Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 11 Dec 1919, p. 2

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D BY PROF. HENRY G. BELL of rtment Is to place at the ser I) 1 readers the advice of an ackn > subjects ing to solls and uestions rofessor Henry G. Bell, Company, Limited, Toron- ppear in this column in the order recelved. When writing kindly men. 3 or space. is limited itis visable Where: te necessary that a stamped and ad- . envel be enclosed with the question, when answer will be mailed direct. fh i Ho am writing to ask advice acid and 3 40'5 per cont. potash. I¢| through modest self-ef togard to sifablishing 4 permanent Tertiisars of an Wuniysis that would fuses to name himself. In : ed, tl i What ough to s were % ] : n or ; ed fac EE 500 Io. ta] the crucifivion, again without & name. us they crowded arouad it tee se Iam Stain your crop would Had the SIry been whiten at > later | of the events of that night, material pat ha Sr diseip! post ! R. Wo What le meant by rotation would certainly have given us ald ot been SHerSr wig hud of crops? Please explain fully. | Z the garden, and exchanging, f Answer:-- She exp of Sully means| This other disciple was "known ynte, slanne? of such serving a offi-| - get & good stand of permanent pasture | the following of crops in a definite] the high priest" and, therefore, whs| cials, opinions and exas n-| have the use of this| system. For instance, there are types recognized and admitted by the door | unciations concerning Him who had next year? of crops that we plant in rows and keeper, arid was able also to secure been captured with such une b 4 .--T assume from your ques-| cultivate the #pace between. These" mittance for Peter. : "| ease and was now a prisoner. . fo ton that the field is now standing in| May be called cleaning crops. They 19-27. I Have Spoken Openly. Jesus ' red light glowed and flickered it threw| clover and timothy. This being the are types of crops such as corn, Lo- said truly that His teaching had not the long shadows of these mei across. hun : case, your problem resolves itself into) tatoes, beans, etc. Then again thera| been concealed. He had spoken in, the inner court, up the walls toward he the sowing of such other grass end are crops which produce a large yield public places, in synagogues, in the, MELE Ida Sn Aad ' clover seed as will thicken 'and ehrich| of grain, are not cultivated, and can tomple, and elsewhore. There were e ! hin, the 3 2% sand und ntroduee'p be used as nurse crops for getting. a| Many who could have testified to that.{ they moved along apartments a that wall be good for permanent pas-| cAteh of timothy or clover, such as Why not ask them? But the. answer, ridors," revealed other faces the: ta Of scourse there will be more| Wheat, oats, barley, etc. Hay crops; to this very reasonable protest was a' And Peter, when he heard -in ; 'hazard in sowing grass or clover seed| Which consist of grasses and clovers, blow from. the fist, or from a rod in early light of the morning the crowing | are "En on top of your present' stand than | stand for at least two years and some- the hand of an officer standing by. | of the tock remembered is own vows | gtarted lif e West. 'there 'would be in 'setting out sn en-| times &or 8. 'The hay crops, especial it Was evident that Jesus would have of unswerving loyalty; and knew TOW {your sis have wi the Rirely new s of grass Tor perm. | ly those that contain _considerable| NO fair trial in such 'an assembly,| how truly Jesus had predicted his! free, open prairie life and have caught anent pasturef but assuming you are clover, are 'especially 'beneficial be- where the chief presiding judge could weakness and his denial. Pérhaps at-| the progressive spirit of the people veady to take the #sk, T would advise| Cause they introduce a considerable witness and not rebuke such an oyt-| tracted by the loud voices of those who! and rejoicell to have a part in build- o Sues Cank 'Kiel Canal X and Panama third with Worried: he sowing of the following quantities amount of plant matter ors, humus| rage. 'The calm answer of Jesus is, accusefl and of Peter who denied with ing up a Yigorous Christian nation. |" ; 'English ITs x 2 through the large amount of roots that| however, both to unjust judge and bru-| oaths and curses, Jesus t rned where Cheer up, per Ace, Just be ore She Stow Janves they produce. Clovers also have the] tal officer sufficient rebuke: "If I have| He stood in the inner audience room Hoon ER restint Ap ing ny er Tu. » power of increasing the nitrogen of| spoken evil bear witness of the evil;! and looked out and saw Peter. That ™ "my sty adent: I regret exceedingly to! After this mixture has been evenly : "Unto Cai » 1 i Ay : : lecided : t , growth on their roots. = All of this nto aiaphas.", It may have been broke the angry and rebellions moody: school. If only I could awake: acaitmed im top the present Sang vl being the case, the growing of a clover| that Caiaphas cccupied Sther apart-| which for the moment had mastered! ts the ovPoFtaRtios at aks you over. and timothy, as soon as crop, every so often, materially bene-| ments in the same palace. At any rate; Peter. "He went out'and wept bitter-| brings!" We only get out of life what round is sufficiently dry, go over it : I I Tg y hy a light Ty wih By ott fits the bearing power of the #oil.- he appears to have been present and; 13" (Luke 22: 62). We i utinboritsnd sit we do mot: sow "turned back about 45 degrees, Larrow- ; x : described. © For instance, you ma drilled. Tua Sek harrowing WH) ve lay out the tilled area of your farm EE is. ame Tire that Peto "| in approximately four . equal areas ng. when -he first entered, looking down from the s, \gom-| by and see some nice' young man not injure the present stand. In handl calling them A, B, C, and D. On A and three times dénied his Lord, The mended the care of His m Tr. whom shy would enjoy, oe for ihe the Paature awe ot he you | Hay have corn and potatoes, and - Bee ren =| the girls Who have made use of their | be in a hurry te put the stock on the possibly other cultivated crops. On B . girl. So'one Friday morning, when| time to improve their minds and lives, notin but give it time to] 10" M8Y have wheat, oats, and barley. 4 ; : Millie May started to' school, mother| and who therefore are more attractive oy growth, but Lite On C you may have tlover or alfalfa) | he | Mason carefully set her watch with rand" congenial? This is matter for not to stock your pasture too heavily. : 0d ars growth, while on D you ad [ine clovk) © "Nw, Mijlie' May ¥(ghelcommonwense. mu} ol 1¢| Would have a second year's growth of , 2 L4 said tweztly, "can you get home by! Being educated is like knowing one timothy and clover or of alfalfa, This} | } CYL. 1 three o'clock ?™ " [is well dressed at a party. If one is, system being established, next year's] "7 TEN {| "0 yes'm," tha Little girl answerad; Well dvegsed, she does not think of | sop Mvadld move on org notch. ao How Millie May Learned to Keep Her iy oo oot home easily by the titime, Lered at all; if she is mot, then her: : 3 : s,- where the cultivated crops (corn, ppointments. i You know school is out at two. . mird iswconstantly on herself and she' dissed Bochse High hinuone potatoes, etc.) grew on A you would 'When Millie Mason Started to sehool! "All right, then," mother -Mason feels embarrassed and ill at ease, and' k it 30. close that. thistroots of the sow wheat, oats and barley, etec., and] in Hillsdale two very interestngyinciz| answered. "IIL depend on yout being fanc'es other people oe looking at yrass and clover will be smothered out, Seed down the Sigver a} the same hi dents took place, in her life. One was, Home at that time." her and making remarks. ; that she added May to her name when! At three o'clock, however, there wag Peddie e had 'sehiodling are So as to make doubly sure of a{growing first-year clover or alfalfa;| she gave it ini to'the teacher, and an-|no sign 'of the little girl; and Mrs, | lever self-conscious: vhen they are 19), and it was apparently in th i i in Hi ; y ' y in the same| Him and believed in Him, and the be- the good things?" an; one | house ahd by the same fire that Peter; loved disciple John. To him Jesus, but her:elf to blame i fshe has to sit Not more than one head per acre: mext fall is wet amd the ground be- comes waterlogged do not allow the stock to pasture on the heavier parts