Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1923-6-7, Page 9BANKERS A general Ba king Butdetee transact.. Netts Dieeoueted, Drafts lefOued• Ietereet Allowed on Depoeits, Sale NotePurchiteed. B. T, RANcg. Netary PubUc, .CocytIof. „ Plaancial, 'Real Estate and Fro In- surance Agent. Representing 54 Flra • . Insurance companies, Divon Court office, Cilnten• . W. BIRYDONE earrister, sollultor, Notary LOAN 13C.00K , CLINTON •DR.,J. C.tANDIER vale°. 1ztm:.—,-1..30 to 3.50 p.m, 1.30 to 5,00 val2_,Suntlacya, 22.3Q tb 3,30 PAIL. ,-9ther, houi`aPPointlilq1A .0,u13'e Offle•q, end Reaidence Vieteha St. " VtiOrS§ resturnieg practise, at bis residence, Office Heurs:,---9 to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2 Sundays,1 to A' ~f6r Con - DR. H. S. BROWN,. L.M.C',C. Office in Mblsoes- Bank Block, Olinton, iirst deer .west of G,T.R. nptoWn. •, ticket. office. Offiee P1ione'2e8 'Acsidence 142 DR. PERCIVAL HEARN : . Office and'Ilesidence; Huron Street Clinton; Ont. Phone 69 • (Formeidy, oecupied by the, late Dr. •' C. W. 'Phoinnson), Dr. A. Newton Bridy Bayfield Graduate Dublin University, Ireland. Late Extern Assistant Master, Re= ttznda Hospital for Women and Chil- dren, Dublin. Office at residence lately eeeitPled hy Mrs. Parsons. ' Hours 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m. OUndays 1 to 2 pan, G. S. ATKINSON D.D.S., L.D.S. Graduate Royal College of Denta: Sur" goons ,and 'I'orouto University DENTAL 'SURGEON Has ollice hours at Bayfield ln old. Post Office. 'Building, Monday, Wed- nesday, Friday 'and Saturday from 1 to 6.30 p.m. 'CHARLES B. HALE •.Conveyancer, Notary Public. ComMia• stoner, to. .-• REAL ESTATE ANL? INSURANCLI HURON STREET' CLINTON GEORGE ELLIOTT • .Licenied Auctioneer for the Cei,inty of Hthon. Correspondence promptly answered. 'Immediate arrangements eaa be made ter Sales Date at The News-Recerd, Clinton, or tir,calling.plione 203.. ^ - charges Moderate and „Satisfaction Guaranteed. B. R. HIGGINS Clinton, Ont, General Fire and Life Insurance, Agent for Ilartford Windstorm, Live Stock, 'Automobile and Sickness and Accident - Insurance, " Duren and Erie and Cana- da' Trust Hendee. Appoiutments made to, meet parties at Drucefield, Varna -and Bayfield. 'Phone 57. The IlicKillop Mtitual fire Insurance Company Head Office, Seaforth,-Ont, • DIRECTORY: . ,President; Tames Connolly, Goderich; Vice., SainesDvans,,Beeetwood; sm. Treasurer, Thos. Li. Hays, Seaforth. Directors: George McCartney, sea. forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; .T. G. Grieve, Walton; Wni. Ring, seaforth; IVIcHwen,,Clintori; Robert ferries; /liarloole; John'Bennewelr, DrOditagen; Goderich., • 'Agents: Alex. Leitch, C11ntenv4. W. Gaderich; Ed, Hinchray, Sea. forth; .W. Chesney, Egmondville; • ..7,artatith, Brodhagen. - Any money to be ialc1,15..inay be pald to Moorish Clothing CO., Clinton. or at Cutt's Grocery, Croderlch, .1.PartieS desiring to. affect Insurance or transept other business will be pro.motiy -attended tO 00 liPPliCati0/1 to -any' of the above officers addreseed to their respective post Losses • .IIMPected by the lDireeter Nita- lives , nearest the scene, CLINION . . E W S 11-E n . • • .CLINTON. ONTARIO' Terms of Subscrptfon-2.00 per year, In advance, to Canadian addreilsesi' 4,2,50 to the -U.S. or other foreign ceuntries. No paper, discontinued , until all arrears are paid unless itt filo option of the ptiblisher. The date to which every Subscription .is Paid is denoted on the label. . • Aciiiertising Ratee—Ttatielent adv,- -11sements, 10 tents per nonpareil • line, for first Insertioa and 5 Ceuta per line for each subse.quent Iuser. Hon. Small advertisements not to 'excaeil one !nob. Such as "Strayed," or "S,tolen," etc.,- inserted' onee tor 85 cents, and each slam). quentl,insertion 15 cents. COminunioations 1i/tended for oubli. cation ratiat, ' as a guaeantee• 'of • good faith, be aetotnpanied by the name of the writer. 0, a HAtl, • CLA:RtC, Proprietor, ' Old hogs lots with their familiar . , . ditches and creek beds ate a menace to stickling or weenling pigs. Here it Io where the little f.elloWS gather up and sWallow worm -infested soil, The C.N,R. better farming train at the erid of three weeks' tour in Mani. tebe. distributed 65 puterbred bulls, a ' large qUantity oflOrage crop' seed and breeding poUltty,, the fo owing quotations will» bins if. it Sales of cattle at the public „tock is run throti,h. the elevator , addstatt C9SolUttrliCatiOn. t9 Atit'Ou i.31441. 