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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1900-03-15, Page 411, r. ..=.1.S..14114.4,11.04,8ar r.7 AIfIA NALAMMOTAINV. -J.ITTM.A.% 11AT.I4 AIMINTIONNANNOININNINT Sitanbgteebta Itmtillity to -stand the hardship of :pusturlDg. Horses aro also In mush ' A. S. IIRADWIN, Plummer& better condition for their work when stabled and also present a better t%MTN STANDARD DWIRIND1 STINT nePearance. Hogs, if allowed their eaday morning, is 1.1p44, seeeionewe. own way, will lie in the allude due- gilythitid surroundingcoontry, meting their food in the cool of the evening Seritionteries testify part of Canada or lOr early morning. Thus we see Lana tuadvittglt 81. Nat be cloned , the exception of sheep and poultry, w Met so paid. Advertising rid" *13' are benefitted by being stabled In itp$leation. lob Printing neatly and . oily awatiA. carompaadam al a the heat of summer. 'l'bey do not Newsy eaten, respectfully 'elicited. I need to expend much energy to ob. • min their food, and consequently ate THURSDAY, MARCH lb, te0o, enabled to produce more weight or intik. lilted Merest Fermiers' tnetitute Another great ed vantage is the per, sad has alare •eiroulation in lug the heat of the day and look for 11 a v edverthing medium. Sub - she el fitsiteverdettOne Dollar per that all live meek on the farm, with 'One of the most successful meet- Ings•over held by the West Huron Parniers'Institute was the one held le the Temperance hall, Auburn, on %MOW litternoon, Feb:vary 24th. Tete 8,1 was very stormy, but that AM net prevent a large attendance. The president, Mr. James Snell, pre. Bided and Mr. F. C. Elford, the Wolent secretary, was also at his post. All the addremes and papers laseasoellent ones and interesting end profitable dismission' followed diet TOO 5kOOK TRADI. .Mr. T.9. Raynor, BA A., of Rote - Was the first speaker and chose his 'Odom, "The &con Trade, or S1141011Mmt." Ile produced charts 'shoeing desirable and undesirable awe of bacon hogs. The demand 3s Am 'a light, lean side, what is known as Wiltshire side, the whom Mde of the pig, shoulder and haat Ineluded. Though it was hard to ray just what was the cause of soft Sork, the speaker thought feeding bad a little to do with IL Bolding hack when the hogs were ready for market tended towards softne-s The reason for fluctuation in the IMMO w.ts because we turned off parpork not at in ter val s throughout Ob. Tear, but all in a heap, as It Were. If all mod to send a few ge every month or two, the market would not giat. The cross between the Berkshire and Tamworth or Yorkshire seemed to be the favorite. IMPROVING TON YARN, Mr. Raynor also spoke on " Im proving an Impoverished Farm." Oar farms should have good soil and *Mitt be rloh and produntive of settile, grain and apples. He would Der advise knyor.e to bay an impel, - writhed Arm, the chief cense of Satoh was lack in fertility. All ',./anus should be well manured wUb lash or green manare, which should be taken out in the winter and -00.11,11hd in the sprir• on fields where it 'is to be grown. There would the least loss in this way. Wood Ohm should not be sold, as there WU ample 'room or the application el Weed ashes in the orchard and seeeiable garden. If land is water. !wed it shotild be well drained lift tile. Oa a badly piece of land lamtwheat first and prepare thoroughly. Study the history lit +aids sad bow to get away witb -AWL soars*. ifr. J. N. Kernighan, of Seindller, 11 the Mowing address on Soil. ling La eyateat of feeding farm Ales stoat to liable, during the sum. • ON with green or eured food, as • *Mud to puttering. While ail aliounefol farsers are convinced of 'Itheiteneets of partial selling, yet all pe not convinced as to the practi- 'Witty of total soiling. Where land Is poor or broken, the inducements ko 'Mow this system will not be so cassis where the land4ii good and easfirwerited. llowever, the have to be followed to a Gnat than Torinerty, as the paihre1 always fall throughout July and. Await, and we all know that II Meek needs to be fed to their at.' • poet eapeetty to be fed profitably. The lies, especially the horn -fly, 'fiave become no numerous that what ' leogrishment stook receive goes to ,"Withstand the ravages of the fly. Some of the advantages of soiling wrett The saving of land and food; abolition of fences and weeds; proved condition of stock-; increased 'quantity and better virility df ma- ne?, ; increased productiveness of • The saving of land results from Stet that it bas been found by operienee that 10 acres of soiling 'rope are (laid to from 20 to BO ;sass of pasture. We CRO take ser. 