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Durham Review (1897), 3 Aug 1922, p. 6

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. R_4°4 Was IN one corner of this Kvingâ€"reom. _ Then there were two small bedrcooms, so small, in fact, that by the time you got your bed up there was no room left for dresser or table or hardly any for yourself. Then, as far as doors go, there was an opening but no place for the door to go when you wanted to open it. So doors were just about forgotten in this house.| The diningâ€"room and kitchen were | together and when company came the chikiren had to wait until the second table, or had to stand up end eat, for . I have heard of people making their families fit the house, but when it comes to making the house fit the family I think it is about the latest thing out. Do you think enough of your tenant and his family to fix the house all over and make it larger? I think there are very few men toâ€"day who fully appreciate what his tenant] does for him, and fewer still that care' about making things pleasant and| helpful for his family. And still, perâ€"| haps you, yourse!‘f, were in the tenâ€"‘ ant‘s "shoes" "in the good old days." ; Nevertheless, there was one man in these same "good old days" that apâ€"| preciated and took an interest in his‘ tenant and fixed his house all over.‘ His tenant had three children and | there wore only four rooms in the house, and those nothing to speak of.‘ So he betook it upon himself to make amends. There was a goodâ€"sized : livingâ€"room necding new paper and paint just "awfully." And the dish supboard was in cn» cornor af this i C OOWe 00 Om Pm unel C O It can be made of equal parts by' of t weight of bran, middlings, corn meal, make ground oats and beef scrap. If you! ate « have only a small flock or lack of time‘ in t to make a mixed mash, try using one| stim of the commercial growing mashes. ’ing t Sour milk is a fine developer for" It chicks and helps to reduce digestive| from disorders. A grassy range is a great| insec belp in making chicks grow. Young and j birds confined to yards lacking in!or in chicks at all times great variety of causes Lack of viâ€" tality in the breeding stock produces weak chicks. An overâ€"crowding of the brooder will cause chicks to h"i come droopy and stunted. Overheatâ€" ing in the brooder is a common trouble during hot weather and just as sorl-.’ ous as chilling in the early spring. i Poulrymen ars generally finding| that the growing mash before the Mre. J. R.: My chicks wore hatched| in incubators and I am losing them / real fast. At night they seem all | right; in the morning their wings are‘ drooped and they stand humped up.‘ Some die during the day, and in the: morning there will be as high as four and five dead in brooder. They are‘ fed small chick feed, rolled oats and fresh water. They are now three | weeks old and do not seem to grow || very fast. ‘| £. 0i OO â€" e RAak Answer: I prefer the first methodi 10 to 12 per cent. : you mention. Believe it will exhaust acid. Sometimes the root system of the quack grml' with good success most. Next summer the hoed crop| should be spread b must have very careful attention anmdt! tho _ai. _4 "nl D D. M.: 1 have five acres of hay’gocd r which 1 am cutting which will yield at: ease, t least one ard a half tons per acre| R. V of cured hay, half June clover and,raspbel half quack grass.. Which would be the | ed for best way to destroy the quack? Plow| gravell as soon as the hay is off and work well _ Ansy the rest of the season and plant to| will atr corn next spring, or wait till I get a mode a good second growth of clover and| cane, ; plow it under and work it thormllhly: frosts s next spring and sow it to buckwheat |fertilize about July 1st? [ anrtege m GRouiry? that stay on the tree. No universally successful remedy has been developed. Deep fall plowing helps bury the inâ€" sects that remain in the fallen fruit. Spraying with a poison mixture of lead arsenate sweetened with brown1 sugar attracts the fly and sometimes kills considerable mumbers. | insect lays its eggs in the cherry from early June until the fruit ripens. The eggs hatch out quickly, and the magâ€" got eats its way into the stone or pit. This causes rotting sections of the fruit. The insect passes the winter in affected cherries on the ground or that stay on the trom Nn iuniwawoalis Ancwer: The pest affecting your cherry tree is undoubtedly the Cherry Fruit _I"ly. _ Sanderson says that this im .i 3. , 1 "C"® w appear in this column in the order g in which they are received. When writing k‘nd!y mem \ > tion this paper. As space is limited it is advisable where + Immediate reply is necessary that a stamped and ad Uressed envelope 4e enclosed with the question, whenr the answer wiil be malled direct Copyright by Wilson P ublishing Co., Limited C. H.:;: What can I do with my| down. In working the cherry tree? It was set out last after disking and harr spring and came on just