Zurich Herald, 1919-10-31, Page 2Dandruff.
Dandruff is a disease of the scalp'
that begins usually in childhood and
continues indefinitely, unless it is suc-
cessfully treated, until it brings about
loss of the hair, It is caused by a
germ, and although there is not much
reliable evidence on the subject, it is
Consistency. the next day, if she is nervous and
Consistency ' one of the funds-! Unwilling to endure his noise, she
is „ is
leer child more
mental qualities of discipline, and, yields "just for once. The result
itt ' ^
probably spread by cos:tagion, either frons my own experience I have found sire Saves
directly through contt:et, for which, i it to be most ,important, It should! or less through his later childhood.
in platy, there are many opporttmiti,esd always be accompanied by kindness.I Again, with an older - chips, the
or indircutly through infected brushes • More mothers have troubles with their) mother will partially concede, 'a 'sort
in bxe',1ers' shop or thru'_:gh an ex -al children because of their own incou-i of+Vcompromise, and the' child is keen
ehother one rea1 enough to know that he has • gained
change of lists. 1 sisteney than for any
The disease is marked e•:. first by the, scson.reaenee of grayish, bran -like scales, Johnnie comes bailee from schools his point, and each time he will seek
to gain a little more, until the'mother
dry and loo>e, which readily fall from I and asks, "Nether, may I go over to realizes when it is too late that her
file stair to the &o es., 'rile; can be I flay Baker's to play ?" and Mother, I problem is great and her `yard really
removed from the heat] by ih 'cu�°111 lclul�ving that bully's influence is lest' has very little weight.
b::!:''_l ?_T end slut .tt liar, 110 new displays more . Myadvice is: Be eonsldeiete in
it places. qs I good, refuses. Johnny d1,. n ,
the c1 ,`t ,..Llro fOL'in o their adult
.and
•1 ? 1�• if i Or 1@a'3- temper, but Mother is firm, I your requirements Of. a Child;
she et t l grows into e<:1,3, at.la• 1__e„ p
Bell become darker ins ;and Johnnie stet's • at home. A few I then be consistent in •seeing that these
the C tC?� '•'�•r Y greasy; they' Slays later, hewev.'r, ,3<',1nrie makes;requiirements are carried out..- Il.r1-
C~,::'_' and more or leas 1,11:3_- >,
lees n li r !And! the . request, ':"'• •r,l Maher, 1`; ho is! table, nagging xnothei•s and veattraC-
1ar1 � ?1 the S'F i}"i reel 1S �,lt» ..fill(', 2Ct,�1C• 3, , ,' thee, , t••a x•
_ �' , - t form te'ts- That er ,'-,g 1.,• caller, • t him go f01 t t ee nervouschildren would he:almost
s11(aL' L tt t: e? ry 4a .,._t1h CrL c.2lt.lt..le._3.;, a C.._Itl, lC4S ea >
• '',e `.x -e ctian os the oil : • ie 1 •1 Ties 's a case of in -1 un'•nown if the former couldre..11ze
is caving to ..,. tri 't e T 1 s 3
THE ROYAL, BANK.
An event of great financial import-
ance transpired•On the 13th inst. in the
!celebration by the Royal Rattle of the
fiftieth anniversary of its 'foundation.
The history of the institution is one
of the financial romances of Canada,.
a remarkable. growth in a comparative-
ly short period from humble begin-
nings • ito a great banking business,
covering not only the Dominion, but
extending to many foreign countries.
The expansion of its business in
recent year:; has been remarkable,
Four other institutions with estthli:th-
ed clienteles in as minty proveices
were absorbed, an energetic p, licy
was pursued, and to -day the Royal
ranks wall up among the big financial
concerns of the Continent. Its opera-
tions in Cuba and the West Indies, a
field early, es
• 4 censi terra , and, in order to save one! the importance of kindness ax:d con
-
Ai. i Cent at a, if not ')efore. these s Iscene . r
4 •n ale 1•I •'i e' -1 ct:C'l?e,-.+lether is layin ^;ood LOllnfltl-
araina ienje the heed hens the -i n- tion ftr many more. The probability
te' _ ,rresetli, r.i'tC.:--i,.':1'i o!te_'-. quite, 1;; that had she replied, "Mother has
e . Aftcr the a2 has lasted told you before," the matter would
untreated or wrong's :?.ted for some have ended there, or even if he had
i
�';,a': the nil ; :??'-:4? •.•%`:' 0'1(1 brittle , cried a little anal ''mac.!. n. „Celle, the
''t e:i Saila out 11141 )� '' llh baldness: :;u?1 would have had a t•a:Liable lesson
\f do oft ,T, dui thatMothertwhat•
sintercy. Lack of sympatL T and
strained relations between parrots and
their olcler chihlrcn often •spr1f g from
habitual inconsistency.
Perhaps the most important thing
311^
all is this: Whenyou make a le -
Sir its Cameral drink of ,1Six Herbert Holt, arr.i
re uest you must kneVe with- efts Ines of wade in luxuriant grasses and dl.n!' _ are a very frnclnent ettus 1 of m^.ltY
gitimateq ianr.f>er, :421. C. l • Neill, •C .1:-, ..„-.. •• tt,..,_i .z...:. yourself -that von expect t to be -' •;, ; mrience at will from a stre,rnl of spring water serious ills, The worm.a will be
,.,,e.,�.y, .tt a CtJI.-1 .1nd learned i the:an ) cal tied pis energy, ('aI`ieit3-, :.L•1d wide e`.i:•
sins e._t_*_...fur some *1r, on the settle,: �••; 1 r the moment carried out. Then if you are c,1 oLec- ees and banking 'aJfaire. The that origiat;tes in the banks of the clestroy.Ed and the ills preventhe
a beard
His love for in basin, a
the e r . C vat d , the may assn
might have
Gay Lad blood has proved such a hap-
py rack with imported cows that Mr,
Collicut readily bought another Gay
Lad, also by Gay Lad -0th, from the
Glengarry Rauch, in Alberta, in 11115.
The Glengarry Ranch purchased 30
Herefords at the 1917 sale Of 0. Har-
ris & Sons and among these was Gay
Lad 16th, which sold for $20,000, He
Wes sold in 1918 to Mr. \Collicut, to-
gether with 30 females, and their in-
crease at the saute price, $`20,000. Not
only has (lay Lail 16th got a lot of
beautiful calves for Mr. Collicut, but
he was champion of Canada in 1918,
and stood. third in a -Strong,class at
the 191: International, ill Chicago. The
1910 Canadian. show circuit will see
group cater ,group of Gny Lad ealvos
from Willow Springs Ransil, Anyone
who is incliued to question the ad-
vi,ab;lity of buying a bull of acknow-
ledged
cknow-
1 : irr .d superiority leriority v;ould no lonam
e were to see -•
Their character., smoothness and uni-
formity are unusual,
A visit to thio, herd 1( -Willow
S •'" 1 ench revs t1 one 'of the
'1' et Metering endef+. .tugs in _ -
s )< is Ind:Retry. One would
thins: that in locating a ranch Mr. Coi-
llout hod sou let ut 211 . lberttl for he
1 had f , i i'” '°lest• tom
I TENYEARS
oo Dollars
If invested at 3% will amount to $697.75
If invested at 4%, interest com-
pounded quarterly, will
amount to - $744.26
But if invested in our G!t2%
Debentures will amount to.. $850 .20
Write for }Booklet.
The Great West Permanent
Loan Co;<a'.'!tl+aiiy.
Toronto Office 20 King 4t, West
Genius is the ability to 'lo seine one
thing naturally better than 'nest peen
ple can do it with the beet of training,
Buy Thrift Stamps.
pliiftell, have giVtll it a t • gf • 1 {.rta:r,I�.p.y�"y'- ,r�rn.n s.Rznnaa
doubt If h v t e these calves. rr'„�, r „Rd e 3 ,. ,&., +, , ,: , )..
leading place in those countries, with "i r x 611'' A a �,t "...I.* i /Cr. &0
the reau1t thet it hot.--no',r 015 branch- ler m �''i.T1�:I to cul: your
grass y x
es, and 42 sulab Inches riving It pee-
" r t openinSa. Flu 1
•1, .'.7.11:42. ...a:k•.: ill }� with slam. S7kfe de.
n,i0r pines, ,stn. ,; C
Springs rreJ�; ttir " :en savant.. 'o
e til has gro n to ue- i ,
this- rE'sl: et,' C'"1:1,+, a ) ^tlbc'r i Vitt . dux tee. Let
wards of t:iS,Ot+;,000. the lr .ei ve fund
1• J. 1..) t
to a 121 . t0C. l l 1• Cut oc4'n furl t
$ •i 000 ' " m„ 'est tills, lame wince,
d1�ilo:'ri to ,351,;}0 a
to $16,400.000, ." e.::ifrrt.
and ar,aas to "•_e0,`;yet( •o• • t'
V Trio 1"•3
.lei a_ -tomplis 11r est. at: this kind is
5. Aa.a,in-re 00f :P;,Y, i.Exrli:cct
e He FM135oN i'. ,rsY !I lr i,t..r .aP!:^h
i'te:ti 1Ur' ta# 1, P.11t. It-( Jtl tt ,.. + w "•'•-
tile lli;,irmi t nd!g t1.2:i1 1 1):. ,`,1111x1 ''.re10111h`1 t11a -- • - -- "..
l.eil 111 a rl"e.lt t.e'-Lill e
the ;,ic= r.. and ; rn, c_l.:a:(etar 011(1 l,ractic ,l Gt -
1?1oet : modelle beans le
• f`� til
i 113i
"1 1
herd 1
o:112e the ulEf i g Jt�w���'
ei si rt.,- wine. _led stemmata night st. r
of 1110 a +�'e3 `Ci"�'( .411,1 \til+t at'ihttte t,; 1'4 : Il;illi:?il;?. slit and, down this ...
1'
I
L I
:� n
t i t .
1
�� t 1 r�
file vi� 4 t!
rectos', 111. E. 1 , r ; a..., 1hoa a large
share, for 110 it was Who thirty-two and (ley.. with nat;lfltg 1)333 blue slop
yeare ;ego blazed the trail of sue :.ss• tor a. roof, the e,(1,Jbct :_:. of
The Royal F3r:a11t lltis in its president, 11 r ..vine for walls. In diaster they
R, 5
R
been sllal;ee but-ev hap- ed you must calmly, but definitely and coot: e, in til 11 ter they pick at hay if you tell -
ti^0-": a:,e..e3. i prasl erity of the hassle is a reilt:C o n
-m4,—efts 1, 11; a sec shot t: , ; ally .lohnnie would have been a flap- emphatically, see t0 it that S.oat re- of elle prosperity anal gt'O�Vit1g COlri- :tn(1 bat she^i't's. 'I'i3C bllll'S atlrl S out g
•
bre Ot @. e.4
r era n-,t,r 1,. that axe some -1 slier boy and his love land respect for quest is complied with This method , nlerce of Canada, in which the ixrsti- thithgs, togeth•er with tins matrons Lir.
m. e Daniel' '
ee tr. a d su^i lirrr then •bei; s, find •shelter in
t ess mistaken for eimple dandruff, { itis lnethclr i. tJtll,'1 1 ave been isnot ei ca d•
but these cl=esses da not usually at- rhe �ai1Le of consistency cannot be! le
• tack the cad. averastit?:^tett. The cuuest baby
The cure of clantlrlli may be etfe:t- should be dealt with kindly but firm-
ed by using an 04ert > . 't that contain_
five per cent, of seblimeti sulphur a - j ?3" A mother can develop the tc assn;'
„r „'.rl : „, �r:l>hed oil in the • saint in her child while he is still in
pace let ...eta .
morning. A more ag eeable remedy is! his cradle if .she lacks this quality of
a lots n tt r - w?t>c,-is cue per sent 01 consistency. At wee time when her qualities of mother-dieelplene that
easel -in, with a little castor oil scent- I teeny cries she cloet not pick him up, f train the strong-willed littie.'sons and
cal lt''.tii cologne water. The lotion 1 an, she says, "It is not good for him b daughters into spier fid igen and tivo-
should be rubbed into the 'scalp every and he is forming' bac! habit7." But e men,
ie •11ifl0' fes - week sir' ten days. The
snot be .practice to -day ,s'1:1' lee^- tllt.icrl hoe materially aided by moons- "' `'� Worm
s Killer
I " is A
but must be cos and •• •ign the we)i•bedcic d bosstails iii the barns. Ce % �,j, $" � � � "
looted to -morrow, aging domestic promoting foreign All others welcome the freedom and
s hef followed. entian llitims of the outdoors. i TC your horse
The future happiness; character and trade. � �
si •are
well-being of vour little one depend
entirely upon firm, wise sad eonsiatent
guidance. It is these fundamental
scale should not be previously sham-_'
i ted with soap, for the coop eombin-
r.
�: with the resort n might discolor
ill'
the hair.
From News o r to
Herrefoa..,: E•se.->.er.
u1lCont has rough star
-
eared
lb ri,, tT� eare(1 for.—Canadian, in 11:?�•(-ees sometime cotiut;
* ravenously, docs
Gazette. not digest its
d ____.w.– .. p---•._._.__ i o K tl. often
Province/of
T'ranl; Collicut, in th^. � c n n r . looks
Alberta, rose from a :le;rsbOy -to be
f i bender. I
1
There is satisf 11 titin in the unifurnti 111: coat, low
- of Herefords properly bred anti eei]'its, poor op
-
The
petite thriilY-h
The JI+Jng Road, back at isles un-
.a easily, rr i t1, at
• ,e
, 11
.•p ri b f3
s .. U s -rube,
Cans 41 s foremost t HC r thin
Fie boyhood days were spent in an at- 1 'When the slut is hi h and the dust is anything.
against he 1
d,,n1' thing 70111'tn-
An(i the twilight ...Inlet late.; lent --it's a pretty
it.,
FALL 1 ,1 1 '111 i decaying ll cities.
organic matter is of little mosphere common to all other boys
I
•.
I advantage. ~Bailin cistern ~vases, or who have to make a living 1
11 i 'at 1'i^ ash aa5' ; p-�t t "dosing" it with chemicals to sterilize His ambition to slake stoney had to
��� �� � � � V MJ� "1• 1 selling n•'wapa)le1S on
1>r It Use M f Bank. t 111e wholesomeness of the watt
s x Canadian fall weather is extremely It should be regarded as -'emergency
I have long believed that our tele- hard on little mese One day is warns measures. •
•'a?t•as could save us more time and and bright and the next '.ret and cold. To filter rain -v1 ,rr feed ave thee
4 am l l ,,, ; r,i , , 1
t i-lt=x'.9nq .n
Right changes b i i,..c. .t . •..i«.,t��
„ ca g sudden cha s �. k
to s . Q ..
an est u c g ,. ,.. �.
than Th
trav•
el 1
t
A
thinking about doing th" a1loe sastxliaps•'cttxfia-esrlro='`and'dnl5 irelys mo•t 1l'•
illy t1le - slaw pe co to
'• hgnl.._1 iJrtele hoxie .. T" ein& not .so
r
very mtcll different than Most farm-
cre, and I live six :Hiles from my bank.
-nacre are times when I want some-
thing done fairly quick and which
fcl:nerly meant a trip to town.
Nov I have found that practically
all ray banking business may be done
without going to the bank at all. When
I want to de?: ;sit cheques on my check-
ingaccount 1 just make a list of them,
en the slips that the bank has on the
public desks at all times, and mail
them to the cashier. I know him per-
sonally, and so I address the letter in
his name, and no one else gets at it.
