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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-08-08, Page 66 illi+, 'WINGlAI TIMES AUUST 8, 1912 AiNai CaraEloa cf tit PHYSIOGNOMY.An aloe of th rad„:•lit•• with wiirb ��� ® r% ---- the sailing ship E ; .1,:.,ii;iL' tri;)t; i : cal:l- Veyed ial ii ,:t`,•a •at iia til • er.. volumes o: I.', v1' , WOrI(1'A ti'Sil'ea: ii.'e . LAI i t+'.;e:. little more than 4.t13. till ;•1n., [lh+-•:e.':i tit! merchant s.•'.0;i''1'R o;' till` t;1.) )L lir;' i 1 excess of 49,0 imito i :ale Oa tha as- sumption tam met tn.t of ';t ' cin iv N.1'i!el to three of ea.', steam feat; new do thirty tlei ; es ..e ,.tilafih eermia tof the world tie see'.;ia:elate e Of this 1.:or1; :,:.,? ire et aril Meal: iia the Britisal ;k:any.!: 'tom;=a<'ti.'s;' oak. - half. a',Tate►,segs.► tone b'li:� registered i:t th.' 1"iit•e1 lie :melee and 1,001,0 :0 t:lae. ht ;1•, i a a l;.•:Hra. It may be ern jec ed, tee that tl. c' 1'.riti: h half coati -I ise.: the teever mai in la: economically :rash+' 1 I7tei.•t, E',"silo 310,000 tot:.; ef set eiett am: 1. • ., ci lets to the Usines: l:r.t, , ea r.',.;:. t'r sine. 1911, Cit rr:an : ..a., m' . .; sed ,lies ton- nage by it;,;,t:'•i.:.l.l,• ::i ;,y 1;1; at, an. Norway by Deafee•w+.l':uul•le 1, d`•tc••ct by lozal ail ; I:, ti.its, n.; tha_r dancer reach the t.i:.•:•=..'; ia':ti;ri " Cie ear. There is ante- of: • Asn to cur •:', • it-tte.-S, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness k t^I;;;ed or: an it:ll:iniee eon- dition of the laaeous linieg of the eats. tachian Tube. Wien tale Lase i:; in- flamed yon have a raineattee sotml or imperfect bearing, and altar it is s•n- tirely Closed Dealt+:?=-; is the result, and unless the ietlaiuinatie.a t•an be taken o,: an•i this tubo rost•r_ed t) its normal e iftie)i, lenitive t:rt he dee- troyed it'r.'ve'r; gine et,sys' e•itt of ton are caused by Catarrh. ti iiie:;i is nothing but an indented condi,iotl of tee :::its-• ous surfaz e. We will ;sive elate 1:u:u1r .I D Micro for any eeee of leaefitoes s raseais ettarrnl il' t t:meet 1' ear.:' i' ::.lid's Catarrh Cure. .`emi I. .refire ..e. F. J. t'I ENi'a &. tie. f«ee:Al , O. Sold by Drumeists. nae Take IIsli', :'ascii, nal.; for meal - petiole :Mrs. sterner, ri.l .tb of Sonata Mean- er, died at Berlin after a iong illness. e Ants, in point of instinct, rat,:: abeam .'•• , a,• ,l• all the n -.:in. .t.l•• except m' himself. . },t. 321 lk.. ,al. "Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamber1ai1;':; Celle, Choles and Diarrhoea Ittrnedy the world ttou;d be much better oil a .d tae lr. _ eel:tage of suffering gre:tltle decreased," write., Lindsey Sesta .f Ind. For sale by all dem.ar.$. James Shaw, in the penitentiary for wounding, with int.•iit. hangt:1 himself with a towel. No fewer than - ,till-, p.'son.. n an av- erage, are in receipt of Government old - age pensions. REST lin HEATH TO MOTHER1 MIRS.wI recow,S SOOTHING Srarr has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by 3IILLIONS of BOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TE8'THIIVG with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CIISLD, SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA. It is ab. solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-five Cents a bottle. Robert C. Adams. brakemen. was lcilded in a collision on the Pere Marquette uc tte near West Lorne. Dr. R. A. Little, etas»sinal r., Ester i.t Idondoa Colleeiatc Ie;.,titutc fee twenty seven years, has resigned. Do not suffer another day with Itchiness Illeed- } ;y r i;;;:' fill igN surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure you. t;1u. a vox: all dealers, or Ednansou, Batu a Co., Lifland, Toronto. Sample box free if volt mention this paper and enclose 8e. stamp mesa- postage. In 'AO nests t h.•;'e uro cal Ln t.'a.1'age, 2t',"00 wasps. Dr. 8. H. Pope of Wad Bothwell ager: ninety. for half a r.nture ti practising physician. dropped dead on the etreet. A dang.•'ous lunatic at large in the wood e by Prescottis causing alarm.. He escaped from the Brockville Asylum. One of the seinen ailments that hard-working people are afflicted with is lame back. Apply Chamberlain's Liniment tc: it a flee and ni ::, ige the parts thorou, i v at each .epl,li atioe, and you will get quick relief. I•or sale' be all druggists. Acear,ling to the Monetary Tulips, the Fire loss of Canada for June was $4,223,412. There were 21 fires. whic;it caused an aggregate loss of ;j:J,slaefe t. The fire of waete 1911 Was 2I,159,577). while the first six months of 1902 has shown a loss of $11,719,49a. In the United States the telephone dates back to 18ia3. Of sour„e, tele- phones were used !•lies• t, that, but it was not until then that they became a commercial proposition. Since then the use of the teleph .ne has feint -teed almost beyond belief. In 1911 there were 14,500,010,000 telephoner conver- sations in the United :3tatea. ars llgtaitlat 22,nn0,000,000 for the whole world. In other words, 03 per cont. of the tele- phone conversations were in the United States. The use of fuel oil by locomotive in the far Western Statees is extending, says the Springfield Republican. A writer for the New York Journal of ,Commerce, who has been looking into the matter and writes from Cheyenne, concludes with the statement that "with the development of this motive power, and the exploitation of the water power that is to be had throughout the moun- tain region, it is believed that the Western railroads within a few years will dispense altogether with Coal for moot.” F0 TEN YEARS COULD NOT HEFT ANYTHING ON HER STOMACH Dyspepsia is caused by poor digestion, 1:1+1 to get rid of this terrible affliction, it is necessary to place the stomach in a gond condition. For this purpose Bur - neck Blood Bitters lige; no equal. Mra. Norman A. MacLeod, :'ort Bevis, writes --"For the last ten years I :af:ered dreadfully eitll d;'spersia, and I .1.2.A1 not keep ant thing ou my stomach. 1tried several kihuis of medicines, but r• see el them scented to do ole any good. at let a friend advised nie to try Bur - fleck. Motel Bitters, which I did, and after iaiug five bottles I was completely cured. I would advise any one troubled with stomach trouble to use B.B.E. I can- not recommend it too highly." Burdock Blood Bitters is manufac- tured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Given the' tiukte any girl will fur- nis'it the kind heart that is more than rnr filets. more than 2 ti --1 million acres per stn :tun of wheat are grown in New Smith I:Vales. "I was enrol of dial rhoea by one doe of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera anti Diarrhoea Remedy," writes M. E. Gel:l;al•elt Oriole, Pa. There is nothing better. For sale by all drams:. Eiectri' trail/wet s were first used in the United Kingdon in leen, when eine was opened et Leytonstone, in Essex. Of the six and a half million person:: who voted et the last general election in England there were 41,71u who were unable to read. Da'., de Vaiifs Fernfiks Pills A reliable French reg lata: urger tails. These piits are exceedingly power!:;l in r.gutaiing the 4a ull reraN:u l xt.nnutL female :r;e t7. Refuse cie:p imitations. Dr. do Vanes are sold at P5 a box, nr three for SIJ. Mailed to any address. ]Cho Scobell Drag Co,, St. Catharines, Ont. The whalebone is not bona, strictly speaking, but bristles found in the mouth of the whale by which the animals are enabited to entrap small fish for food. A vast amount of i11 health is due to impaired digestion. When the stomach fails •to perform its functions properly the whole system becomes deranged. A few do: es of Chamberlain's Tablets is all you netted. Thaw will strengthen your digestion, invigorate your liver, and 7•eg ulate t our bowels. entirely Jo- ine away with that miserable feeling clue to ' aulty digestion. Try it. Many _ otl:c lave been jc1 l.nC. tiy Cured .. way not you? For sale by all dealers. It is claimed on good authority that certain ledgers discovered recently at Piles. Spain, give the interesting in- foemation as to the cost of discovering America. Columbus set sail from Palos and it is esca tein.'d that the a:'inanie'nt of his •- sips eut.t 14,001 pesetas, the ex- t Columbus as t:n, i his t s ofneors were ateeet:.,u v pesetas, including the expense's of the crew, 22,t;:," pesetas were spout for eight months' voyage. 1s a peseta is worth a little less than twenty cents, the expenses of the trip that resulted in the diseavery of Amer- iea amounted to $7.e00. Small as was the amount, Queen Isabella (se history relates) was obiigt d to lawn her jew- els to secure the funds. Seven thous- and dollars for a continent. America is well worth the first investment. But poor Spain, whose Queen pawned her jewels to aid in its discovery, has no t.rritoly of value thereon, nor voice in its affairs. THE ONO MOM An ORIAIE3WP EXTRACT OF WILD aTLIABERRY IS " Dr. Fowler's " This grand remedy has been on the market for sixty-five years, and is, wIth- out a doubt, the test medicine known for the cure of DIAf1BIVEA, DYSENTERY, COLIC; CRAMPS, PAIN iia the STOMACH; CHOLERA MORl3ISS, CHOLERA INFANTUII'I, and ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS. If an unscrupulous druggist tries t• talk you into taking any other proper*. tine when you ask for "Dr. r'owler'e" refuse to take it, and iusist on getting what you ask for. Price 35 cents per bottle. See that the name, The T. Milburn Co., ',ranted, is on the wrapper, els we are the manufacturers and role proprietors. How Your Character Is Written In Your Face. 1.t your forehead. and eyes the ae• einplishe+i eltaracter reader seams the patios of an open book. It is you yourself who are telling hint tf your eharaeter, be it stable or unsteady, Jimmie or cowardly. He posits that if y+.ur head is justly proportioned to t'te rest of your belly it reveals st•'adi- ' and f'rot• of eharaotor: if tee tris,', that it usually indicate:: gross - and stupidity. If it is too email it tells of ftreble- ue-s and ineptitu'lt' of mind, if net ••f constitution. The pliysfn tonly of veer forehead is seen in the form of the frnntal hone, its height and pro - "eft al, reeularity or irrtr dnlarity. This indicate: the disposition and :"•••I -urs' of your facilities, your meth. 1 •'1 thinking and feeling. Patinae maty is to be studied in the skin, its d •,h'r, tension, and relaxatun. It eaves. evidence of the pas.tions, the actual state of the spirit within, and the use it has made of its natural gifts. l •reheatls seen in profile may be divided into three broad e!asses— those that are projeetineahove, flat on the eyebrow's, t Cee retrenting from t+eJliwl we'll -developed br••tt• , and those perpendicular. Generelly :peak- ing. people with pr':mineut eyebunes •tot I rddmptly, on the judemoiet, per - halve the paesion of the moment. But they err very seldom, for their drifts of intuition and eetremeiy rapid de- dlelction guide them rightly. . High for+heads, lacking in .this quick spirit, pause and consider the matter before taking action, and, be- iaieg less imaginative, less passionate, laze resourceful and tactful, they ean- eot aff.'rd to make mistae. The Iniln of action has a short fore - bead and. prominent brows; the pian of int lleet high, iv:il-developed tem- ples. ;1 forehead square on the tem - ales and retreatin:i into the hair on ether side is in•li ative of lasting me/miry ati l well-balanced judgment. The typical forehead of a leader of men is that of Viscount Iiitchoner— short, eempre, e1. with prominent me—alines and thick, straight brows, square :tu'l r t oiling on the temples. Pimple \vitt' this manner of forehead cannot fail to judge character of cir- eumstauces with quickness and ac- curacy; they store away observations in a retentive memory and act rn conclusions with promptness and de - It is singular to note that Bismarck anti I.i Huna Chang both showed the distinctive signs of immense cuteness and genius , 11 '1:* 1 — S 1 - 1 u ler rtl .te Ir nie t the eye -bones that project so sharply as to cause ti,' hair of tit? brows to bris- tle outwards --and the careers of these two statesmen stand in corroboration. But it is the eyes of the individual widelt afford must reward to the ehar- acter-reader. Eyes are the mirror of the soul. Dividing them into two general classes —light and dark—it may be safely put forward that the dark indicate power, the light delicacy. I3lack eyes,it may he stated are 3 r n not really la n re y black. but f s deep an orange that they seem black contrast - e'1 with the white surrounding them. Sometimes, they appear dull and slug- gish, luggish, but the passions they denote are only slumbering. With sparkling black eyes the mental faculties of the individual are brisk and his tempera- ment is vivacious. Clear blue eyes mark the possessor of temperate de- sire,, and, other intellectual in di ca . tInns being equal, what they may lack in power and passion stands for ver- satility and subtlety. • Green eyes, though often fascinating, are danger- ous, for they are the token of deceit and coquetry; while the hazel eye shows steadiness and the capacity for eonstant affection. A Japanese Decoration. Speaking of New Year's celebrations in Japan, the Traveler's Gazette says: "B••fore each house entrance stand tw., pines, on the right a red stemmed me and nn the left a black pine.' Beside the pine trees stand slender bamboo Banes, and the trees are join- ed above with a festoon of paper fringe and straw rope, ornamented witlt yellow, bitter oranges, bits of charcoal, lobsters and large bunches of reed berries. Ms decoration is,sup- po-ed to bring good luck." Cooked In a Knapsack. Charles XII. of Sweden invented the first portable military fireless cooker. He had a knapsack lined with hay to strap to a soldier's back. When start- ing on a march a big chicken was split open and the inside dressed clean and then filled with butter. In' the chicken was placed a small cannon ball of hot iron. The hot cooking chicken. was titin placed in the hay knapsack. When the camp was pitch - el at evening the meat was delicious- ly cooked and all soaking in butter. Exposed. Transient—Was the show last night the real thing, as they advertised? Uncle Eben --Real thifig nothing! It was a fake. The boys exposed it. We got hol.I of the fellow who played the villain, and after riding hire `emoted town the finally confessed that he t. arn't 1w real villain after all; ;fret prete•udin'. Good Enough as It ls, "Do:•tor, if a pale young man named Jell::s calls on you for a prescription •iei.'t let hint have it." "%Shy root,," "He want, : ohhethitig to improve his appetite, and he boards at rat I ,nee." An Obstructed Order. Owens- How du you do, Mr. Shears! What can you how ole in the way of t leges suit to -day? His Tail. r --your bill, sir. That is deriaie lly in the way of a new suit. Tho Tea Problem. "Is tea harmful?" "Sometimtei it drives a Irian from Lorne," replied Mr. Curnr',x solemnly. It all depends on whether noIYous twon STONE & WELLINGTON' is contenttto drink it or insists Canadian NatiHd Exhibitien SOME FEATURES OF Imperial Year Imperial Cadet Review Cadets from all the Overseas Dominions Exhibits by the Provinces Dominion Exhibits Band of Scots Guards From Buckingham Palace Paintings of the Year from Europe Paintings by best Canadian and American Artists Imperial Cadet Competitions Boy Scouts Review Everything in Educational Exhibits Siege of Delhi Besses 0' Th' Barn Band Britain's Best Brass Band Dragoons' Musical Ride Industries in Operation Butter Making Competitions America's Greatest LiveStock Show Canada's Biggest Dog Show America's Prettiest Pussies Japanese Day Fireworks Motor Boat Races Hippodrome and Circus Four Stages and Arena all going Eruption of Mount Vesuvius Athletic Sports Ten Band Concerts Daily Acres of Manufactures Imperial Fireworks --60 Numbers Aug. 24 1912. Sept. 9 TOR:figNTO Suicide ' S chat heri U ted States. tate . The suicide rate in 100 cities in the United States was 10.3 for the first ten years of the !,resent century and 19.6 In 1911. It is estimated that in the whole of theni U to d States to no less than 15,000 people committed suicide in 1911. Commenting on the facts the Spring- field Republican says: "It is generally agreed that the nearest parallel to our own times is found during the better years of a Roman Empire, when suicide was often epidemic. Religion was so far from presenting obstacles that part of the strength of the stoics lay in the doctrine that no wretchedness was so great that it could not be escaped with d p a bare bodkin, The list of distinguish- ed men who chose `the Roman way' is long, and though little account was taken of the ignoble multitude, there is no reason to suppose that suicide was less prevalent among the .people at large till it was checked by the gen- eral acceptance of Christianity. Yet suicide among the Romans was not a doctrine of weakness or renunciation; it was rather looked upon as the vigor- ous exertion of a strong will which pre- ferred death to dishonor. Christianity has without question done much to keep down the suicide rate by its stern injunction, and it is difficult not to as- sociate the increase with a weakening of spiritual authority." Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R i A`. Jas. McPherson, of Stratford, was killed by falling down a stairway. The good housekeeper may now have an asbestos pad, which has the merit of keeping the table from damage by heat or moisture, a thing the flannel pad fails to do. These newpads can be made to order for tables of odd sizes and shapes; and in these days when doilies so often displace damask cloths for luncheon and tea service it is an un- doubted advantage to keep one's table in the best possible condition, free from stains and spots. WANT ED A live representative for WINGHAM and surrounding District to st'11 high-class stock for THE FONTHILL NURSERIES More fruit trees will be planted in the Fall of 1911 and Spring of 113i than ever before in the history of Ontario. !'lle orchard of the future will be the best paying part of the farm. We teach our men Salesmanship, '.:isle Culture and how big profits in fruit growing can be made. Pay weekly, permanent employ agent, exclusive territory, Write f,r particulars. giving it to Otte. arm arra ,.R A, a,rden SPROUTED CHICK FOOD. Gats Have Some Advantages Over Oth- er Forms of Green Fodder. Sprouted grain appears to have some advantages over other forms of green food, says a bulletin of the New York State Agricultural college. This is particularly true In the feeding of young chickens during the season when they cannot have access to the ground anti of mature stock during the breed- ing season. In order to'kill smut qr mold spores it is recommended that the grain used for sprouting be treated with formallu. One pint of formalin added to thirty gailous of water will treat thirty bush- els of oats. The liquid should be Fid tri Photograph by New York State College of Agriculture. RACK FOR SPROUTING OATS. sprinkled over the grain and thorough• ty nixed with it. Tine pile of wet grain should tb*en be covered with blankets and allowed to remain for twelve hours. The blankets should he removed and the grain stirred twice a day until dry, requiring usually about two days, It should then be bagged in sacks which have been sprayed with a formalin mixture of the same strength as used in treating the oats. The trays should be sprayed thoroughly with the formalin mixture .each time they aro rased. 1' or sprouting sonic in warm water one ten -quart pailful of oats for twee' ty-four hours. I'our this grain on a tray. It will fill the tray level full. •S ninkle each trayful of grain with warns water each morning. The grain must be lcept damp all the way through the mass if it is to sprout uniformly. In a room not artificially heated during the spring of the year in New Yorlt • about seven to ten days are required to sprout the grain and grow the leat about three inches high. By this time the sprouted grain will have formed a solid mat of roots, which can be re• moved from Lite tray and fed in the proportion of about one square inch per hen per day, or as much as will be eaten up clean. There is illustrated a simple skele- ton rack with trays used for sprout- ing oats. Four 2 by 4 inch stic!c six feet long are used for corner posts, fastened 'together in pairs by! horizontal cleats, with their top efiges ten inches apart. The two inch by four incl) pieces are two feet six inches apart by outside measurement. The two pairs of cleated stakes are fas' tened together exactly two feet six inches apart by inside measurement; with the cleats on the inside. A diagoi nal brace is nailed at the back of the frame. The cleats serve as slides and supports for the shelves. The shelves are exactly two feet six inches square and two inches deep. The bottom is made solid except for a few holes td allow for drainage. i 1 I 1 I 4-1-1-1-1-4-1+4+1-1-1 The home garden saves the grocer's bills and furnishes wholesome, appetizing food for tho farmer's family. The home i garden should have a variety of the best vegetables that can he X grown. •i"%i••i••I••I• :•$•3-I.3••I•$• I•i�3»:-•F•I•i•�•I••I-ISI•• Apiary Notes. There Is no denying the fact that stimulative feeding in the spring in. creases the amount of brood reared and makes the colony rich in bees for the clover" flow that conies later on. In setting the colonies outdoors jar them' as little as possible. As soon as they are placed upon their summer stands give them some added protec- tion In the form of building paper wrapped about the hives, as this will save a world of trouble. A. profitable industry is being devel- oped on many of tho government irri- gation projects in the introduction of honey. 'Thd quality of this honey is superior. The flavor is exceptionally fine and the color clear and sparkling. Alfalfa is the chief source from which the bees secure their supply. In all your operations with bees you Must use gentleness. All quick, sud- den jars and motions irritate them. 'Work slowly and carefully and yon have nothing to fear. If they sting you and it swells your flesh your systen Will become accustomed to the poison and soon it will not annoy you any ere than the prick of a pin, and it is Ilse=cel1e11t prgveutive of rhtumattars 1 6•04,044444>J®4+->444,0 4\7C•O•:e.X. •f,J•' :e04.5�0 *<,,, ^!'e0000001,4?9 G • WESTERN FAIR .0 SEPTEMBER 6th TO 14th, 1912 4 0 4. • London's Great Exhibition • s Liberal Prizes instructive Exhibits e Speed Events each Day o w New Art Building filled with Magnificent Paint:.. gs. 9 ATTRACTIONS43. • • Programrne Twice Daily. Live Stock Parade Daily .) BESSES O' THE BARN BAND d' of Cheltenham, England. One of the greatest Brass Bands in o the World, and several others. 4 4 . O 0 m 0 0 0 o W. J. REID, President. t AERIAL ACTS, COMEDY ACTS, TRAMBOLINE, and ACROBATIC ACTS, SEABERT'S EQUESTRIENNE ACT. and others.. 0 4 The Midway better than ever. Fireworks each evening. SINGLE FARE RATES over all railroads from Kingston to Detroit. Special Excursion Days, Sept. 10th, 12th, 13th. Prize Lists and all information from A. M, HUNT, Secretary. 0 4 4 4 0 d 4 asetev, C•44060®4o teeeam•a4>0e•e94teeee o• !s•eatee'®fieio4b4t,` e -e -e414.4) 4 4) Mr. W. S. Gunsalus, a farmer living near Fleming, Pa., says he has used Chamberlain's Cholic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy in his family for fourteen years, and that he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes pleasure in recommending it, For sale by all dealers. Sir William Macken zie on his return to Canada urges prompt aid to Britain to maintain naval supremacy. The Union of South Africa, which includes the Transvaal, Cape Colony,. Natal and Orange Free State, has a population of 6,000,000 people. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A ® t Sub.e Times For The 1.00 a Year I'RIN1'6NG AND STATIONERY We have put in our office Stationery and can WRITING PADS — ENVELOPES LEAD PENCILS • BUTTER PAPER PAPETEIUES, a complete stock of Staple supply your wants in [WRITING PAPER BLANK BOOKS PENS AND INK TOILET PAPER' PLAYII:G CARDS, etc We will keep the best stock in the respective lines and sell at reasonable prices. JOB PRINTING We are in a better position than ever before to attend to your wants in the Job Printing line and all orders will receive prompt attention. Leave your order with us when in need of LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES CALLING CARDS CIRCULARS NOTE HEADS STATEMENTS WEDDING INVITATIONS POSTERS CATALOGUES Or anything you may require:in the printing line. Subscriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The 'Times Office STONE BLOCK Wiingham, Ont.