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Times & Guide (1909), 6 Dec 1912, p. 6

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maa cgn es fage: e fore L4 iz Faperes Noiz sns ce 9 F9 s ols s ariC in c t ® 3 ho Eo To l cA ty eal es h e 1F% c\ C a s e M ces "a BA 2. To tala «o ho » w s elpvech No \wat ax Mool e < ip o 9e hg No 99 w9 En e , ~ h PS m Pss hss Lo o essa Es s 5 c ke" (ak CAse i2 es ce l 2o ts a0, €oy % <2> 2y 6y <a hi va Bd w5 Y t eP “7? . h be s t kess Yoâ€"ficrs: i uin & &&& p CA Bb ax 5> h 5 i a, â€"# & F J Ceo 3 _ n i a + hs w 1 _ Gs o bo 6 a w & i o m sutas. h. ille a o 6 o 4 6 P YJ man Coon t es poue $ Siles 12. To 2 is uy t hok ies t t aee) ce ie ie > , merus buoid beaternts oove Peeral Gute 5J EtE Rete s . tor ca% $x o e :‘g{%;f ho Mss s e s eJ y Lo The pureâ€"bred hog will mature and come into money more quickly than a serub, and bring more money for the same weight at that. Where it is practical we should move the hogs to some other part of the farm and build new and betâ€" ter yards. Whitewash and disinfectants must be used freely about the hog house and yards. If the cleaning and aisâ€" infecting is carefully done we may be able to stock up again within a few weeks after the hogs have stopâ€" ped dying and suffer no further loss, but it is usually best to walt two or three months before we do this, or depend on the hogs that have survived for a fresh start. ‘ It‘s DYE, one can buyâ€"â€"Why you don‘t even have to Enow what KIND of Cloth your Goods are made Of.â€"â€"5o Mistaos are Impossible, h/ e mp wd0eâ€", ry AfAe The length of time that the hog CORRECTION. houses and their surroundings will > mss remain infected will depend on the | Through an error in our makeâ€"up, care taken in cleaning them. In |an advertisement of _ Wa terman‘s filth the germs may live for five) Ideal Fountain Pens appeared in months. All litter about the yards |last week‘s issue of our paper inâ€" must be burned or removed to a| stead of the issue of toâ€"day. place where the hogs cannot comej se e css in contact with it. en in ns wl en e ie Eesntc e ce ereane The dead hogs should be burned. This is not a dificult task if the body is placed on top of a pile of wood that will burn quickly and make a hot fire. If disposed of by burying is should be well done and the body covered with lime. Howâ€" ever, this is not as satisfactory as burning. pollet giving results of Dycing over other colc;;; The JOZX‘.\'SO.‘{-RICH‘A!_EDSQN CO., Limited, Both the sick and well hogs should be fed a light diet of sloppy food, shorts, bran and the like. Water or slops must not be left in the trough for the hogs to wallow in. Copper sulphate dissolved in the water and slop in the proportion of four or five ounces to the barrel may lessen the chance of infection. As soon as a hog comes down with the disease it should be removed to the pens set aside for the sick aniâ€" mals. These pens should not comâ€" municate in any way with the pens where the well hogs are kept. The yards, feeding floors, troughs and hog houses must be kept clean. All litter must be removed daily, and the frequent spraying of the hoge, feeding floors and sleeping quarters with a water solution (two per cent. or more, of a tar disinfectâ€" ant is a necessary part of the care. the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME When the weather is warm the only protection needed is shade. In cold weather it is necessary to proâ€" vide quarters warm enough to preâ€" vent the hogs from piling up and catching cold. Portable hog houses are very useful for this purpose. Do not move the hogs to different parts of the farm, nor scatter the disease over the farm. If the yards and hog houses are in such a condiâ€" tion that they cannot be properly cleaned and disinfected we should move the herd to some convenient place and build temporary quarâ€" ters. If the disease proves to be hog cholera or swine plague, and it is practical under the conditions the herd should be divided into small bunches. The sick animals should be separated from the well ones and all possible precautions taken against the spread of the disease. Betes%teascse 0208008 AS * Raising Hogs. It is very necessary that we reâ€" cognize hog cholera and swine plague in the very early stages in order to prevent them from spreadâ€" ing. ‘In some outbreaks the sympâ€" toms are not typical and we cannot diagnose the disease by the sympâ€" toms alone. In such cases we should destroy a sick hog and make a careâ€" I ful postâ€"mortem examination, says Prof. R. A. Craig. l Gre8es°:e0t0e00*800e0G @ I ‘a or give the same satisfaction to the tea drinker, Black, Mixed and Green. Sealed lead packets only. Every one shows the dealer a larger profit, but none possess the flavour of On the Farm : [MITATIONS ABOUND ntreal, Cana ONE DYEM®ALL KINDSor sooos Story Booklet, and The ranger at this station has diâ€" rect charge of some two hundred and thirty square miles of highly valuable, _ young, secondâ€"growth spruce and poplar forest, \and his central object and work will be to safeguard it from fire by every posâ€" sible means, so that in two or three decades it may yield welcome and abundant supplies of fuel and Jum ber to the dwellers on the prairies. _ Madge Lake is a beautiful, islandâ€" studded sheet of water, covering seven square miles, and this rangerâ€" dwelling is picturesquely placed on its southern shore. It is a comforâ€" table house, well planned and well lighted, containing living rooms, as well as office. It will be painted a dark green with white trimmings. The trail from this ranger station to Kamsack will next year be widâ€" ened and otherwise improved. This will benefit the ranger, convenience the public who have forest business to transact, and induce an increasâ€" ing number of people to enjoy the. many delights of a summer outing. at Madge Lake. ‘ Are To Be Built On Many Dominâ€" ion Reserves. In order to protect and adminisâ€" ter the Dominion Forest â€"Reserves to the best advantage, they are beâ€" ing subdivided. into ranger disâ€" tricts and houses are being bauilt at strategic points for the use of the rangers in charge. The first of such houses to be occupied on the Duck Mountain Forest Reserve is located at Madge Lake, a few miles from Kamsack, Sask. The new ambassador to the United States. FOREST RANGERS‘ HOUSES If you are in doubt kill the bigâ€" ger hog, for it makes better meat and the ham of a light hog is hardâ€" ly worth curing, if you are fond of the meat, for it dwindles far too rapidly. Steaming food for hogs is an matter. All that is required large box connected with a boiler by a oneâ€"inch pipe. The should connect the box at the tom. A few coals from the wood f the kitchen put into the houee and then, where the hogs can them up into charcoal, help to the hogs healthy. * _ Pigs will live and grow on rape without a supplement of grain, but a small addition of the latter is proâ€" fitable. Dry sows will, however, do well on the rape alone. Never feed more than hogs will eat up freely. Many farmers do not practice this, but keep a quantity of uneaten food lying in the lot atJ all times. Sir Cecil Arthur Springâ€"Rice. _ If sows are closely â€" farrowing time and t ]mediately be placed in a | suck they are not so ap them. _ â€"The farmer who marketed his corn in the hog yard and who is now marketing the hogs, can look any man in the face and tell him to go to any old place. One acre of alfalfa will furnisch more forage for hogs than two acres of clover, and it grows faster and keeps on growing as fast as the hogsl eat it down. _ _ 0 207 nogs is an easy 11 that is required is a connected with a small inch pipe. The pipe not so apt to devour m the wood fire of nto the houses now the hogs can grind closely watched at the pigs imâ€" a position to keep botâ€" Your druggist has Na of Linseed, Licorice and 25¢. aud 50c bottles, or c it for you. Compounded Drug and Chemical Cc Limited. loeels Pom esnc en oe Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyne is absolutely free from harmful drugs, and can safely be given even to moderately young children. It is pleasant tasting and quick acting, promptiy relieving the irritation of the throat and nostrils, loosening the mucus, promoting expectoration, and" checking the cold, ‘‘We should be delighted,"" said young Cobble. ‘But I fear there is a mistake. I can‘t say anything more about it now, because it doesn‘t do to name peopleâ€"but there is a mistake. Only for that I should have been delighted. Goodâ€"bye."" Then he took his departure, leaving young When you begin to sniff and feel a burning sensation in the nasal passages, or whenr a tickling irritation in your throat starts you coughing, the first important thing is to act at once. It‘s the neglected cold that becomes troubleâ€" some and dangerous. The second important thing to do is to take_ Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyne, and keep it up till the cold disappears entirely. Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice N g es â€" 7 . ‘ 1 The Major was fond of shooting, and would have been glad to acâ€" cept the offer ; â€"but it was out of, the question that he should allow himâ€" self to be taken in at Cobble Hall under a false pretext. Amd was it not incumbent on him to make this young man understand that he had no pretentions whatever to the hand of the second Miss Wanless! ‘‘You are very good," said he. ‘‘We should be delighted," said TWO POINTERS C# How _ T0 CURE A coun Ned dom e e 2 on e on ue oc nc ce eleig es dn en in m a brother of the house. Young Cobble was an honest fellow, and quite in earnest in his matrimoniâ€" al intentions. ‘‘We shall be delightâ€" ed if you will"come to us on the first,"‘ said Cobble. The first, of course, meant the first of Septemâ€" pas Azseey ® .0 â€" s n aen sn h0 W AdDeb OT BCDLOTM~> ber. ‘‘We ain‘t so badly off just for a week‘s shooting. Bophia is to be there, and we‘ll get Georgiana Tess Then young Cobble came to him, and talked to him as though he were ‘"Warrant enou-gh-; :“vav:a.rrant enough,""‘ said the old woman todâ€" dling off. to his ear in the presence of all the assembled guests, he knew that the entire county had recognized him as caught. Y. CHAPTER VLâ€"(Cont‘d) Or , The Bird That Pecked at the Window s Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Syrup and Chlorodyne in _or can quickly get ded by the National F_Coâ€"â€"of ~Canarla The Invitation ; mal |__ When the Major left Brook Park da, _ on the morning after the archery 315 | amusements bhe was quite sure of ey, spent on behalf of the Major, should have been thrown away. ~ Lady Wanless, before she went to bed, was closeted for awhile with the eldest daughter. As Sopha was now almost as good as a marâ€" ried woman, she was received into closer _ counsel than the others. ‘"Burmeston will do,"‘ she said; ‘"but, as for that Cavalry man, he means it no more than the chair."* The pity was that Burmeston might have been secrmred without the archâ€" ery meeting, and that all the mon-] ‘Shall I?‘ she asked, grasping his hand. "Oh, my friend, let it be as I desire. My whole life shall be devoted to making you happyâ€" you and her.‘‘ Then he was allowâ€" ed to escape. You shall hear from me toâ€"morâ€" row morning,‘"‘ he said, almost solâ€" emauly. . _._ ‘‘I «lo not know. I cannot say. Why do you answer me in this way about my child?‘ Then she held her hands together and looked up into his face imploringly. He owned himself that she was a good actress. He was almost inclined to submit and to declare his passion for Gzorâ€" giana. For the present that way out of the difficulty would have been so easy ! "‘IArust that I have done Iig)fhing to lessen your good opinion.‘"‘ Wanless." ‘‘That means nothing.‘‘ This was true, but the Major did not intend Ho mean anything. _ ‘"Of all my flock she is the fairest.""‘ That was true also. The Major would have been delighted to accede to the asâ€" sertion of the young lady‘s beauty, if this might have been the end of it (I had thoughtâ€"â€"" ‘Had thought what, Lady Wanâ€" less ?"‘ § "If T am deceived in you, Major Rossiter, I never will believe in a man again. I have looked upon you as the very soul of honor." ‘I hope not, indeed. Oh, Major Rossiter!"‘ The mother‘s position was also «lifficult, as it is of no use to play with a fish too long without making an attempt to stick the hook into his gills. ‘"Lady Wanless !" ‘‘What am I to say to you I am sure you know my feelings. You know how sincere is Sir Walter‘s regard." I no mode of immediate escape. ‘‘I couldn‘t prevent her because she is nothing to me.‘‘ That would have been the straightforward answer 35â€" but one most difficult to make. "‘I hope she will be none the worse toâ€" morrow morning,‘‘ said the Major. e | 5 °°° moC 2wJOr,. as thougn forced by [ wise. That her hopes had not been lej-olestlny, asked her to «lance, she very high we know from the words q refused. It had seemed to her a} which she spoke to Sophia in the * | matter of course that he should ask privacy of her own room. _ | her, and at last he did;â€"but shef He had intended to return _ by . | refused. The evening with him was| Slowbridge, but when the morning ;) very long, and just as he thought} came he changed his mind and went & | that he would escape to bed a,nd] to Bectham. His reason for doing j‘ was meditating how early he would} so was har«_ily plain, even to himâ€" ; be off in the morrow, Lady®Wanless| self. He tried to make himself beâ€" j book possession of him and carried heye that the letter had better be j him off alone into one of the desoâ€"| wribten from Beethamâ€"hot as it , | lateâ€"chambers. "Is she very tired 1‘ | were, from the immediate neighâ€". _ asked the anxious mother. borhoodâ€"â€"than from London ; but, | )f "Is who tired?‘ The Major at| as he thought of this, his mind was ; |that moment would have given| crowded with ideas of Alice Dugâ€" _’ twenty guineas to have been in hs| dale. He would not propose to_ |lodgings near St. James‘s Street. | Alice. At this moment, indeed, he i ‘‘My poor girl," said Lady Wanâ€"| was averse to matrimony, having ; |less, assuming a look of great soâ€"| been altogether disgusted with foâ€" | licit@de. § ‘male society at Brook Park: but | _ Ib was in vain for him to pretend | he ‘had to acknowledge a sterling | | pot to know who was the ‘‘she"" inâ€"| worth about Alice, and the existâ€"{ tended. ‘"Oh, ah, yes; Miss Wanâ€"| ence of a genuine friendship beâ€" less." tween her and himself, which made "Georgiana." s it painful to him to leave the counâ€" | "I think she is tired. She was| bry without other recognition than shooting a great deal. Then therel that raising of his hat when he saw | was a quadrille;/â€"but she didn‘t| her at the corner of the lane. He | dance. There has been a great deal ) had behaved badly in this Brook to tire young ladies." Park affairâ€"in having been temptâ€" (You shouldn‘t have let her do|ed thither in opposition to those â€" so much." _ â€" > better instinets / which had made ; How was he to get out of it ? What ) Alice so pleasant a companion to : 'wa»s he to say 1 If a man is clearly | himâ€"and was ashamed of himself. |â€" asked his intentions he can say that| He did not think that he could go ; he has not got any. That used to( back to his former ideas. He was | be the old fashion when a gentleâ€"| aware that Alice must think ill of ; man was supposed to be dilatory in | himâ€"would not believe him to be ; , declaring his purpose. But it gave| now such as she had once thought the oscillating lover so easy an esâ€"| him. England and London were cape! It was like the sudden jerk distasteful to him. fHe would go of the hand of the unpracticed fishâ€" ! awbroad on that foreign service which erman : if the fish does not succumb ‘he had proposed to himself. There at once it goes away down the| was an opening for him to do so if stream and is no more heard of.| he liked, and he could return to l But from this new process there is his present dutics affter a vaar n« i. I "Is who tired?‘ The Major at that moment would have given twenty guineas to have been in h s lodgings near St. James‘s Street. | ‘‘My poor girl,""‘ said Lady Wanâ€" less, assuming a look of great soâ€" | Leit@ice. f It was in vain for him to pretend not to know who was the "she" inâ€" tended. ‘"Oh, ah, yes; Miss Wanâ€" less." ‘"Georgiana." s "I think she is tired. She was shooting a great deal. Then there was a quadrille;â€"but she didn‘t dance. There has been a great deal to tire young ladies." Cobble in a state of mystified susâ€" pense. am very much flattered, Lady eftrsi on CHAPTER VII now such as she had once thought him. â€" England and London were distasteful to him. He would go awbroad on that foreign service which ‘he had proposed to himself. There was an opening for him to do so if he liked, and he could return to his present duties after a year or two. | But he would see Alice acain es en e oo nc nc bo possible but that. Lady Wanless should understand what would be the purport of that letter, althougch as she left him on the previous night she had Ai o tamvl adecrmenanens o. haé_ pret% zi&ea‘-flvtg Soe that the trade mark is on write one inâ€" once‘ve every glove, It always surprises a girl more or less when a man tells her that he loves herâ€"just as if she didn‘t know, it all the time. it |\__‘Me! It will not hurt me. Not that I mean to tell a lie to you, father,‘"‘ she added, after a moâ€" ment. _ ‘"A woman isn‘t hurt beâ€" cause she doesn‘t get a prize in the lottery. Had it ever come about, I dare say I should have liked him well enough."" ‘‘No more than that ?‘ ‘‘And why should it have come about?‘ she went on saying, avoidâ€" ing her father‘s last question, deâ€" termined not to lie if she could help: it, but determined, also, to show no wound. ‘"I think my position in life very happy, but it isn‘t one from which he would choose a» wile." ‘‘Why not, my dear?" (To be continaed.) h c s ue en t atce. _ Old Lady Deephbell had caught a _ cold, walking about on the lawn | with hardly anything on her old | shouldersâ€"stupid old womanâ€"and had sent for the doctor the first thing in the morning. ‘‘Positively settled,"" she had said to the doeâ€" tor, ‘‘absolutely arranged, Dr. Dugâ€" dale. Lady Wanless told me so herâ€" self, and I congratulated the genâ€" tleman."" She did not go on to say that the gentleman had danied the | accusationâ€"but then she had not! ‘beReved the dena _ "pha fanee BP i i Emdns nds ce iet : 0.i i2 t nR RC "And you!"‘ ‘This he said, holdâ€" ing her hand and looking tenderly inf;p_ her eyes. believed the denial. _ The doctor, coming home, had thought it his duty to tell Alice, and Alice had received the news with a smile. V knew it would be so, father." mt intcamtemadent ons faes 22 60073 7 this, he drove himself back to Beeâ€" tham. s On that morning tidings of the successful festivities at Brook Park reached the doctor‘s house. Tidâ€" ings of the coming festivities, then of the preparations, and at last of the festal day itself, had reached Alice; so that it seemed to her that/ all Beetham talked of nothins alsa of nothing else.

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