HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-05-17, Page 4"
%Ingham Mance
Puolesbee;
inghara.,. Ontario
, Tleurethie Morning •
..G 1IHrubitsher
$11•Ifeeription rates; — Ono year,
ela months, eL00 in edvintele
*4-Veetising rates cal applicatloa-
„itrieertiseenente without flPe011ia db
reOtioes will be inserted. +lentil *forbid
and charged accordingly.
Changes fer ecietract advertiee-
Menta be in the office by neon, roll,
BUSINESS CARDS
onington ratiutuai Fire
tosuraxice Co.
Establisbed 1840 ,
Head Office, Guelph
Etats takenetm.ill cliesses of Mime.
&fleProperty cad thte Cash or Premium
„note system.
ABNER conENS, Agent,
Wingham
DUDLEY 1101,11ES
SOLIG11"OR, ETC.
Yietcry and Other Sonde Sought and
Sold.
Offiee—Mayor Block, Winghant
0,•-•
NANSTONE
BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR
Money to LOSU1..at LoWest Rates.
WINGHAM
DR. G. IL ROSS
•,Gradtinte Royai Coltege of Dentist
• Surgeons
Graduate Univeraity of Toronto
Faculty of Dentietey
OFFICE OVER H. E. ISARO'S STORE
M.B • C..M.
THE WINGHAM ADVAN011i
Address commeoloatIons V) Agronomist, 73 Adelaide St. West, 'remelts
SUMMER FEED FOR COWS.
Tiding the covrs over the dry
period of summer is a difficult tied
important matter for us dairymen,
Com vrhich freshen late in winter
and in the epriag produce well for a
short time and then fall of heavily
in the milk flow, due very largely to
the decline of pasture and the lack of
some early maturing succulent feed.
Oats and peas make an excellent
combination for summer feeding. I
have grown them heretofore for for-
age with excellent results. The crop
may be cut green and fed as a soiling
crop or matured and stered. I would
sow one and one-half bushels of oats
and one bushel of peas to the acre as
early in the spring as the soil can be
-made ready.
Where a large acreage of clover hay
is grown, some of it can be cut early
and used for feeding. I have done
this as early as the fifteenth of June.
Alfalfa can be used in the same man-
ner. Anieighbor has been feeding al-
falfa, as a soiling crop and like e it
very much for the purpose.
• Special attedlon pZid to !diseases of
,%iromen and Children, baying taken
• postgraduate work in Surgery. Sao-
tsriology and Scientific Medieine.
Office lo tee- Kerr Residence, hetet
the Queen's Hotel ..;:d the Baptist
Churele
2,11 business given ea:ireful attention.
PhOlike 54. P.O. I3ox 113
a•-•
Dr. Robt. C. R ond
M.FLO.S. (Eng).
(Lond).
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
CidishoWs old stand)
DR., R.. STEWAR
THE• CHILDREN'S
FIOUR
I have golden cipportunitiea to make life'
easy for all kind of dumb animals,
becituse they live where the Animate
live, Not all of the humane propa-
gande should be distributed in cities,
one can readily see. Anixetils used on
the farm often suffer when this could
be alleviated, were dusee some boy or
MY NEsT. girl or older person who would make
Up on a hilltop ever so bigb the effort to see that animals are
There's a grassy nest where 1 ove to given proper care and treatment.
best -filled kernels. This seed will ger- he,
minate quickly, sending forth strong, There 1 lieep very still,
hardy sheots. And watch until
By following his plan year after Alt kinds of wonders pass me by.
'
year, the same stride of oats will hie{
'Graduate Ar tinivereltir of Toronto'.
irteeraIty of Medicine; Lleentiate er. the
Ontario College Physicians and
Surgeons.
Mee Entra.n,ce:
OFFICE IN CHISHOLM BL-OCK
'JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE It
Instead of viewing your fate as un-
fortunate because of the fact that you
have to live in. the country or in a
village, you should be thankful 'filet
you were born so close to nature. You
crease in weight as well as in yield., There's a flutter of wings, a bird have opportunities to study wild life,
Since we adopted this plan, we raiset draws near; and to help conserve it, that many city
Freasli air and
Thursday, M
IS, 1923,
—or, ae 'the Report of the Ministry of Health of Great Britain
said; "a sanitary environment and sound nutrition ”—
,
are the great safeguards of Health.
