HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1905-05-18, Page 21
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THE HEIR OE SANi�EI�N
OR —
THE STEWARD'S SON
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CIIAI'TEIt I. the woman slowly. "You .will post
room of a cottage perch- it—with your own hand—whenn--when
In a front ruu
I tun gone; to -night, Norah, dear,,.'
ed on a Lovonshire elms lay a '.Yu;,, Catherine," said Norah situ -
woman waiting for that messenger )!
who comes to all of us sooner or 1 3'You don't ask mo what it us, Mitis
lutes. Tho rays of rho setting sun. Norals?"
which dyed tho scarcely rippling sea -Not unless you cure to tell Ino.
a brilliant crimson, fell upon her dear."
face and upon that of u young girl ..No, I will not tell you; you ta111
who knelt, beside the bell and held know soon. 1-1—" sho struggled
the dying woman's hand. The faceits it with some strong
tion, end
of the woman was softened by tho for the first titno her eyes filled with
approaching climax, and but for a tears. "I can't tell you, Norah, and
strange restlessness and uncertainty yet it is so hard—so hard!" And the
in her eyes it would have been wholly tears rolled down the wan ehoeks.
at peace. "Norah, say once more, 'Catherine, I
She had been silent some time, love you! I will never think nattily
watching the reflection of the eon- of you, whatever may happon--waat-
light on tho wall, and the young
girl had been watching her, silently.
100, with tete•-dimmed eyes.
At last the woman turned her head
and looked at tho lovely taco and
forced a smile.
"What time is it, Miss Norah'" oho
tusked in a faint voice.
"Nearly eight. Catherine, dear,"-
she
ear,"she replied.
"1 shall sink with the sun," sho and fixed them on the girl's taco with
said, not complainingly, but with inexpressible tenderness; then, with a
the listless apathy of one who is sigh, they closed, to open no more
waiting and longing for peace. on this mystery which wo call Lito.
The girl's tears fell, but she cried Norah uttered one cry, and, MI if
quietly and unobtrusively, and oven sho had been waiting for it as a
endeavored to conceal theist from signal, an old lady opened rho dour
her companion, 'who saw them, Hover- and come gently to her side.
theless. "Como away. Miss Norah. Como
"Don't cry, dear." she said. "Don't away. dear.'
be—unhappy. I should not I,0 If—if I Tho girl kissed tho white face and
were not leaving you alone--allstood( k' g down t it fur a min
alone!"
"Don't think of me, Catheri,te.
dear," said the girl, forcing hack
her tears. "Oh, if there were any-
thing I could do!" subsided she became conscious . t the
"There is nothing." she said feob- letter which sho still held in her
ly. "1 nen quite willing to go, but hand. She got up and put on her
for the thought of leaving you. hat and walked Clown to the post
Norah, I have done my (duty--" office in the village. She might have
"Oh, Catherine!" sent it. but sho had promisees to post
"I have tried, since your mother it and she would obey the ono and
died, to bo a—a mother to you!" last request which had been made 1►y
"You have been all that a mother tho woman who, though a servant,
could bo to me—all, Catherine!" re- had been, as she said, a soother to
sponded the girl sobbingly.
A strange look came into the dy-
ing woman's faco and sho raised her
hand nn(1 laid it. lovingly, wistfully
on the girl's head.
"And you have loved me as if—as
if I had been your mother, dear'!"'
alto asked, with a sudden intensity.
"Yes, vet*, you know that dear,"
assented Norah fervently. "Why. 1
scarcely remember any other in titer
than you. You have boon--" she
could not get any further.
".Yes, I know," she murmured. "It
has been the only thing that has
mode it possible. If you had not
loved me, Norah—" She stopped
and was silent for a motneut or
two. '!'hen she said: "Norah, have
you thought of, what you will do
when I am gorse?"
"No, dear. Ilow could I think of name is 1 e it rlc , (t ertc( o • chance of n quiet hour with you,
anything but you? You twist not (:ray's Inn, ma'am. and 1 wish to Ruth. So far ours has been rather
see Miss Norah !'sere'" n prosaic wooing. .11)(1. besides, 1
"Walk in, if you please, sir," she shall want you to coach 100 1p un
said, opening the door of a nest lit- my interview with your uncle. 100
tlo parlor. "Miss Frere Is out nt' have no idea how nervous 1 le. ort
present. but I am expecting her every 11)t the last he night. refuse to accept
name°t'" l me for our husband,"
Mr. l'etherick walked in and look- {toll! your
up fondly
ed round the small room with keen
but. not unkindly glance. It was the! lover's fare.
hest roo►n in tho cottage, and it was' "As if he could."
not without a certain refinement. i nnntly. As 11 Huy
Two or three volumes „ffnult with you.
modern poets lay 00 tire' David drew the slender figure
his side and kissed the sweet,
table and some etchings of the It )•n.
best masters hung on the teal's1 11'hen you ore my wife," he et 141,
!`here was something about the r
that was not only curry but tatiteful,; "011(1 (•0110 to take a closer and ten-
derer interest. in my welfare--"
"Could I take n deeper interest
than i d!, now, David?"
"Well, perhaps not. But your wi11
find a good many people Ilnd fault
with me. You have no idea what tho
critics say sumelime8. They declare
that 1 nm an imposter, a copyist;
they soy that 1 non--"
"Let them say what they like,"
Ruth laughed. "'That 18 11101,0
jealousy, and anybody can criticise.
TO 1ue you are the greatest nuv•list
alive."
There way only one answer to This,
net Ruth broke away, declaring that
sire roust go ut once.
"But you will come this after-
noon?" she said. "And you will
snake Lord l.ittliner like you. Some
people say ho is queer, but 1 call
'hero are many things you can't hien an old darling."
do nith money,"• said the Iran who "Ile will like me, he ie bound to.
effect t; philosophy. i've gut 10:nothing, n present for
"hes," eunaworet Dustin Stnx. hint, that will render him 1)y slave
for life. Au revolt till the gloaming.
('1'o he Continued.!
Thu Prioe of Liberty
16.
4•
C HAI''1'L:It L1'1L.—(Continued.)
"Couldn't have cone at a better
tithe." David murmured. "Ask Mr.
D1ltrley its here."
Morley carne smilingly, yet myster- cumulation of weed seed Itus forced
u; lt• turn down such manures with
turf for cure and destroy tho w•ootis
by cultivati.,u, using care not to
( cultivate deeply at the laying by of
ly desired to know where Mr. Rusin- ti)., curt* crop. Any
suggestion Lu
aid Henson was to be found. destroy weed seed by fermentation
"'Phis is a sour place to look for find no lodgement in our idea of
him," suit Steel. saving and applying manures. Tho
heat necessary to germinate and do -
I
less
icy liuprutuslo tLd.14 h( rc' flu yestchudvalt u(cci- stray seeds containetf in immure
se eeds purchase
use uut( it in manurespreader
tho er ftaiwh i feeding ng re tower lthof Inlmtttt ure tore tfirst� Put
dent." ;nus,. necessarily turn most
"i ogus," said Steel. ewe turl,od uvuilublu nitrogen into the air; lu inures directly on tho soil, ho will unto feed, writes Mr. 1.. 1?. Rev-
"Bogus."
out of the house. Is he won+ud? genre such a method would rob us find wonderful results accruing from; :mitts. Toward the end of the feed-
himo( the expensive element that every, its frequent use. On our farm we ing season cureless beginners wonder.
Marley oxpluined that he'was wont farmer aims to create and retain Itstwu preferred to use commercial why their lambs have not luno I:oL-
e,l on threw dilterunt charges: in fact, in the snit i manures on our wheat crops, and: ter on the amount of feed supplied
the inspector had thu warrants in hos From recent experiments rondo and thus supply it and the gross crop them. In nearly very case it is be -
pocket at the present. moment. analyses of tho results in keeping,with available plant food, mostly in cause they were not started in the
"11'011, it's only by good chance mruuures for several ween:: antler' phosphorus, with a small percentage right. manner to begin with.
that you haven't got one for me.,"shelter with diva stuck tramping
it! of potassium. Limo should not b0: When I first began feeding lambs
1►1tvid laughed. "Tt you hnvo tea used with manures, 1)e it liberates for market I was inexperienced in
utinutes to spare, between Van Sileck
and myself we can clear up the it .S-
tory of the dinunond-mounted c;yar-
case for you."
Isn't It To Please You When
'/1f�QuiteEt Pleases iKillions•
Likely Of Others.
.:1.'1'LY1NC: MAN L' LtL.
in our operations we have nut top -
dressed for whe:►t in many years,
writes Dlr. Geo. 1 . Scott. The tic -
ions. Ile evinced no surprise at tho
sight. of Van Sneck. Ile was, doubt-
less, aware of the success of the 0p-
eration on rho latter.li • pnrtieul.•r-
LA
Once Tasted Always Used.
Black, Mixed or Green. Highest Award 81. Louie 1004A
Bold only In load Packets. By all Grocers.
ever 1 may hear. %hate%cr peuple Marley had the time to spare. and
say of you, I will love you!"
"Catherine, (tear, duns Catherine,
indeed, he was keen enough to hear
you know I have loved you and (hut the solution of tho mystery. A
I shall always love you, whatever
short explanation from David, foi-
1
happen! What, can happen to lowed by a few pithy, pertinent sues-
may
me so wicked and ungr1teful tions to �'an Sneek, and ho was pe-
as to forget you or think of you any per-
fectly satisfied.
way but as my second mother?"
"And yet I seemed to have an ideal
Catherine Reyes opened her (108 cuso against you, Mr. Sl_e!," he
said. "Seems almost a pity to cul
a career like Mr. IIenson's sh',rt,
does it not? Which reminds me that
I am wasting time hero. Any time
you and Van Sneck happen to be
passing tho police -station the cigar -
case is entirely at your disposul."
And Marley bustled oil upon tho
errand that tumult so touch f..,r ltog-
inald Ilenson. Ile was hardly t
the house before Ruth Cates :
Sho looked n little dist.resse,l; sho
down on cement hours, Prof. 'Thorne
has found that the escape of ammon-
ia has been as great as GO p.c. Prof.
Ames has been making some very ex-
haustive analyses along this line,
and some very important discoveries
hnvo been reached. It seems than
ititrilydng processes begin ttith any
degree of temperature above tho
freezing point, especially where livo.
stock urinate very liberally in the
bedding supplied them to absorb it,
and the droppings. They have de-
cided
o-
cided that frequent cleaning out of ;
stables and depositing the ntanures.
to. turfs that will readily hold all
liquids after rains, so the soil will
ttbsorb it quickly, is advisable. Tho
hauling and ricking of manures aro
by no means the best methods to'
got all there is out of manure, and
I would discourage it as a means
of profit. Tho benefits of tho man-
-
°
uro spreader aro to ho realized, I
trrived• think, in the future, by putting five
oo lu u 1 u tone of manln•n on each acro of may sometimes appear to benefit
tato through her blinding tears, then could not stay for n m she .mowing -turf during tho fall, whiter
g g declartyl. bier. machine Was u'.It91'.lu, o.• very early spring. it is not POS -
and
but I doubt its having any
allowed tho old lady to load her and she was riding over to l.on;;dottn atilt that the weed seed will get n sett direct CRcct upon any increase they should be fed very carefully. At
from the room. without delay. A nolo had just I:ee•rt
thee occurs, and would not say a first they aro inclined to overeat and
When the first shock of grief had
start the first scusun, and, after word that would induce anyone to unless the feed is supplied in model. -
.1 to her from Chris. cutting a good crop of hay thnt sea -
1 h ug •1 ••t•tly. In conclusion ate amounts, serious trouble results
that in many instances terminates
tl t •di s t It is advisable
ammonia, though at the 801)10 time tho business. but several of my
destroys tissue, and, in a sets°, neighbors had been feeding lambs fur
makes available plant food. Lime several years. '1'o start with when I
is not a manure in a sense, bet purchased 100 western Iambs out of
std bates the soil in breaking down a cat lot shipped in by ono of my
both organic and unorganic matter neighbors. Tho Iambs were put onto
within it. Few node need lime, ex- reed as soon as they arrived at the
c"pt to correct acidity. and fur this barn. Clover hay and boon pods
reason exports advocate nature's were fed for roughage and corn and
method by supplying carbonate of outs u8 a groin ration. Moth of
limo finely ground so that the acids these wtro fed in amounts; that the
in such soils will unite with tho cal- lambs would clean up nicely. '!'hese
Ciunt in just such degree as condi- lambs were fed during the winter an
tions demand. the following spring marketed, be
It is hardly possible that 500 to my surprise they had hardly mad
pounds per acre of pure calcium will an, average gain of 15 pounds each.
do touch harm. but it would be bet- '!'his illustrates tho importance o
' ter to apply the litmus paper test starting lambs right. While I had
first and see if tho blue will turn supplied the proper amount of food,
red. If it docs not, certainly the 1 had not prepared the lambs to con-
tend dols not require lime. To re- surto it profitably. Since, 1 have b,e-
tain the ammonia in manures, use come more acquainted with tho art
gypsum. Sulphate of limo fixes the of feeding lambs and am now able
ammonia until it comes into other to fit lambs that when marketed
dlti tl ' th lea►il Sult b the t
C011 ons wr un o•ring a op pnCOS.
For the first two or three weeks
after the tannin are put onto feed
her. there now."
A seek lateran old gentleman in Well, he is. Ile went there Inst
a frock coat and a white hat climb(•(!
night. knowin • that he was to his
the narrow path that led to the cc t -
last
b
tags and knocked at the little green, last gasp, with the Idea of get
fluor. more money from Lady Little' •r. To
"My uncle is in Paris," she said. sen, tho chances for a crop of corn
"So I am going over to Lutde:tn arc better than if placed there just
for a few days. Lord Littimer is
there and Frank also. The , ee., eIl-
tation Is complete and ithettIrnu.
Chris says the house is not the steno
now, and that she didn't irna(;ire
that it could be so cheerful. Reginald
I Penson--"
"My dear child, Menson is not
his great surprise he fount) lettimer
Ile was very warns for the m1•ultil
was June and the sun blitr.ing.; in Ihere also. it tuns anything but a
the most gallant fashion, and its h'' who 1108 flintily turned out •,f the
took off his white hat and wiped house. it is supposed that he came
his bald forehead ho paned and, back again, for they found hint this
gasped, although he was by nub morning in the grounds with one
of the dogs upon I ' . Ile •s must
horribly hurt, and lies at the lodge
in a critical condition. I !u•ontised
Chris thut I would bring a ne'e:sago
to you from I,urd I.ittilti r Ile
pleasant interview for Mr. Ronson,
means fat.
"Mrs. Jordan, i believe, t'nt am,"
he said to the old lady who answer-
ed the kock.
"I am Mrs. .Jordan," sir," sho
replied.
'And t his, of course. is Cliff C•.1- Wtutls you and Dr. 1ie1l to cone. acct
to e.. he saw. raring his hal 11.1,1 this afternoot► and stay to (line. r.
•k 1' h ' . •f 81101. "I'll go anywhere to have the
b t "We'll come with pleasure," David
fixing his gold eyeglasses. DIS
bo unhappy ins anxious about me.
"You—you will stay hert, Norah,"
she said, and her voice had grswn
more feeble, "till—till—for a time.
'rho people will look after you
as long ns you stay. They are • fond
of you and kind, and there is money.
You have rho lust quarter's allow-
ance.'
"Don't trouble about ole, Cather-
ine, deer."
•Triere is nothing else that trou-
bles tile. only you --only you, dear."
Tho restless, hesitating look Luno
into her oyes and she moved her head
to and fro on the pillow. "11 tvo 1
done wisely?" she murmured, more
to herself than the girl. "God ki1,ws! and with that Indefinable tone which
is felt, though it cannot be des-
cribed.
('1'o be Continued.)
.1Ai'AN1 til: A'I.1111:'FI,S,
in Japan boys end girls aro from
a very early age instructed in physi-
cal exercise, with the result that at
:Maturity the women are almost as
strong ns the men. it is not an
into
her
she said, iudig-
1It1111 could 1'.11(1
to
shy
I have done it for t ho best; hal—ah,
Norah, if I were only sure!"- she
gasped.
"it Is all so dark, so trou'dai1I"
continued the woman. "1f 1 could
only 1011 you—but i cannot, I darn
I1o1. Not now! It is ta0 late!"
"Whitt is it that worries, you,
Catherine, dear? Is it. anything you
wont to tell nue; anything you wish
Ino to do?"
Tho woman looker) at her long and unusual sight. to see a company of
wistfully, with a tundornoss which girls, who aro strolling along a
could not have been deeper Ir. a country rood, atop buck a few yards
mother's eyes; then she sighed againe for headWuy, nod then, following a
•'No, it. is nothing. Norah --nothing limiter, all nimbly clear a live -foot
I can tell you; but there is something fence by leaping over it.
you Intlet do."
"What is it? 1 will do nnything, 1I0'1':1
everything, you tell ate."
•''!'here is a letter under rho (pil-
low." said the dying woman fnnrtl,(..
Nuruh put her hand under tho int -
low and drew out a closed envelope.
"Rend—rend tho address," said
Cntherino Ilayes.
(lustily wiping the tears from her
eyes Norah read it:
'Pito Earl of Arrowrlrti.•,
The Court.
Sattth'igh,
Berks.
At another time she might linvc
expressed surprise, but now there
Waft no room for any emotion hat
0 t •
I Farl of Arrowdale, yes,'88141
Disease takes no summer
vacation.
If, you need flcs:l and
strength use
Scott's Emulsion
summer as in winter.
.,-d hr Ir(e ►, p'e
SCOTT a ROwNC, .'bran,..
Toronto, ()titmice.
)oc. and 91 ( • all Aril/pais.
•
"But there m•e a whole lot more
things you can't do without it."
Sergeant Sharp was as regimental
0y it is possible for a man to be.
"'Shue!" he cried to his stilted
"Quick march! Lefl. wheel! Halt!
'Take Murphy's noose for talking in
the ranks. "brut he wasn't talking,'
protested a corporal wh(i 1108 stand-
ing neer. "Wasn't ht.'?" roared Ser-
geant Sharp. "Don't molter. 1h.•n.
Cross it out, nest then pot him in
the guard -room for deceiving me."
i''nther—"I hear, my boy, that ;nut
have lately told .‘orn• mother several'
falsehoods. This grieves me to the:
heart. Al ways tall the truth, even
though it may bring sudlerittg upon.
you. Will you promise me?" ltep—
"Yes, father." Father—"Very w• 11.
Now go and see who is knocking at
the door. 1f it's the lox collee tor,
say I'm not nt home."
"Now, Uncle George." snicd little!
Willie's mother, "let me help you ti'
some more duck?" "Well, now." re-
plied uncle, "it is very gelled of yon,
and i think 1 trill." "Ifurr,th' Iter-)
rah!" joyfully cried 'Vi II le. "Mother
bet you'd eat all you could get, moll
she's won."
prior to turning over for the latter
crop. 1 urn positive that any at-
tempt. to carry manures over the
heated periods of the summer would
certainly insure very great loss in
Ile nitrogen, hence would discourage
any attempt to do it. I amt per-
suaded that when we use our man-
ures on turfs. allotting them to Ito
there ono season through frost, rain,
sueshine and the heat of suni[uer,
then will we get better clover
stands. Bacteria will multiply and
and
colonize with greater certainty
rapidity under such conditions.
1f one hits tho cash to spurn
the
spent cas . e c. • •
I want to say that a manure spread-
er is all right in its place, and man -
3 et ng sit a t.
urea do most good placed on turfs for two or three days after tho
and allowed to remain there for one lambs aro put in the barn to fend
season, thus benefiting both hay bright oatstraw twice daily at
crop and corn tho year following. morning and evening. with a light
Tho sooner manures are placed to feed of clover hay at noun. With
account from the stables to the field, tis kind of roughage there is not
the less they lose and greater tho the danger of the Iambs overeating
benelits the soil realizes, both in fer- The nim in feeding this kind of food
tility and bacterial effects.
S'1'Air'TING LAMBS ON F1:ED.
I do not believe any other ono
plume of lamb feeding contributes
is to give the lambs n chance t,
rest up physically before loading the
stomach. After the first two or
three days tho arrangement can be
tarred around and the hay fel twice
tinily and the oat straw once at
uc,un.
TiiN 1)4 11-1I I•; 1r'1'1•:D.
An "imported" e•itteet wade recently
brolight before n magistrate, charg-
ed with hawing threatened to kill
timelier mon ofth an ex.
"What hnvo you to soy, lint?"
asked the magistrate.
"1 niter sthruck tum; watt will nes
ex!" said 1'ut. vehemently. "1
honor, 1 wouldn't hit n now• -burn
bob; will 1111 0x."
-Discharged," said his honor.
--
"What does this stand for?"
'4', 0(1 Uncle George of his nephew
',tillio. pointing 10 n capital letter
4) "Orange," added the bright
}oungster. "That's right. You 811,111
!Lice en orange for ;our cleverness.
New1 what in Ole?" pointing to
another. but a smeller o. "Another
orange," was SS11I1u's uuh08itattog
reply.
Nocash (disconsolately%—"The rich
are getting richer end the poor poor-
er." 1•'riend—"SS'hat'e wrong note?"
Nocash—"Miss F',1tpnrs.' has relayed
me and is gold, to marry Mr.I
Coupon."
No Cash to Pay
Until !'ail, 1905.
) s
are the Best Months to Make ; onev Raising Chickens
Chicks hatched then grow more rapidly and requite less care than
at any time of year, and tho knack of running tho business successfully
is acquired under the tnost favorable circumstances.
Ono good May or June hatching will bring out a brood of chicks
that sell about October 1st for enough to pay for an Incubator and
another batch can then bo started that will get tho chicks cut in time
for tho Christmas market. The next batch will be ready for tho March
and April market, "broilers'' commanding the very highest market prices.
A good incubator is the foundation of real; success in poultry raising, bringing tlio whole matter from guess-
work to cert•►inty. Wo furnish you with a
Chatham Incubator
on easy terms. No cash to pay until November, 1005. 11y that time it should have pails for itself.
Nothing else raised on a farm pays like this, and the beauty of it all is that the women folks or children can
easily attend to the very small amount of work thorn is to bo dune. Halt an hour or so a day is all the (into
required.
Getting the right Incubator is pretty nearly the whole thing. The Chatham is the
safest and surest incubator made. it does the trick ; 10) per cent. hatchosevery time
if the eggs are fertile. Ilathor than go into detaile of construction here, we will print a
few out of many hundreds of testimonials:
Rrdghton, Ont., April 15th, 1903.
The Manson estuplwll Co.,
Chatham, Ont.
1"n8:r, 1 .41 you when 1 received m ineukat01
and Deo:•ler tura, 1 would 1,8 you know what su.rees
i had with ray Snit !mob. When the t•..r.t.ator AS.
read 1 went snot got .trice to put in 16, a,.A ae 1 was
anrloue to get It started 1 look et1 the egg* i ea14
from 1M par•>, and he hot emir enm:,;h so 1 ronkl
pot pi 1, 111.0, aver There were v.m• w11,:1 one. and
same long •1).1 narrow, and ae 1 afterwar•L fonnn1 oat
8e was keeling 1' ens) e.eea hese with one coekrel,
ee the) M•1 not look ,err goal m, the ■'art. 1 pot
fifty 41 edge urti th• Incubator and followed the in-
N.ru•tlenselnSely, and 1 got fifty chieke, two having
d,e.1 in the.h•11, whir h 1 think it first-ola•e. They
are all strong ani 111.•11. i an, sorry I did not renter
lhn t1)' ,ii. instead of the 5o. i have It now 1111.1
with .sty white Wyanduts eggs 1 wish you mold
tell me whore 1 could get 8 gnod poultry piper,
isseethinsf)that would alit a redone.
Yours truly,
11. 1L RARAOF.R,
icor 814, unity CM. On'.
would rattles att na to M Inwhaterthan
one hen now. Thorn ie sorno saliefar,tIon r1) kr.ow,ni
that If you look atter then, you will get (took'.
Valens, Ont., April lath, 122(6.
Th. Manson Campbell t'o.,
('hatham. Ont.
Dear Sir, The in, uhatnr that w. purchased (rune
you on she 14th Jar. last ie „.stunty a dandy. out
of a No. 2 ,n..,halor with 43 fertile egg* 1 rot 78
ehi••ksns, and they eta all strong and healthy. 1
na..l 1i gallon. of oil. 1 think there 1s p, better
Inoub.tor in the wnrbt.
!'oust truly,
MIl i. J011,4 nlf9' 1,
Valens 1' e , Ont.
Wo have similar letten+ from (-very State in the United States, and every Province in the ih.mi,lI ,,l
Every Incubator wo put out is the best kind of advertising wo do, for it sells many other., for 01 11 its never -
failing results.
The Chatham is built on honor, and its construction .tel werkmanahip aro as perfect as
an experience of fifty years and ample capital can hake them.
The Chatham was the first Incubator made that was good enough to admit of its makers
taking chromes that it would make its cost for the poultryman before it was paid for.
i)oi t imagine for a moment th:a it is any longer peeeible to make big poultry profits by
setting hems. As hatchers hens aro as out of (late as stone hatchets.
If these erratic. uncertain birds aro kept busy egg -laying instead of wasting their time
setting, the poultryman will pocket a good 11101ly extra dollars in profit.
if you want to get full particula►s on the subject and learn all rho details of successful
Tneuhntor hatching and profitable poultry raising send to -day fur our superbly printed book,
" blow to Make Money Out of Chinks." It's FREE.
Send for it now.
FREE
BOOK.
A Complete
Guide
to i'oultry
Profit
THE MANSON CAMPBELL CO., Limited
Dept. 32 CHATHAM, ONI.
Distributing W.trchecces 1)t Montreal. Que., Brandon, Man., ('atgerr, Alta, Now Westminster, BC.. and Halifax, NS.
Factories at CHATHAM. Ove.. and I)6TIt0IT. Shen.
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Ale° M.►nufac:arers of the famous ('bf.tTl1AM PANNI! (I MILLS AND 1'ItATii.1M I-AT1Mf RCALKS.
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