Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Jun 1910, p. 14

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we We i THE DAWY BRITISH WHI) SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1010. from daubing over the ¢dge on the bands -- big enough to mean more oily and fresh longer--to make it a 010 SHOE POLISIE is put ep in tho biggest box for the price -- big enough to keep the brush Gips For Farmers ean BY UNCLE JOSH, ' te-- hig enough to keep that paste better leather food. Ladies like dt 80 easy to use. Polo Tan Polish both cleans and Hetion-leaves the leather its natural color "Good for Stands a the Weather". Sind In Bulletin, No. 65, recently issued by the dominion government, the writ- er, J. H. Grisdale, agriculturist, Cen- tral Experimental Farm, gives several reasons why corn should be grown for this x After showing that the plant should be grown by every farmer on account of the amount of forage grown on a small space and the ease with 'which the corn is preserved aod kept for food for stock, the bulletin goes eon to show the proper place for growing corn amd the treatment of the soil for the crop. Corn will grow on all sorts of land if the land is" pro- perly drained. The soil must be well manured for' corn makes such an enor- mous growth that it requires much plant food. Get the soil well drained and give it thorough working before the seed is gown and then cultivate o 1after the seed ig sown and then culti- vate after the corn starts te grow, a -------- oo \ 30) Every housewife w "interested in ROBIN His different." © You hear it makes a bi sweeter-flavored, more assimilated than bread made with other flours. We can tell you wh makes that kind of a Tod, est you more than "why it does' is that **it does." You can prove what we say as true at no risk cf loss to yourself. Itisla ya matter 0 use "Robin Hood." Co., Ltd. Moose Jaw 8.---Ask your grocer about our guarantee, and when you use + Robia Hood add more water than usual, y 5 A \ : S_ve------ -- wens | anil while it is growing, and you will : NSE . pave the best results. Nh Hh NN loo) Care of the Horse's Shoulders, Harse owners and drivers are direct Iv responsible for the condition of the shoulders of the horses which they drive. No horse, young or old, ean do satidactory work if he suffers "at every step he takes. The horse may be cbmpared to a machine, with the ex- ception that the machine has no feel ings and is not willing, whereas the horse has these two valuable qualities. The horse is meant for work and we are always trving to get as much out of him as we can, but unlesé we give him the proper care he will not give us the amount of work he is capable of giving. In the first place the collar should fit properly ii the shoulders are to he kept healthy and ever ready for work, Tho majerity of collars are too large. It i well toihave the colar fitted by a harfess maker. He may te able to remove or replace padding so that the collar will fit well on the shoulder, Do mot use heavy pads. They cause the shoulder to sweat which makes the skin tender and very easily blistered. After a collar has been secured and fitting properly, il is necessary that it be\kept clean. When the horse comes to the stable sweat- ing the collar should be cleaned with a wet sponge and rubbed with an oily rag. This will keep the collar soft and in the best condition for fitting the shoulder. In most cases the back of the knife is used for the cleaning work, but this is not sufficient as the collar gets hard and rough. -- Care of Milk on the Farm. In the interests of a clean, sweet, cool milk supply, the Ontario = De- partment. of Agriculture is sending out through the dairy instructorsiand the makers, a list of instructions showing the proper care of milk on the [arm and showing that the patron of the factory will receive his reward for any ho uses flour must be HOOD *'the flour that gger loaf, that the loaf is 'nutritious, more easily ROBIN HOOD Flour but what ought to inter- f making up your mind to - « Sask. Rival Bread in Economy and are equally nourishing / Try 'this evperimont, madam, * Thin-slice a 20-ounce loaf od ead 1 dee in oven until h ly dry. Now weigh slices. 12 'nunces--perhaps less, The missing eight "=i: shortening in Jersey Cream il butter--while Jersey Cream extra care he gives the milk, In short they are as follows, addressed to the producer ; "It costs you a good deal by way of investment, current expense and labor to produce fvour milk. It is only by taking proper care of the same that you can get full value out of it. "First, see that you have good cows, which with ordinary carve . will pay for their keep the labor in- volved, and in addilion return yon a handsome profit. Know what each cow is doing for you. : | "Then look to it that your cows are well fed, well watered, and proper- ly cared for. Cows should always be milked in a clean place, in a cleanly manner, hy clean people. Cool your milk as woon as possible alter being deawn from the cow. Keep it cool. "Do not expose it to the air, Never expose it to the rays of the sun. You see, there is very little "Do your part, see that factoryman difference in cost of using' ¢ | does his pari; both will be rewarded." McCormick's Jersey Cream Bsn 5 Sodas in place of bread--so Liserve them at meal times. Enjoy their delightful crisp. ness and superfine favor "equal to bread In nourishing |: properties. Purity assured by © our chemist's analysis of all Ingredients. o that "Little - Lord Fauntleroy" trade-mark is on package. 4 You actually pay baker Se. for 12 ounces of dry weight. Now, MeCormick's Jersey Cream Sodas have all the moisture baked out of-them. Consequently cost only a trifle 'more than bread. ' But ® there is whole milk and more Bodas--otherwise Ingredients are the same. And you wonld never think of eating a Joat of bread without spread. Ing on at least Jo. worth of Sodas are usually eaten with. out, Scours in Pigs, Probably there is no diseasé that is wore deeded by the majority of hog raisers than * scours in little pigs. These little fellows get nothing but {heir mother's mifk, add many wonder why they should scour. Yet they do vo. Some feed which the mother has boeri getting does hot go for. 1 production of the best grade of milk. A feeder offers a care for the scours. Thid cure is very, simple, and he says tried so far. has known it to" simply to take a hali gallon of oats and boil them for about an hour and a half, Allow them to cool, and feed Jto the wow. Possibly "it is best to feed nothing but boiled oats for Tiwentydour hours. In all cases this will cure the disease, it is claimed. ------ Ned Milo Maize & Good Hog Feed. ¥ hea milo muize is fed to hogs it fi given ir in the head, x ¢ ground and the | be practised it hes chased the. disease. The treatment' i hose oy Sa "Goal cn Dieses av You: and yours, are my -------------------------- have not done so, usually will spill 15c. Ih. halibat, fahure in laxpe letters, sooner or later. And yet there is no branch of farming that pays better than dairying under favorable conditions and wise manage ment, and, strange to say, none that is. usually conducted in so slipshod a manner. © -------- ~~ Profitable Stock Raising. We are daily coming In contact with the products of the dairy cow iz one form or another. Thus if is to the interest of the owner of the dairy breed of cattle to. carefully: select ani {of mals when laying a foundation for this herd which will yield him the best profit, not only in selecting animale which are from a good healthy stock, but animals which are good profit producers, or, in other words, that vield a flow of milk containing suffi- cient butter fat to warrant the ani- mal worth the while of keeping upon the premises. | While it is always essential that ani- mals be well fod and cared for, it is oftentimes found that the aninial pro- ducing the largest amount of milk is not necessarily the animal which de vours the most feed, and for this rea- son the owner should learn the tem- perament of each individual and feed it accordingly, in this way realizing profits which might otherwise be was- ted.--Dr. David Roberts. Lampas of Horses. y f Lampas is a term used to describe a swollen condition of the hard palate just back of the upper incisor teeth, jv pever should be cut or burned. The "swelling does hot constitute a disease, but merely indicates irritation and in- flammation of the gums and entire huceal membrane of the mouth from | teething or iddigestion. Have the teeth attended to. Feed wome ears olf old hard corn. Swab the mouth twice daily with ja solution of half an ounce of powdered borax in a pint of water or mix borax in honey at the rate of | one drachm fo the ounce of honey and {smear in the mouth several times a | day --DBreeder"s Gazette. i There is Plow scouring done in I the roads an there used to be. Most folks now use greasp, finding that cheaper to apply before a plow 'or a shovel is rusty thgn hard work and profanity after the rust comes. {We keep a gallon pail partly filled with crude oil for the purpose of { greasing polished steel. An oil paint brush is in the .oil pail, and it is but the work of a moment to grease a iplow or a set of eultivator ghovels.-- H. Hatch, in Homestead. Produce and Prices. Kingston, June 4~The market clerk reports as follows : Carrots, H0c. to 60c. bag; apples, 80c, to $1; turnips, 43¢. bag; cabbage, Be. to 60¢. doz.; onions, $1 bag; po- tatoes, 35¢c. to 40e. Meat--+Beof (local), carease, 7c. to Se.; prime western beef, $11 to $12 per cwt.; by earcase; cuts, 20e. to 22. live hogs, 9c. Ibs; dressed hogs, 134%. a lb; pork, 13¢., by carcase; mutton, 12; lamb, by carcase, Be. to 6c; ducks, $1.25 to $1.50 each; turkeys, 20¢. to .; chickens, 90c, to $1 pair; putter, 200. to 26c.; fresh eggs, 18. to 20c. J. A. -McFarlany, Brock street, re porte flour, feed and gram selling as follows : Oats, 450.: local wheat, $1.15; buckwheat, 65c.; barley, 5bc.; rye, #3¢.; peas; #1; yellow corn, Tbe; flour. Lakers, $2.80 to #3; farmers', $2.80 to $3; Hungariad pateot, $3; oatmeal and rolled oats, 25.50 per barrel; corn- meal, £1.90 to 82; bran, $22 to $23 ton shorts, $25; straw (baled), 89; straw; loose, §9; hay, loose, $15; pressed, $15 to $16. John McKay, Brock street, as follows: Wool, washed, 18¢; sheep shine, $1; tallow, rendered, 6c.; dea- kins, The. to 81; veal skins, 15e. per Ib. hides, No. 1, %.; No. 2, 8c; No. 3, 7c.; horse hides, $3. J Dominion Fish Co. réports prices as follows | Salmon trout, 12§c. to 15c. a Ib. skinned digby herring, 20¢. Ib.; white fish, 124¢. to 15¢. Ib; pike, 10¢. 1b.: Chinook salmon, 30, lb; kippered herring, Yatmouth bloaters, 4he, doz. perch, 30e. doz; Atlantic salmon, 80c. lb; salt codfish, Te. to ig Bo Farm Tools. t reports Until Released by Wonderful Samaria Prescription. : Linuer sets up inflammation and ir- ritation of the stomach and wenkens the nerves, The steady or périodiec "al (apres) JJvinker js often forced to I drink even against his will by his un- natural physical condition, Samaria Prescription stops the { eraving,' steadies the nerves, builds up the general health and makes drink actually 'distasteful and nauseous. It j« tasteless and odorless, &nd can be given with or without the knowledge of the patient. i . Thousands of Canadian homes have heen saved from misery and disgrace by some devoted wife, mother or dunighter through this wonderful Can- adian remedy. The money formerly wasted in drink has restored = happi- ress, home comforts, education and reapict to the families formerly in want and « ir. toning. one of 'the nu- merous unsolicited testimonials re- ; a can ver you for your rem- i ig a orth more thay A to me. hus has ered Haunt vearal ti 3 id net touch it. see | jump (rapidly. WHISKEY HOLDS ITS VICTIMS v. {tu experi haddock, 10¢. Ib; bullheads, 12jc. Ih; red ings, We. box; mackerel, ; 15e, ib.; lake ing, Sc. lh; finnan haddie, 250; Ib; sea bass, 133c. 1b; pickerel, 123c. Ib.; mackerel, 15a. Ib.; smelts, le. to 20e. 2 DOCTORS AND TURKISH WOMEN. Now Called to Attend In oft Harems. The attitude of the harems to me dical practitioners has changed much recent years. Twenty "or thirty years ago no Turkish woman would ever have submitted to a physical ex- ammation by a devtor. All he could have persuaded her to do would be to show him her tongue through a rent mn the yashmax, - or let him touch her, pulse from behind a heavy cur: tain and In pence, of comrse, of an Argus-eyed eunuch or old fanale slave. Any attempt to apply a stethoscope to the chest would have been spurned as an impertinent presumption of western barbarism. No matter how severe the illness the medical man could not go beyond certain striet smite . of dslamitic usage and tradi- tonal vustom. Even in cases of im- minent danger to life these scanty lim- its were never allowed to be over stepped, and the belief in the incanta- sons of a priest and the house rem- cites of old, ignorant and supersti- tious women held unlimited sway and was always greater than the faith in the efficacy of medical skill and scierhe. : This is now changing, and changing There are, of course, still many exceptions where antiquated views and conceptions are fanatically adhered to and practised, but these become rarer ana rarer with cach ad- vancing year. Many Turkish women will now when ill voluntarily eall on a medical practitioner and never hesi- tate to submit 'themselves to a thor- ough physical examination. The generaf publie opinion on these matters among the Turks is fast al terinb for the better and only in very rare cases 18 there now any dil fioulty at ad raised as to letting the harem submit to am examination with stethoscope or any other instru: ment. sm sistent AS AN ADVERTISEMENT. How Hot Potato Was Used to Ad- vantage, Patrons of a hotel stopped eating while a piping bo ded potato of extraordinary size was carried across the room and sol before a man seated at a centre table, "Brought it himself Yall the way from Oklahoma," said the manager. "He brought enough to last him all the time he is here. He keeps them mn his own room and sends one down just in time to have it cooked for dinner. Yea, they're good potatoes; but that isn't why he brought a sack- ful up from Oklabomes. He is in the potato business and he eats his own potatoes as an advertisement A pota- to of that size carried across the room up high at arm's length is going to attract some attention anywhere. Tt makes folks ask questions, and pretty goon the vepitation of these potatoes 1s made, "There are other fellows. as entor- prising as this Oklahoma chap. Every year an applegrower from plays the same game. He samples of his best apples along has them served in styles that bound to make people look." dining-room hot brings and are Horse 41 Years Old. ' Joseph Guest of Chestertown, Md., owns a horse which is one of the old- his species in America. The animal cele brated the forty-first anniversary of his birth, on May 6th, by ecavorting joyously around in a beautiful pasture an performing a few unstudied stunts in high kicking that a yearling colt might have envied. On the dey that Samuel J, Tilden was nominated for president in 1876 this horse, a big, elech sorrel, then called Stonewall, was driven to a town twenty-five miles away, whore his owner, a great ad mirer of the democratic nominee changed Stonewall's name to Samuel Ju Tilden in honor of his party candi- date, and under that name"he is sill living in ease and