Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 3 Dec 1908, p. 6

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Look for the label that protects, .to insure getting the genuine. ~TYRER "IT-HUR'SDAY, transit throuoh town and I Ind Rnnl 'D..-l...._ 1 ..-u.-nu uuuuvu Lawn `nu and Burial Parlors. In. M H .....|.a ur__L . Have nu Us All` Work of Eggs are the foundation` "of the! poultry industry, and in` b1__1ying_stock` one should keep this-"fact in mix_1_d.! Not all winners in the show room are ma lfiant FARMING IN_1;_;I_:%__1%zEs*rs I] I .2914 sub" ashin Rut .., .. , out t con Awh $5 `ca olly s Boil up some of the little potatoes in the three-paI'1 kettle, and "mash them for the hens. Not a steady diet, but now and_ then. [They `go first rate. ' . A at avels, escen olly Far iling uld s the . .,.. the` s shu rainc oom, lread If the olly Frigr: J VII oppedl `The best friend_ `of the oultryman in ghting mit_es Ls keroseneroil. VAp- `pyy it `freely in,.all the cracks and cre_- [vxces, and they will soon vanish. `ll To be, a good feeder of sheep re-! qturesstudy and experience. It is the studious thinking man who is "suc- cessful as a sheep breeder and itre- quires a~_little of the same thing..mix- ed with ihs efforts to make a thor- oughly successful sheep-feeder. The great end of the business-is `that of prot and this" is where apgreat deal may be done by care and study. Sheep which varel being winter fed. `for market should have a closed and v- dry yard; with access to sheds, and "the yard should be well littered with straw. ,To enelose fatteningsheeprin a. warm building would not prove protable, as'a wellventilated shed is! 1 better for them. riYAI-`x.nn. Pmxaexit & LAIRD, General Maggot |EDDY S FIBREWAREJ `SAVINGS BANK Depesig of $1 nnd unwr_ards~are feceived and interest allowed #1: current rates. Accounts `may be opened the nainesvbf two` 61' q`_vI'9te`_e persons, `withdrawals to be made b,y_ba_n`y one" or `the; ' _ ' number 6: by the sgfryivor. - A . _ - _m:- 4 . i' j jjjnjnn `II Every A One is -8-S0153; %Hsrama. Mags withootu_HoopAo.rc%dm; 5 Tf hqnideo. my >ot,hr ,E'1:cliujiveJ .sregom 109- P9!I'35'| Pejxi=t%'i-L \ ,3 . _. CANADIAN !AGAZINE. regain; sheep For Market. IThre"s nt Flaw! .::,n mb oricn. mom g Q}: only -awn. v BA"Fz'IE BRANESH; % or - Toni convoy. luv 53:.) `w'If the roof . the poultry-`house; leaks you are advertising for bad luck with the fowls- Mend the roof. Paid-up: Cap ita"l,7 `1Reserve%F1Mmd, .- % ?5;_000.0A00_: Do not be afraid of overstocking the market with good layers or rap-A idly developing broilers. There never was a time nor will there ever be a time when therewill be too many good chickens. There is always a heavy demand for the best. g Winter Bacon Hogs. I I That there is moremoney in pro- ducing hogs during summer months than in winter most. of us are agreed, still there is a living, prot in produc- ing `bacon in winter when properly managed. At one time: we thought toproduce hogs with a prot it was neccessary to place them on the mar- ket weighing at least 175 pounds, when they were six months old. To do this was a comparatively` easy Imatter when everything was right. `Sometimes, however, when the feeder Ibecame a little too enthusiastic, the young pigs were fed tooheavily with the result that they went off their -feed and off their feet; and prots` vanished. It was a common occur- rence for us to have several Crips, `as we call rthem,'on hand duringthe coldest months of winter. These pigs wereadirect source of loss, and, in some instances, they never recovered, and had to be buried, ' - . I I I artistic way in the Dominion. - There is a long table of contents, and some of the best known contributors" are Theodore Roberts, Robert Know. les, Frederick George Scott, Isabel Ecclestoney Mackay, Virna 'Sheard, Jean Blewett, George Herbert Clarke," Albert `R. Carman,`-James P. Haver- son, L. M. Montgomery, 5: T. Wood; Augustus -Bridle, Jean Graham, Arch- ` re P. McKisljmie and S.` A. White, with ahitherto unpublished poem by t W1:1lia.m Henry Drtttn'rnond._" .. Since those days wehave learned from hard experience that there is a more protable way to produce bac- on than by forcing it on to the mar. ket ere it is six months old._ Now, we aim to grow our hogs, rather than to ~fat'ten them. By making use of pastures when they are available, and in winter, availing ourselves of sugar beets and mangels, and skim milk from the dairy, we are able to keep `the pigs growing nicely at compara- tively small expense. We .aim to make this part of the ration compos- ed of mixed grains (oats, barley, corn, peasvand bran) ji-n varying pro- portions as is convenient at the time, to keep the `hogs thriving nicely. ' When the pigs have reached avsize when they will weigh about I40 lbs. they are put up- to fatten. The formerpractice of feeding roots or some green substitute along with the milk is keptup, but the grain ration is largely increased and it is compos- ed more largely of the more solid grains, with the bran and oats left out. After this stage has been reach- ed, but a comparatively short space of .time is requiredto nish the hogs. .gSince following out this` practice of feeding -hogs we put,.them on the marketat an age varying from seven to `nine months. The resulting pro~` duct is more desirable from the pack- ' er s standpoint, and is much more- protably produced.--Canadian Dairiy-_ man. ' T How _many dollars did you m akeA outof your ducks this season`? Ducks are protable, and easy to raise, and canlbe marketed at `an early age, us- ually 8 to 10 weeks; . F '0. Too many _ock_s of _ poultry havel too many cocksp They are only a source of annoyance to `the hens, and where fertility of the `eggs is not de- sired. the hens are better off without l them. \ Winter eggs arenot all in the feed- 1ing._ The `factory` must bexkept in good running order. You wouldn t [expect theehardiest workmen-to make even nails or horseshoes. out in the storms of winter. C8? Producers. T7WCC' J cnxscrr. u...,,g In feeding sheep, grain and rough feed should be fed separately, the roughage in long racks, which should be protcctedfrom rain and snow `if possible, and the grain should be fed in separate troughs, and when oats are fed, they should be mixed with. corn or wheat screenings, as oats alone have more of a tendency to produce esh than fat. Bran, which 15 a good feed for breeding ewes, is not a good ration for fattening sheep. Pea straw, alfalfa hay, and corn stalks, are the. best forms of rough- age for fattening sheep. The racks should be made large enough, so that one feeding per day, or one feeding in several days, will be sufficient, thus saving labor in attending to, them. _ ! 361. -...u-oquuuuuca, vycla`-`ail. an I16 IISIITCQ Aras `attendant on Miss Delcrme, until people began to? speak of the intima- `Y"btW!-'9!I: them. `One A of Molly`: ;friVen`_[s` -kindly ` wrote_ [her some" gossip of`tihI nature. . ` ` V -, '~D-I.-_'..Il'! -`_!J -11:01 no nu nus uuyurtn _ . I .`_`PsVha.w!,sazd Molly, "Joe .s Just being clever and agreeable. Can t "wo',rry`_"me that way," ' Yet the, tumor. had gxen her ea` little star_t-L-she be-, `fan .;to think _that_.;s.he 1,nu_stn t\. tease ...~ |- \ . 'tMln\hlle Jagimseehvihz;=;e5o11y inn `;rn,.1:eet`xx>deer.ore Iavexy gtire ewtatd haw L >>..II-lsflll`-IlVi_ `cvtvu ,Iul._JVlll.l_ _ DCIQYU: Iihrea-%%wa3.` n0t_h!nfz * 19 Just! Isj';gh,_;r:gti_jor of ' evgusa ulcx . Bat -all_cI`Iu.e;av York doesn't go to Ormond In February. `His cousins, the _Wentworths, were entertaining th'eir? Denver fnend, Miss Constance peloa-me, that =Winter, and Joe was 1: frequent demand `to help amuse the guest`. He not only helped en- .tertaIn,v'but \_vas;` in.` f_ac_t, amazingfiv _w,ell=. vent`ertamed' Wnmself. .. Dances, mas u rades o ra-atVall he 6 r d as. `agtpendnnt n1?eMaa l\.'lA...... g3..S:,r uwnvagucl. LVUW >1Ul_' H. IICW game." He had resolved to kgep silent fqr a.,t1me '-and perhaps" bi:-mg Molly to. terms thereby. -' I`-!uo..o.II 1\1'-... v.._I- .I---_n wjzeufzicked up his hat with an ex- clamation of disgust. , _ North Pole barred? he mquired, 'sarcastically. `-`Nothing barred, Joe," l said Molly, sweetly. _ . a_ Joe was too angry to contxnue the `conversation. He strolled off, mut- tering to himself and headin_g_ for the ` nknA.. `-51. 1.. LL- m wuuau\aurc1y DC nuntmg. _:I`<`)e`v\{ent back to- New York that gnght wnth an air of being deeply in- Jared, (but notwithout a decently spoken godd-bye. `And Molly good,- `bye `was most kind. Se whxsperd} I'll not forget the snowstorm, Jo$;"f 1. u nus uugci. unc snowstorm, _yoe.".-. "Joe did some deep thinking on his way home. -He was a substantial fel- low with brains, and he reasoned with himself seriously. She isn't irting," he soliloquized, but she s wild and doesn't want to be a; tame bird in a cage.` ' However, Pm not going a. rthousand miles_ for .Winter roses hereafter; Nowfor anew game. HE had I-Picnlund I-n `Inna 4331-..; 1-.. uppermost In ner _m1nd. The truth about it-the root` of the whole trouble--was thatgwhile Molly loved Joe she didn't want to marry him-yet. Freedom` meant fun-- travel, golk, admirers, everything, She couldn t bear the thought of settling down and managing a. house. And` Joe was~so impetuous, so` _a1-dent that she knew she must. keep hxm at arm's length, or it would,all be over, . Ar f\Pt\O'I-ulna `I\ ...... _- K` Lambs and sheep should feed fat! in from twelve to fteen weeks, and they should be fat and ready for the block in that time. In fattening old- er sheep, the gain is usually not more than 20 pounds in that time, and the feeder must depend upon making his prots from increased price per pound, over cost,_ rather than `from increased weigh_t.-Weekly Sun. Poultry, Yard and `Pen. A duck grows faster than ,a chick- en, sells for-more in market and costs no more to raise. v OBIVIIDU UIL, ulLlL" itering and heading shady path in the woods. -He want- `edto recover his temper if he could. . Molly still drummed and hummed. Presently a bevy of girls rushed round the corner of the hotel and chorused: Come, Molly, putixyour sweater on an. we _ll_ all take to the` tee _ Cl tee! h on her way to the links tlihe invitation ro_used Molly from er dreams anda little later she was with golf uppermost in `her _mind. In II`L a.`..-..L .'L A` ` " awustll, U1 IL WUUIu_all De Over, ` I Her promise to answer. when the terfuge.to gain time, which she had employed three months before. She hadn t thought of Florida then, and Joe would now have brought herface to face with her promisebut for the frost that killed the roses_-a_nd the orange blossoms! . , Ormond was paradise; and `there would be jother Ormonds. There must be some excuse to gain time,` so her mischievous fancy hit on a snow- storm in August. She reected that she had no lintention"of joining a "Peary relief exp_editio'n, and conclud- ed it safe to try one more delay. She didn't want to lose Joe,"after all; but ,M`olly` was artful. ` She knew the shy bird wouldx surely be hunting. `I09 `\IM3l`|f hanlr .n KY-Kn. \7.._I- ALA- was-serene, Joe cross. ` It was a beautiful day. People were ridin-gjbicycles _on the hard sand `beach; a few heads were`bobbing in the rollers; in the hotel office Mr. Price was telling. one. of his best stories to a guest, who was laughing immoderately. Everybody was con- tent-except Joe. Molly! he said. `No answer. IJa---la, la--la, la la, la, hummed Molly, from the -Cavalleria. - ~ - ' .-See he:-e,Molly, said Joe, des- perately, I m in (dead earnest -now. I've got to go back to-night, and you've got to give me some sort of denite answer. `I'm not made of iron. I love you and I want you to be my wife, and I m willing to wait until you've had all the frisking. round that you want; but I must have an 'answer-straight.- If you re playing with me, say so and we'll call it quits. _ If you don't intend to throw me over, !tell me when .you ll give me a posi- `tive answer, and I'll, wait patiently. ` I09- l1!I:cn`-\:Auv1\nn l s `uvc uuswcr, anu 1 11, Walt patxently." JO )7 d 1 d . . ` 6. raw 8 _ the xmschxeyqus `M0113 : I I19 8`.1V y0u--aV posmve a:&Jwe:7posxtxvely-when it snows in gus .- ~ 'lr\n -s:-`;...I .-_ L}. I,_.' '.'I wI_.au:.|uuGu, -uzuuy, C&.iI3PCFa[l}'lgly- `Sdence for a. few_moments. Molly was-serene, Joe [` If `llihn on kA-.L:I..I .1--- T\---`- V ADVVZANCEI .c....a..a""' W" ";.a,'""z;' "5' " '" mdmm1i%wUm;dm wnmgnwhohsvo been &)...... ..% _._ v--- u--- - ww- To keep mites out of the henhouse use whitewash and sprinkle ashes all around under the roosts. The ashes will do" the business. - - ; Joaie1_hineHan,otBardseown. 1 minor.-from hnalotx-aub1_u.an ll tiled ';.`.f. n.............."" "`.`.;.{ :...1. ..."...` ......" 3: How many American women in ; lonely homes to-day long for this i blessing tocome into their lives, and 1 to be able to utter these words, but of some 0 c derange- ment this happiness denied them. `nvincnl II-n-uuunnvu :C\"t\`A`l\A 3-: :- . i`$e"r}vs?3"ii ;i"iB%e`ee`?i`i}In" sybject. should know that. prepara- uon for healthy maternity is accomplished by the". use r of |l.YDlAE.PlNl(I-IAW5 ; v:ema:.: com-wan `I... `If- _.._'- lI2I_. -.L -1 TIT- -A. JIIIIII I 'VC$L(9$ UIILICI K W le iwhezi Lydia E; nkhun's Vegeteb Compound wee recommended to me. It not only restored me to perfect health. but to my delight I In: another." _ "|t__ v-_`__1_:...-vv-n -;1-'g-__a_.,- -.'hIr;-Magg1'"-':- `E59-1:," Jt"vE'2?e 'Umon,_S. C.,writes to Mrs. Pinkham: `C up":-ounnnflun cu-nun_:`4-nu-out In Lg-ILL H best ration_ for laying hens, ac- cordmg to expernnents, 18 about one I to four, or one part of protein to four parts of -carbonaceous toods. ` A mass i QIVVLJKW UVIHLLEO L 35121150 I I was-greatly run-down in health 4 ii:-om; wealmeu If to .11: sex, " $15.1` T.vIn E, ` -nlilunn Q nnnnhlg I 93: . * At the same time the Sunset party was jolting up Jacob's Ladder a le of sturdy young men` in outing cos- tume climbed the footpath that leads up to the mountain from another hotel. They" had started early, but `the climb v_vas a hard one-some- thing to do Just once, Jack 'Somerb declared. nn,_., .,_ ,1:____;_ .1 .... __ -._.a `LULIGL cu. When the climbers, `dusty. and noadstained,' reached the summit and entered the hotel` that manages to *nd anchorage the_re, they were eag- er for dinner. Hurried ablutious pre- ceded their entrance to the dining`- (Continued on '-Page Seven.) . r I Uuuauna. At Bar Harbor -Molly ran into a group of p Ormond acquaintances. They were going the following week to the White Mountains, and Molly must go with them. They would not hear denial. And so they took a train overthe mountains, and landed at dusk onythe piazza of the Sunset House. Mr. Price met them with a hospitable Ormond welcome. and _some Boston people also, who regul- ` arly did Ormond in Winter and the Sunset in Summer, were there. In `to. or-an-\a-o|:o-`no `AALAA an-nan . 5}!-IIl\vD III EIHIIIIIIVI `V VI C BIIEI \r. I In the morning Molly looked across: the charming intervale and saw Mount Washigton looming up before her, impressive and noble. She, fol- lowed the bridle path up Mount Stickney, and breathed in the delights" of her surroundings-very nearly happy; not" quite, for freedom and fun didn't seem so alluring as they bag` at Or_mond.' -_j_I `I, _-f,L,, L`,-L ,- IIGU GB \Il lllkfllln She was'one of the party that made the ascent of Mou__nt Washington.a few days later. The little engine puf- fed and wheezed; the cogs undernea- eth` jolted and jarred the little car, a]t`1d up, up, up they went, into the L3 y. * AL Q11 unsung LL; Canaan` \0O`;' V753 LICVV. I` I Newport claimed -Molly, and then Bar Harbor. Joe avoided both; made` a. stag trip `to Atlantic _City with some cronies, and went shing in `the Adi- rondacks. l A; `I5, , `I T-_I_-, II_1I , __,, __A__ The- Christmas_number of The Can- Eadian Magazine `stands as `evidence that--`in literary equality `and artistic. abiljti Canadian wyriters ax_1d illustra- tors, can~hold their own wxthithe iv- eragc of -production anywhere. I-t,is veasilyd the" bet rcpresentative.lCana'- dian m'argaz`ine yet published, and is a s lendid -indication. of the advances, t nthaye. been made in a literary and T3j_BBsTpEopLI~:? -1- how all the spplinncel for the care of fourth in throuql znrrounding country: Hearse: and Wsgzans; Morgue Burial Pa tormouu 6 null cemeteries. shipment: to :11 ports of the world. nndortck on promptly and properly cared for. P}-|o N E 32 _ `PrE';'.5 : Barrie [Undertaking Establishment G. G. SMITH & THE AIJVANCE S018! and Cnuaranteed by ` of (tvh;.ii;_>;).x;"<;i vtiite -l;e'nhouses this wmter noth1ng~is `better than dry` leaves. I-.Iave a' lot_ of them stored away agamst that umeof need. Collier and Clapper-ton Streets i J who . buy what sA choicest t_h.at Distinction of Reaching Men ;_DJscmM INAT I N G-- ALWAYS open. E3TA`BLlSi-lED:1B69 "Progress Brand Clothing Imitation is the sincerest attery. But you don t want an imitation of your! young pullets a chance.` he _pullet that is hatched early enough wul lay. more. eggs than two or three _old hens-_ . V |

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