HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1924-10-10, Page 79
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at hertWiif ftigittY‘
g,414,4114 ti,n4
two towlolai,im
hundreds of daelnen
Yorkshire -hogs, a
, sheep, and faalh
er cultivation to
oats and other
, ,
complete' an
so that the first
e last imprqssion
al buildings 4W the
village, is midis-
the land,. some
of its beauty
he began
Ole charm of farm-
to explore
of scientific age
itself, he added to
and began the
he possesses to -day.
better than
of the farm
en which
beautiful pedigreed
described in the
The stable, ce-
with continu-
sides. There
the ceiling. The
and scrubbed out
as the cows go
• Whil this cleaning
vacuum pipes, to
brushes are attach-
down on the
open, so that any
-stable cleaning, is
tubes.
to the dairy
•a doctor once a
of routine, and are
ill or subject to
their hands be-
milking, but wash
handling each cow,
to the next. These
discipline in the
cow, on being
from the dustless
pails across to the
corn.pletely
The small room
is carried and
enamel tub that
to the separator, is
partition, from
where only one
to go. He attend s
the chilling machine
The pipes by -which
from the first
room, are
ara!hatre taken down
in the sterilizing
every other sin-
touches the milk,
which the men
the great separator
machine is like a
dairy. It contains
the utensils, and
nickel bars, while
the chamber for
of minutes. A
the time given to
lake on the farm
of ice are cut each
storage vaults of
freezing point al-
-"too thick to
-is shipped.
fed to the hogs,
Milk -fed ducks
Aida. for scores
milk shipped means
ducks!
vast flocks of white
shipped. But the
Aida are consumed
used in the chicken
the attendants can
and the number
it. At the end
"boarders" meet a
the layers are
over the win-
and to breed more
scrubbed out once
visitors will believe
and the separate
and the vacuum
refuse to believe
the hog pens each
we do The hogs
the runs, and the
the pens, they are
out -so construct-
animals' quarters,
flushing, even
-scrubbed with
Then new straw
hogs, also, hive
which to lie."
mikes, chutes read
m,achines where the
off the stables
regarded as the
cleanliness and or-
Everything that
even sweeping. is
The carrying of
and pens is
on overhead trol-
is /raddled in the
Besides saving la-
its own water sup-
of gravel and sand
beyond the farm,
is collected and
farm by males of
buildings, there
Where 'meetings
these -who home
i*, Petty employees
one -of the reel-
house- that is be-
hence-
°Went, ,bOilding in
me, Mein* hag
fences and
qUaint beau-
kne.‘.. *iti litittmiri..
4e- ,,
.'
OtadnatO . On aide . Ve '7
orkp:oge,:golivozW. 0: Togo ,',, 4
dilienaea 91 d9Meetin OgreelPtitxtglteltr
ber., eet ;Maatc, 34gcl,cse... pviruales.
- 00,'Mamit'0;140.tcS Day, or night
t OtsmAr:a#Stidid,tw. ' 0 ee..ort
tOilennoll, opposite Town
; .Phone thil '
_
-
• LEGAL'
/ •
thone No. 91.
JOHN J. HUGGARD
Barrister, Solicitor,
, Notary Public, Etc.
Beattie Bloch - - Seaforth, Ont.
.. •
R. S. HAYS
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Solicitor for the
Dominion Bank. Office in rear of the
Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
loan.
/
. BEST & BEST
Banisters, Solicitors, Conveyan-
cers and Notaries Public, Etc. Office
in the Edge Building, opposite The
Expositor Office.
PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, Etc. Money to lend In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
.all domestic animals by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a specialty. Office opposite
Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
ceive prompt attention. Night calls
received at the office.
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. „,....
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at-
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich Street, one
door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea -
forth.
•
MEDICAL -
DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY
Bayfield.
Graduate Dublin University, Ire-
land. Late Extern Assistant Master
Rotunda Hospital for Women and
Children, Dublin. Office at residence
lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons.
Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.;
Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m. 2866-26
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence Goderich Street,
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth.
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur-
geOns of Ontario.
DR. H. HUGH ROSS
Graduate of University of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine, member of Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate courses in
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; - University Hospital, Lon-
don, England, Office -Back of Do-
minion Bank, Sehforth. Phone No. 5.
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria Street; Seaforth.