The bank gives mea pad of depositing
slips, so that I have them out here all
the time. Then in a few days the
receipt from the bank comes out, and
the business is done.
Sometimes I want to borrow a little
money for an emergency, I formerly
made a trip in to the bank when I
wanted money, as I felt that it was
something to be quiet about—in fact,
almost ashamed of. Now I do not see
it that way, and I call the cashier on
the phone and tell him how much I
need and for how long. He mails me
a note, which I sign and return, and
the job is done. Then the time comes
to pay the note. I send a cheque made
out to the bank, with interest .added,
and in a few days I get the note hack
marked paid, and the business is over
with.
Now I wonder if you think this is
risky. Perhaps it as. Most of the
business we do is risky in some way
or another, at some time er another.
The banker I dear with is a home man
'whose interests are here. A matter
of a few dollars would not make him
run away. If he embezzled a half mil-
Hop,
il-
bio , then he might be expected- to run;
len $rsat I send in wouldn't be worth
the car fare on a very long run.
I find that the banks rather like this
sort of business, as it distributes their
work better than when people come
to the window in bunches. When there
is no one at the window the mail busi-
ness can be taken care'of.
There are some who advocate farm-
ers' borrowing money of their banks,
whether they need it or not, just to
get acquainted with the bank's meth -
ode of doing business and to establish
a line of credit. One can establish
credit that might be very convenient
some time when there is a pinch. I
don't know. whether I would Bio this,
if I didn't need it, or not, though I
believe the idea is worth considering.
--I::, R.
lip
p,
1 . �1 i611-1 1 it, although safe precautions, insure
little stomas is kept
h 1 t right the result's rainfall 'hate-the"ground•will give the
1 from Cal^•ar3' to LdniOntOf, and he
equal Baby's Own Tablets in keeping I a filter can be made from a barrel oe
':old papers magazines and books on
1)8 gratified by e ing
the street corners. - When the first i This is the time the tired heart,
newsboy's route was established in i \'Corn with the weary load.
Calgary he;got it, and his ability as a , Gathers the truth in the saying old:—
long,
son
"Aa
g
for
friend
0
'r
fl rE.
cherry Y
generally .m Y
ca o
17,11 be,
1 t,,:c,p tlt'r s'ale�n . g
Sieogn�"`O'ti,1 'z+s1 'applied "fear the -posh road:'
tion of niws.;gent when the Canadian On the road of 'life are the lofty hills
Pacific :'.utml•r was being completed That the feet of men must climb;
And the deserts wait and wild winds
bear
Tho gray miles' dust and „ruse;
Then does the heart need friendship
gay
And the joy of the pilgrim's code;
Rich is the one who can journey with
1 lung
"A cherry friend .011 a long, ';
road."
fedi
1 a that
When the weary 1t111A:; rim fltrl ahead eatien
that 11e i:' 1Jl:dlg-
alanil far is a llOnit?land €'.133, I
'Cin ller. l of This Dr.
remedyry—tr `tl n0 �f nutd
efficient through the years—will des-
troy worms in eases and eattlo as
rc?tllil,i; else will. •
PRICE 60c.
Big Animal Medical Elook Fres.,,,
DE. A. C. DANIELS COMPANY
or G,+„1ia'.A.33.11, ata I1.'.�37
KNOWLTON • QUEBEC
1•
ti
may be serious. There is nothing to greatest degree of purification. Such
the little ones well. They sweeten
the stomach, regulate the bowels,
breast up colds and slake baby thrive.
The Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail. at 25 cents a box
from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
Drinking Water From
Cisterns.
The mails things to consider in a
cistern from which drinking- water is
obtained are absolute water -tightness
at top, sides and bottom, close screen-
ing of inlet and waste -pipes, provision
large galvanized iron tank, placed
above the ground so it can be easily
cared for, and filled with some suitable
filtering material. The -water as, it
drains from the roof should pass
1;' \rough this material before it enters
the cistern, the rate being kept down
to one pint in feu. minutes (forty-five
gallons fn•twenty-four hours) for each
square foot of area in the filter bed.
Sand is one of the best and most
available filtering materials, and well -
burned charcoal is most useful in re-
moving color, taste and edor. Fine
sand removes minute particles to a
greater extent than does coarse sand,
for excluding from the cistern the first but on the other hand it clogs more
portion of each rainfall until the roof' quickly. Crushed quartz and tho'rough-
has become rinsed thoroughly, a first- ly clean pit or beach sand, such as pis
class filter of clean, well -selected sand
and thoroughly burned charcoal.
The flow in the filter should be
downward, and so slow that effective
filtration (not rapid straining) is se-
cured. A wastepipe should be pro-
vided which removes surplus inflow
from the bottom of the cistern where
impurities tend naturally to settle.
Periodic and thorough cleaning of the
cistern and filter is necessary. From
time to time the clogged. sand should
be raked or removed from the filter
and the dirty charcoal replaced.
The practice of throwing charcoal
into cisterns to absorb the odors of
For Obstinate Paint Stains.
Mix 0(1001 parts of turl'enttile and
ammonia 031(1 apply to Niel; c tains on
woolen chrthing. This conquers ob-
stinate '•stains,
Ai`flinite, ,ivaetlei oil
Inlet:G,rnde Miil En s tory , 74
Sails eheapSurnples Free t.
tlit:STAISitS01, qt,
Thr
Fat
it
1
ok Shnvif
in ET the highest market
4.1 prices as well as some
of the big prize money
by entering your good,
wells finished ,tock in our
Tenth Annua1 Show.
� t6 STOCK YARDS
December 11th and 12th
Write for Premium List and
Entry Blank to -day.
Secretnryt
COX r 5 - Wt ST i'Oi30NTO
the first passenger train over that
railroad.
This environment brought him in
touch with many ranchers and farm-
ers in Alberta. He was ambitious,
and big men tonic it personal inter
tst
in shim. Among these was "Pat"
Burns, a packer and rancher, who has
been one of Alberta's most prominent Though the road be gay or the road
citizens since the cowboys owned the: be sad
ranges. Mr. Burns wanted young
Collicut to herd cattle for him, and
the monetary inducements and future
prospects appealed to him sufficiently
to take him from newspaper salesman-
ship. He began the cattle business
then, and the day he first sprang into
the saddle marked a period of pro-
gress.
Mr. Collicut saved his earnings and
invested in grade cattle. He later be-
came a buyer for ItIr. Burns, and in
these two enterprises, buying and in-
vesting, he was singularly successful
After several years of experience
in handling a grade herd. and feeding
steers in thousands, Mr. Collicut had
an ambition to own pure-breds.
His opportunity came when the
pure-bred Hereford stock of the Bax-
ter -Reed Ranching Co„ in Alberta,
was offered for sale in 1908. This herd
had been imported direct from Here.
fordshire, England, after having been
selected by one of Britain's most com-
petent Herefdrd breeders. In 1908
pure-bred cattle were not so expen-
sive as they are to -day, and his invest-
ment for the.100 cows and young stock
was not so formidable a consideration
as it would be now. In the following
year Mr. Collicut bought the herd of
Simon Downie & Sons, of Alberta, in-
cluding the cow, Sally, and the bull,
Beau Perfection llth, both imported
from the herd of Warren T. MoCray in
Indiana..
Like the Baxter -Reed people he did
not fully appreciate the merit of im-
ported English cows, and was back-
ward in paying the price necessary to
purchase a bull that would give best
results on such high-class females.
Importaflons were nude frons time, to
time fran Mr. MoCray's sherd. Fair-
fax Perfection and Governor Hadley
produced the best results in his sherd
up to the spring of 1916, when Mr. Col-
licut bought Gay Lad. 40th, by Gay Lad
used in mixing mortar, are used ex-
tensively. The size of the grains
should be quite uniform, and should
be such that all could be sifted
through holes made in a sheet of
paper by a medium-sized awl,
A depth of two feet of carefully
selected sand free from clay, loam,
and vegetable matter, is preferable to
a ,greater depth of sand of indifferent
quality. As the thin surface layer be-
comes Clogged with continued use, it
may be scratched or fureowg'd, or a
half inch or so may be scraped off
with a trowel, until eventually the bed
is reduced to twelve or fifteen inches
in thickness, The sand removed eliould
be washed and returned, or - eplaeed
with new sand. It is advantageous to
place about six inches of well -burned
charcoal under the two -foot bed of
sand. Trtpple=burned, triple -ground
wood charcoal, the pieces averaging
the size of wheat grains, has given ex-
cellent results and the east is not
high. I
Two Out of Three Fires Occur
in Our Homes.
The frequent occurrence of fires in
dwellings is a. matter that must re-
ceive more careful attention on the
part of householders. Statistics show
that sixty-four (64) per cent, of all our
fires, or, practically two mut O1 every
three, occur in the homes of the
people. Tills is a terrible indictment
o11 our mode of life, and is the result
of our careless habits.
It is also a fact that glen, women
and Children are equally guilty of
causing this enormous fire waste. The
careless manner in which • Coal 011
lamps Land candles are used; . and
11hted snatches and cigarette butts
are thrown Around is sufficient evi-
dence to show that our " lhalaits"r musk
be changed.
Or the winds be harsh or kind,
Though the rough traits mount to
chill alai snow
Or run where the bright brooks
wind, +
True to the end we should ever be,
Bearing a willing load; •
This is the uauie we should strive to
claim:
"A cherry friend
road!"
Vinegar From Fruit Parings.
With good vinegar selling at twenty
cents a quart, ,it is worth while to
save apple parings, cores and pulp.
Put these materials in a wooden or
earthen vessel and cover with water.
In a few days the first'lermentation
�"vill be complete, and the parings part-
ly disentegrated.
Strain off the liquid portion, and to
this liquid part add water sweetened
with molasses or brown• sugar until
all the liquid has a slightly sweetish
taste. Acetic fermentation will begin
at ogee,' and eften in four weeks a
good quality of vinegar with a decided
fruit taste, almost equal to pure cider
vinegar and much superior to many
kinds that are sold, will be formed,
A little cornmeal put in with the
parings will hastenefermentation and
also add to the body of the vinegar.
If the vinegar appears weak, add more
sweet, and in a short tine the differ-
ence will be apparent. A little made
vinegar or mother of vinegar will
hasten restate. .
Throughout the S ear add to this
product the rinsings of vessel's that
have contained horsey or syrup; or a
little brown sugar. At a cost of only
a few cents a gallon a wholesome sup-
ply of vinegar can thugs be had by any
housewife.
for a long, long
6th, from O. Harris & Sons, for $11,000.
This bull was only a yearling when
brought to Canada, but he had been
a junior champion in the 'United States
the previous season. To -day he has
justified his purchase price many
times over through his progeny, which
now ramble about in large numbers at
Willow Springs Itonch, Mr, Celli -ant's
chief. ranch, 30 tulles north of Calgary.
seteeedefeeeneeeeee
CANAB
FEST
BEEF
�p{p
VEOETALES
PEFECTLY
COKED
lust hoat am
eat.
Vty. CI -ARK
No tiletter Whether
MfLRis---COLT—JACK
wee 14o
10441141.44
1
111 as effective in the treatment of one (1- of tiho other
ioidtoallpisx, Pink I:yo,. anifucuza, Clone% or Cold. The stallion:
in the stud, the horse in the field or o,, tila road, and the!.
1n by colt arc all protected from. dh.cazc by an oocasionai.
dose, 1;uy fretn your druggist.
ISZ'oii:x6f FSw n 0oLTs A:tXT, G}DFi 33?lsv, a. 71"•x4' t'C•t<, '0.14,J1e