The Wingham Times, 1916-09-21, Page 3September 21, 1916
THE WINGI-IAM TIMES
Indigestion Resulted From
Bad Case of Inactive Liver
Experience Proved That Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills
Were Exactly What Was Needed.
It every sufferer from indigestion
would study his case as did the writer
of this letter the great majority
would find sluggish action of the liver
and bowels to be tile cause of trou-
ble.
It is then an easy step to finding a
cure, for there is nothing like Dr.
Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills to awaken
the action of the liver, kidneys and
bowels. With these organs per-
forming their natural functions the
system is thoroughly cleansed of all
poisonous waste matter and the pro-
cess of digestion is no longer im-
peded.
Mrs. W. L. Jones, Hill Spring, Alta.,
writes: "I have often thought I would
write and tell you how much I ap-
preciate Dr. Chase's medicines, es-
pecially Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver
Pills. I .guttered terribly from indi-
gestion and did not know what was
the cause. I got to using Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills and was so iin.
proved that I began to study the mal-
ady. I found that the indigestion
resulted from a bad case of inactive
liver, and as soon as I got the liver
working right, I didn't have any
stomach trouble or indigestion, the
nervous spells vanished and the
'blues' flew away. I am never sick
now, but should the old trouble re-
turn, I know bow to cure it quickly."
There is a whole host of derange-
ments which disappear when the liver
is set right. Biliousness, indigestion,
headache, irritability, constipation
re-
sultsare a taw of of torphmoree
torpid liver action.m By the
use of Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills
You can control all such disorders.
One pill a dose, 25 cents a box, all
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co.,
Limited, Toronto,
SKUNK
Get"More Money" for your Skunk
Muskrat, Raccoon, Foxes, White Weasel, Fisher
and other Fur bearers collected in your section
SHIP YOUR FURS DIRECT to "SHUBERT'• the largest
house in the World dealing exclusively in NORTH AMERICAN RAW FORS
a reliable -responsible -safe Fur House with an unblemished rep-
utation existing for "more than a third of a century," a long suc-
cessful record of sending Fur Shippers prompt,SATISFACTORY
AND PROFITABLE returns. Write for "ilia a.bubcrt fl,iiipper."
the only reliable, accurate market report and price list published.
Write for it -NOW -it's FREE
A. B. SHUBERT, Inc. De Lc 4CHICAG01 UAV A.
r
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- WHITE -OF THE MOON. -
1IM1tat Causes Fair Luna, In It, Color,
!e Muni. Pure Snow?
The moon .has no light of its own
and shies through being illuminated
by the sun. What sort of surface
mut the moon have to reflect the light
so whitely as it does? This question
is put forcibly in a letter to Nature
from J. Evershed of Srinagar, Dash,
sir, who describes the mood as far
whiter and more brilliant than the
snow clad summits of the Himalayas '
when these are still lighted by the sun.
He writes:
Why does the moon appear so white
if it is composed of rocks similar in re.
fleeting power to those on the earth?
The rock surface of the moon should
reflect far less light than the cloudy
surfaces of Venus and Jupiter, and it
would be of interest if those who know
Would explain the apparent whiteness
of the moon as seen in daylight.
"A direct comparison of the moon
with terrestrial rock surfaces illumi-
nated by sunlight is possibly to some
extent vitiated by the superimposed
blue light scattered by the intervening
air, which may affect the color of the
moon. Yet it is very difficult to be-
lieve that this cal convert the grays
and browns of rock surfaces into an
almost pure white.
"Ott several occasions in this valley
I have compared the waning moon,
setting behind the Pir Panjal moun-
tains, and, of course, in full sunlight,
with extensive snow fields. These
snows are perhaps fifty miles distant,
and there is a considerable amount of
blue scattered light superposed on the
snow, although less than ou the moon.
Also the light absorbed by the atmos-
phere is approximately and may be ex-
actly the same for each if one consid-
ers the whole path of the light from
sun to snow and thence to the ob-
server. When the air is transparent
enough to see the moon clearly it ap-
pears to me to be distinctly whiter
than the snows, which seem dull and
yellowish in comparison."
Mr. Evershed throws out the sugges-
tion that the moon's surface may be
covered with ice.
Concentration.
"My daughter," says the first Moths'
proudly, "is the most popular girl in
town. Why, we counted them up one
day, and she has no less than fifty-
three gentlemen admirers. Isn't that
splendid! It must seem so very dif-
ferent to have a daughter like your
Irene, who bas but the one suitor."
"Yes," crisply retorts the other moth-
er, "but I would beg you to remem-
ber that my daughter has landed her
one beau, while your daughter is won-
dering which of the fifty-three is com-
j ng to the point."
"Peddler's Acre."
Lambeth "old" church has numer-
ous historic monuments, and in one of
the windows is the full length figure
of a peddler with his pack, stag and
dog. This is supposed to represent the
unknown person who presented "Ped-
dler's acre" to the parish upon condi-
tion that his portrait and that of his
beloved canine companion should be
preserved in the church and that his
dog should be given a grave in conse-
crated ground. -London Saturday Re-
view.
The Artist and His Work.
The great artists, like the great he-
roes, have always done whatever came
to hand.
Michelangelo grumbled and said he
was a sculptor when Julius II. set him
to paint, but he painted the roof of the
Sistine chapeL Shakespeare chafed at
the popularity of the fool in the drama
of his time and then produced the fool
In "Lear."
If either of them had waited for per-
fect conditions and an inspiration un-
trammeled by circumstances he would
have done- nothing. They produced
masterpieces because they made the
best of things as they were. And this
is the business of the artist in life. -
London Times.
Mystifying Chemical Trick.
A plain blue handkerchief is Arm
im the audience. When the handker-
chief is warmed it turns white and
When cooled resumes its former color.
Make a starch paste•and add •enough
water to the paste to thin it. Then
add sufficient tincture of iodine to col -
Or the liquid blue. A few drops will
be enough. Dye a white handkerchief
With this blue liquid, and when the
handle of is dry it le ready for the
'hriek.r Science Mouthy
A Bargain.
"Look, dearie, at the lovely pair of
shoes I bought today. Such a bargain,
too -only $3,95."
"But aren't they a trifle small for
you?"
"Now that you mention it, I t1
they are, but what can one expect
ranch a ridiculous pricer's
The Difference.
Man hits fashioned the Vivrka. 139
has tunneled its peaks, bridged its
I ehasms, drained its floods, laid cables
across its oceans, tact its isthmi
farmed its deserts and set up its el*
ilizationa. He fashions. Woman id1':
lows the fashions -.that • s the dam.
ence.-Lite.
ie$ . thietcfberetketormeeu
ki picttxsets?"
"'lire durst that bertacceavatited be.
hind their k
It kit ewer to ateeda to "{ .
beirve % *About a ?a 'r gift Sea WA
etesl
JJST PLAIN COUNTRY,
.may to Be Found In Rural Santee
Round About Home.
Lae maty another person of the
present day„ I have from time to time
traveled as far as my means would
permit -and a little farther --exploring
countries new and strange or new and
strange to me, climbing high moun-
tains, sailing broad seas and making
the acquaintance of coasts as full of
wonder and of mystery, swept by the
wings of gulls, washed by green waves,
as were the far shores of Odysseus'
wide adventure to Odysseus. And I
have had huge enjoyment in it all,
standing to watch at distant corners
of the earth the pageant of wind and
wave and cloud, trudging up unknown
hills in a fine mood of adventure, driv-
ing across mountain passes into coun-
tries as fresh and as enchanting as If
they had been created overnight to
meet this first fresh sense oC quest.
Yet sometimes and oftentimes I real-
ize that no strange shore or wonder-
ful mountain range has brought a
sense of pleasure quite so deep as that
which comes at moments in mere coun-
try, the plain country of the land of
home. I do not mean any of the show
regions of America. The glories of the
Canadian Rockies, the wonders of the
Yosemite, are unknown to me. I
mean the common country of old fash-
ioned fences and winding roads, where
tangles of alder and sumac cluster by,
the gray rails or grayer stone -com-
mon country, where the hay grows
long in June and the woods creep close
to the hayfields and a little stream per-
haps goes threading its way softly be.
tween the grasses.
Here is no sense of effort in your en-
joyment, All is near and dear, famil-
iar, perhaps for generations a part of
your forefathers' lives. There is no
need to try your eyes to take in the
meaning of jagged rock outlines and
heaped earth masses or stretches of
desert sand. You have not purchased
an expensive ticket whose worth to
the uttermost penny must be extract-
ed from the panorama before you,
making you study it anxiously, eager
to do your duty by every shade and
outline`. You do not have to strain to
the -su'blime, as you do when confront-
ed by scenery, capitalized scenery -
capitalized In every sense of the word.
You do but sit quietly upon some
green bank, full of unforced pleasure
that hardly names itself pleasure, so
unconscious it is.-Scribner's.f
Quarries of Carrara.
The wealth of the city and province
of Carrara, Italy, which has a popula-
tion of 220,000, is derived from the 500
quarries, which give employment in
one way and another to over 8,000
workmen. The quarries are situated
in the mountains above the town, and
the stone is brought down to the plain
to be sawed and worked, largely in
shops connected with the homes of the
workmen. Explosives are used to ob-
tain the largest size blocks, although
wire saws driven by electricity are
used in a few instances to quarry the ,
blocks to the desired dimensions.
Russian -American Calendars.
The Russian calendar is thirteen days
behind the calendars of other Chris-
tian countries, and unless this fact is
familiar to correspondents in the Unit-
ed States considerable confusion arises
over the dates of letters, telegrams,
etc. 'Usually in Russian business cor-
respondence both dates are used, the
Russian date having after it the letters
0. S., meaning old style, and the date
of foreign countries, N. S., meaning
new style. For instance, the Russian
Christmas occurs on Jan. 7 N. S. and
the Russian New Year's day on Jan.
14 N. S. -Commerce Reports.
Pat's Retort.
.An English tourist was being takes,
through the county by an Irish jar-
vey. They were traveling along the
road when an ass put its head over the
fence and began to bray with :11 itti
power.
"Well, Pat," said the Englishman, "Is
that the 'Wearin' of the Green?'"
"Arrah, no, yer honor," said Pat;
'that's 'Johnny, I hardly knew you.'"
Glaciers Are Brittle.
An authority on the subject says that
the substance of a glacier is brittle,
though solid, and that its descent down
a valley is caused by its constant frac-
ture produced by gravitation and the
sliding forward of the whole mass, the
surfaces of the fractures speedily re-
uniting by regulation.
Or nametited.
Old Mrs. Blunderby was telling her
caner about a play she had been to the
evenitgg before. One of the characters
was an Iceman of the "silly awes"
type. "He did look so awfully ridien.
Ions with that monologue in his err
chuckled the old lady.
•
Safety First.
mr. N: wed Wali you havm84ece'dg
this angel cake, darling? Newoet (caa.
tiously)--Wen, dear, ya z -e --, i w E
don't care much for take. Did zest
make jt2 7itrs. Hewed -No; matanit
sent it over. Newed-Give stag emir
pieces, puss:%.
'Tire oft It 'ai)daaed b'artsid d. to =hot!'
erg wlcitt'111Es .60299 vitae 1
youth, "tint you must re i ftei l
the old feette itreti ,boy hall• oretto! thew
thoughtful old fashioned tlitbeialk
asThose, not tborie rarc #xr vfir�d!rlratls ietllrMlod;
iM l3t+v' ,i
rag.
P-'te
THE TONIC THAI
BRINGS HEALTH
"Fruit -alms" Builds Up The
Whole System
Those who take "Fruit-a-tives" for
the first time, are often astonished at
the way if builds them up and snakes
them feel better all over. They may be
taking "Fruit-a-tives" for some specific
disease, as Constipation, Indigestion,
Chronic Headaches or Neuralgia,
Kidney or Bladder Trouble, ltheu•
matisni or Pain in the Back. And they
find when "Fruit-a-tives" has cured the
disease, that they feel better and
stronger in every way. This is due to
the wonderful Ionic properties of these
famous tablets, made from fruit juices.
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-
a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
AGRICULTURAL INSTRUCTION.
The allotments to the different
provinces under the Agricultural In-
struction Act, passed by the Dominion
Parliament in 1913, have been made for
the year ending March 31st, 1917. It
will be remembered that by the terms
of this Act ten million dollars spread
•
over a period of ten years was to be
divided between the nine provinces of
the Dominion, according to population,
for the encouragement of education in
agriculture and domestic science. In
the initiatory year, 1913-14, $700,000
was to be divided. Each year the
amount was to be increased by $100,•
00U, until 1917-18, when the grants
under this arrangement will have reach-
ed a total of $1,100,000, at which they
are to remain until 1923, when the ten
million dollars will have been exhausted
The sums received by the different
provinces for the year ending March
31st next will be as follows:
Prince Edward Island $ 30,443.75
Nova Scotia 74,859.28
New Brunswick .... 59,209.60 .
Quebec 243 212.23
Ontario 301,158 45
Manitoba .. 70,707.21
Saskatchewan ........... 74,869.76
Alberta.... 61,747.22
British Columbia .. 63,732.50
By the aid of these grants agricultur-
al education at,d domestic science know-
ledge has been greatly benefited and
extended all over the country. School
buildings have been erected, college
buildings have been extended and in-
creased in number, experienced teachers
of a high class have been engaged.
District representative and county
agents expenses have been met, demon-
strations in all branches of agriculture
and short courses have been liberally
arranged, agricultural instruction on
I both public and high schools have been
Iextensively promoted, much useful lit-
erature has been circulated, veterinary
science has benefited, knowledge and
practice of domestic science extended,
manual training received an impetus,
competition of many varieties helped
and initiated and home gardening great-
ly developed, In short, the beneficial
influence of the Act is making itself
felt in every direction that agricultural
and home -making take.
Nerves aro Exhausted
When you have frequent headaches,
find yourself easily irritated and annoy-
ed, feel discouraged and down -hearted,
cannot rest and sleep well, and find
appetite fickle and digestion bad, you
may know that the nerves are in bad
condition. Don't wait for these symp-
toms to become Ironic, but start in
early with the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food and head off disaster.
The colors of the 13th Battalion were
solemnly deposited by the officers in St.
Peter's Anglican Church at Cobourg
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
The Provincial Anglican Synod of
Ontaiio urged the Government to
organize the resources of the Dominion
so as to furnish at least half a million
men and the munitions required for
them in time to be of service.
$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 its 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
the person strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors have
so mach faith in its curative powers
that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send
for list of testimonials.
Address: F. .T. CHENEY & Co.,
Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills tor con-
stipation.
Ifathlt,
Perim Kathleen Parlow-A5412-31.51,
Humoreske (Dvorak) orcheso,a accompani.
ment.
Melodie (Tschaikowsky) ercbestra accents
paniment.
Pablo Casale -A5649-$1.55
Largo (Handel), with orchestra.
Melody in F (Rubinstein), with orchestra,
Jules Falk -A1110 -85e,
Ave Maria (Schubert) with Traumerei
(Schumann).
Charles D'Almaiae-A1712--85e.
White Cockade; Jigs and Reels Medley with
Ilarrigan's Reel (Prince's Orchestra),
Eugene Yeaye-36525-$1.50
Caprice Viennois, Op. 2 (Kreisler),
Eugene Ysaye-36524-$1,50
Hungarian Dance in G (No. 5) (Brahms).
Columbia dealers gladly play these and any other of the
thousands of Columbia records without thought of obligation.
Complete Record List from dealers or mailed by us.
Violin and
'Cello Music
All the whimsical witch-
ery - haunting restless-
ness-dreamful exaltation.
of the world's finest violin
and 'cellc music caught
for you with an exquisite
sense of reality in
COLUMBIA
Doubl...Diuc
RECORDS
Have your dealer play these for you:
M IA,
Graphophone Company
Canadian Factory & Headquarters
Toronto, Ont.
14
H. B. ELLIOTT
Sole Agent Wingham, Ontario
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