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The Wingham Times, 1910-04-14, Page 3TON WITIOTIAM 'TIM, Al;'RI1., 14, 1910. 144‘1":4**14‘1WW SFS' f. ,h' NO, 2 '. Says the Miller; +' 014 Bill Stumps who used to run the bakeshop in our town told me that `Cream or the West' Flour sees the strongest doggone Manitoba flour he ever baked. It wail Bill that first called me the Flour Wizard, and even up to the time of his death he was kind of suspicious that I put something in the flour to wake it so powerful strong. "But Bill was wren$. there, ' Cream of the West flour is made from the best wheat. and its trength is the result of ' Model Mill_' Methods." The Campbell 1}fiilinR Oo., Limited Toronto FOR SALE BY TILER & IVIED. W11' GBA .. a 4 Make Each Animal Worth 25% Over Its Cost On v3 ofaCent 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 cow. horse, swine or poultry, • you are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm. "TEEI Your animals do need not more feed, but something to help their EEL"bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get fat 2:04 and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep Largest Winner of them up to the best possible condition. No stock"food" can do all these L¢r S things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It is. Grand pCircuit, a8 Not a "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 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 STOCJ,SPECIFiC builds up rundown animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. Cures bots, colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan McEwan,the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02, largest winner of an y pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters; 2.09/, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $36,000 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 1 wilt always have jt in my stables." oya.1 urpie STOCIK 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 dam 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 lona A $1.50s ail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will last 280 days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 2516:. It is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. Asa hog fattener it is a leader. It willsave many times its cbst 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 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 your hens summer and winter prevents fowls losing flesh at moulting time, and cures oultry diseases. Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is guaranteed. eepp Just use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation ti 1nRPL�ther animal in the same condition: after comparing results you will say them all beat to death, or else back comes your money. FREE -Ask your merchant or write us for our valuable 32 -page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also cooking receives 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. r For sale by all up-to•date merchants. 1l . A. Jenkins Pifg.•Co., London, Can. CALVING IN. THE WINTER, Strict Attention of Dairyman Required During This Period. prominent authority ou dairying says that the best and safest time for a heifer to freshen is an the summer When she Is In pasture. as she then, Ws the most natural food and environ. Ment" But it sometimes happens that she must freshen in the winter on dry feed,` and under these conditions It re- quires the best intelligence and care of the dairyman to produce a good cow, She should, be free to take all the ex- ercise possible. The heifer, while having plenty of feed, should never be allowed to be- come fat.Neither must she be forced to depend ehtirely upon the straw stack for her food. Food out of which she can make blood, bone and muscle A BRIGHT IDEA. Unusual Sagacity; That Was Lauded by the, Professor. That the proverbial absentminded professor is sometimes ably abetted llj' his wife is illustrated by a story told of Professor Bunsen. One evening about the usual hour for retiring he took it into. his head to run over to the club just as be and' madam were returning froth an evening call. "But," said the lady, "1 must have the front door locked before 1 retire." This emergency staggered the pro- fessor, and as he looked bewildered at his wife the lady, seized with an in- spiration, continued: "1'11 go in and lock the door and throw you the key from the window." Tbis program was carried out, and when he reached the club the profess- or related the incident to a friend as evidence of his wife's unusual sagac- ity. The friend greeted the story with a roar of laughter. "And why, my dear, professor," he said. "did you not simply admit your wife, lock the door from the outside and come away?" "True," ejaculated the learned man of science, "we never thought of that." The climax of the incident., was reached an hour later when, returning home, the professor discovered that the lady in her excitement had thrown out the wrong key. Royal Purple Stock anJd Poultry o loo Specifics and free booklets cokle s are kept in stock by2.1111.5. The Ri%htkind of PrintinA The kind that is neat, attractive and up-to-date, costs you ' no more money here than the inferior article does; elsewhere, Quality Counts in printing as in other things, and the TIMES is in a position to turn out first- class work at very reasonable prices. Try • this office with your next order. The Times WINGFIAM ONTARIO .x„ asi How They Got Out. Uncle Ephraim had two hogs, which he kept in a pen at the rear end of his little lot. .They were of the "razor- back" variety, and, although they were fed bountifully with kitchen waste, it seemed impossible to put any fat on their attenuated frames. One morning when he went out to feed them they were not there. They had disappear- ed, leaving no clew to the manner in which they had made their escape. "What's the ].natter, Uncle Eph?" inquired a neighbor, noticing the deep dejection with which the old man was looking down into the empty pen. "My hawgs is done gone, sag," he answered. "Stolen?' "No, sah; I don't see no signs dat anybody tuck 'em." "Did they climb out over the top?" "No; dey couldn't 'a' done dat." "How do you think they got away?" "Well, sah," said Uncle Ephraim, "my 'pinion is dat dein hawgs kind o' raised deir'selves up on aidge ,an' , crepe through a crack." A GOOD STUDY oi•` MIX BEAD. and milk is produced from the same class of feeds. To be explicit, 100 pounds of wheat bran, 100 pounds of oats chopped, 50 pounds of corn chop and 25 pounds of linseed meal or oil cake mixed together make one of the very best feeds at this time. As the time approaches she should be placed in a roomy box stall liber- ally, bedded with clean straw. And it would be well to mix a good handful of epsom salts with her grain food night and morning for several days before calving. Be on hand when the calf comes, even if you must stay up all night. This is especially important in cold weather. See that the calf gets up as soon as possible and that it gets the first milk, a substance necessary to its •life and health. The cow should now be fed a warm mash of wheat bran or something sim- ilar. In cold weather give her small drinks of warmed water several times a day. Never allow her access to ice cold water. Queer. If the udder swells bathe it with hot 1 "1 tbought you said \Villtius is au water; use a flannel cloth wrung out , Euglishul:in " of a bucket of hot water and hold it on -fa e as - the inflamed parts. Keep this up per --impossible." RECQMPEN$E. J11 have to pay for what we get-" ir we buy at hesastore, true-- Por ifei uy It All fresh and bright and new, Or get it at the counter free Where lunch to tempt Is set The bill in some old form eome5. round.. On that We safe to bet. Some things that seem to be a gift, Gilt edged and free as atr, Without a single hitch or string To mar their outline fair, We find before tbe deal is through And settlement comes round That they have cost us more than if We'd bought them by the pound. And if it is a dog, a beok, A ticket to the play, The cost 1s there, though it may not Be seen as plain as day. The bill collector may not come With his insulting leer, But all the same we have to pay For this same sort of cheer. No wonder as we older get And have grown gray and wise We look a gift horse in the'mouth To guard against surprise. No wonder that we shy and try When we are asked to share The fortunes of another man To find the comeback there. PERT PARAGRAPHS. The mita who inalste Oil 11a'04 the last word with a, woman probably si4. cm the deer to put on hla shoes. Noncommittal. The patient was tossing restlessly on a bed of pain. The doctor had made a thorough examination of the case, had timed the pulse beats of the suf- ferer with his watch, had listened to his heart throbbings and had asked many questions as to the history of the case and as to- recent symptoms. Fie shook his head gravely as he came from the room. "Oh, doctor," said the wife anxious- ly, "do you know what is the matter with him?" "Yes, said the doctor'ml firmly. "Oh, what is it?" "Ile is sick." ,., The 0o01e is that when some of our acquaintances are speaking the truth we have a sneaky teeing that it is ea. tiiely to their advantage to de so, Just a Fit. "i wish 1 knew what to give uncle for a birthday present.". ";",..nothing useful. 1 suppose?" "eerMiniy." • "And inexpensive?" "Oh yes." "You might give him n bath ticket. You (.an get tl IIiiVP ono fol' at ,itlartee." "Bronchitis." sistently twice a day, a half hour if need be at a time. Then rub with melted lard to which has been added a little turpentine. Rinsing the Milk Cans. Milk cans in Denmark are sprayed with cold Water, then thoroughly sprinkled inside and out with hot water. They are then fastened to a revolving wheel which turns them through a solution of limewater, and they are finally sprayed with steam. The milk bottles are usually washed with soda and water and the inside cleansed by means of a mecfianically worked revolving brush and are then rinsed out with cold water. The bot- tles are then filled and corked by a mechanical process, sealed and tied down with thread. The bottles are then put into racks and packed in ice, ready for distribution the following morning. THE FEEDER TEE SYMPTOMS ARE Tightness across the Chest, Sharp Pains and a Difficulty in Breathing, a Secretion of Thick; Phlegm, at first white, but later of a greenish or yellowish color coming from the bronchial tubes when coughing, especially the first thing in the morning. Bronchitis is generally the result of a Bold caused by exposure to wet and inclement weather and when neglected will become chronic. Chronic Bronchitis is one of the, most general causes of Consumption. Cure the first symptoms of 13ronchitis by the use of Dr. Woods Norway 5Pine Syrup W by ." "Be s:tw the paint of my joke in a Hash." It may be possible to wear •an opti- taistic smile over a toothache, but few people succeed in doing it. Man born of woman may be of few :lays. but his nights are apt to be both numerous and hilarious. Kota of us feel persuaded that were true genius recognized we would be On Easy street. A bore is a man who talks about himself for long hours when you are 771ng to tape a whack at all your be, ,i:elute aces Any hind of cover IS at a premium '• 'Ne '•inft nnnt('rs are abroad. ADS.OLUTE SECURin alw�.1. CenuIne Carte r' s Little Liver Fills, must Bear BlignaturO of Sae Par.Simile Wrapper Beta, Very mutat and as em to take as ram, FOR HUDABHL, - FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNES'A. FOR TORPID LiVER. FOR ,CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION � 6161.11 Mill NV.TUVC .ATUrICr tangs l Purely veg'etablo+y� .-��,---'•err �caalas-Ir"---""��"� CURE SICK HEADACIiE. CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. The Militia Department has issued en order that military bandsmen refusing to play with non•nuion militia bands are to be reduced to the racks. On a Diet. "There lc frail tar thought in this." "Not for ole. 1 bank you." "Why not?" "1 have mental indigestion already." •••••••i••••••••i•••••• d' iti000 eai•1llllrs00000100000011 � • • L CLUBB• Evidently. "She says she has refused him five times." "She does?" "Yes." "She must be getting ready to an- nounce the engagement." a 3 • • s FUR 1909 - 10. • • f IThe TIMES will receive subbcl if'tic ns at the talc: • • for any of the following publications No Seats. "Know Peterby 7' "We are friends of long standing." ' "Long standing, eh?" "Yes; we ride home on the street cat together." 1Simpler Way. Mixed feeds go further than single 1 "Soaker thinks his wife has second feeds, and this saving, added to the sight." growth and development, makes it all ' "Second nothing. She can smell the more desirable to feed as wide a on his breath." variety as is possible to obtain. ` Seems So. Good Ration For Young Horses. 1 "Did you ever see eggs so high?" Equal parts of ground oats and corn 'I "Awful, isn't it?' m:..�e an excellent ration for young "You would think they were laid horses. Some add bran, thus making 8 tri" the ration more rich in protein and phosphorus, which build up belie and RATES•, • belc.w 1. muscle. Grind Feed For the Calf. Don't feed the calf grain it cannot masticate. Grind it for him and don't insult him with straw while he is standing where he can see and smell the sweet clover hay you are feeding to your milk cows. For the Sheep. Succulent food of some kind should be provided: Mangels are excellent, bat rather expensive to grow. Turnips meet the requirements well and are inexpensive to grow as a catch crop when sown among corn at the last working. They should be fed in al• most any quantity the supply will ad' trait. ± Miss Martha Bons- get, Little Patios, •4- Bronchitis + Que., writes: "Last + Cured. + spring 1 was very ++++-444-4-41+ 4 -poorly, had a bad ,4. .4 4 4 4 -4- cough, sick head - a c h e, could not sleep, and was tired all the time, I con- sulted two doctors, and both told me 1 had bronchitis, and advised me to give up teaching. -1 tried almost everything but none of the medicines gave me any relief. One of my friends advised me to try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I had when T lie areel y taken the first bottle began to get bettor and when I had taken the fourth bottle 1 felt ad well as ever, my cough had left me and I could sleep well.' Dr, Wood's i`s the orl'ginal Pine Syrup. It is put up in a yellow wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark, and the price 25 cents. There are many imitations of "Dr. Wood's" so be sure you receive the genuine when you asic for it, lvfanufacturcd only by The T. Milburn hotter than to hunt the &ewe tip and 9C,Cs at year s'Irnggists or by mai 1 from Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. milk them where found, Coleman Medicine Co., Toronto, 37 a:inwix,. � r,•..i. Value of Salt In Feed. Put a little, salt in the cow's mashed feed e:' chop. It enhances the flow of saliva while the animal is taking her feed, which is a good thing for an ani• mill as well as for a human being. ft Is not a good thing to force a cow to eat more salt than she needs, so only a little should be given in the feed, and then free access to rock salt will permit her to have all she wants, it • • ••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • • • •• • • • • • in Almost a Science. "Ere believes in art for art's sake." "What line?' "The art of making money." Evident. "I am quite ignorant." "Your explanation is entirely unnee Sessaay." Feeding While Milking. Cows that are trained to be milked without• feed seem to give down their !illi. t- just st ns well as others, Some ex• tra nervous cows blight do better,, though there le doubt if the food would not make them more nervous, specially exactly what we claim -relieve and et if it gave out before the milking ended. } Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all forms of A little choice feed may act as an ; Stomach Troubles. We ate so sure that t Tittle Digesters will euro that we offer incentive to make the cow come tip" hand your money back without hosi- to adesired point where it is morn triton if they fail. tonvenicnt to milk her. This may be Put up in dainty little. red boxes - "1 Find Them Marvellous" This is Mrs. Chas. Brooks' Opinion of "Little Dir#esters" Here is a short but very eonvincing letter which we received recently: THE COLEMAN MEDICINE CO., I. have been using "Little Digesters" for some time. 1 still use them and and them marvellous. I recommend them sincerely. MRS CHAS. BROOKS. Low, Wright Co., Que. Here is another letter, dated Nov. Oth, 1000, almost equally brief andio the point: COLEMAN' Meinenth Co., Would say that tbe box of "Little Digesters" has gene me a lot of good. I think they are all right for any Stomach Trouble, ANTIIONil PISHB1. Trout ek P.O., Parry Y SO. Dist., Ont. Letters like !heap aro the best pos- sible proof that "Little Digesters" do Times and Daily Globe Times and Daily Mail and Empire Times and Daily World .. , . • • . Times and Toronto Daily News.. Times and Toronto Daily Star Times and Daily Advertiser Times and Toronto Saturday Night ......... Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Weekly Mail and Empire • • Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times 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. 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