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The Wingham Times, 1913-09-04, Page 3
W[N owl 11 4 JCS, SEP cN HER 4 1913 f Elk e9 tEto• 480 The Gurney -Oxford Attracts Madam To The Kitchen 'THE GURNEY -OXFORD has a large follow- ing offashionable cooks who dip into the culinary art simply for the pleasure they derive from trying dainty recipes previously not attempted. They are all most enthusiastic supporters of the Gurney -Oxford because it contains many exclu- sive devices that make a perfect cooking equipment. Its oven is evenly heated in every corner to insure deliciously dainty cakes, golden brown biscuits, and light flaky pastry. A special Divided Flue carries the heat to every hole on the range. The nickle trimming is removable thus proving a great con- venience for keeping the range bright and clean. But most important is the Economizer. It is a small lever that moves around a series of six notches giving the exact degree of heat required for any particular dish. The heat of the range can be shut off and the kitchen kept cool between meals by turning the lever to a certain number. The fire is held at a low ebb on a special Reversible Grate until a baking oven is required. Then the necessary heat can be obtained quickly by simply turning the Economizer lever to another notch. Such control as this enables many smart women to invent some very tempting dishes which they set triumphantly before their friends. It will pay you to investi- gate the Gurney - Oxford. CALL ON US-A.;K FOR OUR NEW CATALOGUE "STOVES ANA RANC,ES" elieMMUMONVIIMMH: . ' a .k fir Domestic and Sanitary, Engineer Y E WINGe3AM (B) tITE ♦ REST AND HEATH TO MOTHER AND 011110. MRS.\VINSLOW'S SOOTHING 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 DIARRIR(EA. It is ab. solnte1y harmless Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-dv: cents a bottle. Good Local Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable fonthiD utir[ss A splendid list of frit;t ;incl c. ornanlu ntal S'oCk for Rd' Delivery in 1913 dual Spring -L)ilive•ry in 191.x. 4.Start at once and s ctlr', eh- `cluSive t .' i''tory. • %e. csupply han.lsnni- f, c'c .)ut fit an 1 fsiy high t co nliSSich a, Write for full parlioulars. Stoned WolIiiiIo i )h o - - Ontario "Toro t L.. BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors at the kdbkix/ Y, M. C. A. BLDG.. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Entero any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chartered Accountant 17 Vice -Principal FALL TERM from wept. 2 CENTRAL S7RATF©RD. ONT. Ganada's Best liusinf ss GolleAe. We have three departments 1 Commercial, Shorthand 4nd Telegraphy Courses are thorough and prac- tical. We have a strong staff of experienced instructors and our graduates meet with success. Write l for our free catalogue and learn what we aro doing. 0. A. filet t;ifl.AN PRINCIPAL. 4 What is a Suffragette? Recently a street car advertising agency, in order to stimulate interest in their cards displayed in the cars, offered cash prizes for the best epigram- matic definitions of a suffragette. Here are some of the results: A suffragette is a woman who thinks she has leen de -voted long enough. Not say iefied With the last word, she always wants the first. She is the corset needed to reduce the go✓ernment waste. She is the woman who .needs the "poll" for her vaulting ambition. A suffragette is a sting of beauty and a jawer for ever. A wo'na'I who would rather break windows than clean them. A woman whose troubles are certainly not "little ones." One who spends more time airing her views than viewing her heirs. A woman who will spare no 'panes' to get her rights. A woman who would rather rock the country than the cradle. The nearest approach of la human being to a came;; she can go without food and water for an indefinite period. A female creature queer and quaint, Who longs to be just what she ain't. The hen that would cackle and never set Is the woman known as a suffragette. We can't efface, we don't forget her, We love her still-thestillerthe bettor. VALUE OF THE SiLO ON DAIRY FARMS Silos and silage mean more to the dairy farmer than most of us