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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1936-3-5, Page 7ounty and. District Jaunt in t, wall -known Lucknow aR1feR;�'bresent holidaying with his We L Tlorida, • was taken seriously 111 and entered a hospital there last Reek. Ilia son, Wesley Joynt, Immr- o/time new demo to 6e with bL, father. Eapaged Kra Robert T. Elpfie announces the engagement of ber youngest daughter, rears' Elisabeth, to Mr. Jos. H. I). hall, son of Mr. and Kra Freak peahen. all of Klppen, the marriage to lake pace In St. Andrew's church. Kip- - Iga� 0s. Saturday, March ,21st. Hesse Burned Wm. Darr, Howlck farmer, lost his home by Ire on Monday, February 1Ttb, when an overheated stovepipe —alighted by neighbors, saved most of the furniture, but could not subdue the llamas. Rome Insurance was carried. Rabbit Quilt A Parkhill man has solved the prob- lem of keeping warm In bed this cold winter by making • One quilt out of the aides of rabbits killed by himself g�__friends. It is pointed out that $ tanned rabbit skin robes have lad been popular In Western Canada -and are said to be one of the reasons why "you don't feel the cold" out there. Crushes Feet Fred Waghorn, forty -five-year-old °retinae man. was painfully Injured some days ago when a tree, which he was assisting to fell, crushed his right' foot, breaking some banes and lacerat- ing the leg- in company with ---Me- Schelek, of t'sborne, the men was working on the latter's farm when he misjudged the side lath of the falling Wee. 14. was taken to Victoria hoe - • THE SIGNAL GODERICH, ONT. 116 Jersok g Steer Some days ago, George Grein, who lives near Mildmay, loaded some cattle on to his truck sad started for Toron- to. Alerut tkree miles down the road one of his steers, not liking the travel- ling accommodations, gave a mighty bouno, cleared the nigh rats of itrc truck and lauded In a snowdrift. Some neighboring farmers helped get It aboard again and on ice way to the raker kyardr. biome of Mr. tiretnhr neighbors think that he would have found It profitable to keep so unusual an antmai for exhibition purposes. Wim Race Mrs. Glen 1)esJardine, of Grand Itend, is said to he doing well after having been rushed to a London hoe - WWI over blirssrd-swept roads, two th vital, London ' MOW Out 7*aN alls the mill for a load of slop. He drove a team hitched to a bobsleigh. but struck a drift from -Go In ■ few short weeks the snow shovel will exaln give plate to the spade. Skits, snowshoes and states wiii ` r w-te- ter and the shrill whirr of the lawn mower will be heard in the land. In the meantime _plana_cau bre the garden. On this point at least, ex- perts will agree, that a garden plinned in advance 1. off to a big bead start over those which are Just disown to- gether on the first warm day of spring. Useful Helps All that will be needed for these valuable prelimlgary plans will be a a.0 i-Mi-iM• of her !aunty to be operated upon for lugue. 1t a government bulletin on apptendlcltls thin wluter. After four gardening can be added, so much the hours of desperate battling with the better. The catalogue however, is elements at their worst, Mrs. Denier - dine It should be of Cana- diue war plated upon • London -bound ilea origin, because the secede and di - train at Exeter. The trip from her icvtiuua listed therein have been chose home to Exeter was made on an open en with our own Canadian climate In sleigh and good fortune brought a train view.. Catalogues today are more at the critical moment. than, miteBatso4 flowers and vege- Ow ter the Sleightables. Mach outer valuable infor- mation 1s given. 