HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1916-06-22, Page 6Page 6
THE WINGNAM TIMES
"I don't want to miss a single
dose, because it is doing me so much
good. My nerves were so bad that I
could not rest or sleep, and would get
up in -the morning feeling tired out.
"Besides that, I frequently had
severe nervous headaches and got so
cross and irritable that every little
noise would set my nerves on edge.
I did not seem to have any energy or
strength, and the slightest exertion
would 1180 elle up entirely.
Then a friend told me of the
benefit she obtained from using Dr.
Chase's Nerve Food, and I decided to
give it a trial. It was not long till I
found that I was sleeping better and
enjoying my meals. There did not
seem to be so much to worry me, and
I began to find a new pleasure in life.
It is wonderful the way the Nerve
Food is building up my health and
strength, and since I have been using
it I have found out that many of my
lady friends have -had a similar ex-
perience."
This is the way women every-
where are talking about Dr. Chase's
Nerve Food.. Seldom has any treat-
ment ever aroused so much favorable
comment. While natural and gentle
in action, this food cure is wonder-
fully potent in building up the run-
down system. Ask your friends
about it and put it to the test when
in need of restorative treatment.
50 cents a box, 6 for $2.50, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates
& Co., Limited, Toronto. Do not be talked into accepting
a substitute. Imitations disappoint.
Dr. Chase's Recipe Book, 1,000 selected reeipes, sent free if you mention this paper.
Thursday, June 22 nd 1916
found in 1915 that their herds had made
a gain over their 1918 record of 71
pounds of tat per cow, a gain of eight
per cent. But on the other band the
1913 patrons of the same two creameries
who did not go in for cold calculations
fell off 87 pounds of fat per cow, seven-
teen per cent
If the men not cow testing had made
gains with their cows in the two years
as thase made who were testing, it
would have meant an •increase in the
output of 58,362 pounds of butter,
It pays to test. Record forms are
furnished free of charge on application
to the Dairy Division. Ottawa.
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 mound
$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, over and above the list
price of the car itself, for enongh
spare parts to build a Ford tour-
ing car complete.
$900—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?
A M.
Dealer
Ford Runabout $480
Ford Touiritrg^ ,.530
"Foid-Cgellelleeee730
Fova Sedan , 800,
Ford Town Car 780
f, o. b. Ford Ontario
CRAWFORD
Wingharn, Ontario
All cars completely
equipped, including
electric •bearlliighfs.
Eclunen'k doe, nut
include speedorheter
CALCULATING COWS
DIFFERENCE IN TIME
Last summer, says a British weekly,
a number of masons left Scotland to
settle in America. Recently one of
them wrote to his wife and instructed
her to sell most of their household
property and to take passage out to
him.
The good wife had a neighbor in to
help in the packing In the midst of
business they fell upon Sandy's watch.
The neighbor examined it closely and
then said:
"It's a grand watch, Janet. Ye'll be
takin' it wid ye?"
"Nal nal" was the reply. "It wad
be o' nae use out there, for Sandy tells
me in his letter that there is some
'oors o' difference between the time
here and in California, so I needna be
takin' lumber,"
A. weak Chested Boy.
"My boy Frank seemed weak -chested
and took a very severe cold," writes
Mrs. D. Stevens, Ninga, Man. The
many medicines used did not seen to
benefit him, until we tried Dr. Chase's
Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine and
found it to be exactly what was wanted
to cure him." No treatment is so
thorough and effective as a cure for
croup and bronchitis.
SOME INFORMATION
A Sluggish Liver
CAUSES LOTS
OF TROUBLE.
Unless the liver is working properly
you may look forward to a great many
troubles arising, such as constipation,
severe headaches, bilious headaches, sick
headaches, jaundice, sick stomach, etc.
Mrs, J. Shellsworth, 227 Albemarle
St., Halifax, N.S., writes: "I take
pleasure in writing you concerning the
great value I have received by using your
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills for a sluggish
liver. When my liver got bad I would
have severe headaches, but after using a
couple of vials of your pills I have not
been bothered with the headaches any
marc"
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Piles are, with-
out a doubt, the best liver regulator on
the market to -day. Twenty-five years of
a reputation should surely prove this.
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25 cents
per vial, 5 vials for $1.00; for sale at all
dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto; Ont.
The woman who pins her faith to a
man should be careful to use a safety
pin.
Grapes from seed will fruit the fourth
year if carefully grown. It is from
seed that new varieties are obtained.
Some of the highest clouds we see on
a summer's day are made of snowflakes
and tiny floating crystals of ice.
For fixing on small pieces of wood
chipped off furniture, use the white of
an egg.
Grate an apple into your horseradish
and you will have a fine relish.
There never was an excuse as inter-
esting as duty well dope.
No fewer than 176 different kinds of
bananas are grown in various parts of
the world.
In virtually and dairy district, pro-
bably among the herds supplying one
factory, it is possible to find contrasts
running something like this: one herd
of 14 cows gives on the average 7,7S2
lb. milk and 243 lb. fat. while a neigh-
bour's herd of 14 cows averages only
4,037 Ib milk and 155 ib. fat. Indeed.
in looking over the records in eleven
districts the average difference between
the high herd averages and the low
ones amounted to 4,639 lb. milk and
140 fat per cow. This is certainly an
extraordinary difference, and indicates
that it will pay to calculate what cows
can do.
Take it another way: in 1914, sixty
patrons of two creameries began this
cow calculation, cow testing. It was
J
PIL
DO not suffer
anothor day with
Itching Bleed-
ing,
leeding, or Protract,
ing Piles. No
surgical oper-
ation required.
Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once
and as certainly cure you. sec. a box • all
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited,
Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this
ipaper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay postage.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S p
CAS {LEO R I A
TI -IE ONE HOPE FOR HUMANITY
THE HEART OF LONDON.
THINGS WORTH KNOWING
Aeronauts aver that the barking of
a dog can be heard at an elevation of
four miles.
If brushed with the white of an egg
before the fruit is put in, pie crust will
not be soggy.
The great secret of frying is to
have plenty of fat and to have it
boiling hot when you drop things intro
it, so that the inside cooks without
absorbing the grease.
The per capita consumption of rice
in Costa Rica is 100 pounds per year
Canada's fruit orchards cover 403,-
590 acres.
If one corner of a rug gets much
more wear than the rest, turn it from
time to time.
Direct sunlight by its chemical ef-
fects disintegrates the backing of mir-
rors in a comparatively short time,
Where the Land Is Valued at Over
$16,000,000 Per Acre.
There Is an amazing price set upon
the land of Leaden. In the center of
the English metronolis tiny lots have
been sold for fortunes.
An acre there is the dearest in the
world. Many a transaction over ground
in the heart of the city has set the
figure of $10.250,000 per acre. One
square mite of London is valued at
$730,000,000. The land beneath the
Bank of England at low estimate is
worth $35.000,000, and there are only
three acres in that tract too.
There are places on Queen Victoria.
Upper Thames, St. Mary -at -Hill and
Cannon streets where one square inch
Is worth $1.25. In Lombard street and
King William street prices havernnged
from $200 and $250 to $300 per square
foot.
Cornball property has been bought for
more than $12,000.006 an acre, Thread•
needle street land for $330 per square
foot, and a church in Austin Friars,
not such a large church either. was
tempted with an offer of $5,000.000 for
the land beneath it.
The steady lifting of London land in
price has brought fabulous riches to
the owners. Families have risen to
prominence on no, other ground than
that they owned small bits of ground
in valuable sections. Rents are high
there, and sales have made owners per-
manently wealthy.
Need of Contrast In Beauty.
An essential prerequisite to all beau-
ty is contrast. To obtain artistic ef-
fect Light must be put in juxtaposition
with shade, bright colors with dull, a
fretted surface with a plain one. Forte
passages in music must have piano
passages to relieve them, concerted
pieces need interspersing with solos,
and rich chords must not be contiuu-
ously repeated. This general princi-
ple will, I think, explain the trans-
formation of the bygone useful into
the present beautiful. It is by virtue
of their contrast with our present
modes of life that past modes of life
look interesting and romantic.—Her-
bert Spencer.
Nothing at the end of this war will
bring permanent peace but a moral
revolution. All the strafings, annexa-
tions, indemnities. boycottings, that
are contemplated on either side will
miss their mark unless, sooner or later,
they lead to a revulsion of human feeling
against the horrors and barbarities of
the ordeal by battle. We have seen
enough of it under the conditions pre-
pared by modern science to know that,
if it continues, it will be death to
civilization. For the world at large
there can be no object so important at
the end of this war as to organize some
kind of machinery for settling disputes
and backing it by force against those
who refuse to submit their case to
arbitration or conference. To this we
must come in the long run if we are to
have any security against the renewal
of this strife, and unless the mind of
the world can be at least turned that
way our peace will be precarious,
costly, and uneasy. — Westminister
Gazette.
?) 111.
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til Ill
ji Diamonds, 1
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111 Clocks,
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Watches,
In Siam the natives smoke cigarets
made of home-grown tobacco wrap-
ped in banana leaves or in the petals
of the royal lotus flower.
The amount of powder required to
propel cannon projectiles is about half
the weight of the projectile.
To whip thin cream, or augment,
add the white of an egg.
A cubic foot of well dressed sand-
stone masonary weighs 194 pounds.
Rivals.
Sbe—John is a very considerate sort
of fellow, isn't be? He (the rival)—Oh,
yes, very! He has that keen tact and
loving sympathy which a chauffeur dis-
plays toward a helpless old cripple.
Phone 65
A.� M. KNOX
Children Ory
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
GROWING CANE FRUITS
Often there is far too much wood left
on the bushes of these fruits for best
results. Attention is drawn to tide
now, as pruning of these fruits can be -
done, it desired as soon as the fruiting
season is over, Raspberry canes should
not be left closer than six inches apart,.
the dead and weaker ones being re-
moved and the strongest left. Where
canes are not covered with soil in
winter, the thinning may be left until
spring when one can tell, before prem.
ing, which canes, if any, have been in-
jured by winter. Bending down the
canes and covering the tips with soil or,
where there is little snow, covering the
plant entirely, will ensure the canes
wintering well. Gooseberries are diffi-
cult to pick at any time, but, if the
bushes are kept well pruned, picking,
will be much easier than if there are
many branches. Branches older than
three years should be cut out. The
best fruit is borne on the two and three-
year-old wood, but there should be a
few strong new shoots, veli distributed,.
allowed to remain each year. About
six fruiting branches with their side
shoots will be sufficient. Red currants.
are pruned somewhat as gooseberries,
but a few more fruiting canes may be
left. Unlike the red currant, the fruit-
of
ruitof black currants is borne on the wood
made this year, hence severe pruning of
the older wood is desirable to ensure
strong new wood each year.
The Militia Department states that
the limitation of assignment of soldiers''
pay to twenty days' pay is necessary
for protection of the soldiers.
In the Air.
She—Did you notice that an eminent
professor asserted that were there au
undue proportion of oxygen in the at
mosphere people would become intoxi-
cated? He—Yes; air tight, I suppose
he meant.
Infantile Depravity.
Elsie (aged seven)—Ma, I want a
penny. Mother—What for, dear? Elsie
—I asked Bertie Tones to pretend we're
getting married, and he says he won't
do it unless I have a dowry!
10
10
ll\
/ft
%1'
%I/Ingham i
The Reason.
"I wonder why Miss Snow Is such a
social favorite," said Mra. Jenks. "She
doesn't sing or play."
"Well," returned Mr. Jenks, "prob-
ably that's the reason." -
His Record Clean.
"Your son doesn't work very hard in
the office since he left college."
"No; he doesn't want to Jeopardize
his amateur standing." -
FARE $322' - DAILYBETWEEN
BUFFAY.O
LEVE AND
•,; •Tho Great Ship "SEEANDBEE"
$The largest and most costly steamer on any inland water of the world. Sleeping aceommoda=.
tions for 1600 passengers.
"CITY OF ERIE" — 3 Magnificent Steamers — "CITY OF BUFFALO'!i
SI
BETwEL*I
It BUFFALO -Daily, May 1st to Nov. 15th -CLEVELAND
Leave Buffalo 9:00 P. 1. Leave Cleveland 9:00 P. M.
i� Arrive Clevelan4 • - 7:30 A.M. Arrive Buffalo • • ;R- - 7:30 A.M.
�1. Eastern Standard Time)
1 Connections at Cleveland for Cedar Point, Put -in -Bay Toledo, Detroit and all points west and
Southwest. Railroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland aro good for transportation
on our steamers. Aak your ticket agent for tickets via C. & B. Linc.
4 Beautifully colored sectional puzzle chart showing both exterior and interior of The Great
Ship •'SEEANDBEE" sent on receipt of five cents to cover postage and mailing. Also ask
for our 21 -page pictorial and descriptive booklet free.
. THE CLEVELAND &BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., Cleveland. Ohir.o�1
jam
Cure For Tippling.
To cure a man of drinking take down
in shorthand everything he says about
himself in a barroom and read it to him
the next day:eee
•, .-
Base envy withers at another's joy
and hates the . excellence it cannot
reach.—Thomson.
Rich as Croesus.
The boys were bragging about their
parents.
"I bet my father is richer than your
father," said one. "Me has to pay lots
and lots of motley for taxes orrery
year."
wt's nothlnt; n retorted the oto
"My father is So rich that he stn 'af-
ford to hire a lawyer to fir th!*gs ao
ho don't hale to pay any taxa.",
1
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Novels, Writing �
Paper, Envelopes,
Ink,Playing Cards 1
Tally Cards, Etc.
Magazines, Newspaoers, Novels
All the leading Magazines and Newspapers
on sale. A large stock:of famous:S. cot S.
Novels at the popular prices Iociand 15c,
Times Stationery Store
OPPOSITE QUEEN'S HOTEL WINGHAM, ONT