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Flesherton Advance, 25 Mar 1915, p. 6

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MM IP r ^ 'A FARMERS You'll Find Just What You Want For Spring Painting, In MARTIN -SENOUR PAINTS AND VARNISHES "MADE IN CANADA" Your needs have been foreseen. Dealers in your neighborhood have been supplied with the Martin-Senourline. And you have only to name your Painting Wants, to have them promptly filled. HOUSE PAINTâ€" Why should you waite money on impuro paint, or bother with mixinfi lead and oil, when ycu can Act Martin-Senour "100% Pure" Point for all outtide and inside painting ? Always the tame in quality, color, fineness and purity. FLOOR PAINTâ€" There's only one to be considered- the old reliable SENOUR'S Floor Paint â€" the kind that wears, and wears, and wears. BARN PAINT â€" Martin • Senour "lU'U SCHOOL HOUSE" is the paint for the barn. It spreads easily â€" covers more surface â€" and holds its fresh, bright color against wear and weather. WAGON PAINT â€" Keep the machines, wagons and tools fresh and bright â€" and protect them against rust and weather â€" by giving them a coat or two of Martin-Senour "Wagon and Implement" Paint. Write us today for "Farmer's Color Set" ond name of our nearest dealer-agent. $4,000 A YEAR IN POTATOES Itotation is Important in Getting Maximum Returns From Each ' Year's Crop. LATEST -MACHINERY ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESS. "This year I sold from a twelve- icre patch $1,200 worth of pota toes. I have paid for the land three or four time* with potatoes, and Borne jeara potatoea were pretty cheap"â€" thus said Fred A. Johnson, of Port Stanley, potato farmer. The growing of potatoca on Cana- dian farms is apt to take one or two forms : it may be a highly-special i«ed industry, to which other farm work conatitutea a mere ground work, or it may be merely one es- peciallylucrativB phase of manifold farm activity. In either case the result is the same. Possibly no farm crop is, at all times, more in demajid'than liie modern form of that esculent first called by th« Spaniards "batata." Certainly no crop will show a better proportion- ate profit, all things considered; year in and year out, than th« ubi- quitous potato. The writ<'r has found, on Ontario farms, splendid examples of these two phases of potato-growing. Let us first briefly consider the case of a man wiio has become rather an •Xpert, a specialist. I first heard him described in the city of St. Thomas as "Johnson, the potato man," and at once went to visit him. Fred A. Johnson lives on a liutidr<"d and fifty acre farm very near the village of Port Stanley, on Lake Krie. WIrcn he moved to his present place forty-three years ago, lie put in five acres of pota- toes, and in no single year hince ha»4 ho failed of a crop. Space for- bids a detailed explanation of this e.vpert's methods, but a few facts may here be set down that shoulil be of value to farmeis throughout the Province. ()f the, entire 150 acre urea of the farm, twenty-eight acres are de- voted to potatoes. This area com prises two fields of ten and eigh- teen acres, rchpectively, and in two fields, each of this size, the nn- jial crop is produced, part of a icnlific rotation. In. preparing a •* treld for potatoes, Mr. Johnson first grows a crop of oats, seeded down with clover. Wliile the first crop of clover is cut for hay, the second is left on the ground, and the mat thus forniod is plowed under the following spring. Clovffr, by the way, Mr. Johnson regards as abso- lutely invaluable for us-e C)n the potato ground. When spring comes, plowing and discing are done, barnyard manure being ap plied at the rate of twelve to fif- teon loads per acre. Should the supply of manure be exhausted, a fertilizer consisting of potash (24%), ammonia (10%) and dissolved phospliale (66%) is applied by Diea.ns of a' fertilizer drill. The noil is, alter manuring or fertiliz \Dfr, UwJougl'.Iy cultivated with a THE FATEJIF AZUMA; Or, The South African Millionaire. two-horse cultivator, and this oper- ation is repeated from five to seven tiraee, at intervals of a few days. Owing to the close proximity of the United States gardens, with their early varieties, Mr. Johnson prefers to handle late potatoes. Planting, for the most part, is done the first week in June. Just here it might be mentioned that, on this farm, seed-cutting is done by hand, the proprietors having found that, DO matter how efficient the machine used, spuds went to the fields with- out th« necessary "eye." As Mr. Johnson said, "When every potato means two or three cents, one must be careful that there is an eye on each piece planted." The planting is completed bj' about the 10th of June, and thereafter comes con- tinuous cultivation. After the seed has been planted for a week, the ground is harrowed lightly, and a week or «o later a cultivator, with hillers, is used. Once the plants appear above the surface, cultiva- tion continues at intervals of one week during the entiie growing season. A one-horse hiller is used after the plants attain a fair growth. Then comes spraying. "We use an American machine," Mr. Johnson said, "a one-horse af- fair, by means of which the driver, with a simple pressure on the foot brake, directs the spray over eight rows on each trip up and down the field. We use a paris gre«n spray for bugs, as, in my forty-three year»' experience f have never had a case of blight or rot. in the last two years f have H<iUi 1.5,000 Inush- els of potatoes to my St. Thomas cust<jniers alone, and 1 have yet to hear of one singlo bad potato. This year wo will pick about 6,000 bush- els, as usual, and I venture to say that here won't be a quart measure full of potatoes unfit for the best market. If you select your seed and keep your plants healthy and your soil clean, you need not bother spraying for rot or blight." There is no hand-picking on this potato farm. A four-horse potato- picker is user â€" an American ma- chine, also â€" and does the work in a wonderful manner. As the steel share uproots the potatoes, they are thrown on a revolving chain- carrier which deposits them in a box carried below the driver's seat. A boy walks behind the ma- chine, removing the filled boxes and replacing them with "emp- ties," which have previously been deposited at intervals along the rows. "That machine cost me as much a& a binder, but I wouldn't be witij- out it at any price," Mr. Johnson said. "Nowadays one must uM the latest ' iachiner> if he ii to keep up with the fast-changing conditions. Growing over twenty-five acres of potatoes, we can never go back to the old system of hand-picking." The Johnson potatoes are stored for the time being, and later on marketed. Mr. Johnson has over forty private customers in the city of St. Thomas, including hotels, colleges, stores, etc., and, as he says, "St. Thomas will take all the potatoes I can send it." Besides, should he care to neglect his local market, he can easily dispose of his crop each year in answer to de- mands made upon him by United States dealers and buyers. Now, as to seed â€" you couldn't sell Mr. Johnson any, be your specimens ever so perfect. He be- lieves in seed selection from his own crop, and his great success has justified his policy. On no account would he buy seed from an out- sider. No variety, he says, will ever "run out" if properly propa- gated by intelligent selection. His favorit* "late" varieties are tlfe Worley and the Carmen, the latter of which he has grown continuously for a quarter of a century. Mr. Johnson will not put the Carmen on the market till after the month of January, as not till then, he be-' lieves, does it attain perfection for table use. The writer regrets that he is un- able to reproduce here .a portion of what is probably the most complete and unique book of farm accounting to be found in Canada. "My books show that my first sale from this farm, forty-three years ago, was 54 lbs. of wool at 54 cents a jwund," read Mr. Johnson from his ac- counts. "From that date on, I can show a written record of every tran.saction made on this farm, if only for a postage stamp." Mention must needs be made of this liome, built, in no small mea- sure, from "potato mopey." It is surely one of the finest to be found on any Canadian farm. Such con- vc,niences aa a private acetylepe plant, d\inib waiter, wood-elevator from cellar to kitchen, and hot, cokl and soft water on tap, all con- tribute to a home life which appeals to the visitor as truly admirable. fio much for one who has made his twenty-eight acres of potatoes the object of special study and ex- periment. Let us now turn for a moment to the case of an Erin township farmer, Mr. Charles Bald- win, who runs on ordinary mixed farming principles sonio 200 acres near tjie village of Hillsburg, On- tario. Above all, first and fore- most, be it understood that Mr. Baldwin is a successful, practical, all-round farmer; his work with potatoes is in the way of a little extra attention to a very common crop. Three years ago Mr. Baldwin sold the r>otatr crop from a fifteen acre field for about $1,000. How much profit 1 you ask. Mr. Baldwin puts It this way : "Frankly, I reckon that the po- tato crop pays all farm-running and minor expenses, leaving the returns from other farm work for any other use we desire." -By H. B. Mcliinnon, in The Canadian CountirynMui. CHAFFEE I. "ii(op, you psalm.*inginK brute, and take that." On the stillneee, the ratraordinury at'l'.- iici.s of the Afiican voWt, Which re«Cinibl«B iio oth«r eilen(«, the voice of the man, which waB a pleaeant one, sounded almost metallic, and his wrath and fury were increased by the fact that he ivas ordin- arily a peaceful man, not given to fight- ing, or ere.i to war, but the cringing note, to cften apparent in h'e race, was mifsing, as he gave the man addressed a blow with hie flat that sent him reeling. The "p^alin-singing brute" wr.e a Boer, and what had roused the Jew's ire was the fad that he had caught him in the act cf maltreating a Kaffir woman. The Boer i(i at onoe a fatalist and a respecter of pluck, (he does not, unfortunately, think the Kngliebman plucky, or used not to, that was the trouble), and he de- sifited for a number of reasons. First -of all. evidently it was the will of God that lie should not beat this woman; secondly, he recognized that this was not one of the hated Knglisbmen. and he imagined that he was a German; thirdly, greatetil reason of all, the young mane flets were stronXf and a few more knocks of the kind were not to be looked foiward to witii ):'!ea6ure. He relinciuished his hold on the woman, who stood, boldly defiant. gazing with hate at her tormentor, with deep Bra-tit'ide at her reccuer, while she wipwl the drops of blood that were fall- ing from her naked back and dripping down her arm£ with the end of her t-kirt. The young German Jew was about to walk ofT. ile didn't think that this man â- would touch her a^in; instead it wa* the Boer who slouched away and the wo- man and the man stood alone on the side of the road in the glaring sun. "Haven't you anyone who ... I mean, can't you get someone to bathe itâ€" wa- ter.' " he said, seeing that she did no't un- derstand. The woman smiled and ad- vanced towards him. She did not mind her wounds now. Had she not had many which had terminated lees speedily? for she was in the employ of a family of Transvaal Bcc:s, the mo>.t cruel and be- stial of all. She laughed, and as she did so ha no- ticed how young she was. how beautiful, if one can say beautiful cf a woman who hfls all the characteriMics of a race poa- sevsing all the reverse standards to the accepted ones of beauty. She was not "fair to look upon. " but she was of a rich tawny color, and her shape was like that of a bronze statue, while her eyes were liquid and full of intelligence, ulmoet of Bweetness. She came up uttering one of the few words she knew, but which sufficed to prm-laim him master. "Baasâ€" Baasâ€" ' she said, and kneeling kissed his boot. "Don't, don't do that. " He drew away, and shook his head then he puUed out some coins, a handful of them, from his pocket. Uer eyes gle«med for a moment at the unwonted sight, but she aleo shook her head. Bhe would not take them, and tb« young man passed along the road and into the farmhouse where he had lodged lasil night, the first night of hie arrival. In a few moments the incident had passed out of his mind. Adolph Lieb wa>; the eon of a German Jew. a Jew of Frankfort, a retired Jewel- ler, who had made a fortune, and, more than that, was counted a very rwpect- able man. The Liebs could trace their ance«try for several generations, but a'so they had not rieen to the dignity of, that modern corporation of distincuiehed monevlender with aristocratic pr«"liv'- ties called banke;s. No Lieb had as yet moved in the smart world, bat all had had a certain standing in the town of Frankrfort. Years ago one had been a gold-beater, centuries before that, one, bad had the astute inspiration of chang- ing monies, in a superbly honest man- ner, which had precluded bis making a great fortune, for when a Jew doesn't make money it ig not because he can't, but because he won't, add there are as many honeat Jews as honest t'hrlstians. And Adolph's father bsul followed hie family's traditions, and given good pew- el's for the money, at reasonable prices, and wM cooee<|ueutly the delight of the great ladies of Frankfort. No wedding of any importance took place in Frank- fort or the vicinity without Heinrich Lieb having contributed to its magn: ficenee and it had been known that be had been sent (or to Cologne, and Ham- burg, and even Berlin. He had wonderful- ly good taste himself, and knew the taates of the renowned families of his native town so well that he never wa«"t- «d (heir time nor his by offering them anything tJuit would not suit them; while. â- 8 h» said: "The word "impossible.' that la noit in my dictionary. If there ie a red sapphire anywhere, anywhere, then Heinrich Liieib can get it. If Heinrich Li«4> doesn't get it. then the thing doesn t ei- iet." And apart from the fact, that he was an honest and artiatio jeweller, he was sympathetic. It was told that a great lady, whoee partie« were more sought af- ter than thoae of royalty, had once ez- ol aimed: â-  1 love old Lieb!" And iwhile people laughed, they had un- defltood what the Uralln meant. He was a charming old man to deal with, and many a friendly chat had passed between him and his women customers; while, over iwedding presents and the re-setting of heirloomH, men high up in the aociftl and financial world would give him a glass of wine and offer him a good cigar. His shop was a small, unostentatious one. like his house on the Jiideng.\°se, and he pretended that he wa« a poor man linawlng that nobody believed him. If occaHionally ho had advance<l money on jewels to save seme decadent hcuse of old name and standing, it wa.^n't in the least that he was a pawnhrokcr. bat merely that he had done it out of kind- ne<w of heart, often giving more t'hnn tho value, and keeiping the Jewels jeal- ously guarded from any human eye till such lime as they could be redeemed. If acts of this kind enhanced the gwHl feel- ing that, everyone bore him. and increas- ed his trade, it way hut just. It had been a grief to him when he fin- ally decide*! to reti.-e from business that neither o<f his (tons would continue it, yet he know that it was the natural conse qumice of the eilucation Jie had given them. He ha<l went them to the best schools which would admit tradesmen '». . BoiiM and Jenri. and t« the University, and 1 1 mado them travel. After .Ul they would have enough to do as they like<l; only ,o his eldest son. Adolphs, who was the clovercflt, he had «aid something which the liov had never forgotten. He hail told him : â-  When 1 die. for simple people, trades- men's cli'-Mrcii. you will bo very well oil; hut 1 tBll you tliri now, if you don't make money, thtMi you hwe one of thv gre.tteflt pleasures in life, the greatest plecsuro. The-ro is nothing, nothing like it in the world, it is better than love for it is more lasting, .and then love cannot buy money, and money can buy love." lie laughe<l when he said th;e, ae If it were a joke, but tJie truth in it impreswed the boy; only it seemed to him that a I'ttlo would not be enough, that to make a little money and work very hard for it was not wonh the trouble, that ito be the richest man in the world, and know how to sipeod it/ -that would he magnificent. And while old l.ielh began trt 'nleroet himsBlt in politico and sunned himself on tho terrace of tjie bcauliiful house ho had built in the country, a few miles from Frankfort, and entertained, with his oharmiitg and unsophisticated wife, tt oiTCle of the princes of Frankfort trade, big wine merchants and tobacco mer- ohanl9, pioture dealers and hotel keep- ers, of the .more exchisivo kind, art cite and pian1i5te. whom he helped, and <viv.:>- sionally an iniptcuiiiotis Prince or Or.if whom ho aleo he'i)ed, young Adolpho ro ceived an invitation from tho son of Irs father's agent in Hoiitii Africa, to visit him there, to see the comilty. 'Ph s was a short time before tho t!oer War was declared. so^ iw'i ^i scto! Old Lieb was nuite wiWing that hie son should go. He had never aeen his agent, who as a matter of fact was simply a middleman between him and one of the diaoDond mine owners, and who kad a small share in one of the diamond mines. All that he knew about him was that he was an A,frikander, that he was married and had a large family, and that he sent him very good diamonds at very low prices. Am a matter of fact old Lieb thought the Cape diamonds too white. He generally preferred to buy old ones here and there and to re«et them. "They arc different to women." he would say, "thev improve with age. " I | Adolphe'B mother didn't like the idea at all, and his sisters implored him not to bring back a dusky wife, but old Lieb thought it would be the making of hJm. Adolphe was begioning to kick bis heeU about in Frankfort, imbibing a taste for doing nothing, for entertaining actreescs fvt fashionable restaurants, andâ€" most ueelesj occupation of al'lâ€" for learning the violin. "When a man begins to learn the vio- lin, he is spoilt for everything else," old Lieb would say, while he bought the most expensive boz available, (or his family to enjoy the opera.. "Now. why should my son inherit my taste for music and not my taste for dia- monds." he would say, "there you are. if a young In.^n can get hold of the wrong inlieritance from his parents he doee. ' And .^dolpbe had torn him«elf away from fascinating Frankfort, where, al- though hi^ position wau not in the great world, it was yet an enviable one. and met his friend at Liverpool, returning from a business visit to London for his father, and the two young men soiled toge:ther. Before he started, old Lieb had a serious and characteristic talk with hi«i xon. dwelling on his old age. and the chances and acx'idente of life and death, which might make it that they should never meet again. He recommended his mother to him specially. "The young, they can always get on, and you and yunr brother and sisters all love each other; but yonr motherâ€" I wish you always to think of her first and yourself afterwards. How good she is. that you will never know." Then: ".\nd keep your eye« open out there, who knows, you might see something- a mine, perhaps, what can I tell? Well, write and tell me. You do not care (or i business here in Frankfort, well perhape you will care for it out there. There is good in every place, also money to be made in every place, 'perhape even in the desert. One day diamonda will be made wi/th sand." And Adolphe promised to keep his eyes open, without the least intention o( doing so, and started out full of expectation o( pleasure, and with a letter of credit ou a Cape Town banker, whicJi was in pro- portion witJi his futher'e means and his affection for him. He took bis violin with him, which amused his father. But to the town-bred European, accus- tomed Ito the luxury of Frankfort, to its pretty architecture, ite wealth and amusement, there was nothing very at- tractive in the aridity of South Africa. The buildings were hideous, and the want of vegetation, of cutivated gardens, op- pressed hian. Nor did he find himself par- ticuarly in sympathy -with the people whose gaest he was. They did not under- et^ind him nor he them. It is nearly al- ways so in a new country. One under- stands neither the pathos nor the humor of a country in which ons has not been brought till till one bsa liyed in it a long time. He would have found the ame thing in London or America, and though he would not ba<re owned it, he was home- sick. His frieudu lived at Kimberley, and it was somewhat of a relief when his host one day suggested that he and his son should accompany hion to Johannes- bui-g. He liked Johannexburg a great deal better than Kimberley, which was a drled-up arid-looking place. , Here there were signs of activity, and the presence of little gardens full of roses and carnations were like pools of cool wa- ter to" one's eyes, after dust and heat. They had travelled by coach, and itt had been something of a now experience to be carried acroai a awollen river thtiy came to in a i)aoking<ase worked by pulle.vs. and the novelty of the e»perience when they unc« slept in an ootapan in the open wrapped each one in a karos, gave him something to write about to his father. The place whers his host was to meet the mine-owners was a farm, situated a few milea out of Johannesburg on the Uiet river, ncstlinc discreetly amoor the hills, wifth sometbing of the taciturnity and the "Heave us alone" look of the Boers themselvca, but the want of comifort of the house, with Ita whitewaahed walls, and Hoora strewn with cowdung, its roiich benches and cbaira made of 'riem' (hide) instead of cane, placed against the wall. the dull, surly look of "the owners, the dirt and general want of sweetness, filled him iwith dreariness. To him it seeqned aib«urd that while people ooull be haippy and roiufortable in £urope, they should put up with such thingii as this. Little did he imagine that one day every fibre of hie beinc, every intereet of his mind would 'be centred on juat such a place as this, and tJiS't South Africa would apeak of Adolphe LIc'b almost with hated breath, as thev would apeak of a king, who had also partaken something of a superna- tural character. And two things struck him with some force since he had been in Houtb Africa, cor «»â- â€¢Â« though at the time he d'd not know how they had impressed him, nor what bear- ing they would have on h .i future life. One was that when they heard he was German, the Boer farmers trc ;ted h-m wi'lh a gre,\t deal more considcrition than they did his English friend- Later he under»to.~d thiis better. There '.a no doubt that if Jamcron'hid not ruishcd in where Governments feared to trea<l, the Germans would have accompliiihed courte- out-ly, and on a friendly, footing, wh:U the British did by force, or at lea;;t would have gradually occuipied in the Tr;insv<ia! very much the i^amc position wh-<"h we now oi-cupy in Egypt. Whils the great- est colonizers in the world, we are un- doubtedly the most tactless. Tempera- ments we have nothing to do v,r;th, we are utterly without savoir faije, we treat everyone as if they had reached the ^^ame stondpoint as ouruelvea. whether they are black or white. "What! don't you do as we do.' then you miiiit iearu to do so at once for it i« the only way." And, if opinions d ffer: "You mu.«t do it thit way, ;t may not .icem right to you. but it is Brit:8h, therefore it must be right, and you will see it pre- sently." Thit iri the secret of our slow progres*. that i« why India and Au-tralia are uuch miles behind America. The Amer^caiH don't insist on old m:iter:al be ng xiaed again and again, they tike the materials at hand and use them to the bent of their ability they u*e the cautiousness of the Scotchman, the ac"<"uracy .ind iristinctlve discipline of the German, the r«-.ilcit- rance of the Irishmaii, the ignorance jf the Hungar'an, the Slav, the Po'.e, the Swede, and the Italian (or their own purposes, but they do not say to th;«'0"e and that : "Be American, give up your n.atioinl disposition, your cu>itomu. your in- stincts." Above all they don't say the fataj word: "Wauh," which is so very harmful in countriet^ where dirt !«« ?oii- sidered as a providentially instituted pro- tection against climate. The feature which struck h;m. alth<-,:igh he did not know it, was one which had caused him a feeling of ma'.aise" before. the other which in a way influenced every action of hi« life, sometime; inciting t^t success, sometimes impeding h'e tr urn phal march -yet, lerhaps uot the whole of his life; the day <'a.me when he relin- quished this, the mental lever of h s ini bitions-it was the realization of 'I]-* want of prestige his people, he and h> friends enjoyed, bfcause they were t lu- ply trade«n'«n. Adolphe was, like .>o many Jews, a climber at heart. The .If v has been obliged to aim at great wealth. and at position, for even then he i« not able to run his race fairly with the worlj. how then does he fare without ♦htae? Even in Frankfort. .\doIphe bad felt twinges of envy and je.ilousy. His edu- cation, bis manner:^, h's intelligence. even his looksâ€" for he was not furiously Semitic in eppearaiice seemed to juutity that he should move in a more rarefle<l atmosphere than that of the tradesmen's cons of the town; yet it had been ;mpos' siible. always, when be had tried to eii:er clubs of a more ezc'usive sort, or, a,j ho had once dreamed to do, to enter ibe Army. Caste had struck him a blow, and he had found that it was impcss blc for him to soar above the haunts of his riice, his trade. Even the affection and esteem in which his father wai; held made no difference. Like an insect tied to a pin by a thoughtless child, he had found that be could go no further, that if he tried to go beyond the limits he was pull- ed back with a jerk, with the danger - metaphorically speakingâ€" of los og i leg. Aad here, in the Transv.ial. he not'ccd it even more. In this confusion, this con- flicting (medley of authorities and rulers, in which it seemed that the Uitlanders worked one way. the Boera anothc.-. and the British government a third, e.tch one checkmating the olher. while none dared really advarce. only those were ]y«pc«t- ed whe had enormous -wealth or govern- ment positions. While thought grew .tnd developed in hie active brain, and matur- ed like jtrain in 'ts sheaf, the incident of the Kaffir woman and the Beer was the one that made it hurst forth into corrus- eating flame, a flame around wh'ch pre- * sently all his future ambitions centred^ and warmed themselves. * iTo be continued.) a r â€" -*. Some people would rather be happy than good. Beautiful Walls For Your Home Sanitary, Fircj-Proof , Inexpensive Make your home more attractive, and protect it from fire with these beau- tiful, sanitary "Metallic" Ceilings and Walls They will out-last the buildini and are very Inexpensive. 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