Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-01-30, Page 6ki ese • 9a i! t- A branch of the Irsl;eriel dome Re - anion Association is to be established in Galt. Hon. Dr. Reid secuedi the dismissal ,, n' , Out.,and had of an official at Ca..ri:.a., his own brother appointed to the posi- tion. 7 �I iiliili,s Cougas".mss and C011d3 From itmp er Dressing %:', Exposing the NIL neck and chest ode to the cold Il' blasts of win- ter— Wearing thin hosiery and low shoes in damp, col :I weather— Such are the customs which lead to the sv criiace of many promising young lijcs. No parts of the body are more sensi- tive to the influence of cold and damp- ness, and the result of exposure is coughs, colds) bronchitis and pneu- -moma. Like the healing vapors from the tur- peatme ga o es, Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine brings relief and cure to the sufferer from affections of the throat, the bronchial tubes and lungs. used at the critical time when a cold is settling on the throat and chest, this great medicine brings relief in a won- derfully short, time, and positively vents serious developments. It kills the germs, soothes the irrita- tion which causes coughing, and pro- tects with a coating the delicate mucous linings of the throat and bren- chial tubes. As a calx o for bronchitis, chest colds, sore throat and hacking coughs V Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Tur- pentine stands alone. It iaas E1 thorough and far- reaching Effect, which cannot be obtained from ordinary cough mixtures. There are so many imitations that it becomes necessary to warn you to look for the portrait and signature of A. W. Chase, M.D., the famous Receipt Book author, on the bottle you buy. 25 cents a bottle; family size, 60 cents. All dealers, or Edmanson, & Co., Limited, Toronto. Children Cry FOR FLET©EiR'S CASTO R lA Fire drill saved the lives of twenty young girls in a hoarding school at Montreal. ('ol. Fisher, Assistent I'ostoflice In- pector at London, has 'n e'en appointed to succeed Dr. Camp!:_ll, recently dis- missed from the inspectorship there. sp, .-_rRa.. ,Y3:�^H.^��.._.'��"3'.4J�C3.:.` LfbffiffSR.t"T ...3Ca •••-w".t��^-^1Cu—s2=cr.M Many a girl fails to select the right husband, because she's afraid of being left. .glrs. A R. Tabor. of Crider, Mo., had been troubled with sick headache for aboat five years, when she began tak- ing Chamberlain's Tablets. She has taken two bottles of them and they have cured her. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomach for which these tebiets are especially intended Try them, get well and stay well—Sold by all dealers. When the lamp smokes the ceiling black in one particular spot, it can be made less conspicious if rubbed over with dry whiting. Very dainty bedspreads can be made of organdie muslin trimmed with bands of flowered muslin, in the form of five - inch panels. Lambton county Boards of Trade are undertaking a publicity campaign. More than three hundred and fifty re- turns dealing with the most flagrant dismissals of Liberal civil servants have been brought down in the Commons. Children Cry FOR FLETCiH R'S CAST ' RIA Moscow expects 2,00f,00rt population by 19I8. Over rA, tons of tickets are issued each year by one of England's rail- roads. Hydroplane flights to sea and back are being arranged in France for next year. Astsustor this book it iS free. `10 N C R E T E watering -troughs and ;ceding -floors help to keep your live -stock healthy. ORSIN mai cattle watered from a concrete 1a tr..,l;;'sa arc ;c•.„ likely to contract disease. Concrete is sanitary, easily cleaned does not rot or lea.[. tot:ee built, a concrete watering - trough will last forever. You need never eat: .n;: "patching it up." Like all concaete inrlreuements, its first cost i, it, final N4ANY diseases of hogs are directly due to $ feeding from the filthy, unwholesome mud of the barn -yard. This manner of feeding_ is also wasteful, because the grain is trampled into the ground, in such a condition that not even a hog will eat it. Concrete feeding -floors, with concrete swill - troughs are clean, sanitary. They keep hogs in better health and save feed. j TATE LING: ROUCilia and feediug-tloors are only two of scores of valuable, every -day in scut; that Wray be made of concrete. All are fully described in our 160 -page, ilitotrated book, "WHA.T THE FARMER CAN DO WITH CONCRETE" stat free to any fanner upon esque.t. 'I'ltis book has shown thousands of Canadian farmers how to make tbei • fat•,t:•, mote profitable. In asking for it, you do not place yourself under the slightest dulcet: ,at so leery cement, or t,, do anything else for us. Simply ask for the book, by letter or post card, and it will be maned at once. Address, Publicity Manager Canada Cement Company Limited 514 Herald Building, Montreal FdtfEPI24 R . when in doubt, that our Farmer,' 1''reC Jafor:i,alion Bureau will answer any questions ' "f on the use of concrete That you desire to ask. Thm etrvicC isf,YR of Citerge. Re Sure the this label i5 on every bag. ,,u, 191; WAS TR011kLW... 'TEARS. Boils in themselves are not a dangerous rouble, out sail, Ur the :erne time are ser,- painful. Phey are caused entire!, ay awl blood, end to get rid of them it is absolutely eicessary to put the Mood into good con- ti:Iota For this purpose there is nothing to Tend that old and wall .tetevn blood LI dseine, Burdock 'stood !'stress. airs. James Ma -•n, t' local, Sa cic., vtitcs:—"1 was treoeled toe t ight years with boils on my face a +at body, and 1 rigid everything I could t husk of. Aly teighhors told me to drink meter oft at aur corn meal, but I kepi tthing worse •stil one day a woman in • •ivn ^.steed Ii,c by I didn't try Bur:leek . lot.d (Sitters, ,v husband got me twe battles, ane 'fore one was gone say beds mad all die - speared, and I teed I';, a different -omen. I can't tell you hew thankful I n for your medicine. I is ill recommend to all suffering is omen." Manufactured only by i'hr: T. Milburn 'o., Limited, Toronto, Ont. it About sixty-four per cent. of India's total trade in food and manufactures is with Europe, and twenty-four with Asia. A joke isn't necessarily funny be- cause a woman with dimples and pretty teeth I• u di at it REST AU HEALTH TO MOTHER AHD DHlii1. Atari \VrassLOR"S SOOTnzNO $YRTJP has i,'.s, stied for over SISTY YEARS by MILLIONr? o' MOTIIi;RS for their CHILDREN \.'ill:,;. trisiernING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. :. SOu'1•e:CS the CHILD, SOFTENS the GVM, ALI.d YS al: PAIN , CURES WIND COLIC, ono is the best r,,naedy for DIARRHOIA. It is s:• .otu'L•ts' harmless Be sure and ask for •• Dl,". win:,,o'. s S,,otlring Syrup," and take no ogre wc.uty-five cents a bottle. Iron rust can be ren oved by wetting with lemon juice, coverin.' with a damp cloth and pressing with a hot iron. To make a jelly n o ,' nourishing mix with milk instead o: water, but be care- ful not to have the milk too hot or it will curdle. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C. a3T®R G A 511R. J.' Graham, an apple exporter, was last week awarded $300 in the County Court of Belleville against the Canada Brokerage Co. of Toronto. Mr. Gra- ham had a cents act with the defendants to deliver dried apples. Defendants cl aimed that the samples sent were not as per contract, and did not receive the shipment. Apples had dropped one cent per pound meanwhile, and it was for this loss that the action was brought. Gathering the Remains. A good woman's husband was din. membered and eaten by an African tribe. She, desirous of giving him Christian bural, was left no other al- ternative but that r f exterminating, with the assistance if certain accom- modating friends armed with the de- structive weep.. ns of our advanced civilization, the tribe in question, which had shown steal a receptive at- titude toward her haeband. The bod- ies of the savages were brought back to civilization by the avengifig expedi- tion and ware phone.' in one grave. surmounted by a modest slab placed there by the widen end bearing the following inscriptio.!, "The remains of the Rev. —, beloved husband of Fishes and Memory. Do fishes remember? A scientist who has been investigating the ques- tion found that by placing a red cylinder containing food and also an empty green cylinder in the aquarium with a single fish the latter soon learned to enter the red cylinder each time it was immersed and avoided the other one. Moreover, the fish went into the red vessel and waited until sent.? crumbs were dropped into it, which he then ate. At other times the fish entered the baited red vessel even though he did not appear to de- sire fond, seeing that he did not eat at such times. The factor of hunger was therefore eliminated here, and the existence of a habit or a reflex action was proved. SECURITY. CW -11 1r 6 to�,Liver P Si Must Dear Slgnaturo o2 Seo 1'as.snralio 4°ia; bar IIetow. 