The Brussels Post, 1915-4-22, Page 3PAGE LAWN FENCE,
Not
Height Painted Painted
12 .. inch
8 c.
18 " 7 c,
80 " 8 c.
86 " ,.r 91/2c.
42 " ....11 c.
48 " ,,,12 c.
n pl to our Poultry Feuclug Jest
rI tl ou • i ells at no 1
i . It enemies
sl ck 1 l ec-o
nett heir eusndcs your
n ditch hstays 'put
seen elY lvekgd^lhc kind that stays 'put,"
Peerless Poultry Fence
1....90 at rho host Oran Dearth Moot noo 1eleo tougl, olartto
a d loey-000 WillAuk snap orb louepor sudden ,haoho quick
ut, p hurio choppy, Oi,r recti d I e houIolna pr%•N,to rust anti wll
nun .
not I'000r.! ne ,look' which 001 001040114 oil ulot lop `hooks he
'at tns,of Poulos, poultry Ponca (0 h0 Or ,ted 06 01,o 4,00E 111110
00,1000M sweat without b oJlb,s, snur p,Ioe I b tl b 11 lloavy
lIv, 0I0 "11'tr t. )oq d 1.'P,Ir. 00)} 0,01 L It 00 l 0, " a ,
ea.0, wv vbo Toad r ,I Oro,o I I r Fo..o4 1 w It 100.6altq AGEh28
001* Il000 0130I111, 101110Or013011AAAI,,IY nl000, Dna,ItamilloRY,
8110 s4l{I1Llrr!te11s 008 0 11 101100 ca ltd, Dinh a Dna, lin Gto, Ont.
THE FATE OF AZUMA ;
Or, Tho South African Millionaire.
CHAPTER VI,
And it was wonderful how her new role
became her.
'•n me
It refill seems to be fringing
luok,i' 6110 told herself, forgetting that
when a woman thee reached the point
when oho Begins to see lush coming from
an abnormal mood, and aterrible resig-
nation of all ambition, 0110' has reached.
ono of the most dangerouo emu -roads of
life. She had mode a resolve, and the
resolve had brought a look of calm con-
tent hath been
n r
tot to he fealurc�l which. t
there of lata.
'] Roach looking quite beauti-
ful
Jthis t fir" is g
S
1 year" said women Who wore
pal j a a s d .[110 w 1 h
S
not jealous of her: And Judith Roach
'-- r was aware that 1m neve 'been
herself w, w t she had r
so (beautiful. Her ono fear hitherto, had
been of a sort of "apahoui0eement,' which
'would make Iter look like a married wo-
mail,•-give her away. Now, lately, some -
thin 'which ho had aid no heed to had
1Y e C d
g p
natio her tlLlnner and more ethereal=lank•
ing and her movements grew more wil-
lowy, in keeping with it.
Her resolve wee never to do anything
noble again.
If a man proposed, and she always land
two or three offers every 0010600, or could
have 1f she would, she would accept the
most eligible, and say nothing. After a11,
'ruby should the woman be so much better
than trio man? Almost any woman was
.good enough for the men one met. Only
one had seemed to her too good for such
a fate, and he had passed out of her life,
slammed the door on her in Piccadilly,
and, it seemed to her, ,gone dawn sono
distant corridor and -slammed another.
He had writtoa her a vary nice letter,
telling her that 110 was very sorry for
Siler, that It was hard enough for her
'without lila telling her what a blow it
1va6 for him, that he could never cease
to love her, and that he hoped oho would
grow happier as time went on, that he
thought it very plucky and brave of her
to te.i him. But there was no mention of
rewarding her for hor valor. He had 1ov
ed. her oho was sure of that, but not
enough. Would anyone over love her
enough, she wondered, while she forgot
to cultivate the qualities of the heart
which atom could have made her needful
above all crimps to some man.
The end of the letter made her give a
little 'wicked laugh.
