Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Mar 1908, p. 11

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE TEN. he ; "Mother, why didn't 'you buy Pen-Angle before?" "It doesn't scratch." "It's comfy." en-fingle Underwear It's all in the quality of the wool used, and Pen-Angle is very fine and soft, A Will feel "good" to the most sensi- tive skin. g Your money prompily returned Se 150 never bas a hollow chest ; \ found defective in any way, For 'grown ups," remember! : Peaman's No. 95 Natural Wool, Elastic Ribbed, Scotch t; Wool Fleece and Bal- moral Stripes. Also makerg Has Been Expecting and Looking For. A Record Sale for the New "Writing in Sight" L. C. SMITH & BROS'. TYPEWRITER Prteset. Hensieh We have just closed our first 3 Years' Business. We have SOLD over 1,400 Maclkines in Canada. i We hold the biggest record for the sale of 'placed on the Canadian Market. | Have you seen our new Ball-Bearing Type Bar ? Our Opponents said we "Couldn't do it," "WE DID." It will be money in your pocket to look at it. Lat us demonstrate it to you. Newsome & Gilbert, Limited, No. 9 Jordan St., Toronto. Branches --Halifax, N.S., Ottawa, Ont., Winnipeg, Man. AGENT: any Typewriter LOCAL NEWMAN-SPRIGGS ELECTRIC CO., 79 Princess Street, Kingston, Ont. A Full Stock of Typewriter Supplies for all makes of Machines hlways on hand, We have a large stock, all makes, 2nd hand Typewriters; sold on easy terms. a -- MAKE SHREDDED WHEAT 7 YOUR "MEAT" DURING LENT Supplies the strength and energy to do a ishing and sustain- ing cereal food. Every Morning--Biscuit and Hot Milk for Breakfast. hali-day's work gives you that sat. All Grocers, 18¢; a carton, 2 lor 2c. isfled feeling. Purest, cleanest, most nour. (799) BIG CLEARING SALE ~--OF -- . HALLFURNITURE We have been requested by many of our patrons to continue Our Big Clearing Sale. I 'wish to state that we have a large stock to elgax ne And we antendl yun Clearing o we ke our large stock. Every- thing the newest and latest, he Leading Undertaker, , "Phone 147. Tho 81 ara Sp ig 3s Lo Manufacturers of the choicest ~~ REFINED SUGARS Granulated and Yellows. Made entirely ugar. Be sure you ask for *'St. Lawrence. EE a Ali Cox roi LL 'Authors & from cane me THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1908. -- MANY CASES HERE | Gps For Ghe Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. Country Life. How ULilest, remote from business strife, Is he who leads a quiet lite, As did our sires--the happy dwallers In cots with jarge potato cellars, -- Entirely free from all the din Of this eternal age of tin ! No fire alarms disturty bis sleeps He has no venture on the deep ; The midnight storm without may roar, Aud hurl huge breakers om the shore, They cannet even drown his snore ! The air he breathes is free fran taint 3 He lives unknown to pride's restraint. He wisely shuns the courts of law As he would shun a tiger's pew, He has no money to invest, He melts not down to cards and wine, Nor heeds if shares and stocks declines With Hubs inured to hobest toil, He cultivates paterved soil, And many & busy hour devotes To barley, turnips, beans and oats, And sees his broad fields sprinkled over And blushing rich with scented clover, The cxecutive committee of the Eastern Dairymen's association met at the goverament buildings on Wednes- day of last week when the plan adopted last year of dividing the province into groups of forty or fifty factories for dairy nstructiony met with val. A series for ings wii of cheese and butter makers will be arranged for shortly. The instructors have attended some 400 annual cheese and butter company meetings so far this year, and it has been found that this is perhaps a bet- ter way of reaching the farmers than by means of the institutes, which are not being well attended. . Young Men And The Farm. When you get out where a man has a little elbow room and a chance to develop, he has thoughts of his own. His thinking is not supplied to him every night and every morning, and he is less of a machine and more of a man, so that I do not think that the farmers need to be looked upon, or want to be looked upon, as depen- denta_ of the state. They do not come to the state government asking alms. They are seli-reliant, they are intelli- gent. at we want in connection with agriculture is what we want in connection with every other field of noble effort. We want training, we want intelligence, we want scientific method, we want direction, wé want the way shown, and then the man can walk in it. There is no reason why the same care and intention and skill and scientific consideration should not he devoted to agriculture as to indus- try and. the technical trades. Tha men who are running away from the farms too frequently make a mistake, and some day in New York--end the day rapidly approaching -- our young men, in large numbers, will wake up to the fact that they have a pretty good chance on the farm, and that they may be to a greater degree independent and happy in life if they stay where their happy lots were cast in connection with their fathers' farm or another which they may be able to procure.