AUCTIONEERS
OSCAR W. REED
Licensed auctioneer for the Coun-
ties of Perth and Huron. Graduate
of Jones' School of Auctioneering.
Chicago. Charges moderate, and sat-
isfaction guaranteed. Write or wire
Oscar W. Reed, Staffa, Out. PhOzie
1112. 2965302
to
THOMAS BROWN
Lleensed auctioneer for the cosntie,s
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence
arrangements for sale dates can be
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth,
or The Expositor Office Charges mod-
erate, and satisfaction guaranteed.
OSCAR KLOPP
Hoffer Graduate Carey Jones' Na-
tional School of Auctioneering, Chi -
eIgo. Special course taken in Pure
ed Live !Stock, Real Estate, Mer-
e andise and Farm Sash. Rates In
keening with pre -trailing market. Sat-
lefaetlon assured. Write or wire,
Omar Klopp, Deride, Ont. Phone
16-98. ' 2862-52
, '
— e
R. T. LUK a '
Licensed auctioneer for the County
Huron, Sales attended to in gdi
Lrarts of tbe county. Seven eletkin' eXe
eienee in Matdinba and Saidtatehe-
' n. Tetrai'reelbeeitible: Phone No,
• 3 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0., R.
. Noe 1. Orders left at The Innen
tor 0 cepSeafortb, promptly
o„,pntrputelpt
: P
-0,t,t.0#4,. 0, J #0.
day 944• lward atle
eines •addreQn WW1' 0.111.5
i'44130;
Newel. aettea.beett
Nev -it r
4ndl che. lietten .004
it is the very -best butter that we
,
an ma,lte that must be packed for
winteruse.
Butter undergoes• changes in the
keeping, and two things necessary ter
good results when keeping butter for
winter use are best quality of butter
and low terhperaturee fel*
Use Clean, Sweet Flavored Gemmel.
Use cream that has a 'Clean, sweet
flavor. Churn it at a temperature
low enough • to bring the butter in
nice, firrn grannies in from 20 to 80
minutes.
If by any chance the butter comes
soft, be very careful to get rid of
the buttermilk. It will be necessary
In a case of this kind to use an extra
wash water.
Salt the butter in the usual way
and work it thoroughly. Should the
butter soften during the process of
working, put -it away in a cool place
to become firmer before continuing
the working.
As butter
form, crocks
winter use.
Coat the Boxes Inside With Paralifine.
The boxes have a coating of paraf-
fine on the inside, and it is necessary
to line them with heavy parchment
paper.
While many people have a 56 -lb.
box filled for winter, in some cases
it would be much better to have it
put in two 28 -lb. boxes.
The crocks should be in good con-
dition, free from cracks' or breaks in
the glazing.
When packing the butter, be sure
to Pack solidly. See that there are
no openings in the sides, and that the
corners are well filled.
If there is 8 or 10 lbs. of butter
in a churning, do not put the whole
lump into the crock and then try to
pack it down. Rather put it in in
pieces, Making sure that each piece
Is solidly packed.
Finish the Package Off Neatly.
Finish the top off evenly, and
cover with parchment paper. A thin
layer of salt paste may be put over
this before fastening down the lid.
With crocks it will be necessary to
tbe clean wrapping paper over the
top after the lid has been put on.
All butter should be stored in .a
clean, dark place where the air is
pure and the temperature is low and
even.—Miss Belle Millar, 0. A. 0.
Guelph.
keeps best, in a solid
or boxes are used for
,
it-5:::01Fr!Y
:14 .
11:
mis lot
-040:Vfori. 414,-
11134 MAT yaliZes, ttsgi 4ose to
'thaeOSI04-,04.,Vp„..th.! ' ,liegrankei*0
combs' 04144 te the vnetnaln boss
4ernha the cow dawla ,thorouply.
When the dry cleaning is done, she
is- hathed before willdng. •
Then the milking machine is attach.
ed to her and she is milked. The pail
of weighed. On a chart fram-
ed to the wall the milkman enters up
the exact weight of milk opposite the
cow's number. •
Milking and hand -stripping done,
she is led out, vvith her hundred sis-
ters, into a Anne that leads beneath
the towering elms to a far, sweet
pasture, where she roams at will un-
til mid-afternoon, when she is led
back to the white and beautiful stable
with its fresh straw bed laid on the
cork floor, for the evening milking
and good -night.
