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The Clinton News Record, 1920-11-25, Page 7Prhe ra o Anticipates its exquisite flavour. Sent its .a pOStal fel*, ix free seaaatale. Plcaase,tate the ' price yore. >rxow pay arid yvlae4lael;,l�lacTC$ Green Addzet,s roala4a0 tcorosate,, a7aa T)ishwnshin0 Made Easy. ( it forms a firm curd. Cut into "Just why everybody hates and squares with a kngbladed knife abominates washing dishes, I can't and let stand 10 to 10 minutes understand," Cousin bate said, after until the whey .separates, Strain she had ta]cen off her thinga, "Do you through flour sank or cheesecloth. The Revolt From Four Walls11 POTJRrCI71`l'A1' SAT'.AG,Le; CHAPTER III. Tho first unusual sight that greeted him was the partly open door, It had always been held fast width a rusty end quite inadequate padlock, to which Gu Y ha d the Ivey. Ms next observe - dee Was that there was a small proper package just outside the door, and the third item of importance which he saw as he came nearer, wee a men's bock, a heavy gray sock, which was on the ground not more than five feet from where lie stood, He gripped irks stick closer and went forward• planta shpwed above th earth, The At the door of the shack he stopped, promise of life, that eternal mystery and called. Only the echo of his owls that keeps us always hopeful, was be - vole° answered him, He called again ing fulfilled, As he went back to the and, growingventgresorno, crassed'the fields after his dinner, Guy took of[ threshold. The sight that met his his cap and let the warm .breeze play he appealed, as if they did tlgt want conversation with him and be noticed that the half breeds, Hiway» Parrot- like imitators of tboae about them, i deio talkt n t with • ' at ok Mm -as if he were ae ere rtureo of curiosity, • What had to be dere? Once he thought of spealaing to John Baker on the subject lint on second considers, tion kept silent, It was early Jvne anti the fruit trees had finished blossoming and in the fields, fresh green sheots of living e ear n, to eyes was amazing, 'rhe sap house had been t• ed as a place of decent habita- tion. .. rough cot stood in one corner, there was a good, cheap rug on the on his forehead. He would need straw hat from now on. That after noon he worked in his shirtsleeves and it seemed to him that Joe Tour's know, 1 honestly believe many a wo- Salt curd generously. :floor, and email kerosene stove was t Certain were more am axed thannsever roan keeps help just because she lis-; Put turd into press which has been•, lay the only window rho place boasted. Certainly, he was.not the gonial .Joe likes washing dishes, and if I did it in lined with cheesecloth. A syrup pail On the •Shelf above the stove was a of other sunmters. Guy wondered what the haphazard w•ayt in which most wo- which has the top rim removed, and row of canned goods, and the pots and ,lea ,would do if he ware to este him sten do it, I should dislike it too, As holes punched in file sides and .bottom pans were clean and in good condition. suddenly if ho knew than fat man who it is„ I'd just its soon wash dishes as to allow the escape of the whey makes Two elleap chars and a table templet had lived in the Wardell sap house'. , ed the rootWlth a »quick moiwrnett Guy crossed to the doce thin: led to to do anything else about the house." a good press. Press for 24 to 80 hours I couldn't help laughing. Ctiusin until the whey is thoroughly pressed Kate is a dear, but as transparent as out. .Allow cheese to ripen in a cool a pool of waster. !place three weeks. Xeep'covered will "Go ahead, Honey," I remarked cheesecloth. Turn and grease cheese amiably,- "you might as well. 