Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1912-11-14, Page 6t► 111.I 1,4 1, ES 1\ OYEMBI11 1'1, 1912 :.wmu..� ulWmiiL,»•-•m.u..cr,w�ouuuvu•ryn.w1•�vxu�w.�u�ww..« .. ALL GOOD DEALERS SELL 4 • Lry 4130-uxfult), Ns VES S li;. 9%.1,11 :lis• Wit„„ ilT+llilB i�d111t11dIIGnleuudw H i u uulul t'rrw°'s� gooc>cce' :,00SOix 70 ) THE HORSEMAN. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 y3Oxford Enthusiast The housewife who owns a Gurney-Oxford— who has daily experience with it—who knows the way it •,7;;rle,—the economy and efficiency of it— is tis a Gurney -Oxford Enthusiast. ya*.y-0.x.ford Range is the sum total of 70 ytiers=s-r;e: ience in stove construction. It is a handsome stove, that works con- staWutly and unfailingly for its owner's satisfaction. It au:ancls E-,ev.r2 over her interests, conserving her (131 time and energy, effecting a daily saving in coal, adding to the household economy and increasing the pleasure which comes from a smooth -running and well -ordered household. That's why she enthusiastically recommends the Gurney -Oxford whenever the question comes up. She wants her friends to learn, what she knows to be a fact, that a Gurney -Oxford Range is a good housewife's most valuable and cherished possession. v>, CE, VVINGHAM Pflumbing and Heating pEngineer Great Britain use's 4.000,0 He bat s of The Glasi'ow magistrates have ag- reed not to hermit cinematogroph ex- hibitions at Sunday meetings. . The boy's appetite is often the source of amazement. If you would have such an appetite take Chamberlain's Tab- lets. They not only create a healthy appetite, but strengthen the stomach Do not suffer and enable it to do its work naturally. another davwith For sale by all dealers. Itching Bleed- ing, et_ isrotrud• Do not throw away candle ends which In Piles. No surgical oper-are no longer fit for burning, but collect ation required. them all andput in a jar. Stand it on Dr. Chase's Ointment willelieive youhat once and as certainly cure the side of the stove till melted, then dealers, or Edmanson, Bate:; Si Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample hos ince if you mention this mix a little paraffin oil until it becomes papa* and endow 2c. stamp to pay postage. the thickness of cream. Applied to oil - Timber from forests belonging to the cloths, etc., it makes an excellent polish, raw cotton L ver;; year. British trades unions in 1911 increas- ed their membership by 804,976. Oil was r -ed for burning in lamps so far back as the twentieth century be- fore ('hrist. Prue ian Str:te bring in an annual re- being bright, but not dangerous and venue of Sa'0,U0","10. slippery for children. The French Government has offered a prize of .t1<,U for a device that will make aeroplanes safe. A INCLIIMENFUL ViSCOVERt I'o avoid germ catching corners a 1 There is more Catarrh in this section thediases new sanitary mouthpiece for telephonesut oft to ether,y thend until alln other last few is made flush with the transmitter case. years was supposed to be incurable. A single providence of India has 22,- ! For a great many years doctors pro - 000,000 inhabitants, for whom there are twenty-one foreign missionaries, or one missionary for 1,000,000 of popu- lation. s REST AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. - lle,n't waste your money buying • tre;,e thcni: r; I ,ast1 ps. Chamberlain'sAn eminent scientist, the other day, won - Liniment nt isi lictalier and better. Damp- en )am - gave his opinion that the most won - en apiece r.r flannel with it and bind it derful discovery of recent years was over he ai''rc;Cad parts and it will re- the discovery of Zam-Buk. Just lievr• the Y aitt and si,rca,ess. Fur wale think! As exon as a single thin layer by all dealer.% of Zam-Buk is applied to a wound or a sore, such injury is insured against A Minneapolis health officer declares ii blood poison! Not One species of the on: safe e to kiss a ':woman is l microbe has been found that Zam-Buk on her phot+ig •aph. I docs not kill! Then again. As soon as Zara-Buk Sesame to the value of $479,(00 was 1 is applied to a sore, or a cut, or to exported from Jaffe in 1911. This is, i skin kliseac'e, it stops the smarting. the grain that figures in the Arabian 1 That is why children are such friends • { of Zam-Buk. They care nothing for story of "Ali I;abaal.d forty Thieves." 6 the s'e:ience of the thing. All they know is that Zam-Buk stops their pain. Mothers should never forget this. A rf,aiI1. As soon as Zara-i:ult is ape Dr. de Vares Female Pills A reliable Frena re; :i1'.yt .r; n4ver liege 01113 aro exccet:,u i:v p:,. rfia is r, ;; Elating the generat'vo pert::m (.f the f ;[:'a:rt n':Glc-::�. ii; 4,ae I all neapf:.i"stetii+n9. Dr. deyan,c are E".i at pneti to a wound or to a disua,o d rri. a i.oi, Or ti;re^. t .• ^? .. "1q: ,":1 to u.^.V addretl.- part, tl.e Cells 'beneath the °-kin's tur- ns.* Barbell Drug Co,, St. Catbarines, Ont. facer bre so stimulated that rev liarr.;irlf, .t wan ta, eeforu 1iif,9 is a healthy Urine is quiekly formed. This fr,rrair,,7 of fro h healthy tissue from ,',ecu "ka. an r,Z a ;41.7;„ ,:e �,. ,L'L''3 ser ret of healing. €t r,ut of a L•.Z,i !,r. The t'i: y ie thus formed Is worked up Lestrye to the ,:"'face and literally casts oft • 1 I thr; din; b., r. ti.,cae above i.. r!ii. f1, a mon in •^ z,� " e c r ,, c cn ahoy Zsatz.-itukk (•arcs Etre permanent. 1)C Qug,ilC.r. ^ i •.•t' 1":.':,r",,:, tr1`lf a (l..'v (,tier day :',Ir- Marsh, of hiss. 2419.i.•lc,eit:aier Ave., Montreal, "alied a 7E5011 t661 %a'tl-i;nk Company and told theca] tbet for over twenty-five 5'e:trs r ' 1.0 had 'yes i a martyr to eczema. His FOR FLETCHER'S Taant. v 0 1 at one tine so eevt:red tom" 'T' with `-'t.^( that he liar] to sleep in glows. I'c, �',� n It was our r.,_ o ago f 'o- 1 a Living within a stone's throw of each intrr -,Ino d to 11 + i era i+1 a few tv other in .3t,Amu it I'a7va, a little village '1 ntr�ntlls it e•nrcll tlittl '1'e day-..t•.nr three ycara afta•r hie enrq of a di o a:io in Suffolk, are twenty-eight persona he had for ttventy-ttve years- he 10 whose aggregate ages total 2,131 yearn, ° f:till cured, and has had to tri ^e of On the high seas of the world there •t ny slurp of Go �ezt'nia!p� r are x..011 steamers aggregating atin e ton- ` Al. riruggli:t will sell dant-link i -t 10c. bg g g • box, orwo gelid free; trial bog if nage of 17,0+:0,000, sailing under the you send this advertisement and sa 1c. British flair, ' rtanlpr(to pay return por.tago). Add I draw .Lam -Bulk Co., larouta, Children Cry MRS. WINSLow'S SOOTIIING SYRUP 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, 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. A Hampshire Down ram lamb was sold for $1,175 at Britford Sheep Fair, Salisbury, Eng. This is said to be a record price. To enable a person to leave a sunken submarine, a New Jersey inventor has invented a buoy which can be entered within a boat and set free to float to the surface of the water. "It is a pleasure to tell you J;hat C'hamberlain's Cough Remedy is the best cough medicine I have ever used," writes Mrs. Hugh Campbell, of Lavon- ia, Ga. "I/have used it with all my children and the results have been high- ly satisfactory." For sale by all deal- ers. Substitute for the Potato. nounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with iocal treatment, pronounc- ed it incurable. Science has proven ca- tarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treat- ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufac- tured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts divectly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimon- ials. Address: F. J. CHENLY & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pill's for consti- pation. The ;Department of Agriculture at Washington has ready for distribution one:thousand bushels of seed-dashens, the sem-tropical tuber, which, it is ex- pected. will take the place of Irish po- tatoes in the southern States. The new potato substitute which has a hairy coat and has been grown with much suc- cess in Floriia, comes from Central and South America, and will grow in the moist warm regions of the south, which are fatal to the Irish potato. It canbe boiled or baked, or cooked in any other way a potato can be used. The taste is far more mealy than a potato. Some who have eaten the dashen say there is a suggestion of roasted chestnut about it and others that it tastes as though g a very slight addition of gravy has bet n made to the potato. Statistics have shown that a crop of 400 to 450 bushels an acre can be raised. The strength of glass is greatly in- creased by boiling in a salt water sol- ution and allowing to cool gradually. The world's annual rubber output is valued at $200,000. CURE Flick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl• dent.to a bilious state of the system, mach as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after eating, Pain in the Side dc. While their moat remarkable Success had bon shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carters Little Liver Pills are equally vaivable in Conetlpation, curing andpre• venting this annoying complaint while they also correct•atl disorders of the stomach, stintulatethe liver and regulate the bowclm. Evenif theyoniy Cared EA Ache they wonid b e atm ost pri cele s s to those who auger from thisdietreestng complaint; butfortu- natcly their goo dnc se does netend here,and those who once try them will flndtheso little pills vain• able in se many ways that they will not be villa ling tOdowfthontthem. But after all sick Lcad ACHE 15 thetas() of so many lives that hero is where we maim our great boast, Onrpine taxon while others do Sot. Csrte"e Little Liver ]'ills are very small and very easy to take, One ortwo pIliemakeadose. They are strictlvegetable and do not gripe or pnlnmrpe, but by their gentle action pima all Who oalis'x>z untura 004 rZW TOIL Y E. lsN. TkM, J1MiNN .,Wel 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 The collar is the harness. See to it that the collar fits. Collar boils are caused by 111 fitting collars. The levelness with which a horse walks is one of the best evidences that his legs work in harmony. The good flat knee, the muscu- lar arms, the full muscular shoulders, the good hock are all important points in the horse. Quality in form, disposition and general conformation must be coupled with the size and style to get the best in each class of horses. A. check rein is unnecessary cruelty. For the horse that oc- casions trouble by reaching down after grass or corn try a muzzle, but leave his head free. The quantity of food given the horse should be regulated by the size and breed of the animal and by the amount of work he is re- quired to do. A. man witirr an ungovernable temper should not be trusted j with a horse any more than a drunken chauffeur should be al - 4 lowed to drive an automobile. BREEDING FILLIES. Well Finished Drafters May Be Bred at Two Years of Age. The advisability of breeding fillies at two years of age is an economic ques- tion which is frequently considered and concerning which there is a great deal of difference of opinion, says the Pennsylvania Bulletin. It may hi said, in the first place, that all depend • on the filly. Horses of draft breedia• mature much t:arlier than the ho, blooded sort, so that a draft filly at two years of age is often as forward as oue of trotting breeding almost or fully a year older. Again, there is a great difference in individuals and the way they are grown out. Usually a smoothly turned, neat, well finished youngster makes its growth much sooner than an apparently rougher but growthy individual, although, as a rule, the latter attains eventually to a much greater scale. Furthermore, the same individual may be grown out in much less time in the bands of the feeder who keeps continually "doing" than when required to make all her growth on pasture with a material set- back due to improper feeding each winter season. It does not seem feasible to include in this discussion any but the well ma- tured draft filly, she being the only one which should under any circum- stances be bred as a•two-year-old. It is not reasonable to suppose that from the point of view of the filly herself The draft horse that is second to the Percheron in France in econom- lo importance is the Boulonnais, writes John Ashton in Breeder's Gazette. This breed, while never attaining the massive proportions of the Shire, is an excellent exam- ple of the larger medium sized draft horse. His conformation is neat and attractive. The build is com- pact, body rather short, the girth Is deep and the chest wide, with a deep ribbed, rather cylindrical body. It has been said that the bone of a Boulonnais is not heavy enough be- low the knee, but it must bo borno In mind that the legs are devoid of feather and that in the Boulonnais the skin is drawn very tight over the bone. That the bone 1s general- ly dense and strong nobody will deny. The illustration shows a fine specimen of the Boulonnais. 44O444.490ri'904403.40.90Ct0t-'0.•> *0 00 94,0.'40.9 04^.040440 GOO* 0 ♦ 0 � -0 $3.00 4 0 o ♦ • WILL RENT A •4 4 4 MONARCHI j LIGwT TOUCH i •4 4 ♦ 4 • 4p. _1 • ,' mommenamoratmgoma ♦ o $15.00 • d 4 O 0 4 WILL RENT A 0 0, oP• TOUCH MONARCH04..,!:UtiHE ♦ 0 • • FOR ONE MONTH ♦ 0 O 4 4 •4 • 4 • 4 0 4 4 4 • 0 e 4 0 4 0 4 4o 0 • 4 4 a O 9 4 a 0 4 a 4 4> early breeding is beneficial, but as a business proposition it has been dem- onstrated that whatever slight injuri- ous effect the filly may suffer is not sufficient to offset the advantage of having her make some returns as a three-year-old to the man who has his money invested and is paying for her keep. It is more satisfactory to have a two-year-old filly pay her 'way by raising a foal than by going to work in the field, as she Is very much more WI to suffer permanent injury from this than from being bred. Even though a great many two -year-olds are capable of doing a considerable amount of se- lected work they cannot take tib full part of the horse's :work without dan- ger of its becoming detrimental to their worth. e The best means of solving tl}ieprob- lem is to accept the findings hi the other great horse producing counirries where it has been thoroughly Worked out. In Scotland, for instance, the practice Is to breed the Clyde fillies the spring they are two years old, but allot them no work whatever that Beason. 'Then, hen, after weaning their t9Qa�ls, they are taken up as three -year - 01d had put to work, but are not bred again until they are four. This seems to bd a very practical system and worthY our bi adoption. L Aump klna For Hoge. . . Roots Of various kinds with apples and meal make an economical food for Wine. Bumpkins may be added, or pumpkins, apples and meal may be Used. Provided no roots are at land, boiled. pumpkins and meal mnkn ari excellent combination for Woe. FOR SIX MONTHS Sold Sold Easy Payment Plan 'Illustrated Literature mailed• cam^ zotr.osarta y. fir' er. - 4 •xi a .s+� :s „vrma� a 4, o- 4� 4• 4•. a- - 4- 4 - lupon Request Monarch Department Remington Typewriter Coiipany !LIMITED 18-20 hVictoria Spuare, Montreal, Que. 0 4. a a 0 4 ♦ • 0 • •4 ♦ 4 ♦ ♦ 4 4 O O ♦ 0* 090*440000004400O0094300 4>1,0'40' 00044>0404>N90004000404♦ Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA 0 A great number of cases of injury to the eye caused by persons watching the eclipse without proper protection were reported in Berlin recently. PRINTING AND STATIONERY We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple Stationery and can supply your wants in WRITING PADS ENVELOPES • LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PAPER PAPETEItIES, 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 receiveprompt 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. ramarmimiesaimerammewmale moNoilmmionmist Subscriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Winghain,