2.1 4deialett 6t. West, T ont Yerde this year were 204,900 compared' , '3,1rx illi• lint th,vatoi will also, -•14Ith; 160,90Q in the same period last namile eat COIM SO that'll, 'may be; SPEEDING VP THE PIG'S. 1 tkim or buttermilk, meatmeal" tank- Y'a ,i, Cattle en through billing' tine etored in'the bins, •• • Year were 11 7.80 Comn'ared vith 0 0q7 13 ' ' " • ' What factors make' up the econoznic ago, ftsh meal or a combination of any last yearr. TLis \,,, hve,,;,,,,,,„, ,,- Y ',UTangla-e.,' siloS in this manner, essence of the pig? Feed, mun and 000 of thee with linseed -0/1 meal, month by Monjh'is 'te'ioided; --- — r".°1'age SPn?e' fur beveral thousand boree labor, risk, interest, "depreciation cOrn;'oileaahe '' Men], soy -bean meal, A , general ,impeovemeet was a mare h'//Sheis of gi'aM it provided with only, in capital and equi,ninont anti general groundsoy beans, or wheat inicidlings. ent in quality and werght,•-giying t)roof tile additional e.xpense of awelevator, 1 which, is elueive and oftlenitnes cpbe., even the goad ones, supplmnerits ore m flurniff the winter of 1923 than dot- 8,1,108.-11:F. Deering, (I overhead cover all excepting the profit '2.0 make rapid game on pastures 'at- etellefeeding was more geneit-' 1 Shaft and an elevator between the moral. The time consideration may, order. Lyon on good alfalfa p vespite the y , eery well affect all /..) these items the Addition of a little tankage, proVes 4eav nelease in Vol- Poultry ?dark tit* Co time' over 'b. • ' ff th e _ . 1 . 1, «,.. pi ()pen, o Puna's, e favorably to tlao grower, the shorter a fine Pep rredueer, averiige Price during, April, and the ' ,,, orieratiolL (he time inyntyed in takii4 the pork., To make emi-e that the hog& are Milk of sales,. eheelced at higher Ing1r5 . , . While the , title ' of h,bulletiri 'just ers from farrowing to market the less, Properly suPPII6d with minqale -'-a i`than, chn.'ing' l'''lalelr:': 'While `1P4'!ItY isimed ,by • '1.,u, parntyoon Live Stock the expense. • suitable mixture should by all means , gained,. recognition „in higher prices, B •, „,„.., , „,„.., .., ,, e a owe before em a a ' e the c '1 ' '' ' ' pur,hing on suitable feeds, thoughd ine h.',Iheavier discounts in,Av„ril than dflring P.2°'nainter"; Pr''°d°11-°ePies'i Wl:nn I di Al n dle4altjecel'11"7t highly necessary, le not the only es.. Even °n anch a,ge° ,Pastare, d the previous month, Pxpertstock of its contents were of interest to these seietial however, peed manam geent navs g g ' P rhoth finisbed and feeder type aud qual- engaged with poultry busineset never - must be practiced, and sanitation dili- , to a ration of COST), ael-fed, Plus,,,alitY Were the backbone of ,the market, emess, tee majority of the principles supplemental mixture of fortY Ports EViderice of a continued strong de- laid dewn are applicable to any form gentlY, and Persi'stentlY ecerelaed. of blood meal, thirty parts of linseed Mand for store cattle 15 re7aledaij(11 of agricultur'41 ce-opera.tion The . enlivens the skin but deadens the 1 arid the feed r qui • rine t le s e ie n B . • • - . • ' exceede those rea ize n ] . Delousing is good businoas Pro- meal and ten parts of Peanut meal. the filet that the average pric:es P watei„, .eedure if lice are present. Crude oil for good feeders and, stockers in April Mr. A. Season, District Pool- ' The gains Were sorneWhat More rapid, d 1' d 1 IVCareh in try Premeter for On'tarib, hits fi vital parasites, It is applied easily by her& The mixture „making elle beet how- . spite of an increase the available point when he,says that while there to • supplies. Steady development ef the evi ently, gin earnest desire the ing the hogs into a corner, ell- ing was e.q9,9,,I,Perts of limestone, bone oveeeens 'trade is stithulatingsinterest part Of producers to improve existing Mug it in. with a geed broom. sprinkling them thorelighlY and rub, meat and 4alt. We now suggest that in feeding. , marketing conditions, thee appears to In the salt be rick over 20 'Per' rent. of the , Coinbining ''through -billed" .