'fess with batter every day during the first right up that you've been getting dish week it is ripening in order to keep washing dawn to a science. I never the cheese soft. Always keep in dry enjoyed it end .if any one should tell Place, HIe felt sure that his suspicion to the lean-to of the sap i house, and Mang wards him dated from the night It g had come . uddeniy around tate sap it open. There, as he thought, he house and found the thin man with fount -1%11e goods that had once filled the ferret face luilcing there. the roost in which he stood. They, The petty worries were gone, how were piled as neatly es a careful wo-1 ever, the minute he turned his back bran would store hm• belongings. I to: the setting sun and went blithely For many minutes Guy poked about down the lane towards his own home, the room and it told it.hn severaV There a comfortable supper always things, On was that e me that I would never have another lived jn the room hind lett in a reit waited him and it seemed to him, also t. g that he and Madeline were not as mess of dishes to wash in my life, I'd Household mete.hurry and part of his belongings had; antagonistic as they had been. What dares a jigl If you've any deep, dark To remove wtill paper wet it all over been carried away in a sheet, far the : •a deplorable state they had fallen into secrets to impart»hent how yon do with a thin este made of flour an bed had only one sheet. Another was: --he with his grind of business, she it, for heaven's sake, do tell me what water. When d the that the person who had lived there' with her thought of new dresses and they rrel" ry Paper will must have subseribect to the news- entertainment. They had been drift they and you can pull it oft' in strips. Papers of several cities. He forted a ing toward the shoals of unhappiness Kate nodded absent-mindedly, • 'Small "retell" can be removed piece of a Vancouver paper, one from ' "You're right," ehe said, "It's allToronto, one from Montreal, and from things separation possibly. but now g , from furniture by rubbing the surface seemed cl in Hex in one's mental attitude and the way vigorously with the kernels orally nut Winnipeg. Beyond th side» could learn is my containing a t f 1 y nothing. FIe went outside, closing the (Continued in next ,issue,) you go at rho worlr,Hereg large amour o oil, door after him. He pkclted np the sock method: Paste the oilcloth on the kitchen and the small package. This latter he I clear off the table, bringing the table with flour paste, instead of tack- opened. It was a man's silk under - dishes to the kitchen en either a big ing it on, -The oilcloth will- wear shirt. Ile held the two garments of tray or my tea wagon, Rab made me longer, es it can not move and wrinkle men's wearing apparel ,int his hands 6,a 5 Suggestions For Keeping Warm. igen, you know, out of the when wiped, •and it does not crack and for several seconds—and decidedthatSuppose that you are caught out in children's outgrown baby carriage, soak up water. they both belonged to the same man. the woods on a "cold fall or winter Two trips will do the business if I plan Beating a rug very soon takes out Their size told him that, for the sock night, says a magazine welter, with right. I've had Rob raise my table the stiffness. If you have some old was very large, and the silk under- only a single blanket to keep you and .my sank and cArttdn,board until Y shirt must have belonged to a ntan bed -springs, put them out in the back who measured forty=twif or forty-four warm. You can hardly do better than can work without stooping over and yard, lay the rug on them (farce down) across the chest, borrow an idea or two from .the Indian; breaking my back. You've no idea how incl beat well, then turn the rug over And the man he had seen the night who often manages very well under much that helped. I and sweep off the surface dirt. This before had been thin to the point of •such circumstances. 'Without wasting a motion, T partly will -clean the rag thoroughly with- emaciation. This ,clothing had not be- i IIe builds a large Are and thorough - clean those dishes, using one of the out whipping out the ends and taking longed to hint. Ile went back to the le warms tate ground, Then be rakes little rubber scrapers. When I take out so much of its stiffness. sap house, threw the two articles in -1 away the coals and lies down upon up the meal I ahvays put my cooking Use aluminum paint for brightening side the door, which he again care -1 the warm area, pulling his blanket dishes to soak, and as T use my fire- fully closed and strode in the direction • over him, The ground is the warnnest up the rusty looping pipes 'tad the f h• less cooker so much I am not troubled kitchen boiler or hot-water tank. Tar - with scorched utensils, niched radiators are renovated with "As I go along I stack the dishes this paint or with gold enamel which is and sort til o Is own ome, thing In sight; so he Iles Smack As he approached the house, he saw I against 1#. Ile does not roll up in the that his wife was standing on the ver- andah steps. Her very attitude spoke' blanket, cm, never Iuntb mg spoons, said in com enation cans ready fes, of the unusual, - He quickened his i If the night happens to be extremely forks and knives to scratch them up, mixing. Polish nickel -plated articles steps, cold, the Indian heats a large boulder but keeping them in separate piles. I with a paste made by mixing equal ' "What is tt?" he asked quickly. and covers it lightly with earth, ,Tion You look as if something unusual he curls round the mound andp ulls lead happened," 1 the blanket over him. This isthe She laughed lightly, as if she were better of the two methods in case anxious to pass off his nestle f I have ready a pan of ince warns water, parts of lard and whiting. in which 1 have dissolved a pinch of When wall paper is soiled try the borax I use a grade of mild soap experunent of gently rubbing it all q n as o wield will not injure my hands, When over with a sponge that has been al- no importance. For, a minute he Iyou happen to be caught out with only I want the water very hot, I use a lowed to absorb as much clean bran looked at her intently. It seemed to your coat for covering, But instead dish mop, a small -sized one which will as possible. Though thesponge be him that the last few days had thing- of sleeping with the coat on, take 1 ofP and pull it over your sboulders and the stone, Even the Indian's methods some times do not go quite far •enough however, and it is distinctly worth while to turn to Horace Kephart fon further suggestions. Kephart a•ecom mends a natural browse bed of some sort spread over the warmed area and a small fire on one side and a log serving as a windbreak on the other A better windbreak is a large uptiltec rock with fiat face, or a ledge, Rock in addition to serving as a windbreak bottle heat a long time and generous ly radiates it. So long as it does not rain the irob lem of keeping warns without a blanket is not serious. If you need more coy oring and there are enough small balsams in the neighborhood, you cat make a deep bed of the browse; lay two or three poles over it, pile a lot of boughs on top, and then by maul pulating the poles insinuate yourself between the two !Ayers. This will help to prevent too rapid radiation of the bodily heat. Another plan is to get n number of stones, six or eight inches in dia. meter, heat them before the fli'e, and place thein round you wherever you feel the cold. Rave others heating in the meanwhile and change from time to time. To lift and carry the stones, cut out a small forked limb close to the joint, leaving two feet of each fork for handles, pint the crotch over the rock and press inward with the handles. The man without a blanket can get a fairly good night's sleep 1n this waY, even in freezing weather, - -i ---,.— Why Swallows Fly Low. Undoubtedly the most widely -known of all the natural weather indicators is the flight of the .swallows, When. rain Is about they fly low over the water; when it is fine they are up in the air. Ninety-nine people out of a hundred would explain this phenomenon by de- claring that the atmosphere when damp is heavy and, accordingly, the insects upon which the birds feed are forced to fly low. In line weather the air is light and the inlect5 i1Y high. And they would be wrong. Fine weather given us a high barometer; that 15:1 to say, tate pressure of the atmosphere Is so heavy that it forces the mercury high up the tube, and the get into cups and around the handles of things nicely. "I always work from right to left, dropping the clean articles into a pan of hot water, for I love smooth, shin- ing dithes, and to have them the soap An excellent furniture renovator, is must be rinsed off. As the rinsing pan made by mixing together equal parts get comfortably full, I take the dishes of kerosene, vinegar and turpentine, out and put them into the draining Tt cleans as well as brightens the fur - basket, in the bottom' of which is a ndture and can not harm apy finish, clean towel. 0f caurse, I wash glasses Shake tate mixture well. After clean - and silver first, and am very careful ing and wiping the surface which is never to let thine with gold or dainty' to be treated, moisten a soft cloth decorations. stand en the water. with this polish, rub the wood, then "In the cupboard above my sink, I' give a final rubbing with a dry cloth, keep silver polish, gritty powder, am- monia, steel wool and aluminum soap, so that the right kind of attention can be given instantly to any article. perfectly thy, the bran will remove ed her. The sunlight playing on her the dirty surface, Leaving only grease hair brought out its cmanyoldly be beautiful, stains behind. These stains can be gleamed eyes, usually coldly beautithe removed b means of blottin few hours rsrm with interest. Even the Y g paper few hours out-of-doors life had and a warm iron, heightened the color in her cheeks. Or, 'perhaps, it was not all out-of- doors that brought the flush to her cheeks. "What happened?" he asked again. "Nothing, xea]ly nothing. I was just startled at something. You know how foolish I arm," here?re it a »tan—someone who came She shook her head. "Now, please, I told you it was no- thing, I'm going to cure myself of being frightened every time I hear a noise in the -bushes—I'm going to be very, very calm and quite Brave." She laughed. "Oh, is that all?" He took her hand' in his, an »diol that surprised them both, for demonstrations of affec- tion had become an almost lost' art to both of them. "And I want you to stay that way—stay untfrightened, no matter what happens. I want .you to be very brave—you will, won't you?" She looked at him quiszedly for a minute before answering. What did he mean? Was there something to be afraid of? • "Yes, I promise," she said quickly, "I'll do it for you." They both laughed. A minute later when she told him that she must go and bake a cake for supper, the incl- dent .was apparently closed, but in each heart was a question. What had happened that caused het to stand there with that look of un- easy apprehension on her face? was his question. In what manner was it connected with his discovery of the mystery of the men at the sap House? What did Guy mean when he said that' she must be brave? she won,. dered. Should she tell him that she heard two men talking by the shore? Of course not --that wasn't being brave, really brave, Old velvet makes a good polishing clotrh, To- repair wall paper, instead of cut- ting a square of paper to fit the place I am particular that my dishcloth; which needs patching, tear out a piece is always clean, white and wholesome,: in roughly jagge4,fashion; then, plat - not on old, germ -infested rag. My tow- ing it upon the wall, carefully match els are rinsed out after each meal and all .lines and figures, \without a dried in the air. I straight edge anywhere on the patch - "Last, but not least, I keep a bottle, itself. Placed thus upon the wall the of hand lotion made of equal parts of eye tan not detect the piecing at all, strained lemon juice, rose water and except when one stands at a certain glycerine (the acid is necessary to angle. The irregularity of the lines of counteract the action of the soap) in the patch formas the camouflage. that .same cupboard, and rub a couple i;ler Father's Job. The other day an Irish servant -girl asked Leave of absence for an hour to consult a fortune-teller. Sbe re- turned.wailing dismally, she predict some great tremble?" said her mistress, sympa- thetically, "Och, stem, filch therrible news!" moaned the. girl, rocking backwards and forwards, and wringing her hands. "Tell me what she said" asked the Inistreea , wishing to comfort the gill. She could' aro shot me father works hard eleventh'. coal an' tindin' foires for livin' 1" "But that's no disgrace nor am - tablet which Inas been dissolved in two tow," said the lady, a trifle vexed at tablespoons of water, into the milk. such affection. :then stir into this mixture one-fifth "Och, mem, me poor father!". sob. cf a cheese -coloring tablet also die- bed the giri. "What a Bard time he »dyed in two tablespoon of water. must be Navin', an' he's been dead 7 r.. stand 20 to 110 minutes until these noble years!" of drops into my hands while they are still wet. "For any very dirty tasks, I use stout canvas gloves, and protect my hands about the sink as much as pea - :Able with rubber ones." . I iookced at Cousin Kate's soft, well - eared -for hands and secretly made tip Huy mind that I would try her plan myself+.. How to Make Chcct,e. A fine quality of cheese can be male by using the following recipe: 100 pounds sweet milk, 1 rennet tab- let, 1-5 coloring tablet, salt generous ly. Heat milk to 80 deg, V. Stir rennet Ev, ge fin teeje va. e 1 ��'� � tegetES KEEN' I'S. S. P MUSTARD gives your�,Tfo�ots ct 7011:-.tina To Obtain Full Food savor, and enaites the "debate" food more easily digested. With 'KEEN'S D.S.V. MUSTARD you get the full value of the food you eat --more vitality with less strain on digostiohr dupe BE ai'ways ort your stable. Caaodiad CO% SON 4 CQ,, Lien trod Montreal Tatnato •,wj�..�y.,na ii.? iti3 g �, In the clays immediately foI'lowing Guy Wardell's discovery that his sap house had been used for a place of italbitation by a mysterious person or persons, he was too busy to do more than occasionally wonder over affairs other than agriculture. His cousin, John Baker, made him a business proposition. Wardell's- big field 'MI6 ,plowed and harrowed but not planted. Baker, suffering from lack of help, could not take the time to prop- erly cultivate as much of his own land as be wished and the proposition was that he take over Wavrdell's Iand which was ready far planting. This would aid Baker and relieve Wardell of. the 2e@es-01y of Making a short- handed fight. They would fent, 'gill. dell's land on shares acid the further proposition was that on 00.ery day he could spare from his own work, John Baker would be very walling to give a man of Wavdcll'sa intelligence and honesty a fat sum for his day's labor. The offers were accepted quickly. Guy figured tidal he could spend two doe a week mound his own plaeo, ^';t2piiy caring for the »abundance of A -early fruit that was fest maturing, rho rest of the time Ise eould ir'- o to his eouSIsh At the end of : second week Gts sensed ra,.tter- than Tcnew that ifs vas the ols�ere of disaussiou, Ile felt that a stranger among men he had ° 1„, "."...4 ttwm from boyhood, He Bogan to €' tot ice that they .stopped talking' when reverse in stormy7:f:se nes; Insects fly high in tine weathbr be- Causo'the heavy atmosphere supports them, and low When the weather 15 damp, bece,;;se they lack this support. mx ally the same mistake is made aruout smoke. Smoke ascends is' fine weather, net became the pressure is slight, but because the atmosphere is sufficiently dance to support it; and as in wet Weather the atmosphere is light, the melte naturally inellnes to the lave] or oven downward. -a In' creased means and increased leisure are the tWo civllizers of anon, 174sraa'ltr Vastness of London Town Greater London holds a, m iliion more peepi0 than are to be *mad in the whale of Australia »gid llgsv Zealand, with ea area aintost as largo as Enac- °Pe, and its dwellers could replace every men, woman and child in all Callnda, or re•poollio Norway three times. ' They are, in feet, so litany --a "na- tion" In themselves—that by joining hands they could link London with the Cape of Good hope, or they could form a "column, three abreast, with a yard between auceesslvo ranks, long enough to reach front Liverpool to lrienna. The streets of Greater Lon- don are long enough to stretch across Europe and Asia at their widest, with 1,000 miles to spare, Every week, within its borders, ap- proximately 4,000 children are born, 2,400 persons die, and 2,000 begin wed- ded life. ' London's streets, if pureed end to end, would forth a high -road long enough to stretch across Europe from the North Cape to Constantinople; and her buildings, if placed shoulder to shoeldsr, would make a continuous row, sufficiently long to link Lisbon with Moscow. Her property has an insurance value of nearly $6,000,000,- 000. So vast is London's population that to pay the food bill for a year would eel] for a cheque for $025,000,000, and among the many formidable items of the bill would appear 4,000,000 sacks of goer, 0,000,000 sacks of unground wheat, 04,000,000 lbs, of butter, 460,- 000 tons of meat, 68,000,000 gallons of milk, and 000,000,000 eggs, Of London's thirst we get on int- presaivc conception when we find that the water sh'tulk in a single day wept(' 011 a bath 200 feet long and 100 feet wide to a depth of 0 feet, and that a day's tea allowance (560,000 gallons) would 1111 a cup 60 feet in diameter and 00 feet high. So enormous is London's passenger traffic that every twenty-four hours two and a half million person, travel on her omnibusses, 1,800,000 in her underground trains alone, and 600,000 in her. trains, So litany, in fact, etre her day's passengers, that if they were formed into a column, four abreast, at Intervals aK a yard, the head of the colurint would be on the sea frentofl Brighton before the rear rank had left John o' Groat's. In a single day London's trains travel a distance equal to nine circuits of _the earth at the Equator; the ag- gregate day's journey of her busses is equal to a trip to the moon, with 70,000 miles to spare, and in twenty- four hours London's trams cover a distance equivalent to a dozen return journeys from London to Constanti- nople. Tact Makes the Old Wo a Better Place, Tact osis the machinery of life, Without it tate world would be a very different thing; it would still go round, certainly, but with a creaking and Jolting in every part! Tact probably has more imitator's than anything else; evasion, dishes'. esty, white lies, .all these and many more, masquerade tinder its name, yet tact, In the' true sense, is as unlike them as gold is from dross. Spurious tact is. detestable. Tile woman who "manages" people, who boasts that "anything can be clone with a little tact," usually possesses none. Real tact is spontaneous; 'tt child can have it; indeed, many sen- sitive children are exquisitely tactful. It is a blend of unselfishness, imag- ination, and nice feeling, these tliree. Alen and women may be extremely self-sacrlflcing, yet utterly tactless, through their complete inability 10 put themselves in other people's places, Who doesn't know the man who drops the most appalling "bricks," simply because he lacks. imagination, anti can't sae bow it will affect the feelings ,of ]tis friends? He often, in fact, generally le, the most good-na- tured man possible, but lacks the pre- cious quality of tact. Some people are deliberately tact- less. These are divided into two Wm The monetary value of the mineral output of British Columbia for 1919 was $33,296,313, as compared with $41,732,474 in 1918. There was a de- crease in quanLity in the minerals, but, owing to the high price of silver, that metal showed a momentary increase, • classes: First, there is the blunt, straight-, forward man, who takes pride in "calling a spade a spade," and con- demns any camouflage of this useful implement, however truthfully it may be done, as flnioking and insincere. Then there are the callously indiffer- ent; those who study no one but them- selves. They say what they like whenever it pleases them, totally oblivious to the feelings of their • frleuds. In the old fairy-tales we read of the prince who had a marvellous pair of spectacles, which enabled him to read the thoughts of all those round him. Quite a 1'0t of people possess this magic gift to -day, except that we have a different name for it. How often we hear "So'aud-So is such a-±om?ort- able, restful sort of person; every- thing she undertakes is a success." Why? Because, without sinking any of her own individuality, she has the knack of adapting herself to everybody she meets. A beautiful woman shines in any place. If the background is lovely, too, she harmon- ises with it; 1f ugly, it acts as a 1011. So it is with tact. Fairy-tales are a thing et the •past, but this pre magic quality is still left to us. Its' Ears in its Legs. I'ew people know how the grass- hopper has its ears in its legs; at least this is the case with the long -horned varieties. In the case of ,short -horned grass- hoppers, the ears are at the ba^1c 0f the roots of the wings. The position of the ear on the leg is just below that part of the front legs which is the equivalent of a man's knot;. The ear varies a good deal in form. In sono cases there le a slit in the leg, while in others there is a film covering a