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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1916-03-09, Page 6e Page 6 THE WINGHAM TIMES etesesereteellees March 9th 1916 _ Tm-..e . �- __ . The Duey omen, --------------- -~-.®.,.- `... RC 4't 1.1(`l'R TO 1'OTT HURON AN') PFR1 it PAPERa. GO UP TO $1,50, "Yes -everybody's. She's the ne1Qh �` e, R borhood gossip." -Judge. ` > e Somewhere on the M diterroneaaz li.ucltuow+ Sentinel) Not Mentioned. t . � Somewhere with the aicaiterrin- meeting o the ubli••bea•s of ,+ .ouae of to long Lam Huron and Perth County weekly news., "And l'll bet it hum had plenty of rap. paper publishers held et Stratford ou la It too." -Exchange, is a man whose life provides the Friday of last week, it was decided thot Explained. strangest story in the world of Mere - the price of all papers represented The reason women cry at t' �se4(iing lure. The poetic genius of this sal- 'is beeaust, teles know that all men are n titer, Lance_coeporal Francis; Lea_ there should, after June 30th next, be widge, has at last shone through his $1.50 per reel' instead of $1,(0, as et.alit:Q.-Detroit Free Press, i struggles with poverty, and those present, Takinh Stops. \vho have read his 'Songs of the With everytfiing that goes to they _Patience -Cont. Peggy dance? Fat;ice s Fields," a book published by Herbert making of a newspaper, sed almost _. Well, she's taking steps to 'learn. Jenkins, Ltd., are proclaiming. him t "the Burns of Ireland," an exagger- every necessity of life practically double Yonkers Sttttestnan. „ ated compliment maybe, at which AIr. in cost whet they were when the one Financial. Ledwidge himself will doubtless dollar per year rate waw established, it . ".??cues is the root of all evil;' and smile. But there can be no doubt of was impossible that the country news. gt;tftiug doesn't improve the fruit.- was attires t e poet, and the best i ers should remain at the old figure. n,ttrt Set. literature of the (lay is all the richer Papers S for the enterprise of Mr. Jenkins, Hien will not continue in a business I Between the Acts. who has by the publication of this • which does not give average returns, ; Dolly -11y new salt will be Guished book given the public an opportunity , • and t.ith the country weekty it hes be- tomorrow. ?lolly -Tailor or divorce? - Lelearning of the work of Francis ' come a matter cf go up in price or go New York Herald. Ledwidge. It was really Lord Dunsany, dram- out of business. atist, poet, philosopher, critic, and 1 On Feb, 1st the majority of Bruce now captain of the 5th Inniskiilings. County papers went up to the $1.50 rate w, A `lab Few Weeks ainedl Ea e "The --urns tae lre/an(t" is .nerving, "ls she a woman of affairs?" Never g a At a m n g f p els. c ily line." Was Pale, Weak and Thin, and Had Nervous HH :;1c.':='.tea Before Using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. it is truly wonderful what Dr. C.,.ttse's Nerve Food does for women w hu aro weak, weary and run down in. it •ulth. New, rich t .,rad is what is rs •,•,led in nearly oil such cases, ;tad because Pr. Chase's Nerve Foot forms new blood it brings cure -- not mere relief, but actual fol•.•• -in the great •`•az-`� F>� r,,:a,:,lrity of such, ail^,'pis. With an a+bt:nd- .31 -viz. It, arse of rich, red bte,l.i t•nursing through the veins the nee,, es are strengthened and vigor and vitality are carried to every organ of the human body. R :tla th" nerves properly nourish- ed headaches and neuralgic pains dis- appear, is-appeaar, appetite improves, digestion is good, yore sleep and rest well, and gain in strength and weight, LAICH, Mrs. It. Laich. C'anil:ta ll.:.t.r> Sask., writes:-"TOa4 v .:I < ni.•. 'ter sae writing you. last st.rtne gave up my doctor altd ik r. lig Dr. Chase's Nerve 1','o z- a treat- ment cured ni,= rapidly nn1 1 t s eon, myself again. Z was pale, +h.a, and weals, su•Tered from o' t.acli troubles an , liver cur.: ,t.a t t n,: fre- quently had siek, nervous he : t,hes. "I was s arprised to ti 1in a few weeks' time I had ' 30 pounds in weight. I n. i r telt so * 11e strong and well inall i:r ,,,p,, and aches never bottler n t :• I tun grateful for the e...re. e...?,.W people would only give this ir,,die7ne a fair trial they would certaaai- cured." Everywhere people are talking about this great food cur`, supplying' cures in Nature's way, by ,dying' the ingredients to form net•, Mood, and so overcome •tvt�a'.raess inti dis- ca.e by aa abundance of vitality. Dr. who discovered Mr. Ledwidge•and the others cannot long avoid taking cuuip:auy."-Detroit 1,'ree Press. Chase's Nerve Food a I•ex, (� for I never thought," says the latter, , $2.50, all dealers, or Edmar.so:a, Dates "I was a poet, nor did I believe it at ;the some step, Because FIuron Pub - eau Forces, serving joyfully and strenuously with the lith Royal Innis - killing Fusiliers as e lance -corporal, The Limit. "What a pessimist he is!" "Yes, indeed. Elven tuisery shuns his One Danger.. & Co.. Limited. Tnron+o. all, until Lord Dunsany said so. I Ushers did not )cin with thep Optimist -Tire world owes me a burnt all I wrote for years, because I Ushers in advancing the price on Feb. hp,.Pessimist-Look out that 1t doesn't declare n moratorium. -Judge. Mean Question. "1 am desperately in lace and am en- �,_�_ thought it might as well die young l 1st, The Sentinel. being as much a1IMELY ADVICE TO POTATO hen's. egg are most economic for seed and be happy." I Huron as a Bruce paper, remained at CLIC/WEBSI purposes. They sharkd be kept until Born twenty-two years ago in a , p p ' planting time in a dark, well ventilated iii leT edgidae twos titeue County youngeste but ' having ng e old now , but the dec decided ?toron advance tiers the f storage, spec His father e( "he Senttne ge d tete Blight and Potato Rot cilused .'alerable damage last season to the pont° crop particularly throughout tee E'tstern section of the continent of America. In many instances, the loos amounted to '25 per cent of the total erne. and more in certain localities. In tee -,queues, farmers were induced to pact with their potatoes more readily this winter owing to the high prices ?sant ter this commodity for domestic u,--. •l'nis, itis probable, will result in ;^artily of superior stet?, since the }, , `rel practise is fur farmers to ase i,.,• i:,tt purpose the remeitoder of their in,,:,tt,es in storage tor:.tt:'-s spring. '..,l.� that the crop tuns leech diseas- ed at the commencement of the season r u,i t•onsidel ably effected b:: storage rots, and with all, or most, marketable potatoes sold fee table use the quality 011 heed for seed purposes will be very inferior, when 'the time for planting .games. We would, therefore, urge farmers to immediately reserve for seed pur- pose; the quantity, and a little more to crake allowance fcr further losses through rot, required for seed purposes. These should be band selected tubers, sound, and free from any sign of rot or decay, of uniform size and pure in variety. Tubers slightly larger than a and cool place o ad out in one of nine children.di l , price at the end of June, 1 I Soule „ill? -Browning s magazine. a layer not mere than three c.otatoes when he was two years old, and he yhas no reason for remaining behind' deep. has bitter memories of his, mother has A Swedish Custom. Inquiries which are reaching us. not struggling fiercely against hunger, and therefore, on July 1st, the sus,- Swedish mothers put money into bailiffs and the other woes of the scription price of The Sentinel will go their child's first bath, believing that this beings future wealth. Montana's Gray Wolves. ' The gray wolf of Montana is the hardest animal to trap. It is destruc- tive to cattle. A•Busy Volcano. Mount Sangay, a volcano in South America, has been in constant eruption only from many sections of the Domtn ion, but also from the United States, very poor, up along with the others to $1.50. A deep love of the beauties of Na- this unreasonable ble indicate than the above caution is justi- ture led him to write poetry at a l we would say that To those who think ho more ble fied. There can be little doubt that very early age, but it was necessary un - farmers who have a good quantity of for foodhim to earn oney provide ; fo the family and he was sent I sells at from Sato 14c p eggsn that dozewhicn should sound seed potatoes on hand, used to wilt ob- to Dublin to earn his living in a now be frcm 20 to •IOc per dozen, or tain a high price for them, when others grocer's shop. He hated the work, that hogs which used to sell at begin to realize the scarcity of goodg- to Ge. however, and ultimately, when he • walked home a, distance per pound should now be S to 10e per• seed. Cancun Circular o. Cir ] _ 9 to- pre was sieteeu vention of Late Blight and tree me however, he had continued to write examples. of seed tubers to prevent disease, pub poetry, and Lord Dunsany, in his in- t, bed by the Dominion botanist, 1'%x- troduction to "Songs of the- Fields;" perimeutal Fara , Ottawa, and obtain- quotes a verse of a poem which Led - able from the Publications Branch. De- widge wrote while working in a gro- partment of agriculture, (meet. cer's shop and which was inspired by his dreams of Slane: Specific inquiries relating to disease questions addressed to the Dominion Above me smokes the little town Botanist, Central Experimental Farm, With its whitewashed walls and roofs Ottawa. will receive prompt attentior. of brown, And its octagon spire toned smoothly Division of Botany, February 22nd, 191G- •- - t nt of thirty mules, In the meantime, pound, err. It is needless to multiply since 1728. The Styx. The Styx was, according to Homer, the principal river of hell. It encircled the infernal regions seven times. Simpleton. A "simpleton" was once the honored term for a straightforward man, can- did and "simple." Profiles. Profile likenesses are due to the vani- ty of a Roman emperor who had but one eye. OR. A. W. OASES CO down As the holy minds within. And wondrous, impudently sweet, ase Half on him passion, half conceit, The blackbird calls adown the street, CATARRH POf> 3r. Fe Like the Piper or Hamelin. is sent direct to the diseased rat is b5 theImproved1$1ower. I rabthe u.cers, clears the a+r p'.,ssat es, stop:, drop. pings in the tt,ro..t andggermanent. ' Fever. t ly cures Ca arr:tandHay I e ?ac. a box a ntnw•er free. Accept no substitutes. Ail ee't.•r or Edrranson. Rates & Co.. LimSed, Toronto. ('L�.+spy.�e..ny.w�+fllr++`Zi"'/Z!"'.^,j1M""r?F✓� -SJ 3 1 HERE FOR YOUR Writing 1 Novels, � Paper, Envelopes, Ink,Playing Cards 1 Ta11yCards, Etc. Magazines Newspaoers, Novsls Times Stationery Store All the leading, Magazines and Newspapers on sale. A large stock of famous S. & S. Novels at the popular prices roc and 15c OPPOSITE QUEEN'S HOTEL WI IGHAM, ONT $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con- stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving Preparing Casualty Lists. the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in Battles take place over such a long front nowadays, and are spread over doing its work. The proprietors have Bees secrete wax only when neces- so much greater a time, that the pre- somuch faith in its curative powers sary to furnish storage room for honey paration of casualty lists is much that they offer One Hundred Dollars for or brood. - previous wars. any case that it fails' to cure. Send for Human Bones. Tests of human bones have shown them to be 50 per cent stronger than hickory. Beeswax. _ more difficulty than in list of testimonials. As soon as possible after a battle Address: F. J. CHENEY, & CO, comes to an end the regiments con- Toledo, O. cerned are paraded, often enough in I Sold by all druggists, 73c. the battlefield itself, and the roll call -Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation jutaut. The names of ed by the ad those who do not answer are care- fully note and sent to the headquar- ters of the rigade to which the regi- ment is ati ,ched. The names of the wounded who have been sent to hospital by the Royal Army Medical Corps men are taken and marked off on special forms. Even if a soldier is so seri- ously wounded that he cannot give details of himself the doctors have no difficulty in discovering them from the identity disc and badge each sol- dier carries. It is from these badges that the names of the dead are noted and forwarded to headquarters. A certain amount of time is allowed for stragglers to return to camp before they are reported as missing and the lists completed. They are then cabled to England and checked again at the War Office from the regimen- tal rolls which are kept there. Then and not till then the lists of dead, wounded, and missing are published. When Swearers Were Taxed, FEED VALUE OF CLOVER: When shorts. are worth $24 a ton 1 the milk -producing value of a ton of clover hay that has been cut in sea- son and properly cured is $9.26. A ton of clover hay can be grown on the Smoking. Smoking diminishes hunger and should, therefore, be avoided shortly before meals. When Most Rain Falls. Rain falls most frequently all over the world between 3 and 8 o'clock in the morning. Why We Call Money "Dough." Probably money is called "dough" be- cause we knead it to get our daily bread. -Exchange. Public Health. • e x� 'f and put in the loft at a total The public health is the foundation i air which reposes the happiness iiuess of the , cast of $4. This includes rent of land p 1 i and all cost in •connection with its People and the power or the couu try. production. A dollar invested in grow -,The care of the public health is the ing clover hay will produce more milk -1 asst duty of a statesmau.-Lord Bea - producing feed than it will invested in I coiistietd. ` any other feed. Why not grow more clover? It is a well-known fact that clover adds fertility to the soil, but at the same time clover needs a fertile soil to produce a good crop. A soil that , will not produce a paying crop of grain or potatoes will. not produce a It may not be generally known ' haying erop of clover. We frequently that money was at one time raised by the State imposing d read about robbing a soil of its byfer- fines on those against swearing were passed in the of crops that can be readily sold and given to the habit of swearing. Laws bliss through the continuous growing y reigns of Elizabeth and James I., and i then building the sari with clover, were strictly enforced during the but the building up is not so easily Civil War by Cromwell, who says of his Ironsides, "Not a man swears but !done as said. It can be done, and is pays his twelve pence." Almost a done, but by men who are dairymen century later Swift, in his "Swearer's or live stock men who feed every- Bank," remarks that "5,000 swearing thing grown on the farm and sell gentlemen of Ireland, at one oath a only a finished pr"tduct, and who have day at a shilling each, would furnish onto apply - Fruit of Absence. Madge -Dave you really found that absence snakes the heart grow yonder? Marjorie Indeed I have! Since Char- lie went away I've learned to.love Jack ever SO much more.-Lippincott's Magaziue. kp4WM .ti. Li1,1 t}f�At J; N"� t.• `i. L?l WHA^[' �l'lr, l;x " "`AI M °AN 1{ L o van', li'ii v I )Cif i • ' Ntf _^ wI d 414 a `t .9 � 1 4�•i J7L M.�+� `.4,gto any e =?address fir,.} Kt 1� er• r .1•r;; ,� .�.'`•4rY�k� X0''1.,. 160 pages of valuable building information -:2 useful plans -complete details on how to make improvements on the farm that are fire -proof, weather-proof, time -proof and economical - besides scores of other interesting facts. it's the standard authority on farm building construction, It has saved thousands of dollars for more than 75,000 Canadian farmers and wilt save money for you, If you haven't a copy, send in the coupon NOW. The boo& is free. x Company Limited, ;�,*-fir.': MONTREAL. \ • � iYYi�1i.�,•1 •fit t yK'•.•r ♦i .�' ,,:.t,, •.'�.:t.'i ♦ i. +f?+x l! ?r .... FILL: IN COUPON AND l ,i"d�, Tai A` r Canada Cement CANADA CEMENT COMPANY LIMITED;HerataItuildine,6Iofl'1•SEAL, 676 Gentlemen: Please.end mea free copy of 1 "what Tho Farmer Coa Do with Concrete'". Name Street and No. City... _ _._.__ Prov 006 0+D04304000,>OGO♦4.04..eif-e..35.0v?,.•4•,?N 4.003.60.064va>SD4r;•+;p,:Oe t? • n jThe' Times o • • C1u.bingListj♦ • • ♦ •• ♦ ♦ 1.90 0 4• ..41P• Times .....r-.... 3.75 • • Times Dally World 3.10 • ♦ Times W k1 1.85 •• i Times W Weekly 1,85 0 •2.80 o•o 4. Times `;.80 o o 0 Times • .. 1.60 Times • Times • o Times 2.35 •' e, Times 1.80 0 o Times o Times• 1.60 n •Times 2,85 • 2.85 0 �! Times Times and y • •Edition o.50 0 A 0 0' 0 A s Times and World Wide 2.25 0 0 limes and Presbyterian 2 25 0 Tames and Westminster 2 25 0 3 25 0 o Times an Eight ,1 . 3 05 0 °e Times and McLean s M.tgazin(. ,..... , . 2 50 0 o° Times and Rome Journal, Tot onto 1 75 • m Times and Youth s Companion .... 0 9 Times and Northern 11lesbenge[ 1 40 ♦• ♦ ( Zil) 290 0 •Times and Canadian Pictorial 1 85 • • : • Why They Lived Long. Native-Tbere are the Oldboy twins. They are ninety-eight years old. Stran- ger -To what do they credit their long lives? Native -One 'rause he used ter - backer and one 'cause he never used it, -Chicago News. A Moon Event. February, 1866, had no full moon. This was the first time such a phe- nomenon had occurred since the crea- m annual revenue of £91,250." a large amount of manurepp Y I tion of the world, and it will not occur Swearing is much less common now to the land. It is not done by men I again, according to the computation of than in the old days, but a Chancel- who keep on growing grain exclu- astronomers, for 2,500,000 years. los of the es might at the end of sively. The building up of a run -out ' ht t'il b able to raise some money from the objection- able habit. lone. The growing of clover should be commenced before it becomes neces- A Relief. sary from the standpoint of low yields. A chap had just gone to the Fiend- ' Where you hear of a farmer grow- ers front from the training camp in ing two and three tons of clover hay everyone. So much so, in fact, that also growing 50 and 00 bushels of his corporal declared: oats and corn per acre and 200 or Explained. "I never saw a new hand settle more bushels of potatoes per acre, Willie (reading the boxing news)- "I down to it like George."' ou Clover is a part of good farming, and . Pa, what does this mean, "He was a knew hGeorge's aw fee corporal,"yoif u'd a man who grows clover successfully ! glutton, for punishment?" Papa -It refers to one of these fellows who says understand how the poor fellow en- grows clover every year and seeds his forty years of married lite neem joys a quiet day among the vitriol down from a third to a fifth of the but as a day,. -Puck. sprays and poison -bombs." - farm to clover each year. his resources mig s z e farm is a heart -breaking job for any - fulness Devon, and his calmness and cheer- per acre you may know that he is fulness under German fire impressed He Told Her. Wife -John, what is the difference between direct taxation and indirect taxation? Husband -Why, the differ- ence between your asking me for mon- ey and going through my trousers while I'm asleep. They Pegged the Hole. , This season clover seed is high- priced, but if it were 50 Cents a pound Lord Coleridge was oncethe violas the dairy farmer could not affotd not addressing a large audtenCe thee.! of re varsity men at Oxford. Ile was to use it. -The Farmer, St. Paul. ' when he used the phrase: "We must remember not merely thi beauty of the ,individual colleges, but the beauty of Oxford as a whole. And it is!" what a whole h v rsi yelled the a hear!"t9 "Hear, men. "Yes, what a hole!" they groaned. "What a beastly hole!" Then it dawned upon Lord r^oler- idge that this eves a thing he would rather have expressed otherwise. Tho wife that complains of poverty is the maker 61 poverty. A Lumberman's Opititon. "I was troubled with palpitation of 1 a writes . andsleeplessness," the pea rt . Mr. W m. Pritchard,Lumbet+lnspeetor, Lumsden Mills. Ont., "and used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food with very great benefit as my whole system was strengthened and built up." Dr. Chase's Nerve Food terms new, rich blood and restores the feeble, wasted notate cells, Times and Saturday Globe and - Daily Globe and..... ....,..,..... and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... and Toronto ee y Sun and Toronto Daily Star and Toronto Daily. News.. and DailyMail and Empire. and. Weekly Mail and Empire..... and Farmers' Advocate and Canadian Countryman and Farm and Dairy and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press, and Daily advertiser (morning), and Daily Advertiser (etening) London `Dail Free Press Morning Evening Edition 2.90 Times and Montreal Weekly Witness 6000.m1.b5 Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..., . 1.60 Times _ Times, Presbyterian and Westminster d Toronto Saturday :ig 1t .... ' ' 2.90 Times and Canadian Magazine mont y , al O Times and Lippineott's Magazine 3.15 o Times and' Woman's Home Companion . 2.70 s Times and Delineator .. 2.60 • e Times and Cosmopolitan 2.65 • o Times and Strand 2.45 e a Times and Success . 2.45 • °• • Times and McClure's Magazine 2.10 • Times and Munsey's Magazine 2.85 • a Times and Designer - 1.85 • • Times and Everybody's 2.20 0 0 These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great: Britain. 0• °o The above publications may be obtained by Tfineso :subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-: :tion being the figure given above less $r,00l Weekly Witn• :the price of The Times. For instance : •• The Times and Saturday Globe $1.90 • • The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1,00). L35 •• =making the price of the three papers $3.25. $3.25 2 0 The Times and the Weekly Sun .... $1.70 7? • The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00)1,30 The Saturday Globe ($1.90 less $1,00) 90 :the four papers for $3.90. $3.90 j lit let : above s If the ptablication you want is not in Cana- :us know, We "an supply almost any well-known Ca dean or American publication. These prices are strictly: • :cash in advance • • • ••••♦•••seo.s•s•s•••s•stlb4 44•••4A•ss•s•0(I••4O4•s4.0$$ A' Sure Way. Y The easy mark who sent a half dol. lar to the fellow who advertised "A sum way to prevent swimmer's cramps" received this answer: "Don't swim." - Cleveland Plain Dealer, SUFFERING. Suffering overcomes the mind's inertia, develops the thinking pow= ers, opens up a new world and drives the soul to action. -An- thony D. Evans, • • •