Times & Guide (1909), 2 Sep 1910, p. 8

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

3 SsTORE OPEN EVENINGS To get 3000 new customers in Weston and adjacent villages, I am offering the following inducements: Payments of $1, 2 or 3 per wesek, No. 8 Dundas St., Nest ORDERS DELIVERED DAILY. We Sell the Best and Purest Drags e AaAT THE LOWEST PRICES With our complete stock of TOILET® ARTICLES _ and PERFUMES, we chélleng‘e compefi*ison Millers and Dealers in Grain and Feeds of all Kinds C. & W. Wadsworth CENUINE The Kind You Have Always Bought The Kind Â¥ou Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his perâ€" M%// sonal supervision since its infancy. t [ 4 @ _ Alow no one to deceive youin this. INDUCENMENT Manufacturers of "Three Lion Brand" Graham and Wholeâ€"wheat Flours. H OWE L L l 11, #"C‘cirva _ Allow noone to deceive yourin this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and *Justâ€"asâ€"good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Childrenâ€"Experignce against Experiment. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pareâ€" goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morvhine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its Eguarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishnessy It cures Diarrhcea and Wind Colic. It relieves Tecething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It asgimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children‘s Panaceaâ€"The Mother‘s Friend. 3,000 Men‘s Suits, regular $25, for $20; regâ€" ular $20, for $16.50};, regular $16.50 for 12.50; regular $12.50 for $8.50. â€" â€" = 4498 Ladies‘ Cloth Suits, regular $25, for $20 ; regular $20 for $16.50; regular $16.50 for $12.50. 1 .. â€" = & & a 150 only Ladies Wash Suit or Dress, $8.50 to $12.50, for $5.95. . â€" â€" 7 & % 75 Silk Dresses and Coats only, regular $20 to $35, for $15.00. â€" e > § 400 Boys‘ Suits, special $3.50 to $7.50. 22 Dozen Lawn Waists, regular $1.25 for 75e. What is CAST ORIA WEST ON MILLS . MORRISO N In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TTâ€"MURRAY STREET, NEW yoRK C D R U G G S TS , (ESTABLEIS HED is2s8s. CAST ORIA 318 QUEEN WEST WEST TORONTO ALWAYS Telephone No. 1 since the first of January. â€" Building perâ€" mit figures already "amount to more than twelve million dollars are rolling up at a rate that will place the building record by the first of September â€" with four months to go to the end of the yearâ€"at a point as high as Winnipeg reached in the phenomenal building year of 1906 when nearly thirteen millions > were put into new structures in this city. Manufacturers Will Spend Day. The Canadian Manufacturers‘ Associaâ€" tion will spend a full day in Winnipeg Ha.rvestersg In Demand. |5.4 bushels perrarc;g The Wost will n?ed thousands_of harâ€" ’pe%ac.r.ei_in 1'909' vest hands._ Already, several thous nds 'Oo-oi;;;i?;: Zl\f:;e] have passed throug"fh Winnuipeg on their |fertilizers appiied way to the fields and the call is not anyâ€" Winter wheat, the where near filled. One Manitoba farmer POr Acre for six ye took fortyâ€"five meri:; to gather his crop. [é\ild}(:d;ielrtéllze'ri,{[ Representatives of _ the Saskatchewan "bus. ;.anci Su';)s;r’phn government were gent to Winnipeg to similar land, Cow meet the trains a\m%T engage men for the ?9 tons per acre, g; big middle provineg. These agents went. 27 bus. per acre, a on east of Winnipég and met the harâ€" ‘zil‘;i%:;ilzhil;f;ébl; yesters‘ trains andésucceeded in getting‘SuperphSSphate wa the lion‘s share of 2,500 hands to go Of 320 pounds and t through to Saskatcifxewan. So far, nearly and the Nlt,{‘f‘te of all of the harvesters came from Ontario. ‘Efif)fif,rj},ird :; T}llxe That zExodus. “'t:he other throe Fer Investigation of ?he reports of an exoâ€" figc.ad ;Ir;h:h;l:l;ilpg?f: dus of American sgttlers from Western and five dollars per Canada to. their ol(% homes shows the reâ€" |_ Fodder Crops.â€"] port to haye been a good deal of a joke, [file seed of Hairy V although it was not intended for pure | taiieohagfeecr:)il;zfi humor. â€"Careful ié‘quiry shows that the l testing these erops returning United States settler is about In the average of as numerous as the f:whil:e blackbirds, _A Jm_ents, the Hairy lfew go back, but tbat has always been ,;I&;%};tgzethe,;fizggsi%} the case, and for one that returns, a hunâ€" ’ever, m ahout tg dred come.. Evidence of this lies in the | acre in favor of the fact that a bhousa.n(* homeseekers passed J Distribution of I through St. Paul last week on their way ments to Canada. One real estate firm sent . _As long as the s ewentyâ€"fivye Wisconsin farmers: into the':;(Iilell?eindlfvhfl;;?]l:t:}? ‘ Ochre River country last week, and RAS | coived from ()nt;a:i; another party of like size due to arrive ’expel‘iment tana in September. The exodus report has |any one of the follo been traced to a t1~3k:ansportation company !yax_‘xebles °f. Winte]; with interests in s"puthern, rather than ji,‘:it:}els %igéfte\;’ll}es: northern travel. It has received some Spring Applicationé assistance at the hands of urscrupulous and Common Salt 1 newspaper correspdndents who sell their ’% Winter FEmmer a ;tixff to anybody wl‘:m will pay for it, and ideiugrx):‘fdla?h:;lg furnish the kind that is called for, withâ€" !one rod wide by ty out regard to truth, lterial for numbers ; Conventiong In Winnipeg. by fslxpress and tha Winnipeg has beéome a chief objective [ma,x § ® point for coniventlogs. The Roy‘al Archiâ€" t vALUES OF tectural Institute Wélll convene here Auâ€" TRA I gast 25th, fora thtooâ€"days session. It . ~Fodgfrom PabH goes without saying that this is one Ofi Demonstratic the most important bodies of its kind in | Exhi the world, and the‘;holdin'g of this conâ€" _ Technical educati vention in Wlnnipeé is given special point ject of daily discuss this year by reason::uf the great building ::invooiigdt:lsl 2?:522}10?} Dusines« that has When done inp this city. sepaals Lavo. accom Baptist Church. Public Worship at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sundayâ€"School, 3 o‘clock p.m. J. L. Sloat, Pastor. St. John‘s (Anglican) Church. â€" 11 a.m. Mattins and Sermon. 9.45 a.m. Sunday School. 7 p.m. Evensong and Sermon. Celebration of Holy Communion, first Sunday of the month at 11 a.m. third Sunday at 8 a.m. On Sunday next, services held at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m; Bchool at 3 p.m. Public Worship at 11 a.m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Classes at 2.45 p.m. Rev. B. R. Strangways B.A., B.D., Pastor. Public service at 11 a.m and 7 p.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Classes at 3 p.m. St. John‘s (Catholic) Church. On Sunday next. Mass will be celeâ€" brated at 10.30 a.m. Priest in charge Rev. Father Player, 0.8.B. WINNIPEG, Man, Aug. 22, 1910.â€" | Harvesting has beguh in the wheatfie‘ds | of the West. Demapds made for harvesti hands and reports based upon personal | inspection of the erpp by experts, show | that there is to be & fair cropâ€"as much | as 100,000,000 bughels of wheat. â€" The | quality will be good and the opening price \ of the season waa fixed last week when‘ the first wheat of 1910 was sold at F‘orl;i William for $1.01 a bushel. ' Divine service next Sunday at 11 o‘clock a.m. Methodist Church, Mount Dennis Our Winnipeg Letter. Rev. T. Beverly Smith, Rector. CHURCH SERVICES. J. Hughesâ€"Jones, M.A., Rector Presbyterian Church. Methodist Church. Rev. A. BR MacGillivray, Pastor. St. Philip‘s. will be Sunday _ Lads from Public Schools to Give i Demonstrations at National ‘ Exhi‘pition. ,‘ * Technical education has become a subâ€" ject of daily discussion in the press and among all educational bodies. That the advocates of such training in the public schools have accomplished something is shown by the yearly demonstration by little lads at the Canadian National Exâ€" hibition. The boys who give these deâ€" monstrations are ordinary youngsters chosen from the various schools of Toâ€" ronto and yet the work they turn out is that of expert cabinet makers. The aim of technical education is not of course to turn every boy into a trained carpenter or cabinet maker but co render him reâ€" sourceful and useful in any emergency. The work the Toronto school boys do is one of the innumerable minor features of the Canadian National Exhibition, an event of infinite variety and inexhaustâ€" able interest. j ‘Tertbilizers applied in the Autumn to ‘ Winter wheat, the ayverage yields of grain ‘peracre for six years are as follows:â€" | Mixed Fertilizers, 24.9 bus.; Nitrate of Soda. 24.1 bus.; Muriate of Potash, 23 1 bus.; ard Superphosphate, 22.6 bus. On ‘similar land, Cow Manure, at the rate of 20 tons per acre, gave an average yield of 27 bus. per acre, and the land which reâ€" | ceived neither fertbilizers nor Manure gave an average of 20 bus. per acre. _ The Superphosphate was applied at the rate of 320 pounds and the Muriate of Potash and the Nitrate of Soda each 160 pounds per acre. The mixed Fertilizer consisted |of oneâ€"third of the quantity of each of the other three Fertilizers here mentionâ€" ‘ed.. The usual cost of the Fertilizers, as used in this experiment, is between four and five dollars per acre. _ Fodder Crops.â€"In each of seven years, the seed of Hairy Vetches and of Winter Ryo has been distributed throughout Onâ€" }tario for Coâ€"operative experiments in testing these erops for fodder purposes. In the average of seven years‘ experiâ€" ments, the Hairy Vetches produced slightly the largest yield of green Fodder per acre. The difference in 1910, howâ€" ever, was about twoâ€"thirds of a ton per acre in favor of the Winter Rye. Distribution of Material for Experiâ€" ments in 1910. As long as the supply lasts, material will be distributed free of charge in the order in which the applications are re: coived from Ontario farmers wishing to experiment and to report the results of any one of the following tests:â€"1, three varieties of Winter Wheat; 2, two varâ€" ieties of Winter Rye; 3, five Fertilizers with Winter Wheat; 4, Autumn and Spring Applications of Nitrate of Soda and Common Salt with Winter Wheat; 5, Winter Emmer and Winter Barley; 6, Hairy Vetches and Winter Rye as Fodâ€" ‘ der Crops. _ The size of each plot is to be" one rod wide by two rods long. Maâ€" | terial for numbers 3 and 4 will be sent by express and that for the others by‘ mail . I Winter Rye.â€"Three varieties of win }ter rye were distributed in the Autumn of 1909.. The results show that the |Mammoth white variety came at the head | of the list in yield per acre in sixbyâ€"six !per cent. of the experiments. The Washington came second, slightly surpasâ€" | sing the Ccmmon variety. In the experiâ€" \ ments throughout Ontario, the Mammoth white surpassed the Common rye by an average of 5 bushels per acre in 1907, 5.4 bushels per acre in 1908, and 6 bushe s per acre in 1909. | . Fertilizers with Winter Weat.â€"In the ;C‘o-operative experiments with different Winter Wheat.â€"-Four varieties of winâ€" ter wheat were disty‘ibuted last Autumn to those farmers who wished to test some of the leading varieties on their own farms. The average yields per acre of straw and of grain are as follows. Ameriâ€" can Wonder, 2.3 tons. 31.0 bus. ; Tasâ€" mania Red, 2.4 tons, 28.3 bus. ; Imperial Amber, 2.4 tons, 26.4 bus ; Crimean Red, 2.3 tons, 26.4 bus. Four hundred and thirtyâ€"eight farmers throughout Ontario, conducted experiâ€" ments with Autumn sown crops during the past year. Keports have been reâ€" ceived from thirtyâ€"five of the counties of the Province. The experiments deserve much credit for the good work which they have done, not only for themselves but for the farmers generally. ‘Average results of the carefully conducted Co operative experiments with Autumn sown crops are here. presented in a very concise form . & The American Wonder resembles very closely the Dawson‘s Golden Chaff, both in appearance of the growing crop and in the quality and the appearance of the grain. The Tasmania Red is a bearded, red chaffed, red grained wheat. The straw is somewhat weak but the grain is of excellent milling quality. The Imperial Amber is a bearded, red chaffed, red grained wheat of fair strength of straw and of good average quality for bread production. The Crimean Red is a bearded, white chaffed, red grained wheat, rather weak in the straw but excellent for bread production. when they pass this way en route for Vanâ€" couver, Septemb}r 13. A big reception has been planned for this occasion, and the visitors will §>e given a banquet by the city, will be faken on a sightâ€"seeing tour by the \’Viufi)ipeg Development and Industrial Bureay, and will be joined by the local manufaéturers, more than two hundred firms hilving been invited to take part in the ré_ception to their eastern brethren. RESULTS OF GOâ€"OPERATIVE EX PERIMENTS| WITH aUTUMN SOWN CROPS. VALUES OF TECHNICAL TRAINING. 1476â€"1478 Dundas St., WEST TORONTO. w3 c & dE ECS OCCAAAAAIAEIIEE Be well; be strong. You cannotif your boweE are constipated. The best la.xafl\_rg is Ayer‘s Pills, all vegetable. Ask your doctor if he agrees with us. Do ashe says. We have had nearly seventy yéa.rs’of experience with Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral. That makes us have great conâ€" fidence in it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, weak throats, and weak lungs. Ask your bwn doctor what experience he has had with it. He knows. He can advise yo_ wisely. Keep in clo;ey"foucgl ggi‘tvh your family physician. No alcohol in this cough medicine: J C AgerCo.. Lowell Mass, We have a number of secondâ€"hand Automobiles that have been taken in exchange for new style cars, and which are guaranteed to be in firstâ€"class condition, having been thoroughly overhaaled by skilled ( “""‘r‘/ M‘mec_!:la.nics. T\hese * M ___.â€"~ en mss machines answer ‘every «S‘ a N _ se ,__ _ possible requirement, of _ _ M _,_ country people, and car * x be _ bought at a decided R cvece y bargain. _ If ‘interested it «* _R _ | write at once for fuller mmz ” _ particulars, . HYSLOP AUTOMOBILES High Class and Artistic Monumental Work. arni o ditp en Sm ie ~G. WARDELL, ears with â€"Cousghse _ We can also make you£ an attractive proposition . on the new Cadillac «Thirty " that represents * the best value ever offered in automobiles. Send for illustrated booklet. | HYSLOP BROS., Automobiles and Bicycles TORONTO yae e Ahamaus Limited

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy