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The Wingham Times, 1911-02-23, Page 3• ••• . I.„I.r..4.•r.. n..2,.,,, M.: ./.,. W1,Nt*RAM 'i"I.VIi':S, Fi'aliRT.34111' 2] 1011 Just an outine "CREAM of the WEST" FLOUR is --hard 1 strong -sweet as a nut if/ and -white as snow and :made:at a model ba mill by LDE MILLER The Campbell Milling Co. Ltd. TORONTO Ln4 FOR SALE BY KEF&R & BIRD, WINGHAM. ;,„;;Ai i DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THIS? D HAD HEART' TROUBLE MERITS WERE ALL UNSTRUNG. Wherever there is any weakness of the heart or nerves, flagging energy or phy- sicat breakdown, the use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will soon produce a healthy, strong system. Miss Bessie Kinsley, Arkona, Ont., writes: --•"It is with the greatest of leasu:o I write you stating the benefit I have received by using your Milburn's Iieart and Nerve Pills. This spring I was all run down and could hardly do any work. I went to a doctor and he told me I had heart trouble and that my nerves were all unstrung. I took his medicine, as he ordered me to do, but it did one no. good. I was working in a printing office at the time, and my doctor said it was the type setting cause1 the trouble, but I thought not. My father advised me to buy a box of • your pills ns he had derived so much benefit from thorn, Before I had finished 'one box 1 notice] a great difference, and could work from morning to night with out any smothering feeling or hot flushes. T can recommend them highly to all nervous andrun down people. ' Price 50 cents per box, or 3 for $1.25, at all r ealere, or mailed direct on receipt of pri.ro ley The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, Coon hunting is a favorite pastime for country il;ds, and usually ends inn plea- sant way. Up at Stayner, in Grey county, two young nimrods discovered that eooes were about $40 each, plus much trouble. The hunters sallied forth with guts and dogs and were for- tunate tc looatidg a big fat coon But Mr. Oion was ire the tap of n big elm, and not oaring for the look of things below. had no intention of leaving hie safe retreat. But an axe out his refuge down; the coon took a flying leap for another, this was out, and so on until a half a dozen trees were laid low The farmer appeared, angrey that many dollars' worth of lumber had been ont to get a 75 cent coon. fie summoned them to police court, where the bills amount- ed to over $40. Pretty dear coon! ABSOLUTE • Eiii RITYI s Genuine Carter's Little Liver Fills, Must Bear Signatures of See 178C-SItnhe %Weeper aeon Y1etaautu attd,as any *Si*kb.t N safari �AIiTEl'Yi e litroof Dime* FOR $IUOU'SKEFtt F'Oh'rt0'Rtlb LIVtI . N"f10 a sy�is;t'sa Ra FOR $ALL'OW$KiNI. R''1'NE COMPLEXION 'E: 1!t1: T 1t MUS! NAV,[, MliiUlft.' „,,y •i"rltt+i �dit`d'mZ.,I'V'.Sh%sr 1+'ti✓'."..'�Kt.,' MIRE WOK HEADACi•: . Begging -Any person sending ohil• dren begging may be sent to gaol for three months or fined $100. Liquor•Selling-.Any saloonkeeper who gives or sells liquor to a youth under t wenty•one years of age, is liable on conviction to a penalty of $20. Tobacco -Any person found guilty by a justice of the peace of giving or sell- ing toba000 to a boy under eighteen years, must be fitled $10 and the sum may be inoreased to $50. Pool Rooms --The keeper of a lieensed pool or billiard room who allows boys under sixteen years of age to frequent hie premises, may be Japed $10 by any justice of the peace, half the fine to go to the informant. Sohool-Every child between the ages of eight and fourteen years must attend eohool, unless excused for some good reason. Factory - No child under fourteen years can be employed in any factory, Indecent Oondnot,-Any person found guilty by two justices of the peace of committing any indecentaot may bs fined $50 and sent to gaol for six months. Criminal Assault -Any person who criminally assaultsa girl under fourteen years of age is liable to imprisonment for life, Pistols -Any person who sells or gives a pistol or air -gun or sells ammunition therefore, to a boy under sixteen years of age, is Iiable on conviction to a pen. alt; of $20. Neglected Children -Oen be removed from the control of vtotous or drunken parents if.there is no likelihood of im- provement. Hunters and Trappers WILL GET THE Best Market Price, Honest Treatment, Correct Assortment, Quick Returns. by shipping their RawFursand Skins TO RE'VILLON FRERES 1S?AILUMeD 1711 the old reliable Firm of the I+ur Trade. 