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The Wingham Times, 1915-08-19, Page 3r August 19th, 915 THE WINGHAM TIMES Justice of Peace Praises Dr. Chase's Ointment After Nine Years of ,Agony He Escaped an Operation by Using This Great Healing Agent. As a means of heating sores and wounds that defy ordinary treatment i». Chase's Ointment has long stood supreme. It is known far and wide as as positive cure for eczema and p 11 e s. Whatever uncertainty t h e r e may be about the results obtained by the use of medicines taken internally there can be no 1, question of the healing of the skin when Dr. Chase's Ointment is applied. You can actually a see with your own. eves just what takes MIL BEAT L place. The sore parts .are cleansed, and gradually the new skin is formed and the sore becomes smaller and smaller, until it finally disappears, It is often wonderful the results which are accomplished in a single night by the use of this great healing ointment. M. N. A. Heath, J,P,, Fitch Bay, Que., writes :-"Nine years ago I was taken with an abcess, and cannot be- gin to describe what I have suffered as a result, I was examined by two doctors, both of whom said I would have to undergo an operation t,, be cured. 'Thanks to Dr. Chase's Oint- ment, It has rendered an operation unnecessary, and has completely cured me. I cannot say enough in praise of this wonderful ointment which' cured me after nine years of agony." Dr. Chase's Ointment, 60c a box, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. DON'TS FOR THE KiTCHEN. Don't throw away the small ends of candles. They are excellent to add to boiled starch, or shaved they will wax a floor. Don't throw away the paraffin from which unsalted rice has been boiled. It makes the best starch for lingerie waists. Don't throw away the paraffin from jelly and marmalades. Wash each piece • and save it. Boil the accumulation, and there will be clean paraffin for next jelly time Don't throw away the coarse, green leaves of celery. Dry them in the oven for flavoring soups and sauces. IL Do not Buffer another day with Itching Bleed- ing, or Protrud- ing Piles. No surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly euro you. 60o. a next all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample box free f1 you mention this paper; and enclose 20. stamp to pay pestage, •4041•444044•04.••44.4044,1)•"...44 444.441•41•110•104411040•0•409••••• i • •4 !The 4 Times • y i • • • •Clubbin List! • • 4 • 4 • 4 • Times and Saturday Globe 1.90 a X • Times and Daily Globe 3.75 ft • • Times and Daily World 3.10 e • •Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... 1.85• •Times and Toronto Weekly Sun .... 1,85 4 •• • Times and Toronto Daily Star ... 2.80 • • Times and Toronto Daily News.. 2.80 •• w• Times and Daily Mail and Empire. 3.75 • • Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.60 • • . Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 • • Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 1,60 • Times and Farm and Dairy 1.80 e • ' Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press 1.60 • i• Times and Daily Advertiser (morning) .... 2.85• Times and Daily Advertiser (evening) 2.85• alp • • Times and London Daily Free Press Morning • •• r Edition .......... ; 3.50 • •• • Evening Edition.:.... 2.90 • • Times and Montreal Weekly Witness 1M5 ' • •• Times and World Wide.... ............ 2.25 a • Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... 1.60 • • Times and Presbyterian 2.25 • • Times and Westminster . 2.25 • • Times, Presbyterian and •Westminster 3.25 • • Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3.35 •• • Times and.McLean's Magazine 2.50 • 4. Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.75 • ° • Times and Youth's Companion2.90 e • Times and Northern Messenger 1.35 2 • Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly)2.90 • • Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60 0 . Times and Lippincott's Magazine 3.15 ,•y • Times and Woman's Home Companion 2.70 0 •. Times and Delineator .. 2.60 0 •Times and Cosmopolitan 2.65 • • Times and Strand 2.45 • o Times and Success . 2.45 a •Times and McClure's Magazine................ 2.10 • • ' Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,85 • .• Times and Designer 1.85 • • • Times and Everybody's / 2,20 • • These prices are for addresses in Canada or Great: Britain. • 2 . The above publications may be obtained by Times® subscribers in' any combination, the price for any publica-: :tion being the figure given above less $I.00 representinga :the price of The Times. For instance : • •.o The Times and Saturday Globe...,.,. $1.90 • Y' • The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1,0O). 1.35 ` • • • • - $3.25 e •making the price of the three papers $3.25. • .• • The Times and the Weekly Sun.... $1.70 The Toronto Daily Star ($2,30 less $1.00).. 1,30 • The Saturday Globe ($1.90 less $1,00) 90 • $3.90 • • •the four papers for $3.90. •a . Making the Little Farm Pay By c, C. BOWSFIELD It will be noticed anywhere in the eouritry that if the owuer of a farm eleourages his family to take an in- terest iu garden management the home premises will look well and become more profitable than they otherwise would. Young people take tt keen interest in uovelty farming. They will delight la studying out,pInns for succession crops, anti In this way they will make a gar- den pay well. A fact which should be ,;eat in mind is that truck growing ulay be !mile highly profitable on any farm and therefore should not be treat- ed as a sideline. For instance, if a tanner who is accustotued to a return a1' $20 to $40 au acre from his big field erops can see a revenue of $200 an a•re from vegetables, berries and flow - ..vs he should be willing to make this feature n little more prominent than • • • • • • • • • • •If the pilbiicat on you want is not in above list lets: *us know. We •. in supply almost any well-known Cana- •dian or American publication. These prices are strictly: • cash in advance • Send subscriptions • by post office or express order to* • ' •The Times Office 1•• yStone Block •• •WINGHAM • ONTARIO • r a a *4 t444.e4ofe#44s44+444*-4 tot• 4,40•4.44.41►44440•4.44014.404.444o t r,r WILL WE EVER WALK ON AIR? Train Of Thought inspired By a Letter About "Fruit-a•tives" TO CURE PORK. DON'T FOR BABY. Paco 3. VHOETABLES AND DERBIES PAY WELL. it usually is, especially when it serves to stimulate the interest of his sons and daughters. When young people take up this mat- ter of double cropping they should nim to make the season as long as possible and to get their commodities into mar- ket early enough so that they will reap the benefit of the highest prices. A. lit- tle study will show them which are the Hardy and profitable early products. Usually it pays to start vegetables in a hotbed, but whet her this is done or not when the peas. lettuce. radishes and other Orly crops are out of the way the ground can be utilized for celery, tomatoes, sweet corn. peppers, cab- bage. etc. This is not a complete pro- gram, but merely suggests what may be accomplished. When the sweet corn is disposed of late in the sumuter it is still possible to raise rutabagas, beets and carrots. Three crops in a season are nothing phenotnenal even in the northern states. and it makes al kind of farm- ing that is interesting and worth while. Anybcidy going into this kind of work should look out for the mon- ey making possibilities, as it is useless to try to keep up interest in a project unless it pays. Cabbage growing belongs in every garden scheme, big or little. Where no hotbed is available it is well to buy plants in April for the early crop. These are set about eighteen inches apart in the row and the rows at least two feet apart, thinning the fliants as it appears necessary. The crop for use in fall and winter is sown about June 1 and transplanted in July, giv- ing little more space than for the ear- lier plants. Lettuce is one of the garden prod- ucts that buyersldemand early in the spring. It is hardy enough so that it may be sown in the open by the mid- dle of April. If it can be started in a hotbed so much the better. It is difficult to grow lettuce in hot weather, but another good crop may be started about Aug. 1. Lettuce will thrive right up to the time of sharp frost. It is a good deal the same with radishes. An early crop pays well, and then it is best to skip the hot weeks of sum- mer. One ounce will sow 100 feet. For spinach an ounce will sow 100 feet. Sow in a broad drill and thin to about four inches. Make the rows fif- teen inches apart. The early spring crop can be sown as soon as frost is out of the ground. Obtain three varie- ties of seed to insure a good succes- sion. Skip the month of July and two weeks In August or even the entire month. The hardier sorts provided by dealers in seeds may be sown as late as Sept. 15 and with a light covering of hay or rubbish will winter over and produce an early spring crop. Swiss chard is of the beet family and is cul- tivated only for greens. Cut or pull the leaves from the outside while young, keeping the inner leaves to continue growth. Satisfactory crops of turnips can be raised both in spring and fall. While they are an easy product to raise, it will pay to give them a rich, loose soil. Brome Grass. Brome grass is one of the best pas- ture plants. Its good points are that it has a good root system; therefore stands tramping web, starts early and grows late, is leafy and makes a tine pasture. It does well on poor as web as on good soil, but responds splendid- ly to good soil and manuring. Grape Rot. Just before the blooms appear on the grapes the plants should receive an im- plication of bordeaux mixtnre. The greatest pest of the grapes in most sec- tions is the rot, and tailless the bor- deaus mixture is applied regularly ev- +r,• tIn•ee it'erke the fruit is Hare to lot ,twl spoil. MR. D. MCLEAN Orillia, Ont., Nov. 28th, 1914. "Fox over two years,' I was troubled with Constipation, Drowsiness, Lack of Appetile and Headaches. I tried several medicines, but got no results and my Headaches became more severe. One day I saw your sign which read. 'Fruit- a-tives' make you feel like walking on air. This appealed to me, so I decided to try a box. In a very short time, I began to feel better, andnowlfeel fine. Now I have a good appetite, relish everything I eat, and the J''sadaches are gone entirely. I cesaeot say too much for `Fruit-a-tives', and recom- mend This pleasant fruit medicine to all my friends". DAN McLEAN. "FRUIT-A-TIVES' is daily proving its priceless value in relieving cases of Stomach, Liver and Kidney Trouble- General Weakness, and Skin Diseases. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25e. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. DEDICATION One of the important problems that is confronting the farmer who wishes to keep hie expenses as low as possible is the one of ctiringhie pork forconaump- tion during the Summer months. The following is a quick, sure and cheap method which I have used for the last twelve years without a single failure, Before the carcass of the pig has be- come cool I cut it up, taking out the parts I wish to cure. These parts I prod all over with a common table fork, so that no air bubbles or blood will be cased up inside. I then place a side o pork in a box that I have made for the purpose from common wood and about four feet long, two and a half feet wide and eight inches deep. Over this side I sprinkle two tablespoons of saltpetre, then throw salt upon it until the meat is covered. Upon the top oil this side I place the other side and, treat in a similar manner and also the same with the hams. Every day for the first 'Week pour the brine off the meat and add more salt if the meat is not covered with it; by the end of the second week the meat has become dry. I then take pepper and sprinkle all over the meat so as to prevent it from becoming mouldy, after that I place meat in empty flour Backs and hang away in some cool place until needed. Pork cured in this manner will keep for two or three years, and it has not the briny or smoky taste that most cured pork thas.-H. E. A. Grain Grow- ers' Guide. A little while to pass within the throng, To dream, to toil, to weep, to love, to die - And then the silence, and the ctosit+g Song, And no more of the riddle that was I! Yet who in this brief passing finds des- pair, Denies the certain God within his breast. Life has a crown for every man to wear, Tho' 'tis a thing of moments at the best. A thing of rr•onents, scattered pre- ciously Across the level causeway of the years! And yet what sudden Light may I not see? What Vision making glory of my tears? Maytag) if I sing bravely, true and well My song shall strike -God's universal rhyme, a And like the echoes of a sweet, stilled bell Live in the heart of heaven after Time. -Dana Burnett. I REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND BHILD.. MRS..WIaSLOW'a SOOTHING SYRIIP has been ased for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MoTHEaS for their CHILDREN WtIL$ TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS all PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA. It is ab. solutely harmless, Be sure and ask for ',Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup." and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents &.bottle. VIRTUES OF THE HOMELY ONION. Onions supply a complete cure in themselves for cold, as well as being a wonderful remedy in cases of insomnia. An onion cure breakfast includes a poached egg on toast, three tablespoon- fuls of fried onions and a cup of coffee. Luncheons of sandwiches made of brown bread, buttered, and filled with fine chopped raw onion, seasoned with salt and pepper make the second meal on the schedule. For the supper the onion may be fried as for breakfast and eaten with a chop and p baked potato. :The efficiency of onions is well known to the singers of Italy and Spain, who .eat them every day to improve the quality of their voices and keep them smooth. Onion plasters are prescribed to break up hard coughs. They are made of fried onions placed between two slices of old muslin, The plaster is kept quite hot until the patient is snugly in bed, when it is placed on the chest, to stay over night. Onion syrup is claimed by some to be unequaled as a cure for a bad cold in the head. FALL FAiR DATES.. Atwood Sept. 21-22 Blyth ...... ... Sept. 28-29 Brussels .... .. ..........Sept. 30 -Oct 1 Dungannon ..... .... ...- Oct. '7-48 Goderich Sept. 28-30 Oct. 2 .... Sept. 16-17 Sept. 21-22 Sept. 28-23 Mt. Forest ' Sept. 15-16 Palmerston ...:... .. Sept. 23-24 Ripley Sept. 28 - 29 Teeswater Oct. 5 - 6 Tiverton ............Oct. 5 WalkertonSept. 14--15 Wingham .. .... ... . Sept. 23-24 Gorrie Kincardine Listowel ...... .... Mitchell Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA WOMEN IN FRANCE. Don't overfeed baby, fleet depress - appetite, so keep him well by dilut- ing his food one-third with boiled water in muggy weather, Don't give baby milk for a day if he is sick at the stomach. Give two tea- spoonfuls of barley water (one table- spoonful to one quart of boiling water and bail for half an hour), which does not produce heat, as does milk, Grad- ually put him back on bis feedings next day. Don't crake diet changes during hot spells, Tide baby over on what he is accustomed to, unless it actually harms him. Don't forget the gospel of milk care! Keep milk clean, covered and cool. Give baby only that inspected by health officials. All summer long boil or pas teurize it. Don't forget that baby feels thirst just as you do. Give him' plenty of boiled, cooled water. This often stops fretting and sleeplessness that might harass him into illness. Don't prostrate baby with tight or bulky clothing. Don'.tforget that cleanliness is baby's insurence policy. Keep it paid up in clean food, clean clothes and clean sur- roundings. Don't forget to bathe baby three or four times every hot day, and in the middle of the night if he frets. Often frequent cool sponge baths prevent dis comfort and sleeplessness. Don't expose baby to mid-day sun this time of the year. Light -struck eyes cause headache, and sunstruck pavement reeks with germs. Keep him indoors over this hardship. Give him long outings by getting him outdoors earlier mornings and keeping him out, asleep if possible, till you go to bed nights. Don't deprive baby of thr;life-giving boon of fresh air. Ventilate rooms day and night. Stale air gets vapor -soaked, and so prevents free perspiration, which discharges body heat. Don't give a peevish baby soothing syrups, but find out what troubles him, and remove it. Protect his food from flies. Screen his crib and carriage from insects which cause discomfort while their bits bring disease. Owing to the war, women in England and France are taking up many odd callings to make up for the shortage of men, but in the country women have al- ways done whatever- lies nearest to their hand. In the village the butcher, the baker, the candlestick -maker, may all be women, and there is at least one small town in Devon in which women form the chief business element. The prim. cipal hotel is run by a woman and her daughter: a woman deftly cuts the joints and orders her son about. A bakeress bakes the nicest bread, and her daughter trudges far into the country with two baskets slung on her back, a picturesque figure of the female worker. The wine merchant is a woman who worked up a nice little business, while a chemist's shop is owned by a woman, to say nothing of the trades which are to be found •ev'erywhere, sweetstuff shops, fancy shops, and the like. France, being a country where uni- versal service is the rule, is nowadays depending largely on the work of wo- men, but even in times of peace there were places where they were the chief citizens. At Froissy, in the Depart- ment of the Oise, most of the public appointments are held by women, and will be until their present holders die. There is a postmistress instead of a postmaster; the telegraph department is run by a woman. a station mistress directs the porters at the local station; a lady barber cuts the hair of the com- munity, and the town crier also tacks "ess" on to the name of her calling. CHOW'S TtIAT? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that can- not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years,, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALn1NG, KINNAN & MARviN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi- monials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pins for tonstipd- tion. Paralyzed Limbs. To -day it is sleeplessness. headaches, digestive trouble, and irritability. Next thing you know some form of paralysis has developed. Mr. Alex. Honsburger, 10 Moore street, St. Catherines, Ont., writes: "Nervous trouble developed into paralysis of the limbs so that I became helpless. Doctors failed me, but after using ten boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I resumed work, and now feel better than I did for 20 years." Twenty-two years ago John Martin, of Paxton. 111., married. Twelve months later Martin was injured in a railroad wreck, lost his memory, and his wife, thinking she had been deserted, married again, becoming Mrs. Knepper. A feet years ago her husband died. In the meantime Martin recovered his memory, met his former wife several days ago, and they were married again. He is now 65 and she is 63. William Douglas Sloane, millionaire merchant and philanthropist, died at Aiken, S. C. Chicago city civil service employs 28,- 515 with a pay roll of 535,176,535. Londo! Eng., hospitals have over 10,000 beds in daily use. Presidential Cheeses. The first monster cbeese presented to a president of which we can find rec- ord is that offered with great publicity to Jefferson in 1802. The cheese was made -one might almost say built-ir, Cheshire. Mass., in a press giving It the great dimensions of four feet diam- eter and eighteen inches high. After being successfully pressed it was drawn from Cheshire to Washington in • a six horse dray amid popular re- joicing. With regard for the dignity of his office, the president insisted on footing the bill to the tune of $200. There is record of an even greater cheese presented to President Jackson, and President San Buren received a great cheese every year of his incum- bncy. With him the custom seems to have ended. -New York Sun. The Dominion fisheries branch will not only maintain an exhibit, but operate a restaurant also to advertise Canadian fish as an article of diet. The will of the late E. C. Walker, of Walkervilie, filed for probate in Essex County Surrogate Court, disposes of an estate of $4,126,000, and is said to be the largest in volume and value ever probated in Ontario. Henry J. Chute, at Kentville, N. S., whose son, Roy, sold an unserviceable horse to the remount department, asked Sir Charles Davidson, Commissioner on war contracts, for permission to refund the priee, $165, to the Government. The fish of America, north of the Isthmus of Panama, embraces three clafs'ea, Ib'or's, ' v' families; 1,112 genera, 335 subgenera, 3,263 species and 133 subspecies. First Sumptuary Laws. Laws regulating eating. drinking and dressing are almost as old as his- tory itself. Nothing like exactness can be reached in the matter, but it is safe to say that it was in Egypt as far back as 3000 B. C. that the first prac- tical sumptuary statutes were passed. Among the Romans they first appear- ed in the celebrated "twelve tables." In modern times Charlemagne was the ationeer in sumptuary legislation. Fairly Warned. Cholly-Before I met you i thought of nothing but making money. Ethel - Well. keep right on: Pop ain't so rich es folks thin!:: -Dallas News. A Matter of Taste. The Woman-i'd rather live on bread and water than on charity. The ;Tram -Yes, mum; there's no accountin' fe taste. -•-Philadelphia Ledger. Lock counts once in awhile; brain count all the time. -W. H. Lough. Woes of an Author. "How's your now book coming one "Passably well. The demand Ian' what it should be. I mean among pur chasers. And, of eourse, if people don' buy the book there's nothing in it fo me." PATRIOTIC A complete Writing Books, iu g INITIALED A. Stationery ies and GENERAL Our cry envelopes, Try order. iingaziues on taken newspaper , TIMES 1 Opposite r GOODS 1 - - Hue of Patriotic. Paper, Seribhling Exerciee Book,:, Play Oards, Flags, Pens, n. s, eta. STATIONERY new stock of Initialed in fancy papeter- cora espondence cards. STATIONERY line of general station including writing paper, eta. is complete, us with your next and newspapers sale and subscriptions for any magazine or you may desire. STATIONERY STORE Queen's Hotel T. R. BENNETT J. P. AUCTIONEER Sale dates can be arranged at TIMES office. Pure Bred Stock Sales a Specialty Saler conducted anywhere in Ontario Write or Phane 81, Ingham c ..-.,-.i I CREAM �VANT[D 1 Having an up -to date Creamery inn full operation, we solicit ) tar cream patronage We are prepared to pay the highest market prices tor good cream aro give you an honest butinerr. IAeighrrg, sampling and testing each can or cream received carefully and returns, g a full statement of came to each patron We fuuieh two cane to eto b patron pay all express cilarg,•s and pay every tivo weeks Write for furth,r tertirrlars or send for cans and give us a trial. SEAFORTH CREAMERY CO. SEA FORTH, ONT. Ani. 28 Canadian National TORONTO IAITIRlACr10YS $150,000 Sept.. 13 EXHIBITION $150,000 "PATRIOTIC YEAR" Model Military Camp Destruction of Battleships Battles of the Air MAMMOTH • Military & sl ay MARCH OF THE ALLIES Farm under Cultivation Millions in Livestock Government Exhibits THRILLING Naval Spectacle REVIEW OF THE FLEET Belgian Art Treasures Creatore's Famous Band Biggest Cat and Dog Show WAR TROPHIES Field Grain Competition Greater Poultry Show Acres of Manufactures One Thousand and One New Things to See REDUCED RAILWAY RATES FROM ALL POINTS • After Scrimger, byterian his wish, be cremated. I In the bas been bottle, CASTORIA Dr. Joh Pre 1 1 the] mil en the funeral of Rev. Principal of Mont: real College, the body, according was taken to the cemetery interest of clean,iness invented a bottomless having paper caps at each "I see. By the way, I'm reading it now, Sinks loaned me a copy that Tompkins borrowed frees Bradley. Pretty lair story." -Cleveland. Plain Dealer. Ror Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years siways nears the Signature• of n 0 .o e k