vigorous start of this grass and clover| three years hence section A would be| other 'thing: that she was especialy] Mason waited {iffeen minutes, and still] with people who ave educated and cul Jee asi You. are sowie in spring growing second-year timothy andi happy over was a lovely 1litt13 'wrist che didn't comé, and then gha did a tured. Iducation increases our capa- & P V1 clover or alfalfa, and four years hence| watch that" her 'mothér' gave her in' queer thing---she picked up one er-two! city torenjoy people and books aud the girl, yours is all the soil on account. of the bacterial] Put if well why smitest thou me?" | look revived the old affection and | herr that you have decided to give | Fraser; "Janet of K; one by H. A. Cody, full humor, entitled "The Ralph Connor's "The Man's Land" is & mo Canada in the Great War. ) ! '87 that "delightful story, "Mist .of Now a rotation or system of crop.| {0 have quectioned Jesus while He 19:/25-27. Standing bv the Cross. |energy and ambition and courage andsMorning," by Isabel Eeele one Top with the rows wher the wheat is ping includes ajithree classes of pee was still in the house of Annas (18: There 'were the women who had loved! enterprise, how a to reap 'Mackay. -Three 1ew no ada are "Bulldog Carney' McKowan, and "The Girl of OK. Val- ley," by Robert Watson, all of them absorbing tales. From Nova Scotia comes a charming romance, "Joan of Halfway," by Grace McLeod: Rogers. Critics predict that "Joan" ne of the best sellers of ! favorite, « L. M written "another entértainin "Rainbow Valley." Marshall 1 "Golden Dicky" is a hook that wil capture as wide a circle of readers Her 'world-famous "Beautiful Joe." = "A Labrador Doctor" is an.a biography by Dr: Wilfeed Grenfe "Stories of the British Empire," Agnes. Maude Machar, is a book in which Canadian boys and girls will revel, stories written around pertinent ; ptanding, I would advise you to apbly| it would be growing cultivated crops| order for hem to always be on time,' traveling bags that satin the hall and finer things of 1ifé, but above all, it periods in British history, nt least 200 to 250 lbs. per acre of a| again (corn, potatoes, ete.). * Or, if{ hoth at school and a% home: Jerkifiaee earying a Jou oh to consider all of the four| At first Millie May wag delighted) _ At three-thirty M ie acid. This can be on old locks, it simply means that the crops| with the shiny gold watch that "rushing in. and. not finding her mother| ~ 4 : imal re you hivrow 'to 'cover the Nios. move on in Bia efinite order (culti-| away the minutes of the p % day in the usual place ths made for the "In making salt pork, first rub each RN EA Ap wii va Supe, Teliowed y grain nurse| so softly, and che was very careful tevitchen and asked the cook where her, piece with fine 'salt, the next day Jloed as In will work in both fertilizer. es owe re first-year grass and see that che e herself plenty of! mother wi Lire Ti cover with a Erine made up of ten and seed ; 42 over, 9, owe by second-year grass; time by the watch to get to school in, "Your mother's gone to thé country! pounds of salt 'and. two ounces * of v jand clover). This order is gone the mornings; bit in the afternoon to spend the, week-end with your| sattfcter to four 'gallons of Doing lie May came' Follow This When You Butcher. J. W. 8.:--I have a field I had in through on all of the blocks. fshe found the watch disagreeable, for grandma," the cook answered. "She Water. This will be enough for one! | started toward the station. ------------------------------ The Great West Permanent . 20 King St. West. pnsilage corn, well manured last In some sections it is profitable to! mother always set her watch with said to tell you she waited for y as hundred pounds of pork. Leave in the| ring. Will it be best to plow this leave only one year for grass, cutting| the clock in the living room, and she! long as she could without missing the brine until needed. = For hams and all and manure again,or manure first,' down the system to a three.year ro-| was expected to tome home at a cer-. train." N : ; then plow? | tation. Tn otMer sections it is profit-| tain time each day. If she wasa't| Tears came into Millie May's eyes, next day pack in a barrel or stone jar, Answer: --If 'time remains before able to make it five or six-year rota-| there, mother usually came to look her! and a lump. tose in her oy as the! cover with a brine made up of eight! frost 1 would advise you to fall-plow, tion by introducing such variations as| up. It was the same way about going thought of missing a trip to grandma's | Pounds of ealt, two pounds of brown your corn patch in preparation for the growing a crop of oats, first in the| out to play with any of her little! dear old country place passed through sugar and two ounces of saltpeter wherry planting next spring.| grain division and following this with friends--mother always set a certain) her mind, Just then the clock in the| dissolved in four gallons of boiling en gpring comes I would advise you wheat before seeding down, also allow-| time for her to come home, and the! room chimed the hour of four: Millie | 'Water. After cooling pour over the Yo cross plow this same soil and then! ing the hay seeding to stand three, | was expected to come when she' was May looked at her watch; they wer | meat. Bacon should be left in the apply manure preferably well rotted, four, and sometimes longer years. toldie oh. i tizht together. "It's all my fault, brine four to six weeks and hams six and work it in by successive disking| The establishment of such a system| Lately Millie had been very indiffer-| she sobbed. "I stopped .to play with to eight weeks » «Bis wou ¥ : and harrowing. You cannot get the, on your farm saves labor by cutting ent to the advice of her watch, and Mary Dean and forgot about coming| There are-many ways to improvise seedbed too smooth. Strawberries are; down the relative amount of land that| time and again by that carelessness! home as I promised. I didn't keep, ® smoke house." One of the simplest, 'bacon rub each piece with salt, tha] Ref Union Bank SN. SILVE 280 #6. Paul fs, W. great lovers of an abundance of suit-| is plowed and brought under tillage! she had caused her mother muchimy word, and now I'm left behind, | i8 to invert a barrel, suspend the hams - ably balanced plantfood and' practical| year by year. It also sbabilizes the worry. Finally, being 2 few minutes' just as I odght to be. But Pll never|and bacon from the bottom by passing, growers in the Maritime Provinces amount of labor so that you can figure| late Docame a habit with the little girls! be guilty of the same thing any more? ® string through holes in the bottom: and in Ontario are getting exceedingly ' : r with some degree of certainty as to the| and mother Mason thought perhaps| ' And strange as it may seem. Millie{ of the barrel with a length or two of, good results by proper fertilization. Famount of expenditure you have" tothe sooner she learned her lesson of | May began right then to keep her ap-| Stove pipe.. Maple wood is regarded | I have before me the record of one make in labor year by year. Rotations| what carelessness sometime causes} pointments on time; and she's done it as the best.fuel. Hardwood is prefer-i{ man who used as high as 1,800 Ibs. of are"also exceedingly valuable since the better it would be for her little ever since. able to soft wood. Corncobs are very high grede fertilizer per acre on his; they establish a systematic means for|- ---- mmo A \ fire is best. With con- _ strawberries, and he claims to make keeping up the organic matter or! i I slaved atciad the trap. G i '& net profit of $200 to $300 per acre humus of the soil. If good crops are. al i mn ne yap Sos Te". enough in two 0 by his methods. | grown in rotation and proper atten- 3s set in this hz secure be trap g Ee : > Most of the eastern growers use a tion is. paid to the manuring and Se 0) 18 Re near a badger or Re high grade potato fertilizer such as fertilizing of the crop with a minimum Prairie oF Hmouy J 2 ene analyzing about 8 to 5 per cent.jof expenditure of labor, maximum re- n excellent method for trapping t s the wolf when the snow is on the|® ammonia, 6 to 8 per cent. _phosphorie sults can be obtained. ground js the following: Place a heavy "A slo stant fire the meats may be smoked Highest _ Batisfaction Guarant SL Mest ow

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