134 and 136 ttcG1l1 St Montreal, ' Ask for our Pres -=--: Price List, WA 'ASC IMPRESS Ct3AA0$6. ' A Farmer's Regret. "As 1 look bank o%er nay life," bald a prominent farmer of Frentenao 00., Ont., recently to an editor 01 Farm and Dairy, "I see that if 1 had invested $100 or $200 in pure Dred at the beginning, niy herd today wodld be worth at least $2,000 more than it Is, while during the I would have agone,�" eretb t have A e y made •renoh more from the bele of my' enrolee stook and my oowe alae pto.' bably have given more milk." y won1d av Them aro thouaandlf of younit farmers today who are making themibtake that was made by this man. They know it cede theta duet as much to keep IS grade herd belt *mild were they to keep herd Of tiers brer1k yAw, raid there art thattsaudd 01 older s*oinws who aro rookies the game mistake, IiM3K TO THE FARM" XL - Rural Education - The Agricultural College. My C. V. =GORY. .GORY. M01)7110 4, M0, by American Frees Asses ciatton.i N 1802, congress passed a law ap- propriating money for the estab• lis me h a of1 colleges es o l ta icu s f ture and mechanic arts, Today there are sixty-seven such hastitutions in the United States. The establish- ment of the agricultural colleges open- ed up an entirely new Held of educa- tion, The study of science and the ap- plication of that science to the prob- lems of everyday life began to take the place of the study of classics. Edu- cating a man merely to have Mm edu- cated began to go out of style, and the truer education that better tits a may to tackle the problems or life took its place. The growth or the agricultural cot - 'egos was slow at first. and not unto within the last fifteen years have they 'STUDYING YAIUU MACIIINEuY AT AN AGnT- cUTil'UIt.1L CoLnL:GE. really come to alit the place for which they were designed. At first the idea of educating a farmer was laughable to canny people \vbo rejoiced, in a lit- tle learning. Even the farmer him- self did not realize the advantage of a college education to a man who must make a living from the soil. it took a good many years to bring people to re- alize that college education is as val- uable for a farmer as for a doctor or a lawyer. The main difference is that the law eotnpels a man to get a col- lege c- lege diploma before he starts to prac- tice medicine, while be may start farming with nothing but a team and a plow. 1< Even at the present time there are many men both oo the farm and in the cities who doubt the value of college eduearion fur the fanner. Many a farm boy is squarely con- fronted 'with the problem of choosing between four years In college or start- ing to farm at once. tour years is a long time to a young man, Fifteen hundred to $2,000 Is a Large sum of money to itim. To spend both for a college education requires a great deal, of courage and faith in the future, • The amount of money necessary to pay four years' expenses in college will enable the young man .to start- farming tart farming on a rented farm. The four years will, if he is industrious, enable him to earn enough to make a good sized payment on a farm of his own. If he goes to college he will have nothing at the end of the four years but the experience and knowledge he has gained there. Is It worth 1t2 I have put this, question squarely to dozens of men in their last year at an agricultural college. Without ez caption they say- that it is worth the outlay. Not one regretted the time at the money which he had battered for his education. Few of them placed' It on a money basis alone, but even from that standpoint they considered that the chances were in favor of the College man. The boy who 'Starts farming for him- self without any education will run up against a good many snags which the •c•oliege man will mtes. Re will learn by experience many of the things which the college matt foams in school. In doing so he will pay nmeh dearer for his knowledge. 'J'he old arejudiee against•book farming" is east disappearing. People are orating to realize that book farming Is merely the fused experleuce of seecees::;1 farmers everyWhere, e::i:laiued :t:.tl illumined by the light of :eel:uea r: m,b• Ably ki no one rot:pect Is tl:(4 att`.c'r r tags of the college aurum more rkaeiy apparent than in the !'ase of s,'1 fly'• tility. Long after the untrained man has begun to notice- tted wot.der ut the decline of his crop yields the nue who has studied the wciellce of soli fertility will be raising undiminished , • f Gc. tin u i the r S The rt u .roe . a 1 g t soil fertility cannot, be le.u•uud from the neighbors, for they bare not pray. Need t he learned from t cannot it. I C c father or grandfather, for lis their day the fertility of the soil was emha- sidered inexhaustible. The success of the ab; iculturltl &t - teat graduate eattlet he Measured itt m:ohey gluey. 1 inpnitithe spat !tow .peed leaders MOS pANIG iN 3HIFWI;ECK. wore than they need men who Ca. simply make money on their 41111 farms. It is aect;ssury for thee agrt- Cultural college graduate to eucc00d on his own farm, of course. JOIS ever► Move le closely watched by critical neighbors. Even the Shadow 01 a failure startg a chorus of "41 told you a9." Success on his own farm is the first essential to the young man whowould be a leader. Given that for backipg, he can do almost anything he wants to with ills coutluuglty. ifaraners have a vast deal. of respeal for the man who can do things. *sitar prejudice against college farming is lost in all, 'Motion for the results achieved by the college farmer. If be advises or- ganizing a Flub they are willipg to join in and help. If be tells them the school needs reorganizing they are willing to be convinced. They may even consent to bringing two or three schools together and using the money saved to hire better teachers. The in- spiration et one man's success and the energy imparted by him i&,sullicient to starta whole community to thinking. Oncey t yo I get a man n to thinking, there is no need to worry further about him. IIs will take care of himself. If SU energetic young farmer with an agricultural education could be placed in each township throughout the farming sections the results would be an enlightened agriculture that would be the envy of the whole- world. holeworld. A leading educator recently made the statement that three live agricultural college graduates could in ten years increase the value of tint land in any agricultural county $t0 per acre. That sounds incredible, but it is literally true. The community would become so progressive that it would be worth $20 an acre more t0 live there. The charge has been made that ag- ricultural college graduates do not go back to the•farm. The facts rio not Mar out this assertion. While the percentage varies, it is safe to say that fully 50 per cent of the graduates go directly to the farm. The others go into some work closely related to farming, In my acquaintance with young men just finishing college 1 have known of very few who were not anxious to go to farming. A good many of them do not do so because of lack .of capital. They have spent all their money in college, and it Iooks to them like uphill business to start farming without a cent. They are overwhelmed with offers of salaried positions at salaries of from $1,000 to $2,000 a year to start with, TBxperi- ment stations, agricultural college`s, agricultural papers and manufacturers of agricultural products are all looking for agricultural college graduates. 