Such is a day in the life of a cow
at Don Alda, the great farm of Mr.
D. A. Dunlap, four miles up the Don
Mills road from Broadview and Dan-
forth avenues.
Mr. Dunlap who is viceapresident
and treasurer of Hollinger, one of the
world's richest gold mines, has de-
veloped a farm on the outskirts of
Toronto which is, in the opinion of
visitors from all parts of America,
not out -rivaled in the world.
Don Aida is the meeting place be-
tween the oldest science, agriculture,
and the very latest developinents of
physical, mechanical and medical
science.
Prize cattle are given every oppor-
tunity to do the utmost cattle can do.
Prize hogs, prize sheep, chickens,
ducks, are set down amidst the ideal
surroundings which farmers have vis-
ioned for a thousand years, and the
results noted and analyzed. In fields
drained, fertilized and tended to the
last degree of scientific perfection,
prize grades of wheat and grain and
roots are planted to function to their
utternrost.
Passers-by are often led to wonder
what these great farms, with which
successful business men of Toronto
are surrounding the city, are good
for. Are they mere expensive play-
things? Pretentious retreats?
Don Alda, seven hundred and fifty
acres of magnificent land through
which the Don river meanders, is per-
forming for the great science and in-
dustry of agriculture what the en-
dowed laboratories of universities and
of giant industries are doing for the
younger sciences. No agricultural
college has a sufficient command over
public funds to give practical effect
to the theories and ideal conditions
of farming which it really requires to
keep practice abreast of thought. Don
Alda, beautiful and impressive even
from afar, has set out where agri-
cultural science leaves off, and is car-
rying the theory of what even the
manufacturers still admit is the basic
industry to practical ends.
As you drive in off the Don Mills
road, a mile past Donlands, Mr. R. J.
Fleming's vast acreage, you drop
smartly down a hill into a glen of
great elms, and suddenly find your-
self in the midst of what seems to
be a village, an old world, a sort of
Netherlands village. A mighty barn
in the centre of the village, surround-
ed by stables, outbuildings and offices
are all topped by brown cottage roofs
and are of stucco construction. A
dam across the Don spreads the river
into a little lake, beside which the
village stands. Up the steep road
dwelling houses climb and children
play on the lawns.
But it is not a village. It is simp-
ly the farm buildings of Don Aida.
There is the giant barn, the cow
stables with their white walls and
windows on every side, the trim office
building where all the minute records
of the farm and of each cow, chicken
and field are kept; beyond them, a
caged run where a mighty Holstein
bull stamps truculently up and down.
chicken houses where two thousand
five hundred pure white chickens
flutter and run, hog pens that gleam
like stables where race horses are
kept by horse lovers, a duck house,
where hundreds of white Pekin ducks
parade absurdly back and forth. . .
Not a straw lies on the cinder
courts, not an implement left stand-
ing about, not a stain or a smear in
all this spotless village of white and
brown and creamy stucco.
Across the little lake, where the
white ducks sail along, up over wide
green lawns, the chimneys and tiled
roof of the Dunlap country house
show. And up the road out of the
river valley stand the coach house
and horse stables where the prize
Clydes, a few hunters And hackneys
and the work horses live in equality
together.
Beyond, hundreds of acres of
sweeping, fencesless fields shorn of
their crops.
Don Aldah first impression to the
visitor is one of cleanliness and or-
der. It is too trim, too spotless to be
a farm. You imagine it is a farm
only by courtesy -that is, if you drop
in in mid-afternoon, when the cows
are out to pasture, and there is no
threshing, and all the other beasts
are asleep.
Cleanliness and order are not inci-
dents of the scene, They are the
first facts of the scene. The first
impression is the main impression,
and the last impression.
Dr. Rolph M. Jenidns, manager of
Don Aida fermi formerly with the
Toronto department of health for
many years, maps:.
"We are discovering what cleanit-
flees will do in agriculture. Cleenall-
_WOW in eve thing front wheat to
WO- ,r , 1114. he a Sose.' W ' ecreting, that clean..
117100 will hipratu 'breed and increase
etrEPSt. ' We 'are eranlitt Oh *talkie
tfolvand siinliolat. They tire' otiO
Blade Blight of Oats.
This disease occasionally causes
heavy losses in the oat crops of East-
ern Canada and Eastern and Central
States of America. It attacks also
barley, wheat and bluegrass to a
limited extent. So says Prof. Dan
Jones, Ontario Agricultural College.
It is most noticed in the spring
and early summer when it causes the
young plants to turn yellow, brown
and red, withering them up. In the
latter part of the season it induces
blast in the heads. '
Its spread and the amount of
damage it causes is largely dependent
on weather conditions. The seasons
when much rain, cloudiness and
muggy weather 'prevail are the sea-
sons most favorable for its develop-
ment.
Primary infection is chiefly
through the stomato resulting from
sPattering of the leaves by the rain
with the organisms from the soil.
Two species of bacteria working
together are considered necessary to
eause the disease. They are found
in the soiL They do not, however,
affect the plant through the root.
Little can be done to prevent or
control this disease except to select
'and breed resistant varieties.
Honesty Pays.
The man who aspires to the accom-
plishment of things worth while in
the realm of pedigreed live stock,
must realize that his Integrity as a
breeder will be one of his greatest
assets, and he must guard it, as he
would his Stocks, from foul admix-
tures. As his herds and docks in -
mese and his business expands, he
must make certain that, at the same
time, there grows up a reputation for
absolute honeeny and fair dealing.
Only by the help at these eseentiais
can he expect his business to endure
and yieldei to him eatisfaction and
profits.
A Bong of Good Feed.
A handful of grain while on pasture
May seem like a terrible waste,
But theAcow will return, it all later
If given of grain a slight taste.
The stomach of a young Calf is very
delicate, and changes in feeding Must
be made slowly. The calf -will begin
te eat grain and hay when it is about
fair weeks of • age., Shelled corn is
about the best grain feed, as it takes
the place of cream in the milk.
Poorly -fitting collars -are sure to
cause sore shoulders. It la a good
practice to bathe the shoulders noon
and nista with cold water. This
avoids the chance of blood congestion
and is at once soothing and pleasant
to the animals.
J S r WATSON
Agent fir Sin Sewing
Onehinee, and
4urnsee Agent
ipluised .of *beano:se; With ve
!7'
Ibid .w
. ,.
, 1:
'Jilt
ed ,
4.
an P a a siire.nt
Ethese.,,
line A ,
9
tild,grm,-
WOO IS the
Overnser,,,-sive
twenty Sho„
hundredchift
Cliundied and
fleet of 1.4-
hundred acres
wheat, bay,
ems are ha,
thorough efficiency
impression
around these
little Netherlands
turbed.
Mr. Dunlap
five years
first of all.
to farm it
mg, and the
into the moderneld
riculture presenting
his holding
great plant
The dairy
any other
the theory
the farm is
The care
Guernsey cows
opening paragraphs.
ment floored,
ous windows
are ventilators
stable is
once a day,
Out to the
is going on,
which the cleaning
ed during
cattle, are
dust raised
sucked up
All the
are examined
week as a
laid off whenever
colds.
They not
fore going
their hands
before proceeding
are matters
staff.
milk,
TheThtnenatigiltorangy-eskinm
weighed, is
stable in covered
dairy.
The dairy
of white glazed
into which
poured into
is pumped
shut off, by
the main dairy
man is permitted
to the separator,
and the churn.
the milk
room' to the
made in sections,
each night
machine along
gle utensil
from the
milk the cows,
of bright nickel.
This sterilizing
vault in the
racks to receive
is locked tight
the live steam.fills
the required
time,clock
the sterilizing.
From the
hundreds of
winter, and
Don Alda
ways.
Some of
pour," says
The skim
chickens and
are a reality
of cows and
something
Eggs from
Leghorns are
field crops
on the farm.
Trap nests
houses, so
record each
of the hen
of the year
chicken's fate,
kept in heated
ter to lay
layers,
The hog
a day.
"Many of
about the cork
drinking fountains
cleaning, but
that we scrub
day. Nevertheless,
are put out
hose is turned
thoroughly
ed, as are
te allow for
in the feed
brushes and
beds are laid.
the cork ePaces
Prom the
to the chopping
feed is cut
and pens.
greatest enemy
der around
contrillites
dente away
feed about
done pay buckets
leys, as merchandise
big warehouses.
bor, it is cleaner.
Don Aida
ply, in filter
on the high
where spring
distributed
One.
. In the central
lire oottneranitl,
MVO be lield—(besfdee
trent 'mit:side
dwell on the
&wee b
lier4, to lee
Inerlt -0.6nat7,
restored -with
othemisle,
,,frel...Aimottfeme.,
iwp!'i-thla
,
3,n'
P
tg
4
'
Oe
the
,.
eq,,with
and
ce
,
bought
ago, because
Toemployit,
Then
opportunity
of land
which
demonstrates
department
of cleanliness
now functioning.
of the
Was
is lighted
on, three
ie
flushed
as soon
fields.
the
the rubbing
all left,
in the
into the
men attached
by'
matter
only wash
at the'
after
of rigid
of each
carried
is constructed
tile.
the milk
a white
direct
a glass
room,
is carried
separating
and put
with
which
pails into
to
white
all
by
number
records
little
tons
the cold
are at
the cream
Dr. Jenkins
milk is
ducks.
at Don
no
for the
the
also
of Don
are
that
egg laid,
that laid
the
and
houses
again
pens are
our
floors
they
out
into
into
flushed
all oar
coniplete
troughs
dried.
The
on
root
up, in rooms
Dust is
of
a farm.
to dust,
with.
the stables
run
has
bade
hills
water
over the
farm
hall,
to
favia,
a log.
the
vihiabt
old-fashioned
tie Its ontg1ien1
lam,
,
r iu.i
'c't
,
n
ni-
4 e 0,
cmi
et V
,
ame*
is i .,
tit! ,
;pleas , lir 0
,. unireitiect sc, 0
at hertWiif ftigittY‘
g,414,4114 ti,n4
two towlolai,im
hundreds of daelnen
Yorkshire -hogs, a
, sheep, and faalh
er cultivation to
oats and other
, ,
complete' an
so that the first
e last imprqssion
al buildings 4W the
village, is midis-
the land,. some
of its beauty
he began
Ole charm of farm-
to explore
of scientific age
itself, he added to
and began the
he possesses to -day.
better than
of the farm
en which
beautiful pedigreed
described in the
The stable, ce-
with continu-
sides. There
the ceiling. The
and scrubbed out
as the cows go
• Whil this cleaning
vacuum pipes, to
brushes are attach-
down on the
open, so that any
-stable cleaning, is
tubes.
to the dairy
•a doctor once a
of routine, and are
ill or subject to
their hands be-
milking, but wash
handling each cow,
to the next. These
discipline in the
cow, on being
from the dustless
pails across to the
corn.pletely
The small room
is carried and
enamel tub that
to the separator, is
partition, from
where only one
to go. He attend s
the chilling machine
The pipes by -which
from the first
room, are
ara!hatre taken down
in the sterilizing
every other sin-
touches the milk,
which the men
the great separator
machine is like a
dairy. It contains
the utensils, and
nickel bars, while
the chamber for
of minutes. A
the time given to
lake on the farm
of ice are cut each
storage vaults of
freezing point al-
-"too thick to
-is shipped.
fed to the hogs,
Milk -fed ducks
Aida. for scores
milk shipped means
ducks!
vast flocks of white
shipped. But the
Aida are consumed
used in the chicken
the attendants can
and the number
it. At the end
"boarders" meet a
the layers are
over the win-
and to breed more
scrubbed out once
visitors will believe
and the separate
and the vacuum
refuse to believe
the hog pens each
we do The hogs
the runs, and the
the pens, they are
out -so construct-
animals' quarters,
flushing, even
-scrubbed with
Then new straw
hogs, also, hive
which to lie."
mikes, chutes read
m,achines where the
off the stables
regarded as the
cleanliness and or-
Everything that
even sweeping. is
The carrying of
and pens is
on overhead trol-
is /raddled in the
Besides saving la-
its own water sup-
of gravel and sand
beyond the farm,
is collected and
farm by males of
buildings, there
Where 'meetings
these -who home
i*, Petty employees
one -of the reel-
house- that is be-
hence-
°Went, ,bOilding in
me, Mein* hag
fences and
qUaint beau-
kne.‘.. *iti litittmiri..
t
,
cattle
'Wpm
course,
the over
of demenetrating
the nevt
the raison
REVIVAL
STRANGE
It
gnaintid-involved,
era of
le, beneath
net have
four
build,'
three
ea Truro,
the
Westminster,
tkird
was
once
In
said
whether
ent of
that
keep
down.
the taxpayer,
had replaced
no church
cathedral
tunes,
dated
more
Gothie,
Cathedrals
except
the central
ster at
by fire.
borough
and
kin had
At St.
had
rubble,
be almost
tures.
Lincoln,
sought
the noble
his name,
In
to find
feudal
to contribute.
stand,
sult
site alone
to the
expenditure
been
000.
pletion
ral is
costly
price
ties,
is as
guns
The
conspicuous
flee.
Truro
one city
is agricultural
wealth
is a
by an
santly
the
wall
choir,
a crypt
landmark
ally
ward
Similarly
only
Church
a vast
Byzantine
hia.
To
lenge
mends
And
highbrow's,
huts
crescences
wise
the
which
laid
men
jewels
gold
Tennyson,
I quote
grapes
Of
rate
out disrespect,
"growed."
product
many
many
cathedrals,
each
is the
of Pearson.
and
You
never
any
three
by faith.
so Pearson
bring
come
it.
of piety.
upward
very
St. Louis
St. Francis
minster
-because
the
century
street.
Liverpool
tie than
Westminster.
Liverpool
rieoned
entrenched
of a
feint.
l.
',
.
'
t?0‘,
It
.
:6 ' ,
shiw
,AI w,,„,r40
the prAgne
Age' farmer
great
4:11'Otre
,
III1I`".it
,
,
t
e
sm
the
' •
step
' "
..
..
Oh .
ii r41
°
cl`•ent
,r!p *
1.. •
P , ,
e
gret,faini, ..
,
-
A a
ut timaiiarlo . 91nt,
1.1 _ t o
, 44, ?' of
—for 'the Arzso
the a4Vaete91 !ai; I*
in agriculture,la•
Of Eon Altla,
•
c• a d V hnil for the world
''' wt Ji . tiii 4' 'w b. Iii', heme,
' r t' ' le tellaaneer it*
e ,
0 nenet 'eorpeti
te ions y t (lee'
, . ,
/, /iijsIfl.I1, a nine,
rA " 4 k ' 3 •
1 9
;1 1 i.. lits 'Iaui
ii _
• b ,-Zaftill
oil j., '
at't
061,
„
ai
,',41
q ,
, *it
•
./.
A
,riz
'1.Y.:
e
e
te'
.
.r •
* aterl
tr
, ,,
d add
'1
r,
e
,,
prov&dcs.
?
..
a, ...
t * .i
i • /
n .
t -
nee
,
,t, •
e
-
_
t I,
'0
pnnn4nmr,
. ,
0
, • •
•
Repeated experimentsgo,
the Voultry•Ditiainn" ,
Experimental Faunae be, at ' cur
_ _ ..
Cananclasitt4heghtarnofeet4uVtethdal'itme i'lellet,
etbeeatelteLSat before P"nnt..nal'le nett' 4`t•7
:re '',„„tree*",euet'atee Pu„ttun5.,. tigla, QA.
'''''''' wc--4-e". than '"'''' sew bum direct
frtma angn` The additional Profit oh -
tamed thereby, le due not only ta,the
increase in the weight, but more par-
tieularlY to the improved quality of
the flesh, which always commands a
higher price.
Crate fattening invelves a little
more timand trouble than does fat -
e
telling in pens or yards, but has prov-
en. to be the more satisfactory and
gives greater returns. An experi-
m-ent conducted at the Experimental
Farm, Ottawa, in 1921, showed that
the average profit (over cost of feed) realized on birds fattened in crates
was almost fifty per cent. greater
than on those fattened in yards.
No birds showing signs of coned -
tutional weakness shouldabe put in the
fattening crates, as they will he un-
able to endure the confinement and
forced feeding. Cockerels of the gen-
eral purpose breeds fatten best in
crates when they weigh from four to
ee crates they
Besfhooreuldhebinegthpolroacuedghilny
the
treated for lice, and if necessary
treated again during the fattening
period.
a Experiments fhaattveanainlsgo mshatngithveast
equally good results as a commercial
mash and produces a cheaper gain.
Such a mash may well be composed of
equal parts by weight, of cornmeal,
feed flour, and middlings, or equal
parts of feed flour, cornmeal, barley
meal and buckwheat meal. In fact
a mixttire of almost any finely ground
grain will prove satisfactory. The
mash should should be mixed with butter-
milk, but if this is not possible, skim
milk may be used, and 5 to 10 per
cent. tankage added to the mash in-
i
gredents. The mixture should be
about the cOnsistency of porridge so
it can be poured fpreferable to mix one feed ahead, a pail. It
is
s
so that it will be a little sour when
fed. As a general l t f
l enrue two feeds per
d
day are sufficient, and no more should be given than the birds can clear up
in twenty minutes. All surplus feed
should be removed after each feeding
and the troughs kepthoroughly
t
clean.
More detailed information on this
subject, including a complete descrip-
of fattening crates, is contained
in
•n Exhibition Circular No. 70, "Crate
Feeding," which can be obtained free
of charge from. the Publications
Branch, Department of Agriculture,
Ottawa.
OF CATHEDRALS
SIGN OF TIMES
is surely astonishing that old
as she is, in an
inquiry -and submerged, as she
a deluge of doubt -should
had the faith, clueing the
decades that include the war to
either in whole or in large part,
great cathedrale. The first is
in Cormeall; the second is
Roman Catholic cathedral at
in London. And the
is in Liverpool,. where the choir
dedicated recently in the pres-
of the sovereign,
the '80's most people would have
that the day for new cathedrals,
in England or on the contin-
Europe, had passed away, and
the only question was how to
the old cathedrals from tumbling
It was true that, assisted by
Sir Christopher Wren
St. Paul's; but otherwise
that could be classed as a
had arisen for many cen-
the latest being Bath Abbey,
1495, which, -after all, was no
than the final spasm of a dead
were thus out of fashion
for tourists,. At Chichester
spire collapsed. The min-
Selby, in Yorkshire, was gutted
The west front of Peter -
swayed from the plumb line
amid cries of anguish from Rus-
to be saved by underpinning
Albans, where the Normans.
filled the piers of their nave with
a light wooden roof proved to
too heavy for the struc-
And in memory of Abraham
Americans are to -day be -
to save the three towers of
church that at Lincoln bears
the old days it was easy enough
funds for a cathedral. The
system compelled the nation
But. as matters now
such edifices must be the re-
of free-will offerings. For the
the church in Liverpool paid
city a sum of $55,000. The
on the entire scheme has
up •to the present about $5,000,-
And the total needed for com-
will be $10,000,000. A cathed-
thus becoming one-quarter as
as a single battleship. The
of religion, as of other commodi-
is rising. And to elevate souls
contentious a task as to elevate
under the treaty of Washington.
cathedral of Truro is not' less
as an example of sacri-
In Cornwall, of which county
is the capital, you will not find
of any magnitude. The area
and remote from the
of the country as a whole. It
promontory girt on three shores
indented coast which is inces-
lashed, summer and winter, by
restless ocean. Yet it is Corn -
that now has a cathedral with
nave and transepts, a baptistry,
and three spires that are a
for miles. being named roy-
after Queen Victoria, King Ed-
and Queen Alexandra.
-in the third case -it is
by willing gifts that the Roman
has enriched Westminster with
basilica which as a triumph of
style ranks with San Sop-
build new cathedrals is to chal-
the spirit of an age that de-
the useful.
yet, amid the sneers of the
the humdrum folk contri-
of their subskance to these ex-
of loveliness on an other-
intelligent civilization. It was
mothers' meetings of Liverpool
paid for the foundation stone
by King Edward. It was the wo-
of Cornwall who pooled their
and so provided for Truro the
and three hundred gems for what
in his dull way, called -if
it aright --"the chalice of the
of God."
the ancient cathedrals, at any
in England,-itmay be mild with-
that, like Topsy, they
They -were usually the
of many architects, living in
centuries and often making
miatakes. These three moderna.,
however, are the creations
of a single mind. As St. Paul's
monument of Wren, so is Truro
Westminster of Bentley.
Liverpool of the younger Scott.
have here an outburst of genius
surpassed in the architecture of
single generation And in all
casee the genius was inspired
"I will erect a building,"
used to say, "which shall
people to their knees when they
within the doors." And he did
Truro is peculiarly the cathedral
The soaring pillars leaping
to the lofty arches enclose the
atmosphere of an era which sent
to the Holy Sepulchre and
to the Cross itself. West-
Cathedral is not less fearless
it is frankly foreign. It is
eastern orthodoxy of the fifth
planted boldly behind Victoria
Cathedral is less majes-
Truro and more modern than
Cathedral is th be a gar-
citadel of the church militant,
amid the ptoperons clouds
Wealthy yet often -squalid dee-
Ti iia to be the emiewant% fare-
e
j 1
,
a i
1
•
e .,
,,
mpuorich't
,
eurnace
Happy
burn
ec
ththeeyy
a
Happy
Pipe
mended,
guaranteed
ne
6U0,000
lars
Send
ing
Heatin
' --
.
.
-
-
a.
-'4* -. `
_
.,
.
,
„
,7
a -
eas...-AV IH ----T-1:
'nesen. LL,..----
futhillkei y'oticoriad'ecier de-- ' ylioourw'
.
decides -for you.
Thought Furnaces
Furnace
anyyk.indmisof fisuewhyt—
kareeep syootirsafutisefiacthinsery,—at
mumn— uni. Wherever
Thought Furnace—
Furnace—
01- PilaeleSS-is MOM
the .. talla.tion
by the makers
orwn ibe
• - thalt
in use. Get particu-
this week.
to factory for interest
free booklet "Live Air
g.-
SOLD BY
WVM cLAREN
. N.
PHONE 55.
Hensall.
evemenromp.
-
is-
of
-
i
'
WV COMPARIV-IMUTED - ----
F U R
\IIIIIINMMIIIII.14M==. #
CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM
_
i a,
I till
. got .
,
a
., ,
, •
a
.
. i
Alla
.
I '
V '
t
/.
-•
e
R :
eal Service
Means that we think more ,
about what we give trim
customers than we think
about what they give us.
We see how much reabralso ,
we can nive-ihas fabrie-in
es
workmanship and in atyislat
also how much we eau
off of the price 'without
sennahhee
dehttha. t eff of the '-
q uality. ,
Thetas why we feature
athaahh- '
ORSS :nret7t:N't'Clei,
ne ---2; senner) •
• terettn. - -•
_,
. e
$25, $35, $45, etc. -
The Suit or the Overcoat. s
"MY ARDRODE"
"
Agent
- - (Int. 0
Marry in haste and you never have
any leisure to repent it. -Ex.
About 5,000 matches are lighted
every minute in Canada, of which
about 4,999 are borrowed. -Carleton
Place Canadian.
Don't worry when you are rejected
-unless you've been rejected by an
insurance company. -Kingston Stan-
dard.
It's nonsense to say that there is
any decline in moral courage. See
the number of men who go about our
streets in knickers.-Kineardine Re-
view.
One reason Why people do not have
more respect for laws, is that the
supply of laws exceeds the demand.-
Ashville Times.
A country is not broke that can
absorb $60,000,000 of bonds in a few
hours and cry for more. -Regina Post.
Many a self-made man started lag
picking out a prosperous wife. -Bran -
don Sun.
Some folks prefer to be dry, and wet
at intervals. -Guelph Mercury. .
—
The aggressor is the party to a dis-
puts Who refuses to submit to arbi-
tration.-M, Herriot.
A bathing beach is a place where
the men go down to see. -Ex.
0 -e -eh-
"Boys will be boys," observes Mr.
Douglas Cowburn. And, nowadays,
will girls -London Opinion.
—
Even a bishop would he more dis-
tresped if he were told that he had
not behaved like a gentleman than if
- e were told that he had not behaved
like a Chrienian.-Dean Bilge.
•Seaforth
Winston Chuvehill has gone over to
the Conservative. Peobably was a
Pretty short trip, too. -Manitoba Free
Press.
,
Men don't realize the maim:leer of
splinters in the ladder of life until
they start sliding down. -- Kingston
Standard.
For
BIM--
fleet
cargo
*
nerho
-
teSW
Sale ,r Reid
--me
'
I
The true, strong. tui sound mind is
the mind that can embrace equally
great 'things and small. ---Dr. Saneuel
Johnson.
An 44Villerelint SIVAttir Atte
--- - -- ---,, ---
stet)**
Lot MO. ii, Sat Coto
/!`` E"Yte"Lt' 41411"
re spiv to
A. IA
—
Arid yett Very few 'of the -";700 s
great problems are solved by People
Who 'remember their elitebiltt, Ote
WW1 joneentti.
V Jr