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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-02-03, Page 3• .. 1 INOU TIES, F,MaRM4+tIrd1, 3 11eiO NEWS NOTES, MC Miler ti NO. term must be ngmlr good reason why pearly every wise housewife .4, , „AM QF TUX WF''ST' Flour, ' because, I turn out about a barrel every minute of every twenty-four hours, That sounds $orad for ' CREAM or 'fHE WES'i'r' doesn't 1t? And it's made at the *Model lKilh' too." The Campbetl Milling Company, Limited Toronto V FOR SALE 13 KERR & JIRD, WINGRAM. EXPL':.:tr UIF ECTIONS, At t. Hol3 enga epee el the • man tell prose "Yaw Ale c ek, shtrt•.o ulemau travelling in sf at a certain village •Av,.e anyone who could HH was iutroduoed to •fol easter. The English% to tear friend, can yon Whaokhammer, the v Y ,a Jet walk de road up to and t irn de pritob over de l7•'•••t just go on till you gum t ro .h f vidde woote around a who, r^ to ; nt you don't take dot road, Well den you go on till you meet a big barn, shingled mit straw; den you dura de road round de Feld and an till you cum to a'pig red bowie ail speckled o'er mite vite, and de garret upstairs. Veli, dat is my Broder Han'a house, Dan you Burn de house around de barn, and yott see a road dot goes up in de woods. Den you don't take dat road too, Den you go right straight on and de first you meet is a haystack. Yell, he don't lif here, Den you vill get fu ether, and you see a house on top de hill about a mile, and goon in dere and esk.de ole woman and she vill tell you better than T oar." Make Each Animal Worth "THE EEL" 2:021 Largest Winner of any pacer pn Grand Circuit, '08 25010 Over lis Cost On%ofaCentaDay Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, making hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of millc five pounds per cow a day, or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor. When you feed "stock food " to your cow, horse, swine or poultry, You are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm. Your animals do need not more feed, but something to help their bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get fat and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep them up to the best possibe condition. No 'stock food" cap do all these things. ROYAL. PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It is Nota"Stook 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 adds flesh faster than any other preparation known. Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE are 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 hots: colic, worms, skin diseases and debility__ permanently. Dan McEwan, the horseman, says: 1 have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.091, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $35,000 in trotting stalces in 1908. These horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple Specific almost a'year ago, and I will always have it in mystabies." Qyal u STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One 50c. packaged ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFICwill last one animal seventy days, which is a little over.two•thirds of a cent a clay. Most stock foods in fifty cent packages last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE' STOCK SPCIFIC is given but once a day, and lasts half again as long. A $1.50` pail containing four times the • amount of the fifty eent pacicage will last 280 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 20. It is an astonishingly quick fattener,. stimulating the appetite and the relish for o food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh, As a hog fattener it is a leader. 11 willsgve many times its cost in veterinry bIlis, ROYAL. PURPLEPOULTRY SPECI- FIC is our other Specific for poultry, not for stock. One .50 cent package will last twenty-five hens 70 days, or a pail costing $1.50 will last twenty-five hens 280 days, which is four times more material for only three times the cost. It makes a ' laying machine" out of yourhens summer and winter, prevents fowls losing flesh at tnoulting time, and cures poultr diseases. Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is guaranteed. dust use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation on another animal ie the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has them alt beat to death, or else backcomes your money. FRES—Ask Your merchant or write us for our valuable 32 -page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also 000kingreceipes and full particulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL- TRY SPECIFICS. If you cannot get Royal Purple Specifics from merchants or agents, we will supply you direct, express prepaid, on receipt of $1,50 a pail for either Poultry or Stock Specifics. Make money acting as our agent in your district. Write for terms. For sale by all up-to-date merchants, W, L Jenkins Mfg, Co,, London, Can. Royal Purple Stook and Poultry Specifics and free booklets are kept in stock by J. Walton McKibben and T. A. Mills. DRs.KEN CURE DISEASES OF MEN PATIENTS TREATED THROUGHOUT CANADA FOR 20 YEARS Dtz.10E$slgov, M•SntoA tom omit I of Das. p. CONSULTATION FREE Bootee Free ori Diseases -of Moo. If unable Ro call, writeHOMETRE0AT6MENT tion lank for Drs. K. & K. are favorably known through- out Canada where they [lave done bush cess for over 20 years. Thousands of patients have been treated and cured by their great ;91;lll and through the virtue of their New Method Treatment. When you treat with them you know you aro dealing with respon sible physicians as they own and occupy their own office building in Detroit, valued at $100,0OQ when they decide your case is curable,'alt your worry is remoaed for you know they will not deceive you. They guarantee to cure all curable eases, No matter how many doctors have failed to benefit you; no matter how much money you have spent in vain; no matter how dis- couraged you may be, don't give up in des - pale until you get a free opinion from these master specialists. If you aro at present within the clutches of any secret habit which is sapping your life by degrees; if you are suffering from tho results of past indiscre- tions; Hymn. blood has been tainted from any private disease and you dare not marry; if you are married and live in dread of symp- toms breakingout and exposing your past; if you are suering as the result of a mig- spent life—brr. K. & K. ate your Refuge. Lay your case before them confidentially and they 1 fyou re ur bre. will tell you honestly i a c s YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED, We Treat and Curb VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD and URINARY COMPLAINTS .KIDNEY and BLADDER Dietetics and all blecaees Peculiar to Men. Dps.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor, Michigan Ave. aid C ri$wold Stat Detroit, Mich, NOTICE All lettere front Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart ntentWindsor, Ont. I1 you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat ne patients its otir Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Y,aboratory for Canadian business dilly, Address alt letters as follows DES. KENNEDY & KENNEDY", Wintlittir. Ont. tNrkh?tatr out nrivatomaws, A PERT PARAGRAPHS. ALL'S well that ends profitably and with no expose in sight, according to the grafter'u dictionary, It isn't difficult to be good as long ad A% temptation is locked up, Of course ail aeronauts believe Inv plieity in revision upward. Nobody likes to be a knocker, but a lot of people would be the better fon being hammered into shape. An attachment isn't a sweet and pleasant thing if It is served to you by an officer of the law, Roughhouse. Who issued first The license? And who Got this thing going, The muss And fuss And chaos, thus Convention overthrowing? For he Who first suggested The rattling And the clanking Of gates and chains Had little brains And for his pains Needs spanking. Yes, .%lalloween Comes only once A year, But that's just once too cttea Unless we find Somewhere, Somehow, A way Its pranks to soften. And it is really Getting so, In spite Of mayor or copper, We'd better Have A foreign war And do The thing up proper. There ought TO be Some method found To stop Its ravage Surely. One dare not Leave his lot Outside Unless It's tied Securely. Had Warned Them. "What got you into all this trouble?" asked the self made man of his sons, whose business affairs he was trying to straighten out. "It all came about on account of 'a verbal contract that the men wouldn't live up to." "What's the use of men having an education and making such brealts? Didn't I warn you before you began bustness to have all of your verbal Con- tracts in writing?" Sour Grapes. Is it really such a much .At the northern point to touch? Is it hard to find the pole As it is to rustle coal For the loved ones in the Shank, Who might freeze ere you came back? Is it hard the world to mount With a swell expense account? Any one could turn the trick Could the pole be found on tick, Had a Reputation. ".What can I do for you, my good Klan?" "Don't 'my good man' me."' "Oh, no offense, but why not?" "Me pals might hear it and Cutme dead." Opposite Kinds. "Ile has written one of the best sell- Cres of the day," "I suppose he wrote it in an attic." "Nee in a basement --in fact, one of the -worst cellars of the day;" Any One Could. a"He always brings his pay home to his wife." . "That is rico of him. What 1s he getting?" "He isn't working now." In his first 'years in America, Caruso Would nJt eat childens and duoke from d fat - tined h e 11•'ted an the butchers bps but to tined Italian fowl in the baeenient of his. reetcende. While the area eonoed to the thirteen original Stator by the peaoe treaty Of x788 Was 8'28,000 egnate tiles, their present area is about 820,000 equate Whig, the other $02,000 square tunes forming in whole or itt •part thirteen other States, The best thing About a geed min 'OW he nevelt, knows how good he ilr, To make sure that bread will rills in cold weather, wart;~* the doer before mixing. The Amerlopn oonegl•general et 14v, erpool shows that dt2ring the six Months ending June $Otkt of the past year 2?2,• 124 tong, of salt were shipped from the Mersey, of which 180,505 tone were billed frena 14Vekpooi Manitoba bas 090 elevators, with a total 4epaoit ' ot 21,624,600 bashele. Patting the velue M the lowest figure of 24o per 'bushel of capacity would be $6,189,880, Mise MoOormiok, for 20 years astir. tent hi the Walkerton post oifice, hoe reeigued. Her plane is to be taken by 1 Miss Marie Schneider, of Illiidmay. Mies McCormio'k is a niece of Mr. Me- rmen, the late postmaster. The extension of prohibition through. out the United States has paused a largely increased demand for "bodes pop" as indicated by the great demand for bottles, 'l'wo big faotoriee et the Alton (Iil•i glass works have been work- ing since last tall night and day mann. faotnring soda pop bottles. The prohi. bitten wave has also caused a big in. crease in orders for all kinds of large! bottler The Bruce County Hospital is a store - hoarse of coinoidenta, and blessings or otherwise mostly Dome there in pairs, Every graduating class aim the ineti. tntion opened has had something 80 singular by way of ooinoidents about it that people remember the 000aelon long after the graduates are forgotten. This year the two candidates for honors are Mies Mary Isabel McPhail of Tiverton. and Mite Mary Isabel Tullook of Brant, and if aucceteful in their exams. they will form the graduating class over whioh the blessings will be said on Feb. 1st. One might live long tend travel far, without finding two Mary Isabela again graduating at the same time from the same plane.—Brune Tinges, "William" Dubois, sixty-five your of age, was committed to jail at Montreal on Saturday, the police authorities being under the inipreseion that their prisoner was a man, Not until a war• den was inatrnoted to take the prisoner off and administer a bath, prior to entrance into the jail infirmary, was the discovery, that "William" was a "wo- man." Then she owned up to the name of "'Adeline" and to the fact that she had masqueraded ae a man for thirty five years, most of the time gaining her living as deck -hand on lumber barges. Thirty-five years had made her perfect in her roll, and no one would `for a mo. meet have taken her for anything but what. she %peefeigr ed toe be; :"�4I31tam'' 18 now in the infirmary of the female jail wearing A skirt, which she finds most awkward. ar Pre in FortheWorst. Preparing W o st. "I want an accident policy matte alp) hie to my Sweetheart." "Want it today':" "Yes: t aur going to ask her father ,uuight." Costly. Little drops ot water Frozen into ice Look 11ke big round dollar!, When you ask the PERT PARAGRAPH rt takes clothes to make a woman ,01 to break a ulau. :Honey cart do everything, but it Pne keep the twenty-four hours moving .,loitg at a reasonable gait. Knockers and kickers should be lined up against each other to a tinisb, Even a perfectly good excuse can be overworked. When vve feel particularly miserable It is pleasant pastime to reckon up the undesirable things that have not yet Happened. HEADACHE AND Burdock Blood Bitters. The presence of headache nearly always tells us that there is another disease which, although we may not be aware of it, is still exerting its baneful influence, and perhaps awaiting an opportunity to assert itself plainly. Burdock Brood Bitters has, for years,' been eur:ng all kinds of headaches, and if you will only give it a trial we are sure it will do for you what it has done for thou- sands of others. }•4' Mre. /obit Connors, 13 tirlin t n e d the g s , xnd +. writes ;--y"Ihave bees Constlpatiou troubled with head- Gured. ache and conatipaticl + for a long titne. After +++4444+ trying different deter tors' medicines friend asked Ine to try Burdock Blood Bitters. 1 find 1 sin eotnpletely cured after having taken three bottles. I can safely recons- mend it to all," Per tale by till dealets, Meanifaetnred only by the T. 11'l lblitti Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. MONEY IN SHEEP,. Profits Fee the Fenner Who Engage' In. This industry,. An sutboirlty on sheep breeding Adyit American farmerbt lack thio' interest to foijaw tee breeding of pee steep. Sheep are in greatdermied, especially lu the eorn heft. In allother cougtrlerl sheep are one ot the Mill branchess of animal industry. l Teter to those Cettdtrlos Of i•ltropa where farming is and el Ways bas been a leading Indus- try, '!'hero Is 4Q ttettei' laud than the teledle welds, bud, furlberjore, +fie Wave not the drawbacks to eneougter wbtch :bey have edt'onbleredaac$ Mire o.yerconle, it is true many ewes nave When brought on tee martcet and mid to the farmers tor breeding purposes, but few elf these have reached tlecorn belt proper, They have gone either further east or saute, 'I'iiere are, flow - ever, mauy feeders who are willing to gamble on a carload Qr two of fatted• lug stock or lambs. But this is not building up the sheep industry. *beep breedlug sbould pe reorganized in the cru brit, where we are practicing di. versified syiteins ot farmtug. Witt) mutton at tb per buudred- weigtlt. it 1s enough to prove mat there is looney m tee business and mat it can be tubae a paying propos:. A COTSW )nD SQDS. tion, It would not be an exaggeration to say that the profits in the sheep industry, relatively, .are greater than those in any other class of farm stock. 