The Wingham Times, 1916-01-13, Page 6Page
THE W1NGRAM 1 IMES
iwtyt- HUMORS OF CASTE. ads rANCE FROM TOWN,
CO !.
f ri)
Scientific ,i
•4.0), ,!> How Rules Governing Travel, Study
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and Dining Are Broken.
Though going to foreign comitries by
erossing the oeean is to break one's
vaste, hundreds of youtig Indians are
now visiting Europe Lind America,in
eursuit of modern so:tenthly auil induS•
trial eiluention, Bailer( , sonume
lessen the time lost in getting to town
FOR GOOD POTATOES. are the families afro:Pal that publie
opiniou has eompelled the Brahmans for market or for pleasure if the roads
el • 1' t lose of ceiste re- travelled itre fit for the upholding of
Their distence from eity or town to
large extent governs the price of farms
taint ere for sale, and the condition of.
the country roads is a factor that should
be considered in making a purchase of
a piece of land for farming,
The use of an automobile will greatly
Some Rules for Growing Profitable
Tubers,
The right kind of potatoes bring
batter prices than the wrong kind,
and the right kind can usually be
grown with very little added trouble.
The right kind of potatoes is the
kind the public wants. To find out
the taste of tbe public' as to potatoes
expert agriculturalists not long ago
made an extended investigation - in
homes, hotels, restaurants, and com-
mission houses -from the Atlantic to
the Pacific coast They found the de-
mand was for sound potatoes of good
flavor, medium size, and regular
shape. They also found that such Po-
tatoes commanded higher prices than
iii slioII suit from ,on,, ithroad for tielnefition. the machin.e. 'f,his matter is sometimes.
It is not se rowel the going abroad overlooked by the intending purchaser
that is objected to as the ceding of for- of a farm Who considers first the proxi•
bidden food, as beef. pork ana (thicken, nay of neighbors, and is Willing to pay
or allY food cooked iv f"l'etgliers• To high for the pleasure ief seeing his
eliviate partly this diflieulty the Um- triende as often as possible,
tins tirganizeil a steitimelnp line, the
If a hundred -acre Term, situated ten
Indian Peninsula company, between
, Bombay nnd Loudon, On :hoard the or fifteen miles from the neelest rail -
:Ides of this line Hindu easte rules are road town, can be bought for two-thirds
1 etudiously observed. This company in- of the price of one that is only two or
tends to open a hotel in London for three miles out, the saving in purchase
' the caste people of India. so that Hin- price should pay for a good, useful cat
tin students, mem-limits mid travelers and its upkeep, and the added distance
may go to London, reside for any from town or city should appeal to the
leneth of time and still return borne . man who wishes to make farming his
a ithout breaking their caste. ' life work or to the one who takes to
tenste rules prohibit people of differ -
farming as a change from city work,
ent castes (lining together. These rules.
however. aro broken by the rising gen_ : The regular, out-and-out farmer can
. oration in schools and colleges. The stay on his place of business nearly all
students. defying the cold and calculat- ! the year round, to his own advantage,
ing conservatives. use the school and , and occasional necessary trips on busi-
oiliest" building for dinner parties, I nese need not be neglected on account
where Hindus and Mohammedans, of a fifteen -mile drive on . snow roads,
Christinns and aains. Iluddhasts and •
I when an automobile cannot travel;
atheists, brenk bread together. In Be- 1
i while the man who farms as a side line
nares, the stronghold of Brahmanical i
to some city business . does not, as a
orthodoxy, intereaste dinners are of .
rule, intend to spend much time in the
country during the wintee months.
Besides costing a smaller cash price
liely with Europeans in the town hall the outlying farm provides, as a rule,
of Calcutta. These dinners are helping better chances of growing large crops
• break down obnoxious rules and thus
are establIshiug dinner table democ-
racy.
SOLE GOOD SEED POTATOES.
mixed lots of large and small, dis-
eased and sound, regularly and irre-
gularly shaped potatoes.
To grow thidekind of potatoes the
public wants, then, is the thing to
do, and the way to begin is to plant
the kind of potatoes you wish to
grow. This means careful selection
from the hills, observing the follow-
ing rules:
Select only from hills in which a
larger part of the potatoes answer
the description mentioned. Potatoes
from such hills are more certain to
breed true to type.
Select potatoes weighing from five
to eight ounces,
Use for seed no potatoes grown in
.fields showing a considerable amount
of wilt or rosette.
Avoid potatoes showing brown ring
discolorations at the stem end.
Save for planting no potatoes
which are bruised, cracked, or decay-
ing, or which show discolorations at
stem end.
Store carefully in moderately
warm, dry, and well ventilated place.
Treat with corrosive sublimate,
four ounces to thirty gallons of wa-
ter, for en hour end a half before
pleating.
Big Prices for Shorthorns.
At the annual draft sale of Mr.
William Duth:;.e'e beef cattle at Colly-
nie, Scotland, some remarkable prices
were paid for pure-bred Shorthorns.
1,250 guineas (about $6,250) was
the top value, which was given for
Prince of the Manor, a middle of
„April Princess Royal calf sired by
'Knight of Collynie.
Despite the abnormal conditions in
the old country at present, with one
exception, the demand for the Col-
lynie class of stock was never
stronger. Buyers were present from
Canada, Australia, and South Ameri-
ca. The average price paid for the
18 bull calves sold was 2348 or £156
more than the average value of the
1914 sale. The sami number of heif-
ers averaged £90, or 27 above last
'year's figure
A. F. & G. Auld of Cuelph par -
.chased the first arrival of Kings Heir,
a light colored Roan of the Princess
Royal family by Danesfield Storm
King, for 300 guineas (about
$1,500). This animal will be
brought to Canada as soon as pos-
sible.
Following the Collynie sale came
the Upper Mill dispersion. where the
,top price, 950 guineas, was paid for
a bull calf. The buyer, Mr. Wm.
• Duthie, was the gentleman whose
•stock was disposed of in the first sale.
At both these sales there was a
,striking demand by the old country
breeders, which shows that despite
the scarcity of money, these men are
loyal in keeping their best stock at
home.
etnnmon occurrence. The fodian lead-
ers in reform have gone a step further.
On a public occasion they dined pub -
1
NOT THE WIG'S FAULT.
he Baring of a Bald Fact That Had
Been Long Hidden.
One of the best known wigmakers
or the city declared recently that he
lad won a wager with his barber by
wearing a wig to the tonsor's shop and
having it wen trimmed before the man
with the shears discovered his mis-
take. 'Whether this is an •exaggera-
tion or not the hair furnisher has a
long list of additional stories to bach
U1) his claim that wigs can be made so
natural that it is all but impossitae to
detect them as artificial head covering.
"Why," said the wig man as he
pointed to a case in his Sixth avenue
establishment."there are wigs in there
made of human hair that I would defy
the closest scrutiny to detect as
'fakes.' Would you believe it, one of
my customers. a well known man in
this section of the city. wore one of
these wigs froin the night he was mar-
ried for ten long years, and his wife
never knew that he was bald? It is a
MONEY IN TRANSIT
How Millions Are Moved In Safety
From City to City.
STRONG ROOMS IN BIG BANKS
The Modern Manganese Steel Veult,
With its Electric Skin, Can Defy the
Most Paring and Clever Burglar
Equipped With the Finest Tools.
Millions nod io real. cash,
gold and bills. are vague thluge to
inost or us, and few people have any
hien h
where tis inuneusely wealthy nia!
11011 Keel:is its real mooey or bow It is
gun on Its travels.
t is with the greetest reluctant -a Oita
es owners 01' trustees ever move it;
they prefer to exchange the ehecks,
notes, drafts or siecurities thnt rePre-
sent it, But there are times when the
i•eal money must go, tied theu its joule
ney Is' a ore' interesting -thing.
Every beak aud trust company is re-
quired by the honking laws to keep a
certain amount of motley ou hand, the
Amount being in proportion to the size
of the institution. and in addition the
eurrent business of the house requires
t hot SO many millions more be availa-
ble ror use at the paying teller's win-
dow. To safeguard these large sums
Is the husiness of safe and vault build-
ing experts. :Intl so far advanced is
this science that it is practically ini-
poesible for the best equipped crooks
to exl met $1 from any big bank vault.
Balk robbing these &ye is practiced
on small country brinks or at achieved
be dishonesn
t hakers,
The manganese steel eaelt. with its
electric skin. is the last, wort] in pro-
tection. The vault designer selecte a
spot in the institution. in any place
from the cellar to the roof. where the
vault can be isolated and cannot tie
reached easily by tunnelers, and there
the big steel house is built. Its wails
are so thick that they will resist fire,
earthquake and heavy explosives, and
the whole is protected by an electric
skin. This is usually of a soft foil of
alloy. and if even a pin is thrust
through it at any poifit a short circuit
is made 0.1.01 alarm bells set ringing in
the building. in police beadquarters, iII
the aline or private protective agen•
a
C105 nd in the tonnes of certain °di-
cers of the bank. The burglar, with a
torch t hat would Mira a hole tbrough
the steel inn few minutes or tools that
would cut out a door in an hour, has
uot a (tame. even after be has tun-
neled to the vault 'and overcome the
watehmen.
When ruillions in cash are taken from,
the vaults a picked corps of guarded
clerks check it out in steel casks 02
the Mal known as express strong,
boxce, and these are placed in witgone
in which the carrying compartments
fact, sir, a positive fact. are wholly of steel se•een's. latch wag -
"In year and out for the entire ten the proximity of town or city markets.. on has its set of guards, usually two
he was so careful that his spouse • on the front seat, one driving. one lock.
never had the slightest suspicion. The MAKING THE HOTBED ed In with the money and one riding
way the discovery came about was -
wen, while itwas painful to him it
nevertheless had a gleam of humor in
it. Ha bought a uetv wig, and I sent
him the bill to his business address.
lie carried the bill home inadvertently,
changed his suit, and bis wife found
the little telltale papsr in his pocket.
And he would not have been discov-
ered then only his wife, sad to say,
believed that he *as paying for the
wig of some lady, and there was a
stormy time. He was forced to reveal
himself as bald. But you will readily
see it was not the fault of my work-
manship. 1 wear one myself. Could
you tell? Nobody could."
Sun.
without great expense, because, al-
though possibly rough, and in want of
clearing, the land is less worked out as
the distance from markets enforcee the
keeping of live stock.
In the case of a run-down 'place, live
stock will build it up and there is a
much better chance of clean farming
where the manure used is produced on
the place rather than purchased from
the city. The small place is no doubt
necessary in these days of big cities,
lino will appeal to the man whose chief
interest is in tbe growing of crops, but
the toyer of animals and he who longs
for the freedom of the country needs
more room than can be found on the in-
tensive ten acres or less,
With good roads that allow of the
hauling of big loads of staple products
and the travel of automobiles when
speed is necessary, tbe hundred or two
hundred -acre farm, devoted to live
stock and grain or to dairy farming
for the supplying of cheese or butter
factories will develop the country more
quickly and more thoroughly them will
the smell places, that are dependent on
railroad transportation for its crops, or
January 13th igi6
GAPES IN POULTRY.
,
There are numerous internal perasites
of poultry, but only two serious diseases
are caused by such agents. The chief
internal parasites are worms, and the
most importunt disease eaueed by worms
is gapes.
Gapes is due to a round tape worm
which takes up its abode in the Wiwi -
pipe and sometimes in the bronchia
tubes. It is also known as the reel
worm and the forked worm The dis-
ease is produced through the worms
taking up their abode in the air -passages,
and irritating the lining membrane,
c ,u eng infiammatien.
If these pests are present in Wee
numbers, they will block up the wind-
pipe and stop the passage of air to the
lungs. As a rule a number of Worms
may be fund together in the windpipe
of the fowl, as many as twenty crowding
into one particular part of the tube.
