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The Seaforth News, 1925-03-05, Page 6t,lsw- see - address cOmmuntoations to Agronomist, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronta ' resent seed corn. sitiiatid THE SEED CORN SITUATION1e h P to give thoughtful In a normal season in our' seed- should also cause is itho g the torn -growing areas, the corn plants eoussiderstiOn to of coro Avehintendestno plant. for ire their seed sufficiently early varOn the 'whole, seed of the earlier - still it to become well hardened whir the stalk. This hardening maturing varieties is likely to be in still on h better condition than the later - process consists largely in loss of betterin sorts, 'A variety of cern tiioistme and is necessary in order which teaches at least the glazed that cern may go into storage dry stage in any district during ,an aver - .corn to prevent n to the of the age year is therefore likely to be the coU a frost injury to thecon it safest to grow this coining season Unfavorable weather conditions from' the standpoint of the quality during s lattersopart of the largepe of seed that it will be possible to buy, growing season resulted in quantities of corn failing to dry out Not only will the chances be better or nature sufficiently to produoe for securing satisfactory seed of such fleet -class seed, Unless such corn 'a variety, but the odds are equally was artificially dried before heavy good that moreactual•feeding value • rosts set in,its vitality is sure to per acre will be secured than would fcase with most later sorter be impaired to a large extent. Such be the a condition calls for foresight midi It would seem to be the policy of good judgment on the part of. the wisdom, therefore, for all prospective ] g prospective buyer, foresight in they purchasers of seed corn to (1) buy natter of early purchasing, as seed early (2) buy a variety that wall al- eorn is likely to be scarce, and good most reach maturity in the district judgmenth in testing the germination; concerned (3)'test thoroughly he of all aced corn bought in order that! germination of all seed before plant - sufficient may be planted to ensure a` ing. G. P. McRostie, Dominion Agro- full stand. otologist, HOGS. March and April pigs get to mar- liet before the price collapse that conies late every fall, At no other Boys Make Money Wtih Their Tractor. One of the few tractors owned and operated in this part of the country tilue of the year does it pay as well is owned by my brother James an to take an easy chair down to the his friend, Glenn Storer. hoghouse and sit up with farrowing When these boys first bought a tray sows, tor, some three years ago, all their Early spring nights are almost al- friends prophesied that it would lose hilly, The new pigs erre apt them money. "There isn't enough Mr. Cosgrove, the president of the Irish Free State, is back at work in Dublin after a long stay at Nice, where Ise went to recover his health. Ile is shown with his wife and son, Liam, Results of Co-operative Ex- periments With Farm Crops in 1924. A PA ARTY i A t l 1 i A Paddy' Party to be` given on` St. Patrick's on March 17,cou?.'d not help lint "•be '•r •very merry 'one; 1t would- not be natural to be stilt oe glum at a table decorated in Swish green, err to keep a straight ;face .centre This is hupg on the wall, and through. the merry games which this each. geest /:itis try to kiss the Blar- day is sure to bring forth, So if you nay stone by standing about. two feet are planning aputy for this last of away the wall and bending back - the winter months select this felicitous ward uutll he aetuoliy kisses the green day i'or the event, • shot in the muslin, The very athletic You' might send out your invita- tions like little high hats. Cot therm from stiff shiny black 'cardboard or paper making the crown part double so that the /irritation can be written inside; A particularly good way to make them if you can call an artist A famous forLuna dis insure wall. is The "'first stop _ is Blarney Castle. Here the guide Points out the Blarney stone; v iuclt each must kiss: This is a piece of .11111$141' marked ' of rote' stones with ore •l,ainted green in the Ontario in comparing the results from Northern and from Southern grown. seed potatoes. The average an- nual yield per mere from the Northern grown seed was 190 bushels and from The co-operative experimental work the Southern grown seed, 181 bushels. with farm crops 'in connection with In every one of the seven years the the Ontario Agricultural and Eeperi- Northern grown seed gave a higher mental Union is rapidly approaching :average yield than the Southern its pre-war magnitude. In 1924 there grown seed, were 485 more experimenters that in - In an experiment extending over leafed plants can be cut in large quart. p P 1929 and 578 more than three years ,four years and including in all thir- titles from, green tissue paper or uteri - ago. There were in all forty-two dig- teen tests the average annual yield board, and strung on gold cord around tinct co-operative experiments with of oats per acre was 02.8 bushels,from the room. They : can be bung at dif- farm crops in the past year. These the application of ten tons of barn- ferent lengths in the doorways for included various tests with grain yard manure, 58.4'bushels from the portieres: An idea which is not so crops, potatoes, field roots, fodder application a£ 200 pounds of 3-8.3 generally,used for the March party is crops, hay crops, etc. fertilizer, 58.4 bushels from:the ap- the Irish fairy, or "wee folk." This Those varieties of grain crops plication of 200 pounde of 1-8-1 far' •' a very lovely idea to work t a +s alds• lrzer and 51.2 bushels from land would make , t ith a ways which gave the highest average yield to upon for the children's part w to crawl under their mothers, in work on the small farms we have in and get crushed•here to anything like pay one of gram psi acre in the separate ex- which received neither manure nor wishing well for. the. grab bag i one taeatch of warmth,around Yt g But periments in 1924 were as follows: fertilizer. corner of the room, and a ring of pis - I find it pays to be on hand to effect to own a tractor,"they argued. B Oats,'O•A,C. No. 144; barley, O.A.C. For detailed information regarding ies :dancing around a circle of groan iescna:. in case of need. the boys thought they knew how to No. 21; hulless barley, Guy Mayle; these and other co-operative expert- grass and "stones" for the centre - Year after year, every spring, I get work .for the tractor in seasons s fin wheat O.A.C. No. 85; buck -menta the reader is referred to the piece on the table. The stones cleoid have sat up with my sows. It is not when the work on their own farms p g nconteniant as it sounds. 1 bundle was negligible. bre. In order to supply wheat, Silver Hull; field peas, Pot- foyty-sixth annual' report of the Ex- be prize packages of°Wendy with a as ng gl will be able to do it, but the 'others will• leave to he helped along. If this contest is . not too unequal a. prize could be awalyded to the one who kissed ihe'.epet Wrest"e+rattly in the centre. friend to your help, is to draw a com- ical paddy face, make the hat double and separate, and after cutting 'a elit in the double hat—like. a paper doll's that --slip it ori Pat's head. The Invi- tation ineither case tau be the same. Write it 'in limerick farm, in green ink, something like this: I am passing around this high hat, And I know you won't hate me for For it comes to invite You for Tuesday night To a party in honor of Pat. All the opportunity ill the world is offered to the hostess on this occasion. for, her decorations. She has snakes, shamrocks, potatoes, pipes, tall' tats and pigs, for inspiration. The sham- rock idea makes an awfully pretty scheme of decoration: The little three - up warmly and take a good lanteru along. The night passes quickly. y. this work, they bought a small grain- eeparator, a wood -saw and a small (:he next point en route.. Into this, the guide says, any maid can see her fate if she 'looks into it at the time of .the crescent noon This is .s -o arranged; that a mirror eerraunded by. artificial moss and painted muslin rooks is tilt- ed to reflect the picture of a bride, As each girl leaves the well, elle 43 asked not to tell the others what she here ter; field beans, Michigan No, 680425; perimental Union which is now being tiny favor in each `and wrapped in h 11 I soy beans, O.A,C, No, 211, and winter printed and which will be distributed brown or gray paper•. wheat, O.A,C. No. 104. from the Dept, of Agriculture, To- ,'Grown-ups will enjoy the regulia- inert/ doze in my flab. keepingnane eye mil, for grinding feeds. 'Tie highest yielding varieties of ionto, Ontario,a few weeks hence. epee rte• possible mischances to the Last spring the boys not only plow -tion Paddy party batter probably, and roots in the co-operative experiments Ontario farmers wishing to experi- to give it variety it might take the incl dsfirt fain}lies, ed their own ground but also plowed were; Manila, Sutton's Mammoth ment with field crops in 1925 --should form of a sight-seeing tour through }long age 1 learned to distiuguthe quite a bit for their neighbors. This • man els Bruce's write to the Field Husbandry Dept., i1e we rr the combative squeals of the plowing was done ata cost of about Long Red; sugar g , arrivalsfuel. Giant White Feeding; Swede turnips, O.A.C., Guelph, asking for the spring may mssu and the choking moan 60 cents hi acre for oil and that means that one of them is being After finishing plowing the boys disk- Perfect Model; and field carrots, Ren- circular of co-operative experiments crushed- It is welt to shoo smalled part of their ground with the tree nit's Mammoth Short White. which will be painted about the end wanuers base their mother's side, tor. As soon as this disking was done The following gives the average of February. .' tt err they will ll -be safe hum chill the t eta- was p'aoed in the sired' yield in tons of whole crop and in 'a btishels • 14, V. 1.. where it could be hitched up to the of .shelled grain per ill d h 1 to grind feed corn to f h f ht ariotus of LT Y. for the neighbors roundabout.corn eared throughout Ontario under A report on foreign, practices in must be required to pick three sham- POULTRY. ham- ?OU Rarm 1 fh first. seep /award successful b d tine tractor Golden Glow, 9.6 and 65.6; a ap M private. i p• v brooding hens is h MgYellow Dent, 9.4• and 61.4; Wisconsin use most favored. This has popular- any livening up, this stunt is sure to hreakin Ireland. There will have'to be a jaunting car, of coarse, and this can be that old but always amusing atunt of trying to Resp balanced in a clothes basket swung between two chairs by putting an umbrella or broomstick through the handle. Each guest must aero per plant Rapidly' Growing Trees. nn two aye each week 1 o sac o e' v take his turn in the jaunting Car, and it similar conditions for eight years: timber growing revea s the fact that rocks off the back of •a chair just Along in the summer James s pond, 6 Whet C forests is id•growing trues within his reach If the panty needs eserine almost dry an to t tip n•oa nag among was given the verb of pulling the • r° get theca just as soon as they be- road scraper we used in digging a N°• 7, 10.8 and 80.8; Bailey, 9.5 and ized the poplar tree. Its exceeding do it, i it P 59.5; Salters North Dakota, 9.1 and rapid growth, the ease with which gin to brand, If you allow them to new one. many uses to ~�T .set fur eve or three days, they are l s all rain became ri a• 66.4+ Longfellow, 9.0 and 64,8; and can be worked, and the t;et>aily very hard to break. By start- When the m g ripe• Early, 8.5 and 52.5, . which- it can be put, have made it a enough to harvest, Friend Tractor was In sevenco-operative ex tri- favorite. 'Ash, ]arch and Douglas fir ing the first day they show inclination hitched to the binder and went chug- years'P 1 toward brooding. it will only take a ging away until Ute grain was cut, menta the average results in yield of are also planted genero8sly for the 'day or two to break them up. Then, without a whimper, lie backed; grain per acre per annum from three sane reasons. Usually this best way is to go in at u to the separator and pulled it out! different seed mixtures were as fol- p night, taking outany birds which are and begen•threshing grain. The boys lows: Oats 1 bushel and barley 1 To raise turnip -rooted celery or on the nest, and putting them in coopsmade about a 31,000 run with their bushel, 2,104 pounds; oats 1 bushel, soup celery successfully, with slatted or wide bottoms. Feed thresher last summer. them uothu:g but mash feed, with Threshing time was scarcely over plenty of green fond and water. when silo -filling time arrived and the Starting ! 1ot ding hens is absolutely tractor was put to work filling silos.' w ony as 11 throws then/ clear off The farmers who own silos own a production and they are usuaiiy a company silage -cutter but hire the mu,th or ,ii`< weeks coming hack, powert operate it barley 1 bushel and Golden Vine peas ' the bottom bushel, 2;019 -pounds; oats 1 bushel, leaves must be ]rept large ed off. Other - barley 1 bushel and Wild Goose spring wise there will be tops and no wheal t, bushel, 1,913 pounds. large roots. We raise both kinds of In the 890 successfully conducted celery and found out this secret our tests throughout Ontario in the past selves. In the fall we pack the roots. seven years, the Green Mountain po- in boxes of damp sand, and they Without even a breathing spell, mil- tarots gave an average annual yield keep fine until all: used—Mrs. W. S. Get Machinery Ready. let, buckwheat and soybean threshing; Per acre of 208 bushels and rho Irish followed silo filling and close on the. Gobbler of 177 bushels, Boiled vegetables should not be fed Repair parts for farm implements heels of the threshing season came Within thepast seven years 475 too liberally, or they will produce should he ordered months ahead of wood sawing. There are still small' separate tests were made throughout bowel troubles in fowls. the time to put implements in use, be-, patches of timber on nearly every cause there is often a considerable' farm in this neighborhood. Thus it is delay in 01 reining parts, owing t° the' that nearly every farmer gets up a • fact that that particular implement pile of wood for his winter's supply is no lerew, manufactured, and the of fuel. The tractor's ample and part erde`ed has to be cast and maw steady power gains him many friends shined rifler the order is received. here. And, mei cover. there is sometimes At this trine, November 12, wood weeks M latae in transit by freight. sawing is the order of the day and Home Education 'The ChIld'aFirat School Is the Family"—Froebei Childish Fear—By Edith Lochridge Reid. "You'd better behave for that I heard a mother say to a child that Besides, a grain farmer's time is such will continue to be the case for policeman's looking at you—he grabs was impatient about staying in bed worth far less hi winter than in sum soma tiose to come: Then the tractor little boys that cry." So spoke Don- for the necessary time after an at - mer, so hr can better spare the time will move back into its shed and while aid's mother when her small son was i tack of measles, "If you don't mind M tinker ep implements in winter. away the cold winter days grinding making a scene because she didn't have, I'll send you to the hospital and the It is necessary to replace worn out feed for his friends_—W. I. C. a penny to let him get some candy) nurse will come along and strap you equipment with new: 3 •from the slot machine while they were right in bed and not give you any, , 1. When repair parte can no longer Cement in Lime Makes Good waiting for the street car at the cor-' dinner." beobtained Whitewash. Wer. Leas than an a month later Donald! How much better to have read to 2. Advisable, when repair parts would cost more than a new imple- ment, 8. Advisable, when new implement would rows more efficient than the made by using two parts hydratedl parents but Donald was so terrified to; loved her mother and had been taught old one. lime, and one part cement in water. IVhave the policeman touch him that he' to respect authority rather than If a considerable portion of an dries fiard and will not rub off. Bet almost bad a spasm. The nervous, through fear of•being sent to the hos- shock of feeling ire was in the power: pital. - of the man he had been taught to fear A threat to a child always denotes left him half sick. a weakness in the tie that binds that One only needs to walls the streets child to respectful authority. Why of any city for a day to hear similarl does a mother need to tell a child a remarks by parents. "The conductor, big • black bear will ",get him if h will throb' you off the car," or "See that man watching. you—he'll chased doesn't shut his eyes and go to slsep2 as managed his you with his cane,' these are typical l Probably very erraticaecause she lly. Perhaps one expressions to quiet 05 frighten chin-In}ght, he went at seven and the next dren because. -the parent is too weak, might if the family wanted to go to a in discipline to control then/ in any movie he trailed along and was put to other way. bed at nine or later. Now, to -night, Recently a doctor remarked coral - because in describing the trouble 'he! there aro guests- a Son had encountered with a frightened1told be disposed of summarily he is child, "Sous one ought to wake up torsi he lniust go right to sleep or— mathers to the fact that it very. comefallow the , all Has that will come if. he disobeys,; all of which instill tat lasts until Ise fear into his heat.tl is old enough to become disillusioned. Can't we, aiin to have our children do right because it is right, and riot because they fear; doctors, hospitals, temperature several degrees fighting 1 officers and bears? Let us develop user off." caution and judgthent but not senee- Andthis. case is only one of many. loss fear. 1 . A good whitewash for stables, milk - houses, pig pans, hen houses, or any other building about the farm, niay be got separated from his mother when! the restless tot or planned surprises they were watching a street parade. i for her or to have played a new record A blue -coated officer attempted to; on the Vietrola. She should have c n oca' his home an wt ing y s aye in bed because she i help the h'id I to 1 d 11 1 t d implement is worn out, or if it is of ter results will be had if hot water a too antiquated model, it is usually is used to mix. Make about as thick. economy to buy a new implement. as paint.—J. M. P. A great many farm implements last the lifetime of the farmer, if well eared for, and minor repairs made when needed. For example, my father erected ei windmill forty-five years t ago which continues to pump water as when new. A double harness was in almost .dally use, except Sunday, for thirtyyears, being washed and oiled ante a year and repaired as needed. Very many farms are not equipped with enough meehanicg' tools so that the owner can do any repair jobs 1 • h' 1 ` other tlren tt Io Mega ng s togs/ ter exit baling wire. 4 larger assort- nos of mechanics' trues would pay pest ent f the rest on the env me m i f t g°0 owner le fairly handy with tools. ' 1 'amt 1''iqu'ipzner t Melees a Good Feer Flett,.ee, because le can do WO Tref-C,, better woke, do it in the liP0Pep se mel, and at Tess expense. "At Pfi Or ISIUd 110, 10—'26, promises That Much, happy we'll be as a 3 Edwin-And1 p F.�iw any 'Harried eouple that ever lived." Angelina --"At least as happy as any married couple that ever lived to- gether." All the large, suoceesful poultry farms of to -day started in a small way and gradually built an a firm foundation. seen. . For the centre 1ntre of the table from which the refreshments are served use a tall bast turned upside down and filled with a ferndish of shamrocks. If you can get an old hat, it would be unusual to 'spit the hat In several places and let •some of the natural shamrock leaves poke through the holes. Pass around plates on which you have a green pepper stuffed with mashed potato salad, with sprigs of parsley "growing" 9n-. it, brown bread and butter, sandvriehes with very thin slices of tongue or corned beef be- tween the bread, coffee poured from a tea pot, ice cream colored green, or flavored' with pietaohio'nuts, and small cooldes cut in the shape of harps, shamrocks, pipes and pigs. During the .refreshments suggest tguest each guest think' up the funniest frisk bull he has ever heard'; A prize might be awarded for the best one. And if your evening requires any further eu:tertainment, or if you want tosubstitute a game for the journey through Ireland, try the following UPS AND�®�tras Neatly.. all of us, have reconciled ourselves to th idea. that life pis not stable. If it be table today we ex- pect that it will: be'etor my tomorrow. Never in this lira do we arrive at a Point where we expect oar individual affairs of all avec ee(1itlgdttye to move along perfectly. But, it woo d scorn that litaey per- sons carryrite idea: the./, ` tit a ' co- opferetivo institution, if they jest gat by sonic present: difficulty; all will be well; then, they can forget that they are members, except when ;dividends are to lee distributed, True, vaccination wards off small- pox, and the swine are immmfnlzed against cholera; hut these Teets do not argue that n human institution,' like a co-operative,; can be immunized against mismanagement, or attack's from without, 'or ladle of funds. Some day insurance against these things might be had; but not now, Lire a healthy neighbor who, lhav- ing run through three score Of yeard- without a sick day, took the position that his strong and ragged constitu- tion could withstand whatever. came. 13ut one da'y the doctor was called and this nian was advised to fix up his papers. So, if you belong to a ca -operative that is hawing clear sailing, do not become careless in your membership. responsibilities Adversity creeps into silent piaoes, When least expected every species of support may ire roe retired. to keep the Institution going. Too many so-called co-operative members are like the Dutch fisherman who, when the tea was cairn, tied his reorder, put on a full sail, got drunk and went to sleep. Everlasting vigilance on the part of member's is the safest ineurance against co-operative ailments, for, wha'l'e it will not avoid them entirely, the resistance of - an active, well- informed membership is high. 'MN NAT ANSWERS. :dire Pat which destr'oye'd the hole, Patob. The •Pat that is/ imitated, Pattern. The Pat of high birth, Patrician, The Pat as old as the hills, Pat- riarch. The Pat who is hand to keep, Patience. The Pat who .protects your. ideas, Patent. The Pat w;h& gives you a free ride, Patrol. The Pat who loves his country, Patriot. ' Thr Pst who is like his father, Pater nal, The Pat that is heard in the nurs- ery, Patter. ' E. Margaret VB PAM E. Vogel 9 Who has been made nude r•secrotar Y to the French ministry of labor, being the first woman ever to have heco•tne a member of a French government. serious to havo a child fear the doc- tor, This child to -day had been taught that I carry', terrible things in my black bag for children thatcoax foe rich desserts and /ailoutof trees be- cause they 'disobey. She raised her What 63 Cents Did for Me. A. ciaesifled advertieem'ent in our Meet paper sold my eggs for 31.50 1per 13 postpaid, while the market price was 45 cents for 12. Deducting the cost of postage, advertising and the egg boxes, I made an extra profit that spring of 348.60, - My poultry business surely has grown since that day. A farm am - not grow much in a week or;a month. It takes: time and advertising, and I hope a few ;ears from 11ovy will see my farm much larger than it is to -days Here is an example of how a 68 -cent advertiserneiit•paid me: Three years • ago I had forty large Partridge Rock cockerels to sell. They were from full-blooded stock and a good laying strain.. I dressed ten of the largest and shipped them to a nearby city eterket, I thought they were extra good birds and expected a fancy pric"e, but imagine my diasppointmant when I received $1,20 each after commission - WAS paid, I' decided .to'try to sell the rest for breeding. Our local paper ran a 21 - word advertisement for a week. I sold twenty of my cockerels fee 33.50 each and the other ten for 33. The orders kept coming until I had to re- turn or'd'ers for eight. V. 11 Butter and Cheese Exports. By the Naves Letter of the Dairy and Cold Storage Branch at Ottawa it is ascertained that during 1924, 22,848,939' lbs, of butter valued at $8,000,512 were exported from Can- ada compared with 13,178,711 lbs, valued at 34,905,608 in 1928; a;so that 121,456,800 lbs. of cheese valued at $22,575,787 were exported in 1924 compared with 116,201,000' lbs. valued at $23,445,401 in 1923. It wll be seen that exportations of butter last year exceeded those of the year before by 9,170,228 lbs. and of cheese by 5,263,- 700 263,-700 lbs. About thirty per cent, of the butter in 1924 and 80 pea• cent. of the Omen went to the United leingcloni, Nearly twenty per cent. of the butter went to the United States, or 482,613 lbs. over 18 per cent., 459,648 to Ger- many, and 265,019 lbs. to Panama, 'rhe price of the table fowl is as- much smuch regulated by the method of dressing as it is by quality. Matings shined be made at least a month before you intend to incubate tho eggs. \Tia°od ashes must not be mixed with the poultry manure under the roots. It not only injures the .fertilizing value of the manure, but is likely to be injurious to the fowls. LABELS I,na•atacl Lnbely for endue, sheep and amp 8,31(3, Tattoom, Cl, .5,,, Wands null Soon Alma. w do for Cultivation of the Parsnip. Although many people have a par- ticuler' fancy for parsnips they are a vegetable ,not extensively grown or especially abundant on the market at any time. Their season is short and they tale a long time to mature, Messrs. Mcleilliean avid Cooper, of the Brandon, Man.,. Experimental Farm, in their recently -published bulletin on "The Prairie Farmers' Vegetable Garden," advise seeding as early in the spring as the soil is ready, pre- paration of which should be the same as for beets and carrots, and point out that parsnips are better in flavor if etot harvested until after a sharp Inst. While the method of. seeding is the saint as for the afore -mentioned beets and carrots, parsnips on account of uncertain germination of the seed, need a more liberal sowing than the latter. They should be thinned as sorse as the second pair of leaves appear, about two or throe inches apart being' a good distance in a rich soil with a • r moderatesupply of moisture. While of course theseason ''f i storing has , long passed it might be observed that when parsnips am stored it should. be - i la' If the11 b d n a coon ce ar. co err a ry, sz+r packing in sand lessens evaporation, "Bad herr" in poultry keeping is. .'��y Messrs. M'cKiliiean and Cooper advise nothingmore nor .1e; than annth:r en mnioa. erne utterer;. name for wren mleis errant, 1 Ka'e11nm, Manna 4;211.n co,µ 1 td., ollawe, ant. that roots may also be frozen and g li 1 so left until required when • they e----••-. should be gradually thawed in cold water. A portion Of the crop may even be allowed to remain in the ground over winter for early spring ' luggin g. STOCK Maily Farmers ,;flying Flare W :Bulls Ontario is fortunate in having many Pure Brod Breeders of proven merit, and the stock they produce bring fame to Ontario, the .idea Ontario farmers are.rapidly getting that t thehoz� that pap i0 the e only•one totee . Follow thelead of sblG -1suful farmers by get- ting XoQd Pure red our Agricultural ZRepresentative idosys the breeder of good bulla in your county,. See,,hifn, GOOD RVIALS PAY 'BMV!DEN S Every one complains of the badness ole his memory, but nabody of Itis i u:igmeet, -La Rochefoncauld. • • Uniformity is a characteristic in , purebred poultry. There is nothing, however in the theory that purebreds have at hotter quality of flesh, That is t1 matter of food and care. • 1 Marshal 'Chang Tso-lin, ex -bandit 1' (thief,h(thief,andnd now the power behind the h Chhreee Govei'nn eat, is , the 'most guarded man in; the. world. When ire goes out In Tientsin or Pekin, no pedestrians are allowed in the streets, end he travels in an armored car, pre-, coded and (allowed by other cars esrryieg armed guards.