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Clinton New Era, 1910-03-17, Page 3
0 Proper attention to the hair and scalp is the best preventive of baldness. An occasional ap, plication of Bearine Hair Font. ade keeps the scalp in healthy condition. It nourishes the lair folicles and supplements the natural oil of the head. Bearine not only prevents fall- ing hair but stimulates new growth. 50 cts a jar at your druggists. DAVIS MEJ[t5! ills Aswell effective sme hatt are not considelittle red brlle: A compound with a Vaseline base, in conjunction with Japanese Menthol and otherdrugs making an efacacious remedy for Sore Throat. Burns. Bruises. as well as for Iasect B t1SesCns. Sprains. tc. Just the thing for campers. hunters, as well as for those that stay at home. 25c. a box. DAVIS & LAWRENCE, Montreal. m 'O$Noxa @ol in one day. 25c. a bottle at all Drug Stores. We Want to Land your first order, because we know that the satisfaction you will derive from that will open your eyes to the fact that you cannot do better anywhere else that you can with us. You will find that we are not "all at sea" in our business, but thoroughly ''up - to - the minute" and watchful of the interests of our customers; knowing that, by so loing, we are really acting for our wn ultimate benefit. Q A. DOWNS, Merchant Tailor, Clinton, COAL Before placing your orders for you)' season's supply of Coal, get our prices. The very best goods carried in stock and sold at the lowest possible price. Orders may be left at Davis & Rowland's Hardware store, or with W. J. Stevenson, At Electric i,ight Plant. Ford & McLeod Haying secured a commodious Grain Storehouse, we are now buying all kinds of grain, for which the highest prices will be paid. Bran, Shorts, Corn and all kinds of grain, Seeds and other feeds kept on hand at the storehouse. Ford & McLeod G. T. R. STATION. CLINTON. LOGS WANTED AT E STAPLETON SALT, WORKS ♦0000000000000000000.00♦ o • [• how Many•• •• • • • • in a Dozen? ••• •• • Twelve ! and you count • • • them to see if you get • • • them, to. When you buy • • a Wedding Ring and pay • for 18K, you can't count • them, you take the deal er's word, and often get i 17K or less: We sell 2 • Wedding Rings, and there •• • is exactly 18K in every • • • • 18K Ring. Test them • I any way you like. t • ii t W. R. Counter i Z• Jeweler and Optician. • • •♦ o♦ °o issuer of e • Marriage Licenses. • •♦ • 40000000'0000000000.0.00000 opper Feeding of .Poultry. Hopper feeding on the Range, in the Poultry House, and in Yards,. Reduces the Labor, and Produce More Uniform. Growth: of Stock, Dry feeding and h ' per feeding • were practically unknow by the masa of Canadian poultry keepers five years ago. Now these mdthods are in sue. cessful operation .on many' of the largest and best known poultry plants as well as on farms and in village back lot poultry yards. The plan of furnishing all food dry and in hoppers, where it is constantly' accessible, originated in New England that country of progressive, hard thinking pqultry men who appreciate a wail -known fowl as much as a big, round dollar, but the method has been adopted since by successful poultry- men the country over. DYY FEEEING IS NATURAL FEEDING. In nature's food damp mash has no place. rhe wild fowl subsists on grains, seeds and fresh vegetation, with now and then a bug, worm or in- sect to furnish meat. Judging from its development, it is able to pretty nearly baiauce its ratiou ue at least w find the required amount of the ele- ments needed for flesh, fat and bone building. Those who recommend hop per feeding declare that it is the near. est approach to nature's method that man can make. The hoppers are of various designs, but all of them consist of a receptacle for food, the hopper, in which the grain is placed and from which it feeds into a trough at its base. From this traugh the fowls eat,a new supply going down from above as rapidly its that in the trough is eaten. Into this hopper the feeder places the different grains, whole, cracked and ground.. together with beef scraps and some- times charcoal. 6ometimes all the grain, beef scraps, etc., Is mixed and placed in a hopper containing one com partment only and sometimes the hop per is divided into ;separate divisions. by partitions in both receptacle and trough and the different grains, beef scraps, etc,, are fed separate. The writer believes that it is better to mix all together, because then the fowls will eat more or less of the mixture as -a whole and will also pick out cer• tain particles, which their appetite may indicate that they require. THE GRAIN FED IN HOPPERS The food fed in hoppers is not materially different from that fed in the ordinary fashion of three meals a day, part damp mash and part whole or cracked grain. - The principal foods are corn, oats, wheat,bran, beef scrape and granulated charcoal. When fowls or chicks on free range are fed all these grains are placed In the hopper. When the birds are con- fined to yards or to the poultry house, as they are in winter in the northern states the bran and beef scraps, or whatever usually composes the damp mash which the feeder would other- wise provide excepting of course the milk or water ,usedformixing,is placed in the hopper and the whole and cracked grains are fed in a litter to in- duce exercise. At this season of the 'year, however, hopper feeding is particularly useful for chicks that have free range or very large yards. ONE-HALF THE LABOR SAVED The average poultryman feeds his growing chicks that is,those that have been n eaned from the hen or separat- ed from the brooder and placed in roosting coops, three times per day. The use of the hopper enables him to curtail the feeding of two times per week or as often as is necessary to re- plenish the supply in the feeder. When extra large hoppers are used, and the number is in proportion to the chicks to be accommodated, once a week will be sufficient. - Unless water is supplied by a spring or running brook, it • is necessary to water the chicks once 'per day and to clean the roosting coops once per 0•1111•11/....eM THOUSANDS HAVE WEAK LUNGS AND DON'T KNOW IT "THE BOSTON" PODURYDRXFtED HOPPERCA. BOSTON MASS.US.A., week if they have floors and remove them to a fresh location every other day if they are without floors. If by the ordinary method the feed- er is obliged to go the rounds three times per day to feed, during one of which trips he also ,supplies water. it will be noted that in this 'process of feeding and watering he will make twenty-one trips each N eek. W hen using the hopper feeding system he will'go once a day to furnish water, and twice afweek to furnish food, a total of nine times in seven days against twenty. -one times when feed- ing by the time-honored three meals a day system. Additional trips among the coops will lave to be made occas- sionally in some instances a trip at night to close the , coops at d one to open them in the morning, but this has no special bearing ons this argu- ment, for the coops cannot be closed, 'at nightat the time they are opened in the morning the care taker can dis- tribute the day's drink.. The question arises in the minds of those 'who have not used the system, "Will not the chicks (or fowls) con- sume more food than is necessary when it is constantly before them?' Not by any means; in fact, when three meals aday are fed, they rush eagerly to the troughs crowd their crops full to the limit withoutmuch regard to what they need or what their appe. tites demand, if the food is before them all the time, they secure what they need to satiety demands of their systems, then leave the feeder to search for hugs, worms, and vegetable growths, the food that nature intend- ed for them. with the full knowledge that they can obtain more of the sup plied ration from the hopper when they require it. On thisaccount those who have_used both methods and have .studied the results, claim that hopper feeding does not foster. habits of laziness, as a periodical complete tilling of the chick crop does, but encourages wider range and' the consumption of a great er variety of natural food. HOPPERFEEDINGINFLUENCES GROWTH One of the most' important recom- mendations of hopper feeding is that t prevents overfeeding' and under- feeding; each consumes no more than he wants, yet can always get enough to satisfy • his ' hunger. The larger ones cannot drive away or crowd out the smaller and consume all the food, as sometimes happens in trough feed- ing but the stronger supplies his re- quirements from the hopper and goes un his way, leaving room for the weaker to . obtain his -share This. point alone is worthy :of careful con-. sideration by those who. desire the best results in growth and• deyelop'- ment, When the grains are fed separately at regular intervals, either dry or in a mash, the chicks must take what is put before them and do the .best they can to convert it to the use of their odies. In the hopper they find a va- iety of grains and <feet scraps and an eels :t such parts of .the mixture s their appetites indicate is required or proper nourishment. Under these onditions it evident that healthy hicks must grow rapidly and well and. evelop uniformly and heatthfully;the alt' -starved chicken, the chicken with ut sufficient nourishment to supply is body, and grow a coat of feathers, nd the undersized chick are seldom ound. HOPPER FEEDING AND EGG PRODUC- "TION The healthful, robust, full -develop - /1 pullet is the egg, producer of the flowing fall and.. winter and the upper fed pullet is, according to the regoing argument best prepared to rn the fond provided into eggs when ey are thirty or more cents per ozen. As she approaches, maturity rid begins the actual work of egg pro- uctiou, the same argument may be ade, She must have not only suflic- ut food to nourish her body and re - air the waste but must have a sur - us from:which to build the egg, If b r c a f c c d Editor Used a Well Known Tonic o and System Builder If The Editor and Manager of the Burk's Falls "Arrow," is only hurnan. This being so it is not surprising that ho should feel H and suffer as other men. Mr. Alex. Faw• fo tett says : "" I had a very severe attack of h La Grippe which left me very weak, spirit• to less and run down. I seemed to have lost to all ambition. "At this point I realized that my condition was likely to become more a serious unless I took myself in hand. One d day while in this ' Half dead and alive con- m dition ' I u as listlessly looking over recent ie fyies of my paper, .Tho Burk's Falls Arrow' i pi (of which I am Editor and Manager), when sh my eyes rested on an advertisement of Ju PSYCHINE. This clearly and explicitly i sh pet forth a case so exactly resembling my be own that I at once purchased a bottle at of the Medical Hall. After taking two or ou three doses I felt like a new man, and m before half the second bottle had been used, sn every trace of the bad effects of La Grippe m had left me. ""PSYCHINE is a marvel and th I have strongly recommended it to some of m my friends similarly afflicted and they have ml used it with equally beneficent results." no pt P.,: Sale by all Druggists and Dealers, ob in 50c and $1.00 per bottle. on sh e is obliged to depend upon the dgement of thefeeder in furnishing e. right amount and kinds of food, it ould not beexpected that she will a heavy layer in every case,.for ten the feeder is careless and with - t knowledge of the hens require- ents. The per cent of intelligent d careful feeders is comparatively mall. Given a hopper, of the dry mash ixture constantly within reach and e hen no longer depends on the judg exit or whim of the caretaker, but ay eat when and to what extent she as necessary. If the feeder does t furnish sufficient grainshe sup• ies the deficit from the hopper, but tains sufficient exercise in scratch- g for the supplied ration in a litter• the poultry' house floor. If, then, e is properly constituted by breed ing and otherwise, the egg yield will be satisfactory and the owner will be prosperousi This method of feeding seems destined to beeome general among those who desire to feed best for •,c e least expense and those who attempt to get more than a new dollar for an old one. Certainly it is worth the at. tention of every progressive poultry- man. • Dr. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited - Toronto 1 (P1o[4oUNCE© si=CCEEN) ENGTHENS WEAK LUNGS here's How To Feed Your Poul- try So As To Get the Rest Resit] ts. Poultrymen of today are learning more acid more the absolute!"necessity Even people who are =nutty healthy occasionally require some kind of .afood tonic... +'er- rovim, that excellent combi- nation of beef, iron and sherry wine, if taken when ,the sys- tem is run down from over- work or a slight cold, will prevent a more serious illness. Ferrovim gives' strength to con- valescents and all thin -blooded people. $1.00 a bottle, •'s tatavot .PLASTER CURES every sort of Muscular pain, such as. Science, Stitches, Cricks, Tic, Twiching of the Muscles. Lumbago and Headache, Don't throw away money for worthless imitations, by un- scrupulous makers, Vet the genuine. ir,ach plaster25c. 111 an air -tight tin box, 1 yard roll $1,00. Mailed upon receipt of price, or sample for bc. WE Ctl•ARANTEE that they will relieve Pain quicker than any other plaster. DAVIS a LAWRENCE CO., Montreal. of charcoal to keep their birds in, a healthy condition. When fowls have been without' it for some time, and the droppings have become soft, the first feed of charcoal will change the character of the drop- pings almost as by sIlagia. As a regulator and purifier of the bowels, there is nothing better. . It is not alone necessary to keep it• before them in the hoppers where they can get it, but it is a good plan to mix it in with the mash, Below will be found Ari IDEAL MASH FOR HOPPER FEED- • ' I11G, Keep before your birds all the time, winter and • summer, large hoppers filled with a mash made of Wheat Bran, 100 parts ; corn meal, 50, parts,,: Middlimss, 50 parts ; "Esso A" Char- coal, 50 parts ; Meat Meal, 2 parts : Bone Meal, 2 parts ; Blood meal, 2 parts, and Alfalfa Mea1,50 parts. Also keep before them hoppers of Oyster Shells, Grit and "Esso Cr Charcoal, and.be sure that they have plenty of. fresh, pure water. Follow thia plan and the results will emprise you. Boston Feed Hopper RAT PROOF These Hoppers are absolutely auto- matic and positive in their action, they cannot clog ; they do nut waste. They are made of galvanized : iron with swinging grid (meth) and hold from } peck to i iushel respectively and will last a, lifetime. Feed is always accessible and in• sight. They save labor and grain (money.) Write for Circular to • M. C. IKAUFMAN.-Agent; _Clio Ott. Agent for "Esso Charcoal: USE ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM its once when attacked by a Cough and thus avert dangerous bronchial and pulmonary ailments . . . • . . • 25c., 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. Sold everywhere. t DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO,, Montreal. .__+rs 0 New' Decorations For the. Den. • . It usually is a woman who is respon- sible for the adornment of the den in which her husband or brother smokes and reads, and this often accounts for queer decorative treatment of rooms popaiarly supposed to be peculiarly sa- cred to men. One young woman, how- ever, in her brother's absence on a long business trip has completed a scheme of decoration for his den which she Is certain will meet with his approval. He is an inveterate cigk-' vette smoker. She obtained from her men friends and by purchases more than 200' empty boxes• which bad con- tained that many varieties of ciga- rettes. These she tacked around the. walls of the room, making a sort of frieze above the picture molding, alter- nating the red, green and other colors of the boxes in a manner that pri.duces a ,.striking color effect, especially when. the room Is lighted. .Incidentally her acquirement of the boxes led her into all sorts of queer little cigar establish- ments in the east side, where more different brands of cigarettes are rmoked than in any other section of New York. DYSPEPTIC Food Does Y0e1 No Good ' A im, 1 Half the time you're afraid to eat; your tongue is coated, mouth tastes bad, stomach is bloated, If you want to get well, stop using dyspensfa tab- lets, and go to the source of the trou- ble before it is too late,. Strengthen your stomach, east out the bile, regu- late the bowels—do this, and dyspep- sia will be no, more. For your condition the best preset -1p, tion is Dr. Harpiltonrs 1 fllsp which aro made specially. for the stomach, kid- neys and diver. No better remedy will be devised, 'far Dr. Hamilton's Pills are perfect. DR. HAMILTON'S PILLS A SURE CURE - "No one could realize my sufferings from stomach trouble and indigestion. For five years T have not been well. My food .did me ne good, because I couldn't digest or'Assimilate. My doe, - tor said constipation was at ihe•root of my trouble, so I got Dr. Hamilton's brill& My appetite improved, pain after eating ceased, and my food, digested quickly, 1 ata delighted •wiltti the tltor- outfli cure 1 derived Froin lar. Haanil- ton's fills, "t�igne(1) :I.