"You won't mind my saying as we have
been such friends, that I cant help think.
ing that you would bo far happier abroad
or living quietly in the country. You aro
se 'beautiful that perhaps you are laying
up for yoursolf a needlees repetition of
the pails you suffered yesterday lien.
aro sure to :fall in lova with you, and it
isn't quite fair, don't you think? I know
you will talc, this es I mean it, from a
heartfelt desire that you should not suf,
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ter more than is necessary," Ito signed
himself "Yours sioe:rely,"
Yes, ho was sincere. She laughed, then
suddenlyshe grew rave.
g g
"He is a dear boy, :but hole fool," rhe
had murmured at first then: "What on
earth does- he. take me- for, why Roesu'1 he
suggest some institution (where they wear
aprons and do needlework, like those one
(tendo kitchonmeids to? Poor dear' boy,
how young lie lo," Then an awful. thought
m over hhad
came ed her. In his simple way he h
n Y
ox reseed the thought of ever man It
t
p g Y
wasn't tpossible
nsi t p crying Pair: It 0003 not
thatand
elm should � ave • marry, ever,
a d r a
Y,
she belonged ton ¢ in which i was the
of t s
g
mer
ulnar condition that one 1 08 1 marry
primary
' 1 possible,
as soon fie u o --a well b e
n
osa b o w l s 1
and Judith had a e over fourears.
h < been rg
ty
tier mother would lees - (fol lva her not
g i-
marr hl then she would the other e
marrying n
soda. Sho had forgiven the other condi.
g
tionali on its not bete found out,but
y g
-f r hi 0 wouldmther
o nothing n earth her
stand her being an old maid, and with
her looks, with her money -which 'while
it was '1101 much, was enough -'with her
position, why, of course, she must marry.
Yet the thought pierced, was it poosible
that the purity of a dairymaid was a
more valuable possession than wealth and
beauty and good breeding? It seemed so.
And ns she torn up Hubert Gresham's let•
ter oho regained her cynical snood. Yes
g y
apparently in omnia to merry that won-
derful creature -man, especially the Lon.
don young man, who comes straight per-
haps from the arms of hie mistress, or,
moro likely 6E111, from the arms of some
other 3nap's wife, it seemed necessary to
be extraordinary virtuous, not to have
had a malheur, as Louie, would have
called it. (low funny, how hugely funny
men's ideas were,
Sometunes Lady Judith. wondered I1.
Louise knew. She sometimes thought 10110
did, because she one French. One always
ltn6 an idea that .French women have a
sort of emend eight on the subject of
morality, and like everyouo else Lady Ju-
dith had the fancy that, .because a town
101 ,far alvay, e101'70ue in it meets and
knows the other. .
But Judith Roach had no intention of
going to 11vo in the country, or of 'Coiffez
Sainte Catherine.'
On the contrary, she intended to make
a very good marriage, and to keep silent
in the future, and If it come out -why,
no man on earth would publish abroad
that his wife -'had been a malheur, that
ho had been taken. in, '
That was what •shemight to have done
with Sir Hubert, How atul»dry dense she
had 'been. She did not even remember
that she had Pelt it evould. be quite Me
possible to marry him without tolling
him, because oho hall loved 11110. She
didn't lova him any more, he was too con•
ventioual, too puritanic, she didn't believe
they would.over have gotonwell together
even 1f he had forgiven.
Forgiven -now and then when she
thought of all she had suffered; still
suffered' sometimes, she fished herself 11010
any mon would darn use the 'word for.
gra l '
Tho ecene6 which occurred periodically
witl111or mother, once a fortnight, some
times more frequently, were in themselves,
it seemed to her an expiation, and she
w as quite aware that, for the next few
days, elle would 'be expoeal to those, and
elle made up her mind to them, just as a
person who goes out to seals prepared for
rough weather. They lad been too busy,
these two women, with their occupation of
pleasure, which has become a sort of in-
dustry in London, in which there is more
sweating than in a factory, more stream
ou6 hones, and, it better food, very inade-
(itate sanitation, to find time to reproach
or to •perry questions. They wore like two
adversaries, who know that they must
fight a duel, but who Halo proclaimed a
tacit truce till they shall have liberty to
fight at peace. Alreadyhermother was
preparing her orgumonts, the while Lady
Judith was laying up a store of retorts
w ith which to meet them. She had a few.
which she always kopt in store for the
Hour of crisis, the final, the most telling
of them all, though perhaps the most
cruel was when she 6aid at times: •
"It is all very well to blame mo, but you
shouldn't have allowed me to go and 6tay
at the Lorraines alone, you knew what
they were, I didn't."
It 'would not have convinced Judith if
site had been told that her mother had
boon glad to got rid of her a.oywhero, that
because their dispositions were so un-
congenittl elle had jumped at the Iden: of
Judith going away without her Tor a. tow
days, under the ohaperonago of Lady
Bill Fenwick, which, as someone said,
was like tying one's daughter to a bal-
loon. Even now, notwithstanding all that
had happened, Sandy Glaucour•t remem-
bered, with a sigh of satiofa0tiol, -chat
a very pleasant week she had had 'while
Judith w'MM away. Site never allowed her
memory to dwell on how the girl looked'
and behaved when she came back. She
had sent her to Parks, sei•disant to study
art, with quite the right person, a
lfadnano Dufour, who had once ,been a sort
of companion governess of Jltdith's, incl
who, strange to May, adored her; a. really
plica woman, tailed old, probably, out of
sympathy for her 01ot1100, but who had n
distinct personality, which belongs to
rho women who will Hover be old, if they
have also never been quite young. Ala•
dame Dufour really came of quite good
parentage, and was highly recommended
Eby a nnirquise of the ellauceuri's ace
quahltanee. In the dray's when Judith was
quite 'a child, she lead been supposed not
kb epoak English, now site always forgot
to speak French, and made 1 0101)811 aecul
as i�f oho -were still doing s0. Tho only
mistake Madame Dufour mad, wan that
she enjoyed the whole mystery of it all
so much, that Oho forgot to bo Mocked
enough, Atter a long experience of th0
lmute noblesse on both .sides of the than.
net, she had colon to look upon these
things as hart of the Lim grandeur 110008
to pasoi011, and she laud (medal out the
only half -suggested schemes of Lady Slam
court with an. 08tut01ma0 which had' made
the trip to Parte seam almost a pleasure
trap.
Cato pauvre enfant" had suffered a
f
Madaeetm a Dul'our,lees nand hall never complete-
1y realized the enormity of at all, until
she had :fallen In love with Hubert Gres-
ham, Now 1t seemed, even to herself, in.
ooueotvnble how ehe had .boon able to on;
joy 1)16 ooertahip, hew it was she had
not foreseen the end, or at 10ast, taken
111100l•ulionls for the future, Snetend. she
hod floated on the 'tido till a renewed
81 h was [ncere noL1w
t
11•
e 1 s
girlishness
nw
girl-
hood that, s(Old 81 sp'WIlel) her g
hood ryas overt and zloty whon loo vows
011 Glint(
hal gone by, oho grew gradually to
of that girl. of Elle 'whole event of the tri
to' Paris, of all that went before and an
that, wont afterwards, and of that. 2110'
wont of terrible ,hitching at her heart,
as if It had happened to someone else.
It had boon opharaetcriatio of her when
she returned, that, she load said to her
mother;
If yarn ever roproaolt me with it, I shall
leavet'
the horu0.'
It had been llor way of ,hookingy� ORO
for a 1 0 e a •, `rlm1(10.
1 Y ya the r now' 1 11 the make
Gone, w7tlell she know would�.mukq 11fq `n•
Colorable, Rho had confided Iter dread of
thl•s to Madame Dufour, who could 'well
believe that Lady Glaucaurt' who . watt
luta femme de glace sllggeated. that
Judith should aak her very nleely-"tree
gout tlmoflt"-hover to noniron the nob•
hot. Ana ,taaaa'' interpretation of
"tees gentliloment""-had been to threaten
her mother, Perhaps, after all, it had
been the beet way, Nevertheless, ecea6iml•
ally, her mother forgot her vow, made at
the moment of the threats, and brought
up the Bubject; and always there was a
seen, an which Judith threatened to malco,
a clean bi'oaot of 1t to her father and to
dilcappear,
It was roar of her husband kite -wing,
which aitvay6' made Indy Cliauoourt the
:lest to make it up; 14' tultreat her not to
10 away,ylr'onrisin always not to rotor.
to the subject again,
As a, matter of fact Lotay Olauconrt
didn't believe that Judith would tell her
father, They wore both aware that 'wllile
theybelonged to flim, and he provided
than with 'money and every luxury, and
oven slept under the same roof, that they
did not load the some life at all. Ile woe
a quiet man, much given to oport and
politics, and supremely unconscious that
they wero in any way different to what
he wanted them to'be, He had known
'when he married icor that h1s future wife
wee rather cold, and had taken her cold-
ness for reserve and good form. Now that
he was some that it was oewe-
posed
eas, 'su -
posed that her daughter took after her.
(Lie wine's worldliness he attributed to
the natural coneegllenee of their position
and the :reason that hie daughter hadn't
yet married, he pat down to the fact that
oho was ao extremely good-looking, that
she considered that there 0000 plenty of
time, and that oho could ;pick and choose.
Be perfectly agreed with. hog. He had
one aon in tph
e atmy, ho was very
like
]imaolf: and who stayed away from home
as much as possible. He was much moro
intelligent than his father, and had early
found out that his mother, though devot-
ed to him when
o was
at
home,
e
00
0s
not
.fast, but ver wo1ld] • he hadi1 o Found
out,fio hardly knoY how,thatJudith
vanot lrarldi, 'but ver fast -constitu-
tionally
tionally east.
5h0 was e0 very beautiful that, in a eo•
clay which is alYay seeking somethin
without quite knowing 'what,'but certain
a: n!
that it hasn't got it, it was Perhaps only
o bo expected that i£ he had lot been
t n s fi r
Soft, oho would 114 least have been fond
of flirtation. Sho had discovered at an
early age that she -wee quite one of the
moat beautiful women in London, and of
one of those partioular types w•hiolo at•
traot men. She was moat exquisitely
formed.
Lady Manconrt came of a familyof
whichall the members were good-looking.
There are familieo like that in England,
of which .the very name evokes grace, and,
of which the distant relatives, even, seem
to share the family distinction of good
books; in which a plain daughter or an
ordinary -looking son is a ,phenomenon
which 3s talked about.
And oho looked good, as nearly all
beauties do, with something of the ex.
pr'ossion of a Madonna, a Madonna with
aspieglerie," like those painted by the.
modern great painters, something like all
of them; a little the look of Bodenitau•
sen'0 Madonna, while her ]Pair grew low
in a natural wave like S101101'8, and the
expression of the eyes reminded one of
Defregger's. Aud later, without its being
perceptible, except to those who knew her
well, it had intensified, bringing a. kook
of painwhich, ao the years wont by, made
her look more like the afndonna of Pari -
810)11.
Yes, at moments when she remembered,
that was her expression. Her coloring
WAS exquisite, and her height, a little
above the medium, was not enough to
prevent the exquieitegrace of her move.
meats. An ideal woman outwardly, and
the delight of dressmakers, photograph-
ers. artists, with just enough em10motla-
nCGS of it to make her appear to be be-
stowing a sight of herself upon the public.
and not enough to make one think her
conceited. Great beauties aro rarely con-
ceited. In the evening a little crowd
would assemble at the door to see her go
out to parties and balls, and it had never
been known that she was without 10 part-
ner at a dance.•
All she required, someone had said, in
order to become a peek:mime] . beauty,
WAS to marry. Yes, such beauty as hers
needed an impresario. But hitherto site
had not quite hit it off with anyone ex-
oept Sir Hubert Gresham, although she
had had offers which ]lad not been to her
trete. Some mon, who admired her im•
monsely. would yet have been afraid to
ask her to marry them. One amusing old
man had said:
"Upon my word, she's too pretty for a
wife. She ought to be placed in a shrine
so that everybody could come and see
her." And till the "malheur" she had led
n hapoi' life, because of the constant ad•
ulatiou which was offered her every morn.
ing anew, like dew. rayon the maid de
lighted ill running the ribbons in her un.
derlinen.
'Lill the 1palheur, she had been happy,
even if her happiness was not based on
thosefoundations which seem to hold n
them some of the attributes of immortal-
ity. To be young, to be 'beautiful, to be
well-off, and above all, to be well•dreesed,
to Have a couple of horses to hunt with,
and enouglt intelligence to enjoy the mod-
ern twaddle which le written, what more
eoold guy girl desire?
But of rate, without being aware of it,
0"
.r 1 10301'sr'1411
it
l.• i
e.
Now i"e1d HIusbandr,y Building.
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Qy0L10(.
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P
Gunn!, t�. rr't'''I
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l \�
.4.a_.vsesstl~-.� -,,..:`M.:�,,s:zma.,t..-k�?.�et~....�,•r ,, ,..'; -\...
75
.11
er
she was profoundly unhappy, with an un-
happinees which she felt instinctively
would always be hers, even if it turned
frons poignancy and discontent to an 0r.
quiescent, stultlfled despair.
She 0000 much sadder naw than she had
ever been, even at the time of the mal.
hear.' Badder, not only because she had
been as near loving as she probably ever
could be, when she had captivated Sir
Hubert Greolnnm, but +because she had
realized that he had voiced masenllne
opinion everywhere, and that heneefor•
ward either she"Cvould have to forego mar•
riago altogether, a prospect which did
not for a moment find any 1•ed5Onie on
her part, or live a life of deceit.
Thelatter did not dismay her. It was
what all men did, and it didn't seem to
affect their 11a1ypinees at all. After all
her ,past was her own, and thin strange
code of men, that women were to be
everything they were not incensed her.
By what right did they enforce it? Argu-
ing with herself in ,'way which, if it only
g 1 temporary s,
ave 01110.1 and tem orae satisfaction,
yet because it had the counterfeit of
sanity brought a little comfort, she told
herself that surely it was fax better for
such a thing to happen before her mar.
Tinge, and to be faithful afterwards.
When she thought of the young married
women elle knew, and whose society she
instinctively •frequented more than that
of girls, it Beamed to her that there could
be no possible doubt of that. It would
be •like a sort of feminine :sowing of oats,
and, like a frivolous man, she would be
all the mora likely to settle down into
domesticity.
But there were other momenta, those
realistic, terrible ,moments, 1011010 she
awoke in the night, or was ill. when she
saw things as they were, and had to cow
fess W herself that It would be very dif•
Remit for her to find a huobatld if any-
thing ever leaked out. And who could
tell that it wouldn't, Dear old Madame
Dufour, she was safe enough, and the man
himself, she did not think be had ever
spoken, and yet, in these days, bow men
do talk of their successes, beat of 1h em,
and often invent them. She had never,
either, felt quite sure, in bewilderment,
that 1011e had not Beard a door open tat -
titer down. When elle thought of this
something oeemtd to creep from her veva'
feet to the roots of her hair, something
that was more than bathe of the fact.
the drawee of ',whether anyone, anyone
knew the story, which Wilk muelt worse
than the shame of it.
If it leaked out, what would her chances
be? One of a very few, and those few not
pleaeing, to marry some old n1nn for his
money and position, who was taloa with
her beauty enough to take pity on her.
or whodidn't 'believe what he had heard,
whom she could fascinate and magnetize
into acquiescence 0r Dome man of infer•
get o nt
n i
kr position, who wanted to
ciety, and whom she would despise, while
11e despised her. Or, worst of all the
carrying out of her mother's suggestion,
s 7 mare the man the cause
of at she trod y
of all He trouble, the ]assn she hated and
loathed. and who had neither 'wealth nor
any pertienlar position, except that of
squire of dames and buffoon to satiety.
The idea elle bad fostered now for so
many mouths, precluded the hope that
some man would fall so desperately n
love with her that he would 001 earn, Sloe
had hoped that ,Sir Hubert Gre.11nea would
be that man. \r',r she had '-r01v11 0011•
siderably lees von-Pdent of her newer.
And 0,_ these thoughts revolved again and
again,
like a squirrel in its rage,
. ,.Ire
herself
e f whetter it would ever be
posil,10 to feel like a girl again, to go
hack to where she had otarted from, and
to so forget as to h.•lw1ch and enchant by
inn0ronle?
Often and r':ftou elle had wondered whe-
ther it had made any difference in her
manner, her looks, even in the thing,
she said ,Sometimes she fancied so, but
her mother said not.
If Judith began tiuuking that, every.
thing would line to an end, and every-
thing, in this case, meant a brilliant
marriage.
As the 0.:0540(1 progre,setl. L.dy Glom
court. grew feverishly anxious. Of (Orbic
there were guaut tk.0 of men hanging
about Judith, Int ee ono better than Lady
Olatucourt (mole that that meant no.
thing. Now and then . asked o she wt herself,
as Judith did, whether anything had ever
leaked out.
(To be contlnucd.)
--'3'
It isn't the upper dog that howls
for the peacemaker,
WORMS
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Acte on glands and blood. 18).1;11 directions with eaob bottle.
and sold by all druggists,
8POIIN MEDICAL CO., Chemists. Goshen, Ind.. U.S.A
PAGE FENCES AND GATES
WEAR
BEST ----SOLD DIRECT
PAGE HEAVY FENCE.
No, of Stay.; Spachog of
bale. Iteight• holes apart. horizontals
6 40 22 612, 7, 81/2, 9, 9
Price
$0.24
7 40 22 6, 51/2i 7, 7, 702, 8 .26
7 48 22 5, 61/2, 714, 9, 10, 10 .26
8 42 22 6,6,6,6,8,6,8 .29
8 42 161/2 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 8, 6 .31
8 47 22 8 47 161 , 5, 5Vo, 7, 8iz, 9, 9 30
9, 9 .32
iz 4, iz. %z.
