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The Clinton New Era, 1915-02-04, Page 6THE CLINTON NEW ER ti Thdrsday, Peleruary 4th, I915. I �►ft44 6 Ptit fit4tttiiPitiiiftt44i?+4f4hf144f4f14fff41fPPPPrPi41 fiwiftff*44i4i+4+4144fPOPNPPPlP4tPPPPPPl�PPfttf4ftif4ff4444iN444fi14X, NN�44ftt i 4ttiti�titfl;iPPPP PPPPP PPPPPP PPP#P#N ,rFARME A HALF PAGE S +.PNP....ist44N4Pittt•NNP/PNP4••••••N�1•••4P•PN••••••••••• b44Ntttii4titti+4111th'.. 4f4-0?4+444/f4M ti414ii44fONP1lP�1/PP1P1111P/P4► 1P/111PP11P1Pi4i/Y�'� vv. a.iiPPf.•P/11111PP1P1111 Children Cry far Fletcher's The h'txfed.You IIavo Always Doaglbt,.wad which has been in use for over CO yea -s, has borne the signature of Mad has been made under his perms �� conal supervision since itstinfancy. Gy'relres , /2uCG.fr/4 Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good '2 are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and. Children—Experience against Experiment. What is C .ST ' NA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- gor ic, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it lises been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, 'Wind Colic, ail Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. st regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving, healthy and natural sleep. The Chiidren'$ Panacea—The Mother's Friend. .GENU iE Ct .STF AL1, T'AM'S Bears the Signature of 1 In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always' Bought STH I: CENTAUR COMPANY, NCW YORK CITY, POULTRY an EGGS SEASON FOR BROILERS. Demand par -i,Td"• Wo ilaaanChickens Coes in Whiter 5nd''SdPing. The ,broiler season in New York city opens.inracttcelly ip Gel ruary.- Prices impriipe„th ifarch and reachlligb war ter mark by April, writes M. K. Boyer in the New York Sun. Thereis'.aftee that each • month a gradual decline un. til August, when' the market'becomes When winter snows ,cover. the hens' dusting places a dust bath near•• -a sunny --window -should-be provide&ionalice wI1L.mnitlply-s-A°... box 3 by 4 feet is large enough for forty hens, and road dust is the best for the purpose. Ashes kill Jibe, but bleach yellow legs, and Spon plumage. Lime, sulphur, hellebore and louse powder mixed w�jth-earth in the box are simply Waste. They lose their strength Id the mixture, affect the hen's re- . organs and often make the bath soobnoxious that hens Will not enter it. I All Around The Farm 41144.64444-14 4+2444.84144 FOR POULTRY BREEDING. 'European War .Offers. Great Oppor• tunity, Says Expert. That the European war offers great oppolltunity fpr American poultry breeders to extend' the scope of their business Ls the opinlou of T. E. auisen• berry, director of the Missouri state poultry experiment statiom who says: "There is no reason for good poul- trymen to be alarmed because of the present situation which we are facing on account of the European war or the high price of feeds. The man who has a good laying strain of pure bred poul- try is going to get enough eggs this whiter to pay Ills feed and labor bilis and net bin; a nice profit. Neither will plump, for the situ urn teuueuey or the chick is to use all nutrimeht for growth and development. The main point is to grow them rapidly. Some broiler raisers are finding great virtue in cottonseed meal. It is claimed that, while it does not fatten, it puts on flesh. The breast of the broiler at ten weeks old, it is said. will be as plump as a partridge's it a small amount of the cottonseed meal Is given daily. One of tbe most practical broiler ex- perts the nest day gives nothing but wheat bran to peck at. The next day rolled oats are given, and this Is contin- ued,until the chicks are ten days old, keeping dry bran, charcoal and fine oyster shell by them all the time. The chicks are fed every two hours all they will eat up clean. After ten days be feeds a moist mash in the morning and 'evening composed of cornmeal, mid- dlings, bran and ground oats, with meat scraps in proportion to the age of the chicks. It is best to give these parts by weight. At noon he feeds wheat or cracked corn and keeps green stuff by them, so they can eat all they want, until the last two weeks. n fluctuating. During the, last three months of the year there is little call for broilers. Aehieken ceases ro beg brdfler'after 1t 4xceeds two Pounds fn weight, dressed. It then eiterdea.Chiss lendien as Spring chicken The general de- mand is for birds that will not` exceed one I. and one-half pounds, dressed. Manch usually calls for one and one- quailter pounds, April for one and`one- balf and May for one and one-quarter to two pounds. The brdilerlfor the winter: market must be attractive loo,)ring to command a ready tale "'at giodyii prides. Plump chickens, neatly dressed, area from pin feathers with pnsoilei1 skin and with perfectly, clean legs, [`will find a ready sale while poor, sttifk, goes begging. A fat broiler is a rarity: The best ; tbat esn'he done, general%, is to hate them EVERY WOR1AN is interested and should know about the wonderful Whirling Spray Ifieniche Ask your.. druggist for it. IP he cannot supply the MARVEL, accept no •- • ow t, but send stamp for Illus- trate,: x,o.-see . 'gig hl'1 ”7/L i I d It vacua 1.1 to !ditarWIN directions invaluable tolail qa WINDSOR SUPPLY rCanada. 