broader °peni3tg, Neither the grasshopper' nor the cricket use the throatin producing their shrill note. It is produced by the wings. One end of the ribs of each wing resembles a file, whilst another part of the wing is drawn tight like a drum. When the grass- hopper draws one file over the other it causes the drum to vibrato. The leaping apparatus by which the' insect is enabled to make tremendous Jumps is just as remarkable. In its body are numerous "hollow tubes, which tend to )ighton it. It also p0a- sesses air'bladdere which serve the same purpose, The fore -feet aro pro- vided with buffers in bider to reduce Um shock; at the end of the Anne and with anchors o s to hold the alkglrtiitg grasshopper, , The jumping lags have a gripping arrangement with which the grass- hopper gets a good grip before leaping and so acids power to its dump, No Need for Grace Mother always kept little Tomtuy up to scratch in the matter of grace before meals, 'and elm made no die• ference tylion she toalt him to tea With her one afternoon at a restaur- ant, • She said to Tommy, after the wait-' roes had served the tea: "Now, say grace, please, Toothy." 'rominy looped up in surin'lse, "But, manta," objected her seven. year old little son, "we're paying for this, emit *el" ,khe'W'cs1d t. +ltAvar.f aby's Own soap The fragrant crearny, 1411550 of "Baby's Own Soap" and its absolute purity have won a great popularity• bptfbr Raby end ern Air Tea, ALBERT S0AP5 LIMU'ED, Hsnufscfururv, MONTREA1. 15.7.20 "0". et.eeteeerre 'there are in England between 1,004 and 1,100 toyn'iakers, a trade whiel employs large numbers of disables men, times the amount taken That is the nourishing power (passed by in- dependent • scientific experiment) of Engineers nralcemen l'iretuen ',Wight handlers niidl!tromen ' Ittvetera Bricklayers Linemen Carpenters ,u"ltera Banners Moulders Ranchers Miners Tracie Drivers Chauffeurs If your Glove is not listed here, ask your dealer B B LONG There's a Bob Long Glove for Every Job Riggers Lumbermen Rlectrielans Stone Masons Plumbers UNION MADE CLOVES Made by skilled workmen from strongest leather obtainable— soft and pliable. R. G. LONG & Co„ Limited Winnipeg TORONTO Montreal Bob Long Brands Kne,vu front Coast to Coast 552 immatrue m maims itmmaim IIIQrtI11mum Mxitarm maummats lairs II m tt They are Convince Farms in Three Counties of On - 05 05 tario Prove Value -of Fertilizers is Tests of 1920 carried out under scientific super- g vision convince farmers of Ontario of the value of fertilizers in hastening maturity and obtaining larger yields and bigger ears. la The demonstrators report: ffi 1. "The greatest difference of all between the plots was in the 1E maturity of the corn and the yield of ears." 2. "These two plots of corn (lst-fertilized, 2nd -fertilized and M manured) were eight to ten days earlier in ripening." 3. '"rhe—differences in maturity of the cars for silage purposes 10 were distinctly in favor of the fertilized plot." Itnprove the Quality and Increase Yields rssxi in 1921 by Fertilizing. ORDER EARLY Write for .Bookletset THE SOIL AND CROP IMPROVEMENT BUREAU of the Canadian Fertilizer AssociationSti Henry G. Bell, B.S.A., Director 1111 Temple Building, Toronto atwtagmmmsasammswsrtanasmard zt>gsieirewalmrwuuilamuxsiori>rmwstsi>s°rsm This Christmas choose B- U I The 005 to ane that old ep,:sy. " ';'s the 'time to consider the special value of the Brunswick as a Christmas Gift for the whole family. Choose it for its unrivalled Tone and Versatility --for its matchless beauty. Choose it because of .its exclusive ail -wood oval horn which =Piffles tone according to the laws of Acoustica--for its exclusive Ultolta that plays all makes of records exactly as they should be played, H •f', COMPARE! M ' Ask your nearest Brunswiolt dealer to play .aN'li melee of r000rd your own Oars be the judge, The lvfusieal Merchandise Sales Contemn*, Solo Canadian Distributors, Dept. W.2,, 70 Wellington tit, v0., troronto Please gond Inc at once, Frei and postpaid, ilio Booklet "'Mat to look for In buying a bhonograpii,' hr . atraot or R,1%„w,r.+.t•.t+.,aaa+.,r.a,,,, •,,.rest,.+r.«..,rr....,.,..rr...e .7L041,11,04,.,t41,4...r,r r. r,r,.. r..,1. Pravinatt.r rate,r..,r ,,4e„r,rr<„' rs.�w,+wursw n