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The Wingham Times, 1913-10-30, Page 3WINGHAI' E TIMES, OCMOBHI, 30 1913 tgb igjv The G=urney -Oxford Attracts Madam To The Kitchen ", ,,,m I•TCCONOMI2ER PAT 0t, z,:11, lift NStO/04 THE GURNEY -OXFORD has a large follow- ing of fashionable cooks who dip into the culinary " Arpp„��, ',n 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-A3K FOR OUR NEW CATALOGUE "STOVES AND RANGES" • o Domestic and Sanitary Perth, Scotland, where golf is now a municipal institution, is the city where the first act was passed in 1424 by James 1. forbidding the playing of "golfe" futeball or .other sik unprofitable sportes." WANTED. Good Local Agent - at once to repre'r nt the Old and Reliable Foothill Nursurios A splendid list of fruit and ornamental stork for Fall Delivery in 1913 and Spring Dilivw ry in to Start at once and st cut, ex-' clusive tl tritory. We supply hand'.nme free out fit aryl pay highest co n- nlls�io s. Write for full particulErs. Stone& Wellingtoa4 Toronto - Ontel.riio Engineer WING; 1A MM Phone Receiver Bridal Wreatl•. With business too pressing as a tele- phone operator for a church weddin , Miss Al,a E. Gem, in harge of the telephone ceichang • et Sato••, 'leas married to II. 13. Mier, while wealing the head receiver : nit with the trans- mitter in one ham(. Twice during the ceremony she stepped th' (:f1ieieti, g clergyman to a t:. _t • tete, ;t n•• (all,. "Henry 13. Mick, do ; ou take this woman to be your law el and wedded wife, to" --began, the minister. "Hello, 11l•1l+: yes, j,1it a minute please," broke in Mies Gum. Turning to the minister, she said: sorry to inteirept you, but that sub- scriber was very an'co.as for a num t r. Proceed." "'1'o --to cherish, 'ov€ and proti et," stammered the minister. "And you, Alm F, Gu n, do } on take this man" "Number, please," Inerrurted the operator brad'. "Yea, yee, I know, but the line is buoy. Ri.ig again. 0'1, very well, there i- the party. Tha tl; you.', After several int,'rru;ltiens the mini• ster succeeded in getting the knot tied and he "rang off'." Miss Gum has been the manager of the telephone exchange at Eaton for several years and on the day set for their wedding she informed Mick she could not desert her post at the switch- ing board. (8) e m s e n t t n tare nn a tiD •1. ) tgIT e only „ y nut of it will be for me to wear the hoed receiver during the ceremony. she said. ic'c is a prominent stock m to in North Colorado and he is anxiousiy waiting for the telepl o e compete., to send an operator to r lieve his wife. The London & fort Sta •ley Ra'Iway electrification by-law was carried by London ratepayers by a majority of 746. Chree other by -'laws were carried also. Harry Sager, a married man with a family, and Fred Fraser, a lad of eigh- teen, were kil1e0, and thrl-e others in- jured, as the result of a boiler explosion at Mr. 1Nanley Chew's sawmill at Mid- land. The value of the mini- output of precious and sem-preeious metals in Ilahn in 1912 was 21,41;.521 against, $.19,109,89.1 in 1911. AVO d •,•n tl tie ( 'ongl, 1, edlrlur4, If you want to contribute directly to the occurence of ea-tillaw hr orchitis and 9,,cumonin Ilse ,• nt,rh medicines the) c ,main (iodine, inni;,(line heroin and other sedatives when you have a cough; or e • ,l An ee•teetorant like ('hamper- ln • l ..,nnh to medY is what i r ceded. Thar cleens nut the culture beds or' breeding ul,ie s for the germs of pneu- monia and oth"r germ • diseases. That is tt1) pneumonia never results from , a cold when (`hamh,•rl tin' s Cough Rem- edy 1s used, It has a world wide repu- tation for its cures. It contains no morphine or other sedative. For sale by all dealers. The Pop; at The Fair, "For the sake of the farm boys at least, the country fair should be main- tained and patronized. The average active intelligent boy is very apt to be- come dissatisfied with farm life if he is made to see in it nothing bdt a round of hard work, At the fair, however, wh ere he may exhibit his vegetables from his garden, or his pet calf or colt, he gets a larger conception of what farming really means." This claim on behalf of the country fair was made in Farm and Dairy some weeks ago. We make it even more confidently now. In the meantime we have had an opportunity to notice the influence of a:visit to a country fair on the ideals of a couple of farmer boys. These boys were not sons of the Hol- sttin breeder whose cattle they helped to show at a small fair held recently in Eastern Ontario. They Were immi- grants who came across the ocean not so very long ago and hired out on this farm. It did us good to see the faces of those boys as they stood their stock before the judge. Under their employ- ers' direction they had cared for and fitted that stock themselves, and they felt as proud as young kings. To use an exhibitor's expression, they were "showing:all the time." "It was worth while coming to the fair just for the enthusiasm and the pleasure it has 'given those boys," remarked the owner of the cattle later in the day. And indeed the country fair is a grand institution for inspiring the country boy. How successful it is in that purpose depends on how well we farmers patronize the local fair. -Farm and Dairy. Judge Malorim at Quebec rendered judgement unfavorable to the Jewish plaintiffs in a libel action, holding that individuals are not entitled to bring action when their race or religion is libelled. %V pooping Cough, Mrs. Charles Lovell, Agassiz, B.C. writes: "Seven of our nine children had whooping cough the same winter and we attribute their cure to Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. We always have it in the house, and re• commend it as the king of all medicines. I was formerly completely cured of protruding piles by using Dr. Chase's Ointment. Skim Milk For Fowls. An interesting experience in the feeding of skim milk to poultry is given by Lime Ridge Farm, New York, in Hoard's Dairyman. On this farm cows and hens are both kept in large numbers. During April, May and June skim milk was fed regularly at the rate of 350 lbs. daily to 1,500 hens. During this time the amount of eggs received varied from 600 dozen down to 450 dozen per week (all eggs each day being counted and records kept.) By a mistake in in- structions during the first week in July the skim milk was fed to other live stock. At once there was noticed a geadual and alarming decrease in the amount of eggs laid per day. The act- ual omission of the skim mill}, however, was not discovered for two weeks dur- ing which time the amount of eggs laid per day decreased from 66 dozens to 38 dozens. Then skim milk was again fed in the same manner as before, and the egg ;'ie1d increased to 66 dozens again per day, which point was reached on July Slat. • Another correspondent of Hoard's says skim milk is especially beneficial to poultry during the moulting season. His hens frequently lay right through the moulting season when given skim milk. He considers skim milk worth 59 cents per hundred for calves, pigs or poultry, especially to laying hens. They Make Yon Feel flood. The pleasant purgative effect produc- ed by Chamberlain's Tablets and the healthy condition of body and mind which they create make one feel joyful. For sale by all dealers. Character in Gait. Experts say that handwriting m er varies in its essence -that is, the. its true characteristics are always preserv- ed even when one attempts to imitate the writing of an:,ther, says an ex- change. But still we know that forg- eries sufficiently clever to bewilder handwriting experts have been perpet- rated, and itis also certain that, grant- ed a certain "knack" and peculiar tal- ent, a most characteristic signature can be so imitated as to defy anything more than grave suspicion of the committal of a forgery. Walking, however, comes under an- other category. No one can imitate another's walk for more than two or three steps without making it obvious to any but the densest observer that he is acting - or walking -a part; that he is thinking constantly of the length of t.is stride, of the way the foot should reaeh and leave the ground, of the speed and of the swing of the body. l g Y So very characteristic is walking that even the most unobservant requires only to hear three or four footfalls in a passage without seeing the walker to be absolutely assu$ed of his individual- ity if, of course, the walker is familiar to the listener. 41 TESTREiiii So other Sufferers Will Take "fruit -a -tins" And Be Cured Gratitude -- heartfelt gratitude -- prompted this later. 'Madame Lan- glois was so thankful to "Fruit -a -tires" for restoring her to health and strength, that she gladly allowed her letter to be published. MNUNME V.LERC LNNOLOIS ST. Roant:A.1,D, nvk., SipT. 23rd. 1912. "I have pleasure in stating that I have been cured of severe Dyspepsia and Chronic Constipation by using "Fruit-a-tives." I was a terrible sufferer front severe Constipation for many years, and I tried every remedy I heard of, and also was treated by physicians without any permanent benefits. Then I tried "Fruit -a -tires", and this fruit medicine has completely cured both the Constipation and Indigestion. I cannot praise "Fruit-a-tives" enough". 11IADAMI3 VAL1;R13 LANGLOIS, soc. a box, 6 for $2.5o -trial size 25C. At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit -a- tires Limited, Ottawa. And how does character show itself in walking? It might be replied, "In every way." For example, could one imagine a busy, alert lawyer lolling along with a long, heavy, laborious stride,eor could one imagine a lethargic, unambitious, routine -like living farm laborer passing along a street with ;a springy, alert, active and nervous tread? The cautious, suspicious man could not possibly walk in the same manner as the hail fellow well met, open-hand- ed sportsman; neither could the walk of the dignified clergyman resemble that of the bustling, all -there business- man, bent on making himself a million- aire. The cowardly cannot walk as do the fearless, the restless not as the phleg- matic. And for this reason it seems that the police gave often something stronger to go on when they find a pris- oner's boot mark tallies with the im- press of the foot of the known criminal for if placed under observation when at excercise he will demonstrate to those watching him the weight he puts on the different parts of the foot where impress would be greater and so on. A Marvellous Escape. "My little boy had a marvellous es- cape," writes P. F. Castiams of Prince Albert, Cape Hope. "It occurred in the middle of the night. He got a very severe attack of croup. As luck would have it, I had large bottle of Chamber- j lain's Cough Remedy in the house. After following the directions for an hour and twenty minutes he was through ' all danger." Sold by all dealers. What the Silo Does The silo is the only way to save frost- ed corn and get its full value. Silage makes more and better meat, better milk, and calves than any other method of feeding. Stock grows in winter as in summer if well cared for. It is easy to gauge the rations accu- rately. It is a durable and cheap storage. A concrete silo is fireproof and not very expensive. It makes far more and a better man- ure. The cobs and stalks are all eaten and digested. Full values are recover - DID NOT KNOW WHAT OT WAS TO BE RI® OF BOILS. When the blood becomes impure, it is only natural that boils, pimples, or =:nae other indication of bad blood should break out of the system. There is only one thing to do, and that is to purify' the blkod by using a thorough blood cletu.s- ing medicine such as BURnoCI: lLoon 131TT13Ra. MR. ANDRI3w Is. COI,LtuR, River Glade, N.B., writes: -"For years I vas troubled with Boils. I did not know what it was to be rid of theta until 1 b,gau to use 13mrnoci BLOW) PITTI to.. 'g ofout t two bottles it,t t is only used tt new over ten year' and I caIn tsstly eey that 1 have never lied ern• l de :ince. 1 call always recoiuuiu ui 13.8.13." 13uaooca l3Leon BITTERS is a remedy purification of the indicated for the 1 u blood, and has been used by thousands during the past 30 years. It is manufactured by The T. MilLurn Co,, Limited, Toronto, Out, LACK.`"wnganillmlu,� KarimP STOVE POLISH A Winner attIiege KN'I Ger, ,t% A PASTS 1 THE F F. DALLEY i 1.•ru.I14o DUST ' �wt �0 NoWASTL HAM4i.Tort, CANADA No RuciY K moi , ed from the whole plant both as a feed and a fertilizer. Corn cobs are very rich in potash, and when dried hard are very slow to rot, thus losing the entire value as a feed and tying up for years, maybe, the fertilizer value, robbing the soil to that extent. The man who feeds ten head without a silo for a year loses the cost of the silo, and still has none. Why the Youth's Companion Should be In every Family Because it is unusual, and no other source can supply the same kind of reading. The fact and fiction are novel, and every line is fit to read aloud. A year of The Youth's Com- panion as it is to -day is of inexhaustible entertainment and benefit to the family. In quantity, it provides more than any other American monthly periodical - and is the more appreciated because it comes fifty-two times a year instead of twelve. The Companion as it is to -day, enlarg- ed, and broadened in scope, including the Family Page, the Boy's Page, and the Girl's Page as departments, with eight splendid serials and 250 shorter stories, its accurate and impartial edit- orials, Science and Current Events, makes a volume of matter that touch( a every genuine interest of the family, So carefully is it edited, so varied is its contents, that a family would be well supplied with entertaining fiction, up-to-date information and wholesome fun, if no other periodical entered the home. If you are not familiar with The Campanion as it is to -day, let us send you sample copies containing chapters from Frank Lillie Pollock's great Can- adian serial, "The Timber Treasure," and the Announcement for 1914. New subscribers who send 42.25 for the remaining issues of 1914 will receive free the remaing issues of 1913, and a copy of The Companion Practical Home Calender in addition. 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