Etienne Pascal, their father, being compromised in a rising against the Chancellor Seguier, fled from Paris in 1638, leaving his children in the charge of a faithfu® housekeeper. _ But the children were already personages. Jacqueline, about twelve years of age, meeting Cardinal de Richeliena one day, asked hber Tather‘s pardon so prettily in verse that Richelieu not only recalled him to Paris but soon afterwards gave him the important post of adjutant to the intendant of Normandy and sent him to Rouen in 1639. Impressed into the business of his father‘s office at Rouen, young Pascal, at sixteen years of ago, conceived the idea of a mechanical ready reckomer, independent of the will, and energetiâ€" eally gave himself to this invention, which occupied him for more than two years. He devised fifty different When Blaise Pascal, the famous French mathematician, was sixteen years old, he wrote a treatise on conic sections. His sister, Jacqueline, at twelve years of age, was the author of a book of poems. In the French Ideat, Mme. Duclaux tells of the furâ€" ther> triumphs of <those ~wonderful children of the seventeenth century. Famous French Mathematiclan in vented Many Modern Conveniences. Each week the pieces should be gone over carefully and the tiniest break mended. _ Darn linen pietes back and forth with ravelings â€" or threads drawn from the best parts of old linen. This becomes invisible after laundering. _ Don‘t leave it unâ€" til a patch is required. _A patch is unsightly while a darn is not. A well darned table cloth, towel or napkin will wear twice as long as a neglected one and look none the worse for the stitches. _ Fold linen pieces differently from time to time to avoid wear in the same places. wWARâ€"TIMB CARE OF HOUSEHOLD LINEN. The eareful housewife looks well; Sometimes an ‘ugly tear ©A" be after her linens at all times, but in mended so it does not show. _ To do periods like the present when they this follow a thread in cutting out the can scarcely be replaced for love or part to be removed, mitre the corners money it certainly behooves us all to and use tiny stitches and thread of redouble our vigilance in this direcâ€" the color of the goods. A plain mateâ€" tion . | rial can be so mended as to almost d:: 1 ‘ & PP _T L EBC Geceunt First let us see how certain condiâ€" tions shorten the usefulness of such things. as sheets, pillowslips, table cloths, napkins and towels. â€" Much wear comes from laundering when by friction the dirt is rubbed out. Vigor ous rubbing, such as is necessary when linen is badly soiled, wears it out much faster than when only partially soiled. _ Hence it is economy to wash it before the first named condition is reached. A gentle rubbing preserves the fabric longer than a vigorous one. Strong washing fluids cause disinteâ€" gration of the threads and should be avoided even though they facilitate cleansing. is then easily repaired so the break will scarcely be noticed. _ Neglected it means a bad place. Turn pillow slips before slits come in them. _ Rip the bottom ends and resow with the corners as first made half way along the sides. _ This brings the wear in a fresh place. Single width sheets must have a seam in the middle if turned, but neatly folded in a flat seam this will not look badly, or the centre may be over handed. _ The sides will have to be narrowly hemmed but that is a triflâ€" ing matter in war time. So far nothing has been said of unâ€" derwear, but eare will result in a savâ€" ing here also. _ As suggested, wash ing before a garment becomes badly soiled saves wear, even though it means more â€" pieces. Watch for breaks and mend them before they beâ€" come large. Dry all colored clothes in the shade to prevent fading. The careful housewife understands, too, how the wind can injure articles while hanging on the line to dry. An hour in a stiff wind will shorten the period of usefuiness more than a month‘s wear. _ The rays of the sun and a gentle breeze are harmless, but avoid allowing the clothes to flap in the wind. _ This not only whips out hems, but actually breaks threads and does much damage to any fabric. Hemstitching should be mended as soon as the first thread gives way. It Never known to disappoint work of the artisans who wm‘m;kl;i the machines. Some one has happily termed bim "*Le knighterrant of geometry, wy ‘ring Aither= and the Most Critical Tastes "CALADA" A Teaâ€"pot Test is better than a page of Advertisement. B4 Blackâ€"Green or Mixed . . . Sealed Packets Only., l ‘.vâ€".’ " med CONCERNING PASCAL. L TOLLS the Stone jars of small size with stone covers or with paper or cloth covers pasted on, can be used for preserves in which the sugar acts as a preâ€" servative or for any type of pickle in which vinegar and spices act as pre serving agents. These containers are out of the question for fruit or vegetables which are not preserved or pickled. It is wasteful to put into large conâ€" tainers any sort of preserve or relish that is used in small quantities only, since there is sure to be waste when the product stands long unsealed and is used frequently. Canada‘s ¢old storage stocks of proâ€" visions, though large when measured in pounds, comprise but a very small fraction of the amounts required overseas.â€" Canadian Companies reâ€" porting to the Cost of Living Branch of the Department of Labor, held on JufAe 1st, the following stocks in storâ€" age:â€" Butter, _ 1,689,260 _ pounds; cheese, 2,190,098 pounds; beef, fresh andâ€" pickled, 17,203,038 pounds; pork, fresh and pickled, 29,458,903 pounds; bacon, hams and smoked meats, 13,â€" 118,967 pounds. How shall these stocks compare with the British reâ€" quirements may be understood by notâ€" EXER mm NoSee" As patriotic citizens we will each endeavor to save every bit of cotton and woeol goods by using carefully what we have on hand, thus helping to conserve the amounts needed for war purposes. _ A search of attics and store rooms would probably bring to light a good many articles still usable. Fortunate indeed is the housewife who has a stock of houseâ€" hold linens to last until the close of the war. I know of no more discourâ€" aging task than an attempt to buy new at the present time. What Not To Can. Our canning problem needs to be reduced to a very sound commonâ€"sense basis this year and only those proâ€" ducts canned which cannot be better kept in some other way. During the furious canning camâ€" paigns of the past few days, I have found parsnips, carrots, onions, cabâ€" bage, sweet potatoes and even Irish potatoes cannedâ€"all of which is sheer nonsense as each of these could have been kept as effectively in a much simpler way. Glazed earthenware jars are good for putting down egge in water glass. They should be furnished with tight covers to prevent the solution from becoming dense through evaporation. Every housewife should study the ways and means for the storage of root crops, such as trenhces for cabâ€" bage amd turnips, which are kept from freezing by alternate layers of straw and earth. Sweet potatoes can be stored in baskets in a warm attic. _ Navy beans and lima beans and other legumes it would be wiser to store dry than to attempt to can. thither in search of questions worthy of his steel." The calculating machine of Pascal is the ancestor of all our modern mulâ€" tiplicators, the little boxes that hand out change on the counters of shops, the mechanical computators of taxiâ€" cabs and the mathematical machives used in scienific laboratories. Late:, Pascal designed or perfected the barâ€" ometer, the hydraulic press, the wheelâ€" barrow, the«omnibus and the dray. ing how long they would last as the source of t?:ftl sflppi;l*g Grecthrit- ain. The amounts mentioned would supply Britain‘s requirements as folâ€" lows:â€"Butter, 21 hours; cheese, 2% days; beef, 21â€"5 days; pork, 14% part to be removed, mitre the corners and use tiny stitches and thread of the color of the goods. A plain mateâ€" rial can be so mended as to almost deâ€" fy detection. _ If new goods must be used to repair that which has been worn, the new may be placed in the strong sunshine for a few hours, or more if necessary, to bring it to the same shade as the garment . This method will do away with the differ ence in appearance and renders the patch less conspicuous. 5 3â€"4 days. "Who speaks sowsâ€"who listens reaps."â€"Persian Proverb. Canada‘s Cold Storage Stocks bacon, ham and smoked â€"meats, \__‘"That," he said, "would be: like ‘hurrying through Eden." | | _ She venteured to glance up at him. | With his lean, strong face to the sun,; ‘his lithe body swinging rhythmically . ‘ to his stride, he looked like an Indian‘ | chieftain. _ So he would have stalkâ€" ‘ed â€" through virgin forests. So \ under different conditions, she might | have been following his lead. â€" But | conditions have been following his ‘lead. â€" But conditions were as they | were. â€" That is what she must keep ‘in mind. _ He was here merely to escort her safely to Italy and to the ‘ steamer in which she was soomâ€" to | sail for home. _ He was being decent to her, as under the same conditions he would be to any woman. He could ‘scarcely do less than he was doing. , She was forced upon him. _ | | That he apparently took pleasure in the episode was natural enough. It .was just the sort of experience he enjoyed. It was another pleasant excursion like the motor trip from Paris, with a touch of adventure addâ€" ed to give it spice. _ Pogsibly in his | present mood there was also a trace : of romance. Morte had his romantic | gide, based upo_nskié quick sympatties. ! A ï¬'nidir'x in distress was emough to rouse this. _ That was what hapâ€" ï¬ened yesterday when he told her of his love. _ He had been sincere en ‘oufh for the moment, and no Joubt | believed everything he said. â€" He had ‘not given himself quite time enough | to get back to his schedule. With | that in good running order he would ‘laugh at his present folly. _ 3 CHAPTER XXVIII.â€"(Cont‘d.) She was merely a woman now. The muscles in her arms and legs were not strong. _ Because of that she could not leave his side, nor order him to leave. _ She must look to him to fight for her if fighting were nee essary. She must look to him to Eut his strong arm about her and help er if she grew Wweary. _ She must look to him to provide her with food and shelter for.the nightg _ Physicalâ€" ly she was like a child out here on the open road. _ But he was a man. He was a man because he had some | {_/ _ & thing to protect. He was a man be| W« cause he was responsible for some | !t UP one besides himserf. It was this 2°" that the other half of kim had been| W°Y> That was why he must not utter the phrases that burned within. _ It would only frighten her, and he must see that, she was never frightened again. _ To himself he might say as much as he pleased, because she could not hear. He could repeat to himself over and over again, as he did now, "I love youâ€"I love youâ€"I love you." Out loud, however, he said only:â€" "Are you tired?" She started even at that. "No, Monte," she answered. "Weâ€"can rest any time you wish. We have all the time in the world ahead of us." "Have we?" f "Days and weeks and months," he replied. It was the old Monte she heardâ€" the easy, carefree Monte. It made her feel easier. C ; _ "We could, if it were necessary, hergdmitterd. We 6 craving all tlilâ€"esief}}a;s.' L was this that completed him. Yet his attitude toward her, in this| go, with her lips set, she stumbled respect, was strangely impersonal. He| aiong the Cornice Road by his side. was looking for no reward. He did|" A¢ five that evening they had made not®consider that he was qlacuv}g ber| half their journey and stopped at a in any way under an obligation to wayside innâ€"the inn _ of L‘Agneau him. _ His joy in doing for her WAS dansant. On a squeaking sign be not based upon any idea of furthering fore the ancient stone structure, which his own intarests. _ He was utterly looked as if it must have been there unselfish. _ He did not look ghead @N in the days of postâ€"chaises, a froli¢ hour. _ It was enough to have her gome hmg danced upon his hind legs, here in a position where he could be smiling to all who paused there an nâ€" of _some service. vitation to join him in this innocent His love for her was another matâ€" pastime amf not take the world too ter ent‘rely. Whether she were with seriously. _ The good humor of the him or not, t)tat would have remained opyde painting appealed to Monte. the sam>. / He loved her wich @ll fe grinned gack at L‘Agneau danâ€" there was in him, and that was MTC san;, or less disi‘rct from any attitude that "$‘m with you," he nodded. she might assume. _ It was a separâ€" Marjory, dusty and footsore, followâ€" ate, refinite, concrete fact, no longer eq his gaze. 'f’hen she too smiled. cpen to argumentâ€"no longer to be ~ «That fellow has the proper sPirit," affccted by any of the 1\})et’.t;y aCCâ€" ne declared. â€" "Shall we place ourâ€" ents of cireumstance. ot even She gelves in his care?" kad now any control over it. It was "I‘m afraid I can‘t go any farther," within her power t» satisfy it or NOt; she answered wearily . F but that was all. _ She could not 4¢," Monsieur Soucin came out, l00king stroy it. _ If she left it unfulfilled; to be in anything but the mood of the then he must endure that, as Peier gay lamb before his door. had. _ Peter was not sorry that he * it rooms, & little supper, and loved her, and Peterâ€"why, Peter did gome breakfast,‘" explained Monte. not hawe the opportunity to sense «pu; we must strike a bargain. We more than the first faint beginnings are not American touristsâ€"merely of the word love. _ Peter had nOt iwo travelers of the road without had those weeks in Paris in which t9 much gold and a long way to go." get to know her; he had not had that _ @"I nave but a single louis d‘or," put wonderful ride through sunny France ;n madame. with Marjory by his side; and Peter _ "Monsiour! Madame!" interrupted had had r}otï¬ing approaching such & goycin. â€" "I am sorry, but I cannot day as this. _ M s *‘ *nceommodate vou at any price. â€"In Monte turned to look at her. They gne ; had passed through Villefranche, and have were now taking the up grade. The ; mu exercise had flushed her cheeks, Fivâ€" come ing her back the color she had lacked ~ «p in the last few wéeks. Her @Y€8 tired were upon the ground, as if she did ~ «1 not dare raise them. _ Her face Al jesg] ways seemed younger when one did _ ; not see the eies. Asleep, she could ipe 5 not have looked over twenty. _ He ~ wp marvelled at how delicately femining ca5, her fore head and nose were. _ And said the lipsâ€"he could not look very long gain at her lips. _ Warm and full of curâ€" Touis ves, they tugged at his heart. They 5 roused desire. _ Yet, had it been his . @1 blessed privilege to touch them with myust his own, he would have been véery ,; aj gentle about it. _A man must needs " "«g always be gentle with her, he thought. ;. ‘"We should cross the border by toâ€" morrow night, shouldn‘t we?" she asked . ly soon as possible." For she must remember that Monte had not as yet touched either the She quickened her pace unconscious lII think we should get there as * If the price of roast beef and veal ‘is high try stuffed calf‘s heart with vegetables. Wash the heart, remove the veins, arteries‘and any clotted blood, and stuff with dressing, conâ€" |sisting of 14 cup of flaked hominy, % cup bread crumbs, 2 level teaspoons : of molted fat, 1â€"8 teaspoonful of salt, ; cayenne pepper and a few drops of | onion juice mixed with % cup of hot ‘ water or stock. Skewer or sew,dredge | fith flour and fry slightly in fat, adâ€" ‘ ding to the fat one atalk of celery, 4 | slices of carrot, 2 slices of turnip, 1 | bit of bay leaf, 2 cloves, & teaspoon ‘ of pepper corn.. Turn occasionally | until well browned. Put a bit of fat | on the top, add 1% cups of hot stock I or water and cook in the oven slowly for two hours. Serve with carrots Imd turnips. _ ~ heights or the depths of love. It was in him to do that, but she must seeto it that he did not. _ That was her task. _Love as he saw it now was merely a Pleasant garden, in May. It was a gypsy jaunt along the open road where it was pleasant enough to have her with him as he whistled along. _A day or a week or a month or two of that was well enough, as he had said. _ Only sheâ€"she could not last that long. Toâ€"day andktomo:- row at the utmost was as much as she could endure, with every minute a struggle to whip back her emotions. Were it safe, she would try «0 keep it up for his sake. If without danâ€" ger she could keep him happy this way, not allowing {l’im to go any furâ€" ther, she would try. _ But there is a limit to what of herself a woman may sacrifice, even if she is vyilling. $sz "You could not find a bed for madame even for ten louis d‘or?" "Not for a thousand, monsieur. If there are no beds, there are no beds." Yet there was room enough thereâ€" abouts. Be hind the inn an olive orchard extended up a gentle incline to a stone wall. _ Over this the sun was descending in a blaze of glory. A warm breeze stirred the dark leaves of the trees. _ A man could sleep out of doors on such a night as this. Monte turned again to the man. _ "Doubtless the next village in that case is without accommodations also," said Monte. â€" "We will strike no barâ€" gain. _ Name your price up to ten louis d‘or; for madame must rest." Soucin shook his head. "I am giving up my own room. I must sleep in the kitchenâ€"if I sleep at all; which, mon Dieu, is doubtful." "The inquiry was made how many rooms I had, and I answe.cd truth fully." Madame had sunk down on a bench by the door. _ Monte stared up the road and down the road.â€" There was no other house in sight. _ _ _ _ "The orchard behind the house is yours?" he asked. "Yes, monsieur." "Then,"said Monte, â€" "if you will spare. us a few blankets, madame and I will sleep there." "Upon the ground?" "Upon the lï¬ankets," smiled Monts. “Aï¬, monsieur is from America!" exclaimed Soucin, as if that explainâ€" ed everything. “Truly." "And it is so the Indians sleep, I have read." "You have read well. But we must have supper before the officers arrive. "~You can spare some bread and cheese?" "I will do that." "Then make it ready at once. And some coffee?" ‘ "Yes, monsieur." Monte returned to madame. "I have engaged two rooms in the olive orchard,". he announced. [ (To be continued.) Pmd ns es oz Snd Intets "Two rooms, a little supper, and some breakfast," explained Monte. "But we must strike a bargain. We are not American touristsâ€"merely two travelers of the road without much gold and a long way t_s g?." seu‘te . % . \a wen on nlsts Lk "But look hereâ€"madame is very tired," frowned Monte. "I am sorry," answered Soucin helpâ€" lessly. Monte stepped nearer and jingled the gold in his pocket. _ 1 #H €2V EN0 PR RETMI PRRRCC 2 CCC PB MVE “Su'pposing we had arrived yesterâ€" day, would you nave turned us out toâ€"night?" *# g â€" Stuffed Calf‘s Heart TORONTO The Canada Food Board, makes the following statement: ME To on PR P C "Recent announcements that the foo@situation oversea has been reliayâ€" ed by the special efforts of Canada and the United States are being inâ€" terpreted in some quarters as indicatâ€" ing that special food production and conservation efforts no longer are necessary. "All optimistic reports relative to the easing ,of our Allies‘ food posiâ€" tion are based on the assumption that the utmost effort to maintain and to increase production, and also to conâ€" serve food, will be continued on this continent as well as oversea. "Fortunately, there has been an unâ€" usually large grain crop in the United States, leaving a surplus over present consumption which, with the available surplus from Canada, and with conâ€" tinued conservation in both countries, should meet our Allies‘ import reâ€" quirements from North America this year. _ The large supply of food for live stock, which also seems assured in the United States, will be reflected in increased production of pork and, to a lesser extent, of beef also. "Hopeful though recent develop ments in the food situation have been, it will not be safe until enorâ€" mous wheat reserves have been.acâ€" cumulated on both sides of the Atâ€": lantic, and such reserves are not yet in sight. A comparative crop fail ure on this continent next year would, in the absence of holdâ€"over reserves, make our Allies‘ position almost &s desperate as it was last winter. _ Accord!gg to Lieut. Depret Bixio, of the French Army, who is a naturalist as well as a flying man, many insects follow captive balloons in their asâ€" cent. He has seen flies go as high as 2970 feet, after which they de. Grasshoppers cling to the basket of the balloon until the air becomes too rarefled for them, when they let go and fall. He says the swallows have a glorlous time catching these inâ€" sects. Ag an additional sugar conservation measure, the Food Board has ordered that, until further notice, manufac: turers of canned fruits for sale must not use more than an average of twentyâ€"five pounds of sugar to one hundred pounds â€"of prepared fruit. The Order is now effective. _ It does not apply to jams, jellies, or marâ€" malade. "Canadians canrot afford to relax in food production or food conservaâ€" tion because all that can be grown or saved will be needed. Nothing could be more dangerous than to asâ€" sume that our position is yet safe. The Food Board wishes to emphasize especially the necessity for the utmost effort to save this year‘s harvest from waste or loss. The responsibility resting upon city and town men fo see that the farmers have sufficient help to bring in the crops is still pressing, and" must not be ignored." Food Control Corner Who Cannot Go to War CANADA Must Have Greater Agricultural Production. CANADA Needs Men Trained in the Best Agricultural Practices. YOU will be of greater value to your country and to yourself if you acquire all available information reâ€" garding your business as a farmer. You can obtain this information during the Fall and Winter months at the % ¢ Ontario Agricultural College Guelph Young Men on the Farm THE COLLEGE TERM.â€"The College opens September 20th and closes April 12th. This is convenient for most farm boys, as the hardest work of the summer is completed before the comâ€" mencement of the term and students can return to their homes for the spring seeding. COURSES.â€"The Twoâ€"Year Course is particularly designed for young men fiending to be good practical farmers. It inâ€" cludes studies which are of practical valug in all the work of the farm. The Fourâ€"Year Course for the degree of B.S.A. is a twoâ€" year continuation of the twoâ€"year course. EXPENSES.â€"In order to encourage young men to attend the college, the fees are fixed at the lowest possible figure. Board, $4.00 per week; Tuition Fee, $20.00 per year. Public School Education is sufficient for admigsion. Insects as Aeronauts. COLLEGE OPENS SEPTEMBER 20TH Write for a Calendar giving full particulars G. C. CREELMAN, B.S.A., LL.D., President | A Song of the Air. : ‘This is the song of the Planeâ€" | The creaking shricking plane, ‘‘The throbbing, sobbing plane, | And the moaning, groaning wires | The engineâ€"missing again! , One cylinder never fires! Hey,ho! for the Plane! This is the song of the Manâ€" The driving, striving man, The chosen, frozen manâ€" The pilot, the man at the wheel, Whose limit is all that he can, Aiw beyond, if the meed is read! Hey, ho! for the Gun! This is the song of the Airâ€" The lifting, drifting air, The eddying, steadying air, The wine of its liimtless spaceâ€" May it nerve us at last to dare Even death with undaunted face! Hey, ho! for the Air! â€""Observer," Royal Flying Corps. Hey, ho! for the Man! This is the song of the Gunâ€" * The muttering, stuttering gun, The maddening gladdening gunâ€" That chuckles with evil glee At the last, long drive or the Hun, With its end in eternity! ' A British army surgeon, wearing a ‘ mask, exposed himself to the gas for ‘a quarter of an hour, as an experiâ€" \ ment. MHe was burned all over the 4 body, except where the mask proâ€" tected his. head. The public has been advised that if, during an air | Mustard gasâ€" has found more vicâ€" tims among women than among men, | because it penetrates the hair and clings there. Tobacco smoke, too, has 'provod to some extent an unexpected protection for men, Its odor has been described as resembling that of garlic, or even mignonette, but the majority say it is like hot mustard. Terrible Sufferings. Inhabitants of Armentieres who breathed this emanation of frightfulâ€" ness in the morning while walking |nbout town were able to return home | and felt no ill effects until five or six ‘hours later, when their condition rapâ€" !idly became serious. The bronchial ‘tubes are affected first, the eyelids become swollen and little by little ‘the sight is lost. All the mucous membranes are attacked, and the body seems on fire inside, while | burns cover all the skin. Continuous !eoughln( sets in, and in a large perâ€" centage of cases the sufferings of |\the victim terminate in death. Answers to this and other new "wrinkles" introduced by the Germans have been found, but description of them is not permissible. All the lesâ€" sons learned by the British and French troops at a cost of thousands of lives have been communicated to the United States forces, facilitating the purely defensive pat of their work, and permitting them to concenâ€" trate upon ofensive tactics which are likely to gi¥« the Hun something to think about 1%fore The Allied fighting men were thereâ€" by compelled to {onr their masks all the time while mbardmeonts were in progress.. It was a most uncomâ€" fortible necessity; but the Germans were determined to force the enemy troops to take their masks off, and inâ€" vented sneeze bombs and tearâ€"comâ€" pelling bombs that discharged irritant gases meant solely to make the vicâ€" tims uncover their faces and breathe the odorless gases which carry cerâ€" tain death. n The liquid, by its evaporation, was transformed into a heavy gas, which filtered downward and reached the cellars where the people had sought refuge. This was the new and deadly "mustard gas"; surely it must be adâ€" mitted that even the Hun has conâ€" trived up to date nothing more diaâ€" bolical than this carefully planned atâ€" tempt to destroy the entire populaâ€" tion of a town. raid, the smell of mustard essence be noted, the thing to do is to move to an Apper story and breathe through a compress soaked with a certain solution. Women shoy}d wrap their hair in wet cloths. Sand or earth should be thrown upon any liquid that may be seen before it has evaporated. . Sneere and Tear Bombs. Phosgene gives no such warning; it has no odor. For this reason it was very effective when first used by the Germans. Troops could not know that they had been gassed until too late. Though developing no immediâ€" ate symptoms, the men died in awful agony a few hours afterward. It was observed, however, that the sound made by an exploding gas shell was slightly diferent from that of other shells. Men were trained to disâ€" tinguish this difference, and to give a signal "in time for green rockets (the gas warning and gas masks). Thus the Hun, for a while, was checkmated. But he met this with another move, which for a time seemed to baffie the Allies. He mixed gas and explosives in the saume shell, thereby elinmigating differences of detonation, and one of his first experiments in this line was madeâ€" against the Americans. ploded. iULD Th» ne‘ghbor‘s uns of the war i1 one has in mal fit to show, tant thing is to it may be said i deal depends u fed and traine mble to do ar among its peer to the fair and ghow yard fenc dncrease in his cattle . An « among the sp« this: "There a running aroun there are here ority of cases, lack of ability either as to fle Are at then judgme: tle has { plicated maste ne m« mal m the fir ke After : the anim same vis what If th i1 giy ippear TY rmation as good Feeding many h m "»0 ly it\