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The Wingham Times, 1913-01-30, Page 3ITIIE WINGIIAM TIMES, ANUARY 3Oc 1913 0 gine rifle usi O r.111 • 111' O s 4 Raq) o ic.��>> It is an unwarranted intrusion on a bus; ni:.. patience. In the museums of the future, the pen will i.e I the warming -pan, the flint -lock and the sphnni,t;;-t: :. In the business office of today the typev: lite;• < • :.1-- lished fixture. It is not only a new industry it ell it i, the right hand of every industry under the sun The large corporation would be helpless wit i'. T:e• single-handed man needs it most of all, It has a legitimate place wherever there i.; :'i be done or records to be kept. Let the ar© Typewriter handle your writing - especially your busines,' tor, •• ''•;'.cc. it will pay for itself in the better, bigger bu:>i:.. :; t beget. Send for illustrated booklet to Monarch al epa➢ tr. r ...i•. Remington Typewriter Limited, 18-20 Victoria Square, Montreal, Que. Value of the Newspaper. Tired -Out I kineys. The newspaper, is today the most po- Kidney troubles are so frightfully tent element in civilization. Its audi-. common because the kidneys are so eas- ily upset by over -work or excesses of eating and drinking. Cure is effected not by whipping them on to renewed effort, but by awakening the action of liver and bowels by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. This rests the kidneys and makes them well. Backache and urinary disorders then disappear. ence is practically unlimited. It reach- es every class and condition of men. It penetrates to every hut and hovel on the farthest confines of human society. The schools have an influence and gath- er the children of the high and low. But after schools are out -grown, teach- ers forgotten, and books mouldy and dusty, the newspaper is a constant com- panion. No public speaker, be he preacher or political orator can draw an audience of one tenth that which perfectly dry and crisp; then, when you greets the average newspaper today. lay the fire, put them amongst the fewsticks, with a st cks, and you will find that the fire will burn up very quickly. Many bundles of firewood are saved during the year by this little plan. Put all your potato peelings into an old tin and bake them in the oven until North Wellington Liberals nominated Dr. N. C. Wallace as candidate for the Federal House. The following is Sir Astley Cooper's recipe for chilblains: As a preventive, wash the parts likely to be 'affected with a lotion made of 3 ozs. of vinegar and 1 oz. of camphorated spirits.of wine. As a cure, 1 oz. camphorated spirits of wine, oz. of liquid subacetate of lead; mix and apply three or four times a day. In the year I908 over 90,000 Western cattle passed through Winnipeg on their way to Liverpool. Last year the num- ber exported by this route was only 1,475. Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol to its proper tension ;restores restores every nerve in the body vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at once. Pitosphonol will make you a new man. Price $:3 a box, or two for $5. Mailed to any address, The Scoben Drug Co., St. 0t lu •Ines. Ont. • ;a.3„rxaa+c,s.ca+a' rurmr�v.,mxas maa.oe%CO2: rsr - The above is a picture of "Chief Little Bow," who was probably the first inhabitant of CARMANGAY, where once the savage roamed at will, NOW the iartner tills the land. ailways,Wheat,and ter I! CSE � CARMANGAY is a NATURAL RAILWAY CENTRE. on account of the topography of the country. ILis situated on the Little Bow River, and has an UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF PURE WATER. It has VAST QUANTITIES OF COAL close to the town. OUR PROPERTY is WITHIN the TOWN LIMITS and ONLY TWO I3LOCKS.from the centre of business Send for our illustrated booklet describing the property, we have Ao sell in) Work for your Money ely. in the nW D SEND ITS TCOUPON 1 Western Canada Real Estate Company Head Office. ---502 TEMPLE BUILDING, Toronto, Ont. BRANCHES: MORt*EAL: QUE HAMILTON. ONT. LONDON. ONT., Lb Sim Lae Acs.* 302 Liter Chambers 11 Domhe,os Dank Cb.,ebeis East, but invest it in the West WzsnrnN CANADA REAL, ESTATE Co. 502 Temple Building, Toronto, Ont. Please send me without obligation on my part, literature containing facts, figures and .views of CARMANGAY. Name •-..-•••...a Address THE WINGHAM TIMES THE WEED. (Tennyson) once.in a golden hour I cast a certain seed, Up there came a flower, The people said a weed. To and fro they went Thro' my garden bower, And muttering discontent Cursed me and my flower. Then it grew so tall It wore a crown of light, But theives from o'er the wall Stole the seed by night* Sowed it far and wide By every town and tower, Till all the people cried, "Splendid is the flower," Read my little fable; He that runs may read Most can raise the flower now For all have got the seed. And some are pretty enough, And some are poor indeed; And now again the people Call it but a weed. Dr, de Van's Female Pills A reliaL;e French regulator; never fails. These pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the generative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. Dr. de Van's are sold at 05 a box, or three for $10. Mailed to any address. The Soobell Drug Co., St. Catharines, Ont. SALT RISING BREAD. The maker of salt rising bread usu- ally has more customers than she can supply. To make this delicious bread scald one cupful of sweet milk, then add to it a half teaspoonful of salt and two table- spoonfuls of cornmeal. Mix thorough- ly and put in a warm place to sour. As the batter must be kept much warmer than yeast bread, it would be well to set the vessel containing the batter in a pan of warm water, so that it may be kept at an even temperature for five or six hours. When this is light scald one quart of milk or part milk and part water and let stand until lukewarm. Add a teaspoonful of salt and stir in I enough flour to make a drop batter; beat vigorously, add the "salt rising" and continue beating for eight minutes longer. Cover and set in a warm place for two hours. Add a teaspoonful of lard and enough flour to make a soft dough; knead thoroughly until smooth and elastic. Mold into loaves and place in well greased pans, leaving room for them to rise to twice their original size. Cover with a light cloth. Set where they.will keep warn, and when light bake in a steady oven. To successfully make this bread it must be kept at an even temperature while rising. DR. t W. CRASE'S C ITAi FR POWDER c. is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops drop. Ings in the throat and_permanent- ly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. 25c. a box ; blower free. Accept no substitutes. All dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Do., Limited, Toronto. The girl who has a chronic case of the ideal is apt to develop into a spin- ster. Hisd ii1.198 in Nor Hum' Ets31,0.78 .'rilliil U.V1 n731, 1.V lc • ,. +h, Civet is inactive cv,rwthi?lg ,:.:•u,:: ,n ;., whoa_, rtt'd� t la; , l,:r: ci aa its t •'.t't the '• :fish ill :Irtl.cern. Sick peeks h,�. �• the Lees. t,.•-, e'u ', lib town filoteb.ni, Cnuste- .:' ii ,, i' a ui tilts t^t ;tia.a, Ott. :tills;: ❑': t.ir. t ;'ill., •'iouilatt Che slu; .i.;.e t:v,:. clean away all haste :ti.; i! matter 0.'81.? l:' .F'.vr.ini, .1,:;0 ;•r. .a', well as .'tu'c ell iickee:3.• :,ri..iog ti):Iz disordered col:(Ii ion 01 the Aver. Mrs. tif. si, s l?:e+ubreoks, Mid,•ic 1`ta- .im, iV-li., unites:- "For several year.' t have been tronhled with paint; in the Liver. 1 bad rte ciicio., i r mm se -v: ral le :'tats hv; , (illy rely ve Eor• a tin:•. ov them. I lieu tried llilburu'a I.axa- Liver Pills, and 1 leave had no trouble t!i rr, li • r ,.ince. 1 e:m honestly tv- .... offal there to _very person who has c, rr ttoul+le." Price, 21 emits p.er vial or .i vials for II.00. For .:ale at all dealers or retailed LIrect. on. re;'..pt .It thrice by flit T. 1\i''- t.uru Co., Limit.'cl, Toronto, Ont. WANTE A live representative for WINGHAM and surrounding District test -11 high-class stock for THE FORTHILI NURSERIES More fruit trees will be play:ted in the Fall of 1911 and Sluing of 1912 than ever before in the history of' Ontario, I be orchard of' the future will lie the best paying part of the farm. We teach our men. Sales:nunship Tree Culture and bow big profits it fruit growing can be made. ray weekly, permanent employ. trent, exclusive territory, wt rite, for particulars, • STONE 00 WELLINGTON: Toicol`; To. n er LESSONS FROM FRENCHMEN. Some Methods by Which They Grow Double Our Wheat yield. in France wheat farming is always cootlhined with some other branches or agriculture, such to sheep raising or the growing of beets, and often the three go together successfully. In. America we are accustomed to think that in order to raise wheat success- fully one must plant hundreds of acres anti devote his entire time to this crop.. The statement that it doesn't pay to raise wheat on the