Horne ,Educati
on .
from 25 to 30 per cent. more oats than He knows I'm a friend and he has no ^"The Child's FiretEchool is the Family" Froebel.
He -swings to and fro ized in various rural communities and Art Old Fashioned Quality-=-Respect--By Came A. Ritter
folks envy. • '
Humane clubs could well be organ- ,
we were able to raise before. There, fear.
is no waste in this method, as the light;
.
oats are sowed without cleellingt a And trills a sang that I love to hear. spread. A country store, church, or day " i full ' 1 ims a young girl too. Gran ma e
I old hens here and you ought to have' She seemed to enjoy It as much as
IBright as the sun and blue as place. Humane literature could e
•
oats are used for feed; whereas, if to, On a branch w
much helpful propaganda could be uMother had a hen -party yester-I, The young Nits used te come over
• - , ' 11 kinds
large percentage of the light kernels: . ..
schoolhouse could serve as a meeting '' g ee 'Y eXe a ' ' .
will not germinate, and will therefore the s'11. -y • bg of sweet sixteen'. "Mother lied seven! of fun, and invited them to meals.
in villages, or from the rural school.
Smut in oats will reduce -------------. t - can ear a deep hurriming,
be wasted. „-
Flutters a brilliant butterfly; distributed from small libraries found heard them cackle and seen them ea..0 I did."
a large extent. However, this is e.aslyAblebee's coming!
• Nature studies could be made by ice erealm" It was the same girt. who said of her
prevented. by the formalin treatment.: He crawls deep intO a flower near by. classes, whose pupils would not have Many people might call this a cute grandmother, "Grandma does not hear
I end that the amount of seed to sow' •to go far before finding something to up-to-date speech, but the mother of very well over the phone, in fact she
per acre varies greatly according tolHello, Mr. Squirrel, so gay and so bold,
study. this same girl complains, "Mary is not does not hear it ring *unless she is hi
around. In sow -1 Yen laugle although you pretend to This is on •
e way b7 which monotony respectful to me. She thinks I' ; the room with it but don't hesitate to
the condition of the e
• 1 Seo icall up, there are some persons she
tember. I don't see why she talks so can understand so she will answer if
Does not this sound better than.
Casually observing t'hese cases we "She's deaf as a post, what's the good
wonder how much of this is training ef her trying to understand anything?
No 'use your telephoning unless mother
1.s home, or I am."
. We wonder, yes, we wonder very
Much if the attitude of sons and
• • too, and I'll not be tfty-six until
about ray , possible."
ing grass or clover teed with oats, sc
is not safe to sow the oats too thick. Your face looks puffed,
We have raised our best crops by sower For your cheeks are stuffed
ing from 21A to 3 bushels of oats tel As full of nuts RS they can hold,
the acre. This leaves room for a good
seefor -the year's •
ding next hay crop. A crimson lizard I see
can be routed, and the good part about
it will be that you are helping to make
the world loyalier and the life of dumb
animals more comfortable.
Some day you may move away from
the country—though it is to be hoped
or rather lack of it. , We notice the
CSfl When grass or clover are not sown. in He basks the suu and he watches that you will not -nand what you have same attitude in the parents not in -
connection with the oats, 3 to 36me. learned about nature and all forms of frequently in speaking of, th, elder -t
For summer and early fall feeding, bushels tot the acre is a safe amount
I have been growing a small acreage' to sow oh -wen-prepared ground con -
of sweet corn for my- cows, It is taining plenty of fertility.
en farmers are aarloYed by oats
lodging, Most ger:erally it is supposed
that the land is too rieh. This is not
ready at. a time when pasture begins
to• decline ia cadality .54X14 aids : mate-
rially in keeping 'up the milk flow. •
produces a large tonnage. of fodder. I
and always the case, however; it is often
Sweet corn is highly palatable
because the soil lacks some essential
sow the corn as early as possible after element. The soil may lack potash,
the early sprbag crops are in, upon
good clover slid which has received a
covering of manure during the winter.
About twelve quarts of eeed per acre
are required.—Leo O. Reynolds. '
HOW I RAISE BETTER OATS.
