HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-02-27, Page 6ii
'\ lI�(111ill
T11 I{ S
TI:l;1ll l►Z' ; i t W13
is Flattering
To the Original
But Imitations Only Disappoint
If the old saying is true about
i' citation being the most sincere
for= of flattery, then Dr. Chase's
►'
Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine
mist possess a world of merit.
This is a
faaac-simile
of the
package,
bearing
portrait
ani Lie„raa.
tare of A.
W. Chase,
il!I. D.
r
l 11uC �AWo-4/Av
pitutr0SaN15
There are many
imitations and near
imitations of this great
treatment for coughs
and colds. They usually
have some sale on the merits
of the original, and because
they are sold at a lower price
appeal to some people, who lose
sight of the fact that the irh•tir-a
tions are like the genuine in slay;�
only.
From a small begilan hl , the
sales of Dr. Chase's Sy uup c. L E
seed and Turpentine have gr
and growE until today they are
enormous. The constant increase
is undoubtedly due to the genu-
ine merit of the medicine itself,
for nothing else could place itt
¶
a
the front as the greatest sepler
of any similar medicine in the
country.
We have told you something of the
effectiveness of this medicine in the
cure of coughs, colds and sore throat, of
how it lightens every mother's heart by
curing croup and bronchitis, of the
relief it affords to the sufferers from
asthma or consumption.
It remains for you to insist on get-
ting the genuine article. There need be
no doubt if you insist on seeing the por-
trait and signature of A. W. Chase,
M.D., the famous Receipt Book author,
on the bottle you buy. There can be no
better recommendation for any medi-
cine. 25 cents a bottle; family size, 6
cents, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates
& Co., Limited, Toronto.
II
rs
,tlontreal has more than five thous-
and cases o! measles.
Paris women are wearing knee bang -
leo as the result of the rage for slash, d
skirts.
E��iu3�l
aan
fa sent itiraet to -' :, 117 ;" rart,, by the
Improved I.:o or. 1 r .h:
clearstla,air rr: -a t•adro;••
lain;;; in tint t::rr„u
, cures Cal..rrh aa.”: hey Fetor.
25e. a box: ".'. Cr i:' 9,'r. rt r;
suthstitetes. Ali doaI.`ra rr E,!-itaneon.
Sates a Co., t :;::tc u, Tercn:e. •
A camel with an average load will
travel 23 miles a day. Lae: Vbhtn unit:- j
cumb:'red it will reach :co tail,:, a day
sometimes.
Small Stella, durlr. a visit to the'
county deemed to hell: her grand-fath
er milk the cows one mureins. "Grand- ;
pa," she said. after :several fvritlt.•ss I
attempts. "I wish you would come
here and slaw me how to turn the milk I
ells" to
ms. F71 mranri 74-‘77, rrIr7.150
PIAS
:7:1. WE; an. 110 \i'il,,;: Ave;.,
Tere.[',.",.'"a'." .. fear 'Y':1. ...,,
•appeared on the' ra
side,i t'i r rave. `vii°, 0110ei
n. ,
a a i.
i `:.�` i:b .ala i i r
,1 f to h.! slie`r_''aati re 7, l4f a
S ,;at to a d:ertur, 1_1'6 4' e� osis. a L'alt
did nc .'. ser b(!tl.,
eC'e -,o Y T7ln !.ii p.nai'`1t:'led ti elle- t
r
Cl, i ..i al yt',Lrl @ U..f 1b; 4 �,a-trailll. {
F Lad it t tuts aletd, tried p(iali).+.Ch;
s:1 Tait:Os et taslaos, but it v afi
Clad, anti I eontiuned to suit r
kro.a it file ..oil;/year: !
• ,rSn
"A coa'a.- o°7atlj-gsF'1 as one day
gtveli t1l . >:, a,• td I tt;a d it. :klclrout; 3
the gadntIss was ao s_raall, it seemed
Ito do MOitue; owl, so I pu:•abased
Ito,
supper.
