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The Wingham Times, 1913-07-24, Page 3TILE W1 W'INA.AI TIMES, JULY 24, 1913 UNBURN, BLISTERS,• SORE FEET. Ihverybody now admits Zera-lbuk teat for /these. a d it. v. YOU ease Droner,' awl Simes everywhere ViMansHow211.11k AMENDMENTS TO THE FRUIT MARKS ACT. The Dairy and Cold Storage Com- missioner has just issued a circular giv- ing the recent amendments to the In- spection and Sale Act with the new Regulations. The amendments chiefly concern improved fruit. Hereafter the words "Packed by" must precede the name and address of the packer as marked on any closed package of fruit intended for sale. A new section is added empowering the Governor in Council to make regu- lations regarding the branding, marking, and inspecting of imported fruit. Persons violating such regulations are liable to a fine of not more than fifty dollars and cost or, in default of pay- ment, to imprisonment fes a term not exceeding one month. The packages of fruit not properly marked may be confiscated. In virtue of • this amendment new Regulations have been passed and were published in the Canada Gazette of June 28, 1913. According to these Regu- lations every ire porter of fruit must have all grade marks found on closed packages containing imported fruit erased or obliterated when such marks are not in accordance with the Act or the new Regulations. This must be done when the packages are being taken from the railway car, steamship or other conveyance in which they have been brought into Canada. The import- er must place on the end of such pack- ages the proper grade marks, the cor- rect name of the variety of fruit, and his own name and address. Copies of the circular may be obtained free of charge, from the Publications Branch, Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, or from any Dominion Fruit Inspector. There are times when being a good neighbor cuts into one's regular work a a good deal. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R I A CARTERS ITTLE ' i ER PILLS. CUR !lick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl• dent to a bilious state of the system, such as :Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pnin in the Side &c. While their most remarkable success has 'been shown in curing SICK '?Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pilis are equally valuable In Constipation, curing and pre- venting this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach sttmtlatetho liver and regulate the bowels. Even ifthey ealy �Ced HEAD dchethey would be almost priceless to those who 'suffer from this distressing complaint; but forte. mately their goodnessdoesnotend here,and those who once try them will find these little pills vain - able In ao many ways that they will not be wit. ling to do without there. But after allsick head ACHE 7s the bane of so many lives that hero is where we make our great boast. Our pins cure it while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. Oneor two ?rills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please au who ,tree them. EMITI2 mom OQ•e TLV YOSL kat PL. Imann, WANTED. Good Local Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable TWO DOLLARS. The Buy -at-home Dollar -"I was put into the pay envelope of a mechanic. On Saturday night he took me down town with him, and I helped buy him a pair of shoes. After this I was paid over to a carpenter who was putting some new doors and flooring in the shoe store. But I was notto rest with the carpenter, for he passed me along when he came to straighten up with his groc- ery bill at the end of the week, The grocer put me in the bank for a fewdays, and they lent me to a young man who was building a house, The young man paid me over to the owner of a lumber yard who was supplying material for the new house. I have been going around town for a few weeks now, from one man to the other, but I haven't been sent out of the city yet for anything. I have helped a good many people. I helped pay the me- chanic his wages, buy his shoes, pay the carpenter, pay the grocer. I visited the bank and left to help a young tnan with the building of his house, etc. 1 have been fortunate, for I have always fallen in with a buy -at-home man." The Catalogue House Dollar -"I got into the pay envelope of the man next to the one referred to above, When I got home with him his wife was busy reading a catalogue of a department store in another city. So I was chuck- ed into an envelope along with some others of my kind, a registered stamp was put on us, and away we went to the catalogue house. From there I was sent further away to some import- er of foreign stuff. I have been knock- ing around here and there for a long time, but I never got back to the city where I was first put into the the pay envelope of the Catalogue House Man." Moral -If you spend your money at home you will probably see it again. Causes of Stomach Trouble. Sedentary habits, lack of out door ex- ercise, insufficient mastication of food, constipation, a torpid, worry and