From experience covering over
twenty years, I find that most inferior • Aphids on apple trees are quite
•oat crops are due to inferior seed. I easily controlled by the use of a
do not ines.n that farmers intentional- spray containing lime -sulphur and
ly sow inferior seed, but rather that nicotine applied just as the insects are
many farmers sow inferior seed with- hatching out in the.spring.
out being aware of the fact. There are two kinds of aphids corn -
1 find that the cost of improved seed' monly found on buds of apple trees in
is very low, considering the good red the spring, one Lamm.). as the rosy
suits that are sure to follow its use.• aphis and the other as the green apple
Nor does good seed necessarily mean] aphis. The feeding of these insects
high-priced seed. Good seed will make; results in dwarfed, rais-shapen _fruit
a rapid early grovrth, which is very', unfit for market and is frequently a
essential to a good- crop of oats; a•• serious loss to growers.
good crop is rarely seen from a field! Experiments have demanstrat.ed
that makes a slow growth ha the that thorough spraying with a mix -
spring. Just as much labor is re- I tore containing two and one-half gal-
quirecl to sow poor seed and harvest:ions of lime -sulphur, three-quarters of
a small crop as to sow first ,class seed' a pint of nicotine sulphate, and water
which gives strength to the stalk. If
fertilizer, containing 0 goodly amount
of potash, is applied, this trouble may
often be overcome. --L. Me D.
APPLE APHIDS EASILY CON-
TROLLED.
Dr. Margaret C. Calder
• General Practitioner
• Graduate University of Torontot
• Faculty of Medicine.
Ofaca—ilesephine St., two doors south
,ot Brunswick Bete.
Veleptionea--Offine 281, Residence 151
His bright little eyes• wild life will be of considerable -value. 1 relatiVes. Children are -.Often sie
•Perhaps he thinks. I am part of the To say the very least, it will prove. a lowed to be saucy to their .gran
pleasant, wholesome memory- parents or to their elders. -'. mothers haaanything ,to do with the
daughters-in-law to aging widowed
•
Show no surprise.
tree! I Decide that you will do something So coxnes to us that the atinos- "way young people speak' of "Grand -
A sea gull floats through the blue 01, now. . Do not wait until conditions responsible ,for his' respect , or .dis- ,,Old-fellonaren't wanted." You hear
the skY: • seem more promising: _ respect' for those older or inauthority.
He flaps his wings:with a :Wild,• shrill There• -is a great work -for you to do Sometimes it is not the words so mac?,
- sometimes it may be their own fault
it often. Perhaps they are not, but
• •
• •• along this line in your coMmunity phere in which •S. child is ..reaerefi is ma."
• cry.
just over the grasses.
A dragonflypasses,
And loceists snap their wings as they
fly.
Running along , with a jinnp and ,a
bound, el •
Comes Mr e Field' Mouse. 'Now what
has he found?
He looks so merry;
• In his mouth there's a berry!
Then he disappears in hirhole in the
grolual.
and harvest a good crop; hence thel to nmke 100 gallons at the time thatl
balance is all in favor of ,the better the tips of the leaves of the fruit buds
seed. I protrude from one-fourth to one-half
A good way to secure good seed:: inch will control the pests most
oats is to take a good variety af native, effectively.
oats and run it through the fanning,' Careful spraying from the ground
mill theee or four times, until only the and under the tree rather than from
largest and plumpest kernels remain." the top of the spray tank is regarded
We fan out abvt 40 per cent. of our( as an important. factor in the control
• oats, leaving only the strongest and of these pests -
HORSE
Horse stalls so arranged that a
heavy inch, rope, strete.hing across
aaer. „tin 1,uta-irixtri 4.'h i-tivrt.e stave.5 "UM
nec&esity bf halters. The aitachnaents
• for each rope are made in a black- weeks later; but if pullets are not well
STEOPeiTH PHYS C IA at
cause they are cheap, buy eggs for
So now do you see why I love to lie
ir. your community.
Approved Poultry Flocks.
With a view to improving the farm
•poultry in .the Province of Manitoba,
the Department of ,Agrieulture at Ote
tawa has Set about the establishing of
approved flocks of Barred Plymouth
Rocks. • These flocks are intendedto
provide the source of improved breed-
ing stock and hatching eggs for the
use of farmers. • This work is in
charge of the, Manitoba Poultry Pro-
moter of the Live Stock Branch, who
because years before theY allowed
as the tone in which the parent,spealcs
of an elderly- person that conyey,s dis-
respect.• •
There has always seemed to me to
be a natural bend between children
and very. elderly persone. The little
ones love. stories which the older ones
•can tell delightfully. know of a
case in which a' grandmother and her
.only granddaughter are chums. They
camped together for annonth when the
rest of the family did not care to go.