• with be mlack of uniformity of thought and badly infested herds the 6 -ars should i mmtUre A ,haif ounce 01 ,potassium public sales of lio.gs the increase o , . . • ideas as, to Methods Of procedure," and 05 01100 o sou e ice rota one 0 I iodide added to the hundred Pounds the four menthe of 1923 -approximated the tail ends are f"erite hiding Placesttice i as 'ucli4 as the iodine su lied efrer?ngfl, Prices were higher on h"en their faVorite delie. The leg pits and. of Minerals is considered good prac- tee. bpotassium Ye` ' y e0,M, po,un, d 'often 1s80:19.0,01ahee eda..s.,DiensPit:m'teilse ii:creema:nln n M .PP quality hogs nt rds A sea- pasturea, preferablY Try arid get the littiehrosseouttnoultv'ehleaavnolitflotuynddrittohbee.lwaienlieinfgeoidnueltusfiluesieunotlyouftiond-. and a better tone te the Br'itish bacon demand, are quoted as•the underlying riot carried hogs heretofore. Einphre:i Wood ashes' may be used in Place of t th ' size. the good pastures: Alfalfa, red the li.mesfone, and rock or acid plies- The sheep and lamb movement in the our months this year shoi ed over 9,000 head heovier than in the cerres- pending period last year. Prices Were materially higher • at Toronto, Mont- real, and, Winnipeg, and about Steady farther west. • The' export trade in live Stock ana live stock products showed a heavy: in- crease in April this year compared with the., same . month last year, al- though. exports of .sheep -and mut-ton were lighter. There has been inark- ed increase in shipments of loeef to I3ritain andh a decrease in shipments to the United ,States. and other clovers, rape, the blue grass, especially,when it is young and tender, 'and other green pastures. But pas- ture alone is not sufficient. Neither is pasture supplemented with a quarter of a full grain ration enough tomake the.pigs go well. Even. good pastureh on which basal grains are liberally fed—grains such as corn, barley, miIo maize and others—give much better house over. all, helps solve the high results when there is added a little cost of the walloW. phate Instead 05thebone meal. Do not forget that the pigs need . shade and that plenty of good cool drinking Water is absolutely, essential to 'full sped -ahead. The wallow of concrete vvill be helpful dtiring the hottest months, 'Stimulating the -appe- tite arid Promoting gains. A Combina- tion `wallow' Mad' feeding :floor' with THE CHILDREN'S HOUR at 'all, `hilt sonlY tome erribtoiderythat simhad,broUght acing to -,work on dur- ing tho• aft:eh:more , , After a sheet thne she said, "Mary Ann, 1 bought a little ,presentldr you this 'morning and asked' them to *send, . it .out from the ,store. It should be 9 . , , OUR FEATHERED FRIENDS—, here soon.," . , ,.. . • , THE SWALLOW. "Hew sweet of you, Aunt Hattie,', ' , said, Mary Ann.., , BY, LEBEINE BALLANTYNE. ,lit..the afternoon while the little. girl ' Each year . the 'Department' of was, playing intim Srnall yard in front Health spends a lot of money in' thei of the.hotise ahoy rode up esi a -bicycle efforts to keep down, mosquitoes and and handed her a „package with her flies. TheSe who have visited their exhibit at the Canadian National Ex- hibition realize the work they are ing. To the boys and girls of our own district thete is a -very important phase Of work in this connection which they could do to assist this splendid cause. , poiritznent! - name written Q11 It. - , "Oh,, this is iny 'present!" she 'cried in delight and began to open it at once. When she saw what it contain- ed, she cried, "Ohl" again, but this time not from haiminess, but from • disappointment. And such disap- . - The greatest ,flycatcher -which na- Then she carefully tied the, package ture lies provided for qui. use is the again and went to her own littIe room, barn swallow. This beautiful bird, where she sat down and cried. "How with his long, slender, forked tail, lus could Aunt Hattie have bought me black coat, and hennaetolored vest and such a present!" she sobbed. "How throat, builds a truly remarkable nest could she have thought of such home - on the side of an old beam of the.barn ly things!" or shed, arid plasters it there. with ',Presently she sat' -up up and cli.led her mud mixed so -well with grasses and eYes. "I.naust not act this way:" she resting on a beam or slight projection said to heiself. "If .anyone is kind that it will soinetinies remain in good enough to give ine a present, I must condition for pears. thank her for it, no /natter what it is." • If they nest in' objectionable places, „ As soon as the tears were all gone rather than drive them away, it would from her eyes she went into hex moth - amply repay the _farmer to leave some er's rodm. Aunt Hattie was still ern - projections somewhere convenient broidering the table cover. where they can build without caimitig "Aunt Ile.ttie," the little girl began, annoyance, for they are of great ad- trying bravely not to cry, "thank you vantage both to the S armer in riding for the onions. Mother or I will make him of the obnoxious insects; and his' a cream dressing for them, and we stock in, leseenine, the number whic sha 1 all enjo.y them for supper. torture them. I "You thank me fot what, child?" All their food consistS of insects exclaimed Aunt Hattie in amazement. and as they have no really bad habits,! And then she,laughed heartily. "Not these friendly little birds should ,be: onions, Mary Ann," she said, "hya- encouraged in etrery way. Possible.t cinths." TOW is that the sparrow nests close Their grail advantage over the spar -1 tha"tliwYraitnttlihseyl"ocriei?ed Oh, ih•yowAwnioi.nd`o`Ire. to domestic buildings to feed ,upon full And I cadhave a beautiful waste or food 'placed for fowl and they :1' le; Abbneldd:3s-wasloblmemns y,tohofdwisitphicein eat practically, no insects, whereas the swallow is definitely useful, eating no- gbyeaaciainetlithse wi°evae•e- thing else. . Unfortunately the spar -1 enough to delight any little girl. Peo- rows, like most lazy folks, despise the, Ple passing in the street often stopped industrious oneS, and torment to destroy the nests to drive off the and try; ttohaltoodkeiTctuttehephinelaciitoinfou,1"fisouwiders;., `l'aSdeye swallows. . who passed one day; "it is as beauti- These facts hav-e been proven l?e.. fill as the sky before sunrise."— yond doubt, and it is up to the boysi Youth's Companion. and girls, and the owners as web , each district to protect the swallow' fainily,, and twlearn those of our birds ivinich are really useful. ° A Tiny Songster. I.Teider the eaves of the back porch an old syrup .can was fastened in the THE BIRTHDAY PRESENT. -}a"Pa that a wren miiIrt niake It ins .,, • home. A day er two later a 'wren in- , By EVA IVI. CARROLt. . spected the house and the :next day mary Arm was a Ewe girl ;who the family moyed, in. That was abOut tlie twentieth of April. It was a • lived in ihe shabbiest cottage on Maple 6treet,hut It was a very neat cottage, gtiri:t.ilti.opulseeasounreaot.uo.ollimatveoftlrheoli;oz;livoliee.:tYye and 'Mary Ann was a heat: little 'girl.. _,., , For her playthings she had a -few toys rousie, , The wren's" song secins to be and books, of which she teele excel- -a cheery, !nibble of music ' as spon: had to" Work hard, ,Ileremother Was lent care, but most pf the time, she htaenetiointss hais, abieeatd fbraocil, aatfldousnitnaiisM‘'vainthd net- strong, and ;Vary Ann often got the joy and abandon of a Carusn. isp before, daylight to help her with The wren is such a familiar bird breakfast. that he hardly needs descrMtion. His This nioining was iviary Ann's tiny form, long pointed bill and bendy birthday. While she was hasy help., eyes a're distinctive, as web as his up- ing her mother cook the breakfast she standing tail' paused a moment before the kitchen' The nest is usuallY constructed of window tO look Out at the morning sky. nrnall twigs and graSS but one day 4,110w lovely!" She cried, and then the wen w" seen trYing to take hair nn Into the nest As the Combined Silo and Storage A Kansas farmer, desiring to make his elle space available for.the storage of wheat, corn and othee grains when It was not full of silage, built an ole- recleaned elevator screenings make a voter shaft and installed an elevator suitable -meal ration' for winter rat, - the, limits: et the field in which co- operating producers dan hope to achieve'the greatest and most perman- ent success. It is evidently with a view to' help in remedying this con'tli, Ham' of Affairs that the.bulletin-has been written and' published. Not alone are the fundamental eeeentials'to suc- cess and the princlifie of' co-operation laid dovin, but details are given rela- tive to organization, `to the loyalty, and confidence that must preYStil, to the methods of, management that must be adopted and maintained if success is to be achieved, to warehouse meth- ods, to marketing; to grading and standardizing of eggs, to pooling, to financing, to the survey that should be taken of conditions and territory to be controlled prior. to organization, to the cast-iron contract that should be made between members, and to the attitude of producers; the -Whole concluding