1. ,.=~1,;,ft~.: pl f i"'°i Fin, i .V.'. § V.; ,L -. 5”- ;i'~1.».=lf . ti i T i§»_f. »f`:,"§¢ - ..t. si - = , _ X: - C sta _ ____ _/ ‘fl *rl-‘,, `-.-V -_ 1.-.'.,‘.=r,-.~;‘=. .V if1¢.:.;i"i>_i 7, 15.* _*.=~."11_'."_‘,-‘». .. i _ _ »-,iii-i-Vi;-~¢ #Zf ".2=’»`~I1 - to-...l .. , »-.ug fi ‘iii pf-i;-`<»`. `- _ -‘. :T `_.'é_$ ‘ -- ,,, ':‘1_~ ___ ___,___ .. f i, ll ' ,.€-_rl , ~ . ”-».r‘-l_`_‘f_' 2 4-; ' » '. l 1 ivif _:l-fV_.?.~i. t',`:1§‘cf` aft' {:_’i»¢'_ '_ f:“':.- H ' _, , i-» JV. i__- lff' 1-_l .:V I :;§ Ii l' _-" -._ fi.-:-"_ i l giv- ». 1.' # l V ,i ; ' .. i . -_ 4; i . . I i _ ,._ ___ i I ¢ 1 ';. . i i . _ __ `a\ r . i I ., _ i 3:.. .in __‘i _V ici, _£3 ' "` ”-i§l¢.’ V _ __ , ` vifsf .,__.__.~ 1 _ :_ .._‘._i= '- 'i~'7i`i V; 1. :fi ,§. f 5.# -. -. -. _ ‘¢\'=.' _tif . 3 ll _1 ,__ ____ ` Lil' _ ____ ___ ._ .__. __ 1 i ' .ls ~ - -_ ' /iii? ._- ,,~.~Q‘ __ ,I .~f-_. -,-=~. V.. N, .__- .' `l~ " | 'iii-i;.IT' _ ..",»_i_' . 5*. ii.-: ‘ _ .fp __ vig f~V_.VV1 =»- -'fl'-,. Va "-".'__i.~ i` ‘iijfi ii.; '-1 »` V':-i". 1 '.5 in .i -1- . ac. V )__V_f, ..~<.<,Vl, l__:. _ _1;:.(:,r -_.ly f_f1'~`i 3.31 ;=i'i.; . 3€',;»_z- __.__ii‘_»,': 1. _ ;_?-‘ .- 'V\jt_?i1.' _ _§.i`; ’-;:f~L'i. 'li' ll"-= .§§iV-ii " . '.- =f‘-` ailiii ii". "?:` " i I_ j°`l i. ._. V’-_; --'l.i’ 1 “§ .~li.’r. V.~i;\: _.i i_1'\"1?i‘i1_, i _ --viii, 3#`~¢*,<§°J§»;-tww;~v_> s _ I , .. il; §:‘:~»[f _$3.1 ‘fi;-’ii-f- ‘, .~ -. ,lil 'iii 'V " -“i _ it 'an _' :»¢..IL.‘ or broaodhoaiih. .but _‘f_n‘l`§re_l;`i`_t'i~ie eklng out of an existance ‘vl'i\.`i.¢2h.nelther brings joy and con- O or»_Fa1lg1re ic. I. seuhaam _ great majority of life's fall- are. ltpeema to me. due to the or --nic:-lo-it-iv_oiia»." ` Almost daily one sees li°°plea, wllo nre.only»human failures. By a-fall- - ' "dd not mean. necessarily fin- tiiitmchc to the individual himself nor leaves the world better by his Szartingf; The Dairy Business ‘ (0. I. Maelensien _ When starting farming or chang- ing over from one‘breed to another. ‘_ January. 103| the question of breed alwaye_comes V up. There are four distinct dairy breeds ,and possibly one or two dual purpose breeds. Each breed has char- acteristics peculiar to itself, and in making a selection it will be necessary _to consider the market on which the presence. On the other hand, one_ nxeettdwens of people who are mak- produce is to be sold. the class of cattle which predominate in the com- ,-igg success for zhcihscivcc iii tholrfmunitv and also ones own opinion _.chosen work of life. And by succcssi regarding any particular breed. If a Aa long ago as 1le!~CbarI.es Der- win, in his book on "'l1le va_rlatl_nn of Plants and Animals under Domestic- atloli." quoted a “great raiser of seeds" as saying: “it is a rule invari- ably with us. when we desire to keep a true stock of any one kind of seed. to _grow it on poor land without dung; but when we grow for quantity we act contrary. and sometimes have __; do, nm, mmm neggssgl-ily, ghelperson does not like a certain class; de-Hy to "Dem of my Thu- mm _-imaging of weglgh or gh; ;;¢,g,in._or breed of cattle, he will never bei unmnmmmly wu¢h¢d _on on, agqhe “mt °‘ i’l“s“"' bm' ‘M ""“”"‘°“m°ly named' eve" "h°“3h ‘mi two great laws by.whlch new varie- -ioh or ambitions and the sotisfoc- § herd is maklns sued prom. ohclma D, p,m,_, _,Q pmduc;d__th"__m mm and |-1¢\-,gg ghd; this 5;,-i¢; gg. _should have a distinct liking for the growing of wud or wmv-ted plant, |_,m|,1,m _go bmgnm d¢5,ry¢5_ breedof cattle that he is towork with. I under favorable envlrcnmtnts of food -No doubt we have all noticed qulte__'1`h¢ii. i-0°. vile must consider the; supply* ww" tempcnture uhm md frequently that no small number ofimlrket 101' iirwiirlk stock. Drovidedlmue ' Wm' pmduce 'vumdous th_e. oleverest people have developed I that the intention is to derive a oer-I ' ' imp. mm-¢ di-iftwood whilc oghcrg. tain percentage of the revenue from who with ho spccicl ability. hai-cjihe sale of breediur animals. imc’ Th' "her meth” °" mm” won their way to positions of com-I fort and power. Can it be that some' ‘\llt'e.nsplred to success and othersf ~rive not. or some, have attempted, l\orth_v projects while others have* dot? It sc-cms to me that the answer. lick’ in the fact that the succcssfuli hllve stuck to one job long enough: toimeke it e. success. while the oth-i in( with just as much ability. hai-c‘ quit just because they saw what they, :onsldcretl to be brighter prospects lorsuccess in solne other line of tori. filuslity and heavy production. Con-. There are certain localities in this Province that have become Hostein centres and buyers of this breed find it much easier to procure their wants in these centres than where breeders are scattered. We also have to s. greater or lesser extent Jersey. Guernsey and Ayrshire centres. In all these centres where particular at- tention hss been paid to breedirlg and the purchase ol’ bctter bulls one naturally expects to see a large per- centage of herds of good type and The world owes its riches to men _sequently if'one keeps the class of who did not know when they wel'c_cattle for which the district is noted bergen and stayed on the job in spite of all cllscollragement, and tempta- there is a greater opportunity of finding market for his surplus breed- I l“sports"> often extreme' and abund- B new varieties is the hybridizing of related fomis, upon which l need not enlarge at present. The effect of the change of environment semsto be cumulative, so that when plnnts are first introduced into cultivation they do not immediately vary. Thus the Swan River Daisy, Boachycome lber- ldifolia, a blue-flowered composite, native of Western Australia, was first cultivated in English gardens in i943, but it was not till in 1850, after seven years of high cultivation, that flowered form. and several years more before that forin' became pure and fixed. For the past ten years I have I i-ions to try other things. As nn in- _ ing stock. However, the average man 'grown one variety only _of viola; al stance of lack of stick-to-it-iveness_ln starting a herd does not expect pansies are botanlcally speaking _I may be pardoned if I recall an that the sale of stock will be the_°violas, but hortieulturaliy, a "viola" eiiperlrnce I noted a few years ago. 'chief revenue but rather that milk orf is a pansy with a compact- tufted VA young man whose father had died i cream will be the money makers, and ' habit, and smaller flowers than the itl\’iii$ him ii Sliiimdid up-to-date the sale of stock will be added rev- show psnsy iviola tricolorl. lt is as- 'farln decided to raise nothing butl enue Practically all milk produced sumed ul be a. h brid twe vi a ' . Y be en ol 'P1116-iJ1‘¢d Si-0°i< Mid ii'1V¢Si¢i'i “fit i in this province is sold on the qual- trleolor and viola cornuta. My vari- 'wlse1y_bl1t w_eli_1n i_o_ns_ l>e_d_izl‘eed I liy basis, whether it is used for the _ cty hom ii not/cr 0;, milling gp. ii1`i1_mi\ S. W t 011 168111 0 H10 01'! _manufactuie of cheese or butter, eo g pon-moo, me low" Dual, are whim _§ro;l_ll;tl0n._an? o_o rtlot r_eeCh_i_lli; h_l§_it _pays whatever breed enosen totwm, g gun; un" of blue, md the _bezie _dgoe at; 1;-_siiforiée e so_ _look out and pulchase individuals of upper p,¢_.15 hw, ,_ »-mumb_mm.k-~ hu vand §_pel_\“_e __ Th s _e_rro;‘_ n _ :lin _testing qualities for the breed, _ gf dgcp v1°1¢¢.b1u,_ The and is ny. ea y r rs s. en n ng; u avlsys remember even if selling_¢,| and sown ,_nmmny_ and never he did not have large enough a farm- cream that skim milk is a valued feed j once in nut period his "_ come ab_ larger one Willie on this farm heir: “ltr fxmutiiltiittihn ww; ilirodfuv i mlumy mme' Each ye" 8 mopomon ____ec__mud' _M he th_____gh___ ____ _mc__0:e__ _:_ co‘_i___e___t IZ' w° 'ivory to_ dark violet. almost black. 'line' or another with the result that ei-iue throush theby produgiz of i “num” which ue rigorously mined _ ' ` . t to k 'hc lost llivrlel' i\i'li‘i We-'» S010 01-it arid' milk When the marketing of dairy ou "D the “min ‘S ,mrs “» he sold and went into debt for a- posslble The sllowtpansy, lf neglect- ‘as the world would say was ll fail- products is thc.chlcr aim it woiildl ` 'ul’e. 'l-had he P¢1`S¢"°i'°‘i in Bill’ 0i'1€i_not be necessary to goto the expense *hge thobseglded' _"my pau" of these llrolects there is no reesimiof noi-ting with pure bi-cd animals.. n ° W ‘mm “ch “ 1’ lsometimes found in our fields. why he should not have nude ll su1=~.1~iigh gicdc cows will servo the our-1 Th termination he made failuics of them me Should be mam; with gh, hast mi'°"°5““5' “nd 5°m°i'im°5 iii5i\D cess. As it was. with his lack of de- _ pose equally well, but by all meansi ‘B V-Minion In Duma is “ways . _ L " - .L Y ali. sire oi' _thc breed possible baciiedi°°i”““" A” E“i‘1‘5“ “"i““i'-’ ' 1 'know that many vounr men srvfhy high milk ci-id nt records. 'rhorc i’"‘“°°“ ’°'°°° sm” °i ii" "'°°Pi“ii "tied down" on the home farm sliders sonic splendid herds or grade id'°°"i”" ""' 'md “°° ‘ “ini” fhsvelittie Ol' l'i0 My iii U10 011111189' i cows to be found in this province but, seedling W” in the 1”” d°3"°° Pm' ii'i¢"Ii_t"0f' W°1'ii- Bild iiiiiiiisi- ii\Vl1‘i°biY_ they have been brought to their pre- I dulousi i"ilv'€ til Siibiiiiif 70 D055 5\iD9i'i°i`}sent high' standard of efficiency by_` on 'hmury uh' " Wim'-iY iii‘Pi¢3-'i' wisdom which may not always beg,”-¢f,,1 breeding. testilll and rigldlmi lily. with the thermometer 29 ln keeping with modern idcss of _,e1ec¢_i°n_ degrees F., in the shade. I ventured (arm management. It is little won-I _ I ,ee no “non howevm 'hy one o’er the "untrodden mow" to the der they do not tske the interest ini should not gndumy work ,nw , | spring in the hack field. I was sur- tiielr work that one would naturally pm-e.brod herd by possibly the pu,-_ prised to find that the temperature expect them to do. _ ch,” of one 0,- mon ‘ood gym. hm. = of the water, a.s` it issued from the __’_F`i’0i”i'i Wllli- I i¢11°W Oi ili`1`ii°F‘ “iid | ers, and thus have two markets open, l'l`1'!i‘\ei'B‘ 801”i1i~ I iiliiiii ihli 0 MFPYI that of dairy products and breed- guarded llainst. The writer knows of medium mlshb be f°i1ufi Wiivft 1° ing clock. one or more good grade iierils that greater interest shown by the sons' Lwouldfrcsult ln thd, “bosses” not be- ing so much set on having their own *Wayland the way would be found In lriany cases, for the introduction of nlbre up-to-date methods. Takiu; hut' °f1iv fuflliilis but ihe W11°ie bv*-'lbcsi proven cows so that thc ihizialiwav you protect yourself. lt is also "mil W" *i°° '°P9"“i ii’°i“ °i-i1°1' .i1¢~“'i'ii0i”id- has ii “Oi b¢°n d°m°i`i‘_pui'chase of good sized typ? helfers considered better to purchase il small Pi‘°°5- ` ‘¥"i‘“é‘i time Mid “Sli” iii” d¢i‘"' ` usually turn out best. lherd of superior cows than a. larger A mlm °f*i’i5°i‘ duck! “iii 3011511 ifiililiiiiii "id Sii°ii'i-°'ii‘i"'¢1\¢S° ha' when buying, disease must beione that consists of poorer lndivld- 011 lilliiilfl' "hi 'chlnged what at one time looked iik¢`f%iili1'¢ ii'1i° 81160058- I ,dalrylng make up your mind to feed - "°‘*' Of course _a man with sufficient capital could purchase a pure bred herd to start but to get the top notcher high prices would have to be paid. Again the up-to-date owner of pure breeds do not often sell their I ,had to be sold on account of pur- ichsslng from herds having abortion. IAA to tuberculosis we should be al- Imoat free from this disease. but still Ian odd one crops up so -when buy- 'ihg do so subject ic fait and in this uals. And finally when starting in "Therefore would it not be well if hand findeth to do, do with thy_|,|, “pmlty and get |11 um; 1, wm. we each and all would use more de- might." If we do. I feel sure thatiu out of your hm-|_ termhistinn and "whatsoever thy,we will achieve success. __ _ _ __ ________ __ _ _ __ ___ ---------- 'rho little group of the -rhi-ushcc ev-o-+00-eoeaooo-was ao4+o+reoo-o-ooo-ooaoeoevecoeoaeooo-o-+0 "°°°°‘°°‘°‘°°°°**9"°**°" 0.! which W' hw' 'wr' U' -1_1 °l 'CQLQNIAL FERTILIZERS I POTAT(_)ES ...... ..... i...... .. i.. .._.. .ci .. WINDSOR MADE AND TURNIPS .‘.ii..i...»i. condo..-cicuiooc. Our trade mark ea your fertiliser bag la your guarantee of quality _end_ ____ _ ` par; of grub; which lm und" the ` ility. insist apon it-accept no substitutes. Colonial-Vflndaer Made, _ ' _ . surface of the ground. as well aa eat- e_rtlilaers are no experiment - they have been tested and proved by yor W9 Wi" be bU}'ii\K ¢\'¢i`Y '|33' crplllars and cutworlls. In the Pall ‘ d your neighbors. Prius are new available-place year order early with li' 0|" Wi|Nh°“5¢ H033" 3 they_chan¢e their diet and eat many : ideal Colonial agent. We have ageate in year locality. Get in teael `w|\'i°f° Hilh¢3i» l”`i¢¢5 10|' wild berries. those of the Rider and arch of co-isicoiccic 'mi oc. oc on ccomi moi il. r. soil. eaaacc- Iwi liiitii- vioiiniiidi ‘balm uoooial favcriiu. iiaifror fin-ther information me prion. J- LESTER DUUGLAS - but illwelitins til' Rubin) 4° 11°* cotouial. r_l;:_i_§_'_r__i_1;__l§lj._R corirauv ` °"'”,'.'},‘§;1‘;‘”.;‘,;,,‘f,°,,,f’~,,§§'“"" ggi; ,mi .;‘j‘*§_',‘}“,'}u,,§';‘,‘;‘~_ 32; ' ' nrvmw-vraxn no ‘ ` s-e»¢o4»oo¢o+oo4»»»¢¢o¢¢-oooeooooooooooovoeee-eteoeeoo-e "' °" ` 'bu "imuuan mm' ‘nm '”'»‘"' it began to break towards a white-i My Ty°°§ hm” °"' ‘ mnh W-'H' _ mah body. The fourth and last point j NEWSY FARM By Agricola muvulii mer and winter. tain to_be rendered untrustworthy. ` some years seo. on prepluinr e hot-bed in the sprlnz. I.\uli»111ukiuslvl placed a thermometer on the back when the plants were _ all out and the, frame. dismantled. 1 noticed thei the instrument was reading very__low and comparing it with another ther- mometer, I found it 8 degrees "out." The sun had dried the alcohol up, without -othelfwlse/_iliiul-ine the in- strument. _ i - _ ___ _ ' I have often _wondered if the flg-_ ures given in the_- press for the tem- perature on the night of_January illth, 1925, were not due to some such impcrfectien in the thermometer, On' .my “Tycos", one oi' _the best registering. the temperature `fell to. 26 degrees F., belowzero during the night. But the following readings were reported from other places: Conway, 43 below; Wellington, 42 be-` Ilow; Portage, 42 below; Tyne Valley, \4o below; Tlghish. _21 below; sum- merside, 27 below..~ The two last were _ more in agreement with my reading. The thermometer as used today is the result of investigations and im- provements ` extending over more than three and ii half, centuries. Galileo made the first really success- lful instrument in 1592, 'but it warn icumbersome and complicated, and a better form, 'somewhat nearer_ the Ithermometer, as we know ltwas ln- troduced by the Grand Dukefpf Tusc-' any in 1054. In__i654 Ronaldlni sug- gcsicd that the upper mod' point. at normal pressure and temperature, but to Fahrenheit is due the credit. for settling the scale, which up to his time had been thc gmt trouble. 1_-ic selected' four fixed points at first. The coldest known temperature ati thot time land place) wu` obtained by a frigorle mixture of ice'-water and sal-amlnonlac and this temperature he considered as zero. 10 degrees l1'.l. _ The freezing point oi' water was the' I next point marked, and the third was ‘ im !i°i'iiii\i i»¢mD¢i‘ature of the hu-A of the scale was flxed_at_the boiling point of waterat. lil. m. preseiiro and at sea-level, ’I'o_graduat_e`I.ne scale. Fahren_he_i_t diyided' _the dis- iri8»,p0ints ln_to`lll0 degrees, i. e., half the number' of,` degrees in _a_ eh-cle; thence _downward to ure, so _that .boiling point reads 212 degrees and freezing point 32 degrees above. The human temperature point has long been abandoned and it 'is suggested' that the nero be abandoned also, since we -now know of temperatures, many. times colder than the frigorlfic mixture of Fshrenllelt. And scien- tists have abandoned' l"ahrenhe'lt’s_ scale entirely, in favor of that known as the Cenllgrade scale. _ 0n`_Jenuary ith, a slight earth- 'trelnor was felt in the province at about 10.15 in the morning. a little more settling of the Fundlan Fault. .amos rnerannclls' ralsrlns. them migratory. arriving in the early the cold weather sets in. '.l‘hey are as their food consists for the moat tance between the_ freeelng an_¢l__bi;li.__ I , _ _ ' ’ ` norms or a liaruaahisr 'earth we lust ii desrw 1'- V1-vi, - i V~ -- V- ,_,,,,,__ July. when the air te1i\,r°iIiii1*,vl=|ihcy hue; nevertheless in tho only ,,,,,,,._ md 'le degrees. that 011110 #prius vu i2._ pm or the cdasou it rccds itself and, mm mm' t, my mumuhuw 1,, , - so that there is little difference illlin- _ite young_entirely upon earth-worms. lm, vu, ' cutworms, and the large white grlibs seldom strays from the edge of the bush. It will nest in a_.-garden if there is a good shrubbery. and more espe- cially if there are no cats about thc premises. Cats arc ns dcsi.i°uctlvc to young birds as are crows _ and grakles, and are much to blame for i-he decrease in our native birds. 'I`hc_ 0 vc-backed Thrush and the I-icrlnlt I producil. o - M-ills hawk. Wiiiiih Swiiiils in me 3°i`d°“' age and the other provinces will; °“- _ when the fruit is film me P~°‘°i“5 each utilize s iz-root frontage, can-, -` -- -_ _- l .-----if-_ "_-_ ‘ _ W°“'t °°m° “°"' “dim ¢°mm¢i'°i°i °Xi'iii7ii° -‘iiiii °°i“' Rabbits. and Pigeons) are estimated Coffee growe f C l Abi The W11=°11`S '1‘I““Si‘~ °' V"°“'» “‘|mimd s 120-foot froi1tese.wiih lilo reach 10.000 ncaa. or which coli- i csmmicii to czlsugiio ircotiilllcni; strictly il bird °f *iii* “'°°di“"d5' and depth.of 24 feet. This will accommo- gd, Wm supply 1_0g0_ _ _ date the displays of the Dominion Poultry. J* _ Thrush are abundant, but are raihei they are overlooked thollilii iliiiic near to .the observer. THE HAY MARKET ` should be thc boiling point ci_wctcrV - The Market Report states that substantial exports of hal' ii1`€ i¢‘1“” ing the Maritimes for Britain, arrl more are to follow. Five hundrlld ions were shipped from St. John last week, mainly No. z Timothy. Clover isnd Timothy mixed, and some Timo- ¢,hy.No. 3 with fine grasses. ' Growers around St. Jclm. N. ll- are getting ff. o. bo _i°°iii Biiivviiifl points) for Timothy No. 1. |13 D01” ton; No. 2, $10 I’/0 $123 N0- 3» $9 V’ gig; mixed, so to Sli; straw $5 tl $5.50. There arc still some 3.000 will for export; At Amherst. N. S.. FIYOW' 1 Timothsi; $13 (pr No. 2, mid $i'J Tun mon MARKET , Mouth or Throat ` Infection! Daplpneee, dust. exposure and _excess amokmg frequently cause infection of the mouth and throat. gargle of one part Absorblne, _lr._, to nine paris water will bring quirk relief. /ind to brook lili- ihe congestion rub the outside of the throat with a iew dross, fuii strength. The daily use oi bsorblne, jr.,- diluted--as a mouth-wash will swceten the breath and keep the mouth and throat in a wholesome, Qcrm-free con- dition at eil tii1_lee. $1-2; P01’ b°iii*“‘ at your favounte druggists. 13 /ibS0rb_i_n.€.1"i_f /iir _-ri-iillrrl lllrlsils ` `° ii.-id l`lli's‘f rulfis -- ‘mil C, M, Lnmpsnn UCD-. _ Llsllraii. ' M Queen Street ueneen. li, 0. a. lesilile ` Public Auction Sales _ . or -' iultv runs |||| 3 bag; will be furnish- Q wheat rlllrle by aDl\|!U\l to I. 'l‘. llelniali. UI- 3"" saeesile. P. t. l. - aiepresenled by Alfred Fraser. |112- ' ll! flfib Avenue New refli. N. 1. 154-!-29-wedsatihonimontb. _-,,_,,,+,,,,_,,,,_,*,_,,-+“_,,,wiio it as the went shy, concealing themselves so that. i » ,_ I ers are receiving $14 pei' ton for No. fc; _No.1 Mixed. $9 to $12: sirllw $’l_ tq_t6. I - - Conditions arc unchanged with ii-it material increase in demand or -i_.__._»... _ a slulnn Dept. of Agriculture, the C. N. Rdfald college, who is Chairman of the the 0- P-'R-. the Canadian P0lliti'Y,Programme Committee. states. that Pool Limited. the Worid‘s Grain E_x_-I Gund, Wm pl-“mt (mem Pape" hibitlon. and the Association of thelggvgylng meh subjects' as breeding, B- C R¢¢°1'ii iii' i’¢i`f°1‘ii1lii¢° f01°»incubation, nutrition and Fearing, The live stock exhibits (Poultry,\0nom|¢;_in¢|q`q1n¢ -m|,-|m|ng_- ` » DUNN! _ r In Fvrti `rs and henllcels _ _ 1 -_.3 u ’ i._» “ -_ M. J. McIVER orhis Agents ._ IUPUI] Of _ _ _ __ _ _- -_ _mixed _Fert_l_|izcf_"aIs_'o`_(_!hemica s 'for _winter and _ 4 thermometer ought never to ba|the larvae of the “June bug," so de-~ Average prices to fari_ners, i. c. l _ ~ ‘- ' ‘ ' spring deliver _ _ _' exposed to the full sunlight. By-structlvefio the roots of most plants.,quantlties, ex warehouse, -in the ' " `; ` ' _ ' ‘V ' “ inellectlnlr this rule. the meter is cerzi One can pl'°i»¢¢if Um-iiiii Diiwi-S.'1\dsrltime Provinces are:~No. 2. C; ~ like tomatoes. from cutworms by w.,`oats el cts. to sl* per bushel ac- _ fplaclng obstacles round`thein, but co;-ding to freight" distances; local this is impossible in the case of field dats 15 cts; western feed wheat tim; _ erors and Juni hm 1# where these bmi, no to ui per ton; ‘shox-is ssl _ s ~ ~ 1 P. E. f. ' V . wau or thc mmc,_aiid lm. it th¢r¢.ibird~l are--meet serviceable- Nfl-Sh re- to $46: gliddiinsi- #iii in wi: i11u°¢ii` ` - _ _ V Kinkhra, P. E- I ._ 'ji V ‘ cords that he found a yolmg Robin oll'cake meal, $3.50 to 83.75 per 100 ‘ = - .‘ ‘ » ' which had fallen from the nest, and ind; cottpneeed meal, g2.'l5. Local oats hand fed it, to test how much insect in p. 1:. 1. are selling at about es etc, ..__._..___..-..___...-d-.-.-_.-_..__. i i _ Write -for prices and particulars; _ = 1M;J.>'Mc1vER“ _ - General-Agent International Fertilizer for T'-_l_'j;\_R_iislg}ii'li!",ey`siur_`orl'_%r holy-‘,;lL_;; _. ' ' , _ _IL’Purol\e,so_i.hrougll...`f".__i§1 _ .._~? i Now- prepared to take' orders for high grade food it required per day. Up to the 3;, mmpnred with 75 gtg, in N, 5,, *H f - _ . sth of June (from the 21st of May) and N. B. _ ' ` _ ' ' _ it ate from 50 to 70 cutworms per _ ‘ _l~ " \ diem. Afterwards this number was THF P0ULT“¥ Comm 35 ' ._ -- - - - 1. ' _ iniirelbed 9° 105- Th* "°“¥° ““m‘ The coming World's Poultry Con- ` ' bei- or vouns reeled bv 11 viii” °i gms ic Loudon. mcg., is to be car- " ` . ‘ ~ Robin! iS i011i‘- U14 i~h°’° "UW M “tried out on a more elaborate scale nl BULK AND |`N g_g`¢Ks_ nd breed 1011*- °f *his I “"1 “°° than that which was hold in ottawoi ‘ ` ` i 31%) S0 tiiiii W2 ‘1“im"i"Yd°i i‘:°S"1hree years ago. A plan of the floor ` ` ' _ required i-S WFS' 8i”°°i» “fi P" “ 5' s acc show that s 96-foot frontage ' . ` - ' -_ offsets tht fiiiiii i'°i‘°i`i Wh” iii" with a. 22-fgot depth is to be devoted# Brookville Nlanufacturlng C0" y0\l1'1¥ iiiil/0 i¢ii~ me mst- As i'° im’ to the Canadian pruviilclill eiiliibiie- fbperewrs of Government Lime Plant) urlliltkl’ habit °i ihe R°bi“» I °‘“`° The three Maritime Provinces wlli| ` ' ` Bron'liville. N. B. _ _ him Of ii- bl' mimi! an iimiii' °i “ cooperate in usingn 24-foot front-i ‘_ “ ` .-an 0R.DEl\ EARLY ' ' I a =_»- is A _ _ _ a r _ _ 3 Profesdlr A._‘W. Maw. of Mocbon- lan coffee. _ _ ._._ f idisenses and ‘their control. andec-` afterward. _ - I I I I I I I I I I_,_,....,............-------'“”""i ' 4 i l 1 l - __~ ~ T ‘ _ -_ _ -_...__._-____ ,___,_ 1 r-'ox me noe ais¢_:_ui'r WOOD f IMPERI/1.I. I 0 Their Ghoiee 41/iilEE'l> \1lf\\ \ l » . /‘ “NOTBY MEAT ALONE Leading fox ranchers -have delnonstrated _tllat, in addition to meat, it is absolutely necessary to feed a liberal supply of IMPERIAL BISCUITS daily during the winter season. in order .to keep the bowels regular, and also to ensure the females having an _adequate supply of milk during the lactation-'perloil._ IMPERIAL COD OIL BISCUITS are made from a formula which has been prepared with these results in view and which reliable tests, extending over a considerable term' of years. have proved to be signally successful. _ _ r Ranches. which have continued the feeding of IMRERIAL8 regularly in winter, have had the largest litters of young foxes and also the highestaverage of pups raised to maturltyflh ad"- dltlon. _they have practically eliminated .the destroying of young by the females. , ' ‘ . . ‘ ” For assured results-feed IMPERIALS 'throughout all the winter season. 1 ‘ - " - ' ' ' ~- ‘ I _i'MPE`R|;ALS are _sold by leading dlstrlbuitors -or 'direct from the factory. - » V " __A lmcccioi Biscuit ~_c`d~Lid. 1- g PHONE 72| , _ f ' _ ` -BOX: 443 - ' _-Charlottetown, P. E..l.» . . _J thc United States to drink Columb- C'iVii'ill’ ull his bed in a private room of a hospital. following an qpq. ation to another patient who needed ahsolutc qulet.~ Mayor William Tur- wn of Widnes Ensiend. died slim-dy ‘. ii a . “Wiz have rf* " _ oiii-'lilciici-'iii only wcriii aboiii . ascii. iii*-lhe‘ll. s. ir: _whyrf__-ifu‘»t_.~_beel1\@\i° W Ci1“='l°f #iii ' ‘ _ i- _ ght. . ,. ,.1