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The Wingham Times, 1911-05-18, Page 3• • TRE WWNUJ t TINES MAT 191 c:,ANADA'S NK!'JONAL. + NEWSPAPER -t ON YOUR BREAKFAST TABLE DELIVERED IN WESTERN ONTARIO BY "THE FLYINC POST" A BIGGER PAPER AT AN EARLIER HOUR AT A BARGAIN PRICE CONSULT YOUR LOCAL NEWSDEALER OR WRITE a� TORONTO 4+r r�- 0 . Canadian Live Stock. The census and statistics department issued a bulletin on the condition of live 'stock in Canada as it emerged from the winter nth n mo s. Generally speaking, the reports from every province are good. In Ontario, live stock have come through the winter well, and, as a gen- eral rule, are in excellent condition. Horses are scarce and in great demand for the west, and are bringing high prices. Cases of distemper are report- ed in each division of the province. Milch cows and other cattle are selling well. The enhanced value has induced farmers to take care of their live stock. A woman may have her castles in Spain, though she dutifully sews on but- tons for her husband, and makes pies as "mother made them". AT 1.hT A CURE 2 FOR RHEUMATISM "Fruit-e.tives Cured Me" Says°Mrs, Baxter, "I was a helpless cripple from .Riiea- matisn) for nearly a year. All down the right side, the pain was dreadful and I could not move for the agony. I was treat^d by two physicians without help. I saw r"fruit-a-Lives" advertised in rtTne Telegram" and decided to try them, After I had taken one box, r was ranch better. When I had taken three boxes, I could ase my arnt and the pain was almost gone, After takingfive boxes„ Iwas entirely well- again. he cure of my case by "Fruit-a•tives" was indeed splendid because all the doctors failed to even relieve sate. "Fruit-a-tives" cured me. M>j5. 141Zzi4 l3AKT1Slt. A gall);* Yf,Ad l$, To tonTo, Dec: IS,'og. ,t--, k.. :hundreds of other cues, "itrnit• 11• rives" has given exactly same 1sans- • ,factory results because Fruit-a-tivcs s,• 1sAbe greatest blood purifying tnedicine in the world. "Fruit-tt-tives"the fatuous tru'k cdkine regulatesla e kidneys, sr Iiver, 5 .,,Bowels and skin, and prevents the tiwat. • • mutation of uz is acid, which is thepritue cause of Rheumatism. t- "Prnit-a-tives" will positively mire every case of Rheumatism, when taken according to directions. son. a bot, 4 for $1;5o, or triftl site; 25C7 At all de lerS or front Fruit -a -tines' I,inaited, Ottawa. DESTRUCTION OF DAIRY COWS. " ;;;;Ji/ii • Ale r• ; Mr '• .Fir : r Hoard's Dairyman says that not one cow out .of a thousand of those sent into the districts from hie i1 which milk is supplied to American cities for con- sumption ever raises a calf. The calves •go as vealers; the cows are retained for one milking season only, and then go to the shambles. The threatened consequence of this system of dairying, is, Hoard's says, the destruction of the cow industry of the country. How great the scarcity of dairy cows in the United States is will be understood when it is stated that a man recently went all the way from eastern New York to Wisconsin to buy cows for the milk trade, and even at that distance he found difficulty in ob- taining animals for his purpose. It is just a question if one of the most profi- table lines open to live stock men at the present time would not be found in the raising of milkers for sale. A heifer can be brought ht in at two ears; �years; her milk in her first period will more than,pay for feed and attendance, and on dropping her second Calf she can be sold at a price that ought to realize a good profit. OR. A. W. CHASE'S CATARRH POWDER is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. )feats the ulcers, clears the air passages. stops droppings in the throat an4 permanent y cures Catarrh ana Hay Fever. 25c. btoacr free. Accept no substitutes. All dealers or Edmayson, Oates & Co;, Toronto. How It Is Done. Few men have better reasons for ap- preciating an increase in the country's population than the census enumerat- ors. Formerly such persons were paid by the day; and a mighty slow and ex- pensive process the taking of the census the as. It, not for an instant sup- posed sp posed that any of the good men appoint. ed by the Government to go about ask- ing questions ever went fishing or sat around under shade trees when they should have been at work.. On the con- trary, they were probably as faithful as could have been expected; butitwas remarkable, to say the least, how cir.- cUmstainees conspired to delay progress. All that has been ehanged. The ex. pease remains; but the labor of enum- eration is pushed through with surpris- ing vigor. It is done on a piece -work basis now. Por every head. of the pop- ulation the enutnerators receive ii cents. Por land and. for woodland and for every other thing concerning which the Government wants information through them they receive a certain other rate. Naturally, the more such things there are the merrier is it for the tenant. men. Sometime1st, they wilt be around to s you, 1f you mean them well don't ke then) waiting. THE RACES COMMINGLE. The white man in Mexico does not dislike the Indian nor look upon him as. a social inferior because of his race. Nor does the Indian hate or distrust the white man; It would not be a common thing to find a white man in the republic who would refuse to allow his daughter to marry of an Indian, or at least a half-breed, simply on account of his blood. In the true sense there is no race question in Mexico: certainly no social race question. The relations which exist between the governing white race and the gentle -loving, lazy and politically incompetent Indians are • marked by something approaching af- fections and this regardless of political divisions or disturbances. Nothing more surprises visiting for- eigners in Mexico than the total absence of race prejudice among the people. The shutting out of the Indians and their hybrids from control of the Mexi- can Government is due to their political shallowness and indifference and their eir inability to grasp the meaning of demo- cratic institutions or to assume the in- dividual responsibilities which must go with self-government determined by populor majorities. The undisguised theory of the dom- inant statesmanship of Mexico is that to carry out the letter of the constitu- tion by enforcing the right of unre- stricted manhood suffrage, and thus turn over the control of the republic to the ignorant, slothful and unprogressive masses, who constitute the undoubted majority, would be to paralyzematerial progress, drive foreign capital out of the country and throw the nation back again into its old, restless, revolution- ary habits, with national bankruptcy, internecine strife and general lawless- ness as the inevitable result, -North American Review, To mend an umbrella take a small pike of black sticking -plaster and soak it in water until quite soft Place this carefully under the hole inside and let dry. This will be found to be better thandarning, as it closes the hole neat- ly without stitches. To build a magnificent church in the section of the city largely inhabited by the working classes is the ambition of the Rev. Sydney deffords, hector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Peoria. III., he expects to d6 it with the income de- rived from his discovery of a cure for drunkenness, , Children cry FOR FLR CHER S 'CAST ORIA. The deposite which forms in the hot - tom of the tea kettle can readily be re- moved by bailing vinegar :in the kettle. A Wealthy Londoner, Gustave Merlin has left a Iarge fortune for the benefit of the poor at Montreal. The May Rod and Gun, • "In the land of the Moose Bird," the story of a trip eleven hundred miles by canoe and portage from the north shore of -Lakeerior u to S p Hudson Bay, via the Albany river, forms the attrac- tive feature of the May issue of Rod and Gun in Canada, published by W. J. Taylor, Limited, Woodstock, On- tario. The narrator is 1Ir. W. J. Ma - Ione one of the many visitors from the States who finds in the wilds of Canada advantages, from the holiday point of view, impossible to obtain elsewhere. Mr. Malone's writing is full of life and vigor and his narration is brightened by accounts of incidents by no means usual even in exploration trips taken so far afield. The route taken was one few white men, apart from Hud- son's Bay employees, have followed and the story is the more interesting on that account. With such a good opening the reader is led on to the other articles and stories and in particu- lar should attention be directed .to the papers on Big Game Problems and the Destructiveness of Wolves. Accounts of western hunts are also good and should interest hunters in eastern and central Canada. NATURE WILL CURE YOU Of Kidney Disease, Aided by Father Morriscy's No. 7. Kidney trouble is one of the most dis tressing ailments of mankind, and lead: to backache and rheumatism. This it because of the importance of the work done by the kidneys, -•-work which must proceed normally to insure good health. A very large proportion of civilized people have some form of kidney trouble, sottlCtimes without knowing that their malady is of that nature. Many obscure pains can often be traced to diseased kidneys. These organs are the filters of the body. Their function is to strain out of the blood and eliminate through the bladder the worn out tissue and other impurities gathered by the blood in its course. When the kidneys become congested and sluggish, these impurities, including the irritating and poisonous uric acid, are tot entirely removed from the blood. The result is that the uric acid is deposit. ed in the joints and tissues, causing the. ago ni s of rheumatism and frequently affecting the liver and other organs, rather ltforriscy, the fartious priest - physician o riest- physic ane Bartibog te, N.13., after much research compounded a remedy which :corked hand in hand with Nature. His doctrine, justified by thousands of cures, was that the need is not a patchwork relief, but a treatment that will enable the forces of Nature, working through the kidneys, to accomplish their intend- ed work. His fatuous prescription, No, 7, assists the kidneys to work vigorously and elim- inate tl)c harmful uric grid from the whole system. In the form of tablets, No, 7 is easy to take, and will effect cures where other remedies have failed. Do not trifle with kidney disease, but take No, 7 'Tablets, the treatment that has proved so successful with other sufferers. 60e. a bort, at your druggist's or front Father Morriscy Medicinelard„ Montreal, Que. 13S �1. . SOLUTE Y LU „,„,„ .Genuine c:arter's. "Waiver P s i0lMust'Bear Signature of See Fae.Si tate Wrapper Below. �Cesr ,)tush) ei*d as easy' to take Aa sugar t FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS, FoR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. • FOR CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION 1� �iEj VXNE MU.Y,UN=3y�Nhru.c, ili'Iratits 1 enrety'pegetablo.,4'a r •^•+wG PURE SiiCK HEADACHE. CART • 8 IVER 1i LLS MUKRATS Wanted in.'afiy quantity at the fol• t lowing prices: S- rite ?' Niriters Smalls Kitts 42c` • 3So 25c I GAO Also I ,pay highest prices for all other raw furs. Consignments solicited, Write for my latest price list. J. YAFFE, 12 Colborne St, Toronto, Ont. SYNOPSIS ON, .• CANADIAN NOBT$. vvLST ',AND ItEGtiLATPIONS. ANT person *fie is the sole head of a family or any nisle,ovor 18 ears old may home- stead a quarter section of available Dominion )and in Manttoba;,r4$skatehewah or Alberta. The applicant must appear ih person at the i)oniinton Lands • 'genes, or Sub -Agency for the district. Rntry,bq` proxy may be made at a, ;�tl;tCotic, by father nether,Soy sogencyn;o.. ittigieerlitoratn, brotr.diherosor sister o!4 intending homeitfeader. Duties.-ttix ihotithee residence upon and cultivation of the land in each of three years. A h asesteader may live within • nine miles of his 9homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres solely owned and ocoupked by hie or by hie father, 'soother, son, daughter, brother or sister. cerh In tdln dlstrlets a homtstSader in good Standingmay prte;enipt tk eloarter•seetion alongside his hon�ead. P rice 4800 tar a er o . Datiett: ust re upon the homestead or �re,ehi ti n ai months ineach of six ek& r yyt•thr tg1oatead entry(including the,titeuirrttocern horeiead patent) end ettltiva a my art s extra. A heirii steader . has exhaust,'tl his /UMW etriad right and a at obtain a prc•einptien me ontprforapn. '.edhomeattadincertain . +distridth+ price�.'i'i ,araera. I)uMeEr.-•Must .111 PAY W.HEN tLIRE.D Qrs. IC. & K. TAKE AI.L RISKS • Cured by the Naw Method Treatment '' NO NAMES OR PHOTOS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT NERVOUS DEBI ,ITY Thousands of young and middle-aged men are annually swept to a premature gr.' , through Early indiscretions, grease* and Blood Di*ee*s*, If you have apy of tt:e rot-{ lowing symptoms consult us before it is too late. Are you nervous and weak, dt srcn { dent and gloomy, specks before the eyes, with dark circles :under them, weak 1,. , • kidne $irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and lo:a,es,.eeciitnent la t,r: q , pimples on the faze, eyes sunken, Bellow cheeks careworn expression, poor tool. nr lifeless, distrustful, leek energy and strength, tired PlOriliagEf, restless nights; ehan'eat40 moods, weak manhood, premature decay, bane pains, hair loose, apre throat, YOU WILL RE A WRECK enee the brain w �becommes active, he bloodrpurified,1sti make all phonies blotches a d ul, ei disappear, the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness, bashfulness and dcs- Aearned andeneydollarsvanish,,We the will eye becomes bright, the Lace full and•clear, energy returns to tits pody and the moral, physical and sexual systems are invigorated: alt drains cease -no more vital waste front the system. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your bard cure you or no pay, EVERYTHING PRIVATE AND CONFiDT1AL READER, No matter who bas treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Cbarlta, Book* Free -"The Golden Monitor" (Illustrated) on Secret Diseases of Men. QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT SENT ON REQUEST DRS. KENNEDY& KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. Si NOT C Ilii letters from Caaadamtzati)eaddressed ti;. a, E to our Canadian Correspondence Depart emeemsammo went in Windsor, Out, If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat pe patients in our Windsor offices which are far correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters `as follows DRS, KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor,. 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These prices are strictly cash i advance. a n Send subscriptions by post office or express order to resideidix months in sash of three :refire. culti- �+ vate fifty sores and eructa hone* worth 3!300.00. •A r•,; : W. CORY, e• N, $ ,i'Jitt iSlfiOlie f b}ioKiiooeeif eotdr Vortiseanent rtI11 not no. paid toe. + ."."1,3' it4' 3t ;4. d• !4' :!"444! k. he Tiines 0ffice Stone WINGHAM Block ONTARIO