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The Wingham Times, 1910-04-21, Page 3. ,. TUN, WIN MAMI TIMES, APRIL 21, 1910 4• • pp Y tr""11...Y, • FOR SALE Says the glitter ; "'Right out to the prairie for me -yes siree •every year too. Ever see a prairie of ripe wheat? Yellow grain tour feat high. scratching for miles -smiling farmers harvesting from dawn till sundown. What's what pleases me. for youknow what that weans to. • CREAM QF TUE WEST' FLOUR and what' Cream of the West' ,means to baking, You'll never know the real truthli bout the hest flour on earth ' Model Mill' product," Y try it. Get one bag. A Thu Campbell Milling Company, Limited, Toronto. No, u. .. '' 51..1 ) , :4 ;lal BY KERR BIRD. �VINGEAM, CARE OF THE BROOD MARE. lie sure that the floor is level, so she will not get cast. Wheat, bran and oate make strong bones in the colt. Be sure to see that the brood mare receives plenty of exeroise. Avoid constipation by a liberal feed- ing of wheat bran with some oil -meal. Let her spend•the period of sunshine in the open with nights in a we11•bedded Imes stall. When the Dolt is dropped it ,should receive nourishment • from the dam with- in the first half hour. Start the milk with thumb and finger if the colt is not strong, or if the udder le et all bard. .An attendant should be on hand at the birth, for a little timely help has saved many a valuable oolt. Take the chill off the water for the mare and feed her oarefullyand keep her quiet for a number of days. The Old•Fashioned Woman, [From the Atchison Globe.) '"What caused yoursudden blowing in?" asked a veteran in Shade Land of a we.. man who arrived yesterday. The wo- roan gave a sigh that bleiv aoroee atofnb- atone as she replied: "I am an old•fash• ioned wornan, and did my work in kit- chen with a six -hole range, a big sink, three long tables, two pantries, and a dishpan large enough,to wash a turkey in. Two days ago T went to visit my daughter in a big city, and found her cooking for her family in a ;ohaffing dish, doing her dishes •in a washbowl, and keeping them stored in the lower part of the washstand. When I save her get the broad out of a big bowl on the piano called a jardiniere, and reaoh out for the butter out of the'window, I felt a cold chill come over me, and when she made soup by opening'a tin can and pouring out a mess to which she added water from the wash pitcher, I knew no more." Then the old.fashfoned woman gave each a snipf of disgust it blew all the shades over into the next county. It's easy to get what you don't want in this world -coughs, colds, sore throat, asthma, for instance. It's easier still to get the remedy you don't want unless you remem- ber to say" Shiloh's Cure" -then you're safe, then you have the genuine. For 40 years Shiloh's Cure bas been the most suc- cessful throat, bronchial and lung remedy in the 111 market. Scores of imitations have arisen, are arising, will arise - trading on our reputation. Shiloh's Cure outvalues its imitators -as the genuine always does the sham -but the delay, YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO TAKE A SUB. STITUTE FOR SHILOH'S CURE 101 J the risk, the harm of a substitute may b'e obviated now and always, if you'll just remember the name, and see that you get-- -.- 25c. A ' FAMILY FRIEND FOR FORTY YEARS The RightKind of Printing The kind that is neat, attractive and up-to-date, costs you no more money here than the inferior article does elsewhere." Quality Counts in printing as in other things, and the TIMES is in a position to turn out first- class work at very reasonable prices, Try this office with your next order. The Times WINGHAM ONTARIO i THE ADVENTURERS, Over the towns in sunlight clear Forth we went in the spring of the year: Plunder of April's gold we Bought, Little of April's anger thought.. Caught in a copse without defense Low we crouched to the rain•egnall dense; Sure, it misery man can vex, There it beat on our blended necks. Yet again when we wander on Suddenly all that gloom is gone Under and over, through the wood Life is astir, and life is good. Violets purple, violets white, Delicate wiedflowers dancing light, Primrose, meroury, muscatel, Shimmer in diamonds round the dell. Squirrel is climbing switt and lithe, ChM chaff whetting his airy scythe, Woodpecker whirrs his rattling rap, Rlugdove files with a sudden clap, Rook is summoning rook to build, Dunnook his beak with .moss has filled, Robin is bowing in coat -brown, Tomtit chattering upside down. Well is it seen that every one Laughs at the rain and loves the sun; We too laughed with the windwook crew, Laughed till the sky once more was blue, Homeward over the downs we went Soaked to the beat with sweet oontent; April's anger is swift to fall, • April's wonder is worth it all, -Henry Newbolt, In The Spectator, London. HOW A WiSE WOMAN KEEPS MAIDS. She doesn't nag. System is her strong point. She has regular" duties and sticks to them. She knows her own mind and does not distract with changing orders. She never loses her temper or permits it' to be lost by her subordinates, She expecte to be obeyed in her own home, but does not give impossible com- mands. She keeps the children within bounds and does not permit thorn to impose up- on the workers in the household. She makes her maids comfortable,,;e their bedrooms, bathrooms and kitchen are as attractive as she can make them. She provides if possible, a special sitting room, with a writing desk, work table, easy chair and a .shelf of interesting', books. She does not refuse permission to have callers outside of working hours and is willing to give extra days off when occasion warrants. She takes a friendly interest in the affairs of her maids but never degenerates into a regulator or pryer into these affairs. In return she expects good work faithfully done, and a willingness on the part of her maid to help in an emergenoy. Above all ebe knows the valve of judicious praise and kindly eutionragement. frost. Plants which are kept as ae possible during spelt' of fr weather without being allowed to fer from this cense will withstand cessfully far more frost than 'the s kind of plants whose tissues are gor with liquid, and science has also tau us that the greatest mischief is eau by rapid thawing. To grasp the above facts it may as well before proceeding further Just consider briefly what really h pens when a plant gets frozen. I now generally known that a plant, the human body, is made up oe t cells, each of which, of course, bas own walls, Under ordinary conditi and when a plant has abundance moisture at its disposal these cells turgid with liquid. Now, when lig becomes frozen it is one of the la of nature that expansion takes pia and in the case of that in the pl cells no exception to this law is Ina This expansion, then, results in a r tore of the plant cell walls, which der ordinary conditions of thaws causes the plant to Collapse. It has been proved that when a p] is thawed very slowly the plant ce are able to absorb the moisture whi has been forced by expansion throu the cell walls, and the rupture is to great extent made good. Assuming that the plants have n been watered more often than is abs lutely necessary and that one morni we visit the greenhouse or frames find that frost has reached them, know that if they are to be sav thawingmust be done very slowl First of all, we must take care th the heating apparatus, if any is use does not get into working order eget and if there is any likelihood of burst of sunshine shade the struetu with thick mats or anything else th can be quickly secured. Then procu an abundant supply of ice cold wat and syringe or otherwise drench th plants with this until frost is gra .ually removed from the tissues. Tb will probably mean very cold ban and chattering teeth, but it is eith this or Iosing the plants. For sever days subsequently the plants shoul be kept as cool as possible withou allowing frost to reach them again. WHEN PLAtNTg ARE FRO Z Ei1,. rtrdeh ur le with, rose made ante. na Pee con. nder ully bat dry ()sty suf- sue- ane ged gbt sed be to ap- t is like my its ons oe are uid ws ce,• ant de. up- un - ng ant IIs eh gh a of o. ng to the ed y at d, n, a re at re er e d- is ds er al d t Hints On Restoring Window G Fiowere. to. Health,. Duffing the winter the ornate gardening baa wuob to contend end not the least of the evils is f especially where an endeavor is to, steep more or less tender' pi through the cold, dull months 1 i ()oily heated greenhouse or i't'am Fortunately science has come to aid and taught us a few things cerning the effects of frost on to plants, and with these principles f grasped we are In a position to com Caught Cold By Working In Water. A Distressing, Tickling Sousa - don In The Throat. Mr. Albert MacPhee, Chignecto Mines, N.S,, writes: -"In Oct., 1908, I caught cold 'by working in water, and had a very bad Cough and that distressing, tickling sensation in my threat so I could not sleep at night, and my lungs were so,very sore I had to give up work. Our doctor gave me medicine but it did me no good so I got a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and by the time I had used two bottles I was entirely cured. X are always recommending it to my friends." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup eon- bines the potent healing virtues of the Norway pine tree with other absorbent, expectorant and soothing medicines of recognized worth, and is absolutely harm - We, prompt and safe kr the cure of Coughs, Colds, Bronehitis, Croup, Sore Throat , Pain or Tightness in the 'Chest, •nd all Throat and Lung Troubles. Beware of imitations of Dr. Wood's lttorway Puke Syrup. A.sk for it and (insist on getting what you ask for. it I1 it put no in 4 yellow Wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark, said the price 25 cents. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn o, Limited, Toronto, Ont. PATENTS NEW HAY PRESS. Makes Two Safes at Time and Aver- ages Six Hundred Bales a Day. Theodule Guidry, a resident of Church Point, La., who for many years has been interested in farming and improving the devices used by farm- ers, has received a patent on a new double baler hay press. This press is unique in its construction, having done away with the large springs ordinarily in use on such balers and decreased the draft to a minimum. Experiments with models have demonstrated a ea- pacity of fifty or sixty bales an hour. It is constructed with a baling cham- ber on both ends of the press and com- presses the hay by a plunger working on a crank shaft past the feed box on each end. The crank shaft is connect- ed to a beam to which one horse is hitched for power, and at each round of the horse a stroke is made on two difi'erent bales, one on each end. It is possible with this model to get a bale of any desired weight, the same being controlled by two springs attached to a movable side of the baler which reg 'Antes the compression of bales. Mr. Guidry says be thinks the baler will beat anything on the market for speed and simplicity, and be is now negotiating with manufacturing com- panies for its Construction and sale. Orchards Worth $1,000 Per Acre. ' A feature at a recent fruit show was an exhibit of Nova Scotia apples and. a printed statement showing the prof- its of fruit growing in that province, especially in the Cornwallis and An- napolis provinces. The average esti- mate of cultivating, fertliiiing, spray- ing and pruning per acre was X25, and the cost of picking and packing the fruit is estimated at 50 cents per bar- rel. The yield reported from eight to ten orchards shows an average for the past five years of from 100 to 165 bar- rels of shipping apples per acre, sold at an average price varying from $1.90 to $2.50 per barrel during the five years. The gross returns per acre range from $100 to $304 and the net returns from $117 to $210. The aver- age net returns for all the orchards for the five years were $174 per acre, a sum stimelont to pay 15.75 per cent on $1,000. Accordingly a valuation of 81,000 per acre for these orchards seems not excessive. Quick Improvement of Sweet Dern. As a result of several years' setae, tion. Nelson S. Stone of Massachusetts reported last season sweet corn which matured nearly a week earlier than other early kinds which he had tried,, and the ears were almost double the size of other early varieties, The fru- Prevenient was made by eboosing the earliest ears and then using those grains that grew on the middle of the cob and tiion still further selecting the largest and beat shaped grains. THE NEW DiSPENSATIQN. OU' You andie ii1vo to snchato tender 1 A ti You eannettteatt with with -club And still its blessings share, Once patient Women had to sterid For alt eutb kind or sport, BuAndt nowlate theyhim grintoab a +Erfnnurt•.an Ulte that Serenely as the final act Of some old fashioned play, Without a, ripple or a jar, it glides along the way ,Until for hats and lovely gowns The man deei.ines to cough, And, then In few wen chosen words lie learns where be gets off. Before had fawned the suffragette Upon: his startled {;aze Man didn't know he hada snap in those old fashioned days. Tie crooked his finger; than was all; Tie had to do for years, And if she ventured to get gay Perhaps he boxed her/ ears. But now a different morn has dawned. The wornan's day is here, And she must have her little say. And, oh, she makes It eleari Once, as perhaps you are aware, She couldn't speak in church, But now site lets her master know Who's ruler of the perch. No Offense. "You can always tell a pretty girl.'. "Of course you can," "That is what I said. You canal- ways tell her that she is pretty.'+• Antique. "She comes from a very old family." "She does?" ,"Yes.,, "Well, she shows it" Responsive. "Suppose you call a girl a kitten?" "Well, she acts like it." "And a cat?" "Same effect" Too Aristocratic. The muscle that we win by golf, • A process long and slow, Sl'e hate to use, you may observe, '1'o shovel at the snow, SPRING. . [S. E. Kiser,i The frogs are piping in the pond, Because it is their nature to; Where dead leaves lie the tender frond Courageously is pushing through; Where April zephyrs softly sob The violet is on the job. The daffodil is lending charm To scenes that formerly were bleak; The colts are romping on the farm, The alleys have begun to reek, And, though I've sought to shoot theta hence, Two oats are yowling on the fence. A wondrous change is being wrought, Grim landlords heartlessly evict, While out upon the corner lot An umpire's busy getting /joked; Sweet little maidens jump the rope, And everywhere's the smell of soap. The boats are steaming down the lakes, The hobo now the highway hits; Bewildered little garter snakes Scare good olo ladies into fits, And amateurs are planting seeds Where they will soon be wads of weeds. A Sermon On The Hog. Illy son. consider the hog. Re toils not, neither does he spin' but he is worth closeon to 10 cents a pound on the hoof, and he is getting so exclusive that Only the very best circles are able to entertain him. He waxes fat at his leisure, knows no ]abbr and travels to market in a special car. Just at first thought the hog seems to be consider- able of a personage, but still he is only a hog and by really isn't worthy of emula- tion. There are a good many persons who adopt his ways however, and fatten on what other persons have gathered to. gether. Their ambition rano more to the gross weight than to quality, and like the hog they aro despised. A hog isn't worth a thing until he is brought to market. He serves no useful purpose while be lives, and it is only as he gath. ers fat that he adds value. He is the symbol of greed and bad manners, has a bad disposition and is generally out -oast -but he is selling at nearly 10 Dente a pound and that is why he is sometimes emulated, MILBURN',S LAXA`=LIVER PILLS Stimulate the Sluggish Liver, Clean the coated tongue, sweeten the breath, clear away all waste and poison- ons material from the system in Nature's easy manner, and prevent as well as cure Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Heartburn, Catarrh of the Stomach, Sour Stomach, Water Brash, and all troubles arising from a disordered state of the Stom as ch Liver or B owels, 4-4' Mts. J. C. Westberg, 4 ♦ Swan River, lan., writes: Suffered ♦ -"I suffered for years, for Years.+ more than tongue can ee tell, front liver trouble. +' I tried several kinds of medicine, but could get no relief until/ got Milburn's taxa -Liver Pills, I cannot praise them too highly for what they have done for me." Pried 25 cents a vial, or 5 for $1.00, et all dealers or mailed direct on receipt Of price by The T. Milburn; Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Naturally the Kind, Little Johnny ,couldn't, got through We head some great tact that lt. was necessary ter 'him to know in order to round out his education finely and cam, pletely and snake him a credit to the public school system. Ws teacher was. trying her best to explain, and finally he said that be understood, "WelL Johnny, it wee like pulling , rit1„ teeth, warn t said the teacher with a sigh of relief, "Wisdom teeth," cemmoAted Willie Brown, Too. Deep For Her,. A small boy who was picking his way through the family newspaper came on a puzzler and put the' same up to his mother,. "Ma. what is the difference between the °seal year and one of these corn mon. ordinary years?" "1 used to know. but. really t have forgotten. Von can't expet•t rue to heel, up on these lsrieetlghtiug affairs 1'onr pa 1110 rail yen what a tiseal year is when Ile gets Motile." Couldn't Please Her. "have ,•,1u i.lrrfeetly fresh vegeta- "S't's, mien 111 repel-, here vegetables elle,. pier live chic res ago dries Sun , t','r +:rig' n1iytlthl„ fr'esher• 'Yes. ora ntn, 1have same. - yeti •a,• 1 inn a hoarding tHe I 1 tovvies itlee thine 1t little .•'•11 1. tune. so I thintc I dune Cgg 7r dent,$ ho elndetatlel !!!!!!!!114;7:21i: f lie systeemt�,,bleasi se elizztnese, Nausea, Vroralueaa, Dfatrcaa lifter eating, kala in the S1'1 c, l�'}siie tlsulr Alerts rewarkable succors ase woo shown iR curls; SIC , 8 r s ..eadaehe, yet Carte,ittle Liver PSi1s, are equally valuable in Constipation, cutingandpre• venting this annoying cow laiut.whiletheysise correctuiicltadordcraoftthehestolua hv,etimu•atothe Cur =g =to bowels, liven if theyoaiy EAD llehothcywould bealm t qa prlceirsetothose who eager from chis aisticssrngcomplaint; buttons, mately their goodmcssdeesnotondltere,andthose who onoo try then will and these litho p111s vale• able in so many wa>>s that they till mot bo wit- Bog to do withoutthem, But after alt rack heacl �. H 1e the bane of ea many lives that hero is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not, Carter's Little Liver Pills ere very email and very easy to take, ()neer two pips make a dose. They are strietl vegetable and do not gripeor purge, but by their gentle action please au who use them. Qp11TL$ IlZDIC11iZ OD., MIT 4OD& kali N Small la hall tie. In the English Obaroh Times, :Abe clerical *obituary for 1909 contains 461 names. The ages of 870 of the deceased clergymen are mentioned, and these sh ow the attainment of an average age of 713 years. •ISSSS•••••••••••10•••N•s1• g'•••••••••••O••Q••••ef•O••• •.t CLUBBING •• RATES • • i FOR 1909 - 10. • 1. • •`` • • The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates for any of the following publications Times and Daily Globe..... . Times and Daily Mail and Empire 004.0.. 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