Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Dec 1910, p. 14

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

THE DAILY BRITISH _WHIG, SATURDAY, DEC WMEER 34; i= - 1916. : FOURTEEN. FEA VAFERS otr drugy rtable for They ralie che in Drug and Chemical Corapeny ol © Cenada, Limited, e the wor Vest Pocket | Size of EDDY'S Famous "SILENT, Every stick a match, every maich a light, and evary ghia s od eves. Jame. fo " =Li or the Smoker Try § a Jox No Car Sri Ask re, "Ihe Jae Mth Creation Greatest Meh] Manufactory EE -------- {Xmas Presents Buy Something Useful for the House Silver Knives and Forks, Silver Spoon, Carving Sets from $1 to $15 per set, Carpet Sweepers, Fancy Tea and Coffee Pots, Wringers, Washing Machines, Fancy Andirons, Gas Logs, Brass Fenders, Fancy Gas Heaters, Coal oil Heaters, etc. Elliott Bros., "Telephone 385. 77 Princess Street. SOO0000 90 "#% Hockey and PD) Fe BOOTS =~Men's Lightning Hitch, $3.00. SOOO Boys' Lightning Hitch, $2.50. Men's Other Good Makes, $200 and $2.50. Boys' Good Hockey, $1.50, $1.7 70 and $2.00. Women's. Hockey and Skating Boot, $1.50 and $2 4. JENNINGS, ey When you gre ope. tite poor--your who t try a glass of Lobat's Ale & and Stout he palate refreshes the with * the weakest = A po enily hol bever- it pally sources For & BE onshet London Lager | ERE "Comet Beer. ' Skating or 'absence of half a million doren erys. ---- -- - Gips For Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. hd est time andthe feast farm hands was sbout to Giles was the oldest « hostess motioned Kim ~her right hand, But silently uhrespousive, he hostess, "don't be odie was just Giles ons--""you've a right wnor, you know." a moment, then vou kindly." he sald, it's all the same to you, i'd pposite this puddin' 1" 1 he On Corn Ensilage. it the. Guelph Winter Fair wd . is particularly valu feed for dairy cattle, be- syeculenee, It is true ést condensers in absolutely refuses feeding of ensilage, but condensers encourage "tie depend en- the ensilage ne It seems to juality of wed ensilage in. the feed- In ovr own experiments een satisfied with the jamb crop when ensilage fed to sheep Bok in ih I pre fer roots for this purpose but some have fed ensilage, For hares only a limited quantity of en- siliire should be fed, and with hogs used satisfactorily only ior th it of giving a variety to the are no roots available will give twenty-six an matter against elven lah per cent. for swede tut vips an «¢ quantity for man | hese. figures are based on Am- and it is pro- would show they are more those pro- "» god men it he foe re there wilage per gent. dary nyestigations, turnips * bec ause » rule, than the 1 nited States, with--some of the by-pro- duet rn for feeding purposes. Pre said that gluteal meal con- sans abo ute thirty per cent, protein but is a v, concentrated feed and must be us with caution. Gluten feed contains usually cent. of protein. + hy-product of a break- lower ip protein thaw whole corn and is lower even in car- bohv rates it is not, therefore, worth as much for feed as whole cori. about twenty per Heminy, ast food, 1s Casein or Cheese? Partly as a result of the reduction in the du on Cream entering the United States from Canada, and pari ly owing to other causes, a new de parture is developing in connection with the dairy industry of _ Ontario. No les# than seventeen factories in The Brockville district have been separating milk supplied them dur- in? the past summer and shipping the erenm and contents to the United" States, The cream in some goes for Americap city eon- sumption and in other cases to be made into butter in American factor- ies. The casein is used in connee- tion with the manufacture of paper. and for other purposes. The factories which have done this have obtained for their patrons about $1 per, ewt. for the milk supplied by the latter, or some 15¢. more than would have been obtained from the manufacture of che se. In Western factories are engaged in tian of casein for export to the Un- ited States, but, in these cases the fat from the milk is ag 4 rule made into butter for the supply of the local market, casein eas s eight or ten the extrac- Ontario Live Stock Condition in Canada. A report issued by the census office at Oftawa says thenumber of horses in Canada shows an increase of 3.31 per cent. over last year. In milch cows there has been an increase of IR per cent., in swine 2.11 per cent., apd in poultry S02 per cent. The numer of sheep o the other hand has decreased By 1.55 per cent., and the numoor of eatil othe than * miléh | tows hy 2.20 per cent, ' In Ontario a decrease is reported in the number of all farm animals dur- ing the vear, with the exoeptic of swine, where there is an She ir of 6.20 per cent., and in poultry cent. The decline in horses ~ and mileh cows in Ontario is exceedingl small, but in horned cattle there De bean a decline of 12.90 5.02 per pent. 0 In Ountanio the cond lition of all ani mals except sheep is above the aver- age. 726 per and wn sheep Marketing Eggs. Hing A. pha, vied-president of wun, . Langlois company, limited, Montreal; dealt with the dealers' diffi- culties in mnrketing eggs. He said this year the total productio - fry will bo 26,000,000 head, wd hat the value of the Poultry and oggs in Canada "this year is $48,000,000, He declared , the Sealars' great difficulties were : First, the shortage of egus and a lack of uniform supply; second, the of eggs: third, the rds and of necessary legislation. .shortare was proven by the fact that last vear there was imported into Canada from Russia, China and the United States, aver Mr. Gunn asked if it would not he, possible, by hatching out a few early pullets, to continve the egg supply during the late fall and winter. He declared that in spite of the large number of egpe put away in the spring in cold stor age. his firm prepared to pay fortefice conts 'a Horen, delivered at Montreal, for every uaranteed pew aid ecg t ean he deliversd pow. 4 He placed the average preventable lows at seventomm mer oomt.. made an ae fol lows: Soiled and dirty pew fas monidy and Maver, coe ha® breskave, two; chick deci) oreno five: Told oop, five: rotion,- two and ome-hall, And. he placed at 1.550.000 the sum which pend be saved to Can. pe Farmers id of the lake dn the Uniied Staten vor the side side of roltton" egy that it was estimated that in Canada] a law prot nt., sevor 2 put © io Pembroke, busipess can'! was pot meeting. Peter White, said, "MH the improved except by waking th mers criminals, the poultry busy hud better stay where it is poulitiy + Buys Canadian Apples. Andrew Carnegie has ardeped an Uttawa agency twenty re Canadian apples to be sent to frien ds in' Seotland 'as Christmas presents Mr. Qarnegi® has done the same thing for the past three years, ever swce, while in Ottawa, he tasted an apple which he found faore delicious than anything he had ever eaten burr At an auction sale of Holstein grade cows, held by William Pierce, near Til sonbury, eleven cots sokl for spe of $165. One cow sold for an, aver: $235. the condenser at Tilsonburg past summer. They averaged pounds of milk for the seven months, and the money per cow. Three. were three-year-olds, amd ix were over six years. + -- 5] bd Produce and Prices. Kingston, Dec. 2 9,184 lows : Carrots, 6c. , per bag; 5c. cach; . onions, $1.50 per bag; pota- tock, 7 to Ne. per bag: to Te. per head. John McKay, as follows : Hides, No. 1, %¢. per lb; bulls, over ¢@ lbs. 8& pei lb.: horse hides, 98; deacon skims, 90c.; veal | skins, 13c. per Ib.; lamb skins, Gbe. wool, washed, 20c. per Ib; wool, washed, 14c. por Tb.; Ib; ginseng, $6 per Ib. oT NE Parlin, Brock street, re: follows: Oats, 40c,; $1.10; buckwheat, 5c. barley, 65c.: rye, 85¢c,; peas, 9c. to $1; corn, 65¢. to Thc: flour, bakers, to $3; farmers', $2.80 to ¥3; an patent, $3; oatmeal and oats. $4.50 per bbl; file. to 2.90 te $24: baled: straw, 38; hay, loose, $8 t& $9; pressed, $18 to $12. Fruit at the and 20¢, per doz; 60¢> per doz.; doz.; peaches, 40c. grapes, 0c. a basket. Meat--Beef (localy; carease, Tic. to 81e.; prime western beef, S10" cwt.; by carcass, euts, 10c. to 1be; live hogs, Tc. lb.; dressed hogs, "9c. to 10e.; pork, 9c. to 10c., by quarter; mutton, Noc.. lob, 12¢." to 18e., qtr.; veal, Te. to 10¢, Ib.; ducks, $1 eath; turkeys, 18¢. to 19¢. Ib; fowl, The. to Ye. pair; chickens, 65¢. to. The. pair; butter, rolls, 23¢. to 28e.; prints, Mc 25¢.; eggs, fresh, 35c. to 0c; pack ed; Je. Vominion Fish Ce. reports prices as follows : Salmes trout, 124e. to 15¢. a 1b.; skinned dighy Ib.: white 'Gah, 124. to. 15c. Ib; pike, 10c. 1b.: Chinook salmon, .36c. Fag gen bass, 124c. Ih. pickerel, 15¢c. Ib, kippered herring. Yarmouth bloaters, 40c. doz.; perch, B8Be. dor; Atlantic salmon, 30. 1b. salt eodfish. Te. to 15¢. 1b: halibut, 2c. to 0c; fresh haddoek, 10e. lh: buliheads, ' 12jc. Ib.: red herrings, 20c. box: mackerel, 15c. a 'lb; lake herring, Sc. Ib; -------------- A Brilliant Address. St. Louis Globe White, of Kentucky, while speaker of the house, if the twenty-seventh com- gress, was so "pressed 'with business that, when he had to deliver his vale dictory, he got one of those men who are always on hand to make a little to write handed hind just a little while the time he had to deliver it, and he put it into his pocket without reading jt. When the time came, he rose, and slowly unfolding the manuscript, the address. It was very brilliant, but it Aaron Burr's famous vale dictory to the senate. The speaker never recovered from the shock, He went home, was taken ill, and it 44 supposed he killed himself for stores--Dananas, 1be. oranges, 20¢. to to $1 a basket; money his was shame. A Powerful Fluid. York Life Frank .J. Silbey, of the Urohibition J party' National Committee, recgntly scored off an ifiterrupter in the course of gn eloquent address in Tucson The interrupter broke in on Mr. Sib lev's condemnation of whisky to shout : "But it's 5 medicine. A strong'glass of hot whisky and water will break up a cold.' "And eight strong lasses," Mr. Sib lev. retorted, "will break up a home." New 'to Worthless or Harmful Remedies. Stimulating the itching of the dandrufi, not cure the scalp The d won't Yio 'to quinine or' nor al cohol, because it is caused by 2 germ Lend may allay the but that does that iridio 3 that dries up Je soalp in fitthe aks called dandruff, and abaories the vie anlity of the hair, causing falling hair nd fnalle Baldness. Newhros Her vicide is the only veally sieniifie pre Cention tp cure , prevent fall. © hair and a 1 0 peers Heft ke m weed shat his hearers petition the | 'PROPOSED BY-LAW The milk of theses cows was sold to] wring the! returns were $10.36 | ~The market clerk | reports the prices prevailing as fol}; turnips, 40c. to 50c. per bag; cabbage, | celery, Bel; | Brock: styeel, repo | um- | beeswax, 2c: per | |, ie flour, feed and grain selling as! local wheat, $1 tu | yellow | Hungari- | rolled | cornmeal; $1.90 to $20; bran, $19.50 per ton; shorts, $23 | loose, $8; lemons, 280. to 30. per | fe per | to $i. 26 | herring, 20¢. | address. It was | before | F$12000 * BARRIE STREET EXTENSION Voting on By Low Monday, January nd, 1911 A By-Law to raise by way of loan-on the credit. of the Municipality of the City of Kingston, the "sui of $3,600 for the purpose therein mentioned. » i end rtheriy from Quebex 4 priation AH and sing that or tract of lamd and prev ving and bédrg PMthe ( i 3 the Coun Ly of Frox luce. of x te i | flowing Lot ngsign. whieh nded to be conveyed 3 rticularly described as fellows, t to say: Comme ters: tion of the | Queber Street avith the {duction of the wester! | part of Barrie Street Haglan, Road and Quebec thence northerly following the | said northerly production one { red and four feet and six inches (1 or less, to the rear boundary an lots pumber one (1) on Que-| Street apd number one (1) oni! Pine Street: thence easterly following | ;, the aforesald rear boundary nine feet two inches (9 27), thence norther- and parallel to the above mentioned y produetion one hundred and and ; six inches (184 # to the s« therice eas « d "sputherly Hmit i $3), thence southerly parallel to tite above mentioned north. & y production one hundred' and nine] and six inches (108° §") more lees tg the rear b unde between lots 'facing on Pine and | respectively; thence | lagt above men- | boundary one foot and "al *y, more or less to production Hmit of. that part i between Raglan Road | | thence southerly ove ety-seven feel mare Or less nit of Quebet westerly, following thé entioned northerly limit (66), more or less to of commencement, and con- .admeasurément an 'area of ne hundredths (26/1680 of an St reet treet Street following the the northerly is expedient to fired for the pur the issue of WHERE ! the money chase of the said I ids by Debentures of. thel. ceeding lp the 3,600 and cau the hand Corporation between) 3 am 'payable any year be e | during each period at be issued Ane mentioned b, { and take effect 3. The votes NOTICE T0 LEASEOLDERS Dl ---------------------------- Voting on By-Law Monday, Jan. 2nd, 1911 PROPOSED BY-LAW A By-Law to authorize the issue of Debentures of the | Corporation of the City of Kingston to the mmount of $13,000, for the pur- poses therein mentioned. is necessary City AND aise by of the $15.000 extens fons said system WHERH way ND WH debt to EREAS t reated by WHEREAS the 1 to be raised currency of said y spacial rate on the rateable pr ty liable thereto for paving thi id Wont interest a8 Rereinafte provided © $1,001 » AND WHEREAS th « unt wh rateable y ve said Mo ality ae fing to the jast rev assessment reli being for the year 1010 is $8.507.037% AND W HEREAS the amount of existine debt of the Municipal ity exclusive of he improvement debts secured "by acts, rates, or assessments is : 752.72 and no part of the same or in- terest thereon is in arresar {BE IT THEREFORE ENACTED Yby the Council of the Corporation of 'the City of Kingston as follows: $1. It shall be lawful fer the Mayor of the sald Corporation for the pur- poses aforesiid to raise by way of gan upon the credit of the debenivres hereinafter mentioned from any per son of persons. body or bodies core porate, . who willing to ad- vance the same upon the credit of the said debentures a sum - of money uot an 4 of the 28 and ex-}| excpeaing tn the whole the sald sum of $13.0 and to cause the same to be Rm © SNOW! SNOW! The a is coming and in a few days Fave sieghing. You wiil waht your. sleighs repaired or painted and have them réady to . use when geeded SLEIGHS, SLEIGHS. We have an BASOFY fit of Bab djeighs, 2 and 3 Rheed, all ready, with Sox er net: also Sisgle Sieinhe: alse 8 few Secend-hand fon Sleighs and Cot- ers which ow will sell of cheap. NEW WORK. A de Borcher Bolghs di. to Bread, Prick. and fac os for do. ao ot . ur Go SAME LATURNFY PRINCESS ST. yc The payable wer Janus Treas the Deputy annteal Coun®i §. On 1911, at the forer L City ehail "ati srk apd ond at earch poling pls persons Interexied in said into the hands of the Treasurer promoting the passing o * og seresssssescees Phone B10, Sa Select Chocolates speciais In Fancy Baskets and Boxes, Lowney's, Rainsay's, 'Ganong's, Patterson's. Fry's (madein England). Moir' s, Hy nt's. from 25¢. to $10. SAKELL'S cod Next Door to Opera House, For "Xmas; avkesa ebay « 220 Princess Street $ Sevssssensassesessassensssesesasasssesnscne BETTER LIGHTS AND MORE LIGHTS és

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy