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The Exeter Times, 1922-10-12, Page 7ADAC- eu SY PROP, HENRY Th d object of this department it to 'pleat) at the see - 'Oct of or farm readers the advice of en aoknowledged authority on aii sit:elects pertaining to coils and grope. -Address all questloria to Professor Henry 0, Settetri e of The Wilson Pebileleing Company, Limited, Torota to, end anewere yv111 eppe,ar le this column. inethe order which they are reeeived. When writine kledly men. tion this paper. As" spacel emitea It lii advisable where Immediate reply le necessary that a stamped and ad. dressedenvelope ree enclosed wise the queatlore wheal abe &newer vale be mailed direct copyright be Wilsoa P tiblisbing Co., Limited ,pa Once the liver fails to filter the poi- eenous bile from the blood, there is e 'clogging up and poisoning of the whole SyStelll which causes many troubles to arise. "the bowels become constipated, the stomach 'upset, bilious attacks oeeur causing severe headaches, pains and aches come on, and a general fooling of depression sets in. Milburn's La -Livor Pills will help normal condition the liver to rosume its proper functions ^ by removing bile that M eirculatink reach the eahf drink' hewever) the minastty and person a John an In the blood and poisoning the system, hef(me he has fermed to ° stre,ng a an ddenbification of Himself with. that Mm. S. B. Hallett, Herring Coye-, habit for nursing. Give hint WhQle MOvernent, although baptism was in N. S., virite:—"I have been troubled milk from his clam for the first -week, the case •p,f Jesus the 'symbol of clean - for a long time with severe headaches Then use one-half new milk for one nes's from sin rather than cleansing week. Then graduaily increase the fifiemmseisill?vn2.thYethutirnheraneibtyY Ile identiad skim -milk and decrease the new millt,1 in its true a I': IL Knd1y fl us just how to et,l and 'handle calties, to be raised on . separator zuUk. We would ,like to raise eight or ten tbal• WaY, Rhisingcalves is both a science and an art. One sloald knew what the • ) t it is an art to gave calf requ les, g, these requirements in the best and most Ipracti;cal tuallner, Time and Place'---A.D. 27; Allow the c,alf to nurse its dam at Wilderness 'of Judea. . ocro ER 22. Je us Tempted, Luke 4; 1-1 Golden Text- hcoimursetlhfelinlatthICtu,affreeretceimbpetiedng, tHemebp.t2ed.:118xe. it; ab least four times. This gives -the calf the first milk of the cow, Which is necessary to start the bowels in a Mrs. ;Tames ,E1, Green, e The humble kings tristead of insidring Alta., writes under dato of Aug. fishermen? Why mot use wet -Idly 1921:—` '1 should like to advise xuethert, Lesson Setting—Our lesson. this week deals with the Temptation a Jeeths. This'event is connected vitally with His baptism, His baptism bY john was a gracious rec,ognitioa to and pains in my back and stomach. G. 11-: What is the difference he Proximated by feeding 2 to 3 lbs. Sacma went to a doctor who said I. had liver ween hydrated lime and the ground milk per cl'aY along 'Y411 as In_lleh trouble. I took two bottles of medicine, - . limestone applied to„,lands? Where grain as the hog e take. one but it failed to do me any good. I was land required two tons Per acre of the suc'eessfuil farmer made up a,..euccess- told by a friend tO trY Milburn's Lassa ground stone how much of the hY- ful ration out of 1 part oats -and 1 Liv'er tills, tookI d th , fixated lime would. be equal •to the p,art 'pea's or barley finely ground. la have made me welt" stone? , winter it is customary.to feed grain Price 25e. a vial at all dealers, or Answer: Ground Ihnestone is the tWiee daily with mai-gels at ruiclicliy. mailed. direct on rocelpt of price by The carbonate af calcium_ and magnesium. In Your dase a mixture of rye and T• Milburn °°" Limited' T°rmat°' Ont. Burnt lime is the carbenate with bile cloira will about eubstitute for peas — - gee carbon dioxide driven off by burn- and barley, ing e'r heating; that is, inHhrt; lime 18 S. H.: I would like a ration for InY the oxide of calcium. Now, if the oxide or burnt lime is slaked with -site'am or Water it fonns hydrated lime or ealehen hyda;r.te. 56 lbs. pure burnt lime is equal to 74 lbs. hydfrate,d,lime or 100 lbs. of ground limestone. II. M.: I am, feeding my four month old pigs skim milk and middlings. Now I have rye, oats and corn which I could grind and feed with the mid- dlings and milk. Will you please give me a ration from the above? Answer. Four menth old pigs eliould be about 100 lbs. liveweight. 'They shoulel get daily about 35 lbs. dry rnatter per 1,000 lbs. of hogs, 4.8 lbs. protein, 22.5 carbohycheetes, •.and 0.7 lbs. of lat. This could be ap- milch cows. As roughage will have timothy hay and shredded corn fed- 'der- As grain will have corn, oats; rye, cull beans, and bran. This will be for winter feed; will also have mangels. Answe'r: Henry's Feeds and Feed- ing gives a daily ration for 1,000 lbs. cows las fo,llew,s: 10 lbs. clover hay, 20 lbs. corn stover, 8 lbs. corn meal, 3 'lbs. co= and cob meal, 1 lb. bran, 8 lbs. roots. Your SitlibStitliteS may be worked in about as follows,: 12 to 15 lbs. timothy hay, 20 lbs. shredded corn, 8 1113S. COM meal, 3 lbs. oats and rye meal (equal parts), 1 lb. !bran and 8 lbs. mangels. I would not feed cull bean meal to dairy cows. When a hen stands around. on one foot in out-of-the-way corners, not mingling with -the ether foavls, relus- -leg -food, although airrile,s,sly picking at nothing, she is evidently infested with the large white lice that burrow into the skin at the root of, the fereth- „ere. They seem to embed themselves around the ears, gills ancl throat be- fore they attack the ether parts of the body. The hen mopes around for a week or two, "then a slight diarrhea sets in and the fowl dies in a short time, suppeitedly from cholera. , I have saved fowls in the latter stage by hhe following method; Mix pulverized carepher and grease to toren asoft paste. Carefully work this et a stick or end of a match well he 15' :the skin arOuna the ears and everY” p,art of the head and throat. With the fingers work the paste down the back of the neck, a.,CTOS the back and underneath the wings. In a short time the hen -will begin to eat and drink, and will eneirely recover. Egg 'production is the final answer regarding peofit en the. poultry farm, and eggs are seldom obtained from a flock infested with parasites or in which •ddeease is rampant. The com- mon poultry parasites are Hee and 'mites, which attack the outside of a bird's body; the internal parasites are Intestinal worms and tapeworms. • The egg -eating habit may be cured , with quinine. Break an egg into a small dish,andinto it stir a generous amount oil quinine, Also put some around the insidenpf the shell. I put this mixture before the hens and they at once began to eat, but not for long. Soon they were shaking their heads as if des,,,e•Usted..With the meal, and that cured tlrern of the habit. In savine. Meat for the hens, from animals that have died on the farm, it is highly essential that we -be sure no disease caused death. The meat --ought to be dried and put away .so that it will keep well. Decayed meat is not -a bit better for hens than it Is -for pec,ple. The Chinese ma.de agriculture a , part el -their school courses over 4,000 years ago, et The Effect of Feed on the Richness of Milk. Until very recent times it has been universthat 'ally held at milk varied in richness or per cent. of fat a.ccording to the feed and care the cow received. Foods rich in fat, perhaps more than any other elas,s of nutrients, have been looleed upon 'as having a direct influ- ence on the richness ef the milk. Sometimes if the amount of fat or oil in the ration be in'cretased markedly or suddenly by feeding such feedts as cottoes,eecl meal, linseed oil meal, cocoanut meal, say -bean meal or flax- • seed, there will be a temporary in- crease in the percentage ,ol fat in the milk for a. sthort period, but the nor - /nal -richness always rea,ppears within a short time. - This slight temporary increase in riehness of milk is not dee to the nu- tritip 4,0A .the foectejeute,due- to the rend d charge 'in feediiieQiich upsets the normal working -ole the coVe glands and digestive organs, and is 0/ten followed by a decrease in the amount of milk given. Attempts at feeding fat into milk for a long period have not, been suc- cessful. The quality of milk cannot he changed over any considerable time by the feeder, but is largely deter- mined by factors not under his control, such as breed and individuality. The milk of each cow possesses a fixed in- :herent richness.' The Jersey cow give's a milk which is relatively high in fat. No kind . of feed or care will cause the Jersey to give -milk like that of Holsteins, or `the Holstein like that of the Jeesey. The quality of 'milk de- pends on the inheritance pl. the cow rather than on the food which she c onsuin es. Looking for a Farm? Here are a few things no man should, overlook when going to -buy a farm: Do not buy land. when it is covered with snow. woman who did that,a year ago, found when spring opened that She had invested in -a piece of swamp land. Do not Haslet anybody else to pick out a Terra for -you. See it yourself before you close the bargain. Satisfy yourself tha,t the price you pay is a lgosicl investment. That is, that you can grow crops enough and sell them at such a price that you can pay for your farm from the proceeds. Look well to the neighborhood you locate in. Good. neigh,bers, good roads, good schools, church privileges are worth more than good land. And go intending to add your part toward making the' cOmmunity the best 'pos- sible. Take care that you are not too far the figures are as follows: Holstein - from market. Many a farmer has Friesian, 2,368; Ayethire, 591.; Jersey, been handicapped by long distance 150; 'Shortharn, 90; Guernsey, 16; from railway statiens. Freneh Canadian, 9. Total, 3,227. While it is true that houses can be built anywhere, remember that they ees,t in these days, and look your se at three weeks of age the calf is "to God. Moreover marked has entrance inc anew life of public: getting all skim-milk.mi• •m , e end confirmed by the Do notefeed too much mrlk; five approving words of God and the full. pounds at a feed is sufficient. Have gift of the Holy Spirit for that task. the Milk aletays at the same temper- In- a word, the haptiem was a recog- • atom when fed. intion, an identification a begineing, and requires more food-, begin giving exPenienee M the life of Jesus. , As th,e, -calf grows larger and older and an endowment. was a great ground. oaf'vbat mIcknings cern L The Temptation to an Easy Messiah - meal for g.rain, and also give clover ship, 14. hay, ensilage or any roughage toed V. 1. And. M 1 ea "streight- f , are as you have. This will make a better way," after the baptism. Full of the tall than to f eed large quantities of Holy Ghost; dedicated to his great skim -milk, task and endowed with the full Ten Pound Dairy Cows. Five years ago at a dinner of cattle lereeders the late Dr. C. C. James, then Dominion Commissioner of Agricul- ture, said "We need more ten thou- sand poued cows." Judging learn the fourteenth report of the Canadian Re- cord of Performance for pure-bred Dairy Cows, published by the Domin- ion Live Stook branch., Canada is in a fair way of haVing her wants ful- filled. . The number of t3OWS that have qualified in the Record of Pe,rform- ance with records of 10,000 lbs. milk or over, is shown to have been 3,227 up to April 1922. Given by breeds Why Hogs Root. buildings over carefully to see what \Thy do hogs ro,ot? Experts say cencliHon they are in. From -roof to cellar they should be comforbable and sanitary. And bear in Mind that et valicl title rooting is just one of the natural pro- clivities of swine. While it probably does help make muscle, it is other - is what conveys the home. Ins,ist on wise of no special benefit, and has no particular eignificaece. The fact that h,avin,g. a search made and see.that you have an abstract of title. hogs show a strong tendency to Plow Finally, don't be in a hurry. Buy up fields is no indication that they in haste and repent at leisure may be are not getting proper feed; rooting does not result from lack of mineral a revised version of an old saying, but it is a good olio., all the same. —E. L. V. If you want an umbrella to rot, stand it'handle up when wet. " , Some teamsters' make us .wish horses weren't so patient. or protein ln the ration. Hogs root for worms, roots, arid other food, but they seem to thrive just as well when -a-check is planed -on the-extensiye use of their snouts. They also root to make a cool bed on a hot day. Experts 'advise ringing where hogs do material damage by rooting. into of the Dead Sea. Uie Exp it Lned.nta-- -„*.eilneeto of the Psalm is for those in the plain e Gwocli ds ersuppersist loinr erieetres'Anranst TiainetyihetealblednatYtangaentrd 11 is 111-07sgal•ncege,og that menaoe, not for dangers that are invited or created. Jesus refused to be a wonder -monger. The miracles of Jesus were always prompted by lye, always assigned to help, always made suborairiate to His &aching of heavenly truth. He Himself, not His miracles is the supreme revelation of God. V. 13.When the devil had ended all Means for heavenly ends? and Wi'VC, about the really good i:rieud V. 8, 'dhoti elialt worship the Lord Dr, li'owtr's rilttraet of Wild 8trttiv. . Rim only shalt thou serve. There berry bas beea xne, can be no compromise either in 'the Oho 8onjox yo,,,b8,oci came home -worship or service of God. Christ had feeqiug. elk Null bowel trom come tO glorify God and the way of ble, Una asked Inc to betui for a botile SOTVDCe must be in stecordance with of "Dr. 1'e-4er/hi'', and on the foflow- . the will of Ued, ing Tuesday he was out in the field III. The Temptation to a Popular again, as fit as ovv:r. measiahahip, 943. weels ago my baby boy, jilf,3t 011Q Vs, 942. pinnacle of the temple; th e ta7,1,10a 5ft ra ck taLl Tit otL111,0 Pda"ste ttbhYttelsfYrndob414.2e0h&oea could onti 0 seta t i:rrr isbl ci)t:p,b (jut to use divine powers in the interests Ins ree, of self, He has refused to use worldly power in the interests of His ldneem. itBneumttr,wHovim.dicia to}ofi eat hu;saej v hig:cii:onilvr.rli!st re poasiteainx, bv Wild el I ba was tivegituhl :rutty yofuoir- tgrharlac(ei, days, 40 was as well as any boy could spectacular, wander -stirring way that remedy for untold gold." would remedy has would advertise His divinity and pea foundly impress the multitude. He no superior for the relic•f of dinarliouo., shall give His angels charge. Satan dysentery, ersirti2 suggests it would be a splendid con- firmation of the prourise of Ps„ 91: and. panne in, the 12. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord steme,eh, cholera., , thy God. jes,Us-differentiates, between cholora '371011).11$!, faith final 'Presumption, The -promise eitOlera inftineira suermer comp] aie and all looseness of the bowele. 77 yeate -repute - tion stancla behie.d i'Dr. Fowler Priee 50e. a' bottle; put up only by The T. Milburn Oe., Limited, Toronto, Ont. not only be -exp'erienced. They, TraliSt ime und,erstood-, Jesus needs retire - meet for thotight and' contemplation; Being forty daYs tempted. Jesus thought vrould be about His Messiah - ship, tte nature ineth,oct and end. He Cold Storage and the Farmer lo,unci 1-limsell 'being tested. and, tried regarding all these. Terrrptabien for the strong m-earis a revealing of strength. For the weak it means a revelation of weakness, but for strong and weak alike the test is real ancl the the temptation; every kind of tompta- writer of Hebrews emphasizes the then. He departed; a rout, not a re - reality of Christ's temptation and the treat. Fora season. Jesus had fought battle once for all, but tempta- sayrempteamthpytedw, hie, h such temptation this V 2 Did * created in Chniet for the weak who tion Will he other battles, but not along is not a ast experience.There Dream. The Children's , V. . I eat nothing . . he after- • Inc.this iEven at the end of his ir,nomoue,r;ii..113,nra jeghiinia.l-drteionn, fly with i n e I ward hungered. In the intensity _, rem -deity there will' come the tempta- ' His wildernees experien'ce, His bodily tion in the Garden of Gethsemane, to needs were forgotten for a tirne, but seek some easier way than the way of We'll build an aeroplane and see and Fsuri,.oniceambeep.fiidnen.l.,ity is to the will .of God. The propeller whirls— nation. tthhiesyTtial,snseerto.efd theselve's later and -the Cross.- But, then as now, His The wonders of a fairy physicalreactioni e mg to end. He will be a By Hugh J. Hughes John Elkins, who live§ across the, " Now it's another story. Along in road from me, is a likeable sort of November, when the hens out on the chap,- but he has one pet antipathy, farm begin to miss the angleworms and that happens to be cold storage. and to curl up their toes in the morn - He thinks, and honestly so, thae"thern ings, the city consumer notices that cold storage fellers ..le ho,olsin' their eggs are going up. - And ol course he claws onto th,e earth." ,He has it grumbles. You'd do the same, if in figured out that nearly everything his place. About that same time, were from sunburn to taxes is in some way it not for cold, ,stiOrage, eggs would caus,ed by mar great refrigeration not merely go up in price, but they'd —a. plants. And John is not alone in his go clear oft the market! way of thinking. But I doubt -if even Year Round Market for Eggs Now. Tractor Propelled by Feet .we, who take a little mere moderate Note just what happensi In the 'for Use on Soft Ground. position, often stop to figure where spring, when eggs were rolling in fast, An agricultural tractor which is we would be without cold storage, and all the farmers had a market, and like a fair price for their propelled by feet instead of by a just what it sloes for us as well as to something _ wheel is described in the Popular us. Let's make a list of the Indus, Mechanics Magazine. The purpose ..,()T tries that exist on their modea-n scale the machine is to furnish a tractor tohoiruous,gthorathgeo. exTinsteenifieset incdierlanisrintseem, of that will operate equally well at all times 6n ground too soft or .rriuddy The wth°lie milk' basin-ess—an°ther . . for the effective used of propelling lamileill 02 farming' , wheels. Mounted on a pair of steer- The egg business—still ein,other ing wheels is a hood, with a radiator branch ol farming. — and power plant of automobile type, The fruit business --more fanning. The sides and chassis of the hood are 'Dhe poultry business—still more ' Cattle were the first money. The, extended to the rea?, and, support two farming. . •"R°man wcird for. mmleY' Peeinliam, is pivoted vertical, levers, at the lower The livestock business—the biggest • - - ends of which, in "co,ntact with the branch of farming. ' , derived from pe.eus, meaning cattle. _. ground, are flat, herizoneal propelling Wipe. out our refrigerators, our re- SUirillED FOR 5YEARS of connecting rods ,and cranks in con- our cold asterage plants, and these plates, Or feet. By means of a systend frigerator cars, 0112 cooling plants, _.-nection with the motor, these levers lines of busines,s, every ene of them, • WITH HEART TROUBLE; aro caused, to rnbry.e backward arid would decay and disap,pear frOM the -forward alternately like the legs of earth in their pres,ent form: They are . , . any biped, end the propulsion of one built up, and, they exist on cold Stor- fopt continues until • pro,pulsion is age, just as much as they exist be - started by the ohher. cauee of meadows or pastures or rail ------------------ roads or people to consume food. Dairy Cow Record Breeders. . Take fruit. It is a seas,octral crop, '' Hio.w interest thee grown in the ire- highly perishable. It can not stand pro'vernent of the pure -bred -dairy 'Cow heat nor handling, but because of cold is shown by the increased eumleer of storage ene can eat apples ' twelve owners and, 'breeders whose names months in the year, and oranges, and - . figure in the Report for 1921-22 of the bananas. . Record of Performance of Pure-bred When cold storage came into being Dairy Cows kept ,and published by the in a large way, less than a generation . Dominion Live Stock branch. In the ago it made veleat.lracl been the lux - WAS SI!OilT OF BitlEATO ,On the first eign. of the heart be. • coming weakened or ,the •nerves un.. 4trung, Milburn's Heart and. Nerve Pills are just the remedy- you require., regulate an.d stiraulete • the heart, "land Strengthen and restore the.. whole nerve systera. Mr. Waiter Winger, Rogersville, Ont., arrites:—"D" suffered", for five years with heart trouble. could -hardly walk from the house to the barn without report for 1919-20 the number was uries of the riela the .common market resting as 1 used to get so short of 247, in tha.it for 1920-21 it was 339possibilities of the average consumer, breath, sPetlt hloadreas ofydollars on and in 1921 -22 -it was no fewer than Suppose We trace its ..effect 120Ort, let doctors but they could tie nothing for 468, -making an increase of 90 per Cent us say,eggs. Me- 'Friends told,me to try -Milburn's. Iwo yeay8. This shows at Once not " Eggs Five Cents a Dozen. • Heart and -Nerve sa gal- a bm" only aceeleriited interest in pro- EL•0:8 us,c1 to •Attif filo got two mol'e, and now T. am enjoying tr,111'inn '-'ac Part or the breeders of " 'Thrrleillr'ep;coa_ X felt better after takiee the fest ono , 41 my health as beforo. cannot ronone CaV8, 1.)1'11 a'ls'e in the exterior:1Y auction. and their marketing. alike mend your 1?ills 1;00 '121011Y." °-1' 1110 dairy, s.eeing. that the keeping' wer&•,, neg-iected„ Th63,- were plentiful, arid Nerve Pills aro of *records has hecome widosPread. and about five cents a dozen hi the 50e. a box at all dealers,' Or mailed de spring: In -the whited' we counted rect cm -receipt of price by '1'119 '2, Mil- Lightning rods WO 98 per cent, pro- teem a luxury, and a new -laid egg next to a irfidaele, burn Cee Limited; Toronte, Oct.' tree:ion a,gainet fire by lightning. • bodily ex_ h.austion is seized ley the ieree,„siee, nee,oee inn dom TS. not of this tempter for his culminating effort. Id b 'g 1 k AwaY we il-Y1 world. but 0 UN-la:Le eve teat see s, -ver • • We'll cut a window in the sky, V. 3. Comma.ucl . that it be made' serves and saves. Application. bread. Seemingly, a natural thing, lor t b ea.sed—a reas,onable thing, for Christ must live The temptation of our Lord was no to do His work, an easy thing for a drama. He took to Him a true body word win do it, a useful thing for it and a reasonable soul and was tempt- They're forming halos made of lie.lat would demonstrate His divine sanship able as well as tempted in all el ts r " • P n For mothers when they sleep at night. and power. •I just as we are. He was 'plunged into - ' They tie tee,ch raindrop to a string V. 4. Not . . by bread alone . . by no river Styx to make Him involnee- no drop it -on the ft:GI-vacs iri sprieoge every word of God. Jesus uses the able. Otherwise His terepta,tion would ,They,re beriang rainbows bit by bit: scripture (Dent. 8: 3) for His shield, have no value -Tor us. He triumpthed,1 So careful lest they should not fin Hunger is not the supreme motive. His human nature notwiehstanding. Jesus not -ase His power in a', This temptation in the wilderness So when you see a rainbow fair, s,ell-satisfying way. In all His min- was no doubt externalized, in the tell- Hush! istay Jesus never used His divine ing somewhat after the fashion of Don's you tell who placed it there, pewee -be save Himself from any of Christian's experience in Banyan's But keep our secret! Hug it tight, His Pilgrim's Progress'. NobodY we ever And only think I t ht ing,1 . pthoewopx,sliisper:coorf ehassersh-amaa nae. knew of ever saw the. devil with out - II. The Temptation to a Compromis- ing Messiaship, 5-8. kingdoms of the world. ,Satan has his suggestions with a hidden hand been foiled is the test of sell-atis- and no doubt alter this inward and faction. But if Jesus will not cheese epiritual manner, our Lord was the e.asy- way for Himself, perh,ape temeted. will elmose the easy way for His As vie goethrough the wilderness of1 this world, sh,a_, we ourtemp - V. kingdom., 01 snail we go along, Since the inception of the Dominion V. 6, 7. All His power I will give tatiens alone, Thee . . if Thou . wilt worship mac. with that Greatheart of the human Experimental Farnis up to 1922 there The Jews looked for a Isin,gd.orr. of race, who has overcome all temptation have been originated by the Cereal. earthly power and glorY. The Roman, ono. \vim one day put all things under Division seeenty-four new varietie,S world would bow ,before such a king- 1 -lis feet? If we do, Ged will make us and selections oe gaaen, innueing ee Him varieties of spring wheat, 9 varieties dom. Why not compromise, earthly more than conquerors through 14 of barley, 7 ef peas, one power for spiritual ends? Why not that loved us. We may be sure oa on oats come before the world as a king in- this, that we must either overthrow erach-oispring rye, Winter rye, emmer stead of a 'carpenter? Why not choose our temptations •or be overthrown by flax.. The princip,a1 variety of all is An,c1 then With caution peeping, through -We'll see just what the angels do, ward eye. If we coulisi le -rant e , wheouold nilleiikanniee'es'Yejeeaat> tcm "Get T''ohencOviunutcierg;an'ut:'; eauwra3'a-efroel'arliornmee, V 5 An high mountain all the devil's strategic purpose to fling in N.AuprisleloLdsferuseatasch -tenra,struehpeaincl,bed. Hosvcroft. New Varieties of Grain. an,d stinfi.owe'rs, 6 of beans, and 5 cS a throne instead, of a cross? Why net them. . the Mae:qt.-Lis -wheat, NViliCh has svon . , plethoric pluncleripund. They do December is nine months inclusive:1 prize,s wherever shoetni: and: has not buy up and held off the -market total per crate, $2.50. Add freight' minions of daars to Canada. iminense quentitles of food in order and price at time of storing, then acel Although the farms came into life in to gyp the farmer on prices coming a profit and enough in addition to cover 1886 this great work has mainly been and the consumer onepances going. your posseble iosses through some go- done in the present century, first They: do not "earner" lead supplies. mg bad—and you have the price at tinder the clir,ection of the late Dr. They • simply carnt. Not even when which you can. sell end break even. wilimnmn If you follow the market you Saunders. who was Director 'eggs. And this market continues all they appear, to. the Farms up to 1902, and then. takin,g one year , - the season because, and only 'because, Maybe 'some of them try to. I have be apt to find that, under lir. Charles E. Saunders, who the consumer in the city is sure that a recollection something a that, with another, you can get fair prices became Dominion Cerealist in 1903 -words, the egg appetite of the average many in on the same deal. co, scribed. letarquis, which was obtained from a was in turn s'ecurecl froan a ,cross made eggs any time in the year. The eat- for rent to any and all corn- I'M net insisting on holding until •ri lie ca -n satisfy his taste for eggs when- sort in eggs, but it simply isn't done. feir Your eggs bY se14'ing them as cold and in the- svintes of that year and ancl in t.he way I have de- 1904 gave the country the famous ever he wants to do so. Put into other Why? Best reason in the world---to.0 storage, consumer has been trained. to a,sk for storage pla-nt is merelY a Place Sell on a Rising Market. mixed variety called Markham which ing season has wi.deriecl from a few ers. And they come by the December, or until any other set time. in 1892 between Hard Rea Calcutta are egg men gakrret ail hu3,thaign, do; witeethee Inc holde- eggs, or wool, aniletR,sedneFtiffeor.gen7.eTiat the finee-t look- ftsaasremkesr tiso thtl,eveglvaieneim.,oansthhse, saencuclretsh:1 There are and by the handired—literally. The thing the man who holds should steady outlet, . ,t eggs when eggs are cheap—and , or wheat, is to sell when the market the peorest worker, But you tell that to John Elkins andi cheap as they can. Buying eggsi,..°111 is risin.g, and waren he can see a clear 'ing hen is usliallY he'll say: "Yes, but look at how them the market, buying eggs from the prmit. The man who does that will eagetege-----cas---Pereeneargege-e-graceneeess=a- il. - t e cold storage aigs fetch clown the price, country .si3Ore,s, buying eggs fram the net go broke even though he seldom rr 1, it 1 0 1E'il , ' L a in the winter!" well, you can't have; farmers direct—all planning on hits the extreme top price. And, as W buy- . your•cake Emd eat it too. Can't have inc cheap and selling dear, reeularly as the seasons come and go, . ODplenty .of eggs and famine prices. Then .eemes the selling __Along in egg, butter, poultry, fruit, are low CAUSED BY BAB BLP Can't have a leveling up el prites ill October the ,cautious ones begin to let when the egop is on, and high the I Bad blood is responsible for the pi - and the plungers ride Tee a g So I'm not advising that you .- , . in prices in the winter. Fifty years ago season; now it, is reasonably fair Farmers can use cold. storage. wen_known, orderly rootirrente of skin troubles that ereak out on the face ga. 1 , . c , ,..„ rti:,013i;uPunetScLwailiwlid,:eh 'Ii.idii.in1,11"sasjrstthebeth,a.b.atetlatthe',r•elleeff ecyteaars of tuect,gtshisansidiggpeesitlaliTsw, sionmteheocualseer Psrerieenehtailriegsepsawt-‘ivthbeninteble'lirgeeinst aep°,rtieennt.1 "IT% ebr°ed Yis a natural foe to bad blood, called.. Burdock Blood Bitters, which al- 6,frieflot3ierhsivsho is not getting 'in doing so, but \ellen prices are below ways conquers, never fails, and 18 re - the„ coining of the egad storage plant tallifnag,irs'.ptheiee Produce on the the cost of production, do a little Cold commended by thousands to banish as a Part of our marketing sYstent, heMe' market can. take things some- storing yoursel.C, and thee sell as the everything from the smallest pimple to Bmiagrili'eitelsdhfoowrseyoo-uo.onaernaettiv.Perlfists'ociation thl'efrws.w:s4. s"ar°. farkii11116 11-Pssoire bleibenaearlie, 'Sometimes this can 'be done by the N. S., syrites:—“I suffered ebout a • lead -victual. Sometimes it is too eie, year with my ae(...; it WCt5 '11St '''"'a a job for, the individ,ulai. ,amd belongs with -piraplee ad blackheads. 1 used to the farmers, one all kinds of ereams and tliffere.nt mited- way or the other, bore "Go-op."isa But,irraatiesily Ionics, but tepee of there eeemed to elp untouched nem in mat:ketizg., .w43,ere,, entLiell.seaMy.byhome doctor told me they wore bad blood. • 1 last coupege the farmer ean help to narrow the of gettieg Hd of them 'until a lady told gap that existe betwen the consumer l' me to give 13meleels ntooa 13itters a trial. t got is bottle =tilt helped ine, and. by the time I had taten throe bot- tles I 'hadn't a pimple or my :race. 1 The principlee el feeding should be cart Iligh17 Bitters to any one who is troubled with recommend' Besdock Dlooa pimples:°' LiPmilittecill,PTO'ArelYetObsy0n'ttet, T. 111i11113111 C0.' the sunnner an me leveling down go whenever they ,ean make a Profit, balance of the year. I pies, blotches, and, other disfiguring it avas low prices ta,nd .a ,short rimpiket stake." neble but /either thet you meet a has been to lengthen the consuming season, increase the demand for per - fellable farm , products, and increase the income of the farm.er, I an just as ready to agree with you that the farmer has not -received his eull share' of the benefits. In other words, there is too wide a spread between whet the :Carmel' gets far his spring eggs, end what the con- sumer pays for those spring eggs eix menthe later. And so onfax the reett of the list. , • No Cold Sterege Trust. Noev let ine whack a eet sueerati- tien betwecn the horns, The storage men" are not an Aganizea, what into his .oein hands. Any farmer ean buy settee in a cold storage warehouse as easily as he -can rent a room in a hotel When he goes to the city. Upon request, the ware- hoeseman will quote him rates foe :storage; se I/MOD 'COI: the fleet month, and so much per month thereafter; As 1 recall the rete of one warehouse, it amounts to fty cents a crate of twcnty-five tents a crate eaeh month • thereafter. Suppose you •placed eggs etoraire ADril--tho best time to .4tore thern, as in late spririg and sum- mer they became more svatery and Practiced, on the farm 'table as Well as D.O't Of good qtraility--from April to ie the bann 'end lemeelif, tend, in such leshion t clover for the first month, and ' s 'to make the yeatr's boolee show a bet - tot balance for the farm and its boss,