West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Jun 1929, p. 2

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"A visitorâ€"an errand boyâ€"" "Why surmise? Why not find eu for certain?" Dobbins began to look grave. "Much obliged to you, Mr. Goddard I#t certainly calls for investigation not commonly worn by gentlemen of a househol "Some of the servantsâ€" "Pooh!" said Dobbins, "that might have come there before or after the shooting time." "Might have, yea, but isn‘t it up to you to prove it did er it didn‘t? Oughn‘t you to know who has been here wearing new rubbers? They are not commonly worn by ladies and gentlemen of m houschold like this." The two men went to the sun parâ€" Jor, and on its floor of red tiles, beâ€" tween two rugs, was certainly & faint, Irregular footprint, made quite eviâ€" dently by some one who wore new rubb« "Then if you have, why didn‘t you find that footprint for yeurself{*" Godâ€" dard spoke seriously. "It‘s right there, under the eyes of anybody who ehooses to look for it." "Ig it there ygtl’" "ies, unless i has been washed off today. 1 saw it yesterday. Come on, Ill show you." elothes he wore? Also his age hei{l_)t? I‘ve read story books, "Very good of him, I‘m sure! And from that footprint, will you please tell me the color of his hair and what NOW GO ON wWITH THE STORY "That‘s all right, Mr. Dobbinsâ€"and I‘ll make you this proposition. Let me help you and I‘ll agree to play fair. You tell me all you discover and I‘ll tell you what I learn." "Humph. What can you learn?" "Don‘s be supercilious. You may yet be glad to come around to my theory." "Have you one?" "Rather! And a good one. It is that an outsider, an evil intentioned intruder came in and shot Raynor at dusk, and made away without being seen." "Fine fairy story!" "Not at allâ€"he left his footprint en the sun room floor." The body of Douglas Raynor is found in the early evening on the floor of the sun room at Flower Acres, his Long Island home. Raynor has been shot through the heart. Standing over the dead man, !ist.ol in hand, is Malâ€" eolm Finley, former sweetheart of Raynor‘s wife, Nancy. Eva Turner, Raynor‘s nurse, stands by the door with her hand on the light switech. In a moment Nancy appears, whiteâ€"faced and terrified. Orville Kent, Naney‘s brother, comes in from the south side‘ eof the room. And then Ezra Goddard, friend of Finley; Miss Mattie, Rayâ€" mor‘s sister, and others, enter upon the scene. Detective Dobbins heads the police investigation. An autopsy reâ€" veals that Raynor was being systemâ€" atically poisoned by arsenic, and Nancy is suspected as the poisoner of her brutal husband. Dobbins comes to interview Nancy, but is intercepted by Goddard. ‘zite The Borden Co., Limit t AJ, 110 5t. Paudt Street W.» Montreat MISS MATTIES SHARP EYES NOTICED A BOOK SET ASKEW ON THE SHELF. SHE PULLED IT OUT. two Baby Welfare Books. IS8SUE No. 24â€"‘29 PREZ BABY B00%% BEGIN HERE TODAY and you gession at once. I have with me miy father‘s will, which bequeaths to everything he posseesed. I want Ff to push the investigation of his M’Ifi: â€"â€"his murder"â€"he looked straight at Nanâ€""and I want to see justice â€" "You are making any :.cuzsationg‘.’”i Tom: "Has your amateur gardening asked the detective. .. |taught you anything?" Dick: "Yes; "Not thatâ€"I leave that to you and,I‘ll never again believe that we reap your assistants. But it can‘t be a what we sow." 6b before?" Dobbins asked of Nan. "Oh, yes; the lawyer looked after all notifications of the family." /‘ | "He‘s watched continually ,Miss | Raynor, as, in fact, are all the people | of the house." y [ "My land! All of us?" ‘Yes, of course. There are several men detarled for that purpose. Well, ‘Miu Raynor, 1 don‘t see that we can learn anything more here." ' With the book on poisons, carefully wrapped to preserve possible finger lprint clews, he went downstairs, Miss Raynor accompanying him. l They found that in their absence a {newcomer had appeared, who brought with him a new clement of mystery. In the living room, addressing himâ€" self to Nan, was a young man of perâ€" haps thirty or so. He was tall, dark and lean, a man of fine face and figure, but with crafty black eyes that darted here and there, seeming to read the attitudes of the others. _ He was, he told Dobbins, Lionel Raynor, son of Douglas Raynor by his first marrjage. "Had you ever heard of this son "Yes," she said, "I knew of his exâ€" istence, but I have never beforé met "He was apprised of his father‘s death?" "You didn‘t get here for the funâ€" er& M‘f Raynor*" said Dobbins. No, I caMe on from the west and couldn‘t make connections. t now that 1 ag heté,s1 wish to fgfi % Orville Kent, in attendance on his sister, was also listening to the anâ€" nouncements the stranger was makâ€" ing. "He wasn‘t killed by the poison," Dobbins reminded her. "Do you think she shot him?" "No," said Miss Maitie, decidedly. ‘"Nan wouldn‘t do that. But I believe Mr. Finley did, and I can‘t see why you don‘t arrest him." that at arsenical poisoning the leaves were thumbed and worn as if by an interested student. - "I knew it," said Miss Mattie, with a horrified look at the page. "I knew Nan was poisoning him." Dobbins eagerly grabbed it from Miss Mattie‘s hands. They were about to call this search complete, when Miss Mattie‘s sharp eyes noticed a book set askew on the book shelf~ She pulled it out and found there was a volume concealed behind it. This was a boog about poisons and their antidotes,. A small book, evidently addressed to the layâ€" man and meant for family use. _ Especially did the detective serutâ€" inize the bottles in the medicine cabâ€" inct. There were a few vials of white tablets, which he confisgated, but which were labeled quinine or soda mints or some simple preparation. It would be false to say Miss Mattie did not enjoy itâ€"her feminine curiosâ€" ity was gratified at this opportunity to see her sisterâ€"inâ€"law‘s belongings and she poked into drawers and cupâ€" boards with erthusiasm. She accompanied the detective, and the two of them made a thorough search among Nancy Raynor‘s things. _"No, Mrs. Raynor, but I want some one with me. Miss Turner?" "No; I‘ll go," put in Meddlesome Mattie. "Certainly you may search my rooms, Dr. Dobbins," Nan said, quietâ€" ly. "Shall I come with you?" By reason of further request on Goddard‘s part, Dobbins left the search of Nan‘s room until the next day, and then he deelared his intenâ€" tion«. "Agreed, though I doubt if I disâ€" cover anything of importance. My forte is deduction rather than search." And 1‘ll accept your offer of help.. 1 I tell you what I learn, you must tel me anything you discover." He ran over its pages and found Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 200 in stamps or coin (coin prefered; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toro:to. Patterns sent by an early mail. | A lovely dress â€"for gencral utility wear in midnight blue cantonâ€"faille crepe, achieves new flared fulness at front of skirt, with shaped hip yoke in pointed treatmenmt. The simple Roâ€" dice is tucked at each shoulderâ€"with deep open Vâ€"neckline with bow trim. Style No. 402 extremely easy to make, is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure, and takes but 3% yards of 4Bâ€"inch material to make it in the 36â€"inch size. Silk crepe in tweed. pattern, crepe satin, featherweight tweed and georâ€" gette crepe also appropriate. Price 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferâ€" red). Wrap coin carefully. B HOW TIMES DO CHANGE "Talking about Christmas reminds me that my better half gave me a book 1 ear ent! * t (Teh?le#i‘i% ‘This ;‘gg als .gv‘f‘i?: another one, entitled "Wild Animails I Have Known." Minard‘s Liniment for sick animals. For Nancy Raynor, in her black gown and tiny white crepe collar, was very fair and sweet to look at. (To be continued.) Lione! Raynor threw her a quizzical glance, but his eyes rested for a moâ€" ment on her beautiful face. "It must be that Mr. Gannon has the will in his possession," she said, "or, more likely, Mr. Stratton has it. At any rate, I know that it exists, and that its provision for myself is entirely satisfactory." HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Nancy Raynor gave him one scornâ€" ful glance but said nothing. As a matter of fact she knew all about the will her husband had made in her favor, knew how little he had left to Lionel and knew of its other bequests. "How can he read it, if there isn‘t any to read?" asked Lionel Raynor, flippantly. "I fear, Mrs. Stepmother, you won‘t be able to find that will." "I know," Nan said, "the lawyer, Mr. Stratton, said so. But I begged him to wait till today. He is coming this afternoon to read the will." "Grimshawe Gannon? Then he is easily available, and will know where the will is," Goddard said. "This matâ€" ter should have been looked into sooner." ""Who witnessed it?" asked Dobbins. "Mr. Gannon, for one," Nan said, "and the butler, for another. But not the butler we have now. It was Petâ€" ers, the one we had last year." "But it has