Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 4 Apr 1923, p. 2

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mmunlcationi to Agronomist, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toront* Tht opinion prevails in ^ liberty, more especially during Home Education "Ths Child'* Flnt School I* th Family" Froebal. Training for Unselfishness By May E. Wilson o/ Canada that /io ; ; of tk* bacon type ore more expensive to grew than those, of thick type. What early part of the fattening When this is done considerable w ^^ uj- iiwi< _._, ..._ is saved. As a rule, however, slightly i( j eal> , (D av jd so n). A city whose peaking, he did not belong to Canaan. In tabernacle*; in tenta like nomad. In Palestine to this day there arc three classes of residents city dwell- ers, peasant! and nomads. Both the city dwellers and the peasants live in cities and towns. The nomad, how- ever, has no permanent residence. He is here to-day and away to-morrow. Not long ago I heard a very lovable, Here a child learns to hang up V. 10. Abraham is represented as woman say, "If my parents had real- wraps; to care for his rubbers; to Bit living in tents like a nomad because | ze d w hen I was a child, they would erect, overcoming a desire to slide In he looked for a better possession than have spare d me many tears. I was his chair; to obey the directions of the Canaan could *K<> It wi d- allowed my own way in everything teacher, given sometimes by voice, and ^ ew U P a disagreeable and self- sometimes by the piano; to yield his BABY CHICKS as * ttm uw* ** . ftrtom WfcO MIWMM IW CoidbtH vomltir OOIUM fw tody. 334 popl u*u UM. .^_. trt iMt yt*r. Ton my_to<r * of thJ** t..ttooaUl. WHU IS* Bohool. Fonltey Dptmt, W., Toronto. i spot did not satisfy his lh girl. Later, when I had to leave Individual desire and do the thing that v j<j son . A cit whose home and go among people I found I is right for him to do at that moment. W_^f '"<*'* fcil/*Ci VI I <l t\ TV <- $1 f' r - ' ' *VV 1 IU 411* . .1 . &'',, - 1 < jl'Jl 1 1 I '<* * I Vl-^WH /*abVVf- ' .,, it official experiments show in this i better gains are secured when^the f, u {i^ er an d maker t* God. Abraham had to reform myself to be even^ tol- l? How do the different breeds re in the production of export- bacon sides? ; Answer: An experiment was car- at the Central Experimental rie right : ___ ^ The child who at home makes no hogs are housed. In an experiment , wag ,-,,] 1 y looking for a city whose erated. It was a long heart-breaking effort to help himself in putting on conducted at the Central Farm at Ot- ; w hole ] life and appointments would be task, which I had to struggle through his wraps, who sticks out his feet for j* e alone, overcoming habits which might | someone to put on his rubbers, is en- t.~ T t , XT. easily have been kept from becoming! couraged to try and do these things OJirtn. It WttB lIH* IN ClrV <..: .--- - - ___ . . I * t if . __ __ _ A i tawa in 1921 hogs fed at pasture rooted in fellowship with God. made greater pains than those fed Corrugated Galvaniztd Steel Roofing Sprclal Terms to Format The Metallic Roofing Co. Limited 3U6E 1194 King St. W., Toronto Inside. The outside hogs were slight- : *" fj 1 l ,j__ i, *i n._. T,.,ni,m V\nirn Jerusalem. I habits if ' my childhood." guided wisely h , mge , f> not only by the teac her, but most of all by the sight of the t Ottawa in 1921, and record-; 'X shires, ^Berkshire*, and cross-breds erajre daily gain made by the hogs up Isaac ag a sacr ifi c ial victim. There overcome, if properly treated while ione - from these two breeds as economical n the pasture was 1.38 pounds and was an outburst of child sacrifice to children are still young. produrs of bacon. Four lots of hogs 'for those in the piggery 1.10 pounds. ; Molech, the god of the underworld, wereTLd. The number of the hogs The quantity of meal eaten per pound dunng the ,-eign of Man-.*. in ttie experiment consisted of two of gam was 1.83 for those pastured onlb egott pens 'of cross-brcds, eight hogs in'nnd 1.85 for those fed inside. ln . teniper 8e lfi s hness teasing and IH* p -Ifishness *>** | AlAltll >dU\*> *VU | ^ - -, - Isaac was Abra- fault-finding can be kept ham's sole hope for the fulfilment of ing unlovely characteristics if a wise 12 shows that the line of succession can ceptiw of the Yorkshires which were fed lor 133 days. Individual weights per day per head was fl.36 cents of pns wi-re taken at the commence- those on pasture and 5.05 for those in Ishmnel. me of the experiment, at the end of the pigpery. The total feed cost per week kindergarten offers a splendid i opportunity. In a large group of children, where each has equal rights, the selfish child 1UW3 Clink UlC line \J1 OUWGOtiivfi - - . - . _ _ _ ^ to bo through Isaac and not Beem to exlst to please and spoil him, comes to see the need of respecting But perhaps the games help most' to develop unselfishness. Early In life one needs to learn to share to be a good loser to relinquish smilingly to someone else, and for five days a MINING STOCKS BOUGHT, SOLD, QUOTED Orders Promptly Executed Inquiries Invited F.G.Oke&Co. Members Standard Stock and Mining Exchange. 