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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-11-16, Page 6Q. D. Ivie'PA(0GAll',' M. 1), MoTAGCAltir MTAGGART BROS. BANKERS A general Banking Business tratisect- ed. Netee Discounted, Drafts IsSned. Interest Allowed on Deposits. Sole Notes Purchasea, T. RANCE Notary Rublio,' conveyancer. Reat Estate oad 15 3 Agent. .te.p ree outing , 14 laire . . . inee 230 coinpen les . DiVision Court Offjoe, °Setae- 0 - 'W. BRYDONE ,Sarrister, Solicitor; Notary Ptifotic, etc. SLOAN eit.oeie " CaINTON GAMIER' ' OiB Hours: -.1.30 id 3,30 p.111,, 7.30 to 0.00 i.rn. StindayS, 12.00 to 1.30 p.m. " Other lours by appointment onlY. Office and Residence — Victoria' St. DR WOODS s resealing practise at his residence. OffIce Hours: -3 to 10 amt. and 1 to 5.10, SondaYs. 4 to 2 p.m., tor San- itation. G. S. ATKINSON Graduate Royal CoRege.tof Dente,: Sur- geon$ and Toronto University DENTAL SURGEON Has office ',tours at Hayfield In old Post Ofilee Building, Monday.. Wect. n'May, Friday and Saturday from„.1 to 5.30 pm. ' CHARLES B. HALE ' Conveyancer, Notaity" Public, Commis. RDAL 'ESTAT-Id AND -1NSDRANGE Issuer of Marriage Licenses. HURON „STREET CLINTON , - GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County CarreSpondence peomptly apeevered, immediate arranger/len-tar can be Made 'fors Sales Date at The."News-Reeord, Clinton, or by calling Phone 203. Charges Mbderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. • tatallS -te TME TASLE sins will arrive at and depart from , Clinton as follows: Suffalo and Goderich Div. Going East, depart . 6.25 a.2n. Going West at 11.10- AM, ar. 6;08 dp. 6.51 p.m. ar. 10.04 p,m. London, Huron & Bruce Div. Going South, ar. 8.23 dp. 8.23 a.m. " 4.15 p.m: Going North, depart' 6.60 p.m. 11.05, 11.13 a.m. The McKillop - Mutual - Fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth, Ofit DIRECTORY: President, James Connolly, Goderieh; Vico:, James Evans, Beechwood; Trea.surer, Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth, Directors: George IVIcCartney, sea. forth; 1). F. McGregor, Seaforth; S. G. Grieve, Walton; Wm. Ring, Seaforth; MoEsven, Clinton.; Robert Ferries, 1' Haritick John Hennew4ir,Brodhagen; COnnollY, Godpidell, • Agent's; Aeex. Leitch; ,Clinton; J. W. Teo, Goderich; 12d. 1-linehray; Sea - forth; W. Chesney, Egmendville; R. G, Jarmuth, Brodhagen. '• Any money to be paid in may be pni'cl to Moorish Clothing:Co., (Hinton, or et Cutes.Grocery, Goderich. Parties desiring to affect Insurance er transact . other Matinees; will be, promptly attended to on applica.tion tO any of the Above officers addressed to their respective post office Losses inspected by the Director who -lives' nearest the scene.' CLINTON, ONTARIO" Terins af Subeaription—$2,00,30r year, hi advance, to Canadian addresees; $2.60 .to the U.S. or Other foreign countries, No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unlees at , the °Mani of the publither. The date to which, every subscription is paid is denoted on the' lase]. , Advertising :Fletes-a-Teeeipient stayer, tisements, •10 eeleta per notfpareit IMO fat first ineereien and 6 Cents per line for eachealiseauent Meer - tion. Small ,advertisemeatenot to exceed 'one Mole.. snob, 'as .,."LoSt," "Strayed,"'or 4atelen," etc., inserted once for 36 cents, and each subse- quent insertion 15 cents, CoMmenicatioa intended for pubii- cation must, as .0' guarantee of saott faith, be accompaieled by tho name of the Writer. (4, E, HALL, 11, R. MARI& Proprietbr, Editor; Sumac. ...slop 17 the salter SWorri,st 92 frost 7110 last 'aright alessiom Iles; Stripped of their gold by robber weiele Bare ;ameba besenee the eisiesi" I heerd the wild geese in tbe night Go 12 onlci lig' overhead, " Lost in gray'clottds that o'ei the moon 11 Ise fright 05 01 phantoms lleci. , Hut the In+n mot; Hod ell ' ' Ana lonely country .101 ,Where but the withered ..mcinury, 00 eemmer's gegen l'emeine, . . Thal, ragged gYpsY ereee wiec goes About foretelling ontiwc Noeember keep iae staolaarieg aieeO 05 seman dtes aglow, Minna Irving. Nene of -1.1 will got', vary if we f41,0aa OM' experierio.e, e, Addltoes commtiolcations o AifroriontIst, 73 0doIsIde St, Weet, l'�roto. °thl ,T°ho With a Tractor. By doing odd joie; when general 'wove wee sleek, John Semoe hae made 10 traetor: pay on a eerie ,wheee tho noighbore said it would,' Go a bill Of eteeeese, "My ham contains only seventy acres " Sernon expletted recently, and 11 nlowntg etna general 'field work was ni/ 10 tactor eould do, 0 Could not afford te have one on the place. 1 realized tlae,eind befoee I bought mine I began to devise edd jobs te keep it. busy. My first odd job was clearing D. strip of timberland. After the treee were felled and sawed, I used the trac- tor in loading the logs, then again in hauling them to the mill. Afeerwieril, I began to aulleseeleme, With a little saill iry handling, I found that the ma- chine would make an even pull, and develop a great deel more power than a team, I -cleared the piece M. foul' clays, thereby saving a weelas time With team and man -power. . In fencing the lend, I beought the tector int& action again, Hauling 'the ,posts, stretching wire., and draw - Mg the wagomeboat. ' The same year 1114 ioaa work, deagging stonee, grading, ditching and rolling. r not oray improvecl 111yGWn highway, but' was able to take in some mollea be- sides. . When marketing time came around rigged un a couple of wagons and hooked on the tractor. With this:out- fit X hauled my owa grain and that of irry neighbors. On my return trips I brought- back fertilizer 14"thetseme manner. I used the 'machine again in bring- ing in my evinter'a fuel, loading a.nd heeling loge, etc. Then, with a.neigh- bolas` saw, I used the maehine in Cut- ting, -1 haae found the tractor 0.15. in beet work. Many times other farmeii and .1 work tegetime at this.' If Ifehas a feed grindeee -cutter, etc.', we ''-exe change labor and save money': In neighborhood work such as this I often .exchange trector power for team. "These are but e few of the many jeloa which my machine does," con- tinued -Mr. Semon, "I have riggectup s. 111.11hb Or ef :home-made, devices at practically no eapenseeand every day I find something new to whish the trectoe can be met.; For. many of these jebe eeplaces horses, deing the work. eaeapee tie:ea great 4,ea1. less ' • , Gee Opt the Old Wkitewash.Bruah„ Two yeees ag.o aaertaimpoultryrnan threw up his ha.pas in disgust. Withl vermin infesting -his buiidings and dampness henging like a :feg cloud in his brooder houtia, he could not make 51 tmees$ of Lis beeinees, • He edvertisea the place for side at o eareeie, spent the he part Qf 1. 701r getting rid. of it at a huge He wee fauna in explaining tee reaso'n for selling'to the young fent).- 4r who finally conolu(tied to "try it a whzrl,o "You can keep chickens in one place may so long," the cliegneted man 0014),";then the geoima eoee stele, lice fill up the buildings,. and with the ground sear and .not draining properly, the buildings soon become- damp, The 'young Mann. k,,il'idtt nothing, but he used the .pessimism of the, owner to pry off a -few. heated from the prie,e and tack the Pleee; fleet thing I :did," he gays', "was "to get. ,speaying outfit and go ever all the 'buildings with' a disin- fectant wbiteWash. thok half the etime that it used to take. with the bruehes. .1 emend that the whitewash did just twa' things for me: It killed the vermin and it eried up the in- terior. . The, brigheness of the 111001201,ton eure, goes' a long way teward keeping it dry. Lime in the white - well, you know, ;is noted fee taking dampness out of bad plaee,s." f, TO clean up the eoll he used Eine, plowing such of it as eauld be plowed. Other yards and 101115 redeived application of geavel and sand anel vvere then spaded: This tguaran- teed good drainage in the futufe, The runs ;Were then seeded to alfalfa and clover, or oats, as the case might be, and the following 'swing 'ale spaded • This young farmer is raistiog more chickens in the run-down farm than his predecessor did, and die is having the best el successbecause te is 'tak- ing preventive measures. He usee the disinfectdet whitewash once each month on the interior of hie buildings. ' As fast as ,the green food is con - aimed- in one of the runs, he turns die fowls into enotliter and seeds it down, ". • • "Yee," he eaid, "if the other fellow -bad Bally thonght a little while about getting outarfethe hole, he:would have :used' genie whitewash and be would :never have let his -soil get infested. It is all fooldshness to 00111 about moving to new land every- no often with chickens. .1± you want to keep the lane. night you can do it, but you can't let -things take their own Way, if you would Sueceed:" • He added that his hither used to whitewash.his barns and ,stables,.and, that by remembering that One Net, he had been enabled to reclaim ...this place and eave thousands of d011ArS TOT himself.. 10 It pays to dig out the ola whitewash brush new and then—or better still, a good spraying outfit, Profitable Way of Marketing Farm Products The marketing of farm -prodnets 18 one ef the most important things in the farming buliness. It is at least .as important 05.10151114 a good crop. I think a weekly home market in every towri and 'city where there is a reamed would benefit the farmer to a very large extent. The farmer would be able to take advantage of such o marketing „eystern in many different ways. The main 'idea would be that the farmer coued sell his own products himself, or hold them if the prices were not right. It is quite) different at the present. Vaaen. the farmer ships sonie of his products to' some large market com- mission houSe, he does not knew what is done With his goods. When Le gets the l'etliT1lS, he many times owes the commission house money for shipping charges,. The goodseoften do not bring the tost of el -lipping, not speaking of the basket, the eoet of raising the products, etc. There are aleo a let of farm pro- ducte never shipped nor used, as small amohnts are net profitable to: ship. However, if there were a home mar- ket ,you ceirld, take down what you haa, large or small, 'and it anarould not cost anything to get it seld, as you wcarld do this yourself, There would then be many farniers who ceald buy their needs from other farmers at the maiket place, evhile new it is often a prohlem to".1cnew where to buy eceee of them. The neighbors do not leave what he wahte and the faerner cemeot spend his time looking for' it all oyet the countey. If it should happen that, the goods want. ed were not on the home market, one vvoeld at least be 'able to learn where toget it. The weekly hertie market would also ,bring germeal merchandise to the mar- ket'place. Many would put up booths arid many bargains *Mild he offered, and nuieh Money would be „saved be* farrnees und town people and Be mudli to theaadaantageted both. The next thing is how: to seat a weekly home market. This Cap be done in aefew days. You don't have to wait until next summer, there are many things which you care sell every week, even ie the winter thne. „There are eggs, butter, vegebebles, grains, Pigs; cows, horses,'shecp,lat hogs, potatoes, chiekens, ebc,,sto start the market.. A committee of friners' could be ap- pointed to get togeeher with -the town official to buy a piece' of ground to hold the market eere Make a few ar- rangements' for the up -keep of the market, like renting -certain placesaat the market ground to people who would like put up bobths, etc. Then have the - market place divided into sections, At each section a certain etend of goods should be sold. Then a day should be set on which to_hold the merket. The market could be opened at 8:00 a.m. and last until noon or 2.00 • Arrangemente could be made to have the market place limier cover for paotection in bad weather ale would be impoetant to. arrange that not any of ;the iteighboring tewne would have a merket on the ,,Sa1116. Olay. This system is in full swing in many countries of Europe, and there has proven a big advantage le farm- ing. 'Sinai) 40 will be to ehe advantage of Ontario potato growers to gee rid of all undersized and injured; potatoes at home, the bestinetbod of -feeding this precluet to the pigs will be ef iritereat to many, Potatoes gees peculiarly valuable ae a,.eupplement'in :fattening pigs. The beat practice is to cook the potatoes, drain off '0h -water Anti then mix the potatoes with wean at the rate of ahoa `thaeo parte. of potato& to one part of the geain.. • The writer's Metheit- aloin i$ to boil the .Petatoca in 4 feed, 'eceiltece and thee do the mixing it 031±121103 with a piece of beerel of suitable length. Thus prepared literal querrietiesmay he fed Feedhag Pumpkins.. For feeding cows, 2.5 tons of pump - kine, with seeds hi, are the equal of moisth foe, some ',Or disappoint - one -t±0 ea COrn silage. Seine folks mentatinite anneaceiaea bY thase who say that pumpkin seeds will cats° did not happen to be peesent when the coops to go dry, or that they will worlt stab came. Boys, especially, being ori aeimals' kidneys, arid hence the Slow to confide their little rebuffs to 'pumpkin seecle shoald net be fed, anyone through sheer masciatiee pride, There is no truth in such stateMents, will be out se 'humor at seemingly as has been provedeby eeedieg tests. ridiculous oe nnreaeonable things On the other hancl, enneelcin aeecle are Mien something underneath, that they pouts se the 'beet way to disceurege Winter Protection for the StraWherrY Ureter the most favotable eeaeonel conditions winter protection fee btraw- biteverryolitilliebnletacire•ola),a4>eit;ilurlueilty; eweielettztaialliotno, MeY he eaal waken winter conaitione are uefavoeable? It is eafe to say t(11111.4,Ougliti}:Zrbdere7inier4131\ntstatltholltPtega(-' tion will be of little vahie so far ae profit 78 eoncerned, either og fruiting or foi, proeagatien. .0pe need's eider to try out the two eysteme (if a method of culture emitting the. waiter muleh may be properly terinee aeystain),to verify this etatemeet, ' SnOW le an ideal winter ceveeing for atraWberra Plants in eo fer as itmity be depended upon; bat even whor4s it remains 'fairly constant during the greater partof the winter, ite greatest vmoaltueerii4siisnibotu taos s a,ast.41,iblps ptiltilatieenttao aptirm` o:z. 't,ction. Even where„ gnow comes falle deep,,- eed remains 'late, there FAR' remains a" period of time when frost action may Work more ',sr less injury to straevberry 'aeries. St-rawbeery plants thet $how up thrifty and green on the going of the deep snow covering •SOCM part with this virgin vitality under the getien of frost alai sunshine. Dried un foliage quickly, takes the plae iC the lee- tirlant greenness so essen.tial to ,plan£ 'tiger and Paedustevetet bea7Ce2g' itheeen .istti:aowtebegtile'rrYi. abtedsthell°aulppdrola.eyhe a winter, but, if this work wag neg- leeted it will no doubt seal be a profit- able proposition, The season is sure to be unusually severe on 011 lands of yegetetion. In most situations a, pretty heavy aaplictatic;n of material will be necessary to carry' the strawberry plants through uninjured:, Feetunate- ly, our berry bed is tolerably located as to windlotealcs.--K. W. Mixing Berries ,and Chicks. This is how I overcame the diffi- ceity in raieing poultry and berries at the sarne time withoutlanjury to either: Everyone who has had experience with chickens and aefries knows that, doing his best, but of course his best poultry aye a detriment to fruit in the I is not good, and', 'if Pin:alive at the eipening season. To keep the chickens time, say the eame thing about penned up throughout the pickina yeti whergyou are seventy, What are season, is also qnite a loss. In my blaca raspberry and black- berry patch I have sel, geed white -oak posts about every two rods in the rows. On these posts I have stapled a wire just high enough (about three feet) to tie the new canes to after CO-OPEILAI'IV ttl; ,i)AlAtY ]4M545401'0± ±4, Executive committee of the million dollar ea -operative company, launcbed by Hon. Manning Doherty foa marketing dairy ereducte, This conmany will do for dairaing what the Niagara Peeinteula Geowers are do- ing for merketerig fruit, Frout row, 'left to eight, le. IL SliOnellOnnet Wes- , ton, eeerelarye and John Beatty, Malloratown, presieent; imelc saw, 0, z. Gibsen, Oaleclenia, a. A. 1V1oFeeterS, Toronte, and Win. Newman, Lorzieville, directors. • Selling the Olcl Horse. n' Yedon't mind, friends, I'll put inea word for the old herse—thateeld bay fellow, you know, with the ea- largedlenees. He luts-worked you eome,tweive,yeaes, I understand, and has been :Satisfied with his board and room and' a set oe new shoes' now and then, s, During those ea' Tive yeare, I am rightly informed, nineteen hired men have kicked, get balky, and lain eloavn on the job, but the told bay has never 1 thine any of *wee things. I am told that in the same length of time three , hered girls have run away, but the gdod horse has nevea done that either. ‚(Ole also, said that you yeueself have been away two winters, two months each tame,. but the faithlul nag has stuck to the farm and kept thiegs •running until your retuen. He is eighteen IlOW, 9gis it nine- teen? At any rate he is about an ea,a, in horse language es 3reu wiel be at' severity in man lartguage. Re is stili tahsayt ()hue FoPeif$ nOloil,1n1(1>onil'•e0, julssite''0:relnwu' °the: Year farm is t'he, old horee'e home, and horeehooci- herb and knows every CQT-i ser "and feneepost. If you sell aim to any. erne you will bleak his heart, aleelepende on you, Ile has every con- fidence an sent. He has given you twelve long yens of ate active life, and if be had kept books he teould p/ove you owe 02121 42,400 at east, Don't break this heart. Personality, I 'don't think your been s eatwcled. -Why not elip these colts nto that !box stall and 'tie these two mates over in that double Hall?1 Make 'room foe the 010 fellow inside! when the .weather is astael,,, and give' iim,the range of the pasture when the -weather is fine. In two or thee, years that he leas let to live you can pay him back a little of that Make room for the old horseetriend. Whew you axe his ago--seventy.in yoer case—the boas and etrig 31411 make if, a cornet for you and try to pay you back for the yent5 that you eboted for tam without pay-, The Tools I 1.FinUseful.' d Usefu longee most of all far a vand he day d purchase„aacheap' combine. - ion anvil,. vise and drill 'I sure was filing On the peak of tbe world, Had het be,e'n 'the 4n141 one of its ,kind in existence, Force's billioiee could not ave purehased More than one shere. Whee I '0015 a boy Wood, wasecheap nedethe framework of roost farm tools m was ade from 01±14 material. so that in that dey stheefermer with a, good outfit of „woodworking tools was ell et for most ef the repair jobs. To - lay, however, eteel has taken the lace a wood te a greet ,extent,And he farmer who espiree to do his own eepairirig must be in a 'pOsatioa to You going to do with him? I know what you are thinking of t doing with ham You are thinking of t selling him foa $16 or $17.50 la you s can get it, to the old garbage Man in 1. toWn. 'He conld de the gar,baee mana work all right, yoe say, it would not b they have been cut back and the old be hard on him, you need tthe money canes taken out. -This process ea for echool taxes, and then—evell, the a barn ie crowded, badly -crowded. That's what yell are thinking, Coneese. Say, friend, think again—and while thinning Out mist -be' clone every -sea- son, anyway, in order to have good fruit. And I have found iby exper- ience that by tying bite new canes to you are thinking, look me in the eye. the wire'I tot only have "better berries you know mighty well that old gar - and easier to pick, but that the frufi is above the reach al the poulteyt • t f , and bage man is so stingy be wouldn't tt thet f breath, and will not feed hirnsethf UT by letting the:chickens T' at laige through' the picking season the in- e-rease in egg production more than pays far the time and expense in- volved. ' f have left a spaee close to the hoese, and here, in the .speing, we place the coops, ahd find that the loss of little chicks bY hawks, crows, etc., is less than in former years.' Each` of us adds an iota to the world's fund ce knowledge but we earl 'add more if we make more use of that , which is already availebtle,. enough, let alone a horse; you know he cusees like a pirate when he 10 mad, ane he isaiwayt mad; Yeu know work-in m,etal, e • I aa. good ,vise comes first 'on the list, with a hacksaw mei strong • peadrille he nevee esed -a blanket on the last a horse he ha -a, and the beast died early in the spring from expesure and mal- nuteitien. That'e why he wants an- other horse now. Whates that? The garbage man is nob so bad as painted.? Well, grant- ing that he is not; granting for the moment that Ile IR a near -angel with stub wings sticking oat through the holes in his sweater, Olon't forget th t ° set of stocks aned dies TOT bolts and uts, rangmg from. a quarter on up hrough the. various sizes to the half-, neh. A -forge and anvil will come in mighty handy every few days. While' les, chisels, timers' shears, soldering outfit and a colablee's outfit will pay for themeelves 101.0 year. ' For the woodwarking job the farm - 00 will need a good draw knife, a cut- ff, rip and compass saws, hatchet,1 Parents as Educators two or three bevel edge chisels. Al The child Who Pouts—.3y Marion Brownfield, The child who pouts is a problem, ; Young childeen, too, ef e.ensitive na- as the tendency to remain sullen an ures I pont in company on o disagreeable may easily become a life pure diffidence. The writer knows a time habit lthoweagega-a‘bad dieposti- 'boy of three, who invariablY' Folds 1 teem"' ' • and hangs hie little head in com,pany There ie the little fellow who pants mail his older beobliers 'and 'sisters we on he takes a notion that be does have teased to notice him, when he • not waet oatmeal los- breakfast, and becomes lees self eonesSous and the; the eating aniss .who pueses up her poet clisappeers. Another boy-, the lips when her mother decides it is most sensitive of three brothers, de- n not best for ,liee to wear a certain veloped a pout through self defeffeel. h frock elm fancaes. When one knows As. he Was less "-aggressive naturally d the directecause of a pout, it is coin- than his two other blathers', they took t paratively easy to, deal with. But adearatage of. it and gaae him the b with childeen, the bad humor, may worst of it at every oppoetunity. The h really go farther back than -what ap- consequence Was that not being a pears to be the whim of the moment, fighter he developed a eheonie pout Ibis 'because Children 0110 1110±0 more that the family for a long period I sullen, bitter, or deceitful by unjust t d Ir" yone h punishmeM that one must he careful from teasingAine. The sullen looks s to understand the real cause of a pout, make them leave him alone. It was o With childeen theee is such a differ- only when a discerning grandma visit- n once in personalities, just es much ed 'the famile that she seggested the 15 this 01100, 01 one is to cure the pouting And 'sure enough evben the other habit successfully. And eome children brothers were carefully prevenaed have fancies and _moods that are much froen annoying the child, he mellowed niore -difficult to adjust than the up! • safety-pSn. that caused baby's pout. 'aE) to cure 'the pout effectually, one , • d t 'I ' I; f large Plene, a block 'plane, a square a brace with a complete set of an automatic ecrewdriver, a good mil haat-liner and a good leael. While there aro a great Many Other small tools that the earmer can use to ad- antage, he will find that the above. vith ahe adaieion tof ,bolts, nets, crews and nails will with the exee- ising of a little ingenuity, meet, the najority .0± t everyday needs..—D.' Riding. His Machines Always Work John Leke, a farmer I lcnow, has a tetanal of machinery repairing. that as saved him a great maily dollars tiring the pat two years. His sys- em is simple, inexpensive, and may e copied by. any farmer. „This is ow Doke hes dt, as be told it to me: 1.31.90(1 Gof.)4 or 1f -trid Wakery? ycot eeii tell by tete way yeti feel. Toe iteell lIood'e emeaperilhi, to reeke yore' blood nob, red arta pule, tingene Wait bealth for evcry organ. Yoe eeva iteif weak ene ered .0 anda4,,. out, if youe eppetite is poor, eleep unreireehing, — for limeore, eroptioes, serofttla, tendtACI ;00, 11 00 0051 , pee -eta -ream. It is ;lithely woederfel to eye, 035 70114112 to your 'allele hocly. 10 io agrcoahle, pleasant and con- venient to take, and embodies a Ionearied and foend-ime formula, - areee of manueeetueor or dealer who samad likely have repairs ie eteekt, 5201 go over each implemene in tura, 0,114 when they aro 011 stored away I kkalre 4 eomplete liet of repaied rs need for the foliowing year, My next stop is tis search 04±121031100 and to call on Life dealers, I compare prices, and when Igo to town I give the racier for as many parts- as 7. (ten get. As a re, pair ie secuee , 2 moss off them itein my notebook. This is to preveet buy-, Me the same part twice. Having the whole winter befoee me, 10O151 able to select what 10 need at '22 greater saving • than woul4 be the ease if I waited- MAE the seethes rush. ' • eAs ,e, repair part ie secured I go to that particular implement and mena it. In this way my tools ere seont put into god condition. I ilncl the method eapecially good, aor de- tectieg evoen-oue pants. Willie going over a machine I oaten find eemething weakened oe worn until Otto liable to 'break at eny time, I odes' such parts, ve and leathem ready, so that whert 15 beealeeeenas 2 can fix it without loSe 'of time. "This inay eeern to be a lot of un- 0500002013'un- 0500002013'detail," continued Loke, "but it is quite easy once you form the habit: With such a system you can startain seller) therum spring "sh coes, while tae, other, fellow is _rigging up his machinery,"—F. It, 0, Pruning vs. 'Kertilizing., I have found spraying and fertil- izatiqn to be the most important fee - tors iso, freit growing,," says Robert Anderson,, a aucceseful orchardist, Without spraying, you might as well give up-, for no other praetices ±0111 inake up for spraying. After spray- ing coinee featilizers. You must feed the trees if you event leg crops. A lot of orehards don't.pay because they are hall starved." "How about pruning?" lees a quer- tion put to Mr. Anderson. ,"Isn't that one of the most important factors?" "I don't went to 0110011011015 prunieg," was the ansvver, abut I .feel that it is often overdone in the effort to make up for the omission of other peactices. The suecess of pruning is not measur- ed by -the amount of wood, yoa remove, but the 'amount you. can properly leave, I um illustrate bbie by the feection, six over two, in which six reprezents the trees and branthee, and. tevoathe productive iover of tee soil. It's no Use to have more wood than thee soil will stipport to produce good fruit', so ,you take four away from the six by peening, and have the fractton two OVer two, mit another way is to add `four to the tWo below by fertiliz- ing, and then you have six over six ove fruit because You hove the wood and the plant abed. to make -the ftoit. ' That's the system I practice." Uses Temporary Fence. If fields are to .be pestered 501 Ger- tainecrops it may lee easier and cheap- er to have a small temporary fence. to build v;herever wanted on the farm. I have' used an eight-wire,,thirty-two- inch Woven wire. fence. f,or tilts pur- poee .anc when . suimoun.e by two barbed wires it svill tern any kind 1,of stock that the ardinney high woven 5 wire fence will then. In putting up this fence I ueually put the line ,posts abeue twice as far. apart assethey would be irethe ordinary fenee. Von corner posts where there are not peereanent-onee I use One 01 the larger line poste and beace 00 again.st another. The line posts ore sabeter than gavial' 'fence pests and so the holes do not have to be dug over a foot. aeep. With this kind, of fence. 