Prescott-Russell en Numérique

Russell Leader, 8 Nov 1923, page 5

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ProducesMore Milk at a Profit EED grain crops have been light this year, and the quality is poor. How to balance the ration is the problem of every man who keeps cows for profits Schumacher Feed is the answer to this problem. It produces more milk at a profit. It is a perfectly balanced ration, manufactured from milled products of corn, barley, oats OWS and wheat, with linseed m like the taste of it, an y § scrap of it, They digest . 3 Dollar for dollar of cost, no other EL : ration compares with Schumacher 8 as a milk producer. Give it a trial. It will make your herd make more money for you. Schumacher Feed fed regularly brings your hogs to market at the develops earliest age. It good, B sound flesh. £5 3: 1 Y.: Write us regarding your hog and dairy problems. Our Live Stock Service De- partment can help you. Itsadviceis free. v The Quaker Oats Company, Peterborough and Saskatcon. 512 For sale bp O. Maheu, Embrun ; A. Latremouille, St. Cnge, and A. Cholette, Vars latch | This Space For the Announcement of the Crown Life Assurance Co. choo FL i i -* We are Headquarters for All Kinds of School Supplies School Suits for the Youngsters We Have Them Call anp See Them andGet ourPrices Before Buying Elsewhere . McARTHUR Ltd. Pay ¥ INE years age Canada's na- # tional debt was about one- ¥ third of a billion. It is more than two and one-third billions today. £0 Jur debts have greatly in- creased --our revenues must also go up. The farmer has to bear his share of the increased burden. That means he must increase his revenue. Complaint has been heard that farmers under present conditions in Canada cannot make farming pay. And yet many thousands of Canadian farmers do make it pay. How Is It Done? Patient and industrious "carry on" will do wonders, but same- thing more is needed. Toa often "patient industry" is coupled with "dull persistance" in poorly thouzht out prethods, es Farmers today mor" must plan ahead, *7 BRL Lver, along"; indeed (pc as "plug E' L. BRYAN District Representative TE sa -- The great outstanding paper of this country, that paper that has + Won its way to the front rank and heads the procession, the paper that on and exciting universal commendation-- ~The Family Herald and Weekly Star, of Montreal, with 750,000 readers aH over Canada-- East, West, North and South--is the Great Winner. "This is the paper that yields its subscribers not cnly immense dividends, but returns ten times the capital every year. 1t is a treasure-house of reliable information, essential to all who want reliability and the best of everything, Its magnificent staff of writers makes a galaxy unap- @roached by any paper in the Dominion or elsewhere. Serial Yalu to 2 oem and wemsen, The Family Heral @i fdontreal, is this year giving t 11 apply i i i Zremium that ig taking the Poni oe nny eit iauineen FE) furore is & mild description of the intense interest created by this - situl, jRcomparable premium, : : 48 attracting universal atten Besides its won- d and Weekly Star, ; s they have no op. sion, i they wish to succeed, © "akian Qf head and hand ! Co-oraiic.. . is WT will mean real success. «ain § in Canada has paid and pays now on many farms. It can be made t6 pay on alriosf gvery farm, Cana- dian agriculture has passed through low profit-making "era¥ success. fully in the past and cad do so again. Crop Returns Should be Increased On the Central Experimental Farm at Ottawa some crop costs and crop profits in 1922 as contrasted with all-Ontario average crop costs and crop profits are given below. The all-Ontario figures are in brackets: Cost per acre Hay $21.13 ($13.50) Corn for Profit per acre $11.21 ($5.09) Forage $47.50 ($33.75) $10.38 ($2.86) Oats $26.47 ($19.32) $ 7.33 ( 09 Similar results can be shewn from the Deminion Experimental Farms in every province. Experimental Farm crops are at too great cost. Thousands of experiments, however, show that increased cropping costs wisely applied up to a reasonable point always increase crop profits. Thig is true on the Experimental Farm =and on any and every farm. Lave Fait] Dominion Department W. R. MOTEERWELL, Minister. 14 VVYVvwVvw rOCCOLE b Bd LS as GOOD MONEY IN GOOD FARMING "Let's Get to Work and s ff the Mortgage sometimes claimed to be produced .. ~ Authorized for publication by the VW VV YY VVVYVYVVWI AAAS LSAL Dr. J. H. GRISDALE, Deputy Minister, i: Rad J With the increased cost of pro- duction, the higher standards of living now prevailirg cannot be maintained by poor rarm manages ment, "boarder" milkers, scrub beeves, poor quality hegs or none orofitable hens. Ly ---- That even under present condi~ tiogs profits may be made is testi~ fied by many skilful, observant and nen-plunging farmers, who believe more in the pelicy of "slow but sure" and "pay as you go" rather than speed, with excessive bor- rowing and the often consequent disaster. The results on our Experimental Farms algo bear testimony to the value of thorough, skilful work, The Farmer Must Manufactyr-~ al But crops 2° By 4 he fare --0ne are not enough. ' £1 -+€T must change his crops bd .v less bulky and more high= ih priced products--milk ork, mutton, poultry, etc. A BR With fair yielding cows dairying shows good Profits in Canada. The average cow has increased her yield 259, in the last ten years. She can quite readily go up an- other 25¢; ang more, and there's ACA A / where the profit lies. Better feed. ing, better selection and better breeding Will do the job--feed, weed, breed. ss To do beer feeding means better pastures afid more generous supplies of palatable roughage. Shortrotationsincluding clover and ensilage crops (corn, sunflower, pea and oat, etc.) will provide feed in abundance for both summer and winter. The experiments and in- vestigations which the Dominion Department of Agriculture have carried on prove that farming scientifically and systematically undertaken will pay profits. The records and particulars. of such werk in every province are availe able to the Canadian farmer. ing r producing ?7 We can ill help you. e you keep- 2 r erasted in pouliry or bees? for informa- tion. We have som { will help you. We have published and have for free distribution )) different reports, bul- letins an rs dealing with matters of interest to yon. Ask for what you want, or 2 list of our publications. ing y We shall have something more to say later. Meantime write the Department of Agriculture, Ot- tawa, about your problems. of Agriculture Ad rT EE TO NL TEE aE YT

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