Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Oct 1919, p. 11

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

. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1919, ) LIFETIME OF | REPAIR FARM BUILDINGS | | How and When te Paist Them : Efficiently. . i n the Fall the Buildings, Like Machinery, Should, Be as Thor oughly Overhauled as Labor Con- ditions Permit-<Broken Windows Shonld Be Repaired, Dust and Prevented by "Frult-a-fives" The Wonderful Fruit Medicine } BB Mamsoxsxuve Sr, How, Que. , "In my opinion, no other medicine is so good as 'Fruit-a-tives' for Indigestion and Constipation. - For years, I suffered with these '| (Contributed by Ontario Department of dreaded diseases, trying all kinds of Agricultura, Terapia.) Premises Drightened by Cleaning and Whitewash. satments until 1 was told I was VERY farmer should care for | | & incurable. his farm buildings in such a One day a friend told me to try way as to maintain them /n | . ita tives' WV SCID yod 'serviceable condition | 'Fruit-a-tives', To my surprise, I goo TY ? | to equal 2% inches --~ are superior found this medicine gave immediate | and =o conserve his resources gen lief, and in a short time I was all | erally. On most farms there ara] right again', DONAT-LALONBE many details in themseives of minof | At all dealers or from Fruit-a-tives | of the exterior of buildings is an in- Limited, Ottawa, | dieation, generally, of the conditions eptitude and mismanagement. The farmer may not be able-te | change the location of his farm, CREAM | but to a great extent he can In Any Quantity | control its appearance and general | conditions by seeing that the roofs are in good repair and weather tight, the fences in place, gates in order | and painted, on hinges, not sagging ll or "dragging on the ground, the { latches and hinges of all doors and | i \ -- ------------------------ | gates greased and operating freely; wwe | D0 broken lights in the window Phones 47 or 780 ---- eo | GROWING DEAF WITH HEAD | | stable fixtures in order, the stanch- NOISES? TRY THIS ions and partitions in place, and the ---------- ---- - --~ b mangers and floor in good repair, If you are growing hard of hear: | 8lying to the whole place the impres- tng and fear Catarrhal Deafness or if | Sion that it receives prudent care and you have roaring, rumbling, hissing | regular attention. 2 1 noises In your ears go to your drug lgvestigations have disclose he ist and get 1 ounce of Parmint fast That concrete x a3 ies} material a 0 adi tt ) airi a 3 ft dante strength), and aly oh - hands of a resousceful person on the Hater sugar Take 1 table ul | farm. Publications issued by cement Pour tines a day {manufacturers as to tools and mes This will often bring quiqlc relief | i0rials used, agsregates, proportion- trom the distressing head noi { Ing the mixture, how to mix, how to Clogged nostrils should open, breath- | Plan forms Jeinforeement, eit, may ing become easy and the mucus stop | De oe aa] RE. ble door ropping into the throat It is easy | construction" of two thickiesnés of to prepare, costs little ang 18 plea: Lor eied- hrmber 1s not Fatistactory, ant to take. Anyone who Is fhreat-: po 0,00 ihe effect of the warm moist p ned with ( atarrhal Deafness or who air of the stable op the inside ply gos head noises. should: give this) op 1 mer causes it to swell, while yestription a the outer lumber, being less affected, causes the door to spring out top and bottom. A panelled door is less af- fected because the expansion, and contraction resulting from atmos- pheric conditions is taken up by the panels. To hang a door hold it up against the jambs and mark round with a pencil. Then cut down to these lines, Make it 3% narrower and 35 shorter. The hinges should be placed about six inches from the top and the lower one ten inches from the floor. The thickness of the easing should be taken from the total width of the hinge, the balinee, divided by two, gives the distance the hinge*is to set Hotel back from the face side of the door. gl [n all cases the hinge should be wide TORONTO : enough to reach pono two-thirds of In Centre of Shopping the thickness of the doar. Heavy and Business District loors should have three hinges. The a oaMe mortise for the -hinge of the door EUROPEAN SAN i should bevel slightly toward the ®] f(ront, so that the hinge will noi strike the jamb, Setting Joeks for the door ~ Rim You Need Not Tolerate the inconvenience of a cough, when a few doses of 3 | Lee Sold by NR 72272, of 450 a all good Druggists BUOOOnSOU will give you almost instant relief. It heals the rawness of the bronchial tubes; stops the annoying tickling that leads to spams of coughing RS | and soon restores the throat to its normal condition. account of its pleasant taste, children take it readily. Keep a bottle always in the ivi Cobwebs (leaned Away and' the | sashes of the various buildings; the | THE jocks '8 y tuat are shupry screwed on to the face of the door. Mo 5 weeks are 108¢ set into a ye door itself. The rim { in position and marked knob-bar hole, and screw holes, first two are cut and the fast are bored and the lock screwed into place. The escuicheon and knob plates are pui on, and the keeper is tien put to the jamb. Th n se lock is set into the mortise cu n the door just wide and deep enough to admit it, the face plate of the lock being sed flush with the face of the edge of the door. Mark for the knob-bar and keyhole | holes. Set the lock and fasten in; the kngb plates and escutcheon set, {and knobs adjusted. The keeper is | then mortised into its proper place, flush with the edge of the jamb. Roof.--See that the roof is tight. Remember that there are shingles and shingles. - The old standard size 18 inches long--five butts together in several ways to the present method of cutting them to 16 inches long, | six butts of two inches. Much de- ' import&€nde, but in the aggregate of | : . 80 = i nAans in ce > S { 800. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 250, | tremendgus influence. CHFelessness | will not give good service because of pends son the way the shingle is manufactured. A roughly cut shingle its tendency to draw the water up { under the weather line by capillary { attraction, and the "fuza" harbors, Rm ! fa existing in their interior. Slovenly ] surroundings and general run-down Hf ALL SEASONS OF THE YEAR conditions are the ball-marks of in-| dust, making good hold for moss to start growing. The edging should be smooth and. carefully done so that { the butts are slightly narrower than the points so as to allow any debris to pass through the joints apd not accumulate and start a rot, Cattle Ties and Mangers. -- The comfort of the cattle is of great iwm- portance as it affects the milk pro- { duction and their feeding qualities. | Whatever type of manger is used simplicity of construction, conven- fence of feeding and cleaning should be considered. » The swivel. of the chain cow-lie should be'éxamined to see if it works freely. In any case apply a little grease to it, Any weak or broken links may be neatly and effectually secured by using a shit-link or a wire link' made out of two or three turns of fence wire through the links, al- lowing the ends long enough to be crogsed and wound round the strands in opposite direction after the manner of the lineman's splice. The stanchions, links and swivels should be attended to in similar way. ~-Prof, John Evans, QO. A. College; | Guelph: He Ditched the Tripod. * Passchendaele is generally admit- ted to have been about the hottest and . toughest place the Canadian Corps was ever in. Its combination of intense and sustained shell-fire with the rain and cold and mud in which he had to live for twenty-four hours a day will never be forgotten by the soldiers It was during the Third Division's second trip into Passchendaele that | this incident happened. Bill had just incident happened. Bill had just come out to the company as a re- | inforcement to replace the casualties we had suffered the first trip on this front, and I suppose it was on ac- count of the large number of casu- alties that Bill, although a new man, was detailed to carry a Vickers' ma- chine gun tripéd into the line. Just imagine it. To have made the first frip in the'line in a place like Pass- chendaele was bad enough, but in addition to that to have to carry in the heavy tripod, along those miles and miles of duckboards, with mud- holes alongside them deep enough in many instances to sink a horse or a mule,, was not by any means a joke. Poor Bill, who had been told all the usual yarns in Blighty about how five fellows in France used to throw away anything they dign't want at the time as they coula easily find more later on when they did want it, just stuck things for about a mile and a hall of the duckwalk, and then, so fed up and disgusted was he, that without saying a word to anyone he calmly pitched the tripod off his shoulders and dumped it in a shell-hole. The N.C.O. in charge of the crew didn't notice this ang the crew went steadily on their way to the gun position, which was about four miles | further. When they got there and | started to set up the gun, there was no tripod te mount it on, and old Bill's surprise and disgust when he was told t6 go back and bring up the tripod he had ditched was great, Bill enjoys the joke now just as much as his comrades did then, but the shock he received when he rea- |! lized that he had to walk.those four | DAILY BRITISH -- F'WO ODESSA DEATHS The Late Bernard Toomey and Miss Rosy Freemantle. 238A. } *Y passed aw after a long held Friday residence Dieu Hos- an illn about two h "typhoid-pn 1onia, The emains were taken to t home of : its. Storms' Corners, | and the f al was conducted by! i after-| Rev. McTear, Bath, Monday noon Interment : amily plot at Mor Miss Kathleen yn friends last ¢ sday. George Bumett, Brockville, is the guest of | his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Bumett | The fowl supper in the basement of | the Methodist church last Tuesday | ight 'was a great si . The bun-| lant supply of eatables reflected reat credit on the Jadies who far- 1 1 them. ' After th@-supper al entertainment was given." Phe ripts at the door amounted to y dollars Mr, and Mrs. William Calder, Mrs. Clyde and Miss Nellie Clyde motored '0 Belleville last Sunday and were nests of Mr, and Mrs, J. Bird. John fones has returned from spending a ww days in ingston, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Decker Mrs. Henry Asselstine and little grand-daughte Miss Madge Quartz have returned from spending the past wo months with relatives in, Toron- to Mrs. George Ws WO has been 'visiting her daughfer. Mrs George Ettinger. Kingston, for (he past week, has returned. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lee ieft last Wednes iay for their home in Toronto To Fight Income Tax. Toronto, Oct. 1 Taro t had sueceeded in it Dominion Governmer here to pay the civic local judge and otl involved in case- of years ago, and paymen hy » finally peen secured from a n of the reluctant ones, ugh sometimes under protest. 8 1 ounce, however, that the f servants have been collecting af to dispute the judgment of the appelate divi sshon of the supreme court of On- | tario, which said they must pay 'and that, as they ave some thousands of dollars on hand they will proceed at once to the privy <ecune WHIG erhorn called | The Intelligent Way To End Corns Not by paring. That's a risk makeshift, and results are brief. / Net - by harsh, haphazard methods made by non-scientific men. Not by padding. Pads are unsightly, and they simply coddle corns. Expert Methods Blue-jay was invented by a scientific expert. It is made by a house famed for its surgical / dressings. It embodies the up-to-date method, the right method of corn treatment. Apply it and the pain stops instantly. Forget it for two days. Remove it, and the corn is gone for good. One @rn in ten may need a second appli- cation, but that's all. Millions of corns have been ended ip this way, corns are unknown to its users. These are facts known to your own friends and neigh bors. Itis time that you knew them. Try Blue-jay tonight. Blue-jay The Scientific Corn Eader Stops Pain Instantly Ends Corns Completely 28 Cents--At Druggists BAUER & BLACK, LIMITED, Chicago, Toronto, New York Makers of Sterile Surgical Dressings and Allied Products The hog is far superior For, while hie is a sques He soething gives matter to follow ad- Away An old gossip sweeps up mors dirt AAA AAA Pt a i -- -------------- The Way to say "No" Mark Your Ballot with an X after Each ~~ Question under the word "No." 2% Gaeen stress. rr -------------- a» Re -- AH orders] druggists or mai PAGE ELEVEN | ETRE | A Change of TIME Will be made on Sunday, Sept. 28, 1919 For particulars, apply ta x J. P. HANLEY, x CP. & TA, G. 7. RY. Kingston, Opt. fon FNNENNEENEERERER CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAY SYSTEM. IMPORTANT GHANGE OF TIME, Effective October 5th, 1919. , For particulars eunguire nearest Agent, Canadian National Railways. QUEBC AHRPOOL EMPRESS £8 FRANCE 1 pa. MC her Tth 4 PM. NiAember 1st. $150 _up;: 2nd 100 up; 3rd $63.55 MONTREATL--=LIVERPOOL Fh. Cabin Third 90 up $61.3 LASGOW $6 10 $100 up $70.00 $5.00 $3.00 Apply Local Agents HM. MacCallum, Gent. Agt., Toronto. CANADIAN PACIFIC OCEAN SERVICES Tenes ard invigorsten thy who! nervoussyatem, makes new Blood THOMAS COPLEY HE ods Siumfhedinn Telephone 987 = | @AdhE Wanting aaything dene In the earpem.| dency, loss of Energy, Palpitafion the vice that travels in the direction you [tery line. Estimmies given om all i peribox, six of repairs and mew work; siso hard.) for$d Ono will please, six will cure. "Bold by all wood floors of all kinds. eg will receive prompt attention. Y in old Veins, Gures Debility, Mental and Bvain Worry, 1 Heart, Failing Memory. Price $l d in plain . On Peceint of Woon Shop Ries New pomphlotma ied free. THE EPICINE CO ance Act? Are you in favour of the repeal of the Ontario Temper. Are you in favour of the sale of light beer containing not more than two and fifty-one one hundredths per cent. alcohol weight measure through Government agencies and amend ments to The Ontario Temperance Act to permit such sale? -~ v - Are you in favour of the sale of light beer containing not more than two and fifty-one one-hundredtihs per gent, alcohol weight measure in standard hotels in local municipalities that by a majority vote favour such sale and amendments to The Ontaric Temperance Act to permit such sale? Are you in favour of the sale of spirituous and malt liquors through Government agencies and amendments to The Ontario Temperance Act to permit swth sale? Above is an exact reproduction of the Ref- erendum ballot, showing the correct Jay to Vote in order to sustain the Ontario cm- A perance Act as it stands. Everybody should study the four questions and realize Sash Shut ign oly a not be misled by the insidious demand for "light" beer. The beer of the ballot is 118% stronger than the On- tario Temperance Act now allows, and over five times as strong as the limit allowed for beer defined as non-intoxicating in Great Britain and the United States. Must Answer Each Question _ Unless you vote on every question your ballot is spofied. You must mark your answer to each question with an "X" "only. Anything else would spoil your ballot. Unless a majority vote "No" on question 1 the bars will be restored and the sale of all kinds of intoxicants permitted. Unless a majority vote "No" on questions 2,3and 4 the Ontario Temperance Act will become almost worthless. 4 The only SAFE course is to mark your ballot as shown above, Will Mark Battlefields, : : ; commen: {a : { 4 4 ? : miniiraea fl "Nol'=Four Times=""No!" a a ade tour | No repeal No beer sh No beer saloons; No ment whiskey was 80 'a time ago | ; No government ops; No ; No gove 5 J . shops.~--Four X's, each under the word "No." known as our western frost, and his Ontario Referendum Committee visit was mainly in connection with this object. It has been proposed to erect eight memorials commemorat- JOHN MACDONALD : D. A. DUNLAP : ANDREW 8. CRANT Chosirmaos ; Treasurer Vice-Chairman ond Jetretary s (1001 Excelsior Life Bldg; Toronto) - miles back, and then up to the posi- | Note--The package is Red and bears the "Na-Dru.Co trademark. 13 | tion again with the tripod, must have | Massiactared by National Drug and Chemical 'Company of Canadas Limited. | made him feel like murdering some TT OT ERE | one. co A 0 A Stn ct Admiral Sims Not a Canadian. It is necessary to correct one gen- erally prevailing misapprehension | about Admiral Sims. Hé Is not a {| Canadian, and he has never been a British subject, The admiral has wet | the fate that invariably greets an- American who has achieved distin- | guished 'success in arms, for his ar- | rival home started {he usual talk | about his Presidential' availability, | The truth is that the admiral comes | from a well-known Pennsylvania | family, which has been established. in the U. 8. country for nearly two'; hundred years. His father was Alfred | W. Sims, an American civil engineer, | who went as a young man to Port | Hope, Canada, to construet certain | harbor improvements. He promptly | fell in love with a Canadian girl of that town, Adelaide Sowden, and marriéd her. Here the future ad- miral was born, October 15, 1838, and here, as his father's contracting | work kept him in these parts for a | considerable period, he spent the first ten years of hia life.-- Burton J. Hen- drick, in the World's Work. ; By Appointment to HM, King George V. From War to Peace The war restrictions on the shipment of Biscuits having been removed Huntley & Palmers Biscuits are once agai being sent to all parts of the world. They are of the same standard of Unrivalled Quality as in the past, and to prevent disappeintment the public should place their orders at once with their usual suppliers, in ing probally ne Canadian battles | ae 5, a, Corns, my % . en- | HUNTLEY & PALMERS, I,TD. daele, Amiens. and Cambrai. It is Biscuit Manufacturers ! und the Government hus al. / ready selecied wu site for the Ypres READING & LONDON a memorial. + ENGLAND Our idea of a smart salesman is! one who can sell a fountain pen.to g' imap rho rapt write, !

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy