: gms DAILY BRITE WHIG, SATURDAY, "CAN HAVE Dondruff Disappears, F Hair Ceases, When You Paling a Sage. No preparation has done so much to stop falling hair; eradicate dand- ruff and make women's hair beauti-] ful as PARISIAN Sage. i It is the only certain destroyer of the dandruff microbe. the cause of most hair troubles. 3 PARISIAN Sage Is most daintily perfumed. It is an ideal preparation not sticky or greasy. It does not contain poisonous sugar of lead or sulphur or any dye. a It is a magnificent dressing for women who desire luxuriant lustrous hair that compels admiration and for men and children nothing can compare with it. It does away with terrible scalp itch over night and causes the hair te grow In abundance. "And a large bottle of PARISIAN Sage costd only 50 cents at all drug ané tollet goods counters. J. B. McLeod guarantees it. oo i ---- ---- p------ GREAT BELIEVER IN"ERUIT-A-TIVES Well Known Ontario Merchant Has Faith Because ""Fruit-a-tives" Cured Him hammedan codes breathing the full! inspiration 'of the words of the pro: phet. "In thesshade of the crossing scimetars there is Paradise," which is the same as to say that every sol: dier sluift in battle in defense of the faith is translated to glory. A writer in She British Qua Review more than thirty years ago, speaking of the loyalty of the Moslems ares the civic pulers, held that the spirit of Islam is favorable to peace and a t; as prayers are eT all the mosques of 'india for '"'our most gracious sovereign," "'Is- lam is not antagonistic either to re- Egious or political toleration, and that the doctrine of Jibad, a holy les00000000000000000000 uernsey Club, in an illustrated ad. ® !dress, gave shdes showing two cattle Une of these was laity Maid of Yine burst, winger of the a dairy coy n ith a of 9107 of fat. The other was Glencoe Peep, Grand champion for the past years at the National Dairy Show, with a ucing record of onl 622.81 pounds of fat. The one wit the said his producing record would not, 5 x. Hill, oven coms 'in a essesegessssesssessee Tl TL Tl the ons dered A Experiment With Leghorns, much lower = producing record was R. A. Marrison, Frontenac county, ger hghg Hill. dike Prof. Denn Brite as follows jn Farm and believes thers is someibing radically . We poultry men should not be too w cs with the points on dairy set in our ways, We whould be will aw are placed in the ring. ing to give new ideas a ance. keep over 600 hens, and have been Ensilage Fatal To Horses. breeding and running them exclus-| [Four fatal cases of cerebral meningi- ively for egg production.. 1 Giave|lis in ¥ horses in Ingersoll dis- been treating them in about the ms-{1Vich at rg a Dr, Harrison t exercise, t ensilage, whic] gal way as to food afd i given freely to the animals. All t being anxjous to bring practice a plan of management I had of- of the horses that had succumbed to ten said 1 believed would work, | disease were under five years of namely, keeping single comb White of eobsiderable value. One Leghorn hens shut up in a span worth upwards without providing them with scratch ving refused ¥240 for one ing shed or any way of exercising ach case Ur. Harrison emmtves, oer than caine; drink. a ae, re ing. and king about. their 1 be is positive their death My pen. with whieh 1 tried this exc ensilage. periment, was made up 0 single comb White Leghorn pullets, hatch- Give Turkeys Liberty. ed on May 21st, 1911. They were| Turkeys require roomy, well-ven- shut in winter guarters on the fol- tilated houses for roosting, and lowing November 15th, in a room 14)Rever do well roosting with other by 14 feet square inside measure-| POUILry especially it overcrowded. ment. They were never let out off A large shed, o on one side, is doors or given any change from that| more 'suitable than one closed on time until they had to se removed|all sides. : in November, 1912, to 'make room In a wild state turkeys are ex- for 60 pullets hatched in 1912, tremely hardy, and as they are pro- 1 began keeping their records on vided for nature with a very tight- the 1st of January, 1912. That day's fitting coat of feathers rain or cold yield was 33 eggs. For the next ten|has very little effect on them. They months their record was as follows: {are the only birds that degenerate by domestication, and this is chief- [ly due to the restraint which is put upon them, and the close confine- Jan., 1,093; Feb, 1.123; March, 1,- 302; April,'1,346; May, 1,307; June, ment in which they are sometimes kept at night, whew domesticated. 1,141; July, 827; Aug., 956; Sept. 662; Oct., 116; or for the ten months From this the natural inference to be drawn is that the more liberty 9,873 eggs. or 822% dozen, an aver- age per hen of 184% eggs. The av- erage price per dozen for the ten months was 30% ots.; total $351.06.| they have, the nearer they are al The cost of feed per hen for tenjlowed to approach the wild state, months was $1.48, or $88.80 for the|the hardier they will be. 60 hems, which leaves a net profit off If, while' young, turkeys are not $162.26; profit for each hen, |confined in a close house, they gradually' become inured to cold, and grow into stronger, larger and more vigorous birds - than they $2.70%. otherwise would. ooo0esosvoee A WALL OF SOAP. One year's sales of Comfort Soap means enough soap to build a walk 13 feet high and 20 miles long. Think of it! Enough to completes iy surround The City of Tor generally imag Mohammed opened the which contains the divine revela- tions alleged to have been received by. him directly, with the words: "There is no doubt in this book." It does not hang together very well in all its parts, but it has been ac- he very begining of the eepted by hundreds of millions of to the wid, ud Xe people as sent from 'God. It é as aor Som teaches temperance, faith in God | | iy he impro ant preames and in His Prophet. It was made} | \ y for a military people and it has suited their belief in the gospel of force, and is esteemed a most salu- tary thing for the soul of the Mos: lem who dies fighting against the i Women's #isorders always yield ass gE 5 ji ge : , Ay on the moving the comgostion, amd + risaeheing, SL mein, infidels. Probably the Turks have | @iseased parts. In order to gonvinee Ly onering women. of the Yale of a] : - - or ten treal bol! been misjudged; at least some eml- | WEE | SHE SI LGR" UR. FARcET e CURRA. Winder ERR gentle folk given to the simple life. " For Sale iby leading druggists everywhere. : f { MR. JANES DOBSON . Bronte, ONT., MARCH 1st. 1912. "Fruit-a-tives has made a complete cure in my case of Rheumatism, that had at least five years standing before : Somme i a mer, The rouble was m thi and shoulder, the EL oA almost unendurable. Not being able tp sleep on that side, if I chanced to turn on my right side while asleep, the in would immediately a n me, iis kept up until I taking "Fruita-tives'". 1 started by takin, one or two tablets with a large glass Water, in the morning before breakfast and experienced pronounced relief very shortly, After a continued treatment for about six months, 1 was cured and am now in firstclass health. This, I attribute to my persistent use of "Fruit- a-tives" and I heartily recommend your remedy to any Rheumatic sufferers." JAMES DOBSON. soc. a box, 6 for §2.50--trial size, 25¢, At dealers or sent paid on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. i 2 2 ou § the milk flow of the cows was, on " the average, it 's said, too small to be measured. In some cases bet- ter results were obtained from the machine than with hand milking; two cows which bad beer a fail- ure in hand milking, being success fully milked by the machine. It was nd that immersing the rubber parts of the machine in a ten per cent. solution of salt b tween milkings and washing once a weak gave tter results than daily washing and scalding alone, For example, Lord John Russell sums up the character of 'the terrible Turk" in these words: "The Turk is moved by few passions, and those few carry him straight to their ob- ject; if he dis revemgeful, he takes away the life of his enemy; if he is covetous, he seizes the possess- jons of those who are weaker than he is; 'if he is amorous, he buys and shuts up in his seraglio the object of his love. He has no conception of 'the complicated in- trigue, the perpetual bustle, = the varying opinions which. attend and influence the business of lite in our northern countrjes." He says his prayers ever so many times a day, and be lives in poverty and "in slavish dependence under the ty- ranny of his masters. A = gentle creature, to be sure, but a creature of whom Sir Edwin Pears says in his book on "Turkey and Its Peo- ple": "I doubt whether at any time since Mohammed captared Constan- t'nople there has ever passed a quarter of a cemtury without abig massacre. It has been the Turkish way of maintaining supremacy" Dr. BE. A. Freeman does not believe that the Turk and his civilisation can stand: that "a system under wirich the bondage of the mass of the people of the country is enforced by their rulers as a matter of religious duty/is incapable of reform and that "the only means of put. ting an end to the state of things which - necessarily follow on Mo- hammedan rile is to put an end to Mohammedan rule itself." This " SAN MOPS, FLOOR DUSTERS, FLOOR BRUSHES, fic. - Wa bave just received a consignment of those Sanitary Dust Closks, Floor Dusters, Mops, Wall Dusters, Furniture Dusters, ete. These Cloths are the best manufactured, They will pot discolor the whitest surface. They are Neat, Clean and Durable, ELLIOTT BROS. Phene 35. "SOM pum dnpoig Kingston, March 1.--~Market clerk OPO the following : Potatoes, 25¢. pk.; cabbage, 50c. to 75¢. doz; y, 86. to 10e. bunch; onions, 40c. pk.; carrots, 200. pk.; beets, . peck; chickens, 15e. to 17c. per Ib; fowl, ldc. a 1b; por tatoes, $1 to $1.25 a bag; California celery, 10c. to 15c. J. A. Melariane, rock street, re- grain, Hour and feed selling as Oats, 40c.; local wheat, $1.10 bush.; feed = wheat, .; peaspdl to $1.10; yellow feed corn, T0c.; a ur, 2a io $3; Jnmets' flous, $2.55 le ; unganan , $3; oatmeal and roliid Pe ; corm mea per -cwt.; bran, per ton; shorts, $26 per ton; baled straw, $11; loose, $10; hay, loose, $14 to $15; pressed hay, $15. Meat--Beef, carcase, $8 to 810; prime western, lo. to 120; «car case; cuts, 100. to 20c.; mution, 10a to 15¢.; lamb, 15c. to 20e. Ih; live hogs, Pure Food Flavors, (in tubes) Almond; Lemon, Maple, Nutmeg, Vanilla, at 25¢ and G0ec. D. COUPEK'S "Phone 76. 341-3 Princess St. (Prompt Delivery.) Coast Sealed Oysters, 1 failed to keep the record of my other hens. but I am safe in saying that they did not .pay any better than those 60 that were shut up for ---- 12 months. The drop in the egg| / Toll Taken By Weeds. yield for July was caused mainly by! Did you ever stop to think of the changing their wheat rationwhich|iax you are paying to keep up the at that time was the largest per cent. | weed crop? If the township would of their food--from clean milling} jeyy a tax on your crops equal to 25 to Manitoba, socalled, feed wheat. per cent. of the value, you would Note their increase n August, whenirenel in righteous indignation. again fed with good wheat. Wouldn't you? Yet a good many One can readily see from the aboveiot us permit a stand of 25 per cent. of weeds to occupy our fields and think we are doing pretty gool farming too. figures for the summer and winter months that if all the hens in this Why not grow grain or roots, or some other good crop, where that country were managed as this Jot were, the price of eggs would aver- age about the same in winter as in summer, SAGE TEN BEAUTIFULLY DARKENS Th W SP AMPION in a class by iteslf~the easiest running, the most substantially buih, the most satisfactory washer, ever invented, Only washer worked with erank handle at side as well a8 top lever--and the only one where the whale top opens up. ? Ask your dealer to show sow the "* Washer, } \ MAXWELLS cH THE BLESSING OF MOTHERHOOD Motherhood is woman's highest spherc in life. It is the fruition of her desrest . dn, Oat. yi thnk you for the benefit I received by men 'who force our hens taking two or three; mo A photograph shown, and Mr. Marrison added: "Notice that shadows under the nest boxes, and moulting, large combs from careful breeding. Although, as one can plainly. see the coop above. coop, Not a very convenient hroody hens to for 24 hours a It ds right here where we poultry to heavy egg laying in the wiater season are sure of making a good profit, By of the high prices '| that prevail at that season. we make Mry pay for their year's food in of the hens was D of them are asleep, others have waked up, and are intent on watching the photo- grapher, while the moet timid ones have left their roosts, and have hid- den themselves away in the dark the roosts. Also note] Et their worn tails and lange combs, the worn and dilapidated tails come from two causes--atmost daily wearing Xs ° a large number of those hens were niouiting they still kept wp a fair egg yield. Their record for that day. J Aug. 31st, was 31 eggs. Also notice It is a convenient place to keep broody hens, but as there were no white hens on the Tift at that time. it was occupied with six Island Reds Note the slatted bottom ou the themselves on . The object of the slatted bottom is to induce them to stand up, which they will do dur: daytime, and f is 5 of E% weed tax is now growing? weads give no return. ey draw more heavily on the water supply crops. ~~ Paying crops and cannot occupy land at the same time. Let us grow paying crops and get profts rather than pay taxes. Found for pound, the plant food required by crops and by weeds is almost the same but weeds are bet- ter food gatherers. The greatest difference comes when the question of water arises. Weeds not only require more water, but are able to it. From 300 to 700 pounds of water are used in producing = pound of ary matter in our common crops. If it comes to a contest as to which will get it, the weeds win. . Milking Machines. New York experiment station has, says Hoard's Dalryman, carried on an investigation covering a period of fivé years into the work of milk. ing mach"nes. satisfied the station authoritipg, gays the Dairyman, that the milking machine is a practical device, and that it has solved the problem of labor on the dairy farm. . It. hes been found that on the average the time required for milk- ing fifteen cows twice daily, with the use of the milking machine is a Jt:le over four minutes per cow, while the average time with hand milking is 'seven minutes. The influence of the machine on 52 MOTHER! WATCH THE CHLDREN'S BOWELS) and plant food eupply than paying | weeds ! 9¢. to as follows : Weeds require even more. |i, This enquiry has |lo £F £ FEET Bri se a 5 Dairy--Butter, creamery, 35¢.; 980. to 320. 1b; eges, ile. a Ib.; No. 2 and bulls, 10c. a shoep skins, fresh, j so.50; dressed hogs, 13c.; veal, Be. 1 ol? £48 te, 0c. ' $1: must quit Europe. A holy war Just tallow ! now would not aid him very much in gee is the work that the Balkan allies have cut out for themselves and they have put themselves in. such close touch with all Christendom that it does not matter greatly whether the Sultan or the Mahdis declare a holy war or not; itis clear that the Turks his present struggle, especially as the Bulgarians and their Christian fel- tow-workers have disclosed a fighting disposition and' a murderous spirit at times and places, showing that Peter was not wholly wrong when he drew out his eword to cut off the ears of one having authority. In the .| First Crusade. it' will be recollected; seventy thousand Moslems were put "| to the sword when Jerusalem was captured, and the "sword of the Lord and of Gideon' appears to be in prime condition just pow. However *| fatafistic they may be as a race and in their religion, the Turks -- the peaceable and well-disposed Turks, as they have been described by some writers--will reflect possibly that there ought to be an easier road to '| Paradise than the sword offers just , | mow in the present advanced state of . | Christianity. : '| "It is said in the Historians' H's- tory of the World" that "the holy * | war is not imposed asa duty except and only in the case of enemies (0 Islamism being the aggressors: Only 4 an arbitrary interpretation by theo- logians can take the orders other- wise." And it will be generally ad- mitted (bat the present struggle in the Balkans is not a matter with which the theologians can deal suc- cessfully. : The Chwistian plan, nots withstanding ail the brutalities that have been committed under the cross, is the better plan, Christ did not come into the world with a sword. but there is the highest auth- ority for the saying that they who take the sword shall perish by the sword, and the prophecy or promise is even now in process of fulfilment at e. Fighting the devil with fire is an exercise in which the Bulgar one namics, their enemies. be a holy war, it ought to be made holy on both ; and__will de. Soft, Lustrous and Cures : Dandruff. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray bair to its na tural or dates back to grandmoth- er"s time, She kept her hair beauti fully darkened, glossy and ahundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever het hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appear: ance this simple mixture was applied with wonderful elect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date, Rovadaye skilled chem: ists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use producis-called "Wyoth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy' you i 's $s Bi its sound ood value Mixed With Sulphur Makes Hair, EXTRA MIL body and restore the Extra THE HAR WHEN FADED AND GRAY will get a large bottle for about ie. Some druggists make their own, which is usually too sticky, so insist upon getting "Wyeth's" which can be de pended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splen- did for. dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling hair. A wellknown downtown druggist says his customers insist om Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, beonuse, they say, it darkens so npaturally and evemly that nobody can tell it has been apr plied--it's so easy to use too. You simply dampen a sponge of soft brush and draw it through your hair, tak- ing one strand at a time- Do this ab night and by morning the gray hair disappears; afiér another application or two, it ig restored te its natural { loc and looks glossy, soft and abundant. Agent, G. W. Mahood. D Alf Those who work hard, find ry to build up the $ unstrung nerves. Mild" 'Ale--becausc and tonic propertics--is for home food-beverage for use. d in Canada's model Brewery for those o Health is wealth. at 5 ¥