nowIcan call hefore go out for the evem‘ng" BY EMERGENCY CR()PS[ If the soil is welt prepared, buckâ€" xâ€"â€"â€"â€" wheat which ~grows rapidly and By Professor W. J. Squirrel, usually ripens in jen to twelve Ontario Agricultural College. ,weekfl. will keep ahead of the weeds ~â€"x_â€"~ and ‘become an excellent smother A cold, wet April, and a none t00 ‘crop. In the past several years there favorable first week in May, have;g,ag been a good export market for made it certain that there will be 2 buckwheat grain. In a meal mixture considerable demand by farmers fur!huckwheal has almost as great a emergency crops for sowing in Onâ€"jfeeding value for stock as barley. tario this Spring. Peas and Oats Buckwheat This â€"mixture, sown at the rate of This is one of the best grain crops |2 bushels of cats and 1 bushel of peas for late sowing. It gives its greatest|per acre, makes an excellent annual yield when sown between June 1st ‘hay crop. Varieties well suited for and June 15th. On the average,'gmwing in the mixture are O.A.C. throughout â€" the Province, it iiemg l.\ru. 72, O.A.C. No. 144 or Banner more per acre than spring wheat and | Oats along with Golden Vine, 0.A.C. spring rye, but less than barley and I No. 181, McKay or Prussian‘ Blue oats. Sandy loam soils with good ‘Peas. Best hay from the mixture ls] drainage are well suited to growing produced if the crop is cut when the buckwheat but it gives good results | pea pods are about oneâ€"half gmwn.! also on most types of soil where the ‘ It is handled and cured like any drainage is good. The Silver Hull other hay crop. In addition to being and Rye varieties of Buckwheat aro‘an excellent annual hay crop the the two most important varieties and labove mixture makes a firstâ€"class should each be sown at the rate of soiling crop. ‘ A cold, wet April, and a none too favorable first week in May, have made it certain that there will be a considerable demand by farmers for emergency crops for sowing in Onâ€" tario this Spring. FARMERS OVERCOME WET SPRING SETâ€"BACK BY EMERGENCY CROPS SHREDDED Make sure you get the original Shredded Wheatâ€" ‘ the fuflYsize biscuits that fill the cereal dish. §¢w¢ the paper inserts in every Shredded Wheat package 1 ORANGE JUICE for vitamin "C" SHREDDED WHEAT for vitamin You need them both every morningâ€" EVENING rates on stationâ€"toâ€"station calls now begin at 7 p.m. with about 25% off the day rates. A convenience in two ways â€"you can place a call at the reâ€" duced rate before you go out for the evening â€" and you are more apt to catch the called party at home between 7 and 8.30 p.m. After 8.30 p.m. and continuing till 4.30 a.m. there is a further reduction which is about 50% of the day rate. Charges can now be reversed on stationâ€"toâ€" station calls when the rate is 25 cents or more,. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA 100% PURE PAINT AND VARNISHES A special product~for every purposeâ€" for every surface 100 % PURE | RTINSENOUR , threeâ€"quarters to one bushel of geed ! per acre. Liphardt Bros. || Waterloo, Ontario s | It Pays to use the Aat washâ€" able paint ' She started up. James Detong had entered the door; with him was a itown fisherman who piloted him upâ€" |-stream in a battered launch, searchâ€" ing for his brother Fritz. Delong‘s lskin was colorless, his eyes were |disheartened. She went to meet him. "Any luck?" she whispered. "None," he answered. His voice quavered. "Fritz didn‘t make it. 'You‘ve heard the rest, Sue? I drownâ€" jed Erickson‘s father!" "No, no!‘" she protested. He cried out at her savagely. "Didn‘t 1? Who else did? I‘m to blame for all this. Young Erickson lwarned me! He told me the dam would burst . . ." Delong swung around. Jim Nelson stood at his elbow, a Telt hat in his stiff red hands and his hands shakâ€" ing, the smell of fish on his garâ€" ments. "Aye, but sayin‘ it didn‘t bring the rain," said an old voice. "I think he did, too," Sue swered. alone!" she had cried. "I am a wickâ€" ed, jealous girl! Poor Norman. He was not happy with his father. They were two strong wills together. You have seen two chickens, pull, pull, pull at the same worm? Norman is born this way, and this . . ." she spread apart the fingers of her right hand. "Here he is French, like his mother, and here Scandihoovin, and so he gets all mixed up. I fancy he. is just y‘ke this inside his mind," she crossed her fingers. "But he d~id‘ love his father." Julie nodded her black head. She bad wept when Sue told her the news. "So that is why you take him off "Keep him here," she instructed Julie ‘Richaud. "Right here,. among lights and people." "Thanks, Jim," Norman answered. He covered his face with his hands. Nelson limped away bowâ€"leggedly, saying no more, either of blame or condolence. Norman groaned. Cerâ€" tainly old Jim had ibeen faithful to Gustaf, whether his son had been or not. He turned to Sue. She had forbidâ€" den that he leave the mission house. "I ought to go . ." he begged. "Up to your own house? Not toâ€" night, Norman." "I been bailing your father‘s boat, Norman," the fisherman said. "He wouldn‘t want anything to happen to that boat, Gustaf wouldn‘t. You takeâ€"her, Norman. How else you get home?" "It wasn‘t? Ho! Well, whose was it then?" f They hooted him out of the pookâ€" room. He was shaking his head as he turned in the direction of the mission house. He found Norman Erickson near the stove where Sue Stocking had put him. There was an attitude of an old man about him, sitting with his shoulders hnnched.‘ Julie Richaud brooded over him; nha“ carried a cup of coffee which Nor man now refused. He looked at Nel-‘ son dully. any squashy soap about Ericksons. 1 know ‘em. ‘Whos‘ the boy sailin‘ with now? A Delong! ‘Mister James Delong out of Grand Haven.‘" The crowd growled. This was fairâ€" er talk about Delong. They could understand Baker‘s accusations there. If it wasn‘t for the {amily of Delong Madrid Bay would be enjoying now all the splendor of an August Saturâ€" day night. Those Delongs wore outâ€" siders. Bakers was right. "It‘s the truth, Ed," agreod Pug Downey. "The flood wasn‘t their fault altoâ€" gether," Jim Nelson argued. time for that." "It isn‘t?" Baker laughed moroseâ€" ly "That‘s what 1 said," Baker an sweored, "and he‘s got a fishâ€"livered "Float away, Baker." A murmur A Romance of the Great Lakes I BY KARL W. DETZER He atepped through the group inâ€" solently. He held a glass in one hand; an enormous red hand that was out of proportion with the rest of his body. The loafers at the bar started. They were huge men for the most part, with long arms and red faces; a few were bowâ€"legged, even as Jim Nelson, In their midst Baker appearâ€" ed stunted. "He‘s here," Pug Downey anâ€" swered. "Have a drink?" A servile eagerness colored his voice. "I don‘t want a drink, thank you." "Mean you won‘t drink with us?" asked Baker. _ Norman, who had come with Delong silently, stared about the room with in unexpected curiosity. It had been ‘!ong time since he loafed in Pug Downey‘s place. The same dried alliâ€" gator skin hung on the wall, the same pictures of a hunter shooting ducks and of a girl in red tights; greasy‘ it seemed after the lightâ€" house. He saw Pug Downey, peeking around the end of the bar. ‘"‘I‘m looking for Ed Baker," Deâ€" long announced distinctly. A halflozen men loitered in front of the pootroom, talking in low mutters, Delong examined the crowd with a quick eye. He knew none of them; none except the pilot of the ‘boat he had paid well an hour before, ‘and that individual gave him a friendâ€" ly nod. A stuffy odor of smoke and ‘poor alcohol swept out into the damp air as he opened the door. Oil lamps were burning; one on the wall in a tilted bracket smoked furiously. ; "Oh!‘" said Delong. He frowned, with his hand across his face. "You mean thea, Nelson, that the men over in the town are angry at me because my dam went out?" "Thab‘s it." J ‘ "An they‘re planning trouble?" | ‘‘That‘s it," replied Nelson. "Thanks," Delong answered, "I‘ll go see." "I‘ll come along," offered Nelson. "No. Better not. You live here. You don‘t want to make enemies. Thanks again. M take Erickson. "I mean I won‘t drink with you," "Who are you?" Delong asked. had believed his son "afeared." the cleared sky annoyed him as he glanced aloft. There they twinkled, each in its place, as if the tragic antics of a crazy world were none of their keavenly affair. They looked a long way off toâ€"night and very cold, as cold as ice, as remote as stranâ€" ’m as disinterested, as unsympaâ€" thetic. For the first time in his life he wflu’ for clonds to clothe them decently, to cover them, to shield ‘thom from his eyes. ~Few lights burned in the town. In a hollow of darkness below the hill, the disgraced Tamarack River hid its shame. Norman shook a wet mist from his eyes. A chill wind, that came from nowhere, struck ! "I guess it wasn‘t your idea the thing would wbreak," Pug Downey ‘eut in hurriedly. J 1 ‘"No, it wasn‘t my..idea,", Delong [unswered, "God knows that, but it may have been my fauit." | _ Norman waited ontside the mission house; he was unwilling to fate more people. A chill air had settled with the darkness. He shivered. Damp clothing rubbed his skin. There had been no chance to dry off completely. His legs ached ‘horribly. His head burned. Unreal, monstrous, this whole business here in Madrid seem:â€" ed, unreal and monstrous as the enâ€" tire day. The sight of the stars in _ "I have my father‘s boat," Norâ€" man answered. "I don‘t know about Julie." "I go her way. If you‘ll take Sue . . ." he hesitated. "I‘d like to hurry, Erickson. There‘s just a chance some one may have come across Fritz." Out in the wet unlighted street, Delong reached down and rubbed his ankle. f The crowd heard with embarrass ment. None spoke. Only Ed Baker, seeking the exit, on the way passed Norman. "We‘re on edge, all of us," he said. ‘"We‘d better be getting home. I can drive you, Erickson." _ "You‘re fine material f8r the coast guard," the lawyer said, brushing off his borrowed coat. "Now if any of the rest of you gentlemen have anyâ€" thing to say about that dam . . ." "Oh, you," he muttered under his breath, "well, I‘ll pay you a nice price for this, Erickson."‘ Baker resisted the attack. But he was unprepared. From the standâ€" point of the audience, who had watched Baker use his big hands many times withhappy results, the redâ€"haired Delong won before the surfman started. R "I don‘t care what kind of fishin‘ you do â€"â€" baitâ€"castin‘â€"fly â€"fisbin‘â€"trollin‘ or just plain everyâ€"day still fishin‘ with live baitâ€"if you use Hildebrandt Spinâ€" ners you‘ll get more fish," says Slim Eli. "Hi Hildebrandt tells me in his Hildeâ€" brandt‘s Hints what baits to use and how to ase ‘em. € I‘ve followed his adâ€" vice for thirty year or more and I‘ve been gettin‘ my share of fish and having a heap of sport." Jr. Pr.â€"Donald Hamacher and Roy Boshart (equal), Marie Gingerich, Alice Shantz, Incz Witzel, Sandford Hagedorn, Alvin Brickman. Ist.â€"Gerald Richl, Dorothy Boshâ€" art, Wallace Jutzi, Anna Haas, Orlâ€" and Gingerich, Emery Jantzi, Walton Bowman. Sr. I.â€"Jack Riehl 81 hon., Marvin Jantzi 75 hon., Raiph Battler 72, Cameron Honderich 67, Monroe Julzi 66, William Richl 61, Reta Battler 53, *Michael Gerber (absent}. Jr. IL â€" Alicé Witzel, Laveme Jantzi and Orville Bowman (equal), Addison Jutzi. Sr. Pr. (A) Edgar Kennel, Audrey Bowman, Ear] Schwartzentruber. (B)â€"Menetta Jutzi, Pearl Snider Lottie Brickman, Ward Hagedorn. Jr. Ail.â€"Lauretta Jutzi §3 hon., Ruth Schwartzentruber 79 hon., Burâ€" ton Bowman 74, Austin Zoeller 74, Mildred Jutzi 73, Greta Lotz 73, Rudy Gingerich 62, Morgan Witzel 58. Sr. IV.â€"Christian Gingerich 75% hon., Verlus Witzel 65, Cecil Gardner Jr. IV.â€"Eden Good 79 hon., Viola Schneider 76 hon., Ellen Haas 75 hon., Verdella Battler 63. SCHOOL REPORT Report of S. S. No. 10, Wilimot, for months of April and May. Names marked with asterisk absent for one or more examinations. 62. Sr. III.â€"Ilene Riehl 78 hon.. Eileen Kennel 75 hon., Laverne Good and Leona Jutzi 66 (equal), Wayne Shantz 50, *Stevanus Gerber. others appeared. He did not speak as Julle left, only held her warm hands. The ligh@s of the Delong car made swaying ribbons up the Tamarack road, jerked suddenly to the left, and disappeared around a bend: Sue Stocking drew the assiâ€" stant keeper‘s arm into her own. ~ (To be continued) You‘ll Get More Fish with Hildebrandt Spinners ARTHUR FO8STER â€" â€" Manager W. R. BRICKER and JOMN FIBCHER â€" â€" _ inspectors C. A. BOENM INSURANCE AGENCIE® LIMITZO Distriot Agents L. W. SHUH _ â€" + + President W. Q. WEICHEL â€" Vieeâ€"President J. Howard Simpson . Oscar Rumpel! Richard Reechman Edgar Bauer Uetablished 1863 AssETs ovER $1,400,000 GOVvERNMENT DEPOSIT $100,000 n.:-h:.-nun.to.. 240 Hith 8t., Logansport, ind . Goods called for and delivered. library by having your favorite magaszine beund into books. tial Open evenings _ _ _ Motor Loans & Discounts Ltd. 129 King St. W., Kitchaener, Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks Smanced. All deaiings confdes Bookbinder 17 Queen Bt. N. Phone 2006 Add more books to your home C. A. BOENM INBURANCE AQENCIE®, LIMITED J. C. Lehmann Officers and Directore Company Phones 700 and 701 L. O. Checkley, teacher. Hildebrandt‘s Hints is FREE to all fishermen who want to :'n the fishing trips. Send in your name and address Kitchener Accountants and Auditore Authorized Trustecs, Assignose, ote. Income Tax Counsel _ 206 Weber Chambers. Phone 1906 FIRST MORTGAGRS farm property, Ref DR aA C. BROWX, D.tll&m sor to Dr. U.‘B. Shants. Graduate of Bellerue Hospital, New York. DR. 8. H. D. 8. BOWLBY, B.A., LLB., Burt ttjrm._l‘nmu Bring in your harness and have it repaired and oiled ready for spring use. AUDITORS & ASSIGNRES Mico Arna R. Bean Miss Emma L. Bean, F.T.0.M. Tenachers of Piano, Singing, and ‘Theory. Private and class in etruction. Studios 48 Roy S4., Phone 1171M, Kitchener. WATERLOO MUSIC CQO. Day or Night. Home â€" 178 Queéen St. $. CHIROPRACTOR Office 44 Willlam 8t., Waterion Mutual, at the lowest promiums in the city. G. F. Lackmer, Ast WALTER D. INRIG & CO. 8 Holm Apartments, Young 8t Phones: Office 1328J. Hâ€"1328W. L220 20 0 0€°_0> 7+ 20000, A8S, 170 Queer St. N., Phone 116TW. 182 King & & Musilc and Music !nstruments Bechtel & Dreisinger FUNERAL SERVICE Bpecial attention paid to extras tion _ and chfidren‘s diseases. Office 35 King st. 'r‘ Kitchoner. Phone 644. Kitchener, Ont. 18 King Ot N. ~â€" Waterieo i. G. H. HARPER, Dentist, Office in Oddfeliows Block, 33 King Bt. South, Waterloo. Phone 149. 110 Weber Chambers, King 8t. W. Kitchener. Phone 1164. & J. & HETT, SPECIALTY, DW molm-r.‘l\nu-‘m. King 3t. Hast., Kitchener, ". 8. H. HCKEL, Dentist, Office in Bank of Montreal Bldg, Waterioe. Phone 114 P&M.‘M .u“, ,'u' Th tor, Notary Public, ete. Queen St. South Phone §38, KB Bt. N. Phone 120, Kitchener, Ont at ELECTROTHERAPEUTIGT We specialize in SHOE REPAIRING W. J. 8CHMIDT, Exper* MONEY TO LOAN CHIROPRACTIC SHOEMAKING CHIROPRACTOR MEDICINAL Music DENTAL Shoe Repairer St. W., Waterioo HOUSE