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Durham Review (1897), 17 Jul 1919, p. 2

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t € & "I never dreamed there were so many chickens in the world!" Julie groaned as a White Leghorn changed her mind at the last moment and with an agonized squawking scuttled diâ€" rectly in front of Uncle Henry. Julie elutched the wheel with tense fingers, twin red spots blossoming in her cheeks. "Romey, for mercy‘s sakes, what‘s that ahead? It looks as big as anâ€"â€"an elephant." "Hooray!" yelled Romey, waving the‘ directions for driving over his head. "Hooray forâ€"what‘ll we name it?â€"Uncle Henry, that‘s it! Hooray for Uncle Henry! Hoop! Hooray! Three mornings later, still a little breathiess at the desperate nature of their _ adventuring, the Flemings elimbed into Uncle Henry. Julie, the diagram of directions pasted to her left on the windshield, tremulously pressed the selfâ€"starter, released the elutch and the automobile moved majestically out of the farmyard into the beckoning Unknown. "Pooh!" Romey‘s tone was mascuâ€" linely scornful. _ "It‘s only Cyrug Gilly‘s buggy. You got loads of room to pass. What yeu crawling so for?" Her enthusiasm swept dowbts and obstacles before it like straws. The spirit of adventure had seized the Flemings. "But Julie!" Pa expostulated. "Who‘d run the contraption? And where‘d we get the money to go with ?" Julie waved the blue cheque that had come in the letter from J. Tobin. "Here‘s the money," she said briefly. "I‘ll drive! I‘ll study the book and find out how to start and stop. We‘ll go day after toâ€"morrow. Pa, you can get Cyrus Gillis to look after things while we‘re away." bave a good lives!" _ Dazedly they lcoked at her, then helplessly at the shining green and nickel of the automobile. "No! We won‘t sell it!" she cried with a shy laugh of excitement. "We‘ll go to Toronto in it! We‘ll bave a good time for once in our To Romey‘s roar of protest Julie added a note of her own. In the last moments her cheeks had grown very pink and the light of a new idea blazâ€" ed in her eyes as she faced them all. the depths. "Gee! Bet I could get the hang of it in an hour. There‘s diagrams and everything!" "Maybe we can sell it for someâ€" thing," said Pa doubtfully. "Of course we‘ll try." Romey alone evinced any interest in the strange Legacy that had befalâ€" len them. With sixteenâ€"yearâ€"old enâ€" thusiasm he was already deep in an exploration of the tool box. "Here‘s a book that tells how to run it!‘" His muffled réport came from "I ‘most knew I‘d never get to see Toronto!" she quavered. _ "I ‘most knew "t all the time!" Ma laid a hand on her chest. "Ther~‘s my shooting pains again," shâ€"*«ighed. "I guess I‘d better take a «poonful of the Specific and lie down." Seventyâ€"five dollars and an autoâ€" mobile! This was the Legacy on which the Flemings had built their dreams! They stood in the sad little wreckage of them now and Gran‘ma Bradley began to cry like a disapâ€" pointed child. Her tears fell fast. "Mr. Benjamin Fleming, Dear Sir," Julie read aloud conscientiously. "I am shipping you the automobile which Mr. Henry Bradley purchased a week before his death. The old man was eccentric and somewhat childish, He had a great distrust of banks and apparently invested his entire savings in this automobile. Although he was supposed wealthyâ€"the houseâ€"which he rented furnishedâ€"has been careâ€" fully searched and only three hundred dollars in money found. Deducting the funeral expenses, a cheque for the remainderâ€"seventyâ€"five dollarsâ€" is enclosed. Yours â€"respectfully, J. Tobin." | "Suppose you read the letter, Julie," Pa suggested feebly. "My breath‘s kind of took away." ; Neap/ In the Fleming yard the family stood still as he had left them, staring at the automobile as they might have stared at some goggleâ€"eyed monster from Mars. On the edge of departure Leggett drew rein, delving into his pocket with en exclamation, "Hold on! I got a letter for you, too. Abner Wills coma| out of the post office and hailed me | as I was coming by. 1 was near forgetting." ’ He thrust it into Julie‘s hand and drove away. "Where in all creation Benje Flemâ€" ing raised the money to buy an autoâ€" mobile is more‘n I can make out!" hel muttered to Hen as the cart jolted . down the hill. "His place isn‘t any| tbetter‘n mine and land knows the millenium‘ll be due before I‘ll have one! Wish it was so I could though,’ for your mother‘s sake. It would| chirk her up to get out and away| from home." | "Don‘t seem to be expecting comâ€" p‘ny!" Leggett viewed their amazeâ€" ment curiously. "Been mortgaging the farm, Benje? First time I guess anything like this ever got off the narrer gauge at Farmington.. I was at the station when it came, so I said to myself, ‘I‘ll just hitch it beâ€" hind and bring it along.‘" " The Legacy on Wheels CHAPTER IIL By Dorotky Donnell Calhoun. Horseflesh as food was introduced into Gaul when the country was inâ€" vaded by the Franks after the conâ€" quest by Julins Caesar. Records reâ€" lative to 1404 show that it was eaten in Paris at that time. A little while later, he saw her slip the peppermint out of her mouth, and place it on a table by the open winâ€" dow. Grandpa‘s little weakness was for a specially strong peppermint candy, and recently he gave one to fourâ€"yearâ€" old Muriel, and waited to see what she would say. "What‘s the matter, dear ?" ‘"Don‘t you like the candy?" "Yes, thank you," said Muriel, politeâ€" ly. "I‘m only letting it cool a little. Charles Kingsley says, "The mother who loves her own child may be a very ordinary mother, but she who takes someone else‘s and loves it as her own, she is one of God‘s mothers." The strange wedding ceremony conâ€" sists in the husband and wife eating rice from each other‘s bow!, then mixâ€" ing the rice, and both eating from the same bowl. Of course, there is a feast, but it does not cost much, for every guest is expected to contribute something. * On the wedding day the bride is clad in red and carried in a Sedan chair covered with red. Anybody has the right to turn back the chair curtains and take a look at her. Her hair is elaborately ciled, and so all the other girls throw hayseeds at her, which stick. On reaching the home of her husband the bride has to submit to the candid criticism of the entire family. A novel method of arranging wedâ€" ding ceremonies is adopted in China. The "goâ€"betweens" are usually the busy old gossips of the district, who get a commission on the amount paid by the bridegroom to the father of the bride. "When it was taken down to Downâ€" ing Street, the Prime Minister at once commenced to write with it, and he has done all his writing with it ever since. Recently, when another was offered to him, he replied, ‘I have one of my own, with which I am going to sign the Peace Treaty.‘‘* "I désired some time ago to give the Prime Minister a little souvenir, and, seeing that he writes such a lot, I thought it would not be a bad idea to give him a fountain pen. The holder is heavily gold mounted and adorned with the Welsh words, ‘Nado Lig, 1918‘ It also is inscribed with the Prime Minister‘s signature in facâ€" simile. According to R. B. Morris, M.P., Premier Lloyd George signed the Peace Treaty with a fountain pen, says a London despatch. This is said to be the first time in history that such a pen has been used for the sigâ€" nature of a treaty. Mr. Morris thus tells the story: "Who knows but there‘s a pot of gold at the end?" she thought with a touch of awe. "Julie Fleming, I‘ll never forgive you if you give up now! Besides, my dear, you couldn‘t turn Uncle Henry around to save your life! All the book told you was how to go to Toronto. There wasn‘t a word about coming home!" j Premier Lioyd George Introduced An Innovation at Paris. |_ In the brief period since they had left home, Romey‘s whole outlook. on \Vfe had changtd. If old Peleg in an ‘ambitious mood had ever kicked up <his infirm heels to the tune of seven miles an hour, the Flemings would have thought he was remning away, but the smooth ease with which the automobile glided up the, familiar | hills and by the familiar orehards and farms, awoke latent yearnings for speed. Julie quakingly advanced the ‘lever one fotch and steered Uncle \ Henry in triumph by the buggy, toilâ€" ‘ing asthmatically up the hill. A warm wave surged over Julie‘s heart and broke in a spray of happy tears. They made a rainbow of the road ‘before her. "There‘s a baby!" discovered Gran‘â€" ma. "See all the little dites of clo‘es on the line, Emmie? And the knit Afghan like the one I made for Julie only hers was pink striped." 3 "That‘s a real nice house that beâ€" longs to the orchard," Ma‘s voice had not been so animated in yearsâ€""the one with the white trimming round the porch, Pa, and the porch swing." "Look at that orchard, Emmie! Two hundred barrels as I‘m a living sinner! Northern §py, grafted on to natural fruit, some of ‘em. I might try grafting on that lot of trees in the north pastureâ€"â€"" Already vague doubts were assailâ€" ing her. Toronto, she remembered suddenly, was four hundred miles away in the geography! Pa‘s voice drifted from the back seat across Julie‘s panicky thoughts. "They ought to have put that in the directions!" she thought resentâ€" fully. "How to pass Cyrus Gilly‘s Buggy on Totten Hillâ€"How not to Run Over the Willetts‘ Hens. SIGNED WITH FOUNTAIN PEN. Weddings in China. Served Too Hot! (To be continued.) he asked I‘; is easy to become so accustomed to our surroundings that we do not lize their deficiencies. The home that sesms sufficient to the elders is not always suitable for the young | folk‘s ideas of entertaining. The | writer rocenily saw a rather pathetic l' letter from a girl who wanted to give / a party in weleome of some homeâ€" ! returnics so‘dier. She drew a plan of | the lower floor of her home which | showed a bedroom separating the forâ€" . mal parlor from the sittingâ€"room and diningâ€"rocm, where the family generâ€" ally gathered, and sho wanted advice | as ton how she enuld connect the parlor Many a farmer plans to build, or reâ€"build hisâ€"house "when the children grow up," but the years slip by until perhaps the boys have left the farm and the girls are saying "there is no way of having company at our house." Country boys and girls have to depend largely for recreation on the good times they have in each others‘ homes, and a good house to which company may be asked is the farmer‘s best investment if he wants to keep his childrer at home and make the place attractive to their friends. | I‘; is easy to become so accustomed In canning peas handle carefully so as not to break the skin. If the skin is broken the liquid becomes "cloudy." This does not spoil the vegetables, but gives them a bad appearance. In canning corn it is beéter to cut just enough off the cob for one can at a time. Corn that is packed slowly beâ€" comes soaked or "waterâ€"logged." When the directions say to blanch in steam, lay your cheesecloth in a steamer over boiling water instead of dipping directly into the kettle. If you cannot buy a commercial canner you can use your boiler, a lard can, large kettle or pail. Put a small board with holes bored in it in the bottom to rest the cans on; otherwise they are likely to break. Do not use paper or straw packed down. The deâ€" partment of agriculture finds this method unsatisfactory. A slat botâ€" tom like a basket cover will do. Good commercial: canners may be bought for $4.50 or $5.00. If you have a great deal of canning to do it would pay you to buy one. game ...... none 180 180 120 Beef ......... none 180 180 120 *Where blanching is necessary the hot water method is used with ali the above products except with "greens," in which case steam is required. When the time is up remove, tightâ€" en the tops and turn upside down to see if they leak. If they do, remove top, put on new sterilized rubber"and boil ten minutes longer. Bsans :/. ... . Corn (sweet) Corn (field).. Tomatoes ... Poultry _ and | _ There is but one sure way to can | vegetables and that is the coldâ€"pack method. _ The vegetable, whether peas, asparagus, string beans, Corn | or greens, should be canned immediâ€" ately after picking before it has a | chance to wilt. Clean thoroughly. (The next step is blanching. This | means cooking for a limited time, one to fifteen minutes, in a boiling , water or live steam. This is best idone by tying the vegetable in a | square cheesecloth of a size convenâ€" iént to fit easily into your kettl:. | After blanching the exact time menâ€" tioned in the table remove the cheeseâ€" cloth containing the vegetabie from lthe boiling water or steam and dip limmediate]y into cold water. _ The | cans, tops and rubbers should be ready sterilized, that is, put in cold water, brought to a boil and boiled not less than five minutes. Pack your 'cnns with the vegetable; it should not be allowed to remain in the cold water, merely dipped in and at once ’removed, and allowed to drip, fill with boiling water to overflowing,| put on the rubbers and tops, turning the tops down until they just touch the rubbers but not tight. Then place‘ immediately in your canner, cover the top, and processâ€"cook the time. given in the table. If you use n{ hot water bath the water must come up two inches above the top of the cans. It must be boiling when the , cans are entered and kept Woiling, the entire ti "‘nter each can as!‘ fast as filled. i you leave them| standing on th table until all are filled they become chilld and crack when put into the hot water. | St‘wberries A timeâ€"table for fruits and vegeâ€" tables most. usually put up follows, the time being expressed in minutes: Processing. Entertaining in the Farm Home. TORONTO Cold Pack Your Vegetables. 888# $ $s *Blanching;ss §§£§£’£§ + <... none 16 12 10 ... mnone 16 12 10 s .. none 16 12 10 ..... none 16 12 10 .. .. none 16 12 10 ..... ons 16 12 10 ..... none 16 12 10 ... ons 16 12 10 + +iÂ¥ % 16 12 10 +i« ®@"Me tR ~£ 8 ou] @ 1%4 20 2 15 120 90 5 to 10 180 120 5 to 10 120 ©90 5 180 120 10 180 120 1% 22 18 5 EB2 60 90 90 60 15 The French Government has selectâ€" ed about 140 famous sites along the whole front, which will be preserved in their present state as monuments of the war. Among the sites in the British sector will be the Butte de Warlencourt, ruins of Bapaume, obserâ€" vation points on Hill 80, Givenchy battle fie‘d, and the famous slagheap and tower bridge at Loos. Fresh, highâ€"scented blossoms are placed in an uncovered bow! filled with water and set near the "collector," which consists of a common glass funâ€" nel with the small e!.ld closed. The funnel is filled with a mixture of crushed ice and salt and suspended in an upright position. Moisture from the air of the room forms on it and unites with the emanations from the flowers. As the moisture collects it mins off the tip of the funnel into a receptacle. If this liquid is mixed with an equal amount of pure alcohol, the perfume of the flowers is preâ€" served indefinitely. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria ut in m setalelitestiisind bassbteis dciccis M : Sb s sc W Simple Perfume Making. imakura is not in a temple. It is the At first thought it might seem an imâ€"| wellâ€"known Dai Butsu, or great Budâ€" possible feat to collect the perfume of dah, which sits alone in meditation flowers after it has escaped into the ;’with only the sky for a roof, and casâ€" air, yet it seems simple enough by a | ual visitors and a priest in attendance. method that the Scientific American} describes. nopeinemmummiannrceneaincemmmuprmmncarntitiioes. is All verandah boxes should have casâ€" tors on them. It saves calling a man when they are to be moved, and they cost but a small amount. Put them on everything that is too heavy to be lifted.â€"Mrs. J. J. O‘°C. Keep a blackboard eraser near the kitchen range and use it to brush off dust or ashes when you have not time to polish the stove.â€"Mrs. L. M. T. From the Houseleeper to Another. A spoonful or more of lemon juice or good cider vinegar added to apples that do not cook readily will hasten the process and improve the flavor.â€" A farmer who had taken up a homeâ€" stead, planned and built the home for himself and family. He did not stint on quality or quantity of lumber, but when his home was finished he had a square structure of a story and a half, the lower part divided equally into four enormous rooms, without closets. The windows were many and largeâ€" they needed to beâ€"to light up the big interior. .When the children are older and the mother older also, and perâ€" haps worn with the work of caring for that inconvenient home, imagine the steps that must be taken when company comes. Automatically, this poorlyâ€"planned house will make home entertainment either very hard to have or the flesh and blood of the mother and her girls will pay bitterly for the hard work. Needed: better planning. ‘1 $ A LC C serve as the entrance to a living r0OM.