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The Exeter Advocate, 1920-1-15, Page 6! tit t' k:4 , • Address eoinniunications to Agrononeett 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto How We Get Winter Eggs. Eges are pIentiAil ett the s rin simply because natural 'conditions ar then most favorable for heavy laying What we try to do therefore is to provide as nearly spring -time eared' tons as we ean in the winter. In ad (Utica we want good qaters and good management. While our market flocks are forced for all the whiter eggs we tan get out a them, we have a separate pen of fowls which we are going to breed from in the sprieg. These breeder are not eorced, becauee forcing al- ways eventuaily lowers vitality and eauses poor fertility. We have our houses as warm as is consistent wita proper ventilation, without having any artificial heat; this latter we believe to be a needless expense, if not ei positive danger. If the fowls are made to exercise suffi- ciently, thee, will need no supplied, heat. Where the weigher is more or lees changeable during the winter, the fowls should be protected from sudden (hinges, because they have a more dasestrous effect upon egg production than has extreme cold. In warnawia- ter weather, we throw the }tows we open during the clay, and. after night provide somewhat more than the usuel amount of ventilation. Then when the weather term eold, we eloee up the houees us tightly as we eau and still nmentain good ventilation, according to the severity a the Weather. Of curse, we use muslin 'curtains in the front of our house so that the fowls are alweys sure of fresh air. In regard to the number of fowla thee may safely be kept in a house of a certain size—we prefer six to eight, square feet of house room per fowl. Five feet per fowl is the mieimurn for beet results. Our houses are divided into pens ten by twelve feet each, and we keep fifteen fowls in each, thus giving' each bird eight square feet ofi floor space. The feed is important, or the ben! is like every other being in the respect that she millet prodace something from nothing, and she must be previa - ed with the proper materials for con- verting into eggs. The natural food of poultry is grain, inseets, bugs and worms, and green stuff. This makes such a well balanced ration that about the best thing we can do is to try to match it. We feed twice a day, morning and evening, with green food supplied at aeon. Our morning feedealways con- sests of a variety of dry grains seat- tered in a deep litter so that the birds will have to hunt and scratch for all they get. Exercise is necessery, for it is the busy ben that gets fat and per- sists in living the 'simple lee" when comes to producing eggs. At noon we supply soxne kind of green food, giving es great a variety as possible. Any k, ul of grass or. green etuff is ail r girt. eo are vege- tables, roots, hulbs ar‘d tubers of any sort that the birds will eat. If no! supply of fresh green food is available, the next best thing is to uee elfalfa; or clover hay freely. Ir can be fed0 dry but should also be steamed mul fed as mash occasionally. l The evening mash, fed the last thing1 before the fowls go to roost, is a moist' mash, consisting mainly of cracked cern, middlings, bran, etc. Sometimes on very cold days, we ,also give a feed of whole corn that has been thorough- ly heated because it helps keep the fowls warm. The water we use in mixing up the math is always warmed in winter. Sorae people prefer to feed the latish in the morning, with tire grain feed at night. This is all eight if it is more ;convenient, although we find that the fowls take more exercise if they are fed grains during the day. Birds usu- ally fill up pretty freely on soft food, being able to fill their crops in just a few moments. without exercise. This makes no difference in the evenieg when the fowls are about ready to go 2 to roost, but in the daytime we want i them to scratch and rustle around and exercise while eating. ; 1 Animal food in some form is neces- sary to take the place of bugs, worms, insects, etc. We use either ground beef scraps or green cut bane. Of 0 course, grit, shells, chareoal and good e drinking water 'are alw.ays accessible t to -the fowls. ach and then its branch to the lungs beeomes affeeted. The horse always g has a gluttonous appetite and that e helps to incluee heaves. The stomach and large intestines, distended with _ hay or other rough, bulky, dry, in - nutritious roughage, press upon the diaphragm and impair breathing. In all chronie eases of heaves the tine- aireehambers a the lungs break down and mane- chambers now are represented by few whieh -can not properly expel air. It is for that reason that the horse ism tie ab- dominal muscles to helpi empty the lungs and that gives the double, heav- ing action seen at the flanks. The heart usually becomes weakened. Medicine raay relieve the distress of 1 heaves and alleveate the cough; but it ean not restore the lot walls of xnyriads of small air -chambers; there- fore, chronic heaves, teehmeally tertn- ed "emphysema of the lungs," is in- curable. Make it the invariable practise not to feed any coarse, bulky roughage freely at noon to a horse that has to work hard immediately afterward. Al- low a hot, tired, sweaty horse to eat say, one pound of hay -while he is cool- ing off; then allow him drinking water, and then his feed of oats and bran. Give a good feed of hay the first ething in the morning and the bulk of the hay after oats 'twee been eaten, at night. A horse needs about one pound eaci of gram and hay for each hundred pounds of body weight, at three feeds, as a day's ration. Increase hay and decrease grain for an idle horse. At all times keep the; bowels active. Dry, or overripe timothy hay is most likely to cause heaves, Marsh hay also is bad, as is old, weathered threshed timothy or elover. Dry, dusty clover hay, fed as a well-nigh exclusive ration also Ls a fertile cause of heaves. Let the heavey horse live on green grass in etenmer, and wet oat -straw or bundles of eorn-fodeete roots and bran in winter, Do not allow him any bulky feed at Aeon and do not work him soon after a meal. Keep his bowels active, feeding bran and roots ,. • for that purpose. Proprietary remedies will alleviate the distress. So will Fowler's solution of arsenie; dose, ne-half ounce night and morning for a week; then increase to three such doses a day. Gradually discontinue the xnedicine, taking at least ten days to the process when the drug no longer is needed. The fumes from a bucketful of Beaumout erede oil placed en the horse's manger will relieve the cough af heaves. Drinking water slightly blued with indigo (washing blue) is highly recommended -for a heavey horse; and a farmer advised the other day that he can ahvays relieve the trouble by giving three -limes daily one pint of a decoction made by steeping evhate-pine needles in boiling water for twenty-four hours, adding more water as required --to maintain the original einotmt. -let them all go. As the.y ran altouti half and half, the cockerels ha've The 'Troublesome. I brought about e225, leaving as profit over $50 in cash •and a flack or one hundred and fifty fine pulleta. • When winter coulee upon us.. 1 I believe the average farrsees wire, people succumb to annoying colele. ,Ae: would have increased this prefit ey a rule, thereetre very good wt. -teens for' $50 to $75. This is the place o -here the thia afflicti°u" woman waturally excels the mate ie It is a strange but human tharactee- man once We me that he always raise istie that most people do not like to ed at least ninety-eighe per cent ef his lee off their easy -to -put-on summer Oakes, but I have hue, eataleeeed AS a underwear, and to get into the heav- specialist hi plain and faucy ier-weight garments. In fact, mauy ' In this flock the first feed given was pride themselvee on wearing the same rolled oats crumbled with enough hard uedergarmeuts summer and winter, boiled eggs to give a flavor, After arguing that it saves trouble, and three or four days they had 'ewe feeds they do not feel the need of rnaliieg a day oe eonneercial ehiee feed, and a e lunge, In certam parts of the -mile this may be all right, but we are not living in the tropics, If we are to continue living health fn the temperature zone, we should imitate nature and dress accordingly. a box of bran was given theen. When three weeks old the bran was changed to meat mash made of two hundred pounds of ground corn and (lets, ;me hundred pounds of bran, one hundred pounds of meetings, one hundred The birds seek a warmer climate, pounds of meat scraps ane fifty and theeanimaTs; who stay here put on pounds of alfalfa meal. This mash ,a heavier coat for the winter season. was their prineipal ration from that Even the fields welcome a thick, mom thee on. They stowed away great coverlet of white. Arid why shoal qematitiee of it and made rapid growth theehumen farruly try to toughen it - of bone and muscle, self through exposure, and the (lenge For the first two weeks the only el pneumonia. Mener. more sensib drink given was sour milk. We have in this regard than women, for the not had a case of white diarrhoea on underwear and outer garments, to the farm since we began using sour are of a type to protectethe body i milk several years ago. I would not stead of exposing it, advise anyone to change a method ofl Surely the sensible thing to do is t feedhrg unless it has proved unsatis- . dress aceording to the weether, and factory. Last spring one party wrote there is aro gainsaying the fact that that sour milk killed the eb.jaks and anyone who faces wintry !blasts partly another that rolledoats ga e theta clad, soon gets to have a weather-. white diarrhoea. A men mad his beaten look, which does not add to chicks drank so much sour milk he one's lovelieeee. was afraid they would burst, so he. Ia is better to live ;Artificial heat took it away from them. Thee fears , even if the windows have to he left. are groundless, There is nothing bet- ter than rolled SIMS and sour milk for ' "en' thaT to Sit hi damp' el'illY newly hatched chicks and they will! r"ma" (Atikivca are particularly sus - drink a great deal of the milk. Thel eeptible to 401.xls. They gee nearer the inore er Ian le les they will eat , andyoung of other food, but it ie easile digested; children are moee sensitive to respire - and nourishing and th d Itory troubles than older people wh . . a ey o wellon eee developed o . . is well to give them a box of ei.,,eisee,, ' e ain amount o bran also to counteract any teudeney ''''''""ee* ., toward constipation, Another cause a colds -is 'dressing Many farmers find it cheaper to buyover-warmly. Somethrice eareful par- ents are to blame here, in that they brooder may be purehased for $15 to load their children ereve. with wraps $25. Almost any building ten to fit"- so heavy that whet' the children bet teen feet square van be merle to serve t come active in play, they perspire as a brooder house if therm ghle clean, freely' Then if they sit down on the ed and lined with toned paper to con_ ground Or the steps, or come in and serve the heat. The window space on take off their wraps and the houee is the south should be liberal and. at least cool,- they catch cold. . A child's head one large window covered with Hole ;should rever be damp with perspire.: .1 muslin to provide ventilation. The tion when its wraps are removed, floor ;should be covered with clean, Carelessly - used handkerchiefs, dry sand to a depth of three inches, coughing and sneezing are oleo among no litter is necessary. e ( is e extol:, of colde. If one mem- , . Some of the advantages of the early' her of the family is so affeeterle he i hatehed over the late bated. emelt should be emris careful to over hi mouth with a fresh handkerehief whei too much to ase that cup, fete, spoon ;tied anything else which touches th live ofethe patient ellen be washed leY themeelves and boiling Witter pollee( ever them to sterilize them aeyone in the %Wig hoe a severe dld, he should AlSe reaeoeable means to get rid of it, and not wait "to wear it out," for not only is he likely to suffer mere thae wed be himself but to expose othere as well. The other members of the famile 6112% Interest , PAYABLE HALF YEARLY, e alieWed ou money left with us for from thine to tea years. I Write for Booklet. The Great West Permanent Loan Company. Toronto ice King St, West Bewasegre=an, ,-,airizsawegeasextesisslaszazeceus , Keep the ashes cleaned from under , the grate. With a Clean ash -pit the should use a simple gargle night and morning, and a noec spray; for throe fire will burn more et:afore-11y and -with 1' I- • • and nose are so apt to be poriale through which the germs enter. Extra care should be Wien at this time in cleaning the teeth, and the system should he kept free with laxative foods. A ;suitable gargle is made by taking one part peroxide of bytirogen, two paiits of listerine, and thee parts of water, or a few drops of liquid synol soap sbaken into one-fourth cup of xa water will do nicely for both gargle le ir 0, and tooth waele Oil of 'eucalyptus used as a nose spra.y has proved a decicted benefit. the system beemee weakened from a severe cold, the likelihood of catching more is greater, and not only . • • . is the general health and uutritina un - paired, but the lieelihocid Of eontraet- ing epidemic sae -seasonable diseases is greatly increased, • An eld rule warned, "Keep the feet dry, and the twee cool." in meter to avoid.colds, This is equivalent to say- ing, careful oe damp feet, do not ovdtheat your rooms, ami see to it thet they ere sufficiently well:wentilated SO that the air is pure night and day. Exhausted, breathed over .air and 4 high temperature are among •the con- ditions to be avoided. Where there is a marked auscepti- bility to cold,. it may not be sufficient to observe the eautiees given thus far, for scene people, and esneceally some eliildren, hey° very little resistance. Or they have what is known as sensitive, Moue membranes. Bodily vigt or may be built up by good food, a suitable amount of rest for the age of the Individual, and a carefally pre- scribed tonic. Just -what may suit you may not be' what wilt ifeed et all. You may discover that.. the Mem- nmes inside the eyelids and lips are; pale; your skin has a somewhat evaxyl appearancei and there are blue sha-1 (lows beneath the eyes. Your doctor' may .clecide that you need more iron, n your blood, and in that case be re -1 s commends the .drinking of more nil .and the eating of Miele wheat breadse • and cereals, and the takiig of somei t medicine With iron ,in M order to build up the red blood corplisesee. • That same physician may examine; rae an,d rnay dieccwer that f am euffer- Mg from indigest.lott, and so am tn.., Able- to make use of the body-building! , Material which my meals furnish. In 1 that case, he will probahly-reemmend , some partly pre-digested feed, and al ' digestive aid to assist hi, taking care 1- of my food. Or, again he may -dis- COVer that, the Mucous inembrances I are in a condition to beeome very ease , Inflamed, 'tied inay think at wise Ito gave something in an emulsion of !soothing oils -combined:with a special "tissue builder. So you see, it is not entirely safe to take the medicine which the doctim prescribed for an-'' other.' Look outf eolde, and yeti 1 will save yourself unneceesary stiffee- i Mg, lose of time and lowered effici- ency. The Early Hatched Chick. -Nearly everyhfarmer's wife figures on a little extra income from sales of spring chickens, but few are equipped to get the most.money out of them, e Those who do not use incubators have s to wait until the hens become broody and the chicks cannot be hatched w early enough to get them on the mar- w ket at a profitable price. To be marketed most profitably the chicks should be hatched in February o? March, or at least not later` than April. They will then be ready to turn off when the demand is good, the supply limited and the price•high. A little later. the 'supply is ample and the price drops, otten to a point where springs are sold at an actual loss. The colony brooders now in ese on many farms will easily handle four Or five hundred chicks and there is little f anymore labor involved then en ear - ng for a hen and her brood. I am no wizard at chick raising. I always ex - net to lase about twenty-five pet' cent, but even at that February and March hatched chicks are very profitable. In act, I believe there tseic, other branch f farm industry which will turn an ;peal profit in the same length of - Fat for greasing pans should be kept in it for applying it. Thee einge the time ' used in etepping to wash the hands. Children beep been deafened by a box on the ear. If you musteusc tbis method of punistment choose a part of the body where there are no ineide , week*. „ Thaw out frozen waterpipes with applications of Welt elothe dipped iv boiling water. Lees risk attende euch a process thnn is conneeted with. the use of lighted candles or lamps. ttle,mipara•wapor.,..1Cpm7.15.***..P.T I PVI ANTE D 01,1 try, New Luid Eags Da.ryLlutter, esane, Dolling, Peas, etc. Write for our Weekly Priee It and adviee what you have to eieet, Special Priceo for Fancy Quallty Gunn, Langtois, 8z Co., Lid, Dept. W. =outran', - Quo. are: The good pekoe veceiveci for surplus he coughs; to keep far enough away stock. from the rest so tleit they will no The work of brooding is simplified got his breath. In many families the leueetry basket is the receptacle for al and is over before the rush of regular farm work te on. soiled clothier:, and hantikerehiefs are The ehieks are pretty well grown dropped in there, trustieg that the before hawks and crows become trete Pr°cess ° laundering. -will sterilixe blesome. them. This cannot be depended upon, The pullets begin to lay early in the for gems are tenacious of life and fall and with proper care will keep it nutty people do not boil their clothes, up all winter while eggs aro at the but merely pour boiling water upon bestmaces. i ne In this way, not only handker- I. +40.....T. chief but other garnunte may become 1 the source of danger. risk,Run rio but dhinfcet ine ker- When a card of rour-foot wood sells' chiefs with a ,solution of carbolic acid for $8, any man with a woodlat he- , or something else which your druggist gine to feel that it is nearly as good as may recommend to you as safe and a gold mine, and eete about to take certain, The best plan is to wash the better care of it. 1 handkerchiefs by themselves, and to "Cut only dead and dying timber,"„ boil them thoroughly l'er at least is a good rule to go by thinning the' twenty minutes. standing trees for fuel. Many peoplet A. person with a cold should not put this in leases when renting land. sleep with anyone else, and it is not Others who sell farms and take mort- ...se...et ages, ave it inserted in the papers, ..a.......... ,.. hat if any timber is cut the proeeeds: hall be applied on the bond. I Time was when the tops of big trees ere left to rot down after the trunk - as sawed up. Now the thrifty mare Health while breeding Th knows that the big limbs, as evell--a--sl 'for both cock and hen, for inheritance the smaller ones, have much good), perpetuates undesirable as well as de - wood in them; so he cuts them sled, sirable qualities. 'Fowls selected- for length and hauls them ;gown to be the breeding -pen should have strong buzzed, up or cut with the eressienz constitutions, should be in perfect saw into stove wood. healeh -when placed in the lefeed,ing- I Often Worthless saplings grow- up I pen, and ehoulcl never have been sick _ g meet nn el. Cut these' or badly. •.out of a' hd*t" Out, for they take from the goodness; Vigor is more important thawfancy a the soil and -retard the growth of . points or heavy egg production. Vigor the better trees. If you cut out the' wall perpetuate healthy race of fowls; brush ci. vowel efegreise well start, eg; the chicks will survive and grow, and foreling feerfor sheep or caws.i the pullets will lay. The phenomenal If there. are thick spots in the woods' egg producers are not only in perfect where saplings of all sorts grow, cut • condition but are descended from out the most unpromising to the ad-,1"larti stock. ' vantage of the rest. If thfse are not No fowl that shows any weakness Cut out and saved, it will hot be long or sYniPt°Tha'a disease' or that is l'it3t before they will begin to die and drop' thrifty and vigorous, should he allowed of their own accord. That means to enter the breeding -pen. Neither wood lost. should:a bird be used tlfat has ever in If you have a forest of twenty ac its life been ,seriously ill for while it res , have apparently rocoverad, a or more, there will surely be mere ;mast • • '"-• an can be used 'by the home firesi weak spot is likely to remain, and than is is the chance to make a few dole' T ltils, for therd are always many in tehr:PrePililsg aoulita•ibnilli:Ze of the th disorddisorderh e town or city who would like a few The, purely nervous energy of close - cords of wood. ly-bred purebreds must not be Bile- , taken for an Indication of vigor. This. ---- may be nothing more than the mettle- some spieit of the purebred, vilticli itt itself is of no great value as a guide, to a healthful condition. Combine i with satisfactory physical, qualitiee Lillis is a desirable asset.. r Mopey, dopey, loosely -feathered birds with dull plumage and a listless don't -care -for -life manner are not Care of the Woodlot. flaY Yeading and Heaves. et , I The term heaves is applied to that s u. condition or disease of tbi1/4 horse p 'Mid& is charatterized by heaving of F the flanks, bncause a double bellows- c lake motion :is seen as the horse ex- t hales air. This generally is accom- * $ c t rough, staring, unhealthy coat of hair. tends to have stacked legs, usually e shows a "hay belly" and easile- sweats e and tires at work. In many cases i. thero is a discharge Tram the nostrils, t but most often it takes 'the form of a flakes of mucus about the orifice zf T the nostrils. The feces very °Rea are a mushy and have a bad odor, In some a ca,ses, an the contrary, the horse is Just oe an example, here is what one lock did for us last spring. Four hun- lred and twenty-eight chicks were put tider te,,,e brooder late- in March. At ix weeks old they had cost one -cent els week for each chick for food.] roin that time on the expense in-; reasea rapidly and at the age of hree months they had cost for feed, 80.58, and in coal for brooder stove, 6.60. The chicks were worth twenty ents each when hatched, niaking the otal cost $171.78. ' A little over three hundred chicks "ere raised to that date. The cocker- , Is averaged about three pounds each panied by a spasmodic cough and e - pulsion of gas from the rectum. A horse affected with heaves has a ; ri *eight, ',some 'going -bet . ter than hree and a half, The 'pullets aver- ged' less than two and...a half pounds.* he average of 'Ike whole' flock was I little abwe two and one-haIf 1)6=1(181 nd they were therCworth fift,Y refits; ,constIpated. , The' disease not;purely a lung , diseo.SeaS many -far -mere think,- The .c trouble invorlahly starts, in the stO.nI--*V, ach. Incligestidn' ca;u8esicri t1ii 021 b the pnetrmo,ga.stric nerve of the st'6in- er.pound., or .$3,75, leaving,a prate Of 'I ver $8Q0. Only a -few of,- the poorer colorecil Lyeib kept tor ' rcedcr'S,'rbut, 110' ,-6reig 'Worth , 1.501, '6-.17. '01? Isinntall'7>n ‘,;, art -to ,eggereneekieezelegeeeeee THE CHEEftFlii C1iERUI5 I fret' while or ee ttgaire 5y -t -tbis is most ure...fiee, irts COttici be. livtng jU5t rfNA51-% No rnrast.ter , eel -ter e .1 c keertea to be ' the importance of strong constitution, vigor, activity and plenty 'of life itt the foundation stock. On.• . • • e • • 4 e • Larger Machines Are Being Ordered For Next Season's Crop! Suorce of ',Naomi naelieree are being meter, uy maple grove oustere for lil20. 15 guarantee of th? non - belts' meae it:: our fanioue eau's:savior." Evaeoretor , tai •i.'te 'Surf' and Pure 41,eniey 'etalier." one lixe‘v or glve slow order for 14 largt,r one to sour en - lamed requiremeete. Temp ixeiolclet Im A ui'lhui if di Who %Ilium Tazunfacttuang Clomnany, 58 Wellin*-ton St Montreal Quo • It AL 8 p et at mo ii18100 of the wheat question. NEAT pekoe are clialienie Yon ran 110 two thinie to intireene 1920 wheat y1s1ds -. 1. Fall wheat Can be topeiressete with fertilizer. 2. Spring wheat. cam be abuse daatly fer tiliz ed. It Pays to FERTILIZE • WHEAT! Fertilizers make more wit sat bushels More wheat bushels make Big- ger Prailts. Write to -day toy your tioDy of Bul- letin No, 2 on Wheat Produetlae, Soil and Crop Improvement Bureau Of the Canadian. Wert/liner Ashen, 1111 Temple B Idg., ToroWt-o, Ont. t'".1.".entankage iso 41.e! twhogs the hsttiinetake will 'quickly :cover if you treat her i A Sick Cow ' be mixed with shorts until they form ireIth a liking for -it.. We have always fed tankage in the wiuter in this way: We Dr. A C Daniels' first put the tankage in the trough A. e C. dry, using about five pounds of tank-' c age to every 100 pounds of corn. Then ow Invigorator , over the tanka.ge eye pour enough shorts slop to moisten the tankage. The hogs will eat the mhrture quickly and will make geed gains if they have plenty of good pound corn in addition. It is seldom that hogs on tankage vette get the bad habit of eatirig chickens no neater how the thickens may SWAMI about the feeding floor. Simple Manner **(PT—Testing Seeds. 'heartily to it, reesuch a case it should 'It is a simple meter to test seeds before sowin2. Take a piece of white flannel, put it in a saucer with water sufficient to saturate it and -keep it -so. Conant the seeds thateim placed; on the flannel and make- a reccird of the ! I End rofial n.4-11, dgeerts;.; etkoemeed ttod; :wuotheliclrhs.:1:8:erbotttue0111:s1,ttuiristeeritb,44, eily for rabOrt4aw 1tfr 7f - rtalterectO,SicallOtp..- , Sodart:°f;'tlfL"..iliVe5;na2VDT::W'41^ \ - ti 1:tat.gon: lose ..oltf,. c o nit 6 a batilli- - cf,i,. i ging, It litolat-seetill6Illiathaq4.4;171411-1° tity cna ouaiitY 1 qixt i!x, waa °eve old 3,6 the ueet TO1110 tyk. 00^rig that number. Cover with Repel: or anbther RTE 015e. , saucer. turned. over A. Blotting paper — t'he salieer in a warm place, The per-: A..;11:111).1;ANIVI4111"474:COG;)1,P°Z kfil;BY,(23 may, be. used in -place of flaenel. Keep' centage of growth can be caiculated e • ,„ ioastAiee, atteide4texi , ' ebyeeee°rtiedritglin.gowh. ow 7,-a, IlY seeds itt . e KNOWL..:TON • QUEBEC , y,- '• strong' eneUgh in. health. and Vigoie );o:' BuThrift Stamps. be ,entitleei, to a. place in the breeding- 77- -7"•• • pen. However, I,would hot disqealify a bird that has at some time suffered from a slight cold, or one that may have had a frozen comb. I do, not be- lieve saeh mishaps would in any way, 'affect the value of a bird as a breeder, A frail, delicate 12e'n-should mkt be oermitted in the breeding -pen. no mat-' • icr how good a layer she may be, Such an•indivirleal will pass hr pbys- icni -weakness on to her offspring. Too st-fess can not -be pia r2cd upon FARFiERS' CLUBS e IfivErEtiitilT Ps • • We. are Buyers .of Ontario Grains Brae,' Seller's of Western Feeding Oats an:d13"saeleer ; OUR Pie zq.ce C. Sr tt) Itvl° , BOINK.,..,A,.(pi,,p.i,m6 1:ELEPNOtIE = , TOFONTO„ f . •