with the rules of a suggested market agreement for local units. Screenings for Steer Feeding. Ari‘experiment to asceitain whether I was On u tour fl.he otriolts uf my fariner friend, and hadystopped to admire 'a fine, big baY Imre . "Yee, ilne-leaking horse," said the'larmer, "If he Vil,0 as good as he, ioOks, he Would bring 44.pretty sum, but ho is- not dependable you can't tio to him; yeti ,can't rely upon. twine -Mental, for onoh ng,3111dte0 easily discouraged for onetber• , , him m case Ot emergency. tee daYp ika 1 ' A giatefel worean, Writee I '4 , eltlTIOBOY reeolariteed till wonlep fil9t'tg f v., ravIgle it ge Ilooe,ie earsaperi.na, • wonderfully eelieved rim of stOmacli, (Votress and belehing , 'Reed's; luu), ouly Ing rind strong and sometinles •when things don't come as fast as he thinks they ought, he beeornee angry• and simply t&irs them to pieces, , On the a°tsilteo. wiihanend:hheshIandtostieto,eibioeutgliT, itifdiltt) comes to hauling a 'heavy' load up al steep grade, he gots tired easily. and, wants to iitop and rest, and if I don't wleottehtirnpu,nhue pound. 'throwe up, and' "But look ova here, I have some- thing worth while to show you,' "Here's' a hot -se that is a horse; I couid Nhaol,.dhley isrunnettehoe aficaermlalinthg°anet the other, but what he lacks in looke hemaltes up in worth. , "I have seen this fellow pretty tired, but I never knew him too tired to start the first time I told him to g�, •and when it comes to -a 'phial pull,' this fellow would pull the world off its loalanee, if the harness didn't break." , My frierid stopped and lovingly put his arrn about the neck of his favorite horse, and the horse returned the car- ess' by gently rubbing nose against the farmer's cheek. ' Yes, some horses are very like some people. Some people won't do what they Could so easily do and others vvill give their money, time and talent freely and wish they could do more. There are many people who remind Me of that first horse. They are big and strong, neatly dressed, carefully Manicured and sweetly perfumed,"hut •they...simply won't do the work that - needs so badly to be done. They make ft nice appearance, but there theirmse- fulness ends, "You can't tie to 'em." A C ernical Fire Protector. After a couple of ;Accidents with oil stoves in his home which reSulted lit small fires a Western farmer has in- stalled a unique and inexPcnellre de- vice for protecting his home from fire with chetnicai fire extinguisher, In the basement Wee placed a thirty - gallon hotewater-heater tank. Near the top wae mounted a midi air -pressure gauge. I3elow thie, near the centre a the tank, a 'stem frent an old auto- mobile Inner tube., was mounted in the tank for pumping air into the tank. From near the bottom of the tank a half-hich pipe was passed up through the flooio into the kitchen of the house, 'To the end of this was fastened it stopcock and tvventy feet of half-inch tubber hose. A quarter -inch hose 1104-' ale was fastened to the end of the hose. The tank was filled about two-thirds full of a chemical fire extinguisher al- ready prepared and air pumped into the tank until the Pressure reached forty pounds on the gauge, The tank is kept pumped up to this point all thetime. With this pi•essure and this length Of hose it is possible for the farmer to reach any part of his house and put out any fire that may start. The equipment makes aVallable a quick method of stimping fires.. When the Sickle Gums • Often when snowing alfalfa the sickle becomes badly gummed up. Cover the sickle bar with a thin layer of cut alfalfa hay and sprinkle lightly with water, The water will soften the gum, so that when the mower is start- ed again it falls off. Don't Judge our Tractor by Your - uto "While the automobile, has had a lot ease, the machine is being overloaded and one plow should be taken off, The amount of -land plowed with the two plows, will -be about as much as with the three, owing to the fact that when over -loaded the tractor travels slowly and the 'drive wheels slip badly. The lighter load will not damage the ma. chine like the heavy load will, and the profit frora the tractor in the long run will be greater. Poor oil, for instance, will cause enough repair bills when used in the automobile, but will be far nwee costly if used in the tractor engine. The tractor operates ander full load all hours of the day and runs at the maxi- mum temperature. It therefore