Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Oct 1914, p. 13

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Retief way's di two . of tet 1 of mol in_t " 1 BADWAY 4C .» Montreal, Can. FOR QUICK LUNCH Crosse & Blackwell's Potted Ham D. COUPER Phone 76 841-3 Princess St. DRUGS EXCITE YOUR ~ KIDNEYS, USE SALTS If your Back hurts or Bladder Both- ers, drink lots of water, When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot, of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract Keep your kidneys clean liké you kee] your howels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which re moves the body's urinous waste an stimulates them to their normal ac tivity. The function of the kidneys-is to filter the blood. In'24 hours they strain from it 30 grains of acid and waste, we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping kidneys active. Drink lots of water too much; also get from any ist about four ounces of take a tablespoonful in a before breakfast each morning few days and your kidneys will act fine, This famous salts 18 made from the acid of grapes and lemon juic combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate dogged kidnevs; to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus enxiing bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- Jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which evervone should take now and then to keep their ~kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt vou will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache. Agent, George W. Mahood. y 80 you can drink also BUILDERS !! Have You Tried {GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time. P. WALSH, FARMER'S WIFE ALMOST A WRECK Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's:Vegetable Compound -- Her Own Story. Londen, Ont.-- "I am a farmer's wife and a very busy woman. Last summer " w | was taken with 5 a. severe pains in my VX # back so bad that 1 ib } could not get up or { scarcely move with- pain, and my were pain- } My husband i called in a good doe- tor and I was under his carc for some time, but he did me . little or no good. day o friend of mine told me te Lydis E. Pinkham's Vegetable perfect health. In fact I have never felt so well in my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com '| they are done; then lean back, rest, Jit about a week fn order to dry them {should be milked a few times to pre-| THE DAILY AGRICULTURAL TOPICS - FOR WHIG READERS ESS Sess enn Some Farm Suggestions. frost is sure to gather on the walls Save all the scraps for the stock. during winter. which' will produce Feed apple rinds and cores to horses dampness. Chicken-pox, distemper or hens, potato parings to cows, or roup and kindred ailments in many boiled little potatoes to the hogs. | cases owe their origin to poor hous- Conserve the manure pile; and do Ing. not carry any more of it into the If the pullets are now placéd in house than you ean help. | their winter quarters it will give Putting off hard jobs only makes them a good chance to become aec- you dread them more. Pitch right in-: quainted with their new home before to them the minute they stick up they start laying. It is well to their heads, and stick to them till "have a china nest-egg in each nest, which will guide them to the proper | place when they are ready. The !{ April-hatched pullets should begin { laying eggs this month. The greatest amount of fertillity! For a disease that looks like chol- is saved in the manure by hauling' era, use the following' One gal- it directly from the barn to the field.l0on of soft water and one-half ounce and spreading it. {'nless manure ¢f common copperas. I add one is carefully conserved in some sort | tablespoonful of this mixture to a of a manure basin or pected inj Quart of hard water, three times a sheds from rains which cause leach-| Week. This should be given the ing, a considerable/ portion of 'the fowls in a crock. valuable part of the manure is lost. It is quite a common practice to place large heaps of manure under | No problem in the dairy industry the eaves of barns, giving the best|is more important and vital than opportunity possible to carry away | that of replacing the 3,000,000 diary the most expensive elements of fer-| cows, which it is estimated each tility. A very small percentage of | year pass out of their period of use- these elements are lost when manure | fulness. The following figures is spread in the field as fast as pro-{show 'the cost of raising a heifer duced, even on the snow and side {from birth to time of entering the hill. | dairy herd. The figures were se- {cured on the farm of Mr. C. I Bing- Profit In Hogs. ham, a diaryman of Dane county, When fed preperly, there is *bigi Wis. It was found: profit in hogs. My hcgs got a bad! The average net cost of a diary start last year, but 1 put them in. heifer one year old is $39,52, which fine shape for marketing by turning | Consists of its initial value, $7.04; 60 head on twenty acres of wheat, | feed, $24.67; labor, $4.45; other and how they did grow! I consid-, costs, $6.36. Total, $42.52; credit or whedt harvested by hogs worth a! for manure, §3. dollar and a half a bushel to me be-| The average net sides fertilizing my field. | heifer two years After 1 took the logs off the| Which consists of wheat, 1 turned them into an old; $7.04; feed, $40, pasture and fed them all the hominy | Other costs, $13.73; hearts--in form of a slop--with a| credit for manure, $8. : little salt and lye to keep them in| The most important of cost' condition while putting on the fat./is the feed. which is percent. With this 1 fed some ear corn to|Or nearly two-thirds of the total net j niake flesh solid. I always put | cost of the heifer Labor forms | rings in the hog's nose to keep them | 12.5 percent. and all other costs 22 from rooting I notice many far-' percent mers do not pay attention to these One-half of the feed cost the fittle things aud consequently, hogs Year and one-third. for full Tatten slowly. | years is for whole and skim milk. I always keen salt ard ashes, mix-| By far the most expensive period ed one part salt to two parts ashes, |n the life of the calf is the first four near the feed trouga. I also rack Weeks, the cost being nearly double up the cobs and burn them to give | that for any other four-week period charcoal, which helps to keep pige | This high cost is oecagioned by it in good health. 1 have never lost| being dependent almost entirely up a hog with cholera. In preparing | 00 whole milk. hogs for market, I consider nothing! The man labor required in raising better than a well matured wheat @ heifer is about forty-hours during field, with corn for finishing. Besides! the first year and twenty-three hours realizing so much more on my wheat ' the second year The total cost of is much le labor in harvesting.|™an and horse labor for the twc D. E. Beasley years is close fo $8 The manure rey produced during two vears | To Improve Laiab Crop. been valued at $8; consequently should weaned when | | ost of labor oo. pra tically offset from four to feur- and one-half the value of the manure months old. 80 says Frank Klein-| ne tem thes Sosis L.e0ns heinz, shepherd of the University of | EXPEDLES aa 4 rluokeq Wisconsin flocks in answer to num- op ng £ tho nese 8) : erous inquiries upon this subject. charge for the use of buildings-and Many flockmasters allow the | Sduipment, FxXpense for bedding, lambs to run with their mothers un- | Jtistellateons sxpen iB Share 9 til breeding time. 'this, Mr. Klein-| Dus ose, penses Hh 3e hire heinz regards as very objectionable | ie pe A oa Bh LAuyge 0 coy for it. annoys the ewes and keepsi'. '0%%es bY death and discarding them in poor condition. Moreover, {he total for these forms nearly one at this te the lambs get but little fifth of "the total cost of the two- milk and they will really deo better | Year-old heifer. i ' : without it. { If the cost of raising a dairy heif- When taken from their mothers, Shon tbe Bingham Farm. 3 Iypital the lambs should be put on a piece katong IO; ine a Engin lie ns of fresh pasture, which will help to ia hi Teceivec or Suey heifers avoid much of the stomach-worm| 1 ROL pay the cost of producing troobie. | them, This is especially true of a After weaning time the ewes heifer sold at one year of age : These inve ations of the cost of should be put on a scant pasture for| te . should Jut v | producing a diary heifér seem to in ew 7 thieate that a heifer --entering-- the During (his period they | 0.0 yard at two years of age must be worth at least $60 fo cover cost only. It would appear that a far- mer can not afford to raise a heifer calf that will not sell for more than 1 $60 at twp years of M Bennett. and let comfort hang out. Handling Manure, Problem In Dairying, diary $61.41; value, $7.81; | $69,321; of a is initial lal total, cost old item 66.56 first the two the the by Lambs be igts of esti wre interest is up quickly vent the udder from caking and a%| goon as they are fairly dry aeyi ought to be placed on good pasture again, where they will put on flesh and hecome strong and vigorous be- for they are bred in the fall. Early weaning and good care of | the ewes after the lams are taken | away enables the ewes to go into winter quarters in good condition, thug- aiding