Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1910, p. 14

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India Pale Ale XXX Porter The product of perfect brewing. Brewed and bottled by Dominion Brawing Co., Ltd Toronto. AGENTS, , 36 Princess St, - Kingston Dr: Martel's Female Pills SEVENTEEN YEARS THE STANDARD Prescribed and recommended for women's ail ments, a scientifically prepared remody of proven 'worth, The result from their use is quick and permanent. For aslo at all drug stores. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price. Genuine must ber Signature A, i Gips For Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. The November bulletin of the On tario Department of Agriculture says that & pumber of the departments correspondents speak of the juality of this year's crop of fall wheat as ing the best in years, while others say the grwa is lew plump than us- wal owing 10 dry weather at time of filling. This year's spring wheat is fully up to the standard in every re spect. An increased acreage of fall wheat has been sown, and as favor: able conditions prevailed at time of seeding and since, the crop is looking most promising. In fact, some fear 1 may have too much top before enter: ing the winter. the year's barley crop was gener- ally promising, but oats were rather short in the straw, althoush the heads were well filled with grain of good weight, and, where the crop was not knocked down by rain storms just be- fore cutting, there is an usually good field. Peas suffered not only rom drought aud sreen aphis, but the weevil was reported in several local ities, Correspondents of the depart- ment are hardly as enthusiastic a» they were a year ago over mixed grain, difficulty being reported in get- ting the various grains to ripen to- gether. Uthers still point to greater production from a combination of Mandscheuri barisy and Dauenvy oats. Although the spring was wunfavor- able for corn the fall was ideal, and the term "'splendid" is frequently used by correspondents in describing the result. Beans are a medium crop, those put in [ate being caught by rainy weather at harvest. Some buckwheat was in- tjured by early frost, and was also [damaged by rain at Yisme of cutting. | Still the crop generally is excellent, 'both as to eld and quality. } Crop of Potatoes, | The season has been favoralde for clover seed, and geperal results have been satisfactory, there being only a {few complaints of midge. i Regarding potatoes, the report of the | Ontario departmeqh, ig Sens By AOIINION. 1 he © i EF cellent quality. Still the crop as ia whole is reported even by the On- tario department as below that of last year. Turnips have done better than ex- pected, and there will be a fair yield, while a gbod crop of mangels of ox- cellent quality is reported: : . Fall pastures have been all that could be desired, and, where pastures have not been overstocked, grazing animals are in fine condition for the winter. The milk flow has also been well maintained by excellent fall pas- tures. Butter production has upon cheese, and ping of cream over the border along the St. Lawrence has also belped to lessen the cheese production of the province, Help has been scarce, especially in the case of experienced and capable men. Fall plowing is well advanced, and there appears to be a general assur- ance of a sufficiency of all classes of fodder for winter. Poultry Tor Winter Laying. A writer in the American Agrieal- turist says that for winter layers he places clover first and cabbage second 4s a green ration. He prefers the se- cond. crop to the fist crop of clover, as the stalks are not so hard snd dry (lover for poultry should be cut into about one-quarter inch lengths, fed with the morning mash, and boiling water should he applied to it before feeding, to freshen it, ° The American Agriculturist, its statement on reports received all sections of the United States, says the American turkey crop thi r will be about normal. While last spring was not altogether favorable for young turkeys the outlook is still for about the usual supply of matured birds this fall. Rest the Horses' Feet. Every farm horse should, if pos- sible, be allowed to go without his shoes at least two or three months every year, in Horseman. In fact, it is sary to shoe a horse on the Jess he is to go on the hard roads or work on the hard soil, i to do much heavy out, regain its natural shape, which is always more or changed by con tinuous shoeing. Many city uatusy with hoofs bound cracked, otherwise injured, have been taken to a farm, shoes pul 'led off, and turned out to pasture and cheap supply, which turned out to be horses, showing that all that needed was rest on Mother Earth with- is] ling. Without shoes a horse's hoof Pres 0 off ot all. ' EXD STOMACH MISERY. Gas, Indigestion, Dyspepsia and All Stomach Distress Go in Five Min. utes, The question as to how long you are going to continue a sufferer from Indi gestion, Dyspepsia dr outiof-order Sto- mach is merely a matter of how soon you begin taking some Diapepsin, If your stomach is lacking in diges tive power, why not help the sto- mach to do its work, not with drastic drugs, but a re-enforcement of diges- tive agents, such as are naturally at be {work in the stomach. People with weak stomachs should take a little Diapepsin occasionally, and "here will be no more indigestion, no feeling like a lump of lead in the stomach, no heartburn, sour risings, gas on stomach or belching of undi- gested food, headaches, dizziness, or sick stomach, and, besides, what you eat will not ferment and poison your breath with nauseous odors. All these symptoms resulting from a sour, out- of-order stomach and dyspepsia are generally relieved in five minutes after taking a little Diapepsin. - Co to your druggist and get a 50- cent case of Pape's Diapepsin mow, and vou will always go to the table with a bearty appetite, and what you eat will taste good, because your sto- mach and intestines will be clean and fresh, and you will know there are not going to be any more bad nights and miserable days for you. They {freshen you and make you feel like life is worth living. overfed, they 'go stale" and refuse to eat well, and so fail to make good gains. Farm Notes. The son of a New York farmer cently graduated from a course in electrical engineering, says Farm Stock and Home. When he came home he concluded that the little brook rinning through the farm ought to go to work for father. He built a mill dam and a little. power house, in which were installed dynamos | and motors, At present the brook, which a year ago ran noiselessly through the meadows, furnishes electric light for the house and barn, heat for the winter months, and power for the cream separator, churn and other small machinery about the place. re production is better (-operative able than co-operative ¥ * welling, for the reason that in produc- tario department reports a large aver- | (i, the money saved goessenticely to age yield with many returns speaking ('¢ producer, while in selling the ul- | timate result is a division of profits be tween seller and buyer. Organization for either end is practical and timely, but that which concerns itself first of all with reducing the cost of operation wil relurn the it profits to its followers.--Farm, Stock and Home. A correspondent, writing in Rural {Nev Yorker some little time ago, said he once attempted to plow up a field of alinlfa, but found instead of killing out the plant he got a good stand af- tor plowing. This leads another .cor- ained i respondent of the same journal, writ- condensed {0c ing from Nevada, to say that the be tories in Oxford district, and the ship- | way to make sifalle gre : way to make alfalfa grow is to plow, jd'ex, harrow and otherwise try to ex- | terminate it. He says it is & common practice for farmers in his section to double disk their alfalfa each spring, in order to make it grow well, and he #1: a that one plowing, if not too {¢l eduously carried out, will have the aarae effect, -- Produce and Prices. Kingston, Nov. 19.--The market clerk Ask Yourself These Questions And Find Out if You Have Kidney Disorders----Also Make This Test. Mave you pains in the back over the kidneys ? lave you urinary disorders ? Do you suffer from severe head- aches, dizziness or defective eyesight ? 13 thy skin dry and harsh ? Are you failing in health and sirength and » i from rheu- matic pains or swelling of the limbe? These are a few of the symptoms of bidney disease, and here is the test. If the wrine after standing for twenty-four hours -is cloudy; milky or has particles floating about in it, or if there is a sediment in the bottom of the vessel, your kidneys are diseased. There is no time to lose in begin ning the use of Br. Chase's Kidpey au Liver Fill: Dios means the de velopment ight's disease, a you do not want to take any -- with that. Dr. Chase's Kidney and Jit Pills will help you more quickly han any treatment you can obtain, and that is ome reason why they are excellent i i is certified to by the Rev. E. H. . atte. Benitist minister, of Brockville, 0 1 Pr. A.W. C 's. Ki and Li Lills, one haets X ns a box, Cou, Toronto. The mn, Bates & Hon! cure of A. W. Chase, MD, the fash ' ous ipt Book author, dre on avery Sox. These are for your peo: tection aginst imitations and substic SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1 veports the prices prevailing as fol. fows : Carrots, 0c. to 70. per bag; turnips, 40¢c. 10 Hc. per bag; cabbage, Sc. each; onions, 9c. per bag; peta- toes, 75¢. lo 8c. per bag; beets, Ge. per bunch: tomatoes, 70c. to 9c. per bush.; celery, Be. to Te. per head. J. A. MacFarlane, Brock sireet, re ts flour, feed and grain selling as meng Oats, 400.; local wheat, $1 to $1.10; buckwheat, 65¢. to 70; 1, 0c. to 60c.; rye, 85c.; peas, 9c. to $1; yellow corn, 0c.; flour, bakers, $2.90 to $3; farmers', $2.90; Hungarian pa- loose, $8; to $24; baled straw, $5; $v bay, loose, $8 to ¥9; pressed, to $12, Fruit at the stores--Bananss, 15e¢. and 20¢c. per doz; oranges, 20e. to G0c. per doz.; lemons, 25¢c. to 0c. per doz.; peaches, 40c. to $i a basket; grapes, 20c. a basket. Meat--Heef (local), carcase, 6jc. to Tic; prime western beef, $10 per ewt.; by carcase, cuts, l0c, to 15¢; live hogs, 7c. lb; dressed hggs, Ye. to 10c.; pork, 10¢, to llc, by quarter; mutton, 10c.; lamb, 12¢ to }3.c, quarter veal, 7c. to 10c. lb.; ducks, 75¢. to $1 each; turkeys, 13c. to 1bc.; fowl, 7Be. to Ye. pair; chickens, 60c. to 5c. pair; butter, rolls, 2le.; prints, 24c.; eggs, fresh, 35¢. to 40c.; packed, 27c. : Dominion Fish Co. reports prices as follows : Salmon trout, 124e. to 15c. a lb; skinned digby herring, 20e. ib.; white fish, 124¢. to 15e. lb; pike, 10c. lb; Chineok salmon, 30e. Wg kip herring. ro hs 30¢c. doz.; Asiantié salmon, 30e. Ib.; salt codfish, Te. to ide. 1b; halibut, 13§e. to 2e.; fresh haddock, 10c. lb. buliheads, 12je. Ib.; red herrings, 20c. box; mackerel, oc. a Ib; lake herring, Sc. Ib. sen bass, 124c. Ib; pickerel, 15e. lb. John McKay, Brock street, reports as follows : Hides, No. 1, 9%. per Ih; Bulls, over 60 Ibe., 8c. per lb; borse hides, $3; deacon skins, 90c.; veal skins, 13¢. per lb.; lamb skins, 60c. wool, washed, 20e. per lb.; wool, un- washed, l4c. per Ib.; beeswax, 25¢c. per Ib.; ginseng, $6 per Ib. WORKED A-GOOD GAME And Got Even With a Matrimonial Bureau. . Lx ndon Argonaut. : 3 As the matrimonial advertisement flourishes exceedingly in America news- papers, to the shameful profit of those newspapers and the fleecing of many silly dupes, a warning from Italy as to how they lead to the defrauding of victims may put a few on their guard. " Having exhausted various other de- vices for obtaining money he had not earned, an ingenious Sicilian named Marullo turned his attention to the matrimonial advertisements which appear in most italian newspapers, en- tering into correspondence with forty or fifty ladies of various nationalities to whom he represented himself as answering all the requirements which they desired in a husband, When he had thus become rather nu- m rously engaged, he borrowed a lit- tle money and started on a tour of Italy, Germany and France, in order to visit his various fiancees and ar pange the details of their marriage. Needless to say that from each fiancee he carried away something, either in valuable presents or money to invest, or for the furnishing of their future home. He then returned to his native gity, leaving the bride-elect to pre- pire their trousseaux; but shortly al- terwards they were one and all plung- etd into the depths of woe by receiving a printed notice, purporting to be from the father of their fiance; an- nouncing the sad news of the sudden death of his son, who was thus unfor- tunately prevented from fulfilling his matrimonial engagement. A Dictionary. "These veactionaries," said Lewis Fisher, the progressive mayor of Gal- veston, in a recent address, 'remind me of old Hiram Conway, the miller of Dee. "Hiram pcided himself on being con- servative, and he ground his flour in the old-fashioned way between mill stopes. "A brisk young chap brought g sack of wheat to the mill one morning and styod and waited for it to be ground. As the stones turned slowly, and the moal trickled forth in a thin ' and sluggish stream, the young man said to Hiram : ' '"'Hang it, Mr. Conway, I could eat that meal faster than your old mill grinds it out.' " "Yes," chuckled Hiram, 'but how long: could you keep on eating it ?' "Till 1 starved," said the young man." A Unique Complaint. The house committee of a New York club recently received this unique complaint : "1 bave the honor to inform vou that 1 lunched 'at the club this after: noon and had as my guests three gentlemen, all well-known gourmets, Among the other things an omelet was served. It contained only three Gies. As an oli member of the club, jealous of its reputation, I naturally found this very embarrassing, to make an equitable division of the omelet, it was necessary either to di vide a fly--a nice bit of carving, you must concede--or myself. 