--Governor Hughes, of New, York. is -- Farming A Profession. A distinguished scholar and farmer is quoted as having paid his eloquent and, on the whole, just tribute to the farmer, "Farming is a profession re- quiring more shrewdness than law, more uprightuess than theology, more brains and resourcefulness than peda- gogy. It is its own reward. God made farmers. - The -- other - professions are parasites. This is rather hard on other professions, but, still, none too much honor can be paid the con- queror of the soil. More intensive farming is needed in this country, and the young man. who learns to farm scientifically will reap a richer har- vest, Get Ready For Spring. Now is the time to get ready fon spring. Implements which were has- tily laid away in the rush of late fall work, when every day was worth something when the harvesting of the crop for the silo was rushed in be- tween the days when the threshing machine was running in the neighbor- hood, and the root crop was waiting for good weather, housing the. cattle and getting as much fall-pleughing as possible sand- wiched in between, will probably re- quire a little bit of repairing. Look them over.' See if the harrows require the attention of a barrow dentish. He will not be so busy fixing the. bther fellow's harrows and fmplements now as he will in April. Ii the plough was laid away without careful cleaning it may have rusted some, but pothing like it will in " Inte March" and early April, if not attended to now. Clean it off, give a light brush-over with linseed oil.. The = samte is true shovels, is PELE i 2 iH i uy ; § = £1 i iE # i 4k <f ¥ | fog i 5 i 8 : i = i 2 } H § i £ i £ i ri : & : i i : F i g : i i | : 1 : hy with the work of [ha of | eritertainment. While acts with loeali Now is lected players, ror a SS aud com." The small potatoes which are not w can be disposed of in this way at a profit: | Plan the oni of a system ol crop rotation next season. Keep a to cord of the results and see whether it does not give betger crops and leave the land in more productive condition. : Hard labor isa good cure for the tramp. The law should be so framed asto land him with the greatest ex- pedition possible into the ranks of those whose daily bread is earned by the sweat of the brow. Let the sunshine in--into your soul and into the cow stable as well. The first, the sunshine 'of God's love will sweeten life, and the other, the sun- shine of God's sun, will sweeten the stable and contribute to the health and conientment of the animals. ruined Full feed and light work has many & good horse. S2 your breeding pens ready for the spring eggs for hatching. Cream kept too long may become bitter and be full of white flakes, Oats are good for laying hens. Do not be afraid they will eat too many of them, Produce And Prices. Kingston, March 7.--Prices were glo to the Whig, to-day, as fol- OWS © Flour" and feed--Flour, bakers' $2.70 to $290. farmers, $2.80 to $3; patent, $3.15 to $3.30; oatmeal and rolled oats, $4.40 to $4.50; cornmeal, $1.65 to $1.75; bran, #24 to $26 per ton; shorts, $26 to $27 i ton; straw, $12 to $14; hay, loose, 17 to $19; pressed, $20. New laid, 30c. per dozen;. ed, 25¢. to 2%c. per dozen. Grain--Oats, 80c.; local wheat, $1 to $1.04; buckwheat," 55c.; barley, 700; rye, 78¢. to. S6e.; , 36c.; corn, best, 70c.; mixed, oe. Buttes--Choice, creamery, 3lc.: far. mers' butter, prints, 30c.; packed, rolls, 28e. Meat--Beel, carcase, $8 to $9 a cwt.; choice, euts, Bo, to 13. a Ib; Pork, $8 a cwt.; veal, by the quarter, Be. to 9. per Ib.; cuts, Ge. to 10§e.; by carcase, Sc. to 8c. per lb; cutlets, 124c.; hogs, live weight, $5.75; cuts, 12j¢c. to 1c. a Ib; lamb, by pound, 12c.; chops, 15c. a 1b.; mut- ton, 8c. to Oe, Ib. fish--Salmon trout, 12jc. a Ib skinned dighy herring, 20c. per lb.; whitefish, 124c. a Ib; pike, 10c. a Ib; Chinook salmon, 30c. a Ib.; smelts, 10c., 185¢. and 20c. per Ib.; ki berring, Yar- mouth bloaters, 40c. a dozen; At- lantic salmon, 80c. Ib.; salt codfish, Te. to 15c. a lb.; halibut, 20c. a Ib.; fresh haddock, 10c, a lb; bullheads 10c. a ib; red herring, 15¢. a bo» mackerel, 15¢. a Ib; trout, 12§c. a Ib.; perch, 30c. a dozen; 40c. a Ib.; ciscoes, 13c. a Ib.; oy- stevs pyle, 60c., 60c. per quart; blue fish, 15c. a ib; lake herring, 10c. Ib; fionan haddie, 10c., 12je. # 1b; red snappers, 15c.; floun- ders, 10ec.; fresh salt water ings, 40c. to 60c. dozen: fresh 80c. a lb; sea bass, smoked salmon, 30c. a Ib. Poultry--Chickens, $1.23 per pair; turkeys, $1.25 to $1.75. Frui 20¢. per Ib; lemons, 20c. n; Valencias, 10e, jo 20s Mexicans, 20c. to 30c.; na- s, 25¢c. to 50c.; bananas, X 40c. a dozen. . Wn. to Vegetablee--Potatoes, $1.10 to $1.15 bag; cabbage, 75¢. to $1 doz. celery, 50c. a dozen; parsnips, 75¢. a bushel; turnips, 75¢. per bag: beets, 30c. per Jock; otfions, §1 per bushel; x . & bushel. Beel hides--No. 1, 4}c. per 1b; No 2, nd bulls, 3je. Ib.; Sheep ta freshly take of, 80c. to lta, skins, 10c. a Ib:; dairy skins, 60c. each; rendered tallow, 5c. per Ib.; bees wax. No. 1, 25¢. 1b.; wool, washed, 2lc.; un- washed, 13¢, ' ; » - GRAND OPERA HOUSE, The Two Plays That Are Coming ; Next Week. A comedy of sentiment is the novel description of 'The New Mrs. Lor- ing," the play by Jessie Trimble, in which Miss Henrietta Crossman will appear at the Grand on Monday, March 9th. The play has for its motive the love of a mother for her child and the sacrifices she is often galled upon to make for those under her sheltering care. It is said to ve been treated in a somewhat startling, vet direct and simple fan. her, by the playwright and to have won compelling charm in its interpre. tation by Miss Crosman. The mo tive is certainly one of appealing forge to men and Women of all classes. Miss Sirostu, in the role of "Marion," the vo mother, is given o tunity for the display of Ho EE ar- tistic gifte with which she is generous. ly endowed. She carries her audience with laughter and tears through com- edy and pathos, avoiding even one dall moment in the three atts of her . The & is modern in it interpretation; Bory : Miss Crosman is ably assisted by a ny company of carefully se Charley Grapewin. the trons of the Grand "The Awakening of Mr. {Hi ee fl 1% EFent i E i £5 -- il: D RHEUMATISM CASES RE. PORTED ARE ALARMING. Some Good Advice, Also Simple Home Treatment As Given By Druggist Who Knows of Benefits From It. Thousands of men and women who have felt the sting-and torture of this dread disease, which is no respecter of age, persons, sex, color or rank, will be interested to know that while for many wears rheumatism was con- sidered an incurable disease, now it is one of the easiest afflictions of the human body to conquer. Medical disease in itself, but a symptom science bas proven it mot a distinct eaused by inactive kidpeys. Rheuma- tism is uric acid in the blood and other waste products of the system which should be filtered and strained out in the forin of urine. The func- tion of the : kidnevs is to sift these poisons and acids out and keep the blood clean and pure. The kidneys, however, are of sponge-like substance, the holes or pores of which will some. times, either from overwork, cold or exposure hecome clogged and inactive, and failiag in their function of elimin- ating these poisons from the blood, they remain in the veins, decompose and settling about the joints and muscles, cause the untold suffering and pain of rheumatism and back- ache, often producing complications of bladder and urinary disease, weak- ness, ete, The following simple prescription is said to' relieve the worst cases of rheumatism because of its direct aet- lon upon the blood and kidneys, re- lieving, too, the most severe forms of bladder and urinary troubles : Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce Compound Kargon, one ounce; Com- pound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Mix by shaking well in a bottle and take in teaspoonful doses alter each meal and at bedtime The ingredients can be had from any good prescription pharmacy, and are abso- lutely harmless and safe to use at any time. a re e-------- A Ball Dress Of Stamps. London Mai). At a ball in Bermuda a dress was worn, and in the It more than 30,000 stamps were used. Years were spent in collecting the stamps, and three weeks in the mak. ing of the dress, which was. of the finest muslin. The woman called up- on her friends to help hor, and the dress was covered with stamps of all nations. They were not put on any- how, but in elaborate design. On the front of the bodice was an eagle made entirely of brown Columbian stamps. Suspended from the bird's talons was a globe made of very old blue revenue stamps. On each side of the globe was an American flag. On the hack of the bodice was a' collection of foreign stamps in the form of a shield, in the center of which was a portrait cut from old' revenue stamps, A pictuge hat covered with red and blue stamps was worn with the dress. -------------- Let Everybody Speak. Toronto T' an, All the outers in parliament over the fate of a tary College, Kiagston, may have been justified, Still the country wonders whether the Ottawa opposition would have been just as enthusiastic in resenting wrongs done to a cadet who was not related to one of its members. The spirit that inspires Prof. Mac Naughton, of Queen's, to face heavy odds in defenes of a principle he ' be- lieves to have been outraged is a spirié which is none too common in this country, There is more national value in the excesses of that spirit than in the ex- cesses of & silence that betrays either indifference to wrong or'lear to speak I Canadian clubs do not offer 4 forum in which speakers can uphold principles or expose wrongs, then Can- adian clubs should disband and cease to cumber the ground. SHE PATIENTLY BORE DISGRACE A Sad letter from a lady whese Husband was Dissipated. Bow She Cured Nim with a : Soarst Remedy wonderful making of cadet at the Royal Mili- |n INCREASED COST of Living During the Past Thirty-Five Years. A man who is living in the occupied by his father thirty-five years ago; who has the same size family apd who is living about, he thinks, as kis father lived them, discovered an old account-book kept by his father covering household expenses, Compar ing month by month, the som has found that, summing corresponding items, his expenses to-day are twice those recorded by his father. Well, what is to be done? Investi gation results in a merry-go-round like that depicted so often by newspaper cartoonists; every one pointing with his thumb to his neighbor and saying, "Him." The consumer blames the butcher for charging so much for steak, the butcher blames the whole saler for advancing the price of beef, the wholesaler blames the commission house or packers, the commission house alleges shortage of shipments the shipper alleges shortage of cars, the railroad alleges cowboys are scar ing trains with full-dress suits, the cowboys claim that they are forced to wear them; and back it goes: cattlemen assert that the railroads will not ae cept cattle unless accompanied by cow boys in full-dress suits, railroads ae sert government compels this, govern- ment asserts commission-men demand ed it, commission-men assert that the measure was put thropgh by the whole salers, wholesalers assert that the butchers themselves did the lobbying. and the butchers ppomptly unload the responsibility upon the people. Thread advances--présumably because the lumber for spools. is advanced; lumber for spools has advanced be- cause oats are high (the legging teams require grain three tiles a dav, and that mounts up), oats are high be cause of wet spring, and Rs the wet spring Was sent presumably by Provi- dence, certainly My Lady most not Jrocest when ber gown costs more by ity per cent. It is put forward by some social economists that dear money, as the term expresses it, i8 a sign of prosper. ity. But is it? Is it, when the pros- perity of the many is béing milked to swell by greater ratio 1 Brity of the few ? ls the average man, to day, getting his money's worth ? « Oc casionally (we would not breathe the confession outside of bur own hoom ing country)--ocecasionally into the mmds of some of us creeps the sus- picion that the average man---who oc- caupies the bottom of the heaps not ~John Stgne, in March Lippinvott's. -------- house With health, all things are happi- ness," without it, other blessing® can't be enjoyed. We make health--for Hol- lister's Rocky Mountain - Tea is health. Try it; 'twill surely make vou well. 35¢c., Tea or Tablets. Mahood's Drug Store, Everybody is dead against the ma- chine except those for whom it is reap- ing profits. Over one million exiles have lwen transported to Siberia sinee "1840. HOW'S THIS ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Rewgrd for any case of Catarrh.that capgot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. ¥. J, CHENEY & CO., Todo, '0. We the undersigned have known PF. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable tn. all business transactions and « Snancially able to CITY out any pbligations. made by his rm WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohios Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken interna, - 1¥. acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system Testi mondals sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Drugine Take Hall's Fawily Na for consti- patigme | | "1 lowest price for which: umadul- a a an be | ae put.upon | Established yoo DORCHESTER, MASS. BRANCH ROUSE: { 86 St. Street, Montreal Oils Coal Oil Lubricating Oils Gasoline We make a specialty of handling Lubricating Oils of all kinds. Prices on application. W. F. KELLY & Co. South Cot. Qutarie and Clarence, ERY ITSO CURES ALL Coughs ALWAYS AND COBTS BUT 59 Canada. Is aiways chemicals, nor DAWSON" & "STALEY, v men men ore Vn i gh Grade at prices fet or 10000 0000000000B0000000 0000000000000 8000 500 SPECIA 7 and 10, regular 8ic. Boots, in Tan and Black. Men's and Women's Japanese Slippers, just received, all sizes. Bpecial.................e weiss Special......... One lot of about 40 pairs Babies' lar 60c. Speciak.............. y One lot of Baby Boots, sizes 2, 3 and 4, r lar 50e. Special. adie, srnsssmnasinssamsniioslion, HOARE a a pon : % 2 . J Another lot of Men's $5.00 Patent Colt, Box Calf and Tan Calf Bluchers. Special See them in our window. Button Ee | - A= insurance. placing pi 3c Children's Fine Kid Laced Boots, siges o6.676 These Special Bargains | Before with, or call into the office, w) plicy on this up-to-date piars wil Shape. AGENTS WANTED----A ppls 0. HUTTO! N, Manager, k Th ate fot So eee \ 3 fa + ple 3 The 20th Century Policy issued by, the © Assurance Company fits into an : case req your insursties

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy