Exeter Advocate, 1902-5-29, Page 7CONFUSION er
OFQentility
CASTE„ . r $a
fefe
Nobility a Soul. 0,
-SYNOPSISQ1' Piti✓CEDItplG iy when the girl came to her side
Mt�IAPr�'b%I%S. Air,' 'f,'relawney, a and kissed her cheek,
"Mother, I have been very cress her eaothees trace to hers;.kite was
tido creek, and --I have been vexing ; touched uras.petahably es she listened
you. I knew," Dorcas said, rather
suddenly quicely, '"I have been
very bad...: but I want you to for-
give roe, please. I have been talk-
ing it all over with papa, and-aand
The has gonads everything right."' she
ended. shortly and hastily.
She 'bent down over the gentid
face, and kissed it again and-ewwhat
e.ould Lefty say? Perhaps as she.. th :
I;cholarly' r•ecluee, rijx rtees Lefty, the
,niece Of Mrs. Afarl'chan4, his »lreosC-
keeper. Their chill), AOreas, becomes
b, s boon companion fond grows up in •
,ignorance of her mother's history,
said; and then her voice broke, end
site, began to sob.
The hour began in rain, and yet it
wan a blessed hour to Letty, as she.
eat, after a little while. by Dorcas's
side, holding her hand in hero. They
talked a little more; in the quiet and
the darkness natty found courage to
say some things that had been for
A. long time ie. her heart. She told
the girl, who bad hitherto known or
guessed 60 little, something of what
her life bad been, -got ate brief ,toy and
Its long sadness-�-,oi Its hopes that
bad :died in disappointment.
Afore than once Dorcas drew down
tee
see LAV
< W4wcM)
F S;4
s,
MISO R i'MARrll,ilQU
VOLCN G kl:_AR()+PU$i
STORMS. Al"tl ; � :!*S
llAnT1! t XVI,
tl' lie suddenly put her band away
ere �.- from him before he ,begau to ,peal
- again. Ile put his own band up to,his forehead, and leant upon it. and
epoke so, without looking at her.
know' yon were never told that
your mother Was a poor girl before
I Married her,'" he began. "Perhaps
- • it would have been better if you bad
know a it— 1 throb It, would have
been letter; but we made a. misteke,
1 suppose. I will. tell you how it
happened, Your mother carie first
to this house when she was abnost
as :child -What elm was only fifteen;
oho had beet lett an orphan, 'and.
Site ',e far from strong, and by tort
leave Mts. elarkhtlnt brougtat her
here that she might have a bonze and
be of what uric to the Manse she
could Airs. Markham wan my
houeekecper then. From the drat.
from my lira! acquaintw�aatce with her,
I Awn—your mother brad tortes
above her CIA'S% She waas loud of
rending, d after a time the Idea
was started that she should qualify
herself to become ca, school Leather.
and for a year or so --I forgot for
how long --she studied with a views
to Oita, This_ was wheat she was
about seventeen.'"
Air. Trete-water paused here for ra
few moments. The part of his story elubborntaess its ter: the very con,.
t"o her gentle. enicompleinittg words,
Ilow little bad she ever deserved
this patient devotion! Now little
had she ever returned or, cared for
it! She said a few words, but there
were stronger. words in her heard
than any that she epolce.
So it turned out in theeud that,
instead ' of evil, it wan only good
sat alone she bad been trying to re' , at conte of this efascovewthese
beam Seines words to speak to ver ; Dorcas bad made, and that these
dartglater. but they died on her lips , tv o were drawn closer to; et her by
as Dorcas trade her rapid little loDw thEn� that Lefty had feared ; tt
€r
speech. and gave her swrif t e'arc , would: separate them, Nay,
1 etwreeat these two. you see, there P were they not• even an three drawn
had always, been
o little coraidenee, , more together? 1tSr. Trthtwwney, tiro:.
a ..'-,other. i had been touched with pity "for
lnodenes teas molds rt ail riblet: „brut Letty; the call that had been made
her .falter; that, it eneenzed. was all upon, bis loyalty to net had roared
sloe heti to say to. T.etty. orad the ss�ttaetb wg mono than JoyaHty? iiia lois'
mother's timid heart ehrauk as the breast,
few t akl words caaraac, on this night, after she had been
with Verges, he spoke a Sew strong
grateful words to her.
