" "isitrriririirriitAokrfinn Sho . ' the Ad. l yr." vaptades of the ij'lhlh"tt, . ', .. 1.3? '.'.15_. - -tc. . .h cu wound: a an 2thtt 'W-'4i-. bm.fuq.lt.tet.er . Ht ST'..'))':,,'. on. W. m 'terr In: the may“. i'di'r'.'ii' [up rt.:lt,fll,'.;rlt.t1'd,' an (at ., .. “um.“ 1Vtiqfiym in, ya! you: In “twining q 5 who tor the black and white End a um manure ot the_ncqmi- "do. new so ebundautly tieatmred - it. The Holstein cow, which. an even the Ayrshiremu admits. he superior tau-midi, in: not very pop- lin: in the Province, ol Ontario 3 very few years Mo; those who ten- “ch to breed and keep "cumin: were tolerated by theicaeighbors as .8 sort. ot harmless "ii- "good enough lellows, but led away by a md.." In the struggle tor recognition â€on: work was done by a iew pion- eer. spirits. and ot these men one of the best known in breeding circles is Mr. A. C. Mailman. proprietor ol "Bpringtrrooh Stock Farm," at Bres- Ieu. Ontario. Though still a young than in appearance, and a very boy hi hearty optimism, Mr. Mailman l was through the brunt ol the battle tinthe early nineties when the cows IG which he had pinned his laith "irere lighting popular prejudice and . public ignorance. (My t1retr Ir., Peru an...) Thirty years or more ago Mr. iialr. man hogan luggag- on an uneleared mm at New, undee, Waterloo coun- ty. From his father, the late John S. llallman. he had inherited a lik- in; for pure-bred cattle, and his frrst, {lock on the new farm included a few imported Holstelns, pan oe a consignment. passing through Toronto to the United States. With these be Worked carefully and cautiously, good-nat.uredty hearing the patroniz- ing altitude of his neighbors. who thought. it such a pity that llallmn wanted his lame on a useless breed. loving some twelve years ago to his Mt (arm near Hreslau. he brought with him. about thirty-live. held of trttre-bred Holstein". nearly " ot which had been raised on - his lirrrt farm. "'.Did you decide immediately upon taking this farm that you would be a dairyman?" lashed Mr. Mailman. "No, and I'm not purely a dairy- N'YOUB CHILD IS 03088, nvnnn. WNBTIPATID lather: can rest easy after glvlns "1Mttomta Syrup ot Flap." because In a to! hours all the clogged-up waste, loin- bile and fermenting tood gently moves out of the bowels. and you have a yell! playful chlld again. llolt "other! If too.“ I: to“ slam. mu. bowel! unfocu- Sick childron needn't be coaxed to “to this humiess "fruit Justin.†Hillier†ot mothers keep it handy bo. am they know tta action on the launch. liver and bowels " prompt and lure. All! your drugs!“ for 1 60.emtt bot. tle of “Calilornil Syrup of Figs," which conning directions tor babies, children at .11 we: and for grown-um. GiMr.Aoc.HaIiitun Havana. Breeder First'; Then Dairyman Began Thirty Years Ago. “and: Syrup of Fl...†BAINT PROGRESS IN2N'T EXPERIMENT with paints that haven’t a good reputabl- who you can use Lowe Brothers "High Sundial" and get the Best Known Result. will do for you what it has done many an. In others. I. It does the work you expat. 2. it resists weather longer. 3. It covers mom sumac. 4. It leoks better-ood leaves the sumo. in better condition for repainting than ordinary paints. Get our special color combinations for 1914, and bookiet-"Homes Attractive and How ttt Make Them"-free M. Weichel & Son Waterloo, Ont. - "C' In th- umb! m. Ila. . mm- W, th-tltr" ..B- â€nation: my minivan. trye W was" it)!" DIW- -, twt, we "hte we- wmn te owl-ll. - VIII-â€Ivan... .-v- . mats} and May. ISIW county we In: a - “new a! splendid local mutt; halt I don. busy tom no Iithiualew miles of mum. He-tnmattintotnaV a good pro" Iron: the ale ot new." “You teed all your skim-milk?" "Yes, that's the point, exactly. It [were a “hymn solely. operating with a good grade herd, I would sell most ot the “he! and maid the whole mite. But, as a breeder of "obtains, [want the skim-mill tc assist in raising the calves. and the sale ot the cream in neighboring town is a paying accompaniment. You must remember. then, not pim- arily my business in the production ol pure-bred animals." - Prom in Sale at Pure Buds. "Do you tind a good market tor pure-bred dairy calves at present?" I questioned. . . "Very “our. silen are very bis- ing, was the reply. “At present I am leading about twenty calves of dim-rent ages. male and female. How about the males? Why! I can sell every bull call tor breeding purposes at a good price. or course, it ti male call isn't up to the mark I don't keep it, but thosel keep lean readily sell These twenty I speak ot are all pure- bred, and that means a lot in selling. The tull brother to this fellow," indi- Lcating a splendid young bull in a nearby pen, "sold recently tor three hundred dollars. My bull calves last year averaged about. two hundred dol- lars at auction, and, ot course, le- [males sold well. Now, I could sell iiii'iiGrrkairjAan, lint I couldn't sell lm' calves at these fancy prices, could It" But the worn pure-bred, alone, at- tee a call’s name is not sutBeient with a judicious buyer. Heredity is . great factor. and the purchaser of llolstcin calves, be these purebreds or scrubs, is very particular as to the milk-giving propensity translu- red to them by their parents. In the respect or his stock sire Mr. llallmzm. seems 1ery fortunate. He is the pry sessor ot one of the most noted of Holstein balls, "Sir Korndyke Boon," a double son ot the {anions “Pontiac Korndyke." . s “I refused $3,000 for him when h; was two years old," Mr. Mailman said, "and I think I acted wisely in so doing." All his calves look ex- ceedingly promising. Then, he is mated with good-milking females, as some of the records 1 have on hand prove. The choice of a sire is of the greatest importance in the grading- up of a milking herd, pure-bred or grade." On first entering the stable we had happened to come upon Mr. Hall- man's assistant in the act of weigh- ing a paillul of milk. It was not necessary to ask it this practice was generally Iollowed--the discovery and the charts on the wall answered the unspoken question. Success Hangs on a Scale 8000. " "Twmity-six and n lrectiol‘ pounds," said the hired men, as tl, stood Bear while he weighed tbl milk. "That's for the noon milking. She gave over twmtty-tive in the morning. and we'il get about the same to-night." T "How long since, she freshen!!!" "She's been in over two months. and 18 running over aventy-Iive pounds a day," was his reply. "This vow near her will go over eighty pounds per day. This one downJIere has 1 record at over twenty pounds of butter per week " a tttree-year- old. Some of our vows give pretty well up to 15,000 pounds per sexson under ordinary conditions; ol course. under pressure they will give lunch more." "How long is it since you "om- menced weighing your milk?" I asked Mr. Hallman. - “Well, sir, I can hardly' san" he said. “I have been weighing ever since I started farming. " we were in the house I could show you a hook giving the daily yields oleach en la my herd for the rear 1888. FiGril over twenty-rwe years ago. and it is all there in writing." "Would you milk cows without "Well, I should say not? in no ’uther way can a man know how he is doing in the business; " is the only way in which you can weed out the boarders; oiten the best appearing corts-the ones vou think most otr- are not paying for their iced. The ordinary tarmer? By all means. No man at this time can atiord to tami without knowing what his cows are giving. it he weighs, he detects a fattitttt-oit in yield at once, and acts accordingly. He can regulate the teed. Two-thirds oi all food goes to maintenance; the profit is in the other third. What is just enough lor one cow may be too much tood tor an- Iother, hence a lossol profit through waste of ladder: it. may not he enough " another, hence a loss oi profit through a deï¬cient yield. Weighing brings feeding down to a scientitie basis. There should be a scales in every stable sheltering a Irow." Similarly, Mr. Hallman advocates the keying of milk. ."I have used a Baht-00k tester for years, and emuid-' pr that if a man owns only one cow he should have a tester," he said. As might be expected, Mr. Ilall~' man is"a great believer in the value ot torn ensilage as a dairy ration. His large silo is probpbly the tirst concrete silo to be erected in the township, and one of the earliest in Waterloo county. “I don't know the time when lwas without a silo of some kind on the hum." he said, "and I certainly would not attempt to do without one. No man can at.» ford to farm without a silo - the dairy man, the heel breeder, or the ordinary farmer. Silage is not an' all-refund-tood, but itjs an indispen- sable one. My idea is that farmers <hould have a small silo in which to [he]: silage: tor summer feeding. This does away with the labor of cutting green stuff in the summer. It isn't necessary to discuss the silo, When "The silo, or enursr, makes possible winter dairying," he continued. "In my opinion this is preferable to sum: I'm-r dairying," he continued. “In my opinion thim is prelcrable to sum- mei flaming. Your herd is heloré you all the time; you know what they get no what they give My cows tlertr so ogtside' till sometime in I came here twelve years ago there was only "Y beside mine; now praC< lically every farmer has one. ,tiriy wht,m'veitetitioa is at its ttttsth, ii4 thty rarely at above their winter yields. 1 know I diner from many, hull prefer wirrtet dair.ving." When Mr. Hathmut secured his we sent [arm of one hundred, .nd seventy urn the hams were in unwise mod- 'ern or desirable The stable: were dark and poorly-planned. At once the new owner went to work; tore out mailing and put in windows, and changed the entire Inyout of Jazmin; and aisles. The huge wooden beams, twelve In tottrteen inches. which took up room and nbsrun-d tho light, urn- taken but and remand by fron pil- lars. A Concrete tloot Nth gutters and " mm!" aide ten tert in width Every Owner Should Weigh. Couldn't Farm Without Silo. A. C. “ALLIAN â€a.“ a all u mob mun- latte! In. noun- built -edirttg to him “In, and ï¬n to maniac-lib " M an algae. Buy.- each pair of W tmdr.the mu work than to a was“ [actor Inâ€. t ttort qotettst'roqt4ed no“. Tlgo to. , 1i trr but " in in toliowod out. the odd 'rtrs4,,te1r, BO . hm. ml is tuned; ‘Bfom on" to I iguana; Gwyn†the hollow-town! cou- cnto “this: between Ina-5a; Iona tum-howls and an recently . urntcly. The water is lingual to tho bowls through teed and main pipes. 'which no embedded In the mst- id mtperete watt, [arming the launch- tion ot tho muse“. tron . commit tank tilted by wheel-power. This non-l arrangement. Mr. Halli-nan up is a. perfect success and a great labor- “WEI. The raising of hogs has been tor yum a very prts0table side line on Springbrook Farm. Several times Mr llpllman- has imported pure-bred 'rpunworths trom England, but. at late years has not kept somany as tym- erly. The Tamworth, as he says. “is not the beat hog, became there is no treat," hut. it is a good bacon hog and well adapted to ordinary farm rais- ing. Quite a ttoth ot pure-bred Bar- red Rocks contributed to the "plate bred total" ot the farm. Mb". has been given a trial try Mr. llallman with very good results. “I have had " tor "eentr-itee years," he said, "taking from the field, gen- erally. two crops 2 year, leavingpas- “use. 1 mil: that alfalla is as valu- attle as erwilage. in its own way. Of course. it dust be suited to the soil, and it must he cut at the prom tyne and cured in the proper manner. A yen ago last winter a little bit oi mine was killed out, but trom the wav we rese"survivext I imagine that [must have irsed homegrown seed. not knomng lit to be such. The choice not known It [to be such. The choice of Ontario-km: seed is exceedingly important."' ' _ Asamunicipal animal, an Institute and short Cthrge lecturer, Mt. Hall- man is well known outside of his own county. In Holstein circles he is ottm referred to ts "the father ot tho Canadian herd book." SUN AND WIND BRING. OUT UGLY SPOTS. HOW TO BE- llere'a a chance. Miss Frecklehne, tq try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable dealer "at it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles; while it it does give you a clear complexion the et- pense is trifting. Simply get an ounce of othi-dou- Me strength from any drugglst and a lew applications should show you how easy it, is to rid yoursell ol the homely freckles and get a beautilul mmplexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed tor the worst case. . Be sure to ask the druggist for ttie double strength othlne as this is the prescription sold under stratum ot money back it it tails to remove freckles. . _ Rev. In. F. L. Barber, rum: of Listowe1 Methodist Churtrh left on Monday on a six LiiiiiGuiiion to be spent in German, “ht-re he will twain»? his studies in ihitoaothy and lh‘ology. DR. HARDER OFF TO GERMANY. 10 our “W†" mom on com: Ptgred Tongue. Bad Tau. Induci- tlon, allow min Ind nimble Haul- mhen coma from I torMd 11m Ind clogged bunk, which e.trtN, your gated food. which noun tad torment- llko garbage in n "rill barrel. Tint- tra ttrat step to untold mt-rr-V nriion. foul mes, had breath, yellow akin. menial fonts, evemhin. out in horrible and name-tin; A Guam tonight will give your constipated bowel. I (borough clonsln‘ and straighten you out by morning. They work while you 'tlee- Iii-cont no: from-your draught will lap you fool- ing loud for month; For Melt Hanan. Mr {my maul-h Liver and .-t.-Ttter 'work while you oldâ€- _ u' "if 2:.- f?, {4 mue-Bied Hogs on the Bide. MOM FACE MOVE Tum EASILY K1513 T Spanking does not cure children cl bed-wetting. There is a constitution- al cause lor this trouble. In. M. Summers. Box W. Mt, Windsor, Ont. will send tree to my mother ‘her alw- eesstul home treatment. with lnll instructions. Send no money but write her ttrdae it your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chances no " can't help it. This treatment also cure: adults and aged people troubled with urine dlmcultics by day SUCCESS OF TWO STUDENTS THE EXAMS. AT QUEENS Messrs. Oliver Master and In the list of successful candidates in the recent, examinations in Arts at Queens Unn . 1ity. which was given out on Saturday appear the names of Mr. Oliver Master. son or Ald. Irvin Master, ot Bellin, and Mr. Ar- t-hur Woods, of Elmira, both tormer B. C. T. l. students. in addition to securing his M. A.. degree Mr. Master non medals in two subjects. viz., History and Poli- tical Science Unlike Toronto Uni- versity where in order to secure the degree ot ALA. a special thesis is re- quired, at Cieens this degree is awarded to them obtaining over " per cent. in all subjects, those [ailing below this percentage but securing the number required to pass. "reing hwarded the degree at Bachelor ol Arts. The degru of Master of Arts at Queens is thererore a mark oi special merit. To have obtained this degree in what is ordmarlly a tour year course, in three years, which IS the time Mr. Master took to com- plete the course is unusual, but to have won two medals in addition makes the achievement specially note- worthy. Mr. “was, ot Elmira, was mttets"i- tut in securing his Bachelor ci Arts degree. iiRjau1'iti,ff!