'lt goes without saying, however, that sheep need some care and intetll- gent handling. lay starting in on a small scale any person by careful ap- plication and exercise of common sense can quickly get a working ac- quaintance with sheep and their pe- culiarities. Well finished mutton, such as can be produced in the corn belt, probably never will be ebeapagain, and the increased demand for good wool will insure au excellent market for the same. The British farmer is making profits on an industry in which our corn nett farmer could and should share. We have a protective tariff. Furthermore, all the advantages are on the side of the• American farmer as a sheep breeder. Alt we need, then, are more sheep and ludustrious farmers to breed them. Sutter Fat and Butter. What is the difference, you ask, be- tween butter fat and butter? Or bow much butter will a given amount of butter fat make? Well, the difference is usually about 15 or 20 per cent—that is, eighty pounds of butter fat will churn about a buudred pounds of butter. The amount varies according to the way of doing the work, for some butler has more water, salt and curds in it than other butter. Any way, there will be more butter than butter fat. DAIRY NOTES Care of Dairy Buildings. Take care that the buildings in whirb milking is carried on are we'll aired and free from avoidable dust, Fresh air and sunlight should be constantly ad- mitted, and litter or food should nut be handled during the milkiug hour. About Milking. bialy people are not scrupulously clean in their milking. The wonder is that milk and butter are so good as they are. The cows sbould be well bedded and kept clean. The milk bucket should be clean and the er's hands clean always. Allow no flying dust that may get into the milk. Carry the milk away to its proper place and strain or separate it at once. Constant vigilance is the price of pure nlilk. Concerning Feed. Care must be taken not to waste feed and thus reduce profits. Nor must the feed be too scant for produc- ing the full amount of milk. With the present high price of mill feeds the farmer should put up his own grains, clover, alfalfa and corn silage. g . A Purdue uaiversity bulletin says. "A ration commonly used In Indiana is ane composed of eorn fodder, twelve Pounds; closer hay, Yeti pounds; core - meal, five pounds, and wheat bran, six pourers." l4ow Often to Milk. Most fanners and dairymen milk their cows only twice a day, and that ,is right. Sometimes a fresh eow need's to have an excess of milk drawn be- tween times In order to prevent con- geetlon and fever, but not for tt long period, Some cows again bare "leak - lug teats," which waste the mirk if hot relieved ;three or four times a day, but such rows are , a nuisance tied ehouid be disposed of, To nilik twice a day Is enough, as a general rule. ''e milk three times dot's not seem to bring mot•, Oink, thotlgb some people have thoti ht so and acted on that stip• ptiditlon. COALCOA L We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON VOA; which has 'no equal, MOO the beet gretdes of soothing, Cannel domestio• Coal, min Wood or all kinds, always On hand. IlWli aroko tL UMBER SHINGLES LATH. creseddorVndreaeedl If, Cedar Posts, Barrels,. etc, iIGIR" .H.ighest Price preid for all lkindal of Logo. 104 J. A. McLean Residence Phew No. 56. Ofdoe, No, 64, Mtli, No. 44, vw#VWWWWWWw#WWVvYY WVYYVVY vWYVVVvV wwwwl U3ave you renewed your 'subscription to the Times? •••••••••••••••••S•••••tiy 6'•••••••••••Il• 0••1/•••O•' 111 • • • • • • 1 •y • • • • • - • The • • • •• • • • • • • • • s • • • ••• • • • • Z r • • • • • • • CLUBBING RATES • FOR 1909 10. •• • i• TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates• below for any of the following publications : Times and Daily Globe 4.50 Times and Daily Mail and Empire 4.50 Times and Daily World 3.10 Times and Toronto Daily News., 2.30 Times and Toronto Daily Star 2 30 Times and Daily Advertiser 2.85 Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3.35 Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60 Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.60 Times and Family Herald. and Weekly Star 1,85 '.Times and. 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