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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-01-27, Page 31 • • ♦ .Wly. Yi,. tt .e •,i� i fi l • 'T iE WU GRAM TIMES, JANUd#JY 27, .19*Q n. •.,.- •..•.R...nM Says the Miller: "Right out to the prairie for mo -yea scree --every year too, Ever see I1 prairie of ripe wheat? Yellow groin fops feet high, stretching for miles --smiling farmer' harvesting from dawn till sundown. That's what please* me. for you know what that means to CRAM OF THE WEST' FI,QUR and what' Cream of the West" means to baking, You'll never know the real truth (shout the beat flour pn earth- ` Cream of the West' -till you try it. Get one bag. A 'Model Mill' product," The Campbell Milling Company, Limited, Toronto 1,14 FOR SALE B'!s RERR & BIRD, WINGHAM. 011 • •tutid.•ring plans for au esti 'v h,. •v System of railways to cost etso tial+ neo 0} , . i.,.,crie,ti)y DO coal depos- its, oom • P• + r.lpotrio power it has ih, Newt its. 11... U tr••,i States the percentage of rail/ sem hit h are not engaged iu car - ring .>+ .lir+ incus is very small. W 'htn fiv,. years Uraguay will have 140,000 siv- n- es, cepable of producing 2 000,000 pounds of olives and. 60,000 gallons of oil: Morris Hickey, a Windsor butcher who failed, left an inauranoe policy with Judge 'Mel'3ugh for the benefit of his creditors, and the proceeds will, it it expected, satisfy all claims, For train dispatching the Canadian Pacific Railroad has found the telephone so serviceable that the present system of about five hundred miles of telephone Iines will be extended to one thousand miles within a year. "Make Each Animal Worth 25'Vo Over Its Cost On % of a Cent a Day Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, making hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day, or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor. (' When you feed "stock food " to your cold, horse, swine or poultry, �` you are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm. "TBE Y Your animals do need not mere feed, but something to help their EEL" °`� ; bodies get all the good, out of the feed you give them so they can get fat 2:02i and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep them up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these Largest of any pacer of things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It is Grand Circait, 'oB Nota "Stock Food" But a "Conditioner" ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain, nor farm products. It increases yield of milk from three to five pounds per cow per day before the Specific has been used two weeks. It makes the milk richer and adel�s flesh faster than any other preparation known. Young calves fed With ROYAL PURPLE ate as large at six weeks old as they would be when fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. Cures bots! colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan McEwan,thehorseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC Persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel; 2.021, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.091, brother of :Allen Winters; winner of E36,000 in trotting stakes in 1908. These horses have never been off their feed since 1 commenced using Royal Purple Specific almost a year ago, and I will always have it in my stables." 1" oyal Purple STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One 50c. package of ROYAL. PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy days, which is a little over two-thirds of a cent a da Most stock foods in fifty centacka es last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFICF is given but once a day, and lasts half again as long. A $l.50_pail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will last 280days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value gf:your stock 25$. It is an astonishingly quick' fattener, stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into fleshu Asa hog fattener it is a leader. It will save many times its cost in veterinary bills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECI- FIC is our other Specific for poultry, not for stock. One 50 cent package will last twenty-five hens 10 days, or a pail costing $1.50 wittiest twenty-five hens 280 days, which is four times more material for• only three times the cost. It makes a "laying machine "out of your hens • summer and winter, prevents fowls losing_flesh at moultingtime. and cures poultry diseases. Every pabkage of ROYAL PURPLE TOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is • guaranteed. .lust use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation on another animal in the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has them all beat to death, or else back comes your money. FREE -Ask your merchant or write us for our valuable 82.page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also cooking receives and full particulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POU.. TRY SPECIFICS. If you cannot get Royal Purple Specifics from merchants or agents, we will supply you direct. express prepaid, on receipt of $1,50 a pail for either Poultry or Stock Specifics. Make money acting as our agent in your district. Write for terms. For sale by all up-to-date merchants. W. 1.tlenkins Mfg, Co., London, Can. Royal PurpleStOck and Poultry Specifics and free booklets are kept in stock by J. Walton McKibben and T. A. Mills. • NERvouNERVOUS DEBILITY OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will cure you and make a man of you. Ruder its induence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up; the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness, bashfulness and despondency disappear- the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and mental systems are invi^,orated; all drains cease -no more vital waste from the system. You feel yourself a man and know marriage cannot be a failure. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. Or NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Peter 11. Summers relates his experience: "I was troubled with Nervous Debility for many years. I lay it to indiscretion and excesses fn youthI became very despondent and didn't care whether I worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams At night weakened me -my back ached, had• pains in the back of my head, hands and feet were cold, tired in the morning, poor appetite, fingers were shaky, eyes blurred, hair loose, memory poor, etc. Numbness in the fingers set in and the doctor told me he feared paralysis. I tools ail kinds of medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric belt for three months, but received •little benefit. I was induced to consult Dry. Kennedy & AFTER TREATMENTKennedy, though I had lost all faith in doctors. Like a drowning man I commenced the Naw Mnrnoa 'l'n0ATMutaT and It saved my life. The improvement was like ma is -1 could feel the vigor going through wa the nerves. I s cured mentally and physically. I have sent them many patients and continuo to do so. CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY Wo treat anti euro VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases peculiar to Men. CONSULTATION FRES, BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write fora Question Bleak for Home Treatment. • - Dpsj(ENNEDY&KENEDY� Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St:, Detroit, Mich. T ICE All letters from etlofl a trust lie addressed to our Canadian Co>jrespondence Depart- i ntent in Windsor, Oat. If you desire to get us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat so patients in our Windsor oB'iees which are for Correspondence and Laboratory fot Catiadiaii business only, Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. BEFORE TREATMENT W-1•• 46:6: aur trlvate acldresd._ Back to the Farm. There are three ail Important thing's to be weighed by the city man who wisbes to return to the farm, The first is his wife. If she Is in every sense of Use word u helptetlte, loves the country and can give up what she has been used to in the city for the sake of the children and the building of a real home, thea the prospects are fairly favorable to begin with. The second thing to be considered is your years and capacity for work; the third, what is your capital. It all these are favorable. don't lose a day in trying to get suitably located. 1f any one of these points is doubtful, delib- erate well and move slowly. If you have a fat, bank account and a wife tied to the fleshpots of the city you can do nothing in the country; but, on the other hand, if your wife be one with you heart and soul, then capital might at a pinch be forgotten. As to the second point -that of years and capacity for work -thin; is very important, because so many of those who are earnestly desirous of forsak- ing the city today are well advanced in years, who think that the country would afford them an easy means of earning a living. There is nothing ease on the farm. Suited Him. w "Can you give me some work, lady$ "9. am afraid not" "Just a little that I nilly get some? thing to eat. "i have very little work." ".Well, give me half of that." Sure Cure. al just can't understand women." "Why don't you marry one?" "Will I understand them then?" "No, but yon will quit trying." Good Reason. "Why are you so hard up?" "Accident." "What sort?' "I fell off the payroll." Variety of Shapes. "Is be on the level?" "I think be is on the square. "When will he be round?" Identified.' "He talks like a book." "What book?" "Hoyle's Games." �r Os Don't All Do That. "Did she return his love?" "Nor4ust his presents." .61 Farm ar ►./den FLAN FOR DRYING FRUIT.. An. Evaporator Takes the Place of Old Method, The old way of drying apples, peaches and other fruit in the sun is not alvei ya desirable on ageOunt of the worms and bugs getting into the dried product and also from the fact that much loss results from the uu- certainty of the weather. Then the fruit Is of better quality when dried fu the evaporator, A few dollars' out- lay and a little time spent in the dull season, when other faro work is not pressing, will be all that is necessary to conatru0t au evaporator tbat is equal in all the essentials to one that would cost many times that amount, One corner Of same outbuilding prop. erly arranged with the bearing stove to furnish the beat and you have the A• E '1 .......__u,... �.l..._, -----', ---- - ------ -4 r-� h Y J ,i) A HOMEMADE FRUIT DRIER. beginning already, for you will have two sides already built, but it would be more accessible if constructed in the center of the room. A. very convenient size is four feet square with a small door near the floor to permit access to the stove and another door three feet or more from tthe floor, which is the full width of e cthe ceil- ing eaches to the evaporator and r with hinges at the bottom, so that it may be let down on to some support and so form a shelf when open. The stovepipe should be arranged in the form of a spiral sa as to throw off as much heat as possible, and this may be accomplished by using com- mon elbows and a few short joints of pipe. Set the first elbow on the stove opening and turn the next one hori- zontally, making at least one circuit of the compartment within a foot of the top of the stove, completing an approximate circle about three feet in diameter. Then the pipe may be car- ried outside through a convenient opening and run up, either on the in- side of the main building or outside. Only one set of trays may be used in this evaporator, and these will be held in place by cleats nailed to the inside at such intervals as will allow the trays to slide one above the other and should extend from just above the coil of pipe to the ceiling. The trays when filled with fruit are put in and removed through the large upper door and are so constructed that they fill the space entirely, being four feet square. The trays should be made so that they can be used either side up. Eight pieces of lumber one and one-quarter inches square and four feet long with a piece of half inch mesh galvanized wire netting four feet square are the materials used for one tray. The net- ting stretched and nailed between the two pieces make a good reversible tray four feet stjuare and one and one- quarter incbes deep. Making an Egg. "Grandpa, does hens slake them own eggs?" "Yes, indeed they do, Johnny." "An' do they always put the yolk is the diddle?" They do, Johnny." "An' do they put the white stat! around to keep the yeller from tab' bin' off?" "quite likely, my little boy." . "An' who sews the cover on?" This stumped the old gentleman, and he barricaded Johnny's mouth with a large Lollypop. --London . Scraps. Greatest Cavalry Fight. The most tremendous cavalry fight, t the world has ever seen perhaps, placenai t Doryleum, Syria, during the first of the crusades, between the mailed chivalry of Christian Europa and the Saracens. The Cavalry of tits crusaders numbered 110,000, while that of the Saracens reached the prodigious figure of 300,000. Completely surprised by the enemy, the Christians, recover- ed themselves and won the day, It is said that 50,000 of the Turkish horsel were left dead upon the field. Some Good Somewhere. Little Clarence ---Pa, I honestly don't believe it does me a bit of good when you thrash me. • Mr. Callipers -1 begin to suspect as much, my son, but you have no idea how much good it sometimes does tide to thrash you. An Utter Wretch. "Oat engagement is broken," ad. muted the girl, "but 1 still have s tender feeling far him." "You might as well cut it out," ad. wised .her friend, "Hes Ening arorgs0 bragging about his lucky escape. Troubled With Backache For Years Now Com- • pletel$r Cared By Th. Use Of DOAN'S SIDNEY PILLS. Mrs. W. C. Doerr, 13 Brighton St., London, Ont., writes; -"It is with pleasure that I thank you for the good your Doan's Kidney Pills clave done me. Have been troubled with backache for years, Nothing helped me until a friend brought me a box of your Kidney Pills. I began to take them and took four boxes, and am glad to say that I am cuted en- tirely and can do all my own work and feel as good as 1 used to before taken sick. I ani positive Doan's Kidney Pills are all you claim thorn to be, and I advise all kidney sufferers to give them a fair trial."• Let Doan's :Kidney Pills do for you what they have done fot thousands of others, They cute all forms of kidney trouble and they cure to stay cured. Price, 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for 1ti.25 at alt dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When ordering specify "Doan's," a PERT PARAGRAPHS.. 1n can atwaTe And something to be dissattsfled with if we set about it carefully and with malice afore- thought. It is easy to be indolent. though it seldom leads to ease. People for whom the best isn't good enough are generally found hanging over the bargain counter sorting opt the seconds. It is hard to think ill of a man who boosts your own game, no platter what his motives may be. The (aweless way in which some peo- ple spill and slop language around al- most warraots • the belief that they were reared aboard ship. Accident may land a man at the head, but it is an uncertain guy rope to hold him there. Not So Pathetic. Lo, the poor Indian! Poor did you say? Once on his uppers, Not there today, With his allotment Fertile and large, Quite Independent, Nobody's charge. Into a. cottage. Out of his tent. Can he afford It? Look at his rent. Maybe an oil weti Spouts on his land, Royalties bringing Into his hand. There with the check book Heady to buy White man for daughter, Though they come high. Dressing his woman, Gay Mrs. Lo, Out in the latest Paris can show. Lagging not dumbly Back in the rear, Isn't he coming? Well, he is nere. Feeling no longer Poverty's pinch, Lo, the poor Indian! Oh, what a cinch! Getting Wise. A story is going the rounds of an American heiress who invited a duke or a prince with an imposing title and debts to match to chase himself. Some bright girls are willing to learn by the experience of others. Some girls can see the point when it is illus- trated with a diagram and copious footnotes. • To the romantic young girl a prince looks Iike the real thing. He knows how to wear clothes that are not paid for and can band out a line of small talk that would do credit to a ribbon salesman, but when it comes to bring- ing borne a pay envelope on Saturday nigbt be falls down like an amateur flying machine. The fall styles in husbands are not running to dukes, and it is a bopeful sign. Worked Both Ways. "One cannot be too careful about marrylug. This falling in love is all uoiwense. A man should pick his life partner with as much intelligence as he would select a horse or an auto - um bile." "i fear you Rill Bever marry." "Why not? Isn't that a common sense plan?" "Yes, but that kind of a girl might be as particular herself." Easy. "Tell me what a man eats and I will tell you what be is like." "Can you do it?" "Sure." "There's Jenkins, who eats free lunches." "Like a sponge." Rank Poison. "Poor Nick has been convicted of arson." "You don't say:" "Yes.,, "Then he le really arson Nick." Kept Him Busy. "1 hear Jones has hooked up with his girl." • "Yes; be married in haste." "To repent at leis leisure?" He bas bad no leisure since." Way Behind. "Pa, is the baseball season over?" "I don't know. Ask your mothet-" "Hub, she don't even know that it is started." More Pratctical. "Will you love me always?" "Till the sun grows n ro scold. a s "How about when the 'liar gsts chilly?" Ne Discount. "Do you think her age is •what she says It is?„ "Well, all of that." U ncertain. "When shall we get married" "'Tomorrow, or some other day that never Colrlea;"_ . a ri- r �., fl, WI ai COAL COAL COAL. Weare sale 'gents for the celebrated $CRA4IT9N CO which has no. equal. Also the best grades of smilifrtag, Voturiel aaa domestic Coal, anti Wood 0f all kinds, always ou Band. narak oa LUMBER SHINGLES LATH (Pressed or f10dreasedi Cedar Posts, Barrels, etc:. . - "' .Highest 1Pir ce pelt' torr all khsde or Lada. "Ilek A1McLean Residence Phone No. 5t5. Mee, No. 64. 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