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The Wingham Times, 1911-09-07, Page 6y W1N GB N SEPTUDER 7, 1911 Father Morriscy's Prescriptions have been curing for 30 years, and are curing to -day, all the common ailments that cone to every family. We have luundreds of grateful letters to prove this. Father ego i'iscy's 1°lo. 7 tones up the Kidneys, re- moves Uric Acid from. the blood, and cures Rine umuatiarn. Ili tablet form, 500. Father 1114lrr isiy's No. 100 is a most effective and reliable elite for Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma and Whooping Cough. A real Lung Touie, Trial Bottle, 25c. Regular—Si*, 5o. Father ir1ol riSt y'S No. 11 Tablets relieve and cure Dys- pepsia and all forams of Indigestion, Each tablet will digest I,,l/, pounds of food„ Per box, 500. Father M©rrisey's No. 2i) positively cures Catarrh. A combined treatment—tablets for the blood, and a healing salve for the affected parts. Tablets and salve together, 500. Father Mor'ist;y'S L'•ilihlleut is a household standby for all sorts of aches and pains. Pleasant to use—q lick: to relieve. Per bottle, p5c. At your dealer's. $l Father r,4®rriscy Modiaino Co., Ltd., - Montreal, Que. win ;;; Rev.Ftitlher Morrltscy 1 KERNELS FROM THE S?P4CTUM MILLI Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges.f Keep thy shop and thy shop willkeep thee. Almost anybody knows how to spend money easily, except the man who has to earn it. 8 Boxes Cured Psoriasis, Mrs. Nettie Massey, Consecon, Ont., writes: "Three doctors described my trouble as psoriasis, and one said I could never be cured. The disease spread all over me, even on my face and head and the itching and burning was hard to bear. I used eight boxes of Dr. Chase's Ointment and am en- tirely cured—not a sign of a sore to be seen. I can hardly praise this Oint- ment enough." Strathroy ratepayers voted $40,000 for a new Collegiate Institute building. Money goes such a long way in these times that it never can get back home again. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER ANC CHILD. Mss. Wnistow's SOOTIm O SYRUP has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHIM$ TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUM ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHC~A. Itis ab- solutely harmless. Be sure and ask. for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Melbourne, the tenth city in point of since in the British Empire, is seeking more improved means of transportation between the center of the city and suburban areas. As a means of bring- ing about the improvement desired the Acting, Premier of the state in which Melbourne is situated, will ask Parlia- rent to approve a definite scheme for the electrification of all suburban rail- way lines. .0 As usually treated, a sprained ankle will disable a man for three or four weeks, but by applying Chamberlain's ' Liniment freely as soon as the injury is received, and observing the directions with each bottle, a cure can be effected In from two to four days. For sale by all dealers. Canada's imports and exports for the month of July totalled $67,161,284, an increase of over five and one-half millions compared with July 1910. For the first four months of the current fiscal year the total trade has been $259,0$1,772, an increase of $16,401,- 512 over the corresponding period last year. The Customs revenue for the four months totals $25,425,808, an in- crease of a little over $3,000,000. A conclusion isn't necessarily a start- ling thing. Still, many persons have been known to jump at it. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA . The value of Uncle Sam's farm pro- perties was twenty billion in 1900, the latest figures available. The artistic temperament may be a distinguishing mark, but it is apt to be a hard thing to live with. Ocean passenger rates have been about cut in half since the days of the Great Western, 1838. Diarrhoea is always more or less pre- valent during September. Be prepared for it. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is prompt and effectual. It can always be depended upon and is pleasant to take. For sale by all dealers. Investigations following the cham- pagne riots of France reveal many gi- gantic frauds in the champagne indus- try. Place a box of lime in the closet in which jams, preserves, etc., are stored away and it will prevent mould from gathering on the fruit. It is a poor rule that works no good either way. Being firm is your own specialty. Obstinacy is what ails your wife. For bowel complaints in children al- ways give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil. It is certain to effect a cure and when reduced with water and sweetened is pleasant to take. No physician can prescribe a better remedy. For sale by all dealers. One way to kill two birds with one stone is to loan money to your friends. Three bushels of lime and four bush- els of sand make mortar for 1,000 brick. LESDo not suffer another day with Itcheng, Bleed- ing, or Yrotrad• ing Piles. No surgical .tion required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure _you. 60c. a box; all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this paper and enclose 20. stamp to pay postage. Forty tho usand harvest laborers were taken into Western -Canada by the C. P.R. and C.N.R. Ii,grvotis Prostration Sleeplessness Palpitation oo the Heart Dizzy Spells Are a1L Curetby the 17se of MILLIMEWS HEAT and tiERVE PILLS HEALTH RESTORED TO THIS FAMILY Wife's experience with Dr. Chase's Nerve Food led to husband's cure. "Since childhood I was afflicted with biliousness and sick headache," writes. Mr. A. K. Van Wyck, Park Hill, Ont., "and as all the doctors' medicines and prescriptions failed to do me any permanent good, I had lost faith in all medicines. It was by ac- c•identIthat I came to use Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, for it had been recom- mended for Mrs. Van Wyck and did ler so much good that she wished me to try it. "I did so, and was surprised at the results. It is now three years since I discontinued the medicine and I have not had an attack of the old trouble. I hope that others may benefit by my experience." The cures effected by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food are lasting because it builds up the system and removes the cause of trouble. 50 cents a box, 6 for $2.50; at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. "I have a world of confidence in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for I have used it with perfect success, writes Mrs. M. I. Basford, Poolesville, Md. For sale by all dealers. \° Mr. Peter Heist ad, Tiiley, Alta., etrites; II take great pleasure in nriting a few l" nes to telly you whet your ir Heart and 'Verve Pills have done for tae. 1 had a ion ,standing ease of nervous prostration, ,SleepEntlez9, palpitation of ilio heart, anti K1i .. y spells. 1 boubht A box of the -t didtris so mach good r pile and they continued their use until I had used Severn} bane and they restored mo to health again. They are a great remedy and 1 reeommead theism to all my friends." lliilburn'e, Heart and 'terve Pills are Mt. per boar or 3 boxes for :$1.25 at ail dealers, or will be mailed direct on reeeiat of p i o by The x. Milbura Co., Limited, Tomato, Ont. • Baby's Terrible Eczema Hands Tied to Prevent Scratching. Five Doctors Filed to Relieve, but Zero -Butt Worked a Cure. Mrs, Chas. Levere, of Prescott, North Channel, Ont., tells how Zam-Buk cur- ed her baby. She says: --"MY baby's head and face was one complete mass of sores. The itching and irritation were fearful, and the little one'e plight was her ears would bat e one off by the disease. "We had to keep her hands tied for days to prevent her rubbing and scratching the sores Doctor after doc- tor treated her in vain, until we had had Ave doctors. They all agreed it was a frightful case of eczema, but none of them did any permanent good. "As a last resource we were advised to try Zam-Buk. The first box did so much good that we felt sure we were at last working in the right direction. We persevered with the treatment un- til we had used thirteen boxes, and at the end of that time I am glad to say Zam-Buk had effected a complete cure." For eczema, eruptions, rashes, tetter, itch, ringworm and similar skin diseas- es, Zam-Buk is without equal. It also cures cuts, burns, scalds, piles,, absces- ses, chronic sores, blood poisoning, etc. All druggists and stores at 50 cents a box, or post free for price from Zam- Buk Co., Toronto. Refuse imitations. One of the simplest and most effect- ive remedies for tired, aching feet is to bathe them in warm water and then massage them with turpentine. This remedy is far better than many pat- ented "cures" for tired feet. Children Cry. FOR FLETCHER'S. CASTORIA A back rest for an invalid, which will be found comfortable for one con- fined to bed, is made of a wide board, well padded, and slipped into a cretonne pillow case. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA CLOTH FOB UNCLE SAM. It Must .Be Pretty Good Stuff to Pae, the Government Teets, The men of the Varied States =oar Tome nearer knowing to a ee taia?!ta' what they are buying in the way of .loth than do any other consumers • in ;he country, says Mary Heaton. Vorae. as Success Magazine. When the gov. ernment gives out a million dollar :loth contract it seems to it that it sets matesiat according to. specifics-* tion. The specific contract$ for vari- 'aut sorts of cloth are elaborate and go nto the technical aide o! the matters-- :he number of threads to be used to the yard, the kind of wool to be used n the