Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Jul 1914, p. 14

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a 'THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1914. ter having eight children by his first wife, Lady Caroline Villiers, ANOTHER BRITISH LORD SEPAR- ATED FROM HIS WIFE | protect not only the producer and | the consumer but also the merchant. Copies of this pamphlet may be ob- taloed free upon application to the { Publication Branch, Department '0 Agriculture, Ottawa, -------- AGRICULTURAL TOPICS FOR WHIG READERS ||" "= Em flank reports the following : overcome in The United Ment, beei, local, carcase, 12j¢.; States authorities are investigating ©®8fcuse, suis, lUc. 10 %c.; mution, the benetol treatment carefully, and !14¢. to Ic; five hogs, dress. the results will prove definitely whe- ed hogs 12ic.; veal, Sc. ; lamb | Lo Anglesey, head of the great "of better breeding. Thousands of [ther any reliance is to be placed on by carcase, %6: Westen beef, lc. to | Englibh house of Paget, which has so herds there are in the country that [it. If even a portion of the eflicacy 15c., by carcase. nany American conmections through ought to receive the baptism of | claimed for it is found to be real, Dairy--UButier, creamery, 30c.; prints | marriage. is a very -difierent' man in- hotter blood, but it will never come. [farmers will have in it a real boon, 27c.; eggs, 22c. to 25e. leed to his cousin' and immediate pre- The heifer will be no better than her | for it bas the great virtue of being 5 lecessor in the family hopors and es- \ Vegetables---Onicns, 5c. bunch; pars: mother, the bull will be selected not | cheap and easily obtained. ley, 0c. a bunch; beets, '30c, doz: | 'ates, and the intimations contained ° because the farmer thinks he can n the cable despatches announcing his ---- cabbage, 31 'a. doz.; lettuce, 5¢, bunch; . produce better cows, but because his Two Litters a Year, radishes, Sc. bunch; rhubarb, 50c. a | 'eParation from his wife, to the effect color markings suit and "he can be| The man who expects to raise two doz: peas in pod, be quart; cucum | hat he shares the ecentricities of the bonght cheap." So low down on thee] litters a year should use judgment bers, Sec. to 7g. each: potatoes, $1.40 ate marquis, and that these are re scale of real betterment of dairy [in choosing his sows. Get the right per bag. Yousihie for the shipwreek of his mar quality are these men that they [type, and, above all, don't expect: R. H. Toye p: i are unjust. \ haye made no progress in the way of | Young sows to produce you two crops ( berries, 90¢. 10 on * iglesey sa thorou hly sen: ssbetter cows for the last 25 years, [Of good, strong, healthy pigs in a berries, 13¢. to hie Ad normal young fellow, who mor will they ever get out of the |¥ear. It takes mature animals to 20. a dozen; oranges, =. utennnt of the Royal Horse ;«#ut. And yet we would be almost [40 this--those with plenty of vital- , dozen; tomatoes, per 1b} can are 5 prio 4 his npiviage, Rag ex- willing to guarante® that their cows |(t¥y. The second litter of the YORDE telopes, two for 23c.; gooseberries, ty apa a1 2 ali 4 ih his 'poor as they are, if bred to a bull | 0% Will usually be small and weak- quart. rer) gers, an Sith A ° ies of worth while, would bring heifers regiment oof the, British daughter .of . the Earl of Jersey, he was divorced, and at once proceeded | to marry the divorced wife of the | first Lord Cowley, to whom he was | . ee : obliged to pay $170,000 damages as | Who Was Lady Marjorie Mannerss| co.respondent for the alienation of Who Is Wayward, Disdains "Con- that lady's affections. ventionalities and Has High-strung : She has tans Shildven by hey mar Nery syste riage wit Lor owiley, and then | Nervous System, by her union with Lord Anglesey | she had six children more." So that | the family omnium gatherum eon- | sisted, all told of 18 children, 14 of | them Pagets," and four of . them Wellesleys, that is to say, the off- spring of the first Lord Cowley. i Among the: Pagets who have/ sought wives on this side of the At- lantic, are General Sir Arthur Pa- get, married the daughter of the. | late Paran Stevens, proprietor - and manager of the Fifth avenue hotel, | and his brother Almeric Paget, M. P.,, who#is wedded to Pauline, eldest sister of Harry Payne Whit- ney of New York. Another brother, Sydney Paget; who managed 'in turn the rdeing stables of the late William C. Whit- ney, and of James B. Haggin, has as wife 'Miss Mary Elizabeth Dolan _ ROSE BACON AND HAM NSTEAD of the usual meat course to-morrow, try a nice light appetizing dish of Rose 'Bacon and eggs. Rose Bacon. is so mild, so delicate in flavor, and. frys so crisply and tenderly that you'll find everyone will welcome the change. The nice, clear, even streaks of: fat and lean are due to our careful selection. The mild, sweet flavor itself comes from an Old English method of curing. go by with thousands of farmers who are pretending to keep cows for profit und wothing wil be done in the way to | v quotes fruit thus: #®l a basket; straw 20¢. a box; bananas, 15c. to 6oe ly, as she is unable to properly nour-, J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, re | iru. 'whose milk record the first year ak Making his i is "wi would average better - than their aking his home with his 'widowed mothers.'--Live Stock News.. ! An English Scheme Comparatively few people are aware of the excellent work that is being done for British live stock through the operation of the De- velopment Fund. In reality, it tak- @8 several forms. Attempts are be- ing made to improve agricultural orses, cattle generally, and milk ws in particular. One important method of improving horses is to obtain the services of better stal- Mons than those generally used by the farmer. Considerable success in "this direction has already been Athieved. About forty very good 'Pedigree stallions are now trav i- Wg in districts where any sort of horse was thought good: enough just recently. The same thing has been done 'with regard to cattle. A very large number--running to hundreds, We believe--of pedigree bulls have been sent into various districts where the ordinary ten-pound bull formerly helped to produce stock Which was unsatisfactory to the far- mer and discreditable to the coun- ry. These are two very important points. At. the moment, when we are threatened with a meat famine, every farmer who has «got intelli- . Bénce as well as an eye to the main chance, will exert every ounce of energy fo incréase his live stock both jn mumbers and quality. He is learning to-know that it is im: Possible to get good beef unless 800d sires are used. But perhaps the most Important work of all is done 'in the way of encouraging dairy farmers to keep milk records. In te of all the preaching and teach- ng that have been going on for up- wands of a generation, very few in- deed of those who keep cows make any pretence of taking and record- ing their yields of milk.-- Country Life, Some Cow Records, During April and May a great many pour cows have been 'milked, giving, in some cases, only 600 pounds of iat in the month; some ~ have contented themselves with producing even les: than (this, says the dairy d'vision at awa. ' One wonders if the owners of such Cows are contented with records like that, and if the owners of the various factories concerned are content to let their plants" be run with such poor Support. It is a common occurrence to find groups of 50 and 100 cows at 8 Hactory giving on the average 300 pounds of milk more than similar groups supplying the same factory. Suppose a factory is supported by only 600 sows, it should thus be com RS vely easy to have an extra owing through it in six months to the patrons if they had belter cows. : The factory management is, there fore, directly interested in: recommend ing cow testing to the patrons and in providing for its operation. : Some of the good records received at the dairy division, Ottawa (where full in- formation may be obtained about cow testing), for April and May are: Nine- ty cows at Ayerls Cliff, Que., with an average of 25 pounds of fat: 83 cows at Atwood, Ont., with 30 pounds of fas; 53 at Wallace, Ont.; giving 1,005 pounds of milk and 32 pounds -of fat Three grade céws at Cornwall, Ont., averaged 40 pounds of fat, and a five year-old grade at Peterboro, - Ont, gave 16% pounds of milk and 62 pounds of fat. ~ This cow gave more than four times as much fat as many POOr cows in the month. ; 1 Hog Cholera. - There will undoubtedly be much in- st in thy new bentol treagment for hog cholera which is now: the sub- Jeol of experiments at the Minnesota experimental farm. A great deal 1s b bg claimed for it, and it is to be oped that the assertions are well founded. Hog cholera "cures" have been luctive of much disappoint- at in the past and even the serum, yaluable as it ig, has disadvantages Beuetol, the report says, has a car vhalic acid co-eflicient of 123, being 23 Per cent, more active against germs, ¥ob the experimenters have injected 64 ounces into a 60-pound pig. with no bad results. It 1s claimed that -if they can get this bland result uni- ; + the chemical checking of germ in all animal bodies has come, © aud the days of serums are ended. This would certainly be a bold state: ; were it mot for the little Youd that- If benetol will handle it by Inlaetion. it is claimed, there is no other virulent blood germ that euot much more readily handled. Hence ntle hog may be the means -of a field of research which rowalt in henishing many of the maladies with which humanity We shall a suffered for so long. ° | be inclined to-lopk on the tions which will Bave Gvercome before the injection le ex 'milk of sweet aream this Another point in selecting brood that of milk production. We choose 4 cow that is a good milker, and why aot the sow for the same reason? Upon this depends - her ability to ngurish the litter and keep them growing until they can get food for 'themselves, it has been shown that the reason pigs in certain litters turn out to be runts, is because they get insufficient nourishment. It is best, therefore, in selecting your brood sows to take them from the litters or sow that are known to be good milkers, and that are able to maintain their milk flow on the feed given them. The dairy-farmer has an excellent opportunity of raising winter pigs. tHe can utilize his skim<milk to the sest advantage. As for feed for he sow, she requires but little more 'eed than in summer to produce two' litters a year. So the considerations are good, warm shel- | ier, good mature sows, and the cost )f winter feeding reduced to a mini- mum to make it profitable to raise winter pigs.--"Farm Journal." Care of Milk and Cream. The souring of milk and cream is caused by! a form of bacteria that gets into milk and cream from the air and that 'multipfies and grows very fast when the temperature of the milk "or cream is above sixty-five de- grees Fahrenheit. The most favor- able temperature for the growth of this bacteria is between ninety 'and ninety-five degrees of the tempera- wire milkyis just after it is drawn. The first thing to. do to keep milk and cream in good condition in warm weather is to coolythe milk or ercam as. soon as possible. If the milk ig to be disposed of as milk "it should Get the milk into cold water half an hour from the time the cow is milked. Immediately is, better. If the milk is to be separated, seéparate as soon as possible after milking and then cool the cream. In the sale of 18 'maport- ant. Ordinary well water will do for sows that is often overlooked, is be cooled immediately after milking. ! within ! ish two sets of embroyo in a year. ! ports grain, flour and feed selling as follows : . Oats, 800. per bushel; whear, $1 to $1.10 per bushel; yellow feed corn 0c. per -. bushel; bakers' flour, $2.75 to $2.90; farmers' flour, $2.7 $2.90; Hungarian patent, $3 oatmeal and rolled oats, $3.50 bbl. cornmeal, $2 per cwt.; bran, $25 pe ton;. shorts, $26.50 ton; baled straw 39 per ton; pressed sthaw, $9 a ton: pressed hay, $135. « The Dominion Fish company reports the following prices : Whitefish, 15¢- 1b,;. pike, 124c. 1b.; blue fish, 15e¢.; Chinook salmon, 30c. per potnd fresh haddock, * 124c. per' polind steak cod, 12ic.; salmon trout 15¢. per lb; Saginaw salmon, 35¢ per Ib, mackerel, 15¢ principle | fe MAJOR R. W. LEONARD, Who Has Resigned the Chairmanship of the Natioal Transcontinental Railway. Commission, ---- cooling, if drawn fresh from the, well and frequently changed. lee, of course, is of great advantage, but in the absence of ice. well water will lo. For a single ean nothing is more practical than a hali-barrel for a water tank. A few wet sacks or a wet canvas thrown over this will anawer for a cover ved any distance it will pay to have a cooler over which the milk or cream may be run to cool more quickly, In the absence of this it should be stirred frequently. Cool and cool quickly and keep cool is the first principle in keeping milk or cream sweet in summer. . | Use scalding water as a second precaution. Wash all milk uten- | sils thoroughly and then .use boiling water. Strainer cloths and cans need special attention. When ja istrain- | er cloth does not smell as sweet as a piece of new cheese cloth it is not .in a fit condition to strain milk When a can does not smell iresh it is in no condition to receive milk Use a brush in washing and some good washing powder. Set all the' milk utensils out in the sun during the day. . : io Wash the separator every time it is used. Whatever dirt there may be in milk remains in the separator (though the effect goes on with the cream), 'and, when the separator is allowed to stand. without washing till the next separation, it is in very bad condition for the. fresh milk to go through. Wash the cows' udders when they need 'it, and that will be quite of | tei when there are low, places in the | pasture through which the wallow. Farmers who make a stud, of producing high-grade milk and cream make a practice of the udders every milking. Have a wet canvas to throw the cans on the way to the cream- bery or shipping station. Quality in Eggs. "The Payment for Eggs According to Quality" is the subject of pamph- let No. 6 of the poultry division of the live stock branch, prepared by W. A. Brown, J. H. Hare and W. H. Ault. This pamphlet points out that as a result of the 'flat rate' or 'case count' system of purchasing, Canadian farmers,' during the past ten years, have lost annually large sums of money through marketing many bad, and inferior eggs. In- vestigation Into this phase of the poultry industry evinced the fact that while the wholesalers were not themselves directly responsible for the losses and shrinkage, they had at their disposal the most effective means for improvement, viz: The making of a differénce, not only be- teen the prices paid for good and bad eggs, but also between the prices paid for the various grades of The objects of this over good eggs. | pamphlet are to encourage the grad- ing of eggs, which can only be-done by the use of an egg tester; the pay- ent x eggs according to quality, thus a premium adoption eggs, and the a unifprm When milk. or cream has to be ship- 'inloving future generations Cows first-class | pil. On the third flight, she was allowed : system of marketing, which would! s Our Gift to Colombia. It| would seem a lavish grant of money to pay Colombia $25,000,000; for no man can argue ingeniously enough to make the punishment fit the crime. But the mistake of giv- ing Colombia this large sum of mo- (Mey is nothing at all compared with the astounding shortsightedness of The special privileges accorded to Co lombia would sooner or later make seflous trouble and would almost certainly lead to war. For it would be held that these rights pertained to the people' and territory of Co- lombia regardless of future political control. And if Great Britain or Germany should acquire control of Colombia we would,--for pure sen- timentality- and without rhyme or reason,--have given away to a great foreign empire certain rights in the canal superior to those of our own people. If that country had any re- sources it eould well have afforded to pay $200,000,000 in considera- tion of the perpetual rights we have conferred The very fact of our abandoning the Nicaragua roilte and going to Panama has of itself plac- ed Colombia under perpetual obli- gation to us. All the apologies are due in, the opposite direction. = Co- lombia's bad faith was due to her deplorable and corrupt political con- ditions -in that period. and the se- paration of Panama was the right and necessary 'sequel. From "The Progress of the World," in- the American Review of Reviews for July. Jury Wanted Information. Sometime ago there was a homi- cide case in a western court in which (there wae considerable -doubt as to + washing (4p guilt of the accused.. The {rial Ljudge seemed to share the popular belief. ; | "Gentlemen of the jury," said he, {in concluding his charge, "if the evi- {dence in your minds shows that pne- umonia was the cause of the man's death you cammet convict the pri- soner." i Whereat 'the jury retired and in 10 minutes the constable returned and presented himself = before the judge. "Your honor," he remarked, "the gentlemen of the jury want some in- formation." "On what point asked the judge. 'None, judge." was the rejoinder of the constable. 'They want io know how to spell pneumonia." of evidence?" Woman Flyer to Aid Ulster. London, July 3.--~Tha fame of Mrs. Winifred 'Buller has been added to the strong fiving corps' of the British league in case of invasion. From her childhood Buller has heen fascinated by mechanical sciences. v An. December, 1911," Mrs. Buller took to flying for hersell, entering the Breguet School éI° Flying - at Douai, in France, the only woman pu: to conduct the machine berseli. 'ceive, being as "quiet, unaffected, and [of 'New York, apd this does not by any means exhaust the list of the Trans-Atlantic licenses of the house of Paget. SWALLOWED UP IN QUICKSANDS Tragedy in Effort to Produce Moving Picture Play. Denver, Col, July 2.~Two lives were lost, vesterday, in the Arkansas river in an attempt to produce a _mo- tion picture play entitled "Across the "The victims were Miss Grace aged twenty-five, a voung the Colorado Motion Picture company, and Owen Carter, assistant camera man of the company. While fording the stream on horse back, Miss McHugh became nervous and pulled in the horse's reins so that the animal was forced under the water and she into the swift running nother, Lady Alexander Paget, and vith his two sisters, - Beatrice, now 'ountess of Pembroke, and Winifred, narried to 'the Earl of Shrewsbury and lalbot's heir, Lord Ingestre, he pre ents the most striking contrast to the ate marquis that it is possible to con- 'nglish, as the other foreign, eccen ric, and flamboyant. It is not secret tha{ his mother. and usters were opposed to his marriage o Lady Marjorie Manners, daughter f the Duke of Rutland, owing to the Border 'Xtravagances of her manner and ut- McHugh erauce, her waywardness, her disdain adv of of all conventionalities, and her high | rung nervous system, which render- «d her the very antithesis of repose. t. was a great match for Lady Ma jorie, For the dukedom of Rutland is one if the poorest of the British peerage, | was wd -her father would have had the | river. itmost difticulty in making any suit Carter leaped ible provision for her, whereas - Lord wam with her to a sand bar in mid Anglesey is enormously rich I'he birth | stream supposed to be safe. It proved ff a daughter instead of a boy last [to be a quick sand and in a few min ear, was: a source of great disap- | utes both engulied again and ointment, and since then the voung | were, drowned . 'ouple' have drifted apart, Lady Mar Other members orie declining to defer to her his- | had seen them 'on the sand bar start wand's views and prejudices, or to 1 Tor them through underbush, but hose of his mother and sisters, while | hafore the rescuers reached them they we on his side refuses to tolerate her | disappeared. Xtravagances. ' thrown into the water and were of the «company who -- One on the Judge. Goes Her Wild Way It is known that Tord Anglesey and us wile, have been living apart for ome tnne, that he is extremely un- stand. fre appy, that sheé\is pursuing her way | One day he waa counsel in a di egardless of him, and that all at- lyoree : suit, and was examining a wo- i 0 bring about a reconciliation { man. who had taken the stad in be ave avec « 2 13 i 3 3 . 3 vo (half of the plaintiff, In. default of male issue, his little | «x w, madam," began the law laughter, and only child, Lady Alex- | 'repeat the slanderous state- a a. : 3 A : dure Pager, win Inhefit Bis barony snts made by the defendant on this » 410 hecome On his death a |. .cion' reéress in her own right, whereas | "Ob " ried the witness, "they Xe Warauisate and Sarom, as well | eallv unfit for any respeceable 'aluable entaile es- | I 1" V : {son to ear ! " es a £0 to is other Lord | "Then. madam," said the v TN! hc BY rr 0 hii ® ons | conxingly, "suppose you just , Whisper ar Aalely ° actress, Y€ [them to his honor the judge. May," her real name having been | ¢ hee emmtetin Mary Meatyard. |' 7 He Ought to Know. The Pagets have such a reputation | Saskatoon Phoont x HT monial troubles, that i" 4 The attitude oi the conservative he prone Tai in Aad re. | Part) seers to ha hat d ne no § 8 Is : Be ' 3 » senate packed with mien ponsible for the breaking up of his | > pet i Prue LUntioe and uenage, His cousin and immediate lies they will do what they dan redecesser, the fifth marquis, fig- | spoil equitable representation in red on several occasions in the di- | » House of- Commons Didn't a orce court, in conméction with EX- | sonservative nce that the raordinary, suits brought against | rvative party was an iim by his wife, who was as odd | 18 himself i epee eet The fourth marquis "also had | Miss Isabel G. Latimer, eldest nich trouble in the divorce court, | daughter of the late James Latimer, wid was separated from his third. Carleton Place, was married on June wife, daughter of J. P. King, of |27th at Stamford, Con. to W. G Jandhills, Ga., at the time of his| Reynolds leath. The second marquis had no; A man may marry in haste, but ess than three wives. {he usually takes his time about set Lawyer Demers was known to have geniug for malapropos a positive his witnesges on suggestions to age per lawyer, say con hypoerisy ? was the most remarkable of all in honeymoon At Jour grocer's or butcher's MATTHEWS-BLACKWELL Limited Branches in all parts of Canada the | organized | But it was the Arst marquis who |tling the bills contracted during the } | Waist 5553--15 cents Skirt 5718-15 cents Summer Novelties in Pictorial Review Patterns The new "Russian Tuni¢" Skirt and the new "Paquin" Skirt for Foulard and Em- broidery Dresses are the latest word from Paris. These novelties can- not be obtained in ¢ any other pattem. A replete collection of correct Summer styles is presented in a The FASHION BOOK for SUMMER of the Celebrated PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS Only 10c when purchased with one 15¢ pattern, At the Pattern Counter 2

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