0 d andeot, . enerui Agents or area a, r.. DON'T PASTURE CORNSTALKS. ".As death from cornstalk dis• ease is generally sudden and there is little 'opportunity for treatment," says a government Publication, "animals should not be twined into a field with stand- ing stalks." There are good reasons aside from l'oas by this mysterious dis- ease why the stalks should not be fed off in the field, and..for reason, 1f for no other, we join in the advice. The feeding of standing stalks is usually safe, but every man who practices it runs the risk of finding dead in ;his yards valuable cattle which were ready to helpin making profits the day before. Nobody seems to know just what there is which occasionally gets into a fleld of stalks that is deadly polsdn to cattle But wed do know that if the stalks are cut at the proper time for mak- ing fodder, cured and removed from the field the danger is avoided. Stalks fed In the barnyard are safe and better than stalks fed in the field because, they are cut when all the feeding value is in them, or should be. Stalks shred- ded and fed in the barn or yard are better yet because the stalks themselves will be eaten. Stalks made into silage at the proper time are better still, because they will not deteriorate on the ap- proach of spring. They are juicy and palatable to the stock and will be eaten up clean. In these days of silos, rather low priced shredders and cutters and efficient engines, every man should try to avoid both waste and cornstalk.disease by feeding his corn in the most efficient way.—Farm and Fireside. Feeding Alfalfa to Horses. Alfalfa is a splendid horse feed, but must be fed with judgment and care. Because of its palatability mature horses are likely to eat too much alfal- fa if permitted to have free access to it. The average farm horse tabard work Is allowed to eat much more alfalfa and other roughage than he really needs to maintain his weight. One pound of alfalfa or other hay and about one and one-quarter pounds of grain per day for each 100 pounds ,of the horse's weight snake a good ra- tion for the working horse. • Horses like alfalfa stems. Refuse from the cattle racks is very accepta- ble to horses. ....Feed mature horses first and second smutting alfalfa, which is free from mold and. dust Never feed wet alfalfa hayto horses. A sudden change of feed deranges the horse's digestive system. i; Horses accustomed to alfalfa, as 'a regular part of their ration are seldom troubled from its use.-Extenslon Bul- letin 28, Nebraska Experiment Station. FALL GARDEN WORK. FLOOR OF Burr BOORS. the man who has a good strain of pure breed exhibition poultry suffer, because good breeding stock and eggs in 1915 are going to be scarce and high. We believe that eggs will be higher this winter than ever before. So the good poultryman need not be alarmed. On the other hand, we believe this is real- ly the poultryman's opportunity. But the fellow who will suffer is the man who has scrub poultry that has been bred neither for eggs nor exhibition. "When times get hard br the price of other food products advance, as is shown by the past history of the In. dustry, thousands of shop men. clerks, mechanics and laboring men in cities and small towns turn to poultry as a side line to help pay the 'high cost of living.' It is certain to be so again. However, because of this uneasiness, there is great danger of many fine flocks. which it has taken yenrs to breed and perfect, being sacrificed this fall and winter. This war is causing feed to advance in -price, but it will also cause eggs, poultry and practical• ly all other food products to advance In proportion. The question with you ought to be how to get the egg. There will be a great demand next season for eggs and stock for breeding pur- poses. Our advice Is not to decrease your flock in size so that your business will be crippled this winter or -next season." It is usually safe to leave sweet po- tatoes in the ground until the vines are killed by frost, but they should be' dug as soon after that as possible. If they are to be stored the tubers should lie in the sun a few hours to dry oft before they are picked up. They should be handled carefuily'at all stages to prevent bruising. Look at the winter blooming bulbs whicb are put away in November to root. They may need water, and they should be in the dark and in a cool place. In a cold frame outdoors is an ideal place for them. The land that was plowed in the fall for next year's garden will work up better than that that must be plow- ed in the spring. Time spent le cleaning up an °relined in the fall of tbe year will be amply rewarded with better and cleaner fruit the next season. As peon as the !eaves fall and a few sharp freezes ripen the new wood we may commence to prune fruit and shade trees. Ilse tbe larger limbs pruned from the' orchard, for wood, the smaller ones as a plug to stop that wash in 1 the ,field or meadow. 0 0 0 c C. 0 0 0000000000000000000C,O000- A Guaranteed il1edieine For Little Ones. Baby's Own Tablets are a good medicine for Lttle ors They are guaranteed by a government unaly et to be absolutely free from the "soothing"ocalleds mixtures. Tand narcotics 'found inhey cannot possibly do'haam-they always cllu good,: Once ,t mother has '. given t hem '.0 hem :little ones the will use no other medi- cine, e:',b .:erning (them 1 Mrs, Jos.. Deer,siers, St, Alphonse, Que. says; "Baby's Own Tablets saved my little ...one's life when l e w is suffering from worms and I would rot be - without them:' The Tab- lets are sold by all medicine dam' ers or by mail. at '1' cents a box from 'Phe Dr. illiams'rale diciue )3UTTER WRAIPPERS. Pure Vegetable Parchment, print ed in accordance with the'require meets 01 the law. NERVES WERE BA® Hands