fine, but this root stalks together . year all the new leaves are covered have dried, burn them with black lice. I have sprayed with _ A. P.; We have tw common things and sprinkled with] trees. Last year they lice powder, but to no avail. Ethem Lar the Heak ahos, conpuctio s\ PROP. HENRY a. BELL Tho object of this department is to place at the ser vies of our tarm readers the advice of an acknov ledged Dflhirny on all subjects pertaining to soils and cropa. ddress all questions to Professor Menry G. Beli, in eare of The Wilson Publishi Company, Limited, Torom 20. and anewers wili appurnrn this column in the order in sukd on ak P 1 a‘l times is one of the best producing a rapid growth. £&farm Crop ***,/ . Querres Fixing Over the Tenant House es e en eetee grass must be cutl dieo from a t us MB D â€"» IintontWifinginnindsninnantui ic 2 .i.0, S S c ul 4 14000 he hoed mp: should be spread between the rows at attention and the rate of 500 lbs. por acre, and must be cutl worked in by harrowing. ‘ eeeuar ESF iufBGemnuin diccaadsd PW3 o 20 C n o es eoey . MOWErEL £P0n e best, _ Land plaster itseilf has little effect the workâ€"basket by her side. Yet is rowth. | in the bectle control but its fineness ®Pitt Of her neverâ€"idle fingers, her ts by" of texture and its adhering qualitiee °Y6S sparkled with the brightness of meal," make it an ideal carrier for the arsenâ€" YOUth, and her cheeks glowed with the f you! ate of lead. It is also very effective freshness of health. All freshness ( time! in that it is a fertilizer and has a Seemed gone, however, from the face @ one| stimulating effect on the plants, caus.| Of her friend. There was a dullness hes. !ing them to mature and fruit early, |in her eyes and a lack of natural p for!' It is necessary to keep the beetle| COlor in her face, which bespoke only estive| from attacking the cucumbers as this too well of the artificial life of the great) insect also causes the cucumber wilt! business world. Wearily she leaned foung" and produces a grub which feeds on PACk in her chair. E Natceali®accaca ds aca 1 11 out it only cost $200 they were amazâ€" ed. Is the hired man worth the price? If not, you had better get one that is, for a poor man is an expensive propoâ€" sitien at any price.â€"Mrs. M. J. 1. wreruhectstaliinias i tdb lt lt ds h t to sit down at the diningâ€"table and e have any room left to wait table. The t! house needed shingling badly. ) _ First of all, the roof was raised and : two sleepingâ€"rooms added, one above []| the livingâ€"room and the other above ‘) the former bedrooms, each had large | clothesâ€"presses at one end and the j extra clothing was taken care of. An || open stairway led up to these rooms | from the livingâ€"room, and a cellar ! stairway was added under these. Then | the partition between the former bedâ€" , roome was taken out and this made a | nice comfortable diningâ€"room. A large | window was made in the north wall | and the Gish cupboard moved to this | room. The kitchen was painted and the other two rcoms fixed up in fine â€"shape. A large sink and drain were put in the kitchen and much disagreeâ€" â€" able work was eliminated, as well as â€" "nsanitary surroundings. ‘ A verandah extending across the en. vire front cf the house, was then put on and the outside was painted. It ! made such a difference in the house | that people going by often spoke of 1 the new house that Soâ€"andâ€"So put up | for his hined man. They said he would not be able to get enough extra out of 1 his land to warrant such an expendiâ€" 8 ture of money, bet when they found t out it only cnuk oi ki _ _ L 000 9k An easy and effective way to conâ€" trol cueumber beetle is to dust with a mixture of arsenate of lead and land plaster. A very effective formâ€" wla, as shown by tests, is one part by weight of powdered arsenate of lead to twenty parts of land plaster. Land plaster itseif has little effect in the beetle control but its fineness se css 10. 1 | come unhealthy. â€" Shade during the ‘day is necessary to protect growing | birds from the hot sun. li If the eggs were overbeated in the | incubator it might cause weak chicks. | But I belteve if you try plenty of sour ,'milk and the balanced growing mash | that these chicks will do better and the mortality rate will decroase, Of! course, better results with chicks can, bo obtained when they receive no setâ€"| backs of any kind from the time they leave the shell. It is sometimes d'iffl-! cult to bring back a flock that has! become in bad condition. ‘ *\ _ R. V.; What is the best fertilizer for l' raspberry bushes that have just fruitâ€" > ed for the first time? The soil is °/ gravelly and fairly well manured. ) Answer: You need a fertilizer that | will strengthen the cames and produce a moderate growth of good healthy |cane, well hardened before winter |frosts stop growth in general. Such | fertilizer on an average soil should | carry 4 to 5 per cent. nitrogen and | 10 to 12 per cent. availahla whaswkast. Controlling