Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 25 Oct 1928, p. 7

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'the official ire, Who wer : FRAT Was, Shiota of Paul to the many Kinds' of ome called uj and should be : y the winter and "breeding son in the spring. Close housing is not required. Such shelter shed is sufficient i prof but n 2 u! led plied with dry bedding and protection | ond . scene, when 'shore. Fal ; Slo No. 55, published by the Degartinest ve of Agriculture" at Ottawa, gives as wou ¢ la good winter ration for geese equal early | parts of barley and wheat-and about 25 per cent. of green feed, such as {clover or alfalfa hay.' Cabbage, man- gels or turnips, finely cut up, makea ,|an excellent green food ration. The circular gives explicit information on written about the [feeding during the laying season, the Py us a most in-| methods to be followed in rearing the vo pityre of goslings, and marketin: the stock. to do. Here we have an| PREPARING GEESE FOR MAR- idea of the incessant labors which he KETING RGEHOOR: It is with such a Jassage Active trade In gease does not begin Shay we should som fe covained od in | Rl the arrival of cold weather. The trom draughts and sorm. _ Clrcular| mie show the eage : Et Rowe. 1A WES SASTORAL ADDRESS, 20: 17- the last letters he wrote, 1 Timothy, and Titus. and 2 fattening of the market stock should begin as soon as the weather turns cold, Circular No: 55 of the Depart: v.17. Pau has no line Ai Jake the journey. y miles p! but he wishes to give some mess to the Christians there 'before "takes the long. Jogage, rom wh which he ay not return. sends for the elders or STA Ap the le dif ferent congregations in the city, that he may convey his message through them, He had probably ordained these mea himself and {° was with great satisfaction that he addressed them. "This was about the end of April. V. 18, The speech then delivered is "one of the most impresyve in. the New Test full of I in- terest, revealing the sympathy, fer tion, earnestness and sense of respon- sibility "7hich" Paul felt in his minis- try. Tt is the onlv. sermon in Acts "a dressed to the charch. FEviden by: 'Paul thinks that these may be last words to the peovls there. 'He. ment of Agriculture at Ottawa on Goose Raising, recommends taking the geese in from pasture on the ar- rival of cold weather and separating out the breeders. The market stock should be fattened in small enclosures by heavy feeding. Whole corn is re- commended as an excellent dit Stn a plentiful supply of water fo- About two weeks' feadin class of food are stated to be to prepare the birds for mark geese are sometimes mariGtea the usual method is to ---- them for ward in dressed condition. They should be kept without food, but given an abundance of watar for twenty-four hours before killing. The usual method is to bleed the birds ni} the mouth and pluck dry, While | goose feathers are particularly valu-| ! Mule Teams: on the Trail whethe r it Is because most of us natur@gily sm 8-when we lenk at a mule, hut for some reason the army mules which composed the majority of tha®snimals which were driven along the trails certainly inter- ested 1g 1 presume it was because theiry were 80 much more promi- nen those of the horses, but whe) g one ear forward whi other one to loll lazinly L fgd to me not only an cative of ggome 1 do not kho nishing fly below both in gains and This test shows that tanke | the latter feed is mot| ge used is desig- "pects per cent. protein age, The meal mixture for part shorts; for the sec two. 'months, 2 parts oats, 1 part middlings, 1 part shorts, and 1 part corn; for the last six weeks, oats and corn constituted two parts each with one part each of middlings and shorts. POTATOES IN THE POULTRY RATION In the feeding of poultry for mar- ket cornmeal 18 always regarded as having an Important place in a mixed ration, Feeding tests at the Experl- mental Farm at Ottawa have proved that where cornmeal is not readily available cull potatoes can be used very satisfactorily in its place. The test is reviewed in the 1927 report of the Poultry Division, published by the Department of Agriculture at Ot. 'tawa. Two lots.of capons, consisting in each case of fifteen White Leghorns and fifteen Barred Rocks, were fatten- ed in small pens for a period of two weeks. The mash was made up of equal parts bran middlings, oat flour, cornmeal and one-half part of meat meal. This was the ration fed to one of the lots while the mash fed to the other lot contained approximately one- fifth by weight of cull potatoes and no cornmeal. That Is to say, the corn- meal of the mash in the one case was replaced in the other by an equal weight of tat The p were thoroughly cooked, mashed and mixed with the other feéd. The mix ture in'each case was fed moistened with milk in the usual way, The value of the mashes used was 26 cents per pound with cornmeal and 12.2. cents per pound with the pota- toes. The same amount of feed was 'had: been furiously - "attacked, and :o Superior ence. had to svend some time in self-de- | noticed tgs fence. Then comes his warning, He | tier wer knows th gers are always | when th on the Tay | ing the §® | of t defe of | alo) ties | evel a av LOA podulging in pi like that . This is refl humility; (b) which this serv "trials" chiefly due 8 plots of the evil-minded Je V. 20. His great d:ty J witness to the truth, w learned from Christ, This with fulness, and (b) ong tions two sphere Tobe . Publis speech, > ivered in the school of Te secondly private conference he would éonduct in the rig ferent members of the House 5 V. 21. How wide was the range g Paul's efforts! The Jew and the Gr alike received attention at his hafds. He never one Thiet « ofA ead- irs that COW) sas fay the traill px-fron : These at or worked, on for farm. I also es on the fron- steering clear of unhitched and feed- I saw 80 many proofs- a mule's heels hen (uself from danger," real 6 excess give them nce when- of them. nst fight- U instilled in J intuitively day by always pass- any mule's Heels. as deeply in- and their "a number of | consumed by each. of the two lots. able, often bringing as much as sixty * The gains made were much the same cents per.pound, The carcasses 1.hen in either case and the cost of feed dressed should be rubbed over with varied very slightly. At the conch damp cloth and set aside to cool. Da 3p then Ae WY a ® aren 10 sion of the feeding experiment the Mozes of twelve: or less for the mar.) Dirds were killed and dressed. The Ket potato-fed birdy are reported to have ILLUSTRATION STATIONS AS SEED CENTRES Large quantities of seed stock "of grain, potatoes, grass and clover seed are distributed 'om the illustration under the direction |' ental Farms. The 88 may safely be used instead of quantities locally by The stasjon fhmeal when the latter is difficult amoumegd 101.80,942 bushels seed | to Mptain, grain, 15,392 bushels of seed potatoes,| ILLUSTRATION STATIONS PRO- and 30 pounds of geass~and clover , POULTRY RAISING segld "The eties used are those ( ation stations operated nd togff5 best on the Experimental! ynder (AS "The seed is multiplied at the | a) Fofffme fration stations and offered for ince in the district, and in this way |pelp ring the improved varieties and meth- srg ods of growing into general use. The | rd Chief Supervisor of these stations in ind those receiving d of the corn, were fe The $§43 pe} and in British Columbia are very materially to arouse r interest in the breeding, feed- bn housing of poultry. In his ing them through the full hem ihroush of Speniance aith in po Jesus. He did rob shun to declare the whole wisdom of God. V. 28. Paul mu {urns from ls own fae to to that. Shas of the of elders who wil ve the responsi for By foc. The verse shows tha ther Paul h congregation as a part ed pa hutch df of Sod. that the ministers or. like shepherds, who Pal to le and guide the flock. Their one central theme must be the great redemption 'h has been purchased at ey a price. Salvation has come to them through the death of Jesus Christ. - V. 29. Future perils are now point- ed out. These will, in part, come from enemies, who ure outside the church, V. 30, But there are dangers which arise from within also, Members church will corrupt truth as it is in Christ. Tlese predistions were fulfilled, as we can sec from th Pastoral Letters, 1 Timothy 1: 20; 2 Timothy 2: 17. V. 81. Just as Jesus had urged the disciples to watch (Matt. 24: 42), so now Paul vo me same ady hy You sce IT L THAT SIR S1DNES ACCOUNTS AT Al Jewelry STIRG 1 STRE6YT So W] TO Have A © i his report for last year published by the Department of Agriculture at Ot- tawa, says that these stations are in-! creasing Jour by year in tlreir| seed growers and dis- -- lo the care and efforts tarmers with whom they are co: ert in carrying out this work SKIM MILK SUBSTITUTE FOR ing, Th, deser! Af team was composed of six or Sven eight animals, and the traln was made up of any number of such units up to ten. Each team drew one or two canvag-covered wagons. The men drove from thé seat of the lead | wagon, or from the back of one of the lead mules, A long-handled, light- weight, woven leather whip was the staff of office, These trains carried from fifteen to twenty-five hundred pounds of freight, and covered twenty-five to thirty miles per day. Provender in the shape of oats or corn wa§ carrfed, and this was supplemented by grazing at night. Such freight trains worked all the year round, because feed could be carried for the animals. The mule-skinners slept, as the bull- whackers did, under 'thelr wagons, and in stress of weather they also came to sleep in the Lo. dings at Red Fork Ranch. The mule teams, swinging along the trails, made an animated pleture. ~--Hubert E. Collins, in 'Warpath and Cattle Trail." Was as non- py Hog ralsers who cannot obtain. milk for their stock can fiid a satis: factory substitute in tankage which i8 a product of the abattoir. At the Lennoxville, Quebec; Experimental | Station four lots of hogs were fed to ascertain the value of tankage as com- pared with skim milk. With two lots skim milk and tankage were com- pared with pigs from weaning to fin- ishing for the market. The other two lots were fed skim milk to four and five months, and then finished on tankage. The cost of the feed did not vary greatly per pound of gain throughout the whole series, amount: ing from 6.93 cents per pound for, the lot, getting skim milk throughout the test, up to a little over 7 cents for the lot getting tankage throughout, EPO last year, published by the Depar t of Agriculture at Ottawa, the Chief Supervisor of these stations shows that each year improvements are made by the various operators of the stations in the care and housing and in the quality and care of the breeding stock. Some of the opera- who premit parts of their farm for these stations have been uilding new up-to-date houses, while others are remodelling old ones in comity with modern ideas with re- spect to lighting, ventilation and gen- eral comfort, By careful breeding and selection the flocks are being im- proved in' egg-laying qualities. The stock they are able to produce are readily sold to farmers in the sur- rounding districts served by the sta- tions. Last year there were distri buted from the stations 602 cockerels, 682 pullets, and 1,628 settings of eggs from breeding stock that had pro- duced more than two hundred eggs per year, pach | HA The talking movie has ruined an- other good place to sleep.--Nashville Banner, Fruits and Vegetables in the Home" is an e e book for housewived, being the practical information on hin ohy pickling and preserving Shuits and vegetables, as proved at the Central Sxmerimental Farm. The time table for ang Je peaches, pears, apple es, tomatoes, ote is is ble. Just fill in the coupon tl mail it to-day. No charge. Post free. Please send mo bulled together wi with full Lat of booklets. Name. Post Office DAINTY TIERS ers new dress. too! miss. ered organdie, plain orchid voile, pale blue taffeta. Any little girl would feel very, very, Probing with ecstatic bill the irides- _| happy to wear a cross-barred dimity, cent depths of the mighty bells. He "| dress just covered with tiny rosebuds,| does not appear to be buylng trav- "| with triple tiéred skirt, just like moth- It has short sleeves, It's so attractive--and Oh! so ing tickets. cool and fluttery, and made with 21 | tells him that the time has come; yards of 86-inch material with 3 yard but he knows. that all is well. of 82-inch contrasting for the 8-year something to sustain him besides his For garden arties, choose flow-| wings. or must Printed voile, tissue' "Children of Swamp, and Wood." gingham, tub silks, rayon crepe, fine chambray, printed handkerchief linen, printed batiste, dotted Swiss and chal- lis prints are charming suggestions. Style No. 229 is designed in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Pattern price 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin prefer- red). HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want, Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap: it carefully) for each number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. JANIE. TRA