West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Jan 1921, p. 3

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Part of the Province is tian in Character With . al Watercourses. - POWER PROBLEM SOLUTION. (lf MANITOBA _ W' M K avers ral L? One December day when everything there will be a good chance of success “I frozen over, and when oriovtless,with vigorous unrelated breeding flntters would become numb It only a; stock. Even if very few turkeys are moment's exposure, I had my cattle) marketed it is a great satisfaction to tuberculin-tested. I had two reactors raise enough for a few turkey dinners --lt seven-year-old cow and I yearling each year. Of course, there is a great heifer. At this time I had no hirediunilarity to chicken meat and yet a o help on the farm, and found myself} big slice from a well-browned turkey - -ob1itred to take these animals to the, surely tashes very appetizing during train. load and ship them alone. I, the winter and the home-raised tur- let them out of the barn, drove them i key tastes much better than cold stor- ‘into the road, and walked quickly bylage stock. their sides a distance of three miles, Do not allow the turkeys to roost ... to the stockyards. The gate was shut/ in the poultry houses as this increases tand while I ran ahead to open it they; the danger from lice and the turkeys followed close by, walked in, and stood need even more fresh air than hens. -.whl'le 15min fastened it. After open- Their mural environment is in the 1 Log the car door I stood at the top'trees and wild turkeys thrive under ' of the incline and culled them direetlr, such conditions. Turkeys do not thrive Into the car. No Mable. no time, and under too much coddiing. Place round . no temper lost. That one lesson was. poles in an open-front shed and that 'sufficient to teach me what it is worth: is all the protection from the weather . to have stock that are your friends. i they will need. Keep the turkey house I might relate similar instances with clean and spray the roost: at frequent hogs. All who have ever driven them: intervals. It will also pay to inspect know what stubborn. ignorant brutes. the turkeys occasionally at night to they are when they are afraid and do; see if they are getting- enough to eat not know what is wanted of them. Ii and are free from lice. I might relate aimilar instances with hogs. All who have ever driven them know what stubborn, ignorant brute: they are when they are afreid and do not know what in wanted of them. I never have trouble in loading them or in driving them anywhere. Why? Be- cause I treat them kindly, and because I spend some time with them when I am not pressed with work. They have never had occasion to “be me, and became they have never been harmed they do not expect to be. Kindness and petting my equally well with all other chum of liver. stock, Cows will give down their milk much more quickly to u man who has their trust than they will to one whom they fear. Calves will respond even more readily than will their dame, once they are won over to your side. KM“. to Ali-lb Pun. . It pays me in real dollars and cents I can drive them put any sort. of a rtrntrivattee, and I can bark them into the smnllest corner or no" the noisiest locomotive without trouble. If you do not believe that kindness pays divi- dends, just try it. Choose only one horse at tlrst, and see how much time 3nd labor and worry, you may save yourself. to "at my Minn): with kindness. For each minute I spend brushing my heifers, for every moment I spend pet- ting my horses, handling my hogs and chickens, I save valuable time. This perhaps sounds a little far-fetched, but it is nevertheless true. For instance, take my homes: In the: morning I take them out one at _ time.' hook them up on each aide, and‘ groom them. After I have thoroutth-) 1y cleaned one, I step to the. cupboard and give it a lump of auger, or, if I chance to be out ot sugar, I put some salt in the palm of my 'tand for the horse to lick. All of my horses know that as soon as I unsnap them in their stalls they are going to be Rroomed. and that they are to receive something which they like. Conse- quently they come out without hesita- tion or fear; they stand quietly while grooming is in process; they allow me I have watched neighbor: trying to catch their horses in the pastures. It is usually a long job, end by the time the animal is captured it is often tired and sweaty from running; its master is in the same condition. with added diseomfiture of mind. While this is taking place for a half-hour or so. I can step quietly to my gate and whistle, and my horses will come (it reetly to me, go into their stalls, and be hitched and ready for work while the HURT fellow is still clinging all over the lot. In this way alone I save It least fiC:een minutes every thue I want to get my horses from the pas- ire, besides the perspiration and con- tiderable mental energy expended in paying mean things to the horse. 1 How many farmers there are who have to keep I vigilant eye constantly on the lookout for a "nip" or a kick while currying 7 their horses.' And while that eye must watch for the horse's foot or mouth, it cannot apply itself wholly and without thought to the work of cleaning the horses. Time saved by being kind? Yes, and dang- er avoided also. to handfe then; withoht ttuiiirnirG moving, and I am enabled to do my walk in the minimum amount_of time. And because my horses have e tire eonf1denee in me--tutd tt horse tortfidertee cannot be misplaced ma] times without their remembering it M ram Emir iiiiii"'('ii"iiii en- se's I Some farmers who have not raised ‘turkey's on their land in mmy years emay ttnd that the soil is clean and there will be a good chance of success ‘with vigorous unrelated breeding ',stock. Even if very few turkeys are tmarketed it is a great satisfaction to raise enough for a few turkey dinners each year. Of course, there is a great "imilarity to chicken meat and ret I this slice from a well-browned turkey ‘surely tastes very appetizing during :the winter and the home-raised tur- ',, key tastes much better than cold stor- Sugar barrels make fine turkey nuts. And if they are placed in secluded parts of the range the “they mother is apt to find them and 13y her eggs in a barrel where they on be watched and at least partially pro- tected from the weather and pub. Often turkeys hide their eggs around in some artions. . The best turkey tlocks which we have known have enjoyed free range. Some breeders have had sauces: with turkey's on a limited range but we feel that their cost of production must be very large. And there is also an'in- creased danger of the soil becoming contaminated. Turkeys on free range gather many bugs and bottles and will often practically rid infested fields of grasshoppers. They also need plenty of tender bits of green food. On a restricted range where it was neces- sary to furnish the bulk of the feed we can see no peoflt in turkeys at the present price of grain. I to keep plenty of sow milk before them at all times. Sour milk seems to art as a preventive of digestive troubles in all kinds of poultry and also hekrto keep down the blaekhead which is the disease that Ms put turkey growers nearly out of business in some sections. . -- u"”""" u””"’ v l Ihoeamroffnfatrtt-totmr- ftveimgmetantMtrakatdesfeet.,manr sitndthatkindn-o-r111t dicolnnbeeawell Mamba ofMtiehamareetlrasooeaated with poultry. A ftoek. of highly MIN“ when a child reaches the no d twp malnutrition. " the child Incin- to Leghorns will not fir or fun: if ther V he is expected to “go it alone." I, train and Approach the norm] weight are cared for properly and "trulttx1r This is it most important “m. for llne, Lt in inter-ting to smash the (Is- by one person. the . d'e nutrgtida and growth we. 0 some of these detects. There is almost no limit to the 'i,,')tir,'eiili: tucking in than ”a?" They 10-. their pullor and the line cunt of kindness and patience which . has been an". Food and health under the one, the 1111.91“ become man may profiiatrlr give to his ani- habits whidx affect the child'o whole flrm and strong, posture in unmoved, male; and, aside from the time saved“ development as made at this period; shoulder MI and wounding No- one who is kind to animals lives Bl yet during this clung-o ftom inhmyrmon Are lea prominent, and the M1019 pleasant, happy life. Ito adolescence he is left largely to his effect u motlmes I “automation. ----. own devices, and it as e hit Ind mist At the lune tune the parenta report _ Facts About Turkeys. chance whether he will come through that the patient hai, become " differ- A two-year-old tom mated with hens, with average success. - le, child." Where he 1'” yen itr.i- more than one year olimakw the best, There are eertain rehrtiortrhips be- I table, “Why imtttentive, 10911.18 hm combination for produeintr vitrorou', tween a child's height and weight that temper over trifies,a worry to himmdf poults. The breeding stock should be are of great importance, and when a and everyone tut, he now gets on well unrelated and it pays to freqnently child's height and weight are Constant-, with his announce and has some real obtain a new tom from a distant Iv wrong it manna. faults! mirth and enjoyment in life. Protection from pests and storms is necessary, especially at night. Young turkeys should not go into deep wet grass early in the morning. For this reason a wire yard is fine for the mother turkey and her brood at night. By feeding at night the mother birds can be taught to come home to roost. Keep scrap lumber piles and brush or stone heaps away from the turkey yard as such places htubor, rats and weasel-: and make turkey raising dif- ticuit. New milk seems to be good for the growth of young turkeys and after they are about three weeks old it pays . Facts About Turkeys. A two-year-old tom mated with hens more than one year old.makes this best combination for producing vigorous poults. The breeding stock should be unrelated and it pays to frequently obtain a new tom from a distant breeder. Inbreeding has been one of the {actors in devitalizing turkey fiocktt. t Old hens are not as satisfactory as the turkey mother for ha'ohing and rearing young turkeys. It takes from twenty-seven to twentymipe days'for the turkeys to hatch and that is a long time for a hen to set. The old hen may tire of protecting the poults when they are too young to be weaned, but the turkey mother will often keep them with her until the end of Bum- mer. And in that time she leads them through the fields and woodlands and helps them to take on plenty of turkey meat at a small expense to the owner. iiiil)(; Zinc coveud serving table. are most useful if 00931me no attached; 'il't'i,'it'i4il"iii)e'it'i tsaalirtoanrrart of the'. brush plus and in high elurmm of woods. Than if the wealth: it cold and any the mummy of tho em will be injured. A turkey mother an looknltornlug‘h'ooduboutuou- tlr as I and] one and no the broadcl- [may Mm good Intakes. Bottur, broods. phco‘turhy eu- under hens; at tho can. this. the mother tan-km‘ as setting. Then the brood. come of at the same time and the heer/ latched M In given to the ixaT/ l There is a definite Bone of health, _ outside which are, on the one hand, the !comparatively few children who ore obeée or overweight, and on the other, those who are undermght and mol- l nourished. which we hove found to in- elude the large percentage mentioned above. . ', It is to present a param to wipe iout this discreditablo condition, ind do Move malnutrition from YOUR children, that this series of articles in written. V Weight Height for Height Inches Pounds *21 8.2 ‘22 9.7 *28 11.1 ‘24 12.5 '25 13.9 "26 15.8 *27 16.9 '28 18.5 ‘29 20.2 '30 21.7 In the case of those malnourished children, careful examination has brought out an average of more than Are You' Sure Your Child is’Growing Up t to Be ' Strong and Healthy. There an certain relationships be- tween n child’s height and weight that are of great importance, and when a child’s height and weight are constant- ly wrong it means faulty growth and imperfect development. Record: of our examination of thousands of chil- dren of school and preachool age show that from 20 to 40 per cent. are habitu- ally under weight for their height. This conditions is found alike in the city slums and among the rich and well-to-do. It was also confirmed by the percentage of young men rejected in the draft as physically unift. ... CT.' _..... -- '""""""t' “““' I So when asked what I thought he It is to Present a PM"!!! ter w.ie"wii, worth I named a high price. A out this discreditable condition, ind more experienced observer then told to remove malnutrition from YOUR me he was worth only half that am- children, that this series of articles in cunt, and pointed out that he traveled written. _ (iGii his mouth open and his tongue The best test of a child's condition trub-Feta which, unnoticed, would is the relation between “I height and cost the purchaser ml Ion. A hone weight. We have prepared tables glv- trade in really a game of wits, and the ing in three columns the normal farmer has found that it pays to know weight at various heighte, and the the points of a good animal. figures for seven and ten per cent.; The problem of the malnourished underweight. The line marking off child in the average home can beat be sound condition from a state of health presented by a series of questions ttt showizug clear symptoms of malnutri- ilar to those which you would k tion lies at seven per cent. under.. yourself regarding any growing ani- weight for height. lmal: ' Iron lim’with the wind, never NUTRITION CLINK‘S'FOR DNdCATE CHILDREN TABLE OF AVERAGE WEIGHTS OF CHILDREN AT VARIOUS HEIGHTS Also Showing Weights 7 and 10 Per Cent. Underweight for Height. *27 *28 ‘29 ‘30 *81 *82 ‘33 *,34 ’35 *36 '37 67 68 61 62 " 57 " 59 47 48 49 51 53 55 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 BOYS Average, 7 P.C. 10 RC. 103.8 108.0 114.7 121.8 127.8 132.6 138.9 45.4 47.1 49.5 51.4 53.07 155.4 69.6 62.5 63.8 95.2 72.0 75.4 79.2 82.8 87.0 91.1 38.1 41.7 28.7 26.9 31.8 100.4 106.7 118.8 118.9 129,2 67.0 70.1 78.7 77.0 weight Pounds 92.8 61.1 47.8 49.3 51.5 87.0 9.0 10.8 11.6 12.9 14.2 15.7 17.2 18.8 20.2 21.6 22.8 24.1 25.4 26.7 108.2 128.0 109.6 180.6 1 15.0 137.0 119.3 143.0 125.0 146.9 ‘Without Clothing, I ma): - - - -- - of health! Ilrny boy of girl growing properly? Pounds 7.4 8.7 10.0 11.3 12.6 13.8 15.2 16.7 18.2 l9.8 20.9 22.1 28.8 24.6 25.8 weight 89.4 98.4 59.2 62.0 67.9 71.8 74.5 44.6 47.7 49.9 32.7 35.8 37.6 89.g 40.9 ofuntoomhuhutomtuutaameat. Some dairy-men my be satiMUd with ettl1roostamthomrhthoromsaihso mm Andpoodblynhundred of their ha: We vei'y fact-bl, a profit producen with one or two an over. Fine quality " bird. are tumbmntroodtrnaiitrhntehimrotrtm. One male {nuance- t hm manic afeg-ehyenrnnduean- timeatretmsdtoadvaat-fortwoor thmeream. Abundant-ch- oockarel need not srmsthiatrird atta- Thertemst-ottrr?odtrmedtntreoeh- feels fs the chuput ‘way of .m- What are the proper standards for measuring growth? I: my child up to the proper weight for his height? . Is he treir from physical defects that inttrfett w_ith_his Proper growth? Am, his food and ham? babies con- ducive to proper nutrition? (Mitadttfiirs Is his physical development " nut to standard " it should be? The problem of the malnourished child in the average home can beat be presented by a series of questions ttt ilar to those which you would k yourself regarding any growing an!- You as I farmer ere always inter. ested in a horse trade, and when a home is brought out to be examined the boys gather to hem- his "points" discussed, and learn to discover his defects. I remember seeing (1 horse driven up and down the street tut I thought had a. tine style, a good gait, and all the appearance of a splendid animal. 91.1 96.7 102.5 1 10.4 118.0 128.0 130.0' 187.0 143.0 146.9 By William Emerson, M.D. 70.8 74.5 78.4 82.5 61.1 41.2 7.9 9.4 11.0 12.5 14.0 16.5 17.2 18.8 20.6 22.0 81.S 24.8 114.4 127.t 188.0 136.6 69.8 72.9 76.7 47.8 49.6 51.9 62.1 41.7 80.4 26.t 7 .8 8.7 10.2 11.6 18.0 14.4 16.0 17.5 19.1 110.7 117.0 182.2 67.1 70.6 74.8 77.9 IST., 4L7 37.1 25.7 ONT'AMo - AREFI'IVES TORONTO Height 61 62 " " " 47 " 8tP “a 37' 41 21* 22* M' 2e 2lP ap 27. 28* 29* 80* 81* 320 Dry, harsh hair in not . thriftine" in In M More custom hatched” should be prettable in notion: where them are none at present. If the bueineu can be managed by some member of the hardly not enetuntrered with too mud: field work he should be able w do much hatching work hr the commun- ity and sell many day-old chicks. This chick busineu has come to May and people like to buy them. When they use ordiqery common-gen” in their, brooding methods they usually have fair avenge luck. A hatchery costs} money and prospective operators of; mohebullne-Ihouldstanuneemll scale rather than plunge heavily and than have "tttmd-rate Mahatma for do in I We of, yearn. Notot--The “and article In this “do. will - next week. Puma will be able, right " homo. to apply tho prina'plu here set forth in brin- In; up to normal the bore Ind girls who no underweight, and than rot-rd- ed in their "lent-l and physical de. re%meat.-The Editor. ( A very common mimke in to con- sider only the height of e child end to creme his thinneu begun he is "tall for his age." Potent: t'tt',et bout that a boy is two years yond the standard of his on. "At eight he we”: I ten-year the wit." The in. portant point is not hi. luright or weight for hi: I“, but whethor be Ua a body weight to support i,ii height, whatever his I” my be. As u grows, every advance in indie. on!!! for at“! more advance in pom I month more to become ”don-1y under weight habitually. The only ado policy in: Hue every child nbovo his normal might lino! Compete this iitrure with the weight of your child. If the latter Bgure is the%tn.. "' “In" your chili; belongs to the fortunate two-thirds Who 3" l n to " over the standard weight line. You will notice that the next two col- umn: give the futures for seven per cent. and ten per cent. underweight. This, the table shown that the ev- em weight of girls " inches in height in 70.8 pounds. If e ginl of this height weighs 66.4 pounds she is seven per cent under weight for her height, and must gain five pounds More she can pea her normal weight line. If she weigh: 63.8 pounds, the is 10 per If you find that the weight of your child is habitually eeven per cent. be- low the average, he is married in growth at least e you. This is a serious condition which merit- prompt attention. In fact, we adv-lee you to look into - one that fell: below the average weight for height, even by two or three per cent, and to dis- cover what in needed to bring the child up to his normal student It is just such ceeee, with e shortage of only e few per cent., which, under sud- den etrein or when. will quickly lose Now, when you have the weight in pounds and the height in inches, con- sult the table printed with this urticle. Be sure to get the table for the right Ber, and look down the line of heights until you find the number of inches corresponding to the measurement of your child. The next column will give you the average weight for that helght. cent. below the standard, end hes seven bounds to gain. Bathtubs!- that these tables are made from the mats of tens of thoussnds of children, including those below the “that The aver- age- ere therefore low, and the fltrures very conservative. The best time to start on the new program is at night, when both par- ents can be present, and when the child an most easily be examined without Plotting. A man who judges animals When it comes to measuring, have die child mud against the wall. heels together and against the baseboard. Platte a book edgewise on his head and against the wall to determine the point from which to begin the meas- urement. Take a tape measure and read the height in inches. onwards of his we, or uheforget- Ni, backward, nervous, "Micky"'. If he in not what you think he ought to be, do not blame him or call him a numaku1r, for them is always db cause foe his condition. " a parent you have no more important iots than to and out this cause and remove it. The child should be weighed about the some hour each week, if possible without clothing, but in any cue under the lame conditions, so that . consist- ent record may be made. A conven- ient method is to take the weight with- out shoes but with ordinary indoor clothing. If the shoes cannot be re- moved, weigh them separately, or make on estimated allowance of one and a half pounds. knows how much would be hidden if the animal were inspected when cov- ered with a blanket. Yet this is the will way in which children on ex- mined by a school physician, 1nd muny a child with a round, attractive {we panes " well nourished when an examination without clothing would reveal physical defect; Doet heAhtt?biiit, to think and foe T thmught ”8%: vigor vii! viii- u, heto am. (In no 12min. “Wiu4ull cucumbers! t an (all; you needn‘t think I can't. Thor." dtrt on than." “M. would be g lesson to a If "Boat what'." gasped the tumor- Vito. Mm. Youncbrldo mom: the Anus the farmer had brought her m runs any. but In “plum that an. wu been” any had fallen all the tree onw tho qrotutd---tn short. they were ,rindNit-o the bought than. A ml Inter oh. called the We wife up on the tauphono. "t oe6eeqd tho but cucumbon tor pickling," In aid shawly, "1nd you've an no windfalls." "Foe the love of Gad is boundless, As the meuure of man's mind; And the hurt of the Eternal . [a most wonderfully kind." l 23-65. Parable of the Wicked Ser- lvent. The kingdom of heaven is here. "" alwaya in this Gospel, the new order [of human brotherhood, the common- iwelth of kindly and loving hearts, f which Jesus sought to “an” in the .yvorld. The meaning of the pueblo is very clear. A certain king would lake "teou.ttt, that in (R. V.) “make e reckoning." or "settle up 'tpeountC' with his trervatttg. The defaulter. Who lowed such a large sum. may have been none of the king's ministers through whose hands taxes or customs duties lpaued. Ten thousand talents of sir. |vet, at the lowest reckoning. would be |between eleven and twelve millions of doilare. The talent was equivalent to ‘60 mime, and the mine to 100 deumii. I'lhe last mentioned coin, which is l trar eleted "penny" in our Exigliah ver- inch. was worth about Ill or 19 cents (et. our money. in purchasing power. however, the money of those days was worth proportionately very muel' more ;than that of to-day. His lord COPA- imended him to be sold. It wes not an uncommon thin in Bible times, for e .mn to be 5015, or members of his .ftmlily, into slavery for debt. The slavery might be for e limited time or liar life. he law of Exodus 20 jim- rvided that a Hebrew olive should to lout free at the end of six years. So {also Dent. Iii. But a later law, pre- 'tterved in Leviticus 25, provides that a IHebrew may not be held as a slave, but only " an hired aervant, and that ‘in the year of jubilee, that in every fiftieth year, such persoiu servine for debt shall bts set free. The penalty. therefore. was, at the best, u very [heavy one, and in the case prrsent'ad in the parable would probably lune jmcant lifelong bonniugx- ‘ur both ltr, imam and his family. j'ii'iiirtit,f,, ' bi the tmnaformide -- Fir of tPt? 'itii'i"a'i?"iiFl'iE tlumagh t an. (race to A trrothertobstsrttuu-. anti-n; m. There must. be the de- sire tnfth. 7;er ho‘put awful; and u (I: u pubic mu; ttme _ f/d: the wrong and to begin I no. - fo. There wodd bo little ulo in forgivin“ at1atw1toeontim-tosstaat or: alumina: who persist. In Morin. God's foFete" is followed or no} "iiiGm- done is not enough, but it mutt be essomatattied)rr genu- With this parable mny be compared the parable of the prodigal eon, which sets forth the wealth of love and tenderness and forgiving gnoc‘whioh is in the heart of the heavenly Father. He not only forgives, but welmmel oand homn. The elder son. who did not than his fuher’o spirit. represent; the hard and unforgiving disposition of some omerwine good and upright men. Such men put justice over opium forgiven“. They exalt jun- tice, but forget that iustiee _ in not “tidied with Eunichment. Justice is my realized in ma welfare, and that on only in the "duration of the lost. _ St. Paul writes of the habit and das- position of the true Christian life in the memorable worda of Eph. t 8t-'lg, "Let all bitter-mu and wrath, and anger. and clamour. and ruling, be put away from you, with all malice; and be ye kind on. to another, tender, hearted, forgiving each other, even as God alwrin Chript forgavg you." The contrut between the ten thou- sand talents and the hundred pence in very great. For the latter paltry debt, mounting to eightcen or ninolerl. dollars, he who had been forgiven mi]- lions cast his fellowservant into prison. Be is rightly called I wicked net-um, and is justly punished for his intoler- IN. meanness and cruelty. The pn- able, therefore, teaches that God's for. 'gi:i,"tg.ri'i extends to us only if we also ve thtforeisrimr spirit. “In:- Jun. Teaching .-h--at.. I“. 18: 15-”. Go‘- M tR. Mntt. e.. M. N 21-22. Peter's cation. Co Luke 17: 3-4. ft: Jowioh m taught that one mm forgive oue'a brother three times. Peter Inked if it should be until Seven times? The answer of Jesus makes it pneticully limitless. Comp-mo the bound-less pu- tion for rfvenge in, tho sword tango! But the aervant'a prayer moved hi.s lord to compassion, and he, loosed him and "-erave. him the debt. Jesus in- tends to show L: min the greatnes- of God's forgiveness. thseerr sin And piled up I debt humanity never amid. pay. In unswer to the prayer of peni- tence God forgive. it nil. Column Esm734: 6-7, Pull: 103: 3-!2. In. t ' . . urine I man," says a recent writer, " ifting one hand in prayer to God the Father of love, calling upon Him for mercy, while his other hand tighum its tmmereiful grip on his brother'. thmt." "For the launch. Gen. "i.. iu.jdrriGuiintie" 11.030 is_bot_mdlou, measureleu. 8h. Know a When” mrmidist-n,aittaitiomrsoto out, when any will be "mined " MW. chin-A. u: nut to tho causality, of boil; Client“ from meal“, nrebrtakinea court: in an city high "WI unduly. Arum! high school man in: of. ' Mv. typo. The course of nlydy must be looted in the agricultural eta-nutty. and all that below to a. [and of compulling . pupil to "pluf' dud Inna-cu and "emm" hmory, clad“ and higher mathemntics. 1-- am the boys in animl hulbnndry, m huaundrr. economic, mic-tom “In much-lien, an! um man-(co mum and Instant the eir4. In do- n-tfe “a. home economics, has “It. and all other plan. at m but-“uh. Inodnrwwds,ld "7w htrh school he a farm- " all.” on I all mlo, modelled to - to and population h ! To the nation and the future “lurid, igood fatherhood matu- ever} thine It l means that men sill“ knot-forth think l not merely in terms of "hie hummus" but of better human liven. that they dull arrive rot only to bequeath wold: to their children mar death. but shall devote their lives to giving , their chum a treasure of sympathy. 110v. and euidnntse. It man: that Ithrough mutual “demanding, than. 'ers ab" be mm" ad un- Ken anamAiatie,--that the two - tions man mrk hard in [mad for a flner future world. It will do the foal no grant hum it it in oblked to "rough it" 3 little. Nature with: the home with a can of id: ouflie'trtt to wish-and th. ...m*.m iate of _"1t1ty "er- doe, can in which cow-.3," good hon. and nude. Give plenty of ion. will-om. food and provide dry u. mum in u box or shelter _ Therefore I would uy to - Mm. “Know your boy. “in today to play with him, hike with him, db- cun with him, amp out with Hm it ”upon-Hymn. Renaud-youth! you mainly need him. Don't let his mother have all the mm‘hility and all the joy of p-hood,---' an. d the joy your-sell. For out! his anger, for your on like. join the An- cient and Honorable Order of Fa‘hwr. hood'" On beat regulated egg farms Lhero in no longer a mom:- with the threk during the he. apt-1n; and lu‘umcr -.. After the brsediag “an," clon- all Mr. nu kapt _ from the halo, for infertile mu keep m-xah " a apootdul of gait In a thin was of mudin and (new the griddle This um fart and smoke. "To a nun himaelf, being a l father,-" who father and an tlr.. sanding one,--m+ the (rates: 1. lible happineu and “Ma'fum. mum that he an I“ ttw nm of an unfolding WNW, that can renew his own youlh m hi, .- than. and that he a?! be u ('nrwu!‘ with God in lidlnr. with}: my? spiring them. To a Mliid, " Irv-pi fu‘hm' .15. m“ Ono wall that lumen that than was Mi“ shunelul and un- - About um. I. thoroughly do in Mug. tint-weds spirit In our boil. IN tiny Jud who loves to also his bastard old doll “bed with him is tested and att.med out of hi. dictum. The youngster of eight or ten who play! "house" in frowned urtrei,---hs ought to prefer building . fort and playing at soldiers. We are far more afraid of making our boy 0 May" than of permitting him to but bully. Yet, if we study the grown men about us, we And that the 'uitusy" in a pretty are wet-imam while tho coarse-ttrained, “lash. cdloul bully in all too frequent. There in no great danger of our boys developing into cowut‘la. There is the mutant (inn-- nor of their growing Into businon men and money-makers ruthor than fathers nnd home-makers. lbw-moumdcfrhdo! 'etin-e-rhattsota-uug cohort-alumna. Hem-(lone torn-m Tuetioekiet-rjtt mt W. he aid. "Wall, I tink, m Pm mod up, pn hunt around and pick up u ioth of thick. 'tndtmiideho-ariv'em.amtu. Of cm the littl- would~bo "fnth. er" w. m with pool. of adult blather. Yet what ttner or more Ht turd outbid-I could In have voiced? We do not lunch. when our lint. damn! talk. of the day qrtten who wffl have a home and children“ Why does it strike u. in comic that our mull boy mould Mao long for (mm. hood? Pull.” the. word. "greatest dun- Ber" may seem 2mm, but lot us consider what the right loft at fatherhood means to men, to boyn ml to tho nation. a good mother. the but of all in". ages. His father in his Wynne. mu dun. his ideal. Hi: father’s pom” eal opinion; buoinno prim. and “1 “awards are wet-pug] unqumw “ably by hia admiring Ion. Sott"r, In 1.5; My said that mun lov- ing and ulmirilu the mint um ttt u. smut!" child mks " Amt we, Mud worship of the “that when he In: not men. " p It

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