The Brussels Post, 1918-1-17, Page 3ii{ "Bali ri
tl ,t,•
,
�` er1 tl
t'onritietc,t# by Profeeteor Henry G. I3e11
*Ice els curlla1mf realderslithe advicrtment e of ato nece at the 00t,
ackowledged
tutherlty on ail subjects pertal:ling to tolls and crope.
Add:080 all questions to Professor Henry G, Bell, In
sere tf The Wilson Publishing company, Limited, Toronto,
and onewers will appear In tills column in the order In
4.hah they ars recmived. As spats Is rlmlted !t le advis-
able where bnmcceate reply Is necessary that a stamped
and tddrossea envelope be ectclosee with the question,;.;;,,,,.-
va,ce toe ane+ver will be mailed direct. Henry G. Belt
15 .N.:._.J would like to ask a few
qut'stioes b1 regard to the sowing of
spring" rye, Is it as sure a crop as
fall eye? At what !line of the spring
should it lac planted'! C'an 1 seed with
spring rye? Is it as adaptable to
verities kinds of mei as fall rye which
is best to plant its the spring?
Austverr--Spring• sown rye Is not as
sure a crop ns fall sown rye, that is,
it is not as heavy a yielder. /The
Ontario Agricultural College in their
tests obtained experimental yields of
from 55 to 58 bushels per acre in
whiter rye against 25 to 29 bushels of
spring rye. Spring rye should be
sown ne early as the ground will ad-
mit of thorough preparation. It will
grim on most any kind of soil, doing
best on medium loam, However, sat-
isfactory yields can be obtained from
sandy loam or clay Ioom. Rye will
withstand drought very fairly. Do
not saw fall rye seed in the spring •or
SOU will get a low spreading plant
with a small proportion of grain, just
as though you sow winter wheat in -
steal of spring wheat in the spring.
atm looking for information
5s to soy beans and cow -peas. I want
to find out all about the proper
nmthcads of soil preparation, planting,
proper time to plant and cut, and
everything about the crop.
Anstwer:-•-.For Ontario 'certain vari-
eties of soy beans are adaptable. Cow-,
peas are grown much further south.
and are a° used to a long' season that
Total
et would not be advisable to try to
grow them in the short imason at the
disposal of the Ontario farmer, Icor
l soy beans .i,he recd bee! should be pre-
' pared as early as the ground will
wort: well in the spring, The crop
does best on medium loan soil. In
regard to fertility, you will find ma-
nure is good. It is especially well to
supplement this with the addition of
acid phosphate at the rate of 200 to
400 pounds to the acre, The soy bean
is a legume consequently has the pow-
er of fixing some of the atmospheric
nitrogen in the noddles of its roots.
Sometimes the seed has to be inoculat-
ed in order to make sure that the
right race at' bacteria are present.
This inoculation can Le obtained. from
the laboratory of the Dominion De-
partment of Agriculture or the On-
tario Agricultural College. If direc-
tions are carefully followed (which
invariably are very simple) a nl=Levial
increase in the yield of the beans will
be realized. After the beans are in-
(reulated they should be sown in rows
`3& to 32 inches apart and the plants
2 to 4 inches apart in the row. This
will take approximately four peeks of
seed per acre. The crop should be;
cut and handled ,mien the same as
other field beans, as soon as the pods
are well filled and begin to ripen. The
soy bean i$ an especially valuable)
crop since. it carries a large per cent
of protein. Compared with wheat
(bran), clover hay and,ym•n (grain) it,
analyzes as follows:
Trailing t �d M » Bees
• 13y 1) Eve vet1 loon. ;
'1111 term "told b'e,> ie ,t edema -11e,, , Early spring or fall is the hest time,
for thele hese_, are iii no erne dif- to ticc•ure these `•w,u•nie, the fall be-!
i'er,.»t hl their habit( or diep isillons : ing preFeinhie if the Matey and .,,.t the
than the ee-sane, domentie roe's They ; bee,i.. de;tired
are supply the ordinary bet.; which' Winter Work With laces
vba pubNshed site, cath quct:,0 bn and Its anewor lo' t„it. •9'
have escaped and, u1, hivethut em of. n I i:u'titally u."thiol'• can he done to es a means tf ;aentiNcatl;;n, but full mama and sltdress m at b iva o h ,t• the ]a:'*.. finer---posiCeva-
1gilunt bookooplr to them when tetter. Wrlto to one side of u o g n In ea l,1, the ver 1ttsC!
