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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1915-01-28, Page 3January 28th , 1915 .alk Vt r...a ;sta , atraaal 1,ta-' aailaP Cine v'ilas alga rs ,te r ea.t eNWa1,cat ;aa % 1 Beautiful gair Goods Dispiay1 3iTU[: L)01:1•:Nw1•:NI) Co., •� { fl of 'Toronto,ILtd.,,Yar 1ilN"N,,, �,, f 1 f' Canada s I remier Hair Goods � yk 1 , , r r i I House, announce their visit to The Brunswick ,Iletel, „ia �IAP�1 0 , �VrINU I ii ;4.:�::: - 1 r � Wt r th esda W.: :ti:., hrl Feb'! ary 3rd ; when there w'll be shown an exclusive sample stock of QUALITY D OR LADIES in SWITCHES MAI t)5 TRANS, HAIR GOODS F . YFORMATIONS, POMPADOURS, WAVEL ;18, etc. f 1 An invitation is extended to every lady to call and inspect 3+' these goods, "TILE DORENWEND 4 SANITARY PATENT ' TOUPEE ' '�': r r.(! it 7! l4 is an absolute necessity- (� j til every man who is i bald. 1t will protect your health and make ; yeti appear years younger Indetectable-Featherweight-Hygenici g Be sure you see them on day of visit. A demonstration places you under no obligation whatever, REMEMBER THE DATE -WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3rd. THE WINGHANl 't�.Ill.:leaPefee1Mafi'i'-4`l�' !T'iti:-8lt4-4.takeeVe0f:?•i�•A'�=.'le`L-®L.IIO •G46. %I t'S0:•wGr4••44•••)*(50•G+JG•1•`•^••'?T-%.": ,)4.44,19♦r'••••c'444•,,�?,pS•„T••>i?: The Times 0 I Q Clubbin Listt o. ''a •D Q. 4. 4, y o i , Times and Saturday Globe 1.90 cv v Times and Daily Globe 3.75 '' 4 Times and Daily World 3.10 a ,°D Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star1.85 y a Times and Toronto Weekly Sun ........ 1,85 °' o Times and 'T'oronto Daily Star 2,80 a Times and Toronto Daily News,. .. 2.80 e s: Tirnes and Daily Mail and Empire. 3.7:5 • • • Times and Weekly Mail and Empire.....,..... 1.60 a •e Times and Farmers' • Advocate 2,35 a e 'Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) .... 1,60 �2 o Times and Farm and Dairy 1.80 ., a Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press 1.60 G e Times and Daily adyertiser (morning)........... 2.85 <• • Times and Daily .Advertiser (et ening) .. 2.85 y • Times and London Advertiser (weekly)1.60 ,p o Tirnes and London Daily Free Press Morning 4. r Editiono 3.50 ; • Evening Edition..... 2.90 v nTlmes and Montreal Weekly Witness 1.85 a ♦ Times and World Wide 2.25 e ♦ Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 1.60 • •• Times and. Presbyterian 2.25• eTimes and Westminster , 2.25 P e, Times, Presbyterian and Westminster 3.25 a O Times and Toronto Saturday Night . 3.35 00 e Times and McLean's Magazine 2.50 0 0Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75 • v• 0 Times and Youth's Companion .... 2.90 w e Times and Northern Messenger... • 1.35 a • • Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90 Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60 r ' Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3.15 a e Times and Woman's' Home Companion • • 2.70 e Times and Delineator 2,60 0 o Times and Cosmopolitan 2.65 0 e Times and Strand 2.45 a 2 Times and Success 2'45 0 o Times and McClure's Magazine.... 2.10 p st Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,85 ♦ Times and Designer1.850 e Times and Everybody's 2.20 0 s • These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great: • 2 Britain. O• 4 • The above publications may be obtained by Times: subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-411( e :tion l'eing the figure given above less $I.00 representing► •the p, ice of The Times. For instance : • • e The Times and Saturday Globe ............. .. $1.90 • • The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1,35 • 0 • s $3.25 i :making the price of the three papers $3.25. i y The Times and the Weekly Sun .. .. $1.70 •• 4he Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00).. 1,30 � 4 The Saturday • Globe ($1.90 less $1.00) 90 i • e $3,90 • • 4 the four papers for $3.9o. 4 If the pilblicat on you want is not in above list let: *us know. We - ,n supply almost any well-known Cana• .* *dian or American publication. These prices are strictly: *cash in advance • j The Times Send subscriptins by post offie or eprss order toOffice 1 t • ♦ • • Stone Block • WINGHAM ONTARIO 2 s *!♦04.444444++♦09,006-J iw�l+vt **OW,♦•♦•••••I►•.♦1♦1♦•1••' The Dogs of Turkey. In the matter of kindness to ani - Mals it ie said that the Turk cannot be surpassed. Thus at Stamboul the wandering dogs aro treated with great gentleness, and when puppies come into the world they are lodged with their mother at the side of the street in improvised kennels made out of old boxes lined with straw and bits of carpet, And frequently when a young Turlc happens to be flush of money he goes to the nearest baker's shop and buys a quantity of bread, onthe which he distributes am gdogs of the quarter, who testify their gratitude by jumping up at him with in :ddy paws and sniffing muzzles. Hamlet In South .Africa. It can hardly be expected that "post impressionism" will be con- fined to pictures in the future. .A. friend of mine writes me from South Africa that some genius out there has done "Hamlet" in the Taal and quotes the following example, which seems to me extremely post impres- sionistic. Here it is: Hamlet-Wie is u? Ghost-Ik Is enn spook. . Hamlet -Wins spook is u? Ghost-Ik is yu papa's spook. Cold Feet. During a marriage ceremony in Scotland recently the bridegroom looked extremely wretched, and he got so fidgety, standing first on one foot and then on the other, that the "best man" decided he would find out what the trouble was. "What's up, Jack?" he whispered, "Hae ye lost the ring?" "No," answered the unhappy one, with a woful look, "the ring's safe enough, but, man, I've lost ma en- thusiasm." When Motes Fight. lieu would teirdiy believe that moles. clumsy and almost blind, become per - feet deutons when they quarrel. No one knows what they quarrel about, but if they once start fighting one has to die. They will keep on in the pres- ence of any number of spectators, hanging on to nue another like bull- dogs and burying their enormously strong jaws and teeth in one another's flesh. Hedgehogs, another type of the quiet, inoffensive looking animal. not only fight. but always to the. death, and when one is killed the other generally devours him. $100 REWARD, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased tolearn 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 patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do- ing its wol•k. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer O•te Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. C13ENEY & CO., Tole- do, 0. Sold by all druggists, 'Vic. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa- tion. Too Much Expense. "Yes," said. Mr. Tyte-Phist, "I was just stepping on the car when the Conductor gave the motorman the signal to go ahead, and the car start- ed. My foot went out from under me, and I sat down on the muddy crossing, ruining a twenty-two dollar suit of clothes," "Then you sat there, swore like a trooper and gnashed your teeth in rage, I suppose," remarked the sym- pathizing listener. "No," said Mr. Tyte-Phist. "I may have sworn a little, but I didn't do any gnashing. My teeth are new and cost me $30." Don't forget that we have establish- ed a parcel post system with Greece. There's no telling when you will want to use it in a hurry. His quarters having been raided by Suffragettes. the young Prince of Wales should realize how "crazy the girls are about him." Crippled With Rheumatism And Skeptical After Trying Many Medicines -Dr. Chase's Iridney- Liver Pills Cured Hint. When the kidneys fail to pni'ify the blood the poisons left in the system cause pain and suffering, such as back- ache, lumbago and rheumatism. Read how this skeptic was cured by Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, Mr, 1!, W. Brown, Iiingsbury, Que., writes:---" i have been completely cur- ed of backache and lame back by using Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills I also recommended the pills to.a man who was a cripple from. rheumatism. Ito was skeptical, as he said that he had tried nearly everything on earth. Finally he consented to try them, and to his 'surprise was greatly benefited in the first week, and tho pains left his legs until he was so supple he Could walk without pain or difficulty. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills lat4rfS" worked wonders in this place, and it think there is no medicine like them." Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, ono pill fit dose, 25 eents a box, 5 for $1,00; s.11 dealers, or Edtnanson, Bates & Co.. Limitp(I, Toronto, OWES HER LIFE TO "FRUIT-A-1lVES" Cured Both Stomach Trouble and headaches PAI,Mr;asTON, QN'r., JUNK 20111, 1913, "I really believe that I owe soy life to "Pruit-a-tives". Ever since child- hood, I have been under the care of physicians and have been paying doctor's bills. I was so sick and worn out that people on the street often asked. me if I thought I could get along without help, The same old Stomach Trouble and distressing Headaches nearly drove Iue wild. Sometiute nqo, I got a box of "Fruit - a -uvea" and the first box did me good. My In:band was delighted incl advi- sed a coutiuuatiou of their use. Today, I ant feeling fine, and a phv-sict.ut meeting me on the street, not sed my unproved appearautce and asked the reason. I replied, "I ant tak i"g Fruit-a-tives", IIe said, "Weil, if U rust-a-tives are making you look so well, go speed and take them. They are doing more for you than 1 can". Lias. II. 3. t?ILLI.'tM$, Prnit-a-tives" are sold by all deaiet s v.t 5oc. n box. b for $2.5.:,, trial' size 25e. or sent postpaid 011 receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, LIFE AND- ITS TENACITY.. Plant Germs That the Most Intense Cold Could Not Kilf. In reply to a number of questions regarding life and its tenacity, here are results of biologics! laboratory ex- periments made by Dr. Paul Becquerel of Paris university: Seeds and spores of plants were sealed in glass tubes. MI air was removed to the extreme modern vacu- um limit, and then the tubes were sub- merged In liquid air during three weeks at the temperature of 310 de- grees below zero P. and under liquid hydrogen at the temperature of 41S de- grees during seventy-seven hours. Aft- er a year some of the spores, and. aft- er two years all of them, germinated turd grew. This is a remarkable fact -that is, some of the spores required two years to awaken from their sleep of apparent death in liquid hydrogen. ' Life seems therefore, at least in the .ase of these seeds and germs, to be a chemical process -the activity of chem - ism was suspended or stopped by the intense cold. Uo put your finger info liquid air. The cold kills the flesh and the dead part must be amputated. But life in seeds and plants,whatever it may be. snrvived. Humans have no clew to the mauve of life. Calling it a phase of chcmism does not help. since none knows what that is. My theory- is that ehemism is a mo- tion, of and readjustment in atomic states of electrons. These are elec- ticity. But what electricity is is tin - known. -Edgar Lucien Larken iu New York American. tibea the liver • Cots Torpid KEEP YOUR TEMPER, tt W1lI Save Your Heart From a Lot of Unnecessary Strain. Dr. J, Strickland Goodall, in a re - omit address before the Institute of ily-gleue, illustrated the enormous pow - t r of the human heart iu a striking way. l:Ie told his hearers to take a two pound weight •In.the palm of the nand, resting the elbow upon a table, sold raise and lower it from the level of the elbow to the shoulder. This is exactly the work done by the heart at tach beat. Do this about seventy or eighty times a minute and see how louse; you can keep It up. The heart. keeps it up from before ,birth to just .after death, perhaps seventy. years. It never takes n rest. It never sleeps. At each contraction the heart does .•uongb work to lift a two pound •.veight one foot. The heart of a young and healthy person is almost immune to weariness or strain. But if its mus- cles be weakened by the accumulation of body poisons or by anaemia it is very easily strained. The heart has been known to break from the strain of sudden emotion. Anger will in- crease the work of the heart from 152 to 224 foot pounds a minute. There- fore, as the Scientific American says, 'Beep your temper' is good physio- logical advice." Running to catch a train, running up- stairs or any sudden and unusual ex- ertion puts a great extra strain upon the heart. The healthy heart of youth is equal to such strains; not so the heart that has been weakened by dis- ease, dissipation or old age. Dr. G_ ood- all tested the heart of a healthy man before he ran to catch a train; It was beating 70 to the minute and doing 152 foot pounds of work a minute. He tested it immediately after the run; it wits beating 180 to the minute and do- ing 360 foot pounds of work a minute. There is Nothing Like Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills to Set it Bight. Mrs. C. L. Cook, 24S Tenth street, Brandon, Man„ writes: -"I have used Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills for the last four years for liver trouble, and can say that I have had great satis- faction and help from them. I find that I do not need any doctor if I use them when the liver gets torpid, and believe that they are exactly suited for my case. My husband has used them for kidney trouble with good results, and my daughter in Winnipeg has been helped a great deal by the use of those pills. Wo say we can't keep house without them, and have cheated the doctors hero out of a good many, visits. I think Dr. Chase's medicines are just the thing, and have recom- mended them to many people who have used them wiih good results." By keeping the liver active and the bowels regular Dr. Chase's Kidney - Liver Pills prevent and cure such dis- orders as biliousness, constipation, chronic indigestion and headache. One pill a dose, 25c a box, 6 for $1.00 ; all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Don't Oil Razor Strops. "Never put oil on a razor strop.' said ont3 of the largest dealers in bar- bers' supplies in New York. "It spoils It for sharpening steel. A new strop should need no attention for a year at least If it begins to get dry just take a little ordinary lather on your finger and rub it well in. This will soften it again and nothing more is necessary." -New York World VALUE OF ELASTICITY. Shown In the Sand Blast as Web as In Catching a Ball. A sand blast consists of a stream of sand and compressed air shot from a nozzle and is used for polishing or cutting hard materials or cleaning paint off metals, etc. It is also used for etching figures on glass. Now the question arises as to what the glass is covered with in those parts that are to remain free from etching. A thin sheet of rubber is used, it braving been found that the sharp sand particles will rebound from the rubber, although cutting deeply into the glass. As rubber is mach softer than glass It seems more or less peculiar. The ex- planation lies in the fact that the sand Particles striking the rubber take a longer time to stop than those striking the glass, and it is a law of mechanics that the longer it takes a given body to stop the smaller the force exerted on the obfect struck. This is a well known phenomenonin other ways. A player catches a base- ball with a backward swing of his band instead of bolding it rigid. The mitt itself allows the ball some time to stop before the stuffing is com- pressed sufficiently to become rigid. A pair of eyeglasses dropped on a carpet do not break, but do dropped on a ce- ment sidewalk from the same height. They have the same amount of energy to be destroyed by the body that stops them, for , they fall from the same height. but the carpet took longer to stop them than the cement. The same reasouing applies when a than is hit on the jaw and on the fleshy part of the arm with the same amount of force in each blow. Damage is done to the jaw, but not to the arm. Thus, if a fat man be kicked. nothing in the world is hurt but his dignity. - Chicago Herald, In the British Empire there ere in all ranks, 192,281 Boy Scouts. Japan is in fourth place among cotton goods exrorttng countries. At the Shrewsbury Fair there was' a , bed quilt containing 3,000 'squares ex- hibited by Miss Nellie Phillips. Flax crop in Alberta is reported niuch poorer than lastyear. Lumber is soaring in price in Nor- way. An instantaneous electric water heat er is now trade, which gives hat water en demand, Japan's navy has had a larger war experience than any otliot #feet. Poor troth rs in England get 31' shillings at the birth of each child. , Strange, but True. "Isn't human nature a funny thing?" said the philosopher at large. "Take the average man when he goes into the wash room of a big hotel pr restau- rant. If the wash room boys insist upon getting in his way by turning on the water for him, putting a towel in bis bands or whiskbrooming him, their sole object of course being to extort a tip, he says to himself, 'What do they think I am, an easy mark!' But if they pay no attention whatever to him, he asks himself. 'What do they think 1. am, a cheap skate!' Queer, isn't it?" -New York Times. "To (let Into a Scrape:" The expression "to get into a scrape" referred at one time to any one who fell into a deer run in the forest. When deer run wild in the forest they frequently cut deep gullies among' the trees, due to their constantly running backward and forward over the same ground. The cuts so made in the for- est were known as "deer scrapes," and it sometimes happened that a woodsman fell into them, to his great danger. • Dec. a1St January Sale ti Everything left over from Christmas must be sold at and below Cost Bracelet Watches Reg $35,00 .. , . ........ $25.00 Reg $15.00......... ... 10.50 ... 7,50 5,20 3,25 2.25 Reg $10 .. . Reg $8 .... Reg $5 Reg $3 50 Ladies' Bracelets Regular $8.50 $5.25 Regular $6.50 4.00 Regular $5 3.00 Regular $3.50 2.25 Pendant Necklets Regular $25.00 $17.00 Regular $15 .. 9.75 Regular $10 6.50 Regular $6 ...... $ 3.75 Ladies' and Gent's Rings Regular $55 Regular $50 Regular $25 Regular $20 Regular $15 Regular $10 Iteguiar $5..... Regular$3 50 Regular $1.50 .. Ladies' and Chains 39.00 28.00 17.50 14.50 9.75 6.50 3.25 2.25 1.40 Gent's Regular $10..... 6.00 Regular $8 ... 4.75 Regelar $5 • 2.75 Regular $3 1.65 Regular $9 1.25 Ladies' and Gent's Store Rings at exceedingly low prices. Specie prices on Lockets, Chains. Ladies' and Gent's Fobs, Brooches, Scarf Pins, Cuff Links, etc. Large stock of Silverware and Out Glass at and below•cost. Watches For Ladies Ladies' 14kt solid gold 15j Waltham, reg. $40 00 salve $2.9; Ladies' 14k(. gold Elgin or Waltham NI; $16 for 811.7 0; Ladies' 14k1, gold filled Elgin or i1'n11ham rn"t•t reg $12 for $9; La ac's' or Gent's gold fd witteh reg $10 for 87.25; La- dies' silver watch rdg $5 for $3 50 For Men Gent's 18 size 14kt. gold Id 17 jewel Waltham or Elgin wort, reg $25 for $17.50; Dents 14ktgold fd case 17j Waltham or Elgin movt, re g $20 for $14; Gents 1S size gold fd case 15j Waltham or Elgin moot reg $16 for $10.50; Gents 16 size 141st gold fd case, 17j Elgin or Waltham movt reg $22.00 for $15.75; Gents 16 size gold fdcase Elgin or Waltham lnovt reg $15 for 89.75: Gents 17 jewel silver watch, reg $18 price $12.75; Gents 17 jewel Waltham or Elgin movt, reg 513 for $8.75; Gents Elgio • or Waltham movt in nickel case, reg $8, sale $5.25; Boys' watches reg $1.50 for 95e. Clocks Reg. $12 .... 88.50 Reg. $10 ... .....$6.75 Reg. $8 , . ....$5.25 Reg $4 82.75 Very Brief Lesson. Farmer (to country boarders) -Sot ry that you young folks got stung. How'd it happen? Spokesman -Well, yon see, we were standing beside the beehive wondering how the bees made honey. I guess they must have over- heard Us, for they came out and gave us a few points. -Boston Transcript. 1 , For scenting the air of rooms there has been invented a porcelain jet en- closing an incandescent lamp which when lighten, volatilizes the perfume surrounding it. AIVIM. PHONE 65 OPPOSITE NATIONAL HOTEL. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CAST0R.IA She Won't Believe 1t, We don't suppose that it will ever be possible to Convince a woman that a neat little round bole in the sitting room tug, where a small amount of ignited tobacco happened to fall, mere• ly serves to make the plate look home- • like. -Ohio State /Outwit. lirobody evbt yet tobkett tot griev- ele ieit without ;finding them . or tanty- ing" they did, and nobody was ono happier tor an Ending. - ... For cutting grass on terraces and slopes there has been patented an ex- t;nsion handle for lawn mowers per- mittiiig a man to stand on level ground aad operate them. The purchasing pub -committee of the Cabinet will order 150,000 pairs of boots of a new standard pattern and heavier make than the first lot, at about $4 a pair. WHAT WOMEN.ARE DOING. Australia has nearly 1,00,000 women who have the vote. There are over 2,200 women journal- ists in the ignited States. Philadelphia boot and shoe factories employ over 1,200 women. In Sweden every girl not born to wealth is taught a trade. New York suffragettes raised $•45,000 in one day recently. Belgium's queen visits the trenches every night, consoling the soldiers. Nine -tenths of the stenographers in the United States are women. Military service is 'ompulsory for women in certain parts of Hungary. Maxime Elliott is the latest actress to becoine a Red Cross nurse. Nearly 5,000 women are employed as clerks in Missouri's factories. THE TIMES To New Subscribers We will send the Times to New Subscribers to any address in Canada to January 1st, 1916, for $1.00 Leave your orders early Your 'order for any newspaper or magazine will receive prompt attention 1