1}'or lntance, along Another bit of evidence that the with each flower there 1s a desert" - sleigh has, at least temporarily, .come tion of color, height, time of blooming Into its own again comes from Tiver- ton. On a drift -blocked road near that village a Toronto track ease to grief and was abandoned foe' pose days by its owners. Finaliy two focal and some intimation whether the var- iety is frost resistant and if It is suited to sun or shade. All these points will prove of good service, espe- cially to the beginner. if a mixed boys. Elmer Shewfelt and Gordon border 1. to be laid out it is important Avis, saw a chance to do their good,that the smaller plants be placed In decal, au they hitched up the big sieigtrthe front, and one will want to know and went out after the stormhoundltn advance whether the cotors are -go. horseless carriage. They cleared it tog to match. `Time of dowering, too, from Its impeding drift, loaded 1t on la good information to have, because, the sleigh and completed a good Job :knowing that, it 1s possible to plan a by faking Eb. copveyanceTrigt into continuous show of liloom tight through Kisco rd :the season. •, fRir Mar Blyth set out some Leap Veer Children lemma News of the Farm } wlSolent bacteria in the soil to Inoco- 1 late successfully n fresh seeding. Bac- , Leila of some legumes survive In the w roti longer than others without the !host plant. Reteut experiments itnts ludl- ar • e Nutra and comments on hate that red clover bacteria may ids Agricultural Topics Notes in soil better than alfalfa and sweet clover. or pea and vetch bacteria. After a laps re - With regard to the export of live ?shrubs of years, therefore, inoculation appears less urgent with poultry from Canada to the fulled rtd clover thou with the others. mai- ;Mattes cheer is uu duty1•:veu where the roil contaIus sufti- shrubs and an ocesalonal trailing vine I y charged o° Tient bacteria to produce tsalolrs, rr over verandahs or garages will bring -� �� t,t thlrtk�c•Oatarn crates', but a luoeulutiun may be of benefit. 1° the whole thing tugetller. e' tier give the home the appearao tladiaa.•shlppsr,.- part et the Iundsca{oe rather than some urn their crates tutu ('anode, un- rigid affair ndecag out of the earth• (1 , prior to ablpplug the poultry";hi :feria. Therefore, reinoculation may • -he met. Vegetables the United Statra, the lauadlan able Canadian. customs ".T es being .don Linda.y Smmith 1 has the crates pruDerI. hand, should be planted In straight of Canadian manufacture. A customs rows But here, fou, a little plannitag !stamp is pieced by the customs' Farmers should realize, however, will help. There are a great Many ton woodereeratee and a metal seal is that lnoculatlon is only our factor !° new varieties now available In Canada Iattached to metal crates. In order the production of a sueee8aful legume and by the Ilberal use of some of these I to have this stamp placed on the coops, crop and cannot overcome other unfav- orable things, and by aduptlug the It moat ter requeetrd by the Cauadlau, factors smell as poor seed, acid rule to make at least three s owinga of ; shipper, soil, poorly prepared seed bed, etc. The each variety a week or ten days apart, • • • _ only unfavorable factor It can ove4;. The big advantage o[ the vegetable - a '; U' B' thelfilt virion. and The trade In live poultry Prow (an- pestrer the soli is In nitrogen the garden getht at the door f 11 value In Ith xfreshness, I oda to the United States has again Rao ter the gain vflll be from lnocala- but torespect become a factor of considerable im r It Is important to have a new supply coming along frequently. Therefore the modern gardener instead of plant- ing all his peas, lettuce or carrots on the same day puts some in the first week and more a little later. - rgallega-baep• a tied and pour strains of nodule bat' POULTRY EQUIPMENT veryhelpful b • introducing att,. reliability bee e'ot well to m IArr p y a good emetic Das become' •o mem karwfl tbM- rtr►le of bacteria into the Boll having �T..owq Hatched" b .paiveiersl to . c , -ws..ts.al Oa.l+RY. higher tower to fix aft -ogee ta•.ta«Is�uE.eor■.Gn.da•. bus help the crop and the loll. =drat the Jamsew.y off and Thursday, March 5th. 1986-7 and td OM. a., w reduced to Ley tante to the poultry