Dryden Observer, 16 Sep 1927, p. 2

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#1 COTTAGE ROLL, per 1b oe let ali=I= SUIS = BCR CUC UCL aality Meats FOR THIS WEEK AYRSHIRE BACON, per Ib .........vvnennn. 45c. PICKLED PIGS FEET, per 1b ................ 20¢- BOIL FOWL, perth .....iivvesiiirarincncrnns 25¢. GLENDALE BUTTER, per ib . ses ss sas se sss sas Phone %o. 8 A, PATERSON, Prep 3 HUE mE ERE] == i ee =I al {ik i] Lik Een nis : = : E g E 8 E = | = = : E E : = o : ES E - 5 £ 3 g } 2 g g = = 3 2 = : : : 2 a = 8 = hil iY j ; | | § When buying ask for specia'y from paper, or else you are ~~ apt to be chirged regular prices. "The Busy Store LEAVE YUOR ORDERS FOR-- Presarving Fruit _ CAR TO ARRIVE SHORTLY-- PEACHES, PEARS, PLUMS, Ripe and Green TOMATOES, and Pickling CUCUMBERS. D. W. SCOTT, Dryden x Special Prices --On-- CHILDREN'S DRESSES and SMALL BOY'S SUITS A viiy {ine Flannel Dress in one or two piece effect Age 8 tc 1. $1.95 -- $2.75 BOY'S 1-PIECE SUIT, WITH BELT ATTACHED -and 2-Piece Styles, in Tweeds. Age 3 to 7 years. 81.95 -- $2.50 Special in LADIES JERSEY DRESSES! J. . Gates EET PTET TET EHH HHT BH FTL ELL UU Just Around | ! L] As You Please the Corner : 3) : 4 -- help yourself from g { £] i : i + --Ask the Clerk Everywhere LS --Telephone CHAIN STORES O: H: FRONGER, Proprietor These prices not good after September 24th, 1927. The same smiling courtesy in all Red and White Stores. Sugar, pure Cane, granulated, 1o-fbs for ................ 78 oe s J100-Ibs: sack iv evs $7:75 Choice Tomatoes, 2%4's, per tin ........ 17¢c., three for :47 Quaker Oats with Chinaware, per package 38c., two for :75 Pears; 2-Ib tins VLiS: two for i... .ivvieiiinniriii., 129 Plums, 2-1b tins, L:S:, two for ..... Berens ana ine IPE 1 Tea, our Special, bulk, perib .......covviiiiiiinenn. :57 Pure Strawberry Jam, 4-ib tins, each .................. :62 Pure Raspberry Jam, 4-1b tins, each .............cnnnn. 59 Corn Starch, Canada, 1-Ib.pkgs . c+... ivreaier cnc eees :10 Com Syrup, 5b pails... ..coic ii rirsrrasssesinsenss 139 Corn Syrup, IGIDpails .... cov iver avrriiirarrrinnins 75 Matches, 400s, three boxes for .......ccoeveurennennn. 23 Great 'West-Coffee, 1-ib tins, perib .............0vnet :69 Great West Orange Pekoe Tea, 1's, perib .............. :69 Butter, i-lb Creamery, perib ........cocvovinin nines, 42 Fels Napth Soap, 3 cakes ........ 23C., per.cin. 10 ... 175; Clothes Lines, :50-3t., Sisal,each .........~......>... 15 2-in-1 Shoe Pdjish, per tin ................. Sar etane :10 CIR RN TR Ra TR LR LHL RR TTT TH TTT SUELO i 0-ARD (GED QE (EE (-EIED O-@ND (GED (CI (ED (CIES O-GEED (CIES ()-€7 TP (GE O- EXT (Hie (Emm pws ati sri ws iw osm) pre CC CELE TERRE STATA LLL LL CE RL LE LEE TT TL ELL ELLE ELL TEER ERLE LHL LEELA Autumn Planting of Bulbs. (Experimental Farm Note.) Of late years an increased interest has deen taken in the culture of early spring flowers such as Tulips, Nareissi Scilla and Crocuses. All of these are hardy and when once planted may re- main in the ground for a number of years without being disturbed. Tulips however, have a tendency to produce many small blooms after the second year and aie, therefore, lifted at th= end of the second blooming season. The largest of the bulbs lifted may be used for planting the following fall. In general, to obtain good resulis with bulbs, the soil in the beds or bord- ers should be well prepared in advance of the time of planting. If the soil is a good garden loam, and if it has been occupied all summer by othe: plants, it should recieve a liberal ap- plication of well-rotted manure, and this spaded in to a depth of about twelve inches. Since different kinds of bulbs vary greatly in size, it is