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The Brussels Post, 1925-10-14, Page 3eream Wanted ,4++0.1•M'Ne•ki•,die•h'i34#44.044940+er.r41•04 444+0,001 '1°*•i't#'1'm+r•4'rlrr , Mr. •IVI ighen'e New I1iscover7 The Seaforth Creamery ii Ottawa—The tariff duty upon auto - 7,1 • tnobiles Is 35 per cent. A Ford tor- ing ear whielt costa $610 on the Ain. oilcan surd .of the Detroit river, costs Send your Cream to the Creamery thoroughly established and that gives you Prompt Service and Satisfactory Results. We solicit your patronageknowing that we :can give you thorough satisfaction.. We will gather your Cream, weigh, sample and test it honestly, using the scale test to weigh Cream sam- ples and pay you the highest market prices every two weeks. Cheques payable at par at Bank of Nova Scotia. For further particulars see our Agent, M R. T. C. McCALL, Phone 231o, Brussels, or write to The Seaforth Creamery Co. SE,AFORTH, ONT, ffisi.,NO644104,444044 .s+ed'0i14' uat.u0+.0 Z Llye Custer, working on a ranch tett from Colorado Springs, was bit -1 ten by a rattlesnake. Custer jour- neyed 60 milea by foot, mule and alta and reached a doctor in time to save his life. Miss Victoria Kent, an English girl, has become the first woman lawyer in Span. A process of making coarse cloth 'from string beans has been patented at Budapest, Hungary. $090 on rho Canadian side of the river, a faire away, Multiply $i10 by 36 per Gent. and you got $178,50. The difference in pride is 'measured by the tariff duty, In the national interest, it may or may not .be desirable to maintain this ditty; we are not discussing that ques- tion now, The point is that the duty is paid by the consumer, and is added to the price of the ear, whether That car be manufactured in Canada 9r imported from some other country, Tile Real Purpose The very object of a tariff duty, is to permit the manufacturer to charge a higher price. He says to the gov- ernment of the day that he cannot compete with foreign goods: that for ono reason or another they can be manufactured more cheaply abroad than in Canada, This he says enables the imported goods to be sold in Can- ada at a price which is lower than the price he must charge in order to re- cover production cost plus a reason, able profit. He desires that the Brit- ish or foreign goods be excluded by ,a tariff duty so as to enable him to charge the price he must receive if he is to carry on production. His purpose in seeking the duty is to clear the field so that he can sell at a high- er prico. The complaint of the manufactur- British Journalists Give Impressions of canada Baying completed a ten -thousand -mile tour of Canada from coast to conal and rehire at the invitation of E. W. Beatty, chairman and president of the Canndian Paeifie Raihltny, ten British journalists representing papers from Lundell, }f extern England, Wales, Glasgow and Belfast, non brcadeast to Canadians their views of the Dominion. These journalists ere asked to'Conic'to this Ir. 'rest-.rn .t„-nSni;• Nowa, Plymouth. Canada has given me it true ap- preciation of, what is meant by great open spaces., The possibili- ties or this vast country are enor- mous, and' you have as yet barely scratched the surface of its wealth. It is a land which offers great opportunities to men of the right type, but this great Dominion- is obviously a young man's country, and one where every man must work, You ask no questions as to his antecedents. You merely ask him to carve out his own career. You take a man for what he bimself is worth, not for what his father was. In such a land a nen who is a man can work and be happy," "Canada's supreme confidence in her future greatness has made a deep impression upon me. On1.y men possessed of great vision and almost overpowering energy would have laid so soundly and on such a,4 comprehensive lines the foundations which we have everywhere seen for the coming of a great civiliza- tion. The nobly planned parka- v =;ter meat buildings the ambitions uni- versity institutions, the network of rall'ways. harbor facilities, vast water powers, electricity schemes, M•• I) I t%i.'ruN, irrii;t'tton works, and cities planned Daily on. lie