Zurich Herald, 1923-06-21, Page 2—
*dares, eammetaeatema to73Adelaide St. West, Terenta
SPEEDING UP THE PIGS.
Whet factors make up the economic
essence of the pig? Feed, /nen, and
horse labor, risk, intee'est, depreciation
in capital and equipment, and general
overhead cover all excepting the profit,
which is elusive and oftenthnes ephe-
meral. The thee consideration xnay
very well affect all of these items
favorably to the grower, the shorter
the time 'evolved in taking the pork-
ers from farrowing to market the less
the expense,
Pushing on suitable feeds; though
highly necessary, is Dot the only es-
eential however, Good management
must be practiced, and sanitation dili-
gently and persistently exercised.
Delousing is good -business pro-
cedure if lice are present. Crude oil
enlivens the skin but deadens the
parasites. It is applied easily by herd-
ing the hogs into • a corner, oil
-
sprinkling them thoroughly and rub-
- bing it in with a good Isroone In
badly infested herds the ears should
he oiled to rout the lice from one of
their favorite•dena The leg pits and
the tail ends are favorite hiding Places
too.
Try and get the litters out on clean
pastures, preferably those that have
not carried hogs heretofore. Empha-
size the good pastures: Alfalfa, red
and other clovers, rape, the blue grass,
especially when it is young and tender,
and other green pastures. But pas-
ture alone is not sufficient. Neither is
pasture supplemented with a quarter
of a full grain ration enough to make
the pigs go well. Even good pastures
on which basal grains are liberally
fed—gratns such as corn barley Inn°
meize and others—give much better
results when there is added a little
skim or buttermilk, raeat-tneal tank-
age, fish meal or e corelaination of any
one of these with linseed -cal meal,
corn-eil-cake meal, soy -bean meal,
ground soy beans, or wheat middlings.
To make rapid gains on pastures,
even the geed ones, supplements are in
order. Even on good alfalfa pasture,
the addition of a little tankage proves,
a fine pep producer.
To make ghee- that the hogs are,
properly supplied with minerals al
suitable mixture should by all means'
be allowed before them at all tunes.:
Even on such a good pasture; minerals
have given good results when added
to a ration of corn, self -fed, plus a
,supplemental mixture of forty parts
of blood meal, thirty parts of linseed
meal and ten parts of peanut meal.'
The gains were somewhat more tepid,
and the feed requirement less.
The mixture making the best show-
ing was equal parts of limestone, botie,
meal and salt. We now suggest that
the salt be not over 20 per cent. of thel
mixture. A half ounce of potassium,
iodides added to the hundred pounds
of _minerals is considered good prac-
tice, inasmuch as the Iodine supplied,
by this potassium compound is often'
found to be lacking in sufficient quant
tity in the swine 'feeds as usually fed.'
Wood ashes may be used in place of
the limestone' and rock or acid phos-
phate insteadof the bone meal.
Do not forget that the pigs need
shade and that plenty of good cool
drinking water is absolutely essential!
to full speed ahead. The wallow of,
concrete will be helpful during the
hottest months, stimulating the appe-
tite and promoting gains. A combina-
tion wallow and feeding floor, with
house over all, helps solve the high
cost of the wallow.
Canada's New Wheat Champion
HE CHILDREN!
HOUR
PR FEATHERED FRIENDS --,--
THE' SWALLOW; .
BY LEREINS BALLANTYNg.
" Each year the Department of
Health setencle a lot of money in their
efforts to keep down mosquitoes and
flies. Those who have visited their
exhibit at the Canadian National Ex-
hibition realize ' the work they are do-
ing. To the boys and girls of our own
district there is a very important
phase of week in this connection which
they could do to assist this splendid
cause.
The greatest flycatcher which na-
ture has provided for our use is the
barn swallow. This beautiful bird,
With his long, slender, forked tail, his
black coat, and henna -colored vett and
throat, builds a truly remarkable nest
on the side of an old beam of the barn
or shed, and plasters it there with
mud mixed So well with grasses end
resting on a beam or slight projection
that it will stemetimes remain in good
condition for years. •
If they nest in objectionaVepdaces,
rather than drive them away7rt3would
amply repay the farmer to leave some
projections somewhere convenient
where they can build without causing
annoyance, for they 'are of great ad-
vantage both to the farmer in riding
him of the obnoxious insects,and his
stock in lessening the number which
torture them. •
All their food consists of insects,
and as they have no really bad habits,
these friendly little birds should be
encouraged in every way possible.
Their great advantage over the spar-
row is that the sparrow nests close
to domestic buildings , to feed upon
waste or food placed for fowl 4rid they
eat practically no insects, whereas the
swallow is definitely useful, eating no-
thing else. Unfortunately the spar-
rows, like most lazy folks, despise the
industrious ones, and torment and try
to destroy the nests to drive off the
swallows.
These facts have been proven be-
yond doubt, and it is up to the boys
• and girls, and the ownere as well in
each district to protect the swallow
family, and to learn those of our birds
which are really useful.
For ten years Canada carried off , heads that were not true to type. Then
the world's wheat championship as; when the grain ripened he carefully
symbolized in the highest award of the, selected enough perfect heads to sow
Chicago "International," and the re-, the plot next year. And so on, year
rnarleable feature in a survey qf this ' after ydar, he assisted nature in pro -
decade's achievements was the number, ducing her best until there was no
of occasions on which the Canadian: superior grain in the world mid his
farmer securing the coveted prize was; half bushel of wheat at Chicago car -
an immigrant from the British Isles' ried off the sweepstakes and the silver
who, previous to his filing on a West -,.cup of the Government of Saskat-
ern homestead, had scarcely the most', chewan.
tlernentary knowledge of agriculture.' Plant breeding and selection are,
ee1922 the championship was, however, only Mr. Wyler's hobbies.
Ad away froin Canacta by a Mon- is aiermmereiai farmer in the itest acid
farmer and the Dominon left widest sense of the word and has de-
l -
the consolation that that state veloped his holdings along. prosperous
ad found it necessary to import Can- lines. He now has a thriving farm of
adieu seed, produced by the Wheat 320 acres, which ,he operates with but
Wizard of Saskatchewan, Seager, little outside help. His farm is divid-
Wheeler, to accomplish its end. In: ed into three fields'one-third being
1922 Canada won batk her old place summer followed each year. This year
of honor, making her eleventh cham- he raised over three thousand bushels
pionship in twelve years, and this time of wheat in the face of adverse wea-
the farmer to bring her such signal, thee conditions. He does not stake his
.renown was an American fern= who all on grain growing, but is a firm be -
had come up across the border to grow liever in mixed farming, hog and -cat -
superior wheat. • ! tle raising being followed at the same
R. 0. Wyler of Luseland, Basket- time. He and his little family have,
eke -wan, his worldly possessions con- in the brief ten years' period, attained
sisting of the sum of $400, his other the inevitable prosperity that rewards
asset a determination that this sum, sincere and earnest efforts in Western
In combination with Canadian soil and Canada'and the man who left Ohio
climate, would make laim 'a prosperous with but $400 has now a comfortable
and outstanding farmer. During a home on one of the best half -sections
temporary land boom he bought a half- in the Saskatchewan district, which is
section ,of land on half -crop payment increasing in value every year.
for $10,000, and though during the CANADA HAS THE SOIL AND CLIMATE.
next few years he saw the value of A survey of the world wheat chain -
his farm practically cut in two, he did
PionshiPs over- the past twelve years
not grow discouraged and, never makes most interesting, most valuable,
thought of quitting. To use his own and Meet encouraging reading. The
words, he "dug right in and worked signal achievements of British immi-
like a beaver." In 1912 he maeried a grants who ogrived in the Dominion
girl from his home state who has since ignorant of. Western conditions and
thared his tabors and now shares his, farming methods of any sort, pointed
the way to fellow -countrymen to emu-
late them and should have been the
greatest stimulus to further emigre -
Mr. Wyler has been a farmer from tion from the British Isles. For awhile
his earliest years, and came to Canada it almost seemed as though previous
with a valuable store of agricultural farming experience in the United
knowledge and a readiness to adapt it States were a handicap in reaching
to new conditions and to keep apace out for the premier wheat honors.
of new developments. Ile has always R. 0. Wyler has won the honors for
been keenly interested in the prodne- the _thousands of his fellow -country -
ton of superior grain and is, more or men farming on the Western plains
lees, a seed specialist. It was thus he. of Canada. He has shown the road to
carne to buy his first sample of regis- others who may be farming in what
tered Marquis wheat from Seeger they find discouraging conditions,
Wheeler, carrying it away in a twenty- proving that Canada has the soil and
pound sack. Ile planted this in a climate for siaccess providing the
small plot, and throughout the grow- fanner brings in the right personal
Ing season gulled out the plants and qualities to complete the combination.
prosperity and triumphs
PERSEVERANCE, KNOWLEDGE AND
ENERGY.
The Change.
"I left the old farm., confessed an
Oedinary Man, "to esea,pe the endless
work, the long hours, the saeage bite
of the winter mornings and all the
rest of the dull monotony of the treadtill existence; in short, to be master
of my Own destiny. Now, here in the
city, I am not obliged hi do anything
I do not wish to do, except grind day
after day humped over my desk, ride
back and forth in street ears with a
well-nourithed booby standing on ray
feet., or feet, as the case may be; melt
or congeal, aceending to the season, in
an apartment where I do not even
know' the titunee of most of my fellow
dWellers, but sem well acquaitted with
the subjects about which they upbraid
each other, .66rcely and frequently;
get flirt OVer occasiorially when I stroll
out for an airing, ,or held up and
otherwise made little of. ,
"In other respecte 1 am as free from
Lu e as a bonny bird. Arid by saving
up my money carefully all the rest of
the year I am able to goback to the.
old home neighborhood for two weeks
every sweeter and struttingly.. run it
all 'over the folks there, mhst of Whom
could buy Inc and never remeinber
they had paid Out the rooneett"
Arrested
.
Who was it oft robbed Farmer tinke,
Stole mower, plow and rake
And many move farm implements
Slyly as ang snake?
Who took them off before hie eyes?
A rogue he'd not mistrust
Because they went :Met flake by flake—
It was that robber Rust.
But how wise Ilinke has foiled the
thief,
And trialsee no More cOmplaint--
He's coated all his linpleMents
With rest -arresting paint
—Ootar 11, 1toesiier
THE BIRTHDAY PRESENT.
'book with ever so nianY colored pie,
tut'eSegandp oh, a, great atutiber
lovelythings," Jut she was a little
ashamed a. hetself for feeling die-
satiefied wtth ,What Aunt Hattie would
Probehlk etre her: Of course she did
appreciate useful gifts; but just this
once she wanted something beautiful.
About Poen Aunt Hattie came, and
in her hand was n package. She open-
ed it presently. It was not a present
at all, but only some embroidery that;
she had brought along to Work on dur-
ing the afternoon.
After a short time she field, "Mary
, Ann, I bought a little present for you
this morning and asked them to send
it out from the store. It should be,
her'ellowsweetso°n"-of you Aunt liattiea'
said Mary Ann.
I In the afternoon while the little girl,
was playing in the small yard in front
of the house a boy rode up on a bicycle
and handed her a package with her
retitle written on it. i
"Oh, this is my present!" she cried
in delight and began to open it at
once. When she saw what it contain-
ed, she cried, "Oh!" again, but this
time not from happiness, but from
disappointment. And such disap-
pointment! I
IThen she carefully tied the package,
again and went to her own little room,
, where she sat down and cried. "How
could Aunt Hattie have bought me
such a present!" , she sobbed. "How,
could she have thought of such home- '
ly things!"
Presently she sat up and dried her'
eyes. "I must not act this way," she
said to herself.' "If anyone is kind!
enough to give me a 'present, I must
thank her for it, no matter what it is.",
As soon as the tears were. all gone.
from her eyes she went into h I
er's room. Aunt Hattie was still em-
broidering the table cover.
"Aunt Hattie," the little girl began,
trying bravely not to cry, "thank you
for the onions. Mothe,r or I will make
a cream dressing for them, and we,
shall all enjoy them for supper. I
"You thank me for what, child?"
exclaimed Aunt Hattie in amazement.
And then she laughed heartily. "Not
onions, Mary Ann," she said, "hya-
cinths!'
"Hyacinths !" cried Mary Ann. "Is
that what they are? Oh, how wonder-
ful! And I can have abeautiful flow-
er bed all my own!" .
And when the spring came the love-
ly blossoms of the hyacinths were
enough to delight any little girl. Peo-
ple passing in the street often stopped'
to look at the beautiful flowers. "See
that delicate pink one," said a lady
who passed one day; "it is as beauti-
ful as the sky' before sunrise."—
Youth's Companion. "
Combined Silo and Storage
• 'A Kansas farmer, desiring to make
his silo space available for the storage
of wheat, corn and other grains wheel
it was not full of silage, built an ele-
vator shaft and installed an elevator,
'between his twin silos. Either one or!
both of the silos may he used for grain.I
The owner, who feeds quite a lot of
! livestock, found that on occasions he
was short of grain -storage room and
at other times short of silage room.
