January, 191 r 



THE CANADIAN HORTICULTURIST 



23 



beautiful, the best kept and the most use- 

 ful Experimental Station to the people 

 whom it was established to serve, namely, 



Bam 

 Roofing 



Fire, Lidhtnind 

 Rust and Storm Proof 



Durable and 

 Ornamental 



Let us know the size of any roof 

 you are thinking of covering and we 

 will make you an interesting offer. 



Metallic Roofing Go. 



Limited 



MANUFACTURERS 



TORONTO and WINNIPEG 



Try the BISSELL iii your 

 orchard and aee what a 

 real orchard disc harrow 

 will do. Stays right down 

 to :ts work. Has a lever 

 for each gang, so that one 

 gang can be adjusted to cultivate more 

 than the other when required. Attach 

 wings and it extends over 12 feet wide. Ee- 

 vereible— In-thi ow to Out-throw. Call or 

 local dealer cr write Department N for 

 Catalogue. 



T. E. BISSELL CO. 



ELORA 



ONT. 



The 



Bissell *"*D'isc'"* 



Messrs. Hall and Bobinson. of Montreal, 

 state: "APHINE is superior and much 

 cheaper than any other insecticide we 

 have ever used." 



Messrs. P. McKenna and Sons, of Mon- 

 treal, say: "We use APHINE in preference 

 to any other insecticide. One advantage 

 being that it is free from the disagreeable 

 odors of tobacco products." 



APHINE is sold by: 



Dupuy &. Ferguson 



MONTREAL, QUEBEC 



Thos. A. Ivcy &. Son 



PORT DOVER, ONT. i-'mitbd 

 MANUFACTURED BY 



Aphinc Manufacturing Co. 



MADISON, N.J., U.S. A. 



the farmers, of any station in America he 

 has visited. He also saw no city that 

 pleased him as well as Ottawa, which, as 

 a result of the work of the Dominion 

 Government Improvement Commission, has 

 been vastly improved and beautined dur- 

 ing recent years until now the capital is 

 a credit to Canada. 



The Dominion Canners Combine 



The Monetary Times prints full details 

 regarding the organization of Dominion 

 Canners, Liimited, with head olhce at Hamil- 

 ton. This combine embraces 45 canning 

 factories and also one-eighth interest in a 

 B«amsville factory. The capitalization is 

 as follows : 



j^irst mortgage, 6 p.c. bonds $1,500,000 



Preferred stock, 7 p.c 2,100,000 



Common stock 2,100^000 



The preferred stock was paid out for the 

 various properties. The bonds have been 

 underwritten by Messrs. C. Meredith and 

 company, of Montreal, while the Dominion 

 Bond Company of Montreal and Toronto, is 

 oliermg $100,000 of the 7 per cent, cumu- 

 lative preferred stock, with a 25 per cent, 

 common stock bonus. 



The following are factories taken over 

 by the Dominion Canners, Limited. 



Aylmer Canning Company, Brighton Can- 

 ning Company, Kent Canning Company, 

 Delhi Canning Company, Dresden Canning 

 Company, F. R. Lalor Canning Company, 

 Grimsby Canning Company, Simcoe Canning 

 Company, Imperial Canning Company, 

 Lakepcrt Preserving Company, Warehouses, 

 Delhi Canning Company, A. C. Miller, W. 

 Boulter & Sons, Port Hope Preserving Com- 

 pany, Ontario Pure Food Company, 

 Kent Canning Company, Strathroy Can- 

 ning Company, Lowery Bros., Miller 

 & Company. Bowlby Bros., Belle River 

 Canning Company, L. N. Sohenck 

 & Company, A. B. Taylor Canning 

 Company, Wellington Packing Company, 

 West Lome Canning Company, Leamington 

 Canning Company, Amherst Canning Com- 

 pany, Aylmer Condensed Milk Company, 

 Limited, Belleville Canning Company, 

 Bloomfield Packing Company, Farmers' 

 Canning Company. Limited, Burlington 

 Canning Company, Hillier Preserving Com- 

 pany, Jordan Station Canning and Preserv- 

 ing Company, ]Napanee Canning Company, 

 Niagara Falls Canning Company, Old 

 Homestead Canning Company, J. H. 

 Wethey, Limited, St. Thomas Canning Com- 

 pany, Tilbury Canning Company, Limited, 

 Lakeside Canning Company, Limited and 

 one-eighth interest in Beamsville factory. 



The company controls more than 90 per 

 cent, of the output of canned fruits and 

 vegetables in Ontario, which produces 95 

 per cent, of the total quantity consumed in 

 Canada. The above-named factories are dis- 

 tributed over the fertile strip of southern 

 Ontario, commencing at Napanee, in the 

 east, and continuing to Sandwich, in the 

 west, a distance of more than 400 miles, 

 with both water and railway transportation 

 facilities from many of the factories. One 

 of the special lines of the company is gal- 

 lon apples for which there is a good export 

 demand for Great Britain. 



The company owns its own can-making 

 factory and manufactures the bulk of the 

 cans required, purchasing the remainder 

 from the American Can Company. A litho- 

 graphing plant is also owned and operated 

 by the company, supplying all the labels 

 used. 



There were marketed from the orchard 

 of W. H. Bunting, of St. Catharines, this 

 .year, 2,000 barreb of apples. The cull 

 stock sent to the evaporators did not 

 amount to over 250 bushels. 



ALL FOR $2.00 



You may secure tliese four leading Oana- 

 dian Agricultural and Home Magazines 

 each for a year for only $2.00, or in differ- 

 ent combinations with The Canadian Horti- 

 culturist, as shown below. If taken singly 

 the cost would be $3.10 a year. Why not 

 save money? 

 I.— The Canadian Horticulturist and 



The Canadian Poultry Review 90 



2.— The Canadian Horticulturist arid 



Farm and Dairy $i.io 



3.— The Canadian Horticulturist and 



The Canadian Home Journal 1.20 



4.— All tour Magazines (88 numbers In 



a") 2.«0 



Send Orders to 



THE CANADIAN HORTICULTURIST 



PETERBORO, . . ONTARIO 



At Home with the 



KODAK 



The Kodak pictures of the family, the home and 

 the intimate friends are prized highest. The Kodak 

 i8 a part of the home life, every change is re- 

 corded in picture form. The baby walking for first 

 time, the little lad starting off for his first day in 

 school, grandfather nodding over his paper, are 

 but a few examples of the home pictures. 



"At Home with the Kodak" is an interesting 

 booklet, telling of the joy of picture making at 

 home and full of practical hinte to picture makers 

 everywhere. It explains Just how easy it is to 

 take good home pictures with the Kodak, and the 

 simple method of developing the film the "all by 

 daylight" way. It makes olear, too, how to get 

 good flashlight pictures, the safe sure way with the 

 Eastman flash sheets. There are many home pic- 

 tures you can get by flashlight which would be 

 impossible in daylight. 



This Booklet, illustrated by futtntysiv home 

 pictures, ive %vill nend free on regue<it or it 

 can be had by asking- any Kodak dealer. 



CANADIAN KODAK CO., LiBiieil 

 Toronto, Canada 