London. Out on princely lines, have: been conceived for a great to -morrow. Panda is shouldering financlel and other burdens in this teen of Empire building which call for symYathy and a"mtretion. It is the white manna bord'•n in the woletl. Ono stands amazed that -o frfw ptoi'le should have nee tr pushed so much in ao short a time which eueomr,,ssed Canada's history." "Since I was hero in 1011 there has been grtat improvement in the roads of Canada. Though .the eon`itry Is said to bare passed thron;:h hard times recently the enormous number of automobiles 110w in use al•pears to indicatea return or rapidly returning pros- perity. Very many more trees are conserved on the prairie land- scape, tho planting of which and the more general use of paint for the decoration of dtvellinps sug- gests an increasing desire to leave JAS. 1r. OIIAI'TJSIS, homes rather than mato houses. lresIminater Gaz Tbis spirit, it,seems to me, will do Otte, Louden. more for the consolidating of Can- ada as a nation then any great increase if those whose chief desireis get rich quick and quit," "(1) Canada hits laid for foundn- n tions one generous linos; worthy of a great future, (2) 'Her wattieg spaces and Britain's mod for room within the Empire for an over- flowing population create a new bond of union, (3) The future prosperity of Caiman rests not only upon agricil'..ur•al development but 00 increased employment of British labor in both eottntries for mane- ` ectt r 1n ; '. • raw materials. (4) Misunderstanding of Old Country ARP4'. Li. ALTIiA%I. cot. ,..iia,.. i., t' Ing mused by lues- C.8., UN, gra, misleading, and even mole - merging Post, volent news too often supplied from London. England to the Canadian Press. (5) The importance of n navy for Canada's growing exports and ,imports is blooming bettor appreciated. (6) Canada is a land where teen must be men indeed, no wasters, agitators, or traitors to King, flag and bmpire, need apply. That iS my predominant hnpresslon," country to study at first hand the economic, commercial, industrial and agricnitrtrarl conditions of the Dominion and to thus enable them to meet and combat from their own knowledge the misunderstanding and ntisrepre- sentrttion of Canada and Canadian conditions that leave been prevalent in the Old Country of late months. 'Their trip was an unqualified success from every point of view. Tho impressions follows— ".1t the end of a long journey, itt ;the nourau of winch we have cross- ed the Donttulon twice and travelled nearly tat thousauil eines, we are returning to our hones deeply im- pressed with the linmet1so resources of Canada, We have seen life and conditions of labor in the Mari- tltncn, lit the iiltlustrtal centres or the East, on the prairies and at the Pacific Coast, We have set our- selves to letu'n something of the twin problems of teen and ,nnrkets which face the Canadian ample, and the experience which we have IP. 0.11. PIITIOUSON, time gained will be of Inestimable Timm, London, advantage to its in the fnittre, It will enable us to sot the proper value on itoins of news from the Dominion, to refute baseloas charges against its digit good name, to Matte known to the young men of our own country the splendid opportunittos that ttwtiitthem, In short, so tar ad lied within our power, to toll the Motherland the truth about Canada." "Canada is not a Country but a continent boundless in rich is - sources and richer still ;11 the in- defatigable -energy of a neer.e whose most conspicuous scctal s characteristics is their devotion to education and research, in wism. foresight of the future. For its development tbe great requirement is population, which can hest be supplied by co-operative action• of home and Dominion authorities in training would-be immigrants for agricultural work. Training 3s a.:. REAessential requisition to rescue men S. les and women front unwilling idle Cardiff. South Wates News, in the Old Country and put them within reach of the abundant opportunities of the New laud is to transform them from conditions of penury into :hnrers of exhaustless 'wealth, and in so doing to strenau,,a i the Empire. We are greatly indebted to the Canadian Pacific