"Grandma had the time. of her life,"
explained the gini, "only we did eat
themselves to speaknareleeslrof other
elderly nersons forgetfil of -the law
of suggestion.- Let Uff he thankful for
the mothers who taught us that filled
•respect and consideration were their
due, that members of the seneration
elder than themselves were to be
treated with deference, loving care,
and gentle thoughtfulness for their
comfort, and that selfishness and dis-
respect for our seniors are neither
more uplifting nor eenohling to our
own characters than they are pleasant
enters into agreeraent with farmers such a lot, both of us, it kept her busy. to the elderly people.
wishing to tan% it up. Under the
In a grassy nest on the hilltop high1
I • '
And just keep stifle. in the hands of the promoter who sees The Granary COnverted Into
agreement the breeder places his flock
And wait until to it that only approved hens and • An Elevator.
Such wonderful "things come passing
cocks are kept for breeding purposes, The average farm granary • with
- and that only eggs from approved • le grain to whet the appetite.
•
—Ethel C. Brown, in Youth s .
biais eight feet or more in height, with who ,
'the fall for fattening, feed them heav-
ily on mash feed cdmposed of what
grain are a.vailable, corn being in
especial favor, and feed occasionally
by?
• '
tO be To Distinvish Pullets
are to be kept, and during the season
HOW A BIRD FLIES. piers four feet or more and the bins •
parentage a.nd up toea required stand -
Companion. ard are incubated. a store -away attic, is usually not
LaYing. records economic. A granary elevated on
. extended to the eaves doubles the
wiled by me -official
question: "How does a bird fly?" It requirements are to be observed for a elevator shaft with cups is a cone tinguishing pullets from young hens;
problem that the wisest in such mat- Proraoter, during this period ato six-leorse power gasoline engine, is writes a Northuinlierland county poul-
tars have made a study. • afterwards, will assist in securing a used for driving the 'belt to elevate try raiser. A. good way is that ad -
The most prominent fact about a mar.ket for the produce of -the flock the grain. Grain arriving at the ole- vised•by the Dominion Poultry Hus-
bandman, namely, to leg -band the pul-
bird, in which it differs from every and render such other assistance as vator can be scooped into the grain
, lets. each fall, using, year about, the
ther creature except the bat and in- will enable the breeder to keep his • •
the ck
and I -lens.
is :Hew many of us can answer the of the Department. These and other carrying contents at man cost An "I have ‘difficulty at times in dis-
seems simple enough, and yet it is a period of three years. The 1° ulbr
paratively cheaP equipment. A four what, is -the best plan to pursue?"
dump at a rapid rate.
.right leg and. the ibft leg. When the
Reloading grain from bins by gray -
pullets are being selected for keeping,
ity into the alleyvvay, in bags or other -
put a band on the right leg of each
wise, leaves only a few hundred bush -
pullet. In the next year put the band
els to be scooped out of the bottom.
tide left leg. You wili then. know
Reloading can " also be accomplished en
that the right -legged banded 'birds are
through the elevator's operation and
hens: If preferred, the leg -band may
' ' t k Th
its power of flying. For this flock up ton high state of quality and
purpose the bird's arm exds in only profit. The details' of the scheme are
one long, slender finger, instead of a published in Pamphlet No. 25 of the
full hand.• To this are attached the Departinent of Agriculture, which is
quills and small feathers on the upper: available from the Publications
side, which Inake np the wing. Branch of the Department at Ottawa.
breeding. purposes late in the season. Observe how light all this is; in the This paninhlet also ee-plains the ,,,.j -----;-°;
0.0
In
In a climate like that • be used only every othe-n year, and
chicks hatched before tbe 'middle of
of Canada, first place, the 'bones are hollow, then eipies and. requarements of the Recor
AU.* +11evrat:11. ‘-.3441-1. xi. amination of any grain elevator.° in
the distinguishing marks would be the
ny,
leer• s=ree,..ae aact ee,..e- feathers thentennee which. ,cer uficates of production are Your market to e ebasic
town will the
the shafts of the feathers are hollow, of Performance "A" for poultry
bY itleas for remodding a granary into a birds without and those with a hand.
tocat care they may be hatched several are made -of the most delicate file- granted for trapnesi:ed hens that lay farm elevator for
storage. A grain orrrh6ottegr-bsanlitstanarcee mthaadtec:nf baelrufnaus-Iteinirl-
ments interlocking and clinging to the required number of eggs ill a year tank and the elevator reduce the bags ed Around the birds leg without
steopathy, Electricity. All diseases
.1!
treateti.
