The Wingham Times, 1912-04-11, Page 6fr
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In 'WI %HAM WO, ARIL 11, 1912
Learn why PURITY
FLOUR is unlike any
other brand
P'MITI' FLOUR is unlike any other brand of flour.
r- No two milling companies follow exactly the same
process of milling. In faet, no two different brands
of flour in the world are exactly alike in quality.
And here is another fact worth knowing: Every wheat berry
contains both high-grade and low-grade por-
tions.
The process of milling PURITY flour costs
more than to mill ordinary flour, The low-
grade portions are separated and excluded.
PURITY is an ALL IIIGII-GRADE, hard
wheat flour, It has greater strength, greater
absorption and ,greater expansion. It is a
thirstier, more elastic flour. It drinks more
water and expands into more loaves,
Use PURITY FLOUR for your next batch
of bread. Count the loaves. You'll find
you have made "MORE BREAD AND
BETTER BREAD" from PURITY than
when you've used an equal weight of weaker
and cheaper flour,
"More Tread and 'better bread"
JMAGINE, if you can, how much whiter, and more tooth-
some, and more nutritfous, the bread made from such a
- HIGH-GRADE flour must be.
And van you imagine yourself enjoying the
fluky i)le-rut and the light, delicate cake?
--your reward for using PURITY flour
When 'nuking pastry, please remember to
add more shortening• than required with
ordinary liour—)r on account of its extra
•Ftre:t!lh, PURITY FLOUR requires more
shor'n'g for best pastry -results
Yes, PURITY FLOUR costs slightly more
t iionr. Rat use it once and
t 'It v. -twill more—much more—
Atti i TY FLOUR b) your gyocery list
107
WINGUAM WY WM. BONE AND KING BROS.
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,X•Mic, Wm, 080••••Mai,...•14
Lake Erie proieces more tish to the I. A!1 electrically driven machine then
square yard :nee eny other body of
water in the world.
Acia uil�z1ig
is f eceereuletioe or 1,eie-
en WhfCJIin tLe see -
tern when tle. Indre en fell to r,:tvf:,.•,-
frcni the blood. in the kitr.- ia.di
bladder it fon-es stoe es. in the joints
and MUS.Club it (.t.tcS 1Ittr.L1i.. In
any case the pain eicci seffering ir el- i
moet beenhd heretem endurance. 'Uric
zeicl is nreneetly enn eyed fr4,, the eys-
tem when the kinneys are kept healthy
next active yr tisirg s Kif,ney- ;
Liver Pills.
There is grind nee h-pthe
icen•-heeen fee ceeneeet ec.r..cer :s at I
bend tiernegra the en nen. c.:
plied i a new maneer.
Tl ;life or is eneteinen
by reisins, its consorLiag tho
feeit traye gernee:...e !hen Einy
the Snenien-An.,:e! eneelee.
.Childrez Cry
FOR FEXICHERGS
CASTOR rs A
feenn wne eae
he reen.i.7; nee: nee a newsearnre nut
these :en. ene zee:. ens. e.e-
azi :3
n..e.e.e.7.
enete
ne
eln ezeiene ene
7"..ene the al
"•': taking
i4; the elergy •
ee VIglage.
I A
'fur- I
pent:nee. nee z nein, enne eurtal of a I
t7..itee
tliz3 keever South.
Ont. 'nee 12.t.:1 A '-e.:i
ereeratine te re-
en:3 teee .•enene:se:en en 1
'L..- at znen tereeehal
thbes.
Wenihn; by eseetei netie ireis rseerq
brought to such a state of perfection
that reen'elng epnaeatne eel'. earined
to a railroad track min two rail joined as
solidly. as if they had come oet of the
rolling; snill all one piece.
Electric Restorer fOr Men
PhosPh000ltritragil=bgags;
vitality, Premature tiPnar and td1Tteltdal
weakness averted at one. Phosphene/ will
make y a new mon. Price #3 a box. or tem for
ta Mr_ el to 4:11, addrEN. The8cobt11 Drug
Oo.,St. catImrinesi OM.
Evidence of an atmosphere on the
moon ;.o a heigt of 60 or 70 mites or
More has been reported by Prof. W.
Luther of Dusseldorf, who on two •Oe
etiSiOns saw one side of the planet of
Mats become darkened on nearing oc-
cultation by the moon, '
fifrpouncls has been inveated to scrub
tioas.