'Many of the men go into some work of this kind until they ca .save money enough to start farming. Of the' college graduates who do take . up farming as a business the greater number rent the home farm or go into partnership with their re- spective fathers. This is the ideal way for a young man to get a start. tinder such favorable circumstances he cannot help but succeed. Often, however, there are enough brothers at home to occupy all the land. The young college farmer must look else- where for a job. Every year the agri- cultural colleges are receiving a larger. number of calls for farm managers. Many of these offers are exceedingly Liberal. They come for the most part from farmers who wish to retire from active work and at the same time do not wish to sell or rent their farms. They are often willing to take the right sort of a young man •fn on a partnership basis or give him a per- \,y ......::::: • a e:ait tion nt ltiHNu T1:ACUI :G 010 Ar 1 h,t. „L ::t•:• eebtage•of be not d•mulitct " lr :,;,t • of tills kind h she next batt owning a feral Altltmmh an ngric•ulteeel rr,'i•••••• oration is of great veleta It nm. t ; be taken from what t ]]sett ••'141 r' Nnceess without such mm etheeitioar m itupossible. Minty farna'r t,•,t• m not fitted for an ednculit•mm of tIm.s 1,.,. either by tempurahmeut ur !]any othots are so sltuated that 1,.'• cem,uut be away from home for f. u< m yerra Still ethers do not have t.tl Money. For thew boys an ngrictlltur.:i college education is an truposslbility to tc:aeb M.41 some:Mug ubont th.•lm husdness scams other forte of &Jaen dolt Is necessary. This is being su;t !atiod by the s't0tdrttt'y schi,utmt. 'r'be work of these sehools will be tieaeribs'd ei the next article, • When Men Lose Their Wit* and Their Manhood as Well. What has most struck me in my Arany experiences of shipwreck kiss been the strangely diverse ways in which tate passengers acquit them.' selves under intense excitement and. Panic, said a lifeboatlnan to the' writer. Women cry, faint awl cling to each other, but are least trouble. Men of- ten act very strangely. I remember, one span throwing,•into the lifeboat a heavy trunk which he wanted to save,; but which we promptly heaved;river. board. Some men become quite panic., stricken. I've seen strong men, prob.,• ably brave enough in other cases,, fighting fiercely for the lifebuoys and, thrusting the women, and children' aside in frantic endeavors to leap' into the boat first; yet strangely enough, one man who thus disgraced himself has since obtained the Royal Humane Society's medal for saving life at sea, thrice volunteering with, a scratch crew in aid of a distressed vessel. I've known others whqbeca e so stupefied with fright as to resist ii11 attempts at rescuing them, begging to be left to die and having to be' forcibly thrown into the lifeboat. Some persons frequently become half demented, and I've known several calces where they have in a frenzy committed suicide by positively jump- ing headlong into the sea and drown-' ing themselves, and one man, to insure his sinking, filled his pockets With coal. Sonia years ago another passenger, hearing the ship had struck, went and drowned himself in the bath- room, anticipating his fate, as it were. I remember another case where a passenger hanged himself in his cabin just as the lifeboat arrived. LO DO1i WEDDING FASHIONS. The Abandonment of Some Old-Tirne Social Customs. The first weddieigs of the autumn season in London make it clear that the brides of the autumn are going to emulate those of the summer and springtime by introducing into their toilettes and those of their brides- maids a note of novelty. At the wedding of Miss •Carissima Blood recently the bridesmaids were clad in radiant Indian coats and robes and wore pink and white tur- bans. The effect was oriental and novel. At another wedding a couple of little boys bore the train of the bride. The children were dressed in sailor suits of white duck and were unaccompanied by any bridesmaids. The average modern bride is proud of proving herself free from the tram- mels of convention. At one time the wearing of black at a wedding, even by a guest, would have been consid- ered unlucky. Nowadays it is a corn - mon occurrence to see bridesmaids wearing black hats and by no means an uncommon onto for the bride her- sa.f to wear black millinery, One recent bride ordered a faint blush pink satin background for her filmy ivory Lace toilet, and another was bold enough to sanction tlfee ad- dition of green embroideries to her wedding robe -hold because green has ever been held in sinister repute. in connection with a wedding gown. • The fashion of veiling the face, at one time universally observed except in the case -of royalty, is being