Railway for their invitation to matte the tour." "Canada's need is the Old Cone - try's opportunity. Equally Brt- ain's is the new country's OPPO- tunity. From the Atlantic to the Pacific seaboards I have beard 'no cry, "Send us sten; send us cap: - tale and bans' found conclusive proof that once agate the 0r'.r world has the power to rtdrees the balance of the old; have, we t 4d have you the will to malt" ger power effective ? It scents to nm to be largely a utatter of moles - standing and sympathy. Petrett ism is not enough, 10t tr ertl Irroan fiances, into terms of mot^'1 1 alp 1 1,7..1 -- Daily -„._Daily News, London is capable of leading es Y Into a new promised laud. Let 1I3 pull together." "Every,srovince of Canada delete that It is the lane of opji i i. o;ty. 1 believe that each is tn:;ti,d to make that claim and that uta o - portunity is for more people: rim are willing tq work prinuutily -m, the lend and are dctt,r,rimel to, succeed. The vast ope'u spaces must be populated. els a Sentcil- man who has met manly old mal+n- tryrnen on this wonderful tour vin. the Canaditn Peelle: Rainesy across the Dominion I aloud Men Jells' A. Brawl', to see a large influx Of inetegranta Glasgow Herald.' bolongtug to tite rice 'which played snob awoble part in the pioneer work in the hand of promise tor the Young and vigorous, The Old Country can still pro- duce that type. What prevents thein from coming They lack tbe means, not the desire. I believe that if our home government nue the Dominion Government could agree to assist them to a pettier extent than has hitherto hetet time,the main obstacle to the Plow of Scottish immigration tato Canada wonid be removed. The people must be found, if not front the Old Land then token from elsewhere, but 1 think you would pre- fer the old stock" "1 became more and more im- pressed with tate boundless possi- bilities of this great Dominiert every day of My tour, From Hail - fax to Vancouver that impression. grew from wonder to amazeittent. Surely for a ,ean Who will 'rvorlc and Inc the woman who will helm hits there is no land so rich to resource, so full of opportunities t" - •v4 All honor, then, to the bravo men who made this possible, to the 111.1s. J. .inttl', pioneers 'who blazed a nation's way. Daily ret tl;'raph, through brush and canyon, who 1,endon, adventured over river and lake and prairie, and to the Canadian gtateemeu whose vision was not that of ordhmry men." SOUN Deftest Toicgrviph• "Canada Tins neo with wonder and admiration. That a comparatively population. "should have-oc- cnmpllshod so Much in se short a time is tnaevelloua, and from What I have seen I am convinced that the tapping of the l)omhtlon's re- sources, particularly of .Alberta and Britian Columbia, has only begun, It the two argent needs of men and capital--llritish if possible -- can be supplied, there seems to be ue limit to the future of the coun- try. I am impressed by tho loy- alty, the beauty, and the pluck of Canada, and I take off my hat to the courage of the early,explorori rind setters, They laid fouudre sirens upon which it libeeld be M !tenor to be to-dayy, t' ioreat Canada," Hon. G. S. Henry, Ontario Minis- ter of Highways, who officiated at the opening near Parte, Ontario, of the final link in a fine new highway 245 miles long, between London and Bowmanville. er to -day is that British and foreign goods can be landed here and sold at a price which he cannot meet. If a heavy tariff duty be placed upon thorn, these imported goods will not ofier such a serious competition to the Canadian manufacturer. The Canadian manufacturer can therefore aell et a higher price, The New Piecovery A11 this seems elementary; but Mk. Meighen says it is all wrong, He says lowering the duty does not low- er the price, and raising the duty does. not raise the price to the consumer. So far as the consumer it concerned, it makes no difference to him ,in Mx. Meighen's opinion, whether higher' or lower tariff be maintained. Speak- ing in Winnipeg on October 1, he de- clared that the reduction in the tariff. duties made by the King Government had • not affected the price charged the consumer .and that raising the duties would have no effect upon the price. The Manitoba Free Press re- ports his declaration as follows: ,77 BREEDING ?AMY COWS 7' 1i1C't'II OHM"':MI)AN UPON THE USE OF QUALITY iit'IrLS, Characteristics is,tics of it flood 13u11�- liiglt Testing tons ata 1'remiunt-+••4•are In Breeding 1 eifcre--.-i111p)y Dust. tress I'tirclples. • tContrlbuted by Ontario Penn,irnent of Asrime Lure. 'reroute.) The immediate possibility of lower. tag the cot of production of milk or lncroaeing the pow of milk is depcn: dent upon the Care, management and feeding of our cows, It is possible within a single herd to do selecting and by purebasing replace our poorer cows with better cows; but, taking the Province as a whole, we must be content to get along as beat we can with the cows on hands. The cows Re have cannot be changed, but per- haps they will produce more if given more feed , and better care. This !traits the scope for immediate im- provement. For any great improve- ment we must look to the future and since we must get along as best we can with the cows available, the great hope is centered in the sires we use. Characteristics of It Good Bull, To use a pure-bred bull simply be- cause he is pure bred is not enough. Ile must eitherbe a proven producer of good dairy cattle or else have the maximum possibilities of becoming a producer of good cattle, Such a bull should command a reasonably .good price and we should be prepared to pay well for such a bull. Tbis does not mean, 0f course, that we; should not buy as closely as possible. A good bull should be masculine, be must have the characteristics of a good bull and .should be strong in those points where the females are weak: For example,: some Holstein cows with droopy rumps have been good producers, In such an instance the bull to which they are mated should not only have a good rump himself, but oome from a family of gond rumped cattle. Similarly lows that are low testers should be mated to a "Granting a bigger share of the Can- bull that comes from a high testing adian market to the Canadian pro- strain. It is well in selecting a sire ducer should be no excuse for an in- to see that the family tree behind crease in the price to the consumer." the bull is uniformly good, rather Why Do They Want a Tariff? than'to select a etre out of an out - If the tariff has no effect upon the standing individual with no regard p for either the near or remote ances- price, then the consumer should not tors. Then again, the bull must be be interested- It should be' all the typical of the breed to which be be- e ding Giftsb � fts If you have a Gift to choose for a kiride um;imll1►IIIPI {f!ffnfnitttttulliy,0 Visit Our Gift Shop (n1our store you will And suitable Wedding Gifts. A new stock of Cut Glass has just arrived consisting of Sherbett Sets, Goblets, Water Sets, Cake Plates, Vases, Butter Tubs, Sugars and Creams, etc. Also a nice assortment of Silverware, New useful pieces. Tambour and Black Clocks, Call and see the assortment, Diamond' Rings Wedding Rings J. R. WENDT JEWELER WROXETER • b ,1 Lit tee -it • :1ra", t`, N ,t Er - s.. -,3' ,U Lt .. k, .ai.,_:,.._• ,r"mei of lk'tert'1nn r.+tel ` ".'•• ,'• e,; '1 e.: are 11 . 1 - — I1 to i cg -i Fr: : 1. G : n1-- �.: ,...lis et l .t..:..,1. ,..,,. ....,, , ,... ,•,�,.,, r,, . not of Anti• u,t t I,•rpnto.) Inick 1.,•.:. Reich Water, Quarter r ri_ F ,.1 ,ilu:,r• r r 1, n, tee, npp'b"l to ,. ? 1:.•s its tell in ynu.tg. r't,le (rent ,neap h. rds r fu'h year. Prom July to Ucto- n,er fatalttt ar'- mast r faire ,. ei....t1' ;r' e••^rl CC•lrti +t"•1 sem L I' (C 1•�. found lying miff nt 1 eet+t 1. r's.. When pest mete et perform,:,ac.t the swellings e., eff•et . ,.. e'ursp resent a dirty brttwe or dark same to him whether the tariff be 10 longs. In breeding any class of pure- red color and a trop,3, liquid wen a per cent, or 100 per cent. It Should bred stock type is of primary im- pr,cutiar sickly odor Is exuded. The also be all the same to the menu- High Testingportance. tisane surroundiu;r the, swellings should start in piei.Gs of time to pre- facturer,' if he is to obtain the same High Cows at a Premium. show a :craw •colnre•d appearance and Dare tbe boar tot it. rice no matter what the tariff may • Since payment yment for milk is being the lymph gland- are congested. Pre - be. largely Why then, are the manufactur- there has come to be a great demand views to death the ewen1ings occur- 1 'ireatlnettt Dm liar ,. ;t lattvae. ers working over time and spending for high testing cows. Some people ring in the region of the hind guar- Heavy fnfestati<irs nice cause in- money like water in order to get aare trying to increase the butter -fat ters or over the shoulders or along dig, sties. tare the hnriae a chance; b + " ! t til U ton :Natural tslacitLeg agresszn, (4) Black Leg Filtrate --or artifi- cial agresein. All are effective. The pellet form is, convenient, but' the Natural Black, Leg .Sgreesin ds most favored for lta! higher emolency,—L, Stevenson., Dept, of Extension, C, A. College. Feeding the Hoar. The quantity of meal to teed boar will vary with circumstances.' During the season when he le used most, he will require liberal treat-, ment, but at no time should he be fed more than be will eat up detail before leaving the trough, During comparatively idle seasons a' ve a light meal ration will be sufficient, and if on good pasture he will require but little feed in addition, It is en- tirely a matter of judgment, and the feeder must be guided by the condi-. tion at the boar. It is never wise, to make sudden (Matteis In the ration —that is, to change suddenly Pram: a light ration to a heavy one, or trots, .c heavy melee to a !43ht one., Changes shou51: lie made gradually,, and the feeder, Veining about when • the heaviest sr:•sun nammenses greater measure of protection? What yield of the berd by crossing Ayrshire the neck are very painful and the p ten to a darn or o y or Jersey hulls on Holstein cows, moving the too nem,'rees bot fly lar - benefit can it be to them? animal manifests severe lameness, vita from his stomach, This practice should in most cases Maes Production be discouraged, as the results when The Disease, 1 Fast the hero twenty -Tom hours Mr. Meighen tries to expiate this carried past the drat generation aro Black Legis caused by the Bacillus and give three rarrwen of carbon bi- sulphide, saying if the Canadian menu- usually unsatisfactory. 1' a cannot : t'inauvei, an organism that inhabits , sulphide, to be «'an 1••ne at a time, the soil, and is most troublesome on at these bets r rrva.9 low lying, poorly drained pasture The larvas , u alae pans from the stotuach in duL r, i the'soil tar Janda. Fields with small areas of six weidte and then re appear to start swamp, and scrubby shrub growth fin'ir d,,tili•.h wo•it ,,l<r agaln.--- srem to harbor the organism in greatest. abundance and to create con- Dept, t•i Extension, 0.:1.G . Cueiplt. facturer had no competition at all in expect by crossing two Urceds of cat - the home market, he could effect tie u obtain Ines of each tee offs virtuobtain all tits economies and keep down expenses the weaknesses. Thetd oppositeand Is none just fst by "mass production," That might as likely to be true, otherwise we be true if we had a population in Can might expect that by crossing a heavy ada comparable with the population Draft mare w3t11 a standard bred sial - in the U. S. but we have at best a lion to obtain the. weight of the Draft horse and the speed of the Standard small market andforthat reason we bred in the ortspriug. Experience has are told over and over again that proven this Is not the case. 'the Canadian 'manufacturer cannot Care in Breeding Heifers. produce anything like so cheaply as Heifers should attain good size and his Americana competitor. be properly developed before being But does the consenter get the bred. I0 many cases heifers ate bred at such an early age that they turn benefit of economies incident to mass out to be undersized cows, The only production? The woollen manufact- argument advanced in favor of this eras of the U. S„ manufacture in early bresding Is that perhaps over huge quantities and enjoy the high a Perlad of flue years tin extra calf est tariff ever enacted. Are woolen may be obtained, but it must bo re - goods as cheap in the U. S. as they are in England, or even in Canada? - A Flexible Tariff MT: Meighen, 'however, 'gives a guarantee of 'his 'good faith 'by say- ing that he will increase the tariff duties, but if any increase in price :tod for repair. Even iron and steel follews; he will `take them off again,' will not last forever, and machines It may be argued that at thetime he ; 'have oertain idle periods when they was discussing only farm Implements. membered that cows which are not properly developed Oannot produce, In 'other words, the cow should be considered as a hie factory. Site should have size and capacity to turn large quantities of roughage into milk. She should, like allwell man- aged factories, he given a resting per - But how can 'he make flesh of one article and fish of another`? Ti there - 'be a general rise in commodity prices as a result of a higher tariff, will he penalize only the manufacturers of 'farm 'implements? 'Will'he not have to deal in the same`vvay'wlth all other +manufacturers'£ What 'Will Happen 'It is safe' to say thetif the British preference, be -abolished .and tine gen- eral tariff raised, that all protected interests will find some gond reason for charging 'higher peeled, and that Me. Meighen wOl find some gooti rea- son fornot carrying out his threat to' lower duties, If any consumer is foolish enough to think that an increase in the tariff duties will not' he followed by an in- crease in prices, let him by all moans vote for the Meighen candidates, He will be a sadder 'batt tl wiser coati if they be •elected. An Illinois woman died recently a the age of 92, leaving i1 descendants A Goffstown (N,13,) Tesid+ent re cantly drove across the continent fn . an auto, 0 distance of 4400 miles; and had but one puncture: - Charles W. Burr, six months old, New Orleans, has four grandparents. five - great-grandparents; and two groat -great-grandparents. To. Porto Theo 20 cents a day is the Average' wage received by women and children employed in industry on the island, - I,lauias are the baggage Animals of 1 ollvia, A i:ollectintt of - etchings rxeeutrttl by Queen V'icto'ria more than >±b years ago, are note beilig exhibited ill Loddon for the first tient., - t are overhauled and put in good run- 'ning order. This Is equally truewltb a dairy cow. She should have a rest- ing Period est-ing.perlod before freshening and dur- ing this time she should be liberally fed In order to repair the worn-out 'parts of her body and build Alp a reserve strength to be used in maxi- mum produotioe during the lactation -period. The Liberal feeding of at cow ,during her period of seat previous to freshening will pay and pay well, 'Apply 'Business Principles. Dairying as well as all other lines ,of business requires the application of business principles. How often 'have you heard milk and cream ship- pers.doebttag the aeouraey of the test which is beteg given them. This doubt or suspicion should not be. Producersshould learn to do this testing themselves, A Babcock test- ing machine is not so expensive as to prohibit Its use, The method of testing 4s fairly simple. The results obtained more than Justify the expen- diture: It gives every .dairyman a meltable check on his cows. This coupled with the weighing of the milk will eliminate much of the aueplglon of unscrupulous creamery men And should be a guide for the building up of a good herd of dairy cattle, --- L. l0. O'Neill, Lire Stock Branch, Toronto, At the last annual meeting of the fifty County Representatives el the Ontario Department of Agriculture, without a dissentitrg Volae or an op- posing vote, a resolution was passed favoring the use of "Gntario grown seed of all crops," Owls east up tete indigestible parts of their foods in the token of pallets, Bxantinntiotls of 200 of these pellets from two barn owls shotvcd skulls of 25 meadow :nice, 1710 house mice, 20 shrews and one bird. A. greater number of aceidentd 0e- ear furring the hot weather 'tenths of the summer' than during any other season of the year, ditkrns Inc its destructive work, 1linerat •:Nature. ' Animals Attacked. - 1 The f'.ilout f mineral mixture is Susceptibility under natural pas- used in the aw ilc ic.