Flesherton Advance, 4 Jan 1917, p. 2

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D.'iiiiiy Dinhes. wu'n t:ice(l vcgot:ilnt'n unU .i.;ici')rit Dale Cak«'.â€" One poiiml dutos,' broth <o cover . Set it on top of rhe •toncvl and halved; one pouml Eni,'li.<h &tove, and as sot n as it begi'i.-. to !:im- THE SUNDAY SO! IM'EK N A'r(()NAI- LESSON . . JANUAttY 7. Lesson I. â€" Jesun The Life and Lif;iit uf .Menâ€" John 1. 1-18. (Jolden To.xtâ€" John \. 4. Ver.sc I. The Word- walniits, cut; three eggs, beaten well mer rut it in' o the even and cool; slow- Log^s h hc-vond any one Engli;-h John who uses the strongfest phrase] to >hvw th;il> lie v.'hi m h j i.9 alwuy.s de- ' juctinir tis the Veiy God, wa;; Very 1 ' Man like ourselves. Taiiernac'ed i (margin)â€" 'Ihe tynibolism of tie ta!)- â-  i ernaele is used by New Testamt-nt V. Titers to show that the Real Presence ; iroe.i iibout with men, li'ru the tent in | the wilderness of the wanderinga, | never limited to "holy" places or 1 thintjs. We beheldâ€" So 1 John 1. l.'< ' That the writer claims to be an ejj- I witn.sg is the central datum, without The Oreek whi.-h indeed tho psy The old Koman roads, which are con- togcther; one cup of granuiated sjgar and one cup flour. Bake in a shul ly for tn hour iin.l a half. CHsioi.aiiy with (he gravy. low pan in a alow oven and cut in small i-iiunres while hot. Prince of Wales ("ake.â€" Two a:id one-h.;:f cups granulaied sugar, three- tlje steak out on ii table or board and cut the fibers crossv/i -e with a .sharp thrt turkey Witb stoned oli'.e-' and serve with the gravy which choidd be slighl'y thic;?fned. Flank steak, poultry dressing, ba- quailc's cup shorter.ing (butter and con fat, stock .«aiice or ketchup. Spread lard ri;xe<i), or.e egg, two cups sour milk, I r.c large tja.spoonful soda (ilis- aoK"*'! in the sour milk), one teeispoon- ful cinnamon, one-i|Jarter teaspouiiful ging.'V, one-half titaspoonful allspice, one-quarter toaspoonful cloves, one teaspoonful cocua, flcur enough to make a :,tiff batter, one-half tea.-poon- fu! crci-m of t;ii tar added to the flour and, 'aUly, one cup hot raisins ua.'^to oc- wortT! it combines .speech and the rea- (iarni::n son thiil i)r<)iTipt.s it. "The wvrd of God" (personified in Rev. 111. 13) is generally th« go.spe). But while lojjos may nnenn a "sermon," it can al- so mean ".sen* nee": com;>aie "the- ology." The Erangcl-st tiikes up a jfreat term of Greek '•hi'o.soidiy, which in seckirf: for the ultimate element out of V liirh all tilings were made at ... -..el is unintelligible . An onlv bo- "^="^.?, *<*,*'^"' "^ '^^"/'•f improvement ;-tten from a father (mar.'rin)-Wh..n "/^*^. h.ghwa.vs of tins and otfier th-MC were two or more son.^. each ^"' i^^ries, are not brought into com- inhc.-:ted a portion: an only ^on in- f-'^onl'wau-^e they were s-nriply good hcritcd all. 7 he point here then --.s '"'"'«• ''"' 'â- '^"^'•â- '" ^'^'^^"^^ ^hey gave knife, being careful, however, not to last fo:ind it in Mi'v.l. Hut he is re- cut through tho entire thicknes:^ of the calling r.i Uist equally the J2wi:ih per- meat. Prop:fte a dressing such as would be used for roast veal or chick- en. Spread this over the meat, roll up and tie in shape with a string or tape. Brown lightly by cooking in a sonilication of the creativa Word of Gen. 1. Tho arthor of Prov. 8 pictures \ViKdr:m aj with liud at creation; and for Christ-an thought "Christ the Pow- er of Gi.'d and the Wisdom of God" more th.in fulfilled these highest ideals Trucks and Trailers. â- , do not attain maximum results in country running. If you employ a man to operate yffor truck, it might be well to have a governor placed on the engine in ordei that his speed may never be greater than twenty miles an hour. This is going to prevent ac- cidents that would inevitably occur to the truck if it wa.s operated at high maximum load. Invention. mow, are practical- past two years, brought into the closest and easiest They are built in two-wheel and four- communication, that a general pros- wheel types. Some of the two-whee) perity would inevitably accrue. Of models carry the load directly over the . course, they alwaj's had the idea of a.xle, but in the semi-trailer, the load war in the back-ground, and knew '^^ carried forward and rest partly upon that when armies could be transported the connecting rod between the trailer Relative Cost of Powfr Machinery readily, .success was always closest at «"d car. The good quality of tho trail- edge of Greek vernacular proves. Grace â€" Unmerited lovingki.adness. TWO WAYS OF CLEARING LAND. little hot fat â€" bacon fat would be good, of Jew nr.d Cientile alike. Tvo!f;h Night Cookies.â€" To make Then thicken the fat in which the meat 2. The apparent repetition is in- tha c i'elicious"co;;kics beat to a c'ream ^^"^ cooked with a tabIe.«poop.ful of tended to open what is re;illy a new a Ciipfn! and a half of sugar and ono f'Oi"" »"<' " tup and a half of water paragnirrli. scant ci!o.'ul of butter, add four eggs ""'• » ''tt'« stock sauce or ketchup and 3. Through himâ€" This preposition beater, light, a pinch of salt, the juice ^"â- '"iJ the meat to boiling point in this u.sur.lly marks tho action of tho Son, thickened gravy. Cook for ten min- the Fath^-r being the original Source, utef, so as to heat tho entire mass Without him â€" It is the same word as through to the center; then place in in John 15. 5, 'apart from me ye can the flreless cooker and cook from six do nothing." Read here, "Apart from to eight hours. j him not even ono thing came into he- ing. That which h;ith come into be- Househnld Hints. ing was life in him." Nota how often and grated rind of one lemon and a teaspoon of soda, one-half cup of boil- ing v.ater and flour to mix just stiff enough tor oil, but not too stiff. Roll, cut out iind bake in a hot oven; when cold, frost with white icing, and be- i fore it hardens decorate with small I I and E.vplosives. I V,'hen time is no object, the best â-  way to clear land from timber growth is to let nature and live stock assist. Uhen the growth is removed and the brufh burned otf clean, which, with pink candies arranged to form a star in the center. Date Loaf. â€" Take a breakfast cup- ful if flour, two ounces of butter, four ounces of sugar, one egg, half a Skimmed milk end cornbreud and butter are a nourishing lunch. Palms and feiiis should be kept away from draughts and gas. To enrich the soil on your flower pound of stoned dates and throe ounces beds, empty your tea and coffee of stoned raisins. Cream the butter grounds there. and sugar, add the beaten egtr and a quarter of a cupful of boiling water in which has been dissolved a quarter of a teaspoonful of carbonate of soda. Mix in tho flour, together with half a teaspoonful of baking powder, and lastly stir in the fruit, cup up small. Bake in a moderate oven in a well- grenscd loaf tin for one hour and a half, and when baked leave uncut for a day or two. Ratafia Biscuit.â€" Take half a pound of sweet almonds and half a pound of A few i.iinced dates added to fudge as it comes from the stove will make a novel and dainty confection. Blueberry cake cut in squares when hot and served with a strongly flavor- ed thin sauce makes a delicious pud- ding. A good dressing for fruit salad is made of a cup of whipped cream with two teaspoonfuls of French dressing added to it. When making an apple pie, sift a little flour over your apples before bitter almonds and pound them in a putting on the Vop'cTustTnd the" juke mortar, very fine, with whites of eggs; vvill not cook out life nppear.s where we might expect alive: the self-prop;igating quality of ping with one object, but passing it- self on. It is rather attractive to con- nect in him with the preceiling verb, and understand that "all which has been horn in him" has this great qual- ity of life. The lightâ€" Life and Light are the two great words of this Gospel, and th? Kpi.stlo which accompanies it: they meet in Love, which is the es- sence of God. 5. Overcome (marj^in) â€" The same phrase in John 12. 3."), "lest darkness overtake you": what possessed our tran.slators to take the other sense of the verb here, and what the meaning may be, nre mysteries. Darkness may "overcome" us, but never the Light, which is eternal. hand. The paramount though, never- er, and they are made from % ton to theless, was easy access to outlying '-ton capacity, is that they allow the districts. This being true, there is pleasure car, by drawing them, to now no doubt that a further step is carry a full complement of passengers being taken by progressive farmers "'"^ ''^ '""s^ from bruises and scratches in the purchase and maintenance of incident to the actual handling of trucks and trailers, in order that the freight. It can be stated, in a gen- njoiit growths, may be made a profit- ,^5^ of transportation may be brought eral way, that if a trailer is attacked able operation by the sale of the tim- ,10^,.^ to a minim'.:m. A good road is to a truck, it will draw about the same bcr and firewood, clover and grass a!„,ays a well-travelled one. no matter 'oa<l as it carries itself between the seed may be sown, and, while cattle ^.^^^^ ^.^^^^ ^f vehicular traffic is popu- capacity of one ton to five tons, but lar. but if in Canada wo can combine ""any trucks of less than one ton cap- good roads with minimum transporta- acity, will draw a trailer with a heav- , tion charges, we have gone a long way '*'" load. Passenger cars are a differ- tov.-nrds a money-making era such as ^"t proposition, but it will be very i easy for you to determine just what ! sized trailer a passenger car can but three pounds of powdered sugar, mix it well with the whites of the eggs to the proper thickness in a basin; put two or three sheets of paper on the to the Truth. plate you bake on; take your knife and ter, keep them in small pots all sum- â-  ^ares that he was born and came spaddle, made of wood, and drop them mer. When you take them into the ^^^ ^^â- "'â- ''' "^''t he might "bear wit on the paper; let them bo round and . .. ~ about the size of a nutmeg; put them in the oven, which must be quick, and let them have a fine brown and all and sheep are pasturing and eating down the sprouts, the stumps will slowly but surely decay, and their removal becomes an easy operation. life is always in thought, never stonl J^'' ""-"cess will require from si.x to n^^^r yet has'b^en'enjoVd." ten years before clearing can be com- ., ^ ~, , „i..(„^ I Motor Trucks. < . „ ^ ^- ,.^ , Piew- HT t 1 handle by experimenting a little on At the Experimental Station. Fred- Motor trucks are being used, at the the road. It is folly, of course, to ericton, N.B., where it was desired to present time, by many farmers engag- ,iraw a trailer with a load that i.s'too bring the land into cultivation at the <^^ '" the fruit, dairy, creamery, cheese heavy for the car, as damage, through earliest possible moment, two plans aj'-'i. allictl industries. Sometimes strain, may resuts to the mechanism of stump removal have been tried, and these trucks are purchased new, direct of the automobile. There are a few herewith are given figures of the rela- f''"^ the manufacturers or their points regarding the trailer proposi- tive cost on lard from which an aver- agents,^ at priojs ranging all the way tion that are worthy of your attention. ag'» tree growth had been removed. fj"""" $"^0 to $5,000, but in most cases On muddy, slippery and sandv roads The two methods employed were: the machines are either purchased an automobile must, of necessity, re-" Ftump pulling by power, and removal second hand, after having been replac- duce its speed greatly when drawing a by d.vnamite. ed by new ones in city work, or a pas- trailer. The reduction on good A stump puller of the drum and senger automobile is torn down and a roads can be safely estimated at about long lever typo was employed, giving truck body placed upon the chassis. 15 per cent. You must remember, a lifting power of 2ri tons with an Both systems find many advocates, however, that a pas.=:enger car hauling ordinary team. With one hundred and both bring varying degrees cf sat- a trailer, and so lessening its speed, and twenty stumps, 10 inches and isfaction. If you have never used a will nevertheless deliver twice the over, to the acre, and seventy-two truck, it might be well to go slowly at quantity of goods that might otherwise *"- traaller stumps, it required an aver- fi'st, but the system that we suggest be expecte<l without the trailer. Trail- ,.•.,. , ».T ^ "ff of twenty minutes with a team would be the purchase of an old pas- ers are attached to passeuger ears thesiikcof which John was born. Note 3^,, ^^iver and two men to remove senger car with an obsolete body but through a drawbar which in turn is that in this case the Fore-runner was p^j.,, ^f ^^^^ ly^ge stumps and .'> min- an engine of standard make and like his Lord, who in John 18. 37 de- " â-  6. These three verses prepare for The oil left from sardines is a Rood y^^''^ .'['-^^^^'f J.^P"J^^°/ *;*'^ ,^J_'^**^,^';^ age of tvvent'y" minutes with'a team would be the purchase of an olTp substitute for butter in fishballs or "" " " ~ " any kind of minced fi.>h ? To have blooming geranium.-i in win into m attached to buffer springs that take utes to remove each of the smaller satisfactory running condition. You up jolts and vibration. There is one ali'je; \pt them be cold before you take them I IT the paper. Sponge Fingers. â€" Use five eggs, their weight in powdered sugar; half lemon juice are scjueezed over them just before the crust is put on. Charcoal is a cleansing; agent in the kitchen. A lump of charcoal put in their weight in flour and the grated any jar keeps the contents sweet and the light (compare again John 18. 37) ones. The 120 stumps required 40 can either remove the body intact and other point that we must emphasize, "•r"' hours, and the smaller ones G hours, place a new truck body on the frame and that is the case with which trail- And lie to whom John ^(,0 relative cost, therefore, stood or pursue the simpler method of tak- ers can be K'ule<l If you have a •bore witness' is himself the Truth. „s follows: Where power machinery ing ofl^ the rear seat and building a great deal of hauling to do, and caa- platf orm instead . This will leave the not see your way clear to invest in a front scat for the driver and passeng- truck, it may pay you very well to er. Such a step should provide a purcha.se two trailers, one of whi'h '•"'^'' °^ ^'"'" ^'^^^ ^° ^'^''" ""• '^"''"" """^ ^ '" *^® proceiss of loading whil 10 80 "^y ^"'" ''â- '"" ^^'^^ ^P- There are a your passenger automobile is deliv great many arguments in favor of Ing the other to any destination. Iron house in the fall do r\ot re-pot them. When making apple pic- the flavor 's , . . much improved and tho apided will *'• The negative pomts to the strong „,,„ ,,,5,,^ ^o.st per acre was: , keep in goud color if a few drops of ""*' "'Peatcd disclaimers of John, who 45 liour» work, leiim and (irher even long after his death was still be- at ,12o | ,. 1 » I I .u «f • 1 / * i. -'S iiMurs wiirk. hf»lp<»rs nt Ixc. . lievod to have been the Messiah (Acts 330 honra w..rk. ck-anlnK and pll- 19.3). I iHR Ut ISO 9. Coming into the world refor.s to " """"" "'"â- ''• ''""""« "' '*••••â- . H 72 16 bi rind of half a lemon. Set the flour, purified, for the charcoal absorbs un- beat the egg yolks and sugar until plca.sant odors and impurities. A stift' and frothing. This takes about lump' on each .shelf of the icebox is 20 minutes. Beat the whites to a al.so useful. stiff froth and adrl to the yolks and Crack* in Plasterâ€" .'K good filling is sugar a little at a time, sprinkling in plaster of paris mixed with vinegar, the flour alternately. Mix well, add which will not set for twenty or thirty the lemon rind or a lea ipoonful of any minutes, while water will set very preferred flavoring and put into the quickly, often before you can use it. tins, which should be The universality of the Light is here expressed most strikingly. Every hu- i''" iii». stumpinR powi'cr at 111.90 Wh.-rp e^^piosivM were used, thl'lott Jf"'"'' *"'*''' ''"* "'* believe that the tires are used on "trailers where the p.-i n.re w.-i.«: farmer wiU find that the pneumatic g.^ods to be transported are in no sense , . , ,. , ., 160 11,8. stuiiipiiiir powder' 'at \ i're^ srive greater satisfaction, as fragile, but if your product is subject man bemg has some glimmer of the ti4 nn i-onuci »<• |l . . i, tonrlon,-,. fr. «,,», » v? 1 : • 1 1 I .1, 4. I • 1. ^1. rA(, f *}, ••.'i;, ♦-; ii ^ "°^ nave a tendency to com- to breakage, m going over bumps and md that Light is the !iOO feet fuHe at 6O0 30" â- ...-j.. -...•.a> _• » * . • "^ ' -^ , 3ii0 pnps at $1 3 40 iKiur.H laliiif of dynamite op- 4n ho""!"!^.."..'! a'nd ,iri>'eV aVsic 12 80 '"''^*' ^"''^'â- '' ^^^ pavements and roads with your requirements.â€" Auto in ^0 hours, hvipirs at i.Sc 14 40 "re very smooth and even, but they Farmer's Advocate en ImurB, lahiM' pilini? at ISp.... 10 10 True Light, Word. 10. lie wasâ€" The masculine pronoun in this verse comes in to tell us that' the Light, like the Word, is no ab-[ stractlon. but a Person. Moreover, he was in the world: the statement that' o« municate stiff jars and jolts to the rutty places, hard or pneumatic ruL., motor. Hard truck tiros are econo- ber tires must be used in accordance '[â-  oil >r bu 20 40 huurs. luljur burning at ISc »82 75 On other areas, where there were prepared by The putty-like mass must be pushed .... greasing with a blend of flour and into the cracks and can be smoothed ''" 7' "'">'"K.'"to it does not mean u„„,,..,. „„ , ,„,,„ ,_ , ,. butter and then dusting with powder- off evenly with a table knife. ; ^h^t he then visited >t for the first time '"^^ -^""'''-^^^^ ""'' ^"'f ll"";^' ^^' ed sugar. When the tins are filled To dean irons rub them on brown ' :'' ';; " "^i^. »"'> f^l'V"- "manifestation co. t of clearing ran up to »18b per with the mixture sift a little sugar paper over which powdered bath ''^ "that wh„l, was from tho begin- acre^ ^^^.le, ^^ here the land was free over the top and bake in a moderate brick has been .sprinkled, and if they "'"«; ,'^".''''' ^â„¢ n°tâ€" There are two ^rom stone, and stumps oven. become rusty, rubbinj? them with ^"'''''' ^"'" !'""'''• »"'' ^"'" '''''''"? ''"T'" Whistles.â€" Half a pound white emery powder and a little paraffin wilL '"'*'''; <"^ '" -.^'"V ,' • '->â-  the other BUgar. (Quarter of a pound of butter put them right. But Ubie salt' '"'' "'"'^' ""'' '" '*"''• •^- '"' '^""" ^'^• and six eggs, the whites anrl yolks sprinkled on several thicknesses of (sic) beaten separately. .Stir the strong paper, over which you work sugar and butter to a cream, then add the heated iron is ju.st a.s gocnl as any- the eggs previously beaten, and lifted thing, flour to make a thick batter; flavor. To Freshen (iilt FramcH.â€" Dust gilt ;!) for getting it. The world could not be blamc^d for ignorance; its con- dcmnation was that it would not re- cognize its Maker. 11. His ownâ€" Compare the parable were small and comparatively few. the land was made ready for the plough at a cost of less than $40 per acre. ,5^ THREE MILLION TIES. â- Poultry ^S^ feathers can be removed easily if, after killing, the body of the goose is dipped three times in water- is almost at the boiling point, dipping it slowly in and out each time, and then wrapping it in canvas or closely woven cloth to keen in the steam. In a minute or two this will loo.sen the feathers so that they will come out easily. MOBILIZING MAN POWER "Fertile eggs cost the fawner $15,- 000,000 a year." This statement is made in Farmers' Bulletin 528, Hints For Railways in Rear of Fighting to Poultry Raisers, published by The Line, C. N. R. Share. United States Department of Agri-j ^hat Britain Will Do To Utilize Al culture. The bulletin states further: c • a •, t, „,,„.„„ ,„„ .„...„. ....._.„.. ,^'cc-PreHidcnt D. B. Ilanna, of the "Farmers lose $45,000,000 annually! Service Available. buttered paper. The mixture .should whites of three eggs. Where scratch- j and the Kvangelist's almost invariable ^ana'l'an Northern Railway, in dis- from bad methods of producing and The London Daily Chronicle giv, be dropped several inches apart and cd, patch up with eold miint. To , "^e of "the Jews" as a name for the â„¢f,**.'."