HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1916-02-10, Page 6mononollennollinlii•IIMINIONIMeminiamilinall.NIPMNIMIMISMNIMMINft.
1 pub inside the etircaesee of the chiet; ells
Phe want e to keen for a dah Or ewe,
Fish ie Very hard to /wog, and Rhea
aleleye be need the day it le Iturchette0,
Ari interesting Warning wae ootieed Pet
lenh age against ash Whig Pecheth in
artifieiei ice asthe alueloitia osed in ite
manufacture is liable la ereote ptomaine
in the fish.
CASTOR!
TOr WAGS alid children
In 1.15 ForOver 30 Years
AlWaYtt heara
the ,egyh26-aa
Mffriatture Of , , 'nreehereeeeet
ROW TO Avow
PTOMAINE POISONING
TM W!NQH1M TIMES
CLEAN UF THE FARM,
MerlePreterite 0 Home ihie Penland
Attvntien Now.
There are matey features 0 lierthe
life hearing upon the health of the
famtl y that ought to reeeree the itttelh
Oen Of the farrner and receive tPetri
sera the Parte and rlome.
The Water SuPPly ad the Mille Sup,
*.
RACK TO TtiE POP
Among the repines iesueti by the
There are so many eases of hremeine Government of Ontario, maw effores
Poisoning that the efficient beusewife better information ea to the welfare of
meet continually be on her guard where the neotde than tte entmeeries 0
canned tomb are used. She must also municipal etatistics, det1s,e4 from the
watch those in her own icebox, which . tutmielPet tre"urers hmL "slre It
ie to be regretted that the pualieatiOn
may do just as much miechief. All
highly nitrogenous foods decompose of the compreherieive Annteel Report 0
very rapidly under the inhuince 0 heat the Bureau 0 Indwetries has been dis-
and dampness, and this produces the "etietleti sines 1611e and ;het we bane
nehgerous atid often fatal ptomaines. i "thing th"tt" then the MeeiciPal 'pal'
letins. which purport to give only the
Mott er fact, which seems curious, is
that milk just at the turning point has 1 details of populetion, as•-essment, tax,
been known to be deadly, whereas act- 1 ition and debt tor tee 'item prior to
eeliy seer mile is perfectly. wholesome t Publication. It is also to be regretted
Eggsone milk cooked togethec as in I that the Government does not procure
cuetarti and allowed to remain over I the information withheld by delinquent
nightin a warm place, havebeen known
I OffiCials, so that these summaries may
, .
be more than approximately accurate.
te produce so severe a case 0 ptornaine
poispn that death was the result. This From, Bulletin number 9, giving re-
ehould be remembered in buying cream . sults of the assesement taken last
winter we learn that, approximately,
pufte and cream cakes at bakery,
they have been kept over night the
only reasonable thing is to refiese to
purchase therm as they are distinctty
I had shown, We recall, an increase o
dangerous. Cottage cheese is unsafe to
buy for the some reason. There is no about 6,001, while front 1918 bear for
way of actually telling how old it is and 1 many years, there had been an annual
when anything is as easy to make
decrease 0 10,003 or more. An exam -
as
'nation of Bulletin number 9 discloses
take a risk in buying it. or sifted over the townships of Old On -
remembered that practically all the that the increase was widely distributed
cottage cheese there is no reason to
In the case of meats it should be
tario. Kent increased 1,113. Lambton
i
861, Huron 345, Durham 239. Grey 300,
meat on the market is from the cold
- and Frontenac 165. It is, perhaps,
pi Y awl the rendition of the Vellar an
the condition et the gaeret and of the
front yard and the 14a4 yard and the
bernyard, the dealeoge system and the
Stagnant Waters, the niesgeltoes, the
dies :lad thevats and the miCe-ell
have a direct bearing upon health.
