Durham Region Newspapers banner

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 22 May 1919, p. 3

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

18 1b hut 1 1020 88 05.00 08 Perennial Rye ..,..:,.iis Five out of the six of the high yielding grasses are all, natives the Western States and of the West- ern Provinces. Timothy occupies a relatively higher place when used for Pa than it- does when used for pas-' ture, The Tall Oat and the Orchard grass are suitable for either hay or pasture production. The Awnless Brome grass, which was, strongly advertised a few years ago, has not ven very satisfactory results in the Of the varieties under test éadow Foxtail is the earliest and Brome the latest. All of the ixteen warieties are comparatively hardy. The results here presented should furnish some good informa- tion 2s a basis for making eertain lections and combinations when it is desirable to grow different grasses mixtures. nd you cm vst in Smits a te snd held by capitalists. pm ye a seni uc 18 interest by a very simple plan. Thrift Stamps cost twenty-five cents cach. | £ 01 ComniON etches per acre, A crop of thi kind &an be used to exeellent advantage either as a n fodder or for the production of hay. i . By a more general use of some of @ very best varietics of eérops grown singly or in eombination, the pasture and the hay crops of the country ean be improved to a con- oad extent--Dr. C. A. Zavits, _ In each of three years comparative i Fesnlts were obtained from alfalfa, ! jte or Dutch clover and. Yellow efoil in addition to the 4) three. Joe} previously reported. table gives the 0 ine = ow of hay per acre per annum for each of these six varieties of crops in an average of three years:-- Alfalfa ....... Mammoth Red . Alsike .. Common Red . Ld Trefoil ... . ite or Dutch ......... 1.85 it should be understood that al- faifa does not receive its full de- velopment until the third year, and «under favorable conditions should produce crops for many years in sue- , gession. The alfalfa duke not reach : 8 returns the time t i of most of 16 clovers has 4 a, A, oh grown alone at the Qquerie Agricultural College has, in @ average of thz last twenty-one Years, produced 19.3 tons of-greem erop and 4.7 tons of hay per acre . annum, In each of nineteen. rs, the alfalfa gave three cuttings "(per um ; io 1907, two. cuttings; 1896, four cuttings were pro- in the one season. The spring ©1896 opened up very early and t of 1807 very late, The yield of hay per acre amounted to over 'tons in each of three years, be- tween five and six tons in each of five years, een four and five tons in e of nine years, and less than our tons in each of four years, The ults show that, on the average, the erop of the semson Was. about' & the yield of the second crop hat the second 'erop was nearly the third: "green on "the average, 3 per cont, Aw welght as dried The a dates of cutting: tyone years were June July 30th for the WORLD'S LONGEST DAM IT HAS JUST gr COMPLETED IN ALBERTA. Great Structure Was Erected In Connection With Colossal Irriga- tion Scheme and No Project to Rival It Has Ever Carried Out on the American Oontinent-- Will Add to Richness of West: HERE has just been complet- ed in the Prairie Provinces of Bias, Canada, a mou- dam, It asain hee SRE oe fice of ils kind in the world. Where- as the famous Assuan dam, in Egypt, has a total length along the crest of six thousand four hundred feet, The new Canadian structure is nn less than seven thousand eight hundred and twenty feet in length. But apart from dts record in the fatter of length it has many notable features. It has been erected in con- nection with a colossal irrigation scheme, the largest individual Hrd- ject of this character that has been ¢arried out on the American coy- tinen \ ! While most frrigation projects have for their objects the obtainin| bt & larger yield of cereals or frul crops, the Canadian enterprise is de- stined solely to Increase the dairying and live stock output of the province: The scene' of this latest triumph h on the part of the irrigation engineer Bassano, on the Bow river, some éighty-five miles to the east of Cal- . Across this broad stream a ty dam has been thrown and ihe river brought under subjugation Jor watering s uge tract of country. The waters held up by this dam 3. wr) of two thoi? es of can: ) Busia and fo oy _éun be bought wher- ever this sign is dispiéyed. for a War Savings Stamp 414% inter- et fr he Corn 08 Ad you bom a investor th nf of all ssi --s or: ertinient Bond. Canada needs the smal savings of he peopl to finance the work of reconstruction - War Savings Stamps Make Your Savings Serve You and Serve Your Country--Invest _ Them in War Savirigs Stamps. been pidugnt under irrigation Dy diverting the waters of the Bow river at a point just outsldd the city of | mo ch me that sixty minutes make Here a canal, seventeen miles in length, sixty feet wide at the bottom, and one hundred and twenty feet wide on the water level, carries the precious fluid to a great . lake three miles long, hall a mile wide; and forty feet deep. tually a natural depression, but has been strengthened by a large earthen dam From this reservoir water is car- ried to the hundreds of farms by one thousand and six hundted miles of secondary canals and ditches. The engineers' real difficulties, however, began when they tackled the eastern section, for it is here where the great | dam is situated. It was not a ques tion of merely diverting the waters of the river into another channel, but | of first curbing thé stream and then raising the level of the river over forty feet; and controlling the flow, This was accomplished by the erec- | "tion of a great composite dam across what is known as Horseshoe Bend, on the Pow river, | _ There is no engineering work that defhands such careful preliminary "investigations as dain-bui io i eularly when it comes to the storage of a large body of water. For dams ! The most noteworthy instance was the destruction of the town of Johns- town, in Pennsylvania, It was liter- 'ally swept off the Hap by the burst- ing of an earthen dam across the little Conemaugh river under the pressure of tremendous floods. Over two thousand people perished, and property to the value of over, two . ive largé earthen dams have failed, causing, in some cases, large losses of life and the wholesale destruc- tion of property. The pressute Y edalusi the face of a large dam is simply tremendous. ro 'orie foot from the surface a large check by the great dams of the world, exerts a pressure of sixty-two pounds to the square foot; at ten feet the force would be six hundred and twenty pounds; and at a depth of a hundred feet no lees than six thousand two hundred. pounds to the square foot. Accordingly, the earthen emibenk- ment, which is some seven thousand feet in length, is of a. particularly massive character. At its base it is and contains about one million cubie yards of earth, rubble, and stone. Sirsa nai te Passing of Emma. Emma is dead. She. dled, not per together that others might ive, in- Who It is Vir- | do burst with terrible consequences. * millions sterling was destroyed. Since that date, some 37 years ago, thirty | large solid masonry dams and thirty- | of watet, such as that held in' three hundred and fifty feet thick, - | BUSINESS MAN'S PRAYER one hour, sixteen ounces one pound, ,and one hundred cents one dollar, "Help me to live so that I can lie down at night with a &lear con- science, without a gun under my pillow, and unhaupted by the faces of those to whom I have brought pain. Grant that I may earn my meal {ticket on the square, and that, in earning it, I thay not stick the gaff where it does not belong. Dealen me to the jingle of tainted money and the rustle of unholy skirts. Blind me to the faults of the other fellow, but reveal to me mine own, | Guide me so that each night whep I look across the dinner table at pu wife, who has been a blessing. 10 "Tshili "Have nothing (0 coliceal. Keep me young enough to laugh with my children. And when | comes the smell of fl wens, and the tread of dteps. and the crunching of wheels out in from make the cercmony short, and tle epitaph simpler "HERE LIES & MAN."--Tweed News. BTS IN PRIZES FOR GROWING FIELD CROPS IN THE TOWNSHIP OF Cariwrpight! TOTICE is hereby givesi that th Cartwright Agricultural Societ have decided naif a®™FIKLD CRO! COMPETITION at the usual time the coming harvest. The Crop selected bein OATS, at which the following prizes will Le offered, viz. $20, $15, $12, $10, $8; $8 and $4 | Entries for competition ust consist of | 1a field of not less than five acres, h Competition 'is limited to residents of {the Township of Cartwright. No less | than ten entries nor more than twenty {five must be made, snch ettins taking precedence as. received b: e Secretary in the event of more ae twenty-five being made, | Entries must be made with the 8 tary not later than the 19th day of May, 1979 each: competitor being limited tof one entry. 3 Entrance Fee--Members of (he Society {1 £1; non-members $2. i WESLEY CAMPBELL. Pes, ROBT. PHILP, Sec. _Burketon, ' TOR Ry positions filled al al hy interest yo "¥Mogs, per 100 lbs en you need meat you need JHOICE MEAT ONE CAR 00D POTATOES THE RIGHT KIND OF PLANTS TO BUY whether lowering or Vegetable Plants. thatare sdc ond to Nare in Quality and Variety are those that are grown at PRINCE ALBERT. ONE PRICE TO ALL. W.ETTEY, Florist. Painting, House Decorating wre AN DD eee AVING HAD CONSIDERABLE EXPERIENCE as a Painter " House Decorator and Sign Writer I have Opened Business gc lines | PORT PERRY a wt ; 3 feel that GROSSING A SPECIALTY SoLiGITED STEWART FORD D no farther int fact that we have Business Six We Want Now LB AGENT Ju Ontario County A RELIAD ts sell Pelham's Pacrless Fruit and Ornamontal Trees duririg Fall and Winter mOnths. Good pay, exclusive territory. fee selling cquipment. ES N B. Catalogs gent on nts for agencies or purel ser of sieves $2 10@ $2 10) Spring Wheat...... 200@ 2 20 Goose Wheat... & 2 | 4 costes Bievenan e&N T2888 8 Cattle, per'lb , ee w » 8 COO0OCOMN=WWWBNON~N J5L88888888BILS BUNS vs rene: oy OL TOTOTOES YOY OTT OT OY) 254 8 io {un washed) .. Mails _Olosé The mails are de patched from the Pod 'with va 110 J p comfort and con be surpassed. Py Speciul attention paid to requirements of Commercial Ti ers. Our charges are moderate and we guarantee to please dik phtrokisi Patronage solicited. : £7 Phone No. 3, OAWEER BROS G. R. ALEXANDER CARPENTER, CABINET-MAKER & UPHOLSTERER Jobbing promptly attended to and charges moderate. PortPerry, Sept. 19, 1916. Drink the Best! Fim Oook's Special Oreant Cook's Dry Ginger Ald MANUFACTURED BY T. COOK & SON PORT PERRY, ONT. GRAND TRUNK R'y SYSTEM TIME TABLE. Port PErry. GOING SOUTH. 6.35 a.m. 11.55 1.25 p.m. Farm for Sale HE Southihalf lot 17, con. 3, Reach--g7 acres more or less. Buildings on both ends cf farm and it will be divided to suit purchaser, This property is desirable--close to school, churches and markets, and on leading road to the famous Osh- awa market, Price reasonable-- / if interested act quickly. Apply to the proprietor on the property. JAS. KIRBY, R.R No. 2, Port Perry 25 cents buys a Thrilt Stamp. FIRST-CLASS FARM TO RENT ON SHARES possession ei { given = 1st March, 1920. Appl Tie RS. JOHN ADAMS, '* Ambleside Farm," Scugog. YOUR EYES DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH YOUR EYES! Either in regard to the examination of them or the fitting of lenses. F. E. LUKE, OPTICIAN 187 YONGE ST, TORONTO (UpsTAIRS) (Opposite Simpson's) Put $4 into W. S. Stamps. 25c buys a Thrift Stamp H. S. WHITE SUCCESSOR TO SARVIS BROS. BAKER AND CONFECTIONER Having purchased the business formerly iarried oh b Messrs. Sarvis Bros., and having lad a long experi- ence as Baker and Confectioner, I am in a position to give perfect satisfaction to all favoring me with thei# patronage. TROPICAL FRUITS IN SEASON. WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY. A trial solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. H, S. WHITH Baker and Confectioner, PORT PERRY, CR CC 0 BC RBC WOO WR ~ JAMES WARD -- DEALER IN -- Pianos, Organs and Gramaphones Also Second-Hand Orgafis., pe PIANOS TUNED by an expert seetind . th of May and Sep mbt ho. 8a i A FULL STOC OF EVEYTHNG IN THE Farness I. _|CHEAPNESS STYLE Dusability and STRENGTH * Onsnot be arpa u the Uouuty.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy