Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1912-07-25, Page 3UTE WTWWI 1131ES, JULY a>, 1912 E DUST KILLER It's TRADE MARK REG+ LUust . asorber-and Oer_u-- -��eanses .. , � �- s c_a�p��s Boors andbrighten_.�.-, V LMANUF'D BY TP ,.�►ll 7 i.,i`. i,`,�+sGO.. Q'T-"TAWA . CANADA, 1p�G:1;IANR-r.707174'-rkiElar Spring Time, in fact every time you sweep is just the time to use DUSTBANE. Dust caised in sweeping is the dried dieenses and filth that has been tracked in from the street. It rises from the tit t r with evt r v f it of a Human foot and with every stoke of a br,u,ui u, ba brtathcd Ly everyone who inhabits the house. Just a handful or two of DUSTBANE is all that is required to sweep an ordinary roan] either floor or careet. It brightens the floors and cleanses the carpets leaving the room in Sanitary condition. Order a can on trial for one week, All Grocers sell DUST BANE. Packed in barrels and kegs for use in schools, stores and public buildings. DUSTBANE MFG. CO. LTD., OTTAWA. Paper 175 inches wide, for news- paper is made at the rate of 650 feet a minute. The citizens. of Cordova are about to erect a statute to Spain's most famous foreador, Legartijo, who participated in 1,700 bullfights and slew over 5,000 animals. Probably if one every had to pay $2 to vote, like going to the theatre, every- body would go to the polis. Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol restores every nerve in the body to its proper tension ; restores vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at once. rhoaphonol will make you a new man. Price 53 a box. or two for 55. Mailed to any address, The Seobell Drug Co., se. Catharines, Ont. Always Little Chap.. A woman entered a department store, sought out the men's furnishing count- er, and said: "I wish to buy a bathing suit for my husband." "Yes, madam," said the salesman, "and what chest measure?" The woman frowned and bit her 1!p. "Well now," she said "how provok- ing that is! I've forgotten the chest measure." "Twenty-eight inch, madam?" sug- gested the salesman. "Why, yes, of course!" she cried, beaming, How on earth did you know?" "Gentlemen who let their wives shop for them," he answered, "always have twenty-eight•inch Chests." DOCTORS COLD got HELP MY KIDEIEYS "Fruit -a -tikes" Cured Me MEG GEO. W. BERKLEY ChizSneavxr,I,E, ONT., /AN. 2Sth, 1911 "For over twenty years, I have been troubled with Kidney Disease and the doctors told me they could do are no good, They said my case was incurable and I would suffer all my life. 1 doctored with different medical men and tried many advertised remedies, but there was none that suited my case. Nearly a year ago, 1 tried"fruit-a-fives". 1 have been using them nearly all the time since, and am glad to say that 1 am cured. I have rro trouble now with my Kidneys and I give "Fruit-a-tives" the credit of doing what the doctors said was impossible, 1 ant seventy-six years old and ata in first class healtir." GEO. W. BARKLEY. goc a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size 25e. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Iamited, Ottawa. `17 Cents a Day" Offer Stirs all Canada! Whole Country Applauds the "Penny Purchase Plan" . From a thousand different directions comes a mighty chorus of approval, voicing the popuiar- 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 attractiee 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 In place of slow, laborious,Prin.t p illegible handwriting, The great business inter- ests are a unit in usifig type- writers. It is just as important to the general public to substi- tute typewriting for long 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 ndisdensabe assistant. Barristers, Cler gymen, Physicians, Journalists Ar- ICII) Litt VE: cAccountants have learned c Jnnaa and b - to depend on the typewriter. • yp17.�`il"Rale . er r'ypewriter in a fster ew min - hand." 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 small investment of 17 Cents a Day. A Stepping -Stone to Success Foryoung people, the Oliver Typewriter is a stepping -stone to good positions and an advance- inent 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 made an Honorary Member of t Savors. A small first payment brings the magnificent new Oliver Typewriter, the regular $125 machine. Then save 17 Cents aDay 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 Sates Department 1 he Oliver rypewriter Co. °fiver Typewriting Bldg. CHICAGO. Ty pewriter for D National Association ation of Penny COUPON TUB OLIVER 1 i'PEWEWTERCo ()litter Typewriting Bldg., Oentietnen: Please stud your Att Catalog and details of "17. Cents-a.Day" offer on the Oliver Typowtiter. I`iame...1..