| In the case of a long flight the comâ€" When we plan the new farm h°“'°! pass requires the closest attention beâ€" let us have a place where the daughter fore starting. The machine must be may entertain a young man caller and| swung, and the compass corrected and where she may have a simple party.; adjusted by means of small magnets, The parlor should adjoin the living to remove any deviation that may room where the family gather, and, if exist owing to local magnetic attracâ€" the diningâ€"room is at hand, so much‘ tion caused by the engines and other the better; there wili be more ro0m| steel parts of the machine. A card and conveniences either for & Sitâ€"! on which deviations are plainly markâ€" down supper or for informal passing eq is placed at the side of the comâ€" around of refreshments. |pass, «o that a pilot can take these A farmer who had taken up a homeâ€" into account when plotting his course. All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKs @. J. CLIFF _ â€" ~â€" _ TORONT BUMMER SCHOGL _ NAVIGATION SCHO0L July and August, December to April 26 GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar. In manywases our farm homes have grow 1 and the rooms spread out in every direction. We all know oldâ€" fashioned farm dwellings where it is necessary to go through one room to get to a second room. These are very apt to be bed rooms, and there is no privacy possible for the occupants of either room. The situation is even more unpleasant when a bed room must serve as the entrance to a living room. Part of the Arts course ;nnybemed by correspondence, MEDICINE __ _ EDUCATION with the sittingâ€"room and the diningâ€" room. Of course, there was no way of doing this while the middle room reâ€" mained a bed room. e Why should the middle room be used for a bed room? Why should not the bed rooms be confined to the upper stories or if it is necssary to have one downstairs, let it be entirely separated from the living rooms. These little formalities are safeguards to orderly living and should not be disregarded without reason. APPLIED SCIENCE _ Mining, Chemical, Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering ARTS QUEEN‘S KINGSTON, ONTARIO TORONTO â€"ugul| â€" 47 DEALEERS EVERYWEHERZ The most remarkable image in Kaâ€" makura is not in a temple. It is the wellâ€"known Dai Butsu, or great Budâ€" dah, which sits alone in meditation In one temple the image is a Japanâ€" ese conception of the god of the lower world. The figure bas an unusual hisâ€" tory. An imageâ€"maker, it is said, died. When he appeared before the lord of the other world, he was told that in his lifetime he had never represented the lord of the world properly, and that he must return to earth and make a correct likeness. The figure is pointed out as the resuit of the order. WERVOREO M DWR WW MWP NNM NO CC 000 In order to navigate the Atlantic by airplane, the pilot must make exact and minute calculations before startâ€" ing. These are taken in conjunction with meteorological reports, and the latest scientific methods of gauging | the speed and direction of wind are \ employed. No e~sy matter this when some 1,900 nauticat miles have to be taken into account. The pilot must . study the position of certain stars, | make use of the sextant and an instruâ€" | ment called the course and distance | calculator, a hearing plate, and, above | all, a good stopâ€"watch. Egypt built ker monuments in stone; Japan built most of hers of wood. The Egyptian pyramids were thousands of years old when Kamakura was built. To«day the pyramids seem no older, but Kamakura‘s greatness is only a memory. A few temples built from the wreck, after fire and tidal waves had destroyed the city, are all that have remained, and they are fragile temples of wood. The position of the Pole Star can be fixed by finding the Plough, and the two pointers, Dubhe and Merak. A line drawn through the pointers will lead direct to the Pole Star, and if continued will also locate the Casâ€" siopela group, which for direction is the simplest and easiest method of fiking the two Froups, and is accepted at all times as indicating the true north. Flying Over Water Different Thing to Flying Over Land. It is one thing to fiy long‘distances over land, but quite a different matter when it comes to flying over water. Built of Wood, Most of Them Are Now in Ruins. The aerial compass is so constructâ€" ed that the pilot navigator can easily read the card, which is floated in pure alcohol, so that the liquid will not freeze when fiying is taking place at high altitudes. Rapid and correct calculations must be made, as no means are available once the start is made of plotting and laying off the course by the usual means of parrallel rulers, dividers and protractors. sIGN POSTS OF THE AIRMEN. Here is the FINAL Phonograph That Plays ALL Records CORRECTLY Keeps Harness Neow and Axles 3Strong tmpertat | . $ypâ€"P Eureka Harness Oil , _ _ Imperial _ Without obligation send me, free of charge, your booklet explaining prinâ€" ciples of the "Ultona." 6 » FILL zxrnul OQUPQ! * ~â€" _ THE MUSICAL MERCHANDISE SALES co. Dept. W. L. Exceisior Life Bidg. JAPAN‘S TEMPLES. This is the only phonograph with the wonderâ€" ful "Ultona" reproducer which has three disâ€" tinct places for needles, Including the diamond point that stays permanently in position, The "Uitona" is ‘the only "allâ€"record" reproâ€" ducer providing the exact weight, needle and diaphragm for each make of record. Another exclusive feature is the allâ€"wood tone chamberâ€"built like & violin entirely free from tin or cast iron. Name Town Street or RR. Victory Bonds BGeliers of Victory Bonds will find definite hom-uoudutu financial page of the nto morning papers. Long chewing of food helps the apâ€" petite to be satisied with smaller amounts. The grove which surrounds the Budâ€" dah seoms dwarfed beside his giant proportions. _ The statue is said to measure fifty feet in height, the head alone being nine feet high. This giant Buddah is one of the relics of Kamaâ€" kura‘s thirteenth century greatness. It has survived because it is made of | bronze plates fashioned by the best : metal workers in Japan. It is one of| Japan‘s very fow monuments that can | aspire to rival in longevity the pyraâ€"" mids. , Minard‘s Lifment Cures Garget in Cows McKinnon Bldg.. 19 Melinda St., Toronto W. L. MeKINNON & CO. Dealors in Govprument,and Municipal CLARK‘S WEATâ€"VECETAELES â€" COMPLETE WELL COOKED axo SEASONED THIS LECEND OH THE TN IS A GOVERNMENT GCUARANTEE CANADIAN BOILED CixNER JJST HEAT RKD EAT W.CLARK Can t ie dn in is im Prov. Toronto The artist who is to paint t ure, for we may assume the will be recorded on canvas for \ not have as easy a task as h German rival. Mr. Lioyd « President Wilson and M. Clow: will not cut the figure of Bism: his jack boots, though Foch, sky blue, may be able to ch> comparison with Moltke. Yet picture does not strike the eve, be well worth having, particul: we can place It beside a copy < other ftlll" which hangs, or u hang, the arsenal at Berlin pair may then inspire a new J« l4 2l The ceremony just conc! very different. There wore n coats than uniforms, few ril stars, and nq gigantic troope The colors and standards of German regiments besioging 1 gave to the scone a backgroun gold and silk, reproduced almost t« infinite as the reflection in one m was repeated in another acros hall. In front of the colors : grouped on the dais the princ: the German States, headed by handsome figure of "the Crown Pr P‘ro’grlck. In the centre stood th« King, and on the floor in front of Bismarck. Moltke, and Roon, triumvirate who had brought to â€" the event which was being c mated, Flanking the dais on ci side were two gigantic troopers, ing monuments of the Prussian i« The bofly of the great hall was cr ed with a mass of officers reprosen the armies of the German S henceforth to be united in the Gor Army. Contrast Between Then and No Bismarck gave Germlaay to ( the brew which he had concocted, left the hall a proud and satisied : little dreaming how his draught v go to the heads of his Prussians, by making them drunk with power lust would bring them back to the | of Mirrors in beggary and shame I There had been anxieties up to the last moment. The old King was non« too eager to exchange his hereditar crown for another diadem, which i more resplendent might, as one of the assistants at the ceremony, von Brum enthal, shrewdly remarks in his diary prove to be a crown of thorns. . Ba varia, Pluuh'- chief rival, had not given way with the best of grace ani on the very eve of the ceremony had Ansisted the title of Emperor of CGor many, which had been propose should be changed to that of German Emperor, in order that all might know that the new chief was the head of an association of States, and that Bavaria retained her independence within hor frontiers. This hg aroused strong opâ€" position in Prussia, but in the end Di= marck got his way, as he usually did, by the adroit use of threats and conâ€" cessions. French Guns Within 7,000 Yards. It is strange for us, who have read of the bombardment of Paris from a distance of 70 miles, to think of this assemblage of princes and powers in the Palace of Versailles taking place within €,000 yards of the German front line trenches at St. Cloud, and within 9,000 yards of the guns of Mont Vaie:~ ien which contained the heaviest s:t/!â€" lery then possessed by the French Moitke had got wind of French preâ€" parations for a sortie, which in point of fact took place the very next da» The French in the sortie won a foot ing on Garche Ridge, to which the faithful guide now takes the touri=t for a view over Paris across the 1 de Boulogne. There was alarm in Vo sailles, where the day before thore had been rejoicing, and we find 1i marck‘s Boswell, Moritz Busch, speakâ€" ing of the French being within two miles and of talk in the new Em peror‘s entourage of packing up, bui the day of the ceremony passed o peacefully enough, and as was fitti for the celebration of the harvest of the policy ofâ€" blood and iron as it was of military display, Most of us are familiar with t\ ture of the ceremony of the ; 'mnuon of the German Emperor Hall of Mirrors at Versailles in | ‘ber, 1870, writes Major Gener: i Frederick Maurice. The cential | is justly enough not old King W\ the newly become Emperor, ]m‘. burly person of Bismarck | dressed in his white Cuirassi« form, with polished steel helmet . ‘heud. clanking sabre at his sid | in great jack boots reaching hal up the thighs, stands forward : ‘!ront of the dais and reads th: ment, which announces to the tory, and the supremacy of P had been established beyond que 0 CEREMONY OF 1370 AND THAT OF 19139 TWO MENMORABLE SCEngs VERSAILLES. Arrogant Prussian War Lords Hay, Given Place to Delegates Signing «t a Dictated Peace. write UB new world of unl ple. cla» the Sir ure AM, he 1d N. ‘There are som mer duirw'{c n ’mducu.ure ne: mer as in winter, the pasture we do get are and the skim milk he duction of pork in th the year for the hog The one puzzling shall we feed the cow it in the usua} wayâ€" themselves as best short pastures, they milk flow until it will the trouble of caring feed expensive hay we rot our money bac do not fee the cows 1 the effect on? To pr the x ing \ at least posed o mer sil should 4 enough diameter to i ensilage in g should be 2i what clean. We need no will fail to eat grass the pasture even if sumed a large am« They ‘prefer the gr: it if it is to be ha Hiberal amount of « the flow of milk and grain. If one has nc some other age must b is to be key er. Oats ar good feeds relish,. Fe: cows eat, duced. Oats and peas do August ‘first we m thing else. If we problem is easy of has no equal among summer feeds. It i may be fed with g corn w ture of ent for nished from mai form o‘ hay. ready to fee In 1111 m.liootlcl on . Wh led on request. The Soil a What it Pro To Fertilize Hodgins ylelded against bus. per At J tilizers wheat n t4 uy TY Improvement The Summer ying now. . are nearly a #e ) W e be prov nt un d m th ut ngthene winter" the spr the toi The more or the i. y ally ad val

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