HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-4-29, Page 7SMALL POULTRY FARMS SHOW
GOOD RROFITS,
t �
Poultry farming
can be success-
ful
s -
Cul
only when there are proper fm
Bilines and when there is conebant
attention given,. Poultry farmers
are hard workers. They are at their
1 post from early to late, and enjoy
no vacations. But the work is Hob
heavy; it is tiresome to some be-
cause of the sameness, but Ito one
who is interested and seally loves
labor
of
athe work it becomes
1
pleasure.
Taking the standpoint of the man
who is about giving up city life in
order that he may engage in an
outdoor line of work,. and etthe
same time with good prospects of
making a fair living, not neoeesar•
ily a big one, I would suggest that,
inasmuch ass the average beginner
knows little of the "mysteries" of
n
the occupation, he make a atlo t
start in a small way, beginning,
say, with 50 of 100 head of fowls,
and frown them raise his next year's
pellets.
There is no disputing the fact
that there is more profit in poultry
culture, for the capital invested,
than there is in any other outdoor
work, but the business must be
conducted on strict business prin-
ciples.
Some working capita] is requir-
ed. Money will be needed to buy
the property to put up the building,
to purchase the foundation stock,
to pay the feed bills, and to meet
,.:, other expenses that will in the
course of the yea} bob up.
Conservative estimates of profit
range from one to three dollars
per bird. These estimates are bas-
ed on the experiences of poultry-
men all over the country.
Cost Per Foul,
The average cost per year of
keeping a fowl is $1.80, or 15 cents
per month.
Some men devote 'their plants en-
tirely to egg production, using the
White Leghorns for that 'purpose,
and each year marketing the -cock
.a . erels of the hatch as broilers.
Others combine egg farming with
meat growing—selling the eggs at
a season of the year when they
bring the highest prices, and turn-
ing them into table poultry when
the price falls below a certain fig-
ure.
'The sale of eggs for hatching and
fowls for breeding is very profitable
but it culls for expert service. Be-
ginners are advised to keep away
from that end of the business un-
til they have had a general experi-
ence of at least three years.
The selection of breeds is a mut-
ter that must be governed by the
object in view. If it is intended to
have an exclusive egg farm, the
shipments to be made to a markret.
that prefers white eggs, then such
breeds as the Leghorns, Minereas,
or any of the white egg -'layers
should be chosen.
Where it is intended to combine
eggs, broilers and roasters, such
• breeds as the American class should
be kept, with possibly a white -egg
breed if there is a call for white
eggs in the market.
It is a good plan to have an ex-
tra acre or two which can be de-
voted to ;tree fruits and growing
vegetables. What cannot be con-
sumed by the family may be sold to
nearby residents. The garden will
help considerably to pay the house-
hold expenses,
Other ]!leans of Income.
On one poultry farm five acres
are used. Two of these are devot-
ed to poultry, one to a vegetable
garden, and one to peach trees.
The living expenses in 'summer are
virtually paid by the vegetables
consumed and sold, so that out of
the profits from the poultry only
the winter household expenses must
be drawn. When the ,peach crop
comes in there is a sufficient profit
to pay .the heavy bills, like taxes,
insurance, repairs, etc. This -'arm is
not only making a good living for
its owner, bub it is affording him a
congenial occupation, and, above
all things, has restored it once nerv-
ous body to a strong, healthy elan.
Besides, there is true, independ-
ence. Living out in pure air and
being one's own boss is an inde-
pendence worth considering.
To sum up : Poultry raising is an
ooenpation that will prove profit-
able to those who can adapt them-
selves to it. It is a business that
calls kr good judgment. It is a
business that requires close study
and attention.
The beginning should be made in
a small way. There should be suf-
ficient ownital to "pay es you go."
There must ibe working tapltal.
Poultry keeping can be made pro-
fitable from. !both a finauoial and a
health standpoint. The extent of
that profit, or the amount of in-
come, can be gauged only by the
mans adaptability for the workend
the manner in which he perforxas
his duties. The beginner should be,
ma a constant student. Re should
A read books a'nd•'papers on the eels -
led, for therein he will find the
rudiments.
ti.
1,
SPRING BLOOD
IS WATERY BLOOD
How to Get New Health and
New Strength at This Season
Spring eiln ente are nob
imagi-
nary. Even 11a meetrobust
find
the whiter menthe most trying to
their health. Confinement indoors,
often in overheated Band nearly al-
ways badly ventilated rooms -4n
the horns the office the shop and
the soho�ol—tuaxos the vitality of
even the strongest. The bloodbe-
comes thin and watery .said is clog-
ged with impurities, Some .people
have headaches and a feeling of
languor. Others are low-spirited
and nervous. Still ethers are trou-
bled with disfiguring pimples land
akin eruptions; while some get up
in the morning feeling just as tired
a's when they went to bed, These
are all spring eymptores that the
blood is out of order and that a
medicine is needed, Many people
take purgative medicines in the
spring. This is
a serious
mistake.
i
You cannot cure yourself with a
medicine that gallops through your
system .an
leavesyou weaker sti
ll.
This is all that a purgative does.
What you need to give you health
and strength in the spring is a
tonic medicine that will enrich the
blood wed soothe the jangled
nerves. And the one always re-
liable tonic and blood builder is
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, These
Pills not only banish spring weak-
ness but guard you against the
more serious ailments that follow,
such as anaemia, nervous debility,
indigestion, rheumatism and other
diseases due to bad blood. In
proof of this Mrs. D. E. Hughes,
Hazenmore, Sask, says : "About a
year ago I was badly run down, my
nerves were all unstrung, and I
could not go up stairs without stop-
ping to rest. As I was a long ways
from a doctor I decided to take
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and in
the course, of a few weeks I felt
like a new person. As an all-round
restorative I tan heartily recom-
mend this medicine."
If you are ailing this spring you
cannot afford, in your own interest,
to overlook so valuable a inedioine
as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Sold
by all medicine dealers or by mail
at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.60 from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brookville, Ont.
d•
For Baking Day.
Bake your cakes on Due -cleaning
day. And on the day before ser'ub
the oven out with hot soda water.
Make a pint of whitewash with a
small cake of whiting, and white-
wash the interior of the oven. The
difference is extraordinary.
Sieve the flour, and warm it. It
may be damp, and, if not, warmed
flour makes prize cake.
Beat yolks and whites of eggs
separately, and add the whites last
of everything.
Put sultanas, etc., in a colander
and pour hot water through. This
cleanses, makes the fruit swell and
juicy, and partly cooks it. Never
"drops" either. Dry afterwards in
the oven.
If you are following a recipe, do
not guess quantities; weigh accur-
Don't "rub" butter into flour.
Melt it and cream it. Much bet-
ter. Dissolve carbonate of socia in
a little warm milk. This provides
for its even distribution.
If your mixture is too wet, sift,
quickly and evenly, warm flour and
finely grated dry breadcrumbs over
it. The equivalent of two eggs is a
dessertspooaiful of vinegar in a gill
of milk,
A teaspoonful of glycerine makes
a cake very light, Butter your cake
tin well, and line with proper pa-
per, buttered.
If your tin is o1d1 stand it on
sand to prevent buTnrng. If "gas"
cooking, cover the cake tin with one
same size, rim on iim. When the
cake bas risen and begun to brown,
move it to cooler bray. To teat if
done, run a skewer into the middle
of the eake, hunt not through it. If
it Domes out clean, the cake is done,
Two lumps of sugar in your oven
will brown a cake without burning.
A basin of cold water will cool a
hot oven, Put at bottosr,
A burnt cadre, but not done,
should have burnt part removed,
and place covered with beaten egg.
and brown sugar. Stand cake on
sieve when cooked.
Cat out this nehmen and paste up
inside your pastry door, Yon will
find ib very helpful --especially if
you are a beginner—to haus it al-
ways at hand. •
AN EXCELLENT REMEDY
FOR LITTLE ONES
Mrs, Sidney Dalby, Audley, Ont.,
writes; "I have used Baby's Own
Tablets for the past twelve months
and have found them an excellent
medicine for my little girl." Thou-
sands of other mothers say the same
thing—once a mother ha's used 'the
Tablets she would use nothing else.
They are pleasant to take; fere re -
Melt Is sure, • and above all they are
guaranteed by a government ems -
list to be absolutely free therm ha-
jurtoua dt'uas. The Tablets are
sold by medioinie dealere or by mail
at 25 conte it box from The Dr,
Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
BIG AID TO BRITAIN. It All Carne From
Tile Ttritiel) Navy and Canail,ian Strain and Cold
Railway Exp nstolt,
e
has demonstrated heyoudlthe pogoEuro- - BUT G, Il;, MACDONALD FOUND
bility of doubb• that the mainten- RELIEF IN DODD'S l(17) -
ante of Britele's superiority at sea, a •
NEP PILLS,
and the eaapansion of the wheat
i have
area British t'sh D "on
n la z 1
s z om n s
been linked together as basic Me. Nova Scotia Man After Fifteen
tors in the consideration al plaus Rears' SafYering Found a Cure
for imperial offense and defenee. T'hr'ough heading an Advertise-
The lawmakers in London, as a meat,
matte!' of policy, have allowed no-
thing to interfere with' the building Harrigan Cove, Halifax Co„ N.
up of an Bald -powerful navy, arse pifo 10 . eeifrom lamp
they have steadfastly ignored thesuf-
feringfifteenyears
protests of Englishmen who have b -ask and kidney trouble Mr.
oecrbereme that Great mead, would George K, MacDonald, a well -
be in an impossible' pofiitfun if a known resident of this place, is
war should develop with a Power'telling his neighbors of the great
fol maritime power. There were benefit he has received from using
numerous Men in England who be- ,Dodd s Kidney Pills.
lieved that in the event of an im-
portant European struggle involv-
ing Great Britain, `the hunger of
London would dictate terms of
peace." But the Admiralty were
e
convinced that the sea power of
Britain would keep all the routes
open for foodstuffs.. The lands in
the British I s g les whish might have
been devoted to the growth of mare
wheat were left as before, and the
investors of Britain by placing
their funds in the .bonds of railways
in Canada, in South Africa, in Aus-
tralia, and in New Zealand, where
vast stretches of fertile country re-
mained to be opened up encourag-
ed the production of a steady sup-
ply of foodstuffs which' might be
called upon in case of emergency.
The under -water craft of Germany
'have failed to throttle the shipping
of Great Britain. Her ships come
and go almost as they please. And
the resources of wheat lands, in
'themselves many times the area
of the British Isles ars available for
the need of the people of Britain.
, In facilitating the expansion of
the various companies in the Do-
minion during the last thirty years,
the successive governments, federal
and provincial, have enabled Can-
ada to take up the burden of a
greater production in this year of
the Empire's peril. Canada is meas-
uring up to her advertised destiny
as the "Granary of the Empire,"
or, more emphatic still, '`Bread
Basket of the World." The prophe-
cies of leaders of thought for three
decades are on the verge of fulfill-
ment. The large exportable sur-
plus of the wheat fields in Canada
will go to feed a fair. proportion of
the dependent millions of England,
and probably the warrharassed Bel-
gians as well. The railway lines
which have been constructed east
and west and north and south
throughout the country have made
her present position possible. With-
out these essential traffic arteries
the Dominion would have been
merely a helpless spectator while
the greatest war in history rumb-
ledethrough to a oonclusion. Can-
ada's most important contribution
to the cause of Empire is in wheat
and Hour and bread.
The bulk of supplies of GGanadlan
wheat for export are drawn each
year from the wheat fields of the
prairie provinces. The total sup-
ply may be computed by a study of
the carryings of the railways. Dur.
ing the crop year 1913-4, the Can-
adian Northern alone handled from
the territory served by its western
lines, 47,295,000 bushels. Estimat-
ing the increase this year at 20 per
cent., this road should haul out
approximately 56,760,000 bushels of
wheat from the provinces lying be-
tween the Great Lakes and the
Bucky Mountains. That quantity of
wheat, converted successively into
flour, and into standard loaves of
bread, would feed Greater London,
with its estimated population of 7,-
252,963, for more than fouranda
half years,
Bo long as Britain holds command
of the seas, the ,• available supply of
foodstuffs from Canada alone
should suffice to overcome the
handicap her critics maintain she
imposed upon herself by produoing
but a quariter of the wheat she an-
nually consumes.
• Rough on Tounny.
The mails from home had just
been received by a certain regi-
ment, Nob only were there letters,
but many parcels from relatives
and friends at home for lucky sol-
diers, One of the Toanmies receiv-
ed a large box addressed to him-
self, and with a triumphant yell
he rushed off to his company's lines
and gathered them around him to
sharo in the eagerly anticipated
contents of his box.
"Smokes, lads I" he cried as he
undid the wrapping. "From the
old man ; I knows it. An' there's
sure to be a bottle or two of
Scotch."
He opened the box, gave one look
at the contents and collapsed le a
heap.
"What is it?" Cried his comrades
pressing round.
"It's from ole Auntie Mame"
groaned the disappointed warrior.
'Bandages an' ointment an' embro-
cation an' splints an' a book on
''Ow to be yea' own Burgin' I"
a_
It doesn't pay to do things by
halves, such, for instance, as say-
ing
ay(ing the right tying at the wrong
time,.
"My trouble started from a
strain and a cold," Mr. MacDonald
states. "1. was troubled with stiff-
ness of the joints and cramps 10
the muscles. My sleep was broken
and unrefreshing, my limbs were
heavy and 1 had a
dragging ng
sense.
tion ac as the ro on
i s
to.
"My back ached and I suffered l
from rheumatism, when
reading. an
to
advertisement led me try Dadd's
Kidney Pills.
"I am only too pleased to say
that the treatment was suocessful,
Dodd's Kidney Pills have done me
a great deal of good."
Mr. MaeDonald's symptoms show
that he was troubled with Kidney
disease. That's why Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills cured him.
To Disinfect a Boom.
The usual method employed is to
burn sulphur in a closed -up room,
and this is perhaps as effective as
any other method. Fill any large
vessel, such as an old bucket or tin
bowl, half full of earth, and stand
it in the centre of the room on an
odd, metal tray. Lay a. piece of pa-
per on the top of the earth, and
pour onto this a pound of common
sulphur or brimstone. Close all the
windows, and push a mass of
crumpled newspapers up the chim-
neys, set the projecting edges of
the paper alight in several places,
so that it might ignite the sulphur.
Leave the room, closing the door
tightly. A mat laid on the outside
will prevept the fumes escaping
from the room. If the room iredis-
infected' after a serious illness
brown paper should be pasted over
the edges of the window and door,
and left for twelve hours after the
sulphur has burnt out. After that
time the windows should be opened
and left open for twenty-four hours.
The fumes of sulphur will destroy
the colors of most fabrics, and
therefore during any sickness of an
infectious nature nothing should be
used in the way of hangings except
such as can be desinfected after-
wards. All bedding should be sent
to a professional disinfector. The
sanitary or health authorities in a
town will generally give particu-
lars of this work, and see that it is
done. All wallpaper in a room
must be stripped off and destroyed,
a fresh paper being put on its
place. Old paper is in itself a great
cause of infection, and a new paper
should never be pasted over an old
one. This should always he remov-
ed beforehand.
A. FOOD DRINK
Which Brings Daily Enjoyment.
A lady doctor writes:
"Though busy hourly with my
own affairs, I will not deny myself
the pleasure of taking a few min-
utes to tell of the enjoyment ob-
tained daily from my morning cup
of Postum. It is a food beverage,
not a stimulant like coffee.
"I began to use Postum 8 years
ago; not because I wanted to, but
because coffee, whidh I dearly
loved, made nay nights long, weary
periods to be dreaded and unfitting
me for business during the day."
(Teo, as just as injurious as coffee,
because it, too, contains the health -
destroying drug, caffeine.)
"On adviee of a friend, I first
tried Postum, making it carefully
as suggested on the package. As I
had always used 'cream and no
sugar,' I mixed my Postum so, It
looked good, was elear and frag-
rant, and it was a pleasure to sea
the cream color it a light golden -
brown.
"Then I tasted it critically and
was pleased, yes, satisfied with my
Postural in tette and effect, and am
yet, being a constant nese of it all
these years.
"I continually assure my friends
and aoquaintances that they will
like Postum and receive benefit
from its use. I have gained weight,
can sleep and am not nervous."
Name given by Canadian Postum
Co., Windsor, Ont, Read "The
Road to Wel•Iville," in pkgs.
Postum comes in two keens ;
Regular Postum — must be well
boiled.. 16o and. 25e packages.
Instant Postum — is a soluble
powder. A teaspoonful dissolves
quickly in a cup of tot water, and
With ereamn and sugar, makes
delicious beverage Instantly. 30e
and 60o tine.
Both kinds are equally delieteus
and cost per cup about the !mane.
"There's a Reason" for Postum,
--amid by Grocers,
Leon Chester Thrasher,
American, whose death through
sinking of "Falaba" by U-28, may
cause serious complications, ac-
oarding to the position taken by
the United n ted States in itso' to
r P1Y
the German notification of a sub-
marine war zone, the destruction
ofAmei
nca if
n e1 om American
pro-
perty through enforcement of the
decree, would be looked upon as
an unfriendly act. Thrasher was a
mining engineer, and was bound
for Secondee, West Africa, when he
!net his death.
tk
A Nova Scotia Case Of
Interest to All Women
Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help
to Many People.
Halifax, N.S., Dec. 16,—When inter-
viewed at her home at 194 Argy1 r Ste
Mrs. Haveratock -Pas quite willing to
talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case.
"I was always 'blue' and depressed,
felt weak, languid and utterly unfit
for any work. My stomach was so
disordered that I had .no appetite,
What I did eat disagreed. I suffered
greatly from dizziness and sick head•
ache and feared a nervous breakdown.
Upon my druggists recommendation
I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills.
"I felt better at once. Every day I
Improved. In six weeks I was a well
woman, cured completely after differ-
ent physicians had failed to help me.
It is for this reason that I strongly
urge sufferers with stomach cr diges-
tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's
Pins."
Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the
stomach, improve digestion, strength-
en the nerves and restore debilitated
systems to health. By cleansing the
blood of long-standing impurities, by
bringing the system to a high point
of vigor, they effectually chase away
weariness, depression and disease.
Good for young cr old, for men, for
women, for children. All dealers sell
Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and
Butternut.
5
Who Can Do It?
A Boston school teacher tells this
story: 'Children," said a second-
grade teacher, "you should be able
to do everything equally well with
your left and right hands. With a
little practice you will find it so
easy to use one hand as the other."
From .the rear of the room came
the piping inquiry :
"How about putting your left
hand in the right-hand pocket of
your trousers t"
LOW FARES TO
VIA THE
CALIFORNIA EX.
WESTERN RY.
Four splendid daily trains from the
Now Passenger Terminal, Chicago to
San Francisco, Los Angeles and San
Diego. Choice of Soento and direst routes
through the beet of the west, Something
to see all the way Double track. Auto•
matin electric safety signals all the way,
Let us plan your trip and furnish folders
and full particulars. B. H. Bennett, G.A.,
46 Yongo St., Toronto, Ontario.
Except for their vanity, it would
be impossible to please some peo-
ple.
Mlnara's Liniment puree meanie.
In a cinematograph ,show two
Scotsmen were agreeably surprised
to find a cup of tea and a :biscuit
given them free by an up -to -elate
management at 4 o'clock, Half an
hour later one of them broke the si-
lence, "We've seen the pictures
noo, Tam," he said; "we might as
weal gang awe' ort." To which
Tam, aster a moment's thought, re•
plied s "Gang ye awe' gin ye want
tee! I'm .staym' tae diuner 1"
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen, --I had my leg badly hurt,
the pain was very severs and a large
swelling came above the knee, I ex-
pected it would be serious --I rubbed .it
With MINARD'S LINIMENT, *which
stopped the pain and reduced. the swel-
ling very qulolcly. I cannot speak too
highly of MINAitO'S LINIMENT,
AMOS T. SMI'Tl3.
Port Hood Island,
"Don't yon think some men look
better with long whiskers 1" asked
the critical girl. "Yes," replied
Miss Cayenne, "I do think every
man who insists on having .a large
diamond in his shirt front ought to
be compelled to wear long whis-
pers,"
MMRsrd's Unheard Curet surae, ate.
ID. 5. ISSUE 17—'19.
Best Liniment of All.
Destroys Every Pait1.
But Never Burns
"How thankful we are to get held
of such a wonderful household remedy
as Nerviline," writes Mrs. 17. P. La-
montagne from her home near We-!
iaska1n Alberta, " n this far - away
Y
se ti doctor c an, far away front a d r or
druggist, every family needs a good
supply of Raiment. Norviline is the
best of all. It destroys every pain,
but never burns. We use Nerviline
in a score of ways. If it's rheums-
tism,. aobing , u hside,
seiatiea or stiffbasknock,—yopeauin outline laugh
at them if you have lots of Nerviline
handy. Por earache, toothache or
cramps I don't think anything could
act more quickly. For a general all-
round pain remedy I can think of no-
thing more valuable and speedy to
cure than Nerviline,"
The above letter is convincing --it
tells how reliable and trusty this old-
time remedy is. Nerviline for forty
years has been a household word in
Canada. Scarcely a home in Canada
you can find without Nerviline. Every
community has It living examples of
the wonderfulcurative
properties of
Nerviline which will cure pains and
aches anywhere in the Joints or mus-
cles. It'si soothing,
penetrating, so g,
warmingand safe for youngand old
to use. Get the large 50e. family size
bottle; it's the most economical.
fimallanywhere. trial size 25o. at any dealer's
" ,p
Whooping Cough.
"The germ of whooping cough
was discovered by Bordet and Gen-
gou, two French baeterologists. It
grows in the air passages leading
to the lungs, and the presence of
ulasses of germs on the delicate lin-
ing of these passages irritates them
and causes the spasmodic cough. A
rapid succession of these coughs
catches the breath and the spasm
ends in a deep in -rush of air, the
"whoop.,,
The germs are present in great
numbers in the spray thrown out
in coughing, particularly during
the early stages of the disease, and
they aro likely to get smeared over
bhe hands of the patient while he
struggles to get his 'breath during
the coughing spasm. So the dis
ease spreads very rapidly by more
or less direct contact, the germs be-
ing passed from mouth to hand and
;from hand to month, or exchanged
1 on pencils, drinking cups and other
things which go from mouth' to
mouth.
Whooping cough is a particularly
hard disease to check because the
patient is usually up and about for
a period of many weeks and has a
much greater chance of spreading
germs than if he were isolated in
bed. Often whooping cough 1s
caught from a child in the early
stages before the whoop develops
and when people think it has only
an ordinary cough.
The only safe rule is to keep chil-
dren away from other children who
have any cough at all.
Instant
Relief
Paint on Putnam's
Drop Corn Extractor to
night, and corns feel'
better in the morn,!
ing. Magical the!
way "Pu6nain' s"'
eases the pain, destroys the roots;
kilts a corn for all time. No pain.;
Cure guaranteed. Get a 265 bottle of
"Putnam's" Extractor to -day.
"Oh, yes, my husband is an en-
thusiastic archaeologist!" said
Mrs. Moles. "And I never knew
it until yesterday! I found in his
desk some queer -looking tickets
with the inscription, 'Flyaway, 8 to
1.' And when I asked him what
they were he said they were relics
of a loab race. Isn't that interest-
ing i"
Minard's Liniment • Tor sale everSWhere,
Out
SEED POTATOES,
T' AISLY IRISH C0051410 POTATOES,
J specially seleetod and Oovoznment
Inspected Porsed. Only limited' quantity,
Pride, One Dollar per bushel f.o.b. 33ram11.
ton. Also Coungleasur's Pride. and New
Snow, two excellent now potat0rs. Pried,
Two Gallons per tuebal, Special ar'ces
Per large quantity Oash must 515011,
puny µ1l Orders. If. W. Dawson, Brainy.
ton.
NURSERY STOCK
iTRAWAEitRIEs
h. t4oaT 1 PT1OrDt
0A
SPB00157C,o9Rtal o¢OuetteaMon1P
aOll
f TRAWBliRRY PLANTS, 0001) PLANT$,
a guaran toed, Aenatar Dulilap 43,69 nor
ibousand, 82:00 for 600,•01,25 for 160, f.o•b,
Bloomllold. Leavent Orehesdo, Howdrd..
Leavens, Bloomfield, Ont,
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE,
s.»ors'r.MAILING N11WS AND JOB Or -
aces for sale in good Ontario towns.
The Most lwetul and interestingof all'-.
businesses. Full information on amplioit,
tier to Wlison Publishing Company, 11
West Adelaide St., Poroma.
BilSauBLLANEOUs.
CANGER, TUMORS, LUMPS, repo„
internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment. Write
us before too luta. Dr. Gellman Medical
00,, Limited, Collingwood, Ont
■ NO MORE DANDRUFF, DY
DANDRUOURE
Will atop your falling hair, ouzo.
tho Itching, and make your hair
glossy and
for 0 daY c st
h. dS' aimr
lene
ogh
604 Traders Bank aldR, Toronto Ont.
&meees acsored in real
ing Baby Chicks it ye..
feed them
Purina Chick Feed
Send dealer's name and
ask for particulars.
Tne Chisholm Mining
Co., Ltd.,
Dept. 6. Toronto, Ontario.
1253 DIJNDAS
TORONTO;.
POR A«�hbu(181D,RI
HAWK BICYCLES
An up-to-date 01g1, Grade
Bicycle nttedwithRotterChann,
Nero Deparl"re Coaster Bake
taut Nobs, AsTires,
nlghgrade equlpment,faclud-
ing Mudguards, 22.50
Pump, and Tools •P
Sed FREE 1915 Caialoglle,
70 ppllg�es of Bicrctc, S,,edries,
buyyour supplies from
'onusCaat
Wholesale Prices.
T. W. BOYD & SON,
21 NetreDa,eSt. Meet, AfontrealL
Still -Holds Its Own.
The antomobile people to the eon -
teary notwithstanding the best
sparking device continues to be a
sofa, with the lights turned low.
lelnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
"Nature," observed the philoso-
pher, "always tries to make com-
pensation. For instance, if one's
eyesight is lost the sense of hearing
grows more acute." "Faith," re-
plied Pat, "I believe you're right,
for I've noticed that when a man
has one leg shorter, the other is al-
ways longer."
rolls OWN DSU000ST W[LL T1ELL'k'00
ry Murine Rye laced y for Red, weals, watery
Eyes and Comfort
EYelfdsl No Smarting
beset Ere Oomforl write for BookCo.,Rye
by moUMarine ides Eye Remedy o., Oticagw
"Poor Jim was always Such -a
considerate husband, mum." "C:on-
aiderabe I Thy, the brute used to
beat you." "True, mum; 'but he
never bit me where the marks could
be seen by the neighbors, mum."
Canoes, Skiffs„ Mot.'r
THE PETERBOROUGH LINE.
If any canoe can give you satisfaction, it is a "PETERBOROUGH."
Always and ever the acme of service, model, strength and fin-
ish. Over fifty styles and sizes. Write for catalogue, The latest canoe
is the Peterborough canvas covered. Ask for illustrated folder. Skiffs
for the popular Outboard Motors. Powfr Launches, all sizes and pow•
ere. Get folders telling all about these.
T1IE PETERITOROUGft CAME COMPANY, LIMfI'EP,
PETERBOROUGH, ONT.
oats
"d�ersl e n " V Bottom $5560
tow
Motor Boat
Freight Prepaid to any Railway Statiou in
Ontario. Length 15 Ft.,Beam 8 p'4. 9 In.,
bepth 1 Pb. 6 to, ANY MOTOR PITS.
Speaiileation No, et Erving engine prices on request. Got our quotations
ou—""rhe Penetang Line'" Cominertial and Pleasure Lautuohae. HOW
boats and Canoes.
THE Gl=DI4IIY i3OAT CO., LIMITED, P1 TANG. CAN.