The Wingham Times, 1909-10-21, Page 3THE WIND'HAM TIMES, OCTOBER 21, 1909
VER BODY ENJOYS
if
-A CUP OF -
Sold only in sealed lead packts.
A t all gri
3oc, 40c, 50c. and 6-c pPr pound.
.,.......te.,..,,., .., .10.,01.,....,
EA
Don't allow a few extra dollars to pre-
vent you from talcing the perfect -cook-
ing, sure -baking, easily -regulated Pan-
dora in place of a cheaper stove. In a
season or two Pandora will pay the
difference in the fuel it will save -and
it will keep on saving until it has paid
for itself. 20
Pandora special flue construction makes
fuel do double duty. Wide fire box is an-
other fuel -economizer. The steel oven heats
quicker than a cast oven, thus saving still
more fuel. Further economizing features
wii7-be explained by the MaDlar•y Agent.
FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO., WINGHAM.
1
1
----Made in Canada
is put up in rolls containing nails, tin caps and
cement. All you need in addition is a hammer.
This is only one of the many conveniences of
RUBEROID ROOFING.
it Is fire -resisting and weatherproof. 16 years
on the roofs prove its durability,
tUBEROID is the original and standard
smooth surfaced roofing.
Write for samples and prices,
Call at office and see samples taken from a
roof, having been in use for the past 18
years, and still in good condition.
1
J.A1 McLean
SOLE AGENT FOR WINGHAM AND DISTRIOT.
NERVOUS, LIFELES
DEBILITATED MEN
YOUNG MEN AND MIDDLEAGED MEN.
the victims of early indiscretions and later ex
cesses, who are failures in life -you are the
ones we can restore to manhood and revive
the spark of energy and vitality. Don't give
up in despair because you have treated with
other doctors, used electric belts a11d tried
various drug store nostrums.
Our New Method Treatment has snatched
hundreds from the brink of despair, has re-
stored happiness to hundreds of homes and
has made successful men of those who were
"down and out." We prescribe specific rem-
edies for each individual case according to the
symptoms and complications -we have no
patent medicines. This is one of the secrets of
our wonderful success as our treatment can-
not fail, for we prescribe remedies adapted to
each individual case. Only curable cases ac-
cepted. We have done business throughout
Canada for over 20 'Years.
CURABLE CASES GUARANTEED
OR NO PAY
READER Are you a victim? Iiave you lost
hope? Aro you intending to marry?
Has your blood been diseased? IIave you anv
weakness? Our New Method Treatment will
cure you. What it has done for others it will
do for you. Consultation Freo. No matter
who has treated you, write for an honest
nninion Free of Charge. Books Free-
`iioyllood, Manhood, Fatherhood.' (illustrate
ed) on Diseases of Men.
NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. No name* on boxes or enveh
TREATMENT, thing Confidential. Question List and Cost of Treatment FREE FOR HOME
DRS. KEN N EDY& KEN N EDY
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich,
THE FARMERS' OPPORTUNITY..
A splendid opportunity to supplement
the regular revenue of the farm is offer-
ed to those who can oompete for the
Jorge Dash prizes which will be given at
the Ontario I'rovinoial Winter Fair to
be held in December 0th to 10th, 1909
About $14,C00.00 will be offered as prize
money in the different departments
which include the principal breeds of
Horses, Dairy Oattle, Beet Oattle,
Sheep, Swine and Poultry, and also
seeds. The Fair comes at a convenient
season whezi the fitting can be done dur-
ing the slack time of fall and early
winter, while the few daye spent in
Guelph with the exhibits is a pleasant
and profitable outing.
Daring the past summer about $50,-
000 wee spent on an addition to the Fair
Building. Besides providing inoreased
and improved accommodation for the
former department of the Fair, a large
judging arena and about one hundred
and fifty horse stalls have been placed
in the new part Which give epiandid
facilities for a magnificent horse show,
Speoial attention has been given to pro-
viding accommodation for the judging
of the different classes of stook and be-
sides the ring for horses and beef cattle
there are now separate judging rings for
swine and sheep each with adequate
seating.
The following is a brief summary of
the prize list, Our readers who are in-
terested should apply to the Seoretary
of the Fair, A. P. Westervelt, Toronto,
for a complete List: -In the horse de-
partment there are classes for Clydes-
dales, Shires, Hackneys, Standard•breds,
Thoroughbrede, Ponies and Heavy
Draught Horses for which there is offer-
ed $3,300.00 in prizes. The $2,000,00
offered for beef cattle goes to Short-
horns, Herefords, Aberdeen -Angus, Gal-
loway,, Devons and Grades or Crosses.
The Dairy Shorthorns, Ayrshires, Hol-
steins, Jerseys, Guernseys and Grades
compete for $1,200,00. Exhibitors of
sheep can show Cotswolds, Lincolns,
Leiceeters, Oxfords, Shropshiree, South -
downs, Dorsete, Hampehires, Snffolks,
and Grades or Crosses and win $2,000.00
in prizes. The swine exhibitors get
$1,400.00 for their exhibits of Yorkshires,
Berkshires, Tamworths, Grades or
Crosses and Bacon Hogs. Ae pure seed
is now recognized as necessary to ono-
oessful farming, growers of these are
offered $900.00 as an inducement for
them to make a good display. The
poultry department has grown to be the
biggest poultry show in Canada and
breeders show great enthusiasm in com-
peting for the $3,000.00 prize money.
We look to the farmers of this County
to uphold their reputation as successful
breeders and feeders of live stook. The
financial inducements offered are cer-
tainly worthy of their best efforts.
THE LIFE OF A BINDER.
What is the life of a binder on the
average Canadian farm? We instanoe
the binder because it is the most ex-
pensiye implement the farmer buys, In
Ontario a binder's life of usefulness is
placed at five years by some authorities.
This seems like a short time. Bat with
the usage the average binder in this
country gets, the wonder is that it lasts
se long. There are farmers, who are
constantly paying for machinery. There
are on reoord oases where a farmer has
given a three year note for a binder and
when the last payment was made he
had to begin over again, on a new bind-
er and a new note. On the other hand,
we know farmers, who have had the
same piens of machinery in use for
fifteen or twenty years and it is still
doing the work, though, perhaps a bit
out of date, It is all a question of men
and the care which a farm implement
reoeives. The average life of farm im-
plements could be easily doubled if they
were properly taken oare of. If, for
instance, a new binder were only neoes-
eery every 10 years, would there not be
a large saving to the farmers of this
country? Talk about increased pro-
duction and better crops. What better
off is the farmer on that account if the
increased return from this source le
fritted away on new machines every
year, because of his carelessness in not
properly daring for the old ones. -
Canadian )farm.
GRIT FOR FOWLS.
Grit enables the gizzard to prepare
the food for digestion. It is a fowl's
false teeth. When grit becomes worn
out, it is expelled. If new, sharp ma-
terial cannot be secured, the food must
remain nnground in the gizzard until it
is 'softened and falls to pieoes. Thie
makes slow imperfect digestion, The
hardest grit ie best. Always keep it be-
fore the fowls.
Fowls do not really begin to satisfy
their hunger until the food has been
ground and expelled by the gizzard,
Fowls have boon known to starve to
death with the crop full of food, merely
because it could not pass to the gizzard,
and thence on to be digested.
The only rule for feeding, says the re-
port of the Kansas State Board of Ag-
riculture, is the rule of appetite. Keep
the appetite good. To do this is the fine
art of feeding. It eiinnot be taught; it
must be learned by practice. Fowls do
not eat the same amount of foods each
day. Those that are laying eat far
more than fowls of the same ago and
breed not laying, Pullets not living
eat more than the same 1veight of old
hens not laying,
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
Must Bear Signature of
See Fac -Simile Wrapper Below.
war/ small and as cagy
tai take as sugar,
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSIIES-S.
FOR TORPID LIYESI.
FOR,,COHSTIPATIOB
!DR SALLOW SKIN.
FOib TEIECfl59PLEXIO�1
flue .sammXZ I➢ NV.THAVt �.nrunr,
Gras I Pe rte Yegetalaie.,Z.wt 317,;6
CARTERS
IVER
PI LLS.
7,7
CURE SICK HEADACHE,
Let in the Fresh Air`��
There is danger now that the nights
have turned cool of shutting oat of
sleeping rooms the fresh air wbioh
has been freely admitted all sum-
mer, and there is little doubt that
the reason there is more illness dur-
ing the winter than the summer is
the laok of ventilation in our homes.
We heat them to suoh a degree, and
shut out the fresh air to suoh an
extent that our bodies are weakened,
and on going out in the cold air we
become afflicted with colds and oth-
er bronchial affections. If a lower
temperature were maintained in our
dwellings in the winter, and better
ventilation adopted we should be less
susceptible to these attacks. Siaoe
the weather has become cooler the
open window can be continued
by placing additional covering on the
bed, and this will prepare the way
for allowing access of fresh air to the
sleeping room daring the whole win-
ter, It may not be possible to give
as free nooses as during the summer,
and there may be a degree of cranki-
ness in those, who would have the
sleeping room window wide open dur-
ing the winter. They are, however,
nearer right en a sanitary point of view
than those who exclude the fresh air
almost entirely. It would seem a good
plan to maintain the keeping open of
windows during the cool weather so
that it may be kept up to some degree
when the weather beoomescold.-Strat-
ford Beacon.
Why do Men Advertise?
The man who conducts his business
on the theory that it doesn't pay and he
can't afford to advertise, sots up his
judgment in opposition to that of all the
beet bustnsss men in the world. Says
an experienced advertising authority
"With a few years' experience in con-
ducting a small business on a few thou-
sands of capital, he assumes to know
more than thousands whose hourly
transactions aggregate more than his do
in a year, and who have made their mil•
lions by pursuing a course that he says
doesn't pay." If advertising doesn't pay,
why is it that the most bucoessful mer-
chants of every town, large or small,
are the heaviest advertisers? If adver-
tising doesn't pay, who does the most•
business? If it does not peg, why coo
business firms epend millions in that
way. Is it because they want to donate
those millions to the newspaper and
magazine publishers, or because they
don't know as much about business as
the six•for-a-dollar :.rarohant who says
money spent in advertising is thrown
away or donated to the man to whom it
is paid? Such talk is simply ridiculous,
and it requires more than the average
patience to discuss the proposition of
whether advertising pays or not with
that kind of a man. His complacent
self-oonceit in assuming that he knows
more than the whole world is laughable,
and reminds as of the men who proved
that the world doesn't revolve by pian•
ing a pumpkin on a stamp and watch-
ing it all night.
HEADACHE.
In all cases of headache the first thing
to do is to unload the bowels and thus
relieve the afflicted organs or the ove4!-
full blood vessels of the brain; and at
the same time to restore tone to the
system, re-establish the appetite, pro-
mote digestion and invigorate the entire
body.
will remove the cause of the trouble and
restore the system to healthy action and
buoyant vigor.
Mrs. J. Priest, Aspdin, Ont., writes:-
" I was tri tjlod with headache for several
years and tried aluua.;t everything with -
cat results, u1iti1 n. friend a<1vised me to
try Btu Mood Tlittl''.rs. 1 got two
bo'.lel, but 1 efore 1 had finished one I
was eonti;l Lely cured. 1 can never say
too Bruch for 93.13,11."
hbr sale at all dealers. Manufactured
only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
1'ur,anto, Out.
POST CARD PETITION,
The following communication, reociv-
ed at tide office, explains itself:
The Toronto District Women's
Christian Temperanoe Union bas in-
stituted a post card petition in behalf
of Dere, Anna Robinson, now under
sentence of death at Pudbury. Acting
ander legal advice, we, with good reas-
on, beli.,v if this campaign succeeds,
her life will be spared and her friends
will have time in which to take further
m'asnrea.
We make through the courtesy and
generosity of the press, a three -fold
appeal.
1. Will every editor who reoeives
this appeal kindly publish it in his
next issue?
2. Will every man and woman
who reads this rt quest comply with its
demand*?
3. Will you do it At Once, for the
unhappy victim has only six weeks to
liva.
Our request is, write a post pard as
follows: -
"1 reepectfully beg of yon to recom-
mend that the death sentence passed on
Anna Robinson be commuted."
Sign your name and place of resi-
dence, address it to the Hon. A. B.
Ayles worth, Ottawa, Canada. Do It
Now.
Mrs., Fred 0. Ward,
President.
Mrs, Will Pageley, Supt.
Legislation and Petition.
W O. T U. Headquarters,
Toronto, Oat.
DOCTORS SAID ONLY ZAM-BUK
COULD CURE HER ECZEMA,
In view of the numerous cures which
Zam-Bak hart worked when all else has
failed, there is little wonder that in the
end the doctor attending Mrs. J. P. Si,
Denis, of 305 Thompson Street, Winni•
peg, should tell her there was nothing
'eat Zinn -Bak could cure her, The re-
sult showed the farseeing wisdom of
this practitioner and having been com-
pletely cured by Zam-Bak, Mrs. St,
Denis gives her experience for the bene-
fit of other sufferers.
She says: "Eczema started on one
side of my fade and nose. At first my
nose felt sore, similar to what one feels
when having a bad cold. 1 paid no at-
tention to this, thinking it would pass
away in a day or so, but to my surprise
it got worse. The nose then became
swollen and hard, and turned a purplish
red, as well as part of the cheek on that
side of my face.
"As the disease developed pimples and
ulcers broke out, then the skin cracked
in plaoes and peeled off in flakes, leay.
ing my face and nose raw and sore.
This condition reacted on my general
health, and I became very ill. I oonld
get no Bleep at night benne the ir-
ritation and the pain, and y face was
in snoh a shocking oond' ion that for
two months I did not o out of the
house. I applied rem tes, which were
supposed to be go for skin diseases,
but in vain
"My doctor also treated me but with-
out effect, until one day he said that the
only thing which would now be likely
to cure me was Zam•Buk.
"Acting on his advice, I procured a
supply and foand that even the first few
applications had a soothing effect on the
sores. I left off everything else in favor
of this balm and applied it liberally
every day to affected parte. In a re-
markably short time, considering the
obstinate nature of my disease, we saw
trsoes of improvement, which enoour-
aged us to persevere with the Zam-Bak
treatment. Zam•Bnk reduced the dis-
coloration, then the hard swelling began
to show traces of leaving, the sores
seemed less angry, and in about three
weeks' time most of the sores were
healing nicely. To cut a long story
short, I continued with the Zam•Buk
treatment until my face was oleared
completely of all traoes of the trouble -
come and painful eczema."
Such was the experien, e of Mrs. St.
Dents and scores of other sufferers
oontd tell of eimfier 1xperieuce. Zam•
Buk is Nature's own healer, being com-
posed of pure herbal healing essences,
and free from all trade of harmful
animal fat or mineral poison. It is a
sure oure for opts, lacerations, barns,
eczema, ringworm, poisoned wound,
festering sores, bad leg and all skin in-
juries and diseases. Zam•Bnk is also a
cure for piles. Druggists and stores
everywhere sell at 50o. a box, or post
free from Zsm•Bnk Co., Toronto, on
receipt of price. Yon are warned
against cheap and harmful imitations
sometimes represented as "just as
good."
Anything to Oblige.
While crossing the ot•ean the two
sprightly children of very seasick par-
ents were scampering around the deck
"Tom, dear," sold the mother in a
weary voice. "the children are too near
the railing." But he was too ill to me
tice, and in sheer despoil) Hon his wit's
nudged Min on the arm. "Speak tc.
them, Tome" she said faintly.
With a wan smile he lifted his head
end said, "l;h---how do you do;'" -ha
dies' Dome ,foarl,rti,
Villaco Gossip.
"is Squire 'Whetstone t nu'•iu.'ra:e of
dumb annuals:"
"i don't itno • how hr tt't..t:s
answered si Sire link. ort ba` c 'rr'•l 11
ly speaks re elite Idea "f 't':11 n ern
he's E 11( 1!let`i'lil' a Ila 9 i l'.i.:¢•."
11,1�r1
('laft'n: a 1',:1 h•.• !" ;i' . ' 1 t-
&i'ttr for l:i f _' 1010
t ;::•1+t] , 1 . , , 1 .
11 uPn' cl 11 t' 1 ' 11 1. i
. :r�`t.............. 1010,
...•
. . .
intit
LONDON, ONTARIO
Business 8 Shorthand
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I. W. Westervelt, J. W. Westervelt, Jr.. C.A.,
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TIMES OFFICE,
WINGHAM, ONTARIO,
lRlMt11*puto **6****11111