aban- cloned. Missed Them Well. There are always two ways of tell- ing the truth. The man who told the king that he would outlive all his sub- jects understood human .nature far more than the man who was put to death for declaring to the same mon- arch that all his subjects would die before him. The gamekeeper in Fran- cis Pipon's "Odds and Ends" also had the gift of presenting the pleasantest side of a fact. A certain noble lord was a very bad shot. One day, after a particular- ly discouraging exhibition of his bun- gling, he said to the keeper: Now, my man, tell me the truth. Did you ever see any .one who shot as badly as I do?" "Oh, yes, my lord," returned the keeper. "I've seen worse shots than your lordship. Your lordship misses the birds so clean." Too Late. After the guests had waited for half an hour in a Berkshire church for the bride to arrive messengers were dis- patched to the livery stable to try to discover what had happened. The liveryman, made to understand that he had omitted to send a carriage to her house, acknowledged that all the blame rested on him arid apologized in manly fashion, but when they sug- gested that he should proceed to rem- edy the delay he failed to see their potut. What'll be the use o' fetchin' fel now?" lie argued. The service '11 be 'arf over." --London Globe, Accidental Discharge of a Pun. A capital pun may arise by pure accident, us recorded in Bucke's "Book of Table Talk": "A Mr. Alexan+ler Gun wat dis- missed from a post in the customs el Edinburgh for circulating sohie false rumor. The dismissal is said to have been thus noted in the customs book at the time, ilial dischari,'r,l for malting a false report." Not Guilt]]: "Is your ltusbaaad a biienomanine?" naked Mrs. Oldcastle as she was his ing permitted to view the trvasts: ,'. in the library of the new neiehh.n. "Morey sakes, no!" replied Mts. I'ackenlaant, "Ile never bibbles bit. Oh, of course I dont say that h wouldn't take a little at his meals the rest was dein' it, but that's t kilu- 1 them t u ever goes ine far as he things." Sienna. Raw sienna is natural earth free %ietia, and when burned it is knowi is burnt sienna, BLOOD DISEASES GUREB Dia. K. & K. Established 20 Yeas ; `NQ NAMES USED WITH- OUT WRITTEN CONSENT mosso was ey ooat Y ur },2'4sw disa see wLth which I tor d been inmetteedd for twelve years. 1 bad consulted a score of ppb s1► ds ofood mecaclyne,,cians visitedtaken HotaSprkinings and other mineral water resorts, but only got tem. torary relief. • They would help me for a ime, but after dtsoontinuing the medl, clues the symptoms would break out agetn-tanning sores blotches, rheum. • alto pains,• loogeuoss otr the hair swellings of time glands palms01 Cho hands scaling, pmgFOACTAEATMCNT itchiness of the Bkin, dyspeptic stomach, AMR TatATMEtiT etc, had Riven up in _clasps, r when a friend advised me to consult you, as you had cured him of a similar disease 8 years ago,. 1 had no hope, but took his advice. In three weeks, time the sores commenced tubes). op and I became encowaged. I continued the NEW Kermit. TREATMENT for four months and at the end of tbat time every syymmptoru had disappeared. I was cured 7 years ago and no signs of any disease since. Illy boy three years old. Is sound and healthy. 2 net.. talnty can recommend your treatment witfall my heart. You can refer any person to me privately, but you can use this testimonial as you wish, W. II. S. We trent NERVOUS DEBILITY, VARICOSE VEINS, ViTAL WEAKNESS, BLOOD, Sand KINWanomnd eu, SECRET Diseases, URINARY, BLADDER end KIDNEY comptsints et Men BEADREADER Ate you a victim? have you lost hope? Are you intending to marry? Sas ER your blood been diseased? Have ou an weakness? Qur Nr:w Iti7Crltop RE TM N I Y A E 2,f Cure T n.r OU tiYh i tit ba o e�f •o ersl witdo for •e y a e d n of ,' t a t r Cof Charge. Free. No matter who has treated you write for an honest.opinion Fro* of ChaTt:a. Charges reasonable. Books Free-(lilustrated) on diseases of Nen, NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Everything confidential, Question list and cost of Home Treatment FREE. DRS.KENNEDY ' KENNEDY Cor. 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