9 48 22 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6 .34
9 48 161/2 6, 8, 6, 6, 6, 6, 8, 6 ,36
9 82 22 4, 4, 5, 5%2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9 .34
9 62 16%2 4, 4, 6, 81/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9 .36
10 48 16y2 3, 3, 3, 4, 5%zn 7, 7r 7.1/2, 8 . , .38
1010 48 12 3, 3, 3, 4, 511/2, 7, 7, 7%z, 8 .41
10 52 161/2 3, 3, 3, 4, 5/, 7, 31/2, 9, 9 -.38
11 55 161/2 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 51/2, 7, 81/2, 9, 9.41
SPECIAL POULTRY FENCE.
Not painted. No. 9 top and bottom,
Balance No. 13. Uprights
8 inches apart.
20 -Bar 60 -Inch ... .,.,..,. 51c par rod
18.Bar 48.Inch 46c per rod
PAGE
`��,� / �� RAILROAD
GATE
)Ill lJ, �r_...,I; 3 ft...$2.30
�-= s 1 I
12 ft. , . 4,85
13 ft... 4.60
14 ft.,. 483
Angle Steal Posts 7 ft, 4 Ins. x 1I/ 1 11/2 Ina, , . 0.81
Set Tools ,...$8.00 Called Wire (100 lbs.). 2.80
25Ibs. Staples, 0.80 Brace Wire (25 lbs.).... .75
Write for froo copy of the b/g oataloguo.
listing 1P0 ditter'ont numbora of Fames anti
Lawn Ponce and gates, as Wolf no hum
dyads of useful Fdrm and Homo articled at
whotesdle prloos.
PAGE POULTRY
NETTING,
HO feet.
24 Inch ..$2.36 per roll
36 " , . 3.00 " "
48 " „ 4.00 "
60 " 4.25 "
72 " . , 5.60 '8
u
u
AI
7c.
8c,
90,
100,
PAGE STANDARD GATE.
Width
3 feet
91v2,.
4 u
//
,u1 11.111
8
VS17lt10
11•F116211
86 nett 42 inch
41.90 $2,10
2,10 2.30
..•, 2,56
0... 3,00
4144 4,10
10 " 4.80 5,00
11 tf .11.,1 1,-1 016
12 't 01.0", .11 6.56. 6.7
18 u , 147', , 5,@
14
a
Be
These prices for Old Onterlo only.
Prices for Now Ontario, Quebec, Marl.
time and W18t on request.
48 inch
$2.8pp
8
2.80
3.20
3.4
4.36
5,25
Here are the lowest prices on the best -
wearing Fence and Gates.
More PAGE Fence and Gates are
than any other single brand. So
manufacturing cost must be low.
sold
Our
PAGE Fence and Gates are sold
DIRECT from factory to farm (freight
paid.) So our selling cost must be low.
PAGE Fence and Gates are made of the
very best materials by the pioneer fence -
makers - with 23 years' experience in
building fine fence. Every part of every
PAGE Fence and Gate is made full size.
Even our Farm Fence locks are all No, 9
wire. So that PAGE Fence and Gates last
a lifetime.
For these reasons PAGE 1'`b7:TC:E and GATES
are the BEST and CI1EAPEST to' 1180,
Mail your older, with cash, cheque,
bank draft, Natal or expres#' order,
to the nearest PAGE BRANCH.
Get Immediate 8h1pm001 fl'onm near.
by 8t'oelt8'--frelght paid On 410 or
over.
Page Wire Felice Company Limited
DEAPT. W,
1187 1410g St, Weal 1? popUrrori Street
TORONTO WAB,KFRy1LL8
605 Notre Dame at, West ,,t3 tie, Nt
MONTREAL ST, .10N , t+.tf,
pirlvws4�Nuq►snom "awiwro
lw.:„...,.......400,...,....a
On Farm
Recording Cow Quality.
In many dairy sections in Canada
it is quite possible, judging frim
C'a] ur l c a herd of
afil 1 fig en8 to fi 1 1
Cows producing milk ata feed cost
of only sixty-two cents, or less, per
hundred pounds, w' 11.1e on at fayre
two miles away milk costs perhaps
ninety cents or Blore per hundred
for feed. And on that f1t1'01 where
roilkeosts more, maTv often be found
some dairy requisites, such as a
pure bread dairy sire, good ensilage
etc. Other requisites may be lack -
Mg, well rounded dairy judgement,
cow quality.
Solid and lasting success is at-
tained
tamed
both easier and quicker by
the intelligent use of dairy records.
This is just common sense selection
of paying cows, instead of the in-
discriminate boarding of "just
cow's." The individual cow of
good promise is quickly and unerr-
ingly spotted by the use of simple
dairy it
records and feel for better
3
production at less cost; while the
antique sauvenh.', useless as a pro-
fit maker, is beefed because she
lacks .ability to produce milk at a
reasonable cost for feed.
The man who
raises his own
calves can take1
uick strides 'n
q
building upA good r
d hOld
, for
he
keepsonlyhis best
cows andknows
whathehas
t at. The1
just mar
g
who silo f
e often sells his 1 5 bCSt cows
for a eon' tin is e 5 t)1 lain history
g(
P
of some world -champion
o -
C 006
)•
just because ean.e he doe not know
]
s l o ].no r
what good cow quality he has;
dairy records would have informed
hint.
A matter of ten minutes per Cot"
pet month spent in recording will
put surprising, most illuminating
results before any herd owner, in-
dicative of great possibilities at
present dormant in his dairy cows.
Write to the Dairy Division, Ot-
tawa, for samples of record forms.
and start to lower yourcost of
milk production through soleeting
better cow quality.-C'.F.W.
Field Root and Vegetable Seed
Situation.
For three months after the out-
break of war much anxiety was felt
throughout North America as to
supplies of field root and vegetable
seeds that come principally from
the warring countries of Europe.
The field officers of the Seed Branch
devoted much of this time to a study
of the possibilities of creating a
supply of Canadian grown seed for
1916 planting. It was advisable in
the autumn to select and specially
store any biennial roots to be trans-
planted this spring for seed pro-
duction.
Fortunately the European seal
crop of 1913 was much above the
average for practically all kinds.
Owing to previous shortage in sup-
plies most Canadian seed houses
had increased their order's by 50
per Cent. or more and had received
full delivery, The excellent seed
drop of 1914 was also harvested in
spite of war conditions and, al-
though deliveries have been delay- .
ed and transportation excessive,
most seed houses have received the
greater part if not all of their con-
tract orders. C'anadia'n seed
houses of good financial standing
are thus in a position t0 Carry over
sufficient supplies to meet a very
considerable part of 1916 require-
ments.
The quantity of field root and
vegetable seeds that may he pro-
duced in Europe during the present•
year or the next is highly specula-
tive. Phis work requires mnc11
skilled labor of which there must
be a marked shortage for agricul-
tural purposes, European Govern-
mental direction of increased food
production and relatively high
price's fur food (imps will doubtless
decrease the areas devoted to
there seed crops and to stock seed
roots which weeper 110 molly be
grown this year for transplanting
in 1916.
Canadian farmers and gardeners
should give this 111'.t.lbit 014111111).1
their serious consideration. atio1'1. The
soil anti climatic conditions in dif-
ferent Parts of Canada 410 eq full,'
favorable if not superior to those
of Europe. The growing of these
seeds in quantity for commerce ha
been limited in Canada by the
higher price of labor and because
few fitlmer1 had experience with
biennial seed crops. A few dozen
or a few 'hundred sound shapely
roots set out this spring May sive
"Billable experience which all, be
numb. needed .as well as some good
seed. A bulletin on filler root and
vegetable seed production may ho
had on application to the Publica-
tions Branch, Ottawa, free for tilt'
asking,
31051 1)rnrneratie Country.
Brazil is in one respect the m.l l'
democratic. of all countries. Bra-
zilian 1.0w1 prohibit the establish-
ment of any university, be,ean5e
„tile conferring t'f academie dig•
tillc'tlOns in enlltd•flry 1,0 1)131) ,trine.
1 I era:ey.31 There are lean,' institti-
• i (ions In Brazil where medicine aioi
I law are tanghi and these grant
•t en • .il•
clPtilV('ptr' rI , 1 e} t,, nun, k
•
who O'0161)11nt1' elle evil ea in weal in•
I',1'• manner. t
1).•
factory n nl 1. Iiut 1111 tCl well
ll
310 lUf#ed ire may be, no Brazilian
can lcgt(!ly style Minelli in his own
country a,dol ter of laws car of teed.
11100.