Farmer's magazine (January-December 1920) . ntinually turnedoff its $40 to $70 from every acre growing this , corn, roots, barley and oats were staplecrops, which with grade Shorthorn cattle made amoney-making combination. A banner stretching across the old driving shedbuilt more than a generation ago, bore the inscrip-tion—June 1820 to June 1920, as the guests frommany parts came to speech-make and fraternize withthe reunion of the big family of Websters who hadgathered from London, England, the sister Republicand from many parts of the Dominion. Joseph Web-ster, the grandfather of


Farmer's magazine (January-December 1920) . ntinually turnedoff its $40 to $70 from every acre growing this , corn, roots, barley and oats were staplecrops, which with grade Shorthorn cattle made amoney-making combination. A banner stretching across the old driving shedbuilt more than a generation ago, bore the inscrip-tion—June 1820 to June 1920, as the guests frommany parts came to speech-make and fraternize withthe reunion of the big family of Websters who hadgathered from London, England, the sister Republicand from many parts of the Dominion. Joseph Web-ster, the grandfather of the present proprietors,married Martha Widdifield, a name that still lives inthe member for the north part of the in many other more or less distinguished descen-dants in York and Ontario Counties. They settled atfirst in Whitchurch township and then took up thepresent homestead when it was all bush and theKingston Road a trail, with Port Hope on the Eastand Muddy York on the West, the nearest villages. By ELUID KESTER.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear