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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-01-23, Page 6(, .1 NUARI 23" 1913 farm Diiiryliijj „t atattlattataitz-tlz Oxford Wrangler, jersey Bull, Owned by Lord Rothschild XV.—Farm Cheesemak- ing. By LAURA ROSE, Demonstrator and Lecturer In Dairying at the Ontario Agricultural Col- lege, Guelph, Canada. [Copyright, 1311° by A. C. McClurg et Con MOST country people are );nom list) enough to tike home grownhomemade and fo od products. This is mutely why the tanking ot email farm <nut aes ap- peals to them. if made at the time of the year when Ini:k is cheapest one can prodtwe an extra nice quality of cheese at a vete tieiINanilble cost. Cheese does wit hold its proper place In our dietary. it should be more largely used on our tables and should often take the place ot meat at a meal. The proves:: of manufacturing cheese on the -farm should be as simple as possible, and the time from starting until the cheese is put to press should be between four and five hours. The milk must be sweet and pure, and es- pecially of good flavor. If the fresh morning's milk be mixed with the previous day's milk properly cared for, it is usually in about the right con- dition for making cheese in regard to the acidity. in faetory work much stress is laid on !raving the at,.k at a proper ripe- ness before setting it. and either the aeldimeter or the rennet test is used to determine the amount of acid pres- ent in tate milk. With the achlimeter it should show from .1S to .19 per cent cf acid; bY the rennet test, 20 to 24 seennd. , when In coudition for set - Ong. .1, large tin or churn or new tub—in fact, any clean vessel which will bold milk and not injure it—will answer as a chee•.e vat. Heat the milk to SC degrees F. by setting it on the stove and stirring or by placing a clean can of hot water in it. Be prepared to go on with the work or the milk kept at this temper- ature may dcarelor) too much acid. If the cheese is to be colored use a small teaspoonful of cheese color to 100 p'. ands of milk (ten gallons). Add the color to a pint of the milk and stir well into the milk in the vat. For every twenty•dve pounds of milk use one teaspoonful of rennet Try to get the rennet at a cheese factory. .1un...t or reneet tablet:, such as drug- gists rumsgists stir, are often not satisfactory. Dilute the rennet in a pint of cold water and pour it in a stream up and down the milk, stirring well all the time and continue stirring two or three minutes. Cover the vat to keep the milk wenn. Try the milk occasionally to see when it has sufficiently coagulated by insert- ing the index auger into the curd and with the thumb making a dent or slight tut in the curd just at the base of the finger, then slowly moving the linger eforwt't?i. if-ti;e Curd erealze clean like a firma but tender custard it is ready to cut. The time from setting or adding the rennet to cutting is usually about twenty minute:). The older or riper the intik the mere quickly the rennet will act upon it. Overripe milk will give a dry, ad-eine:its cheese. Cutt:tee the Curd. If you expect to make much cheese I would advise getting a set of curd ltnires. rse the horizontal knife first, Cutting slowly lengthwise of the vat. Then with the pereendionlar knife cut cro...wi .e slid afterward leagtbwise of the vat. This mitt:es the curd Into (.rime; from a geacrtcr In -•h to a half its: h square. needed/ling to the knife ):.sed. For factory v:rrl; the quarter !testi wire knife :s blah;. reeon.n:end- el. While more tedious, a !on;, bladed carving knife or a thin bladed sword answers the purpose. First cut length- en .,) into- strips one third inch wide, t'. a er,wsvvhe tee :.ante, then horizon- tally as well as you etta. Begin stir- ring gently. and continue tiie cutting if the a rv"ing 1t'J'r"' is used till the Oiled Is of t!liftemit size. I" 'Mule the stirring Ls goitre on heat nn a he !nen ly applied. The vat may he set In a v'e1 •),lin! "eietil water, 'e -sr ii cleat! Anil r.a.:'1 v lib eat 'eater ):hay be put into t!_'+ sat. lfter the !.t't• Inde !sept m:•Ieth. iref•t;' rani! fro•,! I!.0 raid a paitfni rich• La 'L;:l,cd out tl.leen, r"l 1 o lilt) Ir, i to •Ites. Iso d tint ter )• ti".3 t•11rd '.i the v. att. The ttai'n )titre ,s retnree:l t" the t, a iii in n little a th'1e more whey way Ise new. al Aut -,mal heatt'.1, il,:'f se Weir teemed i.e' t:al.00 to eat the Corti heated •liseicee. it netted too wetel.ly ,,,.r.!.e m! . a netm'xpel enough ewes. i.••.. -eel:+''te•'a nndfnri cheese is the f.,..'