the Cucumber produces a grub whi the stems under th Answer: The trouble is most likely Brown Rot of Plums. This discase spreads from spores which winter in the mummified fruit that hangs on the trees or falls to the ground. All such fruit should be carefully gatherâ€" ed and burned. The whole tree should be carefully sprayed with fresh Borâ€" deaux mixture, strength 4 lbs. copper sulphate, 4 lbs. quicklime, 40 gals. water. Lime sulphur spray is giving good results as a control of this disâ€" ease, too. A. P.:; We have two yellow plum trees. Last year they had plums on them for the first time. About three weeks before they were ripe they started to rot. By the time they were to be ripe they had all rotted. This year we sprayed them three times and they are rotting again. I would like to know how I could prevent them‘ from doing this again. down. In working the field this fall, after disking and harrowing, rake the root su.u'ka together and after they â€" per cent. available phésph-oric Sometimes boneâ€"meal is used om for more than six the diningâ€"table and &‘thfio droop and beâ€" hich feeds the ground Either fertilizer "I once heard a lecturer on child cu‘ture tell a number of mothers that they should take an hour a day to deâ€" vote entirely to their children. Weil, should r ssking to see for yourself what 1 mean. Why, Belle, you think that any woman can be a mother, that the knowledge reâ€" quired to bring up children is very slight indeedâ€"but you don‘t know anything about it. To be a real mothâ€" er, a successful mother, a mother who what 1 meant," she expiained. "Only Ted and Dot are in school, you know ; but as soon as the children wet over their shyness and get accustomed to bhaving you here. vou‘l huws a ahon.. The mother lnugiléd. "No that what I meant " sha awnlsinad â€" ‘"Why * Do they bring home a deal of schoolâ€"work for you to d | _ "Fifteen years!" she mused reminâ€" ! iscently. "Fifteen years since we left _school. Does it seem possible, Marâ€" _ion?" she asked, with a laugh. "We like to look back on those years at school, but, really, Marion, what do you remember that you ever learned there? I believe I‘ve forgotten everyâ€" thing except the bit of know]ed-gej that has had directly to do with my | business life." ; The good mother smiled in her turn. "You wouldn‘t say that if you had four inquiring youngsters," she asâ€"‘ serted. I , The women sat on the porch of the .| small vineâ€"covered house which had ,| become truly "home" by means of ; much planning and saving, and talked . gaily of old times, the mother all the | while industriousiy plying her needle | as she endeavored to lower the huge | pile of stockings that towered from | the workâ€"basket by her side. Yet in spite of her neverâ€"idle fingers, her eyes sparkled with the brightness of | youth, and her cheeks glowed with the \ freshness of health. All freshness | seemed gone, however, from the face | of her friend. There was a dullness , the wife of a moderatelyâ€"salaried | bookkeeper in a town of fewer than 10,000 imhabitants, and was the moth-’ er of four happy, healthy, intelligent children. | By Margaret A. Bartlett Two women, classmates, met for the I never was able to enatch that hour first time some fifteen years after| out of my busy day. But instâ€"ad of their graduation. One was a business| iiving with my children just an hour woman, fairly successful in her chosen| each day, I kave endeavored to live field in a large city; the other was! with them all tha Hima ( Poultry houses need special care during summer months, if flocks are to be kept free from disease and paraâ€" sites. Hot weather makes pests most active and injurious. Keoping the henâ€"houses and yards sweet and clean: helps greatly to check their attacks. Spraying the â€" deaux stimulates prevents most fu for shx:im;en{,: Jif not and are absolutely w least moldy. [ aaltfs‘. s__ LC .. °9 Vy your hend at selling drug plants, write the Jepartâ€" ment of Agriculture, Ottawa, for a free bulletin on drug plants. Bulletin No. 23, Second Series, "Medicinal Plants and Their Cultivation in Can. ada." This tells what part of each plant to gather, how to recognize the: plant and how to dry them. , After all roots are duy ar radlhd The two essential things t be kept in mind in turning th plants into money, are to kno plants to gather and where them. _ The roots of some Itaves of others, and flowers of are used in medicine. If you want to try your selling drug plants, write the ment of Agriculture, Ottawa free bulletin on drug nlante â€" ht oinistorith ts lc ui Acdscca . Aih o4A t 51+ yliver and in dyspepsia Weeds are a necessary, useful evil. While they cause backache, they also cure it. Soapwort, Mayâ€"apple, pokeâ€" weed, degwood, white clover, spikeâ€" nard, wild ginger, dandelion, elecamâ€" pane, burdock, and dozens of otherl‘ weeds for example, can be tur"»d into money if gathered and cured in '.heI right way. i purifying the blaééâ€"avr;;i--.i,n the treatâ€" ment of skin diseases. Dandelion is used as a tonic in diseases of the Lob o m Y NV One may well ask, "If nothing was created in vain, of what use are weeds?" The answer is simple, for hem._ yafif” have a ';P;fince Weeds That Are Worth t Keeping Up With the Childran essential things that must nrimae, .. . _ & _ "HEC OTug UTBUOVOG trade and better prices. ’ noney, are to know which‘I With the facts here given, the cirâ€" ither and where to sell| cular proceeds to deal with the feeds _ roots of some plants,| best fitted for the wintering and winâ€"| ers, and flowers of others, ter fattening of beef cattle in Eastâ€"] medicine. | ern Canada. These feeds are divided | nt to try your hand at into three classes, dry roughages, sucâ€" plants, write the ;)epart.’ culent roughages, and grains. Of dry riculture, Ottawa, for a | roughages, clover hay is the crop that‘ on drug plants. Bulletin; can be recommended most general]y.‘f‘ ond Series, “Medicinall Alfalfa hay cannot be grown every.| heir Cultivation in Can.]| where and is more in demand for dairy | tells what part of each, than beef cattle. Timothy hay, alâ€") ; er, how to recognize the: though often used, is neither as nuâ€"|‘ to dry them. tritious nor as economical to feed to| 1 oots are dug or pulhd,, beef cattle as red clover hay. StraWj; > thoroughly washed and) from the various cereals, of good qua]-!( , airy place to dry.© A) ity, can be used to advantage in feedâ€" y fairly good drying shed,‘ ing beef cattle. Of succulent mugh-ft ite as well as a building' agesâ€"despite the boom for sunflowm‘ p tructed for the purpose,, â€"the circular maintains that corn‘“ considerably in dr}.ing'!silage is undoubtedly the most satisâ€" ( z_ oneâ€"haif what they| factory for the winter feeding of beef t greon, when ready for| Cattle. All of the roughages should be B y should, of course, be| home grown. Of grains, corn and tl' y before being packed | barley are the best for fattening, but . if not they will mold,| Oats are good for growth. Peas are i tely worthless if in the| Food as a feeding mixture, but are si not so often available as the otherlm M iJ ermerrcricsivess ‘ grains. Statistical tables are given in a 6 potatoes with Borâ€"| the circular of the digestible nutrients| n« es growth as well as in the mentioned feeds. A request to| 1 fungus diseases. 'the Publications Branch of the De-;'t}‘: *â€"Râ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" | partment of Agriculture at Ottuww'f es neml wunnocint nowall_in. . . eir Cuitivation in Can., ills what part of each , r, how to recognize the: to dry them. | mey, are to know which} her and where to sell| roots of some plants,] s, and flowers of others, your arm, is used for turning these druv TORONTO special care isn‘t ?H with a thousand million questions to answer? I should say not! To keep up with her children, a mother can not allow herself to fonget." J "Forget what I learned at school ? With little folks to be taught their reading and ‘ritipg and ‘rithmetic. and E msadiila id 42200 CHC | older they grow the more active my + mind will have to be. I‘ll not only have 1 to brush up on my schoolâ€"day algebra â€"‘ and geometry, my Latin and ancient ‘history, but I‘ll have to keep abreast . of the times in order to keep up with | the boy whose interest centres about _ electricity, and with the girl who plans . to be a teacher. | "I know you business women, with your cpportunities to attend lectures } and concerts, and visit art exhibitions if you wish, are inclined to pity the| , ‘poor mothers‘ whose lives centre| about their children, butâ€"" and thisi particular mother finished darning a _long black stocking, found its mate, rolled the two into a noat roil and| placed it on the table with a smile of| l@atisfactionâ€"“yqur minds | are cnly‘ too apt to run in a groove, and a narâ€" row one at that. If we mothers anl to be as successfu} in cur profession| . as you business women are in yours" we must study and learn and broaden our outlook on life and the world in general. 3 UP moknys o omomin s ne . we ,'J‘ed who had cut his finger on thai e! the blood spurted out. While making df a cake I have had to go into the whole ,f, listory of flour for the benefit of four q| cager young listeres. During d‘nner a| 1 have had to expain why it is we e! cat, A shower comes up of an afterâ€" & hcon when I am sew‘ng, anl [ have , to explain to the best of my ability ; the why ard wherefore of thkunder . and lightning. 1 rever know what + qauestion will pop up next, but I’ve} _ endeavored â€" to prepare myscif for _ anything within reeson. I‘ve studied _ up the last few years on foodstuffs, on: physiology, on electricity, on birds ! and flowers. _ Whenever I‘ve come‘ across an article touching in any way, [ on any talk that the children and 1 | have had, I devour it eagerly, and at‘ ; the first opportunity give the children" the benefit of my additional knowlâ€"‘ ~"nere there is any room for mental stagnation in a mother who makes it her business to live with her children and grow up with them. And the wtea s sn 2s F "I have heard mothers pitied beâ€" cause of the ‘narrow life‘ they lead, and because of the mental stagnation that is sure to result from a quist homeâ€"}ife, but I certainly fail to see where there is any room for mental iiving with my children just an hour each day, I kave endeavored to live with them all the time. | "In the midst of my ironing I have had to carry on a lengthy dis-‘rmrse! about the cireulation of the blocd, the: subject having been brought un by! Jane (from the city): "O, Au I went into the orchard to ask brown cow to give me some milk her husband chased me!" discriminate arainst‘ruina _ yCny years it was a heap of Canadian public discriminate against‘ ruins. ‘The people who were not carâ€" frozen beef, which means that were| ried into exfi: meanwhile rerformcd the markets kept supplied with f,esh: their ceremonies on a rude altar in the beef more regularly better prices Old temple area. Soon after the first would obtain, and fourth, that a re_.'!‘eturn.l the foundations of the I.emp!o1 latively small percentage of steers’mfgin;]&‘“ 'sl‘l?en mti}:i fwork of b'f;,; lassed as export steers are sufficientâ€"| uspe. + 5o Reguastmadl Liasse P 4 |of years, partly because of the oppoâ€". ly finished for the trade, hence winter) sition offered by the Samaritans, part»-] finishing of such steers is advisable.‘ ly becsuse the people were poor and Quality rather than quantity counts in could not afford to go on with it and : improved trade and better prices. {partly also pous,. 2l y To nPh t qBb C C ' Complaint recently has been freâ€"| 8 44W au“aay * | quent at the Toronto and Montreal opmaten markets of the number of unfinished AUGL " or badly finished cattle that come forâ€" ward. _ Not only do they depress pomeuape prices, but they are so stow of saie| The Temple Rebuilt and Ded ! }tlh-at there is little or no profit in their} 16. Golden Textâ€"My andling. In Circular No. 106 of the Dominion Experimental Farms, Mr. for the courts of tbe Lo"‘ G. W. Muir, Animal Husbandman, , Lesson Forewordâ€"There is no secâ€" gives as facts of moment to breeders tion of the history of Israel so diffiâ€" and feeders of beef cattle: first, t,hat,flllt to unravel in its historical seâ€" few animals are sent to market suffi. quence, as that which followad the | ciently finished to command the best| Yeluitn frgm exile. . The following} price; second, that prices for finished! ffeems to have been the actuai course animals are always highest betweenf?an:vs:: pI Ig I:'C‘ 9%86“Lhewflal;ylon-1 s s | Tly destroy re temple, so| December and April; third, that the that for m it w h f Canadian public discriminate sgninst'rpins. 'I‘h:ny fi:r‘!vl'm v;v:srea n:tuga(;'-' frozen beef, which means that were'}'}ed into exH:? meanwhile narfarmail. Shor qss cte ce o ie oi SCns roud? ®4 secure a copy Fattening Feeds for Cattle. should be ::l:)flntfl (;{-f-];].o' xnix;:e;;lclr,rfi)‘:l(;)zl,ig;t:’es;%'M‘Vr;:hl&B'{‘heslt:mp'le was finished in7 i;!lv‘e‘;';;‘r.l;u;;l'fl.:]fl;lc.:.r!r,:b;'(;‘l:":;"fr::' 1 corn and th rse, were there because they were _ V, 1'6 lkl;Pt tl)l. dedicati ' "The school music of toâ€"day on! ening, but the Guardians of Israel‘s sanctity, and dication e teation, The deâ€" tJ j 1 * lon If Jt sai Psas are because they alone could perform ccr-'e:im‘t';?n facin] hoii Sfi be mork.| io take actqinht o9 the noyirer aice wn but are tain of the rites. With trumpets. The rds) S(?jecml maerifices, psaims of | e f,ake account of the desires and am ’the other silver trumpets of the priests, instruâ€" Fes k and other appropriate ceremonâ€" e hok moiee o hgome Insim e‘givenf ments of about a yard long and with, _ 5 | mental performers. Even in sma pip n a bel_l-hke end, were blown to anâ€"! : Application, | schools this branch of music is bein. i u ngnt.s‘xllgfmi()o a sacred festival (see Num,!__It is Said that when Michaelangelo] CArTied on in comnertion with schoâ€" quest to| 10: ?), to provide an interlude be. WAS CArving his famous statue of| WOrk with a considerable degres the De'lt}‘:vem each of the three sections of MO8®® his friends noticed that an im.lmcceso. omen es t Ottawa tD€ bsalim of the day and to increase PYE8®/Y¢ dignity came into the sculpâ€"| _ "The iano ‘SR-ngws uproar of the people, Ps, tOr‘s features." It was the result :)f"mu-g on P N a ns a ':l‘h. & The Levites, the sons of Asaph. ty thinking. For long weeks and, t pumber. It is probably the | of e levites were a supordinate order BODths, Michaelangelo sought to mey Solible means by which n child § Aumy!?g,ofi‘("‘,‘s“’s who_ did the more menial ;mderstand the inner life of the great may gain early musical experience ask the| $ n @°" dhWection with the temple, Hebrew patriarch, and then he tried| 8NG furnishes excellent preparation milk and h dg e Levites were the two {? Chisel in marble what he believed f9" the study of almost any instm; t;;; ]‘e“’;lyu