HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-11-30, Page 6k�.
Learn why PURITY
FLOUR is unlike any
other brand
PURITY FLOUR is unlike any otht'r brand of flour.
No two milling companies follow exactly the sauce
process of milling. In fact, no two d"ttTe ent brands
of flour in the world are exactly alike hi quality.
And here is another fact worth knowing: Every wheat berry
contains both high-grade and low-grade por-
tions.
The process of raffling PURITY Ti
flour costs
more than to mill ordinary flour. The low-
grade portions are separated and excluded.
PURITY is an ALL HIGH-GRADE, hard
wheat flour. It has greater strength, greater
absorption and greater expansion. It is a
thirstier, more elastic flour. It drinks more
water and expands into more loaves.
Use PURITY FLOUR for your next batch
of bread. Count the loaves. You'll find
you have made "MORE BREAD AND
BETTER BREAD " from PURITY than
when you've used an equal weight of weaker
and cheaper flour.
PU IT
FLQUR
"More bread and better bread"
IMAGIlNE, if you can, how much whiter, and more tooth-
some, and more nutritious, the bread made from such a
HIGH-GRADE flour must be.
And can you imagine yourself enjoying the
flaky pie -crust and the light, delicate cake P
—your reward for using PURITY flour
When making pastry, please remember to
add more shortening than required with
ordinary flour—for on account of its extra
strength, PURITY FLOUR requires more
shortening for best pastry -results
Yes, PURITY FLOUR costs slightly more
than ordinary flour. But use it once and
you'll say it's worth more—much more—
than the difference.
Acid PURITY FLOUR to your grocery list
right now.
107
i OLD BY WM. BONE AND KING BROS., WINGHAM.
1
TIIE WINGHAM TIMES NOVEMBER 30, 1911.
You can give an approximate guess
as to a man's income by the amounthis
wife spends.
Lots of men are getting along in
years who don't seem to be getting
along in any other direction.
There is little danger from a cold or
from an attack followed by pneumonihe a rand thistnever
happens when Chamberlain's Cough.
Remedy is used. This remedy has won
its great reputation and extensive sale
by its remarkable cures of colds and
grip and can b. relied upon with im-
plicit confidence. For sale by all deal -
ere,
Irrigating Western Lands,
The biggest irrigation project on the
continent is that half completed in
includesAlberta. It three
ches of land termed the
and eastern blocks, In the west-
ern are 1,039 acres to be reclaimed; n
the central are about a million and in
the eastern are. 1,156,224. The west-
ern section is the nearest completed,
and it alone forms a project as large
as in the United States, and the largest
yet attempted in Canada. Already
there have been completed seventeen
miles of main canal, 254 miles of secon-
dary canals, and 1,329 miles of distrib-
uting ditches, Now nearing completion
is a dam on the Bow river 7,000 feet
long 350 feet wide at the base, and 45
feet high. From this dam canals will
lead out over 500,000 acres of land.
Eight million dollars has been appro-
priated by the company to start the
work on the eastern block. In five
years or so a tract 30 miles wide and
15C miles long between Calgary and
Moose Jaw will be irrigated and tens of
thousands of farms will take the place
of the wild prairies of today.
KERNELS FROM THE SANCTUM M1LLI
Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges.
No doubt there are cheerful givers—
but did you ever see one?
For the first seven months of the cur-
rent fiscal year, 265,833 immigrants ar-
rived in Canada.
$ Boxes Cared P,oriaais.
Mrs. Nettie Massey, Consecon, Ont.,
writes: "Three doctors described my
trouble as psoriasis, and one said 1
could never be cured. The disease
spread all over me, even on my face
and head and the itching and burning
was hard to bear. I used eight boxes
of Dr. Chase's Ointment and am entire-
ly cured—not a sign of a sore to be
seen. I can hardly praise this Oint-
ment enough."
The Governors of the Wesleyan Theo-
logical College have decided to appeal
the Workman judgement.
Nuremburg (Bavaria) Gazette, found-
ed in 1467, was the first newspaper
printed from metal type with printing
ink.
F! )r.,a burning, stinging, smart.
Irr. pain is ended, the bleoding
owl a permanent cure
by ilei! e$ Zam.i3lilt.
ii a trial S
4t ,Ura;,;; ists and Stares, 60c boat. ?tr
ANOTHER PHASE QF BUYING FOOD.
Had Leernod His Lesson..
[Atchison Globe.]
A fireman was up for examination
for promotion to the position of engineer
He passed a fair test en the rules and
machinery but during all of it the ex-
aminer was lecturing him as to the need
of economy in the use of fuel and oil,
so by the time he finished his examinat-
ion he had it pretty well on his nerve's..
Having finished the technical part the
examiner thought ho would put the man
ina critical condition to see what be
might do in an emergency. So he put
to him this question:
•'Supposing you are engineer of a
freight train on a single track and you
were in a head-on collision with a pas-
senger train and you knew that
you could not stop your train and
you knew that a collision could not
be averted, what would you do?"
The man unstrung by the vigorous in
structions he had received as to the
economy, replied in this ways "Why, I
would grab the oil can in one hand and
a lump of coal in the other and jump."
To buy feed for dairy cows is to add.
to the fertility of the soil. Fertilizer
purchased in the form of concentrated
feeding stuff is the cheapest way in
which we can purchase it. We not on. y
get returns for our money from the in-
cresed flow, but we have in addition
fertilizer that if purchased in commer-
cial form would be worth in some cases
fifty per cent. of the first cost of the
feed.
Did we stop to consider that in buy-
ing a ton of bran costing at present
twenty-four dollars, we are getting
thirteen dollars and forty-eight cents
worth of fertilizer, valuing nitrogen at
fifteen cents, potash at four and one-
half cents and phosphoric acid at seven
cents, we would not be so fearful of
investing our money in commercial
feeds for dairy cows. The fertilizing
value or a ton of oilcake is twenty-one.
dollars and fourteen cents; of cotton_
seed meal, twenty-five dollars and
ninety-six cents; of gluten meal, six-
teen dollars, and of corn meal, five dol-
lars and eighty cents.
All of the fertilizing value of these
feeds does not find its way to the soil.
Some of it will be shipped away in the
finished products, such as cheese or
milk. More still will be lost by fer-
mentation of the manure. Where,
however, we give attention to the
proper conservation of the manure,
spreading it daily in the field, we can
safely calculate on being able to use
for the production of crops fifty per
cent. of the fertilizing ingredients in
feeding stuffs.
Those dairymen who are considering
the advisability of buying concentrates
to supplement the short crops of the
past season would do well to consider
this phase of the question. Even did
the 'increased; milk flow do no more
than pay for the feed the fertilizer
saved ,would make buying feed for
dairy cows a profitable proposition.
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.
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.
Last year 'the Ontario Government
received from Succession Duties the
enormous sum of $1,048,249.94, or an
increase over the previous year of $189,-
802. The legislation that diverted so
large an amount into the Provincial Ex-
chequer was enacted by. the Liberals
in the face of active opposition of Mr.
Whitney. Guess he's glad he aid not
have his way that time, even if he has
not said so.
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. CHENEY CO..
Toledo, Ohio,
Solt,by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
It depends upon results whether we
consider an enterprize is wise or foolish.
"I do not believe there is any other
medicine so good for whooping 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.
Field mice are increasing in large
numbers in the Old Country.
Essex, England, leads in the
gation of scientific agriculture.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
°AST O R I A
Dr. John Ferguson, A. S. Lown, Alex-
ander Fraser and John Watson were ac-
quitted of conspiracy in connection with
the Partners Bank.
A Manayunk woman found a chunk of
rubber tire in a sausage. Truly the auto-
mobile is supplanting: the horse along
the line.
"I am pleased to recommend
Cha
m-
besla•t,sCough Remedy as the best
met
for
and safest remedy know of ,
I ,
thing
coughs , colds and bronchial trouble,
writes Mrs. L. B. Arnold, of, Denver,
Colo. "We have used it repeatedly
and it has never failed to give relief.
i or sale by all dealers.
The oldest pavement in cities: of tne
modern world is in Cordova, Spam. The
Moors put it down in the ninth century.
They also established waterways with
pipes of lead.
propa-
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
To clean your rugs put them upside
down on bed springs laid down out in
the yard. Beat them thoroughly, then
turn them over and sweep. This saves
the dirt from the ground getting into
the rugs.
WhyNotbeWell
and Strong
Mrs. Louise Armstrong, of Minneso-
ta has made known to the Governments
of the United States and Canada, the
presence of an underground passage
under the river, connecting old Niagara
with Fort Niagara, which she,sairs was
used years ago by smugglers. She
knew of this passage, she says, when
a girl, but was made to promise not to
tell of it for at least a lifetime.
Whooping Cough.
Mrs. Charles Lovell, Agassiz, B. C.,
writes: "Seven of our nine children
had whooping cough the same winter
and we attribute their cure to Dr.
Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpen-
tine. We always have it in the house,
and recommend them as the king of all
medicines. I was formerly completely
cured of protruding piles by using Dr.
Chase's Ointment.
Cowards All.
1
TRAPPERS
send us your
FURS
and we will pay you the
Highest Prices
REVILLO1 FR RES
LIMITED
134-136 Mc6ILL STREET
MONTREAL, PA.
We will send free to every trap-
per who sends, us furs, our book
"The Trapper's Loyal Qom-,
panlon".
�
With Every Bag of Flour
There Goes A Guarantee
That guarantee means that I believe Cream of the West to be the
best bread flour on the market. If your bread doesn't beat any
you ever baked before, if it fails to rise or doesn't giveback
your
extraextrasatisfaction in every way, your grocer will pay you
money on return of the unused portion of the bag.
the
West
Fiour
Cream
the hard Wheat flour guaranteed for bread
If People will fairly and honestly try Cream of the West they
wilt have success with it. That's why we guarantee it. We are
sure of it.
Tie Campbell Milling Company, Limited, Toronto
ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL, President
Whitney and Tax Reform.
From the Hamilton .Herald (Ind.)
Sir James points to the injustice
taxing d farm with a $1,000 house
a $4,000 farm for the same amount
his neighbor, who has a $16,000 .house
on a $4,000 farm; but he admits that in
cities and towns "the case is not ex-
actly the same." Well, all that is pro-
posed is that to the municipalities be
extended the right to decide whether
or no they shall discriminate in favor o
improvements in fixing their tax rates.
If rural municipalities are afraid of
alleged inequalities like the case men-
tioned by the Premier, , they can stick
to the present system. Why not let
the urban municipalities make the dis-
crimination if they wish to?
of
on
BS
FOR SALE BY KERRR & BIRD, WINGHAM.
The Times to
A MAKESHIFT EXPEDIENT.
Eight hundred teachers are employed
in public schools of this province with-
out any certificate of qualification, ex-
cept special permits of a temporary
nature issued by the Department of
Education.
The above situation is the result of
the abolition of the county model schools
by the Whitney gov&nment. It is a
situation at once revealing incapacity
and neglect.
The present need of a system of tech-
nical education in industrial Ontario
has been called frequently to the "atten-
tion of the present government. The
question is absolutely untouched and
remains where it was seven years ago.
Sir James Whitney proposes to hold
teachers in Ontario by withholding
their certificates for a year, certificates
by which they can teach in the western
provinces. This is clearly a makeshift.
If there are not sufficient teachers in
the first instance, how will such an ex-
pedient relieve the stringency?
The fact of the matter . is Ontario's
educational affairs have been in the
hands of bunglers and the Hon. Bung-
ler of them' all is Hon. Dr. Pyne,
the mention of whose flame as Minister
of Education or as an "educational ex-
pert," is likely to bring down any
house as the political joke of the sea -
Johnny, who lives on the south side,
hasn't been to school long, but he al-
ready holds some peeuliar views re-
garding the administration of his par-
ticular room.
The other day he came home with a
singularly morose look on his usually
smiling face.
"Why, Johnny," said his mother,
"What is the matter'?"
Johnny snorted.
"Why, Johnny," said his mother
reproachfully, "you mustn't talk like
that. What's wrong with the school?"
"I ain't goin' there no snore," John-
ny replied; an' it's because all the
boys in my room is blamed old cow
ards!"
"Why, Johnny, Johnny!"
"Yes, they are. There was a boy
whfs er
i
n,
this morning, an'
teacher
er
the
his head on
him an'bumped i
sawp
desk ever an' ever 5o many times.
An' those big cowards sat there an'
didn't say quit nor nothin'. They' let
the old teacher bang eh' head off th'
poor little boy, an' they just sat there
an' seen her do it!"
"And what did you do, Johnny?"
, "I didn't do nothia'—I was tit' boy."
—Cleveland Plain -Dealer.
When weak and run down DR.
CHASE'S NERVE FOOD will
help you back to health.
This letter tells of two women who
have proven this.
Mrs. D. Stott, Cobourg, Ont.,writes,s
"After recovering from typhoid fever
I was left in a very low state of
health. I was weak, nervous and not
fit to do any work. A friend of mine,
Mrs. 0, M. Brown, had used DR.
CHASE'S N11%VE FOOD and told me
that it benefitted her wonderfully. I
took courage and began the use of the
medicine. After taking the first box
1 began to feel an improvement in
health and now after using four boxes
I am completely cured. I now feel
self once like myself more and believe
that I can attribute the cure to I)r.
Chese'e Nerve Food.
Life is too short to spend weeks or
months dragging out a miserable ex-
istence of weakness and suffering.
1)r. Chase's Nerve ood aures by
forming new rich blood and building
up the system. You can depend on it
to benefit you, 50 cents a box, 6 for
$2.50, at all dealers or Edmanson
Bates & Co., Toronto.
Sir James' solution of the question
is postponement., He promises that
at the end.of the next session a special
committee will be appointed to revise
the assessment law, and the question
can then be dealt with fully and ,fairly.
This is indeed a stone that is offered to
the tax -reformers who are asking for
bread. But it is probably the most
that can be obtained just now. In the
meantime, to judge from the Premier's
statement, it must be assumed that
the Whitney Government is opposed to
local option in the exemption from
taxation, in whole or in part, or im-
provements.
son.
PAD WEAK and DIZZ ¥SPELLS
COULD NOT SLEEP AT NIGHT.
People all over this land toss night
after night on a sleepless pillow, and do
not close their eyes in the refreshing
slumber that comes to those whose heart
and nerves are right.
The sleeplessness comes entirely from
a derangement of either the heart or
nerves, or both, but whatever the cause
1vlilburn`s Heart and Nerve Pills offer
the blessing of sound refreshing slumber.
They do this by their invigorating effect
on the heart and nerves, and will tone
up the whole system to a perfect con-
dition.
Mrs. A. B. Martell, Rockdale, N.S.,
writes:—" I was troubled foe a long time
with my heart, bad weak and dizzy
spells, could not sleep, and would have
to sit up the greater part ofthe night,
for me to lieonm
and it was impossibleY
left side. At last I got a box of Milburn's
Heart and Nerve Pills, and they did me
so much good I got another, and after
taking it I could lie on my left side, and
eltep as well as before I was taken sick.
They are the best medicine I ever beard
of for heart or nerve trouble."
Price 50 cents per box, or 8 boxes for
$1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct ost
receipt of joke by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
January, 1913
for $1.00
Salt and vinegar will remove the
most obstinate stains from china.
You sometimes hear of a woman who
is speechless with indignation — in
books.
The good die young, but that doesn't
necessarily imply that the rest of us
are a lot of old reprobates.
In 1898 the total number of railroad
employes in this country was 874,558.
Last year the total was 1,451,000.
In combing out long, tangled hair
never begin at the roots, but at the
tips, and work upwards to the head.
British Ambassador at Paris. .
No man is more averse to pomp and
ceremony than Sir Francis Bertie, the
British Ambassador at Paris, who was
obliged to pay a flying visit to London
on account of the Morocco affair. He
has had a long and varied diplomatic
weer, while in the '8eventies he was
Under georaitalig 44 State. In those
days Sir Franota awn had oocasion
to visit Queen Vtotoria. On one of
these visits, as Sir Francis tae leav-
ing, the Queen said, "I must ask you
not to sign the telegrams announcing
your arrival 'Bertie,' for when I
get them I always expect my son."
Opposites.
Wigwag—The secret of a happy mar-
ried life, they say, is to marry one's
opposite.
Cynicus—Yes; I have frequently re-
marked that your wife was a tnost
charming woman,
What They Missed.
"Did you attend the Wilson obs°.
quiesP" asked Mrs. Oldca tle. "Gra-
cious, no," replied her hostess. "Have
they
had some? Why,
me and J
osiah
was at the funeral of their grand-
` mother only last week."
Hitting Back.
l lith --I am sorry yen were not
asked to the Pemberton ball, dear.
You know I will be there, of course.
Cora—Yee; but,. then, Kate ?ember'
ton knows latn far too young to be
of any 1156 as a chaperon.
PRINTING
FANO
STATIONERY
We have put in our office
Stationery and can
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETEItIES,
Ale
a complete dock of Staple
supply your wants in
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYING CARDS, eft
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 -fine and all
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with us
when in need of
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Or anything you may require in the printing line,
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and Magazines.
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