Flesherton Advance, 7 Oct 1920, p. 3

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

V •w TEB rUCSHIETOV ADTAVGI. Mark Well! Your safeguard is the name "SUADA" This is the genuine 'tea of adl teas'. H yoa do not use Salada, send us a post card lor a free sample, stating the price you now pay and if you use Black, Green or Mixed Tea. Address Salada,Toronto HOW STUMPING RAISE D MY P ROFITS Some} Manufacturers Make All of Their ProfiU From What Was Fomier!yiWaste--Fann Profits May Be Made the Same Way â€"This E:q>erience May Show You How. By W. B. Hartman. If yon haye ever tried to farm a field from which the numerous stumps have not been removed, you will understand what I mean when 1 say that the extra labor required to farm such land costs more as a rule than the crop you get off of it. In the first place, each stump occupies a lot of space. In the second place, you can- not run the rows of crops right up to the stamps, and so you lose more ground. In the third place, it is al- most impossible to cultivate crops on land of this sort without trampling a great many hills. In the fourth place. it requires a lot of extra work and time fn trying to dodge the stumps as yoB worX the soli. Probably the custom of farming land of this sort is still in vogue in some places, because a few farmers still think more of plans that have been handed down from their fathers than they do of those that are more modem and more profitable. It has not been a great while, you know, that we have known how to remove stumps economically. We used to laboriously dig them out by hand and snake them away with a team. That was such hard work that decayed. Usually those that are de- cayed pull apart so badly that it re- quires a lot of extra work to get them oat To give you an idea of the costs 1 cleared a little less than 10 acres in 1917 at a total cost of $467.30, or a cost of about $48 an acre. I pulled 504 pine stumps, 810 oak stumps and 26 poplar stumps, a total of 1.340. In addition to this, I had 478 stumps that had to be snagged â€" that is, they were partlv gone, but parts of them had to be taken out. This was an average of nearly 189 stumps per acre. The actual pulling of the stumps cost me $23.50 an acre. The ne* greatest expense was for draggml them away. The next sn-patest ex- pense was the cost to Uke out the brush and burn it. It cost $2.73 an acre to stack the stumps. It cost $1.97 an acre to do the work of grubbing around the stumps in order to get hold with the , puller. The other operations wercl snagging, moving the stump puUer ' the use of the stump puller, the cost I of filling the holes, and other various small items. Compare this cost of $467.30 with! the net returns of $379. SO. This figure I slamming Rival edi- N'owadavs you could hardly expect many folks to 1 was arrived at after subtractin-' the ' really like such an enormous job. i actual cost of producing the first crop ' After I had stumped one field by i so you see I had an average net return ' modem methods I found I could make i of about $10 an acre more than the i enough extra profit from the crops the | cost of removing the stumps i first year to more than pay for the 1 I claim that it pavs. A let of mv ' stumping, so I concluded the only | neighbors have found the same thin<^ * thing that should prevent me from ' There is stumrlng ground not onfv stamping all of my land was tlie lack I in so-called stump sections, but also in ' of sufficient time to do all of the work, i many other locations. Possibly you ' I have found that there are several i have a pasture on vour farm in which ' good and mexpensive ways to .get out . there are a good manv stumps, and stumps. There are several good : which you have never" cultivated be- ' mechanical pullers that do the work "cause of this fact. You can take tho<e i easily and quickly. Dj-namite or blast- j stumps out easilv and cheaplv and 4* 1 ing powder is. of course, very effec- 1 a lot more off of that field by grow-' tive. and requires quite a bit less work ing crop? than you can in leaving it as a rule. One of the problems for a long time was a good way to dispose of the stumps after they had been taken out. I finally found that most in poor pasture. Even one stump is a wa.?te. Clean fields and clean pastures and clean yards are the indication of thrift and of these stumps could he worked up | economy. Stumps are something like into fire wood, and sold for enough to | wet spots in the loss thev occasion, pay for quite a lot of the expense, so You sometimes see a field of irregu- as my stumping progressed. I de- lar shape that might just as well have veloped a demand in nearby towns for square corners. Someone vears ago this kind of wood. Many people liked .started to plow around a wet place or it so well that they ask me vet for " - some of this kind of fuel. I have made it a point to keep a rec- ord of the actual costs in connection with stumping various fields I found that, as a rule, green stumps come around a stump or two and no one since has thought of the possibility of draining the wet spot or of grubbing out the stump, so extra work has been done for years. We can't afford such wastes any more. Land and its pro- out at less expense than those that are ! ducts are too valuable NEW OLEOMARGARINE REGULA- TIONS. TTndw the authority of The Oleo- margarine Act. 1919, and of An Act to Amend The Oleomargarine Act, 1919, new regulations have been passed governing the importation, manufacture and sale of oleomargar- ine in Canada. The provisions of the previous regulations have been re- tained and oew provisions have been introduced. The use of the words â- 'Butter." "Creamery." "Dairy" or the "Name of any Breed of Cattle" is pro- hibited (a) in any form of advertising or description of oleomargarine, or (b) on any package containing oleo- margarine. Each package of oleo- margarine manufactured, imported or sold, offered, exposed or had in posses- sion for sale must have the word "Oleo" stamped on the surface of the oleomargarine, in capital block letters, at least one and one-half inches high and of proportional width. NECESSITY OF MARKING EACH CHURNING OF BUTTER. The necessity of each buttermaker branding each box of butter with the name or brand of the creamery and the churning number has been forc- ibly illustrated on three occasions during the past week. .\ Canadian wholesaler shipped a car of butter to New York. On ar- rival there It was found that part of the car contained excess water. As the chnmlnga were not marked, pre- . , sumably each box in the car will be tested in order to sort out that which is adulterated. Two different Ontario wholesalers each shipped a car of Ontario Cream- ,v ery butter to Montreal during the week. A part of each car is reported ' from Montreal as containing excessive water. One of the cars contained the make of tour different creameries, all of which were not branded with the name of the creamery or churning * number. Arrangements are being made for testing each of the six hun- dred boxes In the car at a cost of one " hundred and fifty dollars. Had the 4 chnmlngs been numhered. only one box of each chunilng need he tested and the cost of picking out the butter containing excessive water would only .b. lie one-tenth or less of the present cost. It may be impossible in these cases ^ to fix th« responsibility on the cream- !"> ery and the dealer may have to take the loss due to cost of testing, rework- ing, decrease in weight and quality, but such losses eventually work back to the creamery. If the dealer must bear such losses, he must have a wider margin on which to do business. As most wholesalers to-day are testing the shipments from each creamery when received, and in cases of exces- sive water, are charging the creamery with the cost of testing, reworking and loss in weight and quality, the cream- ery shipping such butter will reduce the loss by numbering each churning. EX-SOLDIERS IN U. S. LOOKING TO CANADA. J. E. Nevins of Los Angeles. Cali- fornia, writes to a friend in Ottawa that he is coming back to Canada to take up land under the Soldier Settle- ment scheme. He says there are many ex-soldiers of the Canadian Expedi- tionary Force temporarily located in California who are looking with long- ing eyes to Canada and are desirous of taking up soldier settler's farms. CLEANING REVEALS MASTER- PIECE. A genuine Rembrandt entitled "He- raelitus and r»emocritus." was recent- ly sold, in London. England for the very small sum of $24,000. to a Dutch dealer. The picture was covered, with such a thick coat of old vsu-nish that English dealers were afraid to risk the chance of cleaning. Many good judges were convinced that it was a ,i;tnulne Rembrandt, and one of these declared that it was "not only by Rembrandt but one of his masterpieces." It has since been cleaned, and has been pro- nounced by an expert to be a splendid example of a Rembrandt of about 1660. of ii'most pricel*<83 value. The Holland Government is making efforts to Increase the domestic pro- duction of edible oils by making full use of the beechnut crop, which ex- ceeds 2000 metric tons annually. Both the top and bottom brackets in a new carbon holder for arc lights in projecting lanterns can be adjusted horlJiontally as well as vertically to maintain perfect alignment. An English Eire Department is test- ing a new flre escape by which persons are lowered in a basket from a tower raised against a building instead of being carried down ladders. DAY OF WEEKLY NEWSPAPER NOW AS NEVER BEFORE Not in a Hundred Years Have Weeklies Occupied the Place ' They Do To-Day. It is the day of the weekly paper. All the world is getting down to business. Waste is being eliminated, wages are going up. costs are going up. Shortage of newsprint is going to work a great change in the news- paper business. Years ago, newspapers each other over politics, tors attacked each other, most papers view politicians with suspicion. Everything around a news- paper is on a cost basis. If a politician wants space in a paper to-day, he pays for it just as the grocer might. Our great daUies are no longer champions of parties or organs of individuals. They are rather great impersonal institutions for circulating what is known as news. News of gen- eral interest goes in certain columns, the 'best and most interesting news goes in the advertising columns. Never in a hundred years has the weekly paper occupied the place it ha« to-day in the hearts of the people. It takes a fortune to launch and fi- nance one of the big dailies; but the weekly paper is an institution which can be financed upon a comparatively small capital. It is not the monev in a weekly paper which makes it" im- portant in a community, it is the brains behind the thing, the heart, the personality. The Great Force. It is not the circulation of the week- ly 4)aper which makes it a great force in the community, it is the policy of the paper, the character of the men associated with it. While the daily papers publish long accounts of the doings of the chancel- lories of Europe, the modern well- edited weekly confines its attention to valuable work nearer at hand. Its field is near to the earth. It does not deal in international politics but does the job well which is at hand. The" day of the bitter fight as be- tween Grit and Tory has gone forever. Whether this or that party should be in power does not disturb the editor of 1920. But there are vital problems dealt with in the rural press, the week- ly press, which the great journals rare- ly discuss. And here are some of them: Development of agricultural science. Improvement of markets. Building of better roads. Extension of rural health centres. Improvement of educational facili- ties for the country districts. To-day space which was once de- voted to articles attacking political op- ponents has been reclaimed for such good work as the advocacy of breed- ing of pure-bred stock. Where the weekly press once delved in the politi- cal field, intelligent and serious mind- ed newspaper men are to-day devot- ing their literary talents to such sub- jects as the more intensive cultiva- tion of the field in which food for man and beast is the harvest. You will look in vain in a city daily for articles on such subjects as pota- toes and hogs an^ apples and beef; but the average weekly devotes most of its space to articles upon the culti- vation of soil and the intelligent pro- duction, marketing and manufacture of these vital necessities of mankind. They keep down near to the hearts and speak in a language all of us can understand. If there are among editors to-day leaders of public opinion, you will find a higher percentage of them among the men of the weekly press. Free from the entangling influences of the great cities, aloof from sordid com- mercialism, their expressions are more likely to be those of free and unbiased thinkers and observers who are each day in personal touch with the men and women of the community. Citizens can perform no better com- munity service than that of support ing the local press. And that support must not be limit- ed to the spending of money upon ad- vertising space or subscriptions, but must be to an extent personal and from the heart. NEW YORK STORE WORKERS GOYERN BDSINESS^CONDOCT Employees Given Voice in Man- agement Through Re- , publican Form. The republican form of government I tor employes, introduced in certain in- I dustrial plants throughout the country has been adopted by a iarge New York department store. Employes of this store, numbering 1. .00. have a voice in virtually aU mat represen'tllL" 'Jrev'^^ril.^Se"^'*' ™° em'n,'''^ Cnited^^IuTes'"' ^" ' ate dire^y°'S"\^,"i^«^-«« ^d sen- ! Partment, co^is^ J^,^ executive de- five, is ^^ThTlJ^. * •^*'"««' of ficials. The%,rit, corporation of- earried out hi ^'^ tuncUons are \ot the nauo^ ° "^^ eonst;:utlon ' while ,h • "^* house and senate Corncobs are useful in Scouring poul- , enough to accustom ail of them to the about t! ^°^^^'^ ^^mittee may bring v disheis It nrevents manv naaas nt changed addrees. from the ^^'I"^s'on of an employe Quality First of All. worker hJ^b^^a^'unuJ^ ^^^ .^'"^ « Treat all the pullets for lice in the , they can have hirie^nsufed^^'^t*' fall and they will be safe until spring, acts of the legislative mavt ^^^ This is night work to avoid frighten- "^ the cabinerbut t^ifhL nnrh*^ mg the pullets just as egg production necessary as yet, it wa« said h^^? IS beginning. Place a few poultry ^^ials of the concern "" crates in the laying house in which to i ^laiprovem^nt of the service rona<... ^sten the pullets as they are treated. ^ "y the store to its customers is rt>« Then no birds will be missed and they ^â„¢ "^ niuch oi the legislation eLcf can all be freed from the crates the ^^ .^^ ^e workers, but the betf^Hnl' next morning. ot the morale of the force of emnlo The beginner with poultry likes to f^so brings many bills to the floor''nf â-  ^® ^°"^^ ^"'l senate, which con^ne one day each week. convene Will Provide 'Movies." .ri}f,?°"-' -* ''"^ providing for the in- to nrovf^ "..^ """""^ P'""'-^ "^a^W^e to provide ••movies" in the building FALL POULTRY REMINDERS By R. G. Kirby. try dishes. It prevents many cases of changed addrees, 1 bowel trouble if the dishes are fre- quently scoured with boiling water, Sanitary fountains are not sanitary be- cause that word is printed on the gal- vanized metal. But occasional scour- ing with cobs and hot water will make them sanitary. i Caponizing the surplus cockerels of- ten pays, and a few capons are fine ', for the home table. But they consume j a large amount of food in making their j growth, and it is necessary to study the markets and to ship them where the demand is good. Housewives in small market towns often prefer fat old hens to capons at high prices. ' Tnless there is a good market for : the capons they had better be sold as broilers, leaving the range and the j feed for the use of the pullets. Try and estimate the feeds required for the flock during the coming winter , and in the fall buy as much as pos- j sible from the producers in the home I community. Balance these with the home-raised feeds and try to keep the pullets laying throughout the winter. • Profit with poultry is not determined i So much by the low cost of feeding : as by the difference between the feed r costs and the egg receipts. No eggs means no profit, regardless of how I little .it cost to feed the flock. Pullets should be taught to roost ; j before the cool fall nights. If they t ; crowd together on the floors of brood coops or colony houses they become j (verheated. When they come out on the cool ground in the morning they ' may be chilled. Soon watery eyes ap- I pear and the poultryman must begin ' doctoring to avoid a serious loss and '; many devitalized birds. The vigor- 1 \ ous, well-ted pullet with a good roost- ' j ing place seldom catches cold. Colds Spread Easily. If any birds show watery eyes, Iso- j late them at once. Colds often spread , through the drinking water. By color- j ing the water each morning from a ; stock solution of permaganate of pot- i ash it is possible to prevent colds from spreading. The birds do not like the colored water and it is best see a large number of birds, but qual- ity pays better than quantity, as i large amount of quality stock" can be developed in a few years from a few birds of good foundation stock. Thr> difference of ten or twenty dollars in Ih! ""T ^-J- P*"" °^ ^^"^s" ^^ ^^ ^ess "^^ P^*^^ ^d the management is to than the H,frflr«n.„ ;„ value of the two spend $5,000 a year "'â- *^â„¢^°'^ '^ to than the difference ._ ^. „>; ,.„„ or three hundred birds that mayTesuU in a couple of years from the original stock. There is a great cash differ- ence between 300 quality birds and 300 of medium quality or worse. The beginner with poultrv should not be tempted to buy large numbers of hens or pullets culled from the flock of another poultryman. Fine qualitv ts provisions. :^-othrr aa^ovid^' lor the location and installatiJi of new individual lockers in the bLe ment where employes might ^ their coats and hats. Passing much of the responsibUitv he XV?^'^'''' °' "^* institS on o bron.hr "^f °^ "^^ employes has brought about many improvements. . - <^ quajiiy - rj ~â€" J "upruvements hens are not otten sold in lots of fifty ^°^'- "^ ^^^â„¢ origmating in sugges and a hundred; thev are sold in pairs â-  ^ »"hich are made to the suedes trios and pens. The ownership of a '•"-'"^"- ^ "*" large flock of culls is a handicap al- most impossible to surmount. Enthusiastic beginners in the poul- try business are killed off each vear because they go too fast and stock up with quantities of poor birds. It is hard to wait for birds to grow when afllicted with chicken fever. But it is the only safe way. it saves monev for the poultryman and helps him to stay in the business if he can control his enthusiasm and develop the busi- ness slowly in a sensible manner tion committee of the hoase and ^n- ate at the rate of more than 50 a 7^..u ^â„¢P'°-'«s are paid cash prizes for all suggestions put into use and no suggestion is rejected until an in- vestigation has been made bv the committee. ' An increase in the earning power ot each employe is one of the purposes ot the new store government and economy dividends are paid on the saving in the percentage of operat- ing expense. A merit system has been inaugurated by the workers grades for each employe being made out monthly on a basis of their ahTf SOME STRANGE CAUSES OF FIRES ^^T- e.xperience and co-operathe work , . -^ average grade is reached by bal- An mqu.^st was held recently on a ancing those turned in for all work man killed by an explosion which tooK ers by their direct superiorsâ€" floor place at a London dyers' and cleaners' managers, buyers, assisUnt buyers works. A drum was being opened | "id department heads. Salaries go ud whuh contained silk articles and 14 along with the ratings and promo- gauons of naphtha, when the whole tions also are based on them thing went off like a powder barrel. I "~ ' - Direct Election. ""- ^ There were no matches about, no Th«. h«. , E'«<=ti°n«- ""I The house of representative mem- bership is elected directly by all of „„.,'".'".. -.-" V â- " '° smoking. The onlv possible exolana- ' ., "L" "T"""- "' "^i-icDcumiive mem- avoid using It except mveYy necessary,, ion is that the silk rubbed 'oeether ^v"'^'^ '^ ^'^•^'^'^ directly bv aU of c*ses. produced a spark ^^^ workers except department heads Hens that have raised a brood ot Fires are caused in manv odd wavs ^""^ ^^^"^ assistants. These two chicks may partially moult before ! There was a case not long ago of a Sâ„¢"Ps elect the senators, of whom returning to laying condition. Do not drug store being set on fire by the ravs : ^®''® "^ ^^' compared with 16 repre- cuU out such a hen as an early moul- of the sun concentrated through "a , ^^'"^atiVes. Half the membership of ter and poor layer unless she shows j globular bottle in the window. "^ '^f^^. ^'^l changes^ semi-annually, the A few drop.' of oil on a bale of cot- " '" ~ ton will set up a chemical action which generates enough heat eventually to set the cotton on fire. Many a ship carrying a rich cargo of cotton ha? met its fate through this mischance. Coal. too. will sometimes catch flre other signs of inferior quality. Never leave water in the pipes ot hot-water incubators throughout the winter. It may freeze and cause a bursting of the pipes. At least it causes much unnecessary rust and this may result in some connecting electors holding office one year. The five standing committees from each body include those on justice, co-oper- ation, economy and service. As soon as this industrial demo- cracy plan has gone beyond its in- fancy its originators hope to take the pipe rusting apart. The incubator through spontaneous combustion. This | P'^""'^ 'nto the organization In some â-  - . ,!..*.» â€" ; â€" J I... Hnoc not hanrwin ,n-{rK r^^^A .-«a»». ..«-> .Way. Already observance of the wish cost a year is partially determined by the number of years of service in the machine. At the present cost of poul- try equipment it must be properly stored every fall. New cockerels needed next spring should be purchased in the fall. Th:^ gives the buyer a large selection at . moderate price. The cost of keeping them over winter will not equal their incrased value in the spring. Poul- trymen will not hold over any but the best cockerels at the present price ot feed. Buyers who need them at mod- ^m, erate prices must make their deals I Qre. til's fa"- ! When an old building was pulled After the fall crops are harvested down recently, quantities of matches there may be time to build brood were found behind the wainscoting. coops and colony houses. They will , They had been dragged there by rats does not happen with good steam coal. • --v wm=.»- or even with the best household coal, i ** °^ customers by employes has re- But it does when the coal has sulphur ' suited in bills directed toward making in it. and from this cause, too. manv I shopping more pleasant and sttgges- ships have been lost. " j tions for other changes are expectea Perhaps the strangest of causes : '° come from outside the store after which ever produced a fire was an ant j the government grows beyond the em- hill. There is a species of ant known br>onic stage, as the wood ant which makes a nest ; entirely of vegetable matter. Under certain circumstances this may fer- ment until it gets hot enough to begin \ Spend a dollar with your home mer- to smoulder. Then comes a breeze i chant and you will have an opporttini- which fans the spark into flame, and I ty of spending it again soon. Spend the result may be a serious forest a dollar away and that dollar is for- HOW A DOLLAR CIRCUUATfeS. ever out of circulation as far as your town is concerned. Spend a dollar for shoes, the shoe man spends it at the drug store, the druggist spends it at the grocery store. ,„ _„- ., „.,«„»„. •â€",.., , .„,... u„u v..r.r.i uiofi^tru lucic u.v nils, uiu^^isi. 9i>truuB K at iQe grocerv store be useful next spring when the brood- Rats and mice form a very real fire ' the grocer spends it at the dry goods incubating ot chicks will danger for by gnawing the head of a ! store, the dr\- goods man spends it live match they may easily set a house with the butcher, and the butcher on flre. , , owes you an account, and Is now able , _ â-  to pay you because you spent a dollar KOREAN WOMEN NAMELESS. : in your own town. You sold the butcher an insurance ing and make construction work impossible During the winter it is a great satis- faction to have accomplished n^uch of the work necessary to make the spring work a success. Liarge poultry bouses built in the tall should be flnished as I A French scientist has designed X-Ray apparatus for examining ovsters for pearls without opening their shells so they can be returned to the water it they tail to contain gems. lou soia loe outcner an msurance built in the tall should be flnished as I /n^ Korean or as she would be call- , policy, or you were his lawyer or his early as possible so they will dry out i *" under Japanese rule. Chosen wo- : doctor, carpenter or painter, before winter. When possible it is â„¢an has not even a name. In child- ; That dollar bought seven dollars' best to construct, laying houses in the ! **ood she receives a nickname, by : worth of goods while it was coming summer as then thev will be very dry i '^^^<:^ she is known in the family and back to you. Seven men besides your- and thi^ helps to eliminate danger ^^ ^^^ frtends. but. when she arrives ; self made a profit on that doUar. from colds and roup. ** maturity, it is employed only by This question of "buying at Home" If pullets are moved to their winter ^^^ parents. To all others she is "the is much more than mere loyalty to quarters before laying begins it will ' ^'^'®'" °'" °f "'J® daughter of" such a home merchantsâ€" it resolves itself prevent the check in egg production fT",- ^ f' ?«"â-  J°*r"*f« ^^"^ name into a matter of whether or not one prevent the check in egg production which otten results when the birds are frightened by the move to a strange house. Carry the birds at night and fasten them in the new house for several days. Oive them time to adopt their new roosting place be- fore turning them loose on the range. Then they will return to the laying house at night. A few will be stub- born and wish to return to the colony houses, hut several moves are usually is buried: she is absolutely nameless. ; will reduce or increase his chances to If it happens that a woman has to ap- j accumulate money, or have less or pear in a law court the judge gives ' more money to spend, her a special name for use while the ' Every dollar sent away from home case lasts in order to save time and to simply reduces the chances for profit simplify matters. for the man who sent it away. ' Looking at it from a hard-headed. To safeguard street cars should business viewpoint â€" it is good, com- thelr poles slip off while crossing rail- ! mon business sense to spend your road tracks a wire guard has been in- j money where you have a chance to vented that carries current and Im- get at least part of it back, parts it to the loose trolley wheels. I THINK IT OVBaR. J m \

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy