HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-11-23, Page 6n, ..- ,r ^ ,yeas- .�Y7: u"�5' ••n e
e.esaseee
Try the flour that holds
the confidence of
thousands of
s
home -co r.s
III; present huge demand for PURITY FLOUR
shows the confidence in which it is held by thousands
of home -cools.
Those who have used PURITY FLOUR have come to
believe in it, They :'ook on P TRITY as a friend. They
feel they can trust it implicitly,
because each and every lot
of PURITY FLOT..I, has.
always been uniform --always
up to the high standard of qual-
ity that has made it famous.
Wouldn't you, too, like to use
a flour you could aim ays rely
on ? Wouldn't you like to feel
certain that your bread, cakes,
and pies were going to turn
out exactly right ? TL.'at's just
how you'll feel when you
become a user of PURITY
FLOUR — the confidence -
creating flour.
PURITY FLOUR gives high-class results, because it consists
exclusively of the high-grade 'portions of the best Western
hard wheat.
On account of the extra strength of PURITY FLOUR please
remember, when making pastry, to th n an ordinary floudd more r
requires.
And when making
bread add more water,
,and PURITY
FLOUR will expand
into. more loaves than
the same weight of
ordinary flour can
produce, thus making
"more bread and bet-
ter bread."
URITY FCDUr`'.
•uiuw
•
"More bread and
better bread"
Make your next flour order spell P -U -R -I -T -Y F -L -O -U -R.
It costs slightly more, but it's worth the difference.
Add PURITY FLOUR to grocery list right now.
104
OLD BY WM. BONE AND RING BROS., WINGHAM.
adlillUISMEMMELIS.0,1*" 3111111 6111311151111130290O12,
TEE WINGIA4 TI .ES liONEIABER 23, 1911
One-third of Great Britain's tele-
graph operators are women,
I
Scientists tell us the higher we go
the colder it gets, Perhaps that is
why more of us do not struggle to.
reach the top,
The Union of South Africa, which
includes the Transvaal, Gape Colony,
I Natal and Orange Free State, has a
population of 6,000,000 people.
"I am pleased to recommend Cham-
berlain's Cough Remedy as the best
I thing I know of and safest remedy for
icoughs, colds and bronchial trouble,
writes Mrs. L. B. Arnold, of Denver,
• I and it has never failed have tolt give relief.'"
I1� orsalebyalldealers. Almost endless are the uses of a Mis
souri inventor's doors and window
guard, consisting of upright pickets
connected by short parallel bars that
permit it to be extended to various
widths.
A wireless message received in New
York told that a German woman living
in Cuba was so patriotic that she sail-
ed on a German ship when about to
become a mother. Twins were born
under the German flag.
Children Cry
I{ OHS ROM THE SHERIM MILLI
1
Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges.
®.. a
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
The Germans are eating up their
horses. In the first six months of this
year, 35,277,493 pounds of horseflesh
were sold and only about 10,000,000
pounds more than that of mutton.
Meat prices continue to rise, and muni-
cipal markets for the sale of cheap
fish are being opened in many of the
cities. .
Two boys, Harry Coyle and Gordon
McDonald near Colborne undertook to
pick 50 barrels in five hours. They
commenced at 12.30 and finished at
4.47, filling the contract with 13 mmtes
to spare, the average time for a barrel
being five minutes, 83 seconds. This is
a record, and the time was kept by five
of their friends.
HAD. BAD SORE FOUR TEARS
:zam-nox iters #IU+'ALED
m
Mrs, 'Wilson, 110 ya
Toronto,ysAbout ur years ago
he
ht
s sore of y spotappeared
pe This spot increased
side of my
1n size until it became about half an
inch in diameter and very painful.
I went to a doctor, but the ointment
he gave mo did not have any good
effect. The, sore continued to die-
charge
is-
hditecuzd a most
ttful.
Ilafreely, poulices
and all kinds of salves, but it was
no itdfoand I r four years! continued to suffer
"A sample of Zam-Buk was one day
given to me, and I used it. Although
the quantity was so small, it seemed
to do me some good, so I purchased
a further supply.
"Each box did me more and more
good, and, to my delight, before I had
been using Zara-Buk three weeks, I
saw that it was going to heal the
sore. In less than a month it was
healed! ae
I know a lady in the east of the
city, whose husband suffered for
On mylswith
recommendation, Zam-Buen sore on his k
d y, when I saw her, she toldat case. he other
me that
it had healed the sore completely.
"Illy daughter, who lives in Leth-
bridge, Alta., has also used Zam-Buk
with the same satisfactory result. I
think it is, beyond all doubt, the
finest healing balm known."
Such is the opinion of alI persons
who have really tried Zam-Buk. * It
is a sure cure for eczema, piles,
abscesses, ulcers, scalp sores, tinge
worm, cuts, burns, scalds, bruises,
and all skin injuries and diseases.
50c. box, all druggists and stores, or
post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto,
forprice. lin case skin
else Zam-Buk Soap, 25e. tablet.
IL
Do not suffer
another day 'wit
Itching., Bleed-
ing, or rotrud•
ing Piles. No
surgical oper-
ation required.
Dr. Chase's OIntment will relieve you at once
and as certainly cure you. 60c. a box- all
Toronto or ample box free if y Co.,
nited,
this
paper and enclose So. stamp to pay postage.
Wm. Burkitt, of Holyrood who re-
ceived five pounds of potatoes from the
experimental farm at Guelph, has had
good results from them. There were
two -and -a -half pounds of David's War-
rior, from which he raised 104 pounds,
two -and -a -half pounds of Empire State,
from which he raised 47 pounds. This
is thought to be a record yield.
It is F_ *ede eat ta_s a e.*asgp Ane J R Bvsth Gampany. of Ottawa
crpr� �:. _F __g •f ti ecia , ': ave amsed
ane er of t
he �a
en mil -
•
s _a C*l,ur te L sr W..
Tre.
sent, t;e '=i ;gs _ kk 1i in °' r- We have often x .s ;e t.1 hew, many which is the lowest price Ontario pots
essee-
there. z s E .r _..0 screw befo
ei re eis-
ops. l eie as testi-tine.- under, toes are selling at. Manitoba has a
-----�"=r~- the qui big crop of potatoes this year, Those
on sate, says a Toronto newspaper,
,a Tem'3.9adoore. A raw „.*�+ r: . 5 a g„Leh, that
"For thirteen •^e * I was so had
t were
particularly fine specimens. More
a*i ^� _ z "� r r> a Ir] f r the are expected to arrive during the sea-
s F-..-- r
son. In the meantime, Ontario pota-
toes are firm at just doable the price
they were a year ago.
1ST AAD HEALTH TO MOTHER A110 CHILD.
1IssewaareOw'S SoommaG SYxVP bas leen
castor over SIXTY YEARS by lin:LIONS of
BOTHERS for their CHILDREN wmr,B
HiGH PRICED PEACHES.
The One* They lied In 'tendon, Pen
haps, but Not in New York.
They walked Into the breakfast room
et one ot the :big New York betels the
other day--dtticky, precise and quer-
Moue. They bad just returned trom
a u nt the big tr of alk at ee and veAtve that 1-
ry Bane,
"Have you no South African
peaches?" they asked plaintively. ''We
have been stopping at the Saver In
I.oudeu, and there were plenty of
South African Reacbes'
The hotel manager wag found.. He
hastened to the complaining ones.
Certainly the hotel bad South African
peaches. Tbey were imported espe-
cially for the hotel guests; came from
the same peach orcbard that the Sa-
voy's peaches did. The faces of the
traveled persons did not light up with
joy and appreciation, as one would
think.
'Bow much are they?' they asked
with a singular timidity.
"Three dollars each," said the hotel
manager. The traveled persons prompt-
ly protested. "But we only paid -haw
-$2.50 for them at the Savoy," said
!bey. The hotel manager expressed
bis regret at the overcharge. He said
they might •have them at the same
price that they paid at the Savoy in
London, and how many would they
tike to have?
"Haw, Alfred," said one of the plain-
tive traveled persons to the other
plaintive traveled person, "let us have
-baw-one of those dead old tawshion•
ed breakfasts of ham and eggs."
"Right, old dear," said Alfred.
The botel manager went away grin-
ning softly to himself. He bad never
bad any peaches trom South Africa. --
Cincinnati Times -Star.
The Teeswater News reports the fol-
lowing: -'It is with pleasure that we
announce this week the birthday of
Mr. James Whyto:k, sr., of Culross,
perhaps the oldest gentleman in Wes-
tern Ontario, which event took place
on the 23rd of this month when he cele-
brated his 99th birthday, and from that
day started on his 100th year. A won-
derful old man is James Whytock. He
is still healthy and gives promise of
living for a number of years still. His
intellect is good and he can crack a
joke and enjoy one as well as ever.
Not long ago an old friend remarked
that he would see 100 years. He said:
"Yes, and I will just put down a mark
like this (making a figure 1) and start
over again."
Chamberlain's - Stomach and Liver
Tablets do not sicken or gripe, and may
be taken with perfect safety by the
most delicate woman or the youngest
child. The old and feeble will also find
them a most suitable remedy for aiding
and strengthening their weakened di-
gestion and for regulating the bowels.
For sale by all dealers.
Reversing the order of things Mani-
toba potatoes are now supplying the
Toronto market. On Oct. 27, a carload
arrived in Toronto, and were offered
for sale out of store at $1.15 per bag,
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the past few
years was supposed to be incurable.
For a great many years doctors pro-
nounced it a local disease and prescrib-
ed local remedies, and by constantly
failing to cure with local treatment,
pronounced it incurable. Science has
proven catarrh to be a constitutional
disease and therefore requires consti-
tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitu-
tional cure on the market. It is taken
internally in doses from ten drops to a
teaspoonful. It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces of the sys-
tem. They offer one hundred dollars
for any case it fails to cure. Send for
circulars and testimonials.
Address: F.J. CHENEYT& CO.,Ohio,
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
with ehrcnie ire? gest'on Chit cses ^Lt of S )rw cl .._.e- at not go ant of deem A; ery were un-
strung, the hart bad and smother- Is .. ei eds
ing feelings ea:re on till ihso.,
fail-
ed
would Cho'z:e, DGCtGT�3' tv +:' ^t tai - .
ed me, so I began the use of Dr.
Chase's Kidney -Liver PF 'Health. 1
thank for my present
am now cuing toy hcuse'kverk and have
a family of ten."
A man isn't necessarily square be-
cause he is cornered.
The pleasure a woman gets out of
telling her troubles may compensate
her for her sufferings.
There is little danger from a cold or
from an attack of the grip excoptwaen
followed by pneumonia, and this never
happens when Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy is used. This remedy has won
lief great reputation and e .tensive sale
by, its remarkable cures of colds and
grip and can be relied upon with im-
plicit confidence. For sale by alt deal-
ers.
Thera are now 67 theatres in London,
and '738 in the provinces.
Money makes th6 mare go, and a
sheriff's attachment maker, the auto-
mobile. go,
In case you should ever become a
ghost have you decided whom you will
haunt.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHE.:'S
CAST'0e41A
And many a man treats a stranger
better in a barroom than h.I treats his
wife at home.
In the event of an employer becom-
hi, banitrtpt, the claims of domestic
servants COMA before of ordinary
those
creditors.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
OASTO t' l
Combining two household eonvenien-
dee in one, a Washington i-iventer has
made an ironing board Verve as the
back support of a stepladder.
An Ohio man has invented a washing
zttaeth:e to be driven by an electric'
motor, but whin aso may be operated
by hard should the power fail.
"I do not believe there is any other
medicine so good for wheeping cough
as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy,,,
writes .Mrs, Francis Turpin, Junction
City, Ore. This remedy is also unsur-
passed for colds and croup. For sale
by all dealers.
Wood prepared in a certain form is
a common and constant article of food
in all sections of Siberia where the
Yakut lives.
Gasoline may be supplanted by kero-
sene at a source of power for automo-
biles by the invention of a compact de-
vice for prodocing gas directly from
the cheaper fuel.
Ec: e a Not a
Blood Disease
TEETHING wiih rEY.FECT snccxns. it
SOOTHES lie CHILD. SOFTENS the GiJMS.
ALLAYS an PAIN t cuaus wiND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA. It is air
solntely harmless. Be sure and ask for "ides.
'Winslow's Soothing syrup," and take no Other
POSTAL PUZZLES.
They Were Easy Reading For Uncle
Sam's Clever Officials.
A letter with the addressee's face'
roughly drawn on the envelope and the
words • "Baltimore. Md: " following
wasn't too great a puzzle for the men
who decipher mail addresses for Un-
cle Sam. The letter was sent from
Clarksburg, W. Va., by .1. M. Crouch.
When It reached the Baltimore post.
ottice the postmaster said it bad to be
delivered.. Several of the experts were
puzzling over how that trick could be
turned when the mail carrier in whose
(district a big hotel is walked up to a
the let -
oras drsaid, "Why, thatd the man 's Sam Hoo-
ver, chief clerk ot the -- hotel." And
it was for Sam, who opened it and
learned tbat his friend wished to en-
gage a room for that night. When
'Crouch arrived at the hotel the room
was 'ready for Bim.
About twenty years ago a European
Peasant mailed on the other side of the
Atlantic a letter the envelope ot which
bore this sort ot address:
HANS SIEGLIC1�
First House In America.
It was easy for New York postoffle*
men, the first house in America to im-
migrants being Castle Garden. where
they were then received. In Castle
Garden Hans was found without de-
lay. -New York Press.
MEANING OF THE CRASS
This cross (in red) has been adopted in
Canada and all over America as the emblem
under which the Crusade against Consumption
is carried on,
Every reader knows of the ravages of this
disease; how, too often, the bread -winner of
the fancily falls a victim, `or the young man
or young woman, with a promise of a happy and useful
life, is stricken down.
This modern Crusade, like the one of old, is a
winning fight. the death rate from .Consumption in
this province shows a decrease of over 25 % in the
past few years.
Nearly 6000 of these poor sufferers have been cared
for in our Consumptive Homes in Muskoka and near
Weston. To -day we have 300 patients under treat-
ment—patients who, if they had the money, could not
through fear of contagion gain admittance into other
hospitals.
In the Muskoka Free Hospital alone we are now
caring for 156 patients. 128 of these cannot pay a
single cent for the cost of their maintenance, 15 pay
70c. per day, 1 pays 57c. per day, 12 pay 50c. or less
per day.
Our Trustees, having faith in the generous -hearted
people of Canada, have continued to carry on this work
during the past year.
Money to pay doctors, food, nursing and caring of
these sick ones, is urgently needed. Will your readers
help and . have the joy of sharing in a work that has
the promise of the Master's reward?
84 SPADINA AVE.
TORONTO
W. J. GAGE
Chairman Executive Committee, National
Sanitarium Association
—'- -- 4. -
kind.. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
It seems, says Hoard's Dairyman ex-
orbitant and unreasonable to many
farmers to pay from $150 to three
hundred for a good bull, and yet they do
not seem to have the same sense of un-
reasonableness when they make other
purchases. They will not hesitate to buy
a good horse paying from $200 to $300,
and yet such a horse can never be made
to yield the profit on the investement
that a good bull will. Moreover, the
work the horse does lasts, as a tool, but
one season, while that of the bull is
carried on for years to come.
Rapid growth from hogs cannot be
secured on even the best pasture, with-
out some grain. While they may be
kept in good condition and may even
make good gains, moderate grain rations
in connection with the forage pay under
ordinary conditions by the rapidity of
gains the animal makes. The condition-
ing qualities of the green feed enables
the animal to make better use of the
grain given it, than when kept upon a
grain ration alone. It is likely thatthe
greatest benefit of pasture lies in this
fact rather than in distinct fattening
qualities of the pasture itself
Soluble Glass.
In 1818 a German professor stumbled
Upon the discovery of soluble glass.
Which he made from silica with soda
knd potash combined. This is now ex-
tensively used for rendering wood-
work incombustible and marble and
plaster secure against atmospherlo
agents, as a vehicle for mineral col-
ors, in a kind of fresco painting to be
exposed to the weather, in the manu-
facture of 'artificial stone and in the
tcomposition of fireproof cements for
stoves, etc.
About thirty years ago it was discov-
ered that glass might be rendered ex-
ceedingly hard by dipping it in oil
when at a certain degree of tempera-
ture. The particles, however, seem
to be put in a state of high tension,
and the whole may suddenly fly into
a thousand pieces.
For this reason internal treatments
fail to cure -Success of Dr.
Chase's Ointment,
hxiie-ionco with the use of Dr.
Chase': 'wltment will soon convince
anyone Eczema is a disease of the
skin ar t of the blood'.
Mr. '. Macauley, Stornoway,
Quo., s .tes,-"I had itching eczema
on my leg for over five years and tried
many remedies and several doctors
without benefit. Dr. Chase's Ointment
cured the completely."
Mrs. Chas. Hilbert, Iiaystaelc, Pla-
centia. Bay, Nfld., writes, --"I was a
sufferer from Salt Rheum for ten years
i , Dr.
]C tl
f
11 boxes cured
eight and was by 6
heartily
Chase's Ointment.
I am
thankful for this curd and want to
tmorn11 end Dr. Chase's Ointment to
other sufferers "
Why not get the cure started to -day. found. The cause for the strap seen- feet good," .
If you are a sufferer from eczema org The price of 1vlllburlt's heart and
y form of itching skin disease you duet of these stones is doubtless to be Have fills 1s to cents per Bax, or 3 boxes
Toronto, g
The Times to
January, 1913.
for -'$l.00
For pains in the side or chest dampen
a piece of flannel with Chamberlain's
Liniment and bind it over the seat of
pain. There is nothing better. For
sale by all dealers.
Travelling Stones.
"Travelling stones," from the size of
a pea to six inches in diameter, are
found in Nevada. When distributed on
s floor or other level surface, within
two or three feet of one another, they
immediately begin to travel toward a
common centre, and there lie huddled
like a clutch of eggs in a nest. A.
single stone removed to a distance of
three and a half feet, upon being re-
leased, at once started with wonderful
and somewhat comical celerity to join
its fellows. These queer stones are
found in a region that is comparatively
level and little mote than bare rock.
are
rte region
0
er this barren Scattered over
little basins, from x few feet to a rod
or two in diameter, and it is in the bot-
tom of these that the rolling stoner are
Suffered With Nem Troube
for Two Years.
WAS IMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM TO
SLEEP.
The Romany Rye.
;The first notice of gypsies,whlcli oc-
curs in European literature is from
the pen of an Austrian monk about
1122. They are described by him in
very uncomplimentary terms as "Ish
maelites and brasiers, who go peddling
throuib'the wide world, having neither
house nor dome, cheating the people
.with their tricks and deceiving man-
kind, but not openly." Having got a
bad name, they seem to have been in.
the middle ages treated everywhere
with systematic harshness. In Eng-
land the most barbarous decrees
against them were issued, even as late
as the days ot Henry VIII. and Eliza-
beth. -London Globe.
Mr. Chas. W. Wood, 34 Torrance
Street, Montreal, Que., writes:--•-"por
two years I suffered with nerve trouble,
and it was impossible for me to sleep.
It did not matter what time I went to
bed, in the morning I was even worse
than 'the night before. I consulted a
doctor, and he gr.ve me a tonic to take
a half hour before going to bed.
"It was all sight for a time, but the
old trouble .eturncd with greater force
than before.
"One of the boys, wlio works with me,
sH
Heart
fM
Milburn
's half a box O
e1
gav me
and
I got
and Nerve Pills. Y took them
such satisfaction that I got another box,
and before I finished it I could enjoy
sleep from 10 p.m. until 6 a.m., and now
an
will flunk life clay you heard of Dr, found in the material of which they are for !{1 `L3. � Thcjf are for sale at all
Chase's
Ointment. 60 Cts. a box, Co.,ll eoniposed, which appears to be lode. scalers, .or win be invited direct on
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates „ Cstone or magnetic iron ore, f#tirper's receipt of price by 't'ile'r. Milburn Co.,
Weekly. Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Well Qualified.
Fatber-Well, my son, you bave now
got your commission and are pre-
pared to join your regiment and fight
tor the glory ot our country. Do you
think you have the necessary quaiffl.
cations? Young Officer -Well. I should
think so. 1 am the champion long
distance runner ot our club. -London
MaIL
Virtue,
Tirane consists in making desire sub-
ordinate to duty, passion to principle.
The polars ot character are modem,
tion, temperance, chastity, simplicity,
self control. Its method is reit die.
nisi. ..
Too Risky.
"We ebould close our eyes to the
Unsightly things in life."
"Too risky. t tried that once and
slipped ott a banana peel.” -Washing.
ton Herald.
A man should be upright, not bar.
PRINTING
0 ;AND
v
STATION ERY
We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple
Stationery and can supply your wants in
WRITING PADS
. ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETEItIES,
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYII:G CARDS, etc
We will keep the best stock in the respective lines
and sell at reasonable prices.
JOB PRINTING
We are in a better position than ever before to attend
to your wants in the Job Printing line and all
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with us
when in need of
LETTER HEADS
BILL HEADS
ENVELOPES
CALLING CARDS
CIRCULARS
NOTE HEADS
STATEMENTS •
WEDDING INVITATIONS
POSTERS
CATALOGUES
Or anything you may require in the printing line.
Subs ions taken for all the Leading Newspapers
and Magazines.
The Times Office
a!C"ONE BLOCK
wilsg, titan.
ew
M itept ittalght.—Marcuh ;AUtsisui1 i