The farmers in eaeh community
should ferm a health associetion and
have lectures upon topics reithiug te
the bealth 0 the family and thee
agree, each, for himself and then for
the community, to abolish all the, (ion-
ditions that imperil the health 0 the
family,
If a health policy thus indicated weee
adopted anci rigidly adhered to for a
year the change would be marveloos,
and every inember of the association
would recognize a year hence that the
care and the money Wrested, in im-
proving home conditions was the moet
profitable investment Qf u generation.
In New York the health authorities
report that the prevalence 0 teehold
fever in the United States is now about
one-half of what it was thirty years
ago, chiefly because 0 improved, sani-
tation a towns. Dr. Biggs, state
health commissioner, insists that ef-
forts should be directed to the rural
populations.
Let the motto 0 every farmer be:
Clean up and keep cleaned up. Kill
the rats and the mice. Kill the ems.
quitoes and the I tiles, Screen the
house and the kitchen. Protect tlie
milk supply as well as the water sup-
ply. Get a water system tbat carries
the water through the house, so as to
save labor rind prevent the exbaustion
0 the strength of tee women, leaving
them freer to give attention to the
kitchen and to the dining room.
the rural or townships population ex-
ceeded that shown by the assessment
of 1914 by 19,828. The Bulletin 0 1914
•
storage, and bas been kept in a fret zing
temperature until purchased by the
retailer, who tranefered it to his ice -box
best to ascribe a decrease of 75 in Wel-
lington, to the efficacy of exhortation.
The townships population of New On -
where a correspondingly low temperat-
1 term, that is, of Algoma, Haliburton.
are was maintained. Then the house-
Nanssing, Parry Sound, Rainy River,
wife orders a roat of a chicken sent home
• Kenora, Sudbury, Thunder Bay and
the delivery boy it slow, the maid is no
careful to put it in the icebox immed-
iately, and the meat is exposed to vary-
ing degrees 0 temperature quite long
enough to develope a considerable num-
ber of dangerous bacteria. If the chick-
ens are to be prepared on Saturday for
use sin Sunday, they should not be soak-
ed in water and then put directly on
the ice, but after they are drawn they
should be thoroughly dried and put in the
refrigerator. but not in the ice chamber.
In this way they will keep perfectly
sweet. One careful housewife not only
keeps charcoal in her ice -box but has
some extra small pieces which she
Temiskaming increased barely '728. a
poor return, we should say, for the vast
outlay of Governments for the develop-
ment 0 the north. -Sun. •
A process has been invented in Eng-
land treating wools heretofore too long
and strong for anything but manufact-
ure into worsted, so that, they can be
used in finer textiles.
APifItOVEA OF tIVIOGE
BARRON'S VIEW
(qUelph Pertild)
vmv
Judge Parton 0 Stratferd abott
right When be deelaree thet the exist-,
ing Militie tegitelenta ehOuld he dis,
banded. What theyare kept. ping
It is diffieelt to Pee With ell the
t etire soldiers about, arti its just *se
certein when the war is over 40 the
eoldiera Conte back a comet! te neer
start all Oyer the sySieril Will have to
he made, Not only that bet rt new (eater
0 things wi I have to be instituted, ea
well.
Those who bebeaged to the militia
and didn't g to the trent-if physical -
y capatle -will never be al owed to
mix with the met, who he seen ac-
tive service and dew their sworde
when needed. The former would be
out of place in such compute- And
besides that, the future Will probably
see a greater attention, at least for
some years, wad to military training,
and this will bring in int trait* a new
system altogether- At least it will if
the authorities have any common sense.
So it would seem as if Judge Bar,
ron is correct in his contention. We
require a new system all over the
Dominion, and the existing militia Will
hardly fit therein. When the Cana-
dians return from the front there will
be any number 0 qualified officers
Who have seen active service, and the
men as well, to man the different mili-
tary units whie.h Canada keeps on a
peace footing. They are the ones to
take hold.
Great Britian declared that the tem
tons had used Greek islands as submar-
ine bases.
iHERE FOR YOUR 1
Novels, Writing 1
t
I
IPaper, Envelopes,
Ink, Playing Cards
1
Tally Cards, Etc.
Magazines) Newspapers., Novels
All the leading Magazines and Newspapers
on sale. A large stock of famous S, & S.
Novels at the popular' prices 1 oc and tsc,
thites'Stalionery:Stort
OPPATE liatil 110T4 • .WINGHtlk ONt
$
*******+.++,1,.+14++++10
Plo-;
1. WINTER :PLOWING..
poift plow bandy soil in the +
Ph winter if it b .at all Illtely to
blow.
p Winter plowing le hard trit boll-
• I, worms, OM Wernal, eateretnia
'h and klathi 0 haildfiii tosectS
it that Pass the winter in the *
I* it you are interested 1.14 pre, f
• serv.inglhe liveit'andAnereasing
• Mpoes,:utme.iier 0 these Pests deal +
d" it you want 4 big crap in MB +
* de Rae Whiter. nittertnte at all. 47
you had bettee winter plow if eh-
+
sti•
4** +++4**h***
PROFITABLE CROP ROTATION,
Centre' Aim Should Ile to thieve Field*
In a Better Condition
The most prollteble crop rotation does
;tote cimsist merely In Changing the
vroiis ar011Oti from year to year regard-
less 0 the relation of the crops tte each
other, The central aim In ell cop ro-
tation systems should, ire to leave each
tield In a better state of cultivatidn.
itetter physicel condition and reason-
ably free front pests at the end 0 each
rotation cycle.
No hard and fast it:dation system can
be luta down for any comniunity, but
the most Profitable system inust be
worked out for each ferm and indeed
for•eatch kid. There are certain gen-
eral principles, however, that should be
borue In MINI In thin COnneet1011 in Or-
. der to uccomplesh the most. satisfac-
tory results. For soil improvement
there should be at least one leguminotte
crop in each rotation cycle, To this
class of nlants belong the clovers, al-
falfa, peas. beans. etc. There should
be also a sufficient quantity of live
stock. especially mill; cows. on each
num to utilize the roughage and to
supply the desired quantity 0 stable
manure, which in addition to green
crops plowed under will furnish the
necessary innottat of humus to the soil.
The eoridaions resulting from this
treatment ifethe soin is propetey han-
dled will make the succeeding crops
more vigorous and capable of offsetting
besot:no measure at least the effects of
any pests that may appear. Again the
successive crops iu any rotation should
be so selected and arranged that no
two upon which the sante pest may
thrive will be grown in succession.
• The erinciples of disease control by
means of crop rotation are based upon
the fact that eertain pests can, thrive
only on certain kinds of plants. There-
fore when the crops are changed and
the food supply thereby cut off the
pests must perish or he greatly reduced
in mealier.
How to Make a Rag Doll.
The early feast this year couple
tnuch of the seed mire. and it meet
be picked out ear by ear le make sure
it is not dead A simple hut accurate
.t.e,i vorn teeter is easily made as id -
WINTERING IDLE HORSES.
It Is Best to "Rough" Them Through
the Cold Months.
Horses sbould tat be confined to the
barn during the winter on it liberal
supply of grain. It is far better to
rough them through the cold months.
They should be given the run of the
yard or lot during the day. This should
be provided with a protected shed, one
that is thoroughly dry and well provid-
ed with bedding. While Nature does
her part and protects the horse with a
heavy coat of hair during the cold
months, the shed is needed in order
to afford the necessary shelter and pro-
tection against rains, snow and cold
winds. Winter winds come mostly
from the north and northwest, and the
shed should be so situated and con-
structed Os to give the proper protec-
tion from this quarter.
In the feeding, 0 idle horses the
high priced feeds should be avoided iu
order to keep them in proper condi-
tion at the lowest cost. It has been
found that idle horses do very well on
a winter feed consisting of all the hay,
oat straw. cornstalks or sorghums
they wilt consume. so that little ,grain
is necessary. idleuess also permits of
a more thorough mastication of the
feed, thus insuring proper digestion.
From six to eight weeks before the
spring work is begun the horses
should be put at light work and start-
ed on a small grain ration iu order that
they may be in proper condition for
the work required of them. The grain
ration may then be gradually increased
until the regular allowance has been
reached for the working season.
Growing colts require considerable
protein. They should be so fed MS to
• Secure proper development and at a
minimum cost Itough .feed, such as
clean mixed hay, alfalfa or clover,
may be fed along with a mixture of
bran, oats and corn.
Double Story Poultry House.
For a small flock of fowls a piano
box makes a very tonvenient poultry
house. It can be worked over in many
different styles. Usually the affair is
made only one story high., This is not
as of economical space as the double
story house illustrated herewith. Such
a house will commend itself to those
having very limited space. The second •
floor is Placed about a third of the way
There is more catarrh in this section
of the country than all other diseases
pat together, and until the last few
years was supposed to be incurable.
For a great many years doctors pro-
nounced .11 a local disease and pre-
scribed local remedies' and by constant-
ly failing to cure withlocal treatment,
pronqunced it incurable. Science has
proven Catarrh to be a constitutional
disease and requires constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manu-
factured by F J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,
Ohio, is the only Constitutional cure
on the market. It is taken internally.
It acts directly on the blood and muc-
ous surfaces of the system. They offer
one hundred dollars for any ease it
fails to cure. Send , tor circulars and
testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
WONDERS OF THE ALPS.
Changes Nature Wrought to Uplift
Their Towering:Reeks.
Nothing in the world's history is more
impressive than the story of the Alps.
Ten or twelve million years ago, post
sibly far more, a long unseen line of
weakness, a crack 0 fissure in the
earth's crust, stretched away from
France eastward hundreds of miles. On
this line followed huge, •volcanic out-
bursts.'
•Next ensued a vast slow subsidence,
which went on through geologic epochs
until where Morn Illanc sow rears its
summit 15,780 feet was a sea fringing
an old continent. 'Large rivers emptied
into it. Deposits or etudhsand, gravel
were laid one on another as the sink-
ing went on until the layers became
50,000 feet, nearly ten miles, thick.
Then at last commenced a great ulh
lifting: the struggling subterranean
forces raised a huge load. For ages
this went on until the rocks, crumbled;
crushed. contorted, rose above the wa-
ters and continued, to rise, forming lines
of mountain chains and Making Swit-
zerland a tableland,
Every hour since then rain and snow,
river, glacier and avalanche have been
sculpturing into peaks and carving into
lakes and valleys that vast platform
with its recent sedimentary covering
and primeval granite core.
. The result is :s land of unequaled
grandeun-London Telegraph.
; """M"."7""'"'"......'"--..1/!
Volguary loth 1916
•••••••••••mmionalliln
not a catam
A logo(' but a
. book of fafor.
.
ofvoklablemoney
saving facts for
the farmer,
It tells how to
construct fire,proot
weather-proOf,
Wear-proofbuildings
and other farm im-
provementsolindes.
tractable concrete-
tbe most economical
of all building
materials.
It, hi the same book that
has saved time, labor and
money for snore than
75,000 progressive Cana-
dian farmers. Lot it save
money for you.
'up from the lover door. It may be
made renbrable so as to be readily
cleaned -simply fit loosely on four or,
more sappets, 'Such as braekets. The
lid, d, Almeida fit stegly eget the frame
and be easily raised by Meant of
hinges. the fowls ean retch this doer
by walking up the incline, a.
b. trap door, b, fits over the' opening,
no the fowit may be congaed in. the
• upper floor when necessary. shows
the tiotitiort Of the rcioStS. thete shotild
be In trestles about eighteen inchee
high end be 'easily removable. D d
elm* the hinged fronts which they be
bilged or ketveted at with At each tad
ta ti Window ered With wire cloth,
in the front it It gloss witaloW anti Also
ti Wire cloth witaloW. The whole 0011l.
try' house :Mould be voveed with root -
Ing prefter to Reath out the Wet. The
trap door. b, sboatd 18 fastened up bY
Meets of string or * Wire which
passes through the bark of the house
tett to bletthiched to a nail to. 1101411
*S`i MO*
Canada Cement
Company Limited,
Naiad Building,
MONTREAL.
CUT OUT AND MAIL
CANADA CEMENT COMPANY MID, Ibretalleildiehltlestrest
Clip the Coupon
below. Fill in
your name and
address and
mail TO -DAY.
eee Genttement-Please send sae • free copy of
"What the Fawner can do with Concrete".
lows:
Tahe a strip of tmeein about nine
Inehes wide and eighteen inches 'long
tor te,itiog live ears, t wenty-eight
Ihettes: long for tee ears and alma
forty-eight inches long for twenty
ears Marl; on it :es many two inch
and three Melt i11vi4ons as there are
ears of corn to be !muffled in the test-
er. Nutuber the divisions 1, 2. 3. 4. etc.
Make a wick about an inch wide and a
foot long Of any old eotton cloth. '
Number the ears to correspond to
the divisioes. pIncing tive kernels from
ear 1 in space 1. etc. The rag doll
International Questions.
International questions constitute
one of the greatest known bomb of
the human race. luternational ques-
tions are so broad that they do tot re,
quire any close reasoning in order to
espresh opinions about thent. That its
their great beauty. One can strike ht
almost anywhere Without any great
datiger of hitting bottom, and One Call
say almost anything about an Intern*.
clonal question Without being called to
account except by some one Who is
equally unreliable. - Local tplestibtes are
quite different in that respect. Local
catestiOns are Meth More prosaic 'and
less romantic. One mnst be sure of
bit data and more consistent in his,
cocchision, in explainleg loeal quete
eons timed Is always danger that the,
man yOn are explaining to knoWs More
about the matter than you de Yourself.
if yen mutt make Ignorant stateniente
do it bi the way that beet tienceale
yatir.ignOrante,
1
••••••■•=1.
>6*.e..•040•0•••••••4•644,*t 4.6••••••••••••••6•46.0***
• •
shouhl be damoehed before placing the
seed corn in it. When all the spaces
Imre been filled. carefully roll the rag
doll up. starting froth the left hind
end, making sure that the seeds are
dot' mixed by careless rolling; then,
when the last row of seed has been
rolled in, place the wick in the rag doll,
letting, about eight inches of it hang
out, and finish minim' to the end. it
should then be dipped in water, rolled
in a wet towel and the whey placed In
a glass 0 water.
Severe rag dolls, biting fifty to 100
ears, may thus be placed in the sante
towel: Feel 0 thetowel every day.
and if it is not moist dip it in 4
bucket of watet and correct the condh
Bon that Canted it tO dry. In about
six days the test is ready to Want.
and all ears showing Weak, dead o
mt
oldy kernels shotild be throWn into
the feed bor.
The Times
Clubt List'
•
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4.•
•
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• INNIIIIINIIMIINNINEIP--AwaipMs
• Times and Saturday Globe .... 1.90
•
• Times and Daily Globe .. 3.75
•.
• * TWIGS and Daily World• .• • • • • • • .• • • . ....... . 8.10
• Times and Family Herald and Weekly gtar1.85
• Times and Toronto Weekly Sun ••• • 1,85
•
* Times and Toronto Daily Star... ... .. .... 2.80
w,
•
• Times and Toronto2.80
Daily News. .
: Times and Daily Mail and Empire. ... . .. ...... 3.75
• Times and Weekly Mail and Empite........... 1.60
• Times and Farmers' Advocate •••.• • . 2.35
•
• Times and Canadian Countryman • 1,50
• Times and Farm and Dairy : ..... 1.80
• Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press 1.60
*
•
• Times and Daily Advertiser (morning) . ... 2.85
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• Times and London Daily . Free Press Morning
*
• Edition . 3.50
o
•
, Evening Edition • .... 2.90
r ' Times and Montreal Weekly Witness . 1.5
se
Z• Times and World Wide...... 2.25
• Times and Western Heine Monthly, Winnipeg... .. 1.60
• Times and Presbyterian.... . . ... . • • • • • • • • 1 • . 2.25
•
o Times ,and Westminster ........ . . .
...... 2.25
•
3.25
Te Mr. Fred F. Pardee
made an eeriest heti impreesiVe speech,
cheered by both Bidee, -painting etit the
respective duties of the Goverentiefit
and the Oppoiition in rising 'shove
parneenship te Malted national servide.
b11.1k0 ClIASE'S
the
CtientiOnt
CATAIllill POEM
ti lent Matt to the dleeilued parts by trie
imocovea Mower. Heetttheakere,
dears the sir nyeagektitepa &CO*
Oats In the threat and earmariett0
cure/ Catarrh' and Hay Fatten.
hie. A bee; Wort& fee& 01herrf
`,4•• tit
Storing C:t bete,.
Oviing to the low Otos for otbbsts
thils, year, tatuly get -Mere ire tatting te
IMMO tilethed Of !tering the 'Whet MIS
Albert E. ;7111tintitiii b the Crint01
Oentienitis. One of the. ohettpeet and,
Meet eatiefactory methods to put the
iseVeted beads irk square pile ih the
WoOde, Where the beet are thiek
• then& so that the -direct riyi 0 nut
son eittnet PO -ebbed°.
The getitited ShaUld he elate& of WI,
dethrtildi mid the tablatge laid With
butts 11P, The Pile thrield have tides it-
stfaight At POtitible and ihottld tit
On teen -Over thilit ef twhbeigetitit
straw 0 keret ta the dePtit of on.
tont,
As .ande lit the MI6* fAllt it Ahlatild
be picked down' over the e
tomp in pert vet tii
: Times, Presbyterian and Westminster
• Times and Toronto Saturday Night . I i • • • • 0 • • • • 3.35
4, Times and McLean's Magazine ... ..... . 2.50
•
• Times and Moine Journal, Toronto...... •1.75'
•
: Times and Youth's Companion 2.90
• ' Times and Northern Messenger.. 1.35
. 2.90
• Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly).
••
Times and Canadian Pictorial. • ........... . 1.60
Times and Lippincott's Magazine
• Thies and Woman's Bowe 'Companion....
, Times and Delineator... • •
• Times and Cosmopolitan ......... •
44Times and Strand .. . ... ........
• Times and, Success . . 2.45
• Times and MeClure's Magazine........... . 2.10
• Times and llinnsev's Magazine - 2.85
•
Titles and Everybody's 6••• Oslo •••• 0•115 2•20
These prices are for addresses " in Canada or Great°.
!Britain.
tt The above publicationS may be obtained by Times. ,
!subscribers in any combination, the price for any publiFa.••
f 'vet above less $Loo representing!
•
•
••
•
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•••
3.15 *-
2.70
•.
• 2.60 •
' 2.65
2.45 • •
•
•
• Times and Designer ...••• 0600 •• 11111.0 ........ 1.85 01
•Obt 440,k LitIONIth t • *al bir 4 AMU, I. it the AS ,
+0. .
•tion being the figure
tthe price of The Times. For instance:
• TheTimes and SattirdaY oe•• • to *6 ••••$1•90
I The Varyrier,h Advocate 02,85 less 1.35
Making the price of the three papers $345.
The Tittles and the Weekly Son . r 400
the Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 keit $1.00)..e. • • • . 1,30
• The Sattirday Glebe 01.90 iese $(00) • • •
$)800
.four papers tor $1,00.
if the iti!tbilcatiott you waht, is *tuJi ill above fiat let
us, know. We ..1nsupply giVitl9t1 any well-known Cana-
dian or American publicationlbese prices are ttrictly,
eah fit advance,
4441 •••• 4.4044044 *46.4 ieh• 04 10 44640,o )•64, ",4 eh ere theena•hea.•
•
+g
a
0
‘.1