. Ontario Sessional Papers, 1910, . eggs? Farmer (indignantly): They are not months old. They are fresh. Clerl-: How manv hens have voii? 88 IHE REPORT OF No. 4S The farmer told the clerk, who immediately offered a price 15 centsbelow the value of the strictly new laid article. The price was this case the clerk evidently reasoned that if a small number of farmersfowls had been layers, some time must have elapsed before twenty dozencould have been gathered up. As a result, the eggs first collected wouldbo a stale •commodity md a price was named accordingly. The moral is ohv
. Ontario Sessional Papers, 1910, . eggs? Farmer (indignantly): They are not months old. They are fresh. Clerl-: How manv hens have voii? 88 IHE REPORT OF No. 4S The farmer told the clerk, who immediately offered a price 15 centsbelow the value of the strictly new laid article. The price was this case the clerk evidently reasoned that if a small number of farmersfowls had been layers, some time must have elapsed before twenty dozencould have been gathered up. As a result, the eggs first collected wouldbo a stale •commodity md a price was named accordingly. The moral is ohviu>s. But some one says, It means a great deal oftrouble about a few eggs. Almost every week the agricultural papers haveletters from farmjrs showing how thev made from | to | per fowlprofit, in a year^ Did they make these large margins of profit without someeffort? I trow not. Ci>Ass 3. I have much sympathy with these pe-ople who are so seems as if they would have to be content with siich prices as they receive.
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Keywords: ., bookauthorontariol, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910