Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 20 Jun 1918, p. 7

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hole where fertilizer is dropping and allow the seed spouts to drill the beans along the rows that do not receive fertilizers. Many suc- * ~tessful bean growers claim it is ad- vantageous to apply the fertilizers a week to ten days ahead of the time the beans are sown. As to the amount to use, from 200 to 600 Ibs, per. acre . "are used by successful bean growers in Russian vetch. Common vetch and hairy vetch dre both valuable crops. are legumes which produce a considerable growth of very nutritious 'stalk and leaf. The seed of vetches is temporarily very high in cost on ac- count of much of it normally coming from Europe. Common vetches can be handled much like field peas. g application of fertilizers, forms a suitable home for. the' crop which is sown broadcast. Hairy vetches can be sown on poor sandy soil; but of course will. give best results on soil in better state of fertility. , R. R.:--What is the best fertilizer for orchards? Answer:--For orchard fertilization I would recommend a mixture carry- ing 1 to 2 per cent.-ammonia and 10 to 12 per cent. phosphoric acid. Use this at the rate of about 10 lbs. per Neserrr, THOMSON & COMPANY . To be sure, the house-fly is a nusi- ance every Summer and to "swat the fly" after he has laid his eggs is practically uséftss. To get the great- benefit it should be killed in its b; ing places or caught before it can lay its Eggs. "For every fly you kill early in the season you kill a million," has often been said and there is much truth to it. Proper control measures taken early in the season will do much to eliminate this annual menace to the public health. - ' Methods of combatting the house-fly may be summed up as follows: 1. Protect the breeding places from the fly. This can be accomplished by keeping. the garbage in gnclosed con- tainers where the flies®will not have access to it. In thg country care should "TIME NOW TO SWAT THE HOUSE FLY tom, placed near the manure piles will catch many of the adults. 4. Shelter food and dwellings from them. The use of screens on doors and windows of dwellings is quite gen- eral now and should be even more so. Food such as milk, butter, etc., should be covered or place in a fly-proof place. g 5. Poison their food. Many flies will enter the house in spite of our eternal vigilance and will have to be dealt with there. The fly-swatter should be kept busy but alone it can not cope with the invaders that are constantly com- ing into the house. They need water to drink and by giving it to them with a little poison in it it will aid in their destruction. One poison of this nature is to fill a shallow dish about half full of water and add to a tablespoonful of i * 'ates are the old men and women, chil- i dren and babies and in some cases the young women being sent back from | earlier in the war. s they cannot be used to work and eat too much food they are being sent back. 2. Soissons, 'one of the oldest cities in France, is on the Aisne (pronounced "ain") River. 8. Chemin-des-Dames ("Road of the Ladies") is an important highway running along the hills flanking the northern bank of the Aisne in the Champagne. 4. The bride's notes of thanks should be written on note paper in preference to correspondence cards. All of the wedding presents that arrive before the actual day or day before the wedding should be ac- knowledged before the bride goes away, If time does not permit of ac- knowledgment of these and those ar- riving after the wedding on the honey- moon trip, it is permissible to write these notes of thanks after the return home. 5. The terms dried, dehyrated and evaporated mean virtually the same thing--that 1s, removing the moisture from foods or drying them. | In evaporation, as a rule, the water is not all removed, as in evaporated milk and fruits. The dehydrated process consequent waste. ns Milkmaid:--You sound quite pas- toral and picturesque, Miss Milkmaid. ler's Red Cross work look a midget be- side a full-grown bumble bee. There is a big and practically undiscovered field for women in dairying and they would do well to think seriously about taking it up as a definite occupation. Have you thought about factory work at all? You are really more useful where you are, however, for the work in the creameries and canneries is ex- tremely heavy and not altogether suit= able for girls. They are employed at present to a limited extent in cer tain factories, doing such work as testing the cream, printing and pack- ing the butter and other of the lighter phases of the industry. Some are go- ing around the farms collecting cream and delivering it at the canneries, None of them has as yet gone in for cow-testing, although an expert at the { Ontario Agricultural Farm states that they could do this very well. You would be well advised to stay right where you are, however, and to try te convert some more damsels to your ducts have strengthened their hold on way of thinking. Canadian dairy pro... i 8.0 : "Mothers and daughters of all ages are cordial invited to write to the. © Tui a one atthe reasons we recom. || i TERRIA IIE oF hates Sed re and Pu U on letter, Visita on one Nid Hi Nmpion Moinile will be mal og / : p i serving growing comm ress all correspondence for this department to Mrs. Helen Law. on 3 Send for list of Hydro-Electric and Pub- [| ">" Are Torome -- ra lie Utility Bonds yielding 6% to 8%. Wants-to-Know:--1. The repatri- there is a superabundance, with Investment Bankers Limited . Germany into France through Switz-| No doubt you wear a pink sunbonnet. : . Mercantile Trust Bldg. - - Hamilton jerland. They are the French and|But you're the patriot! With so many 4 222 St. James Street " Ne Mont. eal | Belgians captured by the Germans | cows to milk you make the city dwel- tree scattering it out about the area|p, taken in the disposal of manure. If | formalin. Milk may b i i i N . . y be used instead] calls for the removing of a much | foreign markets si broke out this latitude. = Peanuts are a long covered by the branches. the manure pile is allowed to sprawl |of water. Place a couple of bfead| greater amount of moisture.. hh Pi of Avrculiate sees 3 sian BR lB Farmeri~1Is fertilizer needed on | over a large portion of the brn yard crusts in the fluid for the flies to stand | Picknicker: --Even athwart the path great possibilities for Quebec and On. boa on Pongo) of rid he SRI grain as nuch as on Fall) the conditions are ideal for the breed-/on. In order to be more effective] of the picnicker the shadow of war tario capturing much of the dairy 5 joy a season of only 126 to 140 days at the outside free of frost, hence pea- Answer: --Fertilizers are profitable on both spring and fall crops." It is ing of flies. : 2. Kill them in their breeding places by means of some chemical, Govern- other fluids in the room should be cov. ered up. An up-to-date farmer has devised a must lie and the warning note must be struck--to save food. knows Everyone something of the charm of trade of Norway and Denmark; while the Maritime Provinces, besides shar. ing in the markets" of the old land, nuts cannot be successfully produced | impossible to say on which it is most pant ex h i th ; phi . BT ay . it experts report good esgite from | way of killing flies around the cow-| these outdoor expeditions; but it must | should be able to command an ever-in- In the province, wl profitable since. weather conditions, the use of borax which is applied at|barn. Take eight ounces of arsenite| bo admitted that the perennial sand-| creasing trade with the Eastern States R: R.:~What would be the best crop | price of products, etc., entering in at| the'rate of 0.62 pounds of borax to|of soda and dissolve it in a barrel-of | wich for a gravelly knoll that does riot give a good crop of grain or corn? Answer: --The reason the gravelly knoll is not productive is that it fails different times of the year will fre- quently reverse any rule that may be laid down. To give you an idea of the results of experiments, Ohio Sta- eight bushels of manure immediately on its removal from the barn. "Apply the borax particularly around the out- er edges of the pile with a flour sifter water, adding to it a gallon of mo- lasses. Fill a common sprinkling can with the fluid and sprinkle floors and sides of the barn near the manure invariably accompanies them makes the bread and butter fly. While there is no compulsory legislation in | the matter, it should be remembered by all organizations or individuals in butter and cheese. Traveller:--Yes, food demonstra. tions will be put on at all the big ex- hibitions this year---notably Toronto, London and Hamilton, No doubt they to hold a supply of moisture sufficient to the needs of the average farm crop. _ In planning for its management there-} piles. Care must be taken that cat-| having picnics or outdoor expeditions, @ will prove a very popular feature as tle cannot get where they can lick it.| that they are on. their honor to waste of fertilizers for the last 20 years finds treq gallons of water over the borax. there is no doubt of the fact that the a gain on corn from 16 to 22 bushels | treated manure." ot which has been testing the effect. any fine sieve, and sprinkle two or fore, thought should be given to over- coming this difficulty. If the plot is gravelly, possibly the best thing you can do is to seek to establish a stand of sweet clover on it. Prepare the soil early in the spring and seed with 6 or 8 lbs. of good seed to the acre. In handling the crop be sure to cut it sufficiently early so that the growth does not become woody, other- wise the hay will not be satisfactory. If the gravelly knoll is fairly produc- tive, early in the season, I would pre- fer to get a stand of alfalfa on it. This . will produce a splendid quality of feed and at the same time will con- tinually improve the quality of the soil . \ W. R.:--How does sweet clover com- pare with corn for silage, I mean as to What time should it feeding value? be ensiled? - ) Answer: --Sweet clover is becoming of the It is used frequently in combination with fairly popular in some country asa crop for silage. corn, putting it in alternate loads of corn and sweet clover. low in in and high in starch, while sweet clover carries a consider- able amount of protein as well as a This is ad- vantageous, since corn is relatively per annum as an average. On oats for the same time the fertilizer produced an increase over the unfertilized of 29 to 48 byshels per acre. On wheat for the same period, the gain for fertilized wheat over unfertilized, ranged from 21 to 27 .5 bushels per acre. X. Y. Z.:--Do you recommend basic slag on garden vegetables? What is the best fertilizer for cucumbers? Answer:--Basic slag will give re- sults on cabbage, turnips and other cruciferous crops, but is not suffici- ently available to give best results with other garden vegetables. In fa ct, with the vegetables noted, basic slag will not give as good results as high grade fertilizers. For cucum- bers I would recommend on sandy soil from 800 to 500 Ibs. per acre of fertilizer carrying 2 to 5 per cent am- monia and 10 to 12 per cent. available phosphoric acid with as mich potash 'as it is possible to obtain at this time. 8. Place traps near their breeding places to catch them before they lay their eggs. Traps are made of wire screen that fit into the barn window or on top of the garbage pail. Common wire screen traps, with bait in the bot- The barrel of poison when not in use| nothing, to use substitutes as freely as should be covered and put in a place| possible and to steer clear of all wheat inaccessible to any animals. This products. A sufficiency of food poison proved to be very effective on| should be taken to the picnic. Usually Spoay = LJ 3 ------ INTERNATIONAL LESSON Lesson XII. Jesus Triumphant Over Death--Mark 16. 1-20. Golden Text, I Cor. 15. 20. , Verse 1. When the Sabbath was past --This was after sunset on Saturday, for the Sabbath ended at sundown. Mary Magdalene, and Mary the moth- ome successful commerical growers use over 1000 lbs. of such fertilizer acre. If your soil is fairly well applied with nitrogen and you believe it will give a sufficient vine growth, cut down the ammonia to 1 or 2 per er of James, and Salome--Luke , speaks generally 6f the women who | had come with him out of Galilee (23. | 65). They were present at a distance ! when the hody was laid in the tomb. As the burial took place late Friday, before the commencement of the Sa | bath (sundown), and the care of the the farm last summer when other slower acting poisons failed to keep An easy way to insure a reliable these pests under control. thing was in order. winter meat supply is to caponize 7. Go, tell his disciples and Peter| enough cockerels to furnish it. Take --There was no time 'to linger in} April or May hatched cockerels and transport over the amazing fact. caponize them when they reach two They had a message tocgive to the| and a half or three pounds weight and stricken disciples, in their darkness] : : : Tt i | they will continue to grow in weight and perplexity. It is Mark only who The adds "and Peter." This is a special-| until they are ten months old. ly tender touch, .that to the sciple meat of fat fries is no better than the broken by his own denial and by the meat of capons. death of his loved Master the early| To sell cockerels as broilers or to anpnoUnesment of She TeSLIZSotion ze them as broilers or fries gives thet this yale: re So ET Sean us but small returns comparatively, for corded by Mark the interpreter of there is so little of them, but when we Peter. He goeth before you into| take a moderate sized flock, caponize The body gone. There were no evi- dences of a violent removal. Every- his promise to meet them in Galilee--| ten or twelve pounds each we have a the scene of his glorious ministry.| pretty good meat supply. If we want But they had doubtless, in the confu-|, sof] them they will bring as much sion of the last days, forgotten that; : broil i uk | per pound as the ordinary broiler perplexing statement, fter I am P¥ th ot et for raised up, I will before you into| Price, and more than we often g Galilee," (Mark 14. 