Dryden Observer, 12 Aug 1921, p. 3

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em AOR pe at Sh pil ves eas 24h ibe Sn 4 SRR a ge ~ DRYDEN OBSERVER. - Be Mee TRAC OR 'Ready for Heavy Duties - The Case 10-20 is noted for ts in ower. Owners state that these tractors are always capable in emergency, for extra hard plowing or for grades. This 10-20. is recommended for pulling three 14-inch plows which it can pull in sod or stubble. It also handles other implements .usually requiring about six heres, such as two 7-foot binders, two 20-shoe grain For belt work this tractor drives a Qase 20x36 thresher, fully equipped silo fillers, hay presses, feed mills, ete. For all round use this tractor demands your careful consideration. It has long proved its worth. It is economical in operation, burning kerosene successfully. It is built of the finest materials. You get your money's worth, Before you decide on your tractor, let us show you the advantages of the Case (National Crop Improvement Serviece.} "The isolation ef country life is becoming largely a myth. Any man | who has an automobile, and every live farm family has one, will not sever feel lonely if he can any day drills, six section spike-tooth harrow, 8 line. Youll then be better able tol his machine will make both winter to 10 foot doubledisc harrow, ete. judge. - and summer. ! : te "very community is entitled te . passable roads at'all times," says Mr. A KEROSENE F. T. BRIGNALL, R. 8S. Rider, president Canadian Steel TRACTORS Oxdrift, Ont.} & Wire Co. "The road which is most satisfactory is undoubtedly built eof We have a large Stock Of HARDWARE, and a small stock of Cash. In order to Feverse these conditions we are offering the following 'inducements for the month of Arh) me A twenty p.c. discount on all Granite Ware "A ten p.c. discount on all other articles. Ask to see our Japanese Cups and Saucers, also Japanese Rugs. T. J LATII Hardware, Pvisttires and Butcher Shop INTERNATIONAL. McCormick Deering Binders that you know are right. For nearly a century McCormick lead in the grain producing countries Harvesting Machines have held the of the world. From a small beginning | in 1831 the McCormick industry has machines in the field somewhere on outstanding reason for this world- In 1880 Wm Deering marketed time wire had been used, which was 'Deering's twine binder revolutionized ience which he gained are built into It will pay you to buy these time =r grown until now there are McCormick the globe every day in the year. The wide publicity is satisfactory service. the first twine binder. Up to that far from . satisfactory. William the industry. Knowledge and exper- the efiicient Deering binders of today. tried binders that you know are right. The New, Big Twine Ball Six balls to the bale instead of ten-- each ball containing almost twice as much twine as the old style ball. This saves time in the field when every minute lost means loss of money. This is the advantage of the new, big twine ball now offered to Canadian farmers under the names--McCormick, International. old, well-known 'Deering, and Two balls fit in any standard twine can. For your own safety, insist uon McCormick, Deering or International twine in the new big balls. J. S. CORNER, Oxdrift. © or write to i __NTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO. Ltd, Winsipes, Mas. Lente i value severe] eam? 340800080 0603000 COOBOBIEVIVODLTODIBICLHOB OOO *8e The Busy Store on 98-Ib bags only Royal Household Flour $5.40 @ @ @ 3 5 @ [3 2 S @ <@ ] 0d én BORD OR SBC 408650 I | | | D.W, SCOTT, Dryden BerRORY 940064000484 10¢260¢0400906/00¢00 LL DAL Ak reinforced concrete and ome of its the weather, these roads can be kept open with the snow plough and the dreaded January thaw or spring breakup will loge their terrors. "Every town and village ought to have a co-operative arrangement with the farmers to keep the roads open 365 days in the year. bound is a relic of the past." - An emu ctible every farm are bugs and weeds, but if you have a properly constructed | fence, you can burn out the weeds of and rid yourself to your live stock from lightning is greatly reduced," says Mr. R.. S.! Rider, president, Canadian Steel & Wire Company. "The use of steel fence posts has | become so general during recent: years that there is no longer any ; question but what they are the solu' tion of the fence post problem. has many friends, it is usually not an economy because the labor in of the proper size for the work ree guired of it. "The steel made, is heavily galvanized "There is another economy and that is that you can drive the steel posts without digging the holes, and the bottom of the post automatically spreads, making a wedge-shaped an- chor to hold the post firmly in place. "The man who wishes to sell his | farm would be wise to replace his eld ramshackle fence with a woven wire fabric on steel posts. It will a dollars and give it a look of thrift Apion is worth good money." ' (National Crop RRR Ta : in the year travel as many miles as great features is that regardless of: Being snow- (National Crop Improvement Service.) "Tyo of the greatest enemies to | along the fence lines without damage 3 both pests. ° Besides your fence is grounded wher- ! 5 ever a steel post is used and danger ' are meeting all the time. T ERE are instances of carelessness such as the Fire Rangers of Ontario Each is an actual case, as officially reported in detail to the Forestry Brauch. Until each individual realizes -personal responsibility and co-operates to prevent forest fires, Government Fire Rangers can hope merely to lessen the tragic consequences of such human careless ness and bad judgment. They' re Sours Lumbermen's Fires May 25th, 1920--A careless river driver, by leaving his smudge fire or throwing a cigarette into slash, burned over two town- ships, including 7,000,000 feet of pine, a $5,000 mill, camp buildings and equipment worth $7, 000, sawn lumber worth $7,509, and killed several million young spruee and jack pine trees. May 25, 1920--TFire in a rubbish heap be- hind a lumber company's boarding house got away and, despite prompt action, burned over 1,600 acres, including 2,000,000 feet of white pine, and a set of new camps worth $1,000. - June 1, 1920--Two old men left to attend to the stop logs in a dam, let fire get away from either their smudge or camp fire, and burned over 9,000 acres, including 6,000,000 feet of pine, one mill, four camps, large quantities of supplies, and equipment to a total value of $40,000. May 4th, 1921--Lumbermen burning slash around their camps, lost control of their fire and 15,000 acres were burned before they regained it. Railway Tiros 'June bth, 1920--Engine No. 1368 started a forest fire which ran over 15,000 acres, burning one saw mill, three sets of lumber 2 fire which burned over 12,000 acres of tim- ber worth $20,000 on the stump, camps and logs worth $5,750, and cost $1,000 to fight. June 2, 1920--A section erew left a pile of burning ties to geo away to their regular work. The fire spread over 1,200 acres. Fires Set Out Under Permit June 10th, 1921--Partles burning slash under permit, lost control through bad judg- ment, and 1,050 acres were burned and forty buildings, including saw mill, were wiped out. May 27th, 1920--A squatter, burning de- . bris near his shack, fired 7,000 acres, 1,000 of which were virgin timber, and wiped oud four sets of logging camps. Neglected Camp Fires July 4th, 1920-- Tourists left camp fire on shore of Deer Lake. After six days' fight, rangers put fire out, but 550 acres of young pine were dead. May 8ist, 1920--A neglected camp fire, despite efforts of Chief Fire Ranger and 42 men, burned 1,260 acres of young pine. May 7th, 1921--Indians left camp fire, which burned over 7,000 acres and took one week © hing to control. -- Be cavefnl ful te of fire in the forests. Be care your camp fire out--dead out. vaway | , clzarettes 8 : "While the wooden fence post still : making that post and the compara- tively short life of the post, makes | it much cheaper to buy a steel post' post when properly inside | and out with an extra heavy coat of | rustless zinc below the ground line. © camps, stables, houses, and outfits, 5.000 cut logs and 1.400 piles, besides standing timber. | he EET May 25th, 1920--Eagine Ontario Forestry Branch Don't lighted mater . We tch out, lest ST Hire gets No. 2509 set a Parliament Bldgs. Toronto, ons | FOR SALE 100 WHITE for sale. STRAIN Apply-- W. D. NEELY, Oxdrift. LEGHORNS For Sale.--7 WORK HORSES, weight 'from 12 to 1400 Ibs. Well broke in. Apply E. GIBBINS, Oxdrift i PUREBRED HOLSTEIN BULL, aged 21 months. 125 1-yr-old bred-to-lay BARRED ROCK HENS, from O. A. C. trap- nested stock. Prices right. H. WRIGHT, Wabigoon, Ont. FOR SALE--N. % Lot 3, Con. 2, Twp of Sanford. Also some lumber. For particulars apply oe AUG. BERGMAN, Yo Minnitaki, Ont. 12 YOUNG PIGS for sale, five weeks old, $12.00 per pair. : WM. KEHR, Quibell ,Ont. For Sale--2-cylinder ADAMS M. & B. Marine Engine, in good running condition. A pply T. C. R. CRAWLEY. For Service. Registered Skorthorn Bull at Lot 3, Con. 6, Van Horne. JAS. HATCH. "The demand for gasoline is grow=- . ing day by day and economists are always prophesying that the world's supply will soon become inadequate," . q Mr. C..H. Chilton, editor of the County Agent and Farm Bureau. "gcience has already taught us, oa 'however, that almost every growing plant contains alcohol which can be § distilled at a very low price per gal- lon, gruperior in power to gasoline. "There is enough waste on every o furnish its heat, light and The machinery is all avail- apd it is time that we should give this matter the most careful consideration. The principal difii- culty