'Inc man 05.11 fence about fifty to sixty In inputitntielical!Wthis ternporery fen.ce, through the corn field so as to hog clown a piece I ee-ver use ally line poste, -but eimply .wire the fencing to the corestaikse--W. -E. Wiecking. ."Wheneeer implenient is brought in from the year'e servicain the field, go over re carefully, eearching for roken and worn -but parte: When och a part is located, make an Item f it in my notebook, I, set clown ante size, and paice, if I happen. to now it. Below this I write the ad - with grewn-ups, tha one must study real casee of the petits to the fainilv Some ehildren indeed, of change- Must consider the muse before apply - able disposition pout often at tri 11 in a r n edy thiugs, plainly the displeasuee of the A boy oa most asty age can under- immedeate moment. While childeen stand the appeal 'ao be'a good sport" of deep naturee, sensitive at unsus- and "not to whimper, when you're a pected spoes, will be "clown in the loser", It cell 'be urged on almost any occavion to peevent pouts that come from disappointment, a thwaeted appetite or Tenure to win in -a game, Ignoring the pout is a tactful meth- od with a certain type et The Med that thas "tempeearnent" loves to breve his emotionsenoticeel and cate eyed to. So utteely- ignoring these beneficial. When fed to pigs, they are ashamed to confesee eankles, the cbilci 'from trythg them again. 'free the pies of worms and pet' the digestive aapavatue in tip lop shape. • eXcees" of eeeds caeses ' enpset of the eigestiee organs, fiv a eley .ot aes-iae'etae,,, ete, be epee e the seeds aee very 'There ,is 110 ,altngell) though,. if. fed in amounts in lynch they occur. nature ly.For feeding' pigs, puroakine eee ktuolung hor,t8 ond th breed sometimes cooked, Mit ex4a wsie eewe and seoall OieS,„ Rea', petatoee Waa.aalltea Sh ta d, net lie tt`."(ituh68 05)2 t'e' fed to eow 1,10. laige ettantitiee bevel's° of the eelan- fulti 123000 100 'ileaa1151c00 50 31.10(311102 00 121),t 1.0 rolkie8 Lefee This te toeing IfIgs exelnalvelY on .,,cress,e fol eff ystlil e eetaaanad L 0{11' arildopg6, lOalioilit IA yellow color, 11 Ora OS 1,`„ to Ott 5111111 1112 in 1 or , ^ ine which, iC eo,esemed Loo, lieeealle, Same al'ael.1.46n Lowering tile eot producLion citnetiln°8 00 soon sites C. meteeet-dey semtomicntneed. It Con best be done be, eating mere Aggq net, hen more milk per tow, tam( more St human naltire to reoeire much 01, yteit 120.0, 0114 raring' for 1e40 from others bet to.ley rospa'a,;t.. ehickeee, eewe eilities opoe our eW11 ' :Peewit pieces fot farm prockiete would be all eight. if ether thinge would adefiate" Ewan:dine:1r. vote, etaSeeteeeeiesetee eemeseeeteareeee, este Tbere isn'tea member of the family need suffer from indigeetion, siolt headachee, biliouseess, fermented stoMach, etc., if he or sho will take Chamberlain'e Stomach and Liver Tablets. Thereleanse the etoneach and bowele and stimulate the liver to healthy activity and tone up the whole system. Talte one at night and you're RIGHT in the morning, MI 20225504,, Sic, .r by nth tram Chamberlain Makin° Company, Toronto, 16 Svatess oant co Whitt thole ktrt cPn 401 la 00ar tPrtro nnio 114 yllette Ann:whit et home yoil can easily rtuttati, the. sectoth et crhinif 414 innke &onto, cf SktIcoet :Atte SalcAtnen. 'Whatever yettr oN'otritt5te tat bOttl.---.WIlateV0.1. /1‘17,, /1..1 6,, T'". „o '1411 itItt.litie 010 %ipii--"wht:titin, 51, not ;/.00 thitik you 0)0 020—' ,T1s4r• 1.115!i11911016.t111,,,kii6. yti,tt ttonhitirtI7hiern .V0.000, I 1121 41), 01 . quite juStifletit" V. ....sea/1e. , 40) 'Iteaela • tl'ie.'C.C4ittilt Ainbargo' business ondou ()pinion. eceee graetwortit, I will AWN' you how Lite 051YOU‘ttaip 1450111115 a224 o',;:t"o`r, hrt73'0'0 »Ore‘titat'itt''ett)withoot :' rtiolovment Serviet. (.1 the S. 1% A. still yOlt tO hoick 11112105.4 $10000 A Year Seiling Secrets st., Iv Sic It, thirtmato..alattit ova -Watt nt litor btilimd to teior the, tlt,05t4.* tam welt $4 bliehl.otli& job, 0101 144 Yet.Ittor. maltett lOtst. 'Ott 1,11% 54tr ,,I;o1I,tty,,tio nett 00,2 Pt, tts2s,,, mt as) )40,iietks.1 Trairilia9 Asaaaiat,riao 6,11,1,1611 Mgt, ?Ay ;3112 Teittuttet,,