"S OCEAN-1'0. " HIGHWAY IR ROAD FROM TO COAST. Vancouver Rm pproach to All. on: iaseia, to , “to“ g " by “to... :9 from m the exocwy. 'Tourist A... be Dominic-5 wt raven“, "1“ “OI"DO‘ItIl 1) tttt â€'.. " “ems . "at. -~l Anhom motor to.“ as untre- niay‘g'mu.‘ " the "o miles e to tho rim Til“ rwstt In win. East â€may new! " 'M+ hnr " ll moh- tawa an I “an out um h. E2 OI Winter Etur9-Mow to Get Then? ' First, and ttoulaatental. we must not toettet that in the fall and m: Ire can expect our eggs from millet: only --that is, birds which have been hatch- N: in the spring Irf the - year. mum time betieen Jamie, and July. Thur.- hirdl should matuge In about m: nmmhs' time and start laying. Tlv. ulflor birds tiike the fall and w'rc r “or a natural resting period, u.' My they must have in order to lay Anol'u-r your and to make LdiGi. a ra Ke seditur,toriitaat eggs starts ban-RI he wag; Inf-w? we actually Co out gather then, , P starts from the) . the pullei‘fas developed from a.“ k m msqunb weighing about one. to throe-quarttrs of a 'r'2'i'.itiiiq inn-will be treated later '?yttl,',id -Ye. h is enodgh to my he" that) bird must (at, during .the sum-1 orarrovvirot season. a good. strong) no mm: which tho poultrymln it In 5.": some meat and fat f we m the winter, and inside or, ‘h frame she muat have enough " to manufacture eggs easily and m whim: that we have thit (rm pulley. the first thing we mm. o of is a reserve of flesh and 'ntii about a month before the o pullet matures or sum to lay was": most of the feed Ihe con- for gn-wzh. and she is apt to be shy of ttesh. we has egg production bred in d you start feeding her It this point with a ration high in -pris. apeeialiy animal protein. such it scrap. tUh meal. eta. she wttt: n In She immediately Ive-gins; -'-.e_..Fe'_ _ -------_ Irt make numbers, Lurr'p." ' g poultry fan winter eggs is y a matter of breeding them maturity. or breeding birds il mature and lar in six xnstemi of ten or twelve 1.4 is natural: also breedinst' ' ""'ui'"s""'.." - TC" , an" ab /iiiGirutit mm in the fall and fuller 1: 23:31!» if the 1; . my layer MAI our eggs from puiiets 1'2' I the bad Vania! of an "Mn?†rri.,- wrich have been Pt ‘l m started to twine-the New. xpririt yf tht - ':/i'll'.'I' _ Juan-5.100% T . 'y and. Maui's-en January tnd Jul}. then?!“ must i,t?/MGthtt,dt,' q should mature m .aboatI ration to manufacture into eeebf: I . time and start "..T,i,"5. / is . case of "from ua to 'fiiiiiiir; and r Unis take the tall am '1‘) reserve." At the least little ad- a natural resting pt-rlfnl:I \;:>_~x-:elwnd;tgo. that e - s in irii,irii) “‘5‘ have m 0rd?†tttly." I . ccéssarily mm. In on comes the. tf' and to make 'yiv,.r/yiti'di,c, ttng 130']?th "..i..lee.i..:i,r..R I m award thts.e LII-:13 to dug“; for i' 1mm or six weeks/ my ofter the middle Pf ,ttl "M359 two moiittvi'whermrts this "me, "tie" {he 11riddle " um as: pullet had" she been {:6th in!!!†whirl; is the 5635.012 of in? three ',, eetvs Or a mohth befitri Iayi.ryt, I _ p; M and the (mm: ly.'," 'd',.,),":.',; have had the reserve, to. ht,td an: c. iitt hum cur Au": uphuiilet thede rainy Jays, and w6uid â€we, we ofcasiey.lly bee hs m laid steadily all wintai, "s, .1 "g o,r,ls .101“? funk uell, "it'd tTrs't" stop here is that off-bro- lrerictl, I'm-t it I? hard MI paring the pallet for her wintgr's tank,I “3"“? invarinbly 1.ti cd b of r him; her ’into it ebYl 'n-i':: suffer a setback in)ac not. pue . . the‘fwctors of poultry t whiz‘h have made poi mluction of fall and winter y ran all be ground under Heads: 1. Breeding. 