34 King St. East TORONTO Special long distance phone servlcs for benefit of out-of-town clients 1 as well as the little waif on the street V. 19. God was able, etc. Abraham : where to "have," he has to "snatch." each thirty-day period, and at the end pound for the two lots was almost of- the experiment. j identical being 4.C pel Vhe fond consisted of mixed grains 'or those on pasture chopped, tankage and skimmilk. The for those to whom the prain feed was average daily pain was 1.29 pounds carried. During the sixty days the and l.L'8 |)r,:ir."!s respectively for the enclosed hogs were given 960 pounds identical being 4.C per pound of gain | Isaac because he believed that God kindergarten is a blessing. Here for those on pasture and 4.57 ccn tsi could bring him back from the dead to happy surroundings he learns to sh . . fulfill the rjronnse. tic receivM film in j_ i. t _i *_ : pens, 1.11 pounds for the of clover. Berkshires and .88 pound for the Question: Have there been any Yorkshires. The average quantities' official experiments conducted to de- nt meal eaten per pound of pain was t ermine the. value of the Ban>t system 2.62 and 2.50 for the cross-breds, 2.51 of tuberculosis control in cattle? for the Berkshirs, and 2.42 for thej Answer: The Central Experi- Yorkuhircs. The amount of milk used mental Farm at Ottawa carried on a per pound of grain was 5.G6 and 5.68 segregated herd of reacting cattle for! following: respectively for the cross-breds, 6.08 about five years. An account of the) 1. All true religion is a growing ex- lot the Berkshires. and B.5 for the experience is contained in the Interim' pcrience. Abraham is commanded to is represented as ready to sacrifice For either of these children, the in i share . , . in work and play to give as well The wonderful escape of ... Isaac was a kind of parable, illustrat- 1 ' Ing the fact of the resurrection" (Scott). Application. Genesis has been called a "folk- book" and the story of Abraham and his great adventure is rich in reli- gious stimulus for us still. We may learn such lessons as the those rights, which he does by wait- ing his turn and sharing with others. And so the pictures, songs, stories, games and handwork open up to him the world about him and lead him from selfishness, out of himself, to un-.elfishness. REDUCE THE OVERHEAD The Selection of An Incubator. Professor W. R. Graham of the On- tario Agricultural College, in a recent public address, declared that hatching! by hens at the present day is economi- 1 A dealer in implements told us the cally unsound. Professor Graham was' other day that it took twenty-five! referring more particularly to the * .1 i. , ,1 MC Into whwlbtrrow ot I or mi. A Imndy- tot. made lot band or power, on or mounted on lib or tut tnftlue. W __ urirr m <>i.r booiiet I . Gool'l Shmp!y & MulrCo.,Llmitd IP VP the old customs and the tradi- cents of every dollar of his receipU larger operator, that is to say those Yorkshires. The total feed per pound Report of the Dominion Animal Hus- "wve ine ^u w g^oSnlS behind : to pay his overhead expenses, "and who raise hundreds of chickens in the of gain was 6.14 and 4.88 cents for handman for the year ending March ; h - m and str , ke out in searc h o f a new 1 yet," says he, "lots of people think if j year. It may be stated also that ma- i. 4.95 cents for the 31, 1922. In December, 1916, a num- 1 an( j' i arffer f a ith. So we must make wc charge ten per cent, over costs itj chine hatching is unsafe unless one the realm of j s enough." I ' 1;IS a ^'""' machine and operates it -.^sS the cross-breds. 4.95 cents for the ai, izz. in uecemoer, lyits, a num-i an( j \ &rgc Berkshires, and 4.69 cents for the her of the best cows of the main dairy new discoveries Yorkshires. This shows that oross- herd that reacted to the tuberculin Christian faith. We must see more^ ,, c c re u .......... ,...^~ B <. -- , bred swine are capable of making the test were removed to a barn on an i clearly that Christ's spirit is to reach 1 t jm e 't "J, l u B t nto practice'methods^that Dominion Poultry Husbandman, ad- ow- 1 everwhere and control every bit oi| ,j *z* A . .rlj *!__.. _:..' vUsn n <rnint K>, lv in . /.hour. ; n ^,,K<if n ^ We suggested that this was a great 1 with intelligence. Mr. F. C. Elford, inion Poultr against buying a cheap incubator would tend to reduce that excessive maximum daily gains with the mini- adjoining farm. During tho follow- ! everywhere and control every mum of food consumed as compared ing four years other reactors of high our <*Httoa. fact ' overhead. "Extravagant and wasteful i simply because it is cheap. The best, with the Berkshire lot. It will be ob- type were added to the herd. The 2 H f ere stTon faith rather than practices in business have contributed ; he states, is none too good, and cheap aerved that the Yorkshires made the cattle were housed and cared for In knowledffe The oW hero was to find in no slight degree to the high costs machines are usually dear at any most economical pain of the four lots practically the same manner as tho| God in the day8 a head, rather than in that are still agonizing the consumer, i price. In Experimental Farm Circular being fed, followed by one lot of the main herd at the Farm. As the calves i the pagt J p ernaps some g^d may come f rom a' No. 2 entitled "Artificial Incubation," cross breds, the Berkshire lot, and the In the segregated herd were born theyj 3. God is always summoning us as cona iti O n that causes the retailer toj Mr. Elford gives advice on how to other lot of cross-breds in the order were removed to the main barn and individuals to new regions of faith, take note scr j ous i y O f n i s overhead I tell a good machine. He aays, "No- named, jmany of them saved for future use.; new experiences of his grace. The j AnJ whi](j thinki of overh ead. I, thing but results are *>n absolute At the conclusion of the experiment Out of 80 calves born 44 healthy sped- \ voice is an inner voice as it was w,th i ^^ tf ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ guarantcc that a machine is B0od but the hogs wero slaughtered and their; mens have been saved. Twenty-six) ^"Jjjjf^ ^ e a " the typical pioneeT ! deserve some careful consideration by! still there are certain marks that in- 1 did. ! the farmer. Overhead, strictly speak- ; dicate the probable value of a ma-' 4. We may "push off" t*> new faith, ing, is an expense not directly charge- chine for hitching. The first of these Irrigated Farms in Southern Alberta In the ramoni VauxUall Dlatrlot Bow River Irrigation Project An especially good location fur mixed farming- and dairying-. Splendid op- portunity for young men now living In districts where Rood land cannot < 1 . Mglit at reasonable prtcal. THIS 18 MOT PIONEERIMJ. th nrnt 10,000 acres are fully pettlijd and annthtr 10.000 acres now ready tor settlement: maJtltniim distance from railroad, seven miles. Good roads, telephones and schools. Easy pay- ments, extending over 18 years. This Is ths Best in n.l Bay la JUbrt Write for further Information to CAWADA T.AND s,nd IURICATION OOMFAITY. LIMITET) ltdlrln Kt. - - sides compared from the standpoint of this number have been retained of the Wiltshire side type. The Berk- the breeding herd and 18 sold. From shires were found to yield sides of time to time the cows in the Bang the required weight, averaging 60 to herd were slaughtered and examined. 65 pounds a side, but they did r.ot There was a decided lack of uniform- possess sufficient length or uniformity ity in the conditions found. Animals of fk-shing to answer the bacon re- ! long in the herd continued profitable quirements. The cross-bred lot yielded milk producers and, when killed, sides averaging between 60 and 05 showed in some cases only slight pounds. The sides were longer and traces of the disease. With others otherwise superior to the Berkshires the disease progressed at a rapid rate, for manufacturing into Wiltshire The conclusions reached by the Farm sides. The Yorkshire lot showed a ', officials are that the practicability of marked superiority both in quality of adopting the Bang system depends fleshing and the uniformity with ! upon whether the value of the pro- which the fat was distributed along gcny from the segregated cows would the back and sides. Both from the justify the extra expense of main- tandpoint of economy of feeding and taining the second herd. If at any quality ef the sides, the Yorkshires time the Bang herd would be justified urpasgpd either of the other lotu. I It would be with the entry of the herd Qucxfion Is it more profitable to \ in the Accredited Herd System. Tho ' expenses of a segregated herd are un- avoidably high. Charging the ex- and larger endeavor, because God ia able to any one product, but remains is the general appearance. It should with us. The future is unknown to as an added expense to be spread over he well made, good workmanship and us but if he lights up the dark places,! al , before a true balance can be struck good material entering into its con- what does it matter? He takes care of those who are called to break new in any one department. Overhead struction. The doors should hang true innny way ir , allow fattening hogs to run at pas- ture or to supply grain feed in their pens? Answer:- penses of feed, bedding, rent, and labor Much depends on the against the value of the milk, calves, quality of the pasture. If it consists ' and manure. In the Central Farm ex- of luxuriant clover, it is, as a rule, periment, left a profit slightly exceed- more profitable to allow the hogs their ing $6,000 for the five-year period. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON APRIL 8. Abraham, the Hero of Faith, Gen. 12: 1 to 25: 8; Heb. 11 : 8yl9. Golden Text Abraham believed God, and it itas reckoned unto him for righteousness, Rom. 4: 3. LEqpoN FOREWORD. To-day's lesson ; 8 h a ll all the families of the earth givrt an epitome of the chief incidents bless themselves." Every one who in' Abraham's life. To the Old Testa- w ( B hes to invoke God's blessing will ment sainU Abraham was the ideal gay "God make me blessed like Abra- Israelite. To the New Testament ham." writers he was the father of all true i y 4. f) U ( O f Haran; "an important believers. His is a figure which has'^ptre of the caravan trade in north- fascinated all ages. It ia doubtful if j weg t Mesopotamia." "It was a city there is a (pander figure in all lltera- I O f great antiquity and retained its ture. In him there appears a certain comm erclnl importance in classical majesty of person, dignity, courtesy an( j medieval times" (Skinner). Ch. nd kindliness. Above all there is ji:31 asserts that Abraham's home piety and it is the piety which is root- WBS j n Ur, of the Chaldees probably ed in an unshaksable trust in God rj ru ; n 8 outhern Babylonia where was which is only strengthened by the se- t he neat of the moon-worship. Haran his voice. Whittier's faith may well be ours: I know not where his islands lift Their frondcd palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond his love and care. Weed Seed Collections in Schools. It is not difficult to agree with a remark in a bulletin on "Weeds and Weed Seeds," for which the Dominion obodienc. .to ! "en tells where the money went that and fit without friction, the glass you ought to have but have not. It has a subtle way of eating into the profits. "Ruat doth corrupt." It is estimat- ed that the loss due to rusting of steel and iron Implements on the American large enough and neatly puttied or battened, the paint or stain applie< evenly, and the machine should pre sent the appearance of a finished piece of furniture. Good insulation also is absolutely necessary. See that KEEP THEM WORKING are double and likely to a comparatively even tern- farm runs into hundreds of thousands the walls of dollars annually. Much of this can t maintain be avoided by a little effort in the use perature. of shelter, oil, and paint. Carelessness j "There are, besides the above, many in the use of tools, harnesses and im- . other points of more or less import- plcmenta out of repair, often causes | ance. The lamp should have a large accidents and breakage otherwise, enough bowl to last at least thirty Seed Branch is responsible, that noj avo id a ble, resulting in a blow to pro- j hours, convenient to fill, easy to take subject in agriculture is better adapt- ed for presentation to school children fits. Paint as a preservative of ex- posed wood does not cost anything in than the study of seeds. The collec-j the lon(r run> The inc f flci cnt use of tion, identification, and study of seeds ; tlme and labor ap pi ie d to our job, in- gives scope for the training of a wide! directly means increased overhead. range of faculties, and tho intrinsic, A liberal application of thought and made so that it can be cleaned.! value of the information so derived! g lven to the details of our farming A reliable thermometer and thermo-| out and replace, good workable burner and chimney, the mica opening so placed that the whole of the flame is readily seen when the observer Is ; standing, the heater well insulated and made so that it can be cleaned. ! Kendall'! Sp*TllL Ti -n t rr.M, L U the oM MUMo. itln r-'jiH-'ly r- r ,iii i-ri nfipArln, siillnt. curb, rln^buna. bun? gr.twth *inl IIIIIIM frum ottmr 111-1, Ittinwn fur morn than furty v.-.i r< a* Kari'lall HI n in Cur*. It kotpfl tit- bofHt working oot l<ftii(. wh.r it hn a ii.- for oiben.lt will do Cor 70U. K"-[J ft Lwtlin ,.,[ Kendall's Spavin Treatment twnd/to >!,,-,, uMlt quickly when t ha need arlHaa. A bottle rn.iy .t v>- K bonra fur you. It'i worth wblto to in r'-jji v, A*k jour dMlur tb* Dxt tiro* you < In town, r^ir (t-.i.ia iT'-rt'k^inriii out t" remind you. 8(lld V T n Ij-i . Ol * frro O >J. 7 ' -f "A TnfttiM < tTio Kor*" at your dmcflvtX or writ* u, ' KftfuUr" for UOIM tiMimeut ittw ' ltfta*d" fr Muouui u>*x DM. B. J. KENDALL COMPANY. Cnosburg F.H., Vt., U.S.*. * is of use in after life. The seeds of weeds constitute one divison, and In this connection a collection of weed seeds for illustration purposes is most important Unfortunately, as the pamphlet refers to further points out, It is not difficult to make a fairly business may reasonably be expected; stat, egg-trays that slide in and out to point the way to an appreciable reduction of our overhead expense. POULTRY It is a good plan when running an largo and representative collection of, incubator, to set one or two hens at weed seeds in almost any district in! the same time so as to make sure, Canada. Thero are a number of weeds should there be chicks dead in the that occur practically ' everywhere. ; shell, where the fault lies. On the other hand, a great many are| If the eggs under the hen hatch all associated with certain crops, or with right, then there is something wrong! a succession of fine rhubarb from De- without catching, and the height of, the machine should be convenient for working." This circular, which is obtainable through the Publications Branch, De- partment of Agriculture, Ottawa,, also tells how to operate the incubator. Forcing Rhubarb. It is quite an easy matter to secure certain types of soil, or are limited to| with the machine or its management. | cember to May, by which time garden particular sections of *Jie country.' It may seem that there are more dead, rhubarb becomes obtainable. Tho fol- One of the weed seeda with which chicks when an incubator is used; lowing is the method adopted at the every child should be made acquainted^ but when the number of chicks hatch- Invermere, B.C., Experimental Sta- ia Lamb's Quarters. This weed oc-|ed ia taken into 'consideration, the' tion: Old stools of rhubarb are broken before forcing. They were taken in- side on January 16 and placed under the bench January 18. Some sand was scattered around the roots to hold moisture. Canvas was placed around the bench to exclude light The flnt rhubarb was ready February 3rd and it WHS finished by March 30th. Th are* occupied was 22 square feet; the yield was 89.75 pounds, the yield par quare foot being 4.07 pounds. rere trials of his life. /. The Call of faith, Gen. It: 1-S. j would thus be the first stage of the . i journey to Canaan. V. 1. Get thee out of thy country, V. 5. And 'the souls; all the servants tc. In the ancient world the indl- and "laves he had acquired there. vidunl seldom left his tribe and native //. The Wanderings of Faith, Heb. place. For among his own people he 11:8-10. enjoyed the protection of the tribe and y. 8. To the New Testament writ- all its alliances. In a foreign land ,., s Abraham was not onlv the father he had no rights. o f the nation, Israel, but the father of V. 2. A great nation. To the nncient the spiritual Israel the succession of Hebrew, probably the greatest bless- true believers. When he was called Ing was a numerous offspring. Hence. . . obeyed. With no external proofs God's assertion that Abraham's off- spring would develop into a great na- to substantiate it. he believed that the that called was God's and he tion would appear as a goodly prom- obeyed. Hia obedience was an act of ise. The later Israelite believed that his nation could bo traced bark direct- ly to Abraham. (Sec IBB. 51: 2.) Thou shalt be a blessing. "He and his etd will he, a.i it were, blessedness incarnate" (Skinnrr). V. 3. And I will bless them, etc. AH who prove frien.-lly to Abraham will hurt: in his prosperity and all who *!-. hostile will be nfflfcted with nils- fortune. In thtf shall all fatuities. The Hebrew text my read, "By then faith. Not. knowing whither he went. On venturing forth he was guided not by sight but by faith, thus showing how absolute was his faith. V. 9. He. sojourned. "The sojourner" is a technical name in the Old Testa- ment for a resident alien. The alien might put liiui irlf under the protec- tion of the people with whom he so- journed, or he might remain among thorn without rights. As a sojourner Abraham would feel that, properly curs throughout Canada in gardens as well as In cultivated fields. An- other common kind is Wild Buck- proportionate loss is not much greater up into sets in May and planted in than with the hen. well manured grounds during the sum- It would seem, however, that a chick mer. By autumn the crowns are In wheat, a weed that is general in cer-| which is not in the best condition al-'good shape, and are lifted and stored eal crops. A third is Wild Oats, a noxious weed that is similar in shape to the cultivated oat but can be easily ways stood a better chance of leaving: in a shed or cellar which ia not frost the shell when under a hen than when J proof. As needed, the crowns are ] in an incubator. One reason for this 'taken and packed tightly in boxes, in distinguished from it. A fourth is may be insufficient moisture in the moss, well watered, and placed in the; Wild Mustard, which is the common- incubator. This causes the membrane furnace room of the basement where eat and one of the most injurious in the egg to become tough and the the shoots soon develop, weeds belonging to the mustard f am- 1 chick can not break through. lly, of which the well known varieties are Hare's Ear mustard, and Tumbl- ing mustard, and two less known, In- dian mustard and Black mustard. All focation, these and more than a hundred other' current weeds are described and illustratod, toughen and methods of eradication in the Another method of forcing rhubarb' Another reason may be improper has been tried successfully at Kent- ventilation in the incubator. This vifle, N.S. Experimental Station. will cause the chick to die from auf- Clumps of rhubarb which had been ' bulletin referred to. The reason the boys in France used owing to lack of air, or a two years planted from seedlings wero ' of air may dry out and forced under a bench In the green- j the membrane surrounding house. These clumps are dug in the the chick. It is well in this case to fall and allowed thoroughly to freeze slmly the machine used, so aa to re-] ~ medy any defect, or try out another, make of incubator. i DAIRY Dairy experts have found that un- less milking machines are given care, they are likely to become sources of bacterial contamination. There are two methods of keeping milking machines clean and sterile. The most prevalent one is to thor- oughly clean the machine in the ordi- nary way and then immerse the teat cup and milker tubes into some chemi- cal solution, usually strong brine made by adding two pounds of salt to a gal- lon of water. The brine is kept sterile by adding hydrochloride solutions or chloride of lime. Another accepted method of keep- ing machines clean is to immerse the milking tubes and teat cupa in hot water at a temperature pf 160 to 180 degrees F. There is no doubt but what this keeps the machine clean, but certain makes have rubber parts that cannot withstand the high tempara- turea. to crave the juice of canned tomatoea Where chicks are found dead in the j is that this juice is loaded with vita- 1 shell, both under the hen and in the, mines, dietitians say, and vltaminesi incubator, it Is best to look at once into J ran low in the overseas diet. One the condition of the breeding stock. Itj dietitian figures that the family ought is important that the fowls are not ! to eat twelve quarts n head of canned tomatoes, between fall and spring. Olvle oil is good in many cases of bowel troulbles In poultry, and should follow the dose of castor-oil Olive oil ia also useful in egg binding and In oases of enlarged crops, and for BO closely related aa to make inbreed- ing a cause, and at the same time it must be seen that they are getting sufficient exercise and the proper amodnt of the right kind of food. Spring is the season of faith and dressing-the comba of fowU to pre- hope. Good work based on faith and '. vent frost bitw. i hope usually brings fulfillment. | Dollars Count t It pays to fertilize your crops. $1 invested tn Ferti- liser usually means $4 to $6 return in Bigger Yields of better Quality. Experiment* In Truck Qardening thov/ed that $5 pr acre spent in fcrtilitert Inoreattd tht net afa of the Tomato crotf over $85.00 per acr*. Order GUNN'S SHUR-GAIN Fertilizers to-day. You can gt nnalyies for /arm crop* m for truck crop*. SHUR-GAIN FWUIJ.r. .re tit* product of long From tilth Or.d. M.UrUU. ConulurAa*at*rwrlUu. Al.nl. w*nt>d In (rrltorto wt.r. v. .r. not r.pr.,. nt . d. (/ LtmtUrf 04 St. CUir TORONTO

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