small farms in the east is often heard, but 'is without foundation. The average wheat crop in the west, ou the farms devoted exclusively to that cereal, is about fifteen bushels an acre; In France, where wheat is grown in rotation with other crops, the average is about thirty-five bushels. The wheat farm that the writer vis- ited comprises a thousand acres and is situated on a level plateau, from which on clear days the spires of Paris may be seen. On the afternoon of the writer's visit the men were all busy planting wheat and gathering beets. The first signs of life to be seen as the visitor approached were two flocks of sheep -about 1,21)0 in all -feeding on beet tops under the care of two shep- herds with their dogs. Beyond the sheep and a bit nearer the buildings were the men loading beets into enor- mous two wheeled carts, each being drawn by three Percheron stallions driven tandem. Beyond the harvesters were three sets of two furrow plows working, ench drawn by six white oxen. The plows, which were of the two furrow reversible type, were built with a pair of wheels in front to lighten the draft and with four plows keyed in pairs to two parallel steel beams, which were fastened to the axle of the wheels by a ball and socket joint. Each pair of plows was placed one over the other so that when one was in the furrow the mate was upside down in the air directly over it: At the end of the furrow the plowman by means of a lever turned each beam half round, throwing the plow with rnoklhoard on the right hand side into the air and bringing the left band moldboard into the furrow. The plow- men were followed by three teams of oxen that harrowed the field, -and these were followed by two grain drills. To a stranger it was a novelty to see all these operations taking place at the same time. -Country Gentleman. Thirty bushels of wheat to the acre on fifty acres will result in r., its much wheat produced at it much less expenditure of labor and seed as will fifteen bushels per acre on 100 acres. This is the whole arguiutnt for inten- sive methods in farming. DON'T TRY FOR TOO MUCH. Give Your Vegetables Room Is a Good Gardener's Motto. Do not be afraid to thin out your iclants. They must not be crowded. Probably more garden stuff Ilio; been ruined for want of being thinned at the proper time than by any other cause. However that may be, one of the most puzzling thiups for the beginner is to tied out whether any pariie•ula1 vegetable should be thinned or traus- plauted. and how far mint the plants should stead afterward. He will get some help from the cat- alogues as to the distau:es, lu;t wheth- er he should trnnsphiut or thin is the kind of tiling that is not in the book. It requires a good deal of nerve to pull up and destroy the nuuccessary seedling -more nerve than the amateur possesses. They say that a person nev- er bevonu's a good gard:'ler until he steels his nerve to this ruthless merle tire. A vegetable must have plenty of room to develop its best size and flavor, and oue can take no icr;de in small or commonpiarc vi'getables. True it is that "the worst weed in corn is Dorn." -Farm Progress, Irrigating With Tomato Cans. The following is an easy and effect- ive way to start plants in dry weather: Sink en ordinary tomato can, with a one-eighth inch hole half en inch from the bottom, in the ground so that the hole will be near the roots of the plinit. Tamp the dirt around b o t It plant and can IntirGJ.TINGWITH 'roirA-end fill the let - TO CAN. ter with water. Keep the can filled until the plant is out of danger. -Popular Mechanics. Drying Up Wet Places. Farmers often have a wet, springy pined, containing seri iral square feet, in a field which is difficult and often very expensive to drain. The problem was finally solved by a farm hand who dug deep holes in the center of such places and in each one sank two brine barrels, one on top of the other. The top barrel was covered. The water col. lected almost at once in these barrels, and the wet places dried up. --Paris Journal. Two things for the farmer to w do this fall ---vote right and crit the seed corn right, but save the <•. seed corn first. 4'"::0� At 44000oo444g•o4444g.4.4+4 +4' O 444+44444++4044444444 444 AN OPPORTUNITY 4 4 • • oFor a Live Man in Wingham • • • to make some dean, l-onest rilcne}, givirg irfclrrs:ticn to othose who have rEqutsttd it. iegardirg an original Vl est - ern tow nsitc-not a subdivisicn. This is a gent), mans • sproposition, and we want only mi n of good stai t ir•g vtho will rat t misrepleb( .nt. Address 4 T p Western Canada Real Estate Co. 0 • 502 TEMPLE BUILDING - TORONTO : V wb'Q E•vl i fi �y;r4 lr t' + ;,s y.t s$ d, :o: Symptoms. I've been sitting alone in my shack, a -reading the new almanac; and before I began I seemed quite a sound man, but now I am hopeless, alackl As strong as a Government mule, I gam- boled around like a fool, with a spirit at ease, though I'd every disease that is known at the medical school! In the night time I slept like a log; my appetite ne'er missed a cog, I was feel- ing so gay that I chortled all day, now my soul is enveloped in fog. For I find I have ague and chills, and gland- ers and various ills; I must cut out the meat and the good things to eat, and fill my old system with pills. In ailments I'm certainly rich, and my song has a heart rending pitch, I am sick, in and out, with the measles and gout, and the mumps and the seven- year itch. Bronchitis and quinsy are mine; when it ccmes to lumbago I shine; I have shingles and croup and I cough with a whoop, and my stock of dyspepsia is fine. My liver is all out of whack and my stomach keeps jumping the track, and the book says the hung has been lost from my lung and my kidneys are stuck to my back. How lucky it was that I found that almanac lying around! I might have supposed I was healthy nor dosed my stomach with drugs by the pound. -Walt. Mason Persons troubled with partial paral- ysis are often very much benefited by massaging the affected parts thorough- ly when applying Chamberlain's Lin- iment. This liniment also relieves rheu- matic pains. -For sale by all dealers. 44,14.1441.444+14113.4.4.4.44414-1.4.4.4 +4•+++.44$.444W.!3+F+++++++++* The Times Clubbing • 4. 4' .r. d - 'I, 'I' -I. a: 4 .5 4- .I. 4. 1- 44 .I. 0 0 4 -1- 4. 4' .I- 0 -4i- 4. 4. Britain. •i - max rt iaatais-.^+z^a,:ai ;na lit.i; 4, 1.60 4.00 1.85 1 1.75 44 2 3U 4• 2.30 4.50 1.60 4 2.35 1,60 1.80 j 1.60 + 2.85 1.60 i l' 4. 1' -t- '1• Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Daily Globe...... Times and Family Herald and Weekly Staff - Times and Toronto 'Weekly Sun Times and Toronto Daily tar Times and Toronto Daily News. Times and Daily Mail and Empire. Times and Weekly Mail and Empire Times and. Farmers' Advocate Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times aria Farm anti Daily Times and Winnipeg Weekly Flee Press. Times and Daily ,'idverr.iser....... ...... ...- Times and London Advertiser (weekly) ... .. Times and London Daily Free Press i\Ic/nilg Edition Evening Edition ..... Times and Montreal Daily Witness.... Times and Montreal Weekly Witness Times and World Wide Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg, . Times and Presbyterian ..................... Times and Westminster Times, Presbyterian and Westminster ...... Times and Toronto Saturday Night Times 'and Busy Man's Magazine Times and Home Journal, Toronto............. Times and Youth's Companion .... Times and Northern Messenger Times and Daily World.,.. Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly)..,... Times and Canadian Pictorial Times and Lippineott's Magazine Times and 'Woman's Home Conlpanior, . Times and Delineator .. Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Strand. Times and Success . Times and McClure's Magazine Times and Munse 's Magazine Times and Designer . • . • . Times and Everybody's • 3.50 2 90 3.50 1.b5 225 1.60 2.25 2,25 '3.25 340 2.50 1,75 2.90 1.35 3.10 2.90 1.110 3.15 2.6G 2.40 2,30 2.50 2.45 2.00 2,55 1.85 2.40 These prices are for addresses in Canada or 4. 4. 0 4. 4. • • Great .I, .y. The above publications may he obtained by Times subscribers in any combination', the price for any publica- .r tion being the figure given above less $1.00 represcrlir.g ++ the price of The Times. For instance : The Times and Weekly Globe 51,60 The Farmer's Advocate (x2.35 less :x1.00). 135 $2.95 + making the price of the three papers $2.95. The Times and the Weekly Sun .... X1.50 The Toronto Daily Star (w2.80less 1.00)...,,. ,. 1,30 The Week4 Globe (S1.(10 less $1.00) t't� i,4,3 .70 the four papers for $3.70. If the pub icat on you want is not in above list let us know. We - th supply almost any well-known Cana- dian or American publication. These prices are strictly cash in ad 'ince Send subscriptions by post office or en2ress order tc Tue :eines Office o Stone Block o WINCHAM ONTARIO lD +N f+.ra-++:1:. ' 'iN ti nisi -It +.4: '•t:a ttt.ticalilliallani1i t . l a:4