mm wtm^ iMipiMPMIPr ^M^ tmim September 18 1919 THE FLESHEErON A D V AN G E Only a GOOD White Lead can hold World Supremacy for 200 Years Two hu::dred years agoâ€" when the s-gn-painter was t.ii artist of every high standing â€" the best ul.itekad for any kind cf, painting was lirandram's .Genuine B.B. Tcday, the moii. fastidious painters still choose this world-famous white lead for their most particular work. B.B. wr The reason is not far to sec. Most white leads are produced by one process of corrosion â€" such as the so-called "Old-Dutch" process, "Chamber" process, or some more or les-.; r.iechanical process. But Brandram's Genuine B.B. Wliite Lead ir. a combination of different processes. Thus, particles of different shapes and rizes are merged so c;; to form a product of wonderful smooth- ness, capacity and covering p^ivcr. Measured in t^ rms cf cort per hundred pounds, Brandram's Gciniinc B.B. White Lead is tlic most ex- pensive lead on tiie Canadian market. But, considered from the standpoint of covering capacity and length of service, it easily outclasses all other white leads, and proves the most economical in the rtid. ''Save the surfkcaand" you save aU ^;|^^^_^^^ F. H.W. HICKLING, FLESHERTON B»AllVi.D;?AM-H gNK3E:B?SO !NI HtOICiNt MAT * CDMOMYOf* VANCOUVtn mtiJb^tt&r to "•â-ºllt-l.. l-MTl iS^:>rfl;i Oaxir "B-II" Products For Iii(erlor rinlthlnil ' Clilr-.a I ac" the prrfccl var:-.i!,h Sti .nine tilt Koof "Aiiditr llriiiiil Shl:i:.> Slains," i i 1 ilititi litctilurfi. U-U P. rkli Floor Paint !â- â- r 1. nil floors, ctiliiiss anil [arts txiKJSr-l tt) thp Wfathcr. PI. :.lcr Celllnaa Knd Wnlla li H 'I'liscoiiotte"â€" A flat tone cil paiit. Flnlshlnit « Floor III' Mr,»rliiBire" excellent fi-r (ntrriiT fluurs. For Buriin and Outbulldlims liiipiri;;! Hum Paint. For I''iterlor1*alntinK. li II "Kll^iisli" i'uiiit. â- ««â- WE SELL irAiiM iM 'r* s R MENTS WAGONS, HAKROWS PLOWS SPECIAL PRICES IN ^('W Tulmliir SlMipIcs Sopiirator.s JOHN HEARD, MPLi vim AGENT FLBSHRRTON. f ARM WATEI^SYSTEMS A Summary of Best Available Types for Stables. When PanUirea Full the Milk Klow DecreaapH Uiilcwi Soiling CropM Have Keoii I'rovlded â€" ('om Hiliige Will Also GreHtly liK-r^.iHe Milk Yield In Hot Kiimmer. (Contributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture. Toronto.) IN a day'B visit among the farmefB of Ontailo In almost every county you would run across quite a number of stablos equip- ped Willi some form oi- other of water .syslom for supplyinK the farm stock more or less aulomatically with water each day. With few excepfions every new barn built now is pro- vided with a water system. Among the available systems are the follow- ing!, which, in this short article, can receive only a very brief description: Of these probably Ihe most com-, irion is that consist inn of a water sup- ply tank In Ihe hay or straw loft above the .stable, from which Ihe water run.s by gravity into a regulat- ini; tank on the stable floor, which eiipplie.s the indiviijual drinking basins with water autoinatically. The tank is u.'iiially built of concrete and (he size <lepen(ls upon the kind of power used for pumping; if windmill be used then the tank needs to be large enough for three or four day^V supply as the wind does not blow every dav. Under these conditions ft lank 10x4x4 feet, or its equiva- lent would be required for 30 head of slock. Souieliuies the concrete tank is built just outside the stable wall and underground enough to pro- tect it again fiost, or in one corner of the stable, elevated enotigh oft the floor to teed Ihe regulating tank by gravity. -In cane pumping is done by gasoline engine and a smaller tank is sufficient, a metal one is sus- pended from ceiling of stable. In every case an overflow is necessary. Many provide means for collect in.c; the uain water off the barn and run- ning' It into llie storage tank so thai in wet weather very lillle pumping is required, especially wlier<' .a large lank i.s used. Another method cf filling the storage lank Is by the hydraulic ram installed at ihe spring. Still another Is by means of a on?- incli pipe leading from a spring oi other source at an elevation at least a^ high as Ihe storage lank. Some- tinjcs where hydraulic r:iiii or -^irHV- ily .t;y.':lem is in use llie storage lank is dispensed with, the water, in ll:<'^ case ef Ihe former, running througli the drinking basins oi- lrou,-'h all Ihe lime and es(ai)ing to a good outlet o:- drain, in the latter l!"' rater is piped directly to the regulatmg lank which in turn suitplles Ihe basins or trough a".loniallcalI.v. A!,'ain the I water is puniiied diredly lo tank m i Ihe attic of the house, and the over- I How from it supplies the stable wiih I waler. And since the advent of ihe I compression water system we liiul a I few cases where it is used to supply 1 Ihe stables as well as Hie house, the inslalliilion being proportionately linger than il would be for Ihe house alone. Probably no one system, ho.v- i ever, <an be absolutely recommended I as best for oveVy case'Ts ihe 'Tr- cuinslances perlaining lo the source of siipidy, amount of water tts'd, , posiimn and elevation of Ihe farm ouifdlngs, etc.. always have to be , carifuliy considered in ]ihiiuiing the ' llleal water system for the farm house , or stable.â€" It. It. Craliam, B.S.A., O. A. College, Guelpli. Alcohol is Poison Doctors Say It Is a Menace in Any and All Forms FIVE ounces of alcohol will kill a full- grown healthy man within ten hours. Taken in smaller but repeated closes alcohol lets him live longer but gets him in the end. All alcoholic beverages are poison, slow cr swift. Medical science has established that alcohol is a poison and a narcotic chemically related to etner and chloroform, and not a stimulant. A man was once brought out of ether who had taken eight ounces, and a man was once brought out of chlor :;form who had taken 12}/2 ounces, but no man ever reviv- ed who swallov/ed five ounces of alcohol at a single dose. The unconsciousness or coma produced by alcohol if not broken within ten cr twelve hours is followed by practically certain death. Alcohol as medicine has been expelled from the American Ph copoeia by the American Medical Association. 2.51% Alcohol in Eeer Makes it Poison THE beer of the ballot contains 2.51% alcohol bj vCeifhA â€" over twice as strong as the beer of the Ontario Temjjerance Act (2.50 Fmof Spirits). The Beer of the Ballot is intoxicating. Three glasses of the Beer of the Ballot contains as much alcohol as a glass of whiskey. When you are asked are you in favor of beer containing 2.51% alco- hol by weight â€" in shops, bars, or anywhere else, vote "No!"-Foiir Times-"Mol" arma- Save yourself, save your family, save youi co'untr,' for tho des'-iny God intended unhandicapped by "bcozc." Be careful â€" mark your ballot after each question with tn X under tho column headed "No," or your vote will be lost to Temp:rr.nce. Ontado Sefer eiidum CoeiiFiittee JOH.M MACDONALD. Clijirman. D. A. DU.NLAP. Trtajurrr. ANDREV/ixGRANT, I'tCf-Chairmct ti'.i S-cr-t.;r\\ (1001 Exccliicr Life B!dg., Toronto.) zafl^^T^ifeJi^-aiy^tsgBEa ^ my jj D Kfj^ Houiound Lots or Sale l?l U 11 II L I I ^ '"^ «'nv«nionlly h.cnlecl fra.no Oaioltilly Ooireotcd liBci, Wee J '"' ' '' "'''> "' •' «ix r-oiui : IJuti'^r 40 I,, tl 4.-, 1 '" ' "' ^' "' '"*''•'• '" "onrl.hjd, barn, V.AUX BO :oO .501 ''"*''*""^'"'''' "'"â- •""" '""''" « "ml "uno Wh, It a 00 to 2 11 '""' '""^ 'â- ^^M •' "' i 111, hlouli l>. Peas 1 40 t„ I r.i) ' •''''»'"•â- â- ">•> Apply to '>»t^ VO to lO; liM'v: X UADJ.KV i' iiitky 7« lo Hu' I ".' i;. ,.,v ,â- <â- .. , Soiling Crops tov Cons. .Mosi Onlaiio dairy fanners depenrf on Ihe pasture crop f(M' Ihe feeding of cows during summer. If the Jias- ture fails, there is no remedy, the rows go dry, the creameries and cheeseries suffer loss of patronage, Ihe city milk plants are short of milk, and the whide didry business is more or less handicapped. The time lias come when (hiiry fanners should lake out an insuniiu'o iiolicy In the form <ir II Slimmer slln, (illed with (om from Ihe luevioiis year's croo. Falling this, silage in the bodom ( f a winter silo is good feed, hut ihe RiirfMCe expoHCii should be reduced one-luilf hy ending the silage down Ihe cent re with a liny-Unlfe. It tills Im not iivailahle, the sllii.i;(t in oue- lialf llie silo may be dug down wiili â- .' folk, hut ihi.s leaves an Irregular I dj;e which caiLiCs cxeefiive spoiling of Ihe KllAge. fireat euro is needed in feeding summer silage, ^elso there h- danger of laintlng the milk. The .'Irong advaulaKe of silage for sup- plement ing poor pa.sture, is the fact that a man can get fied out of a ,!iilo for a herd of cows in ab»ut one- half the time reriuired to cut a soil- ing crop in a held rnd haul this lo Ihe stable for llie cows lo eal. Some meal, or wheat bran. slioiiW be added 10 Ihe silage for best rcsull.s. If silage is not available for feod- inir during the season of '!!), then soiling crops like clover, oats, peas nnd vclilies, corn, tic, should lie provided, so that the cows ina.v not v.'ant for feed to tnako nillk. â€" Prof. IT. H. Dean, O. A. Collego. Guv^lph. Kiirtii TfHetoi s. Injerest in farm tfarier. liar, in- creased iapi(ity In Onlniii) in Iho punl two or lliree, years. In the early part of this year Ihe Ontario Deparlinent of Agriculture held 32 courses on farai power in different pails of the province, mid there was a (olal at- tendance of 12,270. No gt-ealer in- (erest lins been shown in courses on nny other suhjecl, and much useful eiliicaiional work was clone. i lliiiullp Tubers K'nrefiilly. I Potatoes should be handled care- fully and not (is thnitgh they w .-e cobblestones. The potato is a living Jhing, with n prolecllve akin, which It la able lo keep Intact U it liaa u lair chMio«. Bad Motor Accident! V i;..||ir.g«ocd EntevpriBe M?-. A. F. lleiljjsii', wife Hid 60U, on F.iJi.y Ins; i;rd .-.s i arrow 1.11 e^cipe from death lis cuniis lo mfst piip!o who CSC. jie. 'lluv wore com n;; i! wn the 111 'untiiiii 111 me Kiikviik' when iho briiko r id bloke mid the cm got bcjund coi liol and ilii' ppcedoinetcr leg'." eiet" CO mi'es an hour. The vielcrt i\v. nirg ef the C rlhicw Mr.s. Hitlg>eii iiiul the ley ojt, and liie feinier i;sciipid «ith n severe s- linking t p Hiid many luu m'.s, fii;d ihj toy win only i-li^litiy ii jur. d When just hvhav the rickfeid taiui the cur left the lead uud Uui.id cemp'ctcly ovtr, piiiiiiui! Mr. ll()llg^,.ll Ifiiciih. He, liDwever, rscnp^d witli a liekiU iinii, bil' ihe nut (I WHS nliiim-l » loiiiplete wreck, Mr. Hiid Mi3. Hid>.;sou iiro luiw ncriving t 10 oeiunilubitioim of iluii' friend* mi till ir miliiculi us i«cape. Fall Fair Dates, 1919 'riu- h-t of b'l.ll KiiliH bus boi'il sen' nut by Iho Oiitaiii DepntiiifiiL oi .\i;iieul'..vo fioiii which wa Ifke the •folKi.viii;; ihit»8 : FLEET FOOT! "White, Black ami Tan. For men, women and • chiltlren. All sizes. Prides right. IIi<,Miest prices paid for proiluce. GRAHAM BROS., j EUGENIA, - ONT. ..«..«»•..«"•.â- •«••.•..«« »!»»; .Sipl "-'.I mid L'tii Ocl2i»nd :i] . . . ().:l 7 and ^ . . Scpl 'Ji t . 24 . . .tick 7 hihI i^ â- .!?iipl .".0, t)e' 1 I . ..Ooi 11 mid HI 6epl 10 Hiid 17 . ..Sipt 1(1 to 1!" .Si J)l £t> :iiul'"7 . . . .OvI S .md il KLESliKKldN.... Alliston Arthui '. ... . lUrriu Heoiiin B')ih*oU's (joiners . Chiitsworth CUtk-ouitr C'liiUnnivoiid V, oksl •ttii Chchley Dishiro Diindulk . . . Oct 1 and i I Dm him Si>l>l UO and Oc Li FJmvub' Oct 1 I.I ;t l'\»culi'iiii ."^ep' 30 mid O.I 1; tlr.iml V.illey Sopt 18 mid It' lldsuiu Sipi i;:! aii*l'4. lliiiKnrr Si pi J5iud'i(i| I|.'|nviiith S.pi 10 mill 171 KiiHi'h .. O.t 'J mi. I III L â- .ii's lliiid Ov li'iul 7 Mark^hie Ocl 7 mid 8, Mmr.vd J-ep' SJoi'iitl iJtl| Mount Fore^il.. .. . s 17 ;â- ' •;â- l)imim'>ille . . '" , I 'â- i i7 ; IVioeMlle 0^. 2io.d ;i: Rcklyn '.".".â- Oul 2 mid li'' I'Shollmino Hepi '.':i uul HI; 1 Tan* Sept 80 iin.l Oe! 1 i i Wiiheri Fulls Sep:" ?.1 nT.d ^1 'â- I Wlatton s . â- ; ..I -'i i i I Sui.I I^Hiid 111! IM I I Flesherton Tin Shop. I have just placed on the .'^lielves a full line ot Tinware, Nickel ware and Ao;ateware for domestic use. Call on me and get yoiu- supplies. Eavetroughing, Stovepipes and Stove Furnish- ings. Repairing of all kinds {ironiptly attLMidctl to. Pipefitting, including pump work. m nil nil i I [ \U] Furnaces installed. Agent for Clare Bros. Il|4( IMI iMunaces. 111! i|l D. McKILLOP ! ! CHRI5T0E BLOCK mi FLESHERTON ji^ ONTARIO. IMI : ^9 I ll< f I m -i.....