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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-05-30, Page 3TIDE WINGIIAtt TIMES. U .Y 39, 1912 DUSTBGNE SFINITEIRY SWEEPINQ. COMPOIJND ETHE E\G+ D UST. K(,LLER AWA-014CI l? TRADE MARK REG. st-Absorberand Ger..m �Zaors and bri�� 1- NraNtJF'17i_B•Y � 1p. V "le" lest" F0, C • )' 7Q -'Y',' .AcvA.CANADA. FACTORIES. MA■ NI STJ®HN;rst PT -1 A Spring -Time, in feet every time you sweep is just the time to use DUSTBANE. Dust raised in sttreeping is the dried diseases and filth that has been tracked in from the street. It rises from the floor with eves v fail of a human foot and with every stoke of a broom to be breathed by everyone who inhabits the home. Just a handful or two of DUSTBANE is all that is required to sweep an ordinary room either floor or carpet. It brightens tbe floors and cleanses the carpets leaving the room in a. sanitary condition. Order a can on trial for one week. All Grocers sell DUSTBANE. Packed in barrels and kegs for use in schools, stores and public buildings. DUSTBANE MIG. 00. LTD., OTTAWA. There never was a time when people appreciated the real merits of Chamb- erlain's Cough Remedy more than now. This is shown by the increase in sales and voluntary testimonials from persons who have been cured by it. If you or your children are troubled with a cough or cold give it atrial and become acquain- ted with it's good qualities. For sale by all dealers. Whenever a woman's face assumes an ugly expression even for a moment, she injures her beauty and makes it eas- ier for the face to assume that expres- sion again as a habit. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOPIA W 1THOUT fYQU. mwessesesel Without you, love, the day would hold sio light; The kindly stars would vanish from the night; The flowers would all forget to wake at morn; The rose die sleeping, leaving but the thorn - Without you, -National Magazine. Without you, love, I'm sure I'd never hear How all things useful now have grown so dear, That while you show me bilis that make me groan -- And yet, no doubt at all, I'd feel alone -- Without you, -Cleveland Plain Dealer. Without you, Iove, I'd buy no Paris lids And other fancy things that Fashion bids, I'd have no rugs to pound or grass to mow; But I'd be lonesome, surest thing you'd know - Without you. -Flint Journal. -Without you, love, I'd have no waist to hook, No one would wait with an accusing look When I turned homeward after toiling ;,,,late; But I should probably bemoan my fate- -Stratford Herald. Soil Still Rich After 30 Years. Parham Farm, in Wellington county, owned by Mr Henry Arkell, after 80 summers' constant cultivation, possesses soil as rich as, if not richer than, when it was first broken in 183I, The follow- ing methods of farming, rigidly adhered to by Mr. Arkell, may be cited as reas- ons for this happy situation: - The owner's interests are evenly div- ided between crop production and live stook raising. Everything grown on the farm in the way of feed is fed on the farm. A system of crop rotation prevents any needless waste of soil fertility. The application of barnyard 'manure after special absorbent crops replen- ishes the soil with plant food. Hay area is pastured two years and crops cut from it two years, then plow- ed under. Rape seed is sown with oat crop, pro- viding pasture for cattle and sheep for more than three months after harvest. The general conduct of the farm is closely in accord with mixed farming principles, which protect soil from de- pletion. A Russian named Chessiek fell from a handcar at London, Ont., and was fatally injured. "17 Cents a Day" Offer Stirs all Canada! Whole Country Applauds the "Penny Purchase Planfl ,From a thousand different directions comes a mighty chorus of approval, voicing the popular- ity of The Oliver Typewriter "17 Cents a Day" Purchase Plan. The liberal terms of this offer being the bene- fits of the best modern typewriter within easy reach of all. The simple, convenient "Plenny Plan" has assumed international importance. It opened the floodgates of demand and has almost engulfed us with orders. Individuals, firms and corporations-- all classes of people- are taking advantage of the attractive plan and endorsing the great idea which led us to take this radical step - To make typewriting the univeral medium of written communication] Speeds Univeral Typewriting The trend of events is toward the general adoption of beautiful, legible, speedy typewriting Typewriter, and you have an overwhelming total of tangible reasons for its wonderful success. A Business Builder The Oliver Typewriter is a powerful creative force in business --a veritable wealth producer. Its use multiplies business opportunities, widens business influence, promotes business success. Thus the aggressive merchant or manufacturer can reach out for more business with trade win- ning letters and price lists. By means of a "mailing list" -and The Oliver Typewriter --you can annex new trade territory. Get this greatest of business aids -for 17 Cents a Day. Keep it busy. It will make your business grow. Aids Professional, Men To the professional man the typewriter is an in place of slow, laborious, ri ',type lam_ illegible handwriting. The great business inter- ests are a unit in usifig type- writers. It is just as important to the general niublic to substi- tute typewriting for long OLJVE1 ndisdensabe assistant. Barristers, Cler gymen, Physicians, Journalists, Ar- chitects, Engineers and Pub- lic Accountants have learned to depend on the ty ewriter. • can maT Olivr 1�pci.