Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Apr 1911, p. 12

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» PAGE JWELVE. Jz A GRAND WEICIE FOR OLD PEOPLE "Frult-a-fives" Restores The Heath and Strength of Youth, GRANDE LIGNE, QUR,, Jan. 20d, 1970, "1 heartily recommend 'Fruit-a-tives" to all who suffer from constipation and the painful consequence, Piles. [ am - now over So years of age and suffered for more than To years with Constipation Piles, 1 Btied all kinds of remedies, nothing cured me. About 8 fo years ago, I received a sample of "'Fruit-a-tives". After taking few doses, 1 felt that fuitatives were doing me good. As"Pruit-a-tives" no "ili here Yen; 1 wrote to After taking four Sores, I felt well-- 10 Bartels were regul ar--and the Piles ", N. JOUBERT. "ay tog one "Pruit.a-tives" tablet et 7) Sd poe can rect all two -- e can correct a Stomach, Li idney Troubles. * Fruita-tives "\ the famous fruit medicine is mild gentle in action-- plegsant to the taste yet no other has been found to be so effective in ng okd folks in good health. 3 a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At all dealers or sent on estivt 8 of price by Pruit-e-tives Limited, Otta: So strong, so rich, so flavorful--a little of wrriffs True Vanilla Goes further--and the difference in its ex- quisite aroma and tempting fragrance is wondrous. You will find real economy in Shirriff's. Ask the groceryman. Caution :--A smaller quantity required than 'of any other extract. ~ \ Other delicious Shirriff flavor- ings are: Lemon, Almond, Rose, Pineapple, Strawberry, Ratafia, and ninety more, The Mexican Vanilla 14 Bean Gatherer $3.50 Recipe Free, for weak Men Send Name and Address Today-- You Can Have It Free and Be Strang and and Vigorous 1 have in a possession a preveription for nervous ty, lack of gor ing memory Tame {naabood, 1 0 t on eycesses, Lr drains, or lies of youth, that bas cured so many Sacyous wen rij ¢ in thelr own any additional help o SL me edi. vir oekly SN I have SVR presen sealed en- will write me for it. . from a physician & special study of men and | it is the surest-acting combi- oure ol deficient manhood and alors adver pul - op owe is Yo wy fellow man to se Let us have It to replate. the time; Now Is Nickel Plating and Electro PI ting of a'sinds. Nickel, Copper, Brass, 'We guarantee 8 good job. PARTRIDGE 4.3 SONS Tips For Farmer BY UNCLE JOSH. TROT aes heetEeen ore Too many people fail to reduce their feeding operation, especially for horses, to a system, says Lhe Tor ronto Globe. 'They often | feeding to inexperienced help)' at ? and Je result is that horses are overfed at the wrong time, or underfed when doing severe work, and either lose flesh or get sick. Too often men who ought to know better carry economy to excess so far as the feeding of grain is concerned. On the other hand - apy farm employees seem lo think that a horse's stomach is a sort of storshouse in which the animal can bottle up a reserve of energy lor use in time of need. In times of idleness the horse is fed far too hi berally. 'Then when the horse is re quired to work extremely hard, ihe care and attention he requires are not much more than when he is Toing lit- tle or nothing. A good man with horses can himself work out a system that will economize food and energy by taking into secount the amount of work. his horses are doing and feed them so they may mwintain 'the re quisite standard of efficiency, , The application of sound common sense to horse feeding and care "is just as necessary and just as import- ant a fo apply it to any other branch of the business. of the farm. The feed ing in spring should be just liberal enough to keep the horses in even flesh. ' They should have clean hay and good clean grain in variety. Whole oats, or oats and barley chop, corn and beans ground or a mixture of corn, oats, barley and peas, or any variety or combination of grain, may be supplied. It is 'well to remember that corn-fed horses have not the stamina of oat-fed horses. The work. ing horses require protein or nitrogen to build the muscle, They cammot yet this from corn. Indian corn helps out in making up a ration, and is very good for horses during the winter but when spring comes they must have protein in their food. They can get it from the oats, barley, beans, peas, wheat, and from good clean clover or alfalfa hay. In the spring the working horse can be fed heavily every working day with concentrated feeds, but care must be taken that his grain feed is reduced when he rests a day. He needs grooming, thorough grooming and extra grooming in the 'early spring. Grooming means as much to a working horse as a bath does to a working man. Bofh are essential and neither should be omitted from the daily schedule. Two thorough groom- ings daily are not too much for a hard-working horse. When a man has a comfortable bed, plenty of good food properly proportioned and well prepared, good water to drink; when he takes a daily bath and wears well. fitting boots and comfortable clothing he is capable of doing anything. Just so is it with a horse. His bed should be comfortable and his stable well ventilated. He should hawe the right kind of fodder and grain and good water to drink, thorough grooming and well-fitting collars and harness and proper shoes, and he will not fail to do his whole dutg. It pays to treat one's horses well at all times, but es- pecially in the spring. A Milk Diet for Hens. Frank P. Butts has been experimen- ting with a milk diet for his Buff Leghorn pullets and the results have Ween so satisfactory that he thinks all poultry raisers should profit by it. "During two months forty-two pullets produced eggs that sold for $26 and no record was kept of what was used at home. The two-months' trial end- ed Jan. 29th. Mr. Butts feeds the hens liberally with skim milk in a variety of ways. Mixed with the feed as ourds, and in the drinking trough Much less grain feed is used when the milk is given the hens. --Dryden Herald. Hogs and Alfalfa. Alfalfa, according to one of the most intelligent farmers in Kansas, is the best money making crop. The seed is not raised much in the eastern part of the state, as it grows better where there is drier weather. Where rains are frequent the crop will i growing and does nol run to so well as in the western and der parts. In the western parts farmers often have a seed crop that brings fron $25 to $75 an acre. In the northeastern part alfalfy is grown on the hills as well as im the valleys. Hogs can be raised on it in Kansas, getting half of their growth from the alfalfa, then fattening on a mixed diet of that product and corn, for 24e. a pound, gross. 'This allows for a fair rental for the allalia pasture and the hay, Cases of hog cholera are rare where the farms are free from mud holes. When his hogship is dry he will drink the scum from the mud holes. Hogs need fresh water to keep them from burning up with a steady corn fed diet. They should bave grass during the rang soda season. From Many F Farms. During the month of February, 199 homestead claims were taken out at Moose Jaw. James McAvoy, a residemt of Ni: agara Falls, was, last week, sentenced two years penal servitude, for stealing oats. A. E. Joerger, Virden, Man., sold a Halifax, to Ed ward Wark, of Minnedosa, b Washington statistics state that the exports of eggs from Canada mto the Uniled States are about 35,000 dozen, per vear, as compared with 750,000 dozen seat from the United States to bred stallion, half brother of FB DAILY BRITISH iki ---------- nid $10, 000 for a bull named Finin- ent II. He has since sold $57,000 worth of his gets and still owns twen- ty of his daughters The record for high rents "paid for agricultural lands in Ontario was re cently brokem,* when thirty acres of lamd belonging to 'D. Samsos, and situated within a mile of the town of Blenheim, was leased at 330 per acre. The land -is to be sown with tobacco. A garter spake, one hall inch in diameter, and about eighten inches long, was reported to have been found imbedded in a Ben Davis apple The apple, with soake in it, was found iu a barrel of that frnit which was being re-packed im a fruit house at Colborne. 5-3 The Jewish Agricultural amd Indus- | trial Aid Society enrolls a member- ship of 3,339 Jews who are farmers, im New York, New Jersey, Conaecti- cut, Massachusetts, and North Da- kota, and the claim is made that this is only a fractional part of the num- ber of Jews pow engaged in farming in America. - Increasing stringency in regard to enforcement of food laws im the old country is being complained of by meat shippers and representatives of foreign interests there. One of the regulations complained of is that re garding the use of borated preserva- tives. In regard to Canadian bacon, it is intimated that so long as the boric ackd used is no greater than three grains to the pound, no prohi- bitory action will be taken. Numerous experiments at the Ontar- io experimental farm have shown that better yields of grain are obtained where barley and oats are sown to- gether than where either is sown alone. This combination is a very popular one in Ontario, and its use is increasing. Produce and Prices. Kingston, April 8. --Market teports the prices prevailing as fol lows : Carrots, B50c. to 60c. per bag; turnips, 50c. to 60c. per bag; cabbage, Be. each; onions, $1.50 per bag; pota- toes, TSe. to 85c. per bag; celery, be to Tc. per head. John Ph Brock street, reports as follows : Hides, trimmed, Sc. per Ib.; horsehides, $3 to $3.25; calfskins, veals, 12¢. er 1b; deacons, 5c. to 90c.; wool, sheepskins, from 9c. to $1; tallow, in cakes, 6c. per lb.; bees- wax, 25¢. per lb.; ginseng, £5 per Ib; woul, washed, 20e. per lb.; unwashed, Joe per lb. Raw furs: Red fox, No. , large, ¥, No. 1, medium, $4; rac- hr No. , large, $2 to $3; No. I, medium, a to $2; mink, No. 1, large, $6 to $7; No.l, medium, $3 to spring rats, No. L large, 38¢c.; No. 2, medium, 20¢.; kits and culls, at value; springy rubbed skins at value. J. A. MacFarlane, Brock street, re- flour, feed and grain selling as ollows : Oats, 38c. to 40c.; local wheat $1; buckwheat, 60c.; barley, 60c. to 60c.; rye, 70c.; peas, 90c. to $1; yellow corp, 60c.; flour, bakers, $2.75 . to $2.90; farmers', $2.80 to $2.90; Hungar- ian patent, $2.90; oatmeal and rolled oats, $4.50 bbl; cornmeal; $1.80 to $2; bran, per ton; shorts, $25; baled straw, $7; loose, $8; hay, loose, $8 10 $9; pressed, 89 to $10, Moeat--Beel (local), carcase, Sic. to fc; prime western beef, $10 per ewt.; by carcase, outs, 10c. to 1be.; live hogs, 6jc. lb.; dressed hogs, 9c, to 10c.; pork, 10c. to lle., by quarter; mutton, 10c.; lamb, 12. to 13c., qtr.; veal, Se. to Se. lb.; ducks, $1. to 81.25 each; turkeys, 19. to 20c. Ib.; fowl sl to $1.50 pair; chickens, $1 to $1.25 pr.; butter, creamery, 20c.; rolls, 19. to 20c. prints, 2c, to 23c.; .; eggs, fresh, 17¢. to 20c. Dominion Fish Co. reports prices as follows : Salmon trout, . fo 18¢c. a lb; skinned dighy ing, Ib.: white fish, 12§c. to 15¢c. 1b.; pike, 16c. lb.; Chinook salmon, 30c. Wo, pered herring. Yarmouth bloaters, [40c. doz.; perch, 30c. doz.: Atlantic ghimen, Se Ju.) Sait codfish, Te. to 3 t, to 20e.; frea haddock, 10c. nae bullheads, To iy; red 20c. box; 1c. » Ib.; lake herring, Sc. Ib. son bass, 1240. Ib.; pickerel. 150, Ih. It is now open "season for musk- rats, in the province of Québec and Ontario, and will remain open until May Isat. Prices will range on this article as follows : Square handled rats, large, 35c.; small, 25c.; shot and cut, 15c. to 25¢.; bow handled are Jc. a skin less in each grade. Budget From Newboro. Newboro, April 6.--Mrs. (Dr) King visited Brockville on Tuesday. J. Kalahar, Miss McDonald, Miss Kala- har and J. E. Mulville were guests of Mrs. Daniel McCarthy on Sunday. Mrs. Anna Gallahooley is ill. Herbert Foster was a visitor in Westport on Tuesday. Miss L. Green will entertain' some of her friends on the Sth. James Stanton intends going west. A large number attended the Woman's Insti- tute on Saturday. J. Mulville, of Westport, was a visitor here on Monday. Miss Helen Dargavel, of Flgin, was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. P,Tett, at Clif Place, on Satur- > George Paul leaves on Monday to run an engine in the cotton ill, Kingston. Miss Ella Bolton and Miss Muriel Baudem were in Westport Sa- turday. The Ottawa Normalites are expected 'home on Thursday. There has not been any maple syrup made around here yet. A large crowd from bere attended J. J. Mulville's sale at Westport on Saturday. Mrs. George Lyons was "At Home" to a few Friends on Tuesday. Master clerk . Bass, who has been for the a "few weeks, has returned to school. J. J. Gallagher, manager of of the Union bank here, went to Westport on Tuesday and returned with the Taylor cup: Mrs. (Dr.) Ack- land was in Brockville | on Monday. Mrs, Kite is nursing in Westport. News From Bath. 6.--Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Be fav, wc eit on eft on Saturday last agerman, or Sy ee purchased the | room and barber shop on Friday ast from H. D. Wemp, and Sidoey Beaty, Faber Covert, baker, Morris, of Toronto, at G. A. Wartman's, and left on Wednesday "i Ditaws. The island are still trav the ice in eR Gi her, of Na v paid the village a visit on xv. Wve Primer, of Walle 1s land, visited here on Friday Inst. This tittle girl has ene of our lovely Dolls and Carrizges WATER OR LEMONADE SET Magnificent cut glass water or lemonade set. cosi fram $15 10 836. Don't throw your money away. Farn the lovely Imperial Cambridge Sot consisting of magnificent resi cot tern jug ne Juwel Kinssen to match and a handsome Caretully pael ree worth - Pon delicious perfames We arrange 0) stand payment of all charges. Boys and girls here is a srand present tonyour mother. SATURDAY, I - 1911. APRIL 8S, « Guarantee ensures Satisfaction --or a new hat free. A hat needs a guarantee. More easily than any other article of apparel, a hat ean deceive its purchaser--Ilook right without being right. Clothes, or shoes, or ties, you ean "size up"--a hat, vou can not. For instance, almost every- one knows enough about tweeds to tell whether a be willing to guarantee them. Buckley Hats are guaran- teed. The men that make them believe they'll wear longer than any other hat that's made-- and in proof of that belief the makers attach their guarantee for four months. If vou buy a Buckley hat to-day, and, any time within the next four months, vou find vour hat losing color ar showing signs of wear, suit will wear well. With hats it 1s aif. ferent. "size can will wear three months. or take it: to your dealer and ha will cheerfully unhesitatingly exchange it. The Buckley guar- antee, moreover As- sures you against hat accidents - it's a0 "look sesdy" after one ai month? Few can tell a hat's real worth without knowing what goes into its making. None can tell exactly but the manufacturer. He knows better than anyone how long his product will wear--and, if he believes in his hats he ought to I BO ay mies cam mos sher head. hassleoping eyes, lovely teeth, curly hair and is beau. tifuliy dressed comp! Pretuly enameiied. Doll Carriage and Parasol all complete given jor sel Lingoniy $8.9 worth of our HANDSOME WATCHES sweeping as to include even that contingency. Union made, and of highest grade felt, it is produ ed in a wide variety of styles to suit all physical types and to conform to latest fashion tendencies, The price ia only $2.50. Typewriter FREE Your choles of lovely Per husamasnificent imported $50 appearing watches. Gent x coma in open face with cases of gun metal. hickel or richly Fold plated with fine gold porcelain dial. Ladies are the basatitul small size in open fare with solid sterling siiver oe rich gold plated cases guaranties bo you handsome renl Dorien meld chain either style, will ba included for selling only §1.08 Sxtes LIFE tocar bottles of ---------- only 100 each Junkie them they well Thess and 4% other magnificent pres ens are Even sway sbeolately free te quickly introdsco our DELICIOUS. ROYAL JAPANESE PER- FUMES. Yo send handsome Taree hot io. in six lovely odes rose. cama parfumes tr a wT 3 0 v hotties at our wonderfully cheap price of only 100 NO MONEY ASKED INAD- Tell us which of these magnificent premivms you desire, and wa will send our delicious perfomes to you all charfes paid and trust you with them until money] for the sale of ther is returned t6 var office we promptly send your premium We arrangedo stand payment of Shnrgen 5h all premiums Don't wes this oppor tunity your order for the perfume (0 sell to day YOU TAKE NO RISK perfumes just ike the bottle pletared above all charges paid and if you cannot sell them, you simply return them fo u. 2 bus etslogun, ini ie free shows hundreds of her ha 'DON' TIE MISS THE CHANCE OF YOUR woe magnificent and costly premiums We are the only firm in Canada. who send gut theses beautiful iu licious perfames which can be VANCE. with handsomely ornamented dial or In hunting case siyie. very richly engraved like cut Gent's style given for selling $200 worth. Ladies style 1 1 non doin given for selling 64 00 worth Tell us your choice and wn one HONEY 5 i ox ten We pond tt afl charued prepaid tea OF gents of extra ink harges As soon us the HAND We send our delicious ohy th ® inrgest comers makers in real typawriting just liken hundred 4 wp tn a handsome case with tall direc 6 Boys AYoaurite yo war Jetters, of your home printing for others ME CAMERA. This ia 8 magn: » Special Eine of Rockers. Large Golden Oak Rockers, same as cut, $6.50 tolden Oak Rockers, Leath- er, $8.50, 10.50 and up, Couches, $1.50 and up. Extension Couches, $12.50, 13.30. R.dJ. REID Phone 577. mrme---------- WHEN ORDERING FLOUR Ask your grocer or dealer to send you a trial sack of QUALITY Flour. Try it and be convinced of the celebrated quality ot the Flour, \ oo 0 Manufactured by the Maple Leaf Milling Go., Branch Office, Ontario Street. Kingston. Telephone 886. $00000000000006000000¢ Aftemoon Teas... Will be complete & with' some of Ice Cream Phone 797. i a 300 Cords Pecled Pulp Wood This Wood was pecled and piled under cover (oo dry We are offering this Wood to the public at $5.00 per cord, cut In any lengths This is the best lot of Wood ever offered for pring and summer use, Iry it "and be con- viaced SOWARDS 'Phone 1 North Ead Ontariv Street, Maids who know the virtues of KLENZINE always| No more it to KLENZINE to do thi 'owder cleans everythir insist upon it NN KLENZINE Al work | i a pleas ure. NT V simply le ive RL ENZINE Ammonia Washing | cuts out drudgery and makes scrubbing A » sothing--far superiortesaap. Inthelaundry, for cleaning win codishes, KLENZINE lessens the work by half. It na sparkle and the linen snowy As a disinfectant MOODY'S KLENZINE is indispensible. It white, keeps 1 ! Kitchen, pantry and bathroom clean, swegl, and free from germs MOODY'S KLENZINE contains ammonia in its pur than the ordinary ammonia washing compoundl yet twice aseflective. t form More delicate Delightfully | ? refreshing in the bath--softening the water and imparting a healthy hue to the | "skin Yous Grquet stopics i. Large size package 10c. Order one to-day THE ALPHA £ CHEMICAL fo LIMITED ney

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