Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 24 Aug 1905, p. 1

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Remo-ielled,a.ud newly furnished thr One of the mos ouveuient and arm hotels on Yonge Street. Every mod veuie'ne Sa-ngle mums for con travellers. Anidealstoupiug place to or driving partieanL-yalists. or farms tnorrecucuiu; from unrket. Elect pas: bhedoor lear n-Jonuectiuu A Librarian and Richmond Hill P Reading Room. Applicants tn fur ing, keep the Rom lighted, and act :lSl taker. The above Tuesday and Szttln 7 to 9 n‘clnc-k. Applications, stw lmcuivml l)\' the Sm: Tuesday, 15(1) inst. Duties to hem” 1s COMMISSIONER IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, are. Issuer of Marriage Licenses RICHMOND HILL POST OFFICE. 0.111s by day and night tended to. PALM E R HOUSE VETERINARY SURGEON, 'Phoruhill. Gulls by telephone from Richmond Hill charged to me. ‘V. C. SAY/$11"; JOHN R. CAMPBELL I. H. SANDERSDN, VETERINARY SURGEON Dr. c. HAROLD CL ARKfi DENTIST. \Vill he in LIBERAL PRINT H. \OL.XXVIII. nt'sday ‘ Office, next (1‘ {Ll'x Office Hours ~ RICHLIOND HILT RIC HIViOND HILL Want your moustachgior heard a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use Ayer’s Pills. Aycr’s Pills. Ayer’s Pills. Keep saying this over and over again. The best laxative. {$3 $123271 $1 per annum, in advance. )JlIl ‘m‘ BUSINESS CARDS. fitting lowest; U 1‘ URSDAY MORNING TERMS 31.00PER DAY I. Thornnill Every W Wednesday. RICHMOND 1‘.McMAHON, [SE Wants 1001' EU) Cult lmgin lst of September. MCHAHON, Secretax y. Em'ros & P 1a newly furnished throuchout )s ouveuient and comfortable ge Street. Every modern con- ugle rooms for commercial idoslstoppingplace for riding ies.l)icyolists. or farmers going from mmrkeb. Electrictcsrs I) 33921 tic-:4 L, wetsrimzry TH!!! JBLISHED EVER anted furnish suitable build- Iumn warm and well :lS Libra: inn and Care- w‘e Ronm to be open .tm-duy evenings from W. ANDERSON, cntist, chm 71W, r1 Caretaker fur the Public Librzuy and :tting yearly salary cl-etm‘y on or bcfm' Lh, fltntal. non-l Hill on “’0 ' each week. up north of Stand- B-mk. torin. St. Toronto li%£ral .) m, ket. Electric _ca:‘s ouuectiun THE 0 ng PuBLISHING HOUSE HILL.ON'L‘. 1130 replating, at; Good. work. BOPRIE‘I‘OB REQERS, m promptly at- nnze Toronto. 3 p. m Prop C TH} THURSDAY, OCT RICHNTOND HILL fifiilglflfi - mam The Next Sitting (if Di No. 3. Countv nf vm. Instruction in thy Art of Piano Pl mg. LicensedAuctioneerfnrthe Com and Ontario Altsaies of farm 51 tended tn on the shortest notice a] rates. Murtganeand bailiff sales Residencefitoufivine OutE License Auctioneer for the‘ spectfully solicxts your path influeuvo sales attnuded on and m; reasonabemtes. P. O RICHMOND HILL Licensed Auctioneers f0 Salesatteudedta on shor‘ onablerates Pntmnam ]TORONTO OI- J T Suigeon, Maple above Licensed Aug: Goods sold 0:1‘ atoc etc pro; runes Reside G R Gouldn I‘HL Money Full term opens (Lessons during Undm-mkers &' Hr. Cool af WP J. EABLE NEWTON Pianist arge T. F. MGM A HON 58‘ ubscribe t( @Eswgfig "KY (.18. 0! D mum] 01:19 Life Building (fm-nwrly hold Luau Bldg). Um. Ark-huh Ban-ism RICHMOND HILL _._ON_ IBERAL Offlc Ont mzmu‘ LE MONEY VVRIGHT BROS LL] - LIBERAL C90 , Countyvnf York. will in the Court Room. KesxdoUue Union‘ Gouldmg. Newto lutho Inmmenpinq (1t 10 stock of Funeral Furnishings kept at both places. J‘s EH. in oulan {Peon & McEwen, ‘I'i xctoria . G. BLOI'GH 303*. Lawrence & W adswor‘th, ers,301icitors. Notarics, 84c. RICHMOND HILL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24-, 3.905 \Vesr Ineers fort-he Countyot York. )on shorflestnntiuaud a. ran.- :Ltmnagesolicited nasigument, PUy attend ILL-k 'zaaad Soiicllors. )on of E. Smith & JOHNS rth 1- for the County of Yoxk, gument General sales (A 5. amended so at reasonable. uwnville ewton Brook, agent for the September 5, 19054 July and August: E's unite “In Essentials, Unity,- in Non-Essentials FIC‘I L‘V( rthe Countiqs a! York A: LA" - hree (1L 3917211. L). Um. Ade-Ia'ide & 5w. Tumutu. . Richmond Hill on u rdu VS. v, v. -uuu, xv- 118.361 {agg and friendly v: ._._ n. , l] the County 0! York, to- LOAN AT 32‘ & THORNHHL v 1 SN" MORGAN Emhalmrrs, [111110 on Thursday 2 the old post 011ch the entrance to fine u thevsLéRIesrtr Homes 0. address King Nah bathe) mom 3 101‘ itr inn Com-t for a. m 1 stock, 8w, up eand reasonable 1's south of the )1‘ Phone Main 2984 \VCG Jr». 33 Richâ€" Buildings, »nh) To- attended 7:6. iabQV-evfl. Ma." K McEwen Weston Newmarket CLERK e to. I905 vsavgesat 11V- 1‘99 neni-ly six bushels per acre. The treat- I went here mentioned was easily per- fnrmed, comparatively cheap, oi’fpctual in killing the smut spores, and insti-u-l mental in furnishing the largest aver- In Each uf six years experiments have been conducted in treating \Vin- ‘ ter \Vheat in diiferunt ways to kill the stinking smut and the results have been very satisfactory. Untreated seed produced an average of 3‘6 per cent. of smut in the crop uf last. year, and 9‘3 per cent. of smut, in the cmp of this season. Seed wheat which was immonsed for twenty minutes in a so- lution made by adding one pint of fox» maldehyde (formalin) to forty-two gal- lons of water piuduced an average yield of grain per acre of 50'4 bushels in 1904, and 508 bushels in 1905, and ‘ that: which was untreated produced ‘ only 4613‘ bushels, and 43 bushels per acre fur the (rm-responding two years, I thus making an average saving ufi nearly six bu$heis per acre. The treat- ment here mentioned was easilv Der-l as (-mnpurt'd with luuken 800d. Sued which was allowed to lie-chine Ve-ry ripe ghefurv it was cut ploduced u gx-cntvr yield of both grain and straw and a, heavier weight of glnin p141- nmasm-Pd bushel than that pl'm'luued from wheat which was cut at any one of the four (uglier stagvs of matln icy. In 1597 und’again in 19(J2, :1 large anmnnt (if the winter wheat; in Ontar- io became sprouted before it, was hurâ€" xested owing to the wet weather. thl‘t‘i‘flily Conducted tests showed Limb an :Ivemm- of only ’76 pm- cent. of the slightly sprouted and 18 pur cent. of thu hmlly spruutvd sexed would grow and produce plants. Surely he is the wise {urine-1' whu will sow none but large. plump, sound, ripe seed of good vitality. The results of twelve made at the College Sllt increase in yield of 1,: 68 bushels from lung with small setd, of 7'2 plump as trumpm-rd ' seed, and of 356 l!U$ll( (if Dawson’s Guide-n lhafl’elercn yield- ed lwtwr tlmn the ordinary variety re- ported in the previous paragraph. and two yieldrd “I, the rate of fully 68 bushels of grain per acre. Smile uf the must interesting crops of \Vintor wheat gimvn at, the ()nlli‘ge in 1905 were those nhtnined frum crus- es made hetwcen different varieties in previous years. Several thousand hyhrid plants wvre grown sepnmlely and are nmv being carefully t‘X:llllil)(-‘d and (‘lus‘sifird and the seeds selched for Autumn sowing. These hybrids were svrurod by crossing sur-h Varâ€" ielios us Dawson‘s Golden ()hnfl“, Bul- garian, Turkey Red, etc. The uhjort in this wmk is to secure new varieties which posse-SS the good qualities and (‘Illflillfllk’ 2 the poor qualities of the parent varieties. The results so fur (1f I);1wsun’s Early Ontario, 568 bushels, and l’msâ€" pvrity 55.9 bushels per acre. Thu :1 Ver- age yield (11’ grain per acne in 1905 was 50'? bushels for the eighlw-n \‘Hl'll’LlL’S Hf \Vhite \thut, and 51-7 bushels for the fatty-three Van-1mm ()f h‘vd \‘that Generally speaking, the \Vhite \Vheuts yield [HUI'P grain per acre, possvss stronger straw, weigh a little less pvl- measured bushel and are slightly Stlfter in the grain than the Red \‘m'it-tivs. \Vilhin the past few years (-fl'ort-s have been made to improve huLh the quality and the yield of grain of some of the host; varieties of VVinLer “7hth by mequ of systoumtic selection and by cross-fortilizulinn. There were forty-one new stmins of \Vintex- \thut grown at the College [his yen:- as a direct result of the \Vurk done in plant. Selectiun. Some of these are wry prmmsing. Of Lu'elH- new strains iwr Goldwa Clmlf and reaching 615 lbs. 'I all sufter in the gnu-1i" hllShl‘lS ps-l- acre t1: Tasmania Red. No. 5 Crime-an RM] and B( \‘Jkl'iPlil‘S of Red “ the] Culloge and througlu of Ontario. Sixty-one varieties were gmwn in the e pnrtnwnt, during the five highest leading ki Dawson‘s Golden Ch hezndloss heads, rod grain. The- yiclds in per acre of these \‘uric lmvs: Abundance. (52 (‘1 ; Suppl-lathe. 60'1; ] Uhnff, 59'5. and Ann bushel all “It: the standard The wheat harvest has plated at the Ontario Agx-k lt-gv. The weather condi pusl yva r have hem fuvnml (.uL Ontario fut the SHCCQSE of must. of thc- autumn .< Results of Experiments With Autumn Sown Crops some ( mans 1‘} {I 035 heads, rod (-hnff u The- yields in bushvls 1-9 of these Varieties we Abundance. (52'7 ; N0. pm-lutivo. 60'1; Du“ son 59?), and American In weight nf grain Dem ntzu‘in fut the snow: at of thc- autumn rivf report here prr ;f the principal l'e'Sll cnnducled at the e and throughout! host “US$90 ivd and Budn Peslh. Those of Red “"iuun‘ which gave ;tr yields of grain in the past > as follows: Impvrial Am- lms‘ht-ls; Auburn, 57'?) hush- College show Inn average yield of grain per acre of fran large as compared etd, nf 7'5 bushels from umpnwd with shrnnkon 35'6 buslu-ls from sound will] luuken 800d. Sued allowed to hem-tune may it was cut ploduced u Roliuhlv, 5 56'8 bushel . 60'1; Dawson’s Golden d American \Vouder. L nf grain permeasurvd 1‘9 Varieties went, over »f 60 Ihs., thv Dawson‘s and the Abundance :s. These \‘mietivs are *gmin. but yield more re than such sorts as No. 5 Rod, Tm key Red. llllll] rain and straw of glnin p111- tlmt pl-nduued cut at any one s of nmtlnit)’. )Ut th; of winter wheat ‘xpe-rimentnl (19â€" past your. Thv nds WEN) of the HE class, having (-han and white bushels of grain separate tests ('hnff uh bushels‘ Lies wen I'E'Sé S liven com- ionhurnl Cul- liLiunS of tho lhIPHH'OUglh Sflll growth ‘, in 1905 “'2 on mrivtk lmslwls f( \vn crops. ntvd 2h vs bushels 1nd [’1 us Tho :1 \‘H of experi- ricultuml Pl ovincc Whiu Liberty ; in all things, Charity.” The annual meeting Divisinn Courts Assoc held in the Parliament ' of (32mm 1 of India I Svnutt Jim the 13., nn months. The a P1 esident Mackenzie, Messrs. Mc- Coxh, Duff. Thmnpsnn and Little (If the James Bay Railway waited upnn the Premier last Thurday to continue the agitationas to the course of the road beside Luke Gouchiching. The original plans nf the mad place it on [he cant shorenvhile the plans on which tembrr, at 2 p. m. E. M. Mmphy. one of Toronto’s nld est pinneers, died Monday night in his 85th year. He was the head of the well-known jMVr-lry firm of Murphy 8.: GIL. and fol many yezu-s was pupuln: and prominent. not, only in the city. but throughout the neighboring cunn- ties. Dvceused was an enthusiastic temperance man. a devout Methodist, and 2!. prominent Conservative. rnnto, on Thuxsduy tember, 11L 2 p. m. guru Mmtn, lute (hwernm--Gvnenll of Uzumdu. has been appointed Viceroy of Imhu. Ontm-ioAgrim Out, A ug. l'ith HUS. LS um! and that, fm 7'6 thus 'of green fodder pur acre reâ€" spectivoly. As lung us the supply lusts material will lm distributed free of charge in the m-dvr in \vlnirh the applications :11 e received from Ontario farmers wishâ€" ing to experinwnt and to repurt the results of any one of the fullnwing tvsts: l, Hairy Ve-tchcs :md \Vinter Rye as {udder crops ; 2. three varieties of \Vintor \Vheul; 3, five fertilizers with \Vintvr \Vhent; 4, autumn and spring applications of Nitrate of Soda a nd and The \Vid1 In thv co-npm-ufivv (-xpm-iments con- ducted thmughaut Ontario in 190511!)- (lvl' the. direction of the Experimental Union the varieties uf \V'intm' \Vlieut gave the following," :u‘vmgv yields in bushels of gmin per acre: I);lwst~n’s Golden Ulmlf, 2322; Imperial Amber, 22'2; Mivhigun Amber. 2l'7: Budn Pesth. 21'1: 'l‘ux-kvy lied. 20'], and Bamutkn, 19'4. \N'inter Rye gave an average yield (If 24 lmsliulspcracre. The \Vintvr Burlpy was badly winter- killed thruughnut the Province. Hairy VvtL-hes and, \Vinter Rye gave 8'1 and 7'6 tone 'nf green fodder pur acre reâ€" logo. The Hairy n1~ \Vintm pI-nduced an average yield of uf green crop per acre in H monts for four ymrs, and of els of seed per acre in the U35 years. 7'2 and 88 bffshwls pm Outs are a repeated fni \Vint.er Rye. The wtm-ns fr: [er Barley in Ontario are unm- sonu-tiuws the yields are vu'y‘ Snmetinws they are very In two varieties grown in 1905 gr.- ’ The :lVf Shmv a y bushels fu 57'51)l1:5h(‘ Many tests conducted at dicnle the impm-tunr‘e of so ninety pounds of winter new on an average Sui]. T might: be increased fur p0 (law-eased for rich soil. If in a good state of cultivn‘ [018 but liule \vln-{hm llw s hmndcnst m- with a tulw the land is dry or lumpy is sown with the, drill is “L the best, results. The big por acre have been obtainm ing between the 26th Off the 9th of September. SM]. 11 (In burlongron thy sud. 9 on summcr f; land following potatuc cum zmd routs. produced van average yield of Wheat per acre which was 221 per cent. (6'5 bushels) greater than that produced on land on which a crop of green buck- wheat was plmved under, and 142 per Cent. (4'2 bushels) greater than that which was worked as a hare fallow, having been plowed three times dur- ing the summer. The results of an ex- periment conducted in the year 1900 show that for that one year at least the winter wheat which was sown on red clover sod yielded 20‘? percent. greater than that which was sown on timothy sod. Two years‘ results with commercial fertilizers show that 160 lbs. per acre of Nitrate of Soda in- creased the yield of winter Wheat 7'2 bushels at a cost of about eighty Cents per bushel. As a result of hundreds of inquiries We learn that in Ontario about 33 percent. of the winter wheat is sown on pea greund. 25 on clover sud, 11 on barley ground, 10 on timo- thy sod. 9 on summer fallow and lZon land following potatoes, beans, oats, Lord Niptn, » Into Gm‘ernnrâ€"G gown with the drill is likely to give e best results. Thv highest yields r acre have lwen olntuinl-d {mm Suwâ€" ; between the 26th of August and 9 9th of September. Phe average results for six years :nv a yield of grain per acre of 60'4 shcls for Lhe Mammoth variety and :3 lmshols for the common variety of inter Rye. The “turns from VVin- common salt on W 5, two varieties (f sizu of Fuel) plot is by two rods lung. ; 101' mur years, and of 7'6 [insh- seed per acre in the tests for five News Notes. 'l snlt on \Vinter “'lwut. varieties (f \VinterRye. Paul) plot is to be one rod ) rmls lung. Material for 4 will lie svnt by 9xp1-css the others by mail. C. A. ZAVITZ. rimiltumlCullege‘Guelph, 71h, 1905. Umm-m are uncertain, as 9. yields are. th'y high and '19)! are very low. The grown in 1905 gave only ulshvls per acre. \Vintvr peated failure at the 001- pm-tunr‘e of sowing about Is of winter wheat, per orngo Sui]. This amount reased fur poor land and rich soil. If the land is It? of cultivation it mut- '. one of Toronto’s 01d- (1 Monday night in his was the head of the r-lry firm of Murphy 8.: my yezu-s was popular not, only in the city. conducted” at Guelph in cted in that, (me ml; which yieldvd 1 01- \Vinter Vr-tcihre‘s Ige yield of 102 tons 1- acre in Hf]: gxpeyi- and to repurt the of the fullnwing tchcs :md \Vinter : 2. three varieties 3, five fertilizers t; 4, autumn and grcnlm- than that d as :1 bare fallow, Pd three times dur- Fhe results of an ex- :(1 in the vear 1900 a tulu- drill, but if lflmpyr that which ma place it uh plans on which 5 of the Ontario :ziubinu will be t. Buildings. To- Lhe 7th uf Sep- W'intm- \Vllent '(‘I'age yields in :re: I);l\vst-n’s nperinl Amber, '1'. 21'7: Budn iod. 20'], and IS 30“?!) _ "' O ‘ ' Fruirthâ€"Thvyocau be built for about one third less than solid brick. These blocks can be used with equal success and beauty in any lace eitlu-x- fur houses or barns, vex-an ah pillzu-s, ('hiIlHlt‘ys, etc. For further informu- tiun inquire 01' write to HI. \‘Vi The building material which is comâ€" ing into favor is concrete made in imâ€" itzltion of cut. stone, which will he found much superior to any other mu- tcl‘iul for building purpuses fur the fulluwing reasons:â€" FirsLâ€"Cument blocks are made ut' the must, (lln-ublv material. Secondâ€"The blocks being made hul- low, houses are not (lump like thaw constl-uvted of solid Cuncnate, us the hollows in the blocks m‘m-lup, thus making .1 (lead air space all around. Uf several inclws,(lepending on the thick- ness Hf wall which can be made eiLlu-i- 8, 9. 10 or 13 inches in thickness. Thirdâ€"The face being made in exnct imitation of cut stone they make the p1‘t'ttiesb building imaginable. n .. â€" » r "I unhesitatingly advise expectant moth- ers to use Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion," writes Mrs.J.W. G. Stephens, of Mila, Northumberland (30., Va. The reason for this advice is that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription is the best preparative for the maternal function. No matter how healthy and strong a woman may be, she cannot use “Favorite Prescription” as a prepara~ tive for maternity without gain of health and comfort. But it is the women who are not strong who best appreciate the great benefits received from the use of "Favorite Prescription." For one thing its use makes the baby’s advent practically painless. It has in many cases reduced days of sufi'er- ing to a few brief hours. It has changed the period of anxiety and struggle into a time of case and comfort. The proprietors and makers of Doctor Pierce‘s Favo‘rite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to pay $500 for any case of Leucorrhea. Female Weakness, Prolapsus, or Falling of “lamb, which they cannot cure. All the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors, of Buf- falo, N. Y.. ask is a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. The crown of womanhood is motherhood. But uneasy lies the head that wears the crown or anticipates this coronation, when there is a. lack of womanly strength to beat the burdens of maternal dignity and duty. The reason why so many women sink under the strain of motherhood is because they are unprepared. aged lb years, the injured (mos. Whu me now in St. Michael’s Hospitnlher». anmlrin, whn can speak but very lit- tle English, says an explosion took place um-xpectedly and that one of their number was insl’antly killed. Ridnlph, the boy injurodjs not expect- ed to x'vcm‘m'. Both his arms and one lognrn badly cruslwd and he is also suffering from painful wounds about. the face. Muzndl-io, the other injured young man. has probably lost his eye- sight. He has other injuries to the bodv. the Ontario Government guzm its bonds for $20,000 per mile, per cent, run it an the west through Orillin. It is an :th‘ tn the original plans for whi( railway officials are agitating. : oust shore route is seven miles sl Another Sf‘l‘i()llԤ dynamite explosion on the construction of the James Bay Railway, OCCLUTPd Thursday after noon m the neighborhood of Bnln, in the Muskokn district, by which one Italian lost his liftx and two others were seriously injured, one probably fatally. No particulars of the fatality warp obtainable last, night, save What could be secured from Angplo Malad- rio, aged 28 years. and Nicolo Ridolph, aged 15 venrs. Th9 ininv-pd “nae ml... lenient: Stone ‘Viug'el‘ é: Son. CARRVILLE, ONT; [Single copies, 3 cts. which Lh ng. as th 193 shown No, 8 :mtoc-d at 23¢ shore rence ,1 the s the

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