’AGE 6. new about 350,000 bass. 1C the dairy industry in the province. In Northumberland. the agricultural mntative, Walter H. Smith, has persuaded Mr. Chambers. the Provincial Dairy Products Inspector at Belleville to open an oflice to assist his dairy farmers. At the beginning of the work twenty-one saniples were taken for testing and the. new oflice promises to become a very useiul adjunct to the department. In Leeds county the dairy- men have arranged to hold a number of meetings of farmers sending milk to various groups of factories with the idea - L‘â€" â€" flg“- NEWS AND INFO FOR T RM ATION HE BUSY FARMER 1:!â€" ï¬prvovin'g the quality submitted for cheese-ma} Changes in Representatives R. 8. Duncan. director of the Repre- nntntives Branch. Ontario Department d Agriculture has announced several changes in the personnel of his de- “ ‘ “a A --.LA has been assistant representative in Ewan for the past 'year has been ap- pointed agricultural representative for that county with headquarters at Clin- ton to succeed George ’5: IgcCague, who "- vv _-- has resigned. Ralph c. Banbury, 3.3. A. Immerly assistant representative of Wellington county has been appointed mntative for Duflerin with head- -,â€"-----.n ‘1- "F VII-..- quartcrs It; iérangevllle to succeed Mr. Campbell Lamont. In Renfrew County. Arthur H. Martin will be spcceeded by MD“! 11. M31111) wm uc Duvkucu u, a Prank Q. Dench. formerly assistanti mutative in Grey County. Mr.‘ 11mm has been appoi fed eeslstanti "â€" vwv â€" _ V - Two Ontario counties have ijecenyy â€"â€"- v..- .-w director of the crow. Co.Operation and Ilarketa Branches at the Parliament mass. The following assistant repre- sentatives have been appointed: Essex. n. R. niéclenan B.s.AI;' Huron. A. M. Burr B.S.A.; Grey. A. V. Langston 3.8. A.; Wentworth. H. L. Atkinson B.S.A.; Wellington. H. L. Fair. B.S.A. to come to grief if it is on sod land where white grubs make their home. At least two vegetable crops should be taken from the land before strawberry plants are set out. June beetles lay their eggs commonly in grassy land and the white grabs which hatch from them require two or more years to develop. L‘â€" A“-““- quâ€"v ' in newly ploughed sod. therefore. there will be some half-grown larvae. In the year following, they will be nearly full grown and very voracious and strawberry roots are a favorite food. with the result that an entire ulantation may be easily wiped out. Tests on Alfalfa ‘ Satisfactory yields of alfalfa are fairly common in many parts of On- tario yet many farmers are anxious to find means of increasing the produc- tion of this highly valuable legume and of strengthening the crop. It is a well known fact that alfalfa makes use of large quantities of suitable fertilizers will be best to apply to it. is a question tilâ€"ditch many- bractlcal farmers are mtemted. In an attempt to answer this important question: a very interest- â€A; 1“- AL- Department of Chemistry. Ontario Ag- ricultural College. in_ co-opel'atlon with R. E. Whi'te. Agriculturai Representa- tive in Newmarket. on the farm of In] Toole. Newmarket. Grape: and Soy Beans Elï¬n Benn. assistant manager of the Border Cities Chamber of Commerce at a recent meeting in Essex County said that it would be well i or that county to so in for the cultivation of soy (Furnished by the Ontario Department of Agriculture) Vollett’s Cash Specials For This Week Only Pearl White Naphtha 800:). 2'? bars for Iauvo I. Odd for Stawm thh â€OK mammal-yum boys-elud- hamWodlouhtâ€"wmm acreage W. J. VOLLETT 'I" v--'â€"_“' V :1]:in us who cannot learn something oy *nt 1 observing what farmers in other parts }e_ of the province are doing and how ex they do it. Norfolk can show most M. ‘counties something in growing and IS. selling apples; Oxford can give most A .' ‘some pointers in dairy farming; West †Middlesex knows how to grow potatoes ‘and other sections have their strong as 1V 1px aausg. It will also be competed for at the Agricultural Societies’ Fairs in York 'County as follows: Aurora, Agincourt, [Markham Richmond Hm, Schombery, Sutton, Woodbridge. more general use and me nay u far distant when electricity will the farm as completely as it now the modern factory. in 1930 at the following county fairs: Russell, Kingston Industrial, Roblins Mills Victoria, Simcoe, Lincoln, Norfolk, Lambton, Elgin, Bruce, Haliburton, Nipissing. A ‘ * ‘ ' â€Au-u mm hp Inter-County Visiting Farmers’ excursions from Welland.‘ Wellington, Kent, Lambton and Essex are visiting Norfolk County this sum- ?mer. As a writer in the Farmer’s Sun iremarks: “If the time and gasoline can be spared and the trip is well-planned. ‘lthis inter-county visiting seems to be a "Plow in July while its dry" 13 the slogan adopted by farmers of Welling- ton County in their combat to elimin- ate the "Million Dollar Menace"-â€"the sow thistle. The method described by Ralph Clemens, agricultural represent- ative. is perhaps the bes rained heavy clay soils on which sow thistle best thrives. A mod- (our horses or a gotten off early and the land is plowed [while dry to a depth of six or eight inches. The clods thus turned up, if left for a few days will dry out so ed. a heavy broad-t heavy disc is used to eXpose all the roots to the killing eflects of heat and drouth. It will pm: you to advertise The Chronicle. dei A year’s york July the Division 9f most ligion. or West there is a. tatoes thus far 1V. mg as the prime Brantford was plainl: . He made 13 the nett’s decl: solâ€"utelyr nothing up their sleeves. Mr. Bennett has been developing his campaign program for some three weeks. Mr. King has heen doing his “WM. 5'“ ---'° â€"â€"--_ best to catch up and indicationé are that he has fully laid bare the structure of his appeal to the public. In Ottawa. where politics are a re- ligion, or an obsession, or a disease, there is a very wide spread belief that thus far Mr. Bennett has outdistanoed the prime minister. Mr. King at Brantford and again at Peterborough was plainly on the defensive. He made the greatest use of Mr. Ben- nett’s declaration that a British prefer- ence should be mutual, that is, that some beneï¬t should accrue to Canada as well as to the mother country. Ottawa p1 seventy-fr that the the Cause British C . Manitoba 8 seven Cc v r-vv-___ a very heavy burden in taxation. ‘ With the tourist business ranking as ‘ Canada’s fourth greatest industry were was nothing in Mr. King’s pronounce- j ment to stack up against a national ; highway plan. . There was nothing to form a counter- . part to the national fuel policy which Mr. Bennett undertook to make effec- tive if returned to OflIC3. There was nothing to parallel the speech in regard to the Hudson Bay Railway and the Peace River outlet to the Paciï¬c. ‘ Through more than two hours Mr. King endeavored to prove that the burden of taxation had been appreci- ably lowered by his government. In this connection he was unusually frank, admitting that the taxes which had been reduced had been imposed al- most entirely by his own government. On this score Mr. Bennett pointed out . that in the last six years the King mzre from "the public than was ex- tracted in the last six years of the Sir Robert Borden’s and Rt. Hon. Arthur at Halifax, which will shortly . e o ned will give the Canadian ational Railways an up-to-date hotel adjoininf their terminal station and wil provide a needed facility for the travelling public. The hotel has 160 bedrooms, each with bath, besides the necesser complement of public rooms. feature of the new hotel is the Image farage which has been pro- vi ed n the basement of the hotel, A‘- _ .'-_-..- C-v' â€"â€"â€".â€". thatut'he seats held in the House by the Conservatives in the Maritimes and British Columbia will continue; that Manitoba will return a minimum of seven Conservative members; that oh the groimd political leadgrs now have bonsemtive ab- \â€"â€"'r v 7 Mortality ï¬gures over a period of poultry flocks in the provinces of On- tario and Quebec and from the Canaâ€" dian and Ontario Egg Laying Contests. 80 per cent of the birds of which were also from the same provinces. Ob- â€" 1-2-1-- “1W 5. V... '--v viously these figures are a fairly ac-l curate barometer of disease condi- tions in the provinces mentioned and no doubt {would apply with slight reserva- tions, to Canadian conditions in general. i In the light of this fact it will be readily recognized that the control of Ithis disease is of great importance to I the industry. ‘- J AA‘IQA‘ "UVIV VVuao '- m... or while remaining iii the cit whilg visiting 9ther arts 0 the 1131 an“ “ V5“ 5W - v -â€" furnishes remarkable scenic views both to the harbor and the land- ward side. Constructed of Nova Scotia brick and stone, in the Georgian style of architecture, the Nova Scotian has man ' features about it. One 0 these, the radio broadcasting studio on the â€â€˜6 alvull“ w-vâ€"-â€" .-- or five sections of equal size. While the stock ranges on one section the re- maining ground is cultivated and sown to tree growing crops to maintain the cleanliness of the soil. The follow- .Lâ€"J -_- ing season the range is $111wa one section and the used land cultivated and put down to crop. Clover. alfalfa and hoed crops make excellent soil cleaners. the land being used for range following the green rather than the hoed crop. The colony brooder house and range rearing GOOD. plans 19" and range rearing 000p, plans ml which are shown in the bulletin. “Poultry House Constructionâ€, obtain- able from the Publications Branch. Department of Agriculture. Ottawa, ï¬t in excellently in such a rotation owing to ease of moving and adaptability to Once reared free from parasites the maintenance of such a condition is gained by the same treatment. Per- manent laying or breeding houses should have large front and back 'yards free from interior fences which mav be cultivated in the same way as the rearing land and alternated between crops and range for the birds. in the and actual eighth flgor entering the Dominion through the Ha 1f ' splendid ï¬rst impression of the country when they step from the train into this magniï¬centb building which is connetted with the sta- tion ï¬ermitting the passenger to 1sh otel room without having to step outside into the open air from the time of leav mg the train. We one: “0“ "I“ “'“w t ' ' ' It is ï¬re-pm“. mï¬ï¬â€˜h‘ Old (enticing follows. ï¬Ã©hday morning. Enrolment Certiï¬cate No. 2622 ‘7'. 2‘; I THURSDAY, to his own stable at V. S. Atchtson’s for noon, where he m mmn‘in until the following «my Best forâ€"Metal nooï¬u of 1930 I8 washetl. east of ' ton Street. Oflice hours. 2 (except Sunday: I. L. SMITH. Ofltce md re: ii. old Post C b 111111.. 1.30 (Bundnys excew University of mid corrected Graduates < , Toront Collage Block, Durham Honor gradw momma Gm Dental Surgem at: all its I , Mill Su ucBeth's Du 0mm tad Burl-£61 umbmn Stre Physician unless tra mt: eflicie: Your OFFICE: 1 Ofltce over I. F. GRAN mmptly Intrauteeq Phone All: Mover I: ENSEMBLE Hosiery . Mi Wednesdax' B Nicholl Notary PU Auction 99 DURH (l) Jux (1) En‘ Med (ca Burris“ Lucas. K LI'CAS. written [)311’4 Lew St of Sm UP ‘V‘