T Are yrm r`nr]ir1{,"t!m Wpckl_V Czmad_iah letters, tcllmg stones of a;uI`crm'.r from skin dnscnses and how cure was elfccled? "nun !. -..-...L. .0. I...u..... 4I..__. nah-` vv,._.,__ 0' V 10 Years of Eczema -_-A Sample Cured Her` yuus UBIUKIUIIVICIIEIIIIUDUH WQIIOII. MADE IN CANADA` LII. BodlingIonCo..S|losA|onu. Toronto V x. 0. Leomn. Inc..mra.. 70 am Av.. N.v.cm A For Sale in Barrie by Geo. Monkman and all good druggists REI:n71a's'n:EAF1?Es:.d STOPS HEAD NOISES Rub it in Back of the Ears T (Never Put in Ears) Insert in Nostrils Deafness II neatly relieved by a simple trestment with Leonard Est Oll. Special Instructions by a noted Ear Speclsllst for dlerent kinds of Deaf- . ness and Head Noises contained In each Pscksge. Leonsrd Eer Oil is not an experiment. but has llld a successful sale since 1907. "You cannot elford to be desf." TRY T318 011.. It has helped thoussnds of people. Why not you? Descrlptlveclrcnlsr upon request. IIAIII III BAAIARA` .DON i'W no THIS! % '.-`."_"`!`..% uuua uvcll ulIUVn ` A hen carfnot lay. an egg a day l on whole grain,"~he;.explained. She needs at least half her grain_`in ground material with .mangles or mash added. At the department farm they had found canned toma-1 toes an excellent substitute for g'r'ass and g :-een stuff the hens [crave for . to manufacture the egg} * 1:`-..-1....1... ..I.:..1... 1.- ..-..-...'..--...1-.I "VH3, -. --v --vru evgnoau ' I The professor described the com- _} position of the yolk. It is mostly,} `the fat produced by grain; while the ` albumen or white is similar to lean, and it is 65 per centjwater. A. nu ........ .1 ........-.-n L- _-1-__1 ( v v I I I u Iluauvvulv IJIIG V55: For` baby chicks he recomxended Johnnie cagce as the best and simplest. vvvv aw: Coming to the primary stage, he said it required horse sense to make hens `lay. It had been proven, he asserted, that one chicken had the germs of 1,000 eggs, which meant more than 300;eggs a year for three vears. The thing was to make her lay consistently. In this connection be `compared a hen-to a boiler re- 0 quiring fuel to produce steam. A . hen requires fuel- the right kind 0; of feed. ` If the hen s` steam, i.e., "her . vitality, can be kept from going down her laying can be kept going.` ii '1 uuu Iv no uu ycl. vculu, waucr. On careful survey, he _asked,- how many poultry yards will be found with adequate water supply` at all times. Here again the per- sonal factor came in. Likewise the hens need material such_ as grass, grasshoppers, earth worms, etc., for the albunien composition. Ten per cent of, the egg being shell, lime is essential for the hen to manufacture that shell. VII V DIIVIII Informing a questioner, the sbeak er said the best known record of egg laying was'363 eggs in one year, but the hen. that laid` them was a duck. However, both in New Zealand and the U.S.` a hen record of 342 eggs had been made. 'A than nngn` `nut nun .u-.. . .1--. nxuuuauur uu uu-: szuuc uuuluer 01 eggs. He preferred the brooder hen himself, he said, but in the matter of natural selection factsdemonstrate that selection by incubator hatching is productive of"qually~ good results, to swallow his pre-- so that onehad judice. _ I For `the best results in general. -however, he believed people should adopt community hatching. It was the economic solution. He said there was a7'g'rowing demand for young chickens. and told of one Ohio hatch- ery that'- set250,00_0 eggs at one time. - ` ' V Asked about flooring` for a hen- house. He said that `personally he preferred cement. The effect of cem- ent on toe-nails, from scratching, was but little. A wooden floor is best. though`, if rats can be guarded against. On an earth floor the fowls mix earth with the straw. It is ex- pensive because the earth has to be removed and replaced. "With a rea- sonable amount of litter, cement flooring is best. And hevwould rec- ommend` cement in a permanent brooder, too. He said sulphur was good on mites. but of little effect on 1:..- -.-:4.I.--_L -1 uvan-so viva I. Answering` a question, the profes-i *sor said that incubators produced 50 per cent of _their eggs, I and that 75 per cent. o`,\their chickens mature; this` compares favorably with the ` hen s production, though. of course, an individual `hen will outclass an incubator on" the "same number of I `D--. -4.1-- L-,,4, 9. -' - .onvI|J- an auananuu unvonan a ' V ' In Oxford Vjcounty an average of 105 had ,-been shown on the farm,` ( which, he said,.gave a good profit`; at that. I The di`erence between 1 those farm hens and the specialized farm hen products he attributed to;` the personal factor. Where the man} is systematic the hen will prove sys- 1; ltematic. . A , A ' . ` i ?` - A. Vll`heV_spealce~rMe':;1ilaihed' that while the 200-egg hen is fairly common to- day, as compared with the .50-egg hen of fifty` years ago, yet if a flock" of 1000 produce an average of 15 dozen eggs at year, they are doing good yvork. On a poultry farm in! New Jersey an average of `.130 eggsl a year was considered excellent; but; this. was- the average of a flock of: half a million hens. - ' , _ f\_,, ' I I MUST `aA`( 4006-me TO YOUR DAUQHTER I3FO_R \<.c> - ,v -._. ---~---cwwvvvll vu An eight or ten foot square was , sufficiently large for 20 hens, he . considered. The .main thing is clean- _ liness.. One man succeeded and num- ' 1 serous persons failed because of the . big 'factor of careful attention, or lack of it. Artificial lighting will lincrease production 25 per cent or \'higher. But with longer daylight ,'hours the question of food is again } :a study, n11..<..n..... 1.A:--.a- mm - .. .1....._,., . - . Wh`e_th_er birds will degenerate from-incubator reproduction is a question of which little is known. He would hesitate to use generation af- _ter "generation" in breeding, either from incubator or by the natural ..-uuuuu; GIIIUUIIU U1, Ill.-L613, Cenlent hevwould permanent lice without steam; and to use steam- ed sulphur great care was necessary as the fumes are deadly to human beings as well as insects. Formalde- hyde and tar compounds were used `chiefly as disinfectants. M ` __, ,- -.... ........u..- ` ,2 A question that _puzzles poultry- men is whether-fertile` eggs can be! idistinguished. The professor said [that with a powe1'f_ul microscope one , might be able to tell, but ordinarily; tha_t even `is a guess. He mentioned that machines were sold that claim to telleverything. but in h1's.exper- ience `there was no reliable way of . determining either fertility or sex to" be. . ' ' T ` ' .44., an vuc us one utau esseuuals.` Answering a question relative to soft `shell eggs and of hens eating `their eggs, the professor said these offences might be due to a habit - acquired whlile shutcup. They-might require another circus. _He would feed-them all the shells possible and try to get. them out of doors. If [the hens appeared too fat a_ good [purge would help, He said there [were but two treatments for hens; lonelis to purge them, the ,other is ldisinfectants. i In a flock of one `hundred chickens they should have gone poundof epsom salts` a week; for `purging a much larger dose. `I21--. .t'-,Al Alt`: a `capsule. Just swallow it I as you would a tablet. It is guar- 3 attend to bring relief. Costs $1.00 at your druggists. Ask any any of our agents for free trial or write `_l`emn|e- tons Limitad. Toronto. F: eatHer pulling he teco1n111nd- Jed plenty of raw b1ood.. I! `you have tried eve:-yth}`hg--i! yen are discouraged`-if ydu think your knee is hopetess. you are just like thousands of other asthma sufferers until they tried ASTHMA RAZ, -MAH DUIU P VVIII. \)l`U$ll1HUa In Allandale, by A. E; Patterson. Sold By Wm. Crossland. nnltlnhn kit A E`: Du-an f wow THAT aux NU`oT HAVE TAK\N' A DIS LIKE 'I`t`\ hat.-_ vvvvulu vtxutl uc uuuuucu LU hue lUSS' rm`? one hen s production; if a male` `bird were introduced there would en-, ` . Y ` A _L'_ r_[`_`_"___ _A`___1, p y o u - u |.....-. n \.4A.\a alAv.I.\l\.llA\aC\.l UIICLU WUUIU. UH` Rue the obvious results from his kind. ; In the crossing"of standard leghorns with white leghorns he said that or- process; Regarding` nests, he pre-E fer-red them tobedarkened. In in-; troducing a strange bird with a par-i ticular strain;for experimental pur-" pose he would use the female bird. In the. event of evil results the effect would then be confined to the lossf r\I\r\ L,....).. ....-.1._,L.-, `Head Oce and Factories: Tor'mtoA A 150% l In conclusion, "Prof. Graham said. [that so long as one interested `in; I` chickens remains a student he is safe; ,should he get to the point where he `knows it all, well, then its time to` quit. T " An-.. T1-.-:.-I-:.---.- .,-_VAV -- - " I E dinarilir T the first cross might be; good, but later it might be found a} ;combination of good, and of no good, .`had resulted. It isethe same process }as manufacturing a new breed. , ..-- .-| :111anAHutchinson, secretary, Bar- Many women will prot bythe following statement of one "of their sex: I was afraid to eat on account of stomach trouble. Even rice did not agree. After ._taking Adler-i-kc I can eat anything. . Adler-i-V his .acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, removing foul matter which poisoned the stomach. `EXCELLENT for gas on the stomach or sour stomach. Guards against appendicitis." "It brings out poisonous mat-' hr you never thought was in your system. Wm. Grassland, Druggist. _ I92? av I_N'r'|. II Kindly remember your Examiner `subscription. If it.has_npt been re- Vnewed, please renew now. I . v ` T _ ;1\rIinard?s'Linin1ent prevents Spangsh Flu. irie Poultry association, moved a vote of thanks for thevinstructive lecture, which was seconded by _A. W. Smith, and presented to Prof. Graham by `A `n p..:,.1-._v r\11nc-;r3n*n4- me n... 1.,--1 IauA|\.a \..su\,u nu 4. L\.IJ. \;;.;;u.;u V W. . . , IA . C. -BI`1Ck(:L, resldent of the local association. ` b T [0 c HMS ll cuuxs STATEMENT I WILLMHELPA BARRIE fYoU One afternoon Izm- twenty-one gentle`- ned in a prison ix '1 . were sane and l1m`.c-1 wanted neither the bons nor the c-xcs--'2-\ voluti" 11:! . II r:H'n of the land. In ugzv H `two and :1 hzaif _\'w.~. I sentence tr) liv hf. m morning. Tho HY]."'l been spe\vml Hp fr .-:; utionary II`..:'.<-' u-..,x Lltguua blood. ']\L_"` llo That evoniuv gether ;:r! 11?. times grail)`. ~ it was latv Vs them to mvY(--~ only q11e-rinn conkirlercvl 2- A TY- `...\.. .,..,_,, vu-r ....... .. . He then .j:1':-:-- .on the ,g'. >m:r! after to ri':'ht uh...) ..... , A1 llluu I` second ity M humzm LL 2 _ J a . J..l.u.lI|.Lu thin cl 1 : _th* ` rm: philusra; `tum pr Thursdavy, VMarcf .:a-..~n.._._ If you have especially nice a that you do not sending with t washing. you c and quickly clea Lux. The thin, w like akes of Lux by our own excl cess. and rcaclilv into a rich. bubbli as harmless toxx as pure water its For All Fine -auuua u nu vuuvluuu I-HG ILIUDL aucpuuzu. Relivf from itching torment is immediate. Just try one bottle of D. D. D. today on our oaitive guarantee. $1.0oa.bott1e. Try D.D D. D] t00. ' Lux is supreme for garments. It is s sealed pacl LEVER BROTHERI1 THE HONESTY J~`| nu ;:h(-r. Largs ` I Herbert G. Robertson, `Druggist, Barrie.` will Toronto uuu. ugvv uuxc: was CHCULCUI Here is part ofa letter from Mrs; Henry Hnr- vey. Black Lake. Que. Write her if you desue. "Ten years of eczema on the face. Treated unavailimxly by doctors. A sample alone of D. D. D. cured me`. etc." The proof of the pudding i_s in the eating. When a presenptxon for skin disease has letters of cure and engloraemeut from nearly every city and town _m the Dominion. surely it is enough to convince the most skeptical. ' 'Da1.'..n I.-mm M..1.:.... o.............a- :. 1......`-.I:..A- auu. uy um: uuun: U! U. U. U. ISOGEY on Olll` D. 00- L D I) Lounxbr sm? mseas