an- xiety, overeating, partaking of food and drink not suited to your age and oc- cupation. Correct your habits and take Chamberlain's Tablets and you will soon be well again. For sale by all dealers. EVER USEFUL SALT. Salt on the fingers when cleaning fowls, meat or fish will prevent slipp- ing. As a gargle, is good for sore throat. Salt in the water will clean willow ware and matting. In the oven under the baking tins it will prevent their scorching on the bot- tom. Salt and vinegar will remove stains from discolored teacups. Salt and soda are excellent for bee stings and spider bites. Salt put on ink when freshly spilled on a carpet will help in removing a spot. Used in sweeping carpets will keep out moths. Do not suffer another day witk Itching, Bleed- ing, or Protrude ing Piles. No surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at ones and as certainly cure you. Mc. a box • all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited. Toronto. Sample box free it you mention tbfa paper and enclose Sc. stamp to pay postage. The Scotchman's Prayer. 0 Lord, we approach Thee this morn - in' in the attitude of prayer, an' like - se o' wi complaint. 0 Lord when we cam tae the lan' o' Canady we expect- ed to find a lan' flowin' with milk an' honey, but instead o' that, we foun' a lan' peopled wi' the ungodly Irish. 0 Lord, in thy great mercy drive them tae the utmost pairts o' Canady, mak them hewers of wood, an' drawers o' water, gie them nae emoluments, gie them nae place o' abode, ne'er mak them magistrates nor rulers amang the people, but if ye hae any offices tae bestow or ony guid lan' to gie awa' gie it tae thine ain peculiar people, the Scootch. Mak them a' members o' Parliament, an magistrates, an' rulers among the people, but as for the un- godly Irish, take them by the heel and shak' them ower the mouth of hell but dinna let them fa' in, an' all the glory shall be thine, for ever and ever. - Amen. - s Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTC R I A The Price of Paper. a At the annual meeting of the Cana- Fotjhlin h!In NIJI'SE1EIOS1jets dian PI'essAssociation, one of the ub- u��jjIj` discussed was the advisabilit of A splendid list of fruit and ornamental stock for Fall Delivery in 1913 and Spring Dilivery in 1914. Start at once and secure ex- clusive t< rritory. We supply handsome free out- fit and pay highest co n- miSsions. Write for full particulars. $Ioue & Wellingfon1 Toronto - - Ontet.rioe 1•aisiug the price of the country weekly. ' The cost of production and the high cost of living have grown to such an extent that the country publisher finds himself hard run to make ends meet, land he must get more for his labor and outlay or quit his job. City merchants have become so much alive to the bene- fit of advertising that they are using the pages of the cheap dailies in their rush for the country trade so largely that the publishers can afford to and do send their papers out at less than the white paper costs them. Let a country publisher try sending out his paper at less than cost, and with the small amount of advertirting he can command, he would find himself up against a proposition that would soon put him out of business. SAVED HiS CABLE TOLLS. A Clever Ruse at Homo Gave Hien the Information He Wanted. A wealthy merchant in Paris wb does an extensive business with Japan was informed that a prominent arm in Yokohama bad failed, but the name of the firm he could not learn. He could have learned the truth by cabling; but, to save exPense, instead he went to a well known banker who had received the news and requested Wm to reveal the name of the firm, "That's a very delicate thing to do," replied the banker, "for the news In not official, and if 1 gave you the name I might incur some responsibility." The merchant argued, but in vain, and finally he made this proposition: "I will give you," he said, "a list of ten firms in Yokohama, and I will ask you to look through tt and then tell me, without mentioning any name, wheth- er or not the name of the firm which has failed appears is it. Surely you will do that for me." "Yes," said the banker, "for if I do not mention any name I cannot be held • responsible in any way." The list was made. The banker looked through it and as he handed it back to the merchant said, "The name of the merchant who bas failed is there." "Then i've lost heavily," replied the merchant, "for 'that is the firm with which I did business," showing him a name on the list. "But how do you know that is the firm which has failed?" asked the bank- er in surprise. "Very easily," replied the merchant. "Of the ten names -on the list only one is genuine, that of the firm with ?which I did business. All the others are fic- titious." THE HUMAN FACTORY. Its Machinery Develops With the he- tellect That Directs It. A human being is a kind of factory. The engine and the works and all the various machines are kept in the base- ment. and he sends down orders to them from time to time, and they do the work which has been conceived up in headquarters. He expects the works down below to keep on doing these things without his taking any particu- lar notice of them, while be occupies his mind, as the competent bead of a fac- tory should, with the things that are new and different and special and that bis mind alone can do; the things which, at least in their present initial formative or creative stage, no ma- chines as yet have been developed to do and which can only be worked out by the man up in the headquarters himself, personally, by the handiwork of his own thought. The more a human being develops the more delicate, sensitive, strong and efficient, the more spirit informed, once for all. the machines in the basement are. As be grows the various sub- conscious arrangements for discrimi- nating, assimilating, classifying ma- terial, for pumping up power, light and heat to headquarters, all of which can be turned on at will, grow more mas- terful every year. They are found all slaving away for him, dimly, down in the dark while be sleeps. They hand him up in bis very dreams new and strange powers to live and to know with. -Gerald Stanley Lee in Atlantic Magazine. The German Empire. The German empire was constituted as at present Jan. 1, 1871. After pre- liminary negotiations during the course or the Branco -Prussian war the par- liament of the north German confeder- ation (with which Baden, Hesse-Darm- stadt. Bavaria and Wurttemberg hal recently allied themselves) 11I as ad- dress dated Dec. 30, 1870, requested King William of Prussia to become German emperor. All the sovereign princes of German states and the three free and Hanseatic towns having join- ed in offering the Imperial crowns, the proclamation of William 1. as emperor was made at Versailles Jan. 18, 1871. The first reichstag was opened at Ber- lin eelin March 25, and the imperial consti- tution was adopted April 14, 1871. - Philadelphia Press. Not So Serious. A doctor who had been summoned hastily alighted from his carriage to find a woman awaiting him on the doorstep, but without the anxious look be expected in the circumstances. "I understand," he said, "that your boy has swallowedd a sovereign. Where is he?" "Oh, sir," was the reply, "I'm glad to tell yon we made a mistake! It wasn't a sovereign; it was only a haif- pennyl"_London Mail. • A Good Excuse. "Now, then," demanded Luschmaa'lI wife tine next morning, "what's your excuse for coming home in that con- dition last night?" "Well, to tell you the truth, m' dear," be replied, "none of the hotels would take me in." -Philadelphia Press. A Big Difference. "How rejoiced the knights of old were when they gut thetriady'sglovel" "And bow mean they look now wneu their girl gives them the mit- tent"--Baltimore American. Wever a !Year Retains,. "Pa, wno is Mrs Grundy?' "She is an Old Lady v►bo till &Forays supposed to lxdona to ebme other man's family.'••- (savage ecord-lieu a Id. His Mistake, Fogg -1 understand Dobkin Marilee a deb widow. P etidereon-SO by bet- deratilod, too, not tt proves to be a misunderetanding: Boston Transcript, SUFFERED TERRIBLY WI1H NAY FEVER Until "f=ruit-a-tives" Completely Cured Her MHa. HENRY KEMP. CORNWALL CENTRE, ONT., NOVEMBER 27th. 191r. "I was a martyr to Ilay Fever for probably fifteen years and I suffered terribly at times. I consulted many physicians and took their treatment - and I tried every remedy I heard of as good for IIay Fever. But nothing did me any good, Then I tried. "Fruit -a - lives" and this remedy cured me completely. I ant now well, and I wish to say to every sufferer from Hay Fever -"Try Pruit-a-tives". This fruit niedeicine cured me when every other treatment failed and I believe it is a perfect cure for this dreadful disease". MRS. IIRNRY KEMP. soc. a box, 6 for $2.5o -trial size, 25c. At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. VARIATIONS IN THE TEST. F1•equent experiments have shown that one single test of a cow's milk is not reliable as an indication of what percentage of fat her milk normally contains. A great many well known causes affect the test, also some causes that are unknown at present even by the closest students. This "variation in the test" is one of the puzzles of the cow's individuality, and because of these puzzling variations itis advisable to take composite samples at intervals so as to ascertain the average test. Some recent painstaking investiga- tions at one of the dairy research sta- tions in England with seven cows for two days, even covering such details as a separate test of eleven successive pints, three times a day, from the four quarters of the udder, show that while the average test with the cows giving thirty pounds of milk per day was 3.6 per cent, the variation was all the way from only six tenths of one per cent up to nine and a half per cent of fat. This is clear proof of how misleading one single test may be. If the real earning capacity of each individual cow is to be computed, it must be on the basis of her annual production of milk and fat less the cost of feed; regular weighing and testing give that know- ledge which