28.) summer fries. i 8. And they went out, and fled] One of the best things about the Galilee--This was to remind them of | them and grow them until they weigh interest of everybody in the country has now been awakened to the food question and people are thinking about it more than they ever did before. can be done to the best advantage so far as the winter supply is concerned, by caponizing, for cockerels will not remain good eating until they are so large, and hens are not liked so well even if we wanted to sacrifice them. The modern caponizing tools are so well made and the methods of doing the work so well developed that it has become an easy matter for anyone to get a set of tool and do their own caponizing. Full instructions come with the instruments, and as the oper- ation is not a very painful one for the cockerel, there should be no hesitation in attempting it if you are at all nim- ble of finger and have the ordinary set of nerves. Any of the meat producing breeds will make good capons. They soon show a marked difference in their ' growth, and grow larger than cock- erels of the same age, weighing sev- eral pounds more when fully grown. | The meat is always tender and sweet, {and preferred by many to turkey or cent. For best results apply 2-8 of po4y was not leted ount, from the tomb--True to nature. The! eat supply is that it is stored goose. As the capons never are fair amount of starch, Good results the intended amount of fertilizer, of The Sabbath, the a rotates whole account is artless, honest, and | burg and upp meat of the best quarrelsome, flocks of 'them can be 'have been obtained by cutting the! drilling it into the field with the ferti- as soon as the Sabbath s over to!strong. Trembling and astonishment grade whenever we want it. There is | grown together, nor will cockerels or " when it is in full bloom. How- ever, I would prefer cutting before the full crop is in bloom, since the plant becomes very woody if left till this time. As to feed value, sweet clover carries about 8.17 per cent. protein, 20.8 per cent. carbohydrate and .65 fat. Well matured corn carries 2.1 lizer attachment of the grain drill or spreading it broadcast and disking and harrowing it in carefully." When planting the cucumbers work in a handful of the fertilizer into each hill, mediately on top of the fertilizer. tng) eer but do not allow. the seeds to drop im-| : complete the final preparation. Bought spices--Aromatic herbs and ointments or the embalment. This was un- {like the Egyptian embalment, for no | incisions were made and only the sur- face was cared for. 2. 'Very early, the first day of the week--Our Sunday. The time is carefully noted by all the evangelists had come upon them--Matthew (28. v 3 8) tells us that this first impression © loss in the keeping, for the eight |of terror and mental confusion gave is constantly on the increase. We have place gradually to other feelings so| been urged and all but forced to rear that they ran to bring_the diseiples! a large poulily supply to Snable ue to word. release the pork an supply for It is maintained by biblical scholarg, the use of the armies in the field. This that the following verses (9-20) form | cocks bother them. Any left "over | winter can be used for mothexing | flocks of chicks, for which they have excellent reputations, though I have | never seen one serving in that capa~ city. no part of the original Mark Gospel, en little or no bulky food should be fed i rbohydrate and is to the effect that Saturday|but that they are of a very anc pr vent. protein, 21:70 Serbo night was just dying out and the first date and trustworthy material, added during the course of treatment, and as L. L.i--1 What is thé right ration streaks of dawn were rising on the, to the Gospel soon after the original Se the parasites are stupefied by worm feed to dairy cows? Would darkness. draft was composed. remedies rather than killed, the ani to. to you .8. Who shall roll us away the stone| 9. He appeared to Mary--Mark Many horses lose condition, or 2ail| mal's bowels should be kept in an aca advise mangels with hay and --They do not seem to know that the alone mentions that the first person! , ove oaing because they are infect- | tive condition so that the stupefied "some grain? 2 Would you advise authorities have sealed the tomb. The't, whom Jesus appeared was Mary. ake ga R | tive p growing Russian vetch for hay? * [expression "Toll away" literally i8 She first ran to tell Peter, then re- ed with worms. This is especially true | worms may be passed out before they Please advise as to its culture. 1 The Summer Cottage, "soll up and back," since the circular | turned to the tomb to receive the|Of colts. Horses suffering from worms regain their vitality. A well-salted Busy Johnny chanced to peep flat stone was rolled up and back into, manifestation here recorded. generally have a good appetite, but bran mash once a day will generally = RE an inclined groove and would have to| 1, hem tha be ith rently benefit little from the food insure such an action. . a | | Within an ancient rubbish heap be wedged so that it would not roll Bid Vhem that Had Dec Tin) appar y | The following formula is a worm _{ That held the things they cast away | down again. This is the character of gigcloses the condition of the discon-| There may be no symptoms which | remedy which is also of value as het LIT Behind the barfi on cleaning day. "These grown-ups," said he, "are not wise 'Now here is something! This, mayhap, | Will make a sling; perhaps a strap." | High on a broken cherry limb, In sheltered corner known to him, He hung his treasure out of view-- | A battered, broken; worn-out shoe! - 'ed away. Mark says nothing of the such a stone seen by the writer ina tomb near Jerusalem. 4. Looking up--While they were amazed to see that the stone was roll earthquake or that an angel had rolled away the stone,.as Matthew records 28. 2). bs ntering into the tomb--Luke agrees with Mark that the women en- tered the tomb and that they found solate group of disciples in their ex- treme distress. 11. When they heard . . ~dis- from their thoughts. It was only after the most convincing and irre- fragible proof that they subsequently ' preiched that he was risen from the ee eames Sex of Geese. It is almost impossible to tell a point conclusively to worms, but this tonic: Powdered nux vomica, twa. trouble is so common that if the colts ounces; powdered gentian rool, fous' remedy may prove of decided senious acid, two drams. Mix. x In treating horses for worms, a noted | Give one heaping teaspoonful to veterinary. suggests it is well to keep every 250 pounds of weight, every in mind that the drug is meant for the | morning and evening for about ten worm rather than the horse and should | days. The medicine may be mixed therefore be given in as concentrated with ground feed or sprinkled over form as possible. To insure this, oats or corn which has been dampened. a =~ ; rn «not the body of Jesus. Some of the cre er enr -- | Then by and by, with merry song, _cut tombs Im the vicinity of goose from a gander. They all look er : Came Mistress Jenny Wren along. Hon may be easily entered by a alike to most people. The gander . | skim-mitk, you are preventing them "Why, husband, dear," she called out! person ng erect. The burial has a shorter, thicker neck than the (7) VV | obtaining butter-fat, which is a_na- thus,' 7.0 #2 niches Pd in: lateral chambers . in| goose, The bag between his legs j fora purt of she food of a i 2 m ces. A 3 : A _ | mal. ou must replace this, inso! : -|{ "Who built this handsome home for any ie igen; he is not here--The is single, while that of the goose is The calf shows very quickly the oi} CaN be the Horo 3 a = : ya double. The gander's voice is high! fects of poor care, and this often oc can be re | "With floor, and sides, and roof of) resurrection is here stated as an ac-| 9? gar ba k ; . With Meor, 4 ang x complished fact. T has been suggest-|and thin. The goose has a deep bass| curs during the summer months be-| 8rain rich.in oll, ed to the young ani- eo leather, 5 x oo Jeampliohed Bs bo » sugGest nig The beak of the gander is| cause of the pressure of other work, mal on grass, the grass itself taking To fond our hopfhold:. from been no other than Jesus himself, in-| thicker; the under mandible is fuller; | although it is really much easier to the place of the butter-fat in milk to a as Fl fo at distinctly seen in the lighted | the under mandible of a goose is| keep a calf thrifty in summer than in Small extent. A calf grown upon skim- a door opens wide, sepuleher by the women, who as J shrunken around the nostril. = Put a winter. Calves grown on farms should | ilk, grass, and a small amount of '| Here isa window at the side!" no thought of e ility A 4 flock of uncertain ganders into a pen,| have grass pasture provided for them gee, yo a he Hm «Why bless me, ves!" said Mr. n. reburrection Behold, ®| and turn a strange dog in. The gan-| and should be fed some grain, prefer- y & 'a ba |, ln Jesl® 8 Sis Mr. Wea ; they la id hintThers were no I ders will come forward ready to fight| ably oats, during she first five months | while a stunted calf will require m LX » {Rhey copule, free from care, | dences te t the ¢ had | while the geese will huddle in a Cor-| of their life. In taking them from | more feed next winter to get adel Jolly couple, free from care, | taken he The place as empty. ner. aid the cow and raising them by hand on started towards 'waking god: gains, & 3 walking along and talking, they look-! pe}ieved-- od utterly impos.|&nd horses are not doing as well as| ounces; powdered areca nut, six ounc- i x They often throw away a prize. ed up to the tom and were | Pijeved mg was further rea they should for the feed given, j wana] es; sodium chloride, four ounces; ar- A a.

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