needs an oil film between the piston and 'the cylinder which will stand such tem- peratures. THE NEGLECTED INSTRUCTION BOOIC. Too often the , tractor operator doesn't know where -to -find the instruc- tion book which came with the ma- chine. As a general thing, the stand- ard farm tractor instruction book is written by some of the keenest minded engineers in the country and the book contains good information. More of these instruction books hetween his twin. silos.. • Either one or telling of beef cattle, was undertaken to do with familiarizing sfarmers.with both of the siloe may he' used foi grain. in the fall of -1920, at the Dominion the opere,tioneinaintentince and repair - The owner, who feeds quite „a lot of Experimental ,Station, Lennoxville, of the, gas engine, it has been aome- livestock, found that on'occasiens he Que. Two lot e of -eight steers each what misleading to farniers when was shoit of grain -storage room and were selected and fed ,the same hay ,egimpared with the tractor, ' The two 'at -othei times short of silage room. anti ensilage ration. Lot No. 1 receiv• machines work V'ery much alike, Unt In years of large grain production he .ed a meal ration composed of equal their .respective, jobs are 'very much seldom made Much silage. He cOuld parts of :bran, corn, ground oats,, and different. ' hardly afford the'building of both silos barley, while lot No. 2 'received ground and granaries for the'Inaximum pro- screenings two parts „and bran one it ToPhe9raaute:mo°abisiMe oc9oath..staledvoewl 131.-etahde, In duction of grain -and' silage on the Part. The details are published in the „fact, et operates °Under full load only farm so hit on the pla of combinin Su te d t' o t , g pea n n en s rep r o51921-22, ob- the silos and gram bins.. tainable from the Publications Branch The silos were Made of coneret,e, of the Dephrtment of Agriculture, 01. - twelve feet hi diameter ancl thirty feet, tawa, The results show that the high. A concrete eleVator shaft was steers fed screenings and bran Made made by connecting the byte silos with slightly cheaper gains, and the Sup - two concrete walls as they were built, erintendent is led to say "Screenings The 'silos stand four feet apart. This are a' valuable feed when- they can be leave ample roma' the operation bought at a reasonable price. Owing of an elevator that will handle:several to their tendency, however, tO vary in hundred bushels Of grain in an hour. quality and weed seed content, they The power :for the elevatcir is furnish- should be bought on a basis of analysis ed by a tractor' that is owned by the only. Ground screenings are too fernier. ' , heavy and pasty' for fee,ding alone,, When the silos are filled with grain and therefore .should be mixed withl a special' silo door with a spout for bran or ground oats to resider theen letting' grain into a wagon* is placed more digestible." in one of the lower door holes of each silo. On one side of the,elevator Shaft There are 168 furnaces on the Aqui- .and under a dui -aping. platform .is tania 'and. her turbineS have 750,000 pit into which the grain fiery' wagon's blades. Canada's New Wheat Champion For, ten years Canada carried off the World's wheat championship as symboliud the"higlfest award of the Chicago "International," and the re- markable feature in a survey of this decade'e-achieveznents-was, the number of occasions on Which the Canadian farmer securing the coyeted prize was an inunigrant from the ,British` Tales who, preVious to his filing.on a West- ern homestead, had scarcely the mos elementary knowledge of 4riculture, In ,I.922* the championship was wrested away from Canada by a Mon- tana farmer and the Dominon left with the consolation that that state had found it necessary, to.import Can- adian seed, produced ,by the Wheat . Wizard of Saskathhawan,, Seag•or Wheeler, to accomplish its end, In 1922 Canada won back her old place of honor, Making her elefenth cham- pionship in twelve ye,ars, and thiS time the farmer to bring 'ber Such signal renown was an American farmer who ho.d collie up across the border to groW superior wheat. , R. 0. 