►414,,4441..., AddressNN.. 4444. 6.44S1144 1146... r• lot ,,.,,.11,6, GET DOWN TO FERTILITY. , Na Reason For Disuse of Plant Reed. Piow Your Lend Deeply,. let a recent Issue of Farm and ly'lre- aide a contributor writes a very inter- ' eating article on soil fertility in w.We!t he shows the different qualities th8b coil must have and how, when the soil becomes depleted, some sort of replen- ssbnlent of the lest qualities must be -provided. Following is an extract from the article: "One of the ways we have of increas- ing our crop yield is to plow deeper.' That is like running the hand a little deeper into the pocket, it Is true, and it does not take the place of adding to our soil nitrogen, potash and phos- phoric acid, but it does enable us to make available soil fertility that is really ours and to the benefits of wbich we are fairly entitled, 'But will this deeper soil really give us better crops? That homely creature the woodchuck may answer that ques- tion for us, wherever he has iris home. See what he does by hia system of deeper digging. The rankest guise on the whole farm is right around the woodchuck bole. What has he done? He has brought up some of the fertil- ity that has all these years been locked up waiting for us to make it available. The rains have moistened this soil, the sunshine• has warmed it, and splendid grass is the result. "So this is a plea for deeper eultiva. tion, I know it will take a little harder work on the part of our horses to bring this rich earth up. And if we bad to bold the plow as we used to our arms would surely ache before night, but the beautiful riding plows of today, which hold themselves, have lessened the work of turning over the soil. We may as well have the extra depth of soil to grow better crops as to let It ]le there idle in the dark. Oa many farms there are layers of what have been called 'bard pan' a little way below the surface. These form tables which hold the moisture and prevent it from finding its way deeper into the earth. They also in some degree form a bar- rier to the progress of plant roots doLvuward. Other lands do not present this barrier, but wherever the soil is thus packed down it needs breaking up. "Drainage will do very much to help about this, and a little raising of the cievis, so that the plowshare will dive deeper, will certainly enable our crops to get hold of and make available the locked up reserre fertility." 000000 000 0000000000.000 INSURANCE. Save and apply a few more tons of barnyard manure to your soil and increase the yield. Ma- nure is the best insurance against drought. It makes the soil re- tain more moisture and furnish- es plant food which hastens ma- turity. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00000000000000000000000000 FENCE YOU CAN SHiFT. , Useful in Unclosing Temporarily Rich Bit of Pasture. Rather than cut a rich piece of fod- der to be gathered and moved away to the sheep, hogs or other stock it is often more economical to pasture it off, a small piece at a time. The lack of a suitable fence often prevents this. A portable fence may be built according to the plan shown in the drawings herewith. It re- quires but a few panels of this to inclose sufficient field for a day's cropping, wirers it can be shifted to new ground for the next day. • If sheep with lambs are to be folded in this way au extra board will be needed at the bottom of each panel. FENCEPosT. • 1.1)-"-�' PANEL OF POBTABLPI FENCE. These panels may be built twelve or fourteen feet in length and must be thoroughly braced to keep the fence firm from endwise motion. Cre•-a- pieces at the bottom of the upri: ft should be ioug euough to keep fence firm sidewise. The upright t, -ed for the portable base should be 2 by 4 inches, with iron hoolts driven or screwed in at proper intervals to receive the end boards of the panels. - American Agriculturist. Orchard and Garden Notes. If air slaked lime be in earth in which plants are petted it will keep worms away. Most growers using fiats sow one and a half to two inches apart. The seed need not be covered with more than one-fourth of an inch of soil. Water thoroughly immediately after sowing, and do not apply more water than is absolutely necessary. Overwatering, high temperatures and lack of ventila- tion are responsible for spindling plants. Mats of some kind must be used at night for the protection of the plants in hotbeds and cold frames. These should be removed at soon as possible in the morning when the suit is shining and replaced on the frames not later than 4 oeeloek in the afternoon. Some air should be admitted to the frames every day if the weather will permit. --Na- tional Stockman and 15'armer. . A /ear 1.ivelihO9d, `'I ' Our fathers lived on native game tenthit tired them, so they claim,: I've often heard any uncle .pay rhe dined on bruin thrice a days 1 no wearied of the bill of tare, I'or he had got hia fill of bear, -Kaneae City Staff', No ?Sluff. "Father seems impressed with your talk about coupons," said the girl. "Have you really any?" "Sure," answered the guileful youth: "Got 700 saved up toward the tura. Pure for our little flat." --Louisville Courier-JournaL Birds as Benefactors. Bill -You know some birds built a nest in my neighbor's pboltograple trumpet, so the thing couldn't go. Jill -Well, that shows wo should aI- ways be kind to the birds and encour- age them to come around.-Zonkera Statesman. Two In the Rain, You'll be convinced when you've take* her home And are soaking wet through and throuald An umbrella Is a shelter for one, But a shower bath for two. -Near York Bum Nothing Doing. "Don't you want a private secretary, sir?" "Private secretary? Great Scott! This Is a bureau of publicity and pro- motion: William, show the gentleman out." -Chicago Record -Herald. A la Sherlock Holmes. "%'lubdub has just been calling 011 his best girL" "How do you know?" "He has taken three cigars from his waistcoat pocket, and every one of them was broken." -Judge. Also. Mixed up in the Persian muss Wae that 'ere Shuster man. When it got so thick that he couldn't stick He -to -he -Te -he -rani -Chicago Tribune. His• Luck. Kind Old Lady -Now, don't cry, little man. What's the matter? Jimmy -Boohoo! 1 had arranged to play truant tomorrow with Billy Mlggs, and now they've gone and given us a holiday! -Comic Cuts. Dead Men Tell No Tales. Motorcar Owner -You just hit him a slanting blow. I don't think he's dead. Chauffeur -Then I'd better go back and finish him. When he comes to he might remember our number. -New York Times. Baseball Approaches. The buckwheat cake is passing. Its season soon will nit. Another kind of batter soon Is due to make a hit. -Ifansas City Star. Located. "Where is the wild west?" "Gosh, stranger, can't you read? In the current magazines. Where'd you expect to find it -running around loose?" -New York Evening Sun. • Party Successful. "Do you know, little boy, that year sister promised to marry me at the party last night?" "Of course. That's what the party waa for.'! -Bystander. Laying Heavier Rails. The London, Huron and Bruce is being re -railed from Clinton to Wing - ham, a distance of twenty-four miles. The rails heretofore in use were made in 13arrow, England, and were put down when the road was constructed in 1875. They have stood the wear and tear remarkably well, much better than the rails of more recent make. Those now being laid are 80 pounds to the yard and have been in use on the main line, where they have been re- placed by rails twenty pounds heavier to stand the strain of the big freighters. It is expected they will answer for the lighter traffic of the L., II. and I3. for some time to come. The re -railing is being done by fifty or more Italians who live in a caboose which is taken along the line as the work progresses. Mr. Alex, McKay, formerly of Car- rick Township, was buried at Walk- erton last week in his ninety-third year. Mr. McKay came out from Scotland as a young man, being sent out to the Northwest by the Hudson I3ay Company, and spent several years in the far north. Ilis experience of five years at the mouth of the Mackenzie on the Arctic Ocean were thrilling. Three years of that time he never ate bread, living largely on fish. He leaves a widow and a large grown-up fam- ily. In the last ten years, according to an official return quoted by Public Opinion, the naval expenditure of Great Brit- ain, France, Germany, the United States, Russia and Japan, has inertias. ed from £47,000,000 to £120,4100,000. In that ten years Britain's naval ex- penditure has jumped from thir- teen and one-half million pounds to .£.44,ti00,000, Germany's from twelve and one-half pounds to £22,000,000, the tiniteu States from ten and one half millions to $26,000,000, that of France from £3,000,000 to £16,000,d00, of Rus- sia from £4,000,000 to £13,000,010, and Japan from £1•,000,000 to £8,000,000. PILES. You will trod relief in Zat i fuk it eases the burning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings ease. Perseverance, with Zam. Buk, means cure: Why not prove this? Ail Druggists aces..,-. 1041 bo* New A, 0. U. W. Rates. At the March session of the Grand Lodge of Ontario Ancient Order of United Workmen it was an instruction to the Executive to employ a compet- ent life insurance actuary to value the policies held by the membership in the Order, and to draft a schedule of rates that will insure permaney and be ade- quate for all time. F. Sanderson, M, A„ Fellow of the Faculty of Actuaries of Scotland, was engaged and present- ed a report and a schedule of rates to the Grand Lodge Friday, that was adopted after discussing the question of readjustment and the effect of the increase on the entire membership. The outcome of the interesting discus- sion was the adoption by an overwhelm: ing vote of the new rates recommended. The new rates will be applied to the account to which each member hal at- tained on May 1, 1905, all members over 65 years being valid as at 65 years, The Misfit life. The ether day a weary man jumped in a rippling pond; and. now, 1 hope hia pinions fan along the great beyond. They fished his body from the brink and took it to his wife; and not a man of them could think why he should end his life. He had abundance of long green -be carried it in lumps; life should have been a thing eerene- why did he bump the bumps? Iiia wife sat view- ing with alarm beside that lifeless clay, and moaned: "1 drove him from the farm, where he desired to stay! That wish of his'n made me wroth; 1 longed to come to town, and try and cut a mighty swath, and wear a silken gown. At balls .and routs and thimyjigs I had a wish to shine, and he desired to feed his pigs and train his pumpkin vine. So here we came and here I tried to hit the social swim, and with my false and futile pride I've gone and murder- ed him! Away from all the scenes he Loved, his horses and his hay, by hust- ling neighbors pushed and shoved, be moped and pined away, until at last he jumped into a small fresh -water sea, and here I raise my howdy -do! Alas, and woe is me!" I know a hundred men who jerk their way through wretched lives because they quit their proper work to pl ease their batty wives. -Walt Mason. A simple and excellent way to re- move dirty marks from a raincoat is to cut a raw potato in slices and rub it well on the marks. It will also re- move mud stains from dress skirts, children's coats and gentlemen's trous- ers. 4.444.' T :F:!4:4g**4'3'3'34.1.4 444. +++++441.4. +113'34+++++4. Iv The Times +.......: 4.. lu in Lit:j� bb• •+ + + 1.60 .+1. 4.50 ,'tI,, 1.85 1.75 :1. 2.30 2.30 I 4.50 1.60 + 2.35 4' + + + + + making the price of the three papers $2.95. 4. The Times and the Weekly Sun... $1.30 The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00) , 1,30 4. The Weekly Globe ($$1,60 less $1.00) 60 $370 the four papers for $3.7o. p 4. + + + Times and Weekly Globe , Times and Daily Globe . , Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 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 (weekly) Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press. Times and Daily Advertiser ,... Times and London Advertiser (weekly) Times and London Daily Free Press Mcrnirg 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 .... Times and Westminster Times, Presbyterian and Westminster Times and Toronto Saturdae Night . Times and Busy Man's Magazine Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Youth's Companion .... Times and Norther n Messenger Times and Daily World ,.... ... Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly), Times and Canadian Pictorial Times and Lippineott's 141ngazine Times and Woman's Rome Companion Times and Delineator Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Strand Times and Success . Times and McClure's Magazine Times and Mnnsoy's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's These prices are for addresses in Canada Britain. 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 3.25 340 2.60 1.75 2,90 1.335 8.10 2.90 1.60 8.15 2.60 2.40 2.30 2.50 2.45 2,60 2,55 1.85 2,40 + + 4. + + 4. + + + or Great $ + + + + 4. + 44 + + + + + The above publications may be obtained by Times 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 : The Times and Weekly Glebe q, 4 1.60 The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less 61.00) 1.35 $2.95 + + If the pub icat 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 adaance 4. Send subscriptions by post office or express order to I Tiie Ti 1� •i + WStoneock CNTAIO + IM 4. 4,44++++++++++,04.44.4444.444 I. al+ 44'3F. _ _ 4 ere4„7