(l,t,,tt'ri/t' _wittt Arthur Woods. B. C. 1. Stud- entp Digtinguish Themselges VlSl'l'El) THE . ORPHANAGE ht Si'. AGATHA These liberal benefactors recently rrurented to the Institution 3 valu- Ible Millet Range “hm. proved 'ery "iciettt on this (reunion. number of the friends and benefactors at the orphans at St. math. paid a Visit to the Orthan's Home on Wed- inlay, April 22nd, uhete ttey en- oyrd a good old lashionrd "Rance Hatch." The orphans 'otttrittutrd their share towards mining the dar a pleastcnt \HXARD‘S LlNlHl-ZNT 1tMfto “ANN FRIEND. night. Better Than Spa ith Ttttt Itetrtg-niutintrrntintoutside" m the fact thug “protects your prop- V it, 'astthisweardadtearofthe weather. Of eoum it Improves the appearance too, and adde much to market value if you wish to seit, but the chief moon in that the building the: is kept painted keeps. in good condition. We an Agents for Sherwin-William, Paints and Vamiehee. The makers of these paints have studied the principals of paint protection for years and so evety Sherwin-Williams product wean v. dl, and looks well. sf _ ‘Ihere'is ecodbmy in using good irain'tpso come and talk ton: [ about - Sherwin-Williams Paint (Prepared) SWP hr your building-S-W Porch Floor Paint for verandahs and porch floors--- S-W Wagon Paint for wagons and implements-S-W Buggy Paint for buggies, automobiles, porch furniture, boats, canoes,' etc. . ' We haven't space here to tell you about all the different Sherwin- Williams products. Just remember that there is ‘a special S-W finish for every kind of surface. Come and see In about your painting needs. ’ HARDWARE. & PAINT WATERLOO . - smmssm SARNlA WOMAN GETS DAMAG- ES. . / m', Mr. Justice L'rittori has awarded $3,000 damagtglol ttie Widow of the late William _Moliatt ol Samia a~airst tht Grand Trunk Railway. Moliat was kilFd win-nan "trfite ml into his conductors van, and his “idow and for 810,000 damagrs. Mmssmsss - _ C (Ind h, Arr,'e2C.--Last sum- mer Mr. T. Stump of Rock- voxl caught two red tores rib n they [are quite young and he took than home. 'ihey were red, all triseohe aittie Mack spot on each, 3nd were male 'and female. _ Yesterday two yo n: outs wore born, and were tom fort-lack. It these Val-.azb little, fellas s. live and grow to their Mal Iright they win mew 33.000 in hard cash for tha owner. LLACK FOX PU.’|ES MAY BRING' 35.00.. . ___ (ttet; 'makes the common-sense statement whic followsz’ - ' -.- - MR. J. J: HOUSTON, who lives on†a r_oad that has lately been im- prqved, n? Lysderdale County. Mis- Then your road taxes will be wanted and not 'm-l-" They will return many times the amount they cost, and those returns will show in the baud valuation of your property. the leaaeped cost of marketing your produce. the longer life of your horses and vehicles, the greater conveniences and general prosperity of your community. Concrete roads outlast all otheLlindI of road: and require practically. iir,%iiiriE,7 man; its". They in aft, clean, Imminent Ind [unable every day in the yer. ' Write Engine. Good Roads literature and learn how good rod. will better your candkiom. Address , "I have never made an investment for which I have " much financul returns and satis- faction out as l have out of this road. The advancement in openy alone has been sufficient to four or five times pay the whole cost of con- struction. and I don't think the county could make any investment that would bring in as much return. as to build a network of them all over' it. It is such a good thing that I want every man in the hound to have one just like it. and I am willing to pay my part of the axes to help him get k." I Canada Cement Company Limited m Rerald and... Mantra] Build Concrete Roads Conan. I“ Dom-.0 the peach crop. this year will he . l cidtdly small. ‘. 'C:,', F. iagara district growers ' tear ':iut HQ}? [iii] iv: V0ver- -. - Qs- Fra Taaa "7' have proved in value. :- llLJ.l.Gnu-Ilnolll.ul.¢n. ' Inna: "I hare been as]. - “I Gum tar - J'.fltt await Qua-nun tuning." histamine-tn. havin- I". .ttety M's A'alell't4', ffttr, is-tiii) Gal. Ken an - One " In, 'tmrgisvs "In. our pr huh. . in“!!! ht $10\ "A Tmsst in an tu, Inn‘Tmn angin- " ttum d Dr. B. J. Kaila-II C... tummmm SPAVIN CURE? gsUVG, 551512383" "'_, fge",',,fT,,ie"t,lit 'teat - , " for a Home “Si-f Kai 'ié iii" Don‘t sell ardent»! hone org-acquit} a! gm! iff, Iii