Industry in Weak - ern Ontario as a result of the tariff reductions made effective under the recent Canada -United States trade treaty. Daring January, 190O, ablp- ments of live poultry to nearby United States points, chiefly Buffalo, N.Y., TOWNSHIP COUNCILS ASHFIELD The township coasell met February 7th, all members present. The coun- This is the time, according to the amounted, according to unofficial fig- cil and °dicers took the oath of alle- horticulturists, that motet damage oc- ores, to 11,233 head. In January, Vile a to lila Majesty King Edward curs to rouses, perennials, fruit trees 183.;, shipments totalled only 566 head. Minutes of January sleeting were and other plants which winter out- By the terror of the treaty the United read and approved on motion of Sher - doors. Warm days that tempt too Matt* duty on live poultry was fixed wood and McI)onald. early growth, with near zero nights at four cents per pound. It previously Moved by Sherwood and Culbert, immediately after, and cold, drying had been eight cents per pound. sad earrtd, that !larch 20th be the winds from the north or west are re- i Shipments are made up largely of edit ds) for payipg taxes and all par- aponstble. Very tender things wild (owl. Prices on live fowl at Montreal tyy -be netitleti that seizure would be benefit from a light covering of atraa. and Toronto at the present, time are erode leaves or even old newspaper'', for a approximately Oce tents higher than The auditors gave their report, few weeks until spring really arrives. last year. which N'ae received on motion of Mo- p Nature's own rotection snow, Is often • Donald and Sherwood. "There ha l+ea * r and erw absent. ' Hay Narket Report .Mo.eil by Culbert Sb pod FORMER BA!'FISID RESIDENT a u pravticelly noebeag 1aM eateeed, that tale -auditors be paid In the hay marketing situation during,ttve.dollars such for extra work int - Windsor, March 4.—Application has the past mouth. Large supplies of ' posed by the Government. been made to Leap year has produced the modelFor sort garden layouts informal • probate of thethe willl ofrth Lel: t Altrid' growerstno t `!rep are still arailabte lu The following bills and accounts Count for crop of odd storks, but no more un- planting, say the experts, Is the utast tJemea Barge, formerly of 478 Fie- halo.. The demand is gen. i were ordered paid, un 'notion of usual than that emanating from Wing- suitable. True, It is possible with I coria avenue Windsor Ont oral eal ly poor at precut owing to lur' Fr 01 n iA;�p to t!» mm. be •b r.- flit lire. $. k3- Idoyd ` s �uttads-int * it" -111" ri!' ! e trrmtea}•y„arketa and Ice Wish. _lie unhitched and returned to utast of ble home, tomos the sleigh; Tor berg ear eh - When be again ref ti — for the Neigh 1 P;itiTIa tike storm had blown the drift level 192'[. In and be could not find bio property. Cromer. Slow he 1s waiting for the thaw. in Guel A Roundabout Trip eclebrat A Toronto friend addressed a Christ- though fmall b Mas letter to Rev. C. J. Moorehead* of Brussels, Ontario. In the rush of the four ye bunch marked """"s 1 brooders. feeders .nd w•t•re �o all i= .t••1 Deets. I*ying r.gee, wt .pro tete, eat aermua4,r. and complete brooder bower. Mosal.ctsr.ra of ail hinds o/ahe,. Twetal 6e.tttt,fg mater est hs. v..lacel l..w., dsel•f OMA. diner* A. K. Aspden asked pay for damages to ht* car on No. 8 highway. The local municipality having no control over that road, nothing was done. Department of Health, read and filed. The Bureau of Municipal Affairs drew attention to the form of the auditors' report; the treasurer Informed the council that these errors had been corrected. Mr. M. H. Lowden entered action 1n the Goderteh Division Court for pay for work reputed done- The clerk was instructed to enter a defence on the ground that the townahlpdoes not owe him anything. The collector's time was extended to round up all delinquents. The following accounts were ordered paid: Wee, McLean, re- lief supplies, $12; Goderleh Star, print- ing, $11.80; grant to Clinton Stock Fair, $20; Mr. Jenner, rilter auppflce, $4; C. G. Lobb, relief supplies, $12' Council then adjourned to meet cm Monday, April 6, at 1.30 p.m. R. C. Tfit)MPSON, alert. 'TKa-saYre`ti► s-aslale= r i 1 �r ptsmpc,.-tinr►agaami=ruPPUese being the parents of two leaky to do aomesh nje__.►uh_>I,crnightdiggl_.,, t �atJ.11lLt1g„ypttpelagl tldren. The ' e14er, "$hlrlek .lied "ii{lifk and-bitreara. 1111. -ice- file-- ttu3 , was burn on ,February 28th, I average case planting irregularly in oda, $513,737.541; real estate. $8.4451: Galt. The younger, Harry clumps will produce the most pleasing bonds and c•a-h on hand, $13 77'. was born February 29tb, 1932, effects. Such planting, too, will add ph. Shirley on Saturday last au air of spaciousness, giving even• tri her second birthday al- ' Buy backyard gardens the appearance she Is eight years old. while of much larger affairs. Where at all rather enjoyed his first after , possible there should be • bit of lawn ars A real party; with a 'In the foreground, with an irregularly of wondering kids in to help. ; abutted bed of dowers around the this near -record event. • edges and possibly group. of shrubs at ga I the corners. screening of harsh n people are *1111 wondering 1 straight lines about the house and he Ideatlty of the occupant of ;drives with clumps of flowers and erlch car which blocked the moment the letter was sent tp Brus- sels. Belgium, where it was delivered, is doe course, to a man named Moore- house. Reallzing the error, the lat- ter redirected the letter to Brussels in Ontario and It arrived a few days ago with • friendly covering letter, from rasa, out of Clinton a week ago Sunday wltleh it 1s thought probable a -liked- 10-11 very Inennetderate way. The skip Is likely to spring. plow had' just forced ■ passage through a drift nn Vinegar Hill, allowing farm traffic Its first chance In some days to get Into town. A email racing - came along and, without stopping to investigate, 'Reused into the new pa which was fiT for ratters hot too soft for ears. The racing car Muck. Its driver made no great effort to get nut, contenting himself with sitting in hie car, blocking traffic whleh was forced to tarn back- Eventually some people bad to get through, so they dug the obstruetIng car out with, the driver apparently enjoying the spectacle. Considerable feeling was aroused but local people were glad to see the last of the bumptious driver. Ctinto tut tot the God 'New Pep Lnergq Brophy Bros. THE LEADING nAAND EsllIAI11111111 Ambulance service at all boars, day or night PHONICS: Stere 111*. Sar. !1T GODERICH R. Wheeler Funeral Director and Iksbakner AU rails promptly attended to day or night -AMBULANCE SERVICE - PHONES Store 835 Reeldenee 355* Hamilton Street, Godericb Walter Dalton f NDRRTAAb.R iluron Old Roy. Graduate Ooderich Collegiate Institute 13510 Weat Warren Ave,. DETROIT, MiCIi. Telephone Oregon 8668 LEEBURN LEEBURN, March 4. -Mir Wrreljs Horton spent a few days in Ooderfch this week. Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Horton and daughter Eva were to Goderich on Friday lata celebrating the eighty- sixth birthday of Mr. Morton's moth- er, Mrs. James Horton. She is to be congratulated on being spared to live to such a good age. Sunday next, March Sth. will be the sixty-fifth •vnlversary of the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ('ook. We offer our copgratulatfons. Miss Alma Bellows, from Stratford Normal School, bad some holidays at home last week. The February meetIDg of the Wo - metre Mlswlonary Society was held on Wednesday of last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Horton, with a fair attendance. Mrs: Horace Horton was Leader of the meeting. A short husineaa meeting was held first and roll call was given. Then the pro- gram for the World's Day of Prayer was followed. several members taking part. After the closing benediction i dainty hunch was served by the hst- ess and her daughter. Fred Horton is laid tip with a sore Isiek. the result of a sudden collapse of sno* salol► -tame on him while he ass working In the hush. Only with the asst -fence of Albert Wolfe, who CAMP to the rescue, was he able to free himself from the accumulated anew. We hope he will have a speedy reov ery from hIs Injury. FEAR All fear Is In ItepH painful, and, she n It conduce not ta safety, is painful without ter. Every mushier - allot'. therefore. by which groundltrts terrors may he removed adds smile thing to human happinese.-Johnson. HOW TO "KEEP EDUCATED" Reed Deily the warm -sow Constructive New. 1. TiRR CUUI$TIAlr i1N7R1rCR MONITOR Aso Isterw.M.w.l Deny N.ur.p.p.r Si .few N /a! •...I._.es. .•ey .r. ael dee orvi owner oleo sad *maw no ar fee .nim.. •T.r acme• nes••-....• u to u. Sew nee.. 11 W eefineMty emirs meet to .a t*. tomer- * own ile.r.•.. 111.01r, e•I.r w .t.frr.rer ••••••401••, o• me - semis r.tttw.l reitnew st........r .r .•....t ..r. mW er. The O.rtsu.D SS...• p.welows await, ow.. Werway West, 5..t.., Y..r.Mrtts Mays evert my .e.a.rlatw t. nr Otenttan aenem nl.twrseter w'er~.a.ee Mlines. - Waeasi.• searMOas .e M. Nara toeless N.. } smelt noes .. sweet The late Mr. Barge, who•c death oc- curred in Windsor on February 13th, was born in 1,448 in Kettou. Rutland - shire, I0ngland. After leaving Eng- land, he moved with his parents to Hayfield, Ontario. and later hook up re- sidence In Cleveland, Ohio, where. be engaged in the plate glass business. About thirty-five years ago he retired from active life and took up residences in Windsor. SNAPSHOT CUIW re Vou GettingSmudgy Pic t$ilet 4�Ci "�}• Beak:. of 7$entmet;`'rrnf " 01`'r' "IL- does. not always !soy is assume that those who -diHaldane.-with-post-aret • 1'on,rl r , e y .T"r ]t.,; (11Qurd !flake, sheep Ignorant." --J. B. 8. tlzmarket is still re•rlving suave Iclalt6. $6; i.'Kiipetrkk, sheep vainer, _ hay feom Eastern Ontario. large ;12; Lorne McKenzie, bulbs for street - - quantities of market hay are reported Bight*, $13.20; Municipal World, dog • generally throughout the Province and i tagi and -supplies, $:30.99; Art ('ourt- particularly from the northerly sec: lacy. tenet account, $10; Samuel Swan, tions and the Ottawa Valley. In flue i relief etecount. $5; Wilfred McCarthy, heavy alfalfa hay producing arca Ix ' ealatias ar�r. $18;. Lee (Tare, sal- twtrn Mnrkdale r amf.-ettL■ry �Tx;-+Tee t•Inity, a fair- q tits of alfalfa bay Wawa nosh, assessment on Girvin }isbeing- ground totoa�eal. The !drain, $711.20; Pedlar People. freight flow prices being paid for this hay are I eM snow fence, $5.M.;; Charlet, Con - enabling the grinders to compete on l gram, widening road, $7.00; Herb. Iexport markets with this product. 1('urran, salary. 19.90; herb Curran, Prices per- ton to growers are: For work of men. 92.10. No. 2 timothy mixtures $7.:0t4-_$M.utt, Bylaw No -3. re expeilaillre oahigh- for-Na: 3 ..tO td -$11,1111, for alfalfa $4 ways, was duly passed, on motion of to $10 depending on location, and for McDonald and Sherwood. straw $250 to 0. At Fort William eiOPRmnlxtures are sellint 'SI t $9 per too In car lots. _ C. -E. Iteli(Nf A4;H; Clerk. • • • • Provide Information _- T8i4'N-44P- 4P-fiftisEtt1(11 Ontario vegetable growers will have The township council met on Mon- et -curate amt up-to-the-minute crop, day, March 2. t:Omnlullh'atlona from storage and marketing Information, Hon. David A. Croll re relief read provided by the Provintial Govern- and filed; from H. 1'. ('ummings re meat, 8. H. H. •mons of the Ontario relief, also filed. A motion was passed itatiti-ticiI department 1pld the Grew-. authorizing the treasurer and Reeve Drs' Aseociaton at their convention In rto sign all cheques, etc., in behalf of TorontoPatterson,, the towuship. Mr. Patterson, maty The scheme is part of a Federal sys- tem sponsored by the Dominion Bur- eau of Statistics in co-operation with the Canadian Horticultural Council and Provltjal Governments to gather crop growing, yield and marketing in- attention to the fact that the clerical formation. superintendent -should be bonded; this The Ontario wirier, as planned ten- was left over Until next meeting. De- tatively, will Include publication of partmcnt of Highways wrote regard. Ore reports, Mr Symons said, the first ing the road euperintendents' confer - rer g n ala Council then adjourned on 'notion of Milkmaid and Frayne. Fascinating wlntsr scenes of all types can ba snapped Jnax- p.nsivecameras .Du 1st the winterwith stop you. THERE are in this world many amateur snapehooters who simply do not give their cameras a "break." They complain of smudgy looking pictures and sometimes believe some- thing Is radically wrong with the camera. The exposures are correct and developing done carefully in fresh. clean Chemicals but stilt, they say, the final results are smudgy looking prints. You have looftled through dirty eye-glataee with probably a few lin- ger prints on them. It you haven't :Ca a sure bet that you have ex- perienced the difficulty of looking thro...;h a smudgy window. Clean eye -glasses and clean w:ndowe give clear vialnn and similarly the cam - ern cannot "sew" act well 1f its eye (the lens) is cloudy and smudgy from greaso, linger prints and dust collected over a period of months. Cleaning a.lens Is a very simple operation. All you need is a soft. nn •tarc•hed linen handkerchief and per- haps it match or pencil, It the lens is quite small. The rear surface of the lens can easily be reached by remove ing the heck of the eamera. it the camera has a double lens (one behind and one in front of the shutter dia- phragm), the front combination may he removed by turning to the lett, which will alfow ym1 to work through the shatter opening when set for "time," with the handker- chief over the end of the mateh nr lead pencil. it the lens 1s quite Qlrty breathe on 11 and then'rob Welty with the handkerchief. Ile sore, whon replacing the front lona, to *crew it back into the shutter aa far as 1t will go The snggsetloa b work through the shutter opening also appllee to cleaning the front surface of single lenses fitted to box cameras ant certain folding models. }candle the lens carefully and don't exert too mach pressure. It Isn't necessary and might; scratch the surface. The amount of pleasure you get out of your camera depends almost entirely on how much thought and care you give it. Picture taking is just like golf, tennis, basketball or bowling - the more you experiment. the more thought you give to your fi•'•bY.'hp greater your reward In self satisfac- tion. There are many good hooks avail- able on amateur photography hot f. ' of the latest off the press is called "How To Make Good Pietnres." rt 1s packed with sound advice for tho beginner or the adv: need amateur and profusely illaatrau•d c,i,h pie.• tures of every tyt+e, d1•e;,r1:• Is host what have yon. it might be call.0 "The Amateur Photogrnph••r's Hof erenes Book," but don't think for one minute 1t 14 as "dry" as 'etch a name might Imply. You can no doubt purchase this book from stores that sell camerae and photographic sup- plies or secure It in your public, li- brary. Remember that your camera la n precision Instrument and should he treated as such. Know your cholera its ltraltations or its verustIlity give careful thought to enmpo.itloto and storytelling posethtltti^s ease Fo$wtll be well along the WAY t,, take the kind of pictures of •vhleh yea will he proal. la the lona in your camera, fella•• Galli member. clean' JOHN VAN (i('11.11p:R Cement Silos bling, House and Barn a anon. Our representailvs• • ivitl be at Bedford Hotel, Goderlch, on Fri- day, the Oth and 13th of thin month, from 1 o'clock to 5.30, when you can have your job figured on, and dates ar- ranged for. 18, not leave this off until the sea- son gets tate, as we are booking or- ders almost every week. HUUILL BROS. Contractors, Sea - forth. Phone 34-616, Clinton. ager of the Royal Bank, wrote in re- ference to cheques pawing at par; in future a small charge may be made for tbla_eervlce. The Department of Municipal Affairs drew the Reeve's to be issued May 1, giving estimated acreage of various crop. and the pro- portions of such acreage for market- ing and canning. The second, Issued June 15, will provide a further check on acreage and Information on grow - Ing conditions. A third, July 15, will cover crop conditions and marketing prespecta, and a fourth, September 1: will record marketing prices. The fifth, November 5, 5111 record the yield, storage amounts and marketing prices during the year. New Hsatitulturel Head J. B. Spencer, B.S.A., of Ottawa, WAS elected president Of the Ontario Horticultural Association at the thir- tieth convention of the Association held recently at Toronto. No .tan in Can- ada I* more worthy of this honor, for he has devoted Ola life and talent. to the betterment Of Canadian horticul- ture and agriculture. As a snereaaful horticulturist, and expert agricultur- Ist. author, and trained newspaper matt. Mr: teps•n(er has never spared himself In the Intereets pertaining to horticulture and agriculture. For several years' he hat been en of- • icer of the Ontario Horticultural As- soriatlon. la it pest president of the �ntnwa Hnrtleultural Society, it mem. !ter of the Canadian Motets' of Teclint- gni Agrlenbturists, n graduate of (tn- tnrio Agricultural Col 141M and is an active member of the Federal District t'ommlaslon, Ottawa. Ile Is also rum- ens as a rose -grower, and in cotmmtn• itt' circlet' has given much practical rolvie'vin the growing of trees In ray street,. lie was aeeretary and editor of the Dominion Government agrit•itl- tnral commlation which studied the cartons phases of production, [•siring, and marketing of baron In Denmark and in the United Kingdom. ills re. port. together with other bulletins col-ering the sheep, ieef, and swine In- dn.tries, are authentic works of 're- ference e- feren e - . • • • _.l .. Legume Immolation This flaw of pest when farmers are hulking preparation for sorting. the question arises whether or not alfalfa, clover or other legume weed should he tnnr111atpti before ...wing. The a seer depend*** IlewsNe• ostatanceA' Where a legume Is grown for the first time the proper mobile forming haeteria are often tacking In the moil. and Inoculation la strongly' offered Where the aamr erne it. la en Drown 'Within a fe•w year. there are probably' ) ence at London on March 24 and 25, The superintendent 1s expected to at- tend. Hospital for Sick Children, asking a grant, no action taken. Mr. Hien i-Oothes FOR WINTER Come -ice-amd look over -our Winter Samples —fey are the very best Everything that's new in Men's -Wear at this time of the year. Chas. Blade Zast Street and Square GODERICH r - Coal Business As Usual ' Chestnut and Stove Anthracite, Pocahontas and Domestic Lump Coal. Alberta Lump Coal from the Foothills of Alberta. DISCO—this wonderful Coke with the gasses left in it. All orders given prompt attention and all the Coal is weighed on the Town!". wales (your scales). Chas. C. Lee —COAL YARD AND OFFICE' AT TIIE HARBOR— Phones—Office 22. House 112 Ooderich McKinley's CHICKS 43sir Ilad•hery program includes Government approvtsl sixth year blood -testing for five years and 'apechil feeling of Breeding eltea•k for vitality in the ('bkke.. i1 inlS•:titles the setting of choir!, eggs carefully incubated end hs ice her}.tb preserve their vltallty. It also Includes a pnletical sanitatloa program to protect their health. THAT'S Wlll TIII LIVE BETTER. THAT'S Will THEY GROW BETTER. TII:1T's WIil T1IE. PAY BITTER. For further information. call, 'phone nr strife The hn Mherc 1•. h..mt,rl on the Goebel' Linc, tttant•i Thr 'phone rt111111a•r i« 97r11, Hernaall. The address is Zurich, Ont. We appreciate tonr e•ngnlrios and Moines. J. E. McKINLEY r ..-_...Lal.:.. _ .