Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 17 Sep 1908, p. 6

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Handling in Bulky Horse; .___. _ I__,.JI!... lino owncn. fronomo telegraph or rvuuw :ww..--:vv- --__.--- Great Britain and other forgign countfies bought dd acid. V3, BARBIE BRANCH .EggsAare a surplus product with the hen and their number depends almost entirely as to whether the hen gdts sufoient food containing the elements to make up the eg or` not. It is not enough that a hen as `plen- ty of wheat or other kinds of grain, or green food. If she does not have `the food in the proper porportion, or, in other words, a balanced ration she can not given us protable re- sults. `One kind of food in particular to make eggs, and a necessary food which a great many keeping hens- fail to provide for them, and that is fresh cut bone and lean meat. Pro- perl cured clover hay is another pou tr food that can hardly be dis- pense with; if we expect our hens to Jay when theyare closely housed or yarded,~yet' it is doubtful if one per- son in one hundred,_ -even among farmers who have. lenty of it, feed it to their hens.~ hese two foods contain theelements that go to make eggs, and .are in such. a form that `they can be readily a-nd easily con: verted `into eggs by the hens. They. help, too, a good eal in keeping the cckgin good heath and vigorous. It is a common thing to nd a iocki meal, is the richest and best grain ration known ,though it should be used with other grains to get the best results. When: obtained pure-' which is diicult, as` a rule--the feed- er can follow de-nite rules of mixt- ure with-other grains for feeding each class of stock, with highly sat-, isfactory results. 'But when, as is not .uncommon, the linseed meal is aclulterated with` uncertain propor- tions of less useful feed and irnpuriv ties, as shorts, cottonseedmeal, oil cake, millet seed, or common weed seed and dirt, then the farmer, be- sides losing the value of the food- stui't' itself, is likely,` togive upvthe use of linseed meal altogether. Pure linseed meal can be.fed in Ontario,` at agood prot, when bou. ht at a meal is dearat $2.50, even if not ex- $3.75. per I00 pounds. Adu teratedi tremely bad. i Linseed meal, fed a- handful each night to. horses, will recommend it- self. For dairy cows,.espec1ally in stable, with or without ensilage `or roots, ~linseed meal rqay be fed to advantage up to four pounds per day, though a less quantity, `say 1%" to 2 -pounds, is usually recommended, be- mg `safer for unpracticed feeders. Forl wintering beef cattle or breeding ani- mals, it is invaluable, and it cambe }mixed with the grain chops, using up \to one or two pounds per day. For. Enishi-ng beef, in stable, even as much as seven pounds may be used per day. For calves, its value is well known. For mares or cows, before and after giving birth, it is highly lvaluable, though care must be exer- `cised. FIhe meal has;_a double ef-I l_-A.- --- ...._ 1--.! _-- \.|3UlIo &.llC IILCGI 1143 `G UUQUIC Cl I ect: First, as a. cooling foqd, sec-' ond, ingivinig health to the` mem-I branes, facilitating birth, and lessen-I ing danger or after-troubles. Caution is necessar in avoiding overfeeding lof thegmea , which. might cause abor- tion. Above all, be it remembered, lit is both. a condition-powder in it- zelf, and a food of. the highest pro- t. - I ~`G'R-A-SETT. Munster Feeding fqr E883- _njsnnusu1`-zn 1991 `dr hens %1:hTa't are prgving very pr-otab`l,_e, the-. .youn g chicks hardy angi thrifty, in fact, everything rutnmng very smoothly and .it is a commbn thing` to nd, ocks that haveebeen doubled up in numbers,` or of 150 or zoo hens, that are provmg a faure as far as dol- lars: and cents are concerned. The IL--- 4-.. . _..-.a--_- -.... 1...1: n.,. -.......- I mu a, sun bcuta at \; uvxspua u\.u. .1. uy lhens don't produce. one-half the eggs lthey should, the` eggs. are infertile, .`.l.:..l..- aunts`: ant` rnmnsr 33 Thnrn Ig.llC = llUL|l\l, Inc 655i GIG ll\uILllV, Chicks weak, and_ma-thy die. There are `many such instances as the latter whenspme bone and meat and clov-= er hay would help, inatters to a large extent. The small ocks` are able to secure much of this kind of food, but when the ocks are large there is not near enough to go around, and must besuppliedi by the owner if thev have it. .If you want your hens to lay ~-well, provide for them such food as they -need to make the eggs. If this is not "done any they fail to come up to your expectations, don t` r'kick.--Weekly Sun. * Largest: and I-Ieaviieist, Battleship` Yet ' > "Launched. V _ ` 1 The."St. Vincent, the largest and heaviest battleship ever built for the British navy, was 1a.unched.success- fully at Portsmouth"`last week. The weather was ne and the sea. smooth `and agreat crowd saw the yessel_ take the water. As the warshnp slipped from her blocks she was christened by the Countess Beauchamp, T 1__.;I_ NEW LEVIATHAN FOR B`RIT- ISH NAVY. ONE CAUSE or RAILWAY ms. . ASTERS, -v-v---v- o The voyager on an ocean steamer must now count on feeing the table steward, the cabin steward, and the deck steward, as formerly, and in ad- dition the smoking room steward, the bath steward, and, in many cases, the band or orchestra. -On `a convention- al basis these tips amount to $12 or $14 a crossing, _ and many passengers pay s_ome`thingre1se to -the) head or second" steward and to" the baggage master. A man `with his wife and daughter is lucky, `therefore, to n- ish 9. voyage across or back without laying out from $40 to $50 in fees to the ship's servants. 3.1. wnxnprooiaut f 4 P aid%-up $1 an 1o3DGenor-Ilaifmr Reserve Fund. 4- s%,oo%o,ooo " After the disastrous train smash` at Shrewsbury a" year of so ago, Lloyct George, then president of the Britis _Board of'Trade,.was present at the Inquiry which was made, says an English exchange. Hfe -~ then em- iphasized the question whether eng- U; V--V `------vv-r -v-v-v------- o - ` ` Counting the three cruising battle- nships of the Invincible class, the "St. Vincent isthe eighthvessel of the Dreadnought type to- be launched in England. The Admiralty has ob- served its usual reticence with regard to the details of the design and con- struction of the St. Vincent, but from certains gures that were given out, it is manifest that the experience gained from the construction of the Dreadnoughthas been utilized in this vessel. It is believed that some of the additional weight of the St. Vin- -cent is to be accounted for by heav- lier armament for protection against itorpedoes, and by improvements giv- ling greater` security to those control- Iling the movements of the ship while Iin action. - The recent friction on one_ of_the largest transatlantic steamship lines over the tippingrvquestxon Wlil, says . the `New York Tribune, serve. a good purpose if it compels a clearer und- erstanding of the measure of obliga- tion which the ocean traveling public should assume toward the ship ste- ward. Convention has long required [that passengers should fee the em- lployees aboard ship, and certain ually established. With the develop- ment of. the great palace liners. ser- 'vice has been expanded and new claims to recognition have been aci- vanced, so that the cost of tipping has been greatly `increased, and iww constitutes a serious tax on the pas- senger wishing to conform to. cuscun Dissatisfaction has naturally arisen on account of the fact that tips are now` expected and given without much regard for the amount or v;i::-|'- `rates forgratuities have been grad-l ity of the service enjoyed` by the passenger. - FFL _ , _- __.-,_. ___ _._, ___-_- _L, V- w ..---------_J. I The St. Vincent was laid down in December of last year- She is `sup- posed to be of about 19,250 tons,` and her cost has been given at $9,500,000. I . , ' ` i A number of foreign -naval atta e agtended the lauqching on the m- vntatxon of the Admxralty. TIPPING ON SHIPBOARD. rm: ? NORTHERN ADVANCE ---------mt yu -- -.---' ----- - - - The best manner of handling -a balk) horse always has `been, and doubtless will be, a matter_of o in- ioii. In most cases whipping oes not give good _results, but has a ten- dency tomake the animal more sul- ky Balky horses are generally the` result of ignorant, cruel_or rash treat-_ ment during the education (generally called breaking) -of the colt. Surly, rash, ill-tempered men, who expect a. colt to know more than themsel- ves, are usually responsible for the balkilng habit in horses. And once the habit has been contracted, it is very.hard- to check. Of course, colts vary greatly in disposition` and pre- disposition, hence some are much more easily spoiled than others. `At the same time,` it is seldom that a colt that has been kindly and intelli-` gently handled during. his rst -les-. sons, and that has been gradually taught to draw loads, makes a balker "to the average` horseman. A man who is compelled to do a certain amount of work with a horse` in a given-time must not have ai balker. The man who undertakes to cure a` balker must not be pressed for time. 'The balker must be carefully handled.` In the first place, the _harness, should t well, and the load_should not be "heavy. The driver must be. able tO\ control his temper, and not have re-{ source to the whip. When the horse; - `balks, he should be allowed to stand` `for a few minutes; if"the load be quite heavy, it should be lightened; The attention of the horse should be drawn to something other than his load. This may be done by giving. him an apple,.a little salt or oats,` or by tapping the shoe with a ham-, mer, etc., and, after a few minutes, if he is asked quietly to `go on, it is very probable he will do so. By kind and intelligent treatment for a] considerable time, most balkers cant be cured, and it is `possible one may} occasionally be met upon whom pun-i ._ ishment may have the desired effect. but in most _cases time and kind "treatment. are necessary. An ill-t.em- . pered or passionate man should nev-. er undertake to cure _a balker; while, I on the other hand. if the. horse h'as IV "" been required to draw a heavy load, without sufficient education, he is very liable to become sull especial- 1y if he has suliicient. ambition, ener- . ,gy and spirit to make a goodhorse.` The richest British-born lady is the Marchioness of `Graham, a pearl among women, noble in thought and deed, and generous to the extremes of generosity. On the death of her father, the 12th Duke -of Hamilton, she became mistress of-the Isle; of Arran, with an income of 114,000 a year. To her tenants she is `a real Lad Bountiful. In her `picturesque cor uroy_ dress _and. Tyrolean hat, she can be seen alrnostevery .day, when in residence at Easton Park or "Bi-.odxi-iek Castle, visitifig, `the . tenants in their own homes,-sand _cl_istributing' rs2ft.1s_1, with excp,t.10na1*'1ibe8l!.ty.. h-inc drivers Were]ar`n erely`t required to pass a.` medical examination before entering the service and. that the exa-; mination of the driver concerned in` the Shrewsbury accident ` must have taken place ;fort-y years ibefore the occurrence, , For a while -the n'1atter wastaken up with considerable keennessjay the public. The _ Granthamr accident, which happened to a boat train! in which there were many Arnencan passengers, had occurred not long before, and in; both cases it was st_1g- gested_ that the drivers were suffermg `from Illness. Then the subject drop- ped out `of the public mind, and noth- mg was done wfth regard `to corn- pulsory.exanuna.t1on`of engine duv- ers. v ' ' _ V. """J' Princess George of Greece, who was Princess `Marie. Bonaparte, has an enormous fortune; `which'=desce'nd- ed` to `her r-om" `her grandfather, A M. `~B1any of Mi_>x,_1te..CarIo, fame; `Prin- _e3's' -M?aufie"' .t17.av_agai1_ee_sA havehe`en_ "An accident` to a` Midland Railway train near -Cottinglfam -on a. recent Saturday has revived. the_' topic. ; A crowded train. after `leaving `.Nottmg- ham dashed through the next station at high speed, 7 though the. signals were against it; Fortunately the ru-n- away by means of the automatic sys- tem was switched on to a branch: line just in time to let the London-Brad-. ford express dash. by. When the reman had brought the train to a standstill the driver was found:lying helpless on - the footplate, struck down by paralysis. ' . Madame Creel, the beautiful Mexi- can lady, derives an annual income of 1,000,000, chiey from her mines. These mines, which were a. present from her father, have already yielded over 4o,o00,oo0 worth of precious metal, but a very big percentage -has to-be deducted -from that sum for working expenses- However, Mad- ame Creel s eggs are not -all in "one basket. She owns 600,000 head of cattle and 280,000 acres of- very good land. Madame s hats are her only failing; for while. she isgcontent with three dress_es=a year at a cost of 3 apiece, she pays as much as 75 for each of `her hats. She attributes her ec0nomy-in everything but headgear --to the fact` that when her father had 400,000 cattle on the plains, of Chihuahua and a. dozen silver mines, he allowed her only live shillings a week for pocket money. A But it is not in America that you will tin'd the world s richest woman. Frau von Bohlen, formerly Bertha Krupp, who has an income of 40,- 000 `a month, and property valued at x6,ooo,ooo, is an important candi- date for the premiere position. It is a signicant fact that this lady, head of the greatest gun-works in- the world, .and in a position to keep the leading European, modistes i-n con- tinual employment, makes all ,her own clothing. She admits with pride that her trousseau was entirely the work of her own hands, and cost less than 50. ' In May an engine driver died on the footplate from fatty degeneration of the heart a few minutes after he had -taken his, train; .out of Newcas- tle, In April. the Board of Trade re- ceived a report of . the,col1is,ion due to a driver s mismanagement which was attributed to the man's debilitat ed condition, to the. fact that he was in the last stages'of mortal com- plaint. ` on sunny Av.|.L. \JlCCll, III Lila`; Se not -yet shown any.-tendency towards` charxtable disbursem'ents._ .She pos- sesses `an estimated `Fnrhlnn n: 2'". Mrs.` Russell `Sage, the next richest woman in America, came into] a for- tune of I7,ooo,ooo, last year, but has made big inroads into it by her dis- tributions in the cause of charity, Mrs. Anne Weightman Walker, who declares that all herltime` is occupied in keeping track of her investments, is like Mrs. Green, in that she has nnf "V!-`II cl-Inurn on.._6-AnA.`......-- A.4__----J- ` Many people have many methods of treatingebalky horses, such "as pouring sand in his `ears, lling the jrnouth with sand, lifting his foot and tapping the shoe -witha hammer, etc. There is no particular virtue in any of these methods, and the habit of pouring sand. water. etc., into the cars is not only cruel, but dangerous. The favorableaction of. any of these methods is obtained by diverting the attention of the horse from -the load, and in many cases he will forget that he does not want to draw, ,,andcwi;ll. go on. If `a person is unfortunate enough to buy a balky horse, or to make one out of a colt, he will have to exercise a great `deal of patience to effect ,a cure.--Whip, in -Far5n1'er sf. Advocate. - ....... V... un-I.uu|u1\-lll\ollLo_ . DHC RUS- sesses an estnmated fortune of 12,- nnnnnn ` ' On December 26 last a-n engine driver fell in the street just after he had brought his train. into Crewe, and he'.died the r_ie.$:tday.' In Octo- ber a driver fell dead from heart dis- ease. while driving a train from Loughborough to Leicester. "In the same month another. driver was struck down by paralysis just as he left his engine, while still another driver died in that month who was at work though suffering from loco- motor ataxia. The. collection of such a _number of cases as this -in a short tlme would seem to point to theonecessity of re- form, ` . - Who is the feminine Croesus-of this age of colossal fortunes, of mag- ically-acquired wealth? It is an open question, for -old earth to-day has many women whose individual riches would have aroused the envy of the famous King ofrLydia. Among Am- ericans Mrs. Hetty Green has as good a claim to the distinction as anyone else, and no wonder, for un- til recently this shabby old woman of seventy, the greatest mistress of n- ance that the world has ever seen, with a fortune of between twelve and sixteen million pounds at her com- mand, but a bankrupt in her wants, was content to live a life of genteel poverty, says M. A, P. . I THE WORLD'S RICHEST WO- MEN, % iuoars Hagdware Stdre. no u Ham mocks: A fa;t:t:T that -we have now m \ 3 %.i11ocks~thtn:;;,,y;s.gtsv_lant to carry over for angtheire` ham. A. the pries 2` 5 per cent. We are S:1el`.`5n, {qr $2.2 5. _ mg ' % . $3-50% Hammock for $2.75. ' ` ` ' $4.5 Hammock for $345. . $5.00 Hammock for 375 $5.53 Hammock for 4_25 . $5.-O0 Hammock f0r$ _ . cnu. AND our one BEFORE THEY ARE ALL GONE 4-50. COLLECTIONS made in all parts ofCmada`hd_.ih' cauntI_ies._ have :11 the epplinncel for the care of funeral: in transit through town ma hurrounding country: Heat-sea and Weggons; Morgue and Burial Parlors. In. torment: in all cemeteries. or shipments to all puts of the world. Work of undertaken prompclv and properly cared for. PHON E 32_ BarrienderlakingEslablishm i,G. SMITH 8 CO. E.T.TYRER always get good `clothes- guaranteed by the Progress 'I).....l)7 1..L-1' Collier and Cjluppex-ton Streets If a man be satised to accept the first thing a. dealer shows him, he can t expect to have otherthan ordinary clothes. Men, who take the trouble to insist on having. Progress Brand Clothing Nothing Without Eort nwrs AND noun onnsns sold. and m`1oney by ALWAYS OPEN. Sold and Guaranteed by ESTABIJSHED31869 Phone 137- :_3f1`f}1;UwRsDAY, ,$EPT_ ix` 179 FOREIGN` BUSINESS. Cheques and drafts on "the 28 I m not Heast, n( omething An imp `rs was t} 9 the thi "She do on for 1 The cri ave pluc enge. I: as rnutil Nd the O ":\-`iiss I- d to ten Linsed , . The; ground axSd .. "E or Iinsegd I pita? e tumble bunting hen he :1 A"-AA But_!v - to.`- in his heart `I W3 rm 1n1- ' A GENERAL BANKING nusmass TRANSACTED AT ALL nmcuas

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