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The Brussels Post, 1915-5-13, Page 3Raising 500 Pullets at a eoSt oI $25. American S. Snaith This may n 1xe done w91 poncern writer h Buff Leghorn ears and bythet d a ohiGlc by the fawn es. It bas ten yewrs $ GhiGks and February, r ,yearst I wonderful ones her words wee e�gga raise chicks, the three e�gotto them, and the pullet' r, ;and h and ea on; winter layers, this her to prod applies breed from good co cation th birds and b ]]ustration Oats for moat any tuber you good stook a y will g be a profit go in with oma have ab r own. to do, is for or sn 1,�0' egg charged age you leave Any 3,000 -eggs ,000.. , have had d 2,200 oh you are hatched on the ha he first of gave them •g the farm nil lose 400 developed, bring h get &90 you are Docker market ,pr which will bring fifty of $2 each figure fif i. 25 for the surplus are 500 pullets you are pass right from the say that worst of this are will trytoh s9 They summer to n,b ages, and run Give him full that around, 500 chicks cost him? least save 11 set one eggs under three and sixty So she her most spring, when of eggs should at old hen a ed under 1d make n eggs at to Farmer $ frena, aan sure that amount chicles. a method and I have are well�to m for me and they they 'would people go and pay o nob get an this plan ]s not. exn on a much by the nam aanrlton, le Comb B t year and for the sail this over Hold your Web your oh anti May e 500 pullets. and 'brno metier you iris, and beat bred to at least' $ you have, Writing in the Poultry Journal, M. F. of Hamil- ton, Ohio, says : seem im- possible but it oaand even at less cost, if ed hove good leek, The as bred Single Oorrib Bu s for the pact sixteen y hatched them each year thousands and never raise himself, but hag done it i fawners near bent on the lralybeen my plan for the last to lsatoh out thousande o n Deeem- ber, ranuary ary, and by doing this for have de- veloped a wond r laying strain, or in of , I have birds that prod the year around. If you s,lby the est in Dole thousands moths, you harygeb winter eggs and lots of . "like be. gets like," le s mother, her grandmother, her great grandmother, have all been good you can readily eee that pullet has the blood :back of produce eggs in cold -weather. The same thing,to allow birds. I never birds unless they aro color, type, etc. I .simply m e blood lines of my heir egg qualties as an i how to produce 500 put $25. You can do thie with ]treed of birds, but remember must give the farmers and prove to them that bhe et some- thing that will bo them or they will" not t -you, for most all of them bunch of mongrels of their The firet thing to pur- chase an incuiba cubatore, that - will hold 1,000. This should• nob be -ch against, your 500 pullets, for it to use in years to come good breed- er will eell'you- for $225. This, is $76 kr 1,000. for- in- stance, that you bad luck" and only hatched inks, los- ing 800 eggs. Nowgive the ohieks as they , to good farmers to raise halves, you take your half t October. Remember you em 2,200 chicks. Supposin farmers have some bad luck a of the plucks; fully de ready to lazy-w'i'ton yea brihome. Out of the 1,800,yotf'" ng birds. If 400 of them els, they can be sold at ice, fifty cents each, you $200. At least the cocker- els should bring as breed- ers, but I only ty cents each for them al By paying $2 3,000 eggs and selling your cockerels kr $200, therefine pullets left and the 500 only stand you $25. Nowready for the poultry bust and will make 'money f start. I think I hear you the farm- er will get the deal, bub there you wrong. How' ninny farmers hatch and raise 500 chioln usually hatch chicks all ng, hav- ing them differs and the large ones kill over the small ones. 500, all of ane age, good, blooded stook, show birds and birdsare bred to lay the year Say the farmer hatchesof his own, what will it He will have to set at my hens and each hen -will week be- fore he places her and it will take her weeks to hatch bhe chicks days to raise the chicks. has lost ninety days of valuable time in the any old hen will lay lobsand during ninety days he least get 60 eggs from the and fifteen eggs