every factory patron should have of each cow he keeps. A Weak Heart. When the heart is weak or irregular in action when the blood is thin and watery, remember the blood -forming qualities of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food and by its use flood the system with rich, red, vitalizing blood. This is Nature's way of curing weakness and disease. It is the only way to ensure lasting benefits. Caterpillars have wrought havoc in orchards in the vicinity of Madoc. Percy Bingham of Barrie was drown- ed in Lake Simcoe on his way to the Lennox picnic at Jackson's Point. The best thing to dust furniture is a large, soft paint brush which has been dipped in olive oil and squeezed alm'tst dry. This will take up every bit of dust without sending it flying about. HER BLOOD WAS TURNED TO WATER. She Doctored For Three Years But Was Finally Cured Sy Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. .Mas. JosEI'H SMITH, Fox 25, Creel - man, Sask., writes:- --" I write you these few lines hoping they will be a help to someone suffering from heart and nerve trouble. I doctored for three year:; but 'nntinued to get wor.,e. I tried three tifferent doctors, and got no relief, and ried all the drugs I could find but all ,iced. I became very weak, and my ,lood was turned to water. I tried 1tI.nt N'S HEART .Ni)SNERVE PILLS, ,nd after taking five boxes, I g=et great diet. I was so thin, I only weighed 01) lbs., but after taking five boxes I was eompletely cured, and I am well and trong'to•day, and weigh 159 lbs., and I •,tn now work • all clay, and do not feel 'ired or fagged out. If anyone would ,ke to hear more of my case, I would pleased to answer any questions," Price, 50 cents per brat Ir 3 haze, for +1.25 at all dealer.; , r mail..,, direct 1,71 ,,coin t of price 1Iy '1 he '1'. mirk. Toronto, Out. COOL THE HOUSE ON HOT DAYS. One way to make a room seem cool is to keep the air, no matter how warm it may be, circulating, and to keep the room shaded from the brightest rays of the sun's light. In a bedroom it is not well to exclude too much of the sun- shine, for in the summer as in the win- ter the room needs the sunlight to keep it in good condition; it needs all the air that wide open windows can give it, even if there is no sun in its windows. But during the hot part of the day the windows in the living -room should be well protected either with shades of dark green or with awnings from the sun's rays. A room so darkened in which the air is kept circulating with an electric fan, is aimost as refreshing as a room really cool. Another way to make a room seem really cool is to take advantage of each breeze. On a table near a window, where every moving breath of air will sway them, have a vase of flowers. Haven't you sometimes watched a sway- ing treetop on a warm day, and felt cooler because you thought about the breeze its tall branches felt? The effect of a few long-stemmed flowers swaying in a breath of air is the same. Linen covers for the heavily uphol- stered chairs, if you live in the same house winter and summer, help made things really coolkr. And surely strip- ed tan linen is much cooler to look at than heavy rep or velours. LITTLE BOY WAS SO SICK Did Not Think He Could Live. CHOLERA INFANTUM WAS THE CAUSE. This trouble is the most dangerous of all the summer complaints of children. It begins with a profuse diarrhoea, the stomach becomes irritated, and the child is soon reduced to great languor and prostration. Cholera Infantum can be speedily cured by the use of DR. FOWLER's Ex - TRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY. ' MRS. JOHN FooTE, Hantsport, N.S., writes :-" I can recommend DR. FowLER's EXTRACT Op WILD STRAWBERRY for Cholera Infantum. My little boy was so sick, I did not think he could live, as he was out of his mind, and did not know any one. I gave him "DR. FowLER'S," and the first dose helped him, and one bottle cured him. I recommended it to a friend whose children were sick, and it cured them too." DR. FOWLER'S EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY is a remedy that has been on the market for over sixty-five years and has been used in thousands of fam- ilies during these years, so you are not making any experiment when you buy it, but he sure and get "DR. FOWLERS" when you ask for it, as there are many Imitations of this famous remedy on the market. The price is 35c., and it is manufacture/ only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont. Put Sand in the Water With Cut Flowers. A sand pot kept conveniently at hand, on one of the porch tables, where slips broken accidentally or in the necessity of pruning from the various bloomeas may be stuck immediately, is a great convenience for the home gardener. The majority of slips will root without further trouble if the sand is kept moist. A novel plan for keeping cut flowers fresh also calls for a sand pot, or an opaque vase that will not show the sand. Arrange the flowers in the vase and fill with water as usual; then care- fully sift into the vase, by means of a funnel, sufficient sand to fiil it nearly to the top, shaking it to settle the sand about the stems. Cut flowers in orna- mental porch vases keep a longtime by this method. Advice For Nervous Folic, A hot water bottle covered with flannel should be placed at the feet. A very thin silk tissue bag of rubber partially filled with cold water should be placed at the base of the brain. This bag can be about ten inches long and six inches wide, soft as silk, and only half-filled with cold water, so that it does not feel bulky back of the head. In many cases the patient goes to sleep within a few minutes with this treat- ment, because the blood is drawn from the active brain, which is one cause of insomnia. When a patient is extremely nervous a cracker spread with butter and sprink- led slightly with cayenne pepper should be eaten. This warms the stomach. The stocking wound around the neck, not too close, yet rather snug, is an old method, but it does not retard the flow of blood from the head to the arteries, but it does retard the flow to the head, just as the cold water assists. All these methods are simple, effective, and harmless. A cup of hot milk taken dust before retiring will induce sleep. Those who hesitate about drinking the milk lest it cause constipation should remember that boiled milk, taken hot, acts as a laxative. It is only when it is cooled that it has the opposite effect. NERVOUS, LIFELESS DEBILITATED MEN YOUNG MEN AND MWni -AC D Mm. the victims of early indiscretions acid later ex, cesses, who are failures in lite -you are the ones we can restore to manhood and revive the spark of energy and vitality, pont give up In despair because you have treated with other doctors, used electric belts and tried various drug store nostrums. Our New Method Treatment has snatched hundreds from the brink of despair, has re- stored happiness to hundreds of homes and has made successful men of those who were "down and out." We prescribe specific rem- edies for each individual case according to the symptom and complications -we have no patent medicines. This is one of the secrets of our wonderful success as our treatment can- not fall for we prescribe remedies adapted to each individual case. Only curable cases as cepted. We have done business throughout Canada for over 20 Years. CURABLE CASES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY READER Are you a victim, Have you ivit hope? Are you intending to marry? as your blood been diseased? Rave you any weakness? Our New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do for you. Consultation Fne. No matter who has treated yon, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. Books Free - "Boyhood, Manhood, Fatherhood." (Illustrat- ed) on Diseases of Alen. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. No names on boxes or onset. ones. Everything Confidential. Question tut and Cost of Treatment FREE FOR HOME TREATMENT. DRS. KENN EDY& KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. riffraiN OarI C L: All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- ou desire to sec us personally call at our Medical Institute in DDetroit as wOnt. Ife see and treat sio patieats in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and I4aboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows; DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. ,Write our private address. 'i++ . _ . _ + ++++++ +++++++++++4M++++++++++++ The Times + + Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Daily Globe Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... Times and Toronto Weekly Sun + Times and Toronto Daily Star . , . • Times and Toronto Daily News. + Times and Daily Mail and Empire. Times and Weekly Mail and Empire Times and Farmers' ,Advocate Times and Canadian Farm (weekly). Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press. Times and Daily Advertiser....... • .... • ..... Times and London Advertiser (weekly) . Times and London Daily Free Press 1lfcrnir g Edition Evening Edition .... Times and Montreal Daily Witness Times and Montreal Weekly Witness Times and World Wide Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... Times and Presbyterian . • . Times and Westminster Times, Presbyterian and Westminster Times and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Busy Man's Magazine... 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For instance : The Times and Weekly Globe $1.60 The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00), 1.35 + making the price of the three papers $2.95. $2.95 The Times and the Weekly Sun .. . $1.80 The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1,00).. 1,30 + The Weekly Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) ti +i• $3.70 Ithe four papers for $3.70. oIf the pubticat on you want is not in above 1ist4 let us know. We • ,n supply almost any well-known Cana- ` dian or American publication. These prices are strictly • cash in advance • • S-nd subscriptions by post office or express order to • • • The Times Office aStone Block t WINGHAt4'I ONTARIO e w