f:‘“’%h“'“ furnished the mm n&t:jt have looked like. Our be-‘ ment in which he may wish to s;:c"::- ic. ey were known in , and our worship of Him| ize 1 iolin is i o dd S the Sog of Asach as 1 p of Him| ater. The violin is x C pnes 15. and in imust have" anpous increasingly 5}(:::1’? Wit}l: I‘ciymbals; br:nzseondsug our lives, USie sAinfuence o\'er’:’;pu gl:rl‘;dw thfe D rvs infeomets h were held in the hands of the , Dr. L. A. Banks i i \the Shoros fop _3 Oooe‘ o Hiteihk s to &erf;brunsl:‘!l's and struck together. They tells of the rel;’gizg (;::eguz.uhl;ozl;s, themmmo: n itinngst and onâ€" ho a kt:o furnish an orchestration tended when a boy living on & farm in | oount to continue in study and ‘ing 'Ir!;‘ar mdg of tlmeâ€"for.the chant.| the backwoods. There were J laim in | practice will make it possible to arâ€" rat hour, tra.('iit.ionilg ;:lge:h:ft ll).).a‘\:fll hL‘,:dw:u I ::r:idd?t: m.k:rlw“ lg:“ es i1 a‘:‘ :dv;ol“ l op ipable Bos! of P 8 & inâ€" service terprise rche st:a]d of‘:::;‘;)t]:d the musical service of the ?m};‘ candle. The?inmfi:gho‘:nl.&aa ; itself ‘itei':a benefl’t:: b:th u:!tlnol l: B shene! . ighted his candle it i 4 o hep | ; o md to live rerYde:-(l-a ’Il?;'e t’:\]'gs:'ch (?1; sthehtemple wastf 'thed e:;d!estk-ksf Uler'lm ifl:!tu-lsn :!r::[ zz:ml:nnvyi;i:n:d:no:lnywolfl ":o l:;:lbefl iC3 t who sang an.‘ arrived did the ; I o 1 clent T ha‘,e';;ghm{f(l)ly._ That is, one choir would the congregation 3;'::, thing, and iked factors in the musical organizations is*wra-'forgil ) give thanks unto the Lord;] the place was illuminated Ewmt‘ew. of their own or other communities frernl e is good," and the other would worshipper adds somethin to N) Whither their interests ocd, t!l:e’}'g:lizlvi& 34 l:"r(;]r_ His mercy enduret-hl'lum‘lmtion of the world he the ilâ€" them." § may Jead up by| r. is seems to have been‘ Writers and f s s mm onl a orent, forn or heenr o Piin . t tem tod Preschem 0t other 2 "What We Ent Toâ€"day, Walke o | people shouted. Hests io & t seeking to rescue _ and Talks ommn’w e whol¢) their trumpets Tt;: ml;m . C on people from some great ship \.Plfe(":‘ I mmtT T i ie oF four) thg ppste, vites struck| was sinking. _ The oo | Hamek address Miss Helen G $ their cymbals and the crowds of the‘ they tho great majority, Campbe!l, Demon n G, d‘nrer| people shouted trinmphant] ie they thought, must be lost; the best ; * 4 strater for the Doâ€" is we doubtless refers to the mzm%nt w’ll‘uzlr:i tlu;t the Church could do w;s to save I;T:”on Dairy and Cold Storage ¢ :lfter-, the foundation stone was laid in its'?s muc}"he Church'q l ouy o to'd"':d 'nd" 10 gong is Prengin how the I have Place. ‘not.h’n l mm ambitious one. It is l'"'y_ and good citizenship were coâ€" ahilip..| OO =mmnmmommmmmms sepeee,,, _ LCCNâ€"1S i2883 than saving tho race. |*®tative, and to th°w bhow W nnau‘t. To remove scorch from whits goods try rubbing the spot with the cut elges of an onlon. Lay the garment in the sun and every place of the seorch will be gone in a short time. Mhd P o etony Satoe ht sitimâ€"smiee | °t MVE mannet 4 T‘ and butterâ€"milk fed them. | "Come on; I‘ll wipe th â€"â€"â€"â€"0â€"“ { ,f » i hi To remove scorch from white smada you will wash them er is conÂ¥ dered . p», |"" "‘art Out then in life _ that is horn in Docember is cons‘dered| I‘ll have a home that‘s al} my o1 on the New Year‘s Day folowing to| _ An‘ then I‘ll need a wife, be a year old. | s lc ath : A!;g'hen Itc::m?h:a!::.:‘:: :iugnht, Mocesty is not a matter of eisthes; To find a table set for two it is an attitude of mind. | And supper cooked just right ? wlb > = on PR | The aanme aleits i2 ccs 10 Adscon ‘ *‘ George B. Rothwell, Dominion Aniâ€"] ', } Y*} mel Husbandman, favors the breeding | | °/ of heavy horses so that the mare will ) / foal in the fall, or any time between! ‘2/ September and December. If she foall’l ® is) in the spring much of her usefulnesc" °) for work is lost. Under ideal condiâ€" | Â¥| tions for the foal, the heavy brood I am n I| mare should spend several weeks Or| J fepo */ the better part of the summer 9n ) And go ",’ pasture. By foaling in the fall the! a; any "Iimare will raise her offspring at a} | time when ordinarily she would be idle But whe ~| or comparatively idle. That the foal| That‘s ) may be strong and healithy, the mare. I dodge ‘/ should receive gentle exercise or light| Now, 1 t/ work that plenty of fresh air may be °) forced through the lungs. The fallâ€"‘ But latel ll'born foal is usually an active indiâ€"| A pip] t‘ vidual, avoids the tantalizing flies that‘ She runs ‘| are busy in summer, escapes in its inâ€"| And ev. ‘ fancy the trying heat, and does not, | have to follow & hungry mare over 4) We make , seant pasture. A few hours a S@Y| _ When : !spent in the barnyard in the winte" ) Sha‘s kin, | will benefit the strong shaggyâ€"coated ) g4, nai | foal, particularly when there is a shed | ‘or shelter of some kind. "Finally,"} a | says Mr. Rothwel!, "the foal is weaned ‘ nq?o v::n |from his mother and faces the MOre I find she | trying summer conditions in a much| _ Before ; | different condition from that cf his | fspring-!;t-rn brsther." If the date from ) Then 1 ju which the age of the horse is reckonad! 3 she « were put forward to June 1 from| Ary wipin‘ January 1 the light horse would probâ€", When I ably benefit frem simfar conditions | as those the Dominion Husbandman ; 1 think, pe argues for. As it is, many a horse: And star that is horn in Docember is cons‘idered ) I‘}] have & on the New Year‘s Day folowing to Apy then be a year old. | When Mares Should Foal. I PSA wans 43. .. _ 3 _ _ "S FHbSLS, OL. Manch, B.C. 516. course, were there because they were V 16. Kept the dedication, The deâ€" the guardians of Israel‘s sanctity, and dication of the temple would be markâ€" because they alone could perform cerâ€" ed by special sacrifices, psaims of tain of the rites. With trumpets. The praise and other appropriate ceromonâ€" silver trfum}pet.s of the priests, ilnstli'u!;‘ ies. ments of about a yard long and wit | icati ‘ a bellâ€"like end. wap, ime a"U, Nt Application. p °. oV 0 j S 0f Israel‘s sanctity, and dication because they alone could perform cerâ€"| ed by t:}'in of the rites. â€" With trumiate "Tha‘cli® _ F ullg 1 40â€" SpLes CZ . uOe UOpee *) sition offered by the Samaritans, partâ€" .\ ly becsuse the people were poor and 1 could not afford to go on with it and partly also because those who returnâ€" .Jed had to build homes for themselves. |\In B.C. 520, after the urgent appeals / of Haggai and Zechariah, it was comâ€" | menced again and finished in B.C. 516. | I. The Foundations Laid, 3: 10â€"13. | i: V. 10. ‘The builders; the workmen mentioned in v. 7. These included the masons who quarried and dressed the stone, and the carpenters. Cr.rpentersi \from Tyre and Sidon were hired be-‘ | cause of their skill in woodcraft. Soloâ€"| | man had engaged them in the building | of the first temple. Laid the foundsâ€"| tions; on the site of the old temple. The fact that the Babylonians did not | leave even the foundations standing | when they destroyed the temple in ' B.C. 586, shows how complete was the i demolition. Laying the foundations P ies TL Ond _ 3 young chick_em and hens will The Sunday School â€" Lessonf'”’ Siark in â€"the Schoch mmmmmmnmmmmzmz ||| ~ Helps All the Other AUGUST 6 | Ctmadiaa Temple Rebuilt and Dedicated, Ezra 3: 10â€"13; 6: 14â€" 16. Golden Textâ€"My soul longeth, yea, even fainteth for the courts of the Lord.â€"Ps. 84: 2. the foundations of the temple id. Then the work of reâ€" was suspended for a number B pegrtlly AbLecaLuse of the oppoâ€" Production in hens is tained by forciag them to mesh during warm wealher. 'A"_d when I call | We make long trips together tin | _ When she can get away. She‘s kind 0‘ protty too, I think ,i Her name is Prettyâ€"May, Then I just sail right in So she can sooner play An‘ wipin‘ dishes then is When I am helpin‘ M ano when i cal of afterncoons To see if she can go I find she has someanu.i.," */ | Helping May. |I am not ford of housework stuntsâ€" | _ I fetch the coal and wood And go on errands for the folks |__As any fellow should ; ; | 1 But when it‘s wipin‘ dishesâ€"no, | _ That‘s work I hate to do. | I dodge the job whene‘er 1 can. | Now, really, wouldii’tv-yt;u? But lately there has come to A girl I rather like., y, 5 / ~ 1as some work to do Before she leaves, you know. "lad 2+ 20. 2000 UIGOT en wepPt AICHT andifor sadness and the younger men irnâ€" | shouted for J;:{, and thus the sounds "0]5- of sorrow and joy were so interâ€" °)8 mingled that those at a distance could U.~|not distinguish the one from the ‘16. / other. The commotion was audible a 3. |long way off. | ie runs and plays just like And even rides a bike, to chisel in marble what he believed Moses must have looked like. Our beâ€" lief in God, and our worship of Him must have ennobling influence over our lives. _ It is said that when Michaelangelo was carving his famous statue of Moses, his friends noticed that an imâ€" pressive dignity came into the sculpâ€" tor‘s features." It was the result of lofty thinking. For long weeks and months, â€" Michaelangelo sought . to understand the inner life of the great Hebrew patriarch, and then he tried: to chisel in marhle what ha Lallousi! _ After the foundations had been laid , the work was left off for a number of | years. The Samaritans, when they |\were not allowed to join in the reâ€" | building, had strenuously opposed it. {Those who returned from the exile ‘had to build homes for themselves. | Most of the people were too poor to ‘contribute much to the building. Thus | for one reason and anothar "I+ ume ll."!"he Temple Completed, 6: 14â€"16. V. 12. Ancient men, that had seen the first house. The original temple was destroyed in B.C. 586 and the foundations of the new temple were laid in B.C. 586. Thus there was a lapse of fifty years between the two houses and the older men could reâ€" * am helpin‘ May, perkaps, when I grow V. 18. The in hens is best e I‘ll l.y':' ‘pe the dishes h them, May," play, in an‘ h.fp up, funâ€" my own, to town mainâ€" more times up now, | omnorwise than thot chilerp: ished should be: ome the es Herbert Hoover, t%4» fap coniroler and director of the United States in Russia 4famine-:u~3cl:en countrics, clared that the greatesy c cny nation was to €o"Â¥ive da‘ry cattle. With an abur cheap éairy products in t},;, | there wore yet many vnior , children in every prov‘nce }» the failure of parents or pyo | appreciate the vaine and i | of milk products to tke dey, | of mind and body, But +sy« o | by deciors, nurses, end nth;, | workers had etablishe? th‘ ; . | had @lso revearled that unseerp ! children from this c@tse w | found among the wellâ€"t3â€"do o | well as among the poorer, S | dren are frequently to be fouy farm home. As well as the ; ment of health generally, cons ,of milk leads to the format retention of good teeth, It is the duty of every posoi dt:ike? fit, an;l the grencorous ry foods will assig: in mai health and efficiency, The m wrote "What we oat toâ€"day w talks toâ€"morrow" was stating found truth, |fifui supply of milk physics | also mentally. Children who c ;mllk regularly and pen‘ife]: ; stronger and more Active ani othorwige aloud Int . Wifke, q. â€" (ABnIVedl of It in thely diet. _ Miss Campbell quote! exper. iences at several cities in =»» antia~ tion of these assertions. It cocld not he OPhnruarimae etcc c aas 2 * 9 ea more quickly in thoy st those who either manifeted fcor milk or were deprived of ana aee w L. 0 e :}“WlntWeEu’l'o-&y, W”llln | _ and Talks Toâ€"morrow. ,__ In a recent address Miss Helen G. | Campbe!1, Demonstrator for the Doâ€" ‘ minion Dairy and Cold Storage , branch, undertook to explain how the | dairy and good citizenship were coâ€" | relative, and to shâ€"w how Women‘s | Institute could aid, in making this | widely â€" understood. Primarily her lugumem was that good fond made good citizens, and that there were no rpurer nor better foods than the proâ€" ducts of the dairy. The bencfits de. 'rivad in particular from the liberal _consumption of milk, especially by children could not be overâ€"estimated. Health officers, without exception, took this view, Tests made with schoo!â€"children in different ci‘ies conâ€" firmed its truthfulness, Abumdant truth was forthcoming that not only were the chiliren benefited by a pienâ€" ", . mm m uiiso sams whh , "The school music of toâ€"day only | partly fulfils its mission i#f it fails | to take account of the desires and amâ€" | bitions of the pupils to become instr:â€" | mental performers. Even in small schools this branch of music is being carried on in connection with scho~! work with a considerable degree of | success, _ine plano seems to attract the greatest number. It is probably the most suitable means by which a child may gain early musical experience and furnishes excellent preparation for the study of almost any instruâ€" ment in which he may wish to specia}â€" ize later. The violin is increasingly y Aike sustenditnt ult dixas n‘ culture that would otherwise result. l‘vlt is a universaily recognized fact 'idutthodtidmetoflnution is its ‘ children, and conditions surrounding ,| their physical and mental growth are , matters of the greatest importance. || Whatever concerns the children of a | community, interests the people. | "There are many instances of parâ€" {enta. almost wholly neglectful of soâ€" | clal dutles in other lines, who will _ drive over several miles of bad romds | to see their boys and girls take port |\ in some school exhibition. The sertâ€" | ing eapacity of school auvditoriums is | always taxed to the limit whenever ‘l declamatory contest, a school conâ€" | cert, or anything of a similar nature, 4'. staged., Pageants designed for school production, commemcorative o# important point," said the epenker in address on e phases of music in our echools m the writer lately had the pleasure of hearing. "Teachers who neglect to pass lightly over this Music can be interesting!y correlated with almost any branch of study, and still be a recreation and a diversion to the pupils. This was the key to an 1100YÂ¥@r, the famous: foâ€"a and director of rC‘icf fop States in Russia an i a;» r clen eountrics, bad /.. the greates: erucliy i, was to dosrive it of is . With zn abundan e /¢ ‘ products in t‘;;; Crnt v, yet many vncernousishe | every prov‘nce base: t of f parents np Puardier: ¢, the value and imp ~ cnp ducts to the deve‘oum n body, Butr sys con " i 4 nurses, and nth» Â¥o‘>p, ettablishe? th‘ ; fa‘t, eni ealed that unsernour}s‘. ; m this c@vse Warne ta 10 j3 _ S6} *â€"rsumn the formation every good ° generous milk ph_\js§ ;al'-l'yy.bu( "I0 C:0sses . Buch ch found in + the ims», cCn ardily were e and odvanc. r studies than sted a d‘staâ€"t» who ecnsyvme man waiks nour 4 pruâ€" US» q 0 nX tiz®y a) n s ie Plans / South t1 t 19 AT

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