1 beg to future, when an , four persons, it be wi (a) four flies, or (bf no flies at all." as fiy the is served for either giver. : "But, of course," he added, 'when 1 tent, $3 to $3.10; oatmeal and rolled | oats, $4.50 per bbl; cornmeal, $1.90 | to $2; bran, $20 per ton; shorts, 333 Yarmouth bloaters, | Canada's Greafe The Mail and Empive Will be sent-BY MAIL ONLY postage paid fo an address in Canada, Great Britain United 3 (Toronto and Suburbs excepled from now Until May Ist, I191i, For $1.00 it is belioved that this period will the coming Sessions of San Dominion and Peovinoial Parliaments. 34 weit} fudo a and Muonigipal tiootions of EVERY MORNING THE WORLD'S NEWS The Mail and Empire has every nows-gathering service that any paper can' buy and in addition The Laffan Service, over our Special New York wire, which includes a Special Cable Service and | the full Financial News Service of the New York | Sun ° FINANCIAL PAGE. The acknowledged authority In Canada. SPORTING PAGE, Easily the best. Ask the boys. "THE Our object in making this very 'special offer is to get all whe may not know what they are missing to read this Greatest of Canadian Dailies. If you read it fur five months you are sure to become & permanent bscriber. If you are already reading the paper, order r some friend who should be. Hand order to your dealer or sen d direct to-day. The Mail and Empire, Toronto ie Enclosed pl:ase find $1.00, for which mall to The Best dally special feature in America. address below The Mail and BE magazine article every morning. Just one | received until May 1, 1911 pire. from gay column. Always bright and instructive. : : WOMEN'S HOME DEPARTMENT. Daily Articles of absorbing Interest to Women News of what women are doing the world over All Housekeepers should read it. SATURDAY'S SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS : Woman's Kingdom. Flaneur. Field and Wood. Legal Questions and Answers, Contemporary Literature. Good Scrial Story, FOURTH COLUMN." -- ~Asaya-Neurall~ THE NEW REMEDY Fon : us ; Indigestion, Heartburn, Dyagep- sia and Constipation result more often from nervous exhaustion than from food. Dieting or pills will pot avail. The only remedy is nerve repair, " AsavA- NEgu- RALL" is and makes possible this cure. It feeds the nerves, induce sleep, quickens the appetite and digestion, and these disorders dis- appear. $1.50 per bottle. Obtain from the local agent. L. T. BEST T. J. HOAG. b, A gl Vest Pocket | ~Size of EDDY'S Famous "SILENTS' Every stick a match, ¥ every mafch a light; and every Ligh! a sfeady even flame. wp Ihe Jafest Mar eh Geeation SDS; Lights for rhe (Greatest Match Manufactory moker--Try a Box. Alweys everywhere in Canada, Ask for, EDDYS MATCHES ANOTHER GERM DESTROYER. Herpicide is Death Dandruff Gerins, to The zerm burrows into the sdulp, (hrowing up the cuticle in thin scales, alled dandruff, or scuef, and ditrging at the root of the hair where it saps the hair's vitality. First comes brittle hair then lusterless and dead-like hair, then falling hair, and, finally baldness, Nine-tenths of the hair troubles are caused by dandrufi, Without dandruff, hair will grow luxuriantly, as nature intended. "Herpicide" kills the dan 'ruff germ leaving the hair to grow anhampered, as it does with the Am- rican red man. Sold by leading druzgists. Send 10¢. n stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. $1 bottle guaran teed. Jas. B. Mcleod, drujgist, spe «ial agent, Kingston, Ont. High-Glass Tailoring | REASONABLE PRICES TRY == t Crawford & Walsh WRITE JO THIS i a er neces d Bagot Ste. WOMAN IF YOU WANT TO STOP A MAN FROM DRINK Dining Room F urniture Sideboards, golden $6.50, $10.50, $13.50. Bufietts, golden finish, 815.75 to $65. Tables, 86.50, $7.50. ete. China Cabinets, $11.50, 813.50 up. Chairs, B0c., 75c., $1.00, $1.50. Leather Seated Chairs, per sett, $14.50 and up. See our complete setts in Farly Eng- lish, Fumed, and Mahogany, and Gold- en Oak. R. J. REID, Ambulance. Phone 877 I ------ TE -- po ---------- nim -------- ee -- --_-- "HAPPY HOME" RANGE When you require a new range examine the "Happy Home"--handsome in appearance, econ- omical in fuel, large ventilated oven, and every range fully guaranteed to give perfect satisfac- on, Usod. For over 20 years the husband of Mrs. Margaret Anderson was a hard drinker, but nine years ago, by using a simple remedy, she # his drinking entirely, He bus not a drop since. finish, rn,

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