HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-09-19, Page 3e
THE V INGRRA M. TIMES, SEPTEMBER 12, 1912
ENJOYING THF
BEST OF HEALTH
"Fruit -a -tires" Cured. Has Rheumatism
PROP. 0. F. DAVIS
• 563 Gummi CU Sr., TORONTO.
Iwant to say to the people of Toronto
and elsewhere that "Fruit-a-tiyes" is my
only medicine and has been for the last
four years. Previous to that, I had
been very much troubled with
Rheumatism and Kidney Disease, and
bad taken many remedies as' well as
employing hot applications of salt bags
etc., without getting satisfactory results.
Noticing the advertisement of "Fruit-
a-tives", I adopted this treatment alto-
gether and, as everybody knows, since
taking "Fruit-a-tives", I have been
enjoying the very best health and find
it a pleasure to follow my vocation of
Dancing and Deportment Instruction".
PRoI. J. P. DAVIS.
Prof. Davis, the celebrated teacher of
dancing and deportment in Toronto, is
quite frank in stating that "Priit-a-
tives" alone cured him of distressing
Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble.
5oe. a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, 250.
At all dealers or sent on receipt of price
by Fruit-a-tivea Limited, Ottawa.
One day last week Mr. John McInt-
osh of Hullett • delivered in Clinton
eight hogs which are considered to be
about the best bunch of porkers deliv-
ered in that town. Their combined
weight was 1,970 pounds and they net-
ted their owner the snug sum of $162.-
62.
Electric Restorer for Men
restores every nerve in the body
Phosphonol
to its proper tension ; restores
vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual
weakness averted at once. rhosphonol will
make you a new man. Price 83 a box. or two for
j5. Mailed to any address. The Soobell Drug
Co., St. Catharines. Ont.
TI* DEPARTED (WHERE?)
13y Eric Ross Goulding.
Where are they whom we loved and
knew?
Those gracious tender hearts and true
Forever passed from human view -
Where dwell they now, oh say,
0, tell this wond'rer passing on his
way
To his own final resting day?
"Come, I will tell thee where they
be,"
Said one whose form was joy to see,
"They dwell in. God's immensity,
Freed souls, alive in light,
Rewarded, having fought their fight
In this life's dismal night,
"There is no Death!
Life, life forever is my lay,
All, all is one eternal day,
And human breath
Comes from and passes to the wind -
Eternal life, eternal mind -
There is no Death!"
Where are they whom' we loved and
knew?
Where? In the vast unending blue
Where all shall be, not just a few?
I know not! That they are -
I feel in some fair world afar
Trav'ling on from star to star!
Then spalce the vision once again -
"Weep not, thy hollow sighs restrain!
Tho' life and death are pain on pain,
Hereafter much shall thine eyes see,
When earthly shackles cast,
Some time thou'rt free ,
To roam the spaces vast
Of God's eternity!"
Fred Staples, G. T. R. yard helper at
Belleville, was crushed to death be-
tween cars.
St. Jeseph's College, a new Roman
Catholic institution, was opened at
North Cobalt.
A man may fool his wife with regard
to his brain tfi:ciency, but he cant fool
anybody else.
Tom McNeall tells of a Kansas man
who stutters badly. He visited Chicago
and got into the elevator of one of the
sky -scrapers. He worked his jaw fran-
tically, but could not get the elevator
boy to understand what floor he wanted
until he had been carried up fourteen
stories above where he wanted to go.
Then he came down to the lower floor
and started up again. After he had
gone through this performance several
times he stepped out in disgust and
hunted up the gent who was directing
the running of the elevator. "S -s -say,"
he stammered, "w -w -w -w -w -would
y -you m -mind speaking t -to th-th-that
f -f -fel feller in th-that cage I w -a -wa-
wa -want t -to s -t -t -stop at the s -s -six -
sixth f -floor, b -b -but b before I can
s -s -say s -s -sixth h -he had me up t -to
t -the t -t -twenty -s -seventh." - Kansas
City Star.
FALL
SKINSORES
When troubled with fall
rashes, eczema oz' any skin
disease apply Lam-Buk l
Surprising how quickly it eases
the smarting and stinging) Also
cures cuts. burns, sores and piles.
Zam•Bu$ h made from pure her.
bat essences. No animal fats -no
mineral poisons. Finest healer 1
9 Druggists and Mora lDe.rywhors, at
KITCHENETTES.
If you do much cake making save
time and your fingers by buying nut-
meg, cinnamon, etc., ground ar.d in tin
canisters through the perforated tops
of which sufficient may be shaken as
needed.
Use a cheap wire hair brush to clean
the broom of the carpet sweeper.
Nothing else removes so quickly the
tangles of hair, lint and dust. Clean
the sweeper at least once a week if
you expect it to give good service.
Now is the time to start a wood fire
in the fnrnace to test whether it is in
perfect working order, so that repairs
may be made before really cold weath-
er sets in, when it would be a hardship
to go even a few hours without heat.
Silver forks that have been used for
fish are apt to retain a fishy taste, es-
pecially if they have been used in eat-
ing kippered herrings or soused mack-
erels. This fishy taste can be removed
readily by washing the forks in cold
water before washing, then in the dish-
pan with the other dishes in hot soapy
water. Cold water, used first, will
completely take away the objectionable
taste.
A Wonder Worker.
"It heals like magic," is a favourite
expression when Dr. C'hase's Ointment
is used. It works quickly and stops all
itching at once, often heals in a single
night. For eczema, salt rheum, bar-
bers' itch, skin irritations or eruptions,
it is amost satisfactory treatment. Be-
ing antiseptic, it prevents blood pois-
oning.
The redistribution bill may be delay-
ed for a year owing to press of Govern-
ment business.
"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 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 attractiye
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
-tea
in place of slow, laboriou eityp�, illegible handwriting. 't at •r.e-em
The great business inter-
ests are a unitinusifigtype-
writers.
It is just as important to
the general public to substi-
tute typewriting for long
LJVEi
TYp
e
ndisdensab e assistant.
Barristers, Cler gymen,
Physicians, Journalists, Ar-
chitects, Engineers and Pub-
lic Accountants have learned
to depend on the typewriter.
ISYou can master The Oliver
P.WIr i % ar typewriter in a few min -
hand." For every private citizen's personal utes' practice. It will pay big daily dividends
affairs are his business. of satisfaction on the small investment of, 17
Our popular "Penny Plan" speeds the day
Universal Typewriting.
A Mechanical Marvel
of Cents a Day.
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
imesaving Conveniences found only on The Oliver
A Stepping -Stone to Suc•
cess
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!
Everypurchaser of The Oliver Typewriter for 17 cents
mode an Honorer
y Member of the National Association
Savors. A small first payment
brings the magnificent new
Oliver Typewriter, the regular
$125 machine.
Then save 17 Cents a Day and
e -
pa
ter Catamonthllog and full de. The Oliver tails
of "17 Cents a Day" Purchase
Plan sent oh request, by Cou-
pon or letter.
Address Sales Department
The Oliver typewriter Co.
Oliver Typewriting Bidg.
CHICAGO.
a Day is
o£ Penny
COUPON
THE OLIVER TYPEWEfTB 2Co
OIh'er TypeWriting Bldg,,
Gentlemen: Please send your
Art Catalog and details of "17 -
Cents -a -Day" offer on the Oliver
ypewriter.
Name
Address„,.,,.
GEMS OF THOUGHT.
Daily prayers are the best remedy
for daily cares -Anon.
Boys flying kites haul in their white -
winged birds,
Butyou n
can't t do this when you're
flying words.
Thoughts unexpressed may some
times drop back dead,
But God Himself can't kill them when
they're said -Carleton.
Now we that are strong ought to
bear the infirmities of the weak, and
not to please ourselves. --Bible.
0 well for him whose will is strong:
He suffers, but he will not suffer long:
He suffers, but he cannot suffer
wrong. -Tennyson.,
. Sir Hugh Montague Allen has retir-
ed from tae Directorate of the Allen
Steamship Line.
John Bateman was pronounced by a
Coroners:jury at Cedar Dale guilty of
the murder of his wife.
Geo Goodnow suffered frightful, and
possibly fatal, burns In'endeavoring to
prevent the explosion of a gasoline tank
at Belleville.
The things that belong to men must
be understood in order to be loved; the
things that belong to Gocl must be loved
in order to be understood, -Pascal.
If a man realizes his wasted golden
hours of opportunity, let him not waste
other hours in useless regret, but seek
to forget his folly and to keep before
him the lesson of it.
Preserving an old landmark is being
done at at Zurich by placing a metal
roof on a frame building that has a
history. It was built over a half cent-
ury ago, and as the first hotel in the
district. It is now occupied as a priv-
ate dwelling.
Mr. Frank Metcalfe, of Blyth, whois
stationed at Medicine Hat, Alberta,
as Fruit Inspector under the Dominion
Department of Agriculture, writes
from there as follows: "Most of the
fruit consumed here is brought from
British Columbia and it is ;very fine.
On interviewing a number of fruit men
I find very little Ontario fruit handled
here, there being three principal rea-
sons given, first the distance, second
the style of packages put up in Ontario,
and third dishonest packing. To my
friends who ship .their apples to the
West I cannot too strongly urge that
their reputation has been shamefully
injured by sending in the past so many
of our apples that should never have
been sent. If you value the great
market of this west country send none
but the best and if possible pack them
in boxes."
A PUZZLE !N 'METALS.
Brass Has an Odor Yet Copper and
Zinc Separately Have Not.
Brass, as every. one knows, nos ori
awful odor, yet the two things of
which brass consists. zinc and copper.
give no odor whatever in their *'lm
rate states. This is a problem that has
given a great deal of work to scien-
tists. It is one as yet not entirety
solved.
To arrive at the general law It tial
been found that itin:o:t all :cloys, or
mixtures of two meta is, will give an
odor, while the metals tI n 'lues do
uot. Brass is not the single example,
though probabir the most odoriferous.
The explanation is as follows: All
substances, Including metals. are al-
ways giving off small particles 01 their
substance to the air -that is, evaporat-
ing Some solids give these off so rap-
idly as soon to disappear. Guin cam-
phor 1s a conspicuous example. 'Po
smell any substance a particle of that
substance has to tickle a nerve ending
In the nose. If a small particle of cop-
per, we shall say,.does this by itself,
no effect is noticed, but if a particle
of zinc and a particle of copper strike
at the same time the effect is such as
to cause a perceptible impulse to the
nerve. The chance for these two to
strike at the same time is given only
when they are intimately mixed in an
alloy. -New York Tribune.
FAMOUS EPIDEMICS.
In Europe In 1348 the Black Death
Claimed 25,000,000 Victims.
In the twelfth century not less than
fifteen epidemics of disease and many
(&mines carried off the people of Eng.
tand. The thirteenth century saw
wenty plagues and nineteen famines,
while the fourteenth had a black rec'
ord of disease. in 1343 the "black
plague" or "black death," which was
brought into the country from the eat
caused the death of 100,000 persona in
London alo a while 1n Europe Alto.
gather 26,000, people fell victim(( to
rave eh.
I'll the "sweating a1eknep " Aj .
Peered in England, causing great de.
ttruction of human, life. It reappear
ed at parlous intervals for a centum
thereafter. The last terrible viNltatiQI
of tile plague in England avail 11
1654-* by which 100,000 live nest
loch lit London alone.
This epidemics was followe$ by
great fire of 1666, which deetro' 0r
000 hotites, including all i •
Mehl
densely populated portions o • city.
The rebuilding of London 341t)i Nome
regard to sanitary laws appear4 to
have put the first cheek oil the apt,
demic diseases that had prs71oupy
devastated the population. - •tondon
Standard.
TANKAGE FOR HOGS
IN THE FEED LOT.
The hog that is put In the feed lot to
utilize the grain in the droppings from
cattle is often virtually confined to an
exclusive corn ration, for this grain b
practically the only material that is
available in the steers' droppings for
his use. in forty-five replies to letters
of inquiry, thirty -flue Ohio cattle feed.
ers stated that they fed nothing to the
hogs that followed cattle in addition
to the grain in the droppings, or else
fed only corn in addition. Ten others
fed a supplemental feed of some kind.
In a test to determine whether or
not hogs in cattle feed lots would yield
a greater profit if given a supplemen.
The Chester White hog, long the
favorite breed throughout a large
part of this country, still holds its
own against other varieties. It has
been known as a distinct breed for
almost a century. The history of
the breed is somewhat clouded, al-
though it 1s said to have had its
origin when some white boars were
imported from Bedfordshire, Eng-
land, to cross with the better class
of sows then raised in Chester
county, Pa., whence its name. The
Chester White sow hero illustrated
is reproduced from the Country
Gentleman.
tal feed a greatly increased gain re-
sulted from the use of tankage at the
rate of one-third of a pound and of
two-thirds of a pound daily. The lar-
ger amount of tankage produced the
heaviest gains. In these tests the
tankage was fed with water in the
form of a thin slop, The pigs devel-
oped a very great liking for this slop,
and it was noted that the pigs which
received tankage cared less for a salt
and ashes mixture that was kept be-
fore all of the lots.
While it was not possible to secure
exact records of the amount of corn
consumed by tbe various lots, yet all
lots had access to as much corn as they
would consume, a small amount of
corn being left in the droppings by •
some of the lots. However, the rate
of gain indicates that the use of tank-
age was very profitable.
Feeds such as skimmilk, meat meal,
linseed oil meal, soy beans or other
similar feeds could be used in the place
of tankage if market conditions would
indicate that their use would be more
profitable. It seems certain that great
losses result annually from the cattle
hog not being given a chance to do
his best, and cattle feeders can well
afford to give close attention to his
phase of their feeding operations. Pro-
fessor B. B. Carmichael Before Indi-
ana Live Stock Breeders.
Corn and Cob Meal.
It has been found by numerous care-
fully conducted experiments that corn
and cobs ground together are of great-
er value for feeding cows or cattle
than the corn alone ground and fed
separately. This is true particularly
when the heavy feed of grain concen-
trates is being fed. The mixture of
the cob throughout tbe ground grain
allows the juice of the digestive tract
to more fully act upon the grain, and
the digestion and assimilation are
more complete in consequence.
In the case of hogs the cob ground
with the corn is of no advantage and
in most cases has been found to be a
detriment. The bog, not being a ru-
minant, does not give the cobs the
thorough mastication that is the case
with cattle, and the bard particles of
cob act as an irritant -in the cligesstive
tract. -Farm and Fireside.
The Pure Bred Calf.
The breeder of pure bred cattle has
the advantage over the breeder of
grades, owing to the fact that he has
an opportunity of marketing two prof-
itable crops from his cows -calves and
milk -the largest profit lying in the
raising of pore bred calves, as the
milk of grades will bring as much on
the market as the milk of pure breds.
The cost of raising a pure bred calf
is no greater than the cost of raising
a grade.
There Is no particular market for the
grade calf, excepting for veal, unless
it be a nicely marked animal resem-
bling a pure bred. In this event a
nominal price may be asked for it,
While tho pure bred calf demands, if
it be a good individual, a price which
Will warrant its care and feed and
then a handsome profit to the owner
when sold.
Sows Need Good Care.
Many of the difficulties experienced
in handling the spring litters may be
Wielded if the brood sows are properly
fed and cared for in the winter.
KEEP A FEW SHEEP.
Dom', sacrifice the whole flock
because of present depression in
the industry. Keep a few geed
sheep all the A few can
bo kept i}t'httie cost, They aro
needed A8 dLavefgota oil almost
every fart(}. thy Card be win-
tered largely on saw and corn-
stalks as roughness.
*
4 41P114441444�414/1411111 $494L01144A11111490i441a1#*
• AN OPPORTUNITY
4
For a Live Man in Wingham.
4
to make some clean, 1 onest money, givirg irfnrrrFiion to:
those who have requested it, regarding an original West-*
ern townsite----not a subdivision. This is a gentlt man's
proposition, and we want only men of gcod star ding who*
will not misrepresent. Address
Western Canada Real Estate Co.
502 TEMPLE BUILDING TORONTO
4
rt
6340191®CV9400100496V1C"oeSe•'r9b•Ari71.00.. ✓994'+3•ty's"•'
Get Rid of the Rubbish.
In every department of the home, and
in every home, the inclination is to
hoard up, to hang onto useless, out -of
date, worn-out articles that promise
even in the remote future, to in any
way supply a demand. Every room in
the house is filled with "clutter," and
this is especially true of the garret,
stor e room, or basement corners, trunks
or closets. Unless a very present use
is plainly to be seen for the disabled ar-
ticle it is best to discard it. Old clothes
that can by no possibility of the pres-
ent hour be turned to account, old rugs
worn-out carpeting, bed -clothing or
furniture, broken dishes, leaky or rusty
cookery dishes, out-of-date contrivanc-
es that we have grown tired of, should
all be gotten rid of, and if not worth
giving away to someone less fortunate
should be burned.
Seventy Years in Bed.
[London Daily News and Leader.]
After spending 69 years of her life
in bed, Mary Doe, a Grimsby woman,
has just died at the age of 79. Since
sustaining a spinal injury as a girl, she
had not been out of doors, and such
accented features of every -day life as
railway trains, steamboats, and motor
cars were to her only names. She
whiled away the hours by training can-
aries, of which she had a fine collection.
The birds flew about her bed, and at
her call would perch upon her fingers
or eat tit -bits from her hands.
Farmers down in Texas are doing
their plowing by moonlight, in order to
protect their horses from the flies. It
takes all manner of peculiarities to
make a State like Texas.
4.4.++44141 174 .143•+•i•3••F4.4•• *+++:f :: +3.++++++44
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Stone Block •
WINGHAM ONTARIO