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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Fordwich Record, 1901-08-29, Page 7FRAGRANT for the TEETH and BREATH New She SONDONT LIQUID . . . 25c New Patent Box SOZODUNT POWDER . . 25c Large LIQUID and POWDER . . . 75c At the Stores or by Mail, postpaid, for the Price. A Dentist's Opinion: " As an antiseptic and hygienic mouthwash, and for the care and preservation of the teeth and gums, I cordially recommend Sozodont. I consider it the ideal dentifrice for children's use." [Name of writer upon application.] HALL & RUCKEL. Montreal. The superiority of Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator is shown by its good Weds um the children. Purchase a bottle and give It a trial. Mr. Newwed—There is no use talk- ing—I won't eat any more of your cooking! Mrs. Newwed (tearfully) And you-you said—you were willing to—die--die • for me! But, madam, there arc worse things than death. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc The dandelion produces 12,000 seeds per plant, shepherds' pulse 87,- 000, thistle 65,000, chamomile 16,- 000 burdock 4.3,000, and the common plantain 44,000. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. Dear Sirs,—I have great faith in MINARD'S LINIMENT, as last year I cured a horse of Ring-bone, with five bottles. It blistered the horse but in' a month there was no ring-bone and no lameness. DANIEL MURCHISON. Four Falls, N.B. LIKE AND' UNLIKE. Browne—Whenever a woman be- comes unreasonable it's attributed to her Nerves., Isn't that singular? Towne—Yes, but-the unreasonable- ness of a man is attributed to his nerve, and that's still more singular. S. N. ti 337 C BUFFALO HOTELS. ANADIAN ROUSES FOR CANADIANS AT CANADIAN PRICES AND MANAGED NY A CANADIAN. The Motel Buckingham, The Marlborough, and 'rho Lillian. All up-to-date buildhala root-garden one the Buck- iletTIZ7.7,1°Lrgst.e34. Y.reb. 5, H. "81" & CANVASSER WANTED. SAMPLES free or returnable. freight charges prepaid; exclusive territory; repair customers. Salary or commission. Si sgeurity. Write quick, Coons L)rawer Cal, Lando.. Italy only brews 7-10ths of a gal- lon a head of beer in the year, the least of any large country in Europe. Russia's production is about 1-10th of a gallon a head greater. A Trouble That Makes the Life of Its Victims Almost Unbear- able—Causes Headaches, Heart Palpitation, Dizziness, a Feel- ing of Weariness, and a Dis- taste for Food. From "L'Avenir du Nord," St. Jer- ome, Que. Sufferers from dyspepsia or bad di- gestion are numerous in this coun- try. Almost daily one hears some one complaining of the tortures caused them by this malady and it is no uncommon thing to hear a suf- ferer say "I wish I was dead." And no wonder, the suffering caused by bad digestion cannot be imagined by anyone who has not suffered from it. The victim 'is a constant sufferer from headaches, heart burn, heart palpitation, and nausea. He has a bad taste in the mouth, is unable to obtain restful sleep and has always a feeling of weariness and depression. But there is a sure cure for this trouble and it is found in the great- est of all known medicines—Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills for Pale People. Among those who have been cured of this distressing malady by Dr. `Williams' Pink Pills is Mr. Alfred Chasbot, a well known farmer liv- ing near St. Jerome, Que. To a re- porter of "L'Avenir du Nord," Mr. Chasbot told the following story of his illness and subsequent cure:— "For three years I was an almost continual sufferer from the tortures of bad digestion. After eating I felt as if some heavy weight was press- ing against my chest. I was racked with violent headaches; my temper became irritable; my appetite uncer- tain; my nerves were a wreck and I was always troubled with a feeling of weariness. I was able to do very little work and sometimes none at all. Although I tried many remea dies I was unsuccessful in my search for a cure until a friend advised me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Any doubts I may have had as to the merits of these pills were soon dis- pelled, for 1 had not been taking theri, long before I noticed an im- provement in my condition. I con- tinued the use of the pills some weeks when I considered myself fully cured. To-day I am as well as I ever was in my life, and would strongly advise all similar sufferers to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I am sure that they will find them as beneficial as I have. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the disease. They make new, rich, red blood, strengthen the nerves and than tone up the whole system. Bold by all dealers in medicine or sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six , boxes for $2.60 by addressing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Out. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Personal Notes About Some of the Great Folks. The Ring of Siam in his State at- tire wears jewels to the value of over $1,000,000. The German Emperor will drink no coffee but Mexican, and a large sup- ply is seat him every year from a German colony which has long been planting coffee on the Pacific coast of Mexico. The Ex-Empress Eugenie has never worn anything but black Since the death of the Prince Imperial. When travelling she favors silks and satins as velvets of the highest order of ,perfection; but at home her Majesty prefers cashmeres Mme. Adelina Patti says that walk- ing and possibly billiard-playing, on account of the walking it involves, are the best exercises for a singer, Zane. Patti also declares that no one who wishes to retain all the fresh- ness, sweetness and power of her voice should sing in the opera more than twice, or at the most, three times a week. Those of the inner circle of Court life affirm that since his ascension the King has changed very consider- ably in speech and in demeanor. A Certain aloofness is noticeable in his manner and a decided dignity in his Conversation. Instead of addressing his men friends by their Christian names or surnames as heretofore, he now speaks to and of them as "Lord This" or "Mr. That." The pleasant smile and kindly word continue, but some of the cheery familiarity of old days has- disappeared, never to re- tdrn. Stories are leaking out that illustrate this kingly transformation. And it is predicted that the altera- tion in tone and bearing will become more evident as Court mourning grad- ually disappears, and the King and Queen once again take their place in London society. The Emperor of Austria was driv- ing on one occasion on a very rainy day to his suburban residence, the Castle of Schonbrunn, when he came upon a fire engine arrested on its way to a conflagration through the wheels having become stuck in the mud of the street, the horses being unable to extricate it. He immedi- ately stopped his carriage, ordered his horses to be taken out, harnessed to the engine, and used to assist in taking the same to the site of the fire; while for himself he hired a one- horse hackney conveyance to carry him to his home. President Loubet is ono of the best guarded rulers in Europe. A flying brigade of police agents, in civilian costume, has been created so follow the President step by step wherever lie goes. When M, Loubet i3 about to, start from the Elysee the prefec- ture of police is apprised by tele- phone of the place to which he is go- as well as of the route he is to take. Before be has crossed the -gate of the palace a carriage is already In the street, with orders to follow the presidential conveyance and not lose sight of it. This manoeuvre is repeated several times daily. SO SAY THE SUFFERERS FROYE CHRONIC DYSPEPSIA. NO JOY IN LIFE. trict will not be completely rust re- sistant in another district where the soil is richer and moister, and the atmosphere more humih. For ex- ample the wheat was more rusted in the lowlands and valleys about Streetsville than it was on the hill- Fades and uplands. The reasons for this difference in resistance to rust arc probably the ranker, more succu- lent growth of crops in the lowlands and the greater amount of moisture, including dew. It is apparent from the study of plants that if east re- sistant varieties are to be produced in a province like Ontario where marked variations in soil and sur- face conditions, exist, the varieties will have to be developed locally. Along the line of prevention of rust it has been urged that an excess of nitrogenous manures, such as dung CEYLON AND INDIA NATURAL LEAF Gt. 3EG M 1%1" izi• 3B 1;; 4 DAMAGE By Prof. Wm, Loohhead, BY I Ontario T Agricultural College, t Oe 41 The damage done by rusts every the spread of the Cluster-cup spores, year to the grain crops of Ontario from barberry hedges of which there may be safely estimated by hundreds are three miles in the town of Bar- of thousands of dollars. The amount rte. In all cases the wheat close to of damage varies with the individual the hedges is shockingly bad, and years, according to variations in at.