Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Mar 1902, p. 8

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BABY'S OWN SOAP It stands at the top for , Most fm tations are for skins, esiime-- Baby's Own Soap is made only by the ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mas, ; MONTREAL. Jao our name on avery box. HER FATHER WAS A DRUNKARD Plucky Young Lady Vokes on Herself to Care flor Father of the Liquor Habit. . STORY OF HER SUCCESS. T bi DRUDGERY AND PERIL THE BURDEN OF MEN'S LIVES A Man May Make Twelve Hundred Dollars In a Season--An In- Skotth. P. T. 'McGrath, in Alpsle's. The dories radiate from the schooner like the spokes from the hub of 'a wheel. The fishing ar consists of HH] ETE | f exhaustion, and sleep as lie, until aroused by comrades. men g always. The process of preserving the catch varies with the season. In winter cod fish ri from one huendred to three -- and sometimes five hundred pounds. The entrails are removed and replac- then stored in ice-packed "pounds" in summer, halibut are gutted and salt- ed or iced. Cod are packed in ice in winter; gutted and salted in summer, Halibut are very difficult to catch, owing to their size and strength. When fishing in the deepest water the rocess is casiest, as the fish are "drowned" from their struggles ere reaching the surface. In shoal water, w y are gamey, they often up- 'sot a dory and the occupants meet a watery grave. M fishing is good a dory is soon filled. Overloading the boats is a frequent case of disaster. Men pile them to the gunwale, end they ship a sea and swamp. The oc cupants, if they can contrive, turn the skiff bottom up and clamber to it, where they remain until rescued or washed off by the seas or perish mis erably. Henry Forrestal was last in this plight with a comrade. latter was weakening, and cried. "Don't let wy body be lost." When he died and dro off, Forrestal fol- lowed, caught the sinking body and tied it to the sternfast. Thes,.much exhausted, he carefully worked his way back on the precarious raft; where he spent the might. When res cued mext morsing he pbinted to she body, ejaculated, "I didn't lose him," and in a faint on the ves wel's deck. Trawling is continued until theship is well fis A halibut catch on the Grand Banks lasts about a month, and 50,000 to 100,000 pounds - is a fare. To take and salt 100,000 to 300,000 pounds of sod in a two months' trip is equally good work. Sometimes ill Tuck Jiolongs the ven- ture indefinitely. banker that wis out ome x ftom February 3rd till October Jlst was an exteplion. BSS a fous child trip is not Fare. The men ~ hall the p ' sometimes making $1,200 in season. The interest they vessel's success is a will stances, al £2 , knowing it is poor would not stand Intoxicants are i i Ht oi ii Hy: i g A it that FEE ; | FARM NOTES. 3 siden Things That The Fariner Ought to Remember. To get the best results from feeding or raring, B is Bec Ww give g atfention to the comfort as well as feeding of the cow. In considering forage crops, either for gross of dry feeding, sweet corn should have a prominent place. Next to a scant supply of fesd, nothing contracts to the wilk of the dairy herd like cold. Y Prof. Curtiss says that the first step in providing the summer's food 8 should be to strengthen the pasture by sowing some grass seed over the bare places. The American Sheep Breeder says that more sheep will be im- ported from England this year than for many years. It is hoped that a lan, percentage of the jmportations will come to Candds. There are certain elements that go to comstitute the gain of an animal that must be provided, and when t} are so provided that they can consti tute a well balanced ration, supplying She requirements, it is a profitable An American wind isonder says : Fallen fruit is an excellent appetizer for hogs, apples, and their fattening value in conmection with is a i In the Uni States eggs will be high next summer; there is a shortage of poultry all over the country. Damp and yards or runs are responsible for a goodly share of the ills that affect chicken flesh. Breeding is an art that needs tobe jearned, it cannot be done successful y without previous preparation. A breeder needs to know a good many things and practice them before he can feel certain of success. In growing swine the principal ex- pense is the feed given. The poultry business is different from all other businesses, and if pro. perly conducted, - will make a man wealthy in a very few years. The fruit of to-day must have the billy of adapting himself to new methods, new fruits and new markets. Every breeder and feeder is interest: ed in securing the largest returns in pork from the feed consumed and the only way to get good results is to feed a balanced ration. There is no question about the ex cellence of new whole milk for feed ing young pigs, but it is doubtful whether there is profit in the business hen pork is selling at $6 per hund- One pound of butter can be made from the quality of milk that would make a pound of pork. Preparation of the land is an essen: tial too often neglected. g The hen that is crop-bound had bet- ter be sent to the pot as soon as recovers from an attack enough to be considered in good health. A bird that has developed a tendency of that kind is very likely to be troubled with it frequently. Such a bird should not be bred from, and is therefore goed only for the table. Poultry in confinement de not fatten as well or as quickly on grain as on mash. The birds require exercise to assist in grinding the whole grain. In France, where birds are fattened in close confinement, only soft food is Doctor Said Incurable Ercruciating Pa'ns in the Bak and Loins -- A Plaster Cast Necessary for Temporary Relief --How -a Cure Was Found in DR. CHASE'S KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS. We leave Mr. Demers to desaribe his own case as he wrote it in a letter der at i You he is now enthusiastic in the of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver have given him and | ing- £ £ 1 1 F Pie 2H I k F ii ¥ & F Hii i ! ; i its ti if i i F i ih Hi f fl fii o s} 8g eskeitl dis cn ms pai THE DAILY 'WHIG, SATURDAY. MARCH 22 i - hss - : ws RA AE Sp It takes meh over again. It makes perfect men of the punies a THERE, DOGTOR. What causes that dull ache--sometimes a stinging catch when I go to move? When I arise in the morning I can hardly straighten up. Ik exposes the fact that you are in bad shape, your strength has been over-taxed, your kidnoys are breaking down. In fact you are abusing your health. Those pains you have--they are nature's warning ery. They warn you of the approach of lumbago, Bright's disease, sciatica, destruction of your vitality and many other troubles. They will tell you that something is wrong with your health, something that may.lay you up and perhaps before you expect it. Don't you think it cheaper to cure them mow before they make you helpless ? I can cure you with nature's own remedy --Elee- tricity. Every town and hamlet in the country to-day knows of its cures. Perhaps your neighbors are being cured by them, I want every one that is in need of a treatment to use my Electric Belt. If you can offer me reasonable security you can PAY WHEN CURED. My Electric Belt does wonders in a few applications. It arouses all the dormant energies, develops muscular and" nerve life, and restores the feeling of youth, courage and nianhood. t, weakest specimens of "half men." Give me one of those unfortunates with swollen and distorted joints. Give me a man with pains in his back, in his shoulders, hips and chit. I will pour the oil of life into his joints, warm them up, start the life blood circulating and remove his pains in a few days. My belt will cure him and fill him full of lifesad courage, and make him glad with the sunshine of youth, And it never burns or blisters. - THE SMELL OF NEW YORK. Describes The Characteristic Odors Of Great Cities. New York Tribune. a "Did you ever smwll New York? Sir Philp Burne-Jones, the painter oi "The Vampire" and the son of the great pre-Raphaelite, propounds the question seriously. At first the ques tion strikes one a little unpleasantly, perhaps, and then one answers with a grin, "Yes, certain sections of it. "Ah, but 1 don't mean that, | mean the great blended odor of the entire sity, that is found in every section and in every house--that is the smell of New York city, not of any of its parts [| am perfectly serious," the artists answers. Then, if one looks a little bewildered, he goes on to explain what he means, as he did the other day to a New Yorker whose nose is not so cosmopolitan as Sir Philip's. "let me Oirst state what you have probably . observed, if you have been | in Europe," he said, "and what you | have read about, anyway, London, | Paris, Vienna, Venice, but most par ticularly London, have their peculiar odors, which one whose nose is sensi tive to smells goon learns to know, and forever after associates with the cities, never for an instant confusing one with the other. The smell of Lon- don is particularly pungent, und rather unpleasant, due, [ suppose, to the smoke. It reaches you always within a cerdain zone of the city, and does not leave you, wherever you go in the city, until your nose has be come habituated to it, Several writ ers, among them Henry James, if 1 am hot mistaken, have observed it. The odor of Venice is again a distinct thing, not at all like either of the others. It has a peculiar flavor of the sea in it. But I have never yet seen any reference to the smell of New York, perhaps because your writers have always lived here, and 80 never noticed it. "But T can assure you that New York has its own characteristic smell, just as much as London or Paris or Venice. As my steamer came up the bay, out of the week's run in the At- lantic odor, my nostrils suddenly fill- ed with an entirely new smell. Tt was like nothing I had ever smelled before --at least it was not the same thing I had ever smelled. [ took a deep in halation, and cried : "Ah, a new sen: sation ! Here is New York; I . smell it; I shall always know it now !" And so far I have smelled the same odor in every part of the city that I have entered. It was in the Metropolitan opera hase, it is here in my room in Albemarle. But it is slowly fad- I shall get used to it in a week or two and notice it no more." "What is this smell like?" the New Yorker asked. "Well," said Sir Philip, "I can't de scribe it. It js not at all unpleasant, rather the opposite. It approximates a perfume, in fact. It is more like the smell of Paris than anything else I know--due tmosphere i 2 i 3 request. or write to-day. CAUTION Concerns selling old style, blistering belts are now offeri ~"best is the cheapest when you buy any RE BOO My new illustrated book tel: E K end t cloaly sealed iron 1 test $0 every seeker of proof of whit my belt does. DR. M. K. McLAUGHLIN, 130 Yonge Street, Toronto. about my Belt and how it cures the Oall, if possible, and I will ac imitation of my cushion electrodes. Refuse them. The 0, thing for your Dealth. Call and see my famous appliance and test it free. weakness of men and women. It is worthireading. explain my Beit and what it will ao 1 will give I will a free id \ OFFICR HOURS : fam to 8.30 p.m, SPOOL SILKs==- HIS MOTHER WAS IRISH. Bond of Between Them. "Kilweny in the Ottawa Journal writes thus of Marconi : Marconi, famous to-day for perfect ing the (apparently) impossible, is the son of a Dublin woman, formerly Miss Annie Jamison. Miss Jamison showed in her youth a natural taste and pre- ference for mmsic, and her father--a manufacturer of famous Irish whiskies ~having the means to do so, sent his daughter over to Italy to complete her musical studies. While there Miss Jamison met Guiseppe Marconi, mar- ried him afterwards and from this un- jon of Irish-ltalian was born one of the greatest scientists and inventors of the time. We learn that Annie Jamison was a beautiful, adventuresome girl in her teens. Her family was: well-to-do, and she had everything in the way of ducation and ining that E : i i i ¢ | | t 1H i i i § l 2 t E i F i gis i i it i 2 i bs Ain Li Sympathy And Love ' MACHINE TWIST and SEWING SILK. Unequalled for Hand or Machine Use. ICELLI is the For over slaty 00! smoothest, gud best Spool Sk made. his ge ifr Rng mon wi almost the gounry. OC 1 TONLE TWIST bh Roisbed Pot oh on 10 find 16 yard posts. Buttonhole are made in colors to match all sessonable Both silk a Tain Twist Babies' Picture Gallery Partrsiss of THO! NDS OF BABIES made UST and STRONG Manufacturers i JOSIAH R. NEAVE & CD., FORDINGBRIDGE, ENGLAND Agents €0., Lsd., Toronto ------------------------ ------ ® Kitchen (er) Report That trouble and mules should never be ,* from the rear. You are approaching all kinds of trouble when you buy cheap "POISONOUS" Enamel Ware. Try a sin. fle piace RA SKY" for a sample. To be had ELLIOTT BROS, _

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