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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 2 Jul 1914, p. 6

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Cleans Gut Glass and all Glassware-- easily, thoroughly and quickly. Leaves them bright and highly polished--absolutely clean. For every kitchen use Panshine is equally effective. It keeps woodwork and paintwork spotless. Panshine is a pure, white, and clean powder fl without any disagreeable smell-- the magical kitchen cleanser Sold in handy 1 /V sifter top can 1 v v* At All Grocers P3 White Staf POMIMIQN Ll^J Montreal & Quebec- Via LIVERPOOL To GREAT BRITAIN and CONTINENT Palatial Steamers, Excellent Service MEG ANTIC" - Jaly 4 CANADA" ■ July 11 "LAÛRENTIC" - July 18 AND EVERY SATURDAY FOLLOWING Rates to Liverpool from $92.501st Class " " " $50.00 2nd " << tti Only four short days at sea. M. A. JAMES, cut. BOATMAN VILLE Si ft Ü THE GROUTING MACHINE. How Old Buildings Arc Apparently Turned Into New. Nob everyone has heard of grouting, grouting, the mysterious and almost miraculous miraculous process by which old buildings buildings are restored. It is in fact a very simple process and as easy to understand as the laying on 04 t TICKS. In its original sense grout means no more than gruel. In its building building sense it is a„ mixture of sand, cement and water sufficiently thin to be poured. It is not a new thing. It probably was used by the Romans Romans and has been used very much since in engineering _ work. The new thing is the grouting machine, ,-hich enables the'.grout to be dnv- int.o places where it cannot be The Lucky Thirteenth .Man. '•Frederick, I'm sure you will forgive me," said the beautiful girl, bowing her head, "when you know the true reason of my breaking breaking our engagement so soon. But when I became engaged to you I forgot"-- "What is it, Gladys?" he murmured murmured sadly. "Be not afraid. Is it that you love another?" "No, indeed," responded the girl indignantly, her eyes flashing at him through a veil of tears. "But you know how superstitious I am --I forgot that you would be exactly exactly the thirteenth man I've been engaged engaged to." Most men also possess the of injustice. sense DOCTORS DID NOT HELP HER But Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound Restored Mrs. Bradley's Health-- Her Own Statement. w en poured. . dt is an extraordinary simple machine, machine, consisting of two parts, a cylinder of compressed air, the pressure being a hundred pounds to the square -inch and a churn. A flexible hose connects them and another flexible hose with a nozzle leads out of the churn. That is all. Yet when it is at work the machine is - as mysterious as vacuum cleaner. The dust and decayed mortar are blown out of the cracks between the stones with a jet of compressecT air ; clean water is then blown in to damp the masonry just enough to make the cementadhere. Meanwhile Meanwhile the cement is put into the churn or grouting pan and is beaten beaten up till it is about the consistency consistency of cream. The preparing of it needs some nicety lest the .cement should grow hard in the churn and the hose. The wall being ready, uhe nozzle is inserted into a-crack, the cracks above and below it are covered with clay to prevent the cement from leaking out, the compressed compressed air is turned on and passing passing through the grouting pan drives flip cement deep in between .the stones. Starting at the base of a building building and working upward the grouting grouting machine will fill the whole of its walls with a new cement that reaches every crask and hole, so that when it has grown hard the building is as firm as if it were cut out of one stone. And it does this without disturbing a single feature of the building or breaking the weather weather crumbled surface of its masonry masonry or even rubbing off the mosses and lichens that have grown there. Three Orphans. • The Bradfords ' had "settled in their summer home nearly a weCk when Louis, looking up from his. book one afternoon a -little ; befor% sühsét, sàw à small bro"#n> hea< pop but "from under -the corner ot the carriage house.. . _ -V x At first the only thing that ne could think, of was a rat, for he had heard his father say at breakfast that rats had been getting into the grain. But 'he kept very still, and in a little while the head poked out farther, and then the whole body followed, and he saw that the animal animal was much larger than a rat. In fact, it was as large as a full-grown cat or a small dog. It had a round, fat body covered .with grayish- brown hair, and a broad head with small ears that hardly showed at all. ' With little runs of a foot or two at a time, the creature ventured farther and farther away from the corner of the carriage house ; and then, to Louis's astonishment,* _ it stood up on its hind quarters, with its forepaws hanging down in front, and looked all about, to see whether whether it was safe to go .any farther. But just then Louis -leaned too far forward in his eagerness to see, apd his book slipped to the floor of the. piazza with a.loud slam. At that, the strange animal flashed back out of sight into his hole so quickly that it looked like a mere brown streak. When Louis told the gardener what he had seen, the old man laughed, and. said he guessed it was only a woodchuck, arid that they would see him again before long ; but although Louis watched for several several days, he saw nothing more of the brown head or the fat, round body. But one morning he waked very early, and looking out of his window, window, saw the woodchuck feeding in pla : n sight on the grass plot behind the house. In the corner stood the .little rifle that had come to Louis's older brother brother as a Christmas present, and on a shelf near by stood the box of cartridges. Louis had been allowed allowed to use the rifle when he was with his brother, but had never tried it alone.- 9 Now, he thought, his chance had come. \ Very quietly he slipped over to the corner, took down the box of cartridges, and slipped one ôf them into the rifle. Then, barefooted, he tiptoed downstairs, carefully slid, the bolt of the back door, and stepped stepped out. Stealing to the corner of the house, he looked round. Yes, the woodchuck was still there, and still feeding ! It had not been alarmed. - Louis raised the little rifle slowly, slowly, rested the barrel against the corner corner of the house, took careful aim, and pulled the trigger. At the report report he saw something flop, and ran to the edge of the grass plot. There lay the woodchuck, still now, and looking up at Louis with glazing eyes, as if to say, "Why did you do it?" And then the eyes closed, and the woodchuck was dead. Louis went back to the house ; but insteado-f feeling proud of what he been, and all of them followed'T Lduis round ; and whenever the Cook woud let them, they would crawl in Behind the stove and cuddle cuddle together and sleep. -- Youth's -Companion. -- --' SOUL CURE MEDICINE. Physician Calls' It Psychotherapist-- Patients in Trance. Dr. Berillon, of Paris, asserts that psychotherapia, or soul cure, is the medicine of the future. He does not put his ' patients into-- a hypnotic tra ; nce, but places them in the environment which creates an appetite for'sleep. He invites them to repose on a bed and think of nothing. Then he leaves them and they gradually succumb -to the ' 'ticktack' ' of a metronome. When the patient is in hypnotic slumber, if it is desired he should be cured of excessive indulgence in alcohol, the psychotherapatist suggests suggests to him that he cannot raise a glass to his lips and repeats. the suggestion until prohibition is so engraved on his brain that if he I would he could not do so. Berillon ! is' frequently consulted by those ! who wish to be cured of an unhappy had done, he began to ask himself j a ff a i r through hypnotism, and Every borages man knows how difficult it£3 t" livery housewife knows of his desk free frpm the accumulation of useless P^ e "' cu ^ aI A ion of a u manner how difficult it is to. keep her horn difficult to keep it free from the of useless things. So it ïsWiththetiody. I s - tl e ii m i na ted the machin- accuinulation of waste mauter. Unless the wm 0 f most human ills; ery of the body soon becomes clogged, a his is tne rcguiuu b DR. There are many, imitations imitations of this best of all fly killers. Ask for Wilson* 1 ^ be sure you get them, and avoid disappointment. On Tablet or Liquid Form) . Assists the stomsch in the çroper diction offoodL whtoh ÿ ^sustaining blood and all poisonous •.as£ ÏÏdableïbodied-restores ge« " d your rejuvenation. Send 50 cents for s trial bon of tin. M „ diclJ Winnipeg, Canada. -- "Eleven years ago I went to the Victoria Hospital, Montreal, suffering with a growth. The doctors said it was a tumor and could not be removed as it would cause instant death: They found that my organs were affected, and said I could not live more than six months in the condition I was in. ' 'After I came home I saw your advertisement advertisement in the paper, and commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it constantly for two years, and still take it at times, and both my husband and myself claim that it was the means of saving my life. I highly recommend it to suffering women."--Mrs. Orilla Bradley, 284 JohnsonAve.,Winnipeg, Manitoba, Can. Why will women take chances or drag out. a sickly,half-hearted existence, missing missing three-fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been the standard standard remedy for female female ills, and has re-, stored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled troubled with such ailments ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia JE. Pinkham Med- idine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered by à woman, and held in strict confiderieè. why he had done it, and he could not find any good -artswer. To be sure, 'he had heard the gardener gardener say that woodchucks destroy green vegetables ; but when he looked,, looked,, after, breakfast, he could find none that seemed.to have been nibbled nibbled ; and when he went to see whab the little animal had been eating when he shot it, .he found ony a patch of clover. -- "What about the young ones?" asked the gardener that noon. "Young ones?" asked Louis. "What young ones?" .. "Why, that old woodchuck had a family. There are three young ones in the.hole under the carriage house. I saw them all out together the other day," said the gardener. "Will -they starve to death " asked asked Louis, much troubled. "I'm afraid they will, unless somebody kills them -- or feeds them." Louis asked no more questions. That afternoon he went to work with a spade at the corner of the carriage house. It took him until nearly night, but when he finished, he had three little balls of fur, with frightened black eyes that watched every move he made. The gardener gardener found an old squirrel cage in the loft, and into it they pùt the three orphans, with a big bunch of fresh clover ; and in the morning the clover was gone That is the way Louis got his little little family. Two or three times, a day he had to feed them, but he felt paid when he feaw how quickly they began, to lose their fear of him In a week" he could take them out of the cage and handle them as he could the kitten, and in two weeks' they would -run all round the yard, picking a dainty clover leaf here and a little sorrel there, but always ready to come running when he whistled to them. It always made him laugh to see them sit up first, when he whistled, to see where he w T as before they started. Never did any other family of orphan orphan woodchucks fare so well ! Besides Besides the clover and the sorrel, there were tender leaves of lettuce, and the juicy pods of peas, and bits of carrot. All the family grew , round and fat, as their mother had declares they obtain release. It Is In Demand.--So great is the demand demand for Dr.? Thomas' Eclectno Oil that a large factory is kept continually bhsy makipg and bottling it. . To be in demand-shows popular appreciation of this preparation, which stands at'the Héad of proprietary compounds as the leading oil in the market, and it is generally generally admitted that it is deserving of the lead. bakers' -No. Rushed Up-stairs. An Irishman discovered a, part of the woodwork of a chimney on fire. 9e rushed upstairs to his njaster, and announced tb e alarming alarming intelligence. A large kettle of water was on the fire. "Why didn't didn't you put out the fire ?" he asked. "I can't, sorr." "Why^vou idiot, pour the water upon it." itis hot water, sorr." PRICES CF FARM PRODUCTS BEPOBTS FBOM IH B LBADIBO ISADS CE IT TBE 3 O? AMEBIC A. Breadstuff*. Toronto, June 30.--Flour--Ontario wheat flours, 90 per cent., n A° $3.80, seaboard, and at $3.80, Toronto. Manitobas--First patents, in jute uags, $5.50; do., seconds, $5; strong in jute bags, $4.80. Manitoba wheat--Bay Ports Northern, 941c, and No. 2, 93c. Ontario wheat--No. 2 at $1 to $1-01, outside, and ngw at.82 to _85c, outside, August and September delivery. Oats--No. 2 Ontario oats, 41 to 42c, outside, and at 43 to 44c, on track, Toronto. Toronto. Western Canada oats, 42jc ior No. 2, and at 424c for No. 3, Bay poits. Peas--Prices nominal., . _ Barlgÿ^GLood malting barley, 57 to 59c, acc6b£thg ;to quality. Rye-^-NoAS at 63 .to «4c. outside. . Buckwheat--90c. outside. Corri-r^Np. -2 American, 79c, on track, Toronto,'an4 at 75c, Bay ports. Bran--Manltcba bran, $23 to $24 ton. in bags, Toronto freight. $25 to $2$. Montreal Markets. Montreal. June 30.--Corn, American No. 2 yellow. 79 to 80c -. .P at ^ J 5 ,a J ia Astp Western, No. 2. 44 to 444c, No. 3 431c to 433c; extra No. 1 feed, 423 to 43c. Barley, malting. 55 to 5Cc. F1 pur, Man. Spring wheat patents firsts |5.60 .seconds. .seconds. $5.10; strong bakers,. $4.90, Winter Winter patents, choice, $6.2o to $ 5 -? 0, straight rollers. $4.70 to $4.90; bo., ags, $2.20 to $2.35. Rolled oats, barrels, barrels, $4.55; do., bags. 90 lbs-, $2.15. Bran $23. Shorts -$2ù. Middlings, $28. Mouillie. $28 to $32. Hay, No. 2. per ton car lots, $14.60 to $16. Jl 1 ?* est westerns, 13 to 134c; finest easterns. easterns. 123" to 121c Butter, _ choicest creamery, 241 to 25c; seconds, 23 to 231c. Eggs, fresh. 23 to 24c; selected, 26-to 27c; No. 2 stock. 20 to 21c. Potatoes, Potatoes, per bag, car lots. $1 to $l.-u. < t a Shorts, All mothers can put away anxiety regarding their suffering children when they have Mother Grave's Worm Exterminator Exterminator to give relief. Its effects arçe sure and lasting. Christian Counsel Little Sister--"Oh, mamma, Georgie, has just upset the tea table table and broken my dolly an' all yôur nice dishes." Little Brother (badly frightened) --"Yes, mamma, an' let's be .sorry, but don't let's be mad!" Country Produce. Butter--Choice dairy, 17 to 19c; inferior, inferior, 15 to 16c; farmers .separator prints. 19 to 20c; creamery prints, fresn. 231 to 2Ac; do., solids. 21 to 22c. Eggs--Strictly new laid, 24 to toe per dozen, and gcod stock, 20 to 23c per Honey--Extracted, in tins. 101 to 11c per lb. Combs. $2.25.to $2.50 per dozen dozen for No. 1, and $2 for No. 2. Cheese--New cheese. 141 to 14ic ior large, and 141 to 143c for twins. Beans--Hand-picked. $ 2 - 20 .„ t ° c per bushel: primes, $2.10 to $2.15. Poultry--Fowl, 16 to 17c per lb. chickens, yearlings, 20 to 22c; turkeys, 19 tO 21.C. _ , » -t nn , Potatoes--Delawares, $1.15 to $i u, on track here, and Ontarios at $1.10 per bag, on track. United States Markets. Minneapolis. June 30.--Wheat--July, 84c; September, S0|c. Cash No. 1 bard, I 881c; No. 1 Northern, 851c to 871c; No. 2 do., '831 to 851c. Flour--Fancy patents, patents, $4.45; first clears. $4.42; second clears. $2.55. Bran--$19.25. Duluth, June 30--Wheat--No. 1 hard, 894c; No. 1 Northern, 881c; No. 2 do.. 861 : to S63c; July. 873c. Linseed -- Cash and July, $1.593. live Stock Markets. Toronto. June 30.--Cattle---Choloo butchers', $8.15 to $8.50 ^ good, $7.90 to $8; common cows, $4.io to $o.2o, canners and cutters, $2.50 to $4, choic fat cows, $6.25 to $7.10; choice bulls, * ' Calves--Good veals, $8.25 to $11", common, $4.75 to $7. Stockers and feeders--Steers,. 800 .o 900 lbs., $7 to $7.50: good quality 700 to 800 lbs., $6.75 to $7.25; light, $6.10 to $6.50. Sheep and lambs--Light ewes, $0.10 to $6.25; heavy, $4.25 to $4.75: buc.-ts, $4.75 to $5.30; Spring lambs,^$10 to >12; yearling lambs, $7.50 to $S . 50. Hogs--$7.60 to $7.65 f.o.b.,_$8.1o $8.20, fed and watered, $8.35 to $S. off carsl ~ Montreal. June 30.--Prime beeves Sc to 84c; medium. 54e to 73c; common, 4Jc to 54c. Cows, $30 to $75 each. Calves, 34 to 74c. Sheep. 6c to 64c. Spring lambs. $5 to $7 each. Hogs, Sic. per 18 rolls, The most obstinate corns and fall to resist Holloway's Corn Try it. warts Cure. Provisions. Bacon--Long clear. 14 lb., in case lots. Hams--Medium. to 184e: do., heavy. YL 40 17 f c, J iq( ». 144 to 15c; breakfast bacon, 18 to 19c, backs. 22,,to.2$c. 19 , p . 'Lard--Tierces. 124c; tubs. 123c. pans, 13c. Compound, 10 to 104c. Baled Hay and Straw. Baled hay--No. 1 at $14.76 to $15 ton. on track here; No. 2 quoted at $13 to : $14. and clover at $11. Baled straw--Car lots. $8.25 to $8.50 on track, Toronto. 1 Freddy's fat/her had be-en giving him lessons^ in pqliteness, but hardly hardly dared hope that the seeds of his teaching had taken root. One day, hearing noise coming from the nursery, nursery, he investigated, and found Freddy pounding his little brother. '•'I'm surprised, Freddy," said his father, sternly, "that you should hurt your little brother. Don't you know it is very cowardly to strike one who is smaller than yourself?" "Yes," replied the culprit, meekly, "but when you thrashed me yesterday I was too polite to mention it." Winnipeg Grain. Winnipeg June 30 -7r C ?5 h: Northern, 893c; No. 2 Northern 884t, No. 3 Northern. 87c; No. 4.J52ic. Oats --rNo. 2 C.w., 394c; No. 3 C. _... tra No. 1 feed, 39c; No. 1 feeu, 384c, No 2 ifeed, 884c. Barley--No. 3. 524c. No 4.'51c; rejected^ 49c; feed. 484c. Fla* Nd. 1 N.W.C. $1.394; NO. 2 C.W., $1.364, No. 3 C.W., $1.244. to 4 0 Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. constipation. NEW MILK STERILIZER. German Invention Saicl to Abolish Pasteurization. From an investigation of the "biorisator," now used in certain German dairies, W. Freund has reported reported that the harmful germs of milk are completely destroyed, without the disadvantages of pasteurization pasteurization and other sterilization processes. The milk undergoes no chemical or physical change, being still suitable suitable for making cheese; it keeps fresh much longer than untreated or pasteurized milk, and there is no loss from evaporation. The value of the new treatment seems-to depend on rapidity of action, action, the sterilization being effected with very brief heating. The milk is subjected to a pressure of four atmospheres in a suitable chamber ; is then discharged as a fine spray into a large cylindrical vessel, being at the same time h<%ted to 167 degrees degrees Fahrenheit, and is finally led through a cooler, lowering the temperature temperature quickly to about 50 degrees, degrees, and is received in â bottling apparatus. The investigation and report were made for wholesale milk dealers in Germany. You Get Bilious Because Your Liver is Lazy You get a bilious attack when your liver refuses to do its work. The bile does not flow. You become constipated. Food sours instead of digesting. You have that " bitter as gall" taste. The stomach becomes inflamed and inflated-- turns sick--vomiting, and violent headache.--The best preventative and cure for biliousness is Chamberlain's Tablets. They make the liver do its work--strengthen the digestive organs, and restore to perfect health. 25c. a bottle --All Dealers and Druggists, or by mail. ' Chamberlain Medicine Company, Toronto. A When a man forgets to ask his wife if.she needs any money it's a sign that the honeymoon has slumped slumped the slumps. Mrs. Nu wed (to dear friend) -- What's the secret of getting a new frock from hubby after he refuses once? Mrs. Wiley--If at first you don't succeed, cry, cry, cry again ! V I If a woman would cut out the milliner's expensive creations and pin a $10 bill in her hair she would attract" more attention. • GOLD DU digs deep The Rubbish Market Near Pentonville Prison, London. A NEW AMUSEMENT. Mrs. Hiram Offen (seeking a cook)--My home is in the country. I" hope that is no objection. Cook mum.; I'-IL enjoy, a;day. in tbe, country. English Society Women Go to Rubbish Rubbish Market to Secure Antiques. One of the most amusing of modern modern developments in the social world in England of late is the weekly emigration of society butterflies butterflies to the Caledonian Market, London, almost beneath the 'grim walls of -ancient Pentonville Prisçn. A few years ago this market was "discovered" by a few clever American American girls eager to secure some ven- erable mementoes ôf- their trip to Europe. . .On. a certain day. in the week the old clothes dealers, rag- and-bone men, and others-displayed their wares on the stone flags of the market, and in such sordid surroundings surroundings it gradually became the fashion to be found driving as hard a bargain as was ever driven in the Hebrew Petticoat Lane. The society collector is a hard nut to crack. So is the all-British rag-and-bone man. A well-known collector will 'pass down an alley with goods ranged on either side, affecting ignorance of some fine red. wine-glasses ..on the pavement.-. "-Sixteen shillings the dozen,"a tentative dealer remarks apparently to the air, and the collector collector passes- on, , Next time he---or she--passes by the offer is "Twelve shillings the dozen," till by degrees it is reduced to four shillings. The collector feels a glow of virtuous virtuous pride*. "I shall sell these for two pounds a piece," he declares to a friend at the conclusion of the deal. What particular pleasure there can be in reducing the profits of the scantily, clad and wretched-looking vendors is a mystery hid in the conscience conscience of the sociai, leader or the keen collector. But the fact remains remains that the smart thing is e for London aristocrats to be in Penton- ville of a Friday morning looking over ; the refuse of the British capital. capital. Soap merely washes over the surface, leaving a greasy film behind it. Gold DllSt "goes to the bottom," and 'insures absolute purity and sanitary safety^ Why not sdnatize your home, as well as clean it? Soap needs muscle help; Gold Bust does all the hard part of the task without your assistance, Gold DllSt is a good, honest, vegetable-oil soap in powdered form, to which are added other purifying materials in just the right proportions to cleanse easily, vigorously vigorously and without harm to fabric, utensils utensils or hand. j Another National Campaign ~ Swat the Dirt X **Ltt the GOLD DUST TWINS do your work" THE N. K FAIRBÀNK COMPANY LIMITED 1 , Montreal, Canada aKBMKlElglllraiallgassli .? if.-" \ - :

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