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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-3-26, Page 66 Children Nod ere Attacks of HOOFING COUGH •Thi ie One f the rust dangerous diseasee of ehildree, especielly to • those tastier live years a age. • It firsts starts with a fever apd sough, aneezieg, watering a the eyes 1A141 an irritatioa of the throat, Leter the eoughbrg iureases, the taild becomes livia in the face, the eyes appear as if they would aurst I from takar Sockets, mid suffocation resale beeninent till relief is brought am by the whoop." •fficien e FERTILIZER HINTS. I\TQW is the time to consider the slering fertilizer needs en the farm, By placing your order saew 'yen Will ot Oilly be co-operating with your dealer, but you are more likely to get the atmlysie you want. 1 When buying feitilizers conaider the Analysis of fertilizer rather than the brand. A partieular analysis may be sold under many brand names. just because a fertilizer is sold as a "Corn and Wheat Grower," or "Bean and Beet Special," etc., it is no indication 1 that it is best for your particular soil On the first sign of the "whoop" WO Would advise the use of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syn p Mrs, S. 31. Craig I.E. No. 1 Palm- erston, Ont., writes:—"Two years ego, last winter, our five children had ery severe attacks of whooping cougle, We were recommended by our drug- gist to use Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, which we did with the greatest of suceess. It doused out the throat and bronchial tubes, and loosened the phlegm. so that they were able to eougli it up, and in no time I had queached the 'whooping'." "Dr. Wood's" is put up only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ontario. "See That You Get The Genuine! The Rose Bed. Mr. Wm. Hartry, a director of the Ontario Horticultural Association, ad- dressing the annual meeting held in Toronto in January, described his method of making a new rose bed. The space to be worked was 54 feet wide and 12% fee.t long. The sod was first remees d d 1 id i g o top soil was taken out and placed at the other side. The hard subsoil beneath was removed to a depth of eighteen inches and wheeled away. A tile drain was •laid in the bottom and connected with one that ran through the garden. Next, the sod that had been taken from the top was filled in and this was covered with several inches of well rotted stable manure. The excavation was then filled to the top and above it, layer -upon layer of good soil and manure. This work was all done before the rose k arrived. The planting stock of twenty-eight roses arrived in the forenoon and were im- mediately plunged into a tank of water, where they were left until sun- set, when they were in good condition for planting. The plants were put in about twenty inches apart. The var- ieties planted were Primer, Columbia, Sunburst, and American Beauty, all of which did well. The following year the planting was extended to forty- eight plants, the new varieties added being Dunlap, Madame Butterfly and Hoosier Beauty. --Ont. Hort, Asso. Four ,Bee Essentials. These four things are essential to profitable honey production: 1. Suitable weather for the bees to work in when the season of the main honey flow is on. 2. Honey -producing plants secret- ing nectar in abundance. 3. A strong force ref worker bees -- '75,000 to 100,0a0—at the beginning of the honey flow. 4. Colonies that devote all their en- ergies to gathering nectar and storing honey, rather than to swarming. Tbe storing instinct must outweigh the swarming instinct. Care of Grease. The cans or boxes in which axle or . cup greases or lubricating oils come packed, usually become more ar less greasy or oily out the outside. In time, the shelf, bench or floor where they are kept becomes grease -soaked. . This is not only unsightly and messy, but also increases fire hazards. To avoid thia, cover the shelf or floor with ' a piece of tin, galvanized iron, zinc, or other smooth sheet metal. Then, if this is wiped of occasionally with a rag or a piece of waste; it becomes easy instead of hard to keep clean. SKIN DISEASES - Eczernag Salt Rheum 1, RELIEVED EY USING condition. The Ontario Ageicultural College is ready at all times to give infornaatiou regarding the proper fer, tilizatioi of erops on different types of soil. a Always insist on highlanalysis fer- tilizers. A higli analysis fertilizer IS one containing fourteen or more units of plant food. A low analysis fertil- izer contains less than ,fourteen units. A 1-8-1, containing teo units of plant food, is a low analysis •material. A 246-2 contains twenty units of plant food and is considered A high analy- sis fertilizer. A high analysis fertilizer costs more per ton but less per unit of fertilizing. material. • Twenty unite of plant food contained in one ton of 2-16-2 fertil- izer costs $40.30. Twenty units a plant food contained in two tons of a 1-8-1 fertilizer costs $5$.10. By using a 2-16-2 at half the rate of a 1-8-1, the same amount of plant food will be applied and $17,80 saved on every too of 2-16-2 used. Fertilizers are profitable on most types of soil in Ontario. The points of consideration are: (1) the proper analysis to use; (2) the proper rate of application; (3) the proper method of application, and (4) crops adapted to the soil type. The use of phosphoric acid is the most important consideration in fertil-. lzting crops en Ontarlo soils. laotle heevy and light types respond to this ingredient.. Nitrogen, is eesential on the lighter types and badly run down heavy types. Potash gives geed re- turns ou the lighter types, particu- larly when used with atfalfa or the clovers. It is a good practice to top -dress wheat and rye in the spring with sod- ium nitrate at 60 to 100 pounds per acre, or ammonium •sulphate of 40 to 75 pounds per ttere just osthe plants are emerging from their dor- matt stage. This praetice is par- ticularly good on the lighter types of soil, or sons of low fertility, If the soils are alkalme in reaction or have no lime requirement either ore may be used. On acid, or sour soils bet- ter results will • be obtained where sodium nitrate is used. Acid phosphate at 250 pounds per acre is usually sufficient for oats or barley when seeded alone. If the crops are grown in a rotation with no ma- ture or green manure in the rotation, a 442-0 or 2-16-2 will be better. If alfalfa or any of the clovers are seed- ed with oats or barley, it is a.dvisable to use a fertilizer containing more potash on the lighter type soils, such as an 0-12;6 or 4-8-6. A complete fertilizer is one contain- ing nitrogen, phosphoric acid and pot- ash. It must contain all three ingredi- ents. A mixed fertilizer. does not nec- essarily mean that it is a complete fertilizer. It may contain only one or two ingredients. Fertilizers should be used to cut the cost of production and help maintain the fertility of the soil. It costs no more to prepare the seed bed, plant the crop and cultivate a fifty -bushel crop of corn than a twenty -five -bushel crop. Increase the yield per acre and cultivate fewer acres. This will allow more of the farm to be seeded to soil - building legumes. Jokes for Two. Robert had been playing April -fool jokes all the morning. At last even he was tired. "Will you help me put a new cover on my kite?" he asked aliriain, his sister. Miriam shook her head. She thought Robert deserved punishment "All right, I didn't want you to anyway; Aprit feta!'" he cried and ran out to play with the new boys across the street. Miriam had played with Robert ever since breakfast and had not been cross once when he "fooled" her. Now she thought it was most =kind of him to go -off and play with a boy he had never seen until yesterday. "I don't care!" she said to herself and sat down by the window to think. She could see the boys playing under the trees. They seemed to be baying such a good tinte! The new boy had brought out his radio set to show to Robert. Miriam felt like crying. Sometimes boys were very mean. By and by Miriam smiled. "H'ni! I guess Robert Kenyon is not the only one that can play an April -fool joke," she said. Miriam did not tell anyone about her joke, and during luncheon no one would ever have guessed that she had one in mind. But as soon as Robert had gone back to alay with his new friend she busily set to werlawith the scissors and paste pot and a roll of paper and some string. She. worked steadily, and just when she had finished her little joke and put it patray she hed gobert's whistle. He opened. the door of. the closet where he and Miriam -kept their play clothes and games and thing's. Since; he was talking ,very fast about the. new boy, he did not notice that Miriam was fi.dgeting. Robert hung up his cap and stetted to close the door. Then; far back in the corner he saw soma -I thing that made him stare. He caught it up and brought it out to the light.1 "April fool!" Miriam railed, dancing round her brother. "APril fool!" 1 Robert's eyes grew big and a broad , smile spread over his face as he stood; looking at the object in hishand. It was his old kite, with a new glossy covering of tan and blue, with vhich, stood for Lincoln Scheel, in tall' elver letters in the centre of the blue,' and a beautifully kriotted tail that Robert knew at a glance was "just right." He grinned sheepishly at Miriam) "I guess I was kind of mean, sis,", he said. "But it was great of you to' stay in alone -all afternoon and ieencl• that old kite!" 1 "I didn't mind," she answered, and hor eyes were bright and shining. "Last tag!" she cried and darted away to the kitchere--Nellie Josephine gn„e„, ippe, in Youths Companion. Uncle Si says he likes to have coin - any for meals veell enougla but he, oes hate to keep passing things, and I An 'April Fool Party. Use the following rhyme for your invitations: On April First just try for once ' To be a really, truly dunce, And come prepared to do some stunts For goOd news waits for her (or him) vyho hunts. • Provide each guest with. a bag of beans and then eitplain that every- thing is to be done with the left hand. Guests' shake hands With the left hand, pass to tbe left and eat with the left hand. "tA bean is thrown into an in- verted dunce cap every time this rule is broken. After 'refreshments are served, guests should report the num- her of beans they have left and the prize should be awarded to the person having the smallest number, a deci- sion. which will fool everybody. The person leaving the largest number of beans should be required to do some foolish stunt, for he had not been suf- fielently "foolish" to get into the spirit of the evening. •• Ask each guest to bring some article (well wrapped. and disguised) to be used for a "parcel pass." Seat the guests in a circle, each holding a par- cel •which has been numbered, then have a lively tune played upon a piano or talking -machine and instruct the players to pass the parcels as rapidly as possible, 'round and 'round the circle until the music stops. The per- son in charge calls met a number a.nd the person holding the parcel having the number which is called becomes dthe owner of that parcel. The music and the passing of the parcels is re- sumed and repeated until all the par- cels find owners. The contents 'of the :packages should be as ludicioes as possible—a shirt -waist box containing a dish -cloth and a jeweler's box con- taining a yeast -cake, are good ex- amples., Serve any refreshmente preferred, but mix your April Fool dishes with the other articles' of feted. Cotton dougbnuts, individual pies filled with sawdust, end chocolate erearne made of confectioners' sugar mildly flavored with pepper, will fill your guests with apprehension concerning the other re- freshments. Mrs, S. Arseeault, Belle Cotes writes:—"Having been troubled with eezema, on my. bands, for over lvo yearn and trine everything 1 conId think of, includlog doeters, but with- d hey never seem 'to ask fel' what tleei vent. out any relief, a, friend sea:aged me to take 13,13.13, After having used' two bottles of 1" erour wee:aerial nicdiis 1 was re- • /loved of nil tronbae That is now a , year ago, end 1 have not had the sligbtest siga oe it sinee," P 11:8.B. b menufactured only by The t Millera aoe, Linitea, Toronto, On. t Improper handlirig of farm manure 8 probably causing more plantfood to ass into tile air. as Ammonia or into he creek as seepage than even readies': he field, • • The European Corn Borer. A series of experiments were con- ducted by the Dept, of Entomology to aecertain what percentage of the corn borers perished while still very small or during the first few days after hatching. In these experiments 8 100 eggs were used. It -was found that an average of a little more than 75 per cent. a the borers perished. We think that .further evorlt of this kind will prove very valuable in determin- ing the effect of moisture, temperature. and sunlight, not only on the borers themselves, but also on the moths, and will enable us to folio a mach mare accurate estimate of the rate- of in- crease mad damage likely to take place in a normal years, says Prof, Lawson Caesar, Ontario Agricaetural College.' Horse Talk. • Stert nOW to get horses' shoulders, ready for spring work. Bathing with salt vaater will help toughen the shoula dere. Werk horses lightly at first. Wind-pufla, or worse, often come froni puttleg the cot on a heavy pull- ing' job when he is first. broltee. Care- ful—the colt must get used to hard work a little at a time. Harnes.e seines can be prevented more easily then cuted, 'Put the old harness in good shape or get a new set. A poor harnees, patched up With wire, is a sign of a poor farmer. . R IE NEAT 1 S IVI Comes From' .Urte Acid In The Blood Mr, Clifford Petrie, 057B:big S. El Oat., writ,ea—"About sia menthe ago 1 Weenie treublea with , pales le nty beck, tread whet 3 stooped over 1 felt es though 1 could never etreigaten up again. , • "I tbougat the beet thing ter ino to do was to see a doctor, and he said that 1 wa4 troubled, 1Y it 11 elieuxuatisne •'‘After taltiag bis ' treatment for Seale time, I aid. not get rid of my pains, in feat, they were get- ting so bed 3 eckuld swot sleep or east at night. bttar Oa Januar'- 4th 1024 1 was read - tag (me of your Athouuses, aud it told 510 just what, was wrong with me. I lost no tune he sending for a leox of 'Doieu '$ ' e and haa ealytaken them a few days whee any rlienunatie pains lee gall to leave me. can tauthehelle" say that Doao's Xidney Pills are eecond to none." Inoculation of Legumes. Legiereinous plants such as alfalfa and the clovers' have on their roots small bunches or "nodules" containing' bacteria. • These bacteria. can take nitrogen from the air and give it to the plant. As a result the plant is more vigorous and has a higher feed- ing value. This nitrogen from the air helps to build ut; poor soil. If a aeld has grown the seine le- gume with an abundant supply of nodules for three or four years then the field is, in all probability, inocu- lated with the right kind of ba.cteria for this particular crop. If it is nec- essary to bring bacteria from in out- . side source, a nearby field which is known to be inoculated is a satisfac- tory source. Distribute this soil over the field to be inoculated at the rate of 200 to 300 pounds per acre. Make this distribution before seeding, on a cloudy day, and work the soil in im- mediately. If such soil is not avail- , nocu ate with pure cultures, which you can get, with directions, from. any seed store. There are several strains of these bacteria. One strain will infect both alfalfa and sweet clover; another in- fects the common clovers, such as red, alsike, mammoth and -white. Separate strains may also bathed for field and garden beans, soybearis, field and gar- den peas, cow -peas, sweet peas and vetch. A field inoculated for sweet clover will also be inoculated for al- falfatInd in the same manner a field inoculated for one, of the 00211211021c1overe will 136 inoculated for all the vaxious common clovers. .Horne -Made Yeast for • Poultry. Yeast is becoming an important factor en the growth of poultry and ancreased egg production. Poultrymen may make their own at a cost less than the commercial product. Place one quart of hops in about twe and one-half quarts of water, and boil for ten minutes. Then strain and pour the liquid over one quart of wheat flour. As soon as this mixture reaches «a temperature of 100 deg. F. (milk waren), add a cake of commercial yeast, andlat it ferment foe two days. Keep in a warm Place, as a chill will destroy it. After it has fermented, stir in five pounds of cornmeal, and let it stand for thiee. or four hours to rise. Then remove from the pan and place on newspapers to dry. When dried -it is ready to be -fed. She—"Dad says you bave no means of support." He --"It's mean of him to comment on my personal appearance." MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS • Are a specifie for alt diseases and dieordere arising from a ron-down con- dition of the heart or serve eysteare They eorroet such troOles an I's.lpita, ' tho Hoant,o toss of rea Sinotherieg mid Sinking Spells, Feint and Di viy Spells, atervoneness, Sleep- lege:lose, and, aro espetially iedicated for all troubles ;peculiar to the female $ex. 'Fr leall rgeies e1 osayaduthal aettlere, 1 Chicaeo Cholera, Mused by a germ known as the bacillus avisepticus, spreads very rapidly, The geeme are given off with the bowel diseharges and soon contaminate the food and supply.16ecrtaothei Brilfde:t.win als° carry int The disease is acconepanied by a high fever, which caruses birds to be- come unusually thirty, and they will be found hoveriag neae the water trough. It makes itself apparent la from three days' to, a week's time after the ipfection, depending on the resistance of the ,bird and the viru- lence of the infection. Frequently it acts very rapidly, and the first knowl- edge that the poultryman will have will be when he finds% few dead birds arnoeg the flock. In other outbreaks the iodividual bled will be noticed to have loss of ap- petite accompanied by high fever. Birds are very weak, and reel and stagger as they walk. The feathers are ruffled and a sick bird sits by .showing no vigor and a rapid lossofflesh. The comb grows darker in color, and there is a severe diarr- hoea of a greenish -yellow color. This condition ma3r last for from a week to ten days, and the bird may be attack- ed by convulsions arid die early. Virst remove all birds that are ap- parently healthy and put them in clean quarters. Thoroughly clean ap and disinfect the pens, including the runs, which the sick birds are kept. Re- member that the attendant can carry infection from one place to another, and be careful, to wipe the feet thor- oughly on in old sack saturated with stock dip. Dead birds should be deep- ly buried he quicklime. Feed in nar- row, shallow troughs in which the birds cannot stand. Remember that sunlight is the best disinfectant pos- sible. Disinfectant with a good dip and whttewash , with ao • antiseptic whitewash.