HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-08-22, Page 61;
ItiEet<:1.1•" A WOMAN.
[S. E. Iii:er.1
Ileeause :she heed d i ea eh , di 1 net carr
Ilow other : tit it .i tin',t strove ani
schemed;
To her the weather was always fair
Aud sweet were the leaseeitat dreams.
she tiiesain J.
i'Seeauee all: loved liiin her Joel: was
glad
.And the i i.ee were go id ani the
world "7'.i irirht,
And she .a , i i 1, seeing those who
were sad,
Why Mee c t t .a were wan, and
their gip : .see whin'.
Because elle tov. t] hero she did not sigh.
For iia!ita that her enter sisttrra
,ought;
She was willing to let the days kilt bv,
Ilealways nretlaix.•rd,ate.iathous°tt.
Because she loved him ,she ciuld not
see
The cunning snares that he slyly- set,
And, at last, th •erred and dying, she,
Being merely a woman, loved him
yet.
A vast oemmnt of ill health is due to
impaired di ;estion When the stem leh
fails to perform its functions properly
the whole system becomes deranged.
a few doses of Chamberlain's Tablets
is all you need. They will strengthen
your digesti:an, invigorate your liver,
and reulate your bowels, entirely do-
ing away with that nuserable feeling
due to faulty digestion. Try it, Many
others have been permanently cured --
why not you? For sale by all dealers.
The Craft of Mr Rogers.
From the Winnipeg Free Press.
The sad blow administered to Mr.
Robert Rogers by the result of the
Saskatchewan elections is still being
discussed throughout the Dominion, to
judge by the frequency of the refer-
ences to it in the papers, Conservative
as welt as Liberal, In Toronto there
is an intereeileg debate in progress be-
tweenthe Conservative News and the
Liberal Star, the former having ad-
vanced the notable theory that the
result in Saskatchewan "was the worst
t
thing that c,t wend have happened to the
Federal Liberals." Whereupon The
Star replies that if that be true, it be-
comes necessary to account for Mr.
Rogers' active interference in the Sas-
katchewan elections. For the denoting
of the extreme of deepness and slyness
the name of the justly celebrated Joey
Bagstock will now have to give way,
according to the Toronto News' view,
to that of the Minister of the Interior.
Mr. Rogers' strategy in Saskatchewan,
as thus exelained, recalls John Phenix's
account of his castigation of a Califor-
nian editor: "We inserted our nose
firmly between hie teeth, and bald his
knees rigidly against our abdomen, as
we lay on our back upon the flour, etc."
In Dread of Croup.
Every mother dreads croup unless
she knows about Dr. Chase's Syrup of
Linseed and Turpentine. Given in fre-
quent small doses, at the first indication
of trouble, this treatment loosens the
cough and eirords relief and comfort.
Its use should be kept up until the child
is entirely recovered.
In France there is a tax on doors and
windows.
Light moves at the rate of 200,000
miles a second.
A woman who pretends to laugh at
love, is like a child who t,iugs at night
when he is afraid. —Jean Rousseau.
One of the common aihnents that
hard-workh,g people are afflicted with
is lame back. Apply Chamberlain's
Liniment t•=•ice a day and massage the
parts thoroughly at each application,
and you will get quick relief. For sale
by all druggists.
The invention of a Birmingham En-
gineer enablee a passenger in the fast -
eat train to talk with anyone on the
telephone system.
Lip to date,,1,139 checks for the Fen-
ian Raid grant of $100 have been sent
out by the Finance Department of the
Dominion Government.
Dr, de Valles Female Pills
A reliable hrench regulatt,r; never fails. These
pills are exceedingly powerial in regulating the
{
generative pertitm of the female system. Refuse
all cheap ituitations. Dr, do Van's are sold at
15a box, or three far *10. Mailed to any address.
!Cite Scobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont.
Geo. O'Neil, a brakeman in the Grand
'. Trunk yards Belleville, was fatally in-
jured by being caught between the
couplings of ears.
For making paper stencils an Ohio
man has invented a machine in which
an electric motor drives a tiny drill at
the end of a flexible tube.
"Were all medicines as meritorious
aa Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy the world would be
much better off and the percentage of
suffering greatly decreased," .writes
Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For
sale by ell dealers.
Though wages ranging from $1.90 to
$9.2.> are being offered for ordinary
construction labor, it is moat difficult to
procure men for railway' construction
work now in progress.