that he plan her when she was set, would total of 75 eggs. Thetwo cents would bring Mr. 1,60 and by using seventyhe would lase $105, and 1be would not pay out near unt for teed for your 500 I have used this for years with the learners ve them on my staff that -do, that. have raised the on the halves for years, make money by it, ornobkeep it up. So many into the poultry business oust money all year and doanything in return. Follow and you can not lose. It ,gierated and can be done larger seek, A farmer a of Na- than Bryant,:H Ohio, 'rais- ed over 500,5iet Buff Leg - horns for me las all his fled cost him re flock was $69, Think • and get in the businees. ar job in bhe oily and hat ides out in March, April and next fall you will 'have ts. The flesh of next purchase More innubetora clers end the following mummer can have a fioolC of G 000 bif you start with tie lay stock you should olear 2.00 on every hen that NEW STRENGTH IN THE SPRING Nature Needs Aid in Making New Health-Gi'ing Mood In the spring the sys'tean needs a *nig. To be healthy you must have new blood, just as the trees mush have new sup to renssv their 'vital- ity. Nature deanaede it, and with- out ithout this new blood you will feel weak and languid. You nary have twinges of rheumatism or the sharp stabbing pains of neuralgia, Often there are disfiguring pimples or eruptions on the skin. In other eases there is merely a feeling of tiredness and a variable appetite. Any of these are •signs that the. blood is out yf order--thab the in- door We of winter has lessened your vitality. What you need in spring is a tonic medicine to put you right, and in all the world of medicine theme is no tonic can equaal Dr. Williams' Pinsk Pills. These pills actually make new rich, red blood—your greatest need in spring. iihms new blood drives out the seeds of disease and makes easily tired men, women and chil- dren bright, active . and strong. Miss Edith. Brousceaau, Savona, B. 0., says: --"I was as pale as a ghost, suffered from headaches-, se- vere palpitation of the heart at the slightest exeation, I had little or no appetite and seemed to be drift- ing into a decline. I was attend- ing High School- iii Vancouver at the time, and the doctor advised me to stop. T did so and took his treatment kr some time, but it did not help nue in bhe least. Upon the advice of a friend I began tak- ing Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and in e very *orb time they gave roe back complete 'health, and enabled me to resume my studies. I have enjoyed the best of health since, and owe it all to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." These Pills are sold by all medi- cine dealers or cam be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine. Co., Brockville, Ont, SIR HIRAM MAXIM. A Chronic Inventor of Everything froni Guns to Mousetraps. Sir Hiram Maxim describes him- self as a chronic inventor. It may be added that he is the most prac- tical' of inventors, a man who can use his hands as well as his brain. He began young. Before he was any age 'at all, -an expert ix: geography, he made a simple in- strument which enabled him to de- tesmine latitude. At fourteen years and scene months, working eight 'hours iii the moaning and an- other eight in the afternoon, he was turning out wheel-barrows—the best hit hie -employer had seen. An- other job at thio period was making axle -trees of seasoned rock maple plank as 'hard as horn. Then came the first invention proper, an en- gine of destruction by no means as formidable as the famous quick - firer 1 Tp be frank, it was a mauve - trap, 'and mightily ingenious. The trouble with the ordinary trap was that, when it had caught one mouse, it could not Catch another until the first -had been taken out. Young Maxim's device would wind up like a .aa1ook, and set itself e great number of times. Five miee formed the first catch. The trap was expensive, towevem, so it yield- ed place to something cheaper and even more curious. "I made one," Sir Hiram tells in his autobiogra- phy, "that required no culled sprang, the mouse himself doing all the work, His moasesihip walked in, and touching the bait, shut himself