Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1923-6-7, Page 51444 y. W4 • a• w,` Manion I Cup No. 12190, 1 1.569,7 Imported .'C17,de$cla,1 Stajluoo :in,-' eleac,ted Arid ie ,alleel ' E,arltt 1.,w 1 eeeI d Zoe, !kiiJe{ lmpe0er lel,t of stock 4L0 Z o t:t , MO 'e for season tt£ ;1 . alexY$.41.Q try rl;sure,wutli. usual 'condiltiio>ils. ' FRED • BLLERI GTON Proprietor McGillivray Iohn ieslop eed, at the house oflS�ns; sister, .Mrs, Ge Age it Charlton, this• toivr,ship, orn F'day, May 25, aged 62 years, after an ? gess which e±teitd!ed over a per;rod o early. two years. He was born ' Mlvray and is surge - ed ehis ed other, two sisters Mrs. Rcbt• avana tgh of Parkhell,aaid Mrs, Geo. Charlt. of McG.igeivray, and • one rather, aneel of Sarnia arcitim f pis ' use soap and hot water to clean amel�e are. It is so clean and o pure As "smooth as china and a stro g as steel. And no metal touches t e food. Be sure you get Three fins hes: Parl Ware, o coats of pearly grey enamel inside and out. Diamond Ware, three coats, light blue and white outside, bite lining; Crystal Ware, three coats, pure white inside and out, with Royal blue edging. The Sheet Metai Products Co. °j.tmitida Montreal TORONTO WlnnIgag Edmonton Vancouver Calgary " WARE 158 Now you can make jam or jelly so easily that you will put up all your favorite fruits throughout the season. By using C RTO Rog. Can. Q 6 figrcjelt) Pat. Oar. you reach the "jell" point with only/ one minute's boiling, thus retainin the full flavor of your fruit. Ceylo is pectin—the natural jellying s b - stance of fruits. Your jams or 'el - lies will keep perfectly. Complete Booklet of Recipe with every bottle. If your groc does not have Certo send his nae and 40c and we will send you 11 bottle. How to Make Delicious Stray Select small or medium-sized, fully ripe berries. After hulling, weigh out 2 lbs. berries. Measure 7 ,,0 level cups (3 lbs.) sugar into small separate pan. Spread about one - 'quarter of the berries on their sides in single layer on a platter and gently press each berry to a thick- ness of ee inch with bottom of Certo -bottle. (This leaves skins nearly in- tact, but ruptures fruit inside and makes it hollow, allowing boiling sugar to saturate tissues . quickly.) Transfer pressed berries to large kettle, and cover with layer of su- gar. Repeat this operation with all 'the berries, placing layers of pressed berries and sugar alternately in ket- tle, putting balance of sugar on top. then add juice of one lemon, or pre- ferably 1 teaspoon of powdered tar- taric or citric acid. This addition 1, 11 1 Use it with: Strawberries Raspberries Rhubarb Gooseberries Cherries Currants Blackberries and other fruits in season Douglas Packing Co., Limited. Cobourg, 53 erry .lam promotes a Bicker set, thus keeping the fruit evenly distributed in the. jam. Let stan over night, or at least 5 hours, so tat part of the sugar will be dissolvd and mixture can be stirred and ooked without crushing fruit, rise h ttost fire and stir con- stantly bcfor and while boiling. Toil hard for free minutes, remove from ire and sir ir, z/ bottle (scant Ii cu. Certo. Fran time jam is taken o fire all\ w to stand not over 5 minute by the lock, before pour- ing. In the neantt e, skim and stir occasionally o cool slightly. Then pour quickly. If in open glasses paraffin at once. f in jars seal at once, and invert 10 rtunutes to steri- lize the tops. \l3 For crushed Straw.erry Jam see (''ert>• i-nci'ne 'bon' ae. • Why, Waste Money Daily! Of all farm machines, the cream separator is the one on which you can take no chances, for the smallest of cream losses soon mount into dollars. The Melotte has been the farmers' best friend for over 30 years. It is the machine with suspended bowl and enamelled bowl casing. Hanging naturally on a ball- bearing spindle, the bowl is perfectly, balanced, and is guaranteed easier to to and to wear longer than ainy other. On account of the recent ad- v oce in raw materials, it is impossible to guarantee present low prices for any definite time. Ten-year guarantee, with every . r. machine.; Write', for 'descriptive�f:ree• bookie t ;.poet, delay:" Have you seen the wonderful LISTER' MILKER Simplicity Itself! A; LIT'R 8• Limited (New Address) Head. Office, Hamilton Ont. o treall 1VI ri , Toronto, Winnipeg, , Regina, CalbaIY, Edm i' ton.; ; HANDLING LAYINHENS ceding and Mini i ust Both Be:Considere Give the Birds a Gci Run—Dry Mash Hoppers Save Waste—=Sug- gested Ration -For ge Don'ts for the Layer (Oontri.bt{ted by Onttario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) Following are result of experi- ments carried on by th writer when connected with the Ag 'cultural Ex- periment Station for V ncouver Is- land, Sidney, B.C. Houses and Yards. The house in which the birds are kept is provided with water -proof roof and a floor that ils always dry. In preparing the house for the new flock of pullets, everytfting movable is taken out, cleaned, Ind then sat orated with a mixture of equal parts of creosite and coal oil. The interiei of the house is well scraped and swept clean of any foreign materiel A coating of lime -wash is then ap plied, and the movable equipment re- placed after the lime -washing has been, done. When everything is dry, a 6 -inch layer of dry stjaw is placed on the floor. The house is now ready t:or tele five :month-oJd pullets, and care is tillt4fe to see that only strong. vigorQa>,,s birds are permitted to Oc- cupy house space "ir1--I „N ;•y> The runs provide tenlsquare yards of surface for pre lgr They ar" in duplicate and are useid alternately for feed growing and oEercise space. Late -leafing, deciduous rlrees only are used about poultry yard. The coni- ferous windbreaks are !located far enough away from the peultry yards- and ardsand buildings to permit def maximum sunlight entering all space occupied by the birds. is Feeding. A dry mash hopper of such con- struction as will prevent Waste is sup- plied with the following $ash mix- ture: -- Wheat bran 400 ipounds. Grqund oats 3001 Beef scrap 200 " What shorts 200 ` Corn meal 100 " . Fine salt,4 This mixture is always 1 available for the birds. The whole !grain ra- tion is composed of two pa is wheat, one part cracked corn, and one part oats, by weight. This is f on the floor of the house morning nd even- ing, in the daily proportio of five pounds per fifty birds, durin the late autumn and winter. When a supply of skimmilk is available, he birds are given all they will take and the beef scrap is reduced one -ha . Shell, grit, and charcoal are alwas before the birds, being supplied In small metal hoppers which are conelen1.ently placed. Forage Crops for Poultry. Small areas of kale, chard and al- falfa were grown to be used as green feed for poultry. The chart} was rel- ished to a greater extent han the other green feeds. Green 'li'alfa was most usful during its se son from May to November. For winter green feed, kale and mangles Vrere used. For little chicks, chickweed was sup- plied during the first ten Bays, then lettuce and chard. .A. supply of clean water is always available fpr all the poultry; it is given in fountains plac- ed thirty inches above the ifloor and surrounded by the narrowest possible platform on which the bids may stand to drink. This method has proved very satisfactory, as it pre- vents the birds from workingi dirt and foreign matter into the receptacles. The laying houses are kept thor- oughly clean, Dropping boards are scraped and sanded every morning. All litter and dust is removed every three weeks, the house swepttiout, and fresh litter again placed on 'Hie floor. The perches are sprayed with a creo- sote and coal oil mixture In equal parts, every three weeks. D ring the winter period a dust box our feet square and ten inches deep i provid- ed. The birds are always „even the freedom of an outside run, u matter what the weather is. The drawer type of trap nest is used, t e birds readily` becoming used to its action. Broody hens are confined in lat-bot- tom crates for, the necessar period required for the change of th it opin- ion on the subject. Don'ts' For the Layers. HERE AND THERE: Smoking compartments'. are to " be provided in the new wooden • winged: monoplanes for use on the London - Amsterdam -Berlin air route; 7 HensaIl IAlvin McEwe;a;' garagemat}, was married on May 26 IS -Miss Ne11i ' .Priest, 1y daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jaynes P est of this village,' The mar- riage cer any was quietly performed; uu Losad , the young couple being unattended and they then. motored to Toronto an ,other places, where they spent a few days, returning on Tues- day aright, air will continue to ,1 e resi- dents hese. Except for the Sunday schgol the Methodist Chu ch services were with- draawn, owing t the absence of Riev, Rivers at the onference iia Sarnia•. Mr. and Mrs, eter Woolley and daughter, Miss ie, left here for their new home i Stratford. The W. C, Tr e are, preparing a medal contest to beheld on the even- ing of June 18. The G, W. V. . decorated the graves of deceased brothers ori Thurs- day. 1 301980 268 feet of lumber were produced from mills in the Ottawa Valley last season as against 238,- 116,764 feet in the 1921-1922 season. Lastseason's grain shipments through the port of Montreal ex- ceeded 1153,000,000 bushels. Rev- enues reached $3,460,810 providing a surplus of $266,362. Forest rangers of the Quebec and New Brunswick forestry depart- ments will co-operate to the extent of covering fires on either side of the provincial border. Two thousand maples and one thousand green ash ~trees, natives of Saskatchewan, were shipped to the Canadian War Memorial Park at Poperinghe, Belgium, recently. Vancouver is to have direct con- sular trade relations with Spain. A vice -consulate has been estab- lished there which embraces the prairie provinces and is the only one west of Montreal, - During the year 1922 boring oper- ations for the discovery of off and gas in Alberta were continued to the extent of 230,000 feet, result- ing in the discovery and develop- ment of a field with an output of 180,009,000 feet per day. Despite reports of adverse cosi-' ditions in the prairie provinces, Sas- katchewan officials estimate that after paying all expenses the farm- ers of that province last year had $100,000,000 in net proceeds to ap- ply on debts. In 1906, in Iowa, a single head of oats was selected as being a de- sirable variety. In thirteen years this single head had multiplied to the extent that 1,500,000 acres were sown to it and showed an increased production of 6,500,000 bushels. One of the largest timber sales that the Canadian Pacific Railway has made in several months has just been made on Vancouver Island. A group of Seattle lumbermen have acquired 12,000 acres of timber land at Horne Hill. The timber on this stand exceeds 200,000,000 feet. Part of the plans for keeping the St. Lawrence open all winter sub- mitted by Dimitry Jonavici, Rou- manian engineer, to the Federal and Provincial Governments -would call for the erection of a nine mile dam at the east end of Belle Isle strait, which would prevent the cold cur- rents from the north entering the river. The Bungalow Camps to be opened this year by the Canadian Pacific Railway in the French' liver, Nipigon and Lake of the' Woods districts of Ontario will con- sist of a community house, non- taining a dining room with stone fireplace, surrounded by several' double and single bungalows com- fortably furnished for the accom-1 modation of from one to four per -1 sons. A number of canvas houses' will also be used. The official opening of the Banff - Windermere Highway will tale place on June 30th at Kootenay crossing, B.C. Motorists from a1L over Alberta, British Columbia and. the Western States will be ,p`resentl in large numbers. A lunch (will. be' provided for several thousa4_-3 peo- ple at Kootenay Crossing. Promi-1 nent representatives will : present from the Canadian and United - States Governments and fzjom pro-; vincial and state govern ents on both sides of the, line. \T • e official' opening will be marked y the cut- ting of red white and blue ribbons stretched across the roadway. BIDDULPH A Special Se •vice and Strawberry Festival will be 1 eld at Fraser church Biddulph. The se •vice on Swaday tev- ening, June 17th, d the Strawberry Supper from 5_ to on Wednesday, June 20th, when best es the Sapper an. 'excellent program rill be given. The admission is 50e, a d 25c, Sae bills. Dont put pullets into an unclean eeeiv '• he'ase.et . teeeee 4x u; >eeee" Don't waste time on untht fty, de- formed-, or ailing, birds; ge • an axe and a block of wood. Don't neglect to clean the ropping boards daily. Don't forget to clean the h, use and provide new, clean litter every three weeks. Don't neglect to keep•the dry mash hopper filled with a mash ade from clean, wholesome grain, nd meat products. ' Don't waste your tim with wet mashes; feed everything 'ry. Don't • neglect the dr nk; supply abundant water and mi . Don't, neglect the sup lyof shell, grit, and charcoal., • Don't waste time an money feed- ing tonics; well -cared- or poultry do not need nor are they benefited by, such a practice. -L. �teeenson, Sec. Dept. of Agriculture. The worthlessness /if poor quality bulls lives after theme—in their low - producing daughters • Apples are not ery s•ubjeet to blight and if we are +lareful the apple orchard can be' kept clean, "Agriculture, for an honorable and hid hs' minded' man," say• Xenophon, ' ts'the, best of all ccupations and arts by which men pr cure the means of, •wing. le the morning, s W thy seese,ezbd in the evening withhold not•'. thy hand; for thou knotvest not whether `shall prosper eithe ' this orthat, at,or whether theybo shallbe adike eooda-Fceleclastes;.$I b-`; FULLARTOi'—Luther Turner, the reeve of this t vaship, and sex -war- den, of Perth C tasty, a well known farmer, dropped dad on. June 4th. cause is said to had been heart fail- ure. He was 65 year of age, andri3 survived by his Irefie nd several 'children, ST. MARYS les. P,Whi;tin', •aged 23 years, who n'e;rut to London two months ago, coma ted suicide lin Lon- don on Thursday warning by taking strychnine. eir, Ross Mci.e now of Detroit, was here during the week visiting his wife and children. Mr, J, Passmore is y Sarnia attend- ing the conference b ing held there, as a delegate from I-i'nsall circuit, 1Lr, R. Geiger, who as. been, intKit- chene•r for the past seven years, car- rying on a drug store, but who lately sold out his business, there, is here tat present visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Geiger. SEAFORTH.e-The Cady Block, the property of H. Beeley of Albion, New York, was ;s &la ;t week to Mr, M. Broderick. Th black is :apposite the Commercial H tel, contains three stores, occupied ' by W: G W' • NI. Broderick and E. H. lose, .with apart meat roams above all threw, and also includes the large. frame livery barn, on ,klarrket street. KIPPENT.—Urs ltd, Cudmore ,wind daughter, Miss E na, of Peachla+nd,B. C„ are here on a•' three` months' vises. at`thc •,!liotne of kfr Gude-tare's fath- er, ,Mr, Thomas Mellilst It is eleven years since lairs. Cudmore Went to British -Calanpna. BA.YFIELD. The death occurred, an "May. :26th Miss Astnmea' Sperk"s,' e. ir.. t: y. �f a e' a.rlts' ' thea late G daugbtes'..dt 1 a . S. ;of .Baryf-Mei. att ilieti liosrge 011 lief bro- ther-in-law, Cal, \LA. Currie; Tarossto - •e font-. s s suv b '•Nliss Span,. 4 y tees, two Misses' Sparks` of 'Bayfield, Mrs,• McKee nod'; visa. Cue 6f ." `or - Zurich Shirley, the 5 -year-old daughter of Mr, a Mrs. Oscar Koehler, just north d' the village„ fret with a paixi- f ull aec eat by failing into a pail of bot, waste• standing On the floor. 'Miss Su 'ee Jacoire spent the week in Detroit • Miss McK 4¢i. of Detroit, who has not enjoyed ood health lately, is im- proving„ and 's visiiting.at the home of her brother, r. A. J. MacKinnon. Mrs. Echmei r of Dublin is spending some time wi a her son, Mr, Henry Echmeier, the • cal band master. They have tak- up livtag quarters -with \2r. Andres Price for -the sum- mer. Margaretha Wuxi , relict of the late Mathias Wurm, died of, old age on May, 23, at the home, of , ' son,'Mr. Louis Wurm, south of the ''ilage, at the\age of 93 years and 23 day.. She had besn feeble for some time. She was born in Ellenberger, German : and came to Canada 71 years ago, having lived 69 years on the place where she died. Her husband predeceased her about four years. Messrs, Louis and Mar- tin VTurm of Zurich are sons. ST. MARYS.—Andrew A. Knox; \L. D., lo e of St. Marys' highly re- "spected tizens, was stricken in his t ffice las Thursday, and, died June 3, IZOQF that the Ford is recognized as farm necessity, is shown by the fact t at when the Committee on Agri- cultura Conditions investigated the prices of thing entering into farm production, they inves"•'gated the price of Ford Cars to the exclusi of every other make of car. ' ' IILO Exete SNELL COOi: BROS. Hen.^11 vilwamip 3623 FORD MOTOR COMPANY OF CANADA. LIMITED. FORD. ONTARIO. 1 A slow oven will not spoil your baking when you use EGG- ow- er ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER 4 An Opportunity for Cujtural Study School teachers, extramural, regular and special students are inv ed to come for six weeks', Summer School, which opens July 2n•. General B. A. and Honor B. A. courses are offered. English; athematics, History, Philosophy, Languages and Natural Sc `•rices -29 courses in all. Special course in Geology, including tt eography and Physiography required by Depart- mental reg ations. Lovy fees. 16 Apply K. ' .R. NEVILLE, Ph.D., Registrar, London, Ont. r • _Z: elseseeessee 'c i= gig the. ears --= After cleansing,any garment or ----kip material with SURPRISE ex- ;.1 -Al willr amine the Seams. You d _f find --_t at SURPRISE has done its = - - wankthoroughly: aand the��ticle 162 v r `s??g -z' -:sti 22:x. r-•:t. ,;.."„:1 x • Vs:z • �• '==xz- =rs-i:.tisx� ? -sEsi•