comfort. But. there. have been, and possibly slil' are, older horses than thiz Mary- Jané veteran. At the horse show here ih New York threw or four years ago there was exhibited a horsw once used in the siroet car service that was said to be 43 years old. Dogs Commit Suicide. Reniarkable effects were prodused by the new shells in the gunmty expehi- ments carried out against the discard- ed French battleship Jena. Dogs were placed upon the ship in ordur tp dis cover whother thev would be suffocat- ed or injure! hy the shells fired at that old -hulk when the dogs were at gome distance from the point of im- pact. The animals were placed in a part of the vessel which could not be reached by the shells. it was found that the explosives did oot kill the animals by suffocation or" poisoning. But the dogs' nervous sys- tems suffered severely under the - re peated action of the shells dnd the re- sulting concussions. The investigators bel eved it ved that in the next i and crew would v become neurasthenic, 'wo dogs, after being subjected to t. became sombre and themselves when calls. committed suicide bv -i'o the wes' and allowing LL ves £0 sink without making any sttemptyto swim. | Color Blindness. One thind ix definitely shown By the testa that have been made for color blindness i timid, fiding Finally they 13. 0 Me; fresh Fidelity means unswerving adherence to principle. The Anglo-Saxons have created com- mercial ideals which have been followed with more or less fidelity throughout the world. Semi-ready Clothes are built on the sure foundation of a need for good clothes at a fair price. The people who buy know that every garment is correctly de- signed on clear cut lines. - Semi-ready Tailoring Oregon | - est. if not the very oldest, greature of | THE H, D, BIBBY 00. NERVOUS DEBILITY 'R NEW METHOD TREATMENT will ¢ure you and make & man of you. Under its influence the brain becomes active, tha blood purified so thet sll pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up: the veryes become stro as steel, 50 that nervousness, bashfulness and deshondency digapnear: the eyes become bright, the face fall and clear, refurnito the body, and the moral physical and mental systems are Invi 4 sll dealing cease~no more vital waste from the svstem. You feel yourself a man aul know marriage eaunot be a failure. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars £2 NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH PARALYSI Peter FE. Summers relates his experience: i "I was troubled with Nervous Debility for many years, 1lay it to indicercticn acd excomses in you 1 very despoadent apd didn't dare whether 1 worked or not. 1 imagined everyboly § who looked at me guessed my secret Imaginative dreams at night weakencd me-my bad¢k ac had pains in the back of my head, hands and feet were cold, tired in the morning, 130 ppetite, gers were shaky, eyes blurred, hie loose, memory poor, ete. Numbness in the fingers set in and tho doctor told mo he feared paralysis. 1 took ail kinds of medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric belt for three month, ut received tle | 3 ; B sErORE TREATMENT WAS ind to consult Drs : Kennedy, though 1 Jost all faith in AFTER TREATMENT doctors. Like a drowning man 1 commenced the New Merson Trearsest and it saved my ie The improvetnet Wak hike tha ol feel tha vigor amine Lhe sugh ie Nerves. was cured men al hysically. ha LL ns and continue to do so, ' pay y e seat ayy vatis CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY We treat and VARICOSE ARTETA RASS YP SESE RET SRA CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If viable write / Bla oNSULTATION FREE. Eu 0 call write for « Question Drs. KENNEDY & KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. pan OTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed I you desire to to our Canédian Correspondence Depart- ---- ment in Windsor, Ont. see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no ts in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters us follows? DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. Clears the Brain and Builds Up the Muscles. A Healthy, Economical Substitute for Meat or Eggs For dinner, serve biscuit smothered in creamed veg- etables. For breakfast of lunéheon, cover biscuit with seasonable fruit and add cream and sugar. It's delicious: At your grocer's, 13c. a ciiftony two for 28¢. me ion, of some interest in con- I the v' of a cole Is made e from tested na- tural spring water, selected barley malt, and a blend of the choic- est growth of hops. No | substitutes for hops or ji barley are used. An aid to . disgestion and 2 cause comfort after . o ea VIRTUES OF BARLEY'AND | James McParland, 339-341 "Out of Sight |" t of Sight ! Things made from "Quality" Flour, made by Maple Leaf Milling Co., Limited, have an almost mira- cunlons way of disappearing pies, cakes, bread and a hundred pastry delicacien. No grout puzzle. "Quality" Flour is so swoet and wholesome that it lends itself to the baker's art so well that everything it enters into is fortewith a morsel de- lectable. A home without "Quality"

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