�It iti IC. 1.1'1Is1s;1iR,1a "Bridgewater." O+,i,'It rc<ttlts attend the use of Dr. 1, .t,:illon,l l':il1 nig nwalcinc cures .r•t[1121,1 in ti stomach and diger+- c;rgetms by removing the <musics 12 41111 ., . V. 10 i. The Rabies Plague The fact that forty persons have been bitten by mad dogs, 15 of whom nave been bitten by onedog has caused a dommotion. in Ontario and muzzled and locked up all the dogs from To. recto to Windsor. The Department of Agriculture in Ottawa the Provinc- ial Legislature of Ontario, the atuniei pal councils with the police force of the municipalities are in motion, and righteously so, for the suppression of rabies, Yet a death by rabies is beaut Hui in comparison with a death by de - Henn) tremens or the trembling mad, nese. Many of the victims who bays been bitten are children, who though physically injured arepure as the driven snow. The victims of aleohcl are debased and unspeakably degred- ed.In „ vie with each otherase of h, e ies Governmentsintroduc- tion of muzzles for prevention and death for the dog with the. rabies. In. dealing with alcohol these same goy- ernments license both the sale and manufacture cf alcohol poisons, Our Provincial Legislature will not allow it to be banished from a municipality unless by a three-fifths vote, A stranger from another planet watching two deaths in our world,one by rabies,and one by delirium tremens would be puzzled to know why in the former case governments instantly banish the cause and in the latter pro- tect ny a monopoly license. Then the deaths attributable to alcoholsin our• Dominion outnumbered by thousands the deaths by rabies, The most con- servative estimates put the yearly deaths caused by alcohol at from four to six thousand. Another aspect of the case is the fact that no one case of. rabies has, ever been known to send hundreds to their grave at one stroke. One pair of eyes bedimmed by the tumes of alcohol, one hand trembling or one brain befuddled with its poison is causing countless accidents that im- peril many lives. The fatal nature of alcohol is well attested by the contents of an editor ial pigeonholes that is always full to over- flowing. It is the one charged to keep tally of.a fraction of those who fall victims to the alcohol virus. A few of the cases occuring during the last f,lur months are given below:— Axehl, a Toronto machinist dement- ed by alcohol, suicide(' by throwing, himself from York Street bridge. Arthur. Hoyle, a •brilliant young lawyer of Montreal, died in a cheap boarding house the victim of drink. Delia Harris was found dead, last November in a vacant lot atthecorner of Adelaide and Bay Streets, Toronto. She drank herself to death. Joseph Hunter,; Lindsay, under the influence of liquor, shot his wife and then committed suicide. This case cost Victoria County $750. At Deer Lodge, Man.,three drunken desperadoes planned.a robbery. They got to a•wrong house 'where a your g girl opened the door. She had a mira- culous escape. • John Everett, London, was arrested for being drunk on Christmas ivay, Up his sleeve was found a big 44 colts. with every chamber loaded. At the same place and on thesaweday,Alfred Hall was arrested in an intoxicated condition.. He also carried a loaded revolver. • A farmer of Johnson, Alberta, white driving-onthis-way-tb e Mahle(', was` run into by a team driven furiously by two drunken :.men, He was so. badly injured that be died shortly afterwards. A drunken man boarded a St Cath- arines trolley car. During a dispute with another man he•used vile langu- age. The whole affair ended in the death of the. drunken' man. Not because our material is exhaust- ed, but because of the limitations of space we ring down : the curtain on this painful drama, It is being hour ly enacted with all its.. attendant hor- rors of mental and physical sufferings hoth for the victim and his friends. Who can deny that our country Must be infested with commercial rabies "to justify the wicked for a reward" as it does in endorsing our present license system.—(From Tidings, W. C. T. U.) Society Women's flair A Simple Treatment that Will Make It Truly Fascinating W S R Holines-Guarantees It Nowadays every up -to• date woman has radiant hair.,• - What a foolish creature; a woman would be if she lost the opportunity, .:to add to her attractions, Yet in Canada to -day there are hundreds of thousands of women with harsh, faded, characterless hair who doit. not make any attempt to improve - In Paris most women have beauti. ful hair and in Canada all women who use Parisian Sage have lustrous and luxuriant hair. And any woman reader • of theNew' Era can have (attractive and lustrous, hair in a few days' tiine by using this great hair rejuvenator, Parisian Sage., W 5 R Holmes sells' a 11.rge bottle for 50 cents and be guarantees it to banish dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp in two weeks or money Parisian Sage is an ideal hair tonic, not sticky or greasy. . s Cocoarut -dream dandy. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter ll 0 saucepan, add on&half cup or mill and ;i cup and a .hale of sugar, IIea' to the boiling iioint mud cook rive!tt minutes. taking care that - it does• no! burn. Push back on the stove, ade one-third cup of shredded cocoanut ani half a teaspoonful of vanilla. ilea until _10 mitture is creamy, pour Inti a buttered pan, cool and mark hitt squa res. • Grapefruit and Ginger. Cut the fruit and remove the pithy. center and the skin between the secs tions and the seeds. Shred the pub" with a silver fork, adding to each half a heaping teaspoonful of sugar, a heap- ing teaspoonful of disiceated cocoanut, one tablespoonful of preserved ginger cut into dice and a tablespoonful of the ginger sirup. Cool for several hours before serving. When eady to serve cover with whipped cream and top with a little chopped ginger. -1)e- Iineator. Date Biscuit, itotl biscuit dough out quite thin, spread it with soft •butter and then with chopped dates, spread over un. other layer of dough, cut With. at small Mishit cutter, place an a buttered 'tiny and bane in a hot oven. i 11‘ now as semi of fl ba ,. "no 'p¢ 1910 used CatoNlglla 1 and Moet cx►mlriete you prefer, Mit send a, free Beet or D..* to..day, If inter_, Please name .tbltl .a ant to us. DARCH HUNTIE 1-omtlin 1,1 sulks. 1nterestin, ,, We handle Can. Oil at )tic. American at 200, ar, 25c, Machine Oil,Separator Oil, Raw Oil, Boiled t Paints. We have about 20 4inds of Soap,also Lye, Ammonia. We have 13 kinds of Tobacco and 3 Chewing Gum, We have Herbageuln, Columbian St Stock Food, Flax Meal, OR Cake, Libby's Calf 'oo. etc, We have Crushed Oyster Shell—Poultry Non Zenoleum and Instant Louse Killer. We have S, sacks. We have Patent Medicines, Groceries, Hard Rubbers and Dry Goons, also school supplies: We a wants. Our prices are as low as possible and we pa sible for produce, trusting to have your custom, R. Adams, I.ondesbc T • I� p 0h4Culr pnickly'stops coughs, cures colds, heals the throat and lungs. - - 25 cents, Take N� Chances When• you are ready, your nevi Suit or Ove and STICfc with on know to be i?,liable. We are offering:) a B Serge Suit, of a made to your Measure is exceptionally good special Black Melton f to your order, for 320, ar GEO, W. Fine Merchan Fred Jackson' Agent for British -A &:Dying Co MANI S. C. Sho Travel l i n Goods Are you going travel- this Spring ?° We have .just placed in stock a nice line of travelling goods, consisting of ' Trunks, Suit Cast: and Telescopes. Come" in and get prices, before ' purcha elsewhere.. We can terest you, A lull stock of Shoes and Rubbe at Special prig S. C, Bath • Painter and All work Prices Residence net Collegia The Most Popular. Paper In On The Toronto Daily The best proof that people .like a newspa willingness to pay good money for it. More people buy the "Toronto Daily any other Daily, Weekly or Monthly .psi Province of Ontario, Moreover, the circulation of the " Star" is increasing more rapidly thait,tlta newspaper in Canada. These things do not just happen. There must be a feason. In this case there are several reasons. The " Toronto Daily Star " : laublis Reports 12 to 18 hours earlier than the hit It is a Newspaper.. not ' "Organ' any other kind, . Not only the MWoman's 'is attractive to woMen It reports a Canadian Daily. Its special Khan", are too Consequent better than any $:t This papw; one yeta4— $1.20. added to above sub