.'t it te a tent faun to get the '.••' Witt. .lite(' it Is brought to gw at •, a 't Cot neet•seary to Atir a,, a• •v. • e • 0 tenet he hsgnefitle ••r.•d tea $°••'ired IIre rnrd teem anat- .•a.t 't.e tem••a eentnrr' nln-mt I"e .. ,... • 0it to keep tile vat yet ra. °°"eel 'p matotely 'a^'air to dip In 'rattier to this.' :ted . • , ... u r.., mm' t i... t"!^,.' t t'.' ro,"."'t .i uuaa.•J to tint hili!). 'the right con• tlitlon tor 'the curl to''be to at )AAA titage may be ascertained by feeling the curd. If It Is rather firm, haut a Shiny appearance and falls apart when pressed in the band, It is ready to have the whey drawn. By the aeldimeter it should show from .18 to .10 per cent of acid, or when a little of the curd is squeezed well In the hand and press. ed against a hot iroo to stove poker ausvrnrs the purpose) and gently with- drawn if it leaves hairlike threads it quarter of an Mob long on the iron it is a sign the whey should be removed. If the vat is without a tap dip the eurd and whey into a strainer dipper or colander and put the curd in a large cheesecloth on a level butter worker. If you have not a butter worker devise a wooden rack for the bottom of a large tin and spread the ,'loth over it. The curd must be well stirred for ten or fifteen minutes to allow the whey to escape. The curd may now be salted at the rite of one ounce to every twenty•lve pounds of milk. Sprinkle the salt over the curd. stir well and allow It t:l stand ten or fifteen minutes. The Cheese Hoop. One cannot get along without a cheese hoop. It may be made of wood or heavy tin. but must be round straight, strong and the ends clean cut without any rim. A nice size is 0 Invites in diameter by 12 inches high. Phis will press a cheese weighing from six to ten pounds. The circle or follower of wood placed in the droop en top of the curd must fit well or the a•l,eese will have shoulders. .t bandager may be made of ordi- •s,try tin and should fit closely inside 'he hoop and be four inches higher Ulan the hoop. but 'must have no wire ran around it. Cut a piece of cheesecloth the length of the bandager and the width around it. Sew up the sides and run a thread around one end and slip it on the out- side of the bandager. Place the hoop on a board in a tin rein, put a square of cotton wet in the hot water on top of the hoop, then place on the prepared bandager and .hove it to the bottom. Put in the salted curd, press down well with the hand, pull up the bandager and the cheese is inside the cheesecloth in the hoop; any on a square or wet cotton and put on the follower. Many contrivances may be used to supply the pressure. A cider press an- swers. I use the old fashioned fulcrum and lever press, as with it the pressure is continuous This press is easily eon - i CHEESE AND CURD ItNIvm, A—Card from milk cooled, but not aerat- ed; II -curd from milk aerated and cool- ed. The numerous round holes which are shown in B are the result of the growth of gas forming bacteria in the milk. The formation of gas• holes in tine curd is usually accompanied by very obiec- ftintt;?t.le tlavors.l 5erui.•ted. Get it strong ' board or a 0 'erne of scantling eight or ten feet rug. Place it under a ledge, put the cheese on the boor or on a bench near the ledge and put a entail block or r":trd on the center of the cheese for the scantling to rest on. Place a heavy weight—about fifty pounds --on the end it the scantling. It is well nut to put II the weight "n et once. Dressing the.Cheese. • The next mot•niamg tate cheese should I be taken from the hoop, dampened I v-Pli la:+t water on the outsid;. I'.) a.n,.l.sge pulled tip awl trimmed co en I t.' allow it to extrl.cl half an inch ever tee ea'is. curt e e!rc!e of stiffened :I:ee. • eth lite si••e of the top, place •al'ufuily on time oitr.'se, ertver with a ,'.Eric ' f wet c•tti lithe) ton, place the l) I en tap alltii ;one the cheese into it. I Fiuielt off the other owl iii the sat.:'e jjj v.ay. 1'::t eau in to press till the nett t'nyI Teize fraud the Imola null lila...! in • caul cellar, turuina it upside ieio n t.y. "tee net' a tt ontl' rite algal t',•.r i iia r.:t .a'' It It ina•eh-. '1' ai L. .•• i n1.1 b...! a" ti.''sul•...t?C et-'. .'.1 ,. . r . , "::::',I:(141 t L.,,f • • Pee „.• , I e. t t, t eii if two n it 1 ' Ci• i t r ' r et.'' t, lett it . m ie i'`!les • , sic 1`.r ' -. If tete ten% ••'.eat Mitt ..amSal ;ItI i:e '•a!- ry t'ai'l• It lutea, in t' a i'• ' . 1 e 1 t• ••:1,•". ,.. it•tier• t 1erecere'1 r t. •.• l era . I., n t.; , 'Itiii:d..ttt , -.. el; ' Wit n.nre <y"e', enol tenter 9l trete e•. i ensile q r,••t f ' • '• i" tee,, ase •• )'t ''A E t •IR,•iYl :an•I i t '." rileIi 5'. . i 1 .,,,,,,.::::,1:.,:.4.1!:i.,..........• ••,peer ....... . .. .. . ... .. .: Total . , ....... a 0. 1 in lalrn!te:tri .s lam•e.•,,.,, tient. ..••e Ininny vert'tie- a.a ,.p '•K'.1 .... .•... 1'I'IteSP eher".eS at,' u:t•reiI. • • 1.t'. a r 1 this entailment. t'.,nn• et It e ,.. a ., i. ;are easily matte it home o r.t a....., a , pleasant eitatnge. Apply Zam-Bu;+ to all wounds and sores and you will be surprised how quickly it stops the smarting ar.d brings ease. It covers the wound with a layer of pro- tective halm, kills all poison germs already in the wound, and Pen et prevents e is oth s arming.rich ch � healing herbal es:enccs then bu Id up from the bottom, fresh tfasue; end is a wonderful'y short time the wound fs healed! Zam Buk's popularity is based cn merit. Imitations net tr walk cures. Pe sure end get the real thing. •Zam-!rut" is i tit lui .• on everypacketgenuine. , of the •eu.,i e. Ile t::•a a 1 ail co her., bun all druggists and stone or t Zsm•ttuk Co., To -onto. The Asseccment Problem. Prior to 191:4 the language of the As- sessment Act relative to the assessment of reality was as follows: Except in the case of mineral lands hereinafter provided for, real and per- sonal property shall be estimated at the actual cash value, as they would be appraised in payment of a just debt from a solvent debtor In the session of I1104 this provision was changed as follows: In assessing land, having any build- ings shall be ascertained separately, and shall be set down separately in col- umns 13 and 14 of the assessment roll and the assessment shall be the sum of such values. The value of the buildings shall be the amount by which time value of the land is thereby increased. It is safe to assert, says the Brant- ford Expositor, that the assessors have made little or no attempt to determine to what extent the value of land has been increased by buildings or other im- provements at a slightly lower percent- age than they have valued time land,but this is not complying with the terms of the law. Nor is the law in its present shape to be regarded as otherwise than confusing, no matter what instructions may be sent out to assessors in accord- ance with the announc; d intention of time Government. A change in the law is' absolutely necessary, if the'work of the assessors is to be made easy, and im- provements are to be assesst.(1 as they ought to be, at a rate: eonside.ably low- er than land. Do not suffer another day with Itching; Diced- ing, or Frotrud• ing Piles. No surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once 'and as certainly cure you. b000. a box; all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this paper and enclose 2c, stamp to pay postage, "Simplicity is se costly en art that !many a woman is driven to imitations." i "Poverty is no disgrace, but that's a- bout all that can be said in favour of lit." Here is a remedy that will cure your cold. Why waste time and money ex- perimenting when you can get a pre- paration that has won a world-wide re- putation by its cures of this disease and can always be depended upon? It is known everywhere as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and is a medicine of real merit, -For sale by all dealers, A bird in the hand fails to catch thei Queen Mary's Industry, ? 4eueen Mary, as always at this time et d ear, is devotingher time to the k tion of the innumerable skirts,petti- tt ats, stockings, shawls, coverlets and other warm and woolly things that she contributes to the London Needlework (iuild. Even on her voyage out to India the ueen was constantly to be seen with t' ow and knitting needles in hand, and u her motoring excursions through 1 reside during the time her majesty v as staying at Balmoral she almost . stays took her work along withlier. before King George came to the tt t one he would snatch a quiet hour to a i ead to the Queen when the was en- s reed in work in the afternoon, but t t a his tine is too fully engaged to 1 nit his doing so. ®�, . 'Ile numter of articles the Queen m e h trifutes every year to the guild Ts stn fly extraordinary, and now she has r. , . toe tip her, who is al - iii. i -s her mother. tt+l ? -ti- Out Hundred Dollars Reward • • :; - of Catarrh that cannot be e. • a. ,tail's t aturel Cure. F. J. Itt;.,.tr.'i at CO., totedo, 0. W , t"r ai•dersigned, have known F. for the last 15 years, and be - la . ". tit • In rieetty honorable in all busi- r.. • re=i.•:.Ictlt•ns unci financially able to c • n. .•,:y obligations trade by his firm. WALDING, ICINNAN & MARVIN, av u•,. •sale D. ugeists, Toledo, 0. trail's Catarrh Care is taken inter- nal s, • • mer directly upon the blood and n.a'..os surfaces of the system. Test sent free. Price 75e. per bottle. ?,chi by all Druggists. Take Hail's Family Pills for constip- ation. "I would ra her be at the mercy of a thousand I. en who disagreed with me than at tht mercy of one woman whose opinion differed from mine." • ...71i r With Katinoy For Teas Years. Thc-e who have never been troubled viii kidney trouble da not know the • •)•ring and misery which those af- .icted undergo. 1b a: k, lame or aching back comes from the kidneys, and when the kidneys are slut of order the whole system becomes ,erann;d. Dean's Kidney Pills go right to the seat Af the trouble, and make their action ceeelar and natural. Miss Mary Daley, Penfield Ridge, wriics: "I now take great plea - tire in expressing myself for the benefit t nave obtained from your wonderful aedieine, Dean's Kidney Pills. having I,•;,u a sufferer with kidney trouble for he last ten years, and having spent hun- (reds of dollars in the so -canal 'Quack' cures, from which I derived no benefit 7hatt:ver, and after having been advised '.o try Doan's Kidney Pills, I at once ,urehased a box, and from the first cb- aiateil relief, and after lowing taken five ,oxes tun now completely cured." Down's Kieiney Pills are firs cants rer 'ox, or three boxes for el.27i, cit ell ,tales, or mailed direct on receipt cf ,'ice by The T. Milburn Co., -Limited, l oranto, Ont. When ordering )specify "Dearm'it," EDITORIAL NOTES The Industrial Banner, Toronto, of January 10, in an editorial with the heading _"Whitney's Blindness," says in part: "The forces at work to bring about some radical ebon :es in the present ass- esement s:ste.•tir have never had any doubts abdut the final outcome of their appeals to Sir James Whitney for legis- lation expressive of the intelligence of the men and women who huve given the subject of tax. reaorte :care than super - eclat consideration. Their astonise .nent has only been increased by the de- fiant pose of a Premier who assumes : he aiti Laid, cif a dictator when the posi- tion he occupies calls for the wisdom of a statesman." early worm. A deceitful chap is one who pretends a i s ; A man can never remember what a ' girl said when she proposed to him. Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol restored evcrynervc in the body to ite proper tension; restorer vim and vitality. Premature decay and all c�xuel weakness averted of once. Pbosphonol will make van a new man. Price SC a box. nr two for co., tilt, Vadtimanrtaea,iOnt: The Scoboll Drug South African natives are reported adopting European clothing. Just because a man tells you that he I loves you doesn't make it so." Philadelphia has no smallpox isolation hospital, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S OA TORIA that helikes to kiss a baby. A cyclone is a circular storm, varying from 50-5U0 miles in diameter, revoly- Iing round a centre that may advance 40 miles. French colonies and dependencies in all parts of the world have an area of 4,000,000 square miles, and a population of 404,0151,000. No matter what happens, the suspen- ders a man [wears are never entirely free from responsibilities. CARTERS3jL1 P1LNS Slckifcadacho and relieve all the troubles incl• dent ton bullous state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Dronsines, Distress atter eating, Pain in the Side &c. Viihile their most remarkable sutfsa hoe beta airiest in curing 8cadache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills era equally valnablein Constipation, curingandpre• venting this annoyingcomplaint,while they also Correct all disorders Othostomaeh, stimnlatetho liver sad regulate the bowels, Eventf thcyonly Clued - Aehotbey wonldboalmostpricelesatotheso:gee buffer front this distresshtgcomplaint; bntfortu. mately their goodnessdoesnotendhrrc,andtbote who once try them will find these little pills valn- able insomany ways that they will not be wil- ling to do withent them. Dutafter all aidshead ON Is the brae of ad many lives that hero ib Where we make our great boast, Our pills euro itwell* others de not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to tette. Oneer WO )mills make a dote. They are strictly vegetable and do bot gtipo or peer,,but by their gentle action please UR Who faf�e - t3A4fiii VENUE fee VW It04i, ma11 111. Smki FiRE DANGER. AT SEA. Hoe Flames Can Sweep the Inside of Even a Metal Ship. The danger from Lire on a transat- lantic liner is more serious than is gen. entity believed. It is much greater than the danger from collision and is becoming mere and more dangerous with the increased outlay upon luxury and display. The main structure of the ship and most of its essential parts are of metal, but many of the fittings, near ly every feature or ornament and every trapping of luxury, are highly infiam- mablea. No one who has not been aboard the Spanish wrecks at Santiago can con- calve how are can sweep the inside of even a metal ship, Admiral Cervera dcse•ribcd to me the experience on hon rd the Teresa In these words: "The second shot that came on board set us on (ire. The tire main was damaged. Soon we were unable to cope with the tire. it swept through her from bow to stere. There was not a space as big as the palm of your band where life could have been sustained. • An insect cnuid not have lived on board. We had to get overboard or be burned," It is true the Spaniards had not cut out their woodwork and thrown over- board all unnecessary inflammables, as we had In the American fleet, but the Intlatnnembility of one of their war- ships was much less than that of a luxurious ocean liner.—Captain Rich- mond Pearson Robson in Engineering Magazine. • PINEAPPLE PLANTS. They Do Not Die After Fruiting, but Reproduce Themselves. Pineapples do not grow on trees. Im- agine a plant four feet in extreme height front the ground to the tip of telt res. a single stalk at the surface, ilia dividing at once into swordlike blades or leaves, fifteen in number, from the center of which appears a stiff, upright stem, at the top of which is the fruit. This stem is short, and the crown of the fruit when fully grown is a foot or more below the points of the leaves. At the end or a year and a half from planting each plant produces a single fruit, even as a cabbage plant produces a single head. lint the pineapple does not die after fruiting once. Down on the stem below the fruit and among the long, narrow leaves a sucker ap- pears. If allowed to remain this will soon become the head of the plant, and within another year It will yield an - teller fruit. This process may go on for a term of years. In 'the meantime, however, other suckers will make their' (appearance. These are broken off, and when stud into the ground they put out roots and become other plants. Thus a single pineapple plant 'nay produce a dozen or more others while it is yielding fruit from year to year. The intruder. A certain boat coming up the mr4 sisslppi one day during a flood los' her way and bumped up against I frame house. She ,hadn't more that touched it before an old Catty ram mad his head up through a hole in tit roof, where the chimney once cam out, and 'yelled at the captain on tit roof: "Whar's you gwine wid Cat boati Can't you see nothin'? Fust thing yet knows you gwiue to turn dis house ober, spill de old woman an' de chil'e( out in de flood an' drown 'em. What you doin' out here in de country wid your boat, anyhow? Go on back yarn der froo de co'nfields an' get bad into de ribber whar you b'longs. Ain't got no business sev'n miles out in th country foolin' roun' people's house) nohow!" And the boat backed out. -e Life. • The Largest Described Snake. Speke in his narrative of the jour ney to the source of the Nile described the largest snake that has ever been seen by man. "I shuddered," .he says "as I looked upon the effects of WS tremendous dying strength, For yarde around where he lay grass, bushes and saplings -in fact, everything except full grown trees—were cut clean off, as if they had been trimmed with an immense scythe. The monster when measured was fifty-one -feet two and one-half inches in extreme length, while around the thickest portions of its body the girth was nearly three feet." Looking Ahead. it was the first night of a new play. "I say," remarked the author to the manager, "that scene shifter over there is a most peculiar looking fellow." "Yes; he's an Eskimo," said the manager. "An Eskimo! What on earth made you take him on?" "Oh, I thought it Would be a com- fort to see one happy face if the play turns out to be a frost!'' Cases In Point. Rivers-13rooks, that's the eieconl4 time I've heard you use the phrase "aching void." I wish red would tell me how a void can ache. Brooks—Well, not to Speak of & hol- low tooth, don't you sotaetfined have a headache?—London Telegraph. in the Mountains. Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will doer into you as sunshine flutes into trees. The Winds Will blow their own; fresh, neat into you, and the storms their energy, While cares will drop off like autumn Ienves.--John Iduir, Punishment Per Whom? Doss Barber—What? You have eut the gentleman four times? Well, just for punishment you mutt shave him illi ravel•, again right atvayl—Fliogends flinger. Canadian Industries. 'The census re'turus relative to Cana- dian industries are now available and show how enormously the Dominion's business has grown during the past ten years. Canada now has 19,218 manu- facturing establishments, an increase of 4,548 in the past ten years with a capital of $1,247,573,609, an increase of $800,000, 000; employees, 215,193, an in- crease of 176,000 work people; a wage roll of $645,288,783, an increase of 128,- 000,000; raw material used valued at $601,500,018, increase $326,000,000, and products valued at $1,105,975,619, an increase of $585,000,000. Ontario still still leads in the numbertfe capital and the production of manufactured goods. If your children are subject to at- tacks of croup. watch for the first symp- tons, hoarseness. Give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as soon as the child be- comes hoarse and the attack may be warded off. - For sale by all dealers. The Forceful Onion. Kill the onion and you leave a gap in the universe. Kill anything else and there is a substitute. The potato is a- kin to the cereals; squash and cabbage and turnips and cauliflower are of the same family; beans are elongated peas; the lemon is a pessimistic orange; beef incarnated grass; watermelon, just the survivor of a very fit cucumber, and so on. But the onion is sui generis, alone, unique, triumphant. It is a special creation to tempt the palate of a weary world. It proves the futility of man's wisdom. He might have guessed at everything else under the sun, but he would never have guess- ed an onion. Science may deduce a new star before it becomes visible, or rad- ium before its discovery, but this suc- culent, fragrant, starry vegetable would have gone uninvented forever had not its own insinuating yet not bashful qual- ities forced themselves into tear -brim- med eyes and liquescei,t anticipatory lips. Dr. de Van's Female Pills A reliable French regulator; never fails. These pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the generative portion of time female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. Dr: de van's are sold at S5 a box, or three for $10. Mailed to any address. The Sooboll Drug Co., St. Catharines, Oat, Rev. W. T. Pearey, of Londesboro has decided to accept the call to Guth- rie Church at Harriston. SSE FMNr.� I I TIH ARMY "Frull-a-lives" Cured Her Kidneys i5„e•,.' Y's,tai 1N, Y t i 1 i k Lf Miss MACGIE JANNACK ;Muni;TA'cx, ONT., Drc. 14th. 1920 "I desire to let the world know the great debt Inut-a-trves which saved my life when I hall given up hope of ever being well again. For six years, I suffered from dreadful Kidney Disease. My legs and lower• part of my body were fearfully swollen. The pain in limy side and legs would be - so bad that I would faint with the agony. - Five different doctors° attended me - and all said it was Kidney Disease and gave me no hope of getting well. A kind neighbor visited me and mentioned the case of Mrs. Fenwick who had been cured of a sickness like mine. I took "Pruit-a-tives" and in a short time, I began to feel better—the swelling went down — the pains were easier—and soon I was well. I have gained over 3o pounds since taking "Fret-a-tives"—and my friends look upon my recovery as a miracle." (MISS) MAGGIE JANNACK. "Fruit-a-tives" are sold by all dealers at 5oc a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.— or sent on receipt of price by Fruit -a - tires I,isnited, Ottawa. Owen Sound bonded warehouse offi- cials and Berlin shippers have been sum - moped for alleged breach of law in im- porting whiskey labelled as pickles. Persons troubled with partial paral- ysis are often very mush benefited by massaging the affected parts thorough- ly when applying Chamberlain's Lin- iment. This liniment also relieves rheu- matic pains.—For sale by all dealers. IMMMIMMIMMGMM i INTIN A `® STAT1 NERY We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple Stationery and can supply your wants in WRITING PADS ENVELOPES LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PA PER PAPETEItIES, 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. eillMaltah 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. Sii<'bsotiptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Wingham,