In years of large grain production he
seldom made much silage. He could
hardly afford the building of both silos
and granaries for the maximum pro-
duction of grain and silage •on the
farm, so hit on the plan of combining
the silos and grain bins.
The silos were made of concrete,
twelve feet in diameter and thirty feet,
high. A concrete elevator shaft was
-made by connecting the two silos withi
two concrete walls as they were builtI
The silos stand four feet apart. This '
BY. EVA
Mary Ann was a little . irl who
lived in the shabbiest chttage. ,n Maple
Street, but it was a.ve,Fergi cottage,
and Mary Ann was 8- girl--
, - toys,
Forther plaything
and boks, of,
eitcre, but
hid to werk nerd.
not strong, and Mee ei
up before daylight to help,
breakfast.
ft en got
Pr with
This morning eves ary Ann's
birthday.. While she Was busy help,
ing her mailer cook the breakfast the
paused atmoment before the kitchen
window to look out at the morning sky.
"How lovely!" she cried, and then
she thought: "To day is my birthday,
and I wish that some one would give
ine a present as beautiful as the sky
before sunrise"
She turned away from the Window
and began to set the table for break-
fast "Aunt Hattie," she was think-
_
ing, "always gives ' me a birthday
present, but it is nearly always some-
thing useful—a gingham dress or a
,cook apron, or something like that"
And then she began to think about
what she would like to have: "A piece
of pink hair ribbon, a beautiful story -
Home Education
"IThe Child'ii First School la the Farrilly"—Froebel.
Burbanking Your Child—By Zahrah E. Preble.
Luther Burbank says "Whoever be- criticizing trieir surroundings'what,
Levee there is a great gulf between can they expect the child to develop
plant life and human life is wrongexcept an undesirable critical attitude
Racial improvement, like plant int- toward all phases of life?
prevenient, is all a matter of heredity, It is in selection of the, strongest
environment, selection and crossing of physical and mental tendencies and
types. The strongest conViction I have, the training of these toward the best
after breeding plants sixty years, is expeession that the Parent acts as a
that What can be done with plants ean Biinbank with the child. Is the child
be done with human beings --and must showing a strange stubborn quality
be done•if our civilization is not to be which seems to be the predernieant
oyerwhelrned by the fit, Plant life, y? D� not consider this a
I am convinced, is no more plastic, flagrant weed, but look upon it as a
•
than human life." ! desirable trait of determination, and
What can you do with your child by judicious selection of intereste
to improve him for his own sake and train it toward that end, thus "bur -
foe the sake of the future race? You banking" what otherwise might
re -
have already furnished him with her-, main a weed forever. Opposition or
edity: those strong and weak teridene .forcing will not do the work, only care -
cies which are •born with the child.; ful, patient understanding and direct -
These tendencies are not yet characs ing accomplish the best result.
teristics. They are merely sign posts Consider what Burbank did with a
which indicate the way that young wild Mexican grass. In, eighteen years
nature may be turned by careful rut- its meager seed had become full ears
ture or careless neglect. You know, of corn under his skillful handling,
what happens to a garden which is You have more than etghteen years
left to its own devices, and that even in which to "burbank" the promising
in the most carefully tended garden 1 traits of your child. But remember, \
weeds will spring up. But the good patient training and interference are
gardener does not deny the flowers two very different things, and produce
their proper amount of water and widely opposite results. ••
care in order to starve out the Weeds, I Look to yourself first to see if you
He putts out the latter by the roots., are a good gardener. before you at.
In the matter of cultivation of your tempt to experiment' with nature.
g p ou can -------------- chi ds hfe,
qualities, the environment has a last- any more than the gardener can live
ing and formative effect. Much can the life of the rose or cactus. But as
be done to overcome even unfavorable the gardener can make the rose more
physical surroundings, if the mental desirable by training it to shed its
atmosphere is made harmonious and. thorns, and the cactus a friendly, in
-
the child taught to look for and 'see stead of an unfriendly plant to mare
advantages and beauty everywhere. 'kind by depriving it of its spines, so
True enviionment is more a matter of you can train, your child's tendencies
mental attitude than most people real -1 and mind to make of him a better
ize. If. the parents are constantly citizen.
h'ld • • '
leaves ample room for the operation!
of an elevator that will handle -several'
hundred bushets of grain in an hour,
The power for the elevator is furnish-
ed by a tractor that is owned by the
farmer.
When the silos are filled with grain -
a special. silo door with a spout for
letting gram into a wagon is placed
in one of the lower door holes of each
silo. On one side of the elevator shafti
and under a dumping platform is a
pit into which the grain from wagons,
is dumped. The pit has a capacity of
200 bushels A spout is arranged:
from each of the silos to the ptt so,
that grain that is likely to heat in the,
bins may be run through the elevator
occasionally to be aired and cooled.
this way kafir may be stored in the;
bins if it is run through the elevator
occasionally. The elevator will also
handle ear corn so that it may be
stored in the bins
By arranging silos in this manner,
storage space for several thousand
bushels of gram is provided with only
the additional expense of an elevator
exceeded those realized in March in
spite of an increase in the available
supplies. Steady _development of the
overseas trade is stimulating interest
m feeding:.
Combining . "through -billed" with
public sales of hogs, the increase for
the four months of 1923 approximated
131,000 head. Despite the increase in -
offerings, prices were higher on bacon
quality hogs at all yards. A sea-
sonal increase in dcgnestie demand,
and a better tone to the British .bacon
demand, are quoted as the underlying
strength,
The sheep -and lamb movement' in
the four months this year showed over
9,000 head heavier than„in the corres-
ponding period last year. Prices were
materially higher at Toronto, Mont -
heat, and Winnipeg; and about steady
farther west.i, •
.
li
The export trade n ve stock and
live stock products showed a. heavy in-
crease in Api61., this, year compared
with the sante 'month last' year, al-
though exports of sheep and mutton
were lighter. There has been a mark-
ed increase in shipments of beef to
Britain and a decrease in shipments
to the United States.
shaft and an elevator between the •ts
silos —R E. Deering. Halley's, comet returns at intervals
This Year's Live Stock
Market.
There is an optimistic tone to the
summary of market conditions for the
first four months of the year issued by ,
the Dominion Live Stock Breach, as
the following ma -citations will indicate.
Sales of cattle at the public stock
yards this year were 204,900 compared t
with 460,900 in the same period last
year. Cattle on through billing this
year were 11,786 compared with 6,097 FARMERS' POOKLETS
last year. This year a steady increase
month by month is recorded.
A -general improvement was appar-
ent in.quality and weight, giving proof
that stall -feeding was more general
of about 75 years.
Automobile Supplies
We carry a full line of used auto-
mobile parts, magnetos, carbur-
etors, gears, and new accessories
t low prices.
Toronto Automobile Wreckers
179 Queen St. West Toronto
during the winter •of .1923 than dur-
Don't Judge Y- our Tractor by Your Auto
. _ els9,,i_e the heavy' increase in 'vol-
.
While the automobile has had a lot
to do with familiarizing faemers with
the operation, maintenance and repair
of the gas engine, it has been some-
what misleading to farmers when
compared with the tractor. The two
machines work very much alike, but
their respective jobs are very much
different.
The 'automobile coasts down the hill,
it operates on smooth level road. In
fact, it operates under full load only
about 10 per centof its time, while '
the tractor is piffling its full load
about 95 per cent of the thne, If the
automobile was loaded to its full ca-
pacity and run in low gear every day
that the tractor is plowing or doieg
other work, the comparison would' be
a different one at the end of the year.
'KEEP THE IDLE TRACTOR COVERED.
The tractor is atlewed to stand in
the field without cover too often. It
hag to bum the cheap fuel and too
often uses the cheap grade of oil
whieli is quite experisit*e ia the ' end.
Very often a farmer, after runtnnghls
car 3,000 miles, finds that it develops
a knock It is immediately taken to
the garage for repair. Too often the
same farmer heats his tractor knock-
ing a little and he looks out and sees
about eight to ten aeres of land yet
to be plowed. He thinks: "Well,
finish the pion/tag before I get the
tracter repaired," Before the eight or
ten acres have been plowed Ins engine
hes turned over as much as the auto-
mobile engine runs in 3,000 miles.
Transitiseion and engine beariegs
protected from shocks by pneu-
nutria tires n the automobile. The
trattor i8 often rut in high gear over
hard roads without thee proteetione.
Across the fields en the sod would be
mnelt better for it
,.•
Before any one can realize the full
profit from the farm tractor, he must
first realize its job and give it proper
care. The operator of the tractor
should also appreciate the fact that
the machine he is driving should not
be over -loaded. • !
If three plows on a steep grade are;
more than the tractor can pull with
ease the machine is being overloaded
and one plow should be taken off. The
amount of land plowed With the two
plows will be about as much as with
the three, owing to the fact that when
over -loaded the tractor travels slowly
and the drive wheels slip badly. The
lighter load will net damage the ma-
chine like the heavy load will, and the
profit from the tractor in the long run
will be greater.
Poor oil, for instance, will cause
enough repair bills when used in the
automobile, but will be far more costly
if used in the tractor engine. The
tractor operates 'under full load all
hours of the day and runs at the maxi-
mum temperature: It therefore needs
an oil film between the piston and the
cylinder which will stand such tem-
perateres.
THE NEGLECTED iNsTBuCtioN no0X,
Too often 'the tractor operator
doesn't know Where to find the instruc-
tion book which came with the ma-
chine. As a general thing, the stand-
ard farm tractor instruction book it
written by eorne of the keenest minded
engitieere in the country end the leadc
contains good infoematioe.
More of these instruction booln
would be read if the agent who sell'
"a tractor would go over the iinpoetant
things with the tractor purchaser,
Much of the tractor trouble may be
leid at The door of the salesman who
failed to ie feem the farmer about the
neachiiica
urne over the previews offertnge, the
average price during April, and the
bulk of sales, checked at higher levels
than during March. While quality
gained recognition in higher prices,
the common classes of cattle sold at
heavier discounts in April than during
the• th Expert stok of
both finished and feeder type and qual-
ity were the backbone of the market.
Evidence of a continued strong de-
mand for store -.cattle is revealed in
the fact that the average prices 'paid
for good feeders and stockers in April
Corrugated Galvanized
Steel Flooflit
Direct from Manufacturers tO Con.
sunken Write for Prices
Sintoo4 Telwis o Formers
The Metaflc Roofrng CLImItod st.
11.94 King St W Toronto
Spridn Triintlorni Intho old rellnido,
moth rointnly fax o5 t,V10,"sp1itA, rutin,
rInglotte, Irony gron'th. and lonitranNininf &lot
ertirol, known for icon Ilion fat), yeArrr A 4 rondoll'n
Sinririn Coro, It loops tho bonito Working,— nofl
lording, Wlint it ton don° for °thorn, 11 0111 do for
yon, .1<r!en 11ottlo of •
!tenth:sir s Spavin Treatment .
1, :i- snypo ono too I Soldtddy whon tiro rood. orkt0.
A bottrOriery ii;•Ve(111001i0 no yon, XtIrl 'worth winlo
• IO 1, tradY, Asir yOnr notflor talon yon aro
In town. ;Tont tbioNlvatiooraht oot 0•061)1,1 yo‘l.
' troitInirtryititort, nitt. frIOO 'dopy` of 'IA "Iren,tiin on
nit yoor droft/fdryd, 050rite UR.
Ntagelse fOr Horn tnirittiont Olso `Iltunnorr for
IhritOrrndO,.
• ,0116 ri:.11.,KENDALL ON:if:4NY,
. • .
.•.,kapisbuon'Pails, V1,1,
SENT FREE
Any of the following may be had free
on application to the '
Publications Branch
Department of - Agriculture
Ottawa, Canada.
Alfalfa growing In Eastern Canada.'
Crop Rotation for Central and Eastern
Canada. '
Potato, The, It Cultivation and Varie-
ties.
The All -Year Hog Cabin.
The Feeding of Sheep.
Keeping Dairy Herd ftecord's.
Why and How to Use Milk.
Why and How to Use Cottage Cheese'
Winter -Egg Production.
Pceiltry Keeping in Town. and Country,
The Farmer's Poultry flouSe.
SimPle Methods for the Storage of Ice,
Deitern y ui Commercial Cattle.
Dressing and-Cntting Lamb Carcasses,
Bovine Tuberculosis. ,
Feeds for Wittering and "Winter Fat-
tening of Beef Cattle' in Eastern,..
Canada,
New Varietios and S(;lections, of Grain.
The Root Vegetables Act, 1522,
Illustration Community Work M Dun,
dasC°ntitiletrY''FTintilirlin
TheVVIg of Steers in
Tic,\IV),otetorfilQ
tIieuDebetvelSilon of Hortieelture,
Dominion Experimental Perm, 1921.
Report of the Poultry Dividen, Dornin.
ioa Experimental Perms, 1921.
List of 200 Available Publicatiene.
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ost Office
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No. Proviece
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1,
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