The symptoms of gapes are a curious
listless gaping of the mouth, a wheezing
cough, and a stretching forward of the
neck, and the frequent apPearance of
frothy saliva in the mouth and some: -
times in the nostrils. Any birds show-
ing signs of the disease should be isolat-
ed at once, and chicks should not be
kept with stock birds.
If possible, a fresh breeding ground
should be used every year, as the worst
outbreaks are always on overstocked
land. All water vessels should be kept
scrupulously clean, and only pure water
should be given to the birds. Drinking
troughs are best cleaned by -being put
into boiling water and well scalded.
Worms may be partly removed from
the windpipe by means of a feather
dipped in eucalyptus oil or oil of cloves,
pushed down the windpipe and turned
round and round.
A fumigating box will be useful:
Either Camlin powder or finely ground
chalk and camphor blown into tbe box
will loosen the worms, which the birds
will expectorate during their fits of
coughing.
ORCHARD AND GARDEN. 4
4.144,aigieteneaseeendiaieteexiaXeieeteeeitatia4
Squash should be carefully han-
dled in hauling and placed one layer
deep on wooden racks in a warm,
well -ventilated storage house.
, Carrots and beets keep better if a
i little dry sand is put over them. This
„ prevents drying out.
i A cool cellar is the best place for
cabbages. Hang them up or wrap
them in paper and lay on shelves.
See that the sweet corn saved for
next year's planting is stored in a
yell -aired place where it 'will not
freeze.
While many raspberries will ceme
through the winter without protec-
tion, it is always safer to lay them
down and cover them with earth.
As soon as the frost kills the fol-
iage of grape vines they may be
pruned back and laid on the ground
ready to be covered with earth. They
ahoUld be covered before the ground
•
Almost Made a Word.
Has bad handwriting ever managed
to add a new word to the language?
There have certainly been some •nar-
row escapes. A correspondent sent to
Sir James Murray for the New Ox-
ford Dictionary the mysterious word
"brean," which he found in a story by
It. L. Stevenson. It was presumed to
be an obscure Scottish teem, and the
presumption lasted till Stevenson wrote
back that the word he had written
was "ocean." Had the author been
dead "brean" would no doubt have fig-
ured in the dictionary as sanctIoned
by "R. L. S." -London Observer.
Central Asia.
The people living in the cotton belt
of central Asia represent a conglom-
erate of all the races and nations that
in ages past have inhabited these re-
gions, from pure Aryans to full fledged
Mongols. They all adhere to the Mo-
hammedan faith and speak various
dialects of the Tartar-Sart-Bokhara
language except in the southwestern
part, where the influence of the Per-
sian language is felt.
Serfdom.
: Serfdom was abolished in Russia in
1861, in England in 1660, in Fratee not
wholly until the French revolution, in
Prussia in 1702, in the rest of Germany
1781, in Denmark 1760 and in Brazil
1867-38. There is now practically no
legalized serfdom anywhere On earth.
•-- on the rear.
The starting of operations with The money is checked out of the
vaults Into the hands of express com-
pany employees. who cart it to their
eipress CAM 111 the railroad ynrds, and
it travels to its destination in as sim-
ple and unostentatious, a manner as
if it were so meny crates of eggs. The
express company employees • never
know what is In the stroug boxes ---
they merely know that they have so
many of them in given numbers to re-
ceive and to deliver, and that is all
there is to it.
An ndditional safeguard is the very
weight of may given quantity of gold
and the serial numbering of large bills.
These Inee,r are kept in the same pack-
ets in which they leave the banks if
possible, and the groups of numbers
make them as individual and as easily
identifiable as one mnn from another.
If a thief exttacted n million in $10.-
000 bills be could not cash a single one
of them..
Spring vegetables begins earlier every
year, and the time for construction
of hot beds is near at hand for those
whoavish to be among the first on the
tnarket with green stuff.
Seed can be sowu in the hot bed from
four to six weeks before the snow is
off the ground, and tbe plants will
have good start when moved to the
open, but vegetables started at this
time of year must be expected to attain
sufficient growth for use on the table,
under cover.
A sunny corner should be chosen for
early forcing or success will not follow,
and sadvantage must be taken of
the south side of windbreaks, such
as buildings or plantations of trees.
A plentiful water supply, close at hand
is eseential, and a situation near the
dwelling house lends itself to conveni-
ence.
An Exception.
"Ne man would approve ot the re-
call as applied to himself."
"Oh, yeS; an actor Would!"
Portable Hostelry.
°When 1 landed I took the car for a .
Green onions, lettuce, radish, beets ,
and carrets are perhaps the best I
"What a singular mistake." suited vegetables for this early grow -1 lamer Pbeitive,
ing, and can be removed to allow 1-1srlor-Why do you think he Is a
s ace for plants that are to be trans- great preetioal loker? l'arker-Be.
ItOtight and action are Inseearahlle planted to the field or to Old frames ennee alive I filiteel ii little joke on
Li to the thought, so is the life, . later in the season, him the ot:tor tla, it made hire feriolie.
Well mixed horse manure is the best
matter Efor supplying the necessary
heat, and is an araicle easily obtained
by the average farmer; this should be
piled to a depth of eighteen inches or
two feet, and web tramped down.
The seedbed should consist of six
inches of soil, which. can often be
most easily taken up in the bush, at
times when the fields are frozen too
deeply. Manure should be piled
A GREAT REVELATION.
To the Eclitere-
As fact after fact is revealed by ac-
curate statistics showing the cost of
the liquor traffic to the country, one
wonders why we have been so blind as
to allow the saloon to make us believe
that it was a source of revenue instead
of a heavy burden as we now know it
to be. Some one has raid that instead
of being a fevenue producer it is a rev-
enue consumer and so it is.
When at any time the suggestion has
been of lessening or closing the
saloons the cry has gone up where
will the lost revenue come from and
many really believe that it would cause
an increase of taxation. There is little
doubt that but for that 'Cry the saloon
would have been wiped out long ago.
But the end is near because the saloon
is now known to be an immense burden
on the tax -payer. We have known for
some time that in many wet towns the
taxes were much higher than in dry
towns of similar assessment but now
thanks to an investigation by the Am-
erican Issue Newspaper we have the
figures for every state in the Union.
This shows that the per capita taxes
paid in every state bears a very close
relation to the number of licenses in
the State.
The following figures are for 1913,
the latest for which complete returns
were available. Up to that time there
were only eight prohibition states. The
Municipal Revenue Expenditure and
Public Properties Act issued by the
Census Bureau for 1913 shows
The general property taxes collected
per capita in the eight . prohibition
states to be $10.12
The general property taxes collected
per capita in the near prohibition
states $1.1.08.
The general property
per capita in the
states $14.23.
The general property taxes collected
per capita in the licensed states $16.98
These figures show that all over the
United States the taxes decrease with
the lessening in the number of sail:eons.
They also show that as a rule taxes in
the wettest states are 66% higher than
in the dryest states. That is one of
the most important revelations that has
ever taken place regarding liquor traf-
fic. The saloon can no longer claim to
be a source of revenue. Why should
we be taxed for the saloon?' If any
other business injures any one it has to
pay for the damage but when the saloon
ruins the the fathee and kills the
Mother the burden bearing; taxepayer
not the saloon keeper has to support'
the orphans. The saloon is a huge tax
devouring parasite.
Will some one tell us what right it
has to exist. I have never heard or
seen any reasonable answer.
H. Arnott, M. B., M.C.P.S
Hard on the Salesgirl.
A lady was shopping and liteldentally
got into conversation with one of the
salesgirls, boasting particularly about
the cleverness of bin• little daughter at
home. "You ought to be proud of her,"
said the girl, at the same time picking
up a picture book. "Don't you want
to take this home as a present for
her?" "Thank you, 1 will," said the
woman, taking the book and dropping
it into her shopping bag. "Tillie will
be so proud when I tell her yon sent
it." To the girl's dismay the shopper
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Ilona Darn
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teeter ea
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for tloree Bone
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1.11Sh I
d
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51
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City
around the frame of the hot bed to marched away with the book, and the
the top to keep the sides as well as the girl had to pay for it. -
bottom well supplied with heat. After
putting on the glass several days should
be allowed for the escape of bad gases His Hope.
coming from the ferrnenting manure. On a hot afternoon a San Francisco
attorney made a hurried effort to get a
After the fourth day tne soil cen be
car. The day and the effort had made
raked down and fined and planting may him uncomfortably warm, and he
missed his object, but not a minister
whona he knew.
in hot bed practice, and watering and , "This is hotter than hafts," said the
ventilating, must be made a daily lawyer thoughtlessly, mopping his
event. Watering should be done brow -
The minister looked directly Into his
sparingly in thr early part of the sea- I . ,
eyes ana replied earriettly, 11 hope
son, and early morning of bright days me,
are the best tittle for making the ap-
plication, Dressing to Pleat&
Ventilating is probably the part of l "It's Just 'clothes, clothes, clothes' all
the hot bed management that requires the time," growled Mr. Cobbles. "Don't
the most care and attention; the ef- I yen women ever think of anything btit
raising one I clothes?"
feet may be obtained by
end of the sash and blocking it up, but I "Wim, yes." answered Mrs. Cobbles,
the length of time for leaving this 1 "0 .elsionql1 . we thitil• et you men,
opening mast be decided by testing the t s
temperature of the iriterior, and (heti we go 11101 buy more clothes."
take place,
Considerable attention is necessary
Remove all trash and rubbish from hotel."
the parden. 1? convenient, it is well
to plow or spade the land that will be
used for garden next year. 'This will
11011/ to get rid of many Maeda and
weedo.
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•
• Times and Youth's Companion 2.90 .
0 .
• Times and Northern Messenger.. 1.35 ••
• •
• Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90 a •
a Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60 +-
• -
*
o Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3.15 :
6
e Times an Woman's Home Companion 2.70 • •
••
(s Times ani Jelineator • 2.60 •
• Times and Cosmopolitan • 2.65 • -
* • •
• Times and Strand 2.45 •-•
• •
• Times and Success 2.45 ••••
••
. Times and McClure's Magazine 2.10 •
• Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,85 •-
• o
• Times and Designer 1.85 •
• Times and Everybody's • .62.20
•
• These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great: . .
•
•*Britain. :-
. .
• The above publications may be obtained by Times:
o
o . • •
:subscribers in any -combination, the price for any publica-I.
:tion being the figure given above less $1.00 representing i
• •
• .
l'•
'
*
1
*
I
:i
40!
* lithe ptib,ication you want is not in above list let.!
;usknow. We • in supply almost any well-known Cana -t.
•
:dian or American publication. These prices are strictlyt,
t cash in advance •I
• •••
G.....>,:,4'pot a es,1”..› ,,,so.st.* 40,s1,4•4 44 tH, o 000•o•••••44•*4 4 4, 4004s0....
Veil Id a
Valat.
Mrs Edwin Martin, Ayers unit, Que.,
{ writes: "Before using Dr, Chase's
I FerVe Food I was in a terrible condi-
tion. Dizzy spells woUld come over me
not sweep without fainting. Dr.
Chase's Nerve Food has so built up my
system that I can wash and do my
housework. Your medicine cured me
when doctors had faded.
land I would fall to the floor, I could
:the price of The Times. For instance:
•
• The Times and Saturday Globe • $1.90
• The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1.35
• '
$3.25
The Times and the Weekly Sim ....... I $1.70 -
The Toronto Daily Star ($2,30 less $1.00). 1,30
• The Saturday Globe (1.90 less $1.00) 90
• -
;the four papers for $3.go. 0.90
•
:making the price of the three papers $3.25.
•
•