Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Aug 1915, p. 12

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1915. the Horse Several men awaited their turns in the barber shop of a small town. Three barbers weip at work. A neat- ly dressed, clen-faced, glossy-haired young man stepped spryly to his place in one of the chairs and asked «for a hair-cut. His hair was al- "ready quite short. The barber went carefully over his head with - the clippers. and scissors, then dampén- ed hig hair slightly and all over it again, 'taking off just a little here and there. During the time he worked on that one patron his com- panions had each finished with two, but with his next man he made as short work as they. Noticing the extreme care given to thé work on this one man, a wait- ing patron asked about it when his turn came. In reply he was assur- ed that the favored one never paid more than the regular fee, nor com- plained about the quality of work, «wut he always came in for a hair-cut with his hair looking so fine that it took good work to improve it, and Iils général appearance = required a first-class hair-cut to match it, was not for pay, but for the fitness of things, that the barber bestowed his extra efforfs. The men who came in with long tangled hair and dress- ed as though that were good enough were greatly improved in appearance by a rough and hasty hair-cut. The work was suited to the man. Grooms likewise unconsciously suit their work to the horse. It is seldom that a very inferior horse is seen with a shining coat, mane and tail combed out and harness polish- ed. A man naturally feels that such a horse is. scarcely worth so much effort, It will not make a good appearance anyway; on the ot- her hand most men will gladly put forth extra effort and time cleaning up a good Horse and shining his har- ness. So good horses are usually well groomed whether their owners demand it or not. Herein lies a substantial reason for keeping high-class mares for farm work. It is easier to get them cared for properly, and it-is also easier to secure hired hands who ap- preciate good horses. And the man who takes pride in a horse is usually a better general farm hand than the one who does not. This -is why faithful horsemen and well groomed teams are usually found on farms where well-bred horses - are kept: The grooming is suited to the horse. ---Prairie Farm and Home. at AAA Atl tPA A AAP AM PAPA AAA Dairyman's Responsibility. The dairy farmer, the producer of milk and cream, controls the quality and price of butter. If he furnish es cream of good quality he makes possible the manufacture of good butter, which will command the highest®price on the market. If he supplies cream of inferior quality, a low grade butter is bound to be made from it, which means small re- turns for the product. The dairy farmer is the controll- ing power which determines the des- tiny of the dairy industry. The care he gives the cream on the farm determines =the financial returns from the butter, and, in turn, the re- turns from the butter determine the prosperity of the -dairy farmer, be- cause.the price the creamery pays for butterfat is necessarily largely re- gulated by the price the butter brings on the market. Lack of proper care of milk and cream on the farm and the resulting poor quality of cream, therefore, will augment the depression of the butter market and stimulate the sale of foreign butter and butter substi- tutes, causing low prices to the ¢rea- mery and small returns to the farm- er. These unsatisfactory conditions can be overcome by proper attention to the quality of the cream on the farm.~Prairie, Farm and Home. Rape is one of the most valuation food or sheep. It produces rape gains, both in growing and fatten- ing stock. Sow it in drills up to as late as the end of July. Besides an excellent sheep food it is a great smother crop. [ISWENE | Clemency Carter gazed with dreary eyes from the window into the rain, which had fallen four days. All along the street the houses look- ed closed and lonely. No one was stirring about . Upstairs her mo- ther was lying down with a head- ache. The house was still, and Cle- mency could neither endure it or her- self, She was struggling with her first unhappiness. It was the kind of unhappiness, moreover, that was bound, she felt, to last her life long, She had not known at once that Hugh Driscoll was the one man in the world for her; that certainly had come to her slowly. She had been almost afraid of him at first, he was 80 dark and grave and mature, dif- ferent from any man she had known. He had come to help his cousin, Lus- ius Winn, in some difficult piece of law business, and as the Winns were neighbors and friends Clemency had seen much of him. So the story of -her romance was 'told until just as "it seemed about to reach the point "where they lived happy ever after." Hugh finished his work and went away. That was three months ago and Clemency had since "heard no word of him. She had avoided the Winns and his name in a desperate attempt to act unconcerned, but her heart ached cruelly. 'She could think of nothing but him day and night. ' She was thinking of him now as looked out at the rain. "He gone and he will never come back to me." FEE Preservation Of Eggs. Preserveyp only absolutely fresh eggs; stale eggs will not keep in any preservative. Have your preservative ready to receive the fresh eggs as you get them. If you are in doubt as to the freshness of the eggs, candle them, or see whether they sink when plac- in a dish of fresh water. If an egg sinks, it is reasonably fresh., Do not preserve dirty eggs or eggs that have been washed. Wash- ed 'eggs will not keep because the shell has been moistened; and dirty eggs will become tainted in flavor. Do not use the same liquid pre- servative more than one year. Do not leave eggs in the preserva- tive longer than one year. Rinse the eggs with water, after removing them from the preserva- tive, Eggs that are in good condition when removed from water glass so- lution will usually retain good for two weeks. Water glass eggs are practically as good as fresh eggs for all cooking purposes. If it is desired to boil them, prick a small hole through the large end of the shell before placing them in the water. . The 'pores of the shell havo been sealed by the wa- ter glass solution, and without the pinhole the expanding air within the shell would burst it. ------------ Wash the separator twice a day, see that your hands are clean, and brush. down the udder of the cow, are some of the best methods of pro- ducing good cream. up my life to it? Other people don't do that. There is Miss Stafford. The day she became engaged her lover went to war and she never saw him again. He was reported missing. That is all she ever knew. Her hair turned white that first year, but that is all anybody has ever known of what she passed through, No one ever saw her cry, but she is still Miss Stafford. She has made her life worth while, I just feel 'that I must see her to-day. I believe I'll go over there." Half an hour after she was lifting the old brass knocker upon the door of a tiny white house with"a latticed- portico. Miss Stafford came to the door. She was a slender old woman, with snowy hair and a sweet disposi- tion. Fifty years before when her soldier went marching away she had been fresh and young and pretty. "Why, Clemency!" she cried in surprise, "My dear child! Come in. I'm glad to seen you," She kissed Clement¢y and then drew her into the siting room. Clemency started back at the sight of a wrap thrown over a chair and an umbrella leaning beside it. "You were just going out, Miss Staf- ord." : "Well, what of it? I can post- pone my errands for a while, It is nothing pressing, my dear---just my usual rounds--old Mrs. Tribble, Aunt Polly Weaver, poor little June White, Miss Talbot and the rest, you know." 3 "lI wouldn't keep you from them for the world," Clemency said, ear- nestly. "They need you more than 1 do upon.such a day." . "Ge with me, then," Miss Stafford Said, smiling. "The sight of you will do them good. And you can help me carry my "I will," consented Clenieney.. ; They set forth .in the rain. - ency carried a few flowers, a glass of Jelly, and a box of , and Miss Seis peta hop ary Jaden. The Mrs, Tribble, dirty, hopeless, miser- Clemency : g a i Ef ii] There is hardly a worse weed than the Canada thistle, once it' is well set in. the soil, and recently we learn that it will grow luxuriantly on lands in the corn belt, once thought to be immune to Canada, thistles, says Breeder's Gazette. The fact ig, the seeds are in some neigh- borhnods just getting disseminated. If one finds a few thistles on his land he should dig them up with all possible care to get all the roots, burning, of course, the tops. There is a good deal of evidence of alfaifa's ability to eradicate Can- ada thistles, "The way it is accom- plished is to get a good #eedbed and in it a rather thick set of alfalfa. This alfalfa should be well: fertiliz- ed to stimulate it as much as pos- sible, At first the thistles will come up with the alfalfa, but the clippings that are given from time to time, and the competition of the al- falfa's roots, finally destroy the this- ties. Usually two years are needed for this eradication. Naturally one must tear out and destroy as many thistie roots as possible in making his seedbed. Doubtless in regions where summer seeding is practicable 4haf will be found the best season to accomplish this work. Fifty thousand- head of cattle, consisting of yeung females and stockers, it is stated, are going ta be shipped to France before the end of October for restocking the farms of that country. | Kingston, August 7. Meats. local carcases, hinds, 1b. .. Beef, cuts, 1b.... Beef, western, by carcase, 1h. _ ... Hogs, live, ewt. .. Eogs, dressed, 1b. . .. Lamb, spring, by carcase, 1b. .... Mutton, 1b. ...... Veal,by carcase, 1b. Veal by qtr., 1b. Fish. Bloaters, doz. .... Cod, steak, 1b. ... Eels, 1b. nN Haddock, fresh, 1b. Haltbut, fresu, 1b. Haddock, frozen, 1b Herring, fresh salt water, doz. ... Kippers, dos. ... Mackerel Plckerel. Perch, 1b. Pike, Ih. Rock-fish, Ib. ... Beef, 1 11 13 15 12 14 25 14 950 14 18 13 10 14 Beef, 13 40 12% 10 12% 20 1b. Trout. salmon. 1b. White fish, Ih. Suckers, Ib. ..... Poultry. Chickens, dressed and told them funny stories. "Come again, pet," she begged Clemency. "I don't often see such a sweet young face as yours'. Clemency promised that she would "What a gay old woman"! she sald afterward to Miss Stafford, who looked at her curiously as she re- plied: "Gay, dear? Yes, but it is the kind of gayety that covers up a heartbreak. No woman ever had a harder life than Aunt Polly. Why, dear, in my young days she was a beauty and lived in a fine house. But But her father lost his property and she made an unfortunate marriage. Her beauty faded .and her hands grew crooked with hard work. When I think of what she was and see her as she is + Well, here we, aré at the Whites". June was: reclined in her chair. as =~ Hot Weather Fatigue not caused by the heat. With the digestion good and the body fune- tioning properly, hot weather seldom bothers. Grape-Nuts MADE IN CANADA, 1s an ideal hot weather food. It's a body-build- er--delicious, highly nourishing easily {1 can't." CHOPPED STUFF Keep the corn growing. Don't neglect the hoeing. Corn is very short north of city. Prices for sharply, Fruit and vegetable prices are far below normal this year. The root crop is looking remark- ably well west cf here. Harvesting is in _ full * swing many sections of warmer Ontarto. There has been a large increase in the area of fall wheat this season. Medium beef is not wanted. Finish your cattle before disposing of them Late cherries are a good crop in most sections of Ontario this sum- mer. . Don't sell eggs case count. Have them candled, and demand pay for quality. --BExchange. Keep the colt growing, but do not get him too fat. Grass, grain and milk are what he needs. : There were over 6,500 pupils sup- plied with eggs through the District Representatives last spring. Up-to-date machinery and the im- proved strains of the best breeds of 'live steck are always found on the successful farm. Do not make sudden crosses of a heavy or coarse mare, with a light horse, The resulting foal is apt to be nothing but a plug. Nor is it very much better to breed a light, the hogs have declined The Prices Paid For Produce On Kingston Market Chickens, live, 1b. Ducks, Ib. Hens, dressed, 1b. Hens, live, Ib. ... Turkeys, 1b. 156 16 15 10 20 12 18 Dairy Products. dairy... = creamery Butter, Butter, 1b. Butter, prints, Ib.. Butter, roils 1b .. Cheese, old, Ib. .. Cheese, new, Ib. .. Eggs, fresh, doz. . Fruit, Apricots, doz. .... Bananas, doz. Cantelope Cucumbers, each . Figs, 10, «svvnnee Huckleberries, qt.. Lawton berries, box Lemons, Messina, OZ, vv nnnvnren Peaches, doz. .... Plums, doz. ...... Nuts. 'mixed, Ib. .. Oranges, dos. .... Tomatoes, 1b. .... Raspberries, blue . Watermelons, each init Vegetables. Beets, bush. ves Cabbage, new, Ib.. poor twisted back. She was older than Clemency, and yet she was no larger than a child. Her mother had been reading to her. The flowers were for her. They stayed a long time with June. When the' came away Clemency kissed the girl tenderly." Good-bye dear, I'll came again," she whispered "Oh, Miss Stafford," she said, "I didn't know that she was like that," Miss Stafford was silent. 'I be- lieve I'll tell you about June. Clem- ency," she said at last. "But you must keep it sacred. She loves Dr. Fordney. He attends her, you know. And he is. fond of her as he might be of a poor, unfortunate little sister. Oh, my dear, when I think of what might have been had that cruel fall not left my poor little Jine with an incurable spine! Next and last, Miss Talbot, Clemency," she ended in a changed tone. AS So they came to the gréat ' gray 'house swith its blind windows where haughty, cold, old Miss Talbot Mved. A servant admitted them and they entered the room where Miss Talbot sat stiffly, with her fine, blue-veined hands crossed in the lap of her thick silk gown. She received them with such a stately air that Clemency felt chilled until she saw Now Miss Staf- ford accepted it. "Go long with you, Eleanor," she eried. "No airs with me, Here, take your jelly--made ouf of #pples off the trees we used to play under '60 years ago." Then Miss Talbot smiled. "Ah, me!" she said, "and you are the same girl while I * She spread out her delicate . "Troub 'trouble--trouble. ou don't know you can have your joke at your age. hot-blooded mare to a draft stallion. It costs no more to put a pound of fat on a chicken than it does to put the same amount of flesh on any oth- er class of stock. Why sell the chickens. Don't allow the work horses to ex- ist only on pasture unless the grazing is good. + In any case, some grain is necessary. There is still some hard work to be done.--Exchange. Smut is doing a great deal of damage to the grain crops this year, and particularly to the oats. Do not think when you are selecting your seed grain next spring that running it through the fanning mill is al that is necessary. Fanning the grain spreads the smut; you must treat the seed with formalin. Alfalfa Good For Horses. Alfalfa is practically as good when fed to horses as when fed to milch cows or to growing stock, but we must be careful to "balance" the ra- tion. Timothy hay is a good filler and that is one of its great values in feeding to horses; it affords bulk to the food, so when timofhy is fed along with oats we have a very nice combination. The oats furnish . the "strength" and the timothy furnishes the bulk. Alfalfa is a feed really "stronger" than oats, and when we use it"in place of timothy we are just doubling- the strength of onr feed. The feed Is made so "strong" that the animal is unable te utilize it en- tirely and the portions not utilized must be worked off by the. kidneys in large measure. usual with soft cushions easing her what it is, Mary. Well, for you that | ---r Celery, bunch ... Lettuce, bunch,dos. Onions, green, bunches, doz. . Potatoes, bush. .. Parsnips, bush. ... Rhubarb, bunch .. Turnips, bag .... --- -- Grain, Barley, bush. ....$ Bran, ton z . Buckwheat, Lush. . Corn, yellow feed, bush. .. Corn, cracked cwt. Corn, meal, ewt. .. Flour, cwt. Hay, baled, ton .. Hay, loose Oats, local, bush, . Oats, Man., bush.. Straw, baled, ton. . Straw, loose, ton . Wheat, bush. .... Hides. Beef hides, cured, perlb. .... Beef, hides, green, 1b. Heavy bulls, Ib. . Veals, green, Ib. . Deacons, each .......... Tallow rendered in cakes .... Kips or grassers, Ib, ...... Calf skins, per lb. Lamb and shearling, each Sheep skins, each, up to .... Horse hides, each, up to 14c 12¢ 8¢ 12¢ 90¢ 5c .e 8c 15¢ 26c $2.00 $3.50 Sess There goes the bell! My man has arrived. Now, Mr. Irishman, we'll see!" : Almost before Clemency could in the room. He walked away with them from Miss Talbot's When Miss Stafford, with gentle precision had told him what she and Clemency had been doing that afternoon, he turned to Clemency with a smile and deep look. one of those golden butterflies that only come out when the sun shines and then but to play with the choi- cest flowers." Then Clemency knew why he had gone away without speaking; he wanted no butterfly for his wire. So one that wonderful day Clem- ency learned two things. One was other was that life is given to us not to be used selfishly, but to be shared by others. ITALIAN PRIESTS SHOULDER RIFLE. "There Are Enough Chaplains Al- ready," They Explain When They Come to Enlist, -- One 'characteristic of Italy's war is the intense enthusiasm of the priests for the national cause. Many who a week ago were saying mass in Alpine villages under the watch. 11] eye of the Austrian Government. have come in to the camps to vol- unteer for Italy . They want to fight in the ranks "There are enough chaplains al. ready," they tell the officers. HP compose herself Hugh Driscoll was "I thought," he said, "that you were how to win her happiness, and the | vizier made of Jules * Corn crops are looking healthy, but the growth has been slow. Cultivate the root and corn crops frequently during the hot weather. Give the calves protection from the heat and flies during the summer. In. building a hen-house allow four to six square feet per bird. The well-finished cattle have been finding a steady market for. some time, Harvesting of fall wheat in tario has already commenced, There is a large amount of smutt found in the growing oat crops this year. If the mares were not bred last spring why not try fall breeding? Sheep were never moreg profitable than now. This is the time to start a flock. - . Pullets should start to lay before the cold weather. Get them into the houses early. Select the best part of the grain field for seed, and allow it to ripen thoroughly. Remove all dead limbs from pear trees during ~the sumbnier stop the spreading of fire blight: Have you planned any improve- ments for your farm et. After the harvest is a good time to carry them out. Sour cheeries are very cheap and plentiful on the Toronto market. Strawberry trade is also easier. The recent heavy rains have beat- en down the standing fall wheat in ny sections, . "It saves time to keep up with the hoeing. If this job is put off fora few days now the weeds will get such a start that this work 1s doubl- ed. Put the hogs out on pasture and cut down the grain bills. Remem- On- the to Feeding An Orphan Foal. Occasionally one has the misfor- tune to lose a mare that has a young foal and Bas to bring the foal up by hand on cow's milk. It should be remembered in a case of this kind that mare's milk is normally sweet- er than'cow's milk, but has only about balf the amount of fat and other solids that is found in the av- erage cow's milk consequently it is usual to add sugar to diluted cow's milk for feeding orphan foals. A method of feeding is suggested by J. H. S. Johnson, of "Breeders' Gazette," which is about as follows: Use an old teapot for feeding, with the thumb of an old kid glove, hav- ing a few holes pinched in it, fas- tened over the spout. For a very young foal, feed mot more than a cupful of milk five times a day. A Aesert spoon of sugar to a pint of milk is about the right proportion. Three tablespoonfuls of lime water added to this ration will correct aci- dity in the stomach. The milk should be perfectly sweet, the uten- sils should be kept clean, and the milk should be fed at normal body temperature.' ing to lack of police Committees, sub-committees, with high-flown titles send out ap- peals for charity for the benefit, Nobody seems to know or who controls them. messengers pace the streets and visit cafes, restaurants, théatres and pri vate houses begging for some sol- diers' fund. Instead of collectors being requir. ed to have bags issued by the police, as in Russia, these charity mongers, often well dressed women, go unmo- lested. They must have collected hundreds of thousands of dollars within the past week or two, Milan is more victimized than any other city. It is different in Turin. There rich mill owners and other employers of labor have not even contributed generously to the legitimate forms of charity, such as th eRed Cross and Soldiers Families' Sustenance Funds Their stinginess has raised great in- dignation among the poor, because Turin manufacturers have made large fortunes out of the war. The Socialist and Labor parties threaten Turin millionaires with painful expo. sure if they don't disgorge in pro- portion to their wealth, The society women who don be- coming Red Cross uniforms and pose as benefactresses in hospitals almost entirely kept up by poer men's sub. scriptions are also denounced and scorned. The fashionable "nurses" know nothing about nursing, scorn to do the only useful. work they might do--that is, gerub floors and wash dishes--but ask their friends in to see them and send the staff off hap heads by demanding afternoon tea Yor themselves and visitors. One Turin woman, wife of*a pro- minent manufacturer, turned up as a Red Cross nurse, and when asked to hold a basin and towel for real work. ers who were washing patients, re- fuged, saying: "I didn't come to wash thelr dirty faces" Why So Fast? The. sinking of the Lusitania re- calls ag m about. this ship Sultan of Morocco's grand oy The grand vizier, a Huret, who is a French regéived M. | &d the of modern science and invention to his host. Ho told m about the : "in Fez. M. Jourpalist, in a A Ne re tat, It should be obtained Bogus charity thrifos in Italy ow- supervision. | com. missions, patrons and associations soldiers' how they begin, whence they come But their always | those that first see the light Some Timely Pointers ber, however, that green feed alone will not keep the animals growing. If you have any doubt regarding the purity of your water send a sam- ple to the Chemical Department, Cen- tral Farm, Ottawa.- They will anal- ¥yze it free. The fall fairs will be on in less than six weeks, begin now in getting your stock in condition for the show ring. Some interesting experiments are being conducted by the Chemical De- partment at the O.A. College with different commercial fertilizers on mangels. The value of a crop preserved by, sile is increased about forty per cent. over that of a crop harvested in the usual way. Go your limit on a good bull. I your cows are deficient in the flow of milk, buy a sire that will make up the quality. If their milk is defi- cient in butter fat, breed from a sire whose tendency is to build up along that line. Investigation as proven the high manurial value of clover, alfalfa and other legumes. The lesson is: Grow a leguminous crop in the rota- tion, as all other crops, save the le- Bumes, leave the soil poorer for their growth. Aphis.--Attacks peas, melons, roses, and to on. Use nicotine pre- parations, or kerosene emulsion, two or three applications at internal of three or four days, reaching under sides of leaves, No danger of late summer droughts, as by using the silo with clover or other green summer crops, early in' the season, a valuable succu- lent feed will be at hand, when pas- ture in most regions is apt to give out, , AA tlt ata sso sis from a somewhat Trésh "cow that does not test too high in butter fat. The milk may be diluted with warm water or skim milk. After it is two months old, the foal will do very well on skim milk" alone, to which may be added a ta- blespoonful of linseed meal. The foal should have comfortable quar- ters, pasture and fresh water. As soon as it is willing to eat, it should havé a grain mixture put in front of it, a little at a time, consisting of possibly one part of wheat bran to one part crushed oats, corn chop or crushed barley. A little alfalfa hay will also be of benefit, especially if the colt does not have much pasture. --Chas. I. Bray, Colorado Agricul- tural College; Fort Collins, Colorado. The annual Provincial - plowing match will be held on the farm of Ontarjo Agricultural College during the fifst week in November, The packers are determined force the price of hogs down. But why should the packers control the prices? Vegetables are a drug on the To- ronto market. to DATES OF FALL FAIRS, 1915. Issued by 'the Agricultural Soclet- les Branch of the Ontario Depart- ment of Agriculture, Toronto, J. Loe- kie Wilson, Superintendent. Almonte .. .. ., ..Sept. 21-23 APRON: . . i pov diana OBB Arpprior ... .. 8-10 Bancroft .. . Sept. 30-Oct. 1 Belleville Bowmanville .. Brockville ... Centerville .... Cobden . Cobourg .. .. ... Cornwall .. Delta .. 2°, Demorestville .. .. ,. Frankville .. .. .. Sept. Harrowsmith .. . 1 Inverary .. .. sens Bept. 8 Kingston .. + +.Sept. 28-30 Lansdowne .. .. .. ..Sept, 16-17 Lombardy .. .. .. ....8ept, 11 London (Western Fair) Sept. 10-18 Lyndhurst .. .. .. ..Sept. 14-15 Maberly ...... «eo +..Bept. 14-15 ..Oct. 6-7 MORO® vi ie vein Marmora .. .. .. .. .Sept. 23-24 Merrickville.. .. .. ..Sept.16-17 Morrisburg .. ..:... ..Adg 3-5 Napnee . «.Bept. 14-15 Newboro .. .. .. ....Sept. 23-24 Odesta *.. .. .. .. .. <.0ct. ? Oshawa... .. .. .. ..S8ept. 13-15 Ottawa (Central Canada) Sept. 10-18 Parham .. .. .. .. ..8ept. 21-22 Perth .. .. .. .. Aug, 31 Sept 2 Peterboro .. «+ «Sept. 16-18 Pleton.. .. .. .. ..Bept. 21-23 escott ,. .. .. ..Sept. 14-16 Renfrew .. .. .. ..Sept. 22-24 Shannonville .. .. ., ..Sept. 18 Spencerville .. .. .. .Sept. 28-29 Stella .. .. .. .... ..Bept. 28 Stirling .. .. .. .. ..Sept. 21-22 Tamworth .. .. .. .. ..Sept. 9 Toronto (Can. National Aug 28. Sept. 13 : Tweed .. .. .. .. ,.Sept. 29-30 Vankleek Hill .. .. .. Sept. Wolfe Island .. .. ..Sept. 2 Resented By Rube, 3 A countryman took his sweetheart into a West End theater in London. Going up to the ticket office, the girl hanging to the sleeve of his Jacket, he banged down a dollar and eald: "Two seats." : J "Stalls?" inquired the ticket clerk, "Look here, my man," said the countryman, rather sharply, "dinns think because we come frae the | country that we're cattle! Gie's two cooshioned seats!" Exchange. Beste aaa Seals Are Listed. Pui seal pups are born about 'Le ft of August every year, and Gov inment take a census .f Sept. 21-22 . «Sept. 6-8 +o 2 Sept. 11 . . Sept. 28-29 ..Sept, 29-30 ..Sept. 20.22 Oct, 9 30 Oct. 1 « +. Sept, 16-17 » on ue bis out of ug 8

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