- the further removed the field is from mospheric and soil conditions. Dur- the hedge, the rusting is less marked. ing damp, warm seasons the damage The infested wheat has grains so is usually so severe that in some lo-shrunken that they would scarcely calities but a fraction of the possible weigh 20 pounds to the bushel. Two yield of grain is obtained, and which or three interesting cases were noted scarcely pays for the trouble of bar- in the same township, on the influ- vesting and threshing. once of barberry hedges on wheat What is rust? Rusts are parasitic fields. A few years ago one or two plants, that is plants which obtain farmers planted seine hedges of this their nourishment from living mat- shrub,but to their dismay their wheat ter by sending tiny branches into fields became badly infested, al- the tissues. They belong to a low though prior to the planting no rust class of plants called fungi, which had been observed. After the re- are characterized by the absence of moval of the offending hedges, rust green coloring material, by the pro- did not again make its appearance. duction of spores instead of seeds, Mr. C. A. Zavita, experimentalist and by the very simple structure of at the Ontario Agricultural College, their tissues. The rusts are very re- has a like story to tell. So long as markable fungi from their habit of a fine barberry hedge flourished along changing their habitation from wheat one side of a certain field on the Col- or barley or oats to other plants. lege farm, the crops were badly rusted, but so soon as the hedge was removed, the. rust failed to appear. Two stages of wheat and oat rust Lately, however, the College fields are probably well known; one, the are badly rusted. red rust, develops' in early summer, It would certainly appear from and the other, the black rust, in the these and many other cases which late summer and autumn. The char- might be given, that if the barberry acteristic colors of the two stages is not absolutely necessary for the are given by masses of spores grow- continuous propagation of wheat ing in layers upon the plant body rust, it is 'at least a very important of the rust. This plant body con-. factor. sists of a network of threads living It is more difficult, h owever, t o explain the cause or causes of the outbreak at Streetsville, since no barberry shrubs have been observed in that vicinity. There must either be Some plant which takes the place of the barberry (hut such a plant is not known in any part of the world) or else the fungus omits altogether the Cluster-cup stage, as is the habit of some of its closely related rusts. The conditions favorable to the spread of rust are moisture and heat. A rainy season, when the intervals are characterized by intense heat, is an ideal one for the spread of rust. Thus seasons when thunderstorms are frequent, and the accompanying winds strong, will have more than the usual amount of rusted grain. The red rust spores are distributed by the winds, and the rapidity of spread is marvellous to a person of unscientific training, who looks upon the rust as he would upon the hot blast of a fire scorching the leaves from a distance. As a matter of fact when the red rust spores are wafted by the wind to unaffected readily effects the leaves of the bar- leaves, a period of incubation on- berry. Two sorts of spores 'are curs from seven to ten days or more formed on the barberry leaf by this before the rust spots appear on the infection. One kind is readily seen leaves and stems. on the upper side, and the other on It may be stated here that atmos- the lower ;surface in yellow,' minute phonic conditions, such as abundant cups, called Cluster-cups. It is moisture, either as rain or dew, and known that the orange colored spec- hot spells, are not the cause of rust, es when set free from the Cluster- but simply conditions under which cups, and blown away to a wheat rusts will propagate themselves most field, will infect the wheat and give rapidly. It is not likely that the rise to a parasitic fungus plant smoke of locomotives has any influ- body_within the wheat stem or leaf, enc.