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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-02-24, Page 3_.i.tttriattIMM&i:s% VA ED > NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confined to His Home for Weeks. ''Heavy work,sorere strainingand evil habits In youth brought on Varicose Veins. When I wored hard the aching would become severe and I was often laid up for a week at a time. My family physician told moan operation was my only hope—but I dreaded it. S tried several specialists, but soon found out all they wanted was my money. I commenced to look upon all doctors as Iittle better than rogues. Ono day my boss asked me why I was off work so mnoh and 1 told him roy condition. IIoadvised mo to consult Drs. Kennedy 8c Kennedy, as lie had tale treatment from them himself and knew they wore square and ski.iful. I wrote them and got Tac Ncw MCTnon TntsAmMONP. My progress was somewhat slow and during the first month's treatment I was somewhat discouraged, However. I continued treatment fes three months hunter and was rewarded with a complete euro. I could only earn $1•.S a work in a machine shop before treatment, now I am earning $21 and never loose a day. I wish all sufferers knew of your valuable treatment. IlENP li C. LOCUST. HAS YOUR BLOOD REN DISEASED? BLOOD POISONNS aro the most prevalent and most serious diseases. They sap the very life+blood of the victim and unless entirely erauicated from the system will cause serious complications. Beware of Mercury. It may suppress the symptoms. -our NSW METHOD cures all blood diseases. *VONA; OIL MIDDLE ACID 1m . -imprudent acts or later excesses have broken down your system. You feel the symptoms Stealing over you. Mentally, physically and vitally you aro not the matt you used to bo or should be. Will you heed the danger signals? READEAro you' a victimf 1lavc you loot Stop*? rite you intendittit to marrv9 Sas R your blood been diseased? Havo you any woaicness7 ur Naw hlttrtron TaaATrrcvr will cure you, What It ]las done for others it will do for you. Consultation Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an horest opinion Frr'o of Charge. Book. Fred—"Boyhood,Manhood, Fatherhood." (Illustrated) on Diseases of Mon. NO NAMES *JSED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. Na names on boxes or a HOME s.TEverything Confidential. Question List and Cost of Treatment FREE DRS.KENNEDY. KENI1EDY rGriswold St, Dctrolt dile . Cor. Michigan Avt. and Gi W h Ali letters frons Canada must be addressed NOTICE to our Catiadiarl Cars esondenoe l)e art• .. . p .p meet in Windsor,Ont.If you desire to Inn Wn , y see us personally call at our 1VCedical Institute its Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our W1ncleor omces which are for Correspondence and Ilaboratery for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. Writsisreuevalvateaddress, tie i 7 et re , to 114 rl ' UE WINOTTAM TIMES, FEBRUA,U•Y 241 1i1Q n +s 'i Says the 1V>(IilXrrlr "My wife bglce# with OF TUX .., WEST. R r l[.6UR ! !rho,* aprottygood, elan,n " isn't it? I'm the Miller of " CRI AM QV THE WEEiT, and 1 know how it's made, If 1 didn't know r+ 'n0lilt; Cream of the 'West' flour to be the best on earth, I certainly wouldn't allow my wife to use it, would 1? Well; then, won't you give' CREAM OF THE WEST atrial —for your own sake?" The CamplMll lklilih g Co., Limited Toronto i 1.;e. 4 + r. sit �tee:aii. e' t✓ { 1411.e itl1 (ustic Ars • fiti✓- FOR SALE BY KERR & BIRD, 1?VINGHAM, A 1 (1 (((1 ktiell 1 /fie o h Have you renewed your subscription to the Times? ake Eich Animal Worth Th°lo Over Its Gest OnY3ofaCentaDay Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, making hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cowa 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, "TAE ;iYour animals do need not more feed, but something to help their EEL" ; z. bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get fat 2:02 � ` and stay fat all year round; also toprevent disease, cure disease and keep Lamest Wt,nter aj them up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It is any Pacer on Grand Circuit, 'o3 Nota `Stock Food" But a "Conditioner" ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain, nor farm products. It increases yield of mills from three to five pounds per cow per day before the Specific has been used two Young cas. lve fed ws ith ROYAL PURPLE are as lrfaster than weeks old as preparationebknown. he fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. Cures botst colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan McEwan,thehorseman, says; I have used ROYAL PURPLESTOCK SPECIFIC Persistently its the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02x, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.091•, brother of 'Alien Winters.' winner of $88,000 in trotting stakes in 1908. These horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple Specific ahnost a year ago, and 1 will always have it in my stables." al 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, cent packages last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC is given but once a day, and lasts half again as lou A $t,50 ail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will last 280 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 20: It is an astonishingly quicts fattener, stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. Asa ho fattener it is a leader. It will save many times its cost in veterinary bills. 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'flve 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 moulting time, and cures poultry diseases. Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or'POULTRY SPECIFIC is guaranteed. .Just use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animais 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 backeomes your money. FREE --Ask your merchant or write us for our valuable 32•page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also cooking receipes and full particulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL- TRY SPECIFICS. If yob cannot. get Royal Purple Specifics from merchants or agents, we will supply you direct, express prepaid. on receipt of $ I.50 a pail for either Poultry or Stock Specifics. Make money acting as our agent in your district. Write for terms. Por sale by all up-to.date merchants. W. A. Jenkins Mfg. Co,, London, Can. Royal Purple Stook and Poultry Specifics and free booklets are kept In stook by J. Walton MoKibbon and T. A. Mills. PLAINER FOOD, HIGH THINKING. Mr. 0. C. James Says Expensive Tastes are Cultivated. "Plain food and high thinking," is Mr. Cl. 0. James' solation in part of the question of high food prices. "We area nation of spendthrifts in the matter of food. We do not know how to handle food when we get it; and we do not Lwow that there is more nour- ishment on the cheaper cuts —if we knew it, we do not bring it into prate tioe," he said. "Take the French people for example. They are at once the most frugal in the matter of what they eat, and the beet 000ks in the world. Why is it that they are the richeet? Simply beoanse they save in what they buy to est—they know how to prepare the cheaper foods eo as to make them palatable and at the same tome dainty. People like dainty food; the majority of people must have it. "And that brings it down to a ques- tion of; domestic science. That is the solution of this problem: Education." Mr. Jones pointed out to The Newa a printed article by Mrs. Bertha Dahl Laws, of Appleton, Mass., which he thought hit the nail squarely. He quoted from it: "Meat is three guar-. tern water, eo that when you pay e0 cents for a piece of meat yon pay 15 cents for water. Yon see it is not a cheap food. The big difference between cooking an egg and cooking meat is that an egg has a shell to keep in the pour• isbmerit, and the meat has not. In 000king the meat one must handle it so as to retain that nourishment. When I buy an expentsive piece of meat and broil it, I have a delicious and palatable dish, but it is not cheap. But I can buy 's cheap piece of meat and by cooloiog it in an entirely different manner, may have just an satisfactory a result so far as nourishment is concerned, and will be much cheaper," and the article en- larged on the manner of doing all that the writer promised. Also Mr, James said: "In ohoosing our food we cannot depend on looks or taste; and we cannot depend always on the weight. For instanoe, a pound of beano and a pound of lettuce weigh the same, but there is a vast difference in, the nonriahnent in each. We oaenot depend on the price, We pay eight canto for the quart of milk, and fifty Dents for the same 'amount of oysters and get the same kind of nourishment. Personal taste, however, is a phase of the subject which must be considered, "Now," continued Mr. James, "1 willgive an extreme case. I was in Norway last summer. There I met a man wbo told ma of an occurrence that came under bis very eyes. Out driving he and his driver had lunch on the road. The driver carried food which both he and his horse lived on; the black bread of the country, most nourishing stuff bat quite beyond the tourist. It only shows how frngal a people can bo When they must adapt themselves to it. "As r said before, it is a question of education. Onr people here eat food that is too expensive in view of the fact that they could live as well or better, if they knew how to handle, to prepare, and in the first place to buy the food they use, People are brought up with expensive tastes. Many that are not, acquire then!. We need more domestic ocienoe, We aro going to have a BDlen• didly useful institution in connection with the University when the Depart. meet of Household Soieuoe gets under way. We need more of these schools," he said, HAPPY BACHELOR, The bachelor is feeling good And deems himltelf a lnoky wight; He saws and splits no kindling wood, He has ho kitchen fire to light. When day ie done his Dares are o'er And once in bad he takes .his ease; He need hot rise 80 walk the floor This chilly night a child to plaaso. 'E'er hit* there are no hottsehold oared, No broikfast bell his elunlber breaka, He dresses and ends de the stairs a ai e To oatkneitl, tenth or buekwheat cakes. For him life's river smoothly rune; Tie's happy jolly and content, He has no 'trite and little oiled On whotn,hie earning meet be spent. Let him enjoy it while he can, .When age and loneliness shall borne He'll wish he were a married man With sons and daughters, wife and home. Farm nn rdenAUTOMOBILES FOR POWER.. Pleasure Cars May Be Utilised For Farm Work, Automobiles Are cutming into use on the farm as a n)eans of pleasure for the farmer and his family. There is potte, Itg re nature) than desire e Biro to util- ize the splendid power plant contained in a car for other purposes than pro - .polling it over the roads. Ail ingenious farmer has solved the problem In a manner apparently satisfactory to him- self, The farmer devised an arrange. meet whereby the act of putting the ear in Its shed places it in position and so associates the wheels with the ma- ehinery of the dairy tbat the engine when started will do the beery work of running the separator, The accompanying stretch shows this device so plainly that it is' not nem, nary to describe it other than to call attention to the two rollers, one of welch has its shaft extended outside the box to carry a pulley, from which the belt runs to an overhead shaft. If is ensile. apparent that the revolution of the wheels of tlse car will cause a reverse motion of the rolls, which is transmit -teed by means of the pulley and belt to tshaft and thence to the ma- chinery. In this way the wear on the THE MOTOR AS A POWER PLANT. tires 1's rendered uniform. The grip on the rolls that these tires exercise is surprising. A peculiarity of this arrangement is that the car shows a tendency to skid from side to side. This, however, le easily overcome by means of props or bumpers, which are put in place so as to limit the sidewise motion of the eat within the shed, the mere pressure of the hand serving to move the car ease ly when the wheels are revolving on the rolls. In very warm weather or on long, heavy pulls it is sometimes necessary to connect the circulating system with the water supply in order to prevent heating of the cylinders. For sawing wood. cutting feed or any work of an intermittent nature it is necessary for some one . to control the engine 'ate account' of there being no governor. As a matter of fact, ono farmer has a small boy at the throttle most of the time, as the sep- arator is sometimes thrown off with- out warning. All Around the Farm. It is claimed by those who have trained many horses that, taking the cult when training first begins, they can be trained to walk over four miles an hour. The walking gait le the most important one to the farm and road horse. The ynistake with many in training young horses is that they are too soon put to trotting, which is a gait they more readily learn than fast walking. If the land is to be plowed twice be- fore planting In order to make it thor- oughly fine, it will be well to roll it be- fore the second plowing in order to pack the surface somewhat and make the earth turn better without clogging the moldboard. The roller is also use- ful in breaking clods and in packing the surface to prevent excessive evapo- ration in dry weather. In order to get hens in prime con- dition to produce fertile eggs you are required to follow as closely after na- tur'e's plan as possible. Provide them with a liberal amount of green food, together with annual food at least twice each week. if you cannot give them a large, roomy yard,• release them from confitlement at least an hour each day. Thi- any of the hog which is half solid fat is limited. Consul Webster of Niagara Falls states that the Cana- dian hog raisers and packers have been forced, through lack of demand for fat hogs, to produce the leaner bacon type which can be sold to ad- vantage on the British market and is suitable for the export trade. A heifer should be milked as long as possible during her first period of lac- tation even ii' she does not give much milk. Mien allowed to dry up at six months she will go dry every time at the same period when a cow. 13eifees are very suseeptibie to education in this respect. Provided the hen is cooped or tether- ed, young chickens may be allowed to situ in the onion 'told asparagus beds, FARM FOR SALE. The underelgnecl offers for sale his farm north half lots 30 and 31, canoes. pion 6, East ` attwanosh, oonteini tg 86g sores. On the premises are a goad barn with stone stabling, good 'traaio house, good snptlly of water; 134 miles trout 86110°1 haute; ee miles from poet ci floe. For tell partioolars apply on the premises Or adnress WM, DENSMORE, Westi geld, Ont. iIFind Them Marvellous'i This is. Mrs. {Chas. Brooks' O$$tuiou of "'Little Dideaters" Here Is a short but very conviueing letter which. we�,,�r received recently: 'Tic CWLEM7 AN /1ED0QINE Co,, y I have been using "Little Digeatere" for some time. I still use them and tine them marvellous. I recommend tbelrt sincerely, MES, CHAS. BROOKS.. LW,Wrighto , Wr Qo., Que. ITere os auother letter, dated Noy, 9th, 1900, almost equally brief and to the point; Coi.EMAN MEDICINE Co., Would say that the box of "Little Digesters" has done me a lot of good. I Oleic theyare a1 1 right for any Trouble. ANTHONY FISHER, Trout Creek P.O., Parry So.. Dist,, Ont. Letters like these are the best pos- sible proof that "Little Digesters" do exactly what We elaim--relieve and eure Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all forms of Stomach Troubles, We are sa sure that "Little Digesters will cure that we offer to hand your money back without hesi, tatiou if they fail. Put up in dainty little red boxes - 25e. at your druggists or by mail front Coleman Medicine Co., Toronto. 37 The Snow and the Farmer. Loudon Advertiser. • In a magnificent winter like the pre. sent, Ontario has an asset of wbioh to boast. Conducive to vigor of health and out- door recreation, it is also espeoially beaefioial to business. The good sleighingwonderfully facilitates country teaming, which in turn helps the cities. towns and villages, where the wheels of industry revolve. Better still, the heavy and uniform covering of snow preragee bumper farm crops this coming season. The soil is not blown nor dried @ int with frost as when exposed, and will be evenly and thoroughly saturated with moisture, throhgh which planta receive the soil fertility, stores of which are brought into it and evenly diietributed by the heavy blanket of snow, In the. gradual process of thawing, the soil is rendered more friable for the seed -bed. Though it may stop a few electric oars and stimulate walking and shovel. ing, let the snowfall have its fall credit as an improver of farm and general prospects in Western Outari°. Nothing More to Say. A benevolent -looking cid gentleman was walking along the street, when he Dame along an irate parent lecturing his offspring. "Now, you young reseal," said the angry father, "out off home, and before you go to bed to -night I'll give you a good whipping". The o.d gentleman mildly remon- strated, "My dear'sir, perhaps I have no right to interfere, but remember tbe wise old saying, 'Let not the sun go down upon thy wrath.' " "Don't you trouble yourself about that", was the reply, "I won't do anything of the sort. Oh, no; what I'm going to do is to let the wrath descend upon the son." And the old gentleman felt that there was nothing more to say on the subject. IN CHOOSING A HUSBAND. Besere you really know him. Be quite sure he is a good son and brother. Be quite euro you respect as well as rove him• Be sure he truly loves you as mnoh as he thinks he does. Make opportunity to see him under all sorts of oircumetances. Be absolutely certain he is the only man in the world you feel you could marry. The man who marries for a mere pasting fancy will never grow to love his wife, One breakfast at the same table on a wet or foggy day will teach you more about the gentleman than a dozen dances., If the girls only realized that exactly as he treats his mother so will a man treat his wife six months after marriage they ebould rejoice instead of being jealous of the love he shows his own family. Canada's trade for January totalled $91,500,102, an increase of $12,322,627, or nearly thirty per cent. over the cor- responding month of last year, and con• stituting a record for the month, For the first ten months of the present $coal year the total trade has been $568,986.7780, an inorease of $95,610,931, or about twenty per oent, The imports last month totalled $30,253,852, an increase of $7,140,225 ever 5'annary 1909. Ex ports of domestic products totalled $20,- 258,406, an increase of $4,871,084. For the ten months imports have totalled $302,050,207, an inbreese of $60,978,445. lllXports tet domestic products for the ten months' totalled $241,275,218, an in- orease of $31,404,'708, Of this increase, about $16,000,000 was in exports of d cseven and a agrionitural pro trot , audaev half millions in exports of the forest, Eltports of manufactures show an in. crease of nearly two millions. The customs revenue for the month Was $4,606,400, an inorease of $944,037. Pot the ten months the onet0tn* revenue has been $4802,4591 an inoreade of $10,861, 3411' or a little Over a million a month, YESTERDAY. 1 want toga book to yesterday, To skies of tender blue. Dank to the field* of hcoppineee Iused t e wander e p to nd r throutth i 0, for a ding at the sweet, sweet hones Whose memory still is tree— I want to go book to yesterday, I want to go bank 10 yen, AMayhap to some theta boars are fair, Eut my fair hours are few, And Olen o'er ds Mast the olden fields -- 747 tears fall Ad their dew; 0, why are jive that cannot fast, Wby turns the rose to rut? 1 want to go beak to yesterday. I want to go bAek to 7011. But youth goes swift adown tbe track,, And T have age, so view— I've passed beyond the sunny stretoh Where the green hedges grew; So have I lost my bird or dower, Or aught you were, in Lost as p part of yesterday, Yesterday, youth and yon. —New York Ticnee, Where Canada Leads. Dr. Andrew D White. an ex presi- dent of Cornell University, and more reoently United States ambassador to Germany and to Hestia, ,deolares thet the Dominion is freer from murders than any other of the countries. Basing his cal.'ulations on an average taken for eight years, Dr. White finds the num- ber of felonious homicides per year per million of population for various coun- tries to be: Canada, 3; Germany 4;to 5. England and Wales 10 to 11, France 10 to 15, Belgium 16, and the United Statte over 129. Or, to put it soother way homicide is 43 times greater in the United States than in Oauada, and eight times greater than in Belgium which was the worst record in Europe Dr, Whits figures out, further, that iri tcktt TJpited States the Avenge orlutimod serves hut 'oven hears out of a lite Ha. ecce, while only ace GUI of six IIIMP $+ ere a♦ s s .on toted,. ArERS I VER pi LLS. Stoic Meadacht and relieve It the troubles loci.. dent toy hi lo'+ dtate of the system, ouch at Dizziness, Nava m, Drowsiness, Distress after patine, Pala In t'te Sl a &c. While their mast rowerkable success baa'bccrt shown in oualog ,Headache, yet Cu,er'e :,,ittlo Liver Pills are equally valuable In ConetiPation, curing andpro. Tenting this annoying complaint. while they also, carrectall dlsnr dersof the stomach, etimu.atetho liver ndregulatethebowels. Divaniftbeyonly far Ache they would b e almost mica d po to those who 'sailer from tiled strcasiitgeomplalot; butforto. Lately ties r goodness docs nrtend here,andthosei si ho once try them will ,Toots ;so little pilin vain - able 01 se many v a .s that they ;ill not he wil. hag to do without them, But after all pick head, re the bane of so many lives that here is where, we Stake our great boast, gtupilla cureit what others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and very easy to take, ono or two pillsmake a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, bat by their gentle action please all suds pee thein. CUM r )18DIGINE CO, NEW TOIL P1i� i�in li Dom 1zies •.••••ak•••••••••••••••tD••• • II • • • • • OLUBBING • • • RATES • • • • • • • FOR 1 909 - 10, • f • • • • • The TIMES will receive stlbscript]cns at the iatt i below •• for any of the following publications : • • Times and Daily Globe. .,t... , • • Times and Daily Mail and` Empire • Times and Daily World.....• • Times and Toronto Daily News.. it • Times and Toronto Daily Star • Times and Daily Advertiser • Times and Toronto Saturday Night •Times and Weekly Globe . s Times and Weekly Mail and Empire • Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star...... • Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) oTimes and Weekly Witness • Times and London Free Press (weekly) • Times and London Advertiser (weekly) • • Times and Toronto Weekly Sun • Times and World Wide • • Times and Northern Messenger. • • Times and Farmers' Advocate • • We specially recommend our rtadere tosnbscribe • to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine • Times and Presbyterian • Times and Westminster s Times and Presbyterian and Westminster...... , . • • Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) .... •• Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) • • • Times and Sabbath Reading, New York • Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto) • Times and Michigan'Farmer•..... , .... , , .., , Times and Womans Home Companion .. 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