The Exeter Advocate, 1919-2-13, Page 2Aerosemeatsr.
Depattenent le for the use of our farm real -tees who want the advice
*t en expert en any re:eaten reaarding soil, seed, crops, et*. tf your quer,tieste
la a 4tiftiertt, onneral interest, it will be answered through teas column• ee
etertmed and taldreseed envelope is erteloeed with yeair letter, a coneptilet0
eeewer te mailed to yeti. Addrese Asrenemlets care of Won Fetiehe lee
ece 73, Acatenee Se W., Toronto.
F. le.:-..eilefely ativi 4e nee as to the! teoul with weed,. they eleetild lee de-
preeer reeteenle to premeiee feetting.; etoyed before the Pell ie acceezzis
ref -elle slat -toe en my Istran. lehaq Frequent, failures with tilea:ea are
teas cs„s-, she het getee trs'ePers11,:ces te the nee of peor eeed. *Many
lee Seeenne foe tl`.14 !eve? 1)o elle. ettentees who hate met evere other
• tteetl'..• 'Witter(' ;LE.,,t;,,11,3,... ;.::.-ac?oz.,1 vr:t11
, '
re.:! eleesr eeeeen? nema fe'ethere teee. %eve feeed beettese their eeed.
ie telt to el, ea Vale! Ise -eels nett weals ' wee enseree. (Taney. geansee
eeere!eee Th" ceeenliee eat the e11eee11 man aere eate. seal. ie TY:1;re .t.1.11
44' e'erelen Cen titi' neeeented 1)y ' erten tleeelee ene othor weal
.„
4' .014" ,t,"LITie..•"•: It.ed hteeir pegs., ge ,eheei,e ea a te
te
eel the etsre: be dere? ▪ ltneitt i.4°2 erelyeie. This
eaptee
• sten,
ea- Veee - • ' ne the ''""'7'
zneetee
the ael tee I:see wee the eget:it:ere
le:a:tete:ire to lee: into, eesee
sect. fel etoeteet seeeesse een no; be
enereel eh:fa-ate etre iced tees re
eereeg eesenelnetirer quelitiee. lees-
eigees lestene te :are eene
'thee itae heen gvewu in tit:
Ltt ,t;
riesee el. et a .1:eae 'to nteents
ese ez e te !ea I" .1: --re .-: fa tem: e
allt.e. el I IAN C,
'
- et' treaette.
° . eteene
et es gisee, iislte el es,-
' • ..
eett,-
-'"„
et` tlie
.etetees
• ' ese
"eal t foe
• phes-
.Dett fee the
o Le net eels.
4,047:',.r2g°
. TW..1 tC114
tht.V.
,
Deer'
eel lase.
tre ,
:.e eensert e etell
• "- zee ereswen-lee
eleel
lee :test vette.
. whe tete e
tee senestli
,t -tent yee-
„sae, os,
t•.".”
"nr. ;
tiret nee; rtnt
•'• eep- eitest peeper:tee e
ie *ems' Inteirg the
• eels the pee.per
of teneget. If the tee. es nee thee
this may I ;,1' ",r;k"
a snout ea teeseee. alotee; alth, tee elev.,
er
nn e terestely ertees eagb acre.
esingf1f'"Artt an al elfaiee liees1 es
a n ibeee.: the
eacterls et."." end a setteeee..ree
melteply heeere leg rarreed to the
soil, and he apeleirg a few letehele
of. eeli from an old alfa:fa field to the
that is Teeing, eeethel. When ar-
p,leing the eel' from an old alfal:fa
lieei it in nece.seary that the work
seated be rerformel ablie the wea-
ther date: or clotuly as tha dieeet
riye oe the een will deetroy the bact-
eria before they are hicorp.orated with
the see. In nus latitude tie. good
results cetue from seeding the crap
ostrly in August so that the plants
will trial:e good grewth before frost
catrate
ant cheeks their genwth in the
fee. Alter experimenteng with nni
reheat nurse creps we find that unt-
essemee latter results are obtainee
wenn the elfteea. i ec-1,,,d alone. If
the, erop intetce too vigerette a growth
it is freseeently neeessary to s,o over
the field with a mowing machine and
leip the tore eeveral inehes above the
grenel one kaee the crop to eerve as
reeith careens tete winter.
The beet eeeults ere oetaleed by
sea ing one-eele eat-a:lel of cleanee seed
to tee nere aed covering it somewhat
deer 'Ian in tha ease when the
sealir.g is done eteelier in the season.
Late summer seeding has meany ad-
vanteseee, an important one being the
comersative freedom from weeds and
ertruel grasees. Then, too, a better
seed ted can be cetablished and fre-
geently the land ttan be profitably
utilized for 1.1ie growing of some early
maturing crop. If s.own early in
August the plant will make a vigorous
geowth belore -winter sets in, thus
assurin,g an early and vigorous start
in the erring, and M. this way sub-
dair.g 'the weefes. In fact, the alfalfa
sown along in August will produce as
much forage the following season as
thet sewn earlier. If the seeding is
done in the spring a nurse crop should
be erriployed to keep down the growth
of rank veceds and grasses, but when
seeded_ in alfalfa needs the moisture,
plant food and sun. If the land is
dare
avzegi
Fertilizers
For Profit
Write for Free Zelletin
Ontario Fertilizers
Limited
Toronto
I 0 el nt elt) 11)
r 0 47 t 44 ...A..1:# 'III V. a' ' 4 a .
El ALT1 01711IFST!ON
4 • BOX
crop ehoult1 levee a good per NM
evallable ,phoepligtee acid in it,
J4:•••.*Rin1IY give rne a good
balanced ration for dairy eovrs. I
have plenty of alfalfa hay, corn-
stalks, oat straw, small potatoes and
mixed hay. Row much of each. ehell
1re-2d, and whztt would 1 hare to buy?
Ausevert---Alealfa hay, cornetallte
and nets straw mid mixed hay are all
exeellten retie:liege feeds. Smell
neteloes are also a buiey food leet
!would be valuable to fernieh enema.
!enter. I would iult advise, however,
eceseing them in large quantities: ten
to fifteen potaids per tiny wetted he
. An oil these feeds nen
bulky aed, there ie etiongh preteei
alfalea hay to a1 ice the caree-
hydrates in ternatelke met eet etreg.
Beeleles ratlen onela to be ealareed
erten two viewpeinte. First. there
ebottle et. eeetain pree "t•tie.,1 ef pre -
wee er 1 eerte.heeratest arei F•e, enel.
there elitatel be a tgetain peenertitse
of releiletesee xed eonsentretee. Atel
e tv-z aet'oe one
ege
. •
liaee te!.3.171 arel tlee
r n,
,
te ethike tz letlreleal retien.
a. twee !tettei eetien teoeht ente;
tassel an, re.htest e peete
rens tee weight, in taleeneet theee
pezesels cse oil nese; etel ta 47341 eta-e-
re:es dee. I weeeel ere ese ecee the
enete teeneretele if roes:tee ea that
ytel weee.! enfte es. t the teinettet you
A`tf,,it% ft:eel:we testente s -thee and etettee-
ge: I ne:el. whine nee tio eust ati
nits, ee.....;:e; etnetetereted fteeete, an
ti ON% r4'....°47i • 1'0'1 :Tref;
ea With Othr tri°4'711i).
I 'test it yen eta! this
tretti et' ..?£:tt,"*.:14'..-
enet give tit.,
nett eVeteat been
the fee.e.e.e.
ale the
ettsseee 7
anet
'4 t.
.'„t•
' eve,ie, ;,•
i ter elage,
e' the
tetel thee, inneedietele put the tel ree
eeee'et in the entieter, on end a hele
• .2;• •
poet:es ea tee tie liens. atsee in at
eneer ease hew mese'
• .• — teltree".. getting. lease.
•
tef teese ettel Wig....
eget, it eettet to she teree r
;
t)4. Mt. 1.4$
• peette to: grain -.ler ente-
i s • iger egenes reel% eee-
e rei"- taet
'111'• 7.* n't.M eael c -e
▪ Tie"' p • -re tee te eve theee
seemed it; tt tease
ere. esteee of
If vet. :. elralett
this yi-,zo a
tnissal Leg erste eae. ra Neer -
1 teety feetl.
V , t.r n 1 V. , er 1
e eat tyre -et -et et* ate
4 4 i.i.bit,`".:".:4: °°. ,-Vi. 'a..."
:7'"' i. , ...Criirrz• :' ea
.. Cent.' Fes :tat Feere tee tate
. •
weet the eel:lee-a . • sett
•haany. A gesel tone ;i
eere ' e the lase aline: I hate. eve- ecettel tt
A Ranee, tetepie
eettsete with setla a,
ge -eels% eere ere erente cse le "4
ti;e treielien.
ele • ele epee.. ate we!i ttfl e:
• eert: tree 0,•t9i".U. e3n
-nine :ease tee ete tele eeee tric
;.;
tette, greatee eteneatiore tee: the
teeette eles ets.i.:,7
. E. 1....—eeme time ego v. °U. yon
aeleine for In uroc.ilun, about, killing
flaeelt ereee. Lee 1 seortly received
them ee mail. 1 live my ground fallplee • eat reey I ask you,
altat yeti thine al.out planting it in
corn, or seeing it thieley betelev
*. op. me. *-ither o. e t14) it
• •
as ViE. 013 4-011t,';• heal? Of coulee,
. „
elelet stee: ew teetlt. I alweee
sehse laseee a see* fte I
foltitt :;* '1"." "V"•••
%Ante. It -le merle sheets
To otseretts tele stelae at,:
reret, of the tetsee I teeeee
the ',nate,' anti wise teei teen Site teeth
driees. .t hates:. Ittenreor. Tee
etesee is thus easel!: evetigett one ef.i
the peet with preethney temente!
tt, itnee. ate the wirie—le
1.1
In erten to peewee elegaing, when-,
ueing chopper fer cep:Ilene" ertet,;
cut it the s'ee se e —etre'
in either wee, shell fafro' egam m •
.
1.1eSeer".111.1 7P-4
110A bj Fmk
r:. L. Vimxnt
UPG./1141.
good :elle for feeeing rOilltry
1 whiter ie to provide as neter an peeel-
, ble the same :food materials that the
' hens would seeure if they were on
grce raege !a warm weenier:. When
fret: to refilli tilrOV,5h flelefi and
orellards etuning the evearter, ehee
seeere net only the regain, geit,
;meat eennea eta, which ma, led them
teat they ecure tender bleeleit of grass
; and eletce segeultnt veg,teene, bage
1. worms end other Shoe wheel nature
•reeele' e.evtlee fer thole use. They
nizo .eeetain tee:el:else by emitting thout
:at the eresh, 'pure rea Theta con -
detente are ent•irely cheared ween the
autos ere tonfiree thee. et• a nee:here
wletele en•1 the peeltre -keeper -must
de 'zee fie lee can te noeiceuee
the eet the eiele lone of eetremee fate
;"3?. leo? eeeereise the feeet;
eel-nee:eel t ,erateli tee gietin thee
tnt eet of e deep liter. teese tets
Oen.. oe tee ;se -ace nal other green
feed, eelesseses, mangei beets. r.e.er
otte''ly apelee, el:wee arel elfelee foe
sesieee. hi' V.:I, 61
rire eat aye:le:Lee for tee fowls are
gr
m., 'kis eurers.
meet telenniegs e'reea the 1;tehen,
e11 -11e. cease, ce eettr, mil other eniaml
1!...-4.4t; There is it,* gee Nee er
gr.• et as.% leis attisfeetery to thee
teeese feel it le, rt;r-
t'i:^11 Ct. :a Vett ihe tessle eau
ettre ta gen the dittereitt eeed ele-
frerties weeela aro requietel to maintain
:eter taitlprevele ft t aerie- cue
wieels to make egg'. It is et:l-
eant ranceeevy to ilgare oet terei feel
any ifeeeeeiely perfeetiy letleneei
Veen. if given a veeiety the hen will
eee ea e hoe own reelee. eve as a rule
the niees eeteessful postitryeerepere
rey attentlea fee-el:hie :tv?-
tialeet vareete.
By Ate
new F.
Da Currier will answer all signed
question is of geneeal interoet It will
if not, it will be answered perconally
closed. Dr. Curriee will not prescelbe
Address De, Andrew F. Currier, care
St Wes' Toronto.
"1 Tarp:at-tine Poleoning.
Tieeperitine sle)uld harelled vtth
et:re, treeterorted only in metal cun-
teeners to prevent the hasnrd of
ii)reekage, mid such cent:Aimee shotele
be opeteel only undor coxeletions
good verelletien. In painting or var-
niebilee ieuleore, tete right ventdation
moat lee:et:ant; nor setculd
sleep in freeltly painted roonis until
the paien 4r.• thorenighly dry ant/ the
loom has been, fw at leest twoedeye,
wee eirat.
Ihe see:reel-et, oe mle-1 seeee of ter-
eeteinf, e eleenitig. 11.;t5.!S 07 Ira
the Treele air, wilhout treetment. Li
more eastern Ct'f,02, t1L kietteys de--
rearei car, ere' etteneen. Settee a suf •
feet? muat be put co a meet eiivt an.i
hoLflddeirtet cieurteeni„ly of water.
Cue:ping ?eel peteit'eire" (ever
zdIeL -Lae beekt rtety i eceoetete
'3 ie ateeteett. re:lee-ea by beear-,
beente ef la or lime \eater; tete'
eneeb le her treat' I,y eimple
mietete tee h ae Steleen eel ese
ter;.nt; if this le tot fiveiliteta the
(teeter eleseeld eeseeties, atter ex:tulles.
ettau ee tlits nete•
ginin teen: .
Cuerles, M.D.
lettege pertninina to eleaitie 11 your
be enewored theough these ceiumns;
if stamped, addreesed envelope Is en•
for individual casoo or make die.gnores.
of Wileon Pubilehina Co., 73 Adelaide
Iced for gainting eereoests, if it, eeueee
theetrouble I had. do not we paint.
every day, hut I certainly sympathize
welt paintere who ItaVO to.
Anewere-I thine: the pate -eine; in
your care was tarperitine and noe
lead.
A. 0. ani twenty-one, five
,feet. six inches high and weigh 141
noande. Am a heirty weight? 2--
I would like alto far yeu to eve me
:eoree Melte an proper quantities of
?eat and kinds of food for a meal.
.ieeteld you exese-eal eeansitiee le tee,
reeenifule end lecosa That would
le far mere underetwelahle.
epeet :soon waes a mile vele e
eeerter te cr.:liege. Should my food
in quantity thee? I see:se: so
.nwelt v attaehe or that
I an aretione fee reeler, if paareele.
Anateer--Yea 1:471" not in the 'welter-
weight tease,: end yet you ace a tide
tees hefty. 'fry te got down to 132,
whieh is right eeseedeug to sehethale,
eae`feet oe trifle moreed on
the atiejest tee diet; that is not netu
ral /te n healthy yotreg speeimen.
11;...1. in three apeare nteals a dae.
t.--11 that wall; to eeinge were three
milee each vv ineueed of what yozt
state oud yea; -.revere:el et daily, rain
: er „Mae, coulees ftild going, you would
be the better ear it. Drink plenty
or water, eeete-lelly he:tweeze meate:
tee that yetee ere ane ef elimination
are functioeieg I./Nee:lee ; have your
eyes! examined to he gero your beeme
tattaeks nee not on segeunt. ote your
needing genseee, mei yen %till eoret
'long very well.
_
For Better Me-.
r.";r"7 Li.'"ulavaPit*,"s ereetnieed for col-
nutike.lme erelee the smell
:reelewee te obtain geed prtees
1,14:%‘44' A 'i.(.411.14e. 1144.44414141.:4
riw finalize el' farm pro -
the erhe to be detain-
ed. tee eireeency proalwtzon,
the ireegin betweee cost
eee -n (neeing price.
I:, I -ea legeus tr.trItt prediets the
ken:ea is etnefroatee eeleli the difieeul-
tee, tee eapplyien eufeielent voleme
toe ate ea eis heel, oteel:to yeareet
team when profit. 'For
evert:eke a Inemer with a errall pore
tell of a cerloatl tse goad What can
hereee Fay the miahrene eimegee on a
tax to eend lele wheat to market a itbe
tete hetleg the preilt ea the eseneri--,r
tie ether hand, there NVOr0
tee fermere Eirudeteng a uniformly
'lige grade al wheat and owning their
seenettor, .wotele potenble tt,tr thsen
seterro tetra fuel filI them to the
relehnum thus -fending their wheat to
iretteet at a minimum eat!: for trans-
reitetete
Peree leettone that have loet their
sheen threugh lepeated washings, may
he made to leek like new by -firet
weehing with warm weter rata ;nap
suds, Utee. fling nn -.1 po7lehing w:th
a nail. buffer end a 'ate ef nail polish.
•spring after Ingres% hes thoroughly.
If planted to elthar earn or potatoes'
would it not efeteire very meth :toe-
herfee etetbatine. and. eenuld not
earley f-avin crelte hay, he more pro-
lltable? Also, is clay soil good for
barley; eotaid rye to to efelow tee rote:lee I leave real I ought to he a beck( ase. Help your
and if use weinteeretai fertilizer,' about the TOOT11 which the telitlee!..boyitoiegeotot.141.eanldrinillterv,,timriaisklei thbianis
! tl .t 1
how much and what kind is best for an= occupiee,
clay? heve come
`himself. Give your ho
y as good a
F....andi4. art or ihe were:ie. and as sada( bed as them is in the house. He
Answer:—Your plan of sewing the he heee mere or ken ehtatati ley thei gets tired every day and is worthy
ground continually to barley in the wcairtrj4ocle4m. -to have things ale.etys, of n
sod Place to sleep. Do not
spring is not es goad to overeelm:" itee;: so—reerYibing in teepee nie. cas,ler.1 werry if the spread gets ended some-
qua:el grass as it would be to sow it New, wo all know flint no :eve 007 them. Row can it be helped? Boys
to buckwheat the tatter part of June. can always keep his room slate% and have to sit somewhere.
The barley in order to amount to any- dean. He wants to move around, to i Fe
n-nieh the boy's table with pen,
thing must be sown early and the use the things that are in his room i
a ink and paper. He will want to do
quack grass has a chan.ge to grow and have a good time. So at tha some writing ; now and then. By the
along with the barley. By the ether risk of saying some things which the, time he in around fourteen. he will
method, you have plenty of time to women folks may be soniewhat oppose thank you if you give him a moo
cultivate up to the last .of June. You ed to, let me give my idea of what a ,
diary for a birtheay or Chaistmas
can -eradicate a rot of the quack grass real, up-to-tlate bay's room on the !present. On the R•helf under the table
by thorough cultivation before it is seeera ought to be. 1 th,ere es roam Ler thee boy's favorite
time to sow the buckwheo.t, then if I th first len it should be com- -----. ' Th e
(It:al:nous and Meet ere,
' le. ---A few daye ego vt...tritthl
painting Z0.11:10 re.";:nit after purchas-
ing Atiantie White Leel, oil end tur-:
pentine. The first night my kidney
ceeretlen Wire; very elerit erown, und
emceed or tureentlite and there wate
leeed in the exeretion, with great. in-
, ilarnmatiote Was this lead or tar-
pentine poisoning? I Oliva it about
!time Itemateity stepped using white
Zero Wee.ther and The Treetor.
.efter yon have thawed ten tee,
pewee with the teal:vele, ego:tent
the ere en the tank eo that the Ana',
.an cheek ites almoet the last to
have to spent lisef the morning- try -
to get the treeter sthrted in (brae?'
to 6Tina egirn foe the feezlere.
Ileating the mantled with a• heat.
negh n* in eterting, but there
le mutes darger of tire in u.eing thle{
reethote The ;:ntalte van be heated,
aiteleing a hot. iron, hat et tales?
Feet ry heaseired perees relet een-
; t; elginseeneven pernes
taw requeae atliition, large*
ouvrietten of wester for cearyieg
Iewley feetetiene. This Ilc.f.e*:
c,,etrat 7'1.t of tow I'm: to co., env: until
it t:5: Wldineta.t. Ie le ecestilewed ee,
tali it mat 'wermed Melee el' the
Leise. This glees:, the lady a fwvere
ain col roquirxi r, greet (Lel 0"
teeegy f -on the fene et return it to
the proper terneeseetere. The ree-
d -eel not ste inttee aa ehe eleatted
awl the rail% eroenetioe ,ie limited, A
part oe the etzed with+ 61-toult1 go te
matte milk ie ueset to warm the tele
water taken into thn ly tette te
overeome the lle.4 id chili impart el
to the ltoey. Theee are more vette
emitted taleee of 'warming water thee
by the use of expenelee
A0. • le‘ fee
„Leap os teree suettang—em
icy stream ie cenenten I-1meg elelt,
in many parte of the cometry. lit
many ewes the-' otewe ere eriven heti'
a mile or more fur thie p' 1.
meny ceees the voeve eeteite. melee
euch teralitioee, ;o ee myth a.,
they thould and ate driven bate: te
the barn to wait unt,:l the fellowing
day, when they will OffElVa alf•
same thing over age'n. A cow
not he a heavy pro:Meer of elle. iseen-
these circumetanees.
The best place to water dry lege
in cold weather is in the barn. ‘Viteo
running water it: avallahle this can
be accomplished by ,eietelling the in-
dividval drinking cues, cr by watee-
ing them in a gutter -like mean:3e. In
this case, the water will not need to
be warmed', as the water in pipes h:
not too cold. Individual .cups Mee
another advantage by allowing the
cows to take small quantities at free
uent intervals.
coneedgenble tette. Ifot easter it
ful too, eine it takes time to heat thet
water. I have tried all of these sneeel
thiela but !save paced them in tilet
a:1rd for a better one.
Take a small containma—I have used'
—and drill a few tiny holes in one enc1,1
ebeeeng stick box with good remits
Icaeing the other end entirely opon.,1
A emelt hendful of cotton waste Ise
now eipped into water and the sur-
plus water squeezed out. Into this I
bunth of wet waste three or four
!grains of calcium tee -bide the size of
a pea are placed, and the wet waste;
wrapped loosely around them. The.
hunch of waste is placed in the open,
ene of the container, and we arej
ready. Prime the engrene lightly!
with g,aeoline, pines the drilled end 4Dii
the cont.:eater on am intake of care.
bureter, turn the engine- over, andl
away she goes. Carbide gas is
!highly explosive—a very week spark
I will set it off—yet When used in this
1 way there is very little, if any, dan-
ger, and lit is quick and eerbain.—R.A.
44-0
1 Seed Importation Regulations.
, • - es i pa -
you. sow thickler to -buckwheat, it will. forbable. You sh.ut a. boy up in ae pers in the home, but he will be glad
smother More thoroughly than barley room that es dark and uncomfortable, to have one that is his very own. Be-
-would. Possibly barley would nay you put a book on th-e shelf in
eyloue , and he will either elineree out of the fere
better than buckwheat, yet this window and take to his heels Or else'the boy's room, know what that book
cannot tele. A good crop of buck-- he Will make such a fuss that some-. teaches. It may take a little time to
wheat is about as profitable as any i firma will be done to fix that room do that, hut you would look pretty
grain at the present time. I over. So begin by making his room carefully that he did nob get poison
. Your opinion is .eorreet with re -I blight with windows, eheery paper on from a bottle, and why not use the
gard to planting to cern or potatoes., the walls, a few nice pictures, and a .same precaution as to paison from
You will have very netieh hoeing to do pretty carpet on the floor.. Put some books? Then, too, 'there .ought to be
in order to keep this quack grare's shades up at the 'windows that can be another set of 'shelves on which your
down. It can be done but it is al raised and lowered without coming boy may place the .ocld things he picks
painstaking, tiresome job, I down every time they are touched, and up about the farm, pretty stonese clear
Th • i better land than wed inside of the shades put some nice harns big hornet's- net d ri,
ate s noa g , s s an I
strong clay loarnefor barley. Barley. cue -teems, witth heolee end looles tce eorts of anterestin gterinkztmera'and
phosphorous and it wants land that needed. The boys like plenty of sun- that eery have g peace eu these
will not dry out too much by Sllint.• shine,
mer contlibions, and a clay loam' is Next put a table in the room, with
almost ideal, providing, of couree,- it a neat cloth over it, and don't, fag often. I know a mother who went
is well supplie.d with vegetabl'e matter petyes Besse, be shocked into display- .upstairs with her boy every single
and in good cenclition. • eeg had temper if 'some day you drop night until he was nearly a man
It is not the best practice to leave in and field the. boy eitting With his groe-vn. There she and her boy had
°tie cereal folloW It:301'e in a rotatiou. feet on. the top of the table. •Never inally a heart to heart talk before the
It Is much better,to have a rotation mind; he vvill not spell the cloth. If good -night kiss, and I ara quite sare
of grops and have plants eollow each you Took, you will find he has a paver he will never forget it as long as he
leves.
other that are of a little differen:t na-
It mate to do there things, and it
tare, but on good land this can be
eests to keep the room neat and at -
or more convenient, with the idea that
not to do It. You etre a good meth -
the pound should be seeded, as soon
er, land you wane your bee. to look
se possible so as to get some, grese
-bank to that Moe room away back on
roots and sod to keep tep the vegeta-
the farm, as the best spot on earth,
eble matter in the ecel. Commereies.
the spot to which he woued like to
fertilizers would undoribtedler help' the
rye mem; it does' most any crap. About
two hundred -pounds per acre is the
crop. The fertilizer for 04 cereal prone a man an a position whet° he
etee buy land and pay for it too.
amount ustavily used with any ce.real
day he will have a nod
g s. dome
w ants rich land ,containing plenty of hold them back when nem right is
shelves.
Finally, visit the bey in his room
or someeheag of that kind on the cloth
ane under bee hoele. To go with the
table, let, there be a number of Chairs,
ene of them a good easy neater. And
eve be it thet 'Otiose chairs have good
stout bottoms, Maio Aotincitimee
come to bear the pint of a boy's
!shoes. But what are chairs made for
but to be usee? In a earner of the
Toone where the lighb Will be good,
place a bueeati witleplenter draveers.
There should be a big glet,sa in the
top. At the We of the room eliere n vAth hies eheracter,
come back -owe more, even when;his
' Canadian farmers and gardeners
are protected from the evils of plant-
ing inferior seed of many kinds of
crops imported from other countries.
By an order -in -council that tame.
into effect in the autumn im-
portation is prohibited of unfit
.seed of clovers, grasses, vetches, rape,
other forage plants, field root and. gal
den vegetables in lots of ten pounds
or MOTE.
In Pamphlet S-12 of the Seed
Branch of the Department of 'Agrieule
tare at Ottawa, and obtainable from
the Publicabions Branch, unfit seed
is described as that whieh does not
eomply .wilth the Seed Control Act re-
quirements respecting the sale of seed
in Canada, or if it has been refused
admittance into any other country on
' st.ccouret of Tow vitality.
1 The regulations will be 'carried out
:through the Custom offeciale who
!are required to take and forward to.
the Dominion Seed Laboratory for
;examination, .sample of lots of seeds
eof the .class -es named entered for con-
; sumption in Canada. Seed that lease
;arrived in Canada and found to be
!unfit shall be deported. under Customs
• supervision. • The penalty for feeling
to .00mpey with these regulations is
$500 for the first offense and not ex -i
ceeding $1,000 for the second and each
subsequent offense.
eee
One of the Oldest of Flowere.
The origin of the rose is lost in
antiquity. It is certain that roses
abounded in Palestine, and that the
jaws possessed groat knowledge of
their culture and held them in high
esteem. The Egyptians grew eases
op the bank of the Nile and as early
as the days of Romer the Greeks had
them in abundance. The Raiment de-
lighted the 'luxury of, roses and
uzed them in inceedible quantities.
Nero spent 130,000 for aeshigle rose
bouquet. Then the rose found its
way inta, Persia, where. love (7, na
,
honor awaited it.'
head is white with theie's itelentry Celood etottle land equipmenteivilI soon
allows. A bee's. room hea uregh.
bo
A friend whom eare have bean gain-
ing during your whole life, you ought
'not to be displeased with in a menseet.
A stone is mane 7031-3 in. becoming a
reby; take caSn that you do net de-
steey it in an instant against anotle,
er stone.
The itighoot Priced
RE -RAW -FURS
to us, no matter what quantity. We
payethe highest price, also express
charges.
Try once and you are assured. of
satisfaction.
ABBEY FUR COMPANY
310 at. Paul W. Montreal, P.Q.
ReferenCe: Rani,: of Roche/11ga, St.
Renry.
In business for 30 yearn.
•
Sera your
428
1t.11eaki
West
IMONIFIEM,
Being manufacturers and not buying to re,
sell we always assure the fairest grading an
the highest market prices. Quick return
No price Hot issued but we guarantee to
hold your kins separate until you accept
rOjact our offer. 60
petesaotesseeenetaziagenateseetemeataermase