""I often seen to be forgetful of
you Letty-I often seem to ttegleeb
you."
Y heart,said. you wvou d knif ow w that I sic
slou could cc
ow, • mother.y." the girl said right,. you justice. If you have ever
nd I had
" o know ao is tri bled. thotig1it that 1 regret our• 'Marriage
and 1 hall no business to be troubled.
1 undet•atnnd It. elf noun quite.' she Yon Itave been wbcwlly wrong. 1 tlo
said, and took her mother's hand for', not regret it; instead of thet, I
a moment. and jrres rd it, and then ; thank God for it. for waver dict any
turned away. As rho went She felt' man in this world bare a: kisatler. ram
that she ought, to hen said -,sacra'- . mora devoted. or more uneeliish
thiug more, g and yet she slid twit wife "
know what she could have said. ; And then he took her in his antis
There WON Spruce inborn. invincible with n elose and wwaraa enabraee —
need I say that. she was a happy wo-
man? It waned to her this night
"Aly sleet', I thought thet 1 should
like to speak to you, I. I have been
very, unhappy." was all rise was ably
to say,
"Yee. 1 Arnow; but don't mind it
Q .
F ••TW+sr:F4 ...
..cti�Lwesifa• i is -r 81%11$
40. baiSl^l"lAY$
# I rCUR1'1t1)IQf'
I&xQlj .PReetere�{ , 1"Itfdaf i?i l:
1>f Irl 1st n.fiiF la $""
to "ler
ttlA VC• t:11,
that' bad. too eetee "QM' Wan thea Pe/1' a riettsnees that site sought to have
that sees the hardest to tell, been tenderer kept her tenderness
v-
.[ never had o t tau °h n merry- ,s
t l oar
1 a
.. �' y lnaactn.
her, 1 L
a.'a
w Dorcas!" i1
0 14a went,after to
n en
5
. ,,. it t14 •, AD
R t 1. to and sat 1'80^'
,� laaao
P .
that silence, abruptly. and ahutu,t nun, her another reading it almost. in
was
y, Roti, it crane about siHetnce for an hoar. and then het•• tie
arras by no Wait. either of hers or
mine. I' 1
thcr joined tlaerat. and tiny tamed for
.t 1 came out that W t o of MLR-,
alittle.*sac : alb'clock
�, and sc�.c the cG a
n
enable r sstgh gar Hp. I had taken struck eirren and she .-'«.t to lard ventage; a few more nee'oences tfat}l eu
can i}tt;eax.ss, int Iter, orad this~ � � to her root; and theta. rt rlD,ng�,
l
to blame her for it—and I could toot. , 1 s lima. met not fiat tis-.
q 'wee $ cli1188 l Liminess ,tr, SIDCAww'ia
her a.. t , wen�
eThat a whole. Dor- id
c at . � Hoes werethe at
c�H 1H c o
• ,her xn rA .'6 4 a
R
s
hrtPpy for part of the evening but
that the burden of }reern. bad ballet*
ay trent her. and left her yousng
„ ale.
Nor did her, joy pas wiaaU'!y front
her even rs tine went on. it in
r
a r
�l Ei :manner
QAC
true that t in 'leer a Sl nn a a
is b It .
towards Ater there came little shills
taegan�senrte
she trio rt an ne q u Sia
Aed with herself.She had been ne tt' o a • onto Lana st ss ,
1 S.
a, could o Jt teat f o
J n1 heel) thew' s u►,
.p
1 Pfacet: tl esrna
gave of rncswa e
• x•i ns Are o la
fl
� t7
1 s, � rather actwt
the tine wn was, r. ata mei r
r
g
a
esP alLing ill of her by snaking her aud�walace tri InexJ, astac sacaarmosHy* i:tasat�r � sideration for iter:, but when elm bad
wIi ' " thee id her head upon her
nor was 111r4 lfnrl;lata}ta to blatrtcp 1. . • I ► a t P
any wife. Site wan not to blame..
acted against Airs, Alton bun's ad-
Vice.
d Vice. No purer -minded or more in•I faontetimea, when she tees heti of
nocei►t-1►carted woman than. vow4r 1 Wade asleep, it: watt Stilt Tatty 's laza
the remembrance of 'the, a words of
his to live on. -,night she not well be
sautent? she often asked bereealf.
'hey seemed such sweet and blessed.
l f bit. as 11. bad been when she was a words to her—guerdon and reward
mother ever lived. I' pow no eit, litho child. to conte into Dore. a's enough for all her years of love and
�x have no right evenonow (when... 3o,. roma and look at her. and to-nieht tery}co•
-aaa. terrible thing # t have t
sit The girl was touched u remorse, acrd
you) to utter one regret fon the step almost dosed. <'' '-'l. ,' the door�'
that I thought myself obliged to . softly and came to the bedside, and by something gentler and tenderer
take. Poor as she was, and anti• stood still fora moment or two, and than rernora,e. Was it not indeed
c.. err e a sig o nil o talc o ,elle cache before the irl's eyes wrew'e And waz not Dorcas kinder to Iter?
here turd tt,Y•"to justify. myself to FS
wee d 1 i }} t} s that Wien went down an her !:noes, trite that she hail been aslraned of
bad one moment's is trne cause to be front yOU, she Said. With zw istital becmvi,.a Asha had been asnone d }ae
We have rived together I veers
a never dear. want another kiss her another. and was elm not wietk-,•ed
ashamed of herltor here now.tenderness.
'Oh Dorcas,"teas, she cried
I.)oreas'-reQr have,Neuf" De. added TilidenlYi "ore +an+t Mee to IMP Mei
al est fiercereetaid. that suddenly io go to slcepi
She put her areas about. the girl,
and bent dove wv r o
d. ver her n
and the
though sho had asl.ett for the kiss.
she did not put her lips to Dorca 's,
tired his lips.
set. The silence lasted for a little while,
Mid then it was broken suddenly by
the girl's low voice.,
"Papal" tike said beseechingly. but all at Duce --
The little nand of its own accord "Ohl my darling, can you not foie
give me? site began to Cry out bit-
terly. "You wouldn't speak to me
down stairs --but, oh, speak to owe
now. Do not think I dict so wroni ?
I WAS so young. Dorcas), and /didn't
know --and he Wan all the world to
ane. l)oreas, 1 didn't know]" she
repeated piteously. "When 1 found
out that I had done, harm to Iain it
almost broke any heart. Won't you'
bell -dee roe, my dear? Won't you be-
lieve me, and forgive me for what
1 drst?
,,.
"1 do believe you, nutmrna—of
course I do believe," Dorcas cried
in distress.
"It Lei such a long time ago, and I
have suffered so. I would have died
for hint, you know•,' and instead of
that I did burnt to hint, and when it
was once done I could never endo it.',
I used to wish that I could die, Dor-
cas: that would have been the only
thing—but I couldn't die. And then
you came, my deal—and, oh, Dorcas,
from rho time you were a little baby
in my arcus I have been thinking of
this day, and of how they would tell
you what 1 had been—and you would
be ashamed."
"Mother, I am not ashamed!" the
girl cried in great agitation.
She raised herself in bed, and put
her arms about poor Letty's neck.
It was not love for her that she felt
like the love she had for her father,
but a great wave of remorse and
tenderness and pity had risen in her
heart, and overwhelmed and con-
quered her. -
"Mathee,- I have been very hard to
you. Forgiveinefor it. I will
never be aslta:med of your• -I will nev=
er be ashamed of you!" she began to
murmur, and kissed the poor weary
'face with anany a kiss. "You have
been the kiudnest mother to me —
wweary, and only smiled a little faint- the kindest, gentlest mother," she
bad stolen exam to his; all at once,
with a tremor and a sob, she laid
Iter cheek down on 1115 shoulder.