of this plan will be to accumu- farnl t power. able, late enough farm refuse to malke the | project profitable. Therefore. it would be wise to have the outfit own- ed by some farmers' organization which will first encourage all farm- ery to supply a proportionate share in order that there may be sufficient material to make the plan suc- cesgiul, and which in many respects is FB LINDEN 3 4 BoOTARY, --ETQ, . Conveyancing - Collecting General Prastice DRYDEN ONTARIO - W.VA. Applications for membership and informafion con- cerning returned men, wri.e to H. M. DAVIDSON. Secy-'T'reas. | maternity--with self-respect and un- Regular meeting at 2.30 p.t. FIRST SUNDAY every mors THT WOMEN WHO SHOULD MARRY "The slow progress of the world is all because there is not enough love in it and there is not enough love in it because the real mothers haven't done all the mothering; and the 2enl mothers haven't done all the mother- ing because always, in the past, marriage was the only honorable calling for a woman, and all women! rushed into it. But life today offers many honorable callings--a calling for every gift. Then let me implore you, you women at the turning of the ways, in the interest of unborn hu- manity, of more love in the world, of peace on earth, unless the maternal instinet dominates you--unless you crave a home, feel eager to begin feathering a nest with the softest, gentlest down of pure, hich love-- unless all this is paramount with you, stay out of marriage. Turn your steps towards science, to the labora- tories, bu keep your hands off this sacred human problem! "Perhaps the maternal instinet dominates the majority of women. I do not know; I am no statistician. But I do know there are enough who do not have it to botch the job, well- nigh to wreck the world. Then avoid derstanding. Leave it, turn from it, find your own high and honorable calling. But you who have the gift, accept the call of nature, and de this greatest of all earthly work. Find in the knowledge that it is God's greatest work your reason for being. The child puts you in the race, into the future; makes you of the long, un- ending stream. Then go up to God, its hand in yours!" --August Good House Keeping. WOMEN WHO SHOULD NOT BE MOTHERS - "I would divert from motherhood that woman with antipathy to the intimate ways, who never expresses her love in endearing erms, or tender smiles. I would divert these walled- in, self-contained women from mother hood and send them to work in labora- tories where matter has no feeling, and feeling is not needed to Tonsiod the mysteries of matter. "T would divet all stiff, cold. cavesr- minded, house-keeping-minded, pleas- ure-minded women--I would divert all women who lack the passion for hu- man service, in whome the maternal instinct is not the dominating in- stinct; and I would take chances on any loss to the race by reason of this diversion being more than made up by the coming into existence of uni- versally loved babies and homes and households."--August Good House: keeping. "PITCH-FORK GOLF . (From the Financial Post) There are many empty chairs be- hind executive .desks for the short periods during the "dog days." Few have better earned the right to set aside the cares of office for a few days than Ontario's premier whose hours have been long, duties many, and responsibilities heavy since he was rather pre-emptorily placed at the head of the provincial govern- ment. But when Mr Drury left his office for a couple of days last week he did not go to the lakes or the sea- side, but to his farm at Crown Hill-- and the golf they play there is with a pitch-fork. Has Premier Drury forgotten how to play hayfield golf? Hardly! On Thursday last he entered a timothy and clover handicap and after spend- ing most of the morning on some raimsoaked hay bunkers he got down to form and pitched up eighteen loads before he called it a game. = Next morning he finished the hay handi- cap by forking up another eight loads. And that was not the end of the harvest tournament. It was only noon, and half a day by agri- cultural time--union rules do not apply. A wheat match started sharp after lunch and the premier finished strong with a total of twelve loads. When a man ean pitch thirty- eight loads of hay and grain in two days (or rather a day and a half, farm-time) after many weeks of indulgence in the strenuosities of public life, his opponents in the po- litical, or any other, ring had better prepare for a long, hard contest. And if there comes defeat--and at the mention of the word the premier smiled healthily and sun-burnedly on a brother .agriculturist and poli- tician (not the forgotten writer)-- "why we farmers always have a job, even if we do lose a couple of thousand dollars on a season's efforts as I am doing on my farm this year."

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