The Exeter Advocate, 1920-3-4, Page 6Soy
Address communications to Agronomist, 73 Adelaide. St. West, Toronto
Buying Eggs or Steck. culling the noek wzflon be a cone
The beginner with. purebred pounl sidereble value, 1314 have an aim
?try often wishes to now whetherand stick to it. Fhid out the breed
hatching eggs on breeding stook will that you wish to keep and de 'not
be the, best investment. Some have change e.xcept for N'erY imPortant
the hest luck in ene way and some reasona Then there is a ehanee for
'with anther. There are advantageal, nee suecess and every dollar spent
and disadvantages to both metliodsj for improvement will trot be wasted
The buyer a fine quality breeding!, in doubtful experiments but will help
ateek must pay a leased price but he: to build a bneiress.
sees the birds right after the purs;
T•••••••••••,...1
chase and is able to forra a fair jurig-1 Feed For the Dairy Ilea
ment a the quality. It only takee si if the clatter farmer is to make a
ifew birds'as foundation stock to build-, =cense, he meet grow the feeds for
a large flea, ie skillful IlreeniTag isi ez .... e
; ies aere or. ills farm. The farmer
combined. with patience. t who detteade largely on what he buys,
The buyer of Meshing eget) must, or upon ndiet accidentally comes
wait several months befere he ean telU, is not going to make a success, and
the exact quality a his steek araq it is doubtful these day, if he can
afteu the results will he much better!! make even, et erorit.
or much worse than expected. If at One reason \Vey so many elairemee
breeder iu sueeessul in raluing, fail to make a striking eueeess of the
chicks a start .witit
. Purebred stuck' husiriese is that tleey fail to start the
can be obtauied cheaper with hetch-f, besiees in the right way. They fail
,ing eggs. A five or ten dealer set- i to =ere the beet use of the and on
ting ed egg' will eozeetireee prodiacee nee ., . y a_ - .t.,, ‘ e 0
wx or eight birns 0 fine quality tliat; surely roera for improvemert ie. the
are .e•ortb many tireeS tho east. of tne. ;tents "g ia then. umeageneent ten
eggs. Ilsraot'er• it b na alnzatee Post I believe that ie <Weil ffrratcr room
sible to eudge the quality a hatelting improveraent ie. the rear.agereent
'eggs by the Price eddied. This- is 4uei of car farms. We, tealay, as: ear:neve,
to the fart that eorne Itreseler$ with i ere not, getting auything lit prop=
enediere statee thine: they have betteri returns eroea our Erna. This ent
birds than they or, and feel. tint
1 Year lute been an exception :For meet.
can aSk a /Ilea Prier' °thrr breed"! tteetioes, and Cerirere are auvreeriden
itlence ILI -sieriel t'beri•l!ehaiith1,4.4111.2:utc-gg'sniQ.•;:i with crepe ruelt es lea- Lave known
less than they e.re worth. ih'4Qre
The season has been with tit° farm -
Sometimes eggs ean be pereliasedl
from a breeder of fine eteen that; ars, for the most part. Whiehi
will have. no stern-. for sale, Ile willi CaW•ea " to a'.1; r'al."' "VMS' ewireati
keep all ef his Lest birds fel: hiswa bav.e evert' Year some good!
rons9 ' The teaser. eee, cannot hate,
use hut he wilt sell a rev; egee from ae - ' .
o
cr.ops best adapted for the bueinese
he 43 in, Moat of us are interested
in dairaieg, so let us consider some
dairy crop. Every practleal dairy
feet:lee-11as found that the most im-
portant charaoteristic of a good feed
for a dairy cow is that which she
likes best, We must have in the feed
eomething that lereas palatability to it
—something• that will make the cow
'consume a lot et it. If you feed a
cow One hundred pounds a feed, she
will produce so emelt milk; you
feed her one butidred and fifty
pounds, that same cow will produce
you so, mach more milk. Peed her
one hundred pounds of feed that she
likes auci she Will give you more milk
than if e•ou feed her One hundred
pounds of feed that t d •
is not proper to give a cow nothing
but euceulent food; that would only
disgust ilet and disorganize her da-
gestive system and put her in bad
shape for producing, milk. Alfalfa
is good where it can be successfully
grown and cured, but there are eater
crops precisely as good for the deiry
farmer. One we might mention would
be red or alsike clever. Clever is ale
most as rich in food as alfalfa, and
it is easier made into hay, and easy
to fee& and 4$ a surer crop in most
sections.
In addition to a succulent food mid
a highly nitrogenous food, suck as
elover, we need something in the way
of a cereal and straw. There is not
a crop that does better than oats;
she jus eats. barley an W eat also do well, yet supplied with—With what? 'Wha
Therefore, the production of food that oats is the better ote to grow in has every father's child a right to ge
has that charectere 'a palatability most se:dun-is, tlie farmer adds pee t from its parent?
or that IS aeteptr,14e to the cow is to that a tertata aznount of land given Shelter, e'er instaece means more
doubly important. begauee thefirst over to pastere made of the proper than a roof over his head. Ile is en-
plaee will make the eow produce nind of grass, then he has a complete t•tied te„...
more mut tor the anoint eor.sumed, prodeetion of food fer the dairy eow
A. decent, clean, well kept house.
and in the seehnd place, it 'will mane —a succulent erop for the winter.
that melt mole mill:.
her consume mere food and produee grassea for the eurerner Ond clover
V and Rummer,
Plenty of fresh air in the house
or alfalfa fesr the hoe, and oats or
eottiles,welieatilvifietpr4edt ece: TbAhleileeeY firrtebreopgai7A:re' 1i:4:sent-lei things Separate bed, with euffielent bed-
tbat the serne straw. Warni reams in cold weather.
ttheatey tte, -male it is iztvort., for seerees dairying, If the farm- elothes to keep warni.
ant to make a COW give a largo yield, er eliminates one ef there lie earaet Sanitary indoor wateneeloset o
eight or nfteen ehoasaud pounds, it hope to ntaae kuceen 0? dairying. outdoor privy.
is just as huportant to produce that There are poesnoiliaes of ir.ereas- pure, abundant water supply.
milk in such a manner that it will 'dig our dairy farm (gaps that. are A comfortable piare to weieom
cost us lepe than what. we get for
Produeing ten theme -04 peerida of
mill. at " '
prefitalne to the faemere but if he -keret tliat etirtain (mops tAo , Better from the bread bee, eoverea enth
can prorieee tea tlicrazaad poends for aitais ea1taln ct4611'Vol 1114.talIce' eeeth/g frelli the tie2raet jr;re 'jay'
see°, or better shot hor $100, then the men wno woald eeow in the 'filet not take the place ef a real meal. Ile
there is a elianee o: makieg Seine Place a rr°P e3r11' f111a4 ha fr4a •b°1'11-1 have'
pronit. Therefore, it is neeeseary to bia br'`it 11•17'1141 u -nen be roe -e that Three equere recant a day.
eorneeer the test or the artene that coen on a clover F04 or an old pas- [Agee, simple, appetizing, wells
tare sod. That :aid plowed with a cooked feed,
moderately shallow furrow and man- Meals at regular hare eeffi-
You ean enumerate almost en the ore hppnee on em sereaee, feed the
fingers a one hand the list of really alelit time dor them.
I succulent feede available for the dairy wbole thing well peened aud aisks Dinndr 110cn. for claivell under
cow. Corn tillage is easily tile most harrowed, and the core sours r:gbt 7 years of age.
acceptable to the cote but equallY as safutitear itrthea oapaaerdatc:cg.;3,.mentioneci, re- The daily diet should include:
acceptable are turaipa and manferele, Milk, at least 1 eiet a day.
properly fed. But the niage is better
The Welfare of the Home
Essentials for Our Children.