'led Outings from the same plot, and She mop is more nutritious, became : Nittlats pasture becomes woody and 4*ty. All the food in stiffing is eaten Up, Ss none of It becomes too mature, end none of it is destroyed through Sampling as IU the case in pasture increased quantity end improved quality of the manure. In pasturing the greater part f the manure is wasted by being drorped IR the lanes, or under the trees, or In the fence corners, where It Is of no Ilene. fit. The rest of the mom e becomes so dried up and emerged as to be of little use, but by stabling the stock we are enabled to apply the manure fresh and direct to the soil. By having more manure, and being able to cultivate the land oftener, we are enabled to increase the product. Iveneu of the soil. The disadvantages of soiling, though not so numerous as the advantage, yet they might be con. sidered by some as greater. 011e disadvantage Is the labor it would involve; but by having convenient stables the hibor would not be so great, provided we did not let other work interfure. If the system Id a good one it will soon pay fur the extra labor. The greatest difficulty of soiling would be to obtain sufficient straw for bedding. Thi, however, would be 'overcome by having more land to dev 40 to the growing of straw and by cutting all bedding used. Some of the soiling crops that might be grown are: Rye, lucerne and red clover, peas and pets, corn, millet, and rape. These crops might be varied to suit soil and other condi- tions, and could be made to furnish food from middle of May to end of October. By sowing euceessive Plots of corn, or peas and oats, we would lengthen the season. Different va- rieties would else tend to this direc- tion. When any crop had been fed the ground could be resown, as, for instance, corn or rape could follow rye, and millet follow peas and oats. Ensilage could also be fed by having a small silo filled the previous season. Luoerhe furnishes excellent feed on soils suitable for tis growth, and will give three or four cuttings each year. Rape could be cut when the winter weather tomes on, thrown in heaps and taken to the stable as required. It makes excellent feed fur hogs, sheep or young cattle. Peas and oats are probably the richest of all soiling crops and should be sown as early as possithe and may be fed green or cured as hay. In conclusion, I think this system will have to be adopted more by the farmers of Ontario, as it is by the ferment of the older countries of Europe. Especially should those farmers who follow dairying adopt this system, as milk or batter is higher priced the latter part of the season and at a time when pastures generally fail. No breeder of thoroughbred stock would think or fitting his stock for market or the show ring by leaving them out in the heat, and if It pays him why should it not pay with other stock. raurr OROWING IN ONTARIO. Mr. J. A. Mallough, of Dungan. non, read the following paper on Fruit Growing in Ontario:- I think the time has come when most of those who follow farming for a living must let extensive farm. ors, and this kind of farming mast increase as the Ware years come and go. We must look over our acres, be they few or many, and see where we can increase or double the yield, and this is also true in regard to our orchards. A study of fruit growing lin this province leads us to believe that in order to be tumoral we must make a specialty of some particular departments of the farm. It is an old saying end a true one, that if we wish to succeed we desire to lave some deffilite object in view and endeavor to obtain that object. The first thing that every farmer must decide for himself is on what particular lines he shall engage. ThStirops not required for feed can he either cured for winter feed or illowed to ripen. Fences may be oily done away with by total sodium but by partial soiling this milvantage could not be obtained.. WeMs would be comptetety abdi- tithed by soiling, together with a Mid rotation. By cultillt broPli green the weeds would be int be- fore the seeds would be matured an4I, consequently are destroyed. In pasturing a grester pert of the weed aids he in the .04 waiting Aw a tearable opportunity to germinate in a grain crop and thus lecrease thee number This in itself is a wrest argument in 'favor df soiling, As a great part of onr lands are be coming over run witl, tutli. The stock will be kept in better eendidert in stables, than being out ge gm heat and troubled with flies. Anyone who has tried keeping pelves '10 during their first summer tbae, no doubt noticed their improved'ndts1un. This no d. uI4, is flue to skit tat*, genateatlon and their , • There is plenty of room fur a eludes. Nuw we find some farmers engaged In uheep raving, some In hog breed. lug, some in &drying, soma in beef- ing, and also fruit growing, and so cn, and we find WO In all those departments who have been emcees - fel. Therefore, I consider the first great requisite to access depends upon ourselves and tequIres that we must carry into our business the necessary skill and attention, whtnh when properly directed is certain to give satisfactory returns. In order to ha successful we must gain all the inforutation we can, and start out with s determination to make It a success, no matter whet difficulties may be In our way. In dealing with this subject we will suppose that the orchard Is planted on good well drained land ; that varieties suitable to the locality have been selected, that the trees are straight And vigorous, and that they aro all in perfectly straight rows. Crooked tress and crooked rows in an orchard are very unsightly. Whet looks better around our home than a well kept and well pruned orchard; it also adds much to the beauty and value of our homes. With an or• chard then composed of trees, well planted and on suitable soil, let us consider bristly a few of the most important points to be observed In its management. It matters little whether tt be an orchard of apple trees, or plum or pear trees. In many respects they require the same attention. One of the first requisites to success in the management of an orchard Is thorough cultivation. To my mind without Ole it is a waste of time and money to plant an nr chard. By good cultivation I do not mean ploughing under weeds every time they appear, but rather cultivating often enough to keep them down and keep the surface soil loose and open without ploughing at all. Cultivating two or three inches of the surface soli is much beton than ploughing twice as deep, as there is not so much danger of cull. tog off small fibre roots which feed near the surface, and instead of turning up with the plough five or six inches of the soil leaving it In large lamps which dry up. The cultivator leaves two or three inches of mellow suffice teal which acts as a muloh, retaining the soil mots. ture below, besides behig better for the trees. Shallow cultivation in cheaper and eon be more freqeently given. Start the caltivation in the spring as soon as the ground is dry enough to work, After rain get at it again before a crust tOrms, and keep the unlace mellow and open In a young orchard some he ernp may be grown between the trees, which will yield a good return from the land until the trees themselves begin to beer. It must he remem bered that the roots of a tree gener- ally spread as wide below the ground as the branches do above it, and as the rents should he the sole occupants of the ground es they ex. tend, nothing should he grown under the head of a tree. All crops grown between the rows should gradually give way as the trees increase in gat; never grow a grain crop in a young orchard. Whether er not sod should be allowed in an orchard is a diaputed questln.). All gond orchardists are agreed, however, that it should not be allowed in a young orchard of any kind, There it no doubt about it that the sod is one of the main causes of so much inferior frult or no fruit at all In many orchards. I have noticed that where sod is there is not as geed growth, The leaves are small and sometimes yellow, and that there ere more insects and not so much fruit, and more small and wormy apple.. MANIIRIS10.-Noot good cultivation is helpful but it will not take the place of manure. We never think of getting a crop of wheat year after year on the same ground by culti- vating and nut manuring. Yet some men seem to expect a crop off their fruit trees year after year without manure and often without cultivation either. Trees in making their growth take a certain amount of fertility from the soil and unless, after they have made their growth, there is fertility enough lett to make a crop of fruit we need not expect it, Take something from nothing you cant, applies to the taking of crops trom the soil the mime as anything else. ft' we expectmur fruit trees to feed us we must feed them. In my own practice I find that applying wood ashes to bearing trees is a great benefit. I buy enough wood ashes around the village of Dungan- non to give each of my bearing trees a bushel of unleached ashes. I have done this for the past four or five years. My orchard seemed to be In a run out condition for a year or two before applying the ashes. It made a good appearance of blots. eoni but the fruit did not seem to set well mei Allowed me that it wanted something more than good pruning and barn.yard manure, and alae spraying. When trees do not make a good anneal growth, a foot or se in length, and ellen Inc leaves are WATCH Does your Watch need clean- ing or repairing? If NO it will pay you to take it to a practical watchmaker in order to have it well re aired. All work entrusted to me will 'be attended to in the most skilful manner. We also carry a complete and up -to - Weans of- a Jewelry Watches Clocks small and turn yellow early in the fall, they are starving. lf anyone Stationery doubts the benefit of ashes Just let them try applying them to one row School Supplies or trees for two or three years and leave sro'hr 1 W without any. Scientists tell us that unleaded w. ww seil /pogo at tho low- wood ashes contain all the elements sot poselblo price& that trees in growing tithe from the soil. They are to fruit trees what eats ere to horses, nr oatmeal to a ecoteliman, 11 is a poor P,1101, Bond farmers have of trading off their wood ashes for a few bora ef arita. when, by giving them to their fruit, H. C. SMITH trees, they might in exchange get fruit worth ten times the value of sonp. They can be applied safely at any time, as they lend more to make the tree fruit than wood owth. Now I have noticed that trees with ashes well applied do not drop their fruit before the fruit is ripe in dry seasons and that the color and quality of the apple is better. In applying aahes they should be spread well and evenly around the tree as far out as the roots of the tree are supposed to go. It is the small delicate roots or root hairs farthest fruin the trunk tha, take tut the plant food from the soil. Pitustnio.-Regular pruning is an Important factor in the management of an orchard. One of the first things to be considered in pruning a young orchard is the height at which the heads should be started. Some prefer low heeds and Obeli high heads; extremes should be avoided, I think about dye feet is the right height for apple trees and ibur or four and a half for pear and plum. I try to train the lower branches upwerd, so that they will not be muck itt rho way cultivating around the trees. An orchard should be pruned regularly every year, for if the trees are to be trained up in the right way they must be checked when they go astray- before they become hardened in their sins. Probably the best thne fur pruning is in the fall after the leaf falls, or in the month. of Mareb and April when severe frosts are over and before growth bas commenced. Now my experience is Oast spring pruning tends to make suckers grow and that fall pruntng is better for to cause fruit buds. All branches that cross or rub should be taken out and all wounds should be painted. SPRAYING. -In an orchard well cared for and of a bearing age one might expect good crops of fruit, but nowadaye one thing more is needful -we must fight insects. Su the spray pump is the fruit growers most effective weapon of warfare. There are many ways of fighting these insects. Clean WI tivation goes a long way towards keeping down these enemies, by preventing their breeding in the soil. Jioge or sheep ahold be allowed to run in an orchard, they will pick up most nf the fallen and wormy fruit and in this way they destroy many a cod. ling. Moth and cumuli°. Apple buyers all like to get the apples out of orchards that have been sprayed. Ameher very important thing to help us in growing fruit of all kinds is our tame bees -they carry the pollen from one tree to another and fertilize the blossom'''. I believe to fruit grower can be anoceserul with• out the help of the bees. TIIMING. -Th080 who pmctice thinning tell me that it pays better than allowing the trees to overbear. Now in big trees this is quite a tack. I t eve only tried it on one large Spy tree and I found that It nisde a peat difference in the quality and atze of the fruit. I think it would pay well if we have the time to go over all of our orchard. It may go against the grain with some when there Is itt good load on to pull off half the fruit, but the remaining half will fill just as many baskets or barrels as if the whole had been left on anu the improved size and color of the fruit will make it worth one. half more tuoney. It is by thinning that many of the fine spechnens seen at our fairs are obtained. 1 think it is over bearing that causes some trees to bear only every other year, or sometimes bear two or three years and then give out. Some horses will go so far in one day that they cannot get back in two. It is Just the MUDS with some fruit trees. In thinning commence early before the tree has wasted Its enemies in the production of seeds, or just as soon as the fruit is large enough to pick out the best. It la not the pulp or Bash 0( 510 apple that draws on the energies of the tree but the seeds that exhaust the soil. Now, in &inclusion, I think the ponnty of Huron is well suited to growing apples of the best varletlel and with good keeping qualities, and high flavor and coloring, that it will pay to grow winter apples for export and the return, will average at least twice the returns of any grain crop that can be raised on the farm end with lees labor. I would say that proper apple culture may be summed up in four words -culti- vation, manuring, pruning and spraying. INJURIOUS IMAM. Mr. A. W. Peart, B.A., of Burling. ton, gave an excellent tuldreas on "Insects Injurious to an Orchard and How to Combat them." Ile stated that fruit growing is yet in its in. fancy. There are great prospects in this 11n. Our apples are !mew Mg in value in Great Britain. Our fruits from this section have a die tinct reputation in the old land. We must learn the lesson of proper and honest packing if we would rear gond profits. In the Hamilton dis- trict the fruit growers had increased their profits from DO to 75 per cent bv carefi BLYTH MARKETS, Wisest .... 84 68 Barley 88 40 POSII ...... ... 1 I • • ....... a i i , 80 92 'Oats , 25 26 Jigs per dos 10 12 1Pitotietroi;ii ,.5 per bush- ' .. 20 g Hides per itt 7 8 Hay per ton 600 7 00 Lard per lb 8 11 Pork 100 5110 Flour 1 85 2 CO Wood per cord., . 1 50 1 75 Wool ..... . .., 1/1 18 packtng and Judicious shipping. The annual datnage to our fruits by insects, etc., was esti- mated at 55,000,000. Insects were divided into two sections -those which are friendly to us and those which are unfriendly The f outer aro quick, active and lively ; the lat ter, slow, heavy end sluggish. A large number of the unfriendly in. sects are kept killed off by parasitic Insect. The ichneumon -BY, devil's darning needle, lady hug and the black beetle are all insects friendly to us and should not he destroyed. Every farmer should have a Bp:Ay- er. %ap sucking insects have bole. — - in the aide* or their body through which they breathe, Spray these With some oily soapy mixture so se to close up these holes and thus suffocate the insect. Some of the most destructive In. sects were then described and the method of getting rid of them ex- plained. The coddling moth or apple worst destroyed' about 60 per cent of our apples in 1899. There are two broods of these hatched out, one about the first of June and one in the latter part of July or the beginning of August. Let hogs run in the orchard if practicable, they will eat up a great number of these in eating the apples which 1101 to the ground. Let them root up the ground also if they wish. The beet remedy was to have a strip of cloth cat about 15 inches wide. Fold this three time* so that it will make a band five Inches wide. Put this lonely around the middle of the tree and the worms will go into the folds un their way down the tree. Put these on for the first brood about the middle of June and take them off about the 1211i of July. Destroy the worms inside any way you choose. The Londe should be put. un the trees to catch the aecond brood about August 31st and left on until December. The tent caterpillars are hatched out in Me). They live on leaves and take two meals a day, the lint about eight o'cioek in the foremen and if there are not many of them may be crushed in their nests. It plentiful, *prey when hatched with a mixture uf quarter pound of parts green and hailpound water -slacked lime to 50 entities water, Spraying just after hatching was the remedy prescribed for the de. struction of the I west tree catereiller. If this insect has not attacked the Intel' hut is known to he coming put tin guards shout five holm wide and shaped somewhat like a lamp Ands, eronnd the trnnks of the trees and they cannot get pest Ws to get up into the trees. The oyster shell hark Innen itt batehed in MAT or June. They are sepanekers. To avoid this cultivate give the trunk of the VIP R gird toe healthy tree'', After he'ehing washing with 'strong lye being' care- ful not tn get any on the leavea. For spraying purposes use the tol lowing mixtures: Ti one gallon of soft writer add half pound nf hard soap or a pint of soft soap and two gallons Of coal oil, stir this Op and mix one gallon of the mixture to eight gallons nf water. Fur the clinker worm the remedy is sprat ing with paris green. The tussock moth is kept in check IT parasitic insects, eight kinds of which are known to feed on them. The best remedy for preventing fang, is to cultivate a hardy healthy growth of trees or vines, For the apple spot or scab spray with f ur pounds of copper sulphate, four pounds of sleeked lime and quarter - pound of peels green to 50 gallons of water. Spray the vines after the bloom hos fallen. The remedy for black knot is to cut out the knot once a year when there are no leaves on the trees. If this is dune carefully every year there to no necessity for destroying the trees. EAST HURON'S MEMBER. The Ottawa emespondent to the Toronto Star has the following to say of the Dominion member for Emit Huron :- Dr. Macdonald of East Miran is a Veteran parliamentarian, Ile speaks anthoritively of the times and events of the Mackenzie administration. He has watched many political stare wax and wane and has pursued the even tenor if his way. Dr. Mac. &meld is not a placeman. Ilia high- est ambition is to serve his country well and to advise soundly. It is regrettable that owing to the late hour at which he began hia speech on the transportation question not Much of it got into the newspapers, although It stands a valuable reposi. tory of facts on the pages of Han• eard, and 1.411, no doubt, be used largely for editorial reference. Dr. Macdonald has collected a number of facts of the Montreal harbor itn- provements which go to show the people of Western Ontario that the government policy is of general ad- vantage and that the benefit is not confined to Montreal alone, It is charectertstic of Dr, Macdonald's ac. curacy that he visited Montreal, twice at least, when he was getting his dato together. Ile got his facts at first hand, which is a practice that many a member of parliament might emulate with good results. Mr. Tarte, who is pastmaster of this transportation question, listened very attentively to Dr. Macclonald's epeech and applauded frequently. As long , as Dr. election/kid represents East Huron 111 parliament, the electors of that riding will not suffer for infor- mation on all the leading public questions, The doctor does not essay rhetorical flights, but aims to convince the average elector in a way (taper. fence hes proved to be best -he gives him hard, incontrovertible faota to swallow, Ady.stise itt TIDE STANDARD. 4034Irskile4111,1 Anderson lig Elder 3E31.3rt13.. ••••••••• 1••• tee *Ns ***oils Haire moo* *a 1 A These are mottos we keep before us in buying, and they mean a great deal in being able to sell the suitable goods at the lowest notch in price. In other words they are Money Savers to the purchaser. A line of Fancy Prints, worth 70, our price 6e. Fancy light and dark Prints, regular 1210 for 10e, Wide checked and striped Fisnnelette, regular tOo for Bo. Heavy full width Shirting, special for 1210. Cotton Sheeting, 2 yards wide, worth 20e, our pries 15o. Fine English Bleached Cottor., 88 inches wide, regular 1210 for 10e. Tweeds, serge for boys, regular 413e, we sell for sOc. Tweeds, all wool, good patterns, worth 80e for 60o. New Line of Corot: Heavy English Jean steel filled, good to wear, value unsurpassed f or 1500. Art Mosli» Scrim for curtains at 15c. Pore Linen Towels, 18,41 2 for 25c. Table Napkins, large sise, a barg.sin at $1.75 per dozen. Dress Suitings All the fashionable colors comprising all the new makes. Our range of Spring Goods is now complete, and will be sold at old prices notwithstanding the late advance of from to to 20 per cent. •••••••••••••• Ha.* ,,•.,...,....•.....,.,. Anderson & Elder WORTH LOOKING AT Do You Care to Save Morey ? !fiat people do, and are glee to trate here. where the savings are great mei the veluts aro beet Yoe are in- vited to itivilect and compere, kVe keep fall linos in Gliteswere, Crorkery and all kinds of Grocerie‘ including Canned Goods of all varieties. Also Trout and lierrIng, Salt, Flour and Feed. Butter and Eggs taken as cash for goods. A. TAYLOR, DINSLEY STREET, Blyth Are You in Business For Business? If you had an opportunity of addressing 1,000 people la a hall with the privilege of delivering an address on your business and the wares you sell, you would be apt to make that address u haunt. fag as possible, so that your hearers would listen and you profit by it. It is just the same with an advertisement its TWA STANDARD. Yon have the privilege of talking every reek to huudrede of people and if you are selling honest geode and tell the people about them in a straightforward manner you cannot avoid reaping 1 benefit. We stand ready and willing at all times to misfit our patrons in preparing their advertisemente-yes, give them assistance that would cost from 85 to 820 0 a city advertising expert were consult- ed-snd do it free of charge. But bear in mind that no man can get out as good an advertisement for your business as you eta. You know all the little details, the goods you bought at a barged., and all that. Just drop in and haves talk about it. The Standard, Blyth, Ont. • gtottAtaftec-IMIss~net GEORGE POWELL GRAIN, PROVISION AND FRUIT DEALER One Car of Feed Corn to Hand. GEORGE POWELL - - BLYTH Stray Ewe and Lamb. Strayed on to tbe premien of the and.eralguad, tot 85, Con. 11, Rullett, on or about October lid 1855, one ow. and lamb. Owner can have taws byaroving property and paying expense'. Yuma Diaz, Blyth P.O. Farm to Let. Ellalb,e fam to let reaeonably; three rolls, rertZu to8dTd ir fall= allowed for. Appy *0 T. N. Coccus, *Iytb P0. Otto C. HAMILTON. Birth P.O. lrif IT IS HUMAN NATURE The eyes that see the ad. In Tit 8TANDARD Will look for the goods in the shop where the bargains are to be found. THOUSANDS OF EYES Scan TNN STANDARD Every week. to Your Ad. There I* Perfection Table Syrup . . • 1101111411111111410 Bring your jars and pails, and get them filled at the cheapest place in town. Spe, cial prices in Flour. 2 cons Mule Leaf Salome 25e. cans either Corn, Peas or Tomato. 25c. 5 lbs. Selected Baia* 25e. 10 lbs. Sulpha gee. 10 110. Glauber Salt' 25o. 2110. Cheese 26e. We have the choieeet Lard on the market. myth' A gilwaPlist nerd T. W, SCOTT