necessary to plant +hem at different depths. A safe rule to follow is to cover a bulb or corn with about twice its own depth of soil. Thus a bulb one inch through from base to apex should be covered with two inches of siol. The distance apart between the bulbs will vary according to the size and type of bulb. Abou the time the ground freezes in winter the beds should receive a light mulch of strawy manure. This should remain on the ground over wint- er and unil the first growth appears ahove the surface in the spring. Many kinds of bulbs such as daffo- dils, jonquils, snowdrops and crocuses are well adapted for planting in grass along driveways or walks. To plant bulbs in this informal manner, a hole should be dug with a trowel and about {two inches in rich soil placed at the {bottom and the bulb placed atthe prop- er deph. Blubs planted in this way will be benefited by an annual dress- ing or well-rotted manure, applied in the early autumn. Care of the Breed- ing Flock. (Experimental Farm Note.) The quantity and quality of the pro- duct which the sheep-breeder will have to market the following year are large- ly determined by the care which the flock receive during the fall months, September to November, & the spring months from March until June. While most breeders realize the influence which proper care at lambing time will have on the number of good)lambs rais- ed, few consider the breeding season and the period just preceding it as worthy of any special attention; and yet the old slogan of live stock breed- ers, "Breed, Feed and Weed," can be applied at this time to as good or better advantage than at any other perid in the year. At this time the breeder should select the sire of his next years crop of lambs. Nothing ES 0D (CII (< -)- GI (EGE (ES) WE) ED GH GE EE hut a good pure-bred should be used; one that has been inspected and pass- ed as a good representative of the breed. Strict selection of the cwes should also be practised, and all those of poor mutton and wool type should be culled; also those that have shown themselves poor breeders. Any ewe which is a shy or non-breecer is a distinct loss to the owner and should not be retained in the flock. Nova Scotia, figures have been collec- ted on the average cost of keeping a ewe for a year, also on the profits which may be expected when the flock is carefully selected and culling practiced. The average yearly feed cost of a ewe, over a period of six years, is $8:7. The profit over feed cost is $8:46. A non-breeder ewe re- turns only her wool to pay for her keep. The average value of this is $2:40, so the loss to her owner is $14.- 78 per year. The ewe which is a poor milker, and rears only a small lamb, returns on the average $7:20 which is not enough to pay for her feed. All lambs should have been weaned about the last of August. The ewes are flushed for three weeks or more in September on clover aftermath or rape supplemented with a small a- mount of grain, such as oats and bran. Ewes which are in good condition and gaining in flesh at breeding time, will drop and raise a larger percentage of lambs than ewes in poor condition. At the Nappan Farm twenty ewes which were not flushed drepped twenty-four lambs and raised twenty-thre of them. Twenty-four ewes pastured on clover aftermath dropped forty lambs and ra's ed thirty-three. Allow the ewes to remain on he clover and rape for only a few hours a day when first put on this feed or bloating will result. After breeding, the ewes may be wintered on good clover hay and turnips with little or no grain until shortly before lamb- ing time. Dryden Motors Successors to DRYDEN DISTRICT MOTORs Solicit Your Patronage STAR, DURANT AND NASH CARS. Guaranteed Service and Repairs on all makes. SEVERAL BARGAINS IN USED CARS. Dryden Motors, HUGHIE HILL, Mgr. THE HAY SEASON IS HERE. I HAVE A GOOD SUPPLY OF SUPERIOR HAY RAKES, FORKS, SYTHES, SNATHS, STONES, etc, at HONEST PRICES. Ihave a stock of Frost & Wood HAY MOWERS, Also the Beatty HAY FORK OUTFIT ROPE & FIXTURES for the Hay Fork You Already have. A Large Stock of-- MASONS SEALERS, 14-gal,, qts., & pts, sizes at $2 jon $1:75 & $7.40 per dozen. ¥ ) { | EA KLOSE DRYDEN, en _p HARNESS and SHOE REPAIRING For the past three years I have been in Dryden, I have given satisfaction in Shoe Repairing, and intend doing some in the Harness line. At the Experimental Farm, Nappan PRICES VERY MODERATE Childrens Boots Repaired After School Hours. L. GREENHILL NEXT TO POST OFFICE | 1 M. J. CROSIER General Merchant, i OXDRIFT, ONTARIO | i Just Arrived : --CAR OF-- FLOUR & FEED ~ Prices Right Office Positions Are | Plentiful in Winnipeg It will pay you again and again to train in Winnipeg where employ- ment 3 at its best and where you can attend the Success Business College, whose graduates are given preference by thousands ef employ- ers. The Success Business College, Winnipeg, 8 a strong, reliable school--its superior service has re- sulted in its annual enrollment greatly exceeding the combined yearly attendance of all other Busi- ness Colleges in the whole province of Manitoba--it is now Canada's - largest and most influential Busi- ness College. Gpen all the year. Enroll at any time. Write for free prospectus. BUSINESS COLLEGE Limited Cor. Portage Ave. and Edmonton St. 'Winnipeg, Man. Not connected with any other (Success) College in Canada. HHH HBL EH HH FH TH EHH ET A.J.GARDINE © General Merchant, EAGLE RIVER Agent for Frost & Woed IMPLEMENTS. COCKSHUTT PLOW (OY * 8 5% Sharple's Cream Separators. RAW FURS BOUGHT & SOLD. LUE EHO PB HTH HH ESHELF HT EEE HELE T EEE HELE Fresh Fruits or Week-end NOBAVY GRAPES sper ib, ov... cits Ess .30 CRETERY perdh ... iit i ei iini noni srneses .20 BEAD LRTI TUCE: oon rh iene = 15 BANANAS ia is ete da 15 ORANGES, perdozer ..... ns 0 oe 50 & 75 ONTARIO TOMATOES, perbasket-.[.........0.. $1.23 PEARS Iarge, per dUzen 1 caves sein, .50 PEACHES Larose per dozen Loo v0. ora indy 50 LEMONS, perdozen oii ai vi ivnemitane: 40 & .60 CAUIIFIOWER each +. coins ivi isavvens 25 CUCHOMBERS Sts for +. ano 25 Gough's Confectioney J. 0. GOUGH, Proprietor. AUTO LIVERY SPECIAL ATTENTION ROBT. SWEENEY General Blacksmith $GENTS FOR-- dassey- Harris Implements UARBUN REMOVED FROM CYLINDER by Acetylene Burning CLOSED CAR, FIRST CLASS ACCOMMODATION, GIVEN TO TRAVELLERS, WEDDING AND PICNIC PARTIES, Phone 41, A. P. KELLAR DRYDEN - ONTARIO 1 BUILD A HOME FIRST Get our PRICES on B ING MATERIAL of all Kinds. SASH -- DOORS -- BRICK -- LIME -- PLASTER ROOFING PAPER ---- BUILDING PAPER PLASTER BOARD and WALL BOARD SCREEN DOORS & WINDOWS. BUILDERS' HARDWARE © CEMENT -- Screen Wire Cioth, --14 mesh--Black & Galvanized Lumber -- Lath -- Shingles. Call or Write for Plans and Estimates Dryden Lumber Co. ITTY DD iil Will Not J\AR Collapse \ : We handle only the old, reliable Harvester brand twine. No better twine made. This twine runs smooth and uniform in size without thin or raveled spots. The patented cover prevents tan- gling and keeps the ball from collapsing. Make your twine reservation now on the basis of your acreage. This does not obligate you in any way, but does enable us to anticipate more adequately the wants of our customers. Avoid delays and unnecessary expense by seeing us now. J. S. CORNER, Agent, OxdJiit --Agent for-- INTERNATIONAL BARVESTER COMPANY HAMILTON of Canada, Ltd. CANADA

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