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Durham Review (1897), 29 Jun 1922, p. 2

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elways scuked into the arust T T [ CC (oreâ€" served ih-:i!not,cio-km:'“" herself and threw tkmt.'.’. qhdaMulfi-om.hn‘ kawh hmd sls 2200 es cus. s 0 C oet w ue ; »BReg miglie wrling 20 my husband / to ¢ in and try them. took one, ::h“’ about the past experience, and started to eat. It was doughy. I wept. My husband couldn‘t check ie tmiles. 1t seeme funny to me now. That one doughnut was the only 'I m’ one in the pan!" I ©pened, and in he came for a drink «& milk and, of course, for a doughâ€" mut. He seized one and took a bite. Imagine how 1 felt when dough peepâ€" al out from within the browned surâ€" face! We both laughed, but 1 didn‘t Feel very cheerful. 1 resolved to show my husband that 1 could fry doughâ€" wuts. A week later 1 made the second awthen pt. "Every time fried cakes were taken ffrome tho KOMNbS af avaass 6. mop o to mak tib;“-v L w’w“ one to e sure were all ri Py were delicious. 1 went mt in MNolner housekeeper related a eimilar experince with barley. _ She #tarted out to make soup. When her bbandcameinatnoonobem enarching for one more dish to hobd the swol‘en grains of barley. Doughnuts have caused trouble, too. One capable housekeeper astonished me by saying: "I remember how hapâ€" PY 1 was when the large, shining pan was filed with doughnuts, brown and amugary. 1 wished my husband would me from the woods, where he was eutting wood, that he might taste Ancther eimilar ex t bentifininataiis Arccisis in tss i: the kitchen. Poerhaps the most common error is that of cooking too much rice. As one weman puts it: "I1 learned by experâ€" tence that one eupful of rice when eooked measures four ecupfuls; every, yan and keitle 1 owned was filled the first time 1 cooked it. 1 ted it to my Rusband for a week, and he ate it cheerfully. He says everything tasted geod to him then." Wherr first culinary Waterloo. Tbese'sef th women have been willingâ€"their bus-“ 16." bands eagerâ€"to tell of the trials and| â€" Pie teais. Several of them, believing in much yeed megasure, bave told amustng inâ€"| wishin ewlests about their husbands first,) ents | U you remember the mistakes y'ou’ it soggy. My husbarnd sometimes de in ccoking when you were a} joked whout it, but I found it tragie. (:w? You never thought the day| Finally I found that my mistake was wou‘k! come when you could laugh at| that of not having the oven hot them, €&d you? I‘ve been talking with' encugh when the pie was put in, and, howsewives recently, agking : aboutius there was mak entfiniens muce L* &4farm Crop ***,/ ~Querres €C" Pouosh. â€"Work it well into the secx‘led before sowing the mangels. R. F.: Can you give me full direeâ€" tions about starting an asparagus bed? The soil is sandy but has been fanly well manured. The plot has an open sunny exposure. . How many plants aro needed to supply a family of six? ' ef a fertihi «en phc..?,pl Cem it W"b'sh secx‘ted betf h % ef Ariwer: Sand burts or Mkbun-s] are stout growing anmwaal weeds that hbecome cquite troublesome if allowed to gain headway, besides being unâ€" wighily and wasters of moisture and ferltility; they beur seeds that ln‘y' eeriously effect livestock. Putting the ground imto cultivated crops â€" and| kecping the crops clear of woeds,f especially the burrsa is a ;raot.ieall measure for evadication. At all events preverw. ihe woods from bearing seeds| by kecping them eut off. If the bum]‘ have become established in meadow, or posture they may be nadimted“ June Brides and Cookstoves I H;;;T(n;\\Tn n many Inaaa abp 2. _01._ _ DC CRCCTUY °o SUNS AnC crops. Address ail questions to Professor Henry G. Beli, in care of The Wileon Publishing Company, Limited, Toron to, and answers will appear in this column in the order in which they are received. When writing kindly menm tion this paper. As space is !imited it is advisable where :nmedlato reply is necessary that a stamped and adâ€" [CP PW qprntinnine 2s & T wid cel CONDUCTED Bav pror. HENRY a. BELL The object of this department is to place at the seorâ€" viee of our farm readers the advice of an acknovledged uun:rlty on ul: sultjects pertaining to soils and crops. blefmane SHB seun uy D ue 21 man @bT ‘ood, hence in fertilizing for gel crop 1 wou!ld advige n 500 to 700 lbs.. per acre Nzer carrying 8 to 10 per phoric acid and 5 to 7 per sh. Work it well into the efore sowing the manonle | QSC8 grease 1 sampled last, attempts in Shining pan| ing, *, brown and| to h sband would | sinc here he was| fast might taste| mak whes The door| who "~1 check of my former schoolmates came to omenow.fvisit me. You know how eager I was the enly, to impress her with my husi:nd, my | home, and my housekeeping. The daey noted for, before she arrived I potished every 1gee that' ccor knob and dug out every crack _them to, £rd ocorner. I sent my husband to ould see| town for a piece of round steak. 00l, taste| _ "For the first d&nner 1 planned to ie served| have beef roll, using a recipe which of them| J had cut from a lâ€"ading magazine. ky 1 remember now carefully the steak | kmg cus. 'MWMM“N. m, '-'n‘at!m-udiqmmn&e By Nell B. Nichols ) how cochk uds ";:«}:bm'rs'th ;i‘:i:l!o:::;':h t e : t :"3 mt“nsm !W tis the f ie couldn‘t bake those cakes. They wouldn‘t turn.‘ "I couldn‘t imagine what was the matter until I went to the kitchen and discovered that the buckwheat batter on the table was untouched and the jar of bread sponge in the cabinet had been taken out and tried on the griddle iron. Imagine baking bread who was visiting us. 1 emphasized that the batter for the cakes was on the kitchen table. ‘"Returning home later, 1 found my husband wearing a grouchy expresâ€" fast, 1 toid my frusb;r;'t;: ‘iev;ou}d make the coffee and bake some buckâ€" wheat cakes for himself and my uncle, N Toee MAAYâ€" O POT * ing, and her son came Jve-; to‘getvme to help care for her. Before starting, gince I couldn‘t get home to get breakâ€" us * sÂ¥ & 1 8 | _ me merimngue was responsible for | much embarrassment. A young bride, | wishing to show her husband‘s parâ€" .’mts how clever she was in cooking, | invited them to dinner. She worked | during the morning, preparing quite | a feast. Two cccoanut custard pies | were her chief pride. They were beauâ€" | ties, with their fluffy, browned topâ€" | ping of egg whites. i All moved along beautifully until it was time to cut the pies. The merâ€" fingue pulled into various shapes, but it wouldn‘t let itself be cut. In kindâ€" liness the motherâ€"inâ€"law explained that unless sugar is added to the beaten egg white the meringue beâ€"| comes leathery and tough, and cannot be cut after being baked. ; It‘s a husband‘s turn now. Here‘s| the tale one woman tells: "I made| / mistakes, of course, but none of them equal the one made by my better half. Soon after our marriage one of my neighbors took sick early in the mornâ€" clayey soils such analysis as 5â€"12â€"0 and 4â€"10â€"0 are useful. _ For mucky types of soil, fertilizers analyzing 0â€"10â€"8 or 0â€"8â€"8 and the like are used with good profit. Applications of 500 to 1,000 Ths. per acre are made soon after fruiting season is completed. N. P.: If rye and vetch are sown in Auguost fer green manure and plowed t of not having the oven hot ugh when the pie was put in, and, there was not sufficient heat to the crust, the custard soaked into ‘We are tha awa ..3 . _# C Wi} Trealize [chatflheonefinm God sends is really a propheb; [ §0 Ezekiel is not to be daunted by the op;ozition of the people. â€" They imay persccute him in word and deed but he ‘ must not be discouraged. Briers and thorns; "symbols of the opposâ€" "]W"‘ Wfl will h en 3‘&‘.’.‘ Ev fi"l‘m ‘:r-:n' flllt tha nn.m e m '.ln_ m‘i:e chi woll C ECA NC TTeu, stand upon thy feet. This command ‘wu given because God wishes to anâ€" nounce to him that by his prophetic commissig}l ge was to t:ie glevaf:d to a position ignity and : rought into closer relation to God and the rest of his fellow exiles. V. 2. The spirit entered into me. Unable to raise himeelf, the Spirit of God came upon him and lifted him 04000 CCC PPCCRE. JOH OP man. _ Ezekiel uses this expression about a hundred times, applying it to himself. It denotes his sense of human frailty and nothingness in conâ€" trast to the ineffable majesty of (CaAi I. Ezekiel‘s Call. ch. 2: 1â€"6. V. 1. He said; That is, God. In the g:ceding chapter, Ezekiel tells of his ugural vision of God. At this vigion Ezekiel fell prostrate and now the silence is broken: God speaks. Son of man. _ Ezekiel uses this expression sublime. qe 0. 00 C C ECCTEICâ€"WIUVL & great pagan religion and civilization. His style is precise and somewhat formal; his prophecies are filled with all manner of strange symbols, someâ€" Wms * rexibiul us t UZ _ Lesson Forewordâ€"Ezekiel, who was of a priestly family, was carried into exile to Babylonia with the first capâ€" tives in B.C. 597. His prophetic minâ€" istry was thus devoted to the exiles in Babylonia and he did much to help them bear the sorrows of exile and to keep in remembrance the religion of ‘ their fathers when surrounded with a irvanak se lc Au ie T SA 1 sought advice fro-r;l husband‘s mother an. friends thoucht af they saw The Ezeki:_e‘l, 'the Watcl_lman_of Israel, Ezek. 2 T hoii 0 tb alfincnta td schdiinde ies | she wouldn‘t tel} anything on herself. ‘| She wil} ten years from now. Thebridemvhvivingtotownme ! morning and her husband was staying at home. Explaining that a ham was baking in the oven, she asked him to watch the fire in the kitchen rangeâ€" that is, to keep it from going out. | When she returned two hours later, the ham was almost a cinder. The man ‘of the house had made an especial effort to keep the range redâ€"hot. He rnever thought of lookin~ at the ham. This husband bought his wife a fireâ€" less cooker soon after that. Last, but not Tleast, my own great difficulty. My husband asks why I limit it to one. Anyway, here it is: I couldn‘t make eoffee to suit his taste. } I followed the directions given by| two leading home economics colleces ’ Another farm woman admits that she made eight quarts of pickles, usâ€" ing whole red peppers; the seeds proâ€" duced such burning effects that the pickles had to be thrown away. Now for another sling at the husâ€" bands. A woman laughed as she told me how her husband "kept the home fires burning." Being a recent brida C e s eAeneey . To judge for myself,." Evidently pep have been res ponsible for sem mishaps. _ An Irishman says that his first vegetable soup was so hot that a spoonful was more than he wanted; his wife had left the seeds in the peppers and the concoction was quite too hot to beJ w2 000 O0 _0 ECC m CuURet Seddâ€" bys. Nowlknowthatthewfiterof the recipe had city readers in mind who use hot gas ovens. She wasn‘t concltliering my coal range, and II didn‘t have sufficient experience tn [oert,andfinrastofflnmed. My husband and his two helpers came to thehmmefordirmrjm as the thirty minutes were up, so I took the roll from the oven. The vegetables were almest raw and the meat was only partly cooked. It couldn‘t be eaten. To cover my humiliation, I opened’ some canned beans and other standâ€" :;:v areaged in m"l,‘ll'\'en was placed h;uuflflz came from the brand of coffer range oven. mcipod&rected*â€"étwun’tfineomhwhdvhmym that the ro!l be cooked thirty m:infutec.: band was accustomed. But since this "I forgot about this main dish and «ame man drank army coffee overseas went ahead with the coffee, the de"l‘ during the war. he does not tease me :m{ and the rest of the meal. My: about my first sad attempts. hralntud <0‘s i0 x"% rolled up and tied so the vegetables would rot fall out. When the meat was dredged in flour, it was placed in the range oven. The recipe directed udin s _ _ q2 _ °CC PoVrV whie Ne may be found, call ye upon Him while Hs is near: let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.â€"Isa. 55: 6. 7 s y ul o9 o ns ue omm thought of coffee whenever me. It was always on the Sunday School Lesson sometimes truly wrections given by economics colleges. om my mother, my and his sister. My f coffee whenever a recent bride, 1 him to infecte rangeâ€" show t ing out.| worm i s later,| and ru Phe man| tion to especial| a â€" dep1 It'hval V. 17. A more ion, | the +prophet‘s w vhat' is set as a wate vith | is, charged with me. | Watchman. â€"It upy | Ezekiel‘s work is 7| with individuals. V. 18. He is wicked and admo hhe Juiuk srammew 2c LoÂ¥ iq) in Lo alllg C C0,°C VC JCared, In such a sgituation as the Poom, where shal} we find our true prophet ? ""Should not a people seek unto vhoir God? To the law and the testimony; if they smeak o,, _ _ "®. Witimony a ut for our an,., 7. d Ways at lflh Blltfi-mrmm%mueh y said, state was never so M’ &” Wfi*b{ym fN thi or, moâ€" thing too evil to be feared. ® amfuil c 3 200 9 ow HeVer on ns oys Empite in The BR cegforte goree of the new conception‘ of European We sc cing oob c mm L 0% S CHE n Every one is saying, these are st new times,â€"and it is true. And occasions teach new duties." Th always a "present crigie‘‘ T ~ z0 alwave . a2.__ NCw duties." There is always a "present crisis," Lofthouse, mkti;rmtmflbg?km%zfiel,k un quoting here: "There has never ye the Lord while He may be Jt _0 Cotek ‘/ve. 2 * "Watchman tion and persecution the pr expect to encounter" (M Scorpions; a still stronger persecution. With their s sting they are able to deal a sinner. The man who arrives is the man who seeks after ideals. Y speak not M-n;"tov& it”h because there it no lig tion to eat coarse undigestible food, a depraved appetite are common symptoms of the disease. There are a number of effectual treatments for this disease, but far better to avoid the trouble than to attempt to cure it. Keep both ewes and lambs in good flesh by supplementing the pasâ€" ture with a light grain ration. Alâ€" ternate the flock from one pasture to another frequently, even though the, s 2 youl >.0% m . wouse TORONTO condition. Overstocking _ pasture should be avoided. Low land pasture, especially where foul and stagnant water stands, are more likely to be infected with stomach worms. Sheep show the first symptoms of stomach worm infection by their loss of flesh a'nd runâ€"down condition. A disposi-‘ e stomach worm it is difficult to eradicate, therefore, preventive meaâ€" sures are most effectual. Frequent change of pasture is necessary . to keep the flock in a heavy, vigorous the ach worm. Allowing the flock to pasâ€" ture continuously on the same pasture is the cause of this trouble. When a pasture once becomes infected with While sheep are auscepfible t; disâ€" ease, perhaps none have caused greatâ€" er_'losrs to flopl’cr owneirs than the stomâ€" [bolic acid. The addition of 1 quart of ‘fiah oil will improve this mixture. _ _Another fly spray consists of 1 galâ€" lon of kerosene, 5 oun:es powdered Napthaline and 1 pound of laundry soap dissolved in hot water. Sufficient water is added to this to make 4 galâ€" lons of mixture. It may be applied with a sponge or cloth. ndi Fly Sprays. The Wisconsin College of Agriculâ€" ture recommends the folowing two fly sprays: Two gallons kerosore, 1 quart pir‘» tar and oneâ€"half pint crude carâ€" tip of my tongue, a new question about it. And after experimen‘ing a fow of about the same (;J;lxty Application. the great unifying force in while social movements. rlemagne, the p« . _of gunpowder, 1â€"16; 3: 17â€"21 , and the dis. of the prophet may (MeFadyen). er figure of strike and He will| their young; » imitate natu There should phet may hand. ‘Fadyen).| An easy 1 figure of| home, is to Muan s 4h . 2 B ,lEn‘mymm”’wm‘ hw"“‘“"’"“flwn’udl-’mena disinfectant. â€" About rineâ€"tentho of thembnneousmturfoundinmikg manure from the body of the animals and the remaining oneâ€"tenth are partâ€" idesdhdrm“fmfi. table. Dirt not only causes milk to sour rapidly, but makes it unfit for human use. ‘ Myuteuih,m..“m.J above reqauizite« i.: ° °Y U*° +4 the requisites invite loss and human diseame, Stables should be cleaned regularly and some absorbent used to tal the owhite aw k. 1 _ _, _ Meed ake up h e DP iaa tfi ins 2 Wls ... clunmmm f Hiti for ].ngwenflkuooonudnwnm‘ a few of the essentials in producing clean milk for the market and homo‘ sumption. Neglect of any one of fiw lhnm Infnenilad Lc 0s n 2s C 1 ge uin olp hy CR Oe AEAAE for a roof and tie the whole in a tree. The entrance hole should be the size of a quarter. You will be surprised to see how quickly Mr. and Mrs. Wren will go to housekeeping there, someâ€" times as late as August for their third batch of young. j Fruit trees ‘where these houses are placed will have no wormy frnit it Cll o 2 se Coemany EGe these nests are hung in the #pring. h An easy way to furnish a cavity home, is to find a foot length of a rotted tree limb, dig out the cenire about four inches deep and six inches wide, nail a bit of board on the top fave . seniede oo pe uo‘ $MeUE mduced to come and live in your orchard or garden if you wil} supply the cavity for them to live in and rear their young; all you have to do is to imitate nature as nearly as possible, Eem should be plenty of water at s3 cavity dwellers ’ A.â€"Wrens, titmice, chickadees, nutâ€" hatches, towees, B.â€"Bluebirds, prothonotory, warbâ€" lers, ewallows. ‘ C.â€"Fly catchers, martins. ‘ D.â€"Owls, sparrow hawks, flickers. All of these, while occupying tbe' house the @rchitectâ€"carpenter has dugl out for them, are not builders but induced to of woodpeckers but only four different sizes. After having dug and chippo! out the cavity in a rotted stump or 'tree, they use it one season as a home and nursery to rear their young amdi never use the same again. There are numbers of other cavity nesting birds corresponding to the four sizes of woodpeckers that are only too g!ud, to occupy the discarded homes of the j woodpeckers. We will classify them,‘ as to size, as A, B, C and D. every cavity home in the fc-‘rvé.-;tv. There are more than forty varieties when it is ChuM The lobaccoof Quality /2 LB. TINS and in packages l E uâ€"â€"â€"\f m SM OK " Weeding should be done on a ; o Isunny day, so that the weeds ; first drawn Birds Who Live in Holes for nearly *J "_CC UOnes, [ en manare jngnes: % hk spos | dry earth or n rreâ€"s m io excellent for the garden, is much stn <han ""'"’"‘"""'th with caution. A good plan is to mix w i4 is 4 â€" ag “""l’ybu-‘ln-o(.qa,mm ‘:’-mlbimpmn vhn(l:: hrael hasfL. buying and veing pureâ€" prevents most fungus discases. fitted ow ... =~, V@ have trained and MWWYQM«"M. omm mss Spraying the potatoes with Borâ€" MMM“"H Jt MMowmamba L.20a e house with . j "_" * *anitary milk house with a large tank filled with fresh water for cooling the milk., involves less labor and if frequent] 4 while cooling insures ‘a io. feomaskns ue is straimers, etc., used about the dairy, should be thoroughly sterili N er sterilization M"&‘ bacteri '“n' prevents “_:hnlr On most farms hot WAbar urnaskn . o o2 ° ‘wil average two bhundred trips a day to feed her young and come in loaded ‘!with twentyâ€"five plant lice at a time. ‘| A flicker‘s crop, on dissection, was :, found to contain more than four thouâ€" t'sand ants. Five hundred incects a / day is a conservative esvimate of the ‘| quantity consumed by each individual | insectivorous bird, hence it is the duty |and should be the pleasure of every ']citizen to do all in his or her power | to protect these valuable creatures, | Worthy incdeed is the garden that is planted not for beauty alone but also for the welfare of the birds. There is a strong affinity between flower lovers and bird lovers, and a garden planted with this twofold purpose in mind brings greater pleasure to him who gives and a govdly measure of comfort and enjoyment to those exâ€" quisite feathered creatures of the air â€"the birds. I should advise making a special study of one bird during a season, notâ€" ing each special peculiarity and learnâ€" ing everything you can about it. You w:l-l be astonished to know how much | / Shaanr e es e t 1 5 there is to itinntifraihaichscitend is s 2 to such anâ€"extent that all trees will be denuded of their foliage, plants will cease to thrive arnd crops can not be raised. _ For instance, a chickadee will average two hundred trips a day to feed kher young and come in loaded The cavity dwellers are every cone insectiverous and are among our naâ€" tion‘s most valuable asosts, Destroy these and in a comparatively few years the insects will have multiplied se i en ie on p en A A house that swings other place will never the English Sparrow. C 2.e moisiure and atmosphere and »..hing else can supply these two ossentials so nicely as a piece of deâ€" cayed wood. The czgs must not be cCried out; if they are, the young are liable to die in trying to shed the shell. . The conditions to be closely imitatâ€" just a bird!" ver pleasure to him goodly measure of yment to those exâ€" creatures of the air from a limb or be infested by much us e 0 g >3 cov n AOERNOIEY F6 down. mhfiddnm“-, whole ant cofony, 5 L 10 20 OS CASuerecame odor; is highly voletile and explosive. Awwmy sharp implement mh\-adtomuhenbotefmmm’x to twelve inches deep in the centre otudxu;.nmmd. Pour into it e cupful of Monbhlp&dp,thu <close the hole with down. 1\....._..‘.'."?."'"..‘""'" 0A eg C by using earbon bisulphide mbl_e in . â€"h;::.: four or five times dur At the same time this stimulate the rrowih 1 "dust mulch" is formed, and while this layer of finely pulverized soil is quite dry in itself, it prevents the escape of moisture from the deeper parts of the soil. In this case the pulverized Q‘ll&-lnmm or nonâ€" conductor between the moist soil and the heat of the sun. A crust forming over the soil after a rain or watering is dotrimaontal to plant growth and should bs broken uUp as soon as the land can be worked. Sandy soils, of course, can be worked much sooner than clay soils afiter a it many gardenors negloct their asparagus beds as soon as the cutting season is over, Th trouble s‘aris by giving the weeds a free £oot. Let them go to seed and the esparagus will have a struggle for its existence. It is a simple matter to keep the rows {m fm:n weeds if the rows are hoed As a ", _ TBun/l root maggcts, is made in virtually the same way as the keroâ€" gene emulsion, except that a teasp3onâ€" ful of crude earbolc acid is subsiiâ€" tubed for the two cupfuls of kerosens Th‘s stock solution should be mixed with one gallon of water. Arsenate of lead, lime an4 su‘phur nicctine solutions, tobacco dust, Borâ€" csaux mixture, fish oil £nd other scop solutions, pyrethrum, hellebore and calcium arsenate are other wellâ€"known weapons with which to combat the Inorsuff o c Crude carbclic acid emul use againct root maggcts, i: virtually the same way as 1 fene emulsion, except that a t ful of erude carbollc acid h tubed for tha tunn smamfl. _4 3 burn the f0l% spraying the foliage of plan‘s a weakâ€" or mixture is nco‘sd; dilute at the rate of one part slock emu‘sion to ten or fifteen perts wator. Agitate the solution frequent‘ly whils apply it to keep it well mixed, ©ctherwise conâ€" beenfutsd portions of the Xquéid may mams $Lee quasc _ scattered near the stem of the young 'phxtwilip’ntbedqired protectics Kerosens emulsion is one of t;â€" oldest sprays for scaleo insects an| plant lice and is easily made at home. Take a piece of laurdry socp abou: the size of a walnut and shave it i a cup of soft water; boil it for a 10 minutes; while hot add two cupfuls <f kerosene; agitate the mixture violont ly, until the oil is perfectly® emu)=â€" fiod, when it will have a creamy lsok, anml not separate from the water, This is a stock solution. For use es a dormant spray againct scale in sorts on trees and bushes, before the follsge has appearnol, it should be diâ€" luted at the rate of one part emu}sion to three or four parts water. For of water, then work this liquor i the bran mixture; add enough wa to make a stiff mash. used in this operation,. Add a t Mflofmmtouquar: of ordinary feed bran and mix we!l. 1. a tablespoonful of molasses in a cup Sprays and dusting are not effecs;«. against cutworms, grasshoppers, arn y worms and the like, because th: pests do not dwell on the foliago. Tho, must be fought in a different man» on the ground near the baso <f th. plants. Poison bran mash is wid extend above the ground shout If there is danger from cutwo>» and these pests can devastate a paich of plants like tomatoes in a =i~>). night, safegward the tender steoms +« surrounding them with a cylinde> / heavy paper, inserting the pape : the ground for an inch and makins :: Nine times out of ten the orde~); goodâ€"looking garden is the highly p> ductive garden; whoreas the p>~,, arnanged, shabbily planted plot is > ficient for lit‘e more than the a>~<, of fiels mice. Nature is nothiny ; not responisive. Give her what she requirss and you will never be «);: large black quickly withered by the heat gord have m> chance to wake new root on <»« surface of the stirred soil. Even s some are likely to survive if there ; a great deal of moisture. Transplanting and thinning are <», leact harmfu} when the work is donâ€" on a wet or cloudy day, or town»>/ nightfall, becaume there is less h.; from the sun and therefore le=s w ; ering to the plants. _in wiedom reminds » theg use our evor in geiting 9e '.th“‘q es during the sammer. me this cultivation will growith of the asparâ€" may be destroyed or less, of this m enem ies siom, for tiwa> m} aArC #* 1t by Little Ey vuous Slay HIDE RYSSI be Seen TRA MAsS

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