in; this frightened' him; he would attempt to eseape, and did escape into a man cage, but in doing eo he set the trap for the next customer, and so ou." A little while, and he made the' first cated blackboard, presenting a bill foe twenty-four shillings and re- ceiving five 1 • Various Inventions. From wood Sir Hiram turned to metal. He began by cleaning brass castings; then he was promoted to a lathe on rough cast-iron work. And so to brass—making valves and blow -off cocks far boilers. Next he was put to dismantling an automa- tic gas-ma•cbmne and turning out working drawings of it, At the same tame hal was a coppersmith when necemsary. Also, he, pant bed stupes on lathes, which was a good deal easier, if less exciting, than painting landscapes on the dash- boards of sleighs --one of his earli- est tastes, There followed such things as a patent automatic gas madhine, a steam trap, a locomo- tive headiig+ht for gas instead of oil, are lamps, dymarm,o-electrical ma- elrines, and, very nearly and by ac- cident, diamonds I Thus his pro- gress until, in August, 1881, he went to London, Vary wean after he anode his first. drawing of an automatic gnn, that weapon which was to develop into the world-famous Maxim. Many were sceptical. To begin with, he found he could fire rather more tem ten cartridges a second,' using, a belt feed, the gun loading and firing itself by eeeegy derived from the recoil. Still there were unbe- lievers. They were speedily ei- lenoed, for the wen .n• wa phwved to fire 060 shots a . , tubed The gun wtidh was its 6uooaeeoz Wast much smaabler, cheaper, sad lighter, and became the' standard for the world,, Every experiment added td'iits'v.,1.- 110, Demonstrations were given in varioue oountrles. There were other guns, too, including the Pom-Poon of South African war mernoxy, In Switzeliland iris machine gun, in action against a dummy battery ab a range of twelve hundred metres•,, "teehnacally kilned three-quarters of the men and horse's" Ira slightly lees than one minute! Later, the German Emperor said of the Max- ine, which ,had put its every shot in the bull's eyes of a target: That is the gun—theme is 00 ether." The Peen -porn, by the way, interested Sir Hiram Maxim. vastly Li -Hung -Chang, who made a reni,aslc which is of conedderable in- terest today,, when war is costing so many millions. "This gun," he said, refemring to the expenditure on cartridges, "fires altogether too fast for China" (850 per minute). Experiments with Powder. Meantime, Sir Hiram; had turned his knowledge and his common sense to powdema, and invented, for example, a 'smokeless powder, to say nothing of re-diiscaverin'g in England that new and_powerful explosive first diseovemed in France and. called Me]dnite. Next, he pa- tented a torpedo to be propel through the air, inventing a gun to throw the torpedo eo that it would strike the water only a few feet from its target. Other inventions included a coffee roaster, a wheat - and -coffee, and, of course, a flying machine. CROSS, SICKLY BABIES Mrs. Ohas. E. White, Waterford, N.S., writes :—"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for both my babies and find them excellent. My baby girl was cross and sickly, but after giving her the Tablets she became strong, healthy and happy." Baby's. Own Tablets never fail to make sickly chdddeen well .and the mother can give iihem to her children with absolute safety. They are guaran- teed by a government analyst to be free from injurioue drugs. The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box fromTlho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brook- ville, Ont. MUST DISINFECT WA1IZONE. Ground to be Saturated With Linie Over Regions Affected. "Seven months after bhe begin- ning of the retreat of the Ger- mans," whys Dr. Doizy, deputy for the department of the Ardennes, "unburied dead are being discover- ed on the battlefield of bhe Marne. In the centre of a 'village on the banks of the Marne, where the sanitary department was clearing away the debris, ..they 'brought to light a body that vas beyond identi- fication either as 'Grennan or French. "Hundreds, if not ,thousands, of bodies are supposed to be ]lying more or less submerged in the Saint Gond marshes where the Prussian Guard was thrown'baok; they had neither the time nor the means to save those who fell there," In order to avoid ,the pestilential' effects of warm weather; on these unburied corpse's, Dr. Doizy thinks it will be necessary to explore the entire swamp region with ;the ,aid of dogs. Bodies are also being found ecu- stanbly under +brush, in ditches and abandoned trenches. They are found not only in ditches, trenchee, and excavations made by shells, but in wells, springs, and alil the little streevuis of the region. In many places where it was possible for theme to bury their dead they were insufficiently covered with earth, and were frequently burned in too close proximity to sources of water supply. These oondn'tone exist over a zone 250 miles long, and from 10 to 40 miles wide, with a total' of from 5,000 to 6,000 square miles of ground, a considerable pant of which required ,thorough disinfec- tion to prevent the oubbreak of epi- deanioe. Besides the bodies of men there were in this zone thousands of bodies of animals, part of there lrill.ed by sbell fire and many of them dead from etarveution, ltavdng boon abandoned by ilse fleeing Popullatiotte They Helped Hill and His Friend 'RAT IS WRY R. A.- CLARK RE.COMIIII.NDS DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. 'Western Man Tells Why Dodd's Kidney .bills Are So Popular on the Pruirfes. Homeg'leni, Alberta, Mail' bid (Special).—Just why Dodd's Kid- ney Pills are so ,popular on ilio pramrles ws shown by the statement of Mr, H. A. Clark, a well-known resident of this place, Since I came West, Mr. Clark Mates, "I was often troubled with nay stomach and back, Finally I decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills and bofcre I had taken more than hall a box I was so much benefitted that I recommended them to a friend. He ailso found theme a benefit. I am Still taking Dodd's Kidney Pills. I would not baw ithomt them. In new countries bad water is one of the difficulties settletss have to fight and bad water makes its first attack on the kidneys,. To resist this attack the Kidneys mast be stimulated and strengthened. In other words the Kidneys need Dodd's Kidney Pills, By giving the Kidneys the help they naked people get new health, and Dodd's Kidney Pills add to their popularity. A GUIDE TO PURCHASERS. An Expert Opinion on the Use of Newspapers. Whenever business has called me to a city or town where I could get in touch with local ,automobile con- ditions in the last year or two I have been struck by the interest of the prospeettve buyer in the Me- chanism of the ear be is inspeeting, says a representative of a large automobile concern. This, con- trary to the pretty general belief that cars are bought on size and looks cagy. It is this eager desire - for exact knowledge which hard the largest influence incausiaig us to`. prepare a series of advertisements, dealing with the mechanical "fen tures of our oars. We decided to use these advertisements in news- papers because we regard them as the medium that is immediately re- sponsive. The time has 'gone by when an automobile is purchased merely be- enuse it is good looking. Once on a time the man about to buy an autoenobile loaked"only et the hoes of the hood, :to -day he is vitally and intelligently interested in what lies under the hood. Since the work of the advertising department is to tell tihe public what it wants to know and what it should know about automobiles in order to purobase intelingemtly, naturally we are keen to get our story as quickly as possible to the public. Having decided to give what one might call an education in the mechanical features of our car, we are using the newspapers because we can keep our hands on the pulse of the public interest and amplify any of these talks almost in a day if we find there are reasons for doing so because of local con- ditions in any part of the country. In these mechanical advertise- ments we brave a comprehensive guide to the machine. With their drawings they give the owner an understanding of the details of construction and operation. 