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North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 2 Oct 1913, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

{3 0 So Nothing improves the looks of the farm aod the reputation of the farmer morp than a clean, well kept lawn. To this should be add- ed, of course, flelds that are coo- spiocuously clean, barnyards free from noxious growths and fence corners free from weeds. Where dandelions and the various burs and the many poisonous creepers row, there you find the lazy or the overtaxed farmer. Aud, in a meas- ure, every tilier of the sofl is de- linquent along these lines. Few heave the time to push a lawn mower or bend to the uprooting of weeds. What 1s peeded is a living lawn . mower. and we hu\t this In the patient sheep. You may run your flock In thé most luxuriant of pus- tures, yet the sheep will nibble at the noxious weeds and destroy them. Their peculiar appetites re- quire this chapge from grasses and clovers. --Country Gentleman. Sits d AO Te ALS TF AT Canada Cement Compan: PR A NAG Pa 2 y Limited An exgellent ration for brood sows and suckling pigs is made of 'seventy pounds. of corm meal, pounds of middlings, ten pounds 60 per cent ment meal or Jnneaye ; five pounds of bran, two pounds oll meal, & pound of feeding qn bone Houn a. pou Am : 3, that the sow must have flesh and bone forming feed or,the pigs will The bone: are to supply these elements which are pot present in sufficient. quantities in the others. This picture of the was

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