• "Ta:.elt box did terneve an . more
ten and, to lay i liji t, b ff)r ; I ]ta i
been main; Lana -Bok three sleeks, I
saw that It \vas g;'iing to heal the
tone. In k.a than a month it was
ire.. I.;vlt
" t I' -now a, lady in the east of the
city, :Itt:, a ha:sband suffered for
years with an open sore on his leg.
On t:ey recommendation, Zan -1.43111c
f r'c%? ill that (sat). The ether
el ;, s:' en I raw her, she told Inc that
it •i u, e.'ctl filo sore completely'.
"1",y ea:trater, who lives in Leth.
h,•: ; M.:a.. Mata aero used Zam-Eula
'r1t4'llt the sore i atiafaetory result. I
ltldiik 't i:I, beyond all doubt, the
liana healing balm knoren."
a the rhinion of all persons
'Car Lat a really tried Zam-Buis. It
• :1 :etc cure for eczema, piles,
fahramaaess nli-erre, saalp sores, ring -
%o ta. emir', lar' -es, scalds, bruises,
*ad all Oran injuries and diseases.
!Ea a h.aa. all firntrtgiste and cadres, or
'b "^t u_oae leant -Ink Co.. Toronto,
tat.' 9r:en In' c'!'e of skin disease Milt
• Z,am-Buk Soap, 25c, tablet,
D.a:l,al; t:1a i!ist fety y'ear's the prices
of raw produce of farms in the Unite I
States of America has risen by thirty-
six per cent.
Children Cry •
FOR I LETCHE. '.
��3
OAST° a A
resign, ti n of thea e,_• 1 Lo- d
as eali.i.r la 'a ;le New N ori. stun with an-
nounced last night. He had been iirt3-
eti1- y: a:s hi t.a i ervi,te i. i' that. news-
paper.
`t: a MO RUTH TO MOTHER AND Mal
:•' W::asi.t3w's ScurrnIYO Swirl,. has t.,.•e.
-� ^•t for over SIBTY YEARS by IaIII,LIOi'
:':UTIis;iS for their CHILDREN WIIITai
..; with PERFECT SL'CCE.z ,.
4100"; tIF., the CHILD, SOFTENS the t;a':-i',
:,r. PAIN • CURES WIND Col.:C.
i. ;he hest r: ;a:eery fur DIARRIIC:A. It ;s . tr
:ua 1y laar.nlc:a be sure and ask fur • 1'r;.
"'inswll• y Sn„thin. 5:•rup” and take no ether
i:tad. Sweatv-av: cents a bottle,
I?r,ugiaaaton. L. I., Metl;ers' Club is
dc'r.araa.uir g revival of curfew law of
16.8 to keep children in o'aights.
It is said that wan n tsar t ever drink,
wmckc, nor onlay out late at night live
to a ripe old age. Perhaps that's their
punishment.
Dr. de r aireo a"t'9ail�'• � d�ul➢�
A rei.atle French rc ntl.tt.,r; reg .:.•r :.1s. '1 hese
pills ate ercce:iin gly p,n:erful is re a[uhitinq the
'r rattva . 'n s
i ae i. tb u of hr, • la' 'e . [ t
t rise , i 'f a
p a .ism. iZt u, c
all cheat, imitations. Dr. de van's are td at
PS a bee, or three for ala. Nailed to any address.
The hip
Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont.
It take.: a fast young man to be a
good chat:.'ear.
T•t' firit electric plant in Arabia has
Nat Taal, i:?wtrtllc. cj in the palace of
the sultan of Oman, :Muskat
lye-glais.es may be made perfectly
elear and bright by polisilinta With a
cloth wet in alchol. If the glasses are
set in gold frames, a fine camel's-hair
brush will take the dust from the edges
and make them "like new".
r
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S -
°ASTORIA
The number of cows in the United
States has decreased, according to the
United States Department of Agricul-
ture, from 20.699,000 to 20,497,000inthe
last year, the number of other cattle
floor 37,260,000 to 30,03u.000; the
num-
ber of sheepfr n r2 s
,t
.0U to
51,482,-
0f10;
1 48o,-000; and the number of swine from 65,-
410,009 to 61,178,000.
The number of wage-earners in the
automobile industry in the United
States is 1'5,721, and the automobile
wage standard is said to figure out
somewhat higher than -in 'other indus-
tries.
To remove the shine from a serge
skirt, sponge the shiny places with blu-
ing water, made as for tile laundry, but
a little stronger of the bluing. Press
the spots while damp, laying a cloth
between the iron and the goods.
In sewing on buttons on clothes that
are to be laundered, have the knot of
the thread on the right side between
the button and the cloth, and sew over
a good-s=ized pin to allow sufficient
this sad for sh inkage.
t?::ar'ues'i :'senor be tinted.
by lac'-] appiicatio::s, as they cannot
reach theuiseased portion of the ear.
Ttr:'re is only one way to care deafness,
and th'it is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness! is cause:, by an inflamed con-
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus-
tachian Tube. When this tube is in-
tlatnetl you have a rumbling sound or
imp :'r fest hearing, and when it is en-
tirei; • ;;lowed, Deafness is the result, and
unl •<.; the result, and unless the in-
flammation can be taken out and this
tube restored to its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever; nine
cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed con -
clition of the mucous surfaces. •
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure, Send for circulars free.
F. J. CIHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by DruggistsTic.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constip-
ation.
Mature fowls, says Farm, Stock and
Home, usually ptuduce better chicks
than young pullets. Selecting eggs for
hatching from small, immature valets
encourages lack of size and constitution
in the resulting progeny. There is a
marked correlation between the size of
the egg and the sine of the chick batched
from the egg. Mature Hens lay larger
eggs than pullets. Largo chicks are
produced from large eggs. Ill -shaped
eggs should also be avoided.
Electric Restorer for Men
phosphonol restores every serve in the body
to its proper tension ; restores
vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual
weakness averted at once. Phosphene' will
make you a new man. Price Sc a box, or two for
S5. Mailed to any address. The Seoboll Drug
Co.. St. Catharines. Ont.
In recent experiments with stryeh-
nined apples to destroy rabbits in Aus-
tralia, a quantity of apples, cut into
pieces, were scattered in a furrow four 1
miles long, says Country Gentleman. '
For three nights in succession the apples
were exposed without poison and quan-
tities of them were eaten by the rabbits.
On the fourth night the apples were
strongly impregnated with strychnine,
and 1,914 dead rabbits were found in
the furrow the next day.
Humor and
Philosophy
130, D VJVCAJV M. SMITH
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
A. WOMAN thinks her daughter's ro
mance is perfectly sweet, but het
husband Is sure that he never was
such a fool as that fellow.
A man has lost his youth when nei-
ther politics nor baseball can cause
hhn to miss his supper..
Most women don't want to vote, but
it makes them real mad to think that
they just can't.
A man must have a lot of romance
In his soul to enjoy a picnic dinner.
People miss a lot of fun by not being
able to see themselves when they are
mad.
'saying up money for a rainy day Is
all right, but some folks get a lot of
sunshine while they are spending
theirs.
Some teen are so unlucky that if they
really loved to work they would always
be out of a job.
The girl who doesn't care for Ice
tireaeuu or soda makes a very popular
hot weather girl.
'i?sis is about the time when the ama
tear gardener and the man who was go
lug to get rash trout three old hens
quit struggling.
Steel -mow a wan will sell a ten cent
article for a shilling ali his life and
still believe that the wily promoter is
seliina biro forty dollar per acre land
In the sunny south at $0.73 per, for
this month only.
Appearances.
A man can grow a head of hair,
Look wise and call himself a doe
And advertise that he can cure.
And people to his door will flock.
And they will state their ease to him
And listen to his droned advice,
And go 'way thinking they are cured,
And pay him cheerfully his price.
A single drug he may not know
Or how it will or will not act,
Aboe t the structure of a man
He may not know the barest fact,
But if he lets his whiskers grow '
And doesn't cut his hair at all,
But lets it straggle down his back,
The people for his game will fall.
He doesn't have to carry weight
That conies from drinking at the fount
Of knowledge in a doctor school.
For he has other things that count.
His assets are hie whiskers and
Ilis long and flowing head of hair.
In these he looks so fatherly
That people think he's on the sugare.
And so he goes from town to town,
And people come to him in flocks
Until he has a wealth of lands
And mortgages and business blocks.
The lame, the halt and e'en the blind
In streams of profit round him flow,
Not for his skill, but lust because
Fie lets his hair and whiskers grow.
Hard to Please.
"Marcie?"
"Yes, papa?"
"I understand that you refused 'sir
Moneytiags. What can be your 'Ab
jection to him? lie's immensely rig S.'
"He isn't old enough."
"What! Not old enough at six ly`
three, and you only twenty-onel Wiggin
do you want?"
"A very rich man who isn't und.la
ninety-five."
Major W. R. Bell, an agriculturist
and officer, well known in the west,
died at Winnipeg.
His Royal Highness the Duke of Con-
naught visited the Six Nations Indians
at Oshweken and received a civic ad-
dress at Brantford.
•
FOR SAL(:—Comfortable home, well
located in Wirigham. : Ali modern con-
veniences. To be solal(quick as propriet-
or is leaving town. Apply at TIMES
office.
ABSLLTE
EUR1TYI
Con nine
arter's
Little L i ver Pillst.
a I'
t
Blunt Sews Signature of
See Cac.i tc]Ie Wrapper Below.
Tata',. Bradt end its easy
'to take as.ngant
CARTERS
ER
PILLS.
FOR NtAOACRe,
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR {31LIOUSNEt3.
FCLJORPIU LIVER.
FOR'CONSTIPATION
FOR5SALLOW SEI$:
FOR.THE COMPLEXION
elle. iDlttrftrl1'iH i.Nr1S$AVR fi NAf.M.
11t1 Dena :y �caGmlo.�i��" .. ��oG
GIJl31a SICK H13ADACHg.
THE SAVAGE ADORS.
Thoy Sacrifice Mon, Women and Ani-
mals to Their God of War.
%lore unattractive savages than the
..bens it would be hard to lied. Of Ti-
betu-Burmrtn origin they speak a lan-
guage which is allied to that of the Ti-
betans. while their arts, such as they
are, probably come from Tibet.
Their religion is animistic. The dei-
ty, I'lttng, is tile god of war and the
chase, and is believed to favor attacks
on defenceless neighbors and the ruth-
less destruction of all game. In pur-
silence of a policy to propitiate him,
ulcn nod women are killed or taken as
SIN yes. big game Is hunted, birds, squir•
rets and lisp are trapped.
The elemental belief in man as tae
hunter, and cuusequeltly the more fit-
ted to lie the protector, still holds good,
so the women and slaves toil uueeas-
ing;ly at the crops as hewers of wood
and drawers of water, and my lord,
bow in hand and with quiver on his
shoulder, stalks off on the warpath, his
arrows poisoned with aconite or croton
berry.
Thoir burial rites present points of
interest similar to those of African
savages. Over the grave of each des
Puna warrior is a grass shelter, where
art' hung his cane helmet, dao. bow
and arrows, the horns of i lie tame bison
tt'hh•h furnished the funeral feast. with
a basket containing food to propitiate
the deity.—New York 'Telegram.
PAI°IPERED PRINCES.
__—
Luxurious Lives of the Gilded Young
Rajahs of India.
"It is almost impossible for an
Amet'1(119 bqv or ,_girl to imagine the
estratvaganet. and luxury that sur-
round snr.i.' of these young India
pontes." s:iy:; a wt'lter in St. Nicholas.
'Servants attend tient night and day,
fan IItem, dress thein and obey their
slightest wish. If a wInd sun's while
they sleep curtains are drawn that
they may not be disturbed. When
they drive out a mounted escort nc-
coutpanie's them, and all the people
salaam us they pass.
"Once when taking tea with a rajah
in his garden I was amused to notice
that as he moved about among his
guests. a servant followed carrying a
cup, winch he kept always within
reach of his master's hand. The rajah
would take a sip of tea and with per-
fect unconcern set his cup down in
midair. With unfailing dexterity the
saucer was- • placed nudes it by the
servant in time to avoid nc•cident.
"One prince had suspended troui the
ceiling a silver couch, which was kept '
gently swaying while he slept or read.
Another had a beautiful vine covered
arbor, where urtiplai rain was made
to full while the nabob sat under a
marble canopy in the center, cool and
refreshed, with the rest of the world
broiling about him."
Hardy Shetland Ponies,
The cost of raising Sliellaud ponies
is remarkably low. These little ani-
mals are natives of a rough and semi -
barren locality, where they are used
to rustling for every mouthful of
,their shod. When they are (lest
brought over to this country they don't
know the difference between oats and
They they are complete strangers to
a grain ration. lu the Shetland is -
Iamb; they run out the year round,
without any shelter, and pick their
living from between the rocks. For
generation after generation these po-
nies have had to make this kind of a
struggle for existeure. and the result
is a race of hardy little animals that
are able to thrive on the coarsest food
and to stand ati amount and degree
of exposure that would put au ordi-
nary American horse out of business.—
National Stockman and Farmer.
Burmese Tartar Wooing. '
Wooing as delle among Burmese Tar-
tar tribes is ars simple its it is idyllic.
On the brat day of winter the tribe
holds a great feast at which all the mar-
riageable girls gather unit listen to the
music made by the bachelors• who sit
under the "desire tree" and piny their
favorite instruments. As the maiden
he loves passes him a youth will play
louder and more feelingly. if she ig-
nores
bnores and passes on he knows she will
have none of him. If she steps up to
him and lays a flower upon his instru
meat he jumps up, takes her by the
t o drop hand,taking care not 0 flow-
er,
I
and off they Wander.—Argouaaut.
Sea Anemones.
Sea anemones, delicate and sensitive
though they look, may attain great
age. Sir John Dalyell, a Scottish nat-
uralist, captured in 1828 a sea anem-
one of the liver colored sort so com-
mon around our shores. Its age was
then estimated at seven years. It flour-
ished in Edinburgh until 1987 and was
just attaining a vigorous and sober
maturity when trout some unknown
cause it died.—London Express.
It Hurt Him.
Tommy—Did the fowl hurt you, Mr.
Squires? lir, Squires—What d'you
mean, my dear? What fowl? Tommy
—Well, I wanted to know if it hurt,
'cause mummy said you had been hen-
pecked for twenty years.—Condos
Strand Magazine.
r
A Rare Feat.
"The patent sprinkler which fti such
a success for its inventor t0 a contrary,
sort of thing."
"In what way?"
"It raises the dust for bim, you
know, by laying it for other peopie."-.
Exchange.
Rough on Pa.
"Pa, what's a genius2"
"Ask your mother; she married one."
"Why, I didn't know' ma itad iteea
aattrt ed t'>ir p40...-iiidnstolt,>l�ors _ .,. •...
you do your
own typewriti
you will be interested in the typewriter of
light touch.
With the Monarch Typewriter, light touch
is a matter of typebar mechanism, simplic-
ity, balance and a something that me-
chanical men call a creeping fulcrum.
Never mind the technical description.
The fact is, and it is a fact admitted by
other typewriter makers, that
The
nrch
has a wtRinderlully light touch
. '5
Of course, it has the
other essentials of
visible writing,
adaptability to all
kilns oi'.v:'itilli , and
splendid durability.
Semi jar Zestrated
booklet to
M0,7!"arch Daliertv;lent
Rcimir.±;don T ypewrii :? - Ct:rupany
Limited, 18-20 Victoria Square, Montreal, Que.
Children Cry
/FOR FLETCHERt'S
CrAS I O F I A
•
grain you will find Chamber-
lain c.l.aiment excellent. It allays the
war., rc• noves the soreness, and soon
re t•!re„ i,he parts to a healthy condi-
tion 2.i and 50 cent bottles for sale by
all D:aiers.
F
spy A
iN1"1NO
AN 14
We have put in our office
Stationery and can
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER Pt PER
PAPETERIES,
NERY
a complete stock of Staple
supply your wants in
RITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLA•YII 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
WEDDINGS INVITATIONS
POSTERS
CATALOGUES
Or anything you may require:in the printing line.
Subscriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers
and Magazines.
The Times Office
STONE BLOCK
W ngharn,
- Ont.
f �4
•-fid