2. um very big factors, and A! separated. Either one t "tffiee. The best'bred .crly fed will loaf a“ win- vzrw the best kind of feed e the pure bred bird My: natural: also brewing we the power of fum- rvproduetive organs for 1 instead of for just a the spring or breeding You can't get biood At this point! do: not want to be misunderstood. I don't mean ngceki starkly the holding bark fmqhying of a the}: of puitetc-bot fort8t9.or2d--- but I mean that they mutt MW}! befcre they start. I have 9.9m! vqry good friends who were once in we habit o! pmeticirur a starvation that: pd Ort, their. tgrrly-hatdted pallets so the'y wduld not start laying top early and molt. _ ... ‘ b Tris starvation, as I call it, - to increase the amount of ftfrre-earrrirg feeds ;n tb ration, such as brgtw waft? ground oats, and alfalfa meal; also. to' cut into the amount of meat MTM. Thirwas then followed by a heavy 'eed when one was ready to have ithein lay. These practices were dire.etlt op- posed to common sénse, and invar’t'ab- ly rc ulted in a very “may winter lay. In the first place, these birds were Ann-ed of ary little, surplus or rmer-x‘x‘a they had, and then drawn right to .svcrk, you might say, on no reserve ammunition. The following rations and orthod of then, to dra’w on what litm'suiélus or reserve iiesh and fat she has, and earlyaatehed flock Tho first step here is that off-bro- paring the pullet for her wintgt's task, and not of pughing herjinto it ,by heavy protein rations befora'she is Prt. "pd gar it. This applies trim tl,'.7JIfi'e'hh' birds as {well as to all. high fibre they hare HIRE u: T Jran they throw ration shou' l be.tqhert, mfow- it " expected the)" tart laying. or just atrout.tho, ‘y ihrow {kt-31' zmwing molt, ion shouici be changed. They re taken from a nation of a‘ re' and prétein conunt which re, gee-r. growirg and develop, and given a We fa.tteni. follows: “.3 "e ' 'Y5 Part 3 b: foul egg very efficient gs. Abut a - .. -,,.“ , .-.-.-a te"" . 100 lbs. 290 tbs. 200 tba. GO iigt3, 100 lbs. 'LOG-‘lbs. Weighv 300 “is. Ito lbs. ter Wkp About, a month of this tfisedimbmtsouid condition them, and When they shoals! bettmt a I laying Mom.“ tollmms ' s-r, -» will pnvm the bird; Gaming in to lgying what they are too thin 1nd have , Meta-NM wilt round Atm up i good 'truspe iPstti tcreqerveetTr9tai- Feeding scratch in this my wibl aerul to drive" tht, hints fp e mash, which they mast eat to lay: tt birds, wlwn this ration in ted,ams . at about ready to lay, and it wig}! them across in good. uniform and un- lgss something wrong hsrirpeett 'in qual- ls of feed, during the {all and winter they should go through with a pretty steady" tlow of eggs. _,,.', '117fypotprzgiiiiy . Mush Fog-Md Wheat bran . . . . .t. . .‘:éll00-lbs. _ Wheat middling: . . . . ..at100cibs. Grouryl aâ€; (heavy) . . _ .2100 tbs, Corriineat .............. 00.1ba. Meat scrap (high iiiiiiii, lbs. -, Feed dry, 'ursae-tiegerii. hoppers lot: More the birds at. all times. and easily accusble. . Whia't .r--...-1iloltrs. [,iiiiii,i', “murky, buckwheat, some ' itrkgdircotat ......... 100 lbs. TTK, Scratch teed should be cut down "’an q 8 G 10 iiiruiu, per 100 bird, per day; it, He one-tour-G of this " uh; mi in _tth'6'ad,r,i, morntNr, :,ir,ttti:'jiir,i'Er,'?t.,rni "and one- to h; half at "ism, of one- rd in the' morn-lwhkh ing mid twothirda at night. . then I The old high-gable-mof hen mouse shut up tight Lapwing. Unless the hens Were put well up in the top of stick houses they were roosting in the thet', part, and that which contain? on t.heHotrlest air; and wht could blame them for climbing to the dick. est perch in the lot? If we leave the house'so thi girl drainage will take care of 'ouloMeiiaq fast as it drops.after being cooled, W51 can have the roof down as low as we; can get around under it. The hon!