�r. we .rYouypewriter inster a few e ens: For every private citizen's personal affairs are his •business. Our popular "Penny Plan" speeds the day of Universal Typewriting. A Mechanical Marvel The Oliver Typewriter is unlike all others. With several hundred less parts than ordinary typewriters, its efficiency is proportionately greater. Add to such basic advantages the many time- saving conveniences found only on The Oliver utes' practice. It will pay big daily dividends of satisfaction on the smell investment of 17 Cents a Day. A Stepping -Stone to Success For young people, the Oliver Typewriter is a stepping -stone to good positions and an advance- ment in business life. The ability to operate a typewriter counts for more than letters of recommendation. Start now, when you can own The Oliver Typewriter for pennies. Join the National Association of a Penny Savers! Every purchaser of The Oliver Typewriter for 17 cents a Day is made an Honorary Member of the National Association of Penny Savors. A smallfirstpaytnent brings the magnificent new Oliver Typewriter, the regular $125 machine. Then save 17 Cents a Day and pay monthly. The Oliver Type- writer Catalog and full details of "17 Cents a Day" Purchase Plan sent on request, by cou- pon or letter. Address Sides Department the Oliver Typewriter Co. Oliver Typewriting bldg. CHICAGO. COUPON THE OLIVER TYPnWe TaRCO Oliver Typewriting Bidg,, Gentlemen : Please send your Cents'. -D Caold talog offer On the Ol I2. ver Typewriter, Name Address FEARED HF NAD CONSUMPTION "Fruit -a -fives" Cured Nim fts ir Farm ant Garden HENS' LUNCH COUNTER. Outdoor Feed Hopper Found Very Suq- cessful by New York Experts, The accompanying illustration slows a capacious outdoor hopper which has been found very successful by the New York agricultural experiment station at Ithaca, It has the advantage of bolding a large supply of whole and Ground grains, meat scrap, alien and grit sufficient for fowls at range for several days. One side of the top of this double hopper is binged to open for filling. PROMINENT RA.ILRQAD MAN TRYOGINL SEOS KIDNEYS "I have been a Pullman Conductoron the C. P. It, and Michigan. Central during the last three years. About four years ago, I was laid up with intense pains in the groin, a very sore back, anti suffered most severely when I tried to urinate. I treated with me family physician for two months for gravel in the bladder but did not receive any benefit. About that time,. I met another railroad man who had been similarly affected and 'Who had been cured by taking Gin Pills, after MOH MCKENNA, Ess:` ST. Si`RPHRN, N.B. Jan. 17th. rgrx, "I wish to tell you of the great good "Fruit -a -lives" have done for me. For years, I was a martyr to Chronic Consti• potion and Stomach Trouble. I was greatly run down and my friends feared 1 had Consumption. I tried numerous doctors and all kinds of medicines, but received no relief until advised to try "Fruit-a-tives" by Mr, McCready of St. Stephen, and am pleased to say that I now enjoy excellent health. "Fruit- a-tives" are the best medicine made, and I strongly advise my friends to use them". HUGH McKENNA. "Fruit -a -lives" is the only medicine that will positively and completely cure Constipation. This wonderful compound of fruit juices acts directly on the liver, causing this organ to extract more bile from the blood, and to give up more bile to prove the bowels regularly and naturally. 5oc a box, 6. for $e.so, trial size, z5c. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price ley Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, THE SPRING TONIC. Here is a practical schedule that should not be difficult for anyone to follow: In the spring time halve the amount of food you are used to eating. Double the drinking water, and do not have it ice cold. Treble the out-of-door exercise. Quadruple the consumption of fresh air and laughter. If you are a mentally active person include a large amount of ripe fruit and nuts in your diet. Eat little meat and cereals but seldom. If your energies are equally divided between mental and physical labor you should use fruit and vegetables and more nuts and cereals than the purely mentally employed. The physically active individuals should select a diet that is varied and tempting alike, a combination of the above. $100 REWARD, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con- stitutional treatment, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- ly 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 doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation. The writ has been issued for the bye - election in South Simcoe rendered vac- ant by the appointment of Mr. Haugh- ton Lennox as Judge. June 10 is pelli.ig day. A WEAK ACHING BACK Caused Her Much Misery. Mrs. W. It, Hodge, 1 ieldiag, Sask., writes.. --"A few lines highly recommend- ing Doan's Kidney Pills. For this Last year I have been troubled very much with nasty sick headaches, and a weak aching neck, which caused me much misery, for I could not work, and had no ambition for anything. My kidneys were very badly out of order, and kept me from sleeping at nights, I tried many kin" :s of pills and medicines, but it seemed almost in vain. I began to give up in ,;evpair of ever being well and strong again, when a kind neighbor advised me to try Doan's Kidney Pills, which I did, and airs thankful for the relief I obtained from them, for now I am never troubled with a sore back or sick headaches. "I will always say Doan's Kidney Pills for mine and can highly recommend thein to any sufferer." Price, 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 'nett Photo Isy Mew 'fork College of Agricul• ture. OUTDOOR FZED HOPPER FOR POULTRY, The top is covered with roofing paper and has wide overhanging eaves and closed ends to protect the feed trough from rain. The sides gradually ap- proach until they are four inches apart at the bottom, which is one and one- half inches above the bottom of the feed trough. The feed trough is four- teen inches wide, with a four inch re- taining board on each side. At every four inches or closer, on the body of the hopper directly over the feed trough, six inch lengths of common fence wire are driven through holes in the side of the hopper and into the top edge of the feed trough. These wires serve to prevent the birds from flirting the seed out. The hopper may be made as long and deep as desired. The dimensions rec- ommended are five feet long, three feet high and thirty-two inches wide. The steeper the sides the less will be the danger of clogging. By placing the wires not more than two and one-half inches apart, or by putting a small cap on the top edge of the feed trough pro- jecting half an inch into the trough, the possibilities of wasting are less- ened. A hopper of this size will hold about 170 pounds of mixed grain, 135 pounds of mixed ground feed, 45 pounds of grit and 35 pounds of beef scrap. It should cost for labor and material about $R. Care of the Brood Sow. Saccess in pork production is large- ly affected by the attention given to the health and comfort of the brood sow, She should always be housed in a warm, comfortable place. Prefer- ably this will be a cot well supplied with straw and having a door which swings both ways,. always closing when the sow passes in or out. This cot may be located at some distance from the feeding place, so that she will get tbe necessary exercise in running to and fro. Her food should consist largely of bulky foods, such as milk, roots and clover hay, which will keep her in good condition without fatten- ing. As farrowing time approaches the bulk should be cut down, less wa- ter should be given, and more. protein and oily feeds should be fed, so as to keep the sow in a laxative condition. - American Agriculturist. Watch Your Drain Tile Outlets. A thing for every farm owner to re- member should be to look after his tile drain outlets in cold weather, that they may not get clogged by muskrats, rab- bits or other rodents, nor by sods slip- ping over the tiles, thus waterlogging the soil during the wet season. Farm Journal. Keep the Best. Do not make the mistake of giving the purchaser the pick of your flock. Keep the best cow, the best horse, the best of everything. So shall you be proud of your stock and proud of your occupation. 00000 REASONS FOR STAYING ON ' THE FARM. It is the safest real estate in- ; vestment. It is this beat place to avoid doctor bills. There is no place like it for bringing up a family. It affords the greatest opportu- nity to cultivate the bump of op- timism. It is the foundation of all na- tional prosperity. It produces the eatable' and wearables for the nation's peo- ple. It oilers the best chance to live in peace with God and man, than which nothing better can be de- sired, It is easier to leave the farm, than it is to get back to It after you are once fu the city working as carpenter, briekiftyer, carman, bookkeeper or clerk to meet your financial obligations. It gives a man room to build hid own home. In town another is likely to build the home for you --and In the end own it. - Ferns and Fireside. having been given up bs,a prominent physician who treated him for Diabetes. He is nowrunning on the road and is perfectly cured. He strongly advises' me to try Gin Pills which I did, -with the result that the pains left me entirely. PRANK S. IDE, Boves.no, N, Y, 5oc. a box, 6 for $2.5o. Sample free. Write National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Dept. A Toronto. If you suffer with Constipation or need agentle laxative, take NATIONAL LAZY LIVER PILLS. 25c, a box, 105 H nianf►::« laa,dt Wo #, Advocate ofity Pteace: The thli;p l� has most deeply impressed us in cans neetion with the Titanic disaster is the manner in which it has revealed the fundamental oneness of humanity. People of all lands, without respect of race or nationality, were plunged into bitter grief together and suffered a common pain when the sad intelligence reached them. They only remembered then that they were brethren, members of a common family, sharers in a com- mon lot; that those who went down were their own ]lith and kin. Their differences were forgotten; their sor- rows had melted them into one. The unity of humanity would always be realized if people only went deep enough and did not judge from superficial points of view, In war, when men are angry and slaying one another, their essential unity is entirely lost sight of, This is the fundamental condemnation of war. When a battleship is sunk by an enemy's shells, there is grief and pain on the side of those who have lost, but wild rejoicing on the part of those who have destroyed the enemy's vessel, as though a really great deed had been accomplished. When humanity really comes to itself, no such deed as that of sinking an enemy's vessel can ever be done again, There will then be no enemies. IL Do not suffer another day_ with Itching, Bleed. ing, or Protract. Ing Piles. No surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure you. 800, a box; ail dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto, Sample box free if you mention this paper and enclose 2o. stamp to pay postage. 444 ' .. * " - " 3++ ,++++4. + +4'++++++++++4.+ The Times 3+ /'ra ' 71 9 le 4. *I* INIMESIMIUMEMINNIII if 4* + Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Daily Globe Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 4. 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 4.. ',Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 4. Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press,... it Times and Daily .Advertiser , . , , ...... . + Times and London Advertiser (weekly), 4, 4. Times and London Daily Free Press Moxnir.g Edition ... Evenin4.g Edition .... 4' Times and Montreal Daily Witness Times and Montreal Weekly Witness Times and W ..., +Times and WesternorldWide Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 4. Times and Presbyter(an .t. Times and Westminster - 4. Times, Presbyterian and Westminster Times and Toronto Saturday Night - 4. Times and Busy Man's Magazine + Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Youth's Companion ... , 4. Times and Northern Messenger. 4. Times and Daily World .. ... , 4. + Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) .l. 4. Times and Canadian Pictorial. 4. 4' Times and Lippincott's Magazine %l+ 4.4. Times and Woman's Home Companion i• Times and Delineator, Times and Cosmopolitan 4. 4. Times and Strand Times and Success ,4. ' 4. Times and McClure's Magazine Times and M.unscy's Magazine , Times and Designer Times and Everybody's ,�RI 4. These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great t Britain. + 4 .1. The above publications may be obtained by Ti111es $, subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica- • $ tion being the figure given above less $i.00 representing $ the price of The Times. For instance : �' d 3. 'p 4. The Times and Weekly Globe. $1,60 The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00), 1.35 $2., 9:5 making the price of the three papers $2.9$.A. The Times and the Weekly Sun .... $1.80 '++'. The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00) .... 1,30 + The Weekls Globe ($1.60 less $1,00) 60 k. 4. 4. $3,70 4. the four papers for $3.7o. 3 If the plb;icat on you want is not in above list, let * us know. We - .n supply almost any well-known Cana- 4. � dian or American publication. These prices are strictly 1 cash in advance Sind' subscriptions by post office or e' press order to 1 tie Times '6 Prilf Office 3• Shone Stock W WGHJ4M ON0111110 foolf.. 3'L1 '++'li :3:k+3rtri'+ +4*+4r ' : - . ;+ u bin List • 1� 1.60 4.50 1.85 1,75 2.30 2.30 4.50 1.60 2.35 1,60 1.80 1,60 2.85 1,60 3.50 2 90 3.50 1,85 2.25 1.60 2,25 2.25 3,25 34►0 2.50 1.75 2,90 1.35 3.10 2.90 1,60 3,15 2.CG 2.40 2.30 2.50 2.45 2.60 2.55 1.85 2,40 •