In these days when the popular
method of attempting to remedy a
wrong is to eall a strike the wise
parent will consider e4refulay how he
is treating his child. Otherwise he
may come home to supper some fine
night to find his heretofore obedient
children organized 4e, enion and is-
suing to him an ultimatum.
Very likely they will refuse to play
ball with him, kiss bun goodnight, int
elude Wen in their prayers, or eat the
candy he brings home, unless they are
• ainI0S., int-gee:lee to a man wiles has Irlends.
uot tried them, and who has not • Has your dial tbere?
evericetl tbeee things out. It has been A alioe el' bread palled at medal.
we fee4 the (,ow•
his hest birds everyyear. Tins gives- e 1°1,1, el'ar T('""• is ' eea " V...! o r4 -
a nen enteeer a ehauto to procure. nantile our .atel pror.erly. -there y,"
same realy flee stern fer a meeeet; abtolutely no reeeon why elle trope
ate investmere eel i: they are given! flue country eliotild ret be on an :Merl
geed eare. V4,41 SAle% Win payfl;ood , age a fifty per eget. better than they,
ilividends. i are, ea -icing one year after another.l
Aeother inistane in beyietr, li rile reasen v.ily tnee are not firtyl
cent. better le beaauF0 there ie too;
I ems in la ernes. egge frem ire
ta-lay steel; eei eepeet to teilee a it fr...1r1it a Pel1e1-"x'k'''' 02 131411 W120 aran
along g to tel.:0 wieat eenies. ard
of eetiolene thaneMin
, Beth the log,tis
tA.,11ky, and cili:Azi,Va. tetee net Le w o bareile the land wit11 as little
pureLred end frem pereneed birne or, labor as poetible, and who devote
geed viger .1,1z;1 yit their tales., ie den: very little atter.tice to the cultivation
ferent. Birne that ere mated for high of One r land. The t:1110 Lau ennla
when it ie absolutely essential that
easel
egg preduetion abould produce
eeneee nee erege meted incense– ef farmers change all that ani put into
their feathers are el:ea:tea to melee, the business of producing erops a lit-
bircle with flee feathere. The heginsi tle mote eare and intelligence aild
rer who eapeecs to raise exhibition thought end a little bit more labor.
1
hilution stenor h
: fis atchin
hg. eggs. thew land, but they do not eo It ei
birds should go to the breeder of ex- Mary farmera put ouough work on
The breeder who culIe Ida birds aral the right way. There is considerable
keeps high egg produeers rnay not being said about farm management
have a noel: perfeet in eoreb and, these days. This is one of the most
feather but it is the flock that the important lines of iniprovement that
farmer likes beenuse of . its utility' can be undertaken by the farmers
value - - - at the *present thrie We are too
Many breeders are endeavoring to willing to handle our farms as our
comblue the exhibit.ion and bred -to- fathers did, and we are too willing to
lay factor.; so that the high -egg -pro- let the farm traps be produced in the
ducting stoele will he attractive and same way and with the same hick of
uniform in typo and size. The best orderly methods that our great -
method is probably the purchase of gralerathers had. The land at that;
soiele breeding stock and hatching time was overflowing with eteural
eggs. These puree:eves eaa be car- i'ertility, but now conditione are
tied on at Intervale for a few years chaeged, and in many placee the soil
until the &rn fleek cent:iine. the ie, depleted of much el the fertility,
quality that the evener desir.e.e. The vAille in other places the hind ie in -
purchase of one setting of flee qual- -rested with weeds. mei show the eft
ity eggs each year will bring new fects of long tropping. This must be
blood into the farm Cook and if this changed,
addition is eonabined with careful The farmers must consider the
-
Successful Since 1856
7.0 leis easy to make claims for Seeds7it is another
thing to be able to substantiate them. We are
emphatically .able to Make our claims goad be-
cause our record for "seeds that grow" has
gone unbroken for 64 years. For seeds, bulbs,
plants of all kinds, trust Simmers' goods.
THEY CROW!
Wi•lecfswoUran
hdome gew zpo catalog-7re tu,Say.
J. A. Simmers Liinited, Toronto
#.:
41, /WAWA:W. giVAMATV" `rit.V&ZiViift' We; 4%.*:11
,:"..4::,;•;;-.•.2 4 .
eranterseretteetsge ereetne etrereeteeteeettearda
Can You Grow
Laaaasatuaama
Potatoes like this?
With a reasonably good soil and rainfall
and the liberal use ofklarab-Davies Fertil-
izer, you can be sure ;of a potato crop sup-
erior in both quantity and quality. The
potato shown in our illustration was grown
by a New Brunswick fanner who is a con-
sistent user of Harab-Davies Fertilizer.
He sent us this potato as a good average
sample of his crop. There's no magic about
It arab Davies Fertilizer is sinaply avs
efficient plant food, containing Nitrogen or
A111111011.1£1, Phosphoric Acid and Potash in readily soluble form. Its record
of success is its truest recommendation. Write us to -day for our booklet;
"Fertilizer Results by Satisfied *Users." It will be sent fret on request;
and it i11give you evidtmce in the shape of signed letters from farmers
in all parts of the country who know
by experiertce how zirnfitable Harab-
Davies Fertilizer is.
ONTARIO FERTILIZERS
LIMITED
ate ti/ L West Toronto, Ontario
raaa•
, •
•%.
Cereal and bread.
for the :teenier, Just as geed for the IfetWher "a Precious ASsei." Green vegeniblee, attic:Arnie- leaf
vegetabiee.
cow, eince silage caa be n.eielled, all "Tee Ceenadien ectemetnity
Parie44 coun:dered, ebnallahr‘ ea.iihst learn, like the Calnese, that the teeielee
Therefore. core ahould be one of the • • " ,e1
grc4test .4:e4:411118:etueiecy tri aheve the ri?,dfel theEStg-ihrne7irs' Oat
awl with
principal preducts of the deity farce -e'eeent dr "C "Cr,t(:j el Tniik .11(itild be aiven'
veur enild thesen
But eoga e'one is not ceffielent, and murstertea can la toe Vete fee the. r:
erder to balance thinges up, we man er geman c:bo. &es 'tile re • t: ""r'"'"'" "1"
•
meet ;the eame 417 feed, herauee It far natiety:' here, well uourielied, ani reel caral
fer. Ragged, unwholesome, unSuzt-
abl? clothing will net help Lim to
grow up self-reepecting and bealthy.
Thirty -Inch Concrete and the Imperor Nero
.••••1•••••••••••••••••.m.o.amma.r.
What bas your child for elotbing?
Bas he:
Clean, whole garments.
Different clothing for day and
eight, suited to the climate‘
Change oe underclothes and night-
gown at least weekly.
A" change of etookings .at least
twice a week.
Warm underclothing and stockings
in cold climates.
Heavy coat cap, and znittene for
cold weather.
•
Shoes, free from holes, and long
and wide enougb. •
Foot protection agaiest refa or
snow.
Has your child thee?
When he is a yeung,sthr le the thne
when he shoula cultivate those hal.-
its of health and personal eleauti-
ness which should be seeend eatwee
to every email person. What about
the following habits? ,
Hazels awl face washed beim
mealaud at beatiriza
Bath every day, cr at lent onre
a week. •
Natural bowel movement every
day.
Teeth brushed at least twiee a dee
(morning awl night).
Itegular ben hem.
Ten hours a elesp at ngbt, with
pen windows..
Cornet weight for lielant.
Has year ehild thee?
A cbild who is to do Lie ellere of
the world's weak after he is a
must net have Ids energies exliaust-
ed while he is growing up. Edaces
'on and work must be arranged eo
that when he leaven school he has an
adequate mental equipment, as well
as strength energy end. ambition
Ile should Lave:
Schooling Ter et least riue moetha
year front 7 to 16 evars of age.
Not mere throe two hours el
'elieres" suts.:40 et Fetwi hour.
Not easegli work either in shooi
er out, to cause Late.
Nam:twin work, rt. any, ire:a anew
ample opportuziity for the preeet
amount of and reereation.
Rae yone thild these?
Is you' hill getting a reefer::
deal? IC eta, elmt are you geirg to
da about it?
afeguarding the Livestock
Wher. yhil come refit n,own to it, 3, an at cece, perhaps, but reetliedieelly Industry.
leeks az if we woeld have to bnild; aed stubnornly. Mein hiter-town high -
At pesent ere findintwo of
roads, And by roade 1 incan ends--; ;sews first, then sar
ecoedy tap-roada out
-.. we g
eivilified highwaye; not the Minton ont itto the caentry, tben ti relationthip with each other
e reet of great industries coming into
etdps of unused farm land tbat weithe back roads. The Romans built eleaer
grudgingly give up to the community' their roada :kr a t1ou:78n4 5'eare a qi.:ny.vner l..,ief.?re.,. Ille_se aearo the, .1i,x.:
at large end white answer, with. oes1 military UFO.
casional,dragging, if we beve Itiela aef 5.ty, happily, but W43 have a problem •
IV° have no 111eli 11"Q‘':- concerns. 3 here is now a briter un-,
a means for getting into town with! alnloet as gevere—the necessity for a „ere at 11.4 ...f.tAii.,..0 13 N.0 or the
realize their mutual interdependence
tbo family on dry days. "Ihey are, read rehich will endure without up,.
not roads—they are misplacee hdir, keep expense the heaviest poindingof on tech other. Between these two in -
pastures ana nothirig else, eald In env the heaviest, fatert truckfor an in- s dustriee comes a most important fan -
atrocities seen as no ref-reepeetinge trettks are goiete to get bigger ;me ' i'kbothi)eraei
;this. iall :hloe' )t
he Ttoeli
hog should be asked to ttavel. !heavier and faster, iind there are go- eosrtsul
0
enlightened day some or them ared definite number ef years, because
. . , , . . . .
As to roads, they built them letter; hie; to be more of them I tained at live stock shieping tentres
yarde. These yarde are now main -
2,000 years ago. Ihe oldniemans res1 When will stand eteh traffic? What and aince ii 4l... they have been
and leading market cities in Caitada,
togniacd the great prineipls thatis our modern equhalett ef P.onian antler tile control of the Dominion
alms ortazion is ei
N I j alui they
became the greateet roita-builacreoi
all history. To Emperor Nero, We -
mg on a maerne benen, absently tor-
menting his pet kitten, utter, a vie-
torious Roman general.
"Imperial Cresar," say e the general,
'Son of Jupiter and the living
of Apollo, only bettee-looking, I have
conquered a new province for the Em-
pire."
. dressed granite? tenterete of corree
Eighteen ireshes cf it at least, and
there:welly reinforced. Twenty -fou;
perhaps, if we really decide to built!
I roads to they will May built; and
twenty-eight CI: thirty leches would
I Le safer.
, The surface dees not matter Lei
much, for concrete itself takes a pas-
sable surface when laid with any
"You don't tell me," says Nercel
showing some interest. "Hov: del you
find throads?"
"Very poor, Ceesar," replies the
e
general. "I had to move ray legions
on foot, instead of in the wagons,:
which I assure you annoyed the men.
V017 much."
"Of course it din," says. Nero. "It
would annoy anybody. And as, for you,
don't go trying to wish new territory
on the Empire unless it has good high-
ways. You meal right back to
wherever this place is, take 60,000
Iberian slaves and 10,000 mules. and
build some Roman reads. Take all
the money you need; I don't care
where you get it, just so it doesn't
come out of ray pocket. Try the Jews;
if they won't let you have it, get it.
somewhere else. But don't let me see
you again until you have a good four-
teen -foot road from my front gato to
the farthest end of this province you
talk about. .Close the door from the
outside, and tell any slave you see t�
telligence at all. The bituminous mac-
adam mixtures are fairly saeisfactory,
and the newest brick surfaee roads are
wonders. We may yet discover some-
thing better then any of these, but
this is a detail. Permanent roads we
must have.
These are the vital arteries arid
veine, of Canadian rural life. It is over
them that oer merchandise g'Ot-',3 to
find its market and it is over them
that we bring our new mahogany din-
ing -room table and our player -piano
and winter clothes. The doctor in his
flivver hurries over them to bring um
into the world, and the undertaker in
his hearse (motorized) hurries us
away over them when we die. A thous-
and romances could be written under
the title "The Ithad to Tpwn."
Most important of all, it is over
these roads that we receive, via the
family automobile and our own good
eyes, all those new and strong impres-
sions and de.sires that have revolu-
tionized farm standards of living.
Where passable roads have eXiMed for
send me a new kitten. This one years, as in some eastern districts,
seems to be getting. or ill-tempered." farmers felt it first and strongest In
• And what is more, the general went sections with the worst roads, farm -
off and built those roads. You can zee ere are least changed. I believe it is .
them today in Italy, England, France, passible to vielt ten Lam families and
Africa, Armenia and the Balkans and to tell accurately from their hontes,
Geniis:fly— sometimes abandoned, but them clothes and the look in their
e often in use as foundations for eyes, what kind of roads they have. It
modern highways. But whether gitleigtihitinlg)etrhicaht aaLhofuusli
or not, they are real roads. 1111151 aisLinlifyaecs,'wahtierha
A soldier dug one up in France the and free, may be kept starved and
other day in the course of some army nsago-w aild stunted for the lack of a
construction—or rather, he tried to few tons of crushed stone or gravel,
clig it up and failed1 have lost the judiciously applied.
exact figutes of the Measurements he Crushed stone and gra-eel, however,
took, but the bottom of that road was as a practical matter, will not do. Oor
about two feet of prette- solid maeonry. road system. muse be mime AA 41
The top course consisted of dressed Boman -built. •
stones, about 6 x 4 x 18 inehes, set on In the end what will we have'?
end. I imagine the surface looked :Many things, no doubt, not now :Cere-
ment:. like our hfirdbriek-pavhig, but seen, but the greatest of there, and
each of those surface stones went the One abeolutely beyond question,
straight down eighteen inches, and will be a rural life and standaed of.
under that was two feet of solid rock living unique in the Wcreitl's history.
No -.yowler the road stood two or -three A homogeneous rural population that
hundred years of itaffie, and was 'Still .16 frosperity l ntoilthient will
there last yeav to anuoy etueineei. reach menage -of aud as the in-
partles. a-alto:ale sequence, a C-anatla prosperous
Whether we Eke ie or not, ee•ie will and powerful, lPd aS COLIZated as the
Lave to 'hued as the lionIate did, Not tatare ot Mal/ riatt.ditS.
Agnieuituro through
the Live Stock branch. At that time
the regulations prese 'bed order the
Live Stock and Live Stock Products
Act were passed and since then the
construction, equipineet, maintenance
and operation of stock yards
ject to the approval of tho federal
Ministev of Agriculture
Closely identified with live stock
yards are the live stock exchanges
operating on all markets and setting
the rules for the conduct of baseness
among the commission agents and
dealers. The objects of the Exchange
are to establish and maintain a com-
mercial exchange for the benefit and
furtherance of all intereets directly
connetted with the buying and selling
of live stack, to establish uniformity
in the trade, and to provide speedy
adjustment of business disputes. A
series of articles on live stock yards
and exchanges appears in the Janu-
ary number of The Agricultural Ga-
zette. These articles present the facts
regarding the operation of stock ,
yards. It is pointed oat that the stock t
yard is a semi-publie institution
operated as a public market and its
business; is the warehousing of live
stock. Its one great advantage is f
that it provides a medium where the u
men with live stock to sell find buy- t
ers and buyers find live -Meek.
What Tractor Shall 1 Buy?
" a 'number of the maellines week
; 11. failure, while cue er two would
work euceessfully. It was a good on.
ject lesson fez. the big oreval et' peo-
ple present, for cull man mule de.
terrniue for ;timedf whether coy cm
of the tractors would do hie plaee..
No farmer inieeld buy a tractor ei
any Lind without having it tried out
en his farm, or under eireilar condi.
'dons. It may bo he would have te
see a number of machines at work,
sad under different eonditions ot
Season, before ne woulcl be able to
satisfy lumself whee.h he would gel
the most value out of. The. tractor it
the coming thing for many kinds of
farm work, but we need to knew out
soil, know our machine tind know
oureelves before r.ureltasing.
Maple Sugar.
Sugar, 16 cent8 per pound. Neither
United States nor Canadian refineries
can control the situationg-Board of
Commerce report.
The maple groves of Canada offer a
potential crop of home-grown sugar,
which may be made available to re-
lieve the shortage of imported sup-
plies. The days of warm. •sunshine
and the cold nights will soon bring
the sap up into the trees. It is well
to be prepared for an early sugar sea-
son, by having all the equipment
ready.
The high price of sugar will un-
doubtedly create a largely increased
demand for maple products. Hereto-
fore, the latter have been 'considered
more of a luxury by the general pub-
lic, but, in the portions of Canada
where maple sugar is produced, it is
generally found upon the table, in
grated form, taking the place of im-
ported sugar. Malale products are be -
ng used more and more in tho con-
ectionery trade and a considerable
export trade- is developing.
Canada prothcts the manufacturer
of maple products. Tinder the pure
ood law the name "maple" cannot be
sed for any substance unless it is
he product of the maple 'free. This •
s protection to the producer as well
as to the buyer of maple sugar and
maplo syrup.
The sugaring; season comes et 0 .
time when very few.other farm duties
are pressing.. This time should be ctn.:-
played, and withexcellent advantage,
in the -Maple grove, • thuS adding to
v._
he farm income.
Might as well ask, "What kind of
bread shall 1 eat?" It all depends on
What kind <A bread a man likes, and
whether any particulae kind' sets well
on his stomach, and othertvise agrees
with him. • .
Many traetore are being made now:
Some people :like all tractors, others
condemn all tractors. Neithee elass
eil people., is right. One malt may
have better succesa with one kind of
a maehirie; another may find another
type best for , him. It rnust always
be more or less a question of the
place where the tractor is to be used.
Lest ae.temn I wee 'preeent eelhen
number of different trarters were be-
ing exhibited. The aemontiration had
been arranged eon the purpose of eu-
abling farraers to see just what theee
machines coutd and would do. -Each
maebine was given its piece of land
to plow. All were under the control
ef some man who was eupposea to he
an extent. It wee, iuteresting to watch
these,nations traotors at their work.
t
Trouble never tries to dodge people
who are looking for: it.
Zamillgtalt t7.0 saAne old s
acted Pura 5n'r C 1)311.-,7
trC"eiwt sv:aluPiagl:.7:11110er::P12141"3C/::•eap°31:
Alva ikcL LYluko ou a•sight.
garialas it ovsr straw, old kry, az.
•
6s11 other fOadvr. It
Keeps Ste,ck Healthy
Builds FIcsh Faster
Sc
itmtaytic tout. rial,,;,stizgarcalie =omega:
ebE
CeIiis Give More Milk
Cr.:tutted £woni ai
'3112
1 ilrat-sissu floater*.
Seinerwatked NITS1.1, otlieT5 6.4 a S9ut feeding circularo
job. 'Info conclutien 1 airi t1 C:: neneue,
that 'for that particular 1:iricl of a fie it Paul St V/ t
•te