"Pae, forgive mei 1 will never
mind it any more," she began to
say. "Oh, ;t right have known -- I
might halve known you, would never
do anything but what was rightt It
was only that 1 could not see it ---
I could not understand it; that was
all. Oh, you were good and right;
you were my own father! --you could
;not have done anything else;" she
cried, and thrilled and sobbed in her
sudden revulsion of feeling, and
kissed his lips, his cheeks, his hands,
in a generous passion of remorse:
IIe drew her to him nand returned
her kisses, and blessed her. What
would his life have been worth if
this girl had turned her heart away
from him?
. 'And, meautiuxe, while they were so
nappy with Ocieanother, Letty was
sitting by herself, anxious and ex-
pectant; but I am afraid for a good
while they neither of them thought
of that, and even when Mr. Trelaw-
ney remembered it at last, and told
the girl to go to her mother, Dorcas
lingered, and did not want to go.
"Need 1 say anything to maxnnxa?"
she asked, reluctantly, "Oh, sure-
ly I need not. 7. don't know what to
say," And it' was only .when he
pressed her that she obeyed him.
"It would not do_ to say.uothing
to her. She has been very unhappy
about you," he told her. And so
then, at tart—but still unwillingly --
she went.
Site found her mother sitting at
•her work. It had got dark,- and
Lefty 11 ad lighted her' candlos. She
looked up when Dorcas came into the
room with eyes wposc'long wait-
inn had made rather hopeless and
began, to approach her witha uowv
ieclinga-tochink of her with some-
thing }tinder and better than tier
former careless, half condeteending
regard. Some of the words Letty
had spoken on that alight when her
poor loving heart had revealed itself
for to little white to her daughter,
haunted the girl's thoughts after-
wards, and flllctl her with a keen and
painful pity. How little bad she
ever thought of heel lloww little
bad she ever understood or eared to
understand her.
Perhaps
during the next year
Dor-
cas became a little more grave and
thoughtful and reserved than she .had
been before; she drew a little more
within herself; she was not quite so
bappy ass sho had been; the innocent
girlish eyes had been opened, to
something that they had not known
before. She grow a little proud, a
little slay; the old frank manner.
changed a good deal for a time. Ilad
she not eaten of the fruit of the
tree of knowledge, and found it bit-
ter in her mouth? She shrank for
a while from her old friends; sho be-
came suspicious, and thought that
they looked down on her. She had
to bear her little wound, and smart
under it, before any wholesome heal-
ing came.
But, if she suffered for a time, she
was too young and healthy to suffer
long. rlte truth was so as she had
learnt it; yet all the sante did not
the sun still shine above her head as
it had done six months ago, and the
breezes blow so softly on her? The
young life stirred in her too joyous-
ly and strongly for any merely sen-
timental trouble to curb it long. The
World, to her, had seemed her ene-
my for a, little while, and she had
been roady toride full tilt against
it, lance in hand; but now, if she did
not, quite throw her lance aside, at
leant she laid it in rest; she un-
buckled her armor; she gradually be-
gan to cease to see imaginary foes.
She was a creature so much more
made for happiness than for warfare
that, gradually and inevitably, her
nature • in time righted itself again.
(To be Continued.)
Obstihate, base of
a
ing Ecze
Leg and Foot a Mass of Sores that Doctors Could i+lot Thorough
and Lasting Cure by Dr. Chase's Ointment.
•
This letter from Tilsonbcrg, Ont., is an unsolicited testimonial to the extraordinary healing powers of
Dr. Chase's Ointment. Thisis onemore example of how this great ointment cures when all other means
have failed. There is something almost magical about the way the preparation heals and cures. 1-'eople whe
have not used it can scarcely understand how it can be so elfectdVe, olio and
Mr. W. D. Johnson, Tilsouburg,.Ont., writes :—"hiy.father has been entirely cured of a long-standing
obstinate case of eczema by the' use of Dr. Chase's Ointment; Ilis_leg and foot were a mass of sores, and
•'su lforcd-something, terrible from the stinging and itching. Though he used a great many .remedies and
was treated by one of the best doctorsheave, he couldget no persxlanent relief until he began the use of Dr.
