“Dayton ~ Computing Scale Posr OFrfice Box 7% Heintzman . PRINCE RUPERT ~ Pad Rk el pts Pianos. i ee! We ta 0, A. RAGSTAD WATCHES CLOCKS JEWELRY HAZELTON : B.C. Oeste eae ens a 5 is FS ts! POULTRY || DEPARTMENT ||! eas es td tet ns ne es Those who desire winter laying birds realize that it is best to hatch the chicks from winter laying hens. This means that a certain knowledge of what a hen produces in the way of eggs, during the winter is essential. The law that ‘like praduces like’”’ holds good in the matter of egg production, and chicks hatched from winter layers will be more likely to mature into fine winter layers than those hatched from hens that have laid only afew eggs during the spring or sum- mer. To produce a flock that will be good winter layers, it is also necessary to get a good per- centage of the flock. hatched early, There are many advantages, besides the fact that early hatch- ed chicks should, if properly grown, make good winter layers. One of the most important of these is the fact that early hatehed chicks will have better chances of growing to. maturity than late hatched chicks. “. While some may he lost, if the weather during the early spring is exces- sively cold and disagreeable, early hatched chicks have the months of March, April, May and perhaps some of Junein which to grow under a normal ‘tempera- ture, before the: excessive and oppressive heat. of -mid-summer arrives. This is:one of the most important features of the poultry industry :— to. get -the chieks hatched successfully, ‘and then to raise a large percentage of those: on: hand. To be? able to. raise ‘four hundred ‘or’ more cut of ‘every five hundred hatched means success. + Rewroncen Concaer A SPECIALTY Box 271 . -- PRINCE RuPERT By veoetigae cen ciameasinecigmetamecamesnecamecimen THIRD AVENUE—PRINCE Rorerr | { | HAYNER BROS. ) _ FURNITURE cs Funeral Directors - Embalmers SPECIAL ATTENTION TO SHIPPING CARES LE TR EP one hundred or one hundred and fifty out of every five hundred spells failure. Chicks that are ready to be put | out in the colony coops, or on free range, by the middle of April will have the finest kind of nourishment in the way of suc- culent green food: and: bugs, - worms, etc. After the grass has been scorched .for a. month or two with the hot sun, much of the best feeding qualities have: The early grass that j is: left it. not tao long ner too tough, as found in abundance during early spring, will aid materially in growing fine healthy young'stock. ‘Early hatehed chicks do not. have to contend with the depress- ing -effects of excessively warm weather, in so far as they are past the crucial stage of their & growth when this kind of weath- er arrives, While warm weather of itself is not a cause of white diarrhea, it. will spread this di- sease ‘and make matters much worse if the disease once gets in- toa flock. If the birds have been hatched early in the spring, they’ will have sufficient vitality, as the warm weather comes on, to fight off the attack of any slight: disease ‘that might be fatal to later liatched birds, - When the chicks are ® brought off early in'the year, it-gives the operator plenty of time in which ‘to procure as. many more chicks as he thinks he may need, should the hatehing or. raising of tht early.chicks not. be.as- successful as had. been: ‘expected, Early hatehing i is the direct opposite of “putting all the eggs in one bas-. ket,”? and precludes the: possibil- ity of losing: : an. entire season. if any unforseen accident makes: it: : necessary to procure more stock: In a word:it gives the. operator a chance to turn himself; and does not burn his bridges: behind him, To raise only} Chicks that have the advantage Srmermermermientorns TP oth We i ia l. [ ( c StaTion=ny Tae ‘OMINECA HERALD - SMABERS or GOOD—REAL ~ PRINTING. ANYTEING ° o paneer aie aerenaees , _ LARGE ST00K EVERYTHING ‘Thoroughbred White Orp-. -jngton Cockerels; also eggs. |’ for hatching, -$3.00 per 15.