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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1914-04-09, Page 3HELPS THE SICK TO GET WELL ••••••••11,1.1.0f, A goad Friend To GIN PIL.LS The letter below is only one of =Rey that show how GIN PILLS are regarded by those who have used, them. "I think it my duty to tell you that GIN PILLS are a sure cure for Kidney Trouble and La Grippe. I suffered so much with my kidrieys and I4a Grippe until I used GIN ma.,s, and uow would not be without them in the house. I shall always recommend GIN PILLS to anyone I know is suffering with their "Cade eye. " Mns. M. Ihrrr.ER, VANcouvgit, 13.C. GIN PILLS are gold ,on a positive guarautee of raoney refunded if they fail to give relief. soc. a box -6 for $2.50. Sample free if you write hTational Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. MANGA-TONE BLOOD & NER.VE T.ABLETS are the ideal tonic for pale, thin people, eoc, a box -6 for$2.5o. 207 1••••••,••••••• Made the Judge Perspire. Sir John Charles Day, the EnglIsla judge Nebo earned the title of the "hooligan's terror," died at the age of eighty-two. ' In the nineteen years Sir 3-ohn was a judge of the high court - from 1882 to 1001 -he was noted for his gift of solemn humor and for his drastic flogging sentences. In fourteen years he sentenced 137 criminals to 3,766 strokes of the cat. Once he said to a gang of Liverpool ruffians: "I am not going to give you men long terms of imprisonment, but when you go in you get twenty lashes of the cat; wben you have been in nine months you get twenty lashes of the cat; before you eome out you get twenty lashes of the eat. And then you can show what you have got to your friends." Ile.was per- haps the only English judge who ever did "hard labor." While on a visit to a prison he tried the treadmill, but when he asked to be set free tbe guard pre- tended not to hear Ws request. The judge was perspiring freely by the time he was permitted to abandon his experi in ent. Spread of the English Language. The English language is the richest, most virile and most powerful or all the languages now to be found among men. The men who conceived and made good this nation were English- men, and of course they spoke the only language they knew anything about, the language of their ancestors. the English language. The great Dr. Dellinger saki of this language that "td it Is assigned in the coming age the intellectual supremacy that in an- cient times belonged to the Greeks and afterward to the tic:mans." In 1700 English was the language of 0,000,000 people. Today it is the language of 175.000,030, and by the end of the cen- tury it will be the language of 800.000,- 000 people. -blew York America, . . - Tactful, "Miss De Vere," said the lady who was entertaining the popular actress. "would you mind telling me what your real name is?" "My real name? Oh. yes. It is Tubbs -Sylvia Tubbs. But I hope you will not introduce me to your guests by it," ' "Oh, no; you needn't be afraid. I'm Jost as much ashamed of it as you tice."-Olticago Record -Herald. Pin Money. " It was the bride's first requeet for money. "I must have some pin money," said ibex "Certainly," said the bridegroom. eVere's a quarter. That obglat to buy ire or six papers of pins."-Witehing- Serald. Slow, but Not Sure. 4Yen.r glaughter a ot engaged to *ming Johnson yet, then? I suppose it # case of Slow and sure" "Well, yes -he isedow, and she is net at alt sure." rabor is the fabled magic/We ',Ando ebe philesopheres otone and the eapieft Nortiumtus.-elehlaseee ANVONE CAN THEIR CLOTHES WITH The Tee that colore ANY KIND otoCloth Petfectly, with the SAMDY mockontem Mistake.. Caosixt eat% alteele. :gar Diff=tect 114:61124,2 #44++++441+44+40444+4444414444, THE DAIRYMAN, - After the ming cow has fresh- ened the first thee give ber a Ilt- tle chance to rest before breed. Ing again. Do not keep the calves oneculd nights. Start to put them in the barn, and coax them wall a lit- tle grain feed. A, calf well etart- ed is halt grhwie Sour milk is about as goon for growing a young calf as so tench fog. Ice cold milk is but little better, aud exedssive quantities are even worse. See that tbe cows are not chill- ed and tiller milk Dow impaired. Remember that every time the cows shiver they shale out tee profits. The teats simnel always be ob. Iserved by the milker and when they get hard and Ionia should be anointed with vaselina /It tbe butter is slow in coming + it is due to one of two causes. Either the cream is too cold or else the churn is overloaded, and the contents do not get proper ( oscillation, % leItehehheedeedeteeheehlieheelehlea+eteeehat •rt •se WINTERING BROOD SOWS: Alfalfa Hay Furnishes Nutriment For the Unborn Progeny. A number of years ago we worked eut the problem of vviutering our brood sows from the time they were bred to farrowing on alfalfa hay, says the edi- tor of 'hoard's Dairyman, Previous to that thee we had in common with oth- er farmers lost heavily in young pigs. The sows were wintered mainly on .sorn and house slaps, and the pigs were born weak and so lacking in vitality that many of them died, Studying the matter one day, we were convinced that the mothers were not giveu a suf- ficient amount of protele to properly nourish those young bodies before birth. Every pig is a mass of protein, end how *will the sow get enough of that element to make those little bodies and endow them with living vigor unless the farmer is wise enougla to give it to her? If she were ranging in the forest tho nuts and roots would furnish it. But on the farm she is confined to the pen and yard. So to experiment we pieced nine brood sows in Noyenther upon a ration of alfalfa hay and what drink they eeeded, which was nsostly water. The foremen of the farm and all the neighbors were sure we were tnaking a mistake. Teey were certain the sows would, fall away in flesh and all that. eheatehieeheriede The Hampshire breed of hog, known also as the Thin Rind, has until recent years been but little known or bred.. Formerly it was hard to get a class for these hogs, but as their good qualities became known there has been much de- mand for them. The Hampshire is a peculiarly marked breed, having a band of white around its fore body. As a bacon bog the Hamp- shire has won many friends, tor on the market it competes favorably with the Tamworth and Yorkshire. But the sows ate the hay ravenously, largely so, we think, because it was furnishing an element they so much. needed in meeting the demands of their unborn progeny. To the surprise of all they kept up in nese and, indeed, made some gain. During the coldest or weather they were given an ear of corn apiece to help furnish bodily heat. When farrowing time came the nine sows had eighty-three pip, with not a weakling or titman among them. All lived but three, which were killed by the mothers lying upon them. We fat- tened and sold the eighty pigs. There was a vigor about them from birth up that told how well they had been hour. ished while the mother was carrying therm Since that time we have fol- lowed this praetice every winter with our brood sows and have Seen no rea- son for discontinuing it. There Is setae - thing about alfalfa that is a great body builder. Treatment For Sore Teats. Cews inclined to have sore teats should always be milked with dry hands in the winter time. There is nothing that has a greater tendency to aggravate this difficulty than the wettieg of the hands during the milk- ing process, Vaseline Is very useful in treating sore teats. Carbolized vaseline is even better than pure vaseline. rbiA can be purchased, or a little ear - belie acid may be mixed with ordinary vaseline. An oxide, of zine olutment may be made by using One ounce zinc oxide to four ounces benzoated ittrd. This Ointnient is geed for dry Sores ot any lel/ad.-Kansas Farmer. dive the Hogs a Chance. Hogs Will melte the cheapest grewth when the' get three-fourthe of their feed from pasture. This paeture shoeld not be grass, but some legume or rape. Etogs grown on such pee, titre cart be brought to the pork Stage for from two-thirds to one-half the cost When on dry feed. They have better bone and tamale, feWer and instead of lyiug down and breath- ing dost they aro nosing about amotue the herbage end breithieg Pure air. They are healthier Red ittronget, The sewit VIII have more pig* and better oxiek Aga dote of outot 14.101 . •-••••••.•••••• THE WINGIIAM TIMES, APRIL 1914 PACTS ABOUT CANADA. 4.1•••••••,-ro. British Columbia's mineral produc- tion; -Gold, $5,151,518; silver, $958,298; lead, $1,009,521; copper, $4,571,614; coal, $7,07e,717; zinc, $129,092; coke, $3e6, - 01e; miscellaneous, $3,547,202. Nova Scotia Ahmed in 1911-12, 1,731,- 870 barrels of apples, meetly to Great Britain. The St. John River, "the Rhine of Canada" 500 miles long, drains 26,000 square miles. Regina Census population, 30,213; new buildings, 1912, $8,017,300 or 58 percent. increase; bank clearings, 727,018. Capital of the Grand Trunk Railway and Grand Trunk Paeifie System on June 80, 1915, $50.6,625,43e $1,250,000 was invested in factory building additions in Winnipeg last year. Annual value of city's factdry prodacts now exceeds forty millions. Western Canada homestead entries last year included 10,5717 Americans from 59 states; 8,945 Canadians; 7,256 from British Isles. Canada's seven national parks have a total area of 4,010 square miles. Ocean vessels arrived at Montreal last session 401; tonnage, 1.095,613. In- land vessels arrived, 12,031, tonnage, 4,917,658. rieerib W. CHASE'S get CATARRH POWDER is s'ent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops drop. pings in the throat and permanent, ly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. 25c. a box ; hlower free. Accept ne substitutes. °All deal,r• or Rthnonson, Batas & Co., Limited, Taranto. Ten Civic Commands. Brooklyn has ten new commandments to oney. TbeSe "thou shalts" and "thou shalt nots" are failed by the Brooklyn tenement house committee, which sent them out reeently on a tab- let of paper. They are: "Thou shalt honor thy neighborhood and keep it clean. "Remember thy cleaning day, and keep it wholly. "Thou shalt take care of thy rubbish heap, else thy neighbor will bear wit - nese against thee. "Thou shalt keep in order thy alley, thy back yard, thy hall, and thy stair- way. "Then shalt not let the wicked fly breed. "Thou shaltmot kill thy neighbor by ignoring fire menaces or by poisoning the air withembbish and garbage. "Thou shalt not keep thy windows closed day and night. "Thou shalt covet all the air and sunshine thou canst obtain. "Because of the love thou bearest thy childreneethou shalt provide clean homes for them. "Thou shalt not steal thy children's right to health and happiness. Gladioli and Dahlias. Gladioli and dahlias are everybody's flowers, says a writer in the New York Sun, because anyone with a few square feet of garden ',:plot can grow them) They grow well with slight attention, and are not subject to disease or in., sects, Both gladioli and dahlias keep a long time when cut,. Gladioli cut just as the buds are breaking will open out fully When kept in water. They should have full exposure in the sun. If the soil is heavy or stiff, work in sand if possible, and if it is light tied • sandy, spade in a liberal amount of well rotted manure as deep as you can, say 15 inches. This is the propel, thing to do anyway, no matter what the char- acter of the soil. Select only gladioli bulbs ‚that are solid and heavy. Soft light bulbs will not give good results. They can be planted from the middle of April to the middle of May, ahd for a succession of bloom at intervals up to June 15. The small bulbs should be set two inches deep, and the larger ones three times that depth, in single rows, four inches apart, for cut flowers. Dahlias should not be planted before May 1, but they may be planted up to July 1 for lateflowere. The tubers can be divided to a single eye or bud, if purchased in strong clumbs. Cut with a sharp knife, never pull or break the tubers off. Plant in rows four feet Apart, with the plaiats two feet apart in the rows. Plant the tuber on- its side n a trench four inches deep. Cover to a depth of two inches, tamping the soil well abobt the tuber, and as the plant grows, gradually fill in the furrow. Wheu the plants are about eight inehes high pinch out the centre to make the plant brandy, If the soil is heavy, cote ashes or seed will be beneficial. Dahlias like plenty of moisture, but must have good drainage. 'Keep the Withered flowers cut. CASTOR IA Por infante and Oliildron. The Mod You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature a 14.44e THIS TRANC LETTER - How wofeld you answer 11? Between the flees of this shore letter yes can reed grim tragedy. If its appeal wort made to you, personally, how would you 1 answer it? Suppose you held the power tc receive) thie poor woman or to turn her awe • which Lowest Colonist Rate* to Pacific Cost. Via Chicago Union Pacific & North I Weetern Line. On sale daily until !April 15th from ell pointe in Canada to Salt ',eke, City, Ogden, LOS Angeles, Sim Francisco, Portland, Seattle. Vic- toria, Vancouver, Kooteney Distriet arid Canadian Northwest points. Through Tourist sleepers and tree re- clining chair curs from Chicago. Vari- able leoutes. Liberal stopovers. For full information as to rates, routes and literature, write or call on 13 H. Ben- nett, General Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto. you o? "Will you kindly give me information converting achniseion of a very neatly woman near me. Her husband, is deed, and she is in constunption. See Las two smell ehildren, at present itt ne orplume home, Os the Another is not able to care for them, and their only income is what an aged mother earns. They live in one email room." It is easy to say, "Why, of course, I would °flee relief, if it) were in my power I" But, think 1 Are you eincere when you say that? Are you in earnest? Do you really want to help poor, suffering Con- sumptives? Thou hero is your ohance to prove your sincerity. Contribtaions to the Ivioskoka Free Hos- pital for Consumptives will be gratefully acknowledged by W. J, Gage, Chairman Executive Committee, 84 Spadina Avenue, or R. Dunbar, Secretary - Treasurer, 347 King Street West, Toronto. IF I DIE FIRST If I die first, dear love, My mournful soul made free, Shall sit at heaven's high portal To watch and wait for thee, To watch and wait for thee, love And through the deep, dark apace To peer with human longings, For thy radiant face, 'Mid all the stars of heaven, One only shall I see - The Earth, star of my passion, Half Heaven for holding thee - All heaven for holding thee, love, And brightest of the spheres, By thy dear smile illumined, Or hallowed by thy tears. If I die first, dear love, I feel that this shall be, For heaven will not be heaven Until it's shared with thee - Until it's shared with thee, love, linger at the gate, Or by thy guardian angel To teach thee how to wait, And when thine hour shall come, And through the yielding night I see thy happy spirit Up -soaring, robed in light, Mine shall go forth to meet thee Arid through the eternal door Pass in with thee, rejoicing, Made one for evermore. -London Illustrated News A Weak Heart. When the heart is weak or irregular in action, when the blood is thin and watery, remember the blood -forming qualities of Dr. Chase'sNerve Food and by its use flood the system with rich red, vitalizing blood. This is Nature's way of curing weakness and disease. It is the oely way to ensure lasting profits. Househole Suggestions. To make paperhanger's paste, add a teaspoonful of ground alum to a pound of flour, mix with cold water then add boiling water to make a thickish paste, Put a paper bag over the meat chop- per when grinding crumbs; also slip one over the egg -heater when whipping cream, A small hole will allow the handle to come through, and you will not be sprinkled with crumb duet or cream spatters. Never throw away any pieces of lemon after they have been squeezed with the lemon squeezer, for they come in handy for removing stains for the hands and elsewhere. Dipped into salt they will scour copper kettles nicely and remove stains from brasswork. Lemon used like this will take stales, dirt and odor from pans and kettles as nothing else will. The odors of fish and onions can thus be 'easily removed. Children Cry FOR FLETC.HER'S CASTOR/A The Newspaper Business, A country editor out West has kept track of his profit and Ioss during the year, and he gives an invoice of his bush ness at the end of twelve months of ups and dowbs: Been broke, 891 times. Had money, 4 times. Praised the public, 9 tirnes. Told lies, 1,728 times. Told truth, 1 time. MiSsed prayer meeting, 52 times, I3een roasted, 431 times. Roasted others, 52 times. Missed meals, 0 times.,„ Mistaken for preacher) 11 times. Mistaken for capitalist, 0 times. Pound money, 0 times. Took bath, 4 times, Delinquents who paid, 28. Those who did not pay, 186. Paid ih eonscience, 0. Get whipped, 0 them Whipped others, 23 times. Cash on band at beginning, $1.47. Cash on hand, at ending, 15c. Is your subscription paid up? • The spinster lives longet than the married wornare and a person with art endowment policy lives longer than one with a straight life policy, mid Arthur Hunter in addressing ANEW,/ York gath- ering of Life Underwriters there. The figures, he paid, were gathered by experts in the !employ of forty-thtee insutabee companies, 'and were sub- stentieted by scientists. The Belgian army is experhmentibg with a tepid -fire guri which tee be carried on an aeroplabe tet deed agaibet elle from the ground. Voar $nnoors, "For thirteen moths I was so bad with chronic indigestion that I could not go out of doors. Nerve$ were un- strung, the heart bad and smothering feelings came on till I thought I would choke. Doctors' treatment failed me, so I began the use of Dr. Chase's Kid- ney -Liver Pills, which I thank for my present good health. I am now doing housework and have a family of ten." Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR/A A new method for making exact cepies of applications filed has been adopted by several large insurance companies, the result being a gieeit saving of time as well as as increased accuracy A camera reproduces an exact facsimile and avoids the labor of hand copying. John Vout, a farmer in Elizabeth- town, was dragged out of Ws burning barn by a colt he went to bring out, having wound the halter around his wrist, hut being overcome by smoke. The damage done by fire in Toronto in the last three months aggregated three-quarters of a million dollars, four times as much as the total fire losses in the first three months of 1918. In March alone thp loss was $t00,000. IST AND IlEALTH TO MINER AND CHILD. eteeneeaLowe eoo-reyee SYRUP has beet. ,sed for over SIXTY YgARS by Mit:LIONS of MOTIIF,`RS for their CHILDREN evniee ruierinho, with PERFZCT SUCCHSS. It (.)0TIlliS the CHILD, SOI,TENS the GUMS ALLAY% al'. PMN, CURES WIND COLIC, and Is the bet remedy ter DIAP.IMICEA. It is at:. tolutely harnoess Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslows Soothing Syrup.' and take no °tiles dud. Tweta-pnee cents a battle, A. wine cask which holds 97,000 gal - tans and is the largest ever built, may be seen at Maltermora, in California, The steel hoops with which it it bound weighs 40,0e0 pounds, Eggs are 15 cents a dozen in Aus- tralia. John Marr, a well-known wholesale grocer of London, died suddenly, being taken ill on his way with his wife, and some friends to Commander Evans' lecture. An investigation is being made of charges that British peerages are sold to rich men for big campaign funds. No wonder that popular contempt of the titled aristocracy is expanding in the empire. -- Stanley Snelling. formerly of Bright. ford, reported to have been killed in a motoring accident at Sudbury a couple of days ago, is now said to be alive and well, no such accident having taken place. Damages amounting to $400 were awarded by the jury at the Brantford Assizes to George Miller of the Indian reserve against Major Ashton Principal of the 'elohawk Institute, for beating and imprisoning his daughtcdRuth. Complete failures are Often the re- sults of half trying. The death of Dr. Philip Whitcombe reported to have been the oldest doctor in the county, has taken place at Grave- send, where he has lived for upwards of sixty years. He was in his ninety-eight year. NEARLY IN CONVULSIONS With Acute Indigestion. "Fruit-a-tives" Cured Me. biserstnese Or., MAY 29th. 19/3 "lam not a strenuoue user of medieines or pateht medicines, but 1 have taken nearly everything recommended for Indigestion and Constipation. I have been so bad with Acute Indi- gestion that I was neatly in convelsioes arid had to be held. 1 have used "Fruit* a-tives" and I have not had another attack not suffered at all with Iitdigestion since taking them. "Bruit -it -fives" is the only remedy ewer used that did me any good, tied t am grateful. to "Pruit-a-tives" for making me as well as I am today, arid everyone egrets that 1 loole 18 fitstcIass health. Myhushandlikes "Pruit-a-tives" very Much and hikes them whenever he Ithe oe.easion to use a remedy for Constipa- tion'f. MeleAle "Ierultevelvete*- ere eeld by all dealtre it see A box, 6 for $2.eo, trial sicc, 2,5e, or wilt be ?Ant te enr fiddrest oh receipt c:f vette by Ifruitet-tives Limited, Ottawa. Increase in Suicides. The Speceator, the weekly insurance journel of New York, has in a recent number a discussion of the statistics of suicide for the last twenty years, Which presents some rather startling figures on an important sociological problem. Orclinerily it is presumed that it is, as a rule, those whe are miserable, in physical suffering; and especially under stress of poverty, who take their own lives, .As a matter of fact, the suicides ceme med. more quently from the better -to-do classes, and not iefrequently among teehe who have a eousiderable amount of money atending in their name at the time when thty consider that they cannot stand the world longer, As of course is well known, the sui- cide rate has been constantly going up during the past half centery, and its increase is particularly noteworthy during the last twenty-five years. The statistics for twenty years as published by the Spectator are indeed startling. In 100 American cities, containing a population of about 14,600,000 in 1893, there were about 2,100 suicides. In 1903, the populations of the cities taken being in round numbers about 18,000,- 000, there were some 3,500 suicides. In 1912, the population now considered being over 23,000,000, the -re were al- most 4,400 suicides, An increase of less than three-fourths in population has eonsiderably more than doubled the suicide mortality. Miss Gladys Meredith, of Brantford, Was awarded $1,500 demages and costs by a jury at the Assizes against Dr. E. C. Ashton for assault. • . To Suffer From Headaches MAKES LIFE MISERABLE, It takes a person who has bed wad le subject to headache to deseribe the suffer* ing which attends it. The dull throbbing. the intense pain, eometimes hz one pert of the head, sometimes in another, and then again over the whole heed, varyiug in its severity by the cause which brings H on, purely indicates that there is something amiss with the system. The fact that Burdock Mood Bitters reache,s the seat ethe trouble is due to its success in relieving and permanently curing the cause of the neadache. Mrs. Andson, 416 15tle Ave. llast, Cal- gary, Alta., writes: "For three years I wee troubled all the time ivith sick headaches, and euffered also with constipation, end kept breaking out in pimples and sores on my face. I tried everythiug till at last a friend told me of Burdock Blood Bitters. took two bottles, and my skin is as clean and pure as a baby's, and I have never been troubled with the headaches siece," Burdock Blood Bitters is manufactured only by Tile Milburn Cm, Limited, Toronto, Ont. ••••••••••••••••••••••1 The first bright spring days are apt to delude children with the idea that summer has come, end this delusion often keeps the doctor very busy. It is well to teach them that they must not sit on the gruund till strawberry time, nor go without overshoes when the ground is like a sponge that exudes water at every footprint; and that it is not safe to sit on a porch without extra wraps on. Begin when they are very young to teach them that if their feee are wet they must change shees and stockings, +++++.1ieffifilffifile'fie++++++++++ +++++44-14.441BReeeeteselee+++-Yee The Times 4 Clubbin 011111111111111111111111111giunimmemgeli Times and Saturday Globe Times and Daily Globe Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... Times and Toronto Weekly Sun - • . i••• Times and Toronto Daily Star ***** • • • Times and Toronto Daily News.,..... Times and Daily Mail and Empire-. • Times and Weekly Mail and Empire.. - Times and Farmers' Advocate Times and Canadian Farm (weekle ) Times auct Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press Times and Daily Advertisey ....... Times and London Advertiser (neekle Times and London Daily Free Puee Alerting Edition... .. Evening Edition Times and Montreal Daily Witness Times and Montreal Weekly Witness .. Times and World Wide .... •••••••• Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg . -- Times and Presbyterian... 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The above publications may be obtained by Times* *subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica.-* roPtion being the figure given above less $1.00 representing': Zthe price of The Times. For instance : • • 0 dp 0 • The Times and Saturday Globe.... ....$1.90 . 4. • The Farmer's Advocate (. .. $2,35 less $1.00) 1.36 . 4* 4, O. - . • * • • $3.25 • :making the price of the three papers $3.25. * • . The Tithes and the Weekly Sun......... ......$1.70 • o• o The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00),. 1,30 • • • • The Saturday Globe ($1,90 leas $1.00) ......... 90 • Ye • $7,0 o . • • lithe four papers tor $3.go. : • t 4. If the pilbticat on you Weill is not in above lit et'. + us know, We 'u supply almost ans. well.known Cana-+ + .. • +chan or American publication. "11 e, prices are strictly+ • 4- I Icash in advance S .nd subscriptions by post office or express order toi The Times Office Stunt Mock WINGHAIVI ONTARlo iimittetittout. t