Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Feb 1914, p. 13

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Poy a; IT HAS BEEN MUCH NEGLECTED BY rARMERS. will ripen earlier and be leds lable to dodge and rust. ibis is the de duction of 'Prof. Zavitz' experiments | is verified by my own experi- | THINBLOODED | MEN AND WOMEN Need the Rich, Red Blood "ie ek ls Actually I grew 80 bus. of Daubeney oats per acre from 40 lbs, sowing last * season, the stand was good, but, then More Care Should be Taken in Pre-| this Juriety has a small kernel and is paritig and Sowing Seeds, Says'a' splendid stooler. Had it been Tar- "Vim ug So Hg. See to Grow! tr Kings the yield would have been s A ; of : More Straw and Grau Per Acre. | oranCl sree uinting the anne; | Thin-blooded people do not remain ; seed according 10 variety so from choice, but from indifference; Weekly Sun, Toronto. Another thing we do not want to, DB some cases from despair. People AS spring is on the march north- lose sight of is the foddéd value of Who are pale, languid, with palpita- Ward, and will soon be making his | WC Time was when straw' was of] ion of the heart, some difficulty in + Approach known by lengthening little value but now, with the in- breatliing - and a tendency to days and increasing sunshine, it will creased value of all kinds of stock. | easily tired are suffering from t be untimely to write on the sub- it has become almost as valuable as Pood. They need only the resolu- of sprhig seeding and the pre- hay, This being 80, we increase our | 190 to take the' right treatment and aration of seed grain. profits by increasing our yield of |"tick to it until cured. The remedy "4 There appears to be a lack of | po 0" 00 aforementioned experi- [that ¢an be relied ypon is Dr. Wil- "knowledge and decision amongst far- | = there was nearly one ton more |1iams' Pink Pills for Pale People. + mers generally "as to what comsti-| = C08 the thick seceding. |"ith every dose they make new blood 'tutes first-class seed and as to the | qu TO "0 mean a large increase of | and new blood means health and fmount to sow per acre for the best { os. where fodder is needed and |dtrength.. The red cheeks, good ap- "results. Professor Zavitz has given would well repay the little extra cost | Petite, increasing weight and streng- A great deal of attention to this sub- | "0 A th that follow the use of these V'ills Ject and has given the results to the | "pn U5 we recommend from 1 1-2 [prove their great value to thin- public, but these reports fall to reach | "5" 1p bus. per acre; for barley, | blooded people. Here is an eox- 'many farmers who seldom read be- |") OF oe OFF SEES for spring |ample. Mrs. R. Steele, Afton Road, yond the columns of the daily press. | o05t 1 1.2" (o 2 hus: of Goose No |V-F.I, says: "Following child: This is to be regretted because the | g9 000 be sown thickly, as the|birth I took a pain in my head whole country stands to profit or | pe.y is large and while it stools | Which grew so bad.I had to call in lose by the manner of our farm man- well, if cown thinly it will lodge | doctor. He told me that my blood dgement, I have given a great deal | 410" "ia being long and the |had turned to water and that I.was of attention to this subject and have |; 4. heavy. With thicker seeding |in a serious condition. He treated arrived at positive conclusions. On the chances are that the yield will [me four months, but still the pain our farm we make a specialty of be better and that it' will be better |remaiped, and my condition way raising seed grain, and our market | harvest. growing pitiable. I lost my appetite is province wide. Our aim is to| 5 to 4 that this article will beland was so weak and run-down that supply the very best, and to do this ya1u001 10 some. It is worth our |I could no more than walk across we are compelled to make the most rigid selection every year. Take an best thought and attention to ac- la room. I was ax pale 8s a corpse | complish the best results. If we can 'and the doctor told mv friends he ear of grain and examine it, you will | 1," a,v way inerease our crop pro- find the kefnels at the bottom of | que wig ocheapen our stock food and had but little hopes of my getting LACE AND CHIFFON LEND THEMSELVES better. A ai ho cs to see : the ear long and coarse Ja at the 50 .Incredse ORI profits, 11. We gow Det rand" to bi i be Wiane WELL TO THE MODISH FRILLS il da t ur as in ; y »st seed, we can-|Pink Pills, sent 1 Lob small and, not to, plum, 42 10 | woibing Dt The 'bot Seeds wo can: | Pak Fi, sd 1 sent wid Ror a AND FLOUNCES { i supply. In about a mouth after | out of the threshed grain must be | wo ciang to gain from $1 to $5 per For size 86 this costume requires 4% | -- 8 ibelik Jan: Kubeli The eminent Bohemian violinist holds his audience by his impressive individuality, his passionate warmth of playing and his amazing feats of virtu- osity. Kubelik and Melba have made their choice ot the . ews Scale . Williams Piano x their joint Candian concerts, thus showing their proval of the piano they have both used on former occasions. Write for our aut phed biographies of 25 most rer: Vogravei 3B7 New Scale Williams Piano "Agency 35-37 MONTREAL ST,, KINGSTON. The deep flounces so much worn a few seasons back bave returned to take a strong hold pon the fancy, and many of tfie new skirts show flounce upon flounce from the hips to the feet. The cotton volles and crepes, soft taffetas, crepons and other novelty fabrics are wefl sulted to these flounces. Shailow lace and chiffon are used on more drdssy frocks, and no doubt later in the season entire frocks of lace, flounced in this way, will be popular. In No. 8236 is shown a most attrac- tive coat blouse with a shawl collar, short peplum and wide girdle. = s------ it is devoloped in taffetas, plain and Swath Cut by His Valet as a Noble- | figured; the skirt is of plain dull green man and the blouge is fzured in self color. Old Lord Ventry's death, and the | ---- -- succession to his Irish peerag® of ' which her husband took an active his eldest son, Colopel the Hon part. She met with most extraordin- Frederick Eveleigh- de Moleyns, for; lost her leg, 5 hegivning their use' 1 had much re our object when fanning our grain gers. This on a fifty acre seeding yards of 36 inch material lief, and by the time I had taken for seed. ; X will make it worth our while. six more boxes I was full cured Taffetas ranges In price from about Generally speaking, one-third of $1.25 up. and felt as well as ever I did in mv | the crop as grown should be'clean- | life. I have never had a twinge of | Figured silk crepon and chiffon show ed out to make first-class seed. To | the pain since and feel that 1 owe to advantage in No, 8181 There are do this a good mill is reguired; | my life to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, three straight gathered ruffles of chif= lacking this, we need to hire or pur- as they enred me after the doctor fon and a pointed tunic of the crepon. chase one; or else purchase seed, by had failed." | The dress {s completed by a gathered sample, that comes up to registered | Sold by all medicine dealers or lace gulmpe, samples. I might mention here that sent by mail at: He. a box or six | This dress requires for size 38 415' -all'séed grain should be blown, that | hoxes for $2.50 by The Dr. Wil yards of 36 inch material. i5, to remove all riddles and put in | liams" Medicine WCo:, Brockville, Ont. Crepon may be purchased from about windboard and screw, put on all} or ---- 76 cents a yard gad up. wind, then by turning steady all the i LORD VENTRY'S DEATH | No. 8235--s1zes 34 to 43. light, coarse grains will be blown No. 8181---slzes 3610 43. over and the heavier grain be fur- | Yuch pattaen 18 certs ther screened and the sample made | mote uniform. Such seed will pro- duce a maximum yield. This is not a trivial matter. It has been prov- en times without number, that the We sell dis rect from factory where not represented. Writ for Catalogue. Wil Hams Plane Company, Limited, ACCEPTING BRIBES Condemned for $8,000 better the seed the better the yield. L I do not know anything that will pay better than time spent in re- cl¢aning seed and bringing it to a proper standard. A very common misjake made in sowing first-class seed is in sowing too thinly. This has disappointed many. and has 'led them to believe nierly of the Fourth Hussars, serves to recall the very wide swath cut by a swindler of the assumed name of BEveleigh de Moleyns, in New York but more especially in Chicago, in 1908. The man turned out to be a for- mer valet of the new Lord Ventry, and other cities of the United States, | ary adventures there, which had to be amputated without "anaesthetics, recovered, subsequent- ly, bore her husband a large family t of children, and lived to the ripe old age of 90, universally beloved, by reason of her kindly wit, and sunny | temper. t The new Lord Ventry, who won the distinguished service order, for Accepting For Illegal Protection St.Paul, Minn, Feb. 21.--Martin Flanagan, former chief of the St. Paul police, 'and Frederick Turner, former city detective, who were fried jointly on an indictment charging bribery, were found guilty, on Thursday night. Counsel for the defendants announced WOMEN CURED AT HONE Women's disorders always from the very beginnl of the The indictment on which the defend- He on: of ean Ny Within ants were convicted specifically charg- " : two or three days after ¢d the acceptance 'of $3,000 from a wo- "y - Pd its use the man of, the underworld, whose resort Boticeable, eh was to be accorded protection. 5 pletely cured, Flanagan and" Turner recently were rabnllen local trea Su and acts 3 |-be elected by lis fellow peers of Ire- tried on a similar indictment, but rectly on the woman! With charges of bigamy, brought not [ 1and, to succeed his father in repré- | were acquitted. moving the congestion, toning and by one but by several women, and { senting their order, in the house of ---------- if strengthening the nerves, and. re- ane perfect circulation in' the with many clever frauds to his eredit | 1oras at Westminster, he is, unless I am. much mistaken, diseased parts. In order to convince all suffering women of the value of. this remedy, will send a 36-cent box, eno for ten ' treatment, absolutely Ren ; ill "doi i "el i to each lady sending me her address. MRS. FRANCES E. CURRAH, Windsor, Ont, still "doing time," either at Joliet or at Sing-Sing. Sometimes he passed himself off For Sale by the Leading Diuggistserywhere as his former eraployer, and some times as the latter's younger bro- ther, Richard, who happened to be in Chicago at the time when the man had just been extradited from New York, and who confronted him in Jail. The Hon. Richard Eveleigh de Moleyns on that occasion told an ex- traordinary story of the police, of the manner in which the ex-valet had been impersonating various members of Lord Ventry's family, not only on this side of the Atlantic, but also in. Australia, New Zealand, South Af- rica, on the continent of Europe, and even in England itself, raising money everywhere on checks and nofes bearing the Eveleigh de Moleyn signature. The family name of Lord Ventry's: family has only been Eveleigh de Moleyns since 1841. Before that time it was gain Mullins, the change having been nade by the third Lord Veuntry, grandfather of the new peer, Who secured a royal license author- izing him to effect the alteration. The first Lord Ventry started life as plain Thomas Mullins, of Burnham, in the county of Kerry, received a baronetey in 1797, and a peeragé in the year 1800, for his services in bringing about the legislative union between England and Ireland. Until the third Lord Ventry the members of the family were content to regard a certain. Frederick Wil- liam Mullins, member of parliament for Tralee, in the = reign of King William IIT., as the founder of thelr Bogse. x oi 2 he third lord, however, was mor to Canada in "1870 and ambitious, and caused a genealogical soon after that I began to suffer from I tree to be constructed, showing his in across the a and derange- MI I {descent from a certain Willigm de the kidneys which often interfered ! Molines, who coming over with Wil. ad ut cklayer. % A. brother liam the Conqueror, took part in the tared by © n e same way battle of Hastings, and. received a Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver half a box of these pills for trial at siands for his Bravery um ery reat enafit ta we ang acu His immediate descendants are Sock what conifort and pleasure Sack - asserted to have distinguishéd them- that. [BB }Sclves in the early crusades, and the this 'we have Kept Dr. 1 Saracddn's head, which constitutes a ver Pills in the house as a family feature of their armorial bearings, is and have found that they keep the kidneys, supposed to commemorate their war- bowels regular and the system healthful. like deeds in the Holy Land. Even | great care is taken in the com fthe late Sir Bernard Burke, that to judge by their uniform ton . jg {705 complaisant of génealogists, » | who is responsible for so many gen- idney-Liver Pills are above ali ae eaological fairy tales, and mythical workingman's friend. 25 cents a family. trees, did net find it possible § 00, at- all dealers. Sample box will be to stand for this, and in his standard this paper. Edmanson, "Peerages," passes over these pre- r ols = tensions in significant silence. + Among the most noted members of | the family in more modern times Was that genial and witty judge, Thomas Eveleigh de Moleyns, who by reason of his that th i thing in it. The bet that the case would be appealed. hat there is nothing in it. The bet- ter the seed the more we need to sow, up to 0 geclaisslunit, One bu hel of inferior teed. wil] produce double' the plants that superior seed will, and if the growing season be favorable, may ovutyield the better sample, but the weight and quality will not be there; there will be more husk and less ni- trogenons matter in the grain, . and l'sa value in it for feed; and further, if it is used again for seed, will de teriorate still further, Prof. Zavitz has made exhaustive ex- periments in thick and thin seeding, sowing all the way from 3 pounds to hao 12 1-3 bushels per acre. The larger David Cox, Port Arthur are 'at Mrs. quantity produced better than 301 |D. Cox's. Mrs. W. A. 5ainderson bushels, and the {esser nearly 21 bush- | has gone to Barriefield. Mr. and els per acre. The yield of straw was Mrs, Alexander Crozier will en'er- in like proportion. The best results |tain a number of Young people this were obtained by' sowing about 1 1-3 |evening. George McCallum Tweed, bushels, = which yielded 413 bushels. | erected a monument here for the The grain was oats, late C. Hawley. Messrs McCallum We must bear in mind, in sowing | and Kleintensber, Tweed, at J. I. seed, the size of the berry and the | Price's. Union school No. 1 has re- stooling property of the variety. As |opened with J, Dunsmore, Stratford, un rule the variety that weighs heavy | as principal. Mrs, H. England, stools poorly and needs: thicker sced- | Sharbot Lake, is with her sister, ing, while lighter and thinner varie- | Mrs. Alexander McDonald. . A pleas- ties' stool better and less is required. [ ant evening was spent an Fel. 9th In anv case it is always wise to sow | at the home of Walte Barr, when a liberally. Thick seeding will give a | number -of their young frienus full stand, shorter and more straw, gathered at thelr home. Ne} | g SR wo IE Mr. J. J. Gillem, Brick- Ww ey Writes: name has © word in for over thirty came from En and who having been in his service for a number of years, had not only become intimately acquainted . with all his family affairs, but had also succeeded in aequiring his peculiar mannerisms, and in cultivating a marked resemblance to his employer. conspicuous gallantry during the Boer war, Is'a_ bachelor of 53, well set up, and gedd looking; and need- less to say, a conservative, and there- fore opposed to home rule. It is probable that in due course he will LAURENQE IRVING TO VISIT KING- STON Limurence Irving as Rodion and Miks Mabel Hackney as Sonia, will be seen in the great Russian The Un- improvement he patient is com= written Law," next T Lily At Mountain Grove Mountain Grove, Feb. 19..G Boomhower lost a horse recently and 8. Abbott-Bests, is spending a few days with his brother, Thomas, and other friends in this vicinity Miss A. Sigsworth, White Lake, was the guest of her sister at the Loyst house on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. i qe Sixty-five beneficiaries have been selected to participate in the lakes disaster fund, amounting to $110,- If bread is the staff of life, then flattery' is the butter. : Auaemia, Weakness. Nerve Trouhjes and th 'Run-down' feeling, and begin to get well to-da You meed suffer mo longer. Because *Wincarnis' will give you mew health, new strength, mew vitality, and new life. ' Wincarais' is a Tonic, a Restorative, a Blood-maker agd a Nerve Food-- all combined rin. one clear, delicions beverage. Therefore, when you take 'Wincarnis' you obtain its : four-fold benefits -- all at omce. It gives new strength to the Weak--new blood to the Angmic -- mew vigovr to the : 'Run-down' -- ssw nerves to Nerve sufferers' -- mew vitality to Old people -- and sew heaith to Everyone. It does not merely * patch you up" -- it gives you nsw life. Don't continue to suffer needlessly, Toke and begin to get well tolay. Remember that that it is recommended by Will you try just. one bottle ? Begin toget well Send the coupon an fiberal trial boule of + Woke l mere taste, but enough to do SIGN THE COUPON You can obtain 'Wincarais' from your Wine Merchant or from all leading Chemists COLEMAN & CO. LTD, _NWincarnis Works, Norwich, Eng. Please send nie 4 Foe 'Bria Bottle of * Wincacuiz)' 1 enclose ix ccats stamps (o pay carriage. Ne

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