Daily British Whig (1850), 4 May 1912, p. 14

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PAGE FOURTEFEX. -- A "] ,was Crippled, | 1ips For could hardly walk | Br to Cowl 1 the Farmer down stairs at times on my hands My doctor told me 1 ' Sas THE DATLY BRITISH WHIG. SATURDAY, MAY 4, Eel, a forge and am, fa- irs repairing. el ctric signal commurkeation ter's efit An system provides gt t the oki hose compartments of and mond in ithe barns ae Yo maker jt pe and bov to unload in half ueual time alks connecting mre fil barn d the hougs Ihe $ ! t i : SO con for a sheaves or are eid gable for wm ie the house a convemenpce { erent oluthaldings uv DAES. BRITISH WHT wat EBAY san $16; pressed hay, $16; seed wheat, | $1.40 to $1.50, : Meat--Beef, local, carcase, 9%, to] Hu western, Ie. to 12e. car case: cuts, Ye. to 18e.: mutton, to 13¢.; lamb, 32 to $1.50 a quarter; ive bogs, $8.50; dressed £12; creamery, Soc veal, Se. to 13; 3 Dairy--utier, 1 | prints, 23¢. to Ne; rolls, 25c.;} v =, to Te. doz i! George Mills & Co. Prine hogs, The burnt crust and grease that makes pots or roasting pans so hard to clean can be softened, loosened quote the {ol both time and labor in muddy and knees. | @evrerdvaversrsesrssenl had an acute attack of inflammatory | SL rheumatism. I wasin the hospital | for weeks, but was scarcely able to | | walk when 1 left it. 1read about | and lowing prices for raw furs: Red fox, weather Jas to size, 84 to $9. skunks, as » "Isize and length of stripe, He. 2.25; raccoon, large, $3; medium, $i 25 to ¥2; small, 75¢.; minks, as tol tT saves wintry or Wild and False Wid Oats, . to a bulletin, thie 3 PA cording revently is Caring for Horses' Shoulders. by cod branch, of the de | woul wa shoulders i= A sh for ho Dr. Miles' Nervine bought a bottle and began to get better from the start, and for the past six months 1 have had scarcely any pain and am able to walk as Jwell as ever." J.H. Saxpznrs, = P.O.boxs, Rockaway, N. J. Few medicines are of any benefit for rheumatism, but Mr. Sanders tells plainly what Dr. Miles' Re- storative Nervine did for it. One ounce of salicylate of soda added to one bottle of Nervine mikes an ex- cellent remedy for rheumatisin, which is now known to be a nerv- partment of agriculture at Ottawa, i is a type of more 'or less wild oat, that is frequently con- with the as being one of the worst of weeds, © This publication, prepared by Norman Criddle, deseribes field ox periments with these two plants, texplaing by means of charts and des criptive. matter, their distinguishing characteristics. . Aoording to this au- thority, it 5 a comparatively simple matter, to distmguish the two sort lin the growing stage, as the false va ivariely shows the same manner of {growth us the cultivated oat while the Lire wild oat, exhibits a different ha 1 4 ihit. Jn the seed form, the difficaliy ous disease and therefore subject to | if tailing them apart, is greater, more the influgnce of a medicine that acts |oupecially the through the nerves, as does . Dr. Miles' Nervine Bufferers from rheumatism seldom "fail to find relief in the use of i1there harm less fused recognized true wild oat, which is amd 5 in 80 far as some of With the larger the difficulty of distinguishing them is Re a® an experienced eye will tt once wloteet the false wild oat, by Dr. Miles' Nervine, with salicylate [11s burger mize and its usual close re | semblance (0 the ltivated variety in ¢ roncerned sorts, easy gmaller varietios of the false wild oat} salt, onedourth ined fully i onedourth borax Dhar ma thum fourth salipetre. gallon of min glass jars and keep should wash the horses' pight. They hard, for thal and cause it to One should never lars the {ime nse one-fourth ane olve in shoulders ever must not be brushed too woukd irritate the skin get sore. clean but col night "in one forgets to clean it might, ope should take a wet cloth to -them in the morning. H one scrapés the collar with a knife it will roughen the surface of the collar ore shoulders. In tiins ers ready before one starts io one should always clean them well we dandealt and also Keep inder the Most Important Farm Prof. Ww. ¢ Te "The most is horses' i morning. at and the should work, to the cause ron collar from mane, Palmer, North Dakota, important farm a lead péncil. Without accounts, imple ment some form of one eannot know Implement, color and size, $2 to $7.50; weasels, | 20e. to Gde.; spring wuskraes, large, Sie, to Bic; No. 1, medinm, 6c. | to 65e.; No. 1, small, 4le. to 40c.: kitts, shot damaged, fall and winter, 8 to value, 15¢c. to 3, John Mehay, #irack street, reports as follows: The hide market steadily declining, owing to poor gqual- | ity and poor demand. We quote hides | No. 1, trimmed, at loc. a Ib; No. 2 and bulls, 9¢. a lb.; sheep skins, fresh, | We.; deacons, $1; veal skins, lde. per Ib.; sheep skins same as hides; tallow | tendering, Ge. per lb; wool, washed, | Hie. per ib; wool, unwashed, 12¢. per ib.: ginseng, 35 to $6.50 per ib. horse | hides, No. 1, 53; red fox, No. 1, prime, | £5 to 87; mink, No. |, prime, 35 tol 87; skunk, No. I, 81 to £2: raccoon, | No. 1, $1 to 22.00; muskiar, No. }.1 Be.; bear, black, $10 to 820; Ivnk, $15 0 80, i Above prices are for No. | prime! stock, blue pelts and unprime accord: | ng to value. ! The Dominion Fish company reports | he following prices itefish, and washed away with DIRT Try it. Geta can at your grocers to-day. Be sure a mild solution of hot water and RUN LL] Valuable premiums, watches, books, pictures, etc., are given free in exchange for Comfort Lye labels. silverware, 15¢. | { Comfort Lye labels count same as three Comfort Soap wrappers for premiums. Ack yourgrocer for free Comfort Pres Book," or of soda. | which it is found. Uenerally speak Bold under a guarantbe thatassures [ny to, the outer seed coat is more the return of the price of the first bottle { open in front with enltivated 'forms It It falls to benefit. At all Druggists. |, [ales wild oats so that the MILES MEDICAL CO, Toronto, Can | ut is hnoadly lb.; pikes 10c. Ib; Chinook salmon, | We. Ih; kippered herring, Yarmouth | doaters, 40¢. doz; perch, Joe, Ib; | walt codiish, 10e, lb.; halibut, 153¢. to | Me. Th. fresh haddock, 10e. 1h.; bull- | heads, 1 Ih.; smoked fillets, 15¢.; velees, to 60c. ot; bluefish, 150. Ih. you get. the genut Comfort Lye. what is eeally doing. Oue know where the profits or the are. The time required in keeping ac immer counts will he but a few minutes a in day. In 'many eases the returns will of the outer coat be more for these few minutes than for the rest of the day's work, The keep of does not require aluborate I he way =, and wh fon thing that keep aceonnt with, For chickens the banker, the the left hand « pit down whatever goes fo that party? H it he ihe tat down the feed they pot, the fodder, in short, whatever you spend on them, If it is the banker or merchant down whatever you turn over to them, a ws, butler, ete, (in the hand page, or éredit cide, whatever cannot losses wc visible, wherens wild oats, the edges can with thmost meet, improved, air- tight, pry-open cover, only Large Readers interested in ie tdistinguishing false fwild oats would do well to write to i the publications branch, department of With the "Roaster" om i {| Agriculture, Ottawa, for of is crowing louder as he goes slong Dulletin No. 5.7. Only 46¢c per pound, For chewing and | smoking. i AT A. MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street. : ing acoounis any mode a note that fe the iy dilierent wild oats from THAT TOBACCO veto. Oe with can / omen A QUESTION? quite simple pel book sot Pages mam write to COMFORT SOAP CO. A sony face eneh one, 18 metance, the merchant, ete debit andria Cumphbell (Mrs D.Sc Record Year for Planting. present Camphell Smith, BE Upon hearing a little girl say boast fully 10 a little boy: *'Bovs aint vorth as much as girls. You'd be in| the bottom of the sea if you'd been | m the Titanic. They saved the wo-| men but they fet the men drown." Pp : COWS, Hi, 2 fields, The apring in Ontario has "On f witnessind the largest planting of nit | trees history of the provinee, sys the Toronto Globe. The rejuven- { ation of hundreds of old' orchards by modern methods of cultura the growth of co-operative selling associa have given a remarkable impetus tor the furthyr development of the fruit industry in Pretavia Before ond of February nearly EVEeTY nursery in the province had commenced to refuse orders One nursery in the Niagnra district alore has sold over 250,000 mostly peach and apple stock, Me. Poey W. Hodgetts, direftor of the fruit branch of the Ontario department of nerienlture, that this spring has been a record in planting opera While it is difficult to estimnte that Grew" accamtely the amount of stock plant edd, it is belived that the total num ber will come close to 2,000,000 \rees. Labatt's London : ; Notes of latorest, . wu Lager ) rand ad 2.5 Selling fast because made right page, of idle tn the COWS, and put \ question "tis that sLirs, spirit call from deep: When down doom With fifteen hundred souls for death to reap, all my heing tivns money, vy richt put down \ from the put yout the ocean Vou get If it is the money value of the milk, cream that they give, If it is the banker, or merchant, put down the money, groceries, hardware, or what over wot from then. H that ig necessary out vive baok I pencil, and enough gumption to one at jt," : the different partes, the Cows, the down butter went Fitanic to her RE "od JY E ro INSFORT SOAP CZ" al or (trees, vou "ome soul perchance from the wreck Will through me last fond desire; sive tO my pon the impulse it implies; lis came pleading to start with is or ten cent note states : breath forth , its 1 IM siart "The Brew Line Produce and Prices. May f.-Alarket prices prevailing as love of life, its sacrifice inspire. hingst no, reports the lows : Carrots, 20¢, ties, $ Clerk fol lhe greatest ship that e'er. was set afloat Was made the mighty host, blood demands that tect the weak, Thus went death trap of ie. a peck; pota Frank Pacific Smpanys | 2 a bag: beans, le. ay enb H2,500 busHols to the LER $150 (0 $2 doe; celery, loc. 3 7 peek; let of its cla ator C5 oniiud a, a A than, making a tot 4 to ie. a bunch; apples, Wx to Ae. peck; turnip Je. to 206, fn city f five mathon bushels w At the end of March ther: wera PU radish, Se. bunch; rhubarb, 10c.; : green onions, Je. buneh. stared in the ternlnal olevators al : ; Fori William amd Port Arthur J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, wv thing aver -twenty-iwed. milion bushels puts grain, flour and feed gelling » of grain, three-quarters of whith was foliows wheat, Ry ther 200,000 Americans will cross the bind vr ,uto Canada this year, ae cording to the est mate of Viee-Prosi- dent Denn, of the C.P.R. I'wo years the Amirvican immigration nto this covntey wns only 100,000, per barrel; cornmeal, © 31.80 to Ex-Sheep Commisdloner W. p, bram, 227 per ton; x Rich has stated that of the 5 weeds Paled straw, 5%; loose, $8; hay, loose, common In Canada, horses eat - sixty to «izhty, cattle trom HO and siesp 530, of thy very worst, arzument for sheep. to Whos they pro- |= to pacity at . men down the nation's capa. Yee De strength and boast wpa- the flower of manhood and its pride | was there, | Men filled with all life's purposes and | zest; Tue TRIE FLAVOR---AND Pure. TRY IT! LABATT'S INDIA PALE ALE XXX Stout Made and matured iu the old way THI IDEAL BEVERAGES JOHN LABATT some Facts About McClary's "Sunshine" Furnace The Understudy of the Sun-- \mbitions, aims, and aspirations met and fell before the best. Ae; local wheat, $1.10 ®, per race principles wheat, $1.10; bi sh; 51 to bakers' 32.50 $2.00 iT seed] rod, 31; peas yellow feed corn, 9c. flour, $2.75 to 83; farmers to $3.10; Hungarian oatmeal and rolled oats, £3.50 And every woman from that wreck ean say . "Some brave man died for me, his life he gave, Perchance some strange whom I nev er knew Laid down his precious life, that might live." Avo The Fire-pot of the "Sunshine" is made of Semi - Steel ~--that of the ordinary fura- ace is made of Grey iron: it and the ashes drop into the ash-pan. A child ean easily rock:the grates of a "Sunshine" -- merely 'another reason why you should buy a "Sunshine" Furn- ace, shoris, $29 per ton from ™ to | | i 100 i Q : including gies This Tired ? So very tired this Spring ? Some i ii And I, ¢ ¢ 18 anothey » 4 woman, as I think it o'er, from my heart to This question Vames McParland, Agent, 339-34) King Street Kast, i 3 » {ihe farm to market as do the a : Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound Restored | Mrs. Green's Health-- jr to winter Her Own Statement. Covington, Mo." Your medicine has enough to not hesitate in asking for done me more good then all the doe | somper sation ge " tor's medicines. At (hey made in Saskatehewan. SRR eyerymonthly period | I had to stay in bed | four days because of i hemorrhages, and my back was so weak | of electric and steam traction, {4 1 could hardly waik, fetch as high prices as before : Lydia E. Pinkham"s | K , if Vegetable Com- | + s enking, proved profitable and now I can | stay up and do my | k work. I think it is bast medicine on earth for women." | Mrs. JENNIE GREEN, Covington, Mo. 'How Mrs. Cline Avéided Operation. Rrownaville, Ind.--*1 can say that dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compotnd 4s done me more good than anything for & serious fewale trouble' ' that nothing could help me but an ro! EE a Fannie that yout | died if 1 had not got relief soon. pond, told me to try it und it to be the and 1 dia! the system and overcome! : i y i {A wit (List, open to ald farmers in the pro vines, in growing celery, cnlons, {from J {ronto. WHERE DOBTORS |=: condition | thrashing, lon wan {ave the one equine & Then quiet and refresh your nerves s eof 25¢ and 60c bottle. Sold everywhere. The Ontario Vegetable Growers' Assncjition, are conducting a con tomatoes and Partizul us may be obtained Lockie Wilson, secretary, To An on road econstraction"™ pay to author ty (SP . ALLO two amd a hed times much ul : at ns roduce one wile from Eng farmers transport. their; ish, German and French have more good roads. west has existed rlywing and dE Nng going the time. 'The are not revenhng through the exposure of the weather Doukhobor colony in Saskatohe whing leave of the govern to nhgrate to Privish Columbia have been westerners in the this spring the unusual of seeding, all at thr shings lass same soring MAXWELL GH SPE FEHAMPION is the Washer for 2 Woman In the first place; Maxwell's long fa "Champion" is the cnly washer that can be worked with a crank Landis at the side as well as with the top lever. Just suit your own convenience. Another Maxwell foature--Leover and Bi BalancaW heel are so accurgtely adfasted and work up suchspeed that the washer rung sion ven when you have stops working the lever, here's § no doubt abdon Maxwell 'S*Champion beicg the easiest turning Waiher on the market. Witte for new illust- ad Any Ser. A is ment They for the improvements A famous Shire horseman nn Fag : land recently stated that the Shires ass that has. not been seriously aliected by the spread They trac tions were deeamed ol, he said. The stockers that were bought last li for winter fattening have, gener ine vestments to their owners. As pre dicted in Weekly Globe and Canada Farmer, prices have ruled high this nmunth, and in the west partieularie | % the atimals were tn pilme condi! tion, * To Save Labor on a Big Farm. : ! On Rosebank Farm, near Manilla, the problem of saving labor has re! eived close ditentton for the last! quarter of a century, and to this the' owner, Henry Glondinning, attributes much of ths success. Following are a few of the detices esloulited eo sate. vhneeessury work and neetliend steps obsoried on a redont vit: Lan Me Anson A. Modern wgpter + or 5 (Sant furnisees -- of is Dbotws bar, (tab 8 and pastures with Ottawa Out. is eallell a sonstant flow of pure water, : - A fourteon-foot windomill grain, Shale ; hed ibe of hull, sspurates the mil thirty » five cows twice dally. Boyer til wir sheshed, equipped with deales, M tak uf weighing; animals JRS0 Jou to like *Zutoo Tablets - completely that I makes SCRY, ind A Cou eniont toolhouse, wi th earpen- wea wi [For Zutoo Tablets yours will span Pear sister, woman,when we count the) cost, Is vour life, mine, worth some good useful man ? Ix helpless woman worth such saeri- fee * A woman, I, raise; counting we take Tt as our due, forgelting thanks or praise this burning question Nor worth or worthy, yet B Perhaps not ours to question or judge, Though deep and strong. oir inner feelings stir; In death they teach, worth of men, principles which what they were to "tis not the But made thom For what was life to them could it he bought, With what they deemed were infamy and shame ? Better an ocean grave in peace rest, Than life with blasted name. and tortured conscience, For they birth, «Whom inured precepts bound them' fast To save the women and the children first, Then die, if they could not be sav- ed at last. of Anglo-Saxon were men And thus they calmly waited and went dawn, In that last trying hour of hope and fear Arose the prayer-- . "Nearer My God to Thee." Were they not near? i i ala i strains of the musicians' | In that geest harvest on that night of doom, A bost, of spirit hovering o'er the sea, Awoke in one great company to find, That they had solved death's mighty _ mystery. 'Doing Big Things. Ottawa Freé Press Canadians will watch the voyage of | ship Inunched at Colly for | service in the Pacific with much inter . Ha dotkysrd' on the Canadian | lakes can build a ship which can sail jaround the world, a mew epoch is 'opening in Canadian shipbuilding. 7 Here's the dif- ference -- De- structive sul- phur fumes penetrate Grey Iron easily because it is porous. Semi- steel"is not porous--it is a close-grained material with a smooth surface secretly processed by MeClary"s. Gas fumes cannot peneirate Semi-Steel therefore it lasts longer. The "Sunshine" Fire- pot is built in two sections joined to- gether with our famous cup joint. The shape of this joint, combined with a layer of McClary's asbestos cement, makes it absolutely gas, smoke and dust-proof. 3 Clearly, the "Sunshine" is the premier furnace as far as the Fire-pot is con- cerned. The Grates of the "Sunshine" Furnace have three sides each. Plainly, they have three times the endurance of one-sided grates. Every time you rock down the ashes of the "Sunshine" you ean expose a fresh side of the grate to the fierce heat of the fire--lengthen the life of the grates. : held and } i x 5 And the i jung Saul of "Sun- shine" grates simply clinkérs. The "Sunshine" ay ig the best as far as grate construction goes. Shaking an ordinary furmace is hare back-breaking labor. You don't need : shake the "Sunshine" --you simply rock LONDON TORONTO VANCOUVER ST. JOHN, N. B. Sr - - i 3 "Sold By J. B. Bu Ordinary furnaces are called coal glut- tons. There may be good reasons for that--we don't know. But--we have built the "Sunshine" Furnace so that it is very easy on coal. Hundreds of peo- ple now using the "Sunshine," and hav- ing used ordinary furnaces, declare that the "Sunshine" makes two tons of coal do the work of three. Evidently, the "Sunshine" Furnace saves coal and money. The ordinary furnace has a water-pan hidden somewhere about the base. There, it cannot carry out the purpose for which the water-pan was devised. The water-pan of the "Sunshine" Furn- ace is placed scientifically above the up the water, before being diffused all over the house. It contains the same amount of moisture as the air of a balmy June day. Plainly, as far as the water-pan is concerned, the "Sunshine" rf furnace you should buy. are many more reasons why you should invest your money: in "The Un- tudy of the Sun"---MeClary's "Sun- shine" Furnace. Call on the McClary agent and ask him to show you all the mechanical reasons and excludive de- viées which go to make the "Sunshine" the best. and therefore the cheapest furnace can buy. Write us at our near st address if you cannot get in with him. : - s MONTREAL . BY es WINNIPEG mamiLey 8 : I y aD MM caLEARY 1 Emi nt Co.' ia

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