drugstore and get saine 11605e rosin. Pitt scune inthe Teed boX' and pound it to pieces with, a,haretner,. ow feeds will Cure the:horse. Paste thisi 11 yont hat 'a,n.d. sere till spraying idri*: Grannlated sugai" Will lceep Bordeaux ,inixtuVe 100111 Ing bade Add: one-eighth ouriee It' .", granulated sifeem.t.treolisSolved.,4ewOotot. for ea.a(pound of .bluestone.'#040:W wili imop the -ap.rd tamlic of 13-6-0, three e:.,trr11,4" stgixe 010 ‘1.,.Sba:y ta 7, CI614X; 4147'101N well .roniultisd stitgar .in ame quart Of Water; then, Of• the tOluticin, fbr Siete. 10 r.'