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The Wingham Times, 1910-02-17, Page 3W?;•w •,•• w •M • ' THE W1l1Tf#i .i ,M "'DIMES, I''EBRUA rY' 17, #,inQ ;Iz ll�liilca' It's thin era.' 's only ono way this '�=N t �i.%+t'. !t ri°_';ix .•i r+t C'S"C `tiN1"'. . e.,eiMi' 'M ln'•1:. RU. O. ae »4c5 of C; .1,a'a1,:+"d aF 7CHE'WEST' FLO I.a to ineroase,. el be done,'and that's by so pleasing you, madam, that next time you "will insist on the same brant again. So I'm. watching and testing day and night to see that r -le 'Cream of the West' lour is kept to that same uniform. standard that always mattes good bread and buns. Try a bag." A " Model Mill" product. Tte Campbell Milling Co.. 'Limited Toronto r. • t FOR .. LE BY IC.ER.R a BIRD, WINGHAM. nn..ituc,u aaraaneV-ara-•,. Rave you renewed your subscription to the Times? Make Each Animal Werth 25% Over Its Coit "Tilt•. EEL" 2:04 Largest Winner of aon Grand Circuit, '08 On/ofaCent a Day Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, malting hens lay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day, or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor. When you feed " stock food " to your cow, horse, swine or poultry, you are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm. Your animals do need not more feed, but something to help their bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get fat and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure disease and keep them up to the best possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these things. ROYAL PURFLE,STOCK SPECIFIC can and docs. It is Nota "Stock Food" Cut a "Conditioner" ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain, nor farm products. It increases yield of milk from three to five pounds per cote per day -before the Specific has been used two weeks. It mattes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation (mown. Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE are as large at six weeks old as they would be when fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to plumpness almost magically. Cures botsl colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently. Dan McEwan, the horseman, says: f have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC Persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel; 2.03, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in 1908, and 'Henry Winters.' 2.091, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $36,000 in trotting stapes in 1908. These horses have never peen off their feed since 1 commenced using Royal Purple Specific almost a year ago, and f will always have it in my. stables." Ictlr 1 P r1 ¢ STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS One 50c. package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy days, which is a little over two.thirds of a cent a day Most stock foods in fifty cent packages last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC is given but once a day, and lasts half again as Ion A $1.50 pail containing four times the amount of the fifty cent package will last'280days. ROYAL PURPLE will increase the value of your stock 250. It is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating the appetite and the relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. As a hog fattener it is a leader. It will save many times its cost in veterinary bills. ROYAL pURPLx POULTRY SPECI.. FIC is our other Specific for poultry,. not foe stock. One 50 cent package will last twenty-five hens 70 days, or a pail costing $1.50 will last twentyfivc hens 2S0 days, which is four times more material for only three times the cost. It makes a "laying machine" out of your hens summer and winter,'revents fowls losingflesh at moulting time, and cures poultry diseases. . Every package of ROYAL PURPLE. STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRSPECIFIC is guaranteed. Just use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation on another animal in the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has them all beat to death. or else backcomes your money. FREE -Ask your merchant or write us for our valuable 32.page booklet on cattle and poultry diseases, containing also ()oolong recetnes and fall particulars about ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL- TRY SPECIFICS. If you cannot get Royal Purple Specifics from merchants or agents. we will supply you direct. express prepaid. on receipt of 51.50 a pail for either Poultry or Stock Specifics. Make money acting as our agent in your district. Write for terms. For sale by all up.to•date merchants. W. A. Jenkins Mfg. Co., London, Can. RoyaljPurple Stock and Poultry Specifics and free booklets aro,kept in stock by J. Walton McKibben and P, A. Mills. THE DELINEATOR FOR MARCH. Two women head the list in The Delineator. for March with two very remarkable articles, Mies Graoe G. Straohau, president of the Iuterborough Association of Women School Teachers, city of New York, who speaks for 15,000 tesoliere in New York Olty alone, tails of their fight for equal pay with the men of similar rank. Mrs, Wilson Woodrow says some things ilr "The American Husband" that will stir up mroh comment. Kansas City's remarkable method of deaii>;g with its prisoners through a board of pardon and paroles is explained by Charles Dillon, under the title "A New Way to Save Men." William H. Allen, director: of the' Bureau of Municipal Research, discuss- es from a soientifla viewpoint "The Inetitntional Chinch" in which he die- cnesee the sooial unrest in the oburoh. An article of particular appeal to girls is, "What a Woman's College Meaue to a Girl," by Madeline Z. Doty. The fiction is pleasing. Virginia Boyle, Will N. Ruben, Elizabeth Jor- dan and Thomao L. Masson oontrib'ete the leading stories. In addition Grape McGowan Oooke's serial is continued. The fashions are outlined 'for Spring in colors and with authority. Mre Simoox, in her letter, tells of the Spring coats and the trottenr frocks. There is a sense of completeness about The Delineator for March that is very satis- fying. , Uncle Sa:n'o era:zee_ This country each year produces more corn than all other countries of the world combined -2,927,000,000 out of 34SS,000,000 bushels. It grows wore wheat than any •other country in the world -034,000.000 out of 3,108,000.0O() bushels. It produces more oats than any other country in the world -754.- 4,00,000 out of 3.:::2.000.000 bushels. it is the tlitril litruv:it annual producer of barley in the world. 153,000,0(10 bush- l.--anly• 7.000,t50ll bushels less than 1; ei:ntillly, with 11un.,:„ leading. o Pet How to sot= day you will want to• buy -or help sOmeone buy -a Piano. Why not have the knowledge NOW that will enable you to unerringly choose the only piano anyone really wants - the high-grade, artistic, puro toned instrument, as against the cheaply made, commercial piano, built to sell on appearances; which cannot hold its tone, and soon becomes an affront to the eye and ear of its possessor. Such knowledge is at your disposal in "INSIDE INFORMATION" -free - without cost or obligation. Knowledge that will certainly benefit you or your friends if you desire to avoid the tecapfc"ahpurhseoa disappointment that Piano. Mason & ?'i•S.° j', u e w. u.1.. ge a y line • When you have read your Copy of "Inside before motion" (Free) you will not only know how a High - Grade Piano is made but you will be alble to judge its value like an expert of forty years' standing ASTRONG clailii, but justified by the fact that we have embodied in a newly edited, illustrated edition of "INSIDE INFORMATION" the cream of our experience during a lifetime of fine piano building. "INSIDE INFORMATION" has been published for those who with to be able to judge so important a purchase as a piano by other mcano than appearances only. It really gives a master builder's knowledge of the inside -the hidden parts of a piano, in simple, easily rears language, devoid of technicalities. , "INSIDE INFORMATION" does this by taking the reader through one of the most up-to-date, successful Piano Factories in America, telling him why each step is taken, from the selection of the timber, to the delivery of the finished product; how the function of every depart- ment of a high grade piano should be filled; above all, how the heart of the Piano -its tone, is arrived at; and how to decide whether the . tone of any Piano, no matter how pleasing at first, is likely to be enduring or not. "INSIDE INFORMATION" endows its reader with forty years' crystallized experience of fine piano making on the part of men who thoroughly understand and love their work. Wouldn't you like to know what they know on this important subject? You'may-in a few easily read pages -free.', Write now for -your copy. -.a postal will do ---to Risch Piano Company, Limited 49 A King Street West, Toronto, • Ont. • "' AiD 'FOR • FARMERS' WIVES: Uncle. • Sam's Extension of lnptitute idea a Help For Women. ixtenslon of the far'mer's' institute idea to Include the farmers' wives is the 'latest development of the policy of paternal solicitude for the great. Ainer1etu agriculturist as pursued by the department of agriculture. The betterment of the hone surroundings of the farmer, with, particular regard for the ndvantltges of good houset.eep- ing, whole:gime cool:tog, the observe sure of the laws of sanitation, the beautifying tit the home inside and out, the economical administration of the women's side of the business of farming, pure water, ventilation and au endless viiriety of miner items whk'h will tend to make the life of the farmer's •wife and daughters more ;tttrnrtive etre the purpose of this new division of the department.. i'rofessor John fiamiltop, formerly state secretary of agriculture of Penn- sylaanta,'is at the head of the division of farmers' institutes. The work of the' women's institutes Is perhaps broader in its scop° than that for the men, It is certainly more varied. Ln twenty-one states of the Union they have begun the work al- ready, and within a year or so every ngrlcuitural state in the Union will have organized institutes for the wom- en folk. The department of agriculture has just issued its first pamphlet on the subject of the farmers' institute for women. It is hoped that this will be but a forerunner of much more along the same lines. It is the hope of the department authorities that they will be able to put in circulation a compre- hensive series of bulletins, similar to those in regular circulation on general farm subjects, which will prove on real interest and great value to tho farm women of America -really worth while treatises on the art and science of living and being happy amid ideal farm surroundings. The Beautiful Acacias. The Australian acacias, or wattles, as they are popularly called, form a valuable group of plants for green- house decoration during winter and: spring, while fer the mild districts in the south they are excellent for out- door culture. When grown for the _conservatory or greenhouse they are usually placed in pots or tubs, but where space can be afforded in winter gardens and similar structures they are first rate subjects for planting in borders. Planted in this manner, they grow rapidly into large bushes and flower profusely. One objection may be raised iu planting acacias in bor- ders, for in the event of a specimen getting too large for its position it cannot be .suecessfully transplanted 4 CURED AT SEVENTY-FOUR. Little Dldestara are a Great Help to Mr. John F, hooker The weight of years very often brings with it a atilt Heavier burden, that of Indigestion or some form of Stomach Trouble. Then "Little Digesters'' como'to the rescue -if you give them a chance, as did Mr, Becker, Here is hie letter.tell- ing what they did for hila: "New Dundee, Nov. 10, 1909. TO Tire iioaEMAN MEDICINE CO. Dear Sirs, - 1 was for a long time troubled with bloating after heals, and my tongue wee always coated. Seeing the ' "Little Digesters" advertised I bought a box, and they took all that trouble away, but I thought one box would not bo enough, so I sent to you for more, They are a great help to my body. Yours truly, • JOHN P. BECKER. Excuse my writing with pencil, being an old man' of 74."' "Little Digesters" aid the feeble stomach to digest the food perfectly, This means that you can enjoy every meal, and get the strength out,iof what you eat, if you take a "Little Digester" afterwards. 25c. at your druggists or by mail from Coleman Medicine Co., Toronto. 36 WHAT'S IN A NAME? a - OUT in the Rocky mountains They never rock the boat; The dew that falls a liner Would hardly keep afloat. In Kansas City, Kansas, You need not think that you Can sass a fellow being And not your rashness rue. You would't go to Catskill Poor tabby's life to take. A fellow up in 13lsrnarek No business mark may make. You need not go to Dayton To pass the time of clay, And over in Sioux City You'll find a girl named Mae. Some splendid men in Wheeling Don't own a single wheel. In Wichita no witches Through lonely suburbs steal. The people of new Jersey Old jersey sweaters wear. At Rainy Lake the weather Is likely to be fair. At Battle Creek to battle Is not their steady trade. Sandusky maidens are not A lot of dusky maids. The ark found final lodgment, But not in Arkansas, Though out in woolly Rawhide The hiding may be raw. Busy Man. "What -is your business?" "M hie ?" "Yes, yours." "Ah, wine is indeed a grateful task -one to aid suffering humanity. It Is unique." "Well, to the point -what is it?" "It is mine, sir, to gather up tbe heap when the fair beroine crumples in it heap, or the desperate criminal crumples in a heap, or the sorrowing and long sintering Mother, with one 'long, reproachful glance, crumples in a heap -it is mine. 1 say, to gather up the heap and patiently and with great care smooth out the crumples." Fruitful Subject. "Got any current literature about the bouse?" "Here are the market reports." "How do they fill the bill?" "Well, here are quotations of raisins and dates. You may find the current prices farther down." Spontaneous Combustion. OULTER WATTLE. without going to a great deal of trou- ble, for few shrubs or trees are more }difficult to establish after serious root disturbance. By an annual pruning from the earliest years of, a plant's 'life, however, it may be kept within 'bounds with little difficulty, while the selection of varieties of moderate ;growth is a point to consider. Al- though acacias •will stand a very se- ,vere annual pruning, it is unwise to ;cut them back to old wood, for it rare- ly breaks away agt]in satisfactorily. Little Facto For Formats. A government report s:i,is that in tbe United States 2,000.000 cattle die an- nually from disease. exposure and neg- lect. This country always feels un- comfortable When statistics of waste are brought Up. After timbers have been cut froth the log they should be dried as rapidly and evenly as possible so vis to remove the moisture and prevent checks: Wood should not be placed in contact 'with the ground until it has been thor- oughly dried; otherwise some fungus will enter and cause rapid decay. Here are some facts worth remeni• bering: Fifty .pounds of butter make ono firkin; 100 pounds of ifsh make one quintal; 200 pounds of beef er pork make one barrel; 5 pounds make one keg; 100 pounds make one cask; 25 pounds make one bitrrel of soap; 280 pounds make one barrel of salt; loth inches make one hand; 640 acres make one square mile, and 30 square tei , cunei ono, teevn tkien ... . • "Did you burn my letters, as I told you to, sweetheart?" "No." "Imprudent! Wby didn't yon?" "Well, I thought they were Wt. enough without throwing them in the grate." Sized It Up. "Mr. Butcher," confided the sweet young thing, "I am just newly mar- ried and have bad no experience in marketing. What kind of meat do you suppose my husband would, prefer?" "Veal," said the butcher, reaching for his saw. Progress. "HOw did your investment turn out?" "You know they let me in on the ground floor." "And 1 suppose you went right up." "Well, I am now living in an attic." FARM FOR SALE. The undersigned offers for sale his farm north half lots 80 and 31, ooncee- sion 6, East Wawanoeh, oontainio; seg acres. On the premieee bre a good barn with atone stabling, good frame house, good supply of water; 132 miles from sobool house; 2X miles from post office. For full partioulara apply on the premises or address . . 'WM. DENS'9P etfleld, Oat, ....m.raiilkaanls agleam*. AIL Aar .;04+,pxz, AT THE END OF THE DAY, Flow is it with you pt the end of the day? Is pride is your heart, and 11 peace lo your bteaa pact you cit ip thet?darkeeRIand hapettly say That ip all of your cote you. leave. tried heet� That it mute have come to you, little for or greatthe, Na wronged one may think of you, trea• luring hate? Qan you turn at the end of the day and be glad That no one is poorer for aught yoo. have done, That no. ono has reason to purse or be pad Because of a trtvmph that you tray have won? Orta yonpartyour go to heyourart bed with the peace That is his who has noted s praieworthy in? ban yousilence gazeis atdeep the stars when the And say, itpd was consenting to , That noheaorne to -night will be robbed of sweet sleep Beoawanaes you dear? have won a snecees which Have you crushed no fair hope, nor spread grief on the way? How is it with yon at the and of the day? MAN'S BATTLE IN THE WORLD. Man's greatest glory is in rising above the enmity that is a rule of nature. Though millions of years he has lifted himself out of the wild inti tenderness, and sympathy, and helpfulness. Sin is atavism. Slaying, thieving, treaohery, gluttony, are brutalities that man is leaving behind, Through all the rest of nature runs the soarlet thread; only the animals man has tamed live in peace and security, One night last summer an invalid in a mountain home was disturbed by a A PQSITI E t1U FOR INDIOEST Ifyou have indigestion, yoiir fermepta, in the etomiteh and bowels dot -s Mote: it tieosy*, and the tray matter which should go to make blood deoaye with 9, end this leads: an impoverished condition of the b to nervousness, billiousw'ss, Dolts: tats. slot headache,bid broth w diegusre year Weed., and other agreeable sod unpleasant ocnditlous. And all this trouble is °bused by food that doesn't digest, but farms and o'titztes rots in the atomaoh. A„rl tortnel,tali'n is paused by t stomach put bony strong -enough et energetic enouuh to thoretngbly mix t fond ;41i11 the digestive juicer.. M I 0 g A is rrsponstote for 't= no; thonnaude of cures, In fact, 9 is su a positive Dore for indigestion told a stomach troubles that it is guarantee by J Walton hioKibbon to cure op. money back, The price of a large hos;. of 1111 o na tablets; is 50 cents, and theft are sure to promptly relieve the worst case' of indigestion or gastritis, Try them groaning in the da.kness outside like human being in agony. A great jack. rabbit, with right hip torn Almost from its sooki-t, lay groaning in the r"ii:lotion of the taight•lamp from the iuvalid'e window, where he had fi-sI for preteo• tion from some savage thing in the woods. The iuvalid inside, with physi' Dian and nurse and devoted family, and, the dying rabbit outside. typified the long road man has traveled since he, too was hunted and was bunted and wounded, dragged himself eft to sot ont his life alone and unwept.-Ermar_ J. Ridgway in The Delineator fc March. wte•••••••••s!••0•••••i0•® • •• atIlliO batinfl e8i1•••r44104t f4PetanaB• • OLU]3iING • RATES a • - • .• • • • The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the I.att- • • • • ••• • • • Z • • • • - - - - • • ••• 2 • • • • e • • • • • •. • FOR 1909 10. for any of the following publications : 44 • 5 • • • • • • below •• • • • • • • • • •• • .. 121 z i W i i i' i Times and Daily Globe 4.50 Times and Daily Mail and Empire 4.60 Times and Daily World 3.10 Times and Toronto Daily News,. 2.30 Times and Toronto Daily Star 2,30 Times and Daily Advertiser 2.85 Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3.35 Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60 Times and Weekly Mail and Empire •. 1.60 Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star 1 85 Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) • 1,60 Times: and Weekly Witness 1.85 Times and London Free Press (weekly) 1.80 Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1.60 Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1,70 Times and World Wide . • • . 2 20 Times and Northern Messenger. 1.35 Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 We specially recommend our readers to subscribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine Times and Presbyterian Times and Westminster Times and Presbyterian and Westminster Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) . , , , , Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) Times and Sabbath Reading, New York Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto) Times and Michigan Farmer ..... ,,, Times and Woman's Home Companion Times and Country Gentleman Times and Delineator Ti Timesmes and T• imes andand Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine..... Green's Fruit Grower Good Housekeeping McCall's Magazine American Illustrated Magazine American Boy Magazine What to Eat Business Man's Magazine. Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Ladies' Home Journal Times and Saturday Evening Post Times Times and Hoard's Dairyman Times and McClure's Magazine Times and Munsey's Magazine Times and Vick's Magazine Times and Home Herald Times and Travel Magazine .. Times and Practical Farmer Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Designer Times and Everybody''" Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg...... Times and Canadian Pictorial • and Success 2,25 2.25, 3.25 2.40 2.90 1,95 1 85 2.15 2,25 2.60 2.95 1.95 1.55 2.30 1.70 2.30 1.90 1.90 2.15 2.15 2.75 2,75 2.25 2.40, 2.40 2,50 1.60 2.60 2.25 2.10 1.60 1 75 2.80 1 CO 1,00 • • X • • The above prices include postage on American pnhlicelions to any 'I' address in Canada. T1 the TIMES is to be sent to an Amoriosn tideless, add 50 Dents for postage, and where American publications are to be tont to N American addresses a redaction will be made in price, • We could extend this list. It the paper or magazine you went le not in the list, oall at this office, or drop a card and we will give yon priors on the • paper you want. We club with all the leading newspapers and tinge ziur s. When premiums are given with any of above papers, eubecribers will • secure snoh premiums when ordering through us, same de orderly p direct from publishers. These low rates mean a considerable 'saving to subscribers, and are STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE, Send remittanees 1 y wiled tine •, poet office or express money order, addressing TIMES OFFICE, WIr7(IIiAM, ONTARIO.