Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 15 Aug 1918, p. 7

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KEEPING OF BOOKS CUTS FARM COSTS Conducted by Professor Henry G. Bell Tha objaet of this dapartirent It to plae* tt tha •a^ •l«a of our farm raadara tha advice of an aeknowladgad authority on all aubjtcta pertaining to aoila and crop» Address all questions to Professor Henry Q. Sell, la â- â- ^a of The Wilson Publiahing Company, Limited, Toronto, "â- d answera will appear In this column 'n the order In '•hich they are received. When writing kindly msntion this paper. As space Is limited it is advisable where immeJiate '•ply Is necessary that a stamped and addresse-1 envelope »• enclosed with the question, whqn the answer will bs •na/led direct. Not only does a farm record serve ings. A carefi.Ily kept, syiCema'tic aa a guide to better management, but farm reco'd i- t.h^' most important fac- , it al.so furnishes a very convenient tor in carr>-inx out these suggestions j way to make out income tax reports, to n prr.fitable end. , make up financial statement? in order Although most of the points touch- ' to secure loans, make out schedules of ed upon have been in relation to things i cost to present to commissions and of the business world off the farm, ! figure up costs of production in order records can be of equal v.ilue tn any to meet buyers inte"igently â€" all of farmer in connection with the manage- . which are ways of meeting the busi- ment on the farm. Many farmers ness world on it.s own platform. realize that there Is opportunity for The fact that the country is depend- improvement, but a lack of definite in- YOUR PROBLEMS Mother! and daughters of all ages ara cordially Invilad to write to *>^'' department Imtiala only wiM be puliiithea witn eacn ijuestion and ita answer The fall wheat harvest is showing ed, but the bacterial life of the soil ap some facts that should prove which is engaged in the one big oc- mighty interesting and intensely help- cupation of breaking down the soil so ful. On recent trips throughout it may dissolve in the soil waters and Western Ontario, and the Niagara ' become plantfood, is seriously im- Peninsula, we have seen several fields paired. If you can make a choice as •• a means of ideiitiflcatjon, but full name and address must be given in each letter. Write an one side of paper only. Answers will bo mailed direct '» lent "on 7tV agricuihireTaV been most foVmatiTn"'on\reVse^^^^^^^^^ "tamped and adareaaed enye.ope.s er.c.osed. , , „^. h.i.o Law 235 -.,,,,, .. , ,*. ,. . Address ail correspondence for td,* department to Mrs. Helen uaw. *•-» ^ forcefully brought home to us during terest, keep them from making and Wcoao.ne Ave.. Toionto. j the past year. Farmers are looked changes. At the present time, farm- .^__â€" ii~___ I upon as business men, and are to be er^ ail over the country are confront- Summer G:rl:-Lemon juice is the vour fiance also admires the beautiful j dealt with on busness terms. The ed with a shortage of farm labor. In best bleach for freckles. Ar.d al- present, farmer who has in the past followed many instances this could be met m though it doe< not alwavi completely .Mrs. S.:â€" A moderate amount of the development of the business world part by a more efficient use of the jfi^g ^y^^^ ^^^.^^._ j^ j^^; ^ ^^,^.j, ^^ ^^^^^ j^jj.^ ^^ orange juice diluted and adopted some form of accounts or labor actually available. can be done. Apply a cut lemon if w th boiled water may be given '.o a records is the one who has the least In many sections of the country it is y^u wish, instead of the juice, but do six-monrhs-old babv. -To a baby who trouble to bear at critical times. a common custom to use large un:ts ^y^â- ,^ faithfully every night If the is well nourished and thriving on The farmer often finds it necessary of Jiorse labor per man, om man driv- j^^^^ j^ ^ ,jjj,g ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^ mothers milk absolutely no other food to secure a short-time loan in order to ing three and four horses dn farm .m- ^j^ it ^ith a little glycerine. Vaseline .should be given but strained fresh carry on the regular farm business, plements, instead of only two, thus |g tj^g ^.^^y ^^^^ ^j^j^j^ ^^ ^^^ f^^j. ^jjg f^^jt juices until after the child is of good fall wheat, but many fields to the location of your wheat, be sure that show simply a reddish golden _ to favor the best drained field and if ^^ make desired changes. - The man saving the time of another man. Other growth 'of'the'eve'lashes" Tkn'ow'of we'aned'"" fring. around the outter edge, evi- possible obtain the shelter ot adjoin- ^^^ .^^^^ systematic records of h:s sections of equally large fields and ^^^^J.^^J^^^^^^^^^ GS /-The first submarine to cross business is much more likely to be giv- smooth ground are still using only ^^^ ^j^jg j^ ^Jip _\;[antic under its own power was en consideration by the bank than the the two-horse teams. Such instances , pmure Bride: â€" Custom requires not the Deutschland. The honor, so one who does not. Often farmers as these are entirely a matter of cus- j|,^j ji^^ wedding presents be sent to lar as we know, goes to no single ves- are refused credit by the banks be- torn. It behooves every man to ex- ^^^ ,3^..,^^ whether the scnder.s know sel. but is shared equally by ten sub- dence of the survival of but a small ing woods or hedges part of the faM wheat crop sown last \ More Ontario farmers than ever are autumn. As a rule the quality of the ' seeing the advantage of feeding the wheat that survived is good and those young wheat crop. If the seed bed that have, by good fortune or by good has been prepared sufficiently mellow management, been able to produce a so that the kernel is dropped at a fairly respectable crop are enthasia.-itic depth where the young plant can make on account of the big demand and the a strong root attachment, and tha relatively high pricoi? prevailing. Not crown of the growing plant can be a few farmers are discouraged after a slightly buried in the soil the success succession of bad seasons and the of the crop will depend to a large ex- usual question is recurring, ''Shall I tent on the plantfood available to it in sow vk-inter wheat this fall 7 Is it the early weeks and months of its worth while taking chances? Can igrowth. We have visited at least 40 anything be done to help Insure a ' wheat-growers within the last month j^^ buyer i- stand of thi.> grain that will survive where fertilizers have been used with proximately the '-nnning winter?" wheat. Mr. A. L. Hodgins, i -ar i^ ^v,„r >,„ r^s The winter wheat grower is faced London, writes us: "Regarding the with two classes of conditions. The ', value of fertilizers in increasing the first is the uncontrollable factor, â€" j yield of wheat, I would say that dur- weather. Undoubtedly the cold dry , ing the past season I consider the use cause the banker h-i-^ no ready mean.? amine conditions on his farm to see il 1,^,^ personally or not. .A. wedding marines built in the United States and to determine the standing of his pa- he is of this custom-bound class. Many : pj.g3gpj j^ ^g^,^^ g^j^j. ^^ ^.j^^ ijj.jjg. pyj together in Canada. They left tron, and the farmer is refused credit men have not come to realize this un-. gj-oom though he, of course, shares in MonCreal in July. 1915, and travelled for no other reason. The use of a til they have kept a record of their j^^ ^^^^ ^^^j ;^ ^ ^^^y j^^ ^^.^^ ^j,g^ under their own power at eight knot3 farm financial statement would soon ; labor throughout the year, and real- j(jj„tiy with the bride. The bride- without submerging. They were es- remedy this matter. â-  ize in a concrete way how much they ; groom should not acknowledge the corted by British cruisers. Often certain crops such as can- might have saved on this one 'actor pj.gggjj,3 jjy writing, though it would J. H.:â€" When making lemonade, try ning crops and sugar beets are grown alone. .be perfectly good f)rm for him to washing the fruit thoroughly, running on contracts, and the farmer must sell The distribution and efficiency of gpe^k of them to his friends at the it, rind and all, through the meat- his crop before he has produced itj.. farm labor is closely interrelated with ^vedding reception. Every present, chopper, letting it stand for fifteen mi- htrwever, should be acknowledged in nutes with sugar and a small quantity writing by the bride herself. It is a of water upon it, and «hen addir.g s in a position to know ap- the .systems of crop rotations. Each what the maximum price farmer can, by a little careful thought is that he can pay and still receive his and planning ahead, make his system ^^^j. .j^^^ courtesy requires of her. the amount of water necessary to fill proper profit for manufacturing the of rotation such that it not only prO". Write on small note paperâ€" preferably your glasses. This method gives the final product. But it is good busines.s duces crops economically by inaking „,onogramedâ€" a cordial note of appre- drink a real flavor which much so- on his part to buy as cheaply as pos- the best use of his labor, but it also ^i^tion of the gift and the - kind called lemonade lacks. .,..,,, , , â-  -, ^.,. , . , • ,1 * si^'e- that his profits may be larger, furnishes the proper amount of n^"'-, thought which accompanied it. If you .