Auetria-Hungary has the least tele-
phone service in proportion to populat-
nee oi tiny European country.
You will Inek a ffood while before you
end a better medicine for coughs and
colas than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
It not only giv. reieive It cures. Try
it v.hen you have a cough or cold, and
you are c•••.•;:r.rti to he pleased with the
prompt cure which it will effect. For
sale by all dealers.
A IT...?ta! bee in which an incandescent
lamp cell be In:7E1.Tel' fc.r warming a bed
has been patenten by an Idaho man.
Neatly half of the fatal accidents in
coai mines are due to failing rock or con
end less than one-fourth to explosions
or tires.
nen,
reeeee nem PPFAVVR,
re/epet On
a.
SMArigil POINE•Ell
.':ret 1.3 ah.eresed parts by the
1arawe:::W. wer. litaTs the lacers,
the air passages, stops drept
rin,7s it. the threat and_perrnanent.
p s:ges Catarrh and flay Fever.
a Try.: : ti,av er free. A:tier t
dva!?T'l (47 2dmarleatt,
%•A4''''."•71 easeet co.,41M1teCts 70rOttta.
farrr,e,re are receiving a
as $1.25 per bus. for potatoes, de-
Nvered at leading stations; says the
American Agriculturist. In New York
State l is about the hi h stric
d,1
while in Miehigar. it runs from e0c to
2e. In Wisconsin the price is down to
5c aril tea, while in Ohio it gaes up
again to $1 and$1.1n.
F THE LIVER IS LAZY
SIM IT UP BY THE USE OF
minims LAXA-L.IVER PILLS.
They stimulate the sluggish liver,
cretin the coated tongue, Sweeten the
hereatin clean away all waste and poison-
cas matter from the system, and prevent
as well as tura all sickness arising froth
a die...fade:red cooditiort of the stomach,
liver and bovale,
Mrs. Matthew Sullivan, Pine Ridge,
N.B., writes.—"I had been troubled with
liver complaint for a long time. 1 tried
most everything I could think of, but
1 none of them seemed to do me any gOod,
but when 1 at fast tried Milburrns laelFt-
Inver Palls X soon began to get well again;
thanks to The T. Milburn Co. 1 would
not be without them if they cost twice
as maeh."
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pins are 25 cents
per vial, or 5 vials for $1.00, for tale at
all dealers or mailed direct on reeeipt
of price by The T. Milbra Col Limited,
TftritAtOk chlt)
•
ONE WAY -TO SAVE MONEY.
Contraot a Good $ited Debt, Then
Work Hard Till Its Paid.
Perbaps you think yen cau't save.
You have debts, Well, the way to
cure a debt is by contracting another
oue. You tenet your debts. do you not?
Well, contract a debt to the batik.
Just agree with yourself that you owe
the bank $1.000 and must pny tbl
debt in small installments—a dollar o
two or Ore out of each weeit'e wages.
Then pay that debt. The batik, mate
your other creditors. plays you for the
use of your motley and will return It
to you in time with interest. For you
are a partner with it. It Is your Wale
and its business Is to make money for
you.
When you start a blunt account you
become a. capitalist, a banker, an in-
vestor In securities and a substantial
citizen, interested in the development
of your town and couutry. You Ac-
quire standing, respect, peace of mind.
Your point of view is changed. You
no longer fisee red." Your fellow men
appear to. you as they really are—co-
workers and frieuds—uot oppressors or
schemers against your welfare. You
bare doue your part, you have unified
your Interests with tbo right ones—
caught step with the march of prog-
ress.
It is only those who resist this march
that get hurt. Don't get under the
car—get in it. Going in debt to the
bank means going in debt to yourself,
to your family, to the general good.
This should be the most sacred of your
obligations and should come first. It
is the "preferred creditor," and you'll
find that all your other creditors will
ho willing to stand back while you
pay it For it insures the payment of
every other obligation. A. man who
Is saving is trusted and helped. His
credit is good. He can "do flaws."
People place confidence in him.—Chl-
cago Tribune.
DAVID GARRICK.
The Great Actor's Art and His Wife%
Ruffled Feelings.
Mrs. Garrick's admiration of her
husband's dramatic talents was in-
tense, and on his great nights she
would hang over her box next the
stage in rapturous delight. The one
flaw in her idol, she claimed, was a
taste for low life, for which she blamed
him greatly, insisting that he loved
better to play Scrub to a low lived
audience than oue of his superior char-
acters before au audience of taste.