• - Use eneugh potaseium permangan- ate ±0the drinking water to turn it the color of weak coffee. Give one-balf grain of-sulpho-carbolate compound in hot mash, for each bird, two or three times daily. You can secure these tab- lets from any druggist, who keeps them for use of human physicians. —Dr, George H. Conn. Iceland Poppies in the Border. No perennial • border is complete without plenty of the lovely little Ice- land poppies. • -.• My borders had to be re -made last summer, it would be a little larger, and I was discarding 'some of the plants- that spread too rapidly. The seeds were sown in .a peony bed in July, the ground loosened with a. rake,. seeds sealieeed, cleverer]. -with a little earth, firmed with the foot and watered. By the middle of Sep- tember a lot of fine plants arere ready to transplant, but, the border was oot ready, only one end down by the street that I was making a white, yellow, and purple "corner." A large group of lilacs that has been there thirty yea s we t Id has been thinned out, and forms a fine background for Ilehmium, Riverton peauty, and Bycroft Purple Aster. 'The telephone pole covered with Vir- ginia creeper protects Bottonia from the weat winds. On the other side • of the "corner" the wire fence is fairly well covered with Virginia creeper, a fine young syringe at one end, tietween that and the lilacs Helenium, Riverton Gem, Miss Mellish sunflower,. and the tall late white phlox. Along the edge of the porner the dainty, dwarf, purple and ,yellow iris blooming 111 Maar; tall bearded, yellow and purple iris in • June, and purple, Japanese iris in July in the centre. Purple columbine and the lovely lemon lilies are a charming combina- tion and in between the larger plants I have dotted my Iceland poppies. I have clrea.raed of that corner all winter, but, ane of the certain things about horticulture is the uncertain, as it may not be all I hope for.—Miss Anna Moyle, for the Ont. Hort. Asso, SOME OF THE NEWER ROS It will be many years before the elti stand-bys in row, such as 3. 3, clerk, I1ugb Dieksons Mrs, della Lanfa aed Snow Queen, will be entirely re - Placed, but new roses are constantly appearing' and -it is well to consider eghether or rot some a these inight be added le 9110'S stock. Mr, A. J. 'Webster, an. Ontario grower, has made a careful analysis 'ef the newer varieties' and has pub- lished his conclusions in The Flower - Grower, ()phone, he stetes, continues to head the list in sum total of pea qualities. So satisfactory is this variety in regard to disease resist- ance, hardiness, profusion of bloom, conformation, growth and .fragrance, that it should be included in even the humblest collection. Mrs. Henry Morse, a pink vealety, ranks high. The color ie eilvegy pink on the inside of the petale, deep rose on the reverse side, shading to orange at the base. It has proved to be a constant bloomer. Richmond, that wonderful red, and Los Angeles, copper shading, battled all through the season for third po- sition on the list. • sweet Scent and general excelleece,, came peat in rank. The color is often eherry rose. oat ., Ninth peettion wee --awarded to Emma Wright, a serni-double rose of wonderful shade. Mabel Morse stood high throughout the season as eid'Madanfe Abel Chat- enaYl then came Ethel Somerset, a - shrimp pink, followed by Gruss an Teplitz, jonkheer J. L. Mocle, Chris- tine, Diedena, Geisha, and a ntimber of others of varying degree of charm and usefulness. This list ig sufficiently long to be a guide to those who -would make a trial of some additional 'plants for their rose beds, For the purpose of helpthg to estab- lish the relative merits of different varieties of roses for culture in. On- teria a rose demonstration plot has been established at the village of Markham. This is one of the official flower demonstration Plots of the Canadian Horticutteral Council, The Markham plot is supported by the local Board of Trade, the Women's Institute, and the Toronto Rose So- ciety. It occupies an acre of ground and further land will be added to ac- commodate the additions that will still be made, The plot has a sunny ex-, posure and is being given the protec- tion of a boulevard of shrubbery: Ten rose -growing firms in England, Hol- land, the United States, and Ireland, have contributed planting stock which includes twelve hundred plants com- prising one hundred and fifty named varieties. The Dominion Experiment- al Farms, it is expected, will contri- bute a quantity of plantsfor etudy mid demonstratiori purpesese to, the Markham Rose Demonstration Plot. —Can, Hort. Council. Chas. K. Douglas, a scarlet rose, produces a wealth of bloom on long stiff stems. It lacks fragrance, how- ever, and its petalage is not denee. Next in rank io the collection carne Souvenir de Claudius Pernet and C-eo. C. Ward. The former is a glor- ious yellow and the latter a beautiful carmine rose. Of the two only the latter has perfume, Both varieties are charming, particularly in the bud, and the flowers are produced on fine stems, Una Wallace, on account of its ex- cellent growth, profusion shape and u nese of bloom, length of stem, Mangels Have a "Sweei" Tooth. . I once heard a farmer -neighbor say that mangels are the hardest thing to grow on the farm. I think I know why ---in the years I have known him man I have never seen him spZ•ead a pound of lime. You can't grow man gels without lime any more than you can clover. • Lime and manure, good seed and cultivation are the combina- tion needed for manes. When I drive around and see a field of stunted, stringy -looking mangels struggling to make growth, I say to myself_. "A.cidosis." •• There's no dark ,sher, about grow- ing mange's provided you _furnish them with enough manure to grow on and lime te keep them sweet. I limed my plot last fall and it was heavily manured during the winter. • Pall spreading is best for lime. It works down and in, with the alternate freez- es and thaws. The first time I put in mangels, however, I limed in the spring; and certainly grew some big roots. Pretty near scared me, they grew so big and tast—like a red- headed boy raised on raw milk and spinach. • I didn't know then that, unlike the iceberg, the mangers bulk projects mainly above the surface. • I grow red mangels, though .1 under- stand there is no difference in feed value between red and yellow var- ieties. 1 drill the seed with my gar- den seeder, setting the index to feed not too thickly. They can be thinned after the stand is definitely establish- ed to about a foot apart. I put mine in early enough It assure a full sea- son's growth.Keep them cultivated, and ' they will certainly produce. --H. A. B. Turning to the Hemlock. Eastern hemlock was valrueless as a lumber tree twenty years ago, and only the bark was need, but it is now a very valuable timber. CA—Et CP: Use-it:obit Label*'. for cattle. sheep and hose. N 0 s'l a a, Tattooes, Chicken Bands, Bull Nose n*J. Write for •'• tatonles. and prioes, Ketchum Otsautsittaltio Co., Ltd., Ottawa. ost.! Dox .1101W. Seed:Potatoes New Baunswick. Grown and Govern- • ment:Certlfied. Kish CObblers ind Glreen PAountains. For sale at tete followeug Peek, 69c. Bushel, $1.60 • • Beg, 90 lbs,, SPeael price in lots of 5 bags or more. No oharge for bogs or pookages. can gelryou "Ontario Grown, at about 20 per oent. less. You will' have to order • early as quantIsty Is linAted. Cash with order.• H. W. DAWSON P.O. Box 38 - Brampton, Ont. Use "Simonds' Crescent Ground Saws; their teeth ere of even thickness throe ghou t the entire length of the: saw, thus makinghindinglrithekerf impoesible. Criscent Grind - 'mg is an exclusive Simonds feature. SIMONDS CANADA saw CO, LIMITED Vs:mover MONTREAL SL`John, N.D. 'Crescent Ground" 'IAZIet Tooth • Cross Cat. 5.24 STOCK Send us the name of a Bank or Loan Company that won't assist in Purchasing a good Pure Bred Sire. ‘saY' leeetile • -"rt'h • I held-eel:tope. "say, why's the elooe ptimpina out that fellow he thInIcs poisonel him- self?"• , 'Trying to got the initide flope'on'his case." Fair or Foul. 'Tis not the Vielery yeu've won; "ris not great Wl'ealth nor Fame; What really" eolintA in Life, my .on, is how you played the game! when all your motto' days. are d'ono And praise is due, or,hkune, Tho Orcat 'Umpire knoWs, 1113i sen, .Tu 1 h nw Yon played the game! ' 1 11; is not nitogethf.r what a hen eate that makes eg,gn and fiesh,•htit what ,slxe d:geets and nssimilates.. IBSLIE No. 12-25, gan, eze:•..; -111. (SY e kokee er leen eaaRet farmer ought to know what his K ---f farm is making for him and which ac- t re -atom -an if any, are not paying. To this ond he needs a simple record of receipts arid expenclitarcs, along with yearly in- ventories of land and buildings, atoCk, machinery, feed arid gupOies. The bcparprient of Agneulture at Ottawa offars, tor I 0 cents, a "Parrner's Accourit Book." °ale a few aeries foot time to time ate needed. • Oena 10 cents for tile Ace° tint )3ook and receive Mori `Sotuonahlo flints" and our latest list Of free ratbilcations.- in end return id% poet freer to • •The Publications Branch • Department of Agriculture • Ottawa, Oat. • Nazrie • Post OfAeo 11 1400x, P.44,-.4441,1 • .No Province 18