Chase's Ointment.
"Th'is preparation was so cooling and soothing that the very first application brought relief, and it was
not :long until the leg and foot were perfectly healed and. cured. Tt as a pleasure for him to recommend this
ointment because of • the great benefit he derived from it, and he will gladly answer any questions from other
sufferers," it afiorder
Dr. Ohese's Ointment is useful in a Score of ways. For every irritation or eruption of the sikin
prompt relief. lief.. It heals and soothes wounds, scalds and burns, and has never been equalled as a cure for ec-
zema, salt rheum, totter and scald head. Sixty cents a box rat all dealers or; Febneneete, Bate: es
Urn
(Toronto
AT HA'. u .
naeotcsrfatl satanufacture et
full -areata cheddar sheers, SIMI an
raaiternt;, seid at the groom!, store
when dice -e in calledfor depends en
so aaa,aray d taxis that the profess
c,'auttet he eatiefactori y tkncriked in
a si n ie erode.
'For farm manufacture where
messes, hoops, and doriing room are
not ' aaa Wit: v: D't• sol e
,a I sn a cin Eke c t n
V
Cured elate lr may be 'made from
Own. pure milk, that has Settle age,
but iy net et sour to the taste.
Airing the milk to a temperaswre be-
tween een i 0 and 80 degrees, say 7.5. by
piecing the can of milk in warm
water er a pail or can of warm
water may he set into the Indic. To
the suint: which has the proper de-
gree of rifeness or age, and the
right temperature add rennet ex-
tract at the rate of about oaoe•half
ounce for ..0 gallons of aailke. Too
little rennet will snake a cord from
whkh it is difficult to drain the
whey, while too much snakes the
curd hard. Dilute the rennet in a
little water and nrix thoroughly with
mile. it; Is desirable to now put, the
milk in ,eltetgutt Cater, almet cr}y lar..
*HOW; in diameter and tat niches
deep, and allow it to 'coagulate.
This should occur before notch cre:un
has risen awl there win bo no
difficulty if the milk Is Warm and
ripe enough,
The curd should stand in thee()
sans until Lite whey which separates
has a marf:ed acid taste, like mildly
ripened cream. and the hand passed
down between the side of the can
and the curd notes that the curd is
firm, with a peculiar elastic, cusp-
tong feeling. If the cans are dumped
before sufficient acid haws developed
in the whey, it will be very difficult
to drain the curds, the flavor will
bo very bad, the texture pasty and
slimy, and later as the acid develops
more whey will separate, making a
leaky cheese.
When ready for draining, cover a
slatted rack wwith heavy, closely
woven cotton sheeting and carefully
and skillfully dump the curd, allow-
ing it to slide out with as little
breaking as, possible. "'Tae condi-
tions
onditions are best when the mass of
curd, a :aa being dumped, retains its
form and breaks with a clean eit-
reous fracture." The time required
for draining properly will vary from.
two to 24 hours, depending on tem-
perature, amount of rennet used,
amount of acidity developed and
, other unknown factors. When the
'whey has drained out so as to per-
mit easy handling, fold in the cloth
put under heavy pressure until dry
enough for molding. Take from the
press and knead or work it up uni-
formly. •It may be run through a
meat chopper. Add 1; per cent. of
salt, mixing it in thoroughly.
POINTS ON APPLE GROWING.
It is certain that any crop will
exhaust the soil in time, whether
of grain, grass or fruit. On some
farms may be seen orchards .of ap-
ple.: trees over half a century old.
Every year : these trees have pro-
duced fruit, and in return received
nothing in the shape of fertilizer.
It is estimated that an ordinary ap-
ple crop removes from an acre of
soil about forty lbs of nitrogen,
forty pounds of phosphoric acid and
seventy-five pounds.. of potash. When
clover is grown in the orchard, the
land is benefitted by having its pro-
portion of nitrogen increased. liut
it will gain nothing in mineral mat-
ter. The land .devoted to apples
should receive - fertilizer every year,
and where there is a heavy crop of.
apples in sight the fruit should be
thinned out in the early . stages on.
its growth.
11 is a matter of doubt whether
there is anything gained in the long
run by cropping the land that has
been planted to fruit trees. Of
course it pays while the crops are
being gathered, but does it pay to
hale the orchard come into bearing
on soil reduced in fertility. Will not
the orchard during its bearing . "pe-
riod have need of all the food ele-
ments that the soil contained at the.
start ? Will not the productiveness
of the orchard be reduced to the
same proportion as the elements of
fertilityhave been removed by pre -
I rope ? This will certalniy bo It does nett follows tlDrat wlnetn of
case tulle's the rcrnoved elm.•plant increases in yield of fire a watt
stats are restorsd by azneans et ler- ter that its nutritive value has pro-
tillt.ers, Ga•ditttad that sapeorts an ,partionutely inereased. It is ga:it•4+a
apple orchard for thirty successive =possible that Changes ;in texture and
Kars has no food fee corn crops. composition rel dry raahstancc sway
bather cling to the orchard aaad forte offset the greater yield. The dry
go the Cern crop or eine depend ar'a;atter of mature grass eoutaainee
upon tato corn and abandon the Jagger peoi?atrtiera of crude eine Once
tprchard. the immature. Tile nlanti hardence itlt
text"are and lr'es. in both pout at:ltfr-
tai aaad 'digestitpility. It is tGnc'rcforee
leanly incd•aisuli'ie Ile begirt cntainj
grin end where there i;3 a Danger
to hao f;,atiaeru1 wort; £Hlo1M te-
1
'ROUSL 'PALM
The nee and value of farm itcarre
are teem* seaionely Unpaired hy- lac
prover 1rHanD
of s �t,a 6
l t �' +ata s'arly in order .oet a& talaall to
dicey Are eroweed in Iithn e 111• conaapetlead tacicr.-e elite, ,hears seeee ores
ttxti aced stula.es, tics nil. 48 Eno loath !rive cater= ;In to 441l Teem Cue Lead"
-rant the durrap anrinDte a ategi !deem h et the late cant, was. nhonai
ro .t dA I
1440.1-'s � ae a
at t1Dci
iia-
lt3'
iia a':,is tare sAat�s.tn alD.at plaiad aro
1.
F Aim
t a rn1A tianaraal
an D I as sea
'l iiia a °cs J a � .� ,
� ric&'cr iia garQatt,ina in data earlier e,.cD
bs alth taro InitHed, t ndl cti e.t�aa sit eb groat' Ux t:az wvl;enn 6nUv gn oup eta•
sonar kind !s carr t Ate fcallov , , amanita 1;thebue. ThO darer group
ges
A slide light t trtdusa fiat 00 teas' w�'iith twkieh n lea airs hsix 10 clan.-,
geally to nd, to tins> loci. of prot,eis art ilia
'.[Ace light ehoaulci -,cine ice �te ratitanaa axials uep of our eo^wannon
stable from the front and '(iso wan- reeding siulIn, and they should roe.
dower should Le IInnnewashed to a>€sci- 1 eg;nife tics fare that by eutting rar2s,
low the light. they can get two erope of higihio nL'
A stable should Voter 'Le darn. trogcrnoue louder. where they earn
only get one by late eoittottg>
W1T'1' ,'I;►G 'TAI) Pi13ST mise
The Medea should be well ven-
tilated, but, so carehwiiy that no
draft can possibly touch a. wenn
hence. even hcftat'ca tb0 lar-;ttlsa 01'r "4'1A draft on a horse WAWA !rant even frill tend to rause sa. ' vgorollni
work or driving will be sore to twin ,in way a
Jatwp� growth and in ,. good
alt b
Do not feed front a rack overhead, ct'w'f' of rewv cn is sc'<urc d
* w ' > s' 1u.abk -.
t3 apttea
,Crit two crttia:t aro toot at a .,
dustw :1 bayI
h from the
S
the a
eon's,
o s
-, •- •,. c,,pc�. igIDv for feeding dairy t .,,«
h la4tt
,mal; au1. t,atail for the thouz one mature erop on xweotnt ori '
tit gs. the increased portion of protein.,
A deep manger is best.
proportion
A wide manger for the grain in The early sett hay seems Mere is.xl•r,-
best so the grain can be scattered d table to stock, and wrnight fon
to prevent bolting.
The stalls should be Ave feet wide.
A horse cannot rest in a narrower
ne, and in a wider one Ile might
roll and get fast.
HR. A. W. CHASE'S On
CATARRH' CURE ■ ■, k%
!s sect dint to du disesied
parts by the •improved Droner.
}teals Abe ulcers, clears tisealr
pansgee,stcps a:eypivo t:I the
sfaraat and Feneanantiy cores
Catarrh and Hay Fever. Flower
free. All dealers, er Pr, A. W. Class
Stedicltu Co , Toronto and Buffalo.
THE TIME TO CUT BAY.
weight, more s,atisfaetery, On !haat
Cather hand by late cutting we see
mire a considerable larger quautityr,
of carbo-bydrates, which are 1aalalan
hie for feeding. and of crude aibra
tvide!) is of low feeding Value,
For the dairy sows and -,peeps
gratia should be cut early, since these
animals do not relish hay that le
woolly and belting in aroma, as 1st
the case with late cut hay. loon'
horses and fattening cattle later
cutting is allowable, as these animals
subsist mostly on concentrated food,.
and hay serves more for -filling," as
horsemen my. to tests made bye
Professors Sanborn and henry in
fattening steers with early and lata
Cut hay, it was found that late cut
lair. 7. W. Hodson Gives Some bay gate the hest results; If cutting
Valuable. Sints On. the Ones- is delayed too long the stems of the
tion, grass become tough and stringy and
the seeds scatter from the heads.
The aim of our farmers in growing jSuch hay has little aroma tend lathe
forage crops is to produce from a palatability* if not nutrients. Though
given area as large a. quantity as an indefinite quantity, the aroma of
possible of the digestible nutrients in grass has real value in rendering
a palatable form. The time at which hay more palatable. Alien the sun
a forage crop is harvested may af- dissipates the dew from the dying
feet the crop in three ways, viz :—in groes in the meadow. we detect t'he
the quantity of material harvested, escaping aroma;, because the dew in
in the composition of the crop, and rising, carries some of it into the
in the paalatability of the fidder. As air. This is one reason wily hay
a general rule it has been found that should not remain scattered over
the greatest amount of dry shatter the field at night. Green colored,l
is secured where forage crops are ail- sweet smelling hay is really the best,
lowed to fully mature and ripen: and prudent farmers will not over.
The only exception is in the case of look such seemingly small points as
clovers and other legumes, where the preserving the aroma and prerentinse
leaves rattle off .and are lost, either bleaching.
before or during the process of cur- h', W. HODSON,
ing. Live Stock Commissionerk
%w •w.
�,. iii
• ,,,t:ElkEOfLAVAANDA51l 5
.-WIDEN ACT5 A5 A STOP.PZ
AND PREVENTS ZIgFriisonis
UNDER ORDONPRY.'RE$sURE
WATE,? L INh
OCEAN
WATER L/A/E •,
ji
Ii
) r.
J
.OR 51AftfUtiliz.9 3 s
LAVA.
DIAGI AP'I SHOWING HOW VOLCANIC EXPLOSION IS CAUSE
A study of the above picture will show how, the molten masa in the
mountain's interior met the water, and hour the steam generated' thereby
t
following the line: of least resistance, blew off the top of the volcano.
ti