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Port Perry Star, 25 Mar 1914, p. 1

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the sower yowd find there owing that wasn't no good ouldn't grow a crop because kept on a' wasting his time ng to yank out the things as p the land, he'd be i wiul poor farmer, and ud get the ° Our Stock includes designs and % Aaa + o 'suit all tastes, You "coloring % will be surprised and delighted ¥ = what excellent patterns and "colorings ean be secured even in ; + the low priced papers. Come in = and see for yourself: it will be a weal pleasure, = i: yt oii is HARDWARE WERGHANT ORT penny > "Sell 100 pairs of yt seed. is only a little bit of farming, getting the land ready and keepin ~~ Inthe churches it seems hs re all they's got to do is keep on a sowing of the seed, and crops is bound (to come no matter what shape the land is in. They acts as if they thought there was-magic in the seed. = ~~ There's heaps of lives as is all swamped out with whisky and beer. Good seed's plumb wasted on morass soil like that, It needs draining. 1t needs the surplus liquor taken off and has to be dug so that sunshine and fresh air gets a look in. © A sower can sow ten bushel of good seed to the acre on land like this and the whole business will rot in the soggy ~ ground. Better get a ditching machine or a good spade and drain that lot first, then come #long with your seed. You'll be surer of a crop. IPll pay to dig around the whisky soaked chap--he has good stuff in him, and 1t's worth while when he can grow a crop like John B. Gough did. ol ams Shi : z There's other lots as is filled up with scraggly willows that's got great long roots gripping the ground so that the plow hasn't a ghost of a show at stirring things up. Them fields is like the lives of gamblers-- folks as like to get something for nothing and keep other folks from using _ good ground, and the only thing they does with it is to spread their _ gambling wherever it gets a chance. | It grows terrible easy does gamb- ling. You can cut a little stick off the tree and stick it in the ground © most anywhere where it's fairly wet and it'll grow that fast you can't keep track of it, Ves, gamoling and scraggly willows both likes wet ground-- and theres other points as makes them alike. . For instance, willow ain't 'much good for 'fiteWood. Good seed ain't ota ghost of "2 show whore gambling is growing. - ©. : Jim Jones used to have a field that chuck full of twitch grass that it choked out any good seed he ever put in it. It was as scifish as a poor sport as wants to win a game by tricks. + That there was good land that raised the twitch grass, but it got all cluttered up with this kind of meanness, and of course it hadn't no use for any other kind of growth. But Jim Jones, he wasn't 'going to be fooled out of what was his'n that way, so he hitched up his team to the plow and went rip tearing through that quack grass until there was a heep of them strong roots showing on top. Then he dragged out more with the cultivator and the harrows, and after that he put the old mare in the rake and gathered all of that "there grass together that he could and burnt it. . It took him all summer . to get that field clean, for twitch grass is terrible stuff to spread ; but he can put his seed in now all right and gets dandy crops. Good folks must go farming with new machinery--sowing seed ain't most of the time is spent in going to drain the land or rip out the willows or burn the twitch grass: There's something more to be done than sowing. We'll have to use just ordinary tools like the business plow that turns out a straight, clean furrow every day, -clean cut and even, one to be * trusted always, It's a man's job plowing like this every day and not ng spots where the weeds of dishonesty can grow.. ' ~~ Women folks can do their part letting in the sunshine of good will . and charity, and forgetting to say some biting things about folks. Every- body can Sow a little of the salt of decency. _ And 'the "young people can Yun the cultivator of clean sport. 5 There's jobs for us all and we'd better get busy or some of us will find ; the weed patch growing sa large that it covers our fields too. g to There'll. be work for some to see that there ain't no noxious weeds let grow on the sides of the highways of life. : There's a heap to do in summer fallowing little fields that has got choked up with things as spoils - life--sour, soggy lives as is plumb discouraged. . There's jobs as has to . be done alone--only you and the other fellow what you're summer fal- fallowing knows what's going on, and he don't know all about it either, Jim Jones never said a word about sowing good seed; he kept that idea 1n the back of his head though, and was right on hand with the seed when the proper time come. aL . Some good folks could be busy keeping the fences in shape so that tle couldn't get in and tramp down the crops after the seed was « There's big brutes of cattle as loves to go tramping through 5 many as there used to be. i ® g 't know how to sow anyway. They ain't got no ps of seed here and there and misses crops, Jim Jones does ed man or his son of e matter 1s that sowing | feeding purposes, 2 Plots. 3 Plots, | Vetches, 3 Plots. ee © SINGLE COPIES oo. available to the public upon the Ra- moment. The whole project is as- suming much larger proportions than was at first anticipated, and at the present time Hon. Adam Beck is in conference with the Ottawa authori- ties relative to two important matters : 1. That the Hydro Electric Commis- sion seek to take over all available water powers in Ontario for the de- velopment and distribution of electri- city in the Province. 2. The Federal Government is to be asked to grant the bonus of $6,400 per mile to Radial Railways within Ontario upon the ground that they are of general utility and benefit to the people. These requests are to be made by a delegation representing almost every municipality in Ontario, and the future of the Radial Railway pro ect hinges largely upon the success or failure of their mission. So far as routes being laid out, it.is asserted with authority that routes are not definitely fixed, and it is even possible that they may not be fixed until after the vote is taken, as there is a wish to avoid local prejudice or individual interests from affecting the vote. As soon as the various difficulties to successful operation of the scheme have been removed, the public will be Very little reliable information is dial Railway question at the present|and apply for the same. : x inicipal and Deposin 35018592 19 be Debentmes aE 234027752 | DuetoBasks | i} I93g0es Assets immediately available Credit: 3, i000 108,968.37 Eo ie ." of 20504,507.41 ; per Contra, 108,968.37 i Bank ¢ td Deheld 1,053,505.51 Py fi Ce ei ORION ; $45,7 . : Three grain mixtures for Fod Radial Rellnay production, 3 Plots. pddet Each plot is to be two rods long b atters. one rod wide, except No 28, which fs to be one rod square. ¥ Any person in Ontario may choose any one of the experiments for 1914 The mater ial will be furmshed in the order in which the applications are received, while the supply lasts. It might he well for each applicant to make a second choice, for fear the first could not be granted. All material will be furnished entirely free of charge to each applicant, and the produce will of course, become the property of the person who conducts the experiment, Each person applying for an experi ment should write his name and ade dress very carefully, and should give the name of the County in which he lives. C. A. ZAVITZ, Director. OO Notice to Creditors In the matter of estate of Samued Wesley McClung, late of the township of Brock, in the County of Ontario, merchant, deceased. Notice is hereby given that all pers sons having any claims or demands against the late S. W. McClung, who died on or about the ninth day of January, 1914, at Sonya, in the town ship of Brock, in the Province of Ontario, are required to send or dee liver to the undersigned Executor op his Solicitors, their names and ade dresses, and full particulars in writing of their claims, and statements of thefg accounts, and the nature of theip securities, if any, held by them. made acquainted with exact condi- tions. ~ Until then 1t will be wise to consider all "exact routes," etc, as liable to be changed. ° cme . | Experiments With Farm Crops | The members of the Ontarto Agri-! cultural and Experimental Union are pleased to state that for 1914 they are | prepared co distribute into every town- | ship of Ontario material'of high qual) ity for experiments with grains, fodder | crops, roots, grasses, clovers and alfalfas, as follows : Two varieties of Oats, 2 Plots. O A. C. No. 2I Barley and Emmer 2 Plots. Two varieties of. two-rowed Barley, 2 Plots. Two varieties of Hulless Barley, 2 Plots. Two varieties of Spring Wheat, 2 Plots Two varieties of Soy, Soja, or Jap- anese Beans, z Plots. Plots. Three varieties of Mangels, 3. Plots. | Two varieties of Sugar Beets for Three varieties of Sweedish Turnips, Two varieties of Fall Turnips, 2 Plots. - : Two varieties of Carrots, 2 Plots. AND TAKE NOTICE that afte the first day of April, 1914, the said Executor, James G. Shaw, will proceed to distribute the assets of the said des ceased among the persons entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which he shall have had notice, and that the said Executor James G. Shaw, will not be hable for said assets or any part thereof, to ang» person of whose claim he shall nog then have received notice. Dated at Toronto this second day of February, 1914, James G. Suaw, Executor. KERR, BULL Saw & MoNTGOMERY, Barristers, ete., Confederation Life Bldg., Toronto, Ont. Greenbank Born--On March 20th, to Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Beare, a daughter, Miss E. McArthur, of the Stratford hospital staff, is at her home here 'Two varieties of Buckwheat, 2 Plots. | nursing her mother, who has beem- Two varieties of Field Peas, 2 Plots. | suffering from blood poisoning, but 19 Two varieties of Spring Rye,2 Plots. | now improving nicely. ; . Mrs. W. A. Leask and son Charlig : spent a few days last week in Uxbridge Three varieties of Husking Corn, 3 {at W. Beare's. 4 Miss Aletha Cragg has gone to Toe ronto where she has accepted a posie tion. We are, very sorry to lose Mr. E, Cutler and family, who have moved away to Stony Creek, there to work om a fruit farm, ! Mrs. Peter Ganton is still in a critie Three varieties of Fodder and Sil- cal condition. : age Corn, 3 Plots, : "A rale, foine, ould Oirish toime™ Three varieties of Millet, 3 Plots. Two varieties of Sorghum, 2 Plots. Grass Peas and two varieties of 'Rape, Kale and. Field Cabbage, 3 Plots, ply Ra i Two Sfeties of Alife. 2 Plus, Four varieties: rasses, 4 Plots. Three v; Field Bea was enjoyed by everybody who attend= ed the St. Patrick's entertainment im the Methodist church. The tea wan one of those for which Greenbank ip noted, while the concert was full of Irish wit and humor. "It consisted off selections by the Leask trio, solos by s Hattie esses. Real and McKague, "An Irish pa an RE ak ag ed K Ao Mui Rai a Ca eh aif dk (Ls

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