HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-7-28, Page 2Q, O. MeTA0GART
M. IX MeTA0G4RT
McTaggart Bros.
• A GENERAL BANKING BUS!.
NESS TRANSACTED, NOTES
DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS lunwan,
n.rrEaEsT ArLowED ON DE,
POSITS. SALM NOTES PURL
CHASED.
e•-• 1.1. T. RANCE -
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY.
ANGER, FINANCIAL REAL
ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR-
ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT-
1NG 14 FIRE INSURANCR
COMPA.NIES,
DIVISION COURT OFFICE.
CLINTON.
W. DRYDONE,
13ARETSTER, sorAcrrou.
NOTARY PUBLIC. ETC.
()Mee-- Sloan Mock -CLINTON
DR. .1. C. GANDIER
°nice llours:-1.30 to 3.30 p,m., 7.30
to 11.00 p.m. Sundays 12.30 ts 1.20
Dm.
Other hours by appointment only.
Office and Reskienco--Victoria SL
DR. G. SCULLARD
Office in Dr. Smith's old stand,
Math Street, Bayfield.
Office Hours: 1 to 5 and 7 to 9 pm
. Phone No. 21 on 624.
G. S. ATIUNSON, D.D.S., L.D.S.
(Graduate Royal Cesliege a Dental
Surgoom and Toronto Univeisity.)
Dental Surgeon
Has office hours at Hayfield in old
Post Office 13uilding, Monday, Wed-
nesday, Friday mid Saturday from 1
to 5.30 p.m.
CHARLES R. HALE.
Conveyancer, Notary Public.
Commissioner, Etc.
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
Issuer of Marriage Licenses
II CRON STREET, - CLINTON.
-tiEORCE ELLIOTT
Licensed Auctioneer tor the County
of Iluron.
Correspondence promptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be
made for Sales Dat at The
News -Record, Clinton, or by
calling Phone 203.
Charges moderate and sattsfactios
guaranteed.
5. A LVer
. See,ST,
.-TIML TABLE -
Trains will arrive at and depart
trout Clinton Station as follows:
IIIIFFALLt AND GODEIllarl DIV.
Going east, depart 6.28 am.
2.52 p.m.
Going West air. 11.10, dp. 11.15 a.m.
ar. COS, dp. 6.47 ,p.m.
ar. 10.03 p.m.
LONDON, RUItON & BRUCE DIV.
ticiug South, ar. 3.23. Oa. 8.23 a.us.
o
4.16 p.m
Going North depart 6.40 pan.
11.07, 11.11 a.m.
The MeKilltip
Fire Instiralice.Company
head office, Seafortis, Ont.
DIReelesit Y
Frealdent, Jam)* Connolly, Godertch;
vice, James Evans, Beichwood;
EmeTreasurer. Thos. *LIP; Sea'
teeth.
Directors: George McCartney, sea.
bulb; L. F. McGrew r, Seaforth; J.
uri% va. Walteie Wee Item. Sea.
f‘rili;1. Dale en, Clinton; Robert
erries. Hernia; John. lienneweir,
LrodLogen; Jas. Connell, Coderice.
Agents: Alex Leitca, Clinton; J. W.
) ye, ecoderich: ea. Flinch:ay, Seaforth;
, Thtey, Egnion.:411v; IC Li, Jar-
,
Brodhagen.
Any money be paid oa may es
reel to Moorish Clothese Co., Clietha,
at. Cult's erocery, Godericts.
Pat tics desiri.g to 'elect insurance
transact other business will be
to
romi;tly atteneed to on aeteication
try of the above udicers adareesect to
their respective post office. lessee
toe ey the Itrintor sow eeei,
thO *03130.
Clinton
News -Record
cr,wrox, ONTARIO.
Terms of subscription -e2.00 per year,
in advance to Canadian addresses;
32,10 to the U.S. or ether foreign
countries. No paper discontinued
ante ail tamers are paid unless at
the option of the publisher. The
date to which every ruhscriptioa it
paid iq donated on the label.
ta.1...41-Transien3 advet•
10 emits per noneerse
i.r first insertion and b centi
per .ir.e tor each subsequent
up:. Small advertise:no:Its not
c,cocti one loth, such us
'Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., insert-
ed once for 315 cents, and each stabile.
quent insettion 15 cents.
Communications intenaed for pubiletv
tion must, as a guarantee of good
faith, be accompanied by the nate* o•e
the writer.
G. E. IIALL. 16. 11. cLAnit.
Proprietor. Hulloes
His Advice.
Young Policeman (mho hoe beolcea
• ep ltght betweon! two ealored seamen):
"Where do yoU Thiel"
Larcar-"Calcuttn.°
Policoman. (to this ether dago)-
"And where do you eve?"
Obleaman-"Shanghal."
Policeman - `"Unie- wee, the beet
.;.;. thing Yea two owl dro is to pop off
beino to bed,"
Mee with fito in the seeede ie first
priteiple With good Weedereet,
ger
"VaJlob.„.
.,41L
eiferese cemmunieatlene to euronleolee '70 -Adelaide et- Wept, Toronto.
Out Export, Trode in Cattle. leon three bemired and Nixty thourseed
APe13 tree) the Reltish entherge
queseloe at present ueder ipygetiga-
eon Centsda's export trecie in cattle
its brought promieently into the lime -
Egad, by the Foedeey tariff emenele
adepted by the T.Telted Stetes Coe-
gress This places en increased duty
on all manner of 'articles eif agricals
tercel production mune which come
(fettle, not intended for breedi•ag, With
it duty of 30 per eent. act' valorem, Or
thirty dollars on every handfeed do] -
tae cattle may be worth. To what
exteet this will effect Canada's ex-
port teede in live Aeolic with the
Untied States has of 04)=.613 yet to
be determined, bet it *0 worth obeart-
ing that if 30 per ceu t. had been paid'
upon the 294,000 head of cattle ,sent
acmes the border last year aed whieh
brought $21,232,5431, duty amenntimg
to $6,369,765 would eve enriched the
United States customs, In this ton-
nectioe sorne facts presented by the
Live Stock Commissioner at Ottawa
are worthy of note. Previous to 1911,
Great Britain took 6Q.,per cent. of our
eeports of hve steels and the United
States 10 per cent Between 1890 end
1906 the business with Great Britain
increased from 67,000 head to 164,00,0
heed. Then it begap to decline and in
1911, the export & amounted to 113,795,
but in the :following year they fell to
48,000 h,ead. There bas been no re-
covery to speak of since, In 1914 the
shipments to the United States took
an abnormal bound., the total being
206,446 head. Foe the next five years
the trade was steady emend these
figures end. then in 1919-20 them was
another big leap, the number of cat-
tle going across the border th the
south, out of a total expovtation od
578,352 head, being 502,588, leaving
only 15,764 head to go eleewhere. In
1920-21, the number going to the
States feleto 234,000 bead, but at that
the duty that waffle have to be paid at
30 per cent. on value waled reach, es
here stated., to thp-tvardis of six mil -
dames,
Allowing Hogs to Feed Themselees.
Much of the loiter of l'eeding stock
can be saved by the neeletionoif
Modern methods. Thie murtieuleely
tree in the feeding a hese, which it
has been found mice economical gains
-when allowed to take feed as they
desire it rather than to h.and-feed tho
animas at steed period's: The self -
feeder for hogs is not an untried, ap-
pliance. By its use the animals are
allowed eanetant access to a suppler
of meal, whieb is given in dry forin,
7the feed is kept in a hopper which
may be replenietool from time to
time. From tee hopper the feed falls
into the feeding trough as consumed
by the =Meals.
A selfeeeeder to 'lye sucee.ssfel must
be, cheap, etrong, rosupeeious, portable,
easa.to •eonstruet, weather -tight, easy
of regulation foe different textured
meals, and most important of all so
arranged that the contents will feed
into the troualts without anor stoppage
caused by the !blocking of the meal
in the hopper. Furthee, the troughs
must be construeted to ensure the
minimum amount oe waste such as
migibt be caused by the animalnosing
the meal over the aides or soiling it
by standing in the troughs..
A eelf -Seeder gain be readily maxle
by any. handy mem, For an average
farmer a structure 4'x4' and 4' high
should be eatisfactory. The feeder
should rest on three pieces of 2"x4"
mantling. The walls and floor should
have frames of the mane material and
should be board'ed with tongued and,
grooved materiel eo as to be water-
proof. The roof, which should extend
well over the trough; may eonstantly
form the door or lid of the structure.
When used as meth it is well to pro-
vide a prop to keep it open when nec-
essary. Illustrated' .construction de-
tails for ei self -feeder are presentee in
Exthibition Circular No. 93, of the Do-
minion Experimental Farms,
1.
A CITY Ts FAT.HRAI‘TIERHESLPS
T 11
Them is ne fricelon or hard feel-
ings betvoeen city folks and farmers
in the eity oe heiddletown, Ohio, and
itis teigrounding com,munity. For when
O problem manes up that is of interest
to both, they eit down together in the
Chamber of Commerce and thresh, at
out. The earenere 'de not come in ae
visitoes, either, for they belong to the
(3haneber as is farmers' mai= of that
organisation.
Middletown is a thieving Ohio elite
of eerie 20,000 people. It manufac-
tures stool, paper, and tobacco. It is
growing rapidly, and needs the sup-
port of the farming community sur-
rounding it. Incidentally, the fam-
es need the town. Labor is with them
a pressing emblem, and the ehenges
incident to the development of a rapid, -
ler glowing city have made neceseary
the seedy (if such matters as market"'
gardening, milk production ad sup-
ply, and the like. The flamer is not
milted to mole in- and me the ether
fellow's perform; he is pernitted to,
and expected to, 60 50010 performing
himself. As a result, the fanner s,ec-
tion is at present one hundred strong,
made up of leading femme. The
farmers' section heeds meetings very
wieldier to those of the ordinary farm-
ers' elubs.
As an instance of the manner en
which the chamber operates, there was
a demand on the ,part ,of the fermers
for the liettenneet of the poultry in
the neighborhacel. They decided they
weeded a poultry demonstrator from
the college of agriculture to come
down end work with them. Usually
emit requests oome through the county
agricultural agent. It happens that
the county in which Middletown is
loaded ha' no manly agent.lE.4e the
chamber applied for help for the ex-
tension division and it WaE. secured.
The egriculimal section of the
cearnber gets the same asttention that
any other .section of the chamber re-
ceives. Them are dinners for the
agricultural section, to wheel the
wives, a5 well as the Lamm members',
are invited,. Tho chamber wares in
close wowed with the Red Cross, and
the latter orgamitaeion extends its
work out evee the ,c.ountry dietricts in
the same manatee as it covers the
town:.
en short, the Middletown idea is that
there is no hard. and fast line where
the city end% and the country bogies.,
but that all who aa e servedby or con-
tribute to the city are essentially one
family, with like interests, varied, only
by their differing oesupatione and by
the cempational problems that arise.
Axe the beauty of it ie that the plan
works!
-
Hints 071 Tincee Adjustrneot,
A fev,r simple nits which are es -
se teal in the edjustment of plows for
1 ector plowing are given by Domed
McDonald, a well-known plow nein.
1. Adel= the wings eill the weight
of the plow bearns and bottoms is
practically 'balanced.
2. Hitcb, plow at a point on tractor
drawbar- midway 'between lietizontal
centre of tractor and horizontel metre
of plow.
8. Adjust velem] position of hitch
eo as to be substantially level 097 work -
mg position
4. Set levers foe first poeitien end
open fent furrow.
5. Change levers to worki»g posi-
tion.
6. Wee: plowing Is finiehee, set the
levers in transport poeition and tuke
plow andtreetor th nearest shelter.
For males ant pocket gopliere,
solve 41,40,4aitinio 301 belling water;
sok sweet mem in it twelve lesers;
putt a ll'ew grains in the g'opher 11131*
Cream of tartar given in the deink-
ing water every niaw and then wards
off disease erre keeps the blood of
the feees in proper condition.
The inferior laying hen of the meat
type ha thick, beefy pelvic bones,
with hard lumps at the ends. Such
Sons axe not heavy layers. Sell them.
They usually weigh heavy.
Good laying is not indicated by the
amount of cackling a hen does. In
this ee.speet, annetimes, heris axe lies.
The hen that makes a lot of fuss over
an egg is, usually, but an ordinary
layer.
There is. nothing better for either
old hens or chicks than duindetions.
Grub out a basket of the roots and
bops. Chop very line and, feed. Many
times my flock of hens has gem to
laying at once ofter a long period
of rest when ,giv,en a few feedings of
dandelions. , Chicks thrive wonderfully
on 'cued cheese and chopped dande-
lions, and especially when a few table
or meat straps exe mixed in oe-
easionally.
. Meath:mate of soda is of great
value when placed in the mesh or
drinking water. It will cleanse the
digestive tract 01 any VOUT or decayed
substances, and keep it in a healthy
sweetened, condition.
Eggs remain fresh even for weeks
in the warmest weather, and do not
appreciably dose in weight nor condi-
tion even if sent across the continent,
when no males are kept in the flocks.
However, it is always best if etigge
aro marketed within a week; the
sooner the better.
Water -glass is the great egg pre-
servative. It is a syrupy fluid whicth
can be purchased from druggists.
Add one pert of the substance to nine
.parts of water that has been: boiled
and allowed to cool before mixing:.
Thoroughly stir the solution while it
is being mixed and pour it over the
eggs, which have already been pecked
311 0.111 earthen or wood,en vessel. Keep
*0 a location teller° the temperature
never rises above 60 degrees F, The
eggs should not be more than a week
old. Infertile ones are better.
Fattening hogs gained as follows in
Mi mini:tests :
23 eor ee-nt, fester on a ration of
corn =et intedlings than on COTO.
82 per tent easter on 0 ration of
corn and linseed oilmeal than on corn
alone.
82.6 ner tee I.. fester on a ration of
cern end taelcoge than on corn alone.
eff 5 p.er cent fester on a ration of
ccen end soybeans than on corn elate.
17,6 per met. faster on a ratioa of
corn eine gene denote than on earn
alone. -
7 4 per rent waster when self, :eel
than 'when Mind fee the mane ration.
Self -fed hogs 'require no more feed
to produce a given =mead of gam
than when haste fed. When once feed
is placed, in a separate "self -feeder"
the hogs will choose the differed
fee* so that the gein will be both
rapid end economical, The saving of
grain resulting from the use of pas-
ture crepe is free tvvetty to fifty pew
cent
The kind of renege crops best ade.pt-
ed for 'hog eastures is illuistented, as
follows:
Blue groes produced 324,8 poem%
Of pork per acre,
Glover metered 6e7,7 pounds oe
pork per 41C170.
Ra.pci met .eat :althea prod:toed 364.1
rem& of pork per .aei e.
Rape, oats end elovor forage pro -
Aimee 414.6 pounds of pork per acre.
Soybean forage produced 117.6
;mimes of ,pvelc por .acre, Rye erain
Tied in all of the mole rinse One, forego predeced 211,7 pounds ef pork
leeeitmetivi elite OM 014 it) Weep, tea eerie 1
SvPremacy of Marquis
Wheat .
ferther it goes the better it
gees Win fairly 'be 'saki Of Itettequis
w heat, Born in Canada at the Ottawa
Ilhoperimentel Fame 31 1)3)1 come to be
reeegelieed o the Sertioderd wheat of
Wes 'cotintry, suite aceordine to the
Weekly Nemo Letter, publiebee by the
Departmeet of Agricultem p15 Waal:-
ingeme D.C., 'has been fineld, by the
opeciallorts of that Deportment to be
the leading vaxiety cf connnon wheat
.grewn in the Northern Greet Ploins
oe the Meted States,. 153s has comes
about in the lest seven or eight YO'ar64
Mart1=9 wheel; having been introduced
to the !States ie. 1918. It is hairele
necessary to ref er to the many victor -
les that have been gained by this ver-
iety at the =neat mil products .expo-
sitions held in the Steam, They love
been thoroughly chronicled m theY
neturred and have redounded to the
credit of Canada, particularly of !Sas-
katehewen. Prevent efferts by gen-
erous edvertising have Nest made to
introclece new varieties, eat Marquis
hes held '50S, 01511 and is to -day more
extensively grown in Saskatchewan
and in mane &stride of Manitoba and
Alberta then all the other varieties
put together. Hundreds of varieties
of foreign and domestic wheat 'have
been tested by the Washington ex-
ports, but for growth in the northern
States 110118 have proved the superior
of Marquis. The better varieties of
Durum wheat havo proved more than
•tho equal of Meequis in one or two
particulars, but every one has been,
proven by •experiments th have a mime
ler loaf volume. Data obtained
at Washington on rust infeetien
showed that Marquis had a leas per-
centage then any other eommercial
variety of cominon spring wheat ex-
cepting only Durum. Each wheat
sample was analyzed for Illitrogen and
the crude protein, content determined.
Marquis wheat had an -overage protein
content of 15.3 per cent. Other cora-
mon spring wheats rather lese. It
ine= be understooe thatothese samples
were not sar taken from stations or
districts favorable to the growth of
Marquis.
That Extra Can of Oil.
Oneeif the most expensive mistakes
I ever made was in trying to finish
up the day's week with my tractor
svithout getting a new supply of oil. I
was hardly done with the day's work
and had lese than a round to fire& I
'didn't want to .seop and get a new
supply of oil and I just kept on driv-
ing. From feet thne on I had trouble
with my tractor and it cost ,me over
$100 to rem.edy the damage that I had
caused by a few minutes' eareleee-
neee
It is even more necessary to Move
an extra quart of oil in the fuel box
of your tractor than to have an extra
gallon of gasoline in your motor car
-one is dollars and •cents. -the other
is inconvenience.
Co-operation, not competition, is the
fife of business.
Don't pray cream on Sundeys and
live skim -milk the rest of the week.
11
INew them were Magie epeee one no
them
girpReeeen, 8001101180011011•dift TOrieny leak Unmet
Oren he ease all the beitetleil things of
HOUR which the geoine hect told krim-the
Liao eke, the green trees end, beet of
all, the deinty bililo fairy, All day he
ren hither and thither, telinlring
everythinig Ito evive and when Meld
fume 110(1 thO etino came ote over the
treetces he coted not go to sleep et
ell)
"X will rover live underground
Benin)" he mid delightedly, And he
tever did. in fact, ho got n coition
as chief (emit On the fairy bank end
lieoa nalenle for the rest ef Ms days
Isn't it a pity that, ell moles cannot
helm fete, seees?
„..., .
°nee UPon 0 :Wine thorewas en
timbiteous, mole who wieh.ea to emourst
to something in the wotld, He felt
=re teat teem Wali more to the earth'
than the dark undorgrome tunnele'
thet hie family delmbitee, 493000 'big
feting teld Stim xepeetedly that them
WOOS nothing above -ground worth look -
tug at.
TN moles 104143 nordswoeking IltIle
Peel/le'and this partieular funny
were eanakeyed in a mine one dug
eatly and lotto foe their living, One
day WI the Bello melte wee et 'work in
a lonely earner of the mite 'he met
the old gnome vvho employed them
and got into a convereatien.
The old gnome was in a perticulaely
good humor, haven had mushroom pie
eor dineee, and as there wns 310
one about, he condeseended to be
Pleasant to the little mole boy. when
Tonomy-that WOG the =lei's, smine--
mked him about the earth, he de-
scrilied, tit greet leagth, the forests
and meadewe, the trees and blue skies,
theariun and the stare, and he , even.
told him about people --which was
funny, for g110111 OS do not usuellgthe-
lieve in people.
• Tommy could steamely wait till
evening that he might tell •hie family
the wonderful etory. But hes father
fell asleep in the meddle of the recital
and Mrs. Mole was so baser ever her
imam amounts that she ouly nodded
once in a while Without even hearing.
Tommy was dis.eouraged, and all the
next day he was turning civet, in Ms
mind ways and means of seeing some
of these things for himself:
One day %stead of going to wore
with his father ho 'pretendedto have
an errand to de for the old gnome.
He dug up and up and up till at last
he meld poke his head right out. He
looked all around; then he was so dis-
appointed that he flopped down on the
ground and cried. Imagine!
"Everything's just tho same!" hp
wailed dismally.
"What's the same?" A little fairy
on her way to visit a sick 'bird family
stopped 'beside Nun.
"P110 gnome said the trees wero
green and tee sky was blue else
everything is brovenl" ‚*ailed the mole
again.. "Are you a permit?"
"Net quite," laughed the little crea-
ture softly, "I'm a fairy!"
"Well, you're brown, toe!" the mele
set im and viewed the little fairy dole-
fully.
"Why, Pm et/1kt" cried the levity in-
degruantly. Then all at once she began
hopping around 311 031 excited circle.
"I know what's the matter! I know
-what's the matter!" sho laughed. "You
wait here!"
Off Dike a flash she mended., and just
as. the mole woo about to do down
into his hole again sbe returned. with
--whet do you 'spose? A dear little
pair of speatecles.
For, of coarse, dear 'heart, a mole is
almost blind end everything does look
brown to hen.--thates why he thinks
the whole world is like his (leek, damp
home underground.
•• •• •
Marketmg Home Products
By Grace Vale Grey
If you are interested in finding a
market for your WEIXOS you will find
feur methode of sealing: Direct sales-
ineembip, through menufacturerk*
agents to whom you pay a •comaniesion,
through aclveritising, andthrough per-
sonal letters to desirable people aed
business toncerns. Without a doubt
the first 1004110(1, that of selling direct,
is the meekest and the eheopest.
It is quite poseible to sell to a few
persons or to one large concern; and
if you 1Yreier the latter course, it win
be well to ma upon the leading gro-
cers of nearby towns and eittee. You
will doubtless find that dealers are
willing to enter into arran.gements
which they roan depend aeon a regaler
sapply of reliable products
Should this be your fleet venture in
the business world you mey say, "I'm
timid, I can not talk to strangers, and
pride keeps me from telling my own
local deal:es {bat I want to sell my
home-made gimes" This is a evreg,
as well as ti false, attitude. Yon have
a perfectly good bueinese proposition
to meke and good business nese will
take adventage of it, Have confidence
in yourself; that is all that te needed
to Mart in the bu•sinese, You will find
ince people every-whem. I have elways
be= 'courteously' reeeivect by businese
men, whether they were butchers,
grocers..., eantraitselon men, express
company employees, or beads of de-
partarien.te in lenge, wholesale stelae.
Provide attractive labe1s. for your
geode, svbether thtey be eggs or pre-
serves. It is -Mae ta iese the name of
your tame so that customers. will 50041
get used to it and order 'Pine Crest
Preserves" or "Shady Dawn Broilers."
If you put your goods out in en at-
tractive form, guaxantee their =pee-
ier quality, secure one good grocer in
e ach total in which you sell, and fill
your orders proinotly, you will be
surprised to see how much you 011.0
In selling slirectly to the consumes,
the moneyed peop.le are most Barely
bo want youe products, and these aro
the people whom you should seek.
Many houseweves,"aro out o.f tovvn der-
ing the skimmer months and would
gladly circlet. their winter ,septity
triit end vege-tablee from a reliable
pensen Cell egeon such people If 14
is at all possible to do en takin.g with
you temples ef your platelets p0t. up
in an attrective lorm. Your goods
are worth mon than ordinary eanned
geode end you do not have to 'compete
with theen. You neve see "fancy"
p;aotie oe a bargain counter; ea tio
not eat a chem.) price upon your
608510.
Yea cein also go to your nearest eity
terul interview the managers of the
best hotels aed reeteurants, the Mow-
.
ants cif seeial 0113501 ancl tee manegers
of reel:owl, eietheecers, Cntoe to a
good trade, for e. lnege naming of
Peopheitro on the lookout fee ilto best
prothicbs. Go to sco thee° people on
your o.vvn initiative or ask a friend to
recomsnancl you to them. If you
really OM produce eometibing bettere
than ordinary, you will beee no diefi-
culty tin seeing these people and sell-
ing to them.
Delicatessen shops, tea-rooms tied
clubs pay big prices for home -prepar-
ed fond. YOIX.r ex,prese agent will give
you the names of .sueh private custom-
ers, for express ammo/lies are willing
to co-event:a in every way poesible to
help the farm woman place her pro-
ducts and, to assist city folks to get
country food. Go te the egress com-
pany in your town. aruck talk to the
agent. Without 41 doubt ,he will be
ebbs to put you in touch with desirable
customers. Haring securedtheft
names, write these people what you
have to ofeer and pa.yorent can be
made tigough the empress agent. Tilts
is the safest way to transept business
between people 11/1)0110W11 to each
°t1T7'clure." secant method of selling your
goods is easy but expensive. There
are many ealeennen wee would be .g.led
to push yam. goods partioularly if yap
hem a „sistd. novelty. Salesmen sell
On ocnnerissiee, twenty' per cent being
but lee average. There are also bag
jobbeie wee :s.e.1.1 to retail etove's. The
jobbers will be eble to 'Wog you hie
orders if your omelets Merit it; but
here again the expensive camuniselon
most be considered and only e kap
output justifies this form of selling.
Many people prefer adeertieing in-
stead of the direct saleornenship
m.aeufacturee's agents. Some of "see
Inggeat country trade has come about
through advertising. To build up a
trade in this way have °ire -digs, de -
smelting your precincts, printed, and
mail Wonto possible customers liking
within reasonable distance. The man-
ager of your telephone °mileage will
get yone Het of• each peopie. Your
paanebeet ten be in the farm of 41 let-
ter, with a deocription of the varieties
and a prieeetiet. Give it ,a '081.318113"
title so people will want te read, it,
A iolder of •smell size •contelning
abtont four pagce is a good form. In
Ede Melee or leeflet, tell the made
who you ewe -that rie, give enougrh in-
eorrnation oboet youreele end your
expenience in, •coenting anti preseyving,
017 as a vowel, of fine poultry to give
=taxmen oonifidenee in you, Do net
be afraid to epend ten tor fifteee
lars in smiling leaflets; they will net
cost much to print end onestent pos-
tage 1(1311 (10 :foe it leaflet ef leo kind.
Roadside advertising elm met, A
blackboardwith items end prices, 011*'.
41110413' svritten epon it will attract the
eyes ef all 'who pase by, wIdle me-
sidemble eusiness eon be obtained by
letter -writing. Tbe letters »wet be
businesslike in appeamece hnsl 4100
premien end ehould be byeewrieton
These ,aro bet =nest/one; ether
wove may present themselves., but it is
no trouble to lind 11 to:tricot if you just
Marti tiet deter/deed ..to find one,
Extension of Canada's Seed
Trade,
Dining the year 1920 Canada's ex-
pert trade merle a ccrisiderable
uudvenee, owing in no small degree to
the effete of the Dominion, Domert-
anent of Agriculture anct the Depart-
ment of Tiede end Commerce, The
()median Trade Commissioners sue -
plied eats of prospective customers
suimosei for Gomel= seed. Theseewere
emeniumicatee with 'and their require-
ments placed before Ceneelau export-
ers, In this way an increaseci export
of seeds was brought about to the
United State*, Great Britain, France
and Newfoundlend. To Ireland alone
approximetely 100,00.0 bushels ef fibre
flex seed, worth 'Mout $1,000,000, was
exported, In British. Columbia, field
root end garden vegetable seetle,
erne:aiding to 150,000 poen*, were
marketed through the United! Seed
,Gowees, Limited, Penticton, B.G. Seine
75,000 poem& of mangel, swede
turnip, end field carrot seed,, grown by
the Experimental Penns, wore sold at
current wholesale prices to farmers'
organizetione and individual. fanners.
It was deemed adviseble to tonfin,e the
marketing oe this seed to Canada, so
that farmers might have tee exclusive
advantage of using this high quality
eeed. Circulars detailing the available
seed potato supplies in Prince Edwaed
Island, Nova Scott, New Brunswick,
and Quebec, proved an important dex-
ter in relieving the shortage in On- so), we can Map outeicie and thresh a
(=op or two for our friends or neigh-
bors, all of which will be practitally
clear cash .money.
,MOI( KIDNEY
MAKE LAME t3A0K1l,:
Cinise hrolten, iinrefreshing sloo));
and in 10213131 eases that tited feeling
that filakos it so hardto get up In.
tho inorning. Theyalso cause loso..
of appetite, lack of ambition, And
other troubles,
Tfood's Sataapurilla .contains tho.
nnalleinul herbs, harks, roots, obi.,
that strengthen tuna tune these
or-
gi111S, find relieve .tlesie erdthary all.
ments. Take i t.
Anil if you need a, limetive take
Hood's Pills, -they worlc right,
„
mologist, Mr. Arthur Gam, to wit,
that the importance of protecting our
useful birds is becomine more and'
more recognized, especially by farmers,
and fruit growers.
-Thresh Your Own Grain.
ff. you .owe a gasoline engine for
pumping water, etreing wood, cutting
fuea, grinding grain, to., there is ne
mese profitable investment than the'
pitechase of a small grain separator.
•Mue34i grain is lost annually, or the
quality el the ,grain is reduced, doe to
seoure a thresher at the.
proper time. From experience, I know
this to be a fact.
A small 'separator will do just as.
good work es a large one, but, of' --
course, not so rapidly, though you 'will
be surprised •at the eapacity, One that
can be easily operated by an eight or.
en hese-power ga•soline engine will
thresh from 400 to, 500 bushels of
grain or more a day, and the work
can be done far more cheaply than
with the hired threseer. Better etill,
we have the satisfaction of knowing
that we can do the work any time 150
get ready, not having to wait from
ten days to three weeks for the ne4gh-
b.:11,1100d thresher to zonle amend,
which often means a lot of lost or
damaged grain if a rainy spell shoule
happen to come while waiting for the
outfit.
Anellher advantage of thesmall in-
dividual separator is that after we get
through our own crop (if we have the
time to spare and feel disposed to de
team. Demonstrations conducted on
117 farms, in -Ontario and Quebec with
nuen.gel aqui ewed'e turnip seed resulted
in showing the superiority of home
grown seed over foreign. Seed labor-
atories are • now maintained by the
Dominion Department of Agriculture
at Ottawa, Winnieeg, and Calgary,
ancl at those points sonic 28,000 tests
were earried out. Samples of \stoat,
oats, barley, timothy, and clover were
How We Handle Straw.
We always fill our empty barn
mows, sheds and stable lofts with
straw to fullest capacity when WO
thr0511 0017 small grains. In one we
store oat -straw for feeding with hay
tested for vitality and, at Oaligary, .and cern-stover to the Mesas, cattle
investigation wae made into the effect and talves. Another one holds cur
of frost on germination wheat-etraw for bedding, strawberry
Our Insectivorous Birds.
It Trey appear startling, but it is
a fact that if all the insect pests
rayaging our crape could be step- imatenel we elm find for the winter
pressed% and all the plant and tree poultry houses en which tha hens tan
deg and scratchand never wear the
fibre into dust and shert cuts. Last
autumn, when we shredded into our
.barn a quentity of corn -stover, we
heeledetzreelves at no other task than
to keep pitehin,g bintthes of wheat end
minion Department of Agriculture ,botesvertrr,asyny ixindoog
31 auctomn ovtieo on ti tyo f 11,11:31
that conservative estimete ef the the fodder. It made splendid feed, and
annteai. loos in Canada to field, orchard helped to keep the fodder from pack -
and garden crops due to destructive Mg end molding in the mows as so
insects is upweede of $200,000,000, As often. happens.
This season we shall store a quan-
tity of strew in reach of the blower
and mix this with corn -stover half an,d
hell. Makes it go farther in feeding,
and is a most splendid feed for winter-
ing the animals that de little worlc.
If ill fortune pursues you aed you
loee everything elte, keep your temoer,
and raspberry mulches, ents for the
swine and calves, and scratching
material for the hens,
Another MOW 'hold..3 the rye -straw,
coarse and long, which is the best
diseases eradicated, an,c1 the inereesed
revenue derived by flue country there-
by could !be turned into the D.o.minion
Treamey, there would need to be no
question a taxation Thi* idea is
largely substantiated by the feet set
forth by the Entomologist of the Do -
our eutherity says: 'To this huge de-
vastation must be added the enormous
annual destruction, caused by forest
insects, steed proehiet insects, etc."
Upon this statement the • Entomolo-
gist founds well -sustained argument
in favor of the protection of inseeti-
Mr= bircis such es the prairie
horned -lark, the robin, the ecenewhat
despised crow, the redebreaoted Nut-
hatch, the Western Tanager, the
gulls, and many other kincie. In the Cabliedral has, alreedy been procee eine
The work of peeserving St. Paul's
Myrtle Warbler, the Chickadee muse,
!State of Iowa it has been estimated,
that tree sparrees 'annually devour
something like 895 tons of iveed seeds!
Speaking of the Tobin, an investiga-
tor in Toronto found that e single bird
kept in confinelera .at 165 cutworms
in one day. Another authority states
that a brood of preerie horned -larks
co:teemed 400 cutworms in me day.
This mine authority, namely, Mr. Nor-
man Griddle, Dominion Entoinologist
in Manitoba., decieres that six crows
ere capable of consuming three bush-
els of grasshoppere in one season. It
is recorded that in eertain places in
Manitoba limas of growing grain have that it may ee turned to iininerse the
ftroohmoppdeesroy
trutll
ctiol; btoy ro different parwooden r
parts of theim in
'phettestitalesnatvedgro
presence of large flocks of gulls. In
light of these facts it is gratifying to
be infornme by the Dominion Ento-
,
....eurese=,===...leseiesessausa.
Many women with disfigured complexions
neva seem to thine that they need an occasional cleansing
inside as well as outside, 'Yet neglect of this internal
bathing shows itself in spotty, and sallow complexions -as
well as in dreadful headaches and biliousness. It's because
the liver becomes sluggish, and waste matter accutnulates
which Nature cannot remove without assistance. The best
eight years, five ye.ars being spent on
one jab alone.
When tires 011 wooden wheels be-
ersme lo,oee, they may be tighteeed
by immersing the rime in boiling oil
until the wood swells. Have your
timer make a galvanized, trough that
will hold enough oil to cover All OrC11n-
ary Wag011, Wheel rim, Put boiled lin-
seed oil in this trough and build a
fire or .place a small oil stove or lamp
under it to keep the oil at the boiling
point all the time. Arrange the wheel
Move the tough on an iron rod so
the oil. The eit will permanently swell
the wood, end will also help preserve
anct toughen the woodwork of the
wheel.
rein04 y15 Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets, which
51131111 ate tholiver to healthy activity, remove f ermentation ,
gently cleanse the stomach and bowels and tone the whole
digestive system. Sure, safe and reliable. Take one at
night and you feel bright and sunny in the morning. Get
Chamberlain's today -druggists 26c., or by mail from
eltambcriain Medicine Company. Toronto 13
e
flick u�vssexa elfours,Do
What 1111.05men have done, you onn )'**I1'spAro timo
at hem you NM easily master the.seerets of Haiku that make
Stu: Salesmen. Whatever your experience hos heena.whatever
yoa may 10 (20(00 now-etliellter or 51. 11011 think rot: con 504. -
answer Ws question: 11,0 300 ambitions to earn 410,000
yearl Then 001. 1, touch With 010 at oneel 1 trill orovo terns
without cosi or obligation that' yon 110 easity 'boom a Star
Salesman. 112112 stow yee how the Salesmanship Training and
Vree Employment sorolco 01040)0.3,1. 111111 help you to quiek
O. sumps 11 Selling, _
10 000 A Year Selling Secrets
Read These Amazing
Stories of SUCC0S3
ra..1 nu In Two Week,.
1 1.4 no
deo foe
11100
•
1.1; Settoll la Star Shleshinnship (AVIA hY.tha P. 0. }As
thaw th.100,1o, oven1111111t,10 ItItY0 1411100 Yon 0VDT tha cl-m4ery
amall po, Of blina•alley 4.19 that load 11.11.c. 110 ‚*01(00 33,4 300
80' 1100' 11.015, the WI .4 telliog cam you a 415 halm, ea net tuts,
001 55
•Notional &dent -ices Training Astoniatian
'Canadian Mgr. lea ere , Toronto, el 1.
41.