West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Sep 1922, p. 6

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Ey 6 to get certain reswlts, while the pracâ€" tical part of right cooking was demonâ€" strated from fruit and vegetables, milk, eggs, and meats to breads, saiâ€" ads, and the most delicious varieties of desserts. Those of us who had cooked all our lives until we got into ruts of our own, learned easier and simpler ways of doing things, how to make the old dishes more attractive, ard & !z=y ~areiy on our tables the Another woman writes: "We were given enough of thke thoory to show the experienced cooks the reason why they had always done certain things One might suppose that a woman who had done cooking all her life, and good cooking at that, might not be especially enthusiastic over leaving home five consccutive afternoons a week to take cooking lessons, but they do it, in numbers that sometimes outâ€" size the accommodation of their meetâ€" Iing place. The reason is possibly exâ€" plained by a member, who says: | "What we have learned on food values and planning meals for health, was new to even the best cooks, and. the course has started us in the right . direction to study along these lines for ourselves." I In spite of the rush of the berry picking and canning season, and the approach of threshings and cornâ€"cutâ€" ting and the sundry other demands crowding the days of the woman on the farm, the women of Ontario have found a surprising amount of time this summer to get together to study homemaking with the Institute‘s inâ€" structors in Domestic Science, Home Nursing, and Sewing. | First, take a wagon with a good tight bed, one that will hold water, and place an inch or two of dirt in the way to town with a large fat hog.’ The hog get too hot and died before he hardly knew it was suffering. All‘ he could do was to haul the carcass! home to use in making soap. ,! Such losses are expensive and unâ€"| necessary. Here is a plan I adoptedé years ago for hauling fat hogs in hot! weather: 1 How 1 Haul Hogs. The other day I met a ne the way to town with a larg The hog get too hot and di he hardly knew it was suffe he could do was to hanl th When I was young I had a wellâ€" broken single driver. He would stand anywhere without being tied, except when I went to see my girl; then he would walk away. He evidently did not like the match. His judgment afterward ‘ proved better than mine, Artillery horses are taught to go through movements by notes on the Bugie; so they can be taught the meaning of different words if systemâ€" atically used, viz., to start, go faster or slower. They can be taught their own names. On my first farm I had a threeâ€"horse team that I cared for myself. I groomed them and put their! harness on in their stalls; then, stand-’ ing outside the door, called them out *n the order I wanted them to come. ' 1 mention the that kindness w aments alike. 770pf Snd mand sLl till told to move; no horse is safe until he will do so. Having my horses broken to mind, under any cireumstance, has preventâ€" ed serious accidents many â€" times. Sometimes it takes rough treatment to make a highâ€"spirited horse "whoa" at once and at all times. One fine} young horse that I was breakinig reâ€" fused to stand until I pulled him back so sharply that he jerked his hind shoes off in the brick pavement. Hol was willing to mind after that. then that was afral that I needed An experienced horseman can usuâ€" ally tell from a horse‘s eye and the shape of its head what course he must pursue to get it under perfect subâ€" jection. I could go among nearly all of my draft stallions and mares in the dark, with perfect safety, but there were some that I wouldn‘t go near, if at liberty, without a club. ‘ Some people say, never whip a horse for strying. It is another instance im‘ which the same rule will not work ini all cases. If I can coax a horse to go| up to an object and touch his nose to it, the trowble will be over. I remem-! ber one case in particular: a horse| that was afraid of a large white mckl MHorses, like children, vary greatly in temperament, and therefore do not .ll_respond to the same managemnt. Onece in talking with a friend about the management of children, I said I treated my children like my horses. He was greatly surprised, but when I explained that I aimed to get their confidence by kindness, only using compulsion as a last resort, he thought better of my plan. I e up tc X€ T Make My Horses Obey Me an rush of the berry,_y_epr round For Home ard Country m Courses for Homemakers. me a neighbor on ind CVé he After that him. rule in all mean one y At a girls‘ judging competition arâ€" ranged by the Agricultural Represenâ€" tative of Wellington County â€" and staged by the staff of Macdonald Inâ€" stitute, in one test the girls were asked, "What would you do till the doctor came (1) if a man fell off a load of hay and broke his arm? (2) if a baby took convulsions?" Matters usually rather foreign to the average young woman, but not at all strange to these girls They had cared for supposedly fractured bones. and | studied the illnesses of bables in their Home Nursing Course the previous winter, ’ And perhaps even this part of the course program was not of such im-‘ mediate value to them as the general | hea‘th training. One junior pupil | says: "What I liked best was what B0 cmd on things in different ways." | _A course given to a class !age girls during the summer ; under the auspices of the T | 8. Reject all ears which show a ‘‘ moldâ€"like growth. ' 4. Place ears selected upon a rack / or frame where rapid drying may ‘ proceed without delay. / _ 5. Wet weather after the comn is in | the shock favors the development of ‘ rootâ€"rot fungi, hence it is desirable to select seed ears before or during cutting of the corn. | i Tests show that less than one per | cent. of the crop of corn is found to ]be affected where the seed was disâ€". sons the girls were taught table setâ€" ting and table etiquette, school lunchâ€" es and party refreshments. One of the gir‘s says: "We have been making the things Miss Hopkins taught us ever since." 753 5 _ "uring the summer holidays under the auspices of the Rockwood Women‘s Institute proved very popuâ€" lar. In addition to the regular lesâ€" sons the girls were taught table setâ€" ting and table ettuuatie achant kess go easeâ€"free "| Iwo years ago this same man did ,not fill his silo, and was surprised to )/ find how well his cattle did, thoughi ’;vheir production did not come up w, ’iwhezre it was with silage. His exâ€" | perience has led him to believe firmly | that it does not pay to attempt to pmâ€"’ | duce winter milk without silage, and | "thart the most pronounced loss comes | ’ when cattle are suddenly deprived Ofi | silage after becoming accustomed to [itâ€"E. °L. B. | 2. Select ears which l-)'r:;a;(w;way‘ feedi’"év lii;'esbock, yet .c clean without a ragged appearance at‘ enced shipper knows t] the butt. | have good and poor days aas [was to have shipped at night, rather How to Select Diseaseâ€"Free Corn. | than in the morning. _ Then there You can insure having a good lot of| would have been no delay between the seed corn, free from rootâ€"disease, if local loading station and the consignee. you will observe the following rules:! Where the shipment is livestock or 1. Select ears from stalks only | poultry, this matter of the timing of which have made a vigorous growth| arrival is important. _ Provision is and are firmly rooted in the soil. | made at stockyards for watering and | w ol o. Hews Foipr t C T a. us s | _ The first of February his silo was ie‘mptied, and immediately production | decreased alarmingly. As he expressâ€" | ed it, "The cows stopped in their | tracks." A hundred pounds of grain \ a day was added to their feed, with | hay at ncoon, in addition to night and morning, in an endeavor to make up tfor the silage, but to no avail. The‘ cews would not come back. x ,I I have found it best to drive careâ€" , fully and slowly, as the jolting of the | wagon causes them to worry. ll A set of good wagon springs pays. | I always use them on my wagon for |all kinds of hauling. They are espeâ€" | clally valuable for hauling livestock and perishable vegetables and fruits. When I start off with a load of hogs |I lay a big bunch of green branches | over the top of the wagon. Don‘t use | too much, however, as that will shut | off the circulation of air. a | I have hauled hogs ten miles with | such a wagon, and the shrinkage wu} |always slight.â€"R. B. R. A neighbor of mine has had two experiences with silage which are worth passing on to others: He started last winter with a herd of about 30 Holsteins and Jetseys“ which had freshened in the fall andi early winter. They were fed hay and grain night and morning, with a bushel of silage at noon. Productionl was excellent with this ration and Lhe’ herd did splendidly. the bottom. Pour cool water on the dirt until you have mud. Be careful not to worry the hogs any more than possible when they are loaded. A solid floor with about sixâ€"inch sides and the balance of the body made of slats is a good arrangement. Have the bed high enough so they can stand up when they like, and don‘t tie them. When tied they will worry and soon get hot. No matter how hot hogs may get, I never pour cold water directly upon them. This is very dangerous He Found Silage Paid. by cooking the same a class of ‘teen girls, ie tot hdatich iinansicns i Bul .3 P 5217 All this can be done on the farm.| the ends. This air When the eggs get to town there are| run lengthwise of t other losses to guard against. I have) loading in such fas seen egg crates piled up and awaiting! will be at all times o shipment in tinâ€"roofed sheds where; tween the ends of t the thermometer was little short of| load, ahd between the boiling. And eags incubate at around the load. When you ; 100 degrees! Suppose your eggs lie| put a little extra prot in such a shed three or four days! |sacks near the doors, make a good beginning. Then cool. them at once to the lowest temperâ€"| ature possible. Keep them dry. Don‘t wash dirty eggs. Don‘t pack cracked‘ or thinâ€"shelled ones. Use standard egg crates with corrugated fibreâ€"board top and bottom lining. Do not nail down the centre of the cover! There| must be some "give" to the crate if the eggs are to arrive in usable shape. | Egg losses are enormous. Candling helps, but it doesn‘t wipe them out. With eggs, as with milk, the place to start plugging the leaks is on the farm. Infertile eggs, gathered daily, I hope that we shall have time to inject a trifle of humanity into the terminal handling of poultry, and in the meantime, for the sake of your pocketbook, see to it that every poulâ€" try crate is provided with easily filled watering cups. ; Water for shipped fowls is importâ€" ant. My idea of hell is to be a rooster and have to go to market. Some day the losses beginâ€"through negligence. Good crates are important. They get rough handling, and must be strong. Fowls often escape from their crates. They seldom come back. If they are crowded into crates too small for them, and are forced to stick their heads out, they are liable to have their heads crushed or sheared off by other crates. Overcrowding is comâ€" mon. Where it happens the strong fowls trample the weak, and the latâ€" ter quickly die from suffocation. I fzet his stuff into the pens in time tof;;f;'mfl&d the‘sde CORVE get a good fill is an important part" IGw ‘price erp:‘{ u:‘lerfm of the game of selling. He also knows| stock Beeivec f0r that overloading in hot weather, and| _ k lack of protection in cold weather,, Downright Fool cost his fellow shippers a good penny: It saves money to so every season. And he knows that it Of Stuff you wouldn‘t ea pays to study the weather reports and| t9 feed it to the hogs. to avoid shipping when extreme PCVE a "smart trick" t changes in temperature are likely to| O" the market, it is dow occur. |ness. The dealer takes But the shipper of poultry is not so, that you are a fool, or likely to be posted: a dead chickenf“’o"ld keep your unms doesn‘t seem quite so important a| 4t home, and he takes y« thing as a dead hog. And right there| 2Ccordingly. the losses beginâ€"throuch neglicanea ‘ But suppose vou dn «i Just one thing would have saved the shipper, who happened to be a farmer friend (_)f mine, from loss, and that | _ Every kind of farmer has his own {shipping troubles, and so my purpose | is to give a few pointers that may | put you on the lookout for the places { where loss is apt to occur. ing room of the express company. By morning the damage was done, and a fine row started. I recently handled a claim against! a wholesaler on account of a veal that! was shipped in good condition, but| which was reported spoiled when paid; for. The haul was about six hours by| express, the season June, the wea‘ther, hot. As near as I could get at the: facts the shipment, made in the mom-l ing, arrived that evening; and the| veal, along with other veal an‘iving,! lay all night on a truck in the handlâ€"| If somebody could guarantee me the amount, in dollars and cents, that will be lost this fall and winter by both farmers and consumers because of improper packing and bad handling in shipment, I wouldn‘t be writing this articleâ€"I‘d be too busy clipping couâ€" pons and planning a world tour in my private yacht! | Taking and keeping the nose prints of cows is a new idea. It has beon discovered that like human fingerâ€" prints the lines on a cow‘s nose are personal to her and to her alone, and will serve to identify her beyond misâ€" take. ‘ give a number of demonstrations in canning at points along the North Shore Algoma at the season when their vegetables were ready for canâ€" ning this fall. Do You Lose Money When You Ship Your Stuff? mas held morning classes for the younger girls of the community, and a special prize is being offered at the School Fair for samples of their work. The Manitoulin series will be followed by other courses in Algoma and Temâ€" iskaming. Rainy River District was pretty well covered last fall. Another household science teacher was sent to and girls of the neighborhood gather with an equipment of workâ€"tables and sewing machines to work on dresses of silk and serge and cotton. At the close of the course they occasionally have a "dress parade‘" to display their new frocks. : The Department has been making a special effort this year to serve the more isolated northern parts of the province with these courses. A sewing tea.cherbubemwwkingforthemt two months on Manitoulin bhnd,‘ where, by the way, the Institutes m| among the most progressive in the ?rovi_nce. In a few cases the tencherf A Simple Precaution. M CR 0° _ an earnest seeker after truth ers a good penny| It saves money to sort out the kind _ V. 47. Astonished at His underâ€" he knows that it Of stuff you wouldn‘t eat at home, and standing. The lad had gone deeper eather reports and| t0 feed it to the hogs. So far from than the Rabbi in his knowledge of _ when â€" extreme| DOIN# a "smart trick" to get this stuff, the 't?zc‘ilptumife flc:d farther in his ture are likely to? on‘the ’F;‘arl;et, it is dowrgfig‘ht fmli-sh-‘sm\';“ 4";_ ?l?‘e"eg: becauge their sepâ€" 3 :n::.s. e eale;' takes it for granted aration had caused Jesus no anviety; ‘ poultry is not so | that you are a fool, or “'159 that Â¥0U hecause He had joined Himself to such : a dead chicken| WOUld keep your unmarketable stuff company; because their son was the so important a| 2t hom‘e, and he takes your pocketbook omm mm mm mm cnnmmmmmmmmmemmmmmmmmmmmmmememam mm memmmemmmcnnm: And right there| accordingly. | doors shut, except that provision must! rough negligence.. , But suppose you do siart with #00d| be made For opening one door in order portant. They get: stuff, as the great majority 6f sHIDâ€"! to care for the fires. | must be Sfmng-‘&(;];tho' there are several things to Warm the air in your car before, Rvmgen cessn lt o mt & if ~e mlp,o.kml / *a every experiâ€" that markets s, and that to nen c00l) When you do get caught in this temperâ€"| fashion you can do a passable job of ry. Don‘t) protecting your stuff by laying stringâ€" _cracked ers lengthwise of the car, covering standard | these crosswise with lumber. and over We ROL LE HL No is o . : BY HUGH J. HUCGHES P wha aal OCo_ ( C Op O CC Of) mpvlinuny n C000 times, but |run lengthwise of the car. Begin) for allâ€"round satisfaction in business |loading in such fashion that there! give me the man who 'ig able to recall !wi!] be at all times open air space be.1 your face and. say to his men: |tween the ends of the car and the| "I know Bill He‘s a good scout, ;]iad], ar;d t;.;;ween the side walls and‘:fld a hm""ki;"‘hf”mefr'hbg“:’df; | the load. en you get to the doors,| for our ness in his neighborhsod. | put a little extra protection about the’: Give his stuff firstâ€"class care, and as | sacks near the doors, and batten the‘ good a price as the market will stand." ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO Freezing in transit is one of the , causes of big losses. The man who ! ships in a box car during the risky season shows mighty little sense, and (I am not writing especially for his benefit, except where he is absolutely forced to ship them in order to move his stuff at all. Mipinincalincinmninv ind Bs th AA 7 4 this laying building paper. Side proâ€" tection of a similar sort can be arâ€" ranged. Be sure that there is free circulation of air underneath the false floor, behind the false sides, and at the ends. This air circulation must _ Potatoes, or other shipments that move in the fall, are liable to fieldâ€" frost damage. â€" Potatoes especially. ‘ When a potato has been frozen in the ‘field before digging, snd the weather comes out "right," the evidences of freezing may be mighty hard to disâ€" cover. But they are there, and the potatoes that have been frosted will begin to "leak," and will keep right on doing it to the end of the chapter. The presence of field frost in a car is one of the surest symptoms of busiâ€" ness trouble that one can find. And yet I have known men knowingly to load frosted stuff, thinking they could "get by!" il It costs money to pick up little poâ€" !tatoes, chunks of dirt, and stones. It ‘,costs more money to haul them to | market. There is still further cost in }s'orting this "junk" out of the good | stuff. And these costs are all charged | back to the producer in the form of a ]l»ow price received for his ungraded |stock. ’ Potatoes are one of our biggest crops, and the losses in their handling fare enormous. The next time you happen to be in a big town, drop into a grocery and find out about the sellâ€" ing price and quality of potatoes. It‘s seven to one that you will find good potatoes selling at topâ€"notch prices, and that you will also find poor poâ€"‘ tatoes scarcely moving at any price.‘ Maybe both lots came out of the same | car. It has happened that way. ‘ commission house in Toronto. Result: DACl@S. Many Jews had become nm;ss;sn;ttonl;ew(‘k‘:‘[;lsue:;, but di;“"i;'-‘f"’g"'i‘- Nothing happened except a bill for !" attendance, but Joseph went and Favor with God. His communion with ‘eXpres:s from the railroad. I know|"NOreover took Mary with him. They the Father became decper as the days [ now that the Nealer was or; the level sought not the irreducible minimuml'p-assed. And man. In His intercourse Ey that we wore 10 blame, but t » of religious duty, but the maximum,‘wivh men all those inward qualities | ank » en| _ V. 42. When He was tweive years. of His life manifested themseives. 1 â€"it was anoth tt i | M er matter. ,_|Jewish religion allowed no substitute There was nothing aloof in His char. | _ Now I know that if I want to ship for parental training. Until five, the acter. {such things as peas, leituce, or stum.lewish child was under the care of| Application. of that sort it should be cooled before the mother. At five, under the futher’s! Josus grow in stature. It is thought fshipping; and that it should be packed| °2"*; he learned the Law. At the age by some that this means that physiâ€" in crates that. let the air circulate'Of thirteen he became a son of thel'cally He was wellâ€"favored. However ‘freely about tTme produce. " Then. ‘if Law and a member in full of the Jew.,that may be, the care and developâ€" there is lista * * ish Church, and attendance at the ment of our bodies are a very imâ€" s any distance to go, the shipâ€" passover became his dut 1 priviâ€"| portant part of the f ideal ment should be iced or travel by reâ€"|| "waining of bocles sie Antiended to Do imames af i evorat Y r travel by re-.Jeg'e. , All the careful training of bodies are intended to be temples of gerator car. It cost me several Jesus in the home was a real preparaâ€" the Holy Ghost, and the shrine should dollars to gather this bit of horse tion for His great experience in the be worthy of its deity. How to be sense. iTemple. The home was a door to|physically fit is a question which Potatoes are one of our biggest fileJTmnpll.(‘\: § o {should engage the attention of every crops, and the losses in their handling U J®®Us Finding God in the Temple, boy and girl. | | _ Wife and I had a lot of peas. We ,thought of the hungry folks down in the cities, and we buckled to and |picked and shipped a barrelful to a A lot of shippers of perishable proâ€" duce think that every commission man is a robber. Perhaps I can exâ€" plain how this notion, probably 98 per cent. incorrect, got its start. Vancouver, B.C.â€"Grebegga Faldesâ€" sa, a Holstein of the Colony Farm here has won the world‘s senior two year old milk record by passing the previous record of 27,253 pounds of milk. The cow does not complete her year‘s test until September 8th. 1 It is a comparatively simple m.tbel to raise orphan lambs. Milk from a cow producing milk rich in fat, such as a Jersey or Guernsey, should be‘ fed. It can be given in any bottle that a rubber nipple can be fitted to,‘ making the hole in the nipple a bit a pound ill further cost in‘ ., V 48. After three days; one day on ill further cost in the road, one day returning, then disâ€" out of the good covery on the third day. In the midst ts are all charged of the doctors. Three rooms in the * in the form of a Temple were used by teachers of the for his ungraded Law for instruction. Jesus had joined Himself to the cm;‘man_v hof vupils. s ‘Hearing . . . and asking; the attitude colishness, ‘of an earnest seeker after truth wmud c t it y a ce 2D T 1 Nt , and over Side proâ€" an be arâ€" aA* dependable dealers. Shipping to a stranger may bring you satisfactory results, especially in good times, but for allâ€"round satisfaction in business give me the man who is able to recall your face and say to his men: "I know Bill He‘s a good scout, and a hardâ€"working farmer., Builder )Â¥ cipnd iefi n cabnt Fk Cb SpMTT VC C under icing, your ice meltsâ€"and there needed yt: ;:‘:, you are! Watch the doors! 's-pflling. It pays to make a study of your! woeâ€"â€"~â€" market before the time to ship arâ€"| _ In connection rives. This is especially true of the, regarding the al market for perishables. And it is| Canadian bacon well to have personal acquaintance | Louden and Com with one or more wellâ€"known and est importers of Do the doors on top of the ref rigerâ€" ator close properly, and tightly ? Often they do not, and then if you are shipping in cold weather the heat escapes and the car freezes, while if you are shipping in hot weather, under icing, your ice meltsâ€"and there Even when you have a refrigerator set out for your use, and you ship at the risk of the railroad, there are some things it will pay you to watch: vears |doors shut, except that provision must be made for opening one door in order to care for the fires. _ _ Warm the air in your car before loading, and load as rapidly as posâ€" sible. Arrange to have the car leave on the next train, and keep it roiling. More Things to Watch. ! All this, and more, the old shipper will tell you when you start loading‘ perishables in cold weather. You can ship either at your own risk or at the risk of the railroad. Personally T1 should prefer to do the latter, and to: pay the additional freight. But, even so, be sure that the utmost precaution is taken. _ Railroad claims are not cashâ€"not by some months or even‘ p (_uUpop oo 22 GeH UV leachers of the, was winscme. We can believe that he Law for instruction. Jesus had joine4 had an absolute genius for friendship. Himself{ to the company of pupils.| He grew in favor with God. The Hearing . . . and asking; the attitude great proof of this was that when of an earnest seeker after truth {Jesus came out of the Jordan in the V. 47. Astonished at His underâ€" moment of Baptism, he heard a voice standing. The lad had gone deeper out of the heavens, saying, "This is than the Rabbi in his knowledge of My beloved Scen, in whom I am well the scriptures, and farther in his pleased." Desirable as it may be to spiritual experience. !possess the approval of our own conâ€" V. 48. Amazed; because their sepâ€"|sciences or to secure the approbation aration had caused Jesus no anviety;; of our fellows, there is nothing in this because He had joined Himself to suchzlife to compare with the well done . company; because their son was the ‘of God. ‘ V, 44. Went a day‘s journey. The! men and women traveled in separate. companies. Each thought that Jesus,| no longer a child, was with the other,| or with friends. 1 ‘ 43â€"50. ___| "He also grew in V. 43. Fulfilled the days. The Feast| more than informat lasted seven days. The child Jesus time for study. Le tarried; lad or youth rather than child.| books, and above all His tarrying was not due to disregard:â€"â€"bhe Bible. The se of His parents. A new spiritual ex-iul wise unto salvat perience held Him like a magnet. The| He grew in favor parents observed the passover and are two extreme vi departed. Jesus found the Father and Christ. One would lingm‘ed. 'E‘enflfi Inens mual . ‘lesson deals in particular. I. Jesus Finding (.‘kz)d in the Home, 40â€"42, V. 40. The child grew . . filled with wisdom. _ After the presentation of the child Jesus in the temple and the Ithanksgiving of Simeon and Anna, lMary and Joseph returned to Nazarâ€" eth. Luke omits the return to Bethâ€" ;lehem, the visit of the Magi, the flight to Egypt and the massacreat Bethâ€" lehem. The parents train the child for God as well as dedicate him to God. Grace of God was upon Him, Divine love as well as human love surâ€" rounds Him., | V. 41. Parents went to Jerusalem .. .« . passover, All male Jews wer required to attend the three foasts of the Passover, Pentccost and Taberâ€" nacles, Many Jews had become remiss | in attendance, but Joseph went and ; moreover took Mary with him. They , sought not the irreducible minimum | of religious duty, but the maximum. greater work as a World Saviour. We learn also, that the secret of His unique relationship to God is not comâ€" municated to Him by His mother or revealed by angel, but grows like a flower in His heart until it comest to full blossom in His wonderful experiâ€" ence in the Temple with which our Time and Placeâ€"A.D. 9, Nazareth and Jerusalem. Jesus, at twelve years of ege goes with His parents to the Holy City. . Lesson Settingâ€"In COhapter I. we see the birth of a world Saviour and His forerunner, predicted by Gabriel The Sunday School The Birth of Jesus, Luke 2: 40â€"52. Golden Textâ€"And Jesus advanced in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men, Luke 2: 52 (Rev. Ver.) CHICCUusSt And laberâ€" s had become remiss ut Joseph went and ary 'wiq[ him. They r; In connection with the controversy ie regarding the alleged poor quality of is| Canadian bacon and produce, John e| Louden and Company, one of the largâ€" d est importers of Canadian bacon proâ€" a ducts in England, made this comment : y "Our existence depends on the sale of it, Canadian bacon, and we can sell cnry] s i Ounme of it Hhas $420 0 32. N SSR wedlihntsiaintectctar icÂ¥ corn has had time to form cu-b(m-: ‘monoxide gas, which is poiscmus.i { Since fresh air dilutes and !ea.ttm‘ | the monoxide, no one should enter a | silo till the blower has been started, | j and even then the silo doors should | Founk Thox‘ sccul ) Hiik s s T s . V "" _ PAO0R s srowing irom month to month," iofi ts ds s 2 :5 124 petitor, but it wili never drive Canada from the British market. Our actual imporis this yoear will be grenter than last yerr, we confidently predict. and ie ie s ooo C n es oo n e i ounce of it that Canada can ship. It is quite true that Denmark is a comâ€" petitor, but it wili never drive Canada from the British mami., p, _ in / _ In some parts of Norway corn is '| used as a substitute for money, | boormmmmmennm." commccmenennl | _ Japanese officials must get up early | in the morning to keep pace with their _new premier. Admiral Kato begins his conferences soon after six o‘clock | in the morning and keeps them up till | noon. He goes to bed at halfâ€"past \nine. VOPCinPOidnirss Andassaces k 1M s bis | Yacuum with «uiphur;~ acid to absorp Every year numerous fatalities ocâ€"/ the vapor. The contrivance is og. cur among farm hands who enter a _ pecially adapted | for icing | imineral partly filled silo after the fermenting‘ watore, makine ins a,... _ "C _ MEAGK nomn has Iund ; use quiog s 1 C ormnnl Al growers can save at lea part of their own seed. The la: and bestâ€"shaped fruits of the g: should now be marked with a pie twine and allowed to remain they are ripe. Next year‘s ga depends a good deal on this y choice of seed. us uids / 4ss / Bs :2 gentle Jesus, meek and mild, one who never made an enemy. _ The other would set Him forth as one who was ever a fighter and surrounded always by implacable foes. The true view is that up till the time of his public ministry, He was one of the most popular of men. Only in His conflict with public evils did he incur the hosâ€" tility of the rulers of the Jews. He He grew in favor with men. There are two extreme views in regard to ralcica aAo P . OS the Holy Ghost, and the shrine should be worthy of its deity. How to be physically fit is a question which should engage the attention of every boy and girl. _ "He also grew in wisdom, which is more than information. Youth is the time for study. Let us read the best books, and above all, the best of books â€"the Bible. The scriptures will make us wise unto salvation. | 1| yCOPS, TVas sSunject Unid Lnem, P20 : s s ‘‘Fecognized the claim of earthly duties| _ Isma¢ Newton, walking in his orch. :‘ and ties. He is still a son in the home,| ard at Woolsthorpe, saw an apple fall, , \God has become more to Him, but amd, thinking about it, was led to the . Mary has not become loss. Kept all theory of there being some force / these sayings in her hoeart, The mother , which he called gravity. Science tock .,hea.rt remembers where it cannt notice of the fact, and Isanc became ‘junderstand.â€" She thinks of. them|one of the immortals, the man wh though she cannot think through q; wred the la o s CA them. Jesus increased. It is still the i o p Iaw of pvavity. . . A ‘growing Saviour that we see through farmer‘s son, he was brought up to [this window of Luke‘s gospel. Wisdom, (2=m himself, and not forced to go to .‘K:}f;wledge is the gathering of things, &choo!l after he was fifteon, But his ;‘\::sedcmT]is understanding them. Sta. scientific ability attracted attention, +. here was a corresponding and he was sent bridge Uniâ€" physical growth. The body is an imâ€" versity. When mofii(gal}::.Jl:d.LegL'-nl |portant factor in the life. The body to London and i ? ied in W a in on |is not to be despised, but disciplined. Abbey ummei in Â¥Relimingier |Favor with God. His communion with % Â¥ the Father became deeper as the days: A x * passed. And man. In His intercourse ,. 10 Study the lives of bees, the love with _men all those inward qualities life of spiders, the tood that wears a ‘of His life manifested themseives,| Cluster of eggs wrapped around his ‘There was nothing aloof in His charâ€"| hind legs, and other «trange "cri} acton fls Sece. ant trange "critâ€" I ean Hanvi Fahea loft Mauls #g.. T dutlt . M auw ennalcs nut »f th :\ dealt, Mary speaks out of the fulness of an anxious mother‘s heart. All this |religious assertion seemed filial inâ€" difference. ] V. 49. How . . wist ye not. A new ; z:ritual consciousness has dawned in h soul of Jesus. All that He had |done was but the result of that conâ€" '!ciou.meu. The mystery of His birth ‘|hu now become for l(ur; the mystery jof His life. About My Father‘s buc} [mess; or "in My Father‘s house." We, ‘like Mary, cannot understand fully ‘these words. But they clearly mean: that Jesus feels the consciousness of, ‘a direct relationship to God. The hand |of God is more real than the hand of| |Mary. IIH. Jesus Finding God in the Workâ€" whop, 51, 52. V. 51. He went down with !hm.l Jesus went back to the old life, but; \ with thoughts in His heart. On these, He would ponder in the eightcen years | ‘of silence which were spent in the, workshop of Joseph,. He row underâ€"| stands His divine relationship, He has‘ yet to learn His divine mission and| this would shape itself in these quiet) years, Was subject unto them. He| recognized the claim of earthly dutiecs and ties. He is still a son in the home. God has become more to Him, but Mary has not become loss. Kept all these sayings in her hoart. The mother heart remembers where it cannot understand. _ She thinks of thom‘, though she cannot think through them. Jesus increased. It is still the . growing Saviour that we see through | this window of Luke‘s gospel. Wisdom. , ‘ Knowledge is the gathering of things. Wisdom is understanding them. Staâ€" be put into place u: ed to prevent the centre of interest; because He seemed so much at home. Why hast Thou thus set Him up as StHIMHEt â€"a H.nd-Opera.ted Ice Machine The largest for Use in the Home. Whin : mueelas. ds Cmy C EVeRaE. garden Making ice by hand is a rapi iece of inexpensive process when a sma i until chine recently introduceq in En garden is used. The action «* the mac» year‘s based on the principle that ; ffleuec when rapidly eÂ¥veporated & | YBCUKM With enlnhnuta 2 o6a 2 â€"! ter *duber , C uns WwIth roads a y 4 BUr(acing material for Ponrently indicate that it wil b’“w“‘” h -thupltdtmno'ium"'x fiw m“"h-‘-“ aa "s Pes, reversible, variety of shados, jz ) _ 4. Amng®. Wing it slowly and evenly, as you would the clock, and do not wind it too tigh‘ly, __'-â€"’-‘,__ With the lower cost of crude rub. borlppmmunofudmit. An English firm is MINE TNR pehrensatt 1 o ‘"A hog ought no b@ln‘ 4A ho" b“t &A _ However, the slowâ€"motion cb / camera was relied upon to soive / more puzzle in natural history, a | ghant toad was submitted to the | The battery opened fire at shoy; 4 _ while the toad enveloped two or : | mealâ€"worms. Photograpks were t | at the rate of 240 a second. | _ **Now we #hall be able to se~ , x ?hov the toad‘s tongne works; ho | grips the food, and how it carries the mouth," saiq Seienceâ€"ang | ;to the darkâ€"room to develop. i The answer was "in the negaily _ In all that strip of pictures toad‘s tongue was visible in four , This means that the toad NC ods oneâ€"sixtieth of a second to eap and devour his prev movement of the tongue durin a beetle or mealâ€"worm vanishe human eye cannot folow wh pens, and the snapâ€"«ot op mers baffled . Science has just made a great ef. fort at the London Zoological Gardens, but the toad has kept his secret. We know there is a lightringâ€"like movement of the tongue during which a beetle or mealâ€"worm vanishes. ‘The Mnsd o se Luls No man toad feeds on Ms OI¢g farm at Baddeck, Cape Breton. Recently ho reached the end of his long and usefu} careor and lies buried on the pesk of one of his wellâ€" loved hilltops beside the sounding sea. Alexander Graham Bell, inventor the telephone, liked to spend his ti on his big farm at Baideck C To study the lives of bees, the love life of spiders, the toad that wears a cluster of eggs wrapped around his hind legs, and other «trange "critâ€" ters," Jean Henri Fabre left Paris for his little farm fifty yoars ago. He was ninetyâ€"two years old whon he died in 1916. He learned andi put into books such wonderful things about insects that he became worldâ€"famous as a scientist, He wrote about them «» simply that anyone can understand what he said. He wos a highâ€"brow who dug world fame and fifty years of !'Aq»ph._ out of his own little cabâ€" rs, making joe om ; and the like, another hour‘s work, a walk, and lunch. Until four o‘clock he read, took a walk, worked and loafed till 7.30, Always to bed at 10.30. It looks easy, but out of it arose the most revoluâ€" tionary thought in the history of scienceâ€"th= idea that man was evolyâ€" ed from the lower animals. At thirtyâ€"three Charles Darwin, the evolutionist, moved to Down, a little town in England, where he accompâ€" lished the great work of his life, He was never strong. At Down he walkâ€" ed before breakfast. From 8 to 9.30 he considered the best working period of his day,. The next hour he read, has lived for fifty years, wriling novels of the country life about him, which have made him the leading Engâ€" lish novelist of the day. At seventeen he went to London to be an architect, but at thirtyâ€"one, with his first sucâ€" cess in writing, he returned at once to the heaths and downs by the sea, to live there the rest of his life. 602. lin css dilirals uie P eaoe T o0 Te 4 cities. In the little village of Dorâ€" chester, England, in an old house, hidden from the road by high hedges _~d thick shrubberv. Thomas Hardy of the world has been done away from Much of the finest in_t‘ml work man has yet discovered how the The Toad‘s manufacturing rubber prey to be blamed fop ought." TOms, nOW it it carries it to of gravity. A s brought up to t forced to go to fifteon, But his racted attention, Cambridge Uniâ€" mt Than cemmncs dunlzaue w what hapâ€" camera is also ECC 18 @3â€" ¢ â€" mineral cooling byut. pend his time k, Cape d and 2 maâ€" Pland ie is water in a ° only ipture m & mema e one and a > test. three taken went the tly of Weag ) health eamok i fall i}| illness violat i time« yet U 8 mant it on you the nu1 And Bes The It As th Bey 14 w to th Beau Dom Circr comn cal n clearl nan Thi paot Can 18 who for t in Lout now who stud plen in s« gre sys ing linol svst imj the Mai in cor let the cha ma éta sig doi v OÂ¥ n« me lit «t ©ol Wit do mi ws pai but

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