Starting To-morrow The flowers are brilliant with those poignant colors of farewell that Jaunt "triumphantly, flouting the dreads of winter, Most gaudy are certain | gladioll and about these a single ruby- | throated humming bird 1s, in his | dainty fashion, exceedingly busy. He is wholly concerned with the wild honey dew in those gorgeous bells, hanging, to him, tke a huge carillon "tro m the swaying spire of the stem.' | Yet this tiny fairy, as frail as thistle- | down, is on the eve of a prodigious journey, such a one, indeed, as might iappa!l the oldest traveller. He fis starting for Centra] America to-night. Yet he seems joyously unconcerned, fod cheques. "He 18n't 'rushing' around packing luggage and purchas- Something in his heart He has Perhaps it is what all of us have.--Archibald Rutledge, in ar Old Custom in England CELEBRATE OPENING OF COLNE OYSTER FISHERY 'When the first dredger of oysters had been hauled in the mayor and the town crier sampled them, carrying out an old ceremony. Phone the Morgue, Jeff's Brain i is s Dead. EE we T CHARGGD S000 Jans: MUST NDS WORTH OF JEWELRY = AND HAD (T SENT TO NS ADDRESS. IMAGING ALL THE EXPLAINING SIR Std Jill » H 2 ip Si 2000 POUND PEARL NGciLACE] SIR SIDNEY AND DELIVER CHARGE THAT Frat: s§ Him! ADDRESS: THANKS, OLD DEAN! Vso You'Re THE BoLNDER WE WANTED 5 APPRG HEAD! SIR SIDNGY'S ORDERS ARG T™ LODGE Yau IN LONDON TOWER. __AT ONCE! Referring back to the history of the discovery of insulin, Dr. Banting got the idea of his great booh to mankind, so report goes, while an interne ifn a London, Ont, hospital, 'Without funds, and without influential friends, he came to Toronto, where he propounded his theories to several of the University authorities. Rumor. and report has it that Dr. McLeod, who, by the way, is not a Canadian but a Scotchman--Scotch-born and Scotch-educated, refused to assist Dr. Banting either with Laboratory room, equipment or funds. Another pro- fessor in a different department (Dr. Velyen Henderson, Pmlessor of " Pharmocology) gave the ¥eung Ban- ting, and his equally young and en- thusiastic co-oworker, Dr. Best, labor atory room. Dr. Henderson and sev- eral Toronto doctors joined in finane- ing Drs. Banting and Best in their ex- periments, the results of which are too well known to need but passing comment here. Insulin was discover ed, tested and proven beyond all doubt. After being fully acknowledged as one of medicine's greatest discoveries, Drs. Bantin; and Best gave the To- ronto University credit for the dis- covery and refused to profit by thelr work, giving, impecunious though they were, their find to the good of hu- manity. Time went on apace, the Nobell Committee, after dae deliberation, awarded Dr. Banting the Noll Prize in medicine for 1923. Being a physiological discovery and having turned the credit over to that department of the Toronto Univer sity, we find that Dr. MeLeod took a trip to Europe at this juncture, and he happened to visit Stockholm while the Nobel Committee was sitting. Result--the prize of $40,000 was split not between Banting and Best, but between Banting and McLeod. Dr. Banting gave immediately half of his share to Dr. Best, carrying through in his original big-hearted, generous way. What Dr. McLeod did with his share of the prize that, so far as out sliders could judge, he had done noth ing to earn, is not reported. Aber deen University, we trust, will benefit, but Toronto University still has Dr, Banting directing his research labora- tory in his quiet, efficient, modest way. i; an "A girl generally chooses the nar row path when she's driven to it." HERE AI'D THERE A hick town is a place where nobody ever saw a rich policeman --Washing- ton Post. A number of policemen in Chicage are reported ill with measles. Al last! A Chicago policeman has caught something! --Palm Beach Post. ¥ as the poet might have put ft Le fre Live in a House by the Side of the Road and Run a Hot-dog Stand. --Macon Telegraph. A Typewriter for composing musie having been invented, it merely re- mains to turn out a machine to listen to the results--Manchester Union. Germany would have a heap better luck keeping the French off the Rhine if she had thought more about it four 45d years 8g0,~Dallas News. Ian ve ee Aers. with va on individual who differs with us on the liquor as hosrtly as wo differ 1 /

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