9cry aeon enrS as easy to take as sagar4 + FOR u...UACNEt SCAR '��S FOIL DILZD ESS. 3. 1 ER ITT FOR Tonpif LIVEitt PI LLS. FOR*CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION OFSIFINfr MUST MAS rtSaU,a, — jar ,' Ptrtal7 VCKit3h10./�.�v4,0,tei,ro ere, 1.:111ir` 5;o;f ti' ADF.ct; . arm ane Jarden TURKEY GROWING TIME. They'll So Fine Along About Thanks- giving or Christmas Day. Turkeys cin be grown with less care tend attention than any of the domestic fowls except geese. But unfortunately on almost all farms turkeys are al- lowed the range of the farm, no mat- ter how large, and this causes trou- ble. In the first place, they are apt to make their nests where they are hard to find, and after the young ones at'e hatched they will be over too much territory to be good for the little ones before they are a month or two old. After that time unlimited range can be A FINE SPECI URN. allowed unless they are disposed to go Into places where they may come to harm. says a correspondent of Farm Progress. '1'u raise turkeys in the way that causes least trouble and always in- sures the ratan -1g of the largest flock Is as follows: First fence off with a small meshed high woven wire fence—say seven or even eight feet high—several acres of land. It is better if some of the land is covered with brush of almost any sort and, If possible, some open land and running water on it In such in - closures, if there are good places for them to make their roosts, the turkey hens can make their own nests and sit on their eggs where laid. And when they have batched the hens and young ones can remain in the inclosure and roost there and be fed there till the young ones are three months old. With the satne arrange- ments along these lines we formerly raised large numbers of turkeys at a minimum cost and sold them at a fine profit, After they got half grown and had become edible we trained them to come to the houseyard and roost in a large tree to save ti em from possible poultry thieves. We have always fed our very young turkeys on crumbled hard boiled eggs fur a few days and afterward well baked corn bread and a little wheat, then cracked. corn and dually whole corn. 0>4000Ve V 0000 000 THE HOME PARTNER. A seldom mentioned but most important member of an agri- cultural partnership is the wo- man. If she wasn't on the job to keep the household in order and the food supply coining reg- ularly and plenteously, the pres- ent day serious disturbance over the high cost of living would be replaced by a starvation panic that would paralyze, for once she quit the job the hired man and the foreman and the "big boss" would all hit the pike for the nearest town or city in short or- der.—Long Island Agronomist Ooc Ce". 00.0 oc 0000 Gleaned From Law Books. In the great majority of the states two witnesses are necessary to the va- lidity of the will, in a few states three witnesses are required, and in a few others, where the will is written en- tirely in the handwriting of the testa- tor, no witnesses are required. Some states require the addresses of wit- nesses to be inserted after their names, and this is good practice even where not required. The law of New York and probably of others provides that each owner of two adjoining tracts of land, except when they otherwise agree„shall make and maintain a just and equitable por- tion of the division fence between such lands unless one of such owners shall choose to let his lands lie open to the use of all animals which may be law- fully upon the other's lands end does not permit any animals lawfully upon his premises to go upon lands so lying open. The public holida;,s that have be- come firmly established as such by custom aro Christmas, New Year's, Memorial or Decoration day, Fourth of Slily and Thanksgiving day. These a man working by the month may claim is holidays without affecting Ma salary, excepting, of course, in cases of necessity where his services aro re- quired on such days in order to avoid or prevent loss to the employer.'.r- Breeder's Gazette. WHO IS YOUR CUSTOMER? Have you ever met your real customer? Have your, salesman a speaking ac- quaintance with him? Ilave you told him about the merits of your product? have you explained why he should give your goods the preference? Have you done anything to stimulate his desire for your goods? In short, have you made any attempt whatever to sell your goods to him? "Most assuredly,” you say. Every dealer in Canada is known to our travellers, and we certainly wouldn't pay a salesman who couldn't tell our customers all—" One minute, please. The dealer isn't your customer. He's simply a part of your sales organ- ization, and a decidedly independent part of it at that. He is distributor for other concerns in whose goods he is just as much interested as he is in yours. And he isn't particularly interested in your product, any more than in your competitors. The dealer realizes that he can serve six who order their goods by a well-known trade name as quickly as he can serve one to whom he has to demonstrate that a product is good. Your real customer is the Public—the Public who wears your clothing, eats your pickles, uses your safety razor. You've got to sell your goods to the Public. When the user wants your goods and won't take any other— then you are independent of all but hien, your real customer. To make the user want your goods, you must do two things: (1) Produce an article of value. (2) Tell him what you make, and why_he should prefer it. That's advertising. When are the mak- ers of piano actions, for example, going to discover that they do not know their real customers; and, what is worse, that their real customers do not know them? So the public have to buy pianos in blind ignorance of the quality of the most important mechanical part of the piano. What is it going to be worth to the piano -action maker who first dis- covers that his real customer is the Public, and not the piano manufacturer who incorporates the action into the complete instrument? If your children are subject to at tacks of croup. watch for the first symp tons, hoarseness, Give C'hamberlain's Cough Remedy as soon as the child be- comes hoarse and the attack may be warded off. —For sale by all dealers. "IMPOSSIBLE to HELP Y KIDNEYS" Until I Used "Frit -u -Lives" Worlds Greatest Kidney. Cure Practically everybody in Toronto knows Professor J, F. Davis. For years, the elite of that city has taken lessons from Prof, Davis iit the art of Dancing and Deportment. His constant activity gradually weak- ened his Kidneys, which calamity threatened to make him an invalid. But read Prof. Davis' letter - 563 CHURCH ST., TORONTO, ONT. DEcusfnER 29th, 1911 "I want to say that "Fruit -a -fives" is my only medicine, and has "been for the past five years. Previous to that, I had been troubled with Rheumatism and Kidney Disease, and had taken many remedies without satisfactory results, Noticing the advertisements of "Fruit-' a -fives" I adopted this treatment altogerther, and as everyone knows, I am note—and havebeen since taking "Fruit- a-tives"—enjoying the best of health". J. P. DAVIS. If Rheumatism or Kidney Trouble is making you miserable, take "Fruit-a- tives" and get well. sot, a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, 25c,. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Even the man who wants the earth. doesn't care to have it thrown at him in the form of mud. A bill file with its point protected with a cork is a useful little object to, hold a spool of carpet warp for crochet- ing. Fell In u Faint, Mrs. Edwin Martin, Ayer's Cliff, Que., writes: "Before using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I was in a terrible condition. Dizzy spells would come over me and I would fall to the floor. I could not sweep without fainting. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has so built up my system that I can wash and do my housework. Your medicine cured me when doctors had failed." Mr. E. H. Fitzhugh, former First Vice -President of the Grand Trunk Railway, resigneditthe Presidency of the Central Vermont Railway and Mr. E. J. Chamberlain was elected in his stead. TING AND STAT! ERY 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 PAPETERIES, 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. SAsariptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Wingham, r Ont.