The Wingham Times, 1916-11-02, Page 61
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beware of Gat.arrh meat•
mer LN. t h o, {rtfii t tutu Nla'i-Cury
as mer:ttr� w -ie rrc y d+-stroy thesense
of tau C 4111) l.tf"+ii,etely derange the
wt,i, • •,.•.,,µf1..1, 1-•11trring it through
the ur rue „rs. , uch articles
shut) i1e us••o excerpt uu prescrip-
titlt.` tri rt.), Utdoir physicians, as the
duct' ;. •• t u •y will do is ten fold to the
goo . .•4t. posi.fl iy derivefrem them.
,#la•:i'• •,tilt n (,sure, tn•inufectured by
e o,• , t ca Cu., Teieuo, 0., e0:1••
V,1111•1 • u,r•• , u:y, arca is taken internally,
tufa l..: "++a•. rt!.y upon the blood and
tau e•• +.+ ••urtaces of the system. In
btl '" I )ail •i t.:atarrh Cure be sure you
gee +r • +•+•uine. It is taken internally
au.r of 'I uledo, Ohio, by F. J.
Chi d; t..). `1'es•irnonialls free.
So:d .: bruggi4ts, Price 75e per
bort,e
1'a's - )tail's Family Pills for con-
$tipau• n,
c ''.2 THE HOUSEKEEPER
Dao•+•-Idoihs fold up their leaves when
rain is or hand.
Beteh ice cream can he cut into fancy
shapes with a cookie cutter dipped into
hot w:atc•r.
73oi1 0"ndkercl:fefs in oris water for
15 min,ltes and they will have a pleasant
perfu•: N.
Pineapple sliced thin, thoroughly
chilled and served with whipped cream,
2 a deiiciou3 dessert.
Linseed oil, turpentine and a Japanese
dryer makes a very good oil to use on
herdwool oil.
Always remove mildew as quickly as
possible, The longer it remains t e
.r14.14. ,i:fii441t it Mill be.
Linens should always be soaked u
heig time before washing; th oladis
wilt come out more thoroughly.
Salmon sandwiches are delicious.
Flake the fish and add a little c: cum
and a dash of French mustard.
Cheese is the most concentrated of
foods, but being difficult to tegest, it
should be taken in small quantities,
For savory baked potatoes, make a
hole in the end of aitch potato and add
a piece of bacon curled up. so •that it
will go into .mall space,
Flies dislike mignonette, and will not
enter a window where pots of that
Rower are,
Don't throw bones that have been
boiled for soup into the dustbin. Put
them at the back of the fire, ban's up
with well -dumped small coat sod they
will burn for hours. €s�
A little salt added to the bluing water
in which white clothes„are rinsed, will
prevent the bluing from settling in
spots.
Maybe you also have noticed that it
doesn't improve the quality of a glutton
to call him a "gourmand",
When you are shy of conversation,
talk about the weather, That was what
it was made made for.
Rids Poisons From the Blood,
Clears Up the Complexion
Sallow Skin, Pimples, Pains and Aches Are Soon Gone
When Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills Are Used.
The doctor feels your pulse and
looks at your tongue, but at the sante
time he is reading your condition In
your face. The sallow complexion
tells him that your liver is not doing
Its work, the pimples tell him that
the kidneys are not properly purify-
ing the blood, he realizes that the
bowels aro constipated and the sys-
tem overloaded with poisons.
You can apply this test in your
own case and may be able to add
other symptoms, such as headaches,
pains and aches through back and
Iambs, spells of biliousness and in-
digestion.
If you have not used Dr. Chase's
Iildney-Liver Pills you will be sur-
prised to find how quickly they will
rid your system of poisonous im-
purities and thereby remove the
cause of pains, aches and skin trou-
bles.
j Mrs. Ie. N. Hail, 102 Queen street,
St. John, N.3., writes: "I am glad
{ to say I have used Dr. Chase's Iild-
( ney-Liver Pills with splendid results.
iI was greatly troubled with consti-
Dation and pimples on the face. I
tried other remedies and used liquid
'arsenic three times a day for a year
to get rid of the pimples but recely-
sci no benefit. I began the use of Dr.
Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills and it was
not very long before I was complete-
ly cured. The pills acted en the
bowels, kidneys and liver and cleans-
ed them of all impure matter. I
think they cannot be beaten as a
means of ridding a person ,of that
tired aching due to weak kidneys,
and I would not be without them in
the house for any money."
Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pine,
one pill a dose, 25 cents a box, all
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co.,
Limited, Toronto.
BIG GAME, HI NEW
N the summer season the Province
of New Brunswick is a happy
,I
j land, where the sunny hours
(speed away on the feet of delightful
'dreams. In the fall she is Iovely in
her rich dress of brown; and in the
►winter, when she is arrayed in her
'robe of virgin whiteness, she is fair
and charming; and if she is then
cold, her admirers do not feel that
her chillness is a chillness of heart.
' This favorite Canadian haunt is
preeminently a land of the holiday-
maker and sportsman. St. Andrews,
where is situated the popular Cana-
dian Pacific Algonquin Hotel, and
many other seaside places are loved
haunts of the bather and outdoor
'game player during the holiday sea -
'son of June, July, August and Sep-
itember. No sooner have the sum -
'mer holiday folks and fishermen left
'the province than the hunters of the
!big game take their places, for at the
opening of the big game season
Marge numbers of hunters of both
(sexes appear with their guns amidst
(the thick forests of the land. New
Brunswick is one of the most popular
of the Canadian provinces for big
gatne hunting. Moose, caribou and
deer are plentiful in this region.
A magnificent specimen of big
game is the moose. When fully
'grown he weighs over 1,000 lbs. His
►massive antlers are long and gener-
ally average six feet in width. He
.may be found in twelve of the fifteen
counties of the province, It is only
;the hutting folks and the wary
$utiles mho knew how to hunt the
• . There is the "calling" done
early in the season, and the "still
ng" done later on—in the coil
luteat er. In September and October
ire moose is often surprised and
)shot wading in the lakes and rivers,
!resiting on the roots of water plants.
White pursuing the moose, the bun -
tier can distinguish between the
of the male and the i'emale, for
pie Wale leaves round tracks and
!Aimee of the female are somewhat
ed. 11'rederleton, :Haivelcck, New-
' Bathurst, Campbelltou and
are geed starting points.
.A. gr tcoful antlered monarch of
ierutt wick is the eari+bou. Ile
e.
is a delightfulAbout
sight to wat ,krfi m
filtride at a walking rata, or trot, or
wnearibouover t *ends fromhe four and
tatiltnlatt there ave re two height.
artietie , the
fittedla>4d and the batten ground
eefes. The etrotellallel le somewhat
talller than the other and its color is
darker about the body, but the horns.
litre lighter. It is ge i r ,fly found In
t`vaerda o about half a al'lbson. The
greet etteu ltl eartbbut tisaveld in
kirger heeds, end lit a nit fa light.'
?rids
kit►
d ie noted for' iEs migrat#ory
Malts. in Now Rrunmetsit the places
where the, hunters- ease Decay to
tlieve ,echo heat reentle Mt North
t nf'ttmttifchd, iie66010he, trpsat -i
tteh, NePl liygtset, sled Toblet e
iti
THE WINGHAM TIMES
Bear BaltincJ,
In the time of S1 it-es:levee taenters
were often used for bear baiting as
well as for the presentation of plays
and in some cases were equipped with
a stage 'which could be removed when
the bear baiting was to occur. The
contemporary attitude toward this di-
version is seen in this quotation: "It
was a sport very pleasant to see the
bear with his pink eyes leering after
his enemies' approach." It is comfort-
ing to reflect in these days that the
killing of animals, at least as a form
of public amusement, has greatly di-
minished acid in most countries has
disappeared, --Outlook.
What Impressed Her.
Shortly after Will Crooks, the labor
leader, was elected to parliament, says
an Ping11sh weekly, he tools his little
daughter to Westminster. She was evi-
dently awed at the splendors round her
and maintained a profound and won-
dering silence all the time. btJr. Crooks
was delighted to see her so mueh im-
pressed.
"Well," said he to her at last, "what
are you thinking so deeply about,
dear?"
"1 was thinking, daddy," answered
the little girl, "that you're a big man
in our kitchen, but you aren't very
touch here."
Changed Meaning,
Otte of the best examples of bow to
end Ietters incorrectly is that of a sol-
dier who wrote home to his wife the
following sentence without a single
atop or comma:
"May heaven cherish and keep you
from yours affectionately John Don."
Making Peace.-
"Your wife and your mother-in-law
are looking, fcr you."
"Do you thin!: they are working to-
gether, or +•nu I see my wife first and
cook in, 11 8011:1rate treaty"
Know This Burglar?
"Had every cent taken last night.
Woke up hearing some one in the room.
Ileacbed under the pillow for my re-
volver, but didn't shoot."
"Why didn't you?"
^I'd probably be a widower if I bad."
Shortage In China.
"I don't like the family I'm wid.
Seven courses at dinner."
"That's style."
"Nat when you gotta wash the dishes
from one course before you can go on
wid the next "—Loulsville Courier-
Jourual.
Had His Hands Full.
' Judge—Why didn't you seize the
thief when you found hint? Policeman
-flow .•uuld I? I had my club in one
11.1+111 and my revolver iu the other:-.
UFdSWICK
Bathurst, Chatham and Perth, all of
Which are reached by the Edmunds -
ton leranrn of the Canadian Pacific.
There aro few loralities le New
Brunswick where a deer may not he
loeated. Like the moose and the
caribou he gives those who follow
him an interesting and pleasant
sport.
Sportsmen desirous of hunting the
big game of New BruneWlek may so.
ewe good aoeomnlodrttion at the
hordes of their eliklee. Good hotels
and bearding
lr
ou
sea are also avail.
able
The season floe ibte hunting of the
fl ooae, tarlltoa, and deer everts On
Septaanber 1Gt'i *fad ei ti -mot to tto-
*trot* addl. Sheeting oft Sunday is
goroibitylte d b ° hiw. Nonresident
vers. The starttog pointe for thee() hunters must be computed by a
sere
ne tiro Nowea.,tle, CeMpbelltott, l lice ted $,uide. The 110e14e1 to ji
ai
one bull moose, one bulI caribou, and
two deer costs a bona fide resident
of the province ea and a tueeresident
$G0. Hunting with hounds is for-
bidden.
'phis year the opening of the big
game seaeott was marked by the ex-
hibitieal for sale on the St, Jahn mar-
ket of moose and deer meat. it re.
cent times there has been a consider-
able rednotion in the nuntber of
ntalex amongst the larger Now Bruns-
wick game, land the people aro be -
cording Jr alive to the necessity for be -
Mg
soot#n ore eare ul, Indisetitninate
eing obeckto some
extent til ail is hevents, sand it hae been
seggoeted that the sale of the meat
Of big game on the be ped to diseouragelets t hunter
wito hunts for the°purpoee of malting
4499*.
OIUILT IN BLOOD.
Petrograd, the Artificial Capital of the
Czar's Qominions.
Travelere speak of Moscow us the
heart of itussiu, the real Russian city,
anti dismiss Petrograd as an imitation
rggd rneSteurtisttotetm1eoPfekieraLisleuepueussmcoarpnitcahlsrr,
ly Russian, with its iaiUieuse i'aeadee
of government buildings and barracks
werehhig along as far as the eye can
reach. broad streets and mighty open
spaces.
The ,.great stone quays along the
Neva, the palaces, cathedrals and im-
periul avenues paved with cobbles
grew under the hands of iunur+crable
serfs chained in a swamp by be will
of a tyrant and were cemented with
their blood, for where Petrograd now
sprawls for tulles and miles. a city
built l'or giants; was nothing but a
feverish marsh a hundred and fifty
yours ago.
And there, where no roads naturally
lend, the Most desolate spot, the most
vulnerable. and the most remote from
any natural center of the Russian em-
pire, Peter the Great had a whim to
found bus capital, 'twenty thousand
satires a year for ten years were killed
by fever, cold and disease in the build-
ing of Petrograd.
Niue tunes the court nobles them-
selves conspired to wreck the hated
city and force the court to return to
Moscow; three times they set fire to
it, and three times the czar hung them
at the doors of the palaces he had
forced then to builds.
A powerful section of the reaction-
ary party has always agitated for the
restoration or Moscow as the capital,
and it.is only in the last twenty years
that the population of Petrograd has
not been artificially kept up.—John
Reed in Metropolitan.
PARTING SALUTATIONS.
Those Used in Different Nations Ari
Very Much Alike.
The patting salutations of various
nations are strikingly alike. The vale
of the Latins corresponds with the
similar expression or the Greeks, and,
though piety is not expressed distinctly
in either, it was doubtless understood,
for who can be kept in health without,
as the ancients would say, the will of
the gods?
The Greek word perhaps has a high-
er signification than the Latin, for it
was not a there complimentary saluta-
tion. St. John forbids it to be given
to heretical teachers,
The French on taking leave say,
"Adieu," thus distinctly recognizing
the providential power of the Creator,
and the same meaning is indeed con-
veyed in our own word "goodby,"
which is a corruption of "God be with
you."
The Irish in their warmth of manner
and love of words often extend the ex-
pression.
A well known guide, upon one of our
friends leaving one of the loveliest
spots in Wicklow, shook hands with
him heartily and said in a voice some-
what more tremulous through age than
it was when Tom Moore loved to listen
to it:
"God Almighty bless you, be with
you and guide you safely to your
journey's end!"
This salutation, when used thought-
fully and aright, has not only a pleas-
ant sound, but deep meaning.
When He Was Bad.
It has been said that you never know
a man till you travel with him, and
certainly traveling has a tendency to
bring out all the depravity innate in
buman nature. Out of this test, how-
ever, Benjamin Disraeli emerged with
tlying colors. This is what was said
of him by elm. Austen, who, with her
busband, traveled with him when he
was quite a young man, as related in
Mr. Monypenny's biography:
"Your brother," she says (the letter
was addressed to Disraeles sister), "is
so easily pleased, so accommodating,
so amusing and so actively kind that
I shall always reflect upon the domes-
tic part of our journey with the great-
est
reatest pleasure. Your brother has be-
haved excellently, except when there
is a button, et, rather, buttons, to be
put on his shirt; then he is violently
bad, and this happens almost daily."
Fooled Them All.
The discussion about the fitness of
horse meat to eat calls to mind the
Story of a young man in Paris, a good
many years ago, who made a wager
with some friends that at a dinner he
would serve one course that would be
horse meat and that none of than
could tell which it was. After the din-
ner he asked them to name the barge
meat course and found that they did
not agree. One named one conroe, one
another, and so on, but they all agreed
that it was a mighty good dinner:
"Gentlemen," he said, vvlth hie thumbs
stuck in the armholes of Ills walotcoatt,
"it was all horse."
Not a Learner. -
"Thete's a man in the nett apart,
trent learning to play the elarineti"
expostulated the nervous tenant.
"No, be isn't," replied the janitor.
'Tie has been working On that tune
for three months,' and he doesn't play
It a bit better than when he started."
Loyalty.
"1 have been treated very badly by
toy native city," said a man et'he bad
u
been sen d
red for drunkenness, batt
i lovebe r still."
"True," remarked the magistrate, "1
ithonld say her stili is About Ala you fro
longi''
Your achterrernent Will utter Ilillell
higher than your faith,
Itad }ek and
Dizzy S ei s
M
WAS CURED BY
HEART AND NERVE ►'ILLS.
Mrs. J. S. Nicholls, Iestowel, Ont„
writes: I was weak and run down,
my heart would palpitate, and I would
take weak and dizzy spells. A friend ad-
vised me to take your Heart and Nerve
Pills, so I started at once, and found that
I felt much stronger, and my heart was
ever so much better in a short time, I
cannot praise your medicine too highly
for it has done me a world of good,
My husband has also been bothered with
heart trouble ever since childhood, and
finds quick relief by using your valuable
pills.,,
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have
been on the market for the past twenty-
five years, and are universally known as
the very best remedy for all troubles
arising from the heart -or nerves.
Milburn's 'Heart and Nerve Pills are
50e. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all
dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of
price by Tng'1', Mu,suen Co„ Lratrm;n,
Toronto, Ont.
Standing By.
"Didn' Mistoh Pinkly stand by you
when de mixup took place?"
"Yes," replied Mr. Whlffletree Daw-
son. "He were standin' by me, jes'
close enough to take a good aim when
he .hit me behind the ear."
inherited.
t nicl er•—Jones has a bad memory.
)locker—His mother never knew what
were trumps, and his father couldn't
remember anything on the witness
stand.—New York Stm.
Talose who can command themselves
command others.-1Tasalitt.
Nervous Apprehension,
"They are not going to cut me up if
1 go to the hospital, are they?"
"Or course not when you're going
just for a rest. Wbat makes you think
they are?"
"Because when I called up the hos-
pital a voice said, 'Operator.' ".
A Soft Answer.
The wife of a man who came home
late insisted upon a reason.
"When I go out without you," he
saki, "I do not enjoy myself bill? as
Much, and it takes me twice as long."
Measuring Your Pace.
How many steps do you take to the
mile? Even if your considered reply be
"Seventeen hundred and sixty," I shall
take leave to doubt it Should you be
a British infantryman your pace will
be the longest of any infaxrtt 'man 13
the world. The Russians' pace is the
shortest, being but twenty-seven and
one-half inches; the French, Italian
and Austrian pace is twenty-nine
inches, the Germans do thirty-one
inches, while British soldiers stride an
extra half inch. But your own pace,
what of it? It depends upon your
height. Take your eyebrow height,
halve it. and that represents your pace.
You will find it to be somewhere be-
tween thirty inches and thirty-two
inches, so that you will need between
2,000 and 2,100 paces to the mile. --
London Chronicle.
Ancient Barber's Forfeits.
Customers of hair dreseers at one
time were in danger of having to pa
a forfeit as well as their fee when en-
tering the barber's shop. until halt a
century ago some barbers still kept a
list of rules hanging in their shops—
chiefly concerning swearing, seeking la
be served out of turn, etc.—the penalty
for breaking which was the price of a
pint of ale. The antiquity of the prate
tice is evident by Shakespeare's allu-
sion to it in "Measnre For Measure:"
h-'• strong statue is
Stand, like the forfeits in a barber's shop,
As much in mock as mark.
.---Londen. Standard.
A Grievous Burden.
"Just Make' exclaimed the htemuri.
tarian, "when a man enters prison he
loses his ideality and becomes simply
a number."
"Well," replied the man in motor
togs, "except for the fact that be is
confined and has to do hard author, I
don't see that he is inch wosee e
than I am. i not only have a number
but I'm comPelted to pay for it" , I
A Statesman's Queer Ambition.
The great /end Gley barter innbitiedi°
far aboe•e polities. ISe peened the re.;
term bice but that and not satisfy his
soul. There rouse tailo alt tagilani, and
Grey ,aid elttitc+.carnestly, "Wbat'wotikl
I give to dance as weal as slier The
statesman who bad been prime ruinftt;-,'
ter and had heft an ludelitde Meek as
the history of his country was estiios
of net opera daneerie-Londen Saturday;
Review.
Father• 'Time.
Time 'mite for no man—hets man—hedole
j i' a!-attfza*sndn',are he'd never reals'
the jbtreney if he waited for the wilt"'
Men. Don't Step liar sigh Or sots—hes
stronger tt'an the strong; to glooa
tame or gay bets a -gotta right along►
The Attraction.
alis
are engaged to Wm
bans. I'm sure I can't nee anyth$ng
uttracttve about that *Oman, Eteee
1e t er can ] see it but it's flit the
batik, all right. .
Re WW1 in tains Who died in virtue*
110* -0 kitenEsealt _ .._
Nov' niber, 2 19I-6
10 m z and ,
US1C
All the whimsical -witch-
ery -- haunting restless-
ness--dreamf u1 exaltatiory'
of the world's finest violin
and 'cells music caught.
for you wit t, an exquisite
sense of reality in
IA
• Doubl+wDlsc
E yDS
P6
iratheee Have your dealer play then for you:
Purim Kathleen Perlow—A5412—$1.511
fiumoreske (Dvorak) orchestra accompan1.
ment.
Melodic ersch'sikowsky) orchestra accent.
pauimeatt.
Pablo Canals—A5649 $1.55
Largo Mandell, with orchestra.
Itlelody in P (Rubinstein), with orchestra.
Jules Falk—A1110--850.
A"+e Maria (Schubert) with Traumerei
perineaun).
Charles D'Alivaiae—A1712-850.
White Cockade; Jigs and Reels Medley with
IIarrigan's Reel (Prince's Orchestra),
Begone Ysayo-36525—$1.50
Caprice Viennofs, Op. 2 (Kreisler).
Eugene Yaaye-36524—$1.50
Hungarian Dance in G (No. s) (Brahma),
'
I8o,acand, of Columbia records without thought of obligation.
Columbia dealers gladly play these and any other of the 1
Complete Rec.,cd List from dealers or mailed by us.
14a:e'c�.
Graphophone Company
Canadian Factory & Iloadouarters
Toronto, Ont.
tq
nstwa.^IMPHMELIIKIIIMISTIMizatireEtledi
tma.:•.,pax nz�excv�+men,,,•n.—i-.,,v._..�._
H. B. ELLIOTT
Sole Agent Wingham, Ontario
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