^_ L " ^ ,,*;,' '"^,'"? "^.. * handling eggs. One-third of this loss prominence to an article which with rosewater, if you like. Drop the frames carefully, then wash with one "f the wicked huslianiimen. As a na- mixturc by the large spoonful onto ounce of soda beaten up with the | tion, the Jews rejected their Messiah,' stick while warm High Price for Stamp. The highest price lately paid for a first for these true Israelites who could rccDgni/.e and preach their King. 12. As many as -"They called them- selves, both Jews and (Jrecks" (1 Cor. I. 24). The right, or privilege, to be- come children -For tho natural son- ship (Luke ti. 3S) had been forfeited When cold fill In this boil four or five onions or a them with any kind of jelly that ia quantity of garlic. Strain off the *"'c''j ! liquid, and wash the tjilding with a Cake Without Eggs.â€" Boil 1 cup soft brush. When dry it will look raisins in cup wjiter for 10 minutes, like new work. then cool. Add 1 cup brown sugar, i *â€" 2 of flour, 1 tea:ipoonful soda in cup of water, '4 teaspoonful cloves, I tea-i spoon cinnamon, pinch salt, 2 table- j spoons shortening; mix. Hake one postage stamp was $il7t), a sum given hour in moderate oven. Modes good- at a Now York auction thu other j fr part of this. His namfr- Or re- sized loaf. Is delicious for dessert, day for a five-cent Hawaiian mission- volation of himself. A man was steamed \Yith .sauce. | ary stamp of the issue of ISfil. When never a mere label, as with us: it was Meat Souffle. Melt one-third cup- tho early missionaries went from New , a part of the personality and express- a second birth must restore it, and on ""'"^'"y *'ctwecn Sudbury and a higher plane. Believe onâ€" Trust ^""i,!'"'"- in: intellectual acceptance is the small- ! ^"^ prospect ful of biitt»<r in saucepan; add tablespoonfuls flour, and when thor oughly blended ad<l gradually, while •tirring constantly, two cupfuls of â- cabled milk; bring to boiling point, and arid one teaspoonful salt, one- •ighth teaspoonful pepper and one- half cupful of soft, stale bread crumbs, and cook two minutes. Remove fiom fire, add two cupfuls of finely chop- ped, cold cooked meat, yolks of three eggs well beaten, and one tablespoon- ful finely chopped parsley; then fold' in whites of three eggs beaten until j •tiff. Turn Into a buttered pudding dllh and bake 35 minutes in a -tlow oven. Braised Turkey ia aa fine as a roaste<i one. Truss and stuff a tur- key, tlie same as for roasting, using H force-meat made of minced chicken, mushroomn and sweetbreads, la addi- tion to tlv^ breaJj lard the breast; with line sijoare ihreds of fat salt poik; jiUtrf the tarkey In « stewpan, two England to Hawaii they looked ahead to many things, but hardly to tho sale of their postage stamps at prices higher than their salaries for a year. Japanese Make Dyes. ed character. The name of the I..ord Josus Christ ia a complete Creed in it- self, implying everything vital in our religion. II!. Who were begotten â€" An inter- esting ancient reading is who was be- The quick-wittcl Japanese do not f,"""."' '"^P'-Ving the miraculous birth, intend to he caught i>y another dye I ""' '* •"«"""' *'" '^^^^^' "' '^ would Under the pntronaijo of th famine. (Jnvernment a four-niillion-dollar company has been organized to mnn; ufacture Hynlhetic dyes, says the Cincinnati Tifhes-Star. Japanese de never have disappeared . John is here anticipating 3. >'!-(). Those whom tho Lord was "not ashamed to call his brother.s" must be born, like him, of (!od. John's silence about the mys- spatches state that such has been j ^"''y^V!?* V'''n ""''**'!'' '''''^ *^rpT the financial rohabilitutlon of that '^'''ft T l7 l^. "''^ c'^t- T doctrine of the Eternal Sonship has eclipsed any question of the manner of country that the slock for this dye company has been over-.subscribed several hundred per cent. Dry, All Right. "You came from a dry town, didn't youT" "Dry? Why, they won't even allow the carp«nterR t« use spirit levela." the Incarnation 14. Fleshâ€" Paul uses this tern\ of humanity as It ia; John goes back to Creation, when It was "very gfood," like all God's work. Hence when Paul declares the Incarnation, ho says that God sent "his own Son in the likeness of iinful flesh" (Rom. 8. 8). It ia supplied from the territory surveyed ing higher. ' Therefore, be sure that ages of seventeen" :u , j] T ^"'â- t''*^':" Railway the fowls get plenty of a variety of wanted. Thny ..„.,^ pu.„ th»m,. Iv», I \°L Y^ Superior. It is ex- food so that they will have the mater- ! at the disposal of the State fo^'tnl '' rooted that the operations now under ial of which to make eggs. I duration of the war and consent to be way on behalf of the CN.R. will re- Plenty of good yellow corn, fed transferred to occupations or localities suit in the production of a substantial twice or three times a day, all they whw?re their services ar- mo^t requlr local tonnage through that stretch of will eat each time, will make the ed ir. tlu interest of the country. -â-  Port geese nice and fat for the market, j The full trade union rate of wages ,..,,. I Make sure that the glass in the for skilled or un.skilled work, as the of building up of henhouse windows is clean so that tho case may be, will be paid to war owns and traffic in what was un- sun's rays can fill the building, dry it workers and in addition to this pav tamed wilderness five years ago is out, warm it and make it more health- a subsistence allowance at the rata now consKlered very promising. Apro- ful by destroying disease germs. ; of 2s. Cd. (sixty-two cents) a day for pos of the P'-escMt scarcity of paper,! k jt has not been done, be sure that seven days of the week will bft paid u u" if . .u- '" ,. '•ot'ntry the hen-house roof is water-tight and to men who. owing to the systeiii hiough which this new line runs ' the sides windproof so that the house transfer, will be under the ne| " here is sumciont of the raw material „,„ be kept dry and the fowls pro- of maintaining two homes, to satisfy even the hungry press of a tccted from drafts, especially when on | There is to be a register n metropolitan paper for more than two; the roosts at night. i locality, of war. industrial or t| hundred years. fru • « ,• , ' •.• • \ i.- 1. o 1. ivti, tv. n • • . ^ There is no economy in feedmg hens tive requirements, which, of cl iiM H ^'â- Â°^''"'^'*' f^°^''''-n'"e"t' less than they need, or in feeding on ^vill vary fr.,, time to fm] said Mr Hanna, the Canadian North- ; only one or two grains or kinds of schedule of indispensable and ern will undertake to locate sett'crs f^ed. A variety and plentv of it. is o.^sentiul trades is to be drawn upJ toitile agricultural lands necessary to keep the fowls in good Non-essential industries will be shu? condition and provide the material , down without compunction, from which to make eggs. I To stimulate the mobility of Ubj The most important thing in rearing i» nearly as imnortant as to add young ducks is the drinking water. It the quantity of labor. It is estiinal must be kept in vessels in which they that at any given time 40 per ct^n^ can put only their heads. Plea-se of the men engaged on war work note that it is imperative that they , Britain are either idle or not occuij should submerge the whole head in to their full capacity owing to water; otherwise the two holes at the lack of mobility. In order to red base of the bill, through which they the housing difflcidty to a mihim^ breathe, will get filled up with mash power will be taken to billet in these abounding in mineral and timber wealth. The railway alone will pur- chase all the railway tics produced each year. Marriage may be a lottery, but a whole lot of people seem to be sat- isfietl with less than capital prizes. An elephant has more muscles in its trunk than any other creature pos- sesses in its entire body. The trouble with temptation is that il always makes work seem more dU- agreeable than it is and pleasure more alluring. foor or mud and the poor little crea- tures win be half suffocated, grrow aick and die. All the Kinga of Prussia hav» When killing geese for market, the called Fredarlcfi or WilUo'v workers in private houses, ^

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