'VVyler o'f Luseland,, Seekata aiewan, his worldly posedeSions con- sisting of, the sum 651400, his 'other asset a determination that thie sum, in combination with Canadian soil and climate, would make him DTOSpel'OUS and outstanding. farmer. During a temporary land boom he bought a half - section of land OTI haff-crop payment for $10,000, and though during the next few years he saw thee value of his farm practically mit in two, he did she thought; "To -day is my birthday, ' Plengs not grow discouraged and never and I Wish that some one would give were wide spread and the opening in thought -of quitting. To U8O his own ale a present as -beautiful as the sky the can small, he failed after much words, be 'dug yig•ht, itt and worked before , effort. Another time he made -an un- line a beaver," In 1912 he married a She 'berried awnY rilnn the window mbleeesPful attempt to take a small girl from his home state who has since and began to set the table for break- ,squ,a1:e Piece of wireflY-sereen into the shared his labors and now shares his fast. "Aunt . Hattie," 8110 WaS think- nest; • prosperia-----------rimphs. , ing, nalwdyra gives me a birthday The 'eeeding of the aostlingS is very ptesent, but it is nearly always some_ interesting, the .fbod; for the most part r°tts'EvERANC°, IcN°Wtril)° A" thing useful—a linghatn dress or al being smell imeectS and bugs.' . )11°RaY' And then she began to think aboutl tion. tf ' You W cook apron; or sornething like "that." The wren 18 a ig.nrebauttlolviesit'etof taottheni; :1‘'ir, WYier has bnen a fralal. from his earliest years, arid canie t� Canada 'with a valuable store of agrimiltural Of pink bair ribbon, a beautiful story..! \,,IvpilliltPlilrsiStelirboiantl finor an ehired,wrtiltloatolmcet knowledge and a readiness to adapt lt, book with ever so many tolored pic- to new conditions and to keep 'apitee tures—and, oh, 'a great number of an impression on you. ,., of new developments, ,,,He has always lovely things," But she VMS a littlef . Although he Wigs Mit it few notos ashamed of herself for feeling, dis- he is one of our most delightful seng- been tion of suierior grain and is, more or keenly 'interested, in the produc- satiefiedWith what Aurit Hattie would sters, ;Usually he puches to sw,,,,,, less, a seed specialist,. It was thus Im probably giVe her, DI course she did hut he is to full ee ramie that, ha oet,-,, came to buy his first SamPle.of regis- appreciate 'useful giftsi• but lust title' singe on the Wing.. ---D, D. Haggard, tered Min.quis wheat from Seegee once she wanted something beautiful, A heriei, eannien'--in rapn; is that to Wpolu'eriQd1°''' curYing'it away in a tWentY" Abotit neon Aunt Hattie came„ and, sack, ''He planted this ,in a in her hand was a package. She open -1 live long one simuld „eleep with the small plot, arid throughout the grow - ed it presently. It was not a present bead Pointing due 11,0r8i14 big season mined out .the plants and . whia shd would like to have: eA piece song he will sing loudly, but if rin heads that were not true to type. Then when the grain eiperied he carefully selected enough Perfect heads to sow the plot next year. And so on, Year after' year, he aseisted nature in pro- ducing her best until there was no superior grain in the world and his half bushel of wheat at Chicago car'. ried off the sweepstakes and the silver cup of the Government of Saskat- chewan, , , Plant breeding .and sefeaiori are, howeyer,'only.,Mr. is a commercial fatinetin, the best and widest sense Of the Word and has de.' veloped his holdings along prosperous lines.. Herniiiv has a thriving, farm of 32.0 acteS,-wtich he operateg with but little outSicle help. His farm diVid- ed into:,..three fields; one.third'• being suunnoefallowed each year. This- year he raised ',over three thatteendAmsbels of wheatein the fece. of a"dverSe Wea- ther Cor.ditions. He does .1iot stake his ail on grain growing; but iefirm be- liever in Mixed, farming, hog and cat- tle raising being followed at the same time. lie qind his. little family have, itt. the brlef, ton yeare' pefiod, attained the inevitable prosmetity that rewards , sincere and earnest efforts in Western Canada, and the, man Who left 'Ohio with but $400 has now a comfMtable home on one of the best half -sections in the Saskatchewan district, which is increasing in :value every year, , OANApA HAS THE SOIL AND ommdrrn. , A survey of the world Wheat chem. pionshipe over'the, past tveelve years makes most interesting, most valuable, and most enentraging reading. The signal achievements of Rritish immi- grants who arrived in the Dominion ignorant of Western conditions ancl farming methods of any sort, pointed the way to fellow-coantrymen to emu- late them an& should have been the greatest stimulus to further emigre - lion from the British Isles. For awhile it almost seemed as thotigh previous farming experience in the United States were a handicap in reaching out for the premier wheat honors. II, 0, Wyler has won the honors for the thousands of his follow -country- men farthing on the Western Plains of Canada. has ehoven the road t0. others who may he farming in what they find discouraging COnditiOnEir proving that Canada has the soil and climate lot success providing the farmer bringthe right personal qualities to complete the coMbinatiom. abdirt per `cent. of its time, While 'the 'tractor is pulling its 'full load about�5 pee cent. Of the„tirne,• If the automobile was loaded, to its 'full- ea- pit'city and run in low gear' every day that the ,tracthreis, Plowing or doing 'ether Werk, the eoraparisOnseimild be isieelifferent,one atethe: end of the „year:. ,TRA.CTOR COyDRED. • • ' The tractor. is 'allowed to. 'Stand in -the field, without 'cover' too often; It has to burii the cheap fuel and too ft th g • which is quite expensive in the aid. Very often a farmer, after running his car 3,000 miles, finds that it develops a keeck. 15. is immediately taken to the garage for repair. Too often the same farmer hears his -tractor knodk- ing a little and he -looks out and sees about eight to ten. acres of land yet to be plowed. Ile thinks: "Well, I'll finish the Plowing before I get the tractor repaired." Hefore the eight or ten acres have been plowed his engine has turned over as much as the auto- mobile, engine rune hiel,000 miles. Transmission and engine bearings are protected from shocks by pneu- matic tires in the automobile. The tractor is often run in high gear over hard roads without these protections. Across the fields on, the sod would be mach better for it, I3efore any one car, realize the full profit from the farm tractor, he must first realize its job Mid give it proper care. The operator of the tractor should also appreciate ,the fact thdt the machine he is driving should not be over -loaded. If three plows on a steep grade are more than the tractor can pull with 1 would be read if the agent who sells a tractor would go over the important things with the trader purchaser. Much of the tractor trouble may be , laid at the door of the salesman who failed to inform the farmer about the machine. TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows: Buffalo and Coder,oh Going. East, depart 6.25 a.m. 2,52 p.m. Going West ar.• 11.10 m. at'. 6.08 dp: Al6.51 p.m. P sr. 10.04 p.m. London, Huron LI Bruce Div, Going South, ar. 5.23 ID. 8.23 aan, •• 4.15 p.m. Going North, depart 6.60 p.m. " " 11.05, 15.13 a.m, Many women with disfigured conwlexions never seem to think that they need an occasional cleansing indidr as well as outside. Yet neglect of this internal bathing shows itself in spotty, and sallow complexions—as well as m dreadful headaches and biliousness. It's because the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accumulates which Neture cannot, remove without assistance. The beat e la 's StomaehandLiverTrirgt , h ch sthoulate the liver to healthy activity, remove fermentation, gently cleanse the stomach anci be vets and tone the whole dig,estive system. Sure, Safe and 'reliable. 'l'ake one at -night arid you feel bright and sunny in the morning. Get Chamberlam'e today --druggists 25c., or by mail from Chataberiala I1Udiohla Toronto 10 IntrA-SaircealCarR eite Whnt those mon have done, you can dot Is your sport 1111555 Sante you ean, easily matter 60- nerds of selling that males Star Selemen, Whatever your epSrionet tins boon—MAW:or you may be doing now—whether or not you think you can Nut anOwer this- question: Aro you ambitious to tarn $10,600 ft Year? Then got in touch with moot meet I will prove to you without cost or obt.tgatIon thag you int easily 'become 5 S.W. Ssl100ll, 5 will show you how the Salternanship Training and Preo Ifun loyrUtelf Service of the N. S, T. A, will hely you to quick Aliceeto 10 10 000 Alear Selling S6trets aTq1;Y'Fo1,41"r1'i1k5P by thrI, t. 7,A5" ,,,,al1;:„;t.1°,,,,,;v,1,0 ,00r vs mi ensI 3 zl,na•nlejabflZatICa..,ag. , • howttyle41,, 11I1 otnelag ceoaYOU n az ramo, tha faca, • 4751 National Salesman's Trainips Association 0 Cs.,.elion Mgr. Box 3011 Toronto Ont, Road These Amazing Stories of .11ee4411 T8,,,1 1114 Voo Wooro, 1PO for