Daily British Whig (1850), 18 May 1912, p. 13

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COMFORT LIYE "MAKES DIRT RUN" Use it to loosen up and wash away the muck that sticks to the drain-pipes of your kitchen sink and stationary wash-tubs. ~disinfects thoroughly. Large cans 10c. toward Jewaley, at Grocer's plciures. Pre: Cleanses completely Many important uscs. Valuable Preraiums Free. Each Comfort Lye label is worth three Comfort Soap wrappets watches, silvérware, books, catalog ue {ree at Grocer's, i soon expand the sphineter, "ENGLISH" PAINT SAID THE MAN WHO BUILDS. Limitéd, "Hu dish" Faint, You don't suppose I wi howe and then paiat with cheap paint, T 1 am bul 1 shall use, Noue but the Lest for mine Yen sir, 1 am Iding and pginting for permanence--and I it wouldn't be fair to the he ouse,"" £ to use Brandram- Henderson, t #0 much ira new du't il? int is the only paint soo 111 would hh ELLIOTT BROS. Kingston NAVY Y PLUG for Sale Everywhere m---- The Rock City Tosacco Co. QUEB 170 = ] . IE IT RESTS WITH EVERY WOMAN 10 BE ATTRACTIVE No woman, perfect features of otherwise, can atford to have an anemic. or" worn-out, tired appear- ance if she would wish 'to be thought of as either beautiful or attractive. "Good features are to be prized, bit many a woman pos- sesses them who never impresses you with the fact. Why? Because - she is pale; sickly and wornook- ood features, however, are not the essential factors, for how often do you see faces are Bltractive? The healthy complexion, the appearance make it so. ties Are Within the Reach the altogether fresh These { , Every Girl and Woman, Prompt in action, t the natural by using spun. Tablets, f tone Fables i ey first is their capacity in this direction that makes Restor- In short, they are attracting great atten- De elect is entirely beneficial while their tonic sities : restoring the ul virtue the vitality and nutrition of the whole orga to a healthy rormal condition--=the real se Restor one Tablets have been 'tried and. tested in cases; all you need to tos to give them Wi to be von their wonderf hey are recognized as being undermining of "of a { fore, the best treatment fe all. s found in girls and women. 8 ' Tips For the Farmer BY USCLE JCSH. Hard Milking Cows. It is important mtire herd. to determine as whether they are all milking in normal condition or not. A milking cow may ereate more disturb- | and annoyance in the manage- when milking ance else that might afflict them. or heiler be found to be er she should be given the proper treatment to. overcome this difheulty, which is a very simple treatment, con- sisting of inserting a teat plug into the hard milking teats once or twice daily for a number of days. This will and permit the cow to milk m a niee, easy, nor- mal condition, oftentimes increasing the value of the animal, thus paying the owner ble. Hog Ranks With Steer. By a wise provision of naturé 'we were other domestic animals, or we, might he was developed through the cen- turies to fit his present place, He is, from all prospects, and physieal char acteristics, a true scavenger. Amexi can farmers have, however, in en deavoring to produce sufficient quan tity of pork to supply the demands of present-day eivilization, made the growing of this animal quite as im portant as the produetion of the Yoel steer. Hog raising has, in fact, one of the largest farm tries in the United States. Unites "conditions © existing oR the average American farins, the growing of pork has taken the hog out of the scavenger class, and we find American Indian eorn composing, in almost «ll | cases, the entire diet. When straight corn the his natural food. say coms dus given The Oat Crop. Last year's oat crop in Canada is es- timated by the census and statistics at Ottawa, at 348 187,600 bush els, us against 323,449,000 the year be forte. Only sighty-nine per cent. of last veer's yield was merchantable, 93.29 per cent. was merchantable year before. The amount on hand office the bushels, as before, Canada's barley yield last vear was estimated at 40,641,000 bushels, as against 15,147,000 the year previous. The merchantable barley last yen was plaved at'?36,683,000, against 41, 505,000 the year before. There wds on hand at the end of Mareh, 13,235,000 bughels, as against 13,135,000 the rear before. against 127,587,000 the yenr Growing Alalfa. Alfalfa revels in dry land made sweet - with lime (where this needed), znd rich with manures, says an authority. Alfalfa is the most energetic soil-richer of all the clovers, but it must find fertile soil sweet clover, begin on wornout lands. Once it is well established, however, field on which it stands, and adjoining fields made by feeding the hay), thing less than marvelous. the is no- tion has shown that the yield of an acre of good alfalfa contains fer- tilizing ingredients that in the shape of commeccial fertilizers would cost $65. From Many Farms, Land which formerly sold in Es- sex county for $30 is now bringing $1,000 an acre. Welland County Council will con- struct twenty-five miles of good roads this year. Walkerton has established a weekly farmer's market' again and d good attendance is reported. Last year, Huron county report: ed eight acres sown in onions, and a yield of 300 bushels to the acre, or 2,400 bushels. At a. sale in Oxford county a cow which was sold for $560 dropped dead before the purchase price had been paid over. The buyer and seller shared the loss. An lowa correspon.ent of the Breeders Gazette says that he has a mare which ruised a fine colt at 32 years of age. This is surely an- other record. As a result of the death of Al- exander McRobbie, of Scotland , a dozen Clyde stallions were lately dispersed by auction. The average price realized was $612, the top figure being $1,459, A Scotch correspondent of the Breeder's Gazette says emigrant trafic from Scotland to Canada is 80 heavy that it is impossible to find ship accommodation for Clydes- dale horses going to the Dominion, and as a consequence this trade is quiet for the. time. A report issued by the Census and Statistics office at Ottwa shows the condition of live stock to be un- 'usually good this spring, horses standing at 96 out of 100, milch cows 92.58, other cattle at 91.53, sheep at 93.40 and swine at 94. The weekly report of W. Weddel & Co., of Liverpool, of the 15th of Apri, says that arrivals of Cana. Stocks of cheese In the old coun try, it is added, both home-made and imported, are exceedingly small ae compared with last year. No man has ever succeeded, and no man will ever succeed for any gth of time in breeding live sk who does not have as his slo ean that one ina bre " any importers breeders get i he rahe Je on horses ve. Some farmers do' not seem yet to have realized | there is differ ence of quality among pure -- 4 for this little. extra trou- | given the hog to fit in with all | be | hog is taken from | while | ate Luce, Be, the end of March last was 153,846,000 | its ability to build up the | (from the manuro | The New Jersey experiment sta I: on the market at least | hard | ments of a herd than almost anything | i a cow | a bard milk- | Scene from "Mme. Sans Gene," the i cheap horse, in most cases, :nough pure bred, will be or the-inferior drafters. A concern in Buenos Ayres, Ar- gentina, is about to install machin- | ery to be used in a factory for pro- | ducing fertilizing materials. It ig oreposed to utilize grasshoppers and their eggs, thus converting a des royer of the crop into fertilizing material.-- Scientific American, With marked improvements in | stallion legislation passed in Sas katchewan and Manitoba, the prai vie provinces Will soon have the re sutation of being the best horse hredillg centres in America firmly | established. 1 Investigations at the Michigan | experimental station," show that | here is little, if any, difference in he amount of butter-fat in the | milk of a heifer and of a mature | cow. Somebody's imagination would seem to have afforded the only { foundation for the popular belief {to the. contrary. even the sire Produce and Prices. Kingston, May 13.--Market reports the prices prevailing as | lows : Carrots, 20c. to 205¢. {toss, $2 a bag; beans, Uc. qt; bage, $1.50 to ¥2 doz; celery, Lue, ; onions, dc a ' to le. a bunch; apples; 10¢ to dle, peck; turnips, ibe. 10 We peas; radish, 5¢. bunch; rhubarb, green onions, Je. busch, J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, re- | ports grain, flour and feed selling a2 {follows : clerk fol a peck; pota- cab 18a. to peck; lot- a 10¢.; | Oats, B8ec.; loeal wheat, 1 yash.; wheat, 805c.; $1 to 81.10; yellow feed corn, | bakers' flour, $2.75 to $3; farmers' {82.85 to $3.10; Hungarian patent, $2.90; ontmeal and rolled oats, £3.50 per bareal; cornmeal, $1.80 to 8; bran, $27 yer ton; shoris, $29 per ton; haled straw, 3%; loose, 8%; hay, loose, 1817 to £15; pressed hay, $17'to 818; seyd wheat, ®1.40 to 21.50, | Meat--Beef, local, carcase, 9c. i 10g.; prime 'western, llc; to 124c. car: 21.10 "per seed rye, $1; peas, Ne. io 1 case; cuts, 'le. to 22¢; nmtton, 3c. {to 15c.: lamb, $2 to $2.50 a quarter; } | de. to 1c. | Dairy--h tier, 32¢.; printg, 27e. to 30c.: eggs, ec. to We, doz. George Mills & Co. quote the fol- {lowing prices for raw furs: Red fox, as to size, $1 to $9; skunks, as to 'size and length of stripe, 50c. to | %0. 25; raecoon, lar, ge, $3; medium, $1.- [25 to $2; small, 7 750.; minks, as to color and size, $2 to $7.50; weasels. 20c. to 65c.; spring muskraes, large, | 30e, to 836. No. 1, mediom, 60c, to 60¢.: No. 1, small, 4lc, to 45¢c. John' McKay, Brock street, reports as follows: 'The hide market is steadily declining, owing to poor qual- ity and poor demand. We quote hides No. 1, trimmed, at l0c. a lb; No. 2 and bulls, 9¢. a lb.; sheep skins, fresh, | 85¢.; deacons, $1; veal skins, 14c. per Ih 'sheep skins same as hides; tallow rendering, 5c. per lb; wool, washed, 20¢. per Ib.; wool, unwashed, 12¢. per Ih. ginseng, 3 to $6.50 per I; horse hides, No. 1, $3; red fox, No. 1, prime, 85 to §7; mink, No. 1, prime, & to 87; skunk, No. 1, 81 to $2: raccoon, No. 1, 81 to $2.50; muskrat, No. 1, Je. to ox rolls, 25¢.; creamery, "1 Suffered Years With My Ba Backache resulting from ok kidneys, a bad cold or other cause, usually renders the sufferer unfit for work and often results in per- manent disability. "1 suffered for years with my back, or kidney trouble, and have tried 3 number of remedies from dil Blpsiciaim, More than a ar one of our druggists rod me to try great play which will he presented 'at the Grand on Tuesday and Wedne pday nights and Wednesday matinee. 35¢.; bear, black, $10 to $20 to £30. Above prices are for No. 1 prime stock, blue pelts and unprime accord ng to value, 'he Dominion Fish company reports he following prices : Whitefish, 15c. ib.; pike, 10e. lb; Chinook salmon, 0c. Iba; kippered herring, Yarmouth bloaters, 40c, doz; perch, 0c. 1b.; salt codfish, 10c, lb.; halibut, 15c. to 20c. 1b.; fresh haddock, 10e. lb.; bull heads, 12ic. lb.; smoked fillets, 13e.; wetees, 4c. 10 60c. qt; bluefish, 15. ib. ; lynk, $15 The Telephone Girl. Judge. New York Phe telephone girl sits still chair And listens to voices from. everywhere, She knows all the all the news, %nows who is happy and who has the blues; knows all our sorrows, she knows all our joys; knowns all the girls "chasing the boys." in her gossip, she knows She She She who are knows all our troubles, she knows of our strife, knows every man who talks mean to his wife; knows every time with the boys, knows the excuses that each fel low employs She She She we are out She If the telephone she knows, would tura all bitterest foes. girl told half that it our friends into sould get all our churches mised up in a fight; i And turn our bright days into sorrow: ing' night; In fact, she could keep : town in a stew, Ii she told but one-tenth of the things that she knew, Reader, just doesn't it head whirl, When vou think what you. owe telephone girl ? She the whole make yom to the Bridegroom of 91. London Daily News on which to begin, and cannot, like | live hogs, 59; dressed hogs, $13; veal, | Great. Brington chureh, Northamp- ton, the family church of the Spencers, witnessed a remarkable marriage ro leently, when David Waller, who fought through the Crimean war, and is ninety-One years of age, led to theal tar Miss Sewell; who is sixty. Wal Jer, who was born at Diss, in Nor folk, served with the Coldstream Guards and was present at the bat tles of Balaclava, Inkerman, Sevasto pol and Alma. His colonel was the Duke of Graf. ton, who never fails to pay the old man a visit on his birthday, and also sends him a large hamper of good things at Christmas. Aftgr he fin ished his term with the Coldstreanis Waller entered the service of the Spen cer family, and was 0s®er in the ser vants' hall. under the Inte earl, until he retired gn a pension. Waller is no longer able to about and was wheeled to the alte in a hair. There he met his bride who has been his housekeeper for the past ten yegrs. She is his thd wife. walk For an Old Maus. Detroit News. . When a young man sits on a bench in the park, You're sorry--a little--ior him. But the future needn't be dreadfully dark For a youngster with vigor and vim, Jut the park bench man who's - the tragic. man, In search of an old man's john Has a paper whose liners his dull eves scan In search of an oldman's job. Shoulders, age-bent, cont, Face that is wistful and lined; Weak, faded eves eagerbent to nete The pitiful chance they may find In the paper held by the knotted hands, That shake just a Hit as the hold. The chance is so little, he well un- derstands, For a job for the man who is old. 'neath. the shiny Gray, scant hair, sad a leg that drags As he rises and limps away With a half-born hope that never flags Till the close of a fruitless day. Employer men, you are basy, 1 know, our duties throng in a mob; But give him--oh, pledse--just a little ow, . Who asks for an old nfan's job. A Busy Man. "Since 1 rose this morning," said Smith, "I've put down a linoleum, lnid three carpets, four ents, set dip « stave, swept out thy "My dear boy 2 1" eried Jones, com- ¢ ® * ° PAGE THIRTERN. AWFUL NERVOUSNESS AND PARALYSIS CURED BY "FRUIT-A-TIVES" The Miracle Worker, That Cures When Doctors Fail -- Now Used In Thousands Of Homes In Every Section Of Our Great Country. Two Men, From Widely Different Parts Of Canada, Tell How They Found Health And Happiness By Taking These Wonderful Fruit Juice Tablets. . Warkerrton, Oxt,, May oth. 1911 "] have been in w alkerton in business for a good many years and many of my townsmen know that my health, for long periods, was precarious. My trouble was extreme nervousness, brought on by Indigestion or Dyspepsia, from which I suffered in its most severe form, Jt wis #0 bad that I could not sleep before about four in the morning. I noticed in the Toronto «*World"" one of your published testimonials of how someone had used ¢Fruit-a-tives" for similiar trouble, and asked Mr. Hunter, my druggist, his opinion on the matter and he advised their use. I immediately procured several boxes and 1 am pleased to may that I now enjoy splendid health and could not possibly feel better, I can eat with every degree of satisfaction, and sleep without an 'effort, "which pleasure 1 was denied before | was fortunate enough to use "'Fruit-a-tives", 1 strongly advise anyone suffering fom like complaints immediately. Don't stop at a few doses-- until a cure is accomplished. *' ALEX. McCARTER. Bristor, N.B., Jury 25th, 1911. ¢«] am unable to say enough in favor of ¢*Fruit-a-tives", as it saved my lite and restored me to health, w hen I'had given up all hope and when the doctors had failed to do anything more for me. 1 had a stroke of Paralysis in March, 1910, and this left me unable to walk or help myself, and the constipation of the bowels was terrible, | Nothing did me any good and I was wretched in every way. Finally, I took **Fruit-a~tives" for the constipation, and it not only cured me of that trouble but gradually this fruit medicine toned up the nerves and actually cured the paralysis. Upgder the ute of <'Fruit-a-tives", 1 grew swwonger and stronger until all the palsy and weakness left. me. 1 am now well again and attend my store evéry day and all day. Ireverently vay '"Thapk God ! for Fruit-a-tives", ALVA PHILLIPS, These two cases show the wonderful powers of ¢Froit-a-tives" in restoring & shattered nervous 'system to health and vigor--in entirely curing obstinate Constipation--and in completely relieving Indigestion and Dyspepsia. What other one medicine in the whole world has ever done #0 much ? "Fruit-a-tives" cures. It is 'the only medicine in the world actually made From fruit with the addition of valuable tonics, It is pleasant to take and will always give the most gratifying results when taken regularly. soc. a box, 6 for £2.50, trial size, 25c. of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, to commence using ¢*Fruit-a-tives"' but conunue using "*Fruit-a-tves"' Ma ALVA PHILLIMG At all dealers or sent ou receipt A Dainty, Delicious Delight for. the Summer days when the palate is tired of heavy meats and soggy pastries SHREDDED WHEAT and Strawberries | Being made in Biscuit' form itis so easy to prepare a delicious, wholesome meal with Shredded Wheat and berrigs or other fruits. The porous shreds of the Biscuit take up the fruit acids, neutralizing them and ting them to the palate in all the richness of their natural flavor. Heat Biscuit in the oven to restore crispuess] Heat the tities oe othe irae an} ros sii All the Meat of the Golden Wheat Madeby The Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Limited Niagara Falls, Ont. aT otdnta Office: 48 Walling Shewst East 9 er -------- ------ pt

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