winter feeding and in-: suring a large crop of strong lambs in the spring. age C. Must Take A_pamphlet has been issued by the Central Experimental Farm en titled. "The FaFmer as a Manufac- turer." It Ha¥ been prepared by A T. Stuart, B.A., Assistant Chemist, iy who has presented a number of sim Men Well Satisfied. | ple illustrations of the chemical pro : cesses that take place in vegetable Speaking of his experience with |,,q animal life, cow testing for three years ene far-{ pe processes are indicated by mer near St. Hyacinthe, Quebec, re-| which the farmer, whose raw mater cently expressed himself as very well' ui aro hut air, water and soil, is satisfied. He hud good re 1 too to-manufacture there from an be, for in June last year his appare endless variety of pro- averaged 1,203 pounds of milk each ayers both plant and animal. It a total of 10,830 pounds. Three | is shows, however, that their com- years ago the average w.o oWlv 823 noeition {5 to he easily understood. pounds, the total only {7.411 cpngisting'as they do of but four pounds. principal constituents The nature In other; words, h's income from of the raw materials, the process of the nink cows was thirty-four dol gunufacture and the products are lars greater in one month this year. discussed lustances very similar to this may Under the heading 'Maintaining be found in every county where cow Fertility" it iz pointed out that 'the testing has been taken up intelliged-' farmer must exercise extreme care if tly Near Listowel, Ontario, 18 8 he would keep his soil in the highest herd of 16 cows that give on the a¥-| condition of productivenc Soil is erage 2,700 pounds of milk more per the renl guardian of the farmer's tow than three years ago. The ad- capital, and the scarcity is absolute diffion of four hundred and thirty. Try as he may he cannot "break the two dollars per year to one's income, hank." He may brinz about tem- without increasing the numer of porary derangement, and dividends cows, is a substantial and tangible may for awhile be suspended, but in- result of intelligent weighing and variably 'under better management, sampling. 3 prosperity can be restored, and per- Again, at Wooler, Ontario, is .a haps, éven larger prorits than ever herd now giving 8,307 pounds of secured : milk per cows, an increase of almost' The pamphlet, which is Bulletin 3,000 per cow. . Record forms for milk and feed, Lg mn---- and a herd record book, will be sup-' plied free on application to the diary SAV : Y | commissioner, Ottawa.-----C. F, Whit- is ley, Dairy Div., Ottawa. i Care. In Poultry Yard. i Hens that are wild and: sary,' that fly out of the nest the mament one approaches, are never good lay- ors. A restless, excitible hen makes #4 poor mother, Her chicks grow just like her. On the other hand, when the mother hen is tame chicks have confidence in their keeps scalp; of dandruff---that awfui scurf. er and many troubles are saved. . U4 There is nothing so destructive to Fence-fiying is largely due to a the hair as dandruff. restless nature. Hens are like of its lustre, its strength and ite very some people --they don't like to stay life; eventually producing a feverigh- at home, By and itching of the scalp, whieh See that every provision Is made if not remedied causes the halr roots Ladies! Men! Here's the quickest surest dandruff cure known, } Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy {lor thorough ventilation. houses gre imp Where to shrink, falls out fast, A lity) farm sine to-night---now--any |gurely save your hair, RE AAAS ES BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1914. _ LUE ba IN: ATI £= bq => Ji Be. Sure They're Cowan's COWANS SOLID CHOCOLATE MAPLE BUDS People who insist on getting the genuine Cowan's Maple Buds do so because they believe that no others are quite so good-----and they have, very probably, learned by experience. No. 20, of the second series, is avail able to those to whom the inform tion is of interest, an application 1c the publications branch of the partment of agriculture at Ottawa de Silo Filling Accidents. By observing three simple the farmer who is using silo filling machinery for the first time may avoid some of the accidents which occasionally damage new machines beyond repair 1. Be sure that the machine is ing run at the proper speed. 2. Take care. that corn rules is is up to full speed. 3. In stopping be careful not to shut off. the power until the elevator is empty if the elevator is not empty the cut material will fall back and lodge in the fans. Then when the machine is started again, the cut | corn jams the fans, and as a result | they are bent or broken. Registering Farm Names. The state of Missouri f the registration name the county: in which it fa located, on. the payment of a $I fee. 'This protects it for the entire county, and a= the Rural New Yorker remarks, "It is a pleasant thing to name the farm, and & good thing to have a trade mark. LK leads every meniher of the family to think more ALLING QUT has a lay providing of m ~~ OR DANDRUFF--25 CENT DANDERINE time--whll Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and after the first ap- the hair is mute evidence of a neglected plication your hair will take on that life, lustre and luxuriapce which is so 'beautiful. It robs the hair [fluffy and have the appearance abundance; and softness, hut what vou most will. ba after just a few d ky loogen and die-- 'then the [see a ° of it will become wavy and of incomparable: gloss please witen yon will actually fine, downy hair---new ali over the pealp. be-{ _ never | put into the machine until the motion | ports follows on _r TR When the farm is about should have most of I here is no such pro- | uf the farm. | sl you have it [ vous. thought | Vision in Ontario. Produce And Price | Kingston, Oct. "17.--~The | clerk reports the following : | Meat, beef, local carcase, Ye | #6, suts. Vo. to do mution, i jc. and 13c.; live hogs, $8.50 to dressed 12§c. pork, 12¢ per 1b, by quarter; veal, 12¢.; lamb, 12. to 1c. quarter; western beef, 12e, market to 10c¢.; hogs, to Ib. to lde., Fg per by carcase. MeFarlane grain; and Street selling Brock flour re- as Dats, 60 j per { 95e. hush.; wheat, 31.15 bushel; vellow feed corn, per bushel; bakers' flour, per 98 Ibe, $3.25 to $3.50; cornmeal, $2.- 25 per cwt,; bran, $25.50 per | ton; shorts, $28; baled Btraw, 20 per ton; pressed straw, $9 a toh; { pressed hay, 5; ground and cracked | corn, $1.85 ewt.; molassise meal, $1'- per X 190 ewt.y buckwheat, 90¢. bush. The Dominion Fish company reports the following prices : Whitefish, 15¢ Ib.; pike, 12}e. lb.; blue fish, 15¢; Chinook salmon, 30c, per pound; fresh haddock, 124c. per pound; teak cod, 12§¢.; salmon trout, 15¢. per lb; bloaters, 50¢.° a dor. pickerel, 15¢. per Ib.; kippers, 60c. a doren; finnan haddies, 12%¢. per Ib. oveters, 50c. and 60c. a auart. Poubiry--Fowl, 70c. to 9c. a pair; i chickens, 60¢. to 0c. a pair; ducks, F231 to $1.25 a pair. turkeys, £1.50 to £2 each; live fowl, 60¢c. to T0c. a pair. Dairy--Butter, ereamery, 33¢. to 35¢.; prints, 30c. to 32e8 rolls, 27e. to 30c.; eggs. 3c, {o 3be. a doz. Vegelables--Otiions, 25c. to 30. pk. parsley, Te. bunch; beets, 500. doz; cabbage, B0c, per dozen dishes, 5¢. a bunch; cucumbers, h to 15c. a doz.; potatoes, 75¢c. to Me. a hag; apples, 25c. a peck, and $2. 50 per barrels pumpkins, = 10 each: corn, 15¢. to 285e. «a dovem; tomatoes, 40c. to 50c. a bush; tur nips, 75¢. a bag. . R. H. Tove quoted fruit thus: Bananas, 10c. to 20c. a doz; oren- wos, Me to B0c. a doz; pears, 706. a basket; grapes, he. * haskell fornia peaches, fo 8 3 cranberries, 10. a quart, MSA SAS to nostrils nose and stopped-up air passages the freely; pear. 3y cold-in-head will be gdne. small end at BREATHE FREELY ! OPEN NOSTRILS AND STUFFED HEAD--END CATARRH Instant Relief When Nose and Head Are Clogged From a Cold.--Stops Nasty Catarrbal Discharges, -- Dull Headache Vanishes. Cream Balm." Get a bottle anyway, just try it--Apply a little . in the and instantly your --elogged of you will breathe and headache disap- the eatarrh, gore throat Try "Ely's small head will dullness morning ! or catarrhal open; misery now ! Get the Pg ' '"» of "Ely's Cream Balm drug store Ihis sweet; End such any fragrant balm dissolves by the ' heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat; clears the air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing religf comes ing mediately. Don't lay --awake to-night strug. gling for bweath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blow ing. Catarrh or a cold, with its run: ning nose, foul mucous dropping into the throut, and raw dryness is dis treseing but truly needless. Put vour faith--just once--in "El Cream Palm" and your cold or tairh will surely disappear. INDIA PALE ALE Not a Useless WHOLESOME and medicinal uses with dietetical -- MADE AS GOOD AS Tntoxicant, but a BEVERAGE : CAN MAKE IT -- If not sold by nearest wine hd spirit merchant, write JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON - «= CANADA foes 'ment New Becat ne slhie dared to pass judg: oh a case, 'Mra. M. J. Kend 48 $1 by the ~N: = 339.341 Misges Tail 'abd 1. | the on giztared phi aplfnd's only woman sheriff. yy fon etuge z hey w court; {large drug : ro sions in

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy