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The Wingham Times, 1911-06-08, Page 3THE WINGHAM TIMES JUNE 8, 1911 THE CURSE OF BE NATION IS CONSTIPATION "Fruit a -Lives" Alone Cures This Disease A famous scientist states that Consta pation,or uon.actionof the bowels,causes more dentals than all other diseases combined. Constipation inflames the Kiuiieys, ruins digestion, is the found- ation of Rheumatism, poisous the blood, causes Headaches, Neuralgia, Nervous- ness and Insomnia. Constipation is caused by a weak or sluggish liver, Bile, the only purgative of the body, is secreted by the liver, which in turn should pour out into the intestines sufficient bile to move the bowels, Unless the liver is active, there cannot be enough bile to move the bowels regularly, and Constipation is the result, "Fruit•:-tives", the famous fruit me- dicine, will always cure Constipation because .4t acts, directly on the liver - relieves the congestion -increases the quantity of bile -and strengthens the bowel muscles. 5oc. a box, 6 for $2,50, or trial size, 25a. At ail dealers, or from Fruit -a -fives Litited, Ottawa. THE KING AND HIS PEOPLE. King George and his Queen are creat- ing a warm place in the hearts of the people. .Indeed there is every reason to believe and to hope that the young monarch of the British Empire will equal in good -will of his subjects the place held in turn by his illustrious grandmother and father. . Coming to the throne at an age when his experiences are of the riper sort, yet 'With youth still upon his side, re- sponsibilities are placed upon, King George such as were not matched in the reign of any monarch of the royal house of England. The need of a steady hand at the Imperial tiller was never quite so insistent as at the present, when the nation is undergoing changes from within that are far more danger- ous •and important than were any of the great conflicts which the empire en- countered from without .during the reigns of the present King's prede- cessors. Despite the radicalism and the mod- ern spirit of ignoring traditions, King George has thus early won his way in- to the affections of the populace. He has steered a course clear of political boulders, and the result is as happy for his people as it is for the royal house- hold of which he is the head. It is said of his majesty, that he is a deep stud- ent of public affairs. This is charac- teristic of the House of Hanover, and in a large degree it explains and ac- counts for the wisdom and close sym- pathy with which its representatives have guided the affairs of the estate. Good Reason. A young Boston lawyer who is going to be married shortly met another young lawyer who was married last year. They exchanged felicitations and enquiries. "The only thing that bothers me," explained the about -to -be -happy man, "is the subject of expense. Of course I'm notfun in into this thingwith my eyes shut,, but - "Now, look here," interrupted the experienced benedict. "I'll tell you an absolute fact. I don't spend half the money I did before I was married." "You don't?" exclaimed the other. "How do you work that?" "I don't have it to spend." A DOUBLE CURE FOR DOUBLE TROUBLE Father Morriscy's No. 26 Cures Catarrh by a Combined Treatment. The sudden weather variations in our climate result in a great niany cases of catarrh -a troublesome disease usually considered hard to cure, and one which often leads to serious pulmonary and intestinal troubles. A neglected cold in the head weakens the nasal membranes, so that at every future expostire the trouble returns. ant length these conditions are fastened onto the system, and the sufferer undergoes the' annoyance and danger of chronic catarrh, Some doctors confine `themselves to prescribing external applications, and thus do not reach the seat of the trouble - Others give internal treatment exclu- sively, and thus do not promptly relieve the affected parts. Father Morriscy, the skilled priest - physician, rightly regarded catarrh as a doable trouble, consisting of unpleasant local effects and their fundamental causes, the latter having to do with im- paired general vitality. His famous remedy, No. 26, is a coni- bined cure for catarrh, It consists of tablets to be taken three tiintee a day, and an especially Compounded salve. The salve is antiseptic, and quickly r of the heals the inflamed memo :nes nasal passages. The tablets go to the thesystem etrestore s to r able and of the toY Seat to its meal tone. Together,ether, they cure. Instead of neglecting a disease that is unpleasant to yourself and to others, and one which often lends to pneumonia and consumption, it is sorely the part of w ;s - dein to take timely steps to do away with the effects and at the genie time remove the cause. No. 26 does just that. r.)00, for the combined treatment. At . your druggist's, or from Father blorrisey Medicine Co,, l,td., Montreal, Que. 100 `FORERUNNERS OF DOOM `DOMING EVENTS CM THEIR SHADOWS BEFORE THEM, Extraordinary Disturbances Qf the. Globe and Vagrant Stars Which Seem to Herald and Accompany Waves of Pestilence Have Always Been .a Matter of Interest to Phil. osophors---Black Death Feretoid.. A groat tuyetery which stretches lar back into the musty archives of the Past, mat, recorded in the .nSciiptural. accounts. of the plagues which came up out of Egypt, is directing the fierce whits light of learned inquiry to the far east where Death and all hie an- gels stalk through the land. `that "coining events cast their shadaws before them," has been duly empha- sized through all the ages by the bale- ful consequences lollowing the tokens of nature's wrath or the foretelling, of. doom by our mylbholoR oat guar. diens that swing through heaven's' blue dome. The history of successive visitations of the great plague as they relate to, disturbances of the physical globe pre- sents points of some interest, So late as the beginning of the last century there were those who traced with credulous terrors the planetary vaga- ries which were observed to have co- incided with such calamities!' The recurrent waves of pestilence which swept over Europe and Asia before and during the middle ages,. leaving death in its wake, were herald- ed and accompanied with extraordin- ary disturbances of the globe. Rome. fall a prey to its ravages with appal- ling frequency. Tho first grave visita- tion occurred in 366 B.C., when the plague broke out with devastating se verity and continued to rage for three years. Ton• thousand died in a day at its height; the living were scarcely! able to dispose of the dead. Disturbing omens had been observe' ed; dismay filled the :populace; the; gods must be appeased. And so, in the stricken city new games were in: latrituted and a ghastly levity ordained: iThe etahues of Apollo, Latina, Diana,; Hercules, Mercury and Neptune were placed on three couches and served 'with the richest viands for a space of !eight days. But, as the event proved: all was of no avail; the dead stall obJ Istructed the open ways; the air way en offence in the nostrils. They might' !as well have appointed a cooks' hoiiJ `day. At last souse of the more ancien !Romans recalled a pious custom theta fallen into disuse; a nail was driven into Jupiter's remade during the ides of September. The next year Rome was rent by an earthquake of great violence; a fietsure opened in the midst of the city. The gods, it was ih•,ught, had given a haat; they were weary of baked meats' and desired a living sacrifice. Accord -I ingly the dauntless M. Curtius, whose name happily has been preserved to posterity, diurled•himseldan the chasm. imploring the p.:rverse deities to re- store prosperity to the Roman world: Writers recalled after the plague had spent its force that a flaming star had made its appearance, preceded by a' terrific tidal wave which inundated two cities on the Gulf of Corinth. Again, in 126 B.C., ,the pestilence fell; upon Rome. A baleful planet has risen „above the African land. At first, says! !Seneca, it appeared fiery and red,) emitting a bright light so as to over-, come bhe darkness of night. Gradual ly its magnitude lessened and its' rightness paled. In the year 134, 'Etna was in eruption, and nine years, later the phenotnenon,S was repeated. vl'titudinous hordes of locusts,' ounded by a south wind, drove up! Numidia and Utica, obscuring! sun. The havoc wrought was un-; ecedented. It is related that 800,-; died in Numidie. and 200,000 mord n the sea coasted Oaa•thage. Fifteen ed bodies wete ,carried out of at single gate at Utica in, one day. Thire ay thousand Roman troops were num- bered among the v.ietime But Chi's visitation was: to be follow- ' by one stall more appalling in the th century• of our era. Contempor-, writers, said that it had. '"depopu- d" Africa; it swept the whole Rom.' an world. So swift and terrible was fhe action of the disease that men �rltho nose well in the morning were trieken before noon; they fell at games, at table, while they were con- asei ing. St, Gregory instituted a pro - on at Ranco on account of the un ed calamity No leslinethan 80, mans fe]tdead'in the streets while was passing. ' For this plague, too, we find a rea- son in the planetary disturbances. In' 338 A.D. Antioch was overthrown by' an earthquake in which 60,000 perish ed; .the Tiber left its bed and over - owed Se streets of Rome; a comet Made its appearance; the winter was rigorous; the drought which. followed ' „ The times were obviously out of joint, The black death, which was pulmon- ary, like the present epidemic, is stip-' j2osed the have originated in Asia in' 1345. Genoese sailors, Who landed at their home port early in 1348 from' the eastern coast of the Black Sea, aro supposed to havo disseminated it, together with miraculous stories of its engin• They said its coming had been' foretold in Cathay by the bursting of a huge globe of fire or meteor, others assuring them that the fire had burst through the shell of the globe from; bellow. Seismic shocks ed considerable' violenceand extent had alarmed all Europe. Germany suffered • in 1341t;, in 1340 Siei.>Sf, together with Itrily,l was shaken to.. its foundation; .many., cities were wrecked in Greece, and ihbasS.nds were swallowed up by the car'bh. The courses +of rivers were ob-i +strueted, and over • Avignon (then the; Home of the popee) a• meteor hung ndod for an hour. The heavens thick with vapory and abet with e ehra� lights. London which great 1 eof w The , !appeared in 1664, was similarly ax tnotut ed by uniexnny natural phew.: metra. How the plague reached Lona data, if, ,indeed, it did not originate there romaine a mystery. C0IIr't37misrkt al iri Britain are re. guided by the Mutiny Act, first pats. ed in 1690. PROTECT YOUR FIREWOOD. Paying. Proposition to Give Attention to (Wing of He Units. The condition of the farm wood sup. Ply is ofttimea Dot given due consider- ation. There is a right way in the matter maen rand a wrong way, It is Poor economy to barn green or poorly sea.