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The Seaforth News, 1928-02-16, Page 2FLOWERS and VEGETABLES No, 1 and marigolds, if the flowers are kept picked off, will be covered with bloom throughout meet of the season. 2fn. .1n1as, salpiglossis, verbena, scabious, 'coenure and petunliis wilt supply plenty of late summer and tali bloom. + Keep Plante Covered. This is the hardest season of the year on perennial plants. Just now, when the stilt ie amounting higher end This is the asst of a series of timely becoming warmer climbers and shrub - articles on the flower and vegetable ; bevy ou the south aide of the house, gerdentug which will prove interest- • particularly are Uablete start bring- ing to aur reactors. The aeries, while ing sap up from the roots, After sun - giving much interruation of value •to : down there is Mt abrupt drop in tom. the grower of larger gnantitioa; is in-+perature, and tette sap ntay freeze'aucl tended more for the owner of small burst the tiny eerie inside the stems, or "back yard' apaoes which can soThis damage is not noticed until litter often be 'made to return big divldeeds � on when but weaitly sprouts are omit, In fresh Rowers and vegetables, in a I nut or perhaps none at all. On !arab pleasant hobby and in,hoaithful ex-1abay side of the house there isletee praise, The series is from the pen of ciaiiger, but it' is well in every case f one of Ontario's experts and le an ex- to make sure that roses, ivy, and elusive feature' of dila page., well •covered . around Although winter still "lingers inthe tho roots. Tho perennial -border, Loo, lap of spring,'" it is not too .earl to may need some attention in this con., start plane. • 1 r y nection. Straw, old flower etocks, t for the gardert that one has dreamed of during the winter leaves, and snow make the best cover. mouths.' Experience 10 not necessary Order seeds early if you want to be for there is really no 'mystery about sure of getting the best varieties, growing Rovers and vegetables. With It is ,time to look over cold -frame a little planning, some 'healthy exer- and hot bed sltades to make sure that dee and a ,small outlay of sash, the all the glass is In good shape. ordinary back yard ot.weeds and spilt- Pith mit a few novelties in both dly grass flanked• by unsightly fences flowers and vegetables, but let : the and leading up to a garage or chicken proved varieties be the main crops, house may changed into something Seed, labels, stakes, and trellis Woi'k upon which' the eon will delight to may be, prepared now, dwell. Th u i c Look nip last year's garden pian and Those geu t tnl mina of broad study et for improvements. Iawu sweeping up to an informal bed of 'flowers, or those prim rows of green -topped vegetables are not bard to obtain. Given a seed catalogue, a spade, and a bit of vision, anything in the garden Bine is possible. 'Planning the Garden, One can put in a garden without a plan, but the results are apt to be dis- appointing, It is advisable to take an evening orf this week and lay out the vegetable plot on paper. Even' if the bitekyard is only a matter of a few feet eachway, it is surprising the amount of crisp vegetables which may be grown, particularly 11 Due uses a little care in laying out. 01 course where space is less limited a full Year's supply may be grown easily. 'Whore the garden is largo enough to permit horse cultivation, the job Is a simple one. - Make all • rows thirty inches apart, except those for some of the taller or more spreading sorts such as •corn, tomatoes or cucumbers, which should have a full yard be- tween. When it is not possible to use a horse, carrots, beets and such can be cut down to twelve inches and beaus and peas to fifteen or eighteen. This, of course, is rather narrow. It it a good plan to have alternative rows of quick maturing stuff like let- tuce, spinach, or radishes, which will be used before the rows of later ma- turing vegetables spread out. In or- der to get the most of the sunlight run the rows north and south. To con- serve apace, stake tomatoes and place alt climbing vegetables next the fence. It is advisable to grow the nowcrs for cutting in with the vegetables, as these plants aro seldom allowed 'to reach the ornamental stage. Many of them, such as sweet peas, are not at- tractive and do best under regular vegetable garden conditions. A few showy annuals such as poppies, zin- nias, and perhaps a few cosmos in Lae corneas or at the end of the rows will not be wasted hero, as they add a tui of color to the otherwise solid green. Laying Out the Flowers. Litlle planning 1s necessary in lay- ing out the annual flower garden. Here straight rows, so desirable in the vegetable Patch, must he avoided at all costs. The most attractive lay- out is the rri ormal one. This, how- ever, doe r..t moan a jumbled mase, Best t"s"l•e, ares obtained by grouping several epe.elreeus of bne type and color in chump.;, with the shorter stuff such as a1, osum and ageratum at the front, zinnia, marigolds, asters arid a score of other medium sized sorts far- ther back, and along the rear the cos- mos, dateline, and similar plants. An- other point to remember in planuiug the annual flower garden is Lhat a sus• cession.ot bloom is most essential. A goad flower garden should make a show from early June until frost. Cali- fornia poppies and cornflowers or bachelor's buttons may be counted on for early bloom, and these along with the annual' larkspur and cosmos may be sawn on the late snow. Calendulas, candytuft and coreposls, which also can be planted early, will start bloom- ing in early summer. Nasturtiums AN ATTRACTIVE NEW FROCK This charming frock is a decidedly smart style, and wlil appeal at once to the discriminating , woman. The modish uneven hemline is achieved by means of the skirt being sewn to a shaped band which molds the hips. The bloused bodice has a V front with a contrasting or matching vestee, and the sleeves are loose or dart -fitted. No. 1678 is in sizes 34, 86, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 38. requires 3% yards 39 -inch, or 23 yards 54 -inch material, and % yard 39 -inch con- trasting for View A. Price 20 cents the pattern. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number' and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co,, 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Riches have a bad habit of creating new wants instead of satisfying the old ones. We never yet heard a political argument that wasn't sound—mostly sound, anyway. Bobby—"My mummy asked me if I had been •stealing jam, and P told her. yes, "Why didn't you say no?" "I hadn't the face to deny it." "'MUTT AND JEFF" By Bud Fisher. IT'S A Wire FROMJC-FF: FLc- SAYS He PASSc-b rite SCorLANb YARD 'exAN: 0.te. ANb IS NOW A SCOT LAND YARD Sere Go AntT-` 1401A,44'eeer'F1 ,tile great jlugiish novelist whose death took plane at his 10.010 bee (*1510, 17orset, a :Merl time ago, His ashes were interred at West- minster Abb'ey•and his heart buried in. a country churchyard. Sours ' the Alarm �, aim Against Analyses Reveai Much Dirty Seed Where Samples Are Filled With Thistle and. Other Noxious Weeds DANGEROUS TO SOW The unfortunate' part of •sowing dirty seed' is that not only is the yield affected on the field where dirty seed Is sown, but the weed seeds ripening are spread., in their various ways, to adjacent clean crops. Some day 11 will be •made an offence to sow dirty seed and a preventive law, strictly ere forced, can not be looked upon as an infringement on personal liberty. The following article is well worth seri- ous consideration "I don't want to be considered an alarmistt, but there. is no doubt in my miud that the weed menace is grow. Ing and the losses due to it are enor- mous." This was the recent state- ment of Professor J. E. Howitt, of the. Ontario Agricultural College, to a gathering of farmers, who wore fur- ther told that valuators were cutting from eight to twelve per cent. oft the values of farm lands because of the presence of serious weeds. And when one glances over analyses of samples of seed sent by farmers to Professor Howitt for examination ono is forced to agree to both statements, From Wellington County came a sample of alfalfa seed, one ounce of which contained 2' seeds of Canada Thistle, 45 Curled Dock, 666 Sheep Sorrel, besides smaller quantities of seven other very bad weeds. Suppose the farmer sending this in for test had sown the seed just as he had re. ceived 11, allowing 15 pounds to the acre, this would mean that 17,280 Can- ada Thistle seeds would have been sown on every acre, besides well over a million other weed .seeds. Each seed of Canada Thistle, Professor Howitt points out, is capable of multiplying at the rate of 3,500 in a single year. In other words 15 pounds of the alfalfa analyzed, had it been sown without cleaning up, would have been capable of producing over sixty million Can- ada Thistles in one year's time. But this farmer took the precaution to have his seed tested by a government expert before he put it in his seed drill and thus was made aware of the chance he would run if the supply was not properly cleaned up. One quarter ounce of Timothy seed submitted by another Western On- tario farmer showed 6 Perennial Sow Thistle, five Canada Thistle, 38 Curled Dock, 41 Mayseed, 47 Lambsquarters and other weeds when put under the microscope. There were not nearly as many weed seeds In this sample, but it must be considered that it was only a quarter the size of the 'other, and the eix sow thistle seeds consti- tuted a very serious menace in them selves. This wend will multiply at the rate of 2,000 per year, according to Profess- or Howitt, and once it gets a start, it is decidedly a. nasty one to handle. An ounce of alfalfa from Eastern Ontario, which was shipped in' to Professor Howitt for examination, contained 692 Twitch grass seeds, 48 Green Pox Tail and 4 Bladder Campion, a nice mess to get in a crop on a,clean farm. Nor is the risk confined tothepur-. !chasing of ungraded clover seed, The man who sows untested grain ht tek- ing'just es big.. a cbanoe, according to Government omcials. T, G,. Raynor, of the Dominion Seed Branch, exam- ined 69 samples of grain taken from seed drills in Eastern Ontario and Western Quebec and of this number he found that 43 would have been re- jected by' the ,government test had they been offered for sale, on aoeount of the ,umber of weed seeds they con- tained. The 69 samples showed an everago of"156 weed seeds to the pound. Seedsmen would not have beea allowed to sell 43 lots of ,this seed grain tested 'by Mr. Raynor, but'the government cannot protect the farm. er from -himself. Where standard grade, tested seed, either clover or grain, le being used, the farmer knows exactly what he is sowing, but where ho is using his own seed:or some he bought from a neighbor, the only safe plan Is to have the stuff tested at a' Government laboratory and find out just what it contains. These labora- tortes are located at - Calgary, Winni- peg, Toronto, Ottawa and Quebec, and up to'three samples will bo tested free for any farmer. Stock * Notes The best that can be, said for great many stray dogs is that they keep bread from molding. The worst that can be said is that they make sheep raising pretty much a gamble. Let those lovers of dogs to whom this plain statement of facts Is offensive keep their doge at home and give them the care they deserve. Better for both dog and sheep. .M Idle horses need mora straw to line their stomachs in winter. The straw fed horse,aacriflces lits bone structure for maintenance needs, and is likely to become spavined. • I put drinking cups In the barn over two years ago, and I am sure they paid for themselves the first year in convenience and increased milk -Pro- duction. They surely are a blessing to 'the dairyman. Every animal on this farm is watered inside the barn, winter and summer. Outside Make bring mud. My barnyard is practical- ly clean and mudless with no outsicle tank and no manure pile. Here's what I heard a farmer say the other day: "We used to lose a colt of indigestion almost every winter be- fore we put in cups; since, we haven't lost one:' A native of Denmark tells me than in that country horses with heaves are rarely known, for there is always a pail of water before each horse. A Good Living and 10%. The weight' you are paid for on live- stock is the weight over the buyer's scales—not the weight at the farm. Stuffing animals with feed to make them weigh heavier means a large' shrinkage, for stuffed livestock does not•ride well to market. Give hogs 75 per cent. of a normal feed previous to shipping in cool weather, 25 per cont. In warm weather. Rank Incompetents Mike Conway always said Dpc Swivel wasn't much of a medico, and when the doe up and died the other day Mike said that proved it. Couldn't even cure himeelf!—Farm and vire- side. Unhappiness Defined. As a general thing unhappiness. Is Just a wee of selfishness foaling sorry for itself.—American Magazine. Farm Notes Barley or Corn; For Laying Pullets .4.n experiment to teat the relative �1 s statues of barley iuul Dore as ingrcili 'tenon exits In the scratch grata and 0110111--»�'., a... fed to laying • ,pullete luta been ear- `--"`- - ' -r- . ----. Med ort over severed years; at the Felrrpary 1;l, ' Losaokt Vll1,—Two Lethbridge, Annetta 1'txporimantai Mir Station, Mire results of tate teat,' 5: 15aoiee of no: ver. Mark 4: 35.41; -13. Golden Text.—What man'.wieleh are minuted up in the latest re-' nen of man.. is tale, that even port of the superinendont,, were great,' the wind and 1110 000 obey him?--- ly in Raver of foedhtg 001'11 rattier; Mark 4; 41- than barley bout for eggproduction SUBJECT and vitality of the birds. In the OIIRI3T'S PO lit OYI7a NATURED AND TRU season 10 question the amount of 'bar. nem OF MAN, ley or corn fed was On0.111Ik of the INTRODUCTION—The personality of total feed consumed apart front green Josue Wets 0`aah that his followers feed, and the corn or bailey were could neither oomprohend 11 nor dee added to Oire. basic I'atloub''frdiii'tlie,scribe 11101 the language of ordincr•ry time the chitin Wero nine Weeks old, lsuman life, When', looking back from In tele; 1926-26 tool barley was not a later standpoint, these followers used until the pullets were placed in s'P'oieo of his as rho Son of God, they ,were thindcin�m, not •only of the l�quo the laying pens In lite fait, The re- degree to which he manitestod..the di- stults were similar to those of theePre- vine alovo, but of the extraordinary vious yeaz'. The pullets in the bailie.y„;.peace and serenity Which he displayed fed pens were not nearly as thrifty ate in' the presence of tho powers of Na- tlmoso in the' corn -fed pons. Several ture or faced by: tragic aiud tiled, and egg' production was light terrifying facts in the 'life of man, especially in January and l5ebruary. The only language in: which they could After -March tat the barley feel' birds here describe the Master 10 the Ian - were given cod liver ori; which re- gunge which we find in such an incl.- stilted Ina great improvement in the tient as rho Stilling of the Storm, We see a Jesus who is not only fearless health of tate birds and a return to in the presence of storm and tempest, normal laying, but who subdues them Eby his word. So Sunday School Fox Farming an Established industry in presence *1 dementia, insanity, tfrenzy in human souls he Is not dis- port of, the Honorable 1SIr. Mother- and they obey him. If we leave out well, Minister of Agriculture, he states'euelm thoughbs and such incidents in that silver fox farming is now one the life of Jesus, we are left with a of the established ;ndustries of the picture whittle falls short of the real - country and bids fair to' congo ic. onDuin- r• rty. We do not apprehend the great - handed dor many years tq ness of Jesus as his disciples appree hended it, nor de we grasp the full Measure of his faith in God. 7. JESUS AND. TIIE POwelss 00 NATURE, 4:35-41. >. Vs. 35-38. The incident which is reported here indicates that one of Ing the year under review' there were inspected by oDDeere of the Depart- ment and tattooed for registration 37,- 00e foxes, which' was a considerable increase over the previous year: Despite thls increase, the Minister the mightiest factors in the impres- paints out, pricesfor live foxes field Sion which Jests made was, his abso- steadily, while pelts in the open mar tube serenity in the face of storm and ket commanded higher prices on tate tempest. The incident records a average than in the previtue season, deeply religious ekperience of the dis- Taken as a whole: the year is reported elples, "Master," erred the disciples, would you let vs go down without es to have been a most suecesful one thought " It -indicates the impression for the fox breeders who are finding which the Master had made' that the a lively export market in the United disciples burn : to ivies intheir crisis. States and in several of the European Had Jesus �n only a teacher ar. countries. philosopher, would they have leaked New Apples Receive Reeognition to him for help in an emergency like this? Varieties of apples originated at eV., 39-11. The result. The import - the Experimental. Perms received un- ant element here is Jesus' rebuke of usual recognition during the, past 1 his disciples' fears, "Why are you year. To a collection displayed by afraid like this?" He cried. "have the Horticultural Division at the In-/ you no faith yet?" Surely when they ternationat Horticultural Exhibitionwere all engaged in God's business at Paris there was awarded the ! they might have felt that they were in silver gilt medal diplonfu, The Gods`keepingi The words which fol - melba apple, a fine summer varietylow indicate hum deep was reli- IgKaris impresaien.made by rho inctheident. with quality as good as the Mclntosths The disciples are absolutely overawed, was given high recognition on both and their question, "What manner of sides of the Atlantic, The American man is thio?" shows that Jesus could Po.mologcal Society awarded it its not be explained by what merely ap- highest prize in the form of -the silver Peered lc the ego. The disciples were Wilder medal. At the International oontinueliy being driven rivenba k upon a Horticultural Exhibition at Brussels,' daeper, indeed, a upernat :al expla- in xp a . in Belgium, it was given the gold nation of hisperson, medal dploma, This variety Is one of Ih ,JE8U8 ;IND riIe 50510 OF MAN, the first of the Farms' production and `''1-19. Vs. 15-19. If in. the previous incident is now listed in nurser catalogues. s. Y g 7esu r i uo s showed that t ue 1'eli on tr g Relation of Winter Production to the faith .in God, was a mightier lrowcr Hatching. Quality of Eggs- than nature, in the incident which now An interesting investigation has follows he shows also that it is been made at the Ste, Anne de la niiglitierthan the Satanic forces which assail rho souls of men Tho cure of Pocetlere Experimental Station to as the Gerasene demoniac leas been de - certain whether hens with high win- ter scribed. The demoniac in question ex- hibited production or these with low win" hibited an :bate type of melancholic ter production produce the better eggs madness, riding a::p.eessien in homi- from the hatching point of view. In tidal' and suicidal frenzy. • ,All ordi- 1 Buy Good Gil Then Guatd It. The length ofiito of any tractar and automobile motor depends on n Mitre ber of factors, lucluding care p5 tits ' bearings and valves. But one of the very important prob. hems to be solved, 1s how to keep the . gasoline away from the oil, and vice versa, , One of the products of burning pf gasoline is water, and another is sul- furic acid. Water, in feet, is produced in large quantltlee, a gallon of -.rater to agalion of gasoline burned. Most of than is blown out the exhaust, but some of it is` bound' to get into the crank -ease, and 1f the platen rings at bedly, this leakage is serious. • Some of the water 1n the crank -case 10 expelled through the breather pipe when that part of the engine becomes hot enough to boil- the water off, If the engine crank -case is ventilated, it la claimed that more water has a chance to be thrown out, Sulfuric Acid Formed. Water condensed in the crank -case is likely to freeze in cold weather, and may even jam the o11 pump and on lines, tints preventing -lubrication on a cold morning, just when it is most. vitai. ' But there is another effect from the formation of water that is equally serious. Nearly all engine fuels con- tam omtale a little sulfur, and when the fuel burns, this eulfur passes through a chemical reaction with reeler, forming sulfurous acid and sulfuric acid. t With a good gasoline or lceeesene, i the amount of acid produced is not serious. On the other hand, a very. low-grade fuel may 'contain as muck as a third of one per cent. sulfur, This is enough to manufacture a pound of sulfuric acid from 15 gallons of case line. It is hardly necessary to explain what sulfuric acid does to metal sur- faces, All the more importent it Is, therefore, that the acid shall be kept above the piston rings, and, not get into the crank -case with the oil. ` Any- thing that keeps water out of the crank -case, or gets it out after it hes leaked in, also helps to get rid of sul tulle geld troubles. Purifiers and Filters. Cranlacase ventilation ciroukt .help; glee,a thermostatic control en, the . cooling system which will aid to heat the engine up quickly and hold it.at a proper operating temperature. 011 purifiers and filters have been developed recently. Prom all ac- counts, some of these devices have proved to be quite successful in keep- ing oil in the crank -cases of cars. trucks and' tractors lin 'good shape, over long ,periods of time. Some are supplied, as standard' equipment. Any garage man can install the devices. The oil rectifier has three very dis- tinct advantages: First, it materially . increases oil mileage; second, by keeping the motor oil in practically new viscous condition, it gives a Vety material increase to the life' of parte of the motor,' such as pistons, cylin- ders, wrist -pins, connecting rode and crankshaft bearings, insuring continu. ous smooth, powerful' operation; and third, by removing the water and re- sulting sulfuric acid from the crank- case, It eliminates the corrosion 'and etching of parts insicd the motor. In spite of these' measures, howovar, t is essential that oil in the crank - this particular experiment the eggs nary human methods of dealing with of low producing Rens proved to be the case had failed. To the nsan's own the better. It required an average ; frenzied imagination it appeared that of 3 of their eggs to produce one -wing that a whol.i legion of demons, that banded against 8.6 of the eggs of the • i is,' six thous, tt hod taken up their high producing hems. abode in hint. ';'e Pen themadman no longer driven about by the old night - Protein Feeds For Laying Pullets mare -like terrors, but sitting as a With the object of determining the disciple butat 1 Jesus' feet, no longer valve of skim milk, beef scrap and, naked, clothed, no longer mad, but self-possessed. It is a wonderful plc, P y . o the yes o the men wile followed people In the Dominion lo -day as to f meat as sources of protein for laying' Lure of what was daily ha -meaning be - conducted at the Ste, Anne de la, Jesus. The fact to notico ms that the g y g p p case be changed at regular intervals. A good grade of oil is better ableto withstand dilution and wear. It, will lie better able, also, to keep the pl;- tote rings fitting closely. immigration Regina Leader (Lib.): There 13 Practical unanimity among thinking Pocatiere Experimental Station. In ex -madman, az=dtteleiitauje:utconemuni, estimating the results of the experi-1 Cate fronsof reJesusligiousHe societytvihos isto nowfollow a meat, skim milk was valued at 4 djseiple . s cents a gallon, beef scrap at $4.75 per Jesus back to Galilee 3ike the others, 100 pounds, and the meat, In this case i but Jesus has other business for him. He sends him tie do the work of a horse flesh, at Scents a pound, The; disciple among his own heathen Irina. group of pullets fed skim milk laid ' folk and, fellow -countrymen: Imagine 1934 eggs at a cost o•f 3 cents per the impression which the telling of dozen, the beef scrap pen, 908 eggs, his simple story would make upon at 20% cents. :per dozen, and the these pagan folks! horse meat pen 717 eggs at 22 cents per dozen. (Issued by the Director of Publicity, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.) When pinning your faith to some leen it's advisable to use a safety pin. zine. Stop All the Gaps. A man should always keep his fences mended and not stop merely with clos- ing the gate,—Tho American Maga- " %iR SiDNEY, bib 'YOU 'J9e YOUR INFLoOnIc4 AT SCOTt.AND YARD TO Ger OGEE' PASS? RIGNTO: rt -to INSPCCrott AGI2e61, To PASS JEFF ot.0 DeAR tF Ne ANSWd((ep NALF`oF cyueSTlo t co2RCc.TLy: Q1JI32 1R2CGVLAR ttuT tie Intl' Cr AS A FAVOR (0.M4'e Muty: But JEFF tS So STIP1bi How MANY quOSTi9)4 Worse TitC-(00 114 Ttt6 E)(JV � `1'HG f f3SPGscTCC2• Aakcu .1GFF ONLy Two QuesTio 4ii he. FIRST clues -floe), WAS-- "wfiAT 1 S TttE, CAP1TAt `dF ENGLANbi'_ ANb 4C -FF. SID"N-vd Yot2k"-ulNlcN •utAs WRoNGt The Little Fellow Knows Less Than Nothingl, 11-1/46tu ttC AWSI<ctt - 1' wt\AT 1 S 'rile ' Cl1LeUMPtl2C-i1¢c- OF.'IjiMT3 WOI2�,U? ../AG DIDN'T FtNO ,) 't P SPFQ KNo'N ANb TAT F IN etGFir: So ,C --FF ‘or A flnARtc oet • fi l�l'il4i 11 wit ;dation, and in rho co-operation now going otf'ib%w4liiiiie :art I3n1Jl tl lj•a lest; apparent little if any racial prejudice. What is properly desired le that a policy of preferential British inti. granule shall be rigidly maintained, shutting the door only to foreign -born immigrants who, either incapable - of adopting Canadian ideals or unwilling to do so, cannot assimilated. Special . Kinds of Bricks Sand -lime bricks, cinder bricks, and cement blocks aro made at many points in Canada, bothin competition with ordinary clay bricks and pressed. bricks, and also for use in localities: where ordinary bmicktitaro not mail. able except at i•elati ly high cost. ` ; Ontario's Mineral Belt. The larger part of Ontario is-occu• Pled by the Laurentian plateau or "Precambrian Shield," will its typi- cal uneven, forest -covered rocky sur - taco, its iuntimertible lakes in rock bitable and its rivers breicou by ire, cher t:hIca:t13:1101nr 5014 f It to :in this urea teral ds,,,Dean r{ is ink;, - Iing plapldly; Uanl;ade, is Fifth 1 .Among the load producing aountt'ioe of the World, Canada now ranks fifth, her output being cl500cled by that of the Unitech States, Mexico, Spain, and AUstralla; in zinc, sixth,, with an out - Put a Utile smaller, than' :Franco ' and Germany, though only about one -teeth that-of'tho. T.lniterd' States,' trio world's groatoat'prod000r.: i -low to Read. React those things you can read with oda'. and digest atter reading and leave Other works to those who can bppreol4te them, ',pat was .Roos,• ply/ plan.--4jiprlcan 7viagazine,