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The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-03-13, Page 511 'Thursday, March lath, 1930 I 071. WZNG1;114- L AVVANc] .,•''IltdfE", au stn 13111111111111IIbl11MI11 1IIMUIMI►1M111MI111111101IiI1A11111111011111111$111M11IMI1111111MIIIwl1IMUI111111111111111111 w ! it :1111. Arrivals s_ • .... e r 11 An advance showing of New N t — Spring Styles s in Dresses Suits r! . and Coats is now being displayed err in our Ready -to -Wear De>part- a I; �!.' Y anent on Second Floor. 4 u u A choice collection of at -1 tractive models • introduc- ing the new Spring Styles are here for your inspec- i tion. . a i;,,�' Ladies' _ ij ®I Ready- _ -- 1111 Ya ® o I ll :1111' 1111 ,• _.�y, II Wear Garments 0: Visit our department and see our large range of new plain andprinted Silk and Georgette Crepes,. � in the new spring shades in Dresses for. Misses'and • Women. Special values at . 10.50, 12.90, 15.00 � ... COATS •111 Newest models in Spring Coats are now in !_ stock for Women, Misses and Children in the latest !_ styles and fabrics, moderately priced. See them. New Dress Goods, Silks, Satin, Crepes and Wash, Goods, New Scarfs, New Gloves, New Neckwear, New Belts, New Silk Hose, New Silk Vests and Bloomers, Gowns and Slips, New Shopping Bags. II Simplicity and Ladies' Home Journal Patterns in stock. ck. M a H. E. Isard & Co. IS Illlllllmlll®Iiirlll®III®III®IIIMII101II®III111III®III111110111111III111110111 111®III®lll®111E1111®IIIp1111ii ilifilll News and Information j Soil drainage, however, is an import - For the Busy Farmer (Furnished by the Ontario Depart, ment of Agriculture) ' J.: A. Carroll, crops and markets director, explains that to be of the greatest service, a weed inspector or "adviser" as he is to be known in the future, should be free to plan and carry out a weed elimination cern- ant factor in relation to tree growth and productiveness. Fruit trees re- quire a good range for root develop- ment and this desirable condition does not obtain on poorly drained soil. It is thus seen that for permanent and profitable results the soil for apples and other fruit trees as well should be deeply and thoroughly drained by natural or artificial means. Time to Prune paign• Some' of the lesser weeds will The time for the pruning of your be overlooked this year and the more apple orchard is in the spring before Serious Pests concentrated upon. the growth starts, but if this is im- possible it may be done immediately Many Attend Swine Course after the trees leaf out. It is desir- Ontario Junior Farmers able to have the wounds, if large, Westernge, heal 'were in attendance to the number as rapidly as possible to prevent de- of 87 at the special educational swine cay, ' When pruning is done in -the course held at the Toronto packing autumn or early winter the wood is plants tat February. 13y means of lec- Ukcly to dry out and split. tures and demonstrations on live hogs and dressed carcasses,the young men Inspection Needed •were shown clearly why the best type it is stated by A, Fulton,' special of hogs to satisfy consumers' dc- overseas representative of the Ont viands is the .most profitable to pro- brio Fruit Growers' Association, that duce. In the grading competition held Ontario apple exporters have a great conjunction with the course, Lorne many difficulties to overcome if they Simpson, of RR, 2, Blenheim, .won are to land apples in Great Britain first, : prize. George Goodfellow of in good, sound condition, The gttes- Teesivater won the first prize in the time of slacks and scalds are parte live hogs competition, while Orvie mount and should be gone into im- l3aunmani of Foredalc won the first mediately by the shipper in ,order ..prize in the dressed carcasses compo- to be ready for the next shipping sea- titiee. ,son. Shippers in Ontario could saver money by having a thorough inspec- Pasteurizing. Recommended tion at tlic shipping point not only' ' When a bottle of milk is held ep in accordance with the Fruit Act, but andobserved from below, any dirt also according to the requirements of . or 'sediment which has settled to the the export rt market. bottom ,is clearly visible through the glass against the 'whitish ibackgroend Grading of Cheese Pays `cif the .mills A heavy sediment is soon The :grading of food products ex - noticed and useall:From Canada has had the ef- noticed by the consumer Y ported t leads to a change of dairies. Suclt feet., Aurin, th,e past few years, of dirt :indicates careleseeess•iTt the. Pro- greatly increasing the cletnaed for duction and handling for dirt has rvo Canadian fnodstufls tbromeleiut . the place in any food product, least of British Empire; titre)• in foreign co ie- ' ti of ' east:ettrie- re s. s1 recent case has been' cited all :milk, The practice 1 c ing ' milk in the home is strongly re- which sows that in 1922 Canadian cei)i;rmeuded for all localities whore cheese had been selling in England practice of school ehildtenn using •it- ihc w•ceh'etid with the latter's parent. nnl. i''1 pasteurized is not hb tit -5 irieli of. one or twe cents per milk properly ] 1 New •' f,c - Minable. pound rlttsalic°a• than that n � a land. With the advent of gradin:, the • Price has now risen until the Canad- ian product contniatids the highest be a deep;Vvel••draitted sandy' loam price on the Ilr]tish Market for or S. light clay loam with good ipois- ported cheese, two (ents higher. than Ince holding capacity and a moderate- the price. ).said for New Zealand EITMKE HOPES 1pervious su asoil, It bah been cheicse, T() GET SHOT . I Y f i 1'o illation of Moose Jsaw, 1 C1lIC:\(rC)--1Tcatllines <itj ,t I shown also; that apple trees will grow , Lime baseball story in the Victoria, B., (�,, , 'i'he papulation of Moose Jam, on so-called poor soils and pill give Value of L me ..s :liro.t h ee eri- Daily Titres. ! tirnatrd a,t 25,490. good � i tsults if properly managed. � It has been found i t g p { lents over a period of the past 24 years that lime has direct value to tip- ple trees, The nature of the root syster of the apple, penetrating -fair- ly deep into the soil, enables the tree to obtain all thelime o tat . t e it requires n.front the subsoil, The apple, furthermore, is a plant whieh,prefers a slightly acid soil and .does best under .these condi- tions. However, .lime is of indirect value because it •enables the farmer to grow leguminous cover crops in the orchards and thereby supply 'or- ganic 'matter and nitrogen which are the two constituents absolutely essen. tial for the'maximum production .of, fruit. Dr, G. I. Christie, O. A. C. presi- dent, speaking at the Ontario Vege- table Growers' Association. cotaven tion, declared: "With all the advan- tages claimed for the United States, I don't `believe there is any place on this continent producing a better class of vegetables or garden products than we can show right here in Ontario." An Important Discovery Ontario farmers will probably be saved thousandsl •s of dollars bydis- covery a made by Dr. G. Stevenson of 0. A. C„ stated the Hon. John S. Martin. to the agricultural committee of the legislature recently. Dr. Stev- enson has found that a certain con- dition of pigs and sheep making them unfit for market has been caused by worms. This is an entirely new an- gle and an important discovery from the farmer's standpoint. "The condi- tions are general across the province," said Hon. Mr. Martin. "There have been large numbers of sheep and pigs that weren't fit for the market and the farmers didn't know what was the matter with them. Dr, Stevenson has found that these animals are filled. with worms. If not checked, this con- dition will go right through' the farm yards and affect the chickens and oth- ther poultry and animals. Tests and experiments are.being made to cure this condition of worms," Weekly Crop Report The most recent weekly crop re- port at hand concerns chiefly the nat- ter of live stock and the milk situa- tion. In sl3rant cattle on feed are re- ported to be fewer than usual. Duf- ferin rePorts r r 1 o.ts a great interest in the breeding of hogs with requests for good quality breeding stock. Seed oats of No. 1 grade are selling for $1.00 per bushel. Cows are in 'good condition in Dundas das County and at a recent sale grade Holsteins averag- ed around $100 per head. A plentiful supply of apples is indicated in Dur- ham with lowered prices for eggs. Essex reports' a surplus in the milk supply, which is becoming a prob- lem. This is the case also with Fron- tenac. In Glengary live stock is in poor condition due to scarcity of food and poor pasturage last fall. Pure- bred live stock is commanding good prices in Haldirand. Fall wheat is looking green and fresh in Huron and a good supply of., red clover is indi- cated in Lambton. A big demand has obtained for certified seed potatoes in Leeds.. genes, oTten or antiquaxea pattern, tow' trucks to attach to the waiting ASHFIELI) night goods expresses which will roar away to the north, south and west Mr. and firs. Will Kempton, who country, writes F.R.H. in the Star. In addition 30,000 tons of coal are recently lost his tarsi by fire, have In by these little-known un- moved into Lucknow to live and he derground lines en route for south- has taken over the Massey -Harris ern towns,.and before the first grey Implement agency from Mr, 'Marshall streaks of dawn, vans from the fish specials from Hull and Grimsby, with Gibson who has moved to his Tarin Scots beef from north of Aberdeen, near Zion. •are linked with wagons of vegetables Mr. and Mrs, Will Gardner, of Zion and vitamins for the east -end mar - spent last Sunday with MT. and Mrs. kets, Smithfield and Billingsgate, forming further ghost" trains which Jas. Craig at St. Augustine, stop at no stations, require no por- We are sorry to report the passing ters, no tickets, and about which of two very highly respected citizens there are no complaints --• unless p , they are latel of Ashfield, Mrs. James Baird, in her , 91st year; and Mr. John Kilpatrick, , in his 75th year. 'Mrs. Baird died on Hoses from Poe's Garden. XS NOW • AN M.S.E. Hiss MacGill Only Wonsan Who Xfas. Been C„ranted This Degree., Miss EisIe Gregor 1tfacc ill, of Vancouver, can now.write the letters M.S.E. after her name, besides the more' familiar B.A. and B.Se., for she graduated not long ago from the Uni- versity of Michigan in Ann Arbor, with the degree of Master of Seienee in Aeronautical Engineering, When Miss ,MacGill entered the graduate school . of :Michigan she' al- ready had the degree of Bachelor of Science from the University of Brit- ish Columbia and another degree in engineering' from the University Of Toronto. Toronto fellow graduates will re- call her as the only girl student at• the School of Practical Science and when she graduated is. engineering a specially small iron ring had to be made for her finger, as none of the regulation pattern were of any use in this emergency. Itwas Miss MacGili's intention to be an electrical engineer, but later, becoming air -minded, this young British Columbian turned • to aeronautics. Prof. Felix Pawlowski, who holds the chair in aeronautical engineering in the University of Michigan, says that during her course at Ann Arbor Miss MacGill displayed not only ad- mirable qualities of character but also "a rather unusual ability for en- gineering in general." Her work was of such high standing, and she was so generally appreciated by her pro- fessors, that in spite of the feet that her health broke down •a month be- fore the end of the scholastic year, thus interfering with some of the du- ties •assigned to her, "everybody, nevertheless, was satisfied that she should receive the degree." Miss MacGili is particularly inter- ested in design of aeroplanes, having. already had a certain amount of ex- perience in this direction which she acquired before going to Ann Arbor, and she is planning to continue this line of work with the aeronautical industries as soon as her health per- mits renewed activities. The most interesting fact in con- nection with this brilliant Canadian girl is that she is the, first woman on this continent to hold a degree in aeronautical engineering, and `"very likely," says Prof.' Pawlowski, "the gl4iy ime in the world at the present time," ' At:cording to my knowledge," the professor adds, "there are only two women with proper theoretical train- ing in Europe—one in England and the other in Poland—engaged in aero -dynamic research of rather ma- thematical character. These two wo- men, however, have no degre's in aeronautical engineering." • GHOST TRAINS. Pretext Is Carried by Underground Railway After Midnight. When the evening homeward rush begins to subside somewhat, and the straphangers are safely in suburbia between eight'and ten o'clock, from midnight into the earliest hours there is a clanking and snorting in the tun- nels below London's streets — the Ghost Trains are running. Little groups of belated wayfarers stand agape on the chill platforms of the stations as an old-time engine fills the tunnels with wreathing smoke and steam. Conventional, clattering goods trucks appear behind the fire -box glare, and glide with squeaks and groans past them. Where do these nocturnal freights go? From whence do they come? During the night hours the rail freight services are busiest. To and from the docks and City depots and warehouses; from New Cross to P,ad- dington., Feltham to St. Pancras, Hol- loway, and Kings Cross, tank en - Friday, March 7th. The funeral will ' In ;a little garden plot in Phila- deiphia one red rose .smiled up at be held to Greenhill Cemetery Mon- the sun and led the way for other clay afternoon, Mr. Kilpatrick died blooms to follow and revivfy the Thursday, 'the funeral will be held romance of the dwelling, in which Tuesday afternoon to Dauigannon one of America's greatest geniuses, Edgar Allan Poe, lived when it was Cemetery, We extend 'our sympathy known as "The Rose -Covered Cot - to the bereaved, tape' 100 years ago. Miss Ross' is assisting Mrs. D. K, Mrs, John Flunk, who now each- nearlyAlton at present. • pies the house, planted the rose bushes last summer, after she learn- lirs, Sam Morrison, east of Luck- ed the dwelling's old romantic name. now, spent a few days last week with When, at last a lovely brilliant red atits side a burst - her; parents, -Mr, and Mrs: 3). K. Al- rose •alapeaz'ed, and toil, ing bud, which gave promise of other blooms to follow, Helen, the nine- i horn -To Mt. and Mrs, Jim Little, year-old daughter, said "And we're 1 near Coui•ey's Corners, on Wedncs- going to keep it forever! We're go- 1 day, March 5th, a daughter. Congrat_ tag to put it in a case, so that when ulalions, • people mime to see Poe's house we , can show them the rose—the first llr. and Mrs. John Campbell,. 10th one since the others)" con., spent Stu:nifty with their cousins, Mr, Will and Miss Rya Campbell, 12 `Took the Wrong Case. tort„ A1Vi'st Wawaaiosh, A London father has :been corn- 1 Mr, and l:frs. Spence. erwite. spent plaining bitterly about ,the growing s' `instead f the 1d-fas•i- tr�clne eases .inset < c o v 1 \tr. and Mrs. Ii.obcrtson r°f Auburn, loved satchels. Apparently the nn- ` Miss Mary i'hillips, of Toronto, is lucky man had set out from home in ,wending a week with her sister, Mrs• 'the unoruing to attend an important 1 1. meeting in the city, and on opening. ' Tomas Ferguson, hisan arrival,discovered to' his ,casoo utter consternation,. a sr.loction of ;ehnol hooks and a pair of gytnlias-.1 Min shoes, instead ofhittown' ivapor- . tans papers. .Must Be Well -Drained 'The ideal soil for apples seems to Promising Outlook THIS PRJNC)3'S 1101 1113 11..".".,11..,,11,- "Yos House"" Is a .4 stet, OM-1N'ash. ionetl Souse- .duce ll)etestn Ostentation. APPr'opriateiy eltotgh EiYglan l's premier .mien •Uachelor lives in the most typically English kind of bachelor home, Officially described as "The York mouse in the Palace of Saint James, London," it is a quiet, old- fashioned house where dignity is ex' cellently combined with comfort. The prince of Wales detests osten- tati.on in any, way so It is not sur - Prising that his house is furnished with extreme simplicity. In the white hall there is merely a carved bench for visitors and a table on which they can deposit "their hats before being ushered Into the prince's presence. Most of his callers the prince re- ceives in the state reception room, where a fine portrait of the King in naval uniform hangs over the marble fireplace, but intimate friends are always taken direct to the prince's study. This is the room he uses most. It is plainly papered in Dream and the woodwork and furniture are dark oak. There are several capacious easy -chairs upholstered in brown leather and one wall is entirely cov- ered with bookshelves. The prince is an omnivorous reader, his taste rang- ing from detective fiction to hooka on industrial welfare and veterinary manuals Alas for the match -makers, there is only one portrait of a lady on the prince's carved desk and that the Queen in morning dress nursing Prin- cess Elizabeth.: Several old sporting prints from the prince's collection' hang on the walls and in an antique cabinet he has some valuable ship models. An electric kettle stands on the study hearth and nearby is a little cupboard containing a cup and sau- cer, a teapot and some China tea. Tea is the prince's favorite beverage. With toast and a little fruit, it con- stitutes his breakfast winter and summer alike, and he always insists on brewing it himself. Even when touring Africa, camped in the heart of the jungle, the prince still made his tea in the one battered tin jug which the party possessed. When working at home, he likes to be able to make himself "the eup that cheers" whenever he wishes without disturbing his servants, who, inci- dentally, a}}•'e a,)1, es -Servicemen, sev- eral partially disabled. Official gatherings at. York )douse are held in the green and gold state dining -room, but when the prince has a few bachelor friends to dinner, they have a simple meal in the prince's rose -walled private dining -room, sit- ting at a small round table and lis- tening to the wireless loud speaker, disguised as a Chinese vase on the sideboard, afterwards adjourning to the study fora gameof bridge. Biue and gray compose the restful color -scheme of the prince's bedroom and his oak bed is so plain that Prince George always jokingly de - el thati ares his brother bought t cheaply at a hospital clearance -sale. Cora, the prince's wee Cairn terrier, has a cushion at the foot of the bed. Greatly to the athletic prince's re- gret there is not sufficient space to make a gymnasium at York House so he has had a punch -ball and stretch- ers fitted up in his bathroom. To ob- tain the rest of the daily exercise, in which he is a firm believer, the prince generally dons shorts and an old sweater and motors across to Buck- ingham Palace where he runs several times round. the big lawn. Persistent Customs. Questions innumerable have been asked regarding the military guard always on duty at the Bank of ing- land. But there are very good rea- sons why the Bari, of .England should have a guard. it is the Government's bank, and th•a national gold reserves are kept in it. The most extraordinary "`guard duty" on record had no similar justi= fleation, yet it continued for about a century and a half. T]iis was the guard on Drury Lane Theatre, where soldiers went on duty nightly till. 1894. It had been placed to protect George II. from an anticipated riot one evening he was visiting the theatre, and continued till it was withdrawn, 150 years later, owing to a dispute about accommodation. Another estraordivary case was that of the sentries who were on duty in 0 Government ofttce saying "Keep to the right, please!•" for about ten years. They didn't 'know why they said it; but finally someone discover- ed that a wall had been painted there ten years before, and sentries had been posted to keep passers-by off the wet paint. British Poul'tr'y Census. It might seem a hopeless task to count tete chickens in Britain but a poultry census is taken every year, which gives us the number of fowls in holdings of over one acre. When the last census was taken this amounted to 39,9115,578. As hens kept in backyards, which are not in- cluded in this figure, are supposed to account for about a quarter of the total fowl population, this means that chickens outnumber human beings in Britain, the proportions being alt proximately four to three, Lanca- shire, which claims to give England the lead in most things, certainly dots lead in poultry. It has a larger poultry population than any other part of the Old Country, Mineral Frodustaon 'int N. 8. Increased mineral production tri Neva Scotia is seen in a report of the Department of Publle Works and Mines contrasting the years 1925 and 1929. It shows that a Intel of 2,288,321 tons of coal were raised from _the' collieries in 1025 while the 1029 output was 6,339,492. "prodlu,'- ;Son of steel ingots in 1925.weighed 130,283 tons as ecempared,wlth 50,- 248 tons in 1929. Brown Bananas, I It. Isn't fermentation that tnnlrce s I banana Snell brown sifter it, lasts 1)0t'11 es- *ogled, 1t ie oxidation. Delicious Salado quiality is au , inexpensive luxury. PP 'Fresh from the gardens' 764 FAVORITE HYMNS 1,,,,,, P MIau"u""un"uu, au„In11 tl,1111unl„”, ,1111111 I,, 11„i The Lord's my Shepherd, I'll not want. He makes'me down to lie In pastures green; He leadeth nue The quiet waters by, 2: Mysoul He cloth restore again; And nue to walk cloth make Within the paths of, righteousness, Even for His own name's sake. 8. Yea, though I walk in death's dark vale, , ' + Yet I will fear none ill;. For Thou are with me; and Thy rod - And staff me comfort still, 4. My table Thou hast furnished In presence of niy foes; My head Thou dost with oil anoint, And my cup overflows, 5 Goodness and mercy oa1leray life • Shall surely follow me: And in God's house for evermore My dwelling -place shall be. and other scriptural hymns into Eng- lish verse. So that when Queen Eliza- beth succeeded her unfortunate sister upon the English throne (it was not British then as now) and these exiles were enabled to return house, they brought ivith them the learning of continental Europe, aversions •d n also of Biblical songs and hymns which immediately became immensely pop•. alar.” In 1562 'The Complete Psalter' was published ublished contai iboth al containing Ps ms and. music, based upon a version made by T. Sternhold„groom of the robes to Henry VIII., which was altered and became the Scottish Psalter of 1564. This. Old Version was superseded in the next century by the New Version, but not before it had been amended by Rous and others, the version of 1648 containing our hymns taken lar- gely from a transposition by Whitt- inghame then of Geneva in 1556. Its first verse their read as follows: "My Shepherd is the living Lord, And He that doth me feed; How can I then lack anything Whereof 1 stand in meed!” The version printed herewith is not that of the New Version of Tate and Anton. Brady of 1796, that began:— "The Lord Himself, the mighty Lord, I; Vouchsafes to be my guide; 1 V cry early in its history English The shepherd by whose constant care Christianity desired to sing in Eng- My wants are all supplied. lish the hymns of the ancient Jewish Church collected in the hymnal real -1 Our version is that of Francis Rous 1y made up of five distinct boolti 'alluded to above, revised by the West - known as the "Psalms of David,' Irninster Assembly in 1646, further re - familiar to our Lord Jesus Christ and wised in 1650, and is the sweetest His disciples. Only fragments of the form ever given to David's verses in earliest attempts to transpose Psalms English according to current opinion. from the Hebrew into English verse in Scotland. There is, indeed, an art - have survived the passage of time, `less simpilieity about it which has an. The version of Bishop Aldhelrn of )irresistible appeal to every synipath Sherborne who died in 709 A.D. is etic heart. Of all Psalms and hymns it apparently the oldest extant in any- is by far the best known in Scotland. Children there learn it at their mo - thing like complete form. ether's knee. It is more often than not But all tl'mom, the ages past in the i Christian era, this love of the ancient the last thing .they hear as their soul Psalter' persister);`. Traces of the ;is passing at death in old. age. David tempts __a bring its Psalms into knew his tray to the heart -strings of such shape as English,speaking• should be innocent, the ignorant, the learn - be able to sing them, appear in .the Y g tact who are content to become as reigns of Henry II and Richard of 1 ' the Lion Heart. It was in agreement 'little children in order that they en- ter ilio the future Kingdom of their led the old and the oun —to all in with the desire of the English speak- ing part of the Church to - have the I Bible in their own language which Lord. A few of ' the almost nuinberless was noticeable in the days of the English translations of the. Shepherd Saxon Alfred and of the Venerable Psalm will be considered in following Bede, which has persisted to the pre- issues of these articles. The Well known tune Evans was sent day, when far more copies of composed by the Reverend W. H. the English Bible are printed e.aclt Haver„al, an English clergyman who live.) from 1793 to 1870 The well That re year than of any other book• ovetnent known to many of known ltymnwriter Francis Ridley us as the Reformation, which might Haveigal was his daughter. He was have become general to the benefit ; a well furnished musician and wrote Id all Christianity had not Martin Lu- several tone; and chants and also 1tlter precipitated the German refor- some hymns which are still found he ;oration by his impatience at the then ; laurelr,, the church hymnals, Italian C gave a great impetu 1 to the use of versified Psalms in the; church services, Printing had just become continue !and discovery of cheaper methods of In aking paper had made it possible to multiply copies of bibles and hymn books cheaply. Education in the art of reading became a rage and it may almost be said that modern education had its rise at that time, Even the i attempt of the unhappy Queen :Mary, wife of the bitterly bigoted Pliililr oe �III�1111M11�111„+11! 011115111M1lI III�lnIg1111m111B611i• Spain, to stem the tide of progress by iI— 'ploww . res _ persecution ministered, after a hash- � ion, to the spread of the practise of !_ _ ." Ail cC anions singing versions of the. Psalms in lfti- I t The most scholarly filen of letters' 0 Catalogue for same may be seen in England were compelled to fly to on request. :other countries to preserve their lives :' , IR Mrs. Wins Sneath ffi: I Telephone 142, Wingharn, Ont. i4111111q111111101110110X1111II1101 ISI 1 I 11 I 1111!11!! 0 Ends in 1 Minute .• ' "Ended burn, itch and pain of piles in 1 minute with 'Sootha-Salva',"write s L. T. Sears. "Bleeding, stopped. Piles soon vanished. Avoided operation." Get instant results today, Aft druggists. I ,and there, divorced from their usual avocations is gave u1 their time to the work of putting the 'Hebrew )'salter lie efe a n. l eite. isg Y A R•• i( 1' r t.._.:... Ii J GED pYCnuditrn�rr,ri& urn �'an-lar»i S t 130 8 �• SEED D CA .} .' `E Send for• your copy. Fully illustrated -- boner ii r l color proses —lists all your ole) favorites and ninny new varieties of flower and ,vegetnbin seeds, bulbs, roots, shrubs and gnrdc•n requisites, Your Garden. neods Steele, riggs* Seeds. Sold everywhere in,,Canada. TLA SEE "CANADA'S' GTT S z, 11 ,0 USE OR +,P"f'l' 'HAMILTON-VcMIPt~6 60401ittliON b'PM 1kkNG1lootl'( ogzWm3Gi%.Vauga Oe t,