always been there," said Nan, looking perplexed. "I mean ever since it was drawn up, a year or more Nor was it Thoigh the desk was ransacked by Dobbins, assisted by Goddard and Orville Kent, no trace of a will could be found. **Proance it, then." This was said with a snecr, as »f the new claimant to the prcprerty had no fear of the will being forthcoming. _ "Yes? Have you it?" Liorel Rayâ€" nor‘s tone was insolent. "It is in Mr. Raynor‘s desk," Nan said quietly. "But my husband made a later| ies A will," Nan declared, her spirit roused How and When to Give Your by these continued blows of misforâ€" tune. difficult case, given the elements of an vnloving wife and her form:r suitor." ACHIEVES NEW FLARE Toronto Mail and Empire (Cons.): It is apparently the determination of the goyernment that no tariff aid shall be given to any new industry, What is not already made in Canada will stand little change of being made here, #o far as Government policy is concerned. if not made in Canada pow a %lve_n article will continue to be admitted free of duty, so that the setting up of works to make the article will be hampored by unrestricted comâ€" petition from outside countries. Major K. A. Bratt in the Review of Reviews (London): The advance of dictatorships at the present time afâ€" fords a premonitory hint of what is to come, _ They spring up like mushâ€" rooms, not omly in the earth‘s bloorâ€" drenched swamps and feverâ€"stricken areas, but in ~the chill shadow of the new warfare, _ The reaction to this development and the psychologlcal‘ changes which it implies will result in a reversal of the social progress ot: the last fifty years. â€"Such progress| is the child of democracy. _ If that fails, they fall together. â€" There can be no doubt but that this progress toâ€" wards a warlike and dictatorâ€"ridden community must end in war, It can certainly not lead to peace. It will plunge into warfare the whole of the Western world, or more probably the whole earth, with its present tendency towards unification, and precipitate world revolution. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO T .. {UpRsES WANTED "% w § S 10 <ooden The Torohto Hospital for Incurables. in affiliation with Bellevue and Allied Hospitals, New York ’Ci'try. 'ocen fl three year rge 0 rainin fimfig W'bfiefo ‘uing the rqulreg education and desirous of becoming nurses, This Hospital has adopted the eightâ€"hour system. The ;lmplls receive uniforms of the School, a monthly allowance and traveling expenses to and from New York. ;:r further information write the Superintendent. Then the liver, spleen, and pancreas suffer; and, in their turn, the muscles. Finally, a call is made on those vital organsâ€"the heart and brain. ‘ When food is withheld the body feeds on its own store of fat and carâ€" bohydrates. At the start, the weight falls rapidly; then it settles down to a steady loss of a pound a day. Exâ€" cepting the fat stores of th ebody and the glycogen in the liver and muscles, the loss falls first on the glands. But fasting, while an excellent practice if indulged in with care and judgment, can be very dangerous. Long periods of starvation do more harm than good. Many diseases respone favorably to short periods of fasting. Acute pnenâ€" monia, acute nephriti® diabetes, gout, indigestion, high blood _ pressure, rheumatic affections, skin disorders are examples. For severe obesity strict dieting is essential. It was Mark Twain, 1 believe, who said that "no cold in the bead could survive 24 hours un lified starva tion." A fast not only purifies our blood and organs, but muscular growth is benefited. _ It is Nature‘s own cure for fever. _ What better method is there of treating a severe cold or inâ€" fluenza than by strict starvation for a day or two, in conjunction with the liberal drinking of warm water, Apart from the hygienic importance of a fast, there is a © psychological value; the more we feel we want our foodâ€"»and we shall feel we want it badly the day afterâ€"the better will be our digestion and absorption. It is surprising how much fitter everybody feels the next day, after the harmful excretions of overwork have been expelled, and the blood has been cleansed. Choose one day every fortnisht when you will make a point of studyâ€" ing your own internal economy. That day will be your organs‘ period of rest. On that da eat nothing except, perâ€" haps, some buttered toast. The more nonâ€"alcoholic fluid you drink the betâ€" ter. s Day by day this goes on. Is it any cause for surprise that our organs wear out before their time? The,. Overfeeding Danger More people are in danger of overâ€" feeding than of underfeeding. Those accustonfed to live freely would beneâ€" fit immeasurably from an occasional day‘s fast. This excess only imposes additional strain upon our secretory and excreâ€" tory systems, The glands, which secrete digestive juices, and the liver, work overtimeâ€"for nothing. And ou: kidneys find themselves faced with a formidable quantity of waste prodâ€" ucts to dispose of. | Most of us, I think, would consider iourselves underâ€"fed and illâ€"done by, if we had less than three meals a day. There are people who are always takâ€" ing "snacks," who believe that if they are not eating something at every posâ€" sible moment, they will waste away. ~ Did they but know it, they are headâ€" ing for disaster and an early grave. Our digestive organs can only absorb a certain quantity of food at one time. Each individual‘s powers of absorpâ€" tion varies. _ Put in moreâ€"and it is merely wasted. |Fasting for Health System a Rest By DR. FISHER We are unmerciful niggerâ€"drivers of our own organs. . We work our stomâ€" achs, livers and kidneys from morning till night, in a most ungallant manner, and the wonder is that they put upl with it at all. l ‘"Not Made in Canada" War! â€" The trouble is that men dare not go down because of the pressure. _ At half the depth at which the Lusitania pes, a man in ordinary diving dressf wou‘ld be called upon to bear the treâ€" mendous pressure of about 172,000 lbs,| Under such stress no man <ould go‘l down and live, let alone work. | Allâ€"Steel Diving Suits l To cope with the pressure, special| allâ€"steel suits were constracted, and, in these, becanse of the tremendons‘ weight, divers were lowered over the‘ What staterooms are still whole will be the haunt of gigantic conger eels, and the breeding ground of the loathsome octopus. But shattered steelwork and danger from deep sea denizens would deter no diver worthy of the name. Dyna mite can remove the stoutest jronpâ€" work, and there are means for the disâ€" couragement of the stoutest hearted of finney focos. ‘Eleven years of tide rip and corâ€" rosion, to say nothing of the tremendâ€" ous pressure of the water at that depth, will‘ bave reducer the once fine ship to a mass of tangled girders and grotesgeuly twisted platework. Not always is it the storm, however, that sets at naught the salvor‘s efâ€" forts. _ The bullion lying in the Lusiâ€" tania is a case in point. This great liner lies at a depth of forty fathoms, off the Old Head of Kinsalo. Ask Your Barberâ€"He Knows A mass of cannon ball, rusted toâ€" gether, then barred their way. They smashed through this, and found one ball that had been in actual contact with the gold. Then a storm drove them offâ€"and buried, irretrievably, the wreck. The gold off the canon ball weighed six grains.‘* 7 For nine months they labored, and in that time sucked millions of tons of sand from the wreck, and built it into a barrier to divert the sea curâ€" rents; finally, they uscovered the wreck. Once in a while, perhaps, one sucâ€" ceeds in wresting a treasure from the caverns of the deep, and, inspired by the news, others come forward to All the gaps in the treasure seekers ranks left by those who bhave fought and falled. A Foriorn Hope In 1911, a British salvage company attempted the salving of the Lutine treasure, held since 1799 in the grip of the treacherous Vlieland shoals, It seems incredible that science should not yet have found a way ‘0 this treasure chamber. _ Armed with the newest and latest diving apparaâ€" tus, men periodically attempt to salâ€" vage the bullion of some famous wreck, but, more often than not, they return ,broken in beart and pocket, Treasure has been accumulating on the sea bed since the ancient Carthaâ€" genians sailed out to scour the then known world. Day in and day"out men sail over treagure trove that would make them rich for life, and the treasure may only be a matter of thirty,forty, or fifty fathoms beneath their keel. The World‘s Untold Riches Lie in the Depths of the Sea FOR THE HAIR TOUGH SJAYâ€"They hold . TFirestont rines U 10 â€"They hol i orld zcogrdy All thatshowerandsun can giveâ€"in fragrance A~JDA + PR\yé A T h A ‘Fresh from the gardens‘ Strong Box saves you lu'mcy-ndmm better. See him today, FIRESTONE T; & RUBBER CO, there‘s any a;fl'egcn'ée in tires just remember that Firestonc‘s are the outstanding choice of the big bus, truck and taxi fleets who demand the greatest gafety for high specds, supreme endurance for uninter» rupted service and most ecconomy in cost per mile. I Name graphic is equally as accUrate a5 UMC, Plant More Beans above, it is no cause for w::de:l!h::’ String beans, never so delicious as the Ameriffl:: Difl::‘:l C;::h.n: :B , | When taken from the garden right at land o 008 h 6 (.-ountr of beer muge And plusâ€"fours. the door, may‘ be produced all sum Â¥ mer. The first crop should be well 8 d i , i ith its harves p1| Under way now, but w s harvestâ€" For sunburn, apply Minard‘s Linime ing there is no, reason why this popuâ€" s lir vegetable s{wuld be given up. Getâ€" The Pmperoul Indiar ting the beans into the ground at Victoria Times (Lib.): Our lndian:,\-mmd intervals guarantees steady population is fairly stable at §b0fll'prodml;nn. Any one can grow them 100,000, Among the "less civilized |and for the amount of space occupied tribes, according to the Department of they are one of the most economical Indian Affairs, the high bh‘!g Patie "’:1' | vegetables we have. They like the ances the high death rate, but in the warm woather, plenty of water and civilized tribes who have met @Dd fairly light soil. One can get them withstood the first shock of comflt‘_t dwarf or climbing, and, while the latâ€" with civilization there is an APPrOCiHâ€"|tep sort are a little more dificult to able gain, not only in Imhfh('"" but in |handle, poles and string being necesâ€" physical | standards. These latterlsm..\., they will give a bigger crop for people have long ago proved th€i"|the space occupied. They come, toc worth and only need to develop @04 | in two colours, green and yellow, the maturé under ['”-)t”“v,nAi';“ll] g;;y.%'“‘ D(tlfl(‘d being known as the wax reach their destined goalâ€"fu Mype. The green sort seem to be g«t ish citizenship. A l‘tiug more popular, and some insist It is recalled that Mr. Bernard Shaw ; that they have a finer ,flm'm‘ b‘”,' s , % ;. No|is little to chose, It is not advisabi« was once in the Salvation Army, A * o d beat | t0 plant them in hills, except possib!y doubt that is where he learned to bei in Tow, daifip ‘Eround. where thes? As â€"â€" Star. h * o PR MP_“".’_’E_DLT]O“____â€" liable to be kept too wet. Plant about TMieareememecenermenermemmmammceamemmammnmatiomanammane an inch deep, andethi nto five or six inches apart. A row of 25 feet5 will LADIBS keep the average family going for about two weeks, One can continue Prese #kin, hose & , u:':e::::- by using plantings at intervals of a fortnight A N T ' as M o up to the middle of July, ‘ ud Timely Tips \ If the birds are eating the lettuce, KEETI.SKAR cover with a light lattice or strip of chicken wire. This will scare them rme iique prepara The former is a unique prepara [J| _ _ Victoria Times (Lib.): Our Indian population is fairly stable at about 100,000, _ Among the (Jless civilized tribes, according to the Department of Indian Affairs, the high birth rate balâ€" ances the high death rate, but in the civilized tribes who have met and withstood the first shock of contact with civilization there is an appreciâ€" able gain, not only in numbers, but in physical | standards. These latter people hbave long ago proved their worth and only need to develop and maturé under protection until they reach their destined goalâ€"full Britâ€" ish citizenship. ‘ On Sporting Good#, Pishing Tackle Camp Supplies. The Biggest :’ Finest Ever Iesued in Canad Addrese Gallimore Sales Service, 445 King St. W., Toronto. London Free Press Cons.): (The Saskatoon Starâ€"Phoenix received a letter from the assistant editor of the National Geographic Magazine, Washâ€" ington, D.C., in which reference was made â€" throughout to _ "Saskatoom, British Columbia.") If all the other inâ€" formation published in National Geoâ€" graphic is equally as accurate as the above, it is no cause for wonder that the Americans picture Canada only as I am enclosing %6¢ for Antiâ€"Mes or 60c for Skeetiâ€"Skareâ€"$1.25 for both. But, despite the terrible risk and losses involved, the lure of the world‘s strong box still continues to draw men away from their comfortable and #ecure businesses on land. A Georgraphical Inexactitude But the sea bhad still a trump card to play. At forty fathoms the darkâ€" ness was so intense that the most powerful of artificial lights fafled enâ€" tirély to penetrate the gloom. _ And without light it would be madness to attempt the exploration of a mass of shattered plates, many of them rustâ€" ed to such an extent that their edges were razorâ€"like in sharpness. side of the salvage ship by means of a crane, a special nonâ€"twisting cable being attached to the helmet. $ Write For Our Latest Catalogue nearest whe latter (Skeetiâ€"Skare) may be applicd to the face, arms and hands, or any part of the body, without injury to the skin. Jt does not possess the unpleazant odor of preparations formerly used, and positively cannot injure the #kin. The former is a unique prepara tion which applied to either ladies‘ or gents‘ hose, prevents in. sect bites of all kinds, thereby eliminating . much_. discomfiture and runs in hose,. Does not affect color or fabric. Etores and Dealers Please Write, TORONTO RADIO CO 241 040E STREET sHiigy ons mm‘ mm anmene ue iJ .~Mother, to city child on first visit to the country: "Now, Mary, you must drink your nice milk; you haven‘t even touched it." Mary: "It ain‘t nice milk, mama. It‘s nasty. I ain‘t going to touch it I saw Uncle Tom take it right out 6f an ole cow‘s tummy." Trade With Spain W. H. C. in the Spectator (Lon don). Tgere may or may not be truth in the assumption that His Majesty‘s Government dcelined the invitation t« |take part officially in the Barcelona Hamilton Spectator (Ind. Cons.): In buying from the sister dominions, Canâ€" ada merely returns, the compliment which they are paying this country in increasing measure year by year. The Mother Country and the Empire are our best customers and have a richt to expect a preference on the part of the Canadian people for the commodiâ€" ties they are in a position to supp!y, in exchange for what they take/ It is a recirocal movement, in which the adâ€" vantage is mutus!. w Exhibition, . . . as a protest against the further increase in the Epanish tariff promised at the end of the year. Certainly, Spain‘s economic policy is A matter of grave concern for all the pations who are pledged to the only sane measures for the recovery of Europe‘s tradeâ€"which were prescribâ€" ed by the World Economic Conferâ€" ence; Great Britain, in particular, has to bear the brunt of Spanish economic nationalism, because Spanish exports to this country are foodstuffs and raw materials which are admitted free of All duty, whereas British fmports into Spain are precisely those articles which come under the full force of the Protectionist tariffs and trade restrictions. Cosmos planted along the fences will make a good screen and provide an abundance of cut flowers in late August and early September, Four o‘clock plants require six inches each wayâ€"makes a good, tall edging plant for walks or for garden divisions. Alyssgum, either normal or dwarf, is the ideal low edging plant, Alternated with the deep blue Lobelia in clumps, which is also a small plant, a very effective border is produced. the cold weather sets in. Just now, according to A. H. Tomlinson, O.A.C,, Guelph, nitrate of soda is one of the best fertilizers to use for promoting growth. ~A #tant tablespoonf@l of this dug in lightly around the plant, but not touching it, is advised. One or two applications a fortnight apart Will be sufficient, ° After July, slower scting fertilizers, such as liuid manâ€" ure or bone meal should be given, and only shallow cultivation is advised. A ’!ew lowâ€"growing plants, such as pansâ€" ies, calendulas, or dwarf nasturtiums, ’wlll brighten up the bed and will prove of an advantage to the roses, ‘ Push Sweet Peas Along The sweet peas must get their growth now before the hot weather really sets in. They need deep cultiâ€" vation and fairly heavy fertilizing. If grown in a trench, as they should be, gradually draw .in the soil around them, so that deep roots may develop. In this case they will come through a siege of hot weather more easily than if a shallow root growth, which does not penetrate into the cooler soil only has been grown. Just before the buds begin to swell, a little forâ€" tilizer sprinkled along the rows and well watered in, will help the plants a great deal and will add to the depth of colour of the flowers. Care of Roses Roses require fairly deep cultivation and heavy fertilizing up until the first of July in order to push growth and produce flowers. After this, however, it is advisable to slow down, so that the plants may get hardened before Timely Fips on Roses, Peas and Beans Service DA h the 1 #stic them us i 1 01 Of €ormer i which * many th country. the strong fal rogim R up wl D stanc Anan« bined th ti this r tion has inv 14 Fu @nd t i) y and cap tha; of th t V of An &n is ®o pr Th R K th Jn am n As B @nd 1n serm/ Majo th h An dn high () d it

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