THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1928, isi RE WE CAN SUPPLY THE FINEST KIND OF Dressed Quebec Spruce Uniform grades--well milled--in Flooring, V. Joint, Novelty Siding and Sheathing. t us have your inquiries. ALLAN LUMBER C0. VICTORIA STREET. "Phone 1042 FLAT RATE SERVICE Bring your car in, or send for us to call and get it. will She, yor a flat rate for overhauling it or repairing it. class, mechanics. Special Compressed Air Ofl Spray- olor vomioy ir Sie squeeks, and the Greasing Rack, are some of' Butvice day or night (repairing and washing). BLUE GARAGES, Limited Phone 567. Cor. + Bagot and 1 Queen Sts. FOR AUTO ELECTRICAL REPAIRS See F. HALL The Auto Electrician--20 years' experience Storage Batteries recharged and repatred. All work guaranteed. 335 King Street «= - « « Telephone 939 WE ARE NOW. BOOKING ORDERS FOR WINTER Automobile Painting SELECT FINISHING FROST'S AUTOMOBILE PAINTING 200-505 QUEEN STREET. For Auto Repairs For all kinds of Automobile repair work, and where a real mechanic is needed, see us and have it done right. R. GREENLEES Angrove's Auto Males, 146 Sydenham Street Phone 1282. Kingston Battery Service "W. MILNF, PROPRIETOR. ALL MAKES OF STORAGE BATTERIES, STARTING MO. TORS, GENERATORS AND MAGNETOS REPAIRED OUR PRICE FOR CHARGING. BATTERIES ..... PHONE 19254. WE SERVE GOOD MEALS Good meals served to your liking. EVENING PARTIES given first class attention. THE VICTORIA CAFE Siug Lee and Gan Lee, Props. Telephone 762. | | subdue a nasty COLD, no remedy is Special Prices on Davenports, Chesterfields 'and Couches Davenport Beds . . . $37.00, $45.00 and up Chesterfield Suites--5 pieces--Lamp, Table, 2 chairs and Chesterfield. Worth $250.00, for ....... - $200.00 Extension Couches $10.50, $12.50, $13. Large size. ~The largest and best line of F urniture in the | THE DAILY BRITISH. | WEEKLY POULTRY LESSON Under the Authoritative Direction of Prof. F. C. Elford Dominion Poultry Husbandmen ¥ "With Specialized Information Contributed by G. W. Miller Author of Coldbelt Poultry Course. Registered in accordance Choosing the Birds for Production. Now that the pullets are in' winter quarters and the older hens are | pretty well through their molt, the | poultryman should begin making | observations . for the purpose of | selecting his breeders for the com- | ing season. When laying contests become | popular many breeders ~ ignored | | everything but fecundity in choosing | the birds for mating. The result was disastrous. The hens, genera- tion after generation, steadily dim- fnished in size and the eggs also be- come smaller. Furthermore, beth fertility and hatchability were lower- ed. It is now generally conceaeda by experts that if high egg production is to be maintained, and if the eggs are to be of the weight demanded in the best grades, racial characters cannot be ignored. The only safe basis of breeding is the record of production, plus constitutional vigor. In other words, the birds must be standard bred and must approximate standard weight. ir Maintain Purity of Breed. Unless' we are to revert to mon- grelism it is essential that the purity of the breed or variety be maintain- ed. A bird that is so deficient in standard qualities as to disqualify her for a prize in the show room should never, regardless of her egg record, be permitted in the breeding pen. lacks type and appearance. The de- mand to-day is for the stock of | breeders that can produce in a year to which a due place, although not an extreme one, has been given to externals. To sacrifice racial qualities will reduce the demand for breeding | stock. It should be remembered: that the profitable trade in breeding poultry was in the first place due to the high merits of breeding stock. With the rise of the productive aspects of the poultry industry there | came great rivalry. This is being | lessened, and the demand now is for type, size of body, vigor, and what are acknowledged as the distinctive characters of each breed as well as fecundity. Beauty and Productiveness. The aim should be to produce a strain that gives specimens that can win in the show room or in the lay- ing contest. Several of the best Sneezing Colds, Running Eyes, Quickly Relieved To Drive Away Your Cold Simply Breathe CATARRHOZONE To speedily clear up a bad case of NASAL CATARRH, to completely so pleasant and sure as CATARRH- OZONE. You can carry the inhaler in your purse or vest pocket--use it at home, on the street, in the movie. Every time you breathe through the inhaler you send the healing vapor of CATARRHOZONE through all the air passages of the NOSE, THROAT and LUNGS. For those who catch cold easily, for those who sneeze too often, for those with throat trouble or bronchitis, CA- TARRHOZONE is a boon, Two months' treatment, $1.00, Small size, 50c. Refuse a substitute. Sold by druggists. EARLY THRIFT If you would learn a lesson in the constructive values of thrift, study Jig lives lives of our Presidents. Adams taught school as Taylor labored as a boy on his father's southern . T : f Neither should the bird that | 12 or more dozen eggs per hen, and { with the Copyright Ach Canadian breeders are ing this in their flocks Where trapnesting is practised and the layers are handled ' each time they go on the nest the work of selection is greatly simplified. One soon thus learns to pick out the birds that are full of snap and go, that lay eggs of the best marketable size, and that are easily kept in good condition. If the hens ave not trap- ped the poultryman has to depend on observation. He should acquaint himself with the standard type re- quired in the breed, and pick from the hens that the most nearly_ap- proach it the number required that are the most often on the nest, that are always good feeders, that have a refined looking head, that have plenty of abdominal capacity to per- mit of rapid functioning of-the nu- | tritional and reproductive organs, | and that keep in condition while lay- ing heavily. These are the females from which the best pullets will be bred. approximat- ---- Must Not Be Hurried. This selective work cannot be 'satisfactorily done in a hurry. A period of several weeks should at least be given to it. Once a bird makes an impression a note should be made of it, and if there are many birds in the flock she should be band- ed, preferably with a colored band. This should be done with each bird who so distinguishes herself as to be | thought desirable. Then these | should be closely watched to see that | no mistake has been made. { A month or so before hatching eggs are desired the selected fe- | males should be placed in a pen by | themselves, and a male from a high | producing hen mated with them, It | fs only by these selective methods that egg production may be main- tained or increased. Questions on This Week's Lesson. 1. When should the breeders be selected? 2. Which should be given prefer- ence in selection, fecundity or racial character? 3. How shofyd untrapped males be chosen for breeding? 4. What characters, other than fecundity should be considered es- sential in breeders? fe- Answers to Last Week's Questions. 1. Fowls should be given feeds they like because they thus will eat more food than .they otherwise would, Moreover, palatability keeps digestibility, and thus more of the feed eaten is effectively assimilated. 2. The groups of feeds, . that should be found in the laying ration of laying hens are grain feeds, ani- mals feeds, succulent green feeds and mineral feeds. 3. By feeding wet mash in early | mornings supplementary to the re- gular ration in July and August, molt is delayed and summer produc- tion is stimulated. And by adding an afterncon feed, making two of wet mash daily, egg prodhction may be continued for a month or six weeks longer. A fox can scent a man a quarter of a mile away, but 'you must get very close to a pole.cat. You can always spot a man who drinks coffee out of a saucer, be. | cause he rpots himself. Somebody stole a horse in York. Maybe they just took it home to se® what the thing was, A NECESSITY WITH MANY PRESIDENTS | By S. W. Straus, President American Society for Thrift lled to maintain himself early in life by the hardest of farm labor. At one period he carned his livelihood by driving a team of mules for a canal boat. ars he earned his ivelihood as a __WHIG Talk of the Town Louis Abramson's ASTONISHING VALUES TEN DAY SALE MEN'S OVERCOATS! THE LIKE AT THE PRICE HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN IN KINGSTON BEFORE ! 300 Overcoats offered at less than cost to make them Men! You will be astounded at the valpes. Such Great Coats are never seen at less than double the price we ask for them. Ches- terfields and Ulsters; soft, woolly, warm Checkbacks; Three-piece Belts; set in and Raglan Sleoves ] in Greys, Lovats, Fawns and Hea- ther mixtures. Every Coat Cold and Storm-proof. *24.75 New | ALL SALES 29.95 EVERY COAT IS A REAL MASTERPIECE AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR DAD OR THE BOY At These Low Prices @ Louis Abramson CASH 336 PRINCESS | STREET. Phone 1454w. Come at once if you wish to secure one--they'll all be sold quickly ---------------- ALL SALES CASH MONEY~ AT WORK Brief but Important Lessons in Finauce, Markets, Stocks, Bonds and Investments ARBITRAGE LEVELS PRICES IN ALL MARKETS It keeps prices of identical securi- | | ties and commodities about equal | lon all the different exchanges | throughout the soumey. | Did you ever otice that a stock | which is listed on both the Ban, | Francisco and New York stock ex- | changes sells for about the same | | price in both markets? The same Js true of goid, bullion, money, ex- | change, commodities, or securities { which are traded in on different mar- kets. The reason for this is arbi- | i trage. ing of anything in one market and selling it at a different price in an- | other market to make a profit on | the aifterence of prices in the two | markets. i The only difference in price should : _i be the cost of transporting the thing | Fy from one market to another. In the | case of commodities this is natural; ly larger than for securities. Some brokers make a business of | f watching different markets to eateh ! | any difference above transportation Wome te ei to communieate i between all markets quickly, really make a BUY ADVERTISED GOODS "They Must Always Give Full Value The Lure of Montreal in Winter NC ESSN 7 Arbitrage is the simultaheous buy- | EO FO RTRSY # A T Eset snows are on the way once more and the home of Winter sports calls to you. Housed in the largest hotel in the British Empire, you will be but a step from the glistening slopes of Mount Royal. Warmth and hospitality within, with excellent cuisine and all the com- forts of metropolitan hotel service, will enhance the joys of the great out-of ly awed 'BERT TED an TIE TGR ee WS. - at