The Wingham Times, 1915-09-02, Page 3September 2nd, 191$
THE WINGHAM TIMES
Page 3
A Great Blessing to be
Freed of Indigestion
For Years He Suffered After Almost Every Meal^ --
Attributes Complete Cure to Use of Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills,
The experience of many people who
*after from indigestion is like that of
4110 writer of this letter. Stomach
*sdicines may
Isiah some relief,
but chronic indi-
/Datti!on is almost
favariably the re-
sult of derange,.
meats of the
Hoer, kidneys and
bowels, and cannot
be actually cured
until these organs
are set right.
With the liver
sluggish there is
isoaelpation, a n d
the -food ferments
in the bowels in-
stead of being di- MR, BARRETT.
Bested. ' This is the source of pain and
suffering, and the cause of such dread-
ed diseases as appendicitis, peritonitis
and kidney disease. It is much bet-
ter to be on the safe side and prevent
such aliments by the timely use of
Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills.
Mr. J. D. S. Barrett, Nelson, TLC.,
and formerly of Twiilingate, Nod..
writes, :-"For several years I was a
great sufferer from indigestion. The
least bit of food caused me consider-
able trouble, and often I could scarce-
ly eat a meal a day. The mane reme-
dies I tried proved futile until I be-
gan the use of Dr, Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills, and after using about
eight boxes I was cpmpletely cured.
"Since that time I have not been
troubled with indigestion, which I
consider a great blessing. I feel grate-
ful for thls"cure, and shall gladly an-
swer any inquiries from persoris su!-
fering as I did."
Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, 256
a box, 5 for $1.QO, all dealers, or Ed-
manson, Bates & Co., Limited, To-
ronto.
KEEP A -GAIN'.
If you strike a thorn or rose,
Keep a-goin'i
If it hails, or if it snows,
Keep a -going'!
'Taint no use to sit and whine
When the fish ain't on your line,
Bait your hook and keep -a -trying',
Keep a-goin' 1
When the weather kills your crop,
Keep a -going'!
When you tumble from the top,
Keep a-going'!-
S'pose you're out of every dime?
Gittin' broke ain't any crime;
Tell the world you're feeiin' prime,
Keep a-goin'!
When you feel like all is up,
Keep a-goin'!
Drain the sweetness from the cop,
Keep a-goin'l •
See the wild birds on the wing!
Hear the bells that sweetly ring -
When you feel like singin'-sing!
Keep a-goin'!
C. BROOKS
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WINGHAIVI ONTARIO
yw,r . V c i Yy (r.nice. ++4. 04044*.••••i•••♦4••4•A6•••41J'O...*••1
TEMPERANCI: SENTIMENT IN
BRITISH COLUMBIA
•
A significant sign of the rising tide
of put.tic opinion in British Columbia
against the liquor traffic is to be
found in a statement issued by John
Nelson, Publisher of the Vancouver
World, (Independent), in which he an-
nounces that this paper will, undertake
a definite campaign against the traffic,
"British Columbia," the statement
begins, "is shortly to be asked to pro.
hibit the liquor traffic during the war.
A convention ie to be held in this
city in a few days and a campaign will
then be outlined and plans for its ,Pro-
secution made."
' she present movement springs from
causes, classes and interests which in
the main have not hitherto been iden-
tified with temperance deform. One
has only to move about in the business
community of this City and Province
to be convinced how compr..hensive i,
the extent of the present sentiment.
Unduubtedly the war, responsible for
many disillusionments, accounts for
the present conditions,
"The present campaign will be an
economic one. Throughout the Pro-
vince it is' being fathered by shop-
keepers, miners, professional men, mill
hands, lumbermen, farmers and busi-
nessmen of all kinds.
"The candid opinion of most sen-
sible men today is unmistakably in
one direction, namely, that no country
that is at war has any business per-
mitting the continuance of a trade
which imposes unnecessary burdens on
industry and cammerce and entails
worse ravages than war itself.
THE EUGENIC WOMAN.
Taller, darker women, clothed in
more sensible dress, will typify the
"eugenic woman" of thefuture, Dr. A.
J. Read, professor of hygiene in the
Normal School of Physical Education
at Battle Creek, Mich., told the Inter-
national conference on Race Betterment
at the Panama -Pacific Exposition.
"The ideal woman of the eugenic age
will be plump and well rounded, but not
fat," said Dr. Read. "Her complexion
will be ruddy or brown, not pale as that
of present day women, became the pale
skin is a badge of disease rather than
of health.
"Present day fashions are advancing
toward health fashions. Women's dress
is much more sensible than twenty
years ago and women generally are be-
coming more sensible in dress. The
hygienic drets, however, should be sus-
pended from the shoulders, leaving the
waist free."
Dr. David Starr Jordan,, Chancellor
of Leland Stanford Jr. Uuiversity, dis-
cussing "eugenics and war," said the
European .conflict is draining, Europe of
its best blood and will leave its impres-
sion upon several generations.
HUSBAND AND WIFE.
No man ever relied more completely
on his wife's guidance and counsel than
John Keble. the poet of the Christian
Year. She was, as he often declared,
his "conscience. memory and common
sense."
Dean Stanley said: "If I were to
epitomize my wife's qualities, I couldn't
do it better than in the words of a cab-
man who drove us on our honeymoon:
'Your wife', he said to me. 'is the best
woman' in England,' and I quite • agree
with him."
"Why should you pity me?" Mr.
Fawcett, the blind Postmaster -General
remarked to a friend, who had expres-
sed sympathy with him in his affliction.
"My wife is all the eyes I want, and no
man ever looked out on the world
through eyes more sweet and true."
"This place is perfect," Charles
Kingsley once wrote to his wife from
the seaside, "but it seems a dream .and
imperfect without you. I never before
felt the lonliness of being without the
beloved being whose every look and
word and motion are the keynotes of
my life People talk of love ending at
the altar -fools!."
Regarding the ideal relations existing
between husband and wife, Seeker well
said: "The wife is the husband's
treasury, and the husband should be the
wife's armoury, In darkne3s, he should
be her shield for protection and safety."
A good wife-ts heaven's last best gift
to man, his angel and minister of graces
innumerable, his gem of many virtues,
his casket of jewels. -Jerry Taylor.
To Cheek a cold,
It is easy to check h cold if you begin
in time. Frequent doses of Dr. Chase's
Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine keep
the cough loose, allay the inflammation
and so prevent it spreading to the bron-
chial tubes and lungs. Mrs. S. M.
Moore, Shortreed, 13. C., writes; "I
wish to state my gratitude for Dr.
Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpen-
tine for it cured a cold which a friend
said would soon put me in the grave."
There are about 260,000 Jews in the
United Kingdom,
Six thousand two hundred harvesters
left Ontario for the west in six special
trains to help garner the crops!
C. P. Ellis, evangelist, Denver, Col.,
was hack at Bedford, Pa., recently,
paying for loot he took there twenty
years ago.
HER DREAMS
CAME TRUE
• Unbe*rabl• from Indigestion
eaIth Restored Jay "Fruit-s-tivei"
MELLE. C. GAUDREAU
Bochon P.Q., Jan. 14th, 1915.
"I suffered for many years with
terrible indigestion and Constipation. I
became thin and miserable, I had
frequent dizzy spells and became so
run down that 1 never thought I would
get well again.
.A. neighbor advised me to try'Fruit-
a-tives'. I did so and to the surprise
of my doctor, I began to improve and
headvisedmetogoonwith "Fruit a -lives'.
I continued this medicine•and all my
Indigestion and Constipation was
relieved. I consider that I owe my life
to'Fruit-a-tives' and I want to say.to
those who suffer from Indigestion,
Constipation or Headaches, try 'Fruit-
a-tives'. Give this lovelyfruil medicine
a fair chance and you will get well the
same as I did".
CORINE GAUDREAU,
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c,
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Frit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
THE HAZARDS OF FARMING.
Farming has always been a hazardous
business. Fire; and frost, and flood;
wind, and hail, and drouth; blight, and
the hordes of insect enemies, have de-
stroyed the crops since man began
tilling the soil. 0
"Yet, there's always some sort of a
crop left," says a friend who lost a
major portion of his shocked wheat, in
the July freshet. "All we "an do is to
put the seed in the ground and cultivate
it the best we can, and leave the har-
vest to the will of the Lord. These
rich bottom lands will overflow. That's
why they are rich."
And with all its hazards, •farming is
perhaps the most stable and substantial
of all businesses. They say that 90 per
cent. of the merchants fail. We have
always suspected these statistics, but
certainly a much smeller proportion of
farmers are sold out under the hammer.
There is no starvation in the country,
and few cases of charity, outside of the
infirm and helpless. The problem of
unemployment is not pressing, and we
do not lie awake nights wondering if
we can get the money to pay next
month's rent. - Farm Life.
HOW'S THAT?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re-
ward for any case of Catarrh that can-
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and
believe him perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligations made
by his firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. 0.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal-
ly, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Testi-
monials sent free. Price 75 cents per
bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
SOME FACTS iN FAVOR OF OLIVE
OIL.
We in Canada are not, generally
speaking, liberal enough in the use of
olive oil -it should occupy a more prom-
inent place in cooking.
Any olive oil left in the pan after fry-
ing can be filtered through cheesecloth
and kept in a cool place for future use.
Olive oil can be used repeatedly; it
shoud be hot before the article to be
fried is placed in the pan.
Olive oil 19 capable of having the
temperature raised to over 600 degrees
before it burns. Butter burns at a
little over 200, suet at about 300 and
lard at 235. It will be seen that butter
is a poor frying medium, as food must
be kept at too low a temperature or it
scorches, while with oil the high degree
quickly coats the outside of the article
with a crust that prevents the oil from
penetrating.
Rub the preserving kettle with Olive
oil to prevent fruit from burning.
Use olive oil in recipes when possible
when butter is called for; it is especial-
ly delicious in soft gingerbread, salad
eressingandbaked beans,
IL L
e other da with
Itehing, Bleed-
ing, or Protrud-
ing Piles, No
eurgioal opor,
etioii required.
i •n Chale'e Ointment will relieve you at once
tad at certainly cure you. Me- a oak.: all
steers, or Edmanson,, Bates & Co., Limited,
i'oronto. Sammie box free it you mention this,
"Amend snoloae 20, stamp to Par pooch
DANGER SIGNALS.
Rod Is Used BecauseItla the Mgnt
Effective G*tor.
Led is the • color universally used as
a danger signal because it can be seen
farther than entailer color. Itis also
the color that "attracts attention, ex.
cites curiosity and arouses to action,"
as %%'illlaw Churchill said in an ad-
dress before tbe Illuminating Engi-
neering
ngineering society.
Green, the complementary of red, is.
seen almost as far an red, but green is
the color of which nature makes lavish
use, and therefore a greeg eiguai is
less easily recognized than a red, be-
cause the former may easily be taken
for a part of the background, while the
latter always contrasts vividly with
the background. So green has been
used for a clear or a cautionary signal.
At night especially i'ee is used its a
danger signal, red lanterns being plac-
ed on torn up streets and obstructions,
red taii lights being used for motor-
cars, lam indicate fir xi
r,red patofire rein
theaters, factories and hotels and more
recently to mark dangerous parts of
machinery, high current wires and oth=
er danger spots.
In Mr. Churchill's address, as quoted
by the Scientific American, he gave
the effective range of the several col-
ored lights recognized by the Railway
Signal association under ordinary
weather conditions, as follows: Red,
three to three and one-half miles; yet
low, one to one and one-half miles;
green, two and one-half to three tulles;
blue, one-half to three-quarters of a
mile; purple, one -ball to three-quarters
of a mile; lunar white, two to two and
one-half miles.
Red, no matter how distant, never
ceases to look red. This is not true of
any other color, though a good green
fairly approximates it.
Yellow light is visible much farther
than the distance at which its color
can be distinguished and is easily mis-
taken for a "neighborhood light" -that
in a house, for instance.
Lunar white -a pale bluish white -
has come into use as a "clear" indica-
tion for switches on many railroads.
It can be recognized at greater dis-
tances than yellow and is not so easily
mistaken for "neighborho'od lights."
HYPNOTIZING ANIMALS.
Even the Deadly Cobra May Be Made
Perfectly Passive.
Hypnotizing a hen is a trick known
to most counfry boys. It is au old ex-
periment. first described by the Jesuit
father, Athanasius Kircher, who laid
a hen on the table, held it firmly for
a little while and drew a chalk line
in front of its eyes, with the result
that it remained as if in a catalepsy.
In India it is known that a cobra
caught by the neck and gently pressed
will soon become still and remain so
for a considerable time either coiled
up or out straight
A. frog fastened to a board and turned
suddenly upside down goes into a
trance. Other animals are susceptible
to this treatment, some more quickly
than others,
If you pick up a crab and wave it in
the air it becomes immobile, a female
bending her legs over her abdomen, a
male sticking them out almost straight.
The same is true of the fresh water
crayfish. only this resists for a much
longer time than a crab.
Among the insects catalepsy -com-
monly known as "death feigning" -is
common, and, according to Professor
Ernst Mangold, the learned German
naturalist, is often a means of saving
the life of the insect.
According to Mangold, the hypnotic
condition is induced in man by sug-
gestion or physical inhibition, in ant -
mals by mechanical inhibition, but
In both cases sensory stimuli may as-
sist. These stimuli may be bptic (fix-
ing the gaze on some object), or tactile
(stroking the skin), or otherwise. Some-
times an absence of wonted stimuli
may induce the state, as in the case
of absolute silence. St. Louis Post -
Dispatch.
Undiscovered Oceans of Truth.
"We may be justly proud of what
has been achieved, but let us not fail
to remember with Newton that 'the
vast ocean of truth' still 'Iles' for the
most part 'undiscovered before us.'
However marked may be the progress
of science, bar individual votaries must
always feel a sense of humility at the
little the best of them is able to con-
tribute toward tbe general result" -
Sir Edward Schaefer, 1n an address to
the British association.
Gypsies.
The gypsies are nearer to the ant -
mals than any race known to us in
Europe. They have the lawiessness,
the abandonment, the natural physical
grace in form and gesture of animals.
Only a stealthy and wary something
in their eyes makes them human. -Ar-
thur Symons.
Passed Along.
"You must have liked the servant to
whom you gave the letter of recom-
mendation she showed Mrs. Bins," said
one woman.
"I didn't tare for her at all," replied
the other. "But I don't care for Mrs,
Bina, either." ---Washington Star.
End of the World.
,You said when you asked me to
marry you that you would go to the
end of the world for me,"
"And so I will, but the end of the
world is so far off that I can't get to it
Until the end of the world."-Houstotf
Post.
Thinking Shop.
Elostese.-Dr, Spr!ggins, will you
have some of the tongue?
The Doctor (absentmindedly -Oh ---•r
--let me look at It, please. -St. Louis
Times. . .
SCOTLAND'S PALLADIUM.
A Famous Piece of Artillery is Anotsnt
Men* Meg*
In the most honorable location in the
Argyll battery of Lldinburgh castle to a
huge piece of ancient artillery which iA
known as Ideas Meg. This old faab*
coned piece of ordnance Is held in the
highest esteem by the Scottlab people;
in tact, it holds a position 1n their
hearts similar tp our feelings toward
our own Liberty bell,
Mons Sieg was made at Mons. Bel-
gium, about the year 1503, by order of
James IV., and was named Meg in
honor of his wife, MargaretTudor, the
daughter of Henry VII, Its great bulk
and weight rendered it almost worth-
less in those days of hand to band con-
flicts, Uowever, it was used on special
occasions to help celebrate national
events. In tbe reports of the financial
transactions of the times may be
found charges for "grease for Meg's
mouth" (this was used to increase the
loudness0
of the report), ribbons to deck
her carriage and pipes to be played
before her when accompanying the
Scottish army on an expedition, After
the union In 1707 the people feared
that the "odious surrender of national
independence" would be consummated
liy the removal 'of Mons Aleg to Eng-
land. In 1757 the piece was removed
to Woolwich, but it was restored to
Scotland in 1828, "to quiet the people."
Although only a mere mass of rusty
iron, it is,revered by the people today
and is always decorated with thistle
and other dowers on anniversary days.
Ili processions It bas niways had the
place of honor, but recently it was de-
cided that it was dangerous to submit
it to the shock of cartage, and now it
looks down from its resting place over
the great Scot city. -Chicago Herald.
AN EASY GOING SENTINEL
Such a Little Thing as the Password
Didn't Bother Him.
An interesting picture of the confu-
sion that attended the anti -Austrian
demonstrations In Milan in 1848 is
given in "Memories of Youth," by Si-
gnor Giovanni Visconti Veuosta. -
Very early in the morning, says the
author. after several bours of heavy
sleep in a hammock in an anteroom of
Garnier. college I descended into the
street and ran into some people who,
with tricolored shawls across their
shoulders, were giving orders in the
name of the committee of defense.
They were trying to discipline the rev -
elution. Falling into their baud's, 1
was stationed as a sentinel at a use-
less barricade that shut off Via Durini
from the Verziere. The commander,
having inspected my pistols and per-
haps having found them not murder-
ous enough, placed in my hands a
fencing foil. Then he gave me the
countersign, -Papa Pio."
A little while afterward another
chief came along, who re -enforced the
post and gave me us a companion a
good old man who was armed with an
antique Iance. 1 told him the counter-
sign, and we soon became friends.
A patrol appeared. "Halt!" cried
the old man. "The countersign?"
**Concordia. coraggio." replied tbe
captain of the patrol.
"Truly," replied my companion, "the
countersign is something else. Flow-
erer. we are all Italians, so pass on."
Anvils Date Sack of History.
The anvil was known in the earliest
times, being spoken of in tbe Bible. the
prophet Isiiah saying (cbapter 47.
verse 7). "So the carpenter encouraged
the goldsmith, and be that smoothed)
with the hammer, him that smitetb
the anvil." It is not known who first
used it, but of course the anvil of an-
tiquity was unlike that of today as
perfected by modern workmanship.
The anvil still used in the orient, how-
ever, is a boot shaped piece of metal
inserted in a section of oak or walnut
log. Larger or smaller it is used by
tinsmiths, shoemakers, silversmiths
and blacksmiths. The anvils used in
this country are commonly made of
cast iron faced 'with steel and are of
parallelopiped form, with a steel cone
or beak at one end and a "handy hole"
for inserting chisel or other tools at
the other end. -Boston Globe.
The Crimean War.
The Crimean war was in 1853-56 be-
tween Russia on one side and Turkey,
France, Great Britain and Sardinia, as
allies, on the other side, It was Balled
the Crimean war because it was main-
ly fought in the Crimean peninsula. It
arose through the demand of Russia
for a protectorate over the Greek sub-
jects of the sultan and was closed and
its issues decided by the treaty of
Paris elareh 30, 1556. By this treaty
Sebastopol. which had been captured,
was restored to Russia, Russia aban-
doned her claim as to Christians in
Turkey and the Black sea was neu-
tralized.
Lost it.
"There is a good deal of talk about
the English being slow to appreciate a
joke," said Marshall P. Wilder once.
"I have not found that to be the case
at all, although one Englishman did
come to me for an explanation after I
had made the remark that 'I dreamed
one night that 1 was dead, but it was
so hot that I woke up.'
"'1 beg your pardon, Mr, Wilder,' he
said, 'but it must be deuced hot in your
county:"
Getting On: "
"How are you getting nu with Sour
photography?"
"Well," answered the young matt
with brown finger tips, "I'm doing bet
ter. The snapshot portrait I took of
Mr. Curmudge must have been reeog-.
nizable."
„"You are sure of that?"
"Perfectly. for es soon as Curmudge
sats' tt be said he could whip) the man
who made th picturo." _
eiwwwwwwwwkip
PATRI(JTIC
GOODS
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Writing Paper, Scribbling
Hooks, Exercise Books, t aY-
ing Cards, Flags,Penants,etc.
INITIALED STATIONERY
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Stationery le fancy papeter-
ies and correspondence cards,
GENERAI. STATIONERY
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ery including writing paper,
envelopes, etc. is complete.
Try us with your next
order.
Magazines and newspapers
on sale and subscriptions
taken for ally inagaziae or
newspaper you may desire.
TIMES STATIONERY STORE
Opposite Queen's Hotel
T. R. BENNETT J. P.
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Pure Bred Stock Sales a Specialty
Sales conducted anywhere in Ontario
Write or Phone 8 t, Wingham
r
CREAM WANTED 1
Having an up -to date Creamery ;
full operation, we , olicit 3 cut cr, ern
patronage
We are prepared to pay he highest
market prices tor good creat, ane give
you an honest busii•rea. H eighu g,
sampling and testing each can of cream
received carefully and retui nil g a
full statement of Name to each patron
We fuuish two cane. to * e, h patron
pay all express charges and pay every
two weeks
Write for further Trrtirilare or
send for cans and give us e i rinl.
SEAFORtH CHUM CO.
SEA FORTH, ONT. tl
anammaill
mid.
28
el
Canadian
Septi
13 I
National
EXHIBITION
TORONTO
$150,000 I tITAACTIEN5 $150,0{)0
"PATRIOTIC YEAR"
Model Military Camp
Destruction of Battleships
Battles of the Air
MAMMOTH
Military Display
MARCH OF THE ALLIES
Farm under Cultivation
Millions in Livestock
Government Exhibits
THRILLING
Naval Spectacle
REVIEW OF THE FLEET
Belgian Art Treasures
Creatore's Famous Band
Biggest Cat and Dog Show
WAR TROPHIES
Field Grain Competition
Greater Poultry Show
Acres of Manufactures
One Thousand and One
' New Things to See
0
REDUCED RAILWAY RATES
FROM ALL POINTS •
An apple eaten before breakfast
k t
serves as a natural stimula•it for the
digestive organs,
Under normal conditions the in-
dustries of Germany consume abont 1,-
000,000,000 pounds of cotton a year.
CASTO R IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For °vet" 30 Years
Always bears
the
of