swarming, have adrl to
the ronrl'a, t. of the rolanrr _, and paper only. Annwerx
will b* mai(od dbnct If (`i 5 I've put ul) with
1 Bono 09' ir,Lu the in roll tvCalhtr the 1,,_ we fu; vii' at1mpee "r1 addressed envelope is enclosed, aLluttc 1 c.€rtrr, temp• 1,s ,encs tont-
woud5 and tel' u U th8h ce eel tie 11.,•1 . rondenco for this department to Mrs, He:en Law, 238 rr'rn;• 019 en,»'* ! when
sono tree and {here bunt r arnhv lend anon the better ti' they 11 l P 1 f; 1 , taus t• a 1"n )',
' t^loudurno T t
$1
4r//,'V
1,
�,.,..'++..eu'.6a" +lrlyd lfCt`eiraflew �,.,.,,,.•••••,�•••
',rhe ant. 1 om ibeis lips .tis
E BETWEEN FRIENDS
ti •
,a? a t, ."y+ a* r .,7'11 tt ends it!„ sail ( dulls, fumble
lee; 1lereely with her veil and dieclos•
Mentes and eat:eta:es of alta es aro cordial) invitee to write to this pre .a I' milled
i• 1 { I l'
I department, initials 1,839 will Y she {,oiled it oil' with x final re1'kless
,e p 1211' 1111nes 7n' (t , r:
o let u•1,. uw Ave.. •erns O,
1 )
Set tip housekeeping. iter, w 1ctt the eu1,1111 ,u•0 8101' d n1, he re if mind
I' until {
erlfar.; we
111"l'see ..hal. the rPllar is
8.1„C,: ft: iv difrictllt to 8,1',-;s0 w ors f . J''tt ys) nosh, had }talrpened-she
Thee hire in tures have eget stearme ! properly r fy ventilated, and ,weep up front:1139.. e the protein w'llir' n thaw will you know, ,ht• It'sra do hat
and they have likewise,. found a hole 1» . the flour all dead litre whiclrhave ac-; without taw wrote urn•1 of e r nen11 • - drys )1 the moet expe•n5}v1, and nu,A shan't. be 11 home that's i t. all, What •
some oak or gum -floe and there hunticumulit{ed, '; nese'''. 7t erdv n . i:.a fr,•ax+nd C7+luuhle of afl fond :.1,,l, -t ,1,n•+'s, A ere you :milhrg at, Au111. P1'ances't
their combs. Some of. these colnniee 'y •,car, clrft'ti(•nee but.. 19.1 it neap reef be more exteneiv,• !tee r f elite:at-a ti in the Pecause a mere 'Not ,it. h.m,a' sounds
livin"' til d a fight fa the only time to ventilate rnhtl't'
woos can trate Utter anal the cellars. After Clark lite door lead_! p n m f 1
cestors back for a hundred years, all pends neon whether erh,t:ztion and agnou5,
ins" outdoors should } •�
of. which haver similar manner no- ) e opened and; serial standing etre stmt ar "ir;l ?
l left open for an hour or taw, in order. e [ Eire, . of • R.O.A. -"Why do are what
se high ,
pagaLed and lived in the woods. They that the foul air should b, , get his ad a reliable paw 114001 1al- why ?"c they double old t1 the used
arc no more vIcnous than anY other c carried ole get his advise r,•garderg the adwisl1,il-� to he?” The lad, old r :res they
ares, site the terns "wild” does ohem and fresh air admitted, This should; ity oi' marriage from the 1or.:li,•al I aren't they R. 0. #, i hefirst
be done about once a week 00 et such stand A In tilt Oran injustice. They all trace their titnee r point. Probably he could t001' lace it is sam1 til,. " of al exa • + •r -
t s the bees show an inclination! treatment ? ! t 11w a
origin to. the originalc l that would d
colonies ul1 ,add u r
your tam t otos • .r r
P a that P double •
to b•, h they eve i, b vv • t
become •es y u ha
r l s.
toy, Never y
vP
.r ventilltte
e r" ,appal. -ss. .',lu,•h (hi, procuration of food would be advant-
brought over by the first settlers.
lever since colonial days these so-
called wild bees have been hunted end
still are. After the bees have been
eonstrtntiou. As you are still very they u ed to be. In some cases they
during the clay, e'er• the admeselea of young, it Wright be well 10 wait a year
light will cause man y •bees to fl nut •! are, it is true, but this does nut apply
y or two before finally deciding. 1 :;hall . to everything. And in the second
into the cellar. I be glad to hear from you again. i place ewhen you draw comparisons be-
im et l and iodated, then the hunter hn'bed, for if they have sufficient a men at � tween conditions in Canada and 00nd1-
must usually chop down the tree to slvr'ea and aro in warm doubled -walled' the front ,need most- --at least, so t}tose, mens in Europe to -day there as every
secure them and the honey 1't is well hives they ones who have been at the western reason to be thankful that we are 80
1 y a'e all right; and in 11111 -'fens}
Colonies outdoors should not be die -i Soldlelas Sister--bV11at til
to remember that the finding of such a
colony 01 no sense gives the finder the
right to go upon another man's prop-
erty and chop clown his tree simply to
got the bees. The law rec0grlizes the
fact that the bees belong to the man
who owns the tree, unless the finder
canprove conclusively that the parti-
cular swarm emerged from his apiary
before locating in the tree. This is
often a difficult point to prove. So,
use care about trespaesing upon the
man's land and cutting down a val-
uable txee4`V-.'�—�_.._�_�
1NTLIINAT[ON*AL LESSON
JANUARY 20.
Dry Digestible nutrients P rtilizer C; t titueuts Lesson III.—,steles At Work Mark
1. 21-45. Golden Text,
Jo!i 9. 4.
Verse 21. They go into Capernn
—On the northwest shore, of the la
The home of Peter and Andrew. Tv
modern localities are rivals for
site, Tell Ftonl and Khan &Iinyeh.
latter e2 a Iittle to the southwest
Tell Hum. Tell Hum has the remai
of a synagogue, which until recent
might be seen by the traveller ]lea
blocks of sculptured limestone len
among the weeds, Many schol
toeless to Ellen Minyeh as the re
Capern5um. There is no settleme
at either place to -day. Capernau
is indeed "cast down to lades," (1
solate ruins occupying the site of tl
busy lake city, the scene of so much
Jesus' blessed work. Straightway
Indicating the rapidly moving acti
of Jesus. Synagogue—The center
Jewish religious life 111 every town
This institution plays an importal
part in the ministry of Jesus and hi
apostles. The services were ver
simple. After prayer and the react
ing of. the Scriptures any one wh
had a message might speak,' Thi
afforded Jesus his opportunity t
teach. On the sabbath day --The rest
day or the seventh day. The cls
formally set apart by the law to
devoted especially to God's service
Repeatedly we find Josue and his die
Nem). of feed :Wetter err- nt .
i percent. percent.
cent, Protein Carbo
hydrates Fat • N. P. IC.
1,1,.:115 (grain) 888.3 29,1 23.,1 14.6 5,25 1.111 1..2(1
core t (1,,11111! 89.4 7.8 66,.8 4.3 1.fii 0.71 0.57
91,101 (100n) 88.1 11.9 42.0 2,5 2.411 2,119 1.52
Fled clover hay- 84.7 7.1 37,8 1.80.55 1.87
A.B.:—I have two and a half acres
of loose muck from one to five feet
deep well drained, under plow three
year :112(1 planted i°va}lnions and sugar
beets t1dia next spring. I1 needs ferti-
lizing heavily. Would fresh horse and
cow' manure plowed under, also a top
drt +sinrg oI' tine la mme he advisable
for 011101111? ,
inewer:-...When applying
]gorse n1 !
cow• lealltie to the seedbed for onions,
I would advise you to scatter it broad
cast on top of, plowed laud and work
it in before disking or burrowing. The
plowing would result in placing it
down deep in loose muck soil but I am
afreid that the menuee if well turned'
under would be placed too deep if plow-
ed under. I ant of the opinion that
you would get better results by nth
plying the manure 0n some other crop 1
oil upland soil and snit one fertilizes j
1 for your onions and sugar' beets or at
least fertilizer sufficient to cover half
+of the plantfood that is necessary..
For onions good results have been ob-
tained from applying 500 to 1,000
grounds per acre of a fertilizer carry-
; ing 1 to 2 percent. ammonia, 8 to 12
percent. available phosphoric acid
and 1 to 4 percent. potash. This should
be drilled in at the time the mesons are
seeded.
For sugar beets apply' the sane
quantity end the same analyses of
fertilizer, You must remember that a
mucic soil is well supplied with organic
matter, contains a fairly high per -1
cent. of ammonia, however much of
this is in such forst that the plant can!
uoi use it in the early spring. The!
soil is weak in phosphoric acid and'
very weak ill potash. Sugar beets
benefit by liberal anplicatioits of fern -I
lizer high in potash.
In the selection of males fur breed-
ing, vigor, size and early maturity
must he. considered. There 511ou1(1 be
complete development of conch and
wattles, special male plumage, breadth
oP loin, and depth through that part of
the body. Effeminate stales should
never he used for breeding. Look
well to the stale; ]calf the results de-; upon hint.
Most of the successful poultrymen t
keep their line of males unbroken, .Any,
new blood needed is always introduced'
through the female side. That the!
maie gives color, and the female gives i
shape to the ofi spring, is not home out
by facts. It is title that there are
eases where this is so, but the eon
t
kadlClUf eases t
y s S tic so numerous linrtt
it is next to impossible to forst a con.;
elusion either way.
The male should be gallant, ever,
ready to share his meal with the hens;j
but he must not be too :someone midi
thus 40913ve himself, or he will be un-,
derfed; become nervous, and not prove;
to be 1t good breeder', The glutton'
malessoca equally had. I'
1 He betimes mss o+er-
fa v '
tehtlath
o hen }
s co not
et le'
6
their
share,
c
and the e COti e' n
s Duce is
poet q
1
fertility, The nature or every orale
bird should be studied.
For good strong fat•tility it is best' Ir
that the state be younger that the fiat
nestles, or at least of the same age; . d
hit a cockerel with yearling- hens, or a, 11
Which Breed for Baby Beef?
Thele is no one breed which is hest
'for producing baby beef. Good calves
(from any of the leading beef breeds
I Make choice beef, if the animals are; a
1well feel and handled, Herefords 1015- c
tUre quickly and fatten easily, Tl1e!
cattle are good rustlers, Shorthorn'
11811008 make baby beef of high quality.
I°
�:1.ugus calves dress out a large peels
tent. of carcass when killer. Those h
three breeds are leading in the produce y
±30l
nof1
haby hoof,
Calves from other beef breeds malt
economical gains when fattened and 1 tin
killed at a weight of 900 to 1,1A0
pounds. Leven calves from the larger
dairy breeds are often profitable 1)0
Gal beef. le
ef.
Holsteins,
Ybeing cm 11.11'1,
g e v a
than other dairy calves, are sold pro
iflably in that way. Ayrsbires, while
Choy dress out better than Holsteins,
mature and teed more slowly. Both
these breeds are primarily intended
for milk production,
tion to securin en abundance of fresh su)ce the beg i mng of the war I well •oflhere. Letters come from
g , tell ole --es something good to read.: the Old Country which Inti of queues
air trough the hive entrance, they; of c,in,.se when in action they have i oe people waiting for their margine
also have the advantage of 5etur1ng; nn time for it. Bui: when in rest and their tea allowance while their
a cleansing flight during rniid days, billets it is what Chew ]m f t
and that is why bees wintered out-
doors -have a decided advantage 0001'good stories, magazines—not too queues are made r )f
those wintered in cellars, Dysentery • learned or too liters• •---anu"-in if [ m up c poor people.
is practically unknown among colonies y g There is an absolute democracy in the
wintered outdoors, possible; and it' treating of the war, matter of food in Britain to -day and
for ever
Now is a everything written just mats groats it is as much a matter of conscience
good time to eeeirel 0f the war, dealing rather with what with the peeress as with the humblest
supplies for the coming season. Put i is thought of it and what is being private's wife to save everything that
hive bodies and section snpet•s togeth-1 done toward it in this country than can be saved: An Enlist merchant
er now rather than wait until the, g 1 n
with anything in which they are eon- who has just arrived in New York is
swarming season, (rimed. You see, the men who are
doing the work are by this time more
clean spirit is represented as conscious or less "`fed up" with thrills. When
of the incongruity of Christ, the Holy; they are out of it they enjoy forget -
One of God, with the foul spirit and' ting lf,
that the purpose of Christ was to de-; It ruts them to read of what is
stroy the evil spirit. In 1 John 8. 8' done in other parts of the world.
the work of the Son of God is to de -1
s 0o the works of the devil, I knotvI,A
thouwho art, the Holy 0ne of God—
In verse 34 the demons are said to. g
know Christ, "Because they knew' 11
him." The title Holy One of God as- II
cribed to Jesus occurs twice in the a
New Testament; here and in Jahn 0.! jel
ig' n1' mut -
otters from home, news from home,
sugar they get by ticket, Don't
run away with the idea that these
responsible for the following state-
ment: "In England men not released
have been told off to help the farmers,
and in France the situation is so seri-
ous that soldiers had to be released
to work on the land. Both France
and Italy, which formerly produced
portsmen like to read of sports; the nearly all their own food, will now•
st record -breaker in golf or in tar- hate to buy it." The needs of the
et pracL(ce; the latest score of the war have aroused the English farmers
ew champion. The poet want; poetry. to discard their old-fashioned methods
is ideals of beauty are undergoing -of cultivation and to adopt motor pow -
severe strain et the front, and he er and the latest types of agricultural
f1.,..,.
b9. Two personalities seem to be fn-! be
volved here—""What have we to do'
with thee," "I know thee." in the! vz
first the demon seems to be speaking,) hi
91111 in the second the man himself, , ler
ke. 25. Rebuked him ---Or reprimanded he
we him sharply. Hold they peace—Litere! Pi
the ally, "be muzzled," "silence." j WS
The 2f. Tearing hire and crying out th
of walla loud voice—A. picture of :fright -
ns fol convulsions. ly 27: Amazed—A word used only by! fo
no
vY Mark. Astonishutent passing into „el
ting ave. Questioned—Discussed. A newt til
teaching. In verse 22 the wonderful ser
al quality was his authority. she amaze- the
ment wee occasioned by the fact that sti
ml with 0 simple word he cast out the' the
0-1 four spirit whereas the Jewish ex- co
o0cists who professed to east out de -Iwo
.
°f' mons went through a long ritual of, 11 i
vit. incantation and great show of mys-
Y to r' one
lion over,
s vel,
P
) ab28. All the region of Galilee round i ste
out—Tile region about Capernaum.l bo
?t I In Mark the most significant of 'all'
s I Jesus' works is the casting out of evil l rat
Y. spirits from those possessed, Illodt'rn' ten
-; medical science would find most of the and
et symptoms in line with lunacy and
5 epilepsy, hut there are elements here Tata
° I which do not seem to bear out this ex nal
planation fully• for „instance, the Thi
bY'doublei personality of the possessed.enl'
Iand the confessed knowledge of the' milk
personelity of Jesus as the Christ, on
- the part of the demons.
+at love end nature', machinery.
autiee and great ideals have sur- Win-the-war:—If yon want :.specific
wed; so does the artist. It interests directions for how to save here are a
m to knew how contemporary art is few good rules to go by—you might
terpreting the great deeds, the hang theta up in your kitchen:
lois feelings that he has seen di,- 1, - Use four pounds of wheat flour
ayed on the battlefield; but he also instead of five. Eat corn bread, rye
nt to hear and see simple things bread, oatmeal bread and cakes, bar -
at on( -e filled his mind. ley scones, rice and potatoes.
Eldorado: -,.No, tea and c41'ec have 2. Use other eereids with wheat to
food value other than as m(rliums make bread. Wheat and oatmeal or
r giving the body nourishment in wheat and cornmeal together are ex
e form of cream and sugar when • celle111.
ved with these articles of diet, At 3. Eat a baked potato to make up
same time they are powerful for the slice of bread you don't eat.
mutants, In practising economy 4. Cut dower on pie and calve. The
matter of cutting down on tea and wheat flour y00, 1)5 an inclit•idual, save
col
in the daily bill of fare is will keep a soldier fn the tren(hes.
.tlty of con3)1deratien• At any rate 5. When you do eat wheat bread,
s advisable
to use less sugar --say save every crmnb, Cut it at the
lump in the average cup and to table so that there will be nn stale
r it well so that its full value may slices left. Make crusts and crumbs
derived, itit° pmciclinges, muffins, 'baked dishes
5iiss Tda:—bbL11, ha.:, a fat content- and 5814410 cakes.
ging from 3.5 per cent. to 0 per ti. Save eats. Digit 'waste any.
t, a protein content. of 3.5 per cent. Tess pastry and fried feeds spell a
about 5 per cont, of carbohydrates, saving in fats. 'frim pone own meat
popular assumption is that skim- and melt the fat. Let none get into
tt is vastly inferior to whole milk. the garbage pail.
s is a mistake. The only differ- 7, And dont waste soap'! IL's made
0 between whole milk and skim- of fat. Fat which cement be used for
is that the fat has been fallen cooking 1heuld he eared at(1 made into
from et The latter contains 3,4 per soft soap•
elates in the synagogue, with the pec -1
11e i h
of the 9alh
I w r a
ih .
'22. He taught—How he taught is
clearly seen in Luke 4, 1.5-28, where
he reads the Scripture lesson for the
day and makes' that the basis for his
remarks. Astonished—The old truth
01 a new way, with 11 new interpreta-
tion. As 118091g' authority and not
s the scribes—The scribes, the official
cust°dilnns and interpreters of the law,
onstantly quoted other Jewish teach-
es. Jesus' teaching was his personal
ries. He quoted no one, but on the
then hand set tip his atahority over
gainsl; the traditional view, "Ye
tn'e heard" so and so, ""hut I say untie
00," Ile taught not as having the
Scriptures tor his 1n1Clro•ity, but as if
e wore the authority thoufy :for the Scrip-,
ej11
tree. They hail n000r heard any-
ing like this. Ills presumption not
nils, amaz0d them; it enraged them.
he scribes had all outward authority
of prestige and precedent, but their
f teaching was dry, formal, and lifeless
_I '
with no influence upon the people.
2(1. Straightway' -_.A new scene
quickly presented while Jesus w115
Leaching. A man with an unclean
spirit --Literally in an unclean sperit,
00911111 48110±03) the intimate connection
901)0em, Che "spirit" and the man. 11
does not seem out. of order for a man
s° 'aril it
ed b
I
to P in t
9. Into the house of Simon arid,
t Andrew—Peter was a married mal,! (
his brother living with hives, The
' events march rapidly, from the won-,
derful work in the syuagog'ue back
to the house.
30. Simon'e wife's mother lay side'
of a fever—Luke describes the ease:'
—`l "Not exaetl - [r
my dear; bot. know
•
.•, y, I kn w
like an enticlimax? I suppose it does,
but I can't and won't quarrel with her
and I refute( to go nu ignoring the way
she behaves, 10 there's nothing else
le.."t. I have nerves, too, and feelings,
and ncl 11 temper; mpPr; an I I won't have them
cenlfn r )liv stirred up the way Sharlie
Stirs them! $he'.; presumed nn my
forbeattni•e over and over again."
"Yes," agreed Aunt !"rail es grave-
ly, "you have been forbearing. I've
been proud of your patience, for
Sharlie, poor girl, is certainly trying
at times. She inherits her father's
high temper and her mother's caustic
tongue. But, after all, Camilla, isn't
she words it?"
"I've stood all I can," Camilla
reiterated. "If site ever even send
site was sorry! But she never does.
She flies into a temper or flings out
a stabbing word and whirls away
ill a huf-•-and next time we meet you'd
suppose there'd never been tt breath to
ruffle our friendship."
"Do you mean," said Aunt Frances,
"that you want an apology?"
r"I didn't mean that. No, not now;
it's 1,L.. tau late. But. she owes me one,
doesn't slue? One! She owes me u' •
-
rears of dozens!"
"'would you like to have her
apologize? Because, my dear, she
will, this time, if you pursue your not -
at -home policy. She is sere to. the
first time you meet, and you can't very
well decline to let lies. Can you?"
""N -no; I suppose not," egreed
Camilla reluctantly. "I'd have to for-
give her of course; but things could
Clever be the same "
"They never could; indeed, they
never could," said Aunt Frances
earnestly. "Camilla, you have been
in the right hitherto and Sharlie in the
wrong. If you choose now to force
amends or to withdraw your friend-
ship, you will be
P within your rights—
which is a very different thing.
Sharlie's faults are big and positive;
so are her virtues. She is honest,
warm-hearted, loyal, merry; she loves
you, and believes in your love for her;
believes 111 it enough to trust you for
pardon, without words. when elm has
'treated you badly."
""If 1111(145111 she really cared," said
Camilla. "But she hurts me so much
and seems to take it so lightly,"
"If she Meows how much 1110 hurts,
but I doubt if she does. They are
harp -tongued and used to flare -ups -
in her family; too used tc be easily
hurt by them. Site think,: when she
has giren a stab it is only a scratch.
Perhaps she will learn in time; per-
haps she will never fully understand
or control herself. If you foresee an
apology she will, of co;u•se, know tit
least that you were 4001)1y offended,
but I haven't much faith that any good
will .rise from an apology that isn't
spontaneous. After all, you are prob-
ably right in ending tlte. friendship
31081 if you feel you have reached the
end of your forbearance. I believe
you are wrong in thinking Sharlie has
what she must Iook like. She is consciously presumed on it; hot she
very 5}1111 and lovely'. and dresses all has needed. it, and ie likely to need it
in silver, with u wreath of red iea:•os stili. Between frienlsw8,»1
t that's
on her hair, .,ort. with n tiny icicle furl just the point: of you thunk the sacri-
her wand. flee too great a one to mite to keep a
"holden with a great fever." • Caper-' Che Irrost i a#1,y. "And what dve:l :i;,1, do with her friend, let her go. Poor Sharlie!"
nano lay in the bottom of a cauldron,' ° wand l.esides .;,t chin the
ifttle (as- "lou don't mean 'poor Sharlie'; you
Kittle li:ulalie had livid ail her life 1ce,3 on ;110 l.re,a'?"
, six hundred and eighty-two feet be.- mean selfish, cold, c0 a • - ,
m the far South until her mf rt Ivtiu, ,
low the sea level. To -clay, as ancient -father and •'8Le mens green trete to red 1,a j won't -be -tethered- Camilla! You
i ly, `"great fever" is a common scourge. her mother made up their minds to yellow and thrcovs a silver thew over know you do, Auntie.Fran!
talce a lou Y reAnd of
31. The :foyer left her—The mode of t~ journey arrow the seas, tett gross tend the hedges.'' � course -you're right," declared Camilla.
l the cure is not stated, nor eve ally ex- Then 1 1)12110 found herself almost in "How 1 wish she would c'ntne to-. "' i Ia.
pressiens of Jestts given, but simply a flash -so quickly did the train seem ni•:1)t!.' eeel12nme11 Eulalie. Sha 413) was t, oh, dear,
!meetly, and I
I `taking her hand he raised her to titer to1 e. teas upset, hitt, oh, as, what are
Ifeet." Merely the fact of her restore- go --up in the North with her I=)h,p, ah;+ will," said grind.; friends for and what was I thinking
grandmother. j mother, "for el es cold oneugh already of? I'm 50011 a.poky. c' g
tion and her immediate.dtiresumption evidence
ce But oh, how simmer everything for a fire in the hall.' pin td pile does
her househnkl duties as the evidmnC° seemed! '19111 flowers were so different I say 5n upsetting onus m a while does
of the (ores The sex+; moruini;• treat,.}mr.lher, one goods'
32. When the stn ilia set• -Mark's ft•on1 titoae heehaw knew; sad the trees uvvakened 15uia1#v with the words, I "Now you've jumped to tJ
indication that it was the close of the l $ l 1e other
and the birds. There was a were' "Tits Frust Fairy been hem" 1 extreme," said Aunt Festers, "lea it's
Sabbath, which ended at sunset, There queer tree indeed on grandmother's For a moment Eidetic buried her 1 a ?,"
was, conaequently, ne risk of haring- front 1aw's, with routed burry s;, a happier one, (' m
g t 1
ing the Sabbath 1a\v by bringin • their on its bearwhes, A • y things nose b the blankets; she wood not '"Lots!' said Camilla. '"Shade,
sick to be healed, g And when I ulahe remember that It hail ever {'tit void be.; � must have reached home bythis
asked what they were, grandmother foto. Then she jumped out of bed. i and I believe I'll t s time,
83. Sick and possessed with demons said they were the caskets that )veld , "Do you •. it c ') • • , telephone her this
--Thus are dtstnguished the two h 11 , she reject, "toss she j minute. T'll tell her she's u perfectly
(-lasses of sufferer the 'mentally tie- the teen's precious brown nuts. These has let. the Hats out yet?" t impossible and out
caskets, site added, never openers mail 1 "I shouldn't. wonder if she had " said a outrageous young knit -
34.
and the bodily diseased. the Frost Fairy touched them with het I cat, and well she please bring her knit -
84. Ail the city at the door --A 1 i }) r. After breakfast we tint round this evening and I'll siert
ivies picture of the surging mass, and vvaud. will go to see." her on a helmet."
Iieert the a `i
Keep 3 Surrounded With 3[uste,
When you want a sponge to take up
teeter, the best place to put. is is right
Wage War 0n Rodents,
The
tat 1$ one Of the t \vor'lrl'a
worst
S1
nn1mx11 pests. 1t lives in filth tool an
allies filth with it on its visits to
1 veliings and storerooms, to pollute
land destt'ny 111Tntali 'food, It carries
ubonic plague and other diseases;
1111 to man and so brings about the
enter of great n ). 1
g unllars of persons an -1 e, It destroys crops, eggs and
ming poultry, stored food and .fabrics,
yna
n 'ue
g g ,
nee his etas a meatal rnalad and not
V of
unclean physical disease Criers
outs --Screamed out. Suddenly while
Je9t1S was speaking there burst, teeth
the scream of. the possessed man.
,24, What have eve to do with thee?
aft thou conic to destroy us 7 'The tel.
yearling cock with two-year-old htne y'
mesas fires, ruins artificial ponds and
would be better. I
e
Store hone in a room g'
y o n that is flea; d
arta fairly warns to preserve it in best 1 et
Poruiition throughout; the Winter, + al
mbenkLnents by burrowing, and by
mewing damages fntlnrdttlfons, floors,
ools,furniture and much Other prep -i
t.y The mouse, though smells, eel
most. as destl'uct:ive.
Fe rmers may do their part in erarli-'
tthl
g those pests by racpt°anng'
ellings and barns, by thres11illg;
rain earner enc] be) moving v twin)• et from
g ft °191=
e far'nt
promptly, 80 that, etas and
ice will not be harbored and red,
eviduals
everywhere
tests help by
y )
a')l1 T )
apping awl )O1r;0laltY etas i tits aril nave
g
d desta`nying them in other wive,
HIGHEST PRICES
For POULTRY, Y, GAME
BOGS
FEATHERS
ER8
Neese write ter particulars.
v. voriZzllf is do.,
G8 noutoadrtrs
Market, aRnntl•o
nt
dew
g
til
m
Ind
t1,
a)
v f ta.1,r moi 1,c r
the unwell -vying patience of the Great And w len Is tine Frost Fairy?" ask- And right after breakfast, store 0n-
Hlealer. Suffered not the demons e
to ed D i
tel l e
a
r
°11 )1 they found 1
v re half a
�
dozen
open
1,k e
et because s esus°' ,r, ,
they knew t P
to 1n
P vv int ,
it t )t'
Y Ps " ,
I
1 ,.v++ ,
'lilalt
ot:+�
s
Fairy?" 1 repeated r
v ea 1 1,11»11»
aur , `•
P lows, ntu'
g } le t
d halide)
tin u" , !. a uif }of Oleg -
that e testnn
°n would
t
v �'
e n s0tne mother, who delighted in stake -believe .sluts from the ground,
way embarrass hes work. Marl: re- I t eat them all " i i t
nee 0 v a h 'sera 1
ie characl;et• ! e 1 1 om0s to Lell res that the grandunother, `'but vve will last some ns
presents that the (lesions hacl a knov7 as much as :toy chtld. 4Crhy. she is "wo will no
t} 1 said n e Pentre of the 1155111 where ,t
edge of Jesus' Messianic Teo one
is on hes wayel c, p surrounded with water, When you
51)feh It WaS not, 1131)11" to divulge at 6 I f duets; and then, w'11en ,you None' Want to develop your boy's apprecia-
this time. 6 "And when will she let the brown again, you ill find
F vet w n 5,4,4x13 baby '40055 ±1011 of Music 1 h
its out , that s#Hall h° \our own' I ill h
til
any day
.r
la )
v int ,
l v You 1 1 sP, ' this e 111 i.iu. .Chat will be fou, said Eulalte, and, musical pvogrammes. Encourage him
art of the world it gets cod
�_ ... . -.; n1,
�..... .... •
tet
1lotrses that paw iii the stlble right
along 4001 nlm'e w'otdt. 11' you ltaveu't 1
any+.for them to do, let them etre in the
11 short time every (lay. That will
help them to work 1(11 some ,'
1 c t the ex -
yard
era steam
w11.' .
e cut01!
alfalfa 1 •
191 free from y t
dust 9
s i. one of the best •)
C. 1<t1 ,F a ,`
1 1 9 for g g
!
colts, but et generally is rcummmital to i
supplement; 11 with other ron5rttge
s11(11 tie timothy, 1
t 11th mixed
i '
111 n•
Y,e t )
ells
fodder, to Besides heeling
snt0s
v r,•�
1,1 utv io
tine ration sueh a method of feeding
alfalfa will offset any likelihood of
kidney or bowel irregularities,
Colts should be nut in the open every
day that is not stormy; it hi harmful,
however, foe them to remain out in a
cold rain. 'rho foal ,,hould be taught
to teat! and 8111111 lied during' the first.
winter.
Breeding for trotters is ) pretty
good toad to a bad failure. active
that o men ton will are experts in the
htts'n`ss
t o Stick in 'end all -1,m
g , nd
?term horses.
Ctrlb ' •'
t 1 m , r )lad cut loin Ohl s',1,.
, 1 Y
p
rows pal- about 1vltcte ants ahhnnd
will li o:inlay drier them away,
e home, andkeep taking him to
P g i so 90011."pleating up a little stuck, she at ones in every conal stn la way to devote
".Did you over s°P her, grand -1 began to dig n hole .lust big enough ta' time to musical study.
(1)019 :r?o I holes u»e rat:+{nut.. Take the 0(150 of Arthur Sullivan
. ,.peps. who became Sir Arthur Sullivan. lie
Perfect Pastry. y this thin sheet. of dough, Fold so 58 to, Wile one of those fortunate boys of
mix. and sift veva (.00,010 of flour j 11114140 throe layers, Put, roll and fold musical talent• wildest parents em'our-
si, i vemneeeand pre -
the flour with tips of angers m• two ' nppetunity t 1 1 t
ve )
r t t r
Porky, A\he,, til s, ) y es , Hume sus hes
l 1,x u1, 1„ v 1
i t 1c c. ay. I,
lel � Is
to
r.
fish a
meet, with a knii, stir' 1, r r t of eb n bttndm11 the r
t tlr cnan{,1n lce� lyes •) sing,e rat should lie ailovvPd , eros enu•our-
w•1dc•r in 113.11.,' n .100,111. Knead 8:ight.: I" exit;t a'nunrl ±he faxen build i aged the boy t:,1 try tell the wind til to.
ly, cover, and sd l •)side for dve nti. i ihh. Winter, \Vl n 1 etas me 130 ehr force tit his sono mouth t".
01
t septa) ••
etso
n ha
1 s Ile
i 11 •V O
nt11'$. ( : vs f es �' re cl
t. t, , 1 e {h.
t rt , � ebn• ,
1,r 1,1 ( r
ell t old 1+ .
,, r intni i r,•.• y noel
deny a
c edn
n
thin sate arta tip t;. ".1novnfulel god trap foe {:hese pests eod10 task, toad so ut 0,1, ht years 011
they ran hn tn•od fusk''( l nu• (
n< nn with music
with mu -9211' trlisponnfnl of salt:' a"n n ('h it t# i 4 aged hie every' moment, of devotion to
ntu •i .
Workwn b •. 6 0, and surrounded him t La It ho, stole o1' lard into, r m with o•Pry
o a dent) ant express nes
of ural„nthu .n vcty •II`I 1, t. ovoriply nil demalde Ilonlit to s»p Art} 0111(1 play Ovary wind histru
est in his father's band,