have any conception of, and in the future It will he used more than It has been in the past, writes llagh Can Pelt in the American Agriculturist. Commercial foodstuffs have doubled in price during the last few years. The time has come when the fanner .must rely more and more upon his own efforts to produce and pr'eser've titian his own farm those footle that will supply the ueetli of Ills dairy herds. IIe must practice intensive farming in the broad- est sense. That which in the past has beau wasted will in the future meas- ure to a great extent the profits. And 1 dare say there is no one thing that could be lidded to the farm equipment that would promote latens;ve farming so greatly as a good silo. The silo will make It possible to produce two pounds or milk where one was former- ly pt•odncecl, and in so doing fertilizing constituents will are made available that when returned to the land will in- crease the productivity in the same proportions. Like any other farm Improvement, however, the building of 1r silo incurs t•oasillerable expense, yet it is quite doubtful whether or not any other building can be built for the storage of roughness as will the silo. Compar- ing the digestive feeding nutrients, which indicate more nearly than any- thing else the value of foodstuffs, we find that one ton of clover bay, which Photo by Cornell university. The (]uernse.v breed of dairy cat- tle Is becoming very popular in this country because they are superior dairy animals and have the nblliiy to yield Hell, high colored milk. They are larger and more rugged, as a rule, than jersey's and are in demand for building up mills herds from common cattle. The Guern- sey cocc dors not stand for beauty. but for moth. She has no pro- nounced weak points and Is 1111m1- rathly adapted In the conditions of the average 3.1110 (1uerrtb,ys are ec'on'nttral t,rudacers, and thea' mill: tests high in butter fru The Guernsey buil shown Is Ledyard's Warwick, and he is owned by Cor- nell tint vet%)ty 'equires the same space for storage as eight tons of silage, contains 880 puuuds Of total digestible nutrients, while eight tons or corn silage routain 2,004 pounds. 'Thus two and one third times as many digestible feeding nu- trients can be stored in the silo space as in the haymow. Various crops linve been used In the silo, but in states where corn is the principal crop this product alone will be found most satisfactory in making silage, for several reasons, the ronin one of Which is that if corn is not put into the silo the stalks, which rep• resent a large, percentage of the feed- ing value of the coru, will be wasted. While clover or other grains which might be used for silage can be stored In a small barn or even n stack and as some dry foods are necessary with silage, the advantage of storing these in dry form becomes apparent. In filling the silo there are many precautions which must be taken into consideration, and it will be found that to make good silage is more difficult than to make good hay. If allowed to beconie too dry before putting into the silo the corn fire fangs, while if cut too green it will be very sour. Either one of these conditions makes the silage unpalatable and lessens its value for dairy cattle. Worms In Horses. The very best treatment for wn"us in horses is a good purge followi' ; a fast of a day or two. The best ],urge is given in the form of a ball, but if you find difficulty in administering such try i quart of raw linseed oil into which have been shaken two ounces of oil of turpentine in a drench, being careful not to strangle the animal, as this will set up a fatal pneumonia. Do this twice, a week apart. Follow this with Fowler's solution on feed, say a little bran twice a day for a short pe- riod. Give one-half ounce'of standard Fowler's solutionto each horse. If a mare is near foaling hesitate about giving the oil purge. -Dr. G. P. Babb. Dairy Breeding and Feeding. In all breeds milk records are broke so frequently that the last few yetirs "the world's record cow" has held hell title but a few months or. not morq than a year at most, says the Kansai Farmer. Superior breeding bas been Largely responsible for the big records, but the breeding could not have assert- ed sserted except for a thorough understali'4 lug of feeding for milk and with this ;good care. Each is necessary to makd Dairy breeding count. We confidently predict that with a more general sprea4 Of the knowledge of feeding for mill: production more high records, will be established* 31,SOLI Jai<i STRONGLYADVISES "FRUIT-A-TIVES" Because They Cured Him, And They Will Curo You MR. ALEX. MacARTER WALICERTON ONT., MAT 9th. 7e1I. "I have been in Walkerton its business for a good many 'years and many of my townsmen know that my liealll, for long periods was precarious, My trouble was extrl ole Nervousness, brought on by Indigestion and Dys- pepsia, from which I suffered in the lOost severe form. It was so bad that I could not sleep before about four in the morning. I noticed one of your published testimonials of how someone hacl used "fruit-a-tives" for similar trouble and asked Mr. Hunter, my druggist, his opinion on the matter and he advised their use. I immediately procured several boxes and I am pleased to say that I now enjoy splendid health and could not possibly feel better. I can ent with every degree of satisfaction and sleep without an effort. I strongly advise anyone suffering from like complaints, to commence using "Fruit-a-tives". A1I X. McCARTER. 5oc. a box, 6 for $2.5o -trial size, 25c. At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. IMPORTANT CHANGES IN GRAND TRUNK TRAIN SERVICE FROM TORONTO. Train leaving Toronto 10.15 a. m., daily except •Sunday for PENETANG WHARF will be discontinued from Allen- dale to Penetang after Saturday, Sep- tember Gth, but will run through to Huntsville and North Bay via Muskoka Wharf, commencing Monday, September 8th. MUSKOKA EXPRESS, leaving Toronto 12.01 p. m. daily except Sunday for Muskoka Wharf and Iluntsville, will be discontinued after Saturday, Septem- ber 6th. BUFFALO-MUSKOKA FXPRESS, leaving Toronto 2.2') a. m. daily for Muskoka Wharf, Huntsville, Burk's Falls ano North Bay, will be discontinued after Sunday, September 7th. BUFFALO EXPRESS, leaving Toronto 12.05 a. m. daily for Niagara Falls and Buffalo, will be discontinued after Mon- day, September 8th. Train leaving Toronto, 1.40 p. m. Saturdays only for Jackson's Point will he discontinued after Saturday, August 30th. Train leaving Jackson's Point 7.30 a. m. Mondays only for Toronto will be run on Tuesday, September 2nd, in- stead of Monday, September 1st, and will be discontinued after that date. Through Pittsburg Sleeper on 4 32 p. m. train from Toronto will be discon- tinued after Saturday, September 6th. Last Pullman Sleeping Car for King- ston Wharf will leave Toronto 10.45 p. m. Saturday, September 13th, and leave Kingston Wharf 12.211 a. m. for Toronto after Monday, Septemberl5th. A lady entered the railw,y station and said she wanted a ticket. The pale 'o,'king clerk asked, "Single?" "It ain'c none of your business," she replied. "1 might have been married a dozen limes if I'd felt like providin' for some poor, shiftless wreck of a man like you.:' Despondency Is often caused by indigestion and constipation, and quickly disappears when Chamberlain's Tablets are taken. For sale by all dealers. The Saugeen river which is ignored altogether on the greater maps of the world and depicted but dimly on even the minor ones, is nevertheless the most expensive luxury that the ratepayers of Bruce have to taut up for and with to -day. Of .the total sum expended for county purposes in Bruce, it is es- timated that within the past few years nearly one-half has been spent in bridg- ing the Saugeen river alone. -Bruce Herald and Times. DID NOT KNOW WHAT IT WAS TO BE RID OF ROILS. When the blood becomes impure, it is only natural that boils, pimples, or sonic other indication of bad blood sln.u'.d break out of the system. There is only one thing to do, and that is to purify the blood by using a thorough blood cleans- ing medicine such as BURDOCK' BLOOD BITTERS. MR. ANDREW B. COLLIER, River Glade, N.B., writes:--"hor years I was `toubled with Boils. I did itot know what it was to be rid of them until I began to nsc BURDOCK BLOOD BrrTnrs. I only used two bottles of it, and it is now over ten years, and I can honestly .ty that I have never had any boils since. t can always recommend B,B.B." liuRDOCB 131.0011 BITTERS is a retnedy indicated for the purification of the .Todd, and has been used by thousands luring the past 30 years. It is manufactured by The. T. Milburn 1 Co., Limited, Toronto, Out. 'YOUR BLOOD IS TAINTED ULCERS, BOILS, SWOLLEN GLANDS, BLOTCHES, PIMPLES, AND ALL SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES ARE COMPLETELY CURED BY THE NEW METHOD TREATMENT We desire to call the attention of all those aflic•tcd with any Blood or Skin pi to our New Method Treatment ns 4 guaranteed euro for these complaints. There isa no ex. cuse for anyperson having a disfigured face from eruptions and blotches. No matter whether hereditary or acquired, our specific remedies and treatment neutralize all poi- sons to the blood and expel them from the system. Our vast experience in the treat- ment of thousands of the most serious and complicated cases enables us to perfect a cure without experimenting. We do business on the plan -Pay Only for the Benefit You Derive. If you have any blood disease, con- sultus Free of Charge and lot us prove to you how quickly our remedies will remove all evidences of disease. Underthe influence of the New Method Treatment the slain be- comes clear, ulcers, pimples and blotches heal up, enlarged glands are reduced, fallen out hair grows in again. the eyes become bright, ambition and energy return, and the victim realizes a new life has opened up to him. YOU CAN ARRANGE TO PAY AFTER YOU ARE CURED CONSULTATION FREE Send for Booklet on Diseases of Men "THE GOLDEN MONITOR" FREE If unable to call, write fora Question list for Home Treatment DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed }+i to our Canadian Correspondence Depart - went in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and (Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Oat. Write for our private address. ++++++++444+ 44++++++++++++ a'+++++++'Y+d+,:W4,04,++++++++•s, The Times' ClubbrngListI d'iniStalManilailliMEMESSCIAM + + +8 ,1, + ♦ 4 Timet and Weekly Globe . 1.60 4 4 Times and Daily Ulobe 4.50 ,1, + Times and Family Herald and W eehly Star .... 1.85 't 4 Times and Toronto 1'v i ekly bun , ... , . -. 1.75 +.1. + `Times and Toronto Daily Star ........... ... , 2 30 . + Times and Toronto Daily News.. 2.81 + 4. + Times and Daily Mail and Empire. + . t. +A Times and Weekly Mail and Empire... . ., ' t 4 ♦ Times and Farmers' Advocate f, !'Tues and Canadian Farm (weekly) ; t (., ♦ :� I+'r0 '` TimesTimes andaha Winnipegarmand Weekly I'lee pass.... 1 1 +G 44. . 4 Times and Daily Advertise] ... ... .. ... ; .e ; 4. s Times ani London AdvNrtisel (wfekl�) .. 1.' ( °� 4. 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Times and Strand '> f 4.Times and Success 1 .a5 4' 4 Times and McClure's Magazine............ •"' CO ♦ Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,;5 +l: Times and Designer 1.35 + 4 Times and Everybody's 2.40 + 4. These prices are for addresses in Canada or Grt c,t 4' 1 Britain. 4. 4 The above publications may be obtained by T'rnes 4' 4. +r subscribers in any combination, the price for any ptlI'ica- ' � tion being the figure given above less $I.00 repress r.ting 4 ' the price of The Times. For instance : 4' The Times and Weekly Globe 61,60 4 + The Farmer's Adyoeate R2.35 less $1.00). 1.35 ++I+ 4 ''' ''1i+ $ .x. '.95 4. 1 making the price of the three papers $2.95. + t The Times and the Weekly Sun.... •4f• The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00).. 4. The Weekly Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) 4 3. 4. F the four papers for $3.7o. + O o If the p'Ib.icat on you want is not in above list, let o *o us know. We • in supply almost any well-known Cana- ° 6 dian or American publication. These prices are strictly o i cash in advance o • S•.,nd subscriptions by post office or express order to h 4 0 a • • Stone Block ♦ A ° •WIN'GHAM ONTARIO •• da �3+�3'��+��'`l`3�+�:'!'�.�':3'3�+1':es�u t+�:�++t+l•t��i.'�ki�,'k�:� 6'1.60 1,30 60 $3.70 1 The Times Office