5 IN A. SHADOW Tea Drinker Feared Paralysis. Steady use of either tea or coffee often produces alarming symptoms, as the poison (caffeine) contained, in these beverages acts with more potency in some persons than in others., "I was never a coffee drinker," writes a lady, "but a tea drinker. I was very nervous, had frequent spells of sick headache and hearb trouble, and was subject at times to ,severe attacks of bilious` colic. "No end of sleepless nights— would ,have spells at night when my right side would get numb and.tin- gle like a thousand areedles were pricking my flesh. At ,times I could hardly put my tongue out of my mouth and my right eye and eau were affected. "The doctors told me to quit using tea, but I thought I could not live without it—Haat it was my only stay. I had been a tea drinker for twenty-five years; was under the doc"Ator'sbout caresix mtfoonths r fifteaengo, , I finally quit teat and coamneneed to drink Postum. "I 'leave never hard one apeli of sick -headaches since and only one light attack of bilious colic. Have quit having those numb spells at night, aleop well and any heart is getting stronger all the time." Name 'given by Oanadian Postum Co,, Windsor, Ont, Read "Thr Road to Wallvilde," in pkgs. Postum comes in two forrms: Postum Cereal—the original form —must bo ,boiled, 15e and 25e packages. Instant Postnnt—,a eoluble pow- der—dissolves quickly in a cup of liot water and, with or+ealn and su- gar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 30c and 50c 'tit's. Both kinds ad's, 'eituallty delicious and cost about the steno per eup, "There's a Reason" for Postum. --sold by Grocers. Why Glasses Are Chilled Tunt'blere. We eabl our drinking glasses ttvrnbler». But have you ever thought how wo eamhe to use the name ;Our glasses differ a great deal from elle driekiog vessel to which the name was first supplied. In old- en time they were made of metal or: wood, and from their neeulias shape seemed 40 have served as re- minders to "pass the bottle." They were called "tusnibiers," says one authority, because they could not be set" down• except on the side when empty. Another .author- ity contends they derived their name frown their original shape, rounded at the bottom, so•that they tumbled ever unless they were mire - fully set down. Nantes Usurped by Women. Mary is not by any means the only name that has been borne by men and women alike, writes a cor- respondent of tba London Ohron- iole who has dipped into our old parish and other registers, Sir Patience Ward Waa Load, Mayos of n 1 80 a ]' don in 6 Dv S iffhtan is Tec' , mentioned in a will of the six- teenth century and Groes Hardwire was an old landowner in America. As to mato flamers usurped by the ladies, matinees occur of feminine Philips and Georges, and in one ease a daughter was duly baptized Noah. A goddaughter of the Duke of Wellington wars named Arthur in his ;honor, and in Effingham Church theme is a ntoa,ument to Timothy, wide of Richard Mabanke. d' Nagle "Nerviline" Ends Stiff Neck, Lumbago Any Curable Muscular or Joint Pain is instantly Relieved by Nerviline. GET TRIAL BOTTLE TO -DAY You don't have to wait all day to get the kink out of a stiff neck if you rub on Nerviline. And you dont need :to go around complaining about lum- bago any more. You can rub such ,things away -very quickly with Meryl - am. It's the grandest liniment, the quickest to penetrate, the speediest to -ease muscular pain of any kind. One ;twenty-five cent trial bottle of Nerviline will more any attack•of lum- bago or lame back. This has been proved a thousand times just as it was in the ease of Mrs. b, . J. Grayden, of Caledonia, who writes:— "r wouldn't think of going to bed with- out knowing we had Nerviline in the house. I have used It for twenty odd years and appreciate its value as a family remedy more and more every day. If any of the children gets a stiff neck, Nerviline, cures quickly. If it Is earache, toothache, cold on the chest, sore.ihroat, Nervillne is always my standby, My husband once cured himself of a frightful attack of lum- bago by Nerviline, and for a hundred ailments that turn up in a large fam- ily Nerviline Is by far the best thing to have about you." 5 Respectable Parents. Those who know .the Prince of Wales intionately say that he is as fond of a joke now as he was when be was a'little boy, and in his nur- sery days his quaint sayings were proverbial in the royal family. The late King Edward, says Pearsan's Weekly, used to tell with great gus- to the following story. The King asked little Prince Eddie what part of history he was studying. -' "All about Perkin Warbeck," re- plied His Royal Highness. "And who was hal" inquired His Majesty anxious to test his grand- son's knowledge. "Oh," answered the prince, "he pretended he was tae, son of a king, but he wasn't. He was the sin of respectable parents." In Diftioultirs. "Hoax's the family?" a fond par- ent suras asked. "Well, any children are at a dif- ficult age new." "Difficult? Why, they've all passed the measles and ,teething stage, have they not?" "Long ago. But you don't know a father's troubles. My children ars at the age where, if I useslaag, my wife saps I'm setting a had ex- ample; and if I speak correctly the kids think I'm a back number. Which would you do 1" SSinarS+a Liniment Luiaberman's Friend. War and Literature. Im Englaud sevedutl well-known novelists have apparently abandon- ed the writing of romances, at least temporarily, for the topical attraction of war article's, says the London Standard. H, •. Wells, Arnold Beane* and Jerome K. Jerome are the best known victims of the epideanic. The ,same thing is occurring in France. M. Maumee Seises writes almost every day in the Echo de Paris, and even the poet Jean Bddhepin composes gwt ish ides in . admiration of the Br miner/Pe Liniment need b9 Pltyaielans. Man proposes --]but, all the same, the world is :full of bachelors, Wild-eyed ,Oustonier—"I want- a quar'ber'S worhh of fearlb•olic acid." Assistant --"This is tot a dhesniet's, but we have—oi—a fine lino of ropes, reveltverc,.and rezone." VD. 6. ISSUE 19—'15 ;Low a Sick Woman Can Regain Health READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY, "Por years 1 was thin and delicate. ,l lost color and was molly tired' a yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my feelings, but because 1 thought my skin would never look Mee again I grew despondent. Then: my appetite Palled. I grew very weak. Various remedies, pine, tonics and tablets I tried without permanent benefit, A visit to my sister put into my hands a box of Dr. Hamilton's Pills, She Placed reliance upon them and now Mat they have made me a well woman 1 would not be without them whatever they might cost. I found Dr. 13ami1- ton's Pills by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman's nature. They never once griped me, yet they estab- liehed regularity. My appetite grew keen—my blood red and pure—heavy rings under my eyes disappeared and to -day my skin is as clear and un- wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr, Hamilton's Pills did it ail." The above straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y Todd wifeof a well- known miller In Rogersville, rsville, is proof sufficient that pr Hamilton's Pills are a wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton's, 26e. per box. A11 dealers or The Catarrh - ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. N CINDERELLA'S SLIPPERS. Not Glass, but Little Gray Shoes with Fur Around the Top. Mies Cecile Hugon, lecturer in French iterature to the Oxford So- ciety for Women's Idueatian, Lon - den, a000rding to the Post, recent- ly read a papem in answer to the question, 'Should fairy tales be told to children1" Miss Hagen in a •sketch of the his- tory of fairy tales, in which elm iri- eludes all tales of magic and su- pernatural beings, said they were probably infinitely older than the age of Job or the invention of the potter's wheel. Incidentally she suggested that the "gime slipper') of Oindemelle, at once so puzzling and captivating a detail -of the story to English .ohildrem, is due to a mistranslation of the Frsnoh of Penra,ult. Perrault wrote not "coitleir ele vet -rel" but ""'•eoulier de vadr," "vair" being a kind of fur. We may be sure, said Miss Hugon, that Oindeeellia. ware little gray shoes with fur round the top and had never heard of glass slippers. A Name for Every Letter. The longest name ever inflicted on am English child mast surely be that of en unfortunate born at Derby in 1852, upon whom her par - nets bestowed a name for every letter of the a,Iphabet, says the London Ohsonicle, Anna Bertha Cecilia Diana Emily Fanny Ger- trude Hypatia Inez Jane Kate Louise Maude Nora; I will cease the infliction till it tames to Zeus! The Rev, Ralph Lyomel Tolle - merle was another with a craze for long names, and baptized his eldest son Lyulph Yderailo Odin Nestor regbsrt Leonel Toedmag .Hugh BsS- henwyse Saxon Este Orme Cromwell Nevil Dysart Plantagenet. Applied in Corns 5 seconds CuredSore, blistering feet Yrom cornpinchad toes can be cured SwayalithaitCdrakwin by Putnam's Ex- tractor in 24 hatrrn."Putnam's" soothesg pain, eases instant• iy, makes the feet feel good at once. Get a 25c. bottle of "Putnani's to -day, q' Never Caught. Waiter—Oh, yes sir—the fish is quite fresh. It was eaught this morning. Soldier—Go on 1—that was never caught—it gave itself up 1 SEEP POTpTOSO. Ant x311915 061113144R POTATOES specially selected and Govornprpof inspected for seed. Only limited quantity, Price, Ono Dollar per bushel f,o.b. Dramp• ton, Also Ocenoissour'a Pride and New Snow, two excellent now potatoes, Price, Two Dollars per bushel. Special prose for large Quantity. Oaeh ;gust Worn. parry ,alt ordere, 31, W. Dawoou, Dratap. ton. NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE, IioFITabtewwING NEWS AND .7013 OP. flees for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of 1'11 businesses. Fun information on applica- tion to Wilson Putlisll,ing Oompasy, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. BUFF ORPINGTONS, JOOICI RUPP 0It3�ING'PONB--WJNNJ5R6 World's beet shows, Guaranteed zero weather layers, Baby.obleleI, $2.00,. -Set- tinge, half -'prion, $6—$1e. L^. OctW.oy, Weston, Ont. sxsoELxaioaovs. CANCEiR, Ta7MOR8, LUMPS, ETC,. Internal and externalcared with- out pain by our Home treatment, Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medics; • Co,. Limited, Collingwood, Ont, NO MORE DANDRUFF. DANDRU UR Will clop your falling hair, euro the itching, and make your hair glossy and smooth. Semple enough tor 3 days, postpaid, 15 cents. 0a Traders Bank Bldg„ Toronto Ont, s Essomasisustattannummasustai t25 DliNi TORONTO FOR tettadl DQON* Large Vegetables, An Easterner who bad bought a farm in California had'beerd of his neighlbo•r'e talent for raising large potatoes, $c sent his farmhand over to get at hundred pounds. "Yon go borne," answered the talented fanner to the messenger, "and tell your boss that I won't cut a potalbo fax anyone 1" YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Kathie Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated ttyelide; No Smarting by mail nzurineEyeRemedy 0o oitcgo. Rooster or Pullet? "Willie, what part of•.speecli is an eggs" "A noun, miss." "Yes ; now what .gender l" "Can't say till it's hatched." A train of thought is often wreck- ed in a brain storms. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,—Your :KINARD'S LTN- IMISNT is our remedy for sore throat. colds and all ordinary ailments. It never tails to relieve and cure promptly. CHAS. W13OOT1IIN. Port Mulgravo. Different. Crawford—Is that book of the war written by an eye -witness? Crabsltaw—No ; by e war corres- pondent. .$ k for Minard's and take no other. If the world ewes us a living, why not pull off our coats and proceed to collect it? Seep Minaret's liniment in the house. Canoes1 Ski s of is Boats 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, Power Launchas, all sizes and pow - ere. Get folders telling all about these. THE PETERBOROUGH cgtioE COfl'PAef9, I.IMITEP, PETERBOROUGH, ONT. "Overotern" I/ Bottom $550u Motor Boat Freight Ptapadd• to any Railway Station in Ontario, Length 15 VC, Beam 8 Ft. 9 I'n.,' Depth 1 Pt, 6 In, ANT MIOTOk. FITS. •Speottioation Na 28 g'lvil% engine prices on request, Get our quotations, ee—"The Penetang tine" dammarofal and Pleasure Launches, Bow, boats and Canoes, THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, P] iNETAN'G, CAN.