- S.C. White Leghorn Cock- “erels, eggs $2.00 per 15. -R; Brawn, Kitstimkafom, B.C.” W. RB. LOVE P.O. Box ost “Third Avenue PRINCE RUPERT Power and Telephone Equipment - Electric Lizhta Supplied and Inatalled - ELECTRICIAN Gasoline Engines and Fittings carried. Equipment first clase only. Quotations and Information given. "MOORE Sec “TRON IN. THE NEW _WAY:- "8 SAVER OF IPE , By a sgneront, Does the Wa % Housetéepers. & S68 ee Is AHousehoald Treas SAVE YOUR WIFE ine Pat of TRORING - New ‘ Hazelton Do. your business with : Express and Passenger, . : Between Old: 7 Hazelton Stage attention given to all. : parcels. _D. MILLER . Office and hams on lith Ave, near railway Alwaya reliable, Close : : ‘contract disease quickly,” Ly make poor growth in general. | vou need the. _Best QUALITIES SHELF) AND HEAVY: » “HARDWARE, FOR . S ALE - of pleasant: weather, not too’ hot |' ed _ -_ | nor. too cold, and plenty of suceu-. an lent:-green: ‘food, ‘with ‘sufficient if. fed. the proper | po animal food, kind of grain: and” mash, “should |; ‘grow ‘all the “time, -without any setback. «This means. that these us “chicks will’ mature early and ‘not |} be: ‘stragglers’? that: offend the | | | eye, and’ that: never amount. “tel "t anything in the way of. layers. |. Early hatched chicks, when pro- perly:: fed,‘ will -grow- into much larger birds, both in frame and muscle, than those hatched: later ‘in the season, This is ‘quite’ na- tural, as everything i is in favor of the early-hatehed | ‘chick “And when’ the: early- hatched. pullet begins Jaying she will start lay- ing a large-sized. egg, and it:-willl. : be. considerably sooner when she]. lays a~marketable- egg than’ ‘in| case of later ‘hatched: birds.:: This} , is important, for. no one likes ‘to have to use “pullet ‘eggs in. the], house at a time when the eggs: are bringing the’ highest price. | , Late-hatched birds, on’ the con- trary, having smaller frames, do not, as:a rule, lay marketable eggs tor some weeks: after they! to start laying: . . This is principally |p. because of: ‘the tact. that. their bodies are: smaller-: dinary and their vitality i is not-so great as that of. the. early: hateh- |g ed birds.) oes. ‘To attempt. ‘to. ‘hatch ‘chicks from pullets that were not’ hatch- ed until late in the season, unless |i these pullets’ have been specially eared for, will mean much trouble and small success for those who attempt it, strongly ‘vitalized. eggs... This will be quickly reflected i in chicks} that ‘do ‘not seem to be able to|' keep. up with the crowd -- that than-: or- As the late-hatched, ‘bird has neither the:size nor the! vitality, possessed by the early-|: -hatched bird, ‘and | condition in’ -Oatebak” ~ November. . : i And. ast. patie -For- the® ‘poultryma that has” a regular trade’ and: in. value. This. makes it wo while to raise them. . - Good “orinling does. ‘ nsive rintin, a it . cannot lay ‘as expe sive p gi ck ing is expensive in. the.e M.. RUDDY. . ” Forwarding and General Ereighting ting. | - “A. M, RUDDY.’ ‘Residence and Barn near Blackamith Shop! HAZELTON, BG. - ‘THIRTEENTH AVENUE _ FRESH" BREAD | EVERY" ‘DAY paNoY’ PASTERIES, CAKE, &e. “MEALS AT ALL HOURS. C..R.. Bioaaer, PROPRIETOR . ‘Bakery and Cafe - | "We tise ou 6wn Bread and Pastry: ° | LUMBER ty rites right., ; Come and see "me. . Orders taken for all kinda. of bs “lumber and: building t material, ~ *. large or small; and-in-ear. lots. © - Quality. right. “e Adlusting to railroad standard a specialty “Watchmaker and J eweller: “Fine Wares. [REPAIRING WATCHES, CLOCKS, ‘JEWELLERY. NEW. HAZELTON, Bec. = Joseph Kisling ||] 2 ft path You alwaya’ You always look’ nice ‘when’ y Wear’ ‘ghrments; We-slways haye the newes' “goods: and latest “atyles, Our iclothes - fi “well and “are made hy. expert: tailors a wig So OM OWM premises, (5° ; ey Us drée:-: That iy all’ we ‘asl of you." “We also de: Ladies! Conturne : Talloriog. : .. SWEDER ‘BROS. | oe | Merchant } Fallora a : : _Helgerson_B Block... PRINCE RUPERT, Classy. Clothes) _ Be ey ee gee pai Fe