†that gave me» the best "tisraetiorG"af the bear wail fax Seet high,‘and was about five buet where I drytped. up zhree-fcot curtain' down in front " the ream. This house was twenty- four ti,evueeh and fourteen wide. Th: front war hbtut nine feet high and Oro?", anal I‘nev‘er Had a frozen ciunb all winter. and tmt eggs continuoysly. Therns were rteverts1tsirttish " thtrr, a ‘when wrrocst in o'closo hock Cs?†on th, Callas: day: did 'lie watgt "pare we; Mk {there " Kept W watering pan. T _ . _ s' With the tall gable roof has gone the stair-like moses, for we known†that heavy.ltersts should not itsmtNtoiirn some six or eight feet., We but the roasts all on the same level, anduhat not moré than two or three fee.tfi6gt the tloor; and we have tlta,roof'lo'irs so that the warmed air Does not rise several feet above their lfvel. - Tyyierrrisetrsiritrr.tit Hm“- _JI7_"__I"'\1" "'_" -W" "-""." Any farm hoir2Prhat is up to date. has need for a typewriter, No farm homiwn 'Lford to'tre without. one, ‘beaausé‘as a trm'e.iver the type- writer is in the from rank; If it did not_save time it would still be profit- able as a means of advertising the farm†. ' " . ' .' " The typewriter is, economical; it save?, the cost of pens and inlr, nu)!!! workman be written on a sheet of paper,' and the ribbons yin hat a long Lune. - ' ' le.tte/written qn a typewriter is, sure to command mqre attention thin one writteiwith but and ink, and the reader wi'd be fmgrcssed Urith the Net that tlie wrster fs' a good man to da‘ with, The homes of a nation are strongest' fora. its Settteh Fetd. -A 100 lbs 100 lbs its fin; Pryst.srtMteaiit.n.ynetiirmrr.tu. {and '/tl,t' truss; mngry 'fyi,t'g,titt1ih"iir, 't e 231m; rspirit o compasg I w . .tdoyetf the heart of 'ii'se11l,iit?llie'i, IQ #6015 6iptinistrr ttr_thgdiiijhH'ii;s,' 9 We THE syn)†@0100}.- LFs'.Ch.N NovEhimtetvsT ', The Twelve Sent Forth. St. Matt. 10. Golden Text, St. Matt. 9: 37, 38, 1-4. IbeNames of the 'wclve whom Jesus chose have beéome more fam. iliar and betto; known to the world than, perhaps, an other names of hu- nnn history. EÂ¥even stand high in thy world'qltonor roll, one has become the synonym for traitor. These men, when they had been with Jesus for some 15ttks.or moguls, obyrrvirwmis ‘in loving, human service. They will,! as it were, take Chrigtfg p‘ngge.,andl ‘His' healing and Iife-gRViiii, power will} Htow through them. Ttr.rhyirl opt. tisrai mack from any human' need. The sick.‘ ‘the leper, the demoniac. the dead, will' We the objects of them. inte JoA Phat care. Every vii';),),',,:,;,',"':?),')',',?,'-, 1',2'il to the Churcgra'ivgfku; . hLi Mme ,V,u‘»t,9-.ath Wt), w . o thwaent out. 'ltk'ti'l.lh2iltl,'il'le' _kisyrst,iee1siee_d, tha Wre." w, _ ' L “hf iaW-2trarit m ' er gtittt, Warnings. .. Flte' mc ‘oY'tIIéir iriching is t6nie the%earnesa gt. _ ingdom of heaven, and Tt’hat men must repare for its coming y repen . 3'ite7s"lert.'lltl' Co forth in Jiil,'.'il.Nr' ' H’vem 28 Jesus. makes the stanza dee1atyti91r, "Ye alull’ not have Mm? ‘over the cities of Israel till the 860 of man be come." Did J us think that in some marvellous we? by sum dis- why of snqrtTr1atura1 power, EA as that described in 24: 29-31, Bis m meter, listening to His teaehintr, asking Him questions, drinking in of His spir- it, He sentient to do as He was doing. ,to Enach the love of the heavenly, ‘Fal er, to teach willink learners, arid to heal the sick. The instructions which He Rave them for their work. then and afterward, constitute our 5-8. Go Not, Go Rain. The first instruction is where to go and what to do. Jesus appears to have regard- ed it_as His first duty and. that of His disciples to minister to His own people of the Jews. Later He was to issue His command to Co to Samaria and to the Gentiles, to the end of the earth (Acts 1: 8). Button! it was to the Tk of Israel the disciples were sent. e gospel was to begin at home. The Jews, pfepared by the long discipline of their history, and b the revelation of the Old Fldtvia'lllu'U'lt ture, for dtl_ooming, were to, hear it first If they would but â€pent and turn to God and seek the way of faith. the great prophetic promVof their history wouid.be fttltilltsd, and they would be, as be“? of the gospel, "for a light to'th Gentiles and for salvation to the ends of the earth." This. was the chine of Jesus to them, this. God's 'lh"NNtl',i,, through Hfm. We may well believe that He expected fix! hoped great things, and that. 'tTth'e.Wsihittit tTtPirTG't mags ,' _ J " _ 7 1 'ierilt'eJatittirtd/i; i.ritpointed. _ ' " lesson .- Preach Heal. .gWiph k bin no do'ubt, . i,hifiiii. was new hang! in tlt, 8;“: I»; in the. tyssio.n.aryework t e C “My. 'open: up the way, ~mu ' su- ades W‘xlines; 7|"! . . -k$:cts ttigi'st,!the/'s 'and' makes GiiitrrGii. {Together '.h (t'ilu',1/ltli"4re4 teachL men'bs. without ostentation, livhtim the hospitality of the people Nix} would receive them, and leaving be- hind.thean, with such. hespitatite '34, thgtblasing of peace. By _ I t}? "to did not receive themt l Eu â€great loss. The; would, like their hutch meet wit persecution, but .the% would be sustained and guid. trut, t e 'Spigit of God. S' 'i' ihdt deserifre'd in 24: 29-31, 1t.2tr," 'prn vypuld spgedily bls osmb' mp , ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO i ales. You see an om, for every ital-m duet-v9! an orchard. You on y a beautiful farmhouse, modern, beauti- ful, with good txrelsitecturat link, with Ill,',,'::"',',',',',' verandah., cozy fire- i 91% a shower hath ind sleep- ’ing’ When. You get a mental $51M f a. good road run- ‘ing by four fan-m, smooth, hard. good I for the automobile. . To Iirers)iioer's Son Jni/tlfiiits to “Gui f - - 'p-i. ahil&tt Town? Pt8?a'rt:ve" " ", . _' .t".:", "tr, IT.e fhy than: mm mm was! far- thi0.ouotrtnaCto. Myettt , _ is' bi IiQ'Jfil1-t,'lt'tuti')'rhii'tid,'2l; t. aairfthetve,trite.mttiNvc,sAtpMrtttt" H. My to mummy. - my and mom mm): tun "sit _ had. Where will we get mom capi- tal? We must get it from the land, gm,» the m whenyiu " fact. more mum». I do not know‘ ithejnuwor to that (wagon. l _ t'rh"emtititto,"" - l l Now let u. comancht down to IG) _ Thircubb with scraiiot and: tfiu!eomtseises 3%}wa haven u an we know too mach, have had wo’muehlvun he found a an. earth. I hope happen to us. We have lived too brig, that the In“. homo is at down on and thus have Been ttsomanrttotvind. yum on land, or pm Ida! that one and droughts and- army worm-had _ thy you cu m. About it, then, you chinch bags um! floods. We are â€ni- I an - things and “kill them M. mists because' of all the things thatl There is t great Joy in planting things have happened to us, or happened in of your own. MLy-our own little our times. _ hm. in game them _ievehtpr-r.tah,e _ You kayo th ,visidn of in automobile run on that good mad, and I neat gar- age whom ihtnutoinotoud You ham ‘a vision of good, purebred cattle in ‘the pastures, and fine, broad, splendid Ourebred horses and ttood traction till- ‘ring the field-. You want all these /thing, and you want them ’soonulhe {sooner the better. mcirii'drtGGki,?rtusn' 3.; GarG'ii8 at.' . s'expendveir. Europe m J'tlt11ttl;re her irytrtiidirjyAikt, tir,it?2tr2th- war production. Ahmad} Viitftti%riciU about was wheat to the sore that we are pro- The young man is luckier than we; he has In! seen all yhe evils that may happen dn the world, so he is not op- pressed by Irnowimr"of them or dread- ing them. . T.,ltaV.otn is for the hope- ful. Trte...ib%sut will inherit the earth. Beyond-’1 doubt, there are more sunny days coming than stormy Irnetr, more years"MIen it will rain enough than years of "drought. . You, young' man, are naturally an optimist. You feel 1thintrs are worth doing. Yoiebirlieve that things will win out. To the young man is triten most the happy faculty of seeing tliimts--not as they are, but as they ought to be. You have vision. On your Nther's farm you see in your mind's eye-fields of alfalfa whqe no alfalfa is growing now. You picture on the home farm modern buildings and, equipment. -You will have none day a good barn for storing Mammal» which you can feed cattle. You may “pin to yards made mudleu with The one with courage, faith and op- timism wins, just so he is not too much of an optimist! , You see in your View}! twee shena- ing your farm, vision. of fine trees apd spruce: im anion}: and west Well, all these .gucd things mayi icome to any young man if he will have. patience, if he will get behind tin“ wish with intelligence, directing wise! 1 his iirbtiti, getting behind 3mm will "The future of attMetllti'tm Emcm is "ty bright future. The competition 'of the world with our grains and meats 'r.ntro,.Nt,t.areriatlr harm us; because ' . . riiitirrsietrtooiW Mi '.' , " ‘ï¬m‘mmwmgj - -srr" '-.¢~<" ..- ..=..~v~-~. dayswmm. Mit.thon.m Them in a great tor in planing titinesl of your own. Whyour own Mule" home. in sub? than devehar--.the trees. the tines, the shrub: and- not m - ( Then let little childm come to that home of yuan. After oile is tnuniedJ the Mr ohildnn we the better for all. There in more to be learned; (mm being the father of dildren than can be learned in my other way. 0 only Wins my to live when his children come. Then he awaken. to tle'; deep and sacred meaning of life mdv mum. Tim; he begins, I hope, iii, plan his own life anew, with two ob-l, ieets in view-to be worthy of the, wife he has taken, and live so u m? be worthy of imitation by these club: Hyï¬jlW‘ 'iii iii ' 'JilhTsidc tr,7twr: Fun, Ft1tirtity, .’ litit,t,,tt"rf,t"t:"., Mfr I in) " . _ can ‘m w it}: ‘phnned, so arranged. so schoxnml. hat don k, Wt will i V mgr stu' _ ti,':icw's-ila [will wvï¬'ï¬ï¬i gum ,iite w»: . .!kPFir)yr7,.itt'trris tth ono;:5it ['iiiirif5rifkjwrriii'iiiG.iiriiii7 their mm! lik '.' comprises u‘mdrot heaven as cu!" -srtttefoundonthuearth. Thope thattheiittutto-hretdeton " your own land, or pm tmid that one If day you out own. About it, then, your caeirutttthir-andmrtch tPttrCte'i an.-.“ s, A ___-L I--. " wut-.,.,'.- Chin-- men who know mic-d agriculture‘ are hard to find,mod are in big (ir-) tmmd..T?tey are wanted to numge bib, - and farm. -* They are wanto& to uni.» experiment sinuous. Thoyi an wanted " mty agents and "t mmtmtors. There is need that they ob." first have gasp of the Minute or, agriculture, of the reasons for doing “my. Them than is absolutely new that you shall know. partial farmint -.well, . _ l, _ " Biting With Your “lath. 'But what of the young men who own " farms, whooe fathers on no famtts--mUt sort of an outlook is there for them? It in really very splendid. Themumreodtotheoren- 'ttttta for trained fourw men. Your»: “Wire Br. Irdilt Ir", 7 Gl Gi7u7rhieC;r:?-7'%s moth-Nit» shunt (he first thiaie in upon the farm. ' you w-uH do would be to nelec- now . In chain; I “am in say just one for bed. Wouldn't sou', "into the â€rent: or the boy who ... If a dairy cattle "many a.ssooiatiogt mods thé,trr" _ .u. :.' .. _ _ I'iegiMA-rs a heifer an†with good blood It 8ou,, . 30 um“ your so"; if lines, and the card devalops. into a atiitiitt M16“. Ch huh ill-LGOW- Inch a. the one you fited from melt in thts place. Give him a piece.' your dairy herd, the registry amok» of 1iitC1tfi.tttteeryecttur.',, tion would album“! elitrfttnte from he an ed! 11110me an: Nt pm? the mutt-don book an cow {Lat had 'aiGaiiGcyuii'iriiléLiiA9icir-l â€MB to mindlessly. “but 'as't Get work on the best-managed farm' that M can fitrd. Do things. Do as: mmy different kinds of work " you) oan,do, and team to do them Jett.! There is I lot of fun in that too. Thoro‘ il'more real pleisure in running al plow, ind in running itnse:l, than in? playing baseball. There is a lot " fun in rdnnihg a’ ,rksWer or binder aud' learning all then is about them, Ieavrr' u. "s"" - - - v .7 F kik'Cfo 'ruruehtt.C. or 'T _ v", a “on; u they keep well' and Ttre um am much (marble? _ l The comment of a well known edu- itmtormtdfartherwhohn-iemt1no tween: of bringing up his family d 1itdu'1drett is worthy of our considera- [iiiri.' We-id. “rhmuaim. , toimrxl the “when “It! of the mini I I: of pammottrtk imr8ttitnesa, small]. ‘In young dime-en. “he (mam... iemtt"nrtuuuu'. inMereme ith whia imakure people treat the ism-e " lowldren, ddmhy'ing _ them i hyhiu, manner- and woman an: j Ire anything but duinbk,\m 00 mo one of the pamlyrvjne for 'ertof um. l, temporary lite." . i Chlldrelr atl around us are out- l in: the mmnén and liming to LR l asr,tvertsntion of the adult! about than; iand the general bearing of mos’ chit Man is I direct reiteetkm of their ibomo tmrroundines. If eottduA I. digttitU9ttd converntkm is almg (he Him-e of tome noble, or fur-reachin‘ 8. Entry-dc oeta'ms. “Am ob-tdee, munw do "In. man All contra-u that b.6ubtt-t+et-tt. m lud- l-ded “we“ brim a convicti- of rig! a! wrong that pm h m†. p' m 'N' lino of‘contiuct. Wr'd'p. noun can mic dim who» judgment an be and - and whoae fart, mu m all Mating?" And yet we have our little chihua- inOt My fork] of Muted nano- W, _ evemp-‘me on thump ungwy Jadeptittiacrtd oftem. times not “yin: their - (1†tioeshw with accurate Bttturttterug of the things about which they are. ‘m- (wiping. ls this not due to the pn- vniing boiid than It does not man. what liuie chiléren “em m .1 we or with what they occupy themseAm n A In†.aaeatate In- aid. "Eder. ouba bu to do with the development of he powers: ' st-i',,',',',,'?"'.",,',':,?,""" . g. Sound ' they) mama a fitted. If comer [motile main the 0119'. neighbors, I feeding mum that " _ . "i8tf (It! porn- AI T Ctv.at haimLhc showed no pron 1- " dolce better, about the firs" um; ya NOLAN do would be to " (id of ‘hn rig Waul‘dn"h you '.’d ' ::5,Ne.r'rrtroutthtn Ii hdftrfo §ur hm 'ind fouttd G'p. the Colt"' . railk that she can only two or tree quggu a day, tad that the mil 9 poofquuh‘ty, about“ first thing you would do would be 1tse41Ahr PitW otthsrctadr-t eorver a, tTiiCGi/ ' gap; “ham to wgrls on your new: h m Mi vol of the :iH's mind ot th ill be may. sation is w' â€Hula W Wo or tis is. 'theat m It or mp