Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 19 Jul 1900, p. 4

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Subscribe for Watchman-Wade 2'3: greatest thing in the world for Piles and 31: imbiness « f the skin, heals every kind of sore frcm c m-nm 09mph: to the most malignant u‘cer. ULD Sons, 541! Rheum, Enema. Knew-0:11;, waped Hands. Scalsls and Bums. 2 5 cents per box. 2') nd 50 Trip Ticket: for families my be h A at red .xc ~d taxi at the 0.fi.:e or the Company, or W. b. Hs'ni-mn. Bo ‘cayszenn, D. Gau 1*, Feoelou Falls, 0r Undsay Agent, GEO. WILDbR, (5.126. Town Txcsen Amut, Exxes U taco. B)bcngeoa, Stat-{eon Poi-1t. Lindsay, L nisav, Sturgeon Pm)!- Bobca:geon, train from Turouw. Perrin’s All-Healing Ointment Monday! Yggnesday and Friday B »b:aygeou, depart 7.30 a. m. I‘hemonz, “ 9.45 “ Backhorn, “ 11.45 " Hurleigh. arrive 12.45 p.m. Burleizh. deoart 2.00 " Bu :khom, depart 3 30 “ Ubemwmg...... ‘ B3?) 3) geon, arrive 6. w p. m. for Toronto. PMS! FILES! FILES! PERRIN’ C ‘boc mk, den. 6.15 a.m. Arrive 7.45 pm. I Rosedale. “ .15 “ “ (3‘45 " Fenelon FANS, “ 8 45 “ “ 6 00 “ Sturgeon Point, “ 9.30 " “ 4 00 ‘= Lindsay. arrive at 10.30 “ Depart 3 30 " “me allowed at Femlon Falls for hreak’ast and te‘L _ annection at Fenelon Falls with 7.5.3 a..m. than THE“. flux». -~ ‘ ’3.: «figâ€"2..“â€" “H " -«n Trent MYalley Ravigation CO. (LIMITED) Kent-st. , Me xls are serve} on tha Entu ton and 02°‘n . :urgeon P)int 7“ 12.30 p.111. “ 7.40 “ obcajgeon, arrive 1.15 .“ “ 8.45 “ On Sstu'dws hm: wlll wait arrival of evening ‘Ve’ll tell you in five minutes whethu you need glasses or not. Our careful examination will enable us to fit youv eves perfectly. MGRGAN BROS. SAVE YBUH EYES ESTURION i KAVVARTHA LAKES mum) (chewed and positively cured. OGEMAH MANITAQ SAILIN GS OF BOATS Druggists and Opticians, The timely use of glasses has saved' the sight of many eyes. The student or business man often ignores the pains which tell of th: need of glasses. Drug Store, Lindsay “ 11.45 " Thy» rt. 10.3") ive 1245 9.711. \rnve 11.3) art 2.00 " Depart 2.00 an 3 30 “ Depart 3.30 . . z ............. Depjtrt 5 ‘3') (”flag VIV'U‘ a.m. Atz-ix e7 IS U 1‘ 45 pm. 6 45 " 6 00 u ti and S'aturdav Depgrt 7 30 am. 6‘ Depart 2.00 p. :11. Depart 3.30 “ Depart 5 '3!) “ Atrive 7.3.) “ Tue=c§ay, Trauma-g; l5 Lindsay tn rer how much it blooms. To grow mod seed the strength of the plant should be directed to seed growing only. It should not be ailowed to form seeds when fine blossoms am demand ed 0: it. ‘ The Punny Bed. Keep all faded blossoms picked off. Do not allow a seed to form if you can prevent it. advises an exchange. If you should have an especially fine 9mm from which you are anxious to \‘llYe seed, after deciding how many pods you will let ripen. keep all buds picked on' until the seed is ripe enough to gather, after which it will not mat- plants in the garden, the season will govern the prudent person, says the New York Tribune. sand requires to be well moistened all 114* time. \‘llen plants four inches high have been grown. they may be placed in rich soil. Although the middle of May is the» usual time for setting out the Another way to hasten the sprouting of seeds is to make a slight opening in the hind shell. If the first incision does not in a few weeks hasten their 'ZUV'GIODBICDL a further opening should be carefully given. These seeds should be sown in shal- UW boxes and sunk in two or three i1 ( 1: es of sand. While they are sprout- I; the box containing them should be lunt in a spot where the tempeiature will not fall below 70 degrees. The Before they are planted the seeds should be soaked for from 12 to 24 hours and should be kept in warm wa- ter during that time. Summer Foliage Plants. Those who wish to have the beauti- ful foliage of the canna as decoration for their gardens during the coming season should have the seeds sown at once. STANDARD CRIMSON BOSE. pleasing forms. The cut from Mee Liam’s shows its efiectiveness out 0:. doors also when trained to a single stem and allowed to make a head. This form resembles the Kilmarnock willow, but is less formal and has the charm- ing addition of brilliant flowers. Training the Rambler Rose. The Crimson Rambler rose grown in pots was the newest and most notice- able feature of the Easter flower trade of 1900. It makes an exceedingly hund- SOIlle plant, and its strong, vigorous growth is trained into a. variety of. of four varietiesâ€"Montmorency, Dou- ble Natte. Ostheim and Brusseler Brauneâ€"that have done best in this and past years. XVe shall have 021,; per Cent. or $5.10 per tree, or $663 per acre. supposing the trees planted 18 by 18 feet apart. Divide this three or four times. and the profits are yet enor- mous.” their use. “Toe profits in growing sour cherrie are immense. In a mixed oreliaid, where the majority of the sorts have moved themselt'es worthless, the half age of cLemies has yet been verv pzof- itable. A little over $50 wo th of elie" ries were sold from it this season. Sup- pose we take an average for this crop “In the east, more particularly in New York, canning factories purchase considerable quantities of sour cher- ries. With the impulse fruit growing is now having in Utah it is probable that. several cannerics will be started in the state soon. In this case, sour cherries can be counted upon as an izlmortant factor in the fruit supply. Gunners xx ould only need the assurance of an aczeage lz‘ 1ge enough to sup )1) “I do not urge the planting of large orchards of sour cheeries, for I know that the local market would soon be overstocked. But I believe that more money can be made by small land- owners With sour cherries at the presâ€" ent time than with any other crop of which I know. Near cities or where facilities offer for shipping to large markets a small orchard of sour cher- ries could hardly fall to be profitable. A market for the fruit would be cer- tain. “Immense Profit and a. Certain Mar- ket” II the Present Talk. “All fruit that grows on the station ground,” says Professor Hedrich of Utah, “escaping the hands of students, farxnhands, poachers and others is sold. The cherries from 60 trees, occu- pying about one-tenth of the whole or- chard. sell for more than the product of twice the number of trees of any other fruit. We do not have to seek a market; purchasers come and leave or- ders long before the cherries are ripe. ('alls were made for ten times as many cherries as we sold this season. The price obtained was $1 for 18 pounds. This might well have been raised, for the supply about Logan did not nearly reach the demand. GROWING SOUR CHERRlES. in sufficient quantities for Imitation Cheese. In 1899 the imports of Imitation cheese into Great Britain from the United States and Holland, the only countries where it is made. were 5,687 hundredweight, which was less than one-half the amount imported in 1897. Popular sentiment has been so strongly against the article on both sides of the water that it was expected the trade would gradually die out. Recent high prices for pure cheese have. however, induced a few concerns in Great Brit- ain to handle the imitation stuff. and they have inquired for Supplies both in i Canada and the United States. To the credit of Canada it may be said that ‘ the law positively prohibits the manu- z facture or sale of the ai-‘title in any of l the provinces of the Dominion. -â€"F arm, Field and Fireside. Filled Cheese. The question of filled cheese has again come to our attention through recent prosecutions in England for sell- ing these goods contrary to law. Sev- eral fines have already been imposed upon offenders, and there seems to be a determined effort upon the-part of the otficers of the law to enforce strict ad- herence to the provisions of the act which was framed to regulate the sale of imitation cheese. The law provides that retailers shall advise their custom- ers of the character of the article sold, and they shall also wrap each piece of cheese when delivered to a purchase: with a paper on which is printed dis- tinctly the words “Margarine Cheese." Cult Feeding. “I see a great many of your readers have trouble raising calves on separa- tor milk,” says a correspondent of Board’s Dairyman. “I have used a separator for three years and never had any trouble. I will give my plans of feeding them. If it will be a benefit to others, you may publish it. I feed the calf the first few days on the milk of its dam. This is set in pans or crocks for 12 hours, and then the cream is taken off. and the milk is warmed to 90 degrees and given to the calf. When the calf is 2 weeks old, it will eat bran and a little cornmeal. After this it is given separator milk until it is 6 months old. and then it is turned out on grass. I raise nothing but the fall and early winter calves, so I have the milk in the spring and summer for the pigs.” usually be found a considerable varia- tion between her best and her poorest pro<.uction, due probably to her phys- ical condition and perhaps to circum- stances not under the control of her o\"L!e1‘. A fright or excitement of any kind or any trouble with the digestive organs may reduce the amount of mill: given or the amount of butter fat in it, more usually the latter, but often both. The only true test, then. is a record made for a week or longer at each milking. This record will usually in its average show very nearly the nor- mal production unless she is for the entire time suffering from disease or some other cause. Even the results or testing an entire herd are not absolute- ly conclusive from one or two tests. While it would perhaps equalize mat- ters some by eliminating difficulties that might occur to one cow. there may be conditions that would affect the en- tire herd. The presence and worrying of one cow in heat, a fright from a strange dog or other animal. a thunder shower or a cold wind may affect all of them unfavorably, and as a usual re- sult the best cows will be the most dis- turbed. because they are the ones of the most nervous temperament. We do not want cow, horse or man that is not nervousâ€"not in the sense of weak nerves, but rather of strong nerves, that will enable them to perform ex- traordinary feats under strong excite- ment. The powers of a wooden man or a wooden animal are limited. but a live one can be expected to vary in ability as the conditions that surround it are varied. In speaking of the treatment of milk cows The American Cultivator says that when the milk of one cow is tested every time she is milked there will ONE WAY OF MILKING. ple milk only once a day, right after breakfast. It the cow is very gentle, they drop on one knee to milk, but nine cases out of ten that I have observed take the position shown in the picture. It is impossible to attach too much importance to methods of milking. The treatment given highly bred cows af- fects both the quantity and quality of milk. A correspondent of Hoard’s Dairyman submits the accompanying illustration of one way of milking, which he photographed from life. He states that many of the southern peo- gTHE BEST - cows ARE THE 3 0 MOST AFFECTED BY 0 o TREATMENT. 3 O 00006o¢000606606000¢ooo¢o¢ EWAYS 0F MILKIEG 900060906060690cocoeoooong THE WATCHMANâ€"WAHDER: LINDSM’. 0N"! Fertiliser Values. According to the director of the New Jersey experiment station. it has been estimated that if nitrate of soda is rat- ed at 100. blood and cottonseed meal would be about 70. dried and ground fish and boot meal 65. bone and tank- uge 65. while leather, ground horn and wool waste range from as low as 2 to as high as 30'. From these figures it is to be seen that nitrate of soda in the most eflective form or nitrogen. The late varieties like Algiers may be sown; also a succession of Erfurt. and again in the beginning of July selected Erfnrt and Eclipse varieties ranking among the best of the early kinds, says John Hobson in American Gardening. Cauliflower. Although the cauliflower must have plenty of light. yet it will he an ad- vantage if planted where shielded from the midday sun, such as on the north side of some tall growing crops like corn. lima beans. etc. a wide hoard nailed across, as shown. This holds the trough firmly to the ground and also separates the cattle while drinking. The same plan can be used with any shape of trough. Securing a Watering Trough. Many pastures and farmyard water- ing troughs are half hogsheads set upon the ground. They are in constant dan- ger of being upset by the cattle. which also fight each ‘1 other mm 3' from A l the water. A In accordance with this theory spray- lngs were made July 11 and 12. (the last for summer apples) July 24 and 25; (winter apples) Aug. 13 and 14 and first week in September. The cut shows Duchess of Oldenburg, 98.2 per cent sound apples. with the few wormy ones in the small pile. It is claimed by entomologists that larvae of codling moths come in broods. one brood in the east and from two to three in the west in a season. If this is the case, it is hard to account for the behavior of the broods in this state. About the 20th of July the first apple worms made their appearance under the bands on the trees. and from this time on worms were found daily. I do not believe spraying can be made with any reference to the times the broods come out. The apples must be kept well covered with the poison all the summer. The orchard received the first appli- cation of the arsenic solution June f‘. just after the blossoms had all fallen and the calyx tubes had begun to close. Spraying at this time leaves a dose of poison in the calyx tubes, there to await the coming of the apple worms. the majority of which find their way into the apples from this point. On June 21 and 22 the orchard was spray- ed the second time as the finding of moths and eggs indicated that worms might soon be expected. The foregoing directions must be very carefully followed or the foliage will be seriously burned by the arsenic. To prepare for spraying mix the ar- senic with the lime while the latter is being slneI-zed witl .a little of the Wa- ter. When the lime and arsenic are reduced to the consistency of cream. add the remaining vater and boil the whole for an hour. Put this in 200 gallons of water, and the spray is ready for use. This formula has been used here with very marked success: \Vhite ar- senic. one pound: unslacked lime, two pounds; water, three gallons. nucnnss or OLDEXBURG 98.2 rm cmrr SOUND. plums are sometimes seriously dam- aged by these pests. The following by the hortleulturist or the state station is therefore of especial interest: This year (1899) our success in combating the tiny foe of the apple grower has been almost complete. There was much to indicate that there ought to be at least four sprayings for summer and six for winter apples. White arsenic was found to be more efiective than paris green. even though the latter was pure. The writer is well convinced that white arsenic is a much better poison for codling‘ moth than pal-is green. even when the latter is unadul- termed. WATERING TRO UG Ii. Interesting Experience In SprayinS With White Arsenic. It is doubtful whether the codling moth is more destructive in any other apple growing region than in Utah. The high altitude and dry climate seem to furnish ideal conditions for this in- sect. Not only are apples and pears at- tacked, as elsewhere, but peaches and THE CODLING MOTH. plan to obviate. in part. at least. both 01’ thso evils is shown in the cut from The Farm Jour- nal. Two posts are driven be- side the tub and - .. .mmmauun snout plans, see or unite R. Campbell. or J. W. Garvin - "D‘ â€"v- WV. Ulua‘ Company in Csnads. has in the year 1899 mtstripped all her rivals in the Canadian field 11 writing the largest amount of new business. At the c'ose of the first six months, ending June 30 h. we are infouned our new business written. ptemium and interest receipts, exceeds that of any hkc period in any other year in the hisi'fly 0! the Company. For information about plans, see 0: write Company in We assum ' all risks as to flu and work- manship on orders. entrusted to us, and are sure. can please you in variety of goods to select from. p: ices and correct; fit and ‘..n..l-n‘.\_- I. 2.. workmanship. Our tailor!!! g department has been rushed all marine. and has been turning out- good work. Just now we show extra values in Tweed Suit-n to order at $12, $13 and $14; aiso the late~b ht-yles in Blac: and Fancy \Vorsted Suitings and Puntings. REDPATH S GRANULATED and YEL- LOW SUGARS just received. Also full stocks of GEM JARS in all sizes for pre- serving season. Oalnvood, Having just received a carload of Binder Twines we are 953352 {9 MANILA, running 650 and 700 feet to the pound ; Bram-0‘0 RE? 3 BRAND, RED CAP, SISAL, and a number of the best brands In. 315'sz a: Close Prices. Buying in carload lots we secure lowest P3539 :' STOCKS KEPT ON mum DURING HARVEST SEASON. . x, There are a great number of New Twines on the market {.15 563.5221}: and see sample and compare the different kinds in length to the 9033“ our prices before buying. If you need anything in our line send for our 1900 Illustrated CataIOgue, (sen: ire; will find it very much to you: interest to do so. THE NOXON C0., L’td., lngersoll, 0m We also manufacture the best and most complete line of Cultiva: and Seeding Implements on Earth, comprising Soring Tooth Cuki ors, (fitted with grain and grass sowing attachments if desired.) Spnkig Spike Tooth Harrows. Disc Harrows. Grain Drills, <al1kinds,iit Rakes, (friction and ratchet dump,) etc., etc. Ask out Agent to show won the New Patented Ball Bearing Knife Clip. Supplied only when specially ordered. THE Alovvers GENERAL AGENT: Oxford Clipper, With R0136: and Ball Bcarings. snared Ledger Piates if desired. FSONT AND REAR CUT 192%6/67/ 72mm. 11/. W. LOGARE Another Carload ..Tailoring.. ALL SIZES w. w. LOGAN “1998!: _not the oldest H. cannon HE Confection: and Fruit Du“ . am done. West ofGangh’ta “‘4" New parlors. Everything first Jill While anxious to meet the Wishfing 1 customers ineve res eon, we , . from 7 8.111. till 8 gm. :good ”Hm-"S“ in, and from this time. the STORE CLOSE PROMPTLY at s dolor” qight except; Saturday. This Wm.“ little time to get acquainted “in family and give ’the clerks a China” some fresh air. . g Shorter terms of credit no“ 15 makes prices closer all round. sen" 3853?; {EHEéIszhE competw‘ goods salesman. We have been very busy du ring Mi.“ June and to give the promptest 8m to our many friends have sm‘ 1 Chin: in the market, and the according to (Illality . 11ng best discounts, and ca gm 3 My 170 Kent-: v,» . "“le Brass Bax“. Roller Bea-tines, Seventh Roller for Eb All the latest and beatimm Staff Increased Earlier Closing 5 F1. 5% FT. Axngm ....AT.... JULY I Prices term 5. and â€"100 B â€"Big d1 â€"IOO C: â€"Men s â€"Men’s â€"-Men’s â€"-36 in‘ â€"Tabie whlc‘ -40 M Mill Mill Lind to t] a lifi witt bus noi: goix line to 1 new now‘ of g of u qui‘

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