Mrs. Irvine is dead at Harriston, in
ben 77th year. Deceased was twice
Married, her first husband being the
Rev. Andrew J. McCuley, first minis-'
ter of the Presbyterian Church in the
township of Nassagaweya, and her Sec -
mid Iiev. Jolrn Irvine, formerly ofInfilie
Isle, (Sue., and of Nassagaweya, Ont.
DIE 11111 t]i1JAI TIMES AUGIT
lT
NEE 14' M 'SHG
TiE LIVER
so coop AS
rv'S LSURSNIVS
LA $,-l? Ilf .lrt !PILLS
They will regulate the flow of bile to
a t properly on the bowels, and gill tone,
renovate, and purify the liver, removing
every. result of liver trouble frctn the
. e eporary, but disaerecahle, bilious head -
„vies to the severest forms of liver corn-
,!et.
Ma:. John R. learten, Mill Cove, N.B.,
:-•:lees:•-••"I suffered, more than tongue
n tell, from liver troubles. I tried
.sal kinds of .medicine, but got no
ante; until 1 got Milburn's Laxa-Laver
i'...s. They are a wonderful remedy."
Mithurn's Laxa-Liver -Pills are 25
e . ats per vial, or 5 vials far $1.00, at all
t' ,tiers, or mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milt urn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
Unhappiness seldom abides with a
man who loves his home.
Iron nickel and copper compose a
new white, noncorrosive alloy that can
be rolled, drawn and cast, the invention
of a Philadelphian.
"I was curea of diarrhoea by one
dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy,” writes M. E.
Gebhardt, Oriole, Pa. There is nothing
better. For sale by all dealers.
A seven -pear -old daughter of Mrs.
Edward Martin, of Verdun, was burned
to death by a boy throwing a lighted
snatch on her dress, and the mother
died of shock.
Children � i
�i.
FOR FLETCHER'S
C A S T O R I A
A man-eating shark, 12 feet long and
weighing about
t
J
pounds,
was
caughtht
off the coast of Sandy Hook. It had to
be stabbed a score of times before it
succumbed. It is the first seen in those
waters for a number of years.
h.+
tea
,
tx,
t.
t^,
ax,
ax,
,
at
az•,
4>
tx,
ass
t�^a
hyf
' * mud and snow water. �x>
HORSE LORE.
The mare with the fall Belt
must have a good uiilk Making
ration. Oats, wheat bran, a lit-
tle linseed meal, with bright
sweet closer or alfalfa hay, is a
good milk making ration,
The Colts and entised horses
should spend most of each pleas-
ant day in the paddock.
Curry a warm blanket with x°
you every time you drive away
from the farii You may intend
to come right home without
Pitching, but you enn never fore-
see the delay that may compel
you to hitch your horse in the
open.
Horses thin in flesh or unbro-
ken are always poor seIIers,
Uninterrupted growth and de-
velopment are essential in the
colt.
The Idle Currycomb anti the
fat horse seldom live inthe
shine barn.
Tbrusb Is mostly due to dirty
stables, horses standing in far- 4
menttng manure or walking in
THE HEAD OF• THE HERD.
Care Should Be Taken Not to Develop
an Ugly Disposition.
It may seem strange, but neverthe-
less it is true, that all bulls after ar-
riving at the age of one year or more
are liable to become playful, and often-
times their playful pranks lend to more
serious intentions, such as attacking
people, and for this reason it is very
Important to protect attendants against
more serious trouble by having a cop-
per ria; placed in the bull's nose. as
by so doing it enables the attendant to
handle the animal with more safety.
It Is • xceedinglyy Important never
to pet a bull or punish him, as this
gives him an opportunity to either get
rough by being petted or resist pun-
ishment and thus develop an ugly dis-
position. It is Important to give a bull
plentyo e. esti
f x a
e, as be is less liable
to become ugly than if closely housed.
The proper method of ringing a bull
You will find relief in Zara-iluk Y
It eases the burning, stinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease. Perseverance, with Zam-
Ruk, means cure: Why not prove
this ? dli Druggists and Stores, -
600 box.
c'•
Nellie Massey, Brockville, aged 14,
rescued her infant brother from drown-
ing when the boy was going down ,for
the second time.
Mrs. Jas. Wifson, of West Monkton,
was thrown from her buggy and seri-
ously hurt when the horse was fright-
ened by a pig.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
A. T®1AA
To loosen windows that move hard
melt a tablespoonful of lard and pour
a little between the window frame and
easing and on the roller and rope.
It works well and is a good thing to
know in the spring time when frames
are swollen from being closed all wint-
er.
BECAME SO WEAK
FROM DIARRHftA
Had To Quit Work
Diarrhoea, especially if left to run any•
length of tune, causes great weakness,
so the only thing to prevent this is to
check it on its first appearance. You
will find that a few doses of Dr. Fowler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry will do'this
quickly and effectively. Mr. no. R.
Childerhouse, Orillia, Ont., writes:—,
"When in Port William, last summer, X
was taken sick with diarrhoea, and
became so Weak and suffered such great
pain, I had to quit work. Our manager
advised the to try Dr. Fowler's Extract
of Wild Strawberry, so on ley way home
I bought a bottle, and after~ taking foul'
doses 1 Was cured. We always keep a
bottle in the house, We have also used
it for our children, and find it an excellent
remedy for sutnlner complaint."
Price 85 Cents.
Whenu
yb go to get n
bottle of "Dr. Fowler's," insist on being
given what you ask for, as We know of
litany cases where unscrupulous dealete
have headed out some other preparation.
The genuine is Manufactured only by
The it. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Ont.
Sans Alol, the to , para bred Jersey
bull herewith shown, is a son of
Financial Countess, the first Jersey
cow in the world to produce in the
neighborhood or 1,000 pounds of but-
ter in a year. He is owned by E.
R. Shoemaker of Waterloo, Ia. His
dam is still a young cow and is con-
sidered one of the greatest dairy
cows of any breed the world has
produced.
s to place a rope around the neck or
horns and a half hitch or loop around
the nose, pull the head around to one
side in a stanchion and by the use of
a cattle trocar pierce the partition be-
tween the nostrils. Leave the canula
and withdraw the trocar: place one
end of the bull ring when unhinged
into the mouth of the canula and with-
draw same. This will permit the ring
to follow Inside of the ranula until it
is played in its proper position, at
which time both euds should be united
and fastened with the little screw
which holds the ends together.
The bull ring before being placed
In the bull's nose should be medicated
with a little carbolized vaseline or heal-
ing oil.—David Roberts, D. V. S., in
l•:imbaIl's Dairy Farmer.
Age For Breeding Ewes.
In putting together a Book of breed-
ing ewes there is at the present time
much danger of being tempted to in=
elude young ewes that catch the eye
because they appear strong and well
grown. They are seldom ilt to assume
maternal cares before they are tiny
eighteen months old. Il*en if they pro-
duce good, strong bribe they are sel-
dom able to find sufficient milk •fof
them, .or if they are able to fulfill all
these duties you will be likely to find
a spoiled ewe next season. There is
real economy, in giving them this dee
advantage of time, because they will
cost but Little and will more than re.
pay that little in clearing up weedn
and manuring the farm, and wheel ft
comes round to the time of matin
them they teilI be apt to present yo
with two sturdy Iambs.
A1faTfa and Corn.
The Kansas experiment station hail
proved that for every 100 pounds of
growth made by hogs ted grafin alone
178 pounds may be made 'when alfalfa
hay le fed In connection with it,. and
the grate that Wail Worth $1 fed alert°
proved to be worth $1.40 red with this
hay. The Nebraska station shove
that hoge fattened on corn alone made
the grain worth 77 cents per bushel,
but with alfalfa it Was worth $1. ,
gnsilag,a Pore Beef Making,
orienting of ensilage for beef pro.
duction, May t ndt
be possible that
the silo will prove to be the
one thing
that Vose leaking to make the change
frola ranch and range production to
Arta 'productiot Of beef at once easy
s1Dli profitable? All reports from those
who have tried it show the value of
eiseilage b beef making, and those
MI6 y have Once used this method corn
*leap 1119iib. tau.
t:
Canadian
National
Exhibition
SOME FEATURES OF
,imperial Year
Imperial Cadet Review
Cadets from ell 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 Scots Review
Everything in Educational Exhibits
SIege of Delhi
Besses 0' Th' Barn Band
• fritaln's Beat Brass Bind
Dragoons' Musical Ride
Industries in Operation
Butter Making Competitions
America's Greatest Live Stock 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
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
To keep meat fresh wash with weak
vinegar and water and spread over with
small pieces of raw onion. This will
keep meat fresh in the hottest weather
Before cooking remove the onion and
wash in cold water.
When making custards use the yolks
of the eggs only. The whites should be
saved. They add nothing to the flavor
of the custard, and will be found most
useful for clearing soups.
Dishes which have become brown and
burned from baking in the oven may be
cleaned after they have stood a while
in borax water.
When making a vegetable and meat
stew be sure to put a layer of vegetables
below the meat as well as above it. This
prevents the meat from boiling hard and
it gives it a much better flavor.
Never starch linen that is to be stolid
for a long time; itis apt to crack, and
if left for many years will rot. Rinse
the articles quite free from starch, dry,
and fold away, if possible in blue paper
The blue paper keeps them from turn-
ing yellow.
About half a teaspoonful of ordinary
moist sugar rubbed into the hands with
a soapy lather will leave them beautiful
and smooth.
•
To remove paint and varnish from the
hands, first rub into them a generous
supply of grease or lard, then wash thein
with soap and water.
Before scraping new potatoes always
soak them for half an hour in salt and
water. The effect afterwards is won-
derful, Not only do the skins come off
much more easily but the hands will not
be stained at all.
When the linoleum or floorcloth has
been washed and thoroughly dried, make
a little starch in a pint basin With boil-
ing water and rub lightly over with a
clean cloth. It will dry very brightly,
without any further rubbing or polish-
ing, and has the advantage of being
glossy without being slippery.
) REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
MRS, wasseowel SOOT8allo S'PVP has been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTHERS for their. CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS,
ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, anal
is the best remedy for »IARRHcA. It is ab.
solutely harmless, Be sure and asic for "MrS,
Winslow's Soothing Syrup,+' and tike no other
kind. Twe:ay-eve coast bottle,
WANTED
A live representative kr
WINGHAM
at'u surrounding District to sell
high-class stock for
THE FONTHILL NURSERIES
Mole fruit trees will be planted
it. the FanI of 1911 and Spring, of
1912 than ever before in the history
of Ontario,
rhe orchard of the inhere will be
tL s beet paying part of the farm.
We teach Mir Men Salesfnanship,
Free Culture and how big profits in
fruit growing can be ]made.
Pay weekly, permanent employ.
ll,,rrit, exclusive territory Write
fur partleulars,, nuc` `u�+ np
cl & WLLtING-Ter
Tottortm,
t31'EA:a73 "i"nhc
It's the Wise Man Who Knows When
to Jump the Track,
"You trumped my ace," said the
engineer accusingly when the game
was finished and the postmortems
were on.
"Well, what of it?" truculentlyde-
manded the oracle. "Didn't we win?"
but according to alt the rules
of whielt"-•-
"We didn't break any of tl.e rules
regulating what you can and can't do,
We broke only one regulating what
yin should do. There's a difference."
"Nevertheless,. aeeordiug to all the
rues of the best authorities"—
"lceording to the rules of the best
uthorities," the oracle declared, "we
didn't have the ghost of a show to
win that hand.. it was ray trumping
your ace that matte .is possible—our
winding. I broke the rules, if you
wish, but T played fair, and we wort,
"In life it's exactly the same as in
cards. Stick to the rules and you'll
stick in one place. It's the wise man
who knows when to break them. I
don't mean breaking the rules of fair-
ness and honesty, I means the rules
set up by the so-called authorities.
I'll bet you when Alexander conquer-
ed the world all the old wiseacres
shook their Beads and remarked that
he wasn't observing the time-honored
rules of warfare, We know what they
said about Napoleon when lie fought
in winter, and we also know how vex-
ed I3raddock's men were with the
red men who wouldn't stand up and
be shot in the open, but insisted oe
getting behind trees.
"When you stiek by the rules you're
like everybody else end you'll never
get you name in the papers, When
you know when to bust the rules you
begin to climb. Therle; never was a
successful writer or it:leenturer or sol-
dier or lawyer who didn't leave whole
wastes of broken rt:'ea behind him in
Itis progress. And when the conven-
tional old wiseacres got a new set
made to fit the new situation some-
i,t,dy else Came along anti spoiled
them all over again.
"Suppose you hare a job where you
don't need to think. Tradition has
made it a rule that a man in that
peace shouldn't think. By and by you
rise. If you'd stuck to that rule you'd
stiek in the nontliinking job. The
men who do the impossible, the men
whogiveus light and gas
1 ted and print-
ing g p n
ing presses - and trolley cars and
phonographs and such like things,
are all rule breakers. They broke the
rule of precedent, of tradition, of
doubt, of fear. They wouldn't be stop-
ped by what others had decided 'were
limitations. They went ahead, and
if the rules .didn't fit the thiry they
were seeking to accomplish the rules
went by the board."
A Good Storyteller,
Lord Coventry is a celebrated story-
teller, and recounts the episode of a
conversation which a friend had with
a Scotsman, who prided himself upon
Ilia ability as a weather prophet:
"We're gaun to have rain for
seven
ty-
tva days, sir,"ssithe prophet. "Oh;
no," replied the other. It only took
40 days to flood the world entirely."
"Aye, aye," answered the man, "but
the world was no' sae weel drained as
it is naw."
Another of his stories is: Revision
sessions were proceeding, when from
an adjoining cathedral the bells an -
'teemed the wedding of a prominent
trnionist. The barrister (after listen-
ing for a time) asked: "What is the
meaning of all this ringing?" and the
reply furnished was? "It is only in
honor of two Unionists embracing
Home Rule."
The Great ice Age.
It has been known during a long
time that in western Europa man
existed during the glacial epoch. We
now know that the great ice age
consisted of different glacial times
separated by interglacial times. In
glacial times the suow line dropped
3,000 feet or 4,000 feet below its pres-
ent level in the Alps, whereas in in-
terglacial periods it lay about 1,060
feet higher than at present. Thus
the temperature seems to have been
higher in the interglacial periods than
it ie now.
Burnt Almonds.
Burnt almonds are a confection of
purely French origin, owing their in-
ception to the gluttony of a- French
merchant. One day, tradition has it,
Marshal Duplessis-Pralin sent for Las -
segue, the inventor of many tooth-
some dainties, and bade him concoct
a new bonbon. Lassagne searched, re-
flected, combined, until he finally hit
upon the confection of burnt almonds
which were baptised with the name of
the old gourmet, the French for burnt
almonds.
Cause Enough.
"When I was shipwrecked in South
America," eaid Captain Bgwsprit. "1
eatne across a tribe of wild Women
who had no tongues."
"Mercy !" cried one of his listeners
of the fair sex. "How could they
talk?"
"They couldn't l" snapped the old
salt. 'That's what •matile 'ern wild,"
Borneo Brides.
In Borneo the bride and groom sit
on metal logs before the prrest who
gives thein cigars and betel while he
blesses them. He evaves above there
two foWls hound together. The beide-
groom then places the hotel i11 his
bride's Mouth and a cigar between
her lips. They are married.
Gilded Eggs,
In Persia it is the custom to make
present of eggs riohly gilded and
painted. The Persians give presents
of eggs on the first day of the new
year, "because the egg gg marks th8
beginning of things."
The Answer Was Easy.
01d Roxleigh—You must be less ex+
travagant, How do you expect to get
along when you are my age?
His Son—Well, father, I suppose by
that time I shah have your money to
get along with,
444,94,44444•4444•44.44,44.*** ': v :t'.i..- '?ti Oat.?S?+a*O*941d+000•d•+9'0+
4
•
•
o
SEPTEMBER 6th TO 14th, 1912 4
•; London's Great Exhibition I.
•
Liberal Prizes Instructive Exhibits 1
Speed Events each Day °p
•
o New Art Building' filled with Ma nificent Pain s
• g h g.8
So ATTRACTIONS C•
.
Programme Twice Daily. Live Stock Parade Daily
o
BESSES 0' THE BARN BAND•
of Cheltenhann, England. One of the greatest Brass Bands in 4,
the World, and several others. •
,p AERIAL,ACTS, COMEDY ACTS, `I'RAMBOLINE, and ACROBATIC s
o ACTS, SEABERT'S EQUESTRIENNE ACT. and others, 4,
0 The Midway better than ever. o
o4 each evening, s
•o
SINGLE FARE RATES over all railroads *'
e from Kingston to Detroit. +
A
4 Special Excursion. Days, Sept. 10th, 12th, 13th, 4
• Prize Lists and all information from `.
04 11 W. J. REID, President, A, M. HUNT, Secretary. ®y'
44141.44,41do3OA*446441a•1®44141,141** 0*1> •a<14004tP410p4.416.: 4.414,34 44.0011
Mr. W. S. Gunsa]us, a farmer living
near Fleming, Pa„ says be has used
Chamberlain's Cho]ie, 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„ �.
It's easy to get along with some people
if you can conceal your opinion of them,
"A machine for cleaning banknotes
has, after a long trial, been final] adopt-
ed in the United States, and is now in-
active use, By its means the bank-
notes are washed and re -rolled," says
Westminster. "Thus the Government.
avoids, continually replacing old notes
by nev ones. The innovation is said to
result in a net saving of half a million
dollars a year. The machine has a ca-
pacity of 26,000 banknotes per diem.
Subscribe For The
Times $1.00
a Year
PRINTING
AND
STATIONERY
We have put in our office
Stationery and can
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETEIIIES,
a complete stock of Staple
supply your wants in
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYING 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.
'he Times Office
SONE BLOCK
Wingharn, - Ont.