•,111,g at the . Cure conditions is tondned to cattle Ontario Agrlcultur:l Cullege, It.ia froot'three mouths to three years old, giving good satista.a5ko:-- Yearlings are most affected. Calves 4 bushels r har,•nxt or Hardwood fed on milk and not allowed to graze Ashes. . are rarely affected. Calves at pasture 8 pounds Salt are readily affected. Sheep are sus- 2 pounds Alp ur. d Lima Ceptlble but not as much s0 as cattle. 10 poundssoof Iia ,e ':real. Humans, horses and pigs are virtu- This preparation is kept in a suit: ally immune. Stabled cattle are able box in each p.m where it may be rarely affected. The bacillus gains Wean by the swine at will. entrance into the animal body through a small wound or scratch or , by ingestion with feed. 1 Chas. Barnett, who was a Coun- Symptoms. (Once the organism gains entrance into the tissues and successfully ,estebllsliea itself it develops the dis- 'eased condition very rapidly. 'The 'course and duration are very short, death occurring in from one-half to three days. The first noticed symp- tom is the animal standing away from the rest of the herd. IP proved It spews a severe lameness. Soon after lameness appears, swellings develop in the region of the thigh and shout -- dors and over the neck. Swellings may develop anywhere, but usually where the muscles are large. At first the swellings are hot and painful, hut subsequently become less tender. The skin lu the centre of the swollen area becomes cold, dark colored and dry like a piece or leather. These swellings when pressed give a crack- ling sound, due to the air or gas present. Swellings may form on the internal or thotasic Avail Or may be confined to the Tread and throat. In addition to the characteristic swell- ings, systematic disturbances, as Loud beating of the heart, labored breath- ing, high fever and abdominal pain may be noticeable, Finally the af- fected animal becomes prostrated, lies on its aide and appears greatly bloated. Once prostrated, death us - natty follows in a few hours. When young cattle die suddenly a pasture, one should be suspicious of tack leg, Treatment. - Once an animal is infected, treat- ment is unsuccessful, because tbe dis- ease is so rapidly fatal. Many stock owners, especially those that have suffered loss, have learned the value of protective vaccination and prac- tice thle method of protective im- munization on all tattle under three Yeats of age, every spring before the animals are turned out to neatere. The vaccination of a heed with a re- liable Black Leg vaccine can be done at a very small cost, and it gives portent protection during the pasture season. Immunisation against the Blank Leg bacillus to atrougly reooin- mended to all stook owners living to districts where young cattle . have diet, as tt were overnight, while at lraatnre. I#fettods of Vaccination Itt tletc. (1) Pellet, Cord and Powder 'forms of i'itedlne, (3) tutandardlsed Ileum vatttn-L i cillor in Blanshard Twp., has re- signed and has been appointed Clerk of the township, , BUSINESS DARDS THE Industrial Mortgage and - Savings corn pany, of Sarnia Ontario, ere prepared to advance money on . Mortgagee on gond )ands. Parties desiring mousy on farts mortgages will please apply to James Cowan, Seaforth, Ont.. who will fur. Mali rates and other particulars. . The industrial Mortgake and Savings company _ ;AGENT FOR fire Automobile and Wird In 001V1 PAM ES For Brussels end vicinity Phone 64;q JANE'S M'FADZEAN Agent Newick Mutual Fire lnsureace Comply Alio Hartford Windstorm end Tornado insurance Phone 40 Sox 1 Turuberry Ptreot, nrnssela JNO, SUTHERLAN�tWMD��pfp!& SONS .YNi4 rn�.T,�,b(a�XCII GrAiLi it - 0.7rriltesit D. M, soon- ;&.10.C,A0,01.0 C�� 'teratrat�ie PRICES MODERATE O'er references oaaattlt any parse» witope sales, I have officiated et, Phone 28;20 M' fAE�� M. s., rl,t. 0, P., s S. Ti, 111, 0. B„ Village of Ilrneeetr, Phystatan, Sargoen, ACepneifeor OOloea#realdenoe, opposrre MelvllLsphlneh, - W1111arr street, Dir. WA1O61.Auv • Honbr graduate of the Ontacie 'Vetertaary ' Golloge. Day end night witha, Ofee apposite Pleur MI11,.Betel, ,. i it Oli i &NO L * t`<Aititl51'Eh, SCLittitMI0 t;ONVENfANt1ER, NL)tAiIY rtj0tvlti 4E.J1tit BLOCK - 01111SbEi.6