Dryden Observer, 21 Mar 1924, p. 2

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i THE URYDEN OBSERVER Hastern Grain Drills 11, Li) 3. or 15 Marker single Disc 1 nn ® Complete a With grass Lak Leb bed dade Lob ddd ho LE I ES Ty EE Lr ER TO Ell a I TF OB rior fr pine a) J, Agent for-- ; RA How to Get a Fair Profit Gut Avoid Extremes of Heat and Sun-- {| All prices quoted are for delivery £0 oN 3 A BLA 9 il HIE MISING THE PIG of Swine. Using the Self-feeder--A Correc tive for Winter Use -- Farm Bookkeeping -- Roughage: Have ft Good. ; J ontributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) - given Swine are profitable when sbundant sunshine ard exercise, fed on well selected feeds, gently han- and Ford Cars, a : a EM i oe Trucks ROBT. SWEENE and Tractors Agents For- Massey-Harris | Implements Carbon Removed from Cylinders in Dryden, including freight and all taxes. \ died, given proper . sanitation It % ; | , n d housing, kept free from worms and RETAIL SELLING PRICE FOR 1924 MODELS by. " = see lice, and protected against cholera TIME PLAN \ y i d ] and other diseases. Much ean happsd | ; CASH D h A i ° ie Ti td MODUL ; j own 12 Months cetyiene Burning attach. pr PRICE paymen Payments. | 1s an easy animes 10 -B 2 TOURING iii iigrbisimnriois 630.00 T 3 ent straight and narrow path leading t0 ROADSTER / $ 585.00 Somn00 TE : DRYDEN --ONTARIO m Ll LU. . successful and profitable development: opm DE REE 5 ill oh 1 Sass HE ; {off you go the right way about it, {COUPE a BEER TE ine J TERESA Pigs frequently suffer more from A . rr = ? 2 Wheels 48 x 3 inches. : the heat of the sun during the stm-JoeD AY Ais Be 888.00 228.00 Ey : ol ; * mer than they do {rom the cold of >= (Fordor) . + 1040.00 395.00 Confectioner Trame of Angle Steel which is braced and rivitted to withstand heavy work { the winter period. If possible, make CHEASEIS i dimes - 510.00 200.00 : , y in all conditions. 2 or Bind Rha ae pe TRUCK (1-Ton) nn Loy 665.00 260.00 CARD : SIMPLE, ACCURATE, FORCE FEED. pastures, teed lols or: colony house TRON ito without 2 3 F it Easy running discs, which are easily oiled and dirt proof. locations. TETIOT. rrr ont os 75.00 230.00 oom 8275 ruits . i 4 ill hi 38 The Self-feeder for Pigs. ATRACTOR imme - 520.00 50 p.c. cash. Balance Oct. 1st, 1924. Ey Young pigs having access to a ; Y It 1n neea of a dri t 18 spring, self-feeder may neglect the pasture Above includes fill of gascline and oil ~Try--- wo . ; portion of their rations, so must bej ! ; : ; : let it be an I1.H.C. watched from time to time. The self- Time plan includes all Interest, and Fire, Theft, Transportation, Insurance D . 3 y feenias Pi Wg a, mars for 80-p.c. of éeash price for one year. orothy Kingston B pr 3 e rati : ; : : ; given is bulky ong a os We have a special plan to accommodate all agricultural requirements, C h oc 0 ¥) a t es roughage as ground alfalfa. Mature \ - J. 8. CORNER, Oxdrift, Ont. ul ey : ' ; yreeding stock are apt to become too } 3 ; a ; Rig hs § fat if given the freedom of helping 3 : ; : : themselves. The self-feeder is io Keer this page for future reference M = Mrs W. H. Evans INTERNATIONA AERC TRA I TAI ADVANCE RUMELEY ~ Qil-Cooled Engine " The only Perfect Engine on the market TRACTORS CLOVER HULLERS SEPARATORS : COLL PULLS I, HARVESTER COMPANY of Canada, Ltd £5 8 tended as an aid fo feeding oper: ations during the grazing season, and &s such, it will reduce the labor re- duirement of feeding over: fifty per cent. Corrective for Winter Use. Agent For-- y PICTORIAL PATTERNS Dryden The use of a suitable corrective is strongly recommended by all success. ful swine feeders. Oue that is low in| cost and fully efficient, and easy 10 prepare may be provide as follows. 100 pounds of ground lime stode or slacked lime. root cellar soil to which 10 pounds ¢f bone flour has been added. 200 pounds of charcoal. 50 pounds of salt. 20 pounds of sulphur. 2 pounds of iron sulphs Mix all the dry materia | . 100 pounds of hard wood ashes ov i epen ist, an y Preis one o ik geported plentiful in all sections. Brunswick, is now Dingwall Garage, [| Here and Th ere The season .for moose hunting ed in New Brunswick October d the chief game warden ex- f the best seasons in the i The annual reports of Canada's Game is jlarge life insurance companies are al- ways jammed with interest by people 417 meets at the Town The drydock at St. John, New 'of all classes, since all are interested Hall every Monday evening at eight an accomplished 'in the development of this ost useful o'clock. 4 MACHIN & TEASDALE Barristers, Solicitors, etc., IMPERIAL BANK BLOCK KENORA Ont. ; » IGREAT-WEST LIFE -- $351,402,105 Insurance in Force istory of the province. 