West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Jul 1915, p. 3

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@, _ Cone« ‘cason or mething existing p m ‘al side han the m M h nave deâ€" addi= ely tages pel eneral and WAs iling itionm ich 18 which operâ€" ought it of. lems; monâ€" what TIM= ation lliong have armâ€" and be he of preâ€" the be ild lig= at» no psis war fact late en T®, M n3 at preâ€" ve is IN= 4 Inâ€" re 45 As the price of eggs drops during the warm summer weather, and it becomes a question whether much profit may be derived from their sale in the regular way, the wise poultry grower will consider how he may keep up the price for what he sells, or preâ€" serve his stock as it accumulates, in such a way that he will obtain a much larger price and considerably more than pay him for the trouble to which he has to bring about this reâ€" sult. In the first place any eggs required for sale as food products, and not for breeding purposes, should be inferâ€" tile. Fertile eggs become unfit for human food almost as quickly as milk when subjected to the same temperaâ€" ture, and when we consider how carefully our health departments safeguard the sale of this product, it is some wonder that some method is not devised to absolutely prevent the marketing during the hot months of eggs less likely to spoil than is now in practice. It is a mistaken idea that eggs have to be put into an inâ€" eubator or under a hen to start to hatch. The fact is that the germs begin to grow just as soon as it is subjected to a temperature of 90 or above. Whether this be behind the kitchen stove, or on a hot country road en route to market, on a platâ€" form at the depot awaiting shipment, in the country store waiting for the usual twenty or thirty cases before sending out, in the pantry waiting unâ€" til the case is filled, or when you have a chance to go to town, or in the house under broody hens, when they are not gathered frequently. Why produce such a perishable artiâ€" cle at all when the remedy is so simâ€" ple, just by "Swatting the Rooster," or removing him from the pens from which the eggs to sell come. An inâ€" fertile egg will keep so much better than a fertile one that there is hardly any comparison between them. Inâ€" fertile eggs could be placed in an inâ€" eubator for twentyâ€"one days,â€"the hatching time,â€"and used for cooking purposes, and it is doubtful if they would be found in the least objectionâ€" able. But what of the infertile egg that has not matured a chick? The stench from it is terrible! This is the relative condition of the fertile and infertile egg when subjected to heating under the same cireumstances and gives some idea of the value of taking precautions to: have only inâ€" fertile eggs produced at this time of year. o ie By guaranteeing that all eggs are infertile, that they can be depended upon to keep as long as possible, and supplying them in attractive containâ€" ers, it is possible to obtain always several cents better than the market price for them. If the price drops too low, it will pay anyone who will do so to use one of the many ways that can be used for preserving the eggs until later in the year, when eggs are scarce and good prices prevail for wel‘â€"kept eggs. o Eggs to be stored, in the first place should therefore be from hens having no males running with them, because an infertile egg keeps longer, even without the use of the preservative, than a fertile egg; second, perfectly fresh, for not 9nly will they keep betâ€" ter, but if an egg that has begun to decay is placed in the same vessel with fresh ones, it is likely to affect all the surrounding eggs; and, third, MAKING THE moST or EGGS LAID AT THis SEASON. As wWHEN IN DOUBT Serve Ice Cream CITY DAIRY Service makes this possible. We have developed a method of shipping Ice Cream put up in attractive boxes â€" Enough in a box to serve five or six persons. We ship thousands of these boxes to discriminating shop keepers every where. You get it in the original package Just as it is put up in our sanitary Dairy. We perfectly clean, for filth of any kind adhering to the shell will taint the °ggs. In placing ty o a e eggs in the preserâ€" vative be careful to see that none of the eggs get cracked. Keep them in a moderately cool room where the temperature may be kept fairly conâ€" ability of the user to obtain the ingreâ€" dients in his own locality. Of the many methods for use on a small scale none has proved more successâ€" ful than waterâ€"glass (sodium silicate). This is a very cheap product, and can usually be secured at not to exceed fifty cents a gallon, and one gallon will make enough solution to preserve fifty dozen eggs, so that the cost of material would not exceed more than one cent a dozen. Pure water that has been boiled and then cooled should be used. To each fifteen Or twenty quarts of water one quart" of waterâ€"glass should be used. The soluâ€" tion should be prepared, placed in the jar or other vessel, and the fresh eggs added from time to time until the jar is filled, but be sure that there are two inches of solution always coverâ€" ing the eggs. The eggs should not be washed before packing, for washing injures the keeping quality, probably by dissolving the mucilaginous coatâ€" ing. be made as follows: Thirty gallons of water, 10 pounds of salt, oneâ€"half bushel of finely slacked lime. After mixing thoroughly allow the solution to stand two or three days and then remove the clear liquid by dipping or by means of a siphon. Place the liâ€" quid in a tub or other suitable recepâ€" tacle and place the eggs therein, or the eggs may be placed in the vessel first and the limewater placed over them. Have at least two inches of liquid covering the top of the eggs. Limed eggs can be discerned by the roughness of the shell. Before boilâ€" ing eggs that have been preserved in the foregoing ways they should be punctured with a needle, otherwise they will be apt to crack as soon as placed in hot water, owing to the pores being closed and no outlet alâ€" lowed for the air in the egg. Eggs can be preserved for several months in dry salt. Bran can also be used with fair results, but neither of these methods is as satisfactory as the first two mentioned. There must always be at least two inches coverâ€" ing the eggs with these two methods also. Cold storage is undoubtedly the best and most practical method of preservâ€" ing eggs in large quantities in a comâ€" mercial way. As the processes byâ€" which a low femperature can be mainâ€" tained for an indefinite period have become more and more improved the greater has been the number of eggs stored, until the cold storage business has reached such proportions that it has a considerable influence on the price of eggs, tending to lower it in winter and raise it in summer. _ The cold storage plant charged two cents a dozen for the period, which made a total of $12.00 for storâ€" age. To this is to be added $6.20 exâ€" pressage and the commission man‘s charge of $12.00, making a total of expenditures of $30.20 and leaving $47.80 clear and above what the cost of â€" storage and other expenses ounted to. There is no question that storage in this way properly handled is very profitable. od. These eggs were shipped in when they were selling for table use at 17 cents per dozen. This would make the total $102.00. These same eggs were sold in December at an average of thirty cents a dozen, which made a total of $180.00, or a difference of $78.00 in favor of cold storage. A record of twenty crates of eggs stored last season in Buffalo will give some idea of the profit in this methâ€" There are several very good ways preserving eggs, and one of them n be selected that will suit the A good limewater preservative may TORONTO. A dry clean cellar is a suitable the Sign. Look BABY‘S GREAT DANGER DURING HOT WEATHER So much is written with regard to the profits from poultry that one would naturally expect to see more frequently some mention of the very valuable product that can be made very great use of, and which we see mentioned but very seldom. The valâ€" ue of the fertilizer that is available seems to be almost entirely lost sight of. More little ones die during the hot weather than at any other time of the year. Diarrhoea., dysentry, cholera infantum and stomach troubles come cine is not at hand to give prom: the short delay too !req‘;entry m:tflmy that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby‘s Own Tablets should always be kept in homes where there are young children. â€" An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if the trouble comes suddenly the prompt use of the Tabâ€" lets will cure the baby. ‘The Tablets are sold. by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. ‘Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, It has been asserted by good auâ€" thority that comparing its value with the cost of commercial fertilizers, it is quite safe to say that it can be credited with at least oneâ€"fourth the total amount of the feed bill, and esâ€" pecially when one has the land to use it to the best advantage for small fruit and vegetables or flowers. The use of this fertilizer in tests has shown phenomenal results in some cases, and it therefore seems as though due credit has not been given for the value of this very valuable byâ€" product. On our own plant, where the dropâ€" ping boards are cleaned every day, we save the fertilizer until such time as we have opportunity to make good use of it. Before using it is best to mix it thoroughly with the soil and alâ€" low rain and the weather to have its effect upon them. Fresh hen manure used without being treated in this way would be too strong, and burn up the vegetation it comes in contact with. It is an excellent idea to keep piles of this readyâ€"mixed with garden soil so that when the best of soil is wanted it will be available for immeâ€" diate use. Ont. (Grapeâ€"vines can very often be set between the yards to very good adâ€" vantage, and the natural fertilizing they get produce the best of fruit. Cultivation will be found beneficial of course, but the poultry can be countâ€" ed on to help in keeping off some of the undesirable bugs and insects that hold back the plants. Rose beds, Canâ€" na plots, and all kinds of vegetable produce can be helped very materially by the application of seasoned hen manure mixed with a little garden soil. During the summer season small applications can be made from time to time, and where only a few birds are kept, make almost immeâ€" diate use of the fertilizer procurable. During seasons when it cannot be used almost as produced, it may be saved and an accumulation kept for the next season‘s use to greatly inâ€" crease the results and avoid the neâ€" cessity for supplying other fertilizaâ€" tion that would be needed to bring firstâ€"class crops. Naturally poultry at least of maâ€" tured size and a garden do not work on the same ground, but it is a simâ€" ple matter to fence the poultry and much of the waste from the garden can go to furnish some green for the birds. If it is convenient to move the poultry yards and alternate between poultry runs and garden it will be found an especialliy fine arrangement for the yards will not have a tendenâ€" cy, as they frequently do, of becomâ€" ing fouled and soured, and they will grow the best of crops every other year. HOW POULTRY HELPS TO IMâ€" PROVE THE GARDEN. Tender broilers, fresh eggs, fruit, vegetables and roses are luxuries not enjoyed by all, but the very best of all of these may be had if care is exâ€" ercised in utilizing all the elements procurable where a combination of hens and a garden is carried out. Our best physicians of the present day seek to cure patients by the use of food and right living, rather than heavy drugs, and this is the true method, for only from food can the body be rebuilt. f Many people, after living on poorly selected or badly cooked food for a long time, and when their ailments beâ€" come chronic, expect the doctor, with some mragic potency, to instantly reâ€" build .them. 7 â€"This is not possible. The only true method is to run as quickly as can be, from poor food to good. A young lady says: "About a year ago when my appeâ€" tite failed completely and I began to have sinking spells similar to faintâ€" ing, I took all manner of tonic and stimulants, but they were of no efâ€" fect. 1 had been brought to quit drinking coffee and taking Postum in its place and gradually began to get a little better. _ "I was variously treated for my nerves, stomach, lungs, etc., but none of the treatments gave me relief. "Someone suggested that if I found Postum so beneficial I had better use Grapeâ€"Nuts food, as they were both the children of one brain. I comâ€" menced on Grapeâ€"Nuts food for breakfast, having Postum with it. I found the food so dainty, delicious, and appetizing that I always looked forward to breakfast with pleasure. "Shortly after .commencing this diet, the wretched pain in my side was greatly relieved, and now, a year later, it has gone entirely, also the sinking spells; in fact, my pale cheeks have changed to pink, I have gained back more than the twenty pounds I lost, and am thoroughly well in every neJ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. â€" Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There‘s a Reason." Y Ever read the above ietter? A _new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true. and full of human interest. Turns Pale Cheeks to Pink. DAINTY FOOD TORONTO ACROSS THE BORDER Latest Happenings in Big Republic Condensed for Busy Readers. .U. S. seeks 4,000 aviators to be trained for military service. 74 Ott School Garden, Kansas City, has produced a radish 14 inches round and 13% inches long. f i Kansas floods this spring have caused $2,000,000 losses in bridges, roads, and railroad property. _ Fred Warranchuck, of Derry, NH., having lost his job, faced a mirror and shot himself in the head. Daniel Haviland of Putram County, has just retired after 75 years as shoemaker without a holiday. 5 Barry Steafen, barber at Akron, O., was fined $5.10 for stealing a kiss from a pretty girl on the street. Detroit _ dentists are _ injecting emetine into sufferers‘ arms to stop toothache, it is said, with success. The purchasing power of a dollar was double what it is now in New Jersey in 1898, say official figures. Henry Fuchs, State street saloonâ€" keeper, Chicago, has failed owing to sluggishness of the liquor business. _ A storm blew out the window of a jewellery store at Muskogee, Ok., and 200 diamond rings rolled down the street. Kansas harvest hands are accused of placing iron bars in wheat fields so as to destroy farmers‘ machinery. Firing at a fleeing burglar suspect, a police sergeant at Chicago killed Walter Hendrichsen, an innocent byâ€" stander. For six hours Fred Stratman was locked in a fruit refrigerator at Deâ€" troit and almost froze to death before being rescued. WHAT ISs GOING ON OVER IN THE STATES. William Bond, chemist, Wilmingâ€" ton, Del., stayed 7 Kours in a sealed box under water to show his chemical discovery could purify air. The bottom fell out of a mine north of Tonopah, Nev., and revealed a chasm of unknown depth, giving a steady cool draught of air. _ Knox Booth, former chief of the Government internal. revenue district of Tennessee and Alabama, was inâ€" dicted leries. The retiring president of the Amâ€" erican Medical Association said army rules applied to city sanitation would make the average life 65 years inâ€" stead of 42. Their History Is to be Sought in the History of England Itself. Among the most interesting feaâ€" tures of rural England are its manor houses. â€" Lords of the manor have been shorn of many of their oldâ€" time rights ‘by the evolution of the English social system, but some of their former glory still remains. Only a dozen miles from Charing Cross one of them holds his courtâ€"leet to this very day. _A courtâ€"leet is a gathering of the tenants, when rents are paid and the business of the esâ€" tate is discussed. Centuries ago the country was diâ€" vided among the leaders of the conâ€" quering Normans. They themselves subdivided their divisions among their soldiers. Under this system the serfs followed petty lords, guaranâ€" teeing military service for the use of the land; the lords were responsible to the earls, and the earls to the king. The petty chiefs were the lords of the manor. Curious indeed were many of the terms under which lords of the manor held their rights. _ For example, one of them undertook that whenever the king should cross a certain bridge he, the lord of the manor, should meet His Majesty there with two white capons, addressing his sovereign thus: "Behold, my lord, these two white capons, which you shall have another time, but not now." THE ENGLISH MANOR HOUSE. Another lord was bound to appear before the kind every Christmas Day, and in his presence to dance a jig and puff out his cheeks. _ Yet another was to present the king annually with a lance from which a fox‘s tail depended. _ In those days weapons were very popular as tokens of the sovereign‘s rights, and swords, spurs, and warlike accoutrements were freâ€" quently chosen. + The tenants of the majority of manors are "copyâ€"holders," that is, they hold the land for life from the lord of the manor. â€" When they die, or transfer the land, a heriot must be paid. This consists of a fine, usually the "best quick beast"â€"horse or cow. Sometimes, however, it is commuted to a sum of money. _ Something less than a century ago these copyâ€"holders of land possessed no vote. _ The lord of the manor ruled all within his leet. The leet kept the stocks in repair, and proâ€" vided the pillory and the tumbrel, a ducking stool, by which the misdeâ€" meanants were immersed. _ The commons were the waste lands of the manors; Lammas land was formed of fields inclosed and cultivatâ€" ed for part of the year, but made common property at other times. . A thief caught within a manor redeemâ€" ed his life by the payment of a fine to the lord. If a tenant allowed his cattle to stray he was also fined. Tenâ€" ants could sublet for a year and a day. One of the privileges of the lord of the manor was that of kissing the bride at the marriage of one of his tenants; and when a wife inherited copyhold land, by reason of the death of her husband, she was obliged, in certain cireumstances, to appear at the court of the manor riding upon a black ram with his tail in her hand. The manor of Pewsey in Wiltshire was conveyanced by means of a horn that must be blown on the accession of a new lord. h 4 In these days, however, lords of the manor are a diminishing class. _ It requires two copyâ€"holders at least to form a manor, and many modern "serfs" have their land made freeâ€" hold by buying out the landlord. for operating illegal distilâ€" How a Sick Woman Can Regain Health "For years I was thin and delicate. Ilooteolornndwualfl{tund;. yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my _f“llnfl, but because I thought mÂ¥ skin wou! l:icver _llo':: nice mht‘ite grew ent. n my appe! failed.durgrew very weak. \rarioua remedics, pills, tonics and tablets 1 tried without permanent benefit. _A visit to mlg sister ‘Yut into my hands a box of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. _ She placed ‘reliance upon them and now that they have made me a well woman I would not be without them whatever they might cost. _ I found Dr. Hamilâ€" ton‘s Pills by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman‘s nature. They never once griped me, yet they estabâ€" lished regularity. My appetite grew keenâ€"my blood red and pureâ€"heavy rings under my eyes disappeared and toâ€"day my skin is as clear and unâ€" wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills did it all." The above _ straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of a wellâ€" known miller of Rogersville, is Froof sufficient that Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are a wonderful woman‘s medicine. Use no other Pills but Dr. Hamilton‘s, 25¢c. per box. All dealers or The Catarrhâ€" ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. Over eight million pounds of tea have been sunk in merchant ships during the war. _ This immense quanâ€" tity could ill be spared at a time when the demand for tea throughout the world has reached a greater volume than ever. _ Anyway the cost of tea has risen to a higher level than hisâ€" tory records for many years. Fussy Old Gentleman (to chance travelling companion)â€""Have you any children, sir?" "Yes, sir, a son." "Ah, indeed! Does he smoke?" "No, sir; he has never so much as touched a cigarette." _ "So much the better, sir; the use of tobacco is a poisonous habit. â€" Does he frequent clubs?" "He has never put his foot in one." "Allow me to congratulate you. _ Does he never come home late?" "Never. He goes to bed directly after dinner." "A model young man, sir; a model young man. How old is he?" "Just six months." READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. INVESTMENT Wanted capital to develop one of the most valuable natural resources in the Dominion, unlimited t}uantity of raw material to be manufactured into a commodity for which there is an alâ€" most unlimited demand. If you have one hundred to five hundred dollars or more to invest where your investment will be well secured, then write for particulars and prospectus which will convince you of the absolutely sure convince you of the absolutel& sure and large returns. Address P.O. Box 102, Hamilton, Ont. Touristâ€""You have an unusually large acreage of corn under cultivaâ€" tion. â€" Don‘t the crows annoy you a great deal?" Farmerâ€""Oh, not to any extent." Touristâ€""That‘s peculiar, considerâ€" ing you have no scarecrows." Farmerâ€""Oh, well, you see, I‘m out here a good part of the time myâ€" self." I fell from a buildir;s and received what the doctor called a very bad sprained ankle, and told me I must not walk on it for three weeks. I got MINARD‘S LINIMENT and in six days I was out to work again. I think it the bst Liniment made. ARCHIE E. LA UNDRY. French cycling soldiers are providâ€" ed with machines so constructed that they can be taken to pieces in two or three minutes and carried on the solâ€" dier‘s back, when he comes to some piece of ground over which he is unâ€" able to ride. "Do you understand the language of flowers?" said the sentimental youth. _ y Euts is "No," replied Miss Cavenne. "I don‘t know that I should care to have my conversation regulated by the kind of vegetation that happened to be in season." ED. 6. Edmonton. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheris. New Record in Tea Prices. Rest is not quitting The busy career; Rest is the fitting Of self to one‘s sphere. "Tis loving and serving, The highest and best; "Tis onward, unswerving; And this is true rest. â€"Goethe. "Tis the brook‘s motion, Clear without strife, Fleeting to ocean After this life. Language of Flowers. A Model Son. Just As Good. OPPORTUNITY ISSUE 29â€"15 To prevent commerce in contraâ€" band, all merchandise is forwarded to a particular department or proâ€" vince of the Swiss Confederation. M. Dhur, in his investigations of this distribution, found that a considerâ€" able proportion of the supplies went to Augst, close to the frontier point where the German and Swiss Railway systems are linked up. 3 ENEMY GETS FOODSTUFFS. Go From France to Switzerland, Then It seems that a convention ratified between France and Switzerland on July 26th, 1914, provides that in case of war, France shall supply the Fedâ€" eral Government of Switzerland with 300,000 tons of cereals a year. Acâ€" cording to M. Dhur, 100 trucks each loaded with between twelve and fifâ€" teen tons of cereals, cross the Cornavin station at Geneva, while in ordinary times the monthly exports did not exceed 4,000 or 5,000 tons. At the same time enormous quantities of potatoes, beans, oil, and other vegâ€" etable products are passing into Switzerland via Pontarlier. are pouring into Germany through S‘witurltnd. according to M. Jacques Dhur, a al law. After a discussion of various alâ€" leged methods of smuggling supplies through to Germany, M. Hhur adds that Germany has also been able to revictual herself plentifully through Italy. _ Merchandise was sent from an Italian port to Switzerland, and on its way at Chiasso, between the Swiss and the Italian Customs, the word "Transit‘ was added to its label, In this way hundreds of trains of rice and other products have reached Gerâ€" many. A man was crossing the Atlantic with an army officer who suffered greatly from seasickness. One entering the stateroom one particularly rough day, he found the officer tossing in his berth, mutterâ€" ing in what at first appeared to be a sort of. delirium. Stooping over to catch his words, the friend heard him say; Sergeant . .« . Major ..~... « Rergeant . . , . Brigadier General . . ugh, Lieutenant General . . aâ€"aâ€"ah!‘ Lieutenant General . . _ aâ€"aâ€"ah!‘ "What are you saying?" asked the friend in some alarm, as the sufferer looked piteously up at him after his last gasping "aâ€"aâ€"ah!" "Assigning the waves their rank," said the military man, rolling toward the wall, again. _ "There have been eight Lieutenant Generals within the last 20 minutes." Corns Drop Out Whenever possible the Kaiser when travelling between Berlin and the{ fightingâ€"line uses his luxurious State train, which is a veritable palace on wheels. Six coaches, each weighing over sixty tons, compose the special train, and one of these four are reâ€" served for the Emperor and his suite, and the other two are used for kitchâ€" ens. The second coach in the train is the one reserved by the Kaiser for his personal quarters, and it contains a salon, bedroom, dressingâ€"room, bathâ€" room, and s}eeping apartments for his bodyguard. The salon is panelled in the wood of an ancient cedar tree taken from Mount Lebanon, the gift of exâ€"Sultan Abdul Hamid of Turkey. The floor is of.black wood taken from the piles of a wooden bridge built across the Rhine by Julius Caesar in the year 55 B.C., while the ceiling is decorated with a design representing the six great rivers of Germany. Paint on Putnam‘s Drop Corn Extractor to night, and corns feel better in the mornâ€" out ing. â€" Magical the way "P utn a m‘s" eases the pain, destroys the roots, kills a corn for all time. No pain. Cure guaranteed. Get a 25¢. bottle of "Putnam‘s" The windows of the salon are proâ€" tected by thick bars, and armed senâ€" tries stand at the doors of the apartâ€" ment night and day. The last coach in the train is used by an engineer, who has charge of the machinery which operates a complicated system of emergency brakes. The Kaiser‘s two dachshunds, Wardl and Hexl, have their kennels on the train, and they generally accompany their masâ€" ter on his travels. LOW FARES TO THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITIONS VIA CHICAGO & NORTHâ€"WESTERN RY. Four splendid daily trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego. Choice of Scenic and Direct Routes through the best of the West. Something to see all the way. Doutzla track, Automatic electric safety sigâ€" nals all the way. Let us plan your trip and furnish folders and full parâ€" ticulars. B. H. Bennett, G.A., 46 Enormous quantities of foodstuffs There is a dearth of females in Bulâ€" garia, Japan, and _ Australia, but a large surplus in England, Scotland, Switzerland, and Scandinavia. 'Y-::»;Et; -ét.. 7Torontq. Ontario It‘s a poor elevator that won‘t work both ways. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. YÂ¥ Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. AXY MOPOR PAXIS, Specification No. 2B @ving engine prices on request. Get our quotations onâ€""The Penetang Line" Commercial and ."leasure Leaunches, Row boats and Canoes. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO,, LIMITED, PSNETANG, The Rolling Waves. The Kaiser‘s Train. Instant in internationâ€" "Overstern"‘ Y Bo:tom Freight Prepsid to any Rai}way Station in Ontario. Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In., Motor Boat PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. ‘The most useful and interesting of all businesses, Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide 8t.. Toronto. Ir LOOKING FOR a FARM, CON8ULT me. I have over Two Hundred on my list, located in the beet mections of Onâ€" tario. All sizes. H. W Dawson, Brampton. out pain by our nome treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Belimau Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, ETG, internal anG external,. cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write FARHS FOR SALE IN THE Countyv of Norfalk (aod cholce. * _ County of Norfolk,. Good choice. Prices ranging from $30.00 to $100.00 per acre. Terms reasonable. Apply R. W. Bartmann, Lynedoch, Ont. Many curious badges are to be found on the caps of various British regiments. The 17th Lancers, or "Death or Glory Boys," as they are nicknamed, for example, have a skull and crossbones for their badge or crest. The most extraordinary, however, of all the crests worn by soldiers fighting for the Empire is probably that worn by one of the Canadian regiments, the 90th Winâ€" nipeg Rifles. The badge shows a little black devil with a pitchfork, and below it is a motto in Latin which means "Named by the enemy on the field of battle." _ The reason for this curious badge and its motto is to comâ€" memorate the way the Winnipeg Rifles fought when suppressing the iCAmdian Northâ€"West Rebellion of the Red Indians, who called them "the little black devils from Winnipeg," which has now become the nickname Iof the regiment. SUMMER SKIN TROUBLES. Sunburn, blistering, uind irritation are the commonest form of sumâ€" mer skin troubles, and Zamâ€"Buk ends these very quickly. It works in two ways. As soon as applied, its antlâ€" septic powers get to work and kill all the poison in a wound, a sting or a sore. This generally ends the smartâ€" ing and the pain. ‘Then Zamâ€"Buk be gins the healing process, and fresh healthy tissue is built up. For sore, blistered feet, sore hands, heat rashes, baby‘s heat spots, sore places due to perspiration, etc., you can‘t equal Zamâ€" Buk. It also cures cuts, ulcers, abscesses, piles, and all inflamed and diseased conditions of skin and sub. jacent tissue. Druggists and stores everywhere sell Zamâ€"Buk, 50c. box. Use Zamâ€"Buk Soap also, ?25c. per tablet. All stores, or Zamâ€"Buk Co, Toronto. % Tom‘s Cab copies; . "I eopies; and 000 copies. Among books which have had enâ€" ormous sales are "Webster‘s Spelling Book," 55 million copies; "Uncle Tom‘s Cabin," a million and a half YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YCU Try Murine Eye ltemrd‘ for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting» Lun Eye Comfort. . Write for Book of the ‘,. .vnudl'no. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. When marching on Timbuctos, some years ago, General Joffre reâ€" ceived a sting from a poisonous insect which led to the permanent filming of his left eye. For Every SPORT ampo RECREATION Sold by all good Shoe Dealers Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows During the first five months of the war Sir Edward Grey did not leave London for a single night. pek, for the rounder Hampton Court possesses a grape vine which is stated to surpass any in Europe. In a _liule season it ;;og;tge'dr;ver two thousand bunches of grapes, weizhing 18 ewt. Queer Badge of Winnipeg 90th. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Business Advice. "Every employer wants a square g, my boy." _ "Yes, dad." "In other words, there is no place ‘Worn it opsn fpomber | NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE FARMS FOR SALE. â€""Pickwick â€" Papers" 900,000 and Longfellow‘s Poems, 520,â€" FARM FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS. $554 CAW. 4j a 3 1\ » (§*> 4

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