HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1916-06-01, Page 6Page6
THE WI
AM TIMES
Thursd.sy, June list, 1916
How the Blood
Is Purified
By the Searching and Painstaking Work
of Healthy Kidneys.
In its circulation through the
body the blood not only carries nutri-
tion to the cells and tissues, but also
collects the waste material resulting
from the breaking down of cells and
tissues, the ashes left by the fire of
life.
In due course the blood passes
through the kidneys to be purified of
-these poisonous impurities, and these
.filtering organs extract each day
about 50 ounces of liquids and 2
ounces of solids, 500 grains of urea
and 10 grains of uric acid, the mater-
• ial which is found in rheumatie
. joints.
Sudden changes of temperature
throw a 'great strain on the kidneys,
but it is overeating and drinking
that aro the usual cause of trouble.
In a vain effort to remove the excess
of waste matter the kidneys break
down, uric acid and other poisons are
left .in the blood and the whole sys-
tem is poisoned by impure blood.
Pains in the back and limbs,
severe headaches, lumbago and rheu-
matism are the natural result. Har-
dening of •the arteries, excessive
blood pressure, weakening of the
heart's action, Bright's disease may be an-
ticipatecl unless prompt action is taken.
We like to think of Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills as preventive treatment, for by
their timely use you can readily prevent all
these dreaded disorders. Unlike other medi-
cines., for kidney troubles, they awaken the
action of liver and bowels as well as the
kidneys, and thereby effect a prompt cleans-
ing of the whole filtering and. excretory
systems.
There is no way by which the action of
the kidneys can be so quickly aroused and
the blood cleansed of impurities as by the
use of Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. It
is therefore the greatest of blood purifiers
and much sought for at this time of year,
when everybody feels the need of.a medi-
cine to cleanse from the system the accumu-
lation of poisonous matter.
One pili a dose, 35 cents a box, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Litnited, Toronto.
Do not be talked into accepting a substitute. Imitations disappoint.
Dr. Chase's Recipe Book, 1,000 selected recipes, sent free if you mention this paper.
A Ford car bought part by part
costs only $40 more than the
list price of the complete car as
against $940 more for the parts
of the average car priced around
$1000 and less.
$940—Cost, over and above the list price
of the car itself, for enough spare
parts to build the average touring
car priced around $1000 and less.
$ 40—Cost, aver and above the list
price of the car itself, for enongh
spare parts to build a Ford tour-
ing car complete.
$900a --Difference in part by part cost of
cars.
And remember, both by laboratory tests
and actual service tests, the parts of a
Ford car have proved themselves super-
ior, part by part, to those of any other
car.
Don't these figures drive home what is
meant by the low upkeep cost of the
Ford 7
eimeraiimentaliwisissesa
Massaosersaiewasidawlersa
A. M. CRAWFORD
Dealer Winghain, Ontario
Ford Runabout $400
Ford Touring - 530
Ford Coupelet - 730
Ford Sedate - • 890
Fon! Town Car 780
f. 0. b. Ford Ontario
All kars completely
equipped, including
electric headlights.
Equipment sloes not
include speedometer
WOMEN AND DAIRY PRODUCTS
In the area Of industrial labour it is
in the dairy and poultry yard where
women and girls shine the most. In the
ancient days, apart from the interior
of the home and works of charity, in
civilized countries, those two branches
of agriculture represented practically
their only spheres of non -household
activity. To -day there is not a walk
in life in which they have not some sort
of footing, not even excepting the iron
foundries, but still in the,dairy and in
the poultry yard they fid their most
congenial and most healthy agricultural
occupation. It is on them that es-
pecially in the dearth of manhood, will
.to a large extent fall the responsibility
for the increase of Canada's dairy
products. The second number of the
DR. A. W. CHASE'S
CATARRH POWDER 2 5 �r,
is sent direct to the diseased parts by the
Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers,
clears the air passages, stops drop-
pings in the throat and permanent•
1 cures Catarrh and Hay Fever.
'L5c. a box •blower tree. Accept no
substitutes. AS dealers or Edmanaon,
Antes & Co.. Limited, Toronto.
just -issued Agricultural War Book.
makes plain there is much need and
room for woman's work,
Canadian cheese has for more than
a generation possessed a reputation
that even the Long -famous home pro -I
duets of the central countries of England
have difficulty in equalling., despite the
much longer experience of the manu-
facturing families. Of recent years
New Zealand, notwithstanding, its
greater distance from the centre of
demand, has been pushing this country
hard. The products of that partner in
the vast British aggregation have,
indeed, at times commanded slightly
better prices, but on the whole the
cheese of this country has maintained
its supremacy. And the market is
increasing and is hound to continue
progressive. That New Zealand rec-
ognizes this fact is abundantly proven
by the conversion that is taking place
there of butter -making establishments
into cheese factories. Canada is not
lagging behind it is satisfactory able
to state. That she, too, has awakened
to the opportunity for magnifying
trade that confronts her is proven by
the increased output of last year as
compered with previous years; is proven
particularly by the progressive move-
ment that is going forward in the
Western provinces. But the ground
has not altogether been covered yet.
The market is still open, is still only
partially occupied as far as our products
are concerned. No . matter how hard
we may strive to secure excellence in
flavour and general character our efforts
can never prove excessive.
In butter Canada is not doing as well
as in cheese, There has been a signifi-
cant decline in quantity for export.
There are various reasons for this, the
principal of which is the nearness of
indefatigable Denmark and other pro-
ducing 'European countries. Butter
being a more perishable article than
cheese and the use of ice and the
refrigerator being far less common in
Britain than with us, the closer in
proximity of the source of supply of
course the better. Then again there
are rivals in the consumption of butter
that there are not as regards its re-
lative in compenent parts, Conse-
quently our butter export trade has not
kept pace in development with that of
cheese, although it' had of late years
shown some improvement. There is
good reason to fear that a long time
will elapse before 'it will reach the
highwater mark of production of 1903,
when 34,128,944 lbs. at a value of
$6,954,618, were exported, or the high-
water mark in values of 1906, when
1 34,031,525 lb. sent out of the country
commanded $7,075,539.
The products of the years 1903 and
1906 affords marks good enough at
present to aim at in the making of
butter, but the goal open for cheese of
the highest Canadian standard is so
wide that it has virtually no limitation.
And it is women, who by their labour
can preeminently fill the conditions
called for.
Signs of kidney 'Trouble,
In the early stages kidney troubles
are known by backache and urinary dis-
orders. Later come dropsy, stone,
rheumatic pains, and perhaps diabetes.
But don't wait for these. Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills will help you in a few
hours. Their thorough action on the
liver, kidneys and bowels will clear
away the pains and aches and make
you well again.
Canada's egg crop for 1915 was
valued at thirty-two million dollars,
over twice the value of the fruit crop.
The sturdiness of Andalusian horses
is attributed to the fact that they feed
on a species of wild clover which grows
only in the Spanish province of Cadiz.
In proportion to population the
states having the most blindness are,
in order, New Mexico, Nevada, Ari-
zona, Kentucky, Tennessee and Vir-
ginia.
ryi
111
rel
"j Watches,
R
1p
r
rle Diamonds
1.
� n�
!r.10
nt
1.0 A. M'� KNOX h
li tl
Phone 5 Whhghain �%i
.! :t :E: .ft: Iter :0, :: a'. a . 4
Had Dyspepsia,
saw N1 NEARLY TURNED
RP 111 TOES.
Burdock Blood Bitter
CURED HIM.
Mr.' fl. ' Manderso», Stealer, Alta.,
writes: "About twenty-five years
in the Province of Quebec,. I carie pretty
near turning up my toes with dyspepsia.
A cousin of mine persuaded me to try
Burdock Blood Bitters. In about two
weeks I could eat anything from raw fat
pork to unleavened bread. Three bottles
did the job, and I have never been
troubled with my stomach since. You
would say that this is wonderful if you
could only see what we sometimes have
to live on in this country; bannock, half
cooked beans, etc."
Burdock Blood Bitters has been on
the market for the past forty years, and
cannot be excelled as a medicine for all
diseases or disorders of the stomach.
B.B.B. is manufactured only by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Going Down.
Redd—He started out with a $6,000
automobile.
Greene—And what
now?
"A street ear."
car is he using
.•I„ .
Liked Variety.
Judge—oto two of the witnesses tell
the same story. Lawyer --I arranged
it that way. your honor. I didn't want
the trial to be too monotonous for you.
The Simplon Pass.
The Simplon pass was a famous
highway of travel long before Napo.
leou constructed the highroad. Milton
came home that way from his grand
tour, and so did John Evelyn. The
latter traveler went in fear of his life,
not only'egpectiug avalanches to fail
on lain. hot being apprehensive lest
bears and wolves should Issue from
the caves in the precipices and assail
him. The only actual harm which
happened, however. was that his von•
paniou's dog killed a goat belonging
to one of the peasants and that heavy
compensation had to be paid—"a pis -
tole," says the diary, "for the goat and
ten more for attempting to ride away."
MAKE YOUR MONEY WORK.
And the Lesson the Small investor
Needs to Learn.
The advice of one of the large banks
of the country is that every oue should
invest his surplus. whether Large or
small, in dividend securities of the best
class, whether railroad, real estate or
farm mortgages or public utilities, for
"To keep money idle Is a costly oper
ation."
Let every reader of this article re.
member that with as little as $5 or $10
he cau make first payment on the pur-
chase of a first class $100 bond. Let
every reader who has a few hundred
dollars to spare put it in a good $500
or $1,000 bond on the partial payment
plan, and let it earn something. rive
hundred dollars invested in a 6 per
cent bond (with the income deposited
in a savings bank at 4 per cent) will
double itself in twelve years—that is,
the $500 will have become $1,000 in
that time. This $1,000 at G per cent
will earn $00 a year or over $1 a week
for its possessor. Even at 5 per cent
it will double in fifteen years and at 4
per cent in eighteen years.
The lesson the small investor wants
to learn is that his money is just as
good as that of the larger investor.
The former has greater need of being
careful because be has less to spare.
Learn to be a careful investor. The
first thing the careful buyer does if be
wants to buy a horse, a cow, a house
or a farm, a bond or a share of stock
is to make a careful investigation.
Schoolboys may swap the jackknives
they hold in their closed hands, but
grownup men ought to know better.
The humblest investor can buy with as
great safety as the proudest, for both
can deal with the same bankers or
brokers in these days when small lots
are popular with firms of established
character,
Hungarian Face*.
I have never seen such interesting
photographer's show windows as there
are in Budapest. Partly this is because
the photographers are good, but partly
it must lie in the Hungarians them-
selves—such vivid, interesting, uncon-
ventional faces. These people lobk as
If they ought to do the acting and
write the music and novels and plays
and paint the pictures for all the rest
of the world. If they haven't done so
it must be because, along with their
natural talent, they have this indolence
and tendency to flop and not push
things through. --Arthur Rube in Col-
lier's Weekly.
London's Big Belt.
"Big Ben," the bell in Westminster
clock tolver; London, is known the
world over, brit it is incorrectly named.
Sir Benjamin Hail, the first commis.
sioner of 'works, during Whose tenure
ax office the Block was erected, had far
less to do with it than Lord Griml-
thorpe, who designed It and was the
moving Spirit is its erection. In jus-
tice to him it should be ksoivli as "Old
Grins."—.Lendort Mirror.
-'inevitable.
"I 'taw ystate in that railroad ':hilt•
.fan."
"Naturally, when tie mails Were tele.
W a revs•
Withoit Otittase thea etlnnot bi
truth, and itliout tenth there ten he
,...+: .,,
Excursions
Every Tuesday, Marcia to October
"All Rail"
Every Wednesdays During SeasonNavigation
"Groot Lakes Route"
Scaoaaraet cast ea dee prehtiosethems last Year COArda's Greatest
Wheal •tar produced estern is a bravos wattling for you. The
CANADIAN • PACIFIC
win take Yon there, ghee yeas oil the lafcrmatkn about the best
place.,, and help Yeti to socceus. u u
Particulars treat easy Canadian Pacific Ticket
Agent, or write W. 1, Howard, District Passenger
Agent, Toronto.
F ARE :s32 'i►�� 'DAILY~BETWEEN"
1� BUFFAULA,
� :,... Irl
,. wf", vaiii:. ,
5i ^"y�Tnua �.. 711
The Great Ship "SEEANDBEE"
The largest and most costly steamer on any Inland water of the world. Sleeping aceommoda,
tions for 1500 passengers,
"CITY OF E Lam" --- 3 Magnificent Steamers ----- "CITY OF BUFFALO'J
BLTWEEN
E; TFFALO-Daily, May 1st to Nov. 15t1r-CLEVELAND
Leave Buffalo - • 9:00 P. M. Leayo Cleveland 9;00 P.M.
Arrive Cleveland - - 7:90 A. M. Arrive Buffalo • - . • 7:30 A.M.
);astern Standard Time)
Connections at Cleveland for Cedar Point, rut -in -Bay, Toledo, Detroit and all pointe West and
Southwest. Railroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland are good for transportation
on our steamers. Ask your ticket agent for tickets via C, & B. Line.
Beautifully colored sectional puzzle chart showing both e„tcrior and interior of The Great
Ship "SEE:ANDBEE" sent on receipt of five cents to cover postage and mailing. Also ask •
for our 24 -page pictorial and descriptive booklet free.
M. THE CLEVELAND & BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., Cleveland. Olio
14
HERE FOR YOUR
f Novels, .Writing
Paper, Envelopes,
Ink, Playing Cards
Tally Cards, Etc.
Magazines, Newspauers, Navels
All the leading Magazines and Newspapers
on sale. A large stock of famous S. & S,
Novels at the popular prices Ibctatld 15c]
Times Stationery Store
OPPOSITE QUEEN'SIHH1'E[ WINGHAM, ONT