1.0.0.F. DRYDEN LODGE, Ne excepting the iron sulphate. i work, Tt was opened October 29th. form of family protection and saving. } F. COOPE] all are mixed, dissolve the iron sul- The largest drydock in North Amer- y " : i . R, N.G. phate in a gallon of hot water and fea, it 2 capable of accommodating ji One i most a and best D. ANDERSON, Secy {known o ese is the Great-West Life Visiting: Brethren «Cordially: Tnvited, gprinkle over tiie entire mass. Shovel over a few times, and then store in sacks or barrels for use as wanted. Pigs should be given free access to a feeder or box containing the, the largest October 19th, Sir Lomer Canadian Minister of Justice, stated hips of the British Navy. JR Thee report for 1923 appears in this Speaking in London, England, on 'issue. 6 G . ! : 9 om In all departments the company has' L.O.L. DRYDEN LODGE No. 1694 meets the first Wednesday RNS KEROSENE Lowest Operating Cost on Test BU 'above mixture.--L. Stevenson, O.A.C,, | Guelph. Farm Bookkeeping. . Two dairy farms were selected for & study of the cost of producing milk. It was found that on: one the cost that Canada's exports per capita {made notable progress, and is in an rit ors Jims more. Soot those excellent position. The mew business | of the United States and her imports * : ; i: er capita four times more. The Tran during the year of over sixty ritish Empire was Canada's second {six millions, exceeded that of 1922 by dest customer. [over ten million dollars. A. reduction : {in mortality and expense coupled with ithe high rate of interest earned on in- i i There are more telephones in Can- sf each month, at eight p.m., in the Town Hall. Visiting Brethren cor- , dially invited. ! J. E. HARRIS, W.M. { BADEN SMITH, Secy Eagle River, Ont, SSIES SVS = << pie 3 Sasi rr------r COAL PRICES REDUCED {We are reducing the price of Western Coal for the balance of the season:-- ; (GALT COAL, per ton ..--.----- -- $15.50 DRUMHELLAR, per ton .._._~ 14.00 t xxE b i ANTHRACITE STOVE COAL ii iii D200 NUT COAL 22.00 : * k *% EPC -- * J. Winterbottom of production was $1.65 per hundred-} If both these farms were selling milk at $2.50 per hundredweight, what would you say about the com- parative prosperity of the two farms? It is guite usual to see two farms | gide by side, one of which appears BR prosperous while the other seems tod be slowly going down. It doesn't mean that one farmer is a worker while the other is lazy, not at all. We have all seen hard-working farmers who have failed to make a success. We explain it by saying he had poor luck, or things somehow seemed to go against him. After all 'brain is about as im- . portant as muscle, it mot more sa, {fh this farming business. And a farmer can work as profitably at his desk as he can in the field. Phat is why it pays a farmer to be educated. It is a matter of money returns whether the farmer shall know how to keep his books or nst. It takes only a few minutes to jet down items of hours spent on varions erops in a time-book, once or twice a week. And items of expense can | be entered in a column as they occur, to be distributed at leisure in winte: evenings. The date of sale and the price received are more than mers ftems of curiosity to be remembered 3 ck = WATKIN lete Li For Farmer or Citizen REMEDIES, SPICES, EXTRACTS, : 2i Shoes ARS EA KLOYE . The Dependable Hardware ! A HOUSEHOLD SPECIALTIES Best for over 50 years tae. I. T. (DAD) ROWLAND cer Ask Your Gro EVERY © Brown Health Bread Fresh Every TN Waolusday RAISIN BREAD Chock full of plump, delicious Raisins DRYLEN BAKERY IN'S PRODUCTS SOAPS, TOILET PREPARATIONS. Bad SS or Confectioner MONDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY for awhile then forgotten. Really there is no excuse for a farmer not knowing his preducticn costs. And it should be considered as much of a sign of poor farming as the growth of weeds along the poadside or the tumbling of fences. Roughage--Have It Good. A good cow must be capable of { Handling large amounts of roughage. Provided with plenty of high quality forage she will produce much more eeonomically than when fed grain to balance poor hay and stover. Silage added to a ration has been found to reduce the cost of producing 100 pounds of milk from twenty-five to seventy-five cents. In an American experiment, twelve cows were divided into two groups. One group received silage and legume hay, the other the same roughage allowance with grain {n addition. The second group pro- dueed more milk. but the first one did very well and easily excelled the first from the standpoint of economi- cal production. These facts are not meant to indi- esate that it does not pay to feed grain but to shew the importance of plenty of good roughage. y ; The World's Biggest Hog. | New Zealand has produced the big- gest hog on. record. "Billy, the World's Wonder Pig," as the animal is advertized, is a two-year-old Tam- worth-Berkshire cress, weight, 1,058 pounds; beight, 3 feet § inches; ioht 1 pk da per 100 population than weight of milk; on the other farm 3 : the cost was $6 per hundredweight. | a country except the } issued by the : Statistics, in which the proportion of telephone users per {a set at 10.53. that a numb . in a large consignment of Canadian cattle which reach . There appeared to b by special train. | eonvention, in any United This is shown in a report Dominion Bureau of ive 'co 100 population from London states er of cattle from the Prince of Wales' ranch was included A dispatch ed Cardiff recently. e a keen demand . for the consignment and 150 head were despatched to Norfolk farmers Members of the Bread and Cake | Bakers' Association of Canada, at the closing session of their Toronto pledged 'subscriptions owards the launch- t institute of bak- th the Ontario Guelph. It is will be totalling $10,000 t ing of a permanen ing, in connection wi Agricultural College, expected that the school opened early in 1924. - Canadian Pacific Railway figures a show remarkable increases in the m shipment of grain for the ten week ; Em |) days preceding and including Octo- yy 5 ber 18th, this year, as compared yo A =------------ a ------} ===). = L 1922. During the ten days there : at : = were loaded for shipment ever the KEROSENE TRACTORS jg whole system a total o 6, cars, : E : Te i at the rate of ,2,350,000 bushels a YY | Y Ra Sa day, in comparison with 12,000 cars SA! E OUR HORSES % ™ at 1,753,000 bushels a day last year. 7 ALKING over plowed ground all day tires your team as - a 11 as the driver. How about pulling a load besides? |e It cpected that by the end of ve ; ; in it se ip 0 ji In these days of scarcity of horse and man power the 'mn the branch of the Canadian Pacific heavy farm work such as discing can be done most speedily JB running from Kipawa to the Gev- and economically with a Case Kerosene Tractor, The 10-13 un AY om on oe De Sue 'or smallest Case Tractor can pull an 8 ft. double action disc [™ ogi Ci ary vr Ville Marie, harrow set to full depth. Busy farmers can work the "iron a distance of 8 miles, will be com- horse" day and night if necessary. Don't forget that Case [lJ pleted and that by the end of Novem- tractors operate over dusty fields without dust entering eyl- 2 ber the whole line will be ready for inders. The Air washer fully protects the Motor. The all cut § operation. steel spur gears are fully enclosed and run in oil. The weight |] A system of education by mail of the Case 10-18 is only about 3,400 lbs. this, with the liberal - for those who live 'in remote rural sized tires prevents soil packing. Other important features |p Sls out of th Ln ton explained in full descriptive literature sent out for the asking. |=] is being prepare y Hon. Perron et us tell ¥ a Dg Baker, Minister of Education for Al Let us t you more about the 10-18 or larger Case Tractors. - berta, to go into effect this month. \ PNR V The working plan has already been ¥. T. BRIGNALL mu drawn up te run through the winter 7 to the end of the school year. It is i | expected that from 20 to 40 lessons OXDRTFT * ONTARIO ; will be given in the case of each Rm applicant for the service. BR: m Of 526 girls brought to Saskatch- ewan from the British Isles from || 1920 to June 15, 1623, only six have BE .yeturned overseas, and of the sum 1 ig of $45,411.55 advanced to the girls a the sum of $42,980.98 had been re- on paid up to June 15th, 460 having re- HS paid their loan in full and the bal- i by ance of 126 paying all but the sum : ™ of $2,430.57. The girls came to \ = Canada to positions as household - #orkers. | length, 8 feet 9 inches; girth, 6 feet, frre Ee ae and he is still growing. id ® a 'which this company is so favourably | i known. {The investments are and other' funds for the protection of | policy-holders have grown to impres-: sive proportions, and from every point of view the company is to be congratu- Er 'lated on the splendid results of = the year's operations. 'upon its 32nd year with every assur-: 1 ance of a highly prosperous future. 3 | stments, ensures to policy-holders al ntinuation of the splendid profits for: Golden Star od; No. 484 4 , IAF. & AM; GRC. The assets are now over $56,000,000 | : Y : ns - 5 conservatively | yroots in the Masonic Hall, Dryden, BC, oe fo 10 be wa Sod he Second Tuesday of each month. [ougnly sound condition, € TESeIVES * visitors Cordially invited. No A. E. BERREY, W.M. A. BURTON,, Secy. = At the old Rhodes Stand JOS. A. STRUTT GENERAL - BLACKSMITH & HORSESHOER All work done promptly SE This outstanding institution enters

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