- Booed wood when a good article may iuet as well be bad, says a correspond- ent of Orange Judd Farmer. Firewood to contain tbe maximum heating qualities, must bo cut while the timber le green andthe wood cells dormant, and cured under shelter.. ,However, where one is utilizing the waste timber of the wood let it is not always possible to cut the timberwhile in the best condition. There are the windfalls to work up and the young growth to thin, and it is not always convenient or possible to do this work at the proper time. This class of timber should be utilized, however, and will make a very satisfactory article if properly cured and preserved. Firewood exposed to the weather "bile curing loses much of its heating properties. Not only so, but such tim- ber contains a certain per cent of moisture, and this must be driven off before the wood cells will burn. This process uses up a certain portion of the heat units generated by the burn- ing wood. Scientific investigation has determined just what per cent of the heating properties of firewood may be used or dissipated in this way, but for practical purposes it should be suffi- ciently convincing that it pays tc properly cure and preserve wood just to notice the difference in the man ner in which the two kinds burn wben placed In the stove. I have bad experience in the matter and am ftlfiy satisfied that properly curing and preserving the farm fire- wood irewood supply is a paying proposition. 'We have no regular building for cur- ing wood, merely protecting it with a hoard roof, yet this wood is far ahead of that which has had the full benefit of the copious rains and snowstorms. 000000000.000000000.00 Keep an account of every hour's time needed to prepare the ground, plant the seed, tend the crop and harvest the grain. To this add a reasonable amount for wear and tear of the ma- chinery and the legal rate of in- terest upon the money invested in the land. When the crop is harvested figure the number of bushels at the prevailing market. If the expense account exceeds the 5 other, then sot about to increase the productiveness .of the land so that it will produce more the year following. aVe 000 0 000000000 0000000 SAVES TIME AND WORK. c Separating Big Ones From Little Ones Is Job of This Potato Sorter. The tedious labor involved in sort- ing many bushels of potatoes can be relieved with the device shown in the illustration and the amount of work done in hoof or a third of the time possible under the hand metbod. A frame is built to go over a large box ar bin. This Is covered with one inch mesh chicken mire and set so that it tants upon the box or bid. The pote- 'ANDY POTATO SORTER. [From Orange Judd Farmer.) toes are placed upou hits screen. and the small ones pass through the mesb- es into the Uos or bin below, The larger potatoes roll down. to- ward the lowest end of screen. Two teen standing on each side of the de- vice can [telt out all the damaged po intoes as ttey roll down over same, +nus securing perfectly sorted potatoes with but n fraction of tbe time, labor anti expense required to sort them by handling each one. - 1f tbe device is placed on a bin that is several feet from the ground an inclined surface should be placed at the foot of the screen so the tubers will not be bruis- ed by dropping directly to the floor or ground. -Orange Judd L`armer. Hop Shoots as a Vegetable. In the spring, when the . hop pleat begins to throw up shoots, it is cus- tomary in England to thin out and throw away the shoots, leaving only two or three to each plant. In some continental countries, however, these hop shoots are used as a vegetable, be- ing gathered when from four to five inches long and boiled and eaten like asparagus. Map out a plan of intelligent farming and then adhere closely to that plan year in and year out -unless your neighbor has what proves to be a more sue• easeful plan, in which ease fol• kw his methods. 0000000000000000 Russia After the Corn Championship. Not saddled with wresting from the United States the proud title of "cham- pion wheat growing country of the t Bessie apparently seems deter - word p p y us from first mined also to depose place in the production of corn. Hardy Winter Wheat. In the Introduction of hardy varieties of 'winter wheat Ithertcov so far Is found the best, Fromfltteeri t t twenty mlltiotl bushels tare now grown t.inutally from tins variety alone. 14 5. BANK ROBBERIES, Since last fall no less than a hundred country banks in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Nebraska have been robbed. In each instance from $1,000 to $7,000 was e andr 11 tak n p seises y the same proce- dure was followed in each case. In the three States named are approx- imately 2,600 banks, 2,000 of them in little towns and villages with practical- ly no police protection, This ,Ig the usual programme in the cases reported: Soon after midnight the residents are aroused by two or three explosions. Those daring enough to venture on the streets see an automobile standing in front of the hank and two men with guns giving orders to stand back. In- side are their companions, filling sacks with money from the safe. Having gathered all the cash possible the burg- lars enter the machine, fire a few in- timidating shots and go racing Out of town. Then come the gathering of a posse, the cranking up of cars and a desperate attempt to follow and capture the rob- bers. In no instance has there been a capture, and despite offers of rich re- wards for the robbers, dead or alive, the robberies continue. Sometin°tes several weeks go by with- out a robbery; then there will be two. or three in a single night. The automobile is blamed for much of this crime. A Weals Heart. When the the heart is weak or ir- regular in action, when the blood' is thin and watery, remember the blood - forming qualities of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food and by its use flood the system with rich, red, vitalizing blood. This is Nature's way of curing weakness and disease. It is the only way to en- sure lasting benefits. Seed Mystery. There is no more wonderful thing in nature than a eommonseed. Although it looks dead and helpless no one can tell how much is wrapped within' it. Each seed,has a character of its own, a character .that distinguishes it from families and from its relatives of the same pod. In many cases the - seed gives no clue to what will be produced either in size of plant or in color of blossom. The small elm seed produces a tall tree and the large seed of the pumpkin a short-lived creeping plant. One seed has within it that which pro- duces a pink flower; another, to the eye precisely the same, produces a purple blossom. But it is a mystery. Some seeds live but a short time, others for centuries. The seed of the coffee berry is worthless if not planted without delay and the willow seed lives only a few days after ripening. Melon seeds have been kept for thirty years and produced fruit, and other seeds have been kept for centuries and have grown. Gener- ally speaking it seems that seeds of wild plants live longer than cultivated varieties. When one considers the vast quantities of seeds of all kinds that are produced and the ample contrivances of nature for scattering them it is surpris- ing to find that plants do. not increase more rapidly and cover the earth. Dar- win calculates that a single plant of the common wild spotted orchis is the parent of 174,000 others in one season - enough to cover an acre of ground and that the great-grandchildren of this one plant would more than clothe the entire land surface of the earth were it not for the destruction of seeds that takes place from various causes.' Some provide food for animals, some fall on soil not suited, some seed requires special preparation and n many cases space to grow is the principal obstacle. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Shipments of Railway ties from Wiarton this season will average half a million. Of this amount the Play- fellow & Wright Co. will handle 300,000 and Capt, Graham 200,000. All Skin Diseases Can be Directly Traced To BAD BLOOD. Therefore to get rid of these akin dis- eases it is absolutely necessary that the blood should be thoroughly cleansed of the accumulated poisons, and for this purpose there is nothing to equal Bur- dock Blood Bitters.. This remedy has been on the market for over thirty-five years and when you use it you are not experimenting with some new and untried remedy. • Miss Stella Eichel, Maitland Forks N.S., writes: -"I have bet bothered with Salt Rli g um on myhands for three years and it itchecl4 o I didn't know what to do. I tried everything but nothing seemed to be any good. I heard of Burdock Blood Bitters and bought two bottles of. it, and now I am perfectly cured and have no Salt Rheum on my hands any more.; I cannot speak too highly of Burdock Blood Bitters." Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Oat. 3 Deferred Duties, A shiftless Irishman, who has been reduced from wealth to being a semi• public charge, when told to finish a certain task, was overheard to say, "Sure I never do to -day what I can leave till the morning," Be revealed the secret of his fall from affluence to. want, There is nothing that will soon- er make shipwreck of a life than to put off the performance of our duties, Deferred duties usually mean neglected duties, In this field, accumulation is the energy of accomplishment. Ac- cumulated .dividends may be a very good thing, but they are never earned by allowing unfinished tasks to pile up on us. When we have to admit that there are a score of duties that have been awaiting our attention for days or weeks or months, and that ought to had our attention long ago, we may at the same time safely admit that some- thing is wrong with our plan of life. The whole trouble lies in our not doing to -day what we ought to do to -day; and that results from two sins: misusing some of our time, The right selection of our tasks, and then intense concen- tration on our tasks, will put a stop to the fatal accumulation, No one has any right to stagger along under the burden of unfinished tasks that ought long ago to have been put out of the way. During 1910 the number of emigrants who left Ireland was 32,923 an increase of 3,693 over the previous year The num- ber who went abroad in 1910 was, how- ever, below the average for any decen- tal periods for which statistics are avail- able. Not So Strange. "One thing about my uncle, he al- ways puts his best foot forward, which is perhaps why he succeeds so well." "Does be never forget?" "Never, never. never." "That is marvelous." "It would be even more so if the worst foot was amputated." Wrong Relation. "How did you come out with the heiress?" "She said she would be a sister to me." "And you wanted her for a rich uncle." Afraid They Would Bite Him. "So Chawley has given up his 6sh- ing trip." "Yes." "What for?" "He heard the fish were biting." Easy Expedient. "He got more than was coming to him." "Don't see how he could." "Ile simply, ran after it. and he was a good runner." Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles Inc!• dem to a bilio.'1 state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nevem, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side ac. While their most remarkable success bas been, shown in curing headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valt.ablo in constipation, curing endpre- ventirig this annoying complaint, whi ie they also correct all disorders of stomach, atimu.atethe liver and regulate the bowels. :Wen if they only cured Ache they would be almost priceices to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortu- nately their goodness sloes net end here,and those who once try them will ;Ind ti o0o little pills valu- able in so many ways that they v' tI not be wil- ling to do without them. But afte all sick head A ' Is the bane of so many lives that here Is where we make our great boast. Our pills curoit while ethers do not. - Carter's Little Liver rilis aro very small and very easy to take. One or two pillsmako a doeo.. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who UM them. 0/01=1 li!Srin91NE CO.. NDW?0flL �maIl tSmall Doe, Sma11 Irk SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NO.lRTH- W EST LAND REGULATIONS. ANY person who is the sole head of a family or any male over 18 years old, mayhome- stend a quarter section of available Dominion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The applicant must appear in person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for the district. Entry by proxy may be made at any agency, on certain conditions, by father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intending homesteader. Duties. -Six months' residence upon end cultivation of the land in each of three years, A homesteader n fm'tat 0 ncrs solely owned and occupied by hie or by his father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister. In certain districts a liomest,Peer in good standing may pre-empt a quarter -section ale n side his homeggtend, P ri tiDO roe rH acre. Dutton: -Must reside uponhoniestend pre-emption six months lit each of six years from the date of homestead entry (including the time required to earn herrtatead patent) and cultivate fate acres extra. A homesteader who has exhaustedhie home- stead right and cannot obtain a pre-emption ,nay enter for a purchased homestead in certain districts. Price 8300 per corp, Duties. --Mast reside Hix months in each of tin ce yearn, mini - este Snores and erect a htnworth, 8 .00. BY W. W. C( , Demty of the Minister of the Interior. N. B.-Unetithorized pubileetlen of this ad- vertisement mill not be paid fc r. aevetes D'Rs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY CURE DISEASES OF MEN PATiENTS TREATED THROIJOHOUT CANADA FOR 20 YEARN Drs. K. ds K. aro favorably known through. Out Canada where they pave uoa8 bust• nes. for over 90 years. Thout•auds of palletise have been treated and cured by their great skill and through .the virtue of their N method ou knoww you are deailug W th res th n stole physielaus as they own and occupy their own office building in Detroit, 'valued at $100,04 when they decide yoa.r rase la curable„all your worry is rcmoied for )you know they will not deceive you, They guarantee to cure ea curable eases. No matter how many a .,eters 'have failed to benefit you; no rnat.er how much money you have spent la vain; ro matter ,bow die• Cour age,l you may 1 e, don't give up In des- pair until you get a free opinion from these muster specialists. if you are at present within the clutches of tiny secret halt which is salving your lire by degrees; if you are suffering from the results of past indiscre- tions; if your blood has been tainted from any f you private married and and to dread of many; toms breaTcin out and exposing your past; if you are suffering as theresult of a elite spent life -Drs. K. & K. ore your Refuge. Lay your ease before them confect racially and they will tell you houestly if you are curable. YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED We Treat and Cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBiLLITY, BLOOD and URINARY COSAINTS KiDNEY and BLADDER i ll eases and all Diseases Peculiar to Men. DA, KENNEDY, 1IXEDrpAr. DMECTOn or Das, It. aK. CONSULTATION FREE Books Free on Diseases of Men. If unable to Bali.HOMEfor TREQAuestion TMENT leak for DRs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. turNOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- mossommeseas ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows DRS. 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