Office adjoirengA residenc.e, Central
ruet,next Amglican Churcb (formerD Itaclarale id's). Phone 272.
1
smith shop and Must be reasonably developed before winter conies they
t th
shotild never be used for breeding. mi e fin An win ' •• The Live Stock --ar eL
Tut k necessary on the farm o e n
heavy and bolted firmly to the stall. one another with little grasping hooks
ring and bolted to the stall. The forms a hollow on its under side like' Top prices for steers were a shade -while bags are in a constant condition
permanent, trouble.
Lets hatched chicks are seldom worth mum. These fixtures are
One end of the rope is fastened to a
the trouble it costs to raise them.
an inverted saucer; when the Nsiug is lower in the week ending April 12, at of deterioration. , When Cal..ves Ca. be
other end has a ‘•‘.--75''' 11°°k t° drop Breeding stock C2.n. heat be bought forced down the upv,eirci pressure of Montreal and Toronto he ompared A roof over the end of the -granary
44" .21 C
into a ring when fastened. Arrange in the fall, but if the buying has been ten air, caught tinder the concaaity, with the same date last year, but at elevator used for the dump for un -
Slaughtered for Food.
N. E. Ont TVI tl
eing county-- e tat is
• d • - ti 1 f • t
that the ahl-lis 11-1g11 at tbe front left to spring then wait until the - hoist there I d
breeding season is over.
g pre
g I Possible, from the same source each This explains how the bird keeps' according to Dominion Live Stock the building a.t right angles to the Regulations adopted under the Meat
am. lifts the bird up, -much as you Winnipeg ere was no Change an a Cla rrialtes a goo marc or
end so horses cannot reach each', t h'ch
DR D
are 11 McINNES ether's heads. ' method of fas-'• _I It IS wise to ourself up between the parallel bars Calgary oral Edmonton they were 65
grain tank to stand when not in use. age a W 1 calves- may be slaugh-
tered?
& cents and 50 cents respectively, better, A four -foot alleyway running through
stick to the same variety and buy, if in a gymnasium.
.11 Venth. the horses bactin up
CREROPRA,CTOR and dcking at each other. Horses: year. In selecting a niale bird el
1'3°S° itself hi the air, but how does it sail Branch :reports. Calves showed no dump gives access to all the four bins.
Qualified Graduate that attempt to kick at another while, a bird that is strong in the poin'M *
and Canned Foods Act provide that no
9 H T to tirifl 1 f 't t animal under three weeks of age may
441"astEleata even far diseases 'sf e the le•ns are 'weak- If the' never hi this wa.y could get ahead, at Montreal •turil at Winnipeg, al- entaide stairway. All the windows of
ul' forward at steel tern& speed. e change at oron e were a e ower s economy space necessi a es an
be slaughtered for food.
passing behind soon learn. that the!! h
kind.s, specialize in dealtag witn roPe is there end is effective- Iderses^ practice of buying a new male bird, d the hardest question is still to be though ahead of the previous week,,i the granary are removed except in
responded tea enpoy the greater freedom of their t should be taken from the flock as soon : g, formed at the bones and InUS- both Calgary and Edmonton. Hog's Grain which may be wet and inclin-
Now the front edge of the but manifested an improvement at the alleyway. .
atdrett. nese attendant. Night Pena , are easily cared for and apparen
i-
/ each year s followed, the male bird answered.
°face 0e scat Be, linagb.sm, Ont.A bUdISS when not tied by the head. 'Met' a.s the breeding SeaSOU oven, and cle.s of the forear.m., is rigid and un- were steady at the previous week's ea to heat can bee changed to other
on house ee the tate eas walker). halter headstalls are hung up in
— case the cockerels disposed of, or separated yielding% -while the hinder margin is prices at Toronto and Montreal, but bins through the elevator • with corn-
Uours. 2 to 5.30 pan. EveriingstoI1t of need, but are rarely 'used. from the flock, before they become merely the soft, fieenble ends a the were weaker at the three Western, parabve eetse and given e a goo
i margin yielding the easier will rush and unchanged as regards the pre-
en aeration.—J. McBride.
'leathern so when the. wing is forced point.s. Lambs were up $1.00 in
.i Building up the poultry nook troubletome. ......___
1
Feeding Geese and Goslings. 1 ---"---------
3 p.m., and by appointment. Phone 150.!
1 down tbe air ander ite finding this the intakes, compared with last year
i
Baby Chicks and -Ducklings
Fccia STURVING stoci. chltdiS maim sure
Motor layors, Wham lasers are monor-makom.
All vorlotlea to choose from. Larlog gook coir.
Write for circular \
TORONTO HEIGHTS POULTRY
4 , suppLy co., Ltd.
2048 Dufferi n St. - To ro nto,
PoultrY Reoozd 13Pl•- in this bulletin AM "Poultiry Keeping
Weedless Fams.
wat here, and, in. so doing, will bend vireos -week. Sales numerically all
forEntientne. in TOW11 and ODUULt.),,,I Mr. F. O. El-
ep f tin f fro
?are Bred pnettry, enereee rale, by• gives sonm Invaluable advice 011 how to methads give such good results as a 11P the ends al the Pills, Pushing' thera alongetile line were grea
ter then last Geese, like duels, eequire a large
That the Record of Peeormance for: lard' Dominion Patinae Husbandman,
e a s ree we Len
out of the wa,y, 'which of year, excepting calve.s, which showed Proportion of roughage in:the feeding
the Poultry Dinkieu of the Dominion get pure breeds. He points out that'* -s7stenletic shert ration of crops, with' fartvard
grass orII course, tend.s to shove the bird aheadA a slight falling off. Up to date this ration. This can be best supplied in
1.4eirtient:sepeuniariratytecit 1:braownloblyy itbe e hest remits has not proved .t..nee clover at shore ittetTals, renlenen thetThis• proc-ess quickly repeated by tho, year, the cattle billed through have the winter by tbe use of clover haY
--v • n•- •ncroost. the old theory that 111011grel stock gave regular seeding down ta
fact
e,..cperizeents. The foundazon ateak,,,e,eatftiese seed comeesiener, in Ids, iiapping of the wings, results in the: been 34,103 against 20,517 for the and roots. In summer, if given the
that while in the first year onle-r 1,,A weed seedsen bird moving Inward in its f%ht. I seem period of 1922, hogs 56.150 range of a good pasture, a flock of
in the third year that is etr 122 , should be a aantirmaes apea,tian year Weeds are most ie evidence in dis4 ---- I against 18,76% and sheep 15,755 . geese require little else. unless extra
breeders with 4436 was made he says, should be puret but there uu-ue'''n en "Weeds nnt
RURAL OPPORTUNITIES. against 18,559. ' rapid growth is desired. According to
breeders. evith 11:579 hirda were repre- after year. Only telrds of the bese t tricts where the preelection of ceikal:
graine predenneaen., end where the Boys and girls, as well as adults,s Dominion Exnerimentel Farm bulletin
keeper Ncto does no trap_nostzg to rail..., ,criced. TForough eith.er 010000 0170.0 or in the cotunry, p aiming • res e • •
they should be placed where they will -
°Ss birds. in 191'14:2 the number _ nation with a eesnententic rotation of,
sliould
sestematic alternation of crops is not a° a n te coni- No. 91, o begs regiate warmth and
united. in Ontario, *nl Iskt.4 the breed: t7Pe snd strongest constitution
IS matting entry numbered 26 with be bred. It. ;is edvisable for a poultry
- w re fortu a enoneh to five in Beare we know it we will be co g s '
' about tot weather• t the fir -t 'On the necoed day
a breeders represetted was 40 with Purchase cockerel each Year einem a
6,065 'birder including 2,4te! negberns,' goad layireg strain and use him rather
11,147 Plymouth Rockt, and 1,450 We- than ene his ovm breeding. in bnY-
1:trttiottes,_ British cotnnada came sate isg ettedierels b. ie vise to get there, if
cad with 125 toreeders end 1,630 Leg- Possible, frent the same breeder es
. ,
rns, .66,1 plynnonth Boom an -my_ the orneipaa stems,. came froni.
dottes and 1,33. Rhode Ieiand Reds. Ono way to obtain pure-bred stock
erops, combined with tbe reaintezmuce
of as many sheep as Can be kept to
eneentage, iS certein and profitable
means el keeping werds under control.
But enperior to ell suppre.ssion meth-
ods is precaution in the sowing of
clean seed—that in ter.ed then, ba.s be,en
elite was third with 13 etersbreand is to buy eggs, breeding sterk. or day-
mymonok, potent ege Rude Is_ old chicks. Another way is be buy Perfe'edY Puldfild poesible and
and Rods, and 315 Legholue. Alberta pure-lered reales and grade Zip the whith eirates o eiern lend. in many
t:elide a big jerap in 1921.22 with 16. Sark nireadY,nn the Plant- 'Ilse list-t''r .„.naisiee8esl,goirre'61-eeeriesel.nt selfbebfeauent-teleal"
and
hroeders 662 birds. birds. tus. Way is reeommeoded irecrense the.
plyrnouth Boots, gee veyandottes 110 egg yield, but is not, edvieed for the seeds*
Legborts tgrid tither breeds, sgsbtst into a pure urea.. , In flees baekward spring., doing the
Bbndo mead ett,ds and 60 eaAt of purpose of tibantiveg a nemeried Reek':
- right 'hag at Fete sight trtat
ono, ioreedor with eg wyandotees irk trg5 for hatching should be obtain-
ed from herder &cock knowe to be tet,oti eDlul!s"
:1•910-20. t, wintee !eller% end esneorrnieg to the Tbe farraven eeet:se is going to de-
Woirk(kat 18 itot sts1ted is not general breed tellte. The tearer hotte pend upon the hasineee be gets. If he
t II, 503 the eggs can he ratcheted, other waits for the tenser to leak him ere
things heirtg equal, the batten et or his neighltents to tte*.l everebedy
tas ilie ebould be rentembered in exclevegneg rattelf his Pods, he is exPerting koli
'sttUI Y OttI nttd eggt with neigbleors that breeding meek el hutenn natines, rind it will he r
0i Ibeitt jP1MI l0 eggs ASIA WOtth nmee than xv,rkot n !nog time heroine hie ease: Win ret 't the
egge.
Neeme -advises! lir- Mord, be., trl Irfl°114"ble 1.°1111/1** Lr5
0 .. .
tibin
.1>
18
have free acte se to a plot' of tender
• grass,. or sbouni be stipplied witn
the sucealerit ei•eea feed they will eat:,
together with ninsli fed three times a
: day. If they are to be marketed as
green geese it ie nclidsable to feed
mash heavily- itersa the start. If they
are to be kept as stock, use more herd
giallo and %el -mil the goslings are
etrong enough, kt them have the freeo
dom of rence, on the pasture lands,'
era/ they will re-lei:ire only a light feed
of mesh in the 'teeming and grain at
• -111gFhot.
i- lattenite tineklings and go:a
lings, feed a mesh moietened to a
crinnbis• state. eonsieting of 1 part,
bran, 2 parts elioets, 3 Parte corn Chop,/
10 per tent. toeF, :veep. about 5 per
rent. wind, rttleglee the green food
to ahout the quenlity previously
fed. Girt rieety et water at feeding,
tinie. When reese have been, oe peer;
tare aU eame,ter and are. peened
ill
1)1
itteri,,ritritIF
ntnrketnd
a lag or,io
ER.
eitimie'dle in the spring, w :fete of
ter nave:s tnditiotts0 Ca:iodine
‘feis
4NtteMe"1,40
MetUc
Never crack orf1til off
Send for our Free Booklet "6-,
The Metallic Roofing Co„
Ontited 401
1194 King St.: W„ Toronto
rammaimaamie,.RIWZIMS1
-gee
t:10 'book 1 You oromot talrl to
• tolttiout tr. It NAM vait• =Oil= 1 It •
04e0 154m.4.11 mu, woo loo Muottmla
of &Maw.
54 trettuo on tko homo"...lo
yOnIt tat tliO 44511)4440. 144 SoCIO arteivieVe,
tom SS4O11 Alma lam-Ita clhogwo
• ••••1)5* to moomgto thom-Ntkotto Au 11)011)tlsoto.esolth 611 brooktliv..-4Mow
''• Okootom tom loo-otta rowl 144 rua
bootmon. romoilloO.,
AA: ;mut Amottioll Mr noon* or'k 105441105
I aouloutnletvwritd‘litearut-
Dr. De J. ICENDALL co,*
notishurtirmi, U.S A
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