Would Trembly So Sha Could Hot Hold (Paper to Road. When the nerves become shaky the whole system sccsnis to become unstrung and a general feeling of collapse occurs, as the heart worts in sympathy with the nerves. Mrs. Wm. Weaver, Shallow Lake, Ont., writes: "I doctored for a year, for my heart. and nerves, with three different doctors, but they did not seem to know what was the matter with me. My nerves got so bad at last that I could not hold a paper in my hands to read, the way they trembled. I gave up doctoring thinking I could not get better. A lady living a few doors from me ad-� vised me to try a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, so to please her I did. and I am thankful to -day for doing so, for I am strong, and doing my own work SDLDiERS "JOSH" CAPTATN. French Privates Have a Quaint Way of Easing 'Over a Strain. It is good to march with a French regiment along the roads as they are now marching, says a London Chron- icle correspondent. The regiment marches silently. ' They have come a long way down the straight road between the hills, I and there is dust in their eyes and throats, and they have arrived at 1 that moment in the march when the pack weighs heaviest, -.when the shoulder strap begin to rub, when the rifle seems to wear a hole in tbe shoulder and when the shoe begins to pinch—an ugly moment, when black devils poke up their beads in .'men's hearts. ' But the best hearted man in the regiment knows that it is the time for a little joke. He begins to speak about his -captain, who is walking a yard away from him. "Our captain grows a little fat, I think, my little ones." 1 "Yes," says a comrade, taking up the joke. "It 1$ possible that he has been eating too much." "And he has a great thirst, I am. told," says a third man. "It is mar- velous what a thirst our captain has. Three bottles of red wine are hardly enough tb wet his throat." "He gets too old for war." I And so the joke goes on, every word of which is heard by the cap- ` tain, who finally bursts into laughter 1 and says, "You are impudent rascals, I all of you." The bad moment has passed. The weight of the pack is forgotten, and I presently the baritone of the regi- ment sings the first line of a march - Ing song. The chorus goes lilting down the long white road between the poplar sentinels. Feeding an. Atlantic Walrus. The most expensive animal at the New York zoological park is the At- lantic walrus. On his arrival four years ago the animal weighed 149 pounds. He has now attained the 'Weight of over 509 pounds. He re- quires forty pounds of clam meat ' daily. The labor of preparing his meals, cleaning his tank and the cost of the sea salt that must be added to the water make the expense of keep ing bit equal to that of feeding two Targe elephants. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50 cents per box, 3 boxes for 881.25; at all druggists or dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Why He Noticed It. Whistler was dining at a London home on one occasion when a titled guest leaned forward to address him. "I saw one of your works in Parte. Mr. James McNeill Whistler," be said. "Indeed! May I ask what drew your attention to it?" . "Your name, Mr. Whistler. It.was the longest one in the list of artists."— Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Old Fashioned Purging and Griping Action of Pills Tile New Era Job Department COMAINF Is Now Done Away With. Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills gently unlock the secretions, clear away all waste and effete matter from the system, and give tone and vitality to the whole intestinal tract. They do this by acting directly on the liver, and making the bile pass through thg bowels` instead of allowing it to get into the blood, and thus causing consti- pation, jaundice, catarrh of the stomach and similar troubles. Mrs. L. M. Ratebiord, Peterboro, Ont., writes: "Having been troubled for 'years with constipation, and trying many 'different remedies which did me no good whatever, I was asked to try Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. I have found them most beneficial, for they are indeed splendid pills, and I can gladly recom- mend them to all people who suffer from constipation." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 250 a vial, 5 vials for 81.00, at all druggists or dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milbum Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. TI R...IN'S p R.AV BISCU 1TS It's not such a "long way to Tipperary' Biscuits ---just as far as the nearest grocery store: N. Each one ' bears a picture -- troops of the allied armies. Each one is crisp, brown, and delicious. Say Tipperary to your grocer. 0. S. PERRIN & COMPANY, LIMITED London, - - Canada cANAd1AN rVpl NTT•£ Lid ttf�i�trM�. P.ERRVii:. Y+a46113 ril l I�f it is Any Kind of Job Prirltill We can do it At Home Cards Bills of Fare Ball Programs Bill Heads Blotters Booklets By -Laws Cheques Counter Check Books Deeds Envelopes , Legal Forms Letter Headss Lodge Constitutions Meal Tickets Memo Heads Milk Tickets Note Circulars Note Heads Notes Pamphlets ' Posters . Prize Lists Receipts Statements Society Stationery Stock Certificates Shipping Tags Wedding Invitations Etc., Etc., Etc. a Everything from a Calling - Card to a Newspaper. ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING OUR SPECIALTY P tone 3o and a Represent wVl call on you nd sub= mit Prices -and Saa1,t les dive fc �'ky"tial 0401,g. f".'r+1!# 1,g. '';4;r0.1, i