On one particular occasion she was
In tier box in the theater when Gar -
Hetes impersonation of Ric.hard 111.
was applauded to the echo. In that
day n farce followed the tragedy .a the
vvening, and as Mrs. Garrick rose to
;eare before it her husband came to
tins box to sfty he had some business
in the greenroom which would detain
tem. so most uuiviiiingly the lady was
1,1iged to acquiesce and remain
:hrough the closing entertainment.
Thi.% proved to be a comical series of
blundering adventures which had be -
;alien a countryman who had left his
farm to see Loudon and on his return
gave Ina neighbors an account of 4he
'1 enders he had met.
This characterization was received
‘vith such peals of applause that Mrs.
iarrick, erer zealous of her husband's
1:1:11e. began to think It rivaled those
seen. lavished on Richard III. Her
footings were nearly worked up to fe-
ver heat when she was attracted by
the frantic efforts of her little spaniel
dog to overleap the balcony that sepa-
rated him from the stage, when she
Immediately became aware of the truth
that the actor was Garrick and ex-
claimed. "Strange that a dog should
know bis master when the woman who
ioveci him best in the world could not
pierce his disguise."
His Biggest Failure.
John Jacob :'istor was asked one day
what was the largest amount of mon-
ey he had ever made in one trans-
action. This he declined to answer,
but said that he would tell the largest
sure that be failed to make. With
De Witt Clinton and Gouverneur Mor-
ris, he said, he had planned to buy
Louisiana from France and to sell it
to the United States government, re-
taining the public domain and charg-
ing 2te per cent commission. Tbey
changed their minds and Mr. Astor
said that be lost $30,000,000 by failing
to go into the deal.
Fancy Prices In 1849.
A tourist lately on the Pacific slope
picked tip a menu used in 1840, when
California. was the mecca of gold min-
ers. The items and prices in that wild
country ran as follows: "Bean soup,
$1; hash, low grade, 75 cents; basil,
18 carat $1; beef, plain, $1; beef, with
one potato, $1.15: baked beans, Plain,
75 cents; baked beaus, greased, $1;
two potatoes, 110 cents; two potatoes,
peeled, 75 dents; rice peddirer,15 cents.
The Privileges of Weeith.
"That man is getting to be a fegtn
lar customer here,"
"Yes, and he must be a multimillion..
aire."
"Why 50, teaymer
"Jae ain't afraid to tisk to see senie-
thieg cheaper if he feela so inclined."
*Pittsburg Post.
Quick Corstiuslott.
"t see that one convict fatally as.
faulted another."
"They must have some bad Men in.
that petmitent1aree"--4.118reland Plain
Dealer.
Depend",
Ited—Wotild MI marry a girl who
atlaci V011 -fot breach of prtmille?
allirtii*Otild depend on Whether sbe
Won the twito-Phtiedeiphia Time. .,
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ne,
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lent FAY le!enn i. et4,. e) ...
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feDy nelvlee 1 0
tam prevail Zni.12.ElF.Ik
ii..,310er OOF.Oltla :Rail eliit
tio e oneci7.1er eii etia lt
•t-.) yeur far:ally o glye 11 a
t -%_•,al 8 Ot oi,..cle piilia oriel N
.n;Sii'S S
500 box all Drugyidto 4, Storc3.
.,..1•111.•••=70[561.......141111
If there is a kitchen with a window
on which the sun shines, it is a good
plan to have some parsley and other
herlYs growing in pots or in a box on
the windowsill.
'My little scribed a very severe cold,
I was recommended to try Chamber-
lain's Cough Remedy, and before
small bottle was finished he was
as well as ever," writes Mrs. H.
Silks, 29 Dowling Street, Sydney, Aus-
tralia. This remedy is for sale by al
dealers.
Clyde Leavitt, who has been forest
inspector and in charge of the acquisi-
tion of lands for the United States
Government, is to accept the position
of chief inspector of the Conservation
Commission of Canada, and chief iron
inspector of the Railway Commission.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
The long -existing vacancy on the
Railway Commission cf Canada caused
by the death of Hon. Thomas Green-
way will be filled immediately. The
appointment will go to Mr. A. S. Good -
eve, M. P. for Kootenay. B. C., and
assistant chief Conservative whip. }Ie
will represent the West on the com-
mission.
....IMPORINIMNIAONE1.•••••••••••
The Mouth.
A beautiful mouth is perhaps the most
important feature of the face. The lips
exprtss sorrow, joy, and a good or bad
disposition.
Thin, tight drawn lips indicate greedy
penurious nature. There is little danger
of those lips getting into trouble. But
the women and girls who have attract-
ive kissable lips are the ones who must
guard and protect them.
Mothers should forbin their children
to kiss, and grown people should notkiss
children just because they are beautiful
unless they kiss them on their pretty,
chubby cheeks. There may be no dang-
er in the kiss, but we can not know
where danger lurks. And who would
mar the beauty of an innocent child by
a loving paress? No one would intention-
ally do so.
Women should carefully bathe their
lips upon returning from a shopping ex-
pedition. The germs which float around
in the air of the stores may carry dis-
ease and one can never know where they
will settle.
As a preventive, before going shop-
ping, a wash of boracic acid and water
with a few drops of camphor, is an ex-
cellent disinfectant to use—the same
formula that is used as an eye wash.
Also a little greasy Hp stick (the kind
that is sold in drug stores) when gent-
ly rubbed upon the lips before goingout
of dpore will protect them.
.4444..41111044.444:•
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
°ASTORIA
TIE PATIENT BRAIN
A titelees worker so long as supplied
with rich, red blood. e
The brain is one of the most
oatient and industrious crgans of the
body. It min be induced, by good
treatment, to perform prodigies of
work. tut it is sensitive and will not
b.eiek abuse. It responds to the lash
at first, but if the lash is Lint on
too hard it balks.
Xervons trouble is generally brain
trouble, and no suffering is to be
compared to Mental suffering, with
the aceompanying dread, suspicion
and melancholy.
One-fifth of the blood in the tun
man body is consumed by the brain,
so make the blood rich and red by
using D.. Chases Nero Food, and
ycu livill overcorne diseases of the
nerves. Ifeaclaehes will disappear,
irritability will go, digestion will
improve, and weakness and despoti-
deney will giro place to new hope and
courage, fie* vigor and energy.
Dr, A. W. Citroen?, Nerve Food Will
enable you to avoid such extreme
nervous trouble as prostration and
paralysis. 50 ents a box, 6 boxes for
$2.50;itt 1t11- dealers, or Bdraansott,
flaws Co,, Terorito.
THE PARTHENON.
1t, Wan the Most Lieentlial Edifies
aver greeted. by Man.
Time Parthenon on time Acropolis (11
Athens, the most beautiful edillee eves
L..4.,11.:i
.etii:mez by the Muni at Mau, Was
wrecked by n Veuetitut bomb oil Sept
;
%Viten the elm rose on. the morning al
TITTITtt11 d!TY the "Quest building on
the iineet mite In the world" stood ar.
rayed iii all its glory. Just as- it did
wirai Pericles reeelved it from the
lot -tis or its divine architects and
lust 118 it Ind when Plato and
Soeratee Fazed with wonder upon its
simple majesty, and when that day's
Wan V% Olt down the glorious temple was
a wrin:, Its majesty dismantled, its
beauty ton I'm d forever.
This wouderfui tamildiug, even In its
ruins, tuts cearneen the world for go.
Ing on three centuries, and while those
ruins endure they will continue their
hold open the artistic sense of mare
hind.
The master artists of the nations
have been trying for more than 200
years to make something that would
molt like the Parthenon, but so fat
their e0ot'ts have been in vale, and the
dismantled pile on the Acropolis still
woat•s the crown of architectural ex.
eellence.
This famous Rafiding, made of the
!West Pentede marble, is 228 feet in
length,, by 101 feet in width, with a
height at the apex of the pediment ol
4isty-tive feet. Its cost was $S,250,000,
rechoned in present day values. The
rt.lowned frieze ut the Parthenon ran
along the top or the wall forty feel
from the ground. It was three and a
half feet to height and 1520 feet in
length and represented the great Pan.
entente procession, which was held
every eve years In honor of Athena.
the protecting goddess of the city.
For 2,000 years this glorious temple
stood there on the Acropolis as perfeel
as it was when Phidias completed b
nearly am years before the birth of
Cbrist, and it would have been stand
tug just as complete today but for that
rascally Venetian shell. In the yea'
mentioned above Athens. still in the
possession of the Turks, was besieged
by the Venetians, and a bomb from
one of their guns failing through tile
roof of the Patthenon, in which the
Turks had stored a lot of powder, left
it the ruin it has ever since remained.
—Rev. T. B. Gregory in New York
:American.
A Way They Have in Germany.
"One day while 1 was in a big beer
garden in Bavaria," said a returned
traveler, "a handsome young odicer Iri
a magnificent new uniform came fri
and seated himself at a nearby table.
There was brought to him a big radish,
neveml slices of rye bread and a tall
mug of beer. Then I saw that hand•
stone young officer draw from the tail
pocket of that magnificent uniform
something wrapped In paper. This he
unrolled, a sweet smile playing about
his eblond minnache tis he did so, and
at last n piece of sausage seven . or
eight inches long was revealed. My
astonishment at this sight was care-
fully concealed. 1 doubt if any officer
of our infantry would dare attempt
such a movement on the subsistence
department."—Indianapolis News.
The Cleanliness of Animals.
Man seems to be the only animal
whose food soils him, making neces-
sary much washing and shieldlike bibs
and napkius. Moles living in tlie earth
and eating slimy worms are yet es
clean as seals or fishes. whose lives are
eno perpetual wash. The 'squirrels in
these resiny woods keep themselves
clean in some mysterious way;. uot
bait is sticky, though they handle the
gummy cones and glide about appar-
ently without care. The birds, too. are
clean. though they seem to make a
good deal of fess washing and clean-
ing, their feathers.—From "My First
Summer In the Sierras," by John Muir.
Old Wedgwood.
Modero Wedgwood is of greatly in-
ferior quality, and it seems improba-
ble that the success attained by Josiah
Wedgwood will ever be reached
vain. Of all his creations tn jasper
'bis reproduction of the famous Port-
land, or Barberini. vase (the original
of which is in the British =sem) is
the most important. About 1700
Wedgwood at great expense attempt-
ed to make fifty motions. Of hie vase,
but ft is believed that not more than
thirty -die were netually finished. Of
these original pieces only about fifteen
have boon Identieled.—Argonaut.
4,yepommorwa,
Complexion, of
a FAIRY"
You owe it to your
skin to give FAIRY
SOAP a telt—it keeps.
the complexion fresh,
clear, bright and healthfUL
FAIRY SOAP is white;
and, being made from
edible products, it is just as
pure and good as it looks.
a I:7
1.
comesii a bandy or41 cake', it floats. It is
dainty, rc.742d, de:icate in perfume. It has
the app:•:t:aii.L.e, odor and performance of a
high class product.
The price -5c— is the only cheap
thing about FAIrtY SOAP.
Made by
TUB N R.'. FA IRBAN K COMPANY
Montreal
4111 1/1111
',Have yOrif a little 'Peaty' in •
year—home?" '
Subscribe For The
Times $1
a Year ,
Amicient Sausages.
,entlietaries aro baffle° in their at-
tempts to ascertain when sausages
first became an article of human con-
sumption. Wo know at toast that
mincing the ancient Greeks sausages,
called "allarites" and aehOrdal," were
a ememmoa article of diet, and every
schoolboy knows, or ought to know,
that &twinges, black puddings and situ
-
gage eaters appear in the comedies of
axistophaties.aLondon Welegraph.
Sad Feelings.
"J•riggsby takes even WA pleasured
sadly."
"He doe?"
wrod, and te, such an enteut that
when he goes on a spree he never seeN
green serpents, pink monkeys or ism
ple elephants like ether fellows
seee nothing but bIaek
Mere Aluerlealt.
T. I
*silly Spotted. .41.
"Xs this &etas apt to be tow opo.
ted2" he Inquired.
"At least tour block Oftto
Jildge,"` answered the got Ones* j
•clerk.-46frashington Herald:
Who Wens one end, !wide* *We
ell tb1i istireoa)31401011bIlrt
INTING
lif
STATIONERY
We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple
Stationery and can supply your wants in
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETERIES,
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYMG CARDS, etc
We will keep the best stock in the respective lines
and sell at reasonable prices.
•••11MIN!IIRIOMM.1111., *MN
„4444.444444*Itameogermaomirid
JOB PRINTING
We are in a better position than ever before to attend
•!c) your wants in the Job Printing line and all
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with us
when in need of
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Or anything you may require:in the printing line.
•
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Stibstriptions tater' for all the Leading Newspapers
And Magazines.
The Times Office
MOM BLOCK
Ottt•
. _
. • e temp,. peek
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