-Vnocher experiment which children winds that blew so vigorously early in of fertilizers has increased my yield at ^^ .^ i,y ^ ^^^^^^^^ f„^ ^^^ ishing roughage which can be fe.1 pro- ; ^^ve „ever met the person to whom seem to enjov on account of its -fizzi- the spring of 1918 destroyed much of ^ least lo bushels per acre. This man f^^^^,. ^^ ^„^^. ^^^^.^,y ^^.^^^ -^ j,^^ ^.^bly on the farm. ] ,^„ ^^ ^..j^i^.g ,^y that you are look- ness" is to add one-quarter teaspoon- the winter wheat that actual^ surviv- should know-, for he ha^ a thirty-acre ^^^^ ^^^ -^ ^^^^.-^^^ y^^^^ ,„ p,^^^.^ When one stops to consider the : j^^^.^^j J^^y^ '^^^^J^ ,^ „^^,i f^, ^j bicarbonate of soda to a tumbler ed winter condit:onj Speaking gen- field of the bes-t wheat in Ontario this ^j,^ ^,^^p_ ^„^^ ^^„^. ^.^^^ .^e maximum many ways that farm records can be .^ ^ ,,^^,.,^ ^^j^^^g., ^, ^^^ ^^^ t „j. ordinary lemonade, stir it vigor- era llj^Jhe^j^onti^l^ble^^^ pri,.e i, that he can accept and still useful in bringing about better man-;^;^^ ^„j ^^at you hope when you shall ously and drink it while it is effer- j profit by producing the crop. The agement. and thereby great profit in ^^^^.^ returned from your wedding trip vescing. This is not so sharp as margin between the cost of production farming, no one can afford not to use ^^^ ^,j j^^^.^ ^.^^ pleasure of receiving ordinary lemonade, and it is very ! and the maximum price the manufac- the few minutes required each day to '^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ y^^j. ^^^^^ homo as a soothing to a dry or irritated throat. I turer can pay will go to the man who keep a cereful account of his farm ^^^^^j welcome guest. Sign yourself If the acid element happens to be very THE FALL WHEAT QUESTION. shows the best business ability, and business, and receive the benefit ac- ! has facts upon which to base his deal- 1 corded by it. plantfood almost insures a good catch of clover and timothy when this is seeded with the wheat. It is g^od business for Ontario wheat-growers to pay attention as fully as possible to everything that will work toward successful gro\ving „^ „ „. , of the 1919 wheat crop. Successful! The Spelling Lesson. French, British. American and Canad- j I stood up to spell a very big word S/o/res ian wheat-growers will be those who , see that the soil is well prepared, well drained, and supplied with plenty of available plantfood. Quite sure it would come in a mi- ,nute; But when I was ready I could not think Of the letters that ought to be in it. "most cordially yours." .\lso in the stro'ng. it will require a trifle more bulk of the letter Wintion the faC. that soda t.i make it effervesce properly. pie â€" "Such a spirit and mode of life everj'-^vhere and always appeals to the masses; and it is to the populace of Jerusalem as a whole, as distinct from the official classes 1 the Sadducees and Scribes and leading Pharisees), that . reference is made." The Lord added ; to them day by day those that were ': saved â€" -Or "the Lord added day by ' day together such as were in the way jof salvation." This is the record of a record of a great evangelistic move- Working in the Church ment and is sometimes alluded to as the ideal condition of a Christian church, which is filled with zeal for the extension of the gospel. AcU 6. 2-4 INTERN.\TION.\L LESSON AUGUST 18. Lesson VII Acts 2 .41-47; 6. 2-4. Golden Test, Psa. 100. 4. Acts 2. 41-47 .\ Joke On Doris. It seemed to grow a great deal worse y^^.^^ ^j -j-j,^,^ ^.h^y that received Versc 1 speaks of the difficulty in To Doris every minute. \ his w-ord were baptized â€" His "word" the young church in Jerusalem arising I find chickens are not difficult to ; The ache, she said, with puckered face,! was that they should repent and be from the fact that the widows of some Was simply dreadful in it. How it Looked June 20, 1918. Centre drill row unfertilized. Rest of field fertilized at rate of 200 lbs. per acre. Farm of A. L. Hodgins, Ettrick, Ont. familiar to most wheat growers. In ; fertilized through the centre of tHe spite of the large element of chance ' field where in all probability he will weather conditions, there Is consider- ; harvest less than 10 bushels per acre, able inducement to farmers in wheat- ' The fertilized area will easily exceed growing territory to sow a few acres 25 bushels per acre. Mr. Jes«e this autumn. Indications ate that Cliraenhage from the Niagara Penin- wheat prices will equtil If not exceed, sula writes us: "I find that by using those of last year and the demand In fertilizers the plant grows strong in all probability will be maintained. , the fall and is in better position to Europe must have wheat and more; stand the cold and ice. Last fall we wheat! | left several .strips where fertilizers There are three things which stand , were not used and the wheat is not one out prominently that are responsible ! quarter as good." Mr. Harry Tufford for wheat success or failure. Many of Beamsville says: "I think that by a field that we visited showed a hard,' the use of fertilizers is the only rea- compact. and relatively lifeless soiW! sou that I secured a stand of wheat- In these lioys of such tremendous ' at all as it gave it quick growth at shortage of labor we hesitate to call the start so necessary in the short attention to such condition because it growing season of the fall of 1917." is largely the result of lack of thor- j xhe following expressions have been oughness in soil preparation, yet the ! (Corroborated bv nearly every good fact remains that if wheat is going to j^rower that we have visited. It is live over winter it must have suitable L^^t ^^^ intention to in anv way de- home conditions. Soil, where the ! prgoate the value of manuring the fall humus or organic matter is becoming ; .^^.^jg^j seed bed. - If manure is obtain- deplcted, will not form a ideal home 1 ^^le it adds an excellent supply of for wheat, because the soil particlesâ€" 1 organic matter and verv valuable if the soil tends to clay formationâ€" [ pi^^^f^^j Manure is weak, howt/er. herd and drive when I go about it right. T round them up by making a] wide circle around them, get them 1 You see, it happened when the door headed where I want them to go, keep ! Slammed shut on Doris' toe, the flock together, and move up on ; Only she did not ask at all them slowly, taking care not to get I Whether it hurt or no, them fussed up, and they will go] where I want them to. It takes. | Till she had nothing else to do however, a bit of patience and com- j But think of aches and pain: mon sense and it is another case where j And then it really seemed as if undue haste makes waste. 'Twould ne'er be well again. If I have a tlock of small chickens ! of any age that I want to drive into ; She nursed it and she petted it; the brooder or brood coop, I simply i She limped around â€" dear! stand at the far end of the coop and But when she went to bed she found teaching was Jou'^tless S'/en. to imitate the cry of a cock when he sees What seems most wondrous queer a hawk, or as near it as 1, can get. | This trick gets results at once, as the , For when the long black stocking chicks will hike for the coop. j Came off. there was the spot In case the distance is considerable. ' Of black and blue â€" but, shocking! "IV-as on the other foot! some may hunt other cover and lie | clo.se, but a low-voiced repetition of 1 the call ^vill usually start them honie'l in a hurry. Don't be too strenuous | about it; try to do it as does the ot>ck j or the mother hen and you'll be sur- , Some persons much more to .baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus of the Greek proselytes had been ne- unto the remission of their sins. They glected in the daily help given to the I not only heard the message but were needy and complaint reacheil the 'moved oy it to immediate action. The apostles. This resulted in a called ! baptism was the application of water meeting of the entire church to con- i as a svmbol of spiritual purification. It .«ider the matter. I was a" sign of ie new life which sep- Verse 2. It is not fit that we should arated them from their past ani! com- forsake the word of God. and serve mitted tliem to the Christian profes- tables â€" The business of ihe apostles Ision. .A.uout three thousand soul.* â€" was to preach and not to look after I These were added to the one hundred the temporal matters of the church. I and twenty of whom the church con- The jrrowing church required all their i sisted when the day began. time. Now some organization was ' 42. Continued stedfastiv in the apos- , necessary in order to promote har- . ties' teaching and fellowshipâ€" Further '"«">- among all clas-ses. , the 3. Look ye out .... seven men of newlv baptized. Much of this must ffood repon . . whom %ve may ap- - have" been about the life of him whom point over this business-They were they had accepted as their Lord and to be "full of the Spirit and of w,s- Christ. There was as vet no formula- Jom -spintually-mmded and dis- ;tion of any body of "doctrine." but ^'^^K^''\- f'^"" '* required much tact ! all the teaching must have been of the and tine temper to adust the difficul- i simplest character. They were thus ties :ikely to arise. They were to be \, ^T\ ..v i.„^„ ,.1, ,„ I .,f approved by God and man. The num- bound together in a ^'ot^'^''^ ;-^'^'» ^^ ber seven was no doubt fixed upon mutual help and encoiiragement The ^^^^_^^^^ ^^_^^ ^^,^^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^P^^^ breaking of .'i!;«'»^, ,^^^^,^^6 Prayer.-- „^^ blic busing in Jewish I Theearliest litleof the-conimunion was j^^^.^^^ "the breaking of bread." .\s we learn from the Corinthian church they were accustomed to come together for a common meal, at which was com- memorated the deatSi of the Lord. will become so completely settled that air circulation is bad. hence conditions for the life in the soil are not the best. Most of the Provinces have recently enjoyed gooii rains, hence lack of moisture will not likely be the bug- bear of wheat growing thi.s autumn. Summer-fallowed land should be disked and harrowed more thorough- ly than ever and gruund which is pro- ducing a nearly summer crop which can be harvested within the next few weeks should be carefully plowed a in available phosphoric acid, the kind of plantfood that causes the vigorous growth of wheat and induces the young crop to set firm and wide spreading roots. Furthermore it is not our intention to leave the impres- sion that wheat cannot be grown with- out the use of fertilizers, but it is obvious that ff the addition of 200 to 400 lbs. plantfood lo the acre will strengthen, the wheat crop so that it will stand a winter as bad as that prisetl to see how easily you can house . your chicks. ;. ! their horses than others, and get no We work it on every brood, and it more work done. Very often the „,^,,,^_^^^ always gets them in under cover when horses fed the heaviest are not work- .'.',pj^^"prj,\,prs" suggests that there were we want them there. Don't overdo it. ; od the hardest, and are not the fattest, ^.^rtain forms of prayer. Those were just for fun. or it will be like the old One man told recently of changing his partly new Christian prayers and story of the boy who cried "Wolf, way of feeding, and he found that he partly, doubtless. Psalms and wonted wolf" too often. ! got better results with a smaller ,Iew-ish prayers having reference es- There are a lot of other practical : amount of feed. ; pecially to the Messiah and his kmg- stunts that can be worked if one will ; Feed is so high-priced now that this I'om • ^ ^^^^ take the time to study poultry Ian- â-  man found by cutting the amount of â- â™¦''• ^j,,,^ \,.y„ders and signsâ€" Fear, guagc. 'he meaning of it. and then 'grain squarely i" two that his ^0''*«* ; ,'iread, whi'ch are wont to seize the ! imitate the calls. 1 have done as much field work as ever. ^j„j ^f, 3 great and wonderful, entire- .._â€"_* (and are in as gooil flesh as usual, ii^y m,gxppj.t(.d. occurrence The "won- rhe Voice that Counts. j His horses eat a little more hay than J^rs and signs" no doubt refer to the 4. We will continue stedfastiy in prayer, and in the ministry of the word â€" The minister, whose sole busi- ness is to preach the glorious message, and the spiritually-minded layman, full of the Spirit and wisdom, to hold up the minister's hands and take care of the temporalities of the church â€" this is the ideal New Testament ar- rangement. However, the minister is not to be a recluse in his cell but a man among men, that he may know ht»w to preach the Word so as to reach the needs of his community. "Oh, father, 1 wish I could sing:. Florence sang at the club to-day, and we all enjoyed it so much . She sings every night to her father, too. I'd give anything if I could, but there isn't ^ny music in me . "Is that so?" asker father, taking her wistful face between his hands. "Well, perhaps you can't sing, but , I of 1917 and the early p-.rt of 1918. and medium depth and then given thor- \ ^^ increase the vield of wheat from ©ugh preparation, disking, rolling and , j^^^ ^q j^ ^5 bushels per acre, it is . harrowing. The wheat plant «oes ( ^jj^j^y,^ ^.^ ^^^^^ ^l,.^ ^^^.^ .^ practice ' don't tell me your voice has no music best on a medium firm seed bed. while 1 j, ^^^ worlhV of the attention of' in it." for corn and potatoes on the other Qjj^^j,j^ ^^^^.^^.^j.^^^.^^ ^^^ ^,^^. present! "Why .father, how can you say so?" h«nd, a deep mellow seed bed is desir- j ^ij,^_ j "Almost every evening." answered ftble. The surface layer of tWbestj rjy^^ ^^^ ^,f fertilizers is especially father, "when l" come home, the first under the old plan of feeding. prophecy quoted by Peter in verses 17 There is such a thing as getting a 21 of this chapter. horse accustomed to eating an exorbi- 44. And all that be leved were to- . . .f,. .â-ºâ€¢ i-a,! Tiio nvoori»ni-i>d gelher, and had all things common -- tant quantity ot leed The expenenccd ^^^^^^ ^.^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^„ p^^^^^. horseman generally detects the s\mp- ^.^^^^ ^^.^^^ ^^,j f^,^ ^,^p common good tonis of overfeeding, but a man who ..^^^ ^^.^^.^ ^^^^ j^^j need." This cus- habitually feels and handles only his ^^,„, ^^-a," ,„>t borrowed from the out- o.vii horses in his own way may go on jji^g but arose naturally as a continu- for years with a method that is waste- ation and extension of the community ful or even actuallv injurious to the of goods which subsisted in the cn.-e , â-  ; of Jesus himself and his disciples. Probablv it is these differences of^ 4.'.. . .ContinuinK.steilfastb" wit^h^on- accord in the temple- tians -Th^ first Chi 13- wheat seed bed is relatively line. Thi.s ! ,^p^,j^„j ^^j^ y^^^ j^,,^ of thing I hear~is a merry laugh, and it Is always the result of careful and , ^^^ shortage of farm labor. It takes rests me. no matter how tired 1 am thorough working. If your wheat i j^^j ^^ ,„^,^.h i^bor t> prepare the YesleiMay 1 heard that voice saying. ' ' "'" '" "" "" â- ' ' -Don't cry. Buddie; sister'll mend it management that give some tiirmers -v^Yi-jid no't cease to be religious the reputation for contmuaUy having j^^^^ ^^^j, po„ti„ued to frequent *!ic bad luck. accidents, colic, and other ^^j^pi^ ^-^^ .^e customary prayers and trouble with their horses, while some ^U the aobservances of the ancitnt of their neighbors never .seem to have faith as far as consistent with alUgi- anv unfortunate incidents about their ance to Jesus. Breaking bread at Farmers who ehip their wool direct to us get better price* thaa fanners who acU to tha gsneral store. ASK ANY FARMER! who has sold his wool both ways, and note what ha â- artâ€" orj better still, write us for out prices ; they will ahow you how much yoa lose by selliag to tbc General Store. v.> pay the Mghe5t price* ot »nv 6 r m in lhecjuutry«n(l«r»tli«lMrsegiwool d;-«ler9 i:l Cnnadft. Pnvm.-u( Is t^ mittej Uia &iui« 4«y noyl U tctclve J. S'lip i!« T«ur wool to-dnrâ€" Toq wU be uior« t ha It pieA.ied If yl>u Jo, and ai-c a!*«\ir<sl of a sqtiitre ucai frou u». 'i H. V. ANDREWS 13 CHURCH ST, TORONTO th^t Is money poorly drained soil. Water-loggodj ^^^p, but ibe fellow that has .U) , daughttr hasn't a sweet voice soils simply means a seed bed where bushels pox acre feels a great deal the tiny kernel Is smothered. Not better than the one who harvests the only is the tiity wheat need smother- 15 bushels. Moreover, the added SMOljlE TUCKET 1^ "Character is a perfectly cduf.\tc.\ will."- N'ovalis. , , , , â-  the morrow and had only one end in w^iole surroundetl by i ,tjm, has beeK ^,j^^^, ^y,^^ ^^,0 faith of Christ should invented for shaking , insects ^'on^ be spread abroad as widely as pi'ssible. plants «.!'.d catching them. ; 47, Having favor with uU the o«o-i .' Tv COARSE; ^FOR •;ip^SjB?V;usiji

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