Daily British Whig (1850), 11 May 1912, p. 11

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Thomas 3 Copley ; I PHONE Drop a card to 19 Fine Street wwe, wanting anything done in the Carpen- ter line. Estimates given on all Kirss 3 Jeraits iso 'wood hb Als orders will. receive prompt sttention Shop 40 Queen Street. 987. Kingston Business College (Limited) High est Education at Lowest Cost or Rty slam begins ugust Pookkeeping, cdr. Fall term 30th. Courses in Bhorthand, Telo- raphy, Civil Service and Eng 5 Ope graduates get the beat positions. Within a short time over sixty secured positions with the largest rallway cor- porations in Canada, Enter any tims. Call or write for informa- H. F. Metcalfe, Principal. Kingston, Canada. PLN NAVY PLUG for Sale Everywhere The Rock City Tosacco Co. Li. QUEBEC Th to TORE Ne A u pia valuable shol a mine that piace. Radway's Ready Tor External and Internal Use CURES Sore Muscles Toothache Neuralgia Sprains, Strains Headache Coughs Bruises Backache Grip Good for Pain Inthe Cheat Lumbage Athigtes Pain in ths Kidneys Sclatica For over PIFTY YEARS this wonderful Remedy kas Sioved It safest and sutest antidote for pain in the world. In avery family this invaluable figecifio Remedy for all inl eases should be constantly kept on hand. The expense is a mj saves more than twenty times the amount in doctors' or druggists' bills, Dear Sirs: R. R. R. hag had a place in our home for Lhe past twenty years and would not be without it for five times its cost. Yours very truly, R. B. O'FLYNN, Trenton, Ont. RADWAY & co.,' Ltd. Montreal, Canada. 3 Sore Throat Colds Pneumonia Nouraigla Jhe One Perfect Food «The whole wheat grain is the one perfect, complete food given to man. perience. 'Tt contains all the chemical elements that are found in the human body and in about the same proportion. If it is a complete, perfect food, why mix it with other grains? : Nothing could be purer, more wholesome or more nutritious than' It is the whole wheat, nothing added, nothing taken away-- no . yeast, no baking powder: no grease and no chemicals of any kind--just pure whole wheat made digestible by steam cooking. Foi breakfast, heat the Biscuit in the oven a few moments to restore erispness ; then pour hot milk over itand sweeten to suit the taste. It is delicious for any meal with stewed prunes, baked es, sliced pine berries or other fruits. At your grocers, Choicest Selected Canadian Wheat akg This is affirmed by dietetic ex-" THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1912 . i { i i Tips For the Farmer | BY UACLE JOSH. i Reducing Pasture Area" H. E. Krueger, of Wisconsin, keeps, | says Hoard's Dairyman, twenty-eight dairy cows, and still devoted only | thirteen acres, exclusively to pasture, | He does this by sowing clover with' 1ll his grain crops and using the clov- | wr produced that same season for | pasture. Some of the clover land lowed in spring serves as pasture un- til it is plowed. Then the cows go to ihe thirteen acres of pasture field un- | til the ryecrop is harvested, when they are put on the clover grown with the rye. When the barley crop is har- veited, later on the cows are turned | mto the clover in the barley field. | following this they have the clover | on the field from which the wheat has | been cut, and last of all they are pas- tured on clover which has been grown with corn. Ry this means, says Hoard's, Kruger says the difference be- tween the fifty or more acres usually assigmed to pasture fot that number of cows and thirteen acres, But this is not all. By sowing clov- er with all his grain crops the land is vept filled with humus and nitrogen content of the soil is well maintain- ed. ---------- World's Wheat Crop. The International Agricultural lpsti- tute estimates the world's production of wheat for last vear ai 3,566,118, 300 bushels, or 9,000,000 bushels less than for the vear preceding. The big falling offi was in Russia, which shows a decline from 775,000, 000 to five hundred and nine million bushels, a drop of 266,000,000, In the United States, there was au decline of nearly 14,000,000 bushels. On other hand the yield in France shows an increase of 6%,000,000, bushels; in India there was an advance of 12,000, 000; in Canada of 66,000,000, and in other . countries - there were minor changes one way or the other. The important fact is that on the whole, with a steadily expanding demand, there was a falling off in production the world over. the Frerm-- Exercise for Pigs. One thing a farmer can do that will help to keep his little pigs sturdy is, says Farm, Stock amd Home, to see to it'that they get out into the yard to exercise, every day that is at all suitable. This brings about a good circulation of their blood, breaks down tissue which yields heat and keeps it warm and in general serves to make it stronger and more resistant to dis- ease. Nothing is likely to react more unfavorably on the pig than keeping it shut up closely in a small, damp, dark pen, and fewer pigs will be lost as a result of being gotten out. than will be lost by being kept too closely confine®. * At the session of the Dominion par- linment just closed, a bill became law that will, says the Ottawa correspon- dent of the Breeders' Gazette, of Chi- cago, greatly facilitate the work of tion Tor all breeds of stock recorded in the Cawadian National Records. This act makes the punishment false registration more drastia r---- for On the Care bf Cream. A bulletin has been issued by George H. Barr, chief of the dairy division of the dominion department of agri- culture on the care of cream for but. ter making. This bulletin haz special reference to cream intended to be manufagtured in a cream gathering butter factory, but contains many hints of value along general dairy lines as well. In the first place it is recommended that cows should not be fed turnips or turnip tops, rape, rye, decayed en as any of these feeds milk. ing the unclean will taint the cow's udder or teats in an condition at milking times, milking in an unclean stable, using unclean or rusty milk pails, separat- ing the milk in the stable, improper | ly cleaned separators, kesping the cream in cellars where roots or vege: tables are placed, keeping cream at a | temperature of over fifty-five aro] or allowing cows to drink from stag! nant ponds or leakages from barn- vards. Cows should, it is said, have an abundant supply of pure water, | and if they have free access to - sali! at all times they will keep in better health, give more milk aod the cream will have better flavor. : Cleansiness is desirable at all Limes but especially. at milking. time. Much of the cream sent to factories is, Mr. Bare says, kept in cellars, and his own' experiments have shown that cream cannot be kept sweet for thir ty-six hours, or for delivery every other day, in cellars which are as cool as the ordinary run of farm house cellars. It is recommended that the cream be put into cans, and that the cans be placed in ice cold water. Notes of Interest. Farm, Stork and Home says that the flax crop of Minnesota in 1950 was in many parts of the state bad- } 1 * undeveloped, | The depth ' Hit ly eut by grasshoppers, and that of 1911 completely destroyed i localities, Sautrary to the idea, says Fusci ock and 3 grasshoppers not usually travel very far and do the biggest share of damage while their wings are still at w says Farm, Stock i sui=F E58 f5s { LL : = German worth of wheat per annam, of which i without board. maintaining the standard of registra- | silage, or apples (in large quantities) mainly atiributable to failure in the | $17.60 was the average monthly wage, United States. 5 A report of the Canadian trade tom- missioner in Germany stotes that the empire imports $100,600 000 Canada supplics only $161,378. A good deal of the wheat brought ir is im- ported from Argentine, but as (hat country has a short crop this year it is expected there wii be an in creased demand for the Canadian pr, duct. in 1911 the average wages of farm labor in the United States, as | re ported by the department of agricul tore, wns $28.77 per month, with- out hoard, and $20.18 with board. During harvest Lhe average daily wage with board was $1.44, and without board ¥1.85, and for other days than harvest the rate was $1.09 and £1.42 res ectively. The' Inghest wage in preceding years was in N37, fhe lowest rate be when the monthly rate was 316.57, tween thos: years was in SY To get the best of Backache Geta Box of Dr. Miles' Anti=-Pain Pills Otherwise Backache May get the best of you Nothing disturbs the human system more than pain whether it be in the form of headache, backache, neuralgia, stomachache or the pains peculiar to women. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are a standard remedy for pain, aad are praised by a great army of men and women who fave used them for years. *A friend was down with LaGrippe and nearly crazed with awful backache. 1 gave her one Anti-Pain Pill and left another for her to'take. They helped her Hight away, and she says she will never be without them again." . Mgrs. G. H. Wess, Austinburg, O. At all drugglists--25 doses 25 cents. MILES MEDICAL CO. Toronto,Can. | } | temp a 1 | AXWELLS GH SPE HI HAMPION } { i 1 : | fs In a class by lself-the easiest running, the most substantizily built, { the most satisfactory washer, ever | invented, | Only washer worked with crank | { handle at side ds well as top lever--and { { { | the only one where the whole top opens up. Ask your dealer to show gow the "Champion" Washer. "Favorite" Churn is the world's best churn. Write | for catalogue. *¢ 10 MAXWELL & SONS ST. MARY'S, ONT. | | | { i | i i ! | Mrs. H. VON RODEN of LYNDON, KY. Recommends Lydia E. Pink- _bam's Vegetable Compound for Ba , Nervous- ness, Headaches. Lyndon, Ky. ~ "I have been taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for headaches, neuralgia pains, backache, nervousness and a general rup down con- dition of the system, and am entirely re- lieved of these troubles. I recommend your remedies to my friends and give you permission to publish what I write." ~Mrs. H. VON'RODEN, Lyndon, Ky. When a woman like Mrs. Von Roden is generous enough to write such a let- tar as the above for publication, she should at least be given credit for a sin- cere desire to help other suffering women, for we assure you there is no other rea- son why she should court such publicity. i Other causes of taint are hav. | Windsor, Ont. -- ** The birth of my child left me a wreck with terrible weak 1595, when | without board, board, and $1202 with Produce and Prices. Kingston, May 11.--Market clerk reports the prices prevailing as fol lows : - Carrots, 20c. to 25¢. a peck; pota- toes, $2 a bag; beans, 10c. qt.; cab- bage, $1.50 to #2 doz.; celery, 10ec. to 15¢c.; onions, 5c. a peck; let- tuce, 5c. to 10¢. a bunch; apples, 25¢c, to 40c. peck; turnips, 15c. to 20c. a peck; radish, 5¢. bunch; rhubarb, 10c.; green onions, Jc. bunch. J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, re- ports grain, flour and feed selling a3 follows : Dats, 58c.; local wheat, bush.; wheat, $l to $1.10; $1.10 per 85¢c.; seed rye, $1; peas, yellow feed corn, 90c.; bakers' flour, $2.75 to $3; farmers' $2.85 to $3.10; Hungarian patent, $2.90; oatmeal and rolled oats, $3.50 per barrel; cornmeal, $1.80 to $2; bran, $27 per ton; shorts, $29 per ton; baled straw, 88; loose, $8; hay, loose, 816; pressed hay, $16; seed wheat, $1.40 to $1.50. Meat--Beef, local, carcase, 9%. to 10c.; prime western, llc. 40 12je. car- PAGE ELEVEN. LOST HIS HAIR, BEARD AND MUSTACHE Terrible Plight of a Pennsylvania Man Reported by a Prominent Citizen: "About two years ago my hlir, beard and mustache started fo come out in spots. These spoils were en- tirely bare of hair. Seeing PARISIAN SAGE ad- vertised, 1 purchased four bottles and after using two of the bottles, the hair came in until now I have as good a head of hair as 1 had before this trouble started. I can truthfully recommend this preparation to any one for what it is recommended for. Sam Galder, Jamison City, Col. Co. Pa., Oct, 11, 1911. < Please bear in mind that PARIS. IAN SAGE fis not guaranteed to grov hair on bald heads. In Mr. Galder"s case the hair root case; cuts, 116. to 28c.; mutton, le. to 13c.; lamb, #2 to $2.50 a quarter; live hogs, $8.50; veal, 9c. to 12¢c. Dairy--RButler, creamery, 32¢.; prints, 28. to ees 21c. to 25¢.- doz. George Mills & Co. quote the lowing prices for raw furs: Red fox, as to size, $4 to $9; skunks, as to size and length of stripe, Sle. to $2.25; raccoon, large, $3; medium, $1 - a); 25 to $2; small, 7 minks, as to Je. to 27¢.; rolls, 25¢.; 200. to We, to 85c; No. 1, medium, 6c, to 65c.; No. 1, small, 4le. to 45c.; itts, shot damaged. fall and winter, as to value, 15¢. to dle. John NcKay, Brock street, reports as follows: The hide market is steadily declining, owing to poor qual- ity and poor demand. Be quote hides No. 1, trimmed, at 10c. a lb.; No. 2 and bulls, 9¢. a Ib: sh skins, fresh, 85c.; deacons, $1; veal skins, lic. per Ib.; sheep skins same as hides; tallow rendering, 5c. per lb; wool, washed, 20¢. per Ib.; wool, unwashed, 12¢. per Ib.; ginseng, 35 to $6.50 per 1b.; horse hides, No. 1, $3; red fox, No. '1, prime, $5 to $7; mink, No. 1, prime, $5 to $7; skunk, No. 1, $1 to $2; 35c¢.: bear, black, $10 to $20; lynk, $15 to $30. Above prices are for No. stock, blue pelts and unprime accord- ing to value. The Dominion Fish company reports the following prices : Whitefish, 15¢c. ib.; pike, 10c. Ib; Chinook salmon, 30¢. lb.; kippered herring, Yarmouth bloaters, 40c. doz.; perch, 10¢. Ib; salt codfish, 10c. lb.; halibut, 15¢. to 20¢c. Ib.; fresh haddock, 10c. Ib.; bull heads, 12je. lb.; smoked fillets, 15c.; oystecs, 40c. to 60c. qtb.; bluefish, 15¢. ib. : Deadly Expert. A certain great Chinese physician and A. S. Trude, a lawyer of that city, are close friends, but one time when the physician was called as an expert witness in a case Trude was on the opposite side and had to eross- examine. The physician had given his expert testimony. It upheld the contention of his side perfectly. When it came to 'I'rude"s turn he glared at his friend, and, after the usual preliminary questions, began the examination : "Doctor, you are frequently called into consultation when prominent men are il in this community, are you not ?" "I am. "Were you in attendance on George M. Pullman ?" "I was." "Where is Mr. Pullman now "He is dead." "Ah, yes. And were you called jn by Marshall Field 7' "1 was." "Where is ask ¥' "He is dead." "Indend ! And were you 'in atiend- ance on Phihp DV, Armour ?* "I wan" . "And where is Mr. Armour now 7" "He is dead." Trude knew that his friend was called in consultation in aimost every tig case in Chicago, and thers was a malicious gleam in his eye as he named dead man after dead man and asked if the expert had attended them. Aiter he had named about a dozen prominent citizens who had passed away he turned to the jury with a wave of his hand, as if to "There's your expert !" and down, Mr. Field now, may | say : sat A Weird Artist. In an old feudal chateau, with high walls and a round stone tower, si- tuated near the little village of Vire- vols, in the Auvergne, there lives a weird old man who refuses to bur, his father. M. Hector Granet, an artist and collector of curios, is the owner of the castle and the mummy. {Jt is twenty-five years since his fath- er died, At the time the son could not bear the idea of his father being buried, so, without embalming the body, he simply put it into alcohol. |Then he built a massoleum, a 'some place with a curious stained 'glass window i PERE Hat ei was not dead and there is no good i reason why PARISIAN SAGE should not do just what he writes it did. "The next time Mr. Galder came into my store after purchasing the PARISIAN SAGE," writes the drup- gist who sold him, "his appearance was so changnad I did not know him." PARISIAN SAGE is without doubt the most efficient hair grower, beadtifier and dandruff cure in the world, and people who are wasting time with ordinary commercial tonics should wake up. PARISIAN SAGE will banish dandruff, stop falling hair and itch- ing scalp; will put life, lustre and beauty into faded hair, or money back. It is & most delightful and refreshing tonic for men, women and children. Large bottle 50 cents ag J. B. MéLeods and druggists the country over. dressed hogs, $12; | fol- | color and size, $2 to $7.50; weasels, | 65¢.; 'spring muskraes, large, ! raccoon, | No. 1, 81 to $2.50; muskrat, No. 1,4 i 1 prime Try the flour that holds the confidence of thousands of home-cooks HE present huge demand for PURITY FLOUR shows the confidence in which it is held by thousands of home-cooks. i Those who have used PURITY FLOUR have come to believe in it. They look on PURITY as a friend. They feel they can trust it implicitly, because each and every lot of PURITY FLQUR has always been uniform--aliways up to the high standard of qual- ity that has made it famous. Wouldn't you, too, like to use a flour you could always rely on? Wouldn't you like to feel certain that your bread, cakes, and pies were going to turn out exactly right? That's just how you'll feel when yon become a user of PURITY FLOUR -- the confidence- creating flour. PURITY FLOUR gives high-class results, because it consists exclusively of the high-grade [portions of the best Western hard wheat. ' On account of the extra strength of PURITY FLOUR please remember, when making pastry, to add more shortening than an ordinary flour requires. . "And when making i bread add more water, - jand PURITY / FLOUR will expand into more loaves than ordinary flour can ' produce, thus making | " better bread : " er bread Make your next flour order spell P-U-R-1-T-Y F-L-O-U-R. Add PURITY FLOUR to grocery list right now. 104 the same weight of "More bread and * "more breadl and bet- It costs slightly more, but it's worth the difference. | J A. McFARLANE, KINGSTON DISTRIBUTOR } An Encouraging Message I have a message of hope and good cheer, of encoura . courage; 1 and inspiration to every suffering woman. I have endured torture due to female troubles and the consequent despondency and mental agony simost to fhe point of despair, and, | have been restored from this condition io a state o vigorous health, and to the happy, exhilarating frame of mind which Aaccom- panies physical well being. his change has been brought about wholly » the use of ORANGE LILY. In addition | have had the privilege and pleasure of Induc- ine multitudes of other suffering women (n give ORANGE fiLy » Arial, ad have [coiveq Shausands of enthusiastic' ace edgments of e blessin, t has brought to them. 7T following is a sample: is 4 - Truro, N. 8, April 5, 1909, Dear Mra. Currah,--Your very kind Ietier was received yes. terday. In reply to your question about my health, I am thankful to say that I am very well. As I have never given you a statement of my case you may be interested in it years 1 have suffered untold agony. This suffering was continuous, would have violent attacks every. few weeks, each attack lasting several The first Sunday in November, I felt the pain increasing and so did not go rayers. The rest of the family did go. and soon after the forcing down palos seized me and I bad to remain on the floor until thelr return. | was in great Pain all pight and was very sick for a whole week. Then Mrs. L. came to see me and told me of your wonderful medicine. 1 got my husband to send for it right sway, as I was too sick to write myself. My doctor coul! do nothing for me.) "I have used 65 boxes of ORANGE LILY, bad three months good crest, and am now well, never better In ny life. I have wot had the oid since. 1 often ask my husband If it is myself that is around and doing my own work. 1 can scarcely believe i. It b to my eyes. 1 could shout It to all the world, I cannot speak our L as 1 do, dozens of such reports each If ed sisters the merits of ORA LILY. ¥ not taken internally, strictly local treatment, and is applied directly to the affected organs. Its curative elements are absorbed jute the congested tissues, expelling +B stagnant 1 ign tating membrane and oppressin, nerves, OW Ea Feet ot physical Sod 'menias roiet In noticeatie almost from che sla'C" nt a posed scientific remedy. even you use Bo more than Tes Triad you will be very materially benefited. FREE TRIAL OFFER your © may entirely cure event it will do » earnest in

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