The Wingham Advance, 1922-11-23, Page 4lam Advance
Puoleshed at
OrttahiO
very Tilerslas Morning
A, G. §ekITH, Publieber
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*2-00 1a nioiltba, wo ix adVance‘.
AdVeetising ratee on applicetion.
Advertisement:I withoUt sPeclac dl-
tionti will he insertea matt! forbid
&MI charged aceordingly,
thanges for contract advertise.
=lents be in the °Mee by noon, e
dee.
USINESS CARDS
Wellington Mutual Fire
Insurance 'CO.
Established 1$40
Head Office, Guelph
Rieke taken on all classea of Insur-
able property on the cash or premium
note system.
ABNER COSZNE, Asset,
Wiegliam
DLEY HO 13
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.
Victory and Other Sonde Bought and
Sold. -
Office—Mayor Block, Whighant
R. VANSTONE
BARRISTER AND SOLICITOFi
Money to Loan at Lowest Rates.
WINGHAM
a G. H. ROSS
Graduate Royal College of Dental
Surgeons
Graduate University of Toronto
Faculty of Dentistry
OFFICE oval; H. E. ESAPn'S STORE
•
• IV It 11A BIS
B.Sc., M.D.,. C.M.
Special attention. paid to diseases a
Women mad Children, having taken
postgraduate work in Surgery, Baca
teriology and Scientific Medicine,
Office In the Xerr Residence, between
the Queen's Hotel and the Baptist
Church.
All business given careful attention.
Phone 54. P.O. Box 113
re Robt. C. R
mond
M.R.C.S. (Eng).
L.R.C.P. (Land).
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
(Dr. Claisholna's old stand)
RALS T
•Graduate of Uuiveraity Of Toronto,
/faculty of Medicine; Licentiate or the
Ontario ' College of Physicians and
Surgeons;
Office Entrance:
Second Door North of Zurbeigg's
Photo Studio.
JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE 24
argaret C. Calder
General Practitioner
Graduate 'University of Toronto.
Faculty of Medicine.
Office--Soiephine St., two doors south
of Brunswick Hotel.
Telephenes—Offfee 281, Residence 151
J. G. ST ART
Real Estate Agent and Clerk of the
Division Court.
Office upstairs in the Chisholm Block,
WINGHAM, ONT.
D.. F. A. P K
OSTEOPATH IC PHYSICIAN
Osteopathy, Electricity All diseases
treated.
Office adjoining residence, Centre
Street, next Anglican Church (former-
ly Dr. MacDonald s) Phone 272. -
•
Pruning vs. Fertilizing.
I have found spraying and fertil
•izatien to be the most important fee
TIES WINGHAM 4»VANC.a
e et.
a ea
Addrees correemmloatlons to Agronomist, 7e ei,delaide t Wet, Teoironto.
Odd -Yobs With a Tractor.
By doing odd jobs When geneTel
York was slack, john Senion has made
a tractor pay en a farm Where the
neighbors said it would lee a bill of
expense.
'My farm contains only seventy
aorea," Semen explained recently
k
a success of his business.,
He relvertised the place for sale at
a bargain, and spent the best part of
a year getting rid of it at a huge
sacTifice.
He 'was frank in explaining the
reason for sellieg. to the young farm-
er \eh° finally concluded to "try it a
d ! OW
n I-1 g, genea
"a ii 1 lgea,woiA ' "
'oand r. arwhildt
,
was all e traetor coule do, I could not You ern keep chickens in one place
afford to have one on the phce I only so long," the clie'gusted man said,i
realized this, and befoTe 1 bought mine "then the ground gees stale' lice 1111
g
I began to devise odd jobs to keep it up the buildings,* and with the round
busy, sour and not draining properly, the
. .
My rst odd ws 'buildings soon become damp."
fijob as elearing
CO-OPERATIVE DAIRY 'MARKETING-.
Executive committee of the minion dollar co-operative eoinpanY, -
launched by Ron Marmieg' Doherty for merketing dairy' productS. This
company will dee for dairying what the Nigere Peninsula Growers •aTe do-
ing marketing' • r
were felled and sawed I used the tree- used the Pe'simism °I the,°Wner tafee fruit. Front row' ton' • secretary and John Beatty, Mableft toig.ht, EU. Stonehouse, Wes -
tor in load jinethe legs, then akain in pry •off a few hundred from the Price '' •
nn,
strip of timberland, After the trees' The young man said nothing, but he •
Gibsoe, Caleclema, J, A. MeFeeters, Toronto, and Wm. Newman, Lorneville,
herding them to the mill. Afterward and tack the Place'
I began to pull stum,ps. With a little • "The first thing 1 did," he says,
skin in handling, I found that the me,: "was to get a spraying outfit and go
chine would make an even. pull, and over all the 'buildings with a disin
-
develop a, greatdeal Morepower than feetant whitewash. It took half the
soweesoitatimiamiligiaprinmosmoOmmini
1.011.0111ML46046011
litc,r Protection for the
Strawberr3r Plants.
Under the most favorable seasonal
conditions evintee proteetion for stra-w-
The Tools I Find Useful.
1 longed most of all for a vise and
a team. I •cleared the piece in fouT time that it used to take with the the day I purchased a cheap combine -
days, thereby saving a week's time brushee, I found the.t the whitewash . ,
tion anvil, Vlse and drill I sure was
with team and anan-Power- did just two things for me: It killed
sitting on the Peak of the world Bad
In ferteing the land, 1 .brought the the vermin and it dr•ied up the in -I berrryoriptlaTiieopfruwhat,tscirsaosolfutelf; esseti
ntiali:no, that been the only one ox its kind in
t actor into action again. Hauling teeier, The brightness of the interior, ap
the posts, stretching wireand draw- 1 au' sure' g'ea a leng waY t°ward MaY be said when venter conditions existence, Ford's 'billions could not
ino the wagon about. The same year h , .
. . f • -that strawberry' plants that go When I yeat, a 'boy wood was cheap
f
. . . . are un avorable . It is safe to- sa,y ave Puro ased more than one share.
keeping it dry. Lune in the white-- .
-was. , you knew,, es noted o
I did road work, :dragging stones . r taking through hard winters without -pTOtec- and the framework of most farm tools
f dampness out of bad places." ,
graclieg, ditchieg and rolling. Lien
only improved my own highway, but To clean up the ,soil he used lime tim will Ile (4 little value se far as livnalljtantacide'ayfr°tnlhe this material
a° gtehoadt
profit is eoncerned, either for fruiting
was able to take in -some irioney be- plowingor for propagation One eeede only
ee outfit of woodworking tools was all
such of it as could be plowed
set for most of the repair jobs. To -
sides. Other yards and Tuns receivecla a, libor•
try oet the two systems (if a method
When marketing time came aroimr1 eral application of gravel an sandof culture omitting the winter mulch day) h°wever, steel 'has taken the
I rigged up a eouple of wagons and and. were 'then sPaded• This guaran" may be properly termed a seretem)1 to place of woed to a great extent and
y is s a enient.
teed good drainage in the future. The .
hooked on the tractor. With this mit-
• verif th t t the farmer who aspires th do his porn
snow is an ideal winter coveting for .repairing mug be ie. a position to
or my- neighbors. On nr- --turn te'ee clover, or oats, as the case might be
strawberry plants iii so far es ie may Work in metal.
I brought back fertilize; in7 the ea'n" and the fencevine. spring- all spaded
remains fairlY 'constant during .the with a hacksaw and see eng postdrill,
fit le hauled my awn grain and that rues were then seeded to alfalfa andi
• . •
be depended upon; but even where it .A., good vise cemes :first on the list,
manner.
‘I used the machine again in bring- This young farmer is raising more
reater rt f a eg of stocks and di el Ili d
l'hur day, N arab 2,3,
1,1,,,tul/W61,,
• rt" •,,•••• t
.;,:uro' •
Parents as Educators
•
The Child Who Pcnits----ny —rown.Aeid.
e winter, its greatest t . . e 'eh s an
ing in my winter's fuel lo g a -chickens in the ruii-dovvn. faa-m than g •
Th hild wh • ut • bl
, a in an . value is riot as a tht) . no e„eareane. from, a uart e c 0 Po s a pro ern,
hauling logs, etc. Then, with a neigh- hes predecessor did, and be is having " s stitute to othei tee, ouge Ile 'various
materials but as a eupplemental pro- ar sizegs 'to the half-
er on up
as the teredeney toaremain eulieri and
disagreeable may easily beceme a life,
bor's saw, I used the machine in cut-
ting. ,
• I have found the tractor O.K. in
belt k
wor-. Many times ether farmers
and I work together at 'thie. If he has
a feed grinder, cutter, etc., we ex-
change laboT and save money.
In neighborhood work such as this
I often exchange tractor power for "Yes," he said, "if the other fellow
had only thought a little while about
teams.
"These are but a few of the many getting out of the hole, he would have
jobs which my machine does," eon- used "hie whitewash and he would
tinued Mr. Semon, "I have rigged up never have let 'bis sell get infested'
a number of home-made cleerices at it is all foolishness to talk about
practically no expense; and every clay moving to new lend. every so often
with 'chickens. If .,you want to keep
I find eomething new to which the
tractor can be put. Xor many of the landnight you can do it, but you
can't let things take their own way,
these jobs it replaces horses, doing -the
if you would succeed."
• He added that his father used to
whitewash his barns and stables, and
that by remembering that one fact,
-he had been enabled to reclaim this
place end save thousands of dollars
for himself -- .
vermin infesting his buildings and It pays to dig out the old whitewash
dampness hanging like a fog .eloud in brush now and then—or bettee still, a
his brooder house, he could not make good spraying outfit.
the best of success, because he is tak-
ing preventive meaisures. He uses the
disinfectant whitewash once each
month on the interior of his buildings
As fast as the green food is con-
smned in one of the runs, he turns
the fowls, into another and seeds it
work eheaper in a great deal less
time."-
Get Out the Old Whitewash Brush.
Two years ago a certain poultryman
threw up his hands in disgust, With
Since it will be to the advantage of
Ontario potato growers to get rid of
all undersized and injered potatoes at
home, the best method of feeding this
product to t'he pigs will be of interest
to many. Potatoes are peculiarly
valuable as a supplement in fattening
pig,s. The best, practice;is to cook the
potatoes, drain air the water and then
mix the potatoes with grain at the
tate of about three parte of potatoes
to one part of the grain. The writer's
method of doing this is to boil the
potatoes in a feed cooker and then
do the mixing in a barrel with a piece
of board of suitable length. Thus
I prepared liberal quantities may be fed
to fattening hogs and also to brood
soWs and small pigs. Raw potatoes
should not be fed to live stock in too
large quantrties because of the sola
whti-
ine ieh, if consumed too liberally,
is apt to produce harmful effects. This
arystaliee eompound is lost in cook-
-`
tore in fruit growing," says Robert
Anderson, a successful orchardist
"Iiirithetit spraying, you might as well
give uP, for no ether practiees will
make up for. spraying. After spray -
lug conies fertilizers. You meg feed
the trees if you want big crops. A
let Of oroharde don't pay because they
are half etatved." -
"Plow about pruning?" was a ques-
tion put to Mr. Andersen. "Isn't that
one of the most imptatant factors?'
"I, don't want to Mitiirnize preriing,"
was the artsWer, %at I feel that it is
Often overdone in the effort to make
up for the emission of other practices
The suttee's of pruning is tot /newer -
ed ,by the amount of Wood yon reinove,
but the Amount you eari properly
leave, con illustrate this by the
fraetion, Six Over two, in which six
represents the trees and 'bran:obeli, and
two the pi:eductive power of the soil.
lt'e 11043 to have more wood than
the soil will support peoduee good
Ault, so you tate four away from the
sie pruning, and have the fraction
WO poet' two. But another way IS to
eRta fear to the tem boleti by fortiliz-
isle, and then you. have Mk over six
,--More fruit because yeti have the
weed end the plant food to make the
/telt. Thee the systemprtietice,"
Selling thebld Horse.
If you don't mind, friends, I'll put
in a word for the old horse—that old
bay fellow, you know, with the en-
larged knees. Ile has worked for you
some twelve years', I Understand, and
has been 'satisfied with hie board and
teent, ahd• a set ef new shoes. neer and
the;
During those twelve yearie if I am
; Tightly inforniecl, nineteen hired men
have kieked, gut balky, and lain down
on the job, but the old bee has never
done a:1y of those things. I am told
that in the sante length of thee three
hired eiele have Tun away, but the
good horse has never done that either.
It is Mae Said that 'yot. yourself have
been away taro winters, two months
each time, 'but the faithful nag has
stuck to the farm and kept things
,running your 'return. •
He is eighteee now, or is it nine-
teee.? any Tete he is alseut,as old
in hortealanguage as you will be at
seventy"Tn man laH
nguage. e is still
doing his befit, but of eeerse his best
is not geed, and, if I'm alive at the
time, say the s'aree thing a:beet
yett when you are eoventy. What ere
yeti going to d�teith him?
I know What you are 'thinking of
doing with him. You are thinking of
sailing hite for $15 or $1.7.50 if you
tan get it, to the Old garbage matt in
town. He coeld do the garbage tea'Ai's
Work ail right, you say, it Would not
t be herd line, you need the Matey
• Oldest 1..h.trithig.
T titish heteseurn oonteins e
oidet. known exaMple of Chinese writ,,,
DUI' la the tOrM of hi:wraith:oafs atti-
Anal hoketP.
foe, 'school texas, and then ---well, the
barn is crowded, badly crowded.
That's whet you are thinking. Confess,
Say, friend, think again—and while
• . .
,you are thinking, look me m the eye.
You know mighty- well that old gar -
g
tection. Even where snow comes inch. A fore and anvil will cometime habit known as a "bad clisposi-
eaTly, falls deep, and remains lete niighty 'handy every few days. While t. „
there still reernains a period of time
- ' filee, chisels, tinners” shears, soldering
1°Tilhere is the little fellow who out until his older brothers and sieters.•
when frost action may work more er 'outfit and a ethbleTjs clatfit will pay
less injury o strawbplants. for themselves in a when he takes a `notion thated he does have ceasto notice 'him, when he
t.erry -year.
Strawberry plants that show -
•
For the woodworking job the farm- not want eatmeal for breakfast, and becomes less self e,onscions and the
up
thrifty and green on the going of the em will need a good draw knife a cut ,
.. not
. young xniss who purses up her pout disappears. Another boy the
,
•
• Young childeen, too, of seesitive na-
tures will pout in company out of
pure diffidence, , The writ& koows a
boy of three, who, invariably pouts •
and .h.arigs his little head in company
• liphen br moth
or moer decides it - is most sensitive of three brotherS, de-.
deep snow eovering soon part with oft, rip and s w
eompais saws, ;hatchet, '
not this virgin vitality under the action' two or three bevel edge chisels' Aot bst for her to weer a certain veloped a pout through self d
of frost and unade
bock' she fancies, When one knows As he was less aggressive naturally .
Ru, I)ried up foliage large ifrerace with a
kahlecocnkipPleltaene;eta osfgabairts, e, the direct cause of a pout, it is can- than his two other bsothers, they took .'
, ,
quickly takee the place of the lux -
an' automatic screwdriver, a good nail
, . paratively easy to deal with. But advantage of it and gave him the
-orient greenness ze essential to plant good level While with . children, the lead humor may worst of it at every opportunity The .
d should have thhaenilemeale..eanaclge
vigyoz7tnhde pstTroacliztielrvit33:b. e
aeat many other small really go farther back than what ap- consequence was that not being a
been given protection at the approach t°'°1s that the farmer' 'can nsa adt
vantag•e, he.will find that the above,
lecte
of winter, but, if this work was neg-
with the addition .of bolts, nuts,
d it will no doubt still ;be a prefit- sarews and nail's will with the exer-
t
proposition. The season is sure
to be unusually severe on all kinds of•
cising of a little ingenuity,meet the
majority of everyday needs.—D.
vegetation. In most situations, a pretty
heavy application of -materiel win be
necessary to caTry the strawberry
plants through uninjured. Fortunate-
ly, our berry bed is favorably located
as to windbreaks.—K. W.
It is human nature to require much
from others but to lay light resPonsi-
bilities upon our own shoulders.
Profitable ay of Marketig Fa Products
The marketing of -farm precincts is
one of the most important things in
the farming business. It is at least
as important as raisinga good crop.
I think a weekly- home market in
;stutter on account
hage man Is 's° sting3h he wouldn't 01 the waste of every -town and city where there is
a railroad would benefit the farmer to
breath, and ' will not feed himzell a Yety Idege extent. 'Ile earmer would
he cusses like a
enough, let alone a horse; you ltn°w be able to take advantage of such a
pirate w • hen he is marketing eystem in many different
mad •and he ie always mad; you know • •
ed were not on the home inarket, orie
would at least be .dbl-e to learn Where
to 'get it.
The weekly home market would also
bring general merchandise to the mar-
ket plaCe. Many would pat up booth.s
and many' bargains would be offered,
and much money would be saved by
farings and town people and be much
to the advantage of both.
pears to be the whim of the moment.
It. is ,because children are made More
sullen,' hitter, or 'deceitful by unjust
punishment that one must be careful
•toeinderstand the real cause of a pout
fighter he developed a chronic pout
that the family for a long perio•d
termed a "grouch." It kept everyone
from teasing him.: The sullen looks
make them- leave him alone. ,It was
With children there is such a differ- only -when a deseerning grandma visit-
enee in personalities, just as ninel as ed the family that she suggested the
with grown-ups, that one must study real cause of the pouts to the family.
this also, if one is to cure the pouting And sure enough when the other
habit successfully. And some children brothers were carefully- prevented
have fancies and moods that are much- from. armoying the child, he melion-ed
more difficult to adjust than the uP! •
salety-pin that caused baby'e pout. Sr to eine the pout effectually one ;
Some children, indeed, of change- must consider the cause before apply -
able diepesition, pout often at trivial ing -a remedy. '
things, plainly the displeasure of the A bay af most any age can under
-
immediate moment. VIThile ebildeen stand the appeal !'tei be a goad sport"'
of deep, natures, sensitive -at unsiss- and "not to whimper, when you're a
pehtecl spots, will be s "down in the lesser": It an be urged , on almost
mouth' for some hurt or disappoint, any occasion to preeent pouts' that
merit, quite unperceived by those who come Irani disappointment, a thwarted
did not happen. to be present when the appetite ar failure to win in a game,
stab came. Boys, especially, being Ignoring theep.out is n tactful meth-
sloor to conede their little rebuffs to od with a e.,ertain type o ohhel The
kind that has "teinierantent" loves
to have his noticed 'and eat-
ered to. So utterly ignoring these
pouts is the best way to discomage
the child from trying th.em
as they pleas for they neve... go fee
from their master.
Little Pedro always goes with his
father to the Company's warehouse
where he loads the: burros for the trip
to the mines. :
The burro "Xuan." is Pedro's favor-
ite, and Juan's affection for the little
boy is something almost wonderful.
One d•ay when Pedro was a baby he
anyone through sheer masculine pride,
viriX be out .of humor at seemingly
he never used a blanket on the last y . main idem would be that The next'thing is how to start a when something tmderneath, that they
. ridiculous or unreasonable things,
horse he had, and the beast died early the farmer could sell his own preclude eveekly home market. This can be done are ashamed to confess, rankles.
himself, or -hold. them if the prices in a few days, You don't have to wait ---
in the spring from exposure and inal- were not right until next summer, there are ninny e
nutrition. That's why he wants an- - things which you can sM1 every week,
It is •quite different at the present. • •
other horse now.
even in, the. winter time: There ate What's that? The garbage man is •Wherx the farmer ships seine of his THE CHILrigREN'S
ehot so had as painted? Teall, ,grant- preduhets to some large market. COM- GggSr /314teri ve:getables' grains' 13:lgs' HOUR ,
eowstlenees; sheep, fat hogs, potatoes,
mg that is not; granting for the mission hause' lie d'es liat knew What
'elieleenseete., to start the market. A
's chine With his _goads When he gets
b
moment -eh t he is a near angel with 1 --..-- - i. ., committee of farmers could e ap- / ,
stub wings sticking out through the the returns, he many times owes hne
Pedro's Friend.
pointed to get together with the tovm
holes in his sweater, don't forget that comnn'ssion house money for shipping . . - e 'e " ' ' b
y . ofAcial TO buy a piece o ground to Pedro Ti, o is a little Spanish ay.
youT fa.rni is the old horse's home and charges. The goods often do net bring
the cost of shipping, not speaking of hold the market on. Make a few ar- He lives. in a village at the foot of
ranzelecnts for the up-leeep of the the Andes mountains in Chile. If rolled from a box on which his mother
the the cost of eaising the a - , . . .
,products, etc.
basket, market, like rentrng emtain places at Pedro was a Canadian his name would had left him for his nap. Juan was
• .1 -There are also a lot of farm pro- •
the maxket ground to people who be Peter Titus, 'but he is not, so tve in the case yard, As seen as he saw
that he loves his horne just as inuch
as you do, if not more. He grew to
horsehood here and knows every cor-
ner and fence -post. If you sell him
to any one you will break his heart, ducts never shipped nor used, as small
He depends on you, he has every cone amounts are not profitable to ship.
fiderice in you. He has given
twelve long years of his active life ret
you 14°"Nryoeuri eiefultdhertaekwe edreowia home
111;ele.
and if, he had kept books' he could had, large or small, and it would not
prove you owe him $2,400 at least. cost anything to get it eolcl; ;as you
Don't bTeak his heart. wo'qld do this yourself.
Parse/1'01Y, I don't think ,your barn There would then be many farmers
is crowded, Why not slip those eolts who could buy their needs from other
into that box gall and tie these two farmers et the market' place, While
mares aver in that double stall? now it is onen a 'problem to know
Make room ,for the old fellow inside where to buy some of them. The
when the weather is bad, and give neighbors do not have what he wants
him the ratge of the pasture when and the farmer cannot spend his tinie
the weather Is fine. In, two or throi looking for it all over the country. If
year t that he has left to live it should happee that the goods want
you can pay him back a little of that
$2,400.
Make town foe the old horse, frieird.
When you are his ago --seventy sim
your case—the boys etal girls will
make it a cornei• for you and try to
pay you back for the year a thet you
labored for there Without Not. ,
Present prizee for fared products
would be all right if other things
Would "d.efitste" eccortlinght,
taeli of us adds aii Tote to the
woeld'S fend Of knOWledge but we can
add more it we rnalte more use of that
which is airmly availehle,
Lowerieg the coat of produetion is
a present-day eccmconie /wed. It can
lyeet be done by getting. more. ogg•s per
hen, more milk per caw, and mote
grain pet acre, arid terries; for 103S
ChiC.ItenSf 00Wa Mel acres.
would lake to pat up booths, eee. Then inuat .eall him by his Spanish name:Iwhat had happened he -crossed over
haye the market place divided into Pedro Titoto the box, carefelly lifted Pedro by
sectioas. At each seetion a certain Pedro's fether, Pablo, which in Eng- veStido (clothes), put him back on
kind of goods should he sold. Then a. Mali means "Paul," is a ea.banil, and the box, and gently rubbed hmui with
day should be set on which to hold the cabanil (cale45an-ye-i1) m, our Ian- 'his eoft, eeIvety nose.
market. The market could be opened guage weeld he ."e• keeper of burros!' 6
Pan. 'Arrangements coula 1.)e made to thing's Iv to the tne• n who work in For feeding cows, 2.5 tons of pump -
at 8.00 ann. and last until noon or 2.00 pable takes provisions and .041er Feed!lng Petrepktiae.•
have the market place m-iler cover fdt:
protection in had weather, Ale.), it
would be important to arrange that
not any of the neighboring towns
would have a market en the tame day.
This system is. in full swing in
many countries of Eurepe, and there
lute pro-ven a big advantage to farm-
ing.
the silver mines in northern Chile, He
has fifteen berros and twice a month
makes the long, tiresome trip.
Pablo is kind to his laurroe and be
tells Pedro many things about them.
Pedro is only six years ,old, but he
kooevs that the little brim' is the
most faithful of the faithful ereatures.
He is sure-footed, Meetly -nerved, and
is worthy of being trusted. He is more,
_tee -me- sensitive to 'harsh words' than the
ee---et horse, and responds to kindness as
quickly as the dog.
•
For ,carrying loads of freight over
rough 'and rugged mount,airt trails
'If there is no animal that cat be corn -
pared with the burro. He' ean climb
like a goat and without either bridle
or driver carries burdens where a
horse Oculd never go,
Fable Tito will het work hie burros
en Sunday. He says thet they, like
mac, need one day of rest out of the
seven. Se every Seeday Pablo and
his burros forget the heavy loads,
steep trails, and the hot 'sun.
Two Sundays hi each Merrill Pablo
rests at his OWn. res'a (belie) andithe
other ewe he passes in some quiet 1 lit. 0 the 1 $
cereron n oounta"
whore (hero is grass and water for
)
"htl°1/ .°11. i
hs bur os Wel tonere they can roam
1) in ' ,
wee
Leteet
,eeett4a,
• "
9
rsortli;Y • - alwoYs l'Opught the "seteittie tera)ar,esi' basin
was quite juotifiedt."
--1tftig<1i, In
kins, with seeds i; are the equal of
one ton of corn silage. Some folks
say that pumpkin seeds will cause
cows to go dry, or tha, they will work
•on animals' kidneys, and hence the
pintripikin seeds should not be fed.
There is no truth insuch statements,
as'ha.s been proved by feeding tests.
On the other hazel, pumpkin k seeds are
beneficial. When fed to pigs, they
fres the pigs of worms and put the
digestive apparatus in tip-top shape..
An excess of seeds causes mum upset
of the digeetive organs for 'a day or
so, because the seeds, arc very rich.
There is no danger, though, if feel in
anieueits in ,whigll they occur natural.. ,
ly, Per feedlots pigs, pumpkins are
sometimes melte& but this extra work
is not -warranted.
Squashes can be fed to tows, pigs
and horses the salt° as pumpkins.
'Sonia stockmen Make a prectieo of
fattening pigs exclusively on squash -
�s, and getgood returns per acre from
the crop, but the pork ha, isa ob-
jectienahie yellow color, Heeseewili
aoreetirnes 1,411.0 to oat pumplatis
sgitashea,--A, Cfl
None of us Will gel, very far it we
rely alone on oureowe eeperienee.