° whatever in the spread of rust, an some, farmers claim it has. It is also rely essential that, plants suit- able to the fungus be present, if the disease is to spread rapidly, for ev- four different kinds of spores, viz, cry fungus has its own peculiar Red Rust, on wheat in summer; plant upon which it feeds. Black Rust, on wheat in late sum- PREVENTION AND REMEDIES. niers Sporidia in spring, and Cluster- cups At present no satisfactory method spores on leaves of barberry in the spring. is known for the prevention of loss by rust. Spraying the crop, al- With some of the rusts (for there though theoretically good, is practi- are several hundred varieties) one sally impossible while picking the or more of the three stages is ab- seed grain is useless. No practica- sent or has become extinct, so there ble method of "policing the atmos- are varieties which exist only in the phere" and preventing rust spores Cluster-cup stage, and others only from finding their way to the young in the red and black stages. Wheth- wheat has been devised. Australia es wheat rust ever omits one of its is working along the line of develop- stages in Ontario is not certainly meat of rust-resistant varieties and known, but evidence is accumulating has secured results of great practical to show that the rust may be pre- value. That country now -has wheat valent in localities where the bar- varieties that are vigorous, true to berry is unknown, so that the latter name, and of exceptional quality for is not absolutely necessary for the the particular region in which they continuous-{propagation of the Ion- are gro,m While some attention gus. For example, the Cluster-cup has been given to this important stage is not met with in Australia, question in America, little. has been in Central India and in the Western done iii Canada. It is believed, how-States, yet the rust is only too pre- ever, that varieties of wheat with valent in those very regions near narrow, erect, leaves and a stiff skin home. In Streetsville district in On- upon which there is a marked waxy tario, no barberry has been reported, "bloom" are as a rule less easily- af- yet the rust is very severe this year, Seated than those with broad, soft, many fields being so badly attacked as to hardly pay for the threshing. HOW THE RUST SPREADS. In districts where the barberry is common, the fungus, to all appear- ances, uses that shrub as a second host, and the full life cycle is then completed , as already described. The Cluster-cup spores infect some of the wheat plants close by and give rise to the plant body within, from which red rust spores are liberated during the early summer, and the black rust later in the season. In the vicinity of Barrie, the fields of wheat are badly rusted this year; moreover, this destruction of wheat by rust is an annual occurrence there. The in- festation is manifestly the result of Is Free Free from Any Particle of Coloring Matter ; is Dainty and Invigor. acing ; is the only tea that suits fastidious palates and is wholesome for the most delicate digestions. IT IS ALSO A BRITISH PRODUCT • • • • • • A MANITOBA MAN. Printing Material for Salo. • 3P.IIELIZOTUCULATIDI- 1E')FC,MMESMIES- 4 . • One Four Roller Campbell Press, front delivery, bed 43x56, $1200 • One Four Roller Campbell Press, bed 37x52, . . . . $1100 • • 0 •• • IENCISZ.,X1III%Tiell• I0iE-49..1101-3CinT3EIEli. • Two 7-col. quarto Brown Folding Machines, each , . , $400 0* 6 • • e • wsrmoae-sicrt.-taamig• ivraci•Axxxes.ne. • (11 • • Two Roger's Typographs, in first-class order, each . . . $550 • • • • .., • ali, to Also Cutting Machine,- Stones, Stands, Body and Display Type. • in First-Class Order. Easy Terms will be Given, • eArlSt is Machinery is pheolal Discount for Cask. On account of adding a more ussto-date ; All • Plant the above Machinery and Type will be disposed of at a Sacrifice. a e • fo; The Wilson Publishing' Co., of Toronto, L,,.... 7 TORONTO, CANADA. . T 0•6100.0.0s0o••••••ceseeeeeece•009e0a9.0•0•0.90 If You Want "'Bigeg,'1160'8,WATRY. ether FRUITS and P5001.113B, to The Dawson Commission Co.Col born Cor. e St , Wen Market and Toronto. A DELUSION. Willie—Those gold fish you sent home are fakes. Slimson—How do you know? Why, I took them out of the water and they turned brown in fifteen minutes. Totally Deaf.—Mrs. S. E. Crandell, Port Perry, writes: "I contracted a severe cold last winter, which resulted In my becom- ing totally deaf in cue ear and partially so is the other. After trying various remedies, and consulting several doctors, without obtaining any relief, I was ad- vised to try Dr. Thomas' Ecleotric Oil. I warmed the Oil and poured a little of it nto my ear, and before one-half the bot- tle was used my hearing was completely. restored. I have heard of other eases of deafness being cured by the use of this medicine." Two tons of beets are equivalent in feeding value to 4 tons of hay, but its cultivation has proved too expensive to be profitable to English fanners. Known to Thousand- s- .—Parnselse's Vega table Pills regulate. the action of the secretions, purify the blood and keep the stomach and bowels free from deleterious matter. Taken according to direction they will overcome dyspepsia, eradicate biliousness, and leave the digestive organs healthy and strong to perform their functions. Their merits are well-known to thousands who know by experience who beneficial they are in giving tone to . the system. Of the 35,920 churches in the Unit- ed Kingdom, the Church of England has 14,570 and the Methodists 11,- 500. There are 820 Roman Catholic and 60 Jewish places of worship. are removed ten corns froin my feet with Taos. Senna of Eglington, says: "I • Holloway's Corn Cure." Reader, go thou and do likewise. Here, said Benny's papa, showing the little fellow a coin, is a penny 200 years old. It was given to me when I was a boy. Well, cried Ben- ny, just think of anyone's being able to keep a penny as long as that with- out spending it! The great lung healer is found in that excellent medicine sold as Sickle's Anti Consumptive Syrup. It soothes and di- minishes the sensibility of the membrane of the throat and air passuires, and is a sovereign. remedy for all coughs, colds, hoarseness, pain or soreness in the chest, bronchitis, eta It has cured many when supposed-to be far advanced in consul:lip- itAanks, otAca 101 yokx R f 111 LL (Aar 4.0 / ais,o-ore .976,G -&ed true tt -ea.! 4,1— Pnatl clet a044 - fiusPund Qwzo gays t1a:i trice., lati io corny(k;,,y a- 71- eloi...)4; GRAIN RUSTS hot • LIFE HISTORY OF WHEAT RUST in the tissues of the wheat stem and feeding on the living liquid material. The spores project from the inside of the wheat stein by the rupture of the skin or bark and are separated from their stalks by the wind which may continue to carry them all summer to other wheat and oat fields. Thus the infection spreads by means of the red rust spores throughout the sum- mer. From the same plant body which produces the red spores, ap- pear the black spores later in the season in equally large numbers. These, however, must remain dor- mant all through the winter on the stubble of the field before they will germinate, so that the black spores are not instrumental in the infection, of new fields the season they are pro- duced. The red spores are minute, oval, spiny; one-called bodies, but the black spores have thicker walls, and aro two-called. In the spring the black rust spore develops a tiny thread and produc- ing new spores called Sporidia, which does not effect the wheat plant but from which red rust spores are pro- duced. We thus observe that during its life-cycle the wheat rust fungus bears green leaves. In England Nursery, Trump, and Squarehead• are highly_ resistant. In New York and in Can- ada the bearded varieties appear to suffer least. Turkey Red makes a good showing, while the Glyadon .of Dakota showed practically no traces of rust. There appears to be no appreciable difference in resistance of the follow- ing varieties sown in Ontario:—Man- chester, early, Red Clawson, Genes- see Giant, Dawson's Golden Chaff, and Democrat, as all were equally infected. MIST RESISTANT VARIETIES. A - word' here as to rust resistant varieties. It is probable that the runt resistant varieties -of one dis- easily effect an entrance. Again, good drainage is decidedly beneficial, for the dampness of the soil and thereby excessive moisture of air will be removed, and the conditions made less favorable for the develop- ment of the fungus, as has been de- scribed. - o---- Testifies to the Powers of the Fa- mous Dodd's Kidney; Pills.— Cured of Backache Like Thous- ands More —Spreads the Good Work Among His Friends. Oak Lake, Man., Aug. 12.—Frank Colleaux, of this place, has turned missionary. A conscientious sense of duty has impelled him to spread a certain good work among his friends and neighbors. The work in ques- tion is the work of Dodd's Kidney Pills. Some time ago Mr. Colleaux was cured of Backache. He had it for years. Though he didn't know it, his kidneys were affected, and it was his kidneys that caused him so much misery. But he found relief. He did more. he found a positive cure. He read that Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure Back- ache. So they do ; they've cured thousands of cases of it, simply be- cause they act on the Kidneys with such splendid effect and thus get at the cause of that fearful disable- ment. So Frank is spreading the good tidings among his friends as fast as he can. If he meets a man suffer- ing with Backache he tells him right straight what is really the mattes with him and recommends Dodd's Kidney Pills. In this way he is the means of helping many a poor vic- tim of Kidney Disease who might never have understood that in Dodd's Kidney Pills he has a sure escape from his affliction. "It gives me a great amount of plaesure," says Mr. Colleaux, "to recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills to all my neighbors and friends. I can testify to their excellent curative properties for Backache because two boxes cured me." The amount thrown to the child- ren of the Poor Law schools at Sut- ton by persons driving to and from the Derby and Oaks was £206 9s. The money goes to the Children's Recreation Fund. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria Only one country brews more beer per inhabitant than England. That is Belgium, with 31* gallons a head, as compared with 29 gallons in Eng- land . OEM's MOM cures corm m con LA Ceylon Teas are sold in Sealed Lead Ceylon Green. Free samples sent. Address ..SALADA," Toronto. Packets only. Black, nixed, Uncolored or nitrate of soda, should be avoided „....„..........e.e••••••••••0210•0•0•0- ‘.•••ease• as it, tends to a growth of strong, ..!`•`'w s soft stems to which rust spores can . ...PRINTERS.../ • & i . s • 9 a King Edward has appointed Abbas Kull Khan to be Assistant- Oriental Secretary to his Majesty's Legation at Teheran. ONE OF THE LINKS IN THE LONG CANADIAN CHAIN OF DIRECT EVIDENCE. They Advertise Themselves.—Imme d lately they were offered to the public Parmelee'. Vegetable Pills became po p War because of the good report they made 'for themselves. That reputation has grown, and they now rank among the first medicines for use in attack. of dys- pepsia and biliousness, complaints of the liver and kidneys, rheumatism, fever and ague and the innumerable complications to which these ailments give rise. Papa's got got a new set of false teeth,' said little Willie. Really? replied the visitor. I didn't know your papa's teeth were false. Oh, yes; and I'll bet a hat they'll cut down the old set and make me wear 'em. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper WItemolee SO.:1171SO Seem. hue been seed Oh—cr—pardon me, Miss Maudie, Por Over Fifty Years million. of mothers tor their children white annin, but at what age do you think wo- al%rsslthreegu'hiles. Th'rgeueer tam 1,1;ets",lumd Ts: men should marry? You know the beet em y for Blarrhcea Trent -ere mute • bokle. papers are discussing the question. Bold druggiste throughout the world. Be ewe ane wiroe.nee. WiaininVii Solemn. Brian,' At about my age, I think, Mr. Tim- id, she replied sweetly. The whole British Empire has only 12-1 Protestant bishops, of whom 32 are English, 7 Irish, 12 Scotch; 78 Colonial. — •000.000 $100 Reward, $101. The readers of thispaper will be 'plasma to leers that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has bees able to ewe in all its CEases and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh urs is the only positive out, now known to the medical maternity. Catarrh being a coos. Muth:mai 'disease, required a constitutional trmtmeur. Haire Catarrh Cure '", taken inter. sally, acting directly span teiTs blood Rnd mucous surfaces of the system. thereby des baying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient errength by building up the tunableness and ...tiding nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so mach faith in ourAtive powers, that they offer one Hun-dred Sollars for any ease that it falls to sure. Send for list of testimonial, . F. J. CHENEY& CO., TOLEDO lie,. HeU's Family P1110 a the beep K DOG AS- WITNESS. A dog has figured as a witness in a case before the county magistrates of Nottingham, England. A hawker was charged with being on certain land in search of game. The police did not capture the man on the spot, but secured a dug which siccompa- flied him. The policeman in charge of the case took the dog l to court with him when the hawker -was sum- moned.. As soon as the hawker was put in the dock the animal began to struggle violently. At length it es- caped from the police of ficers and tried -to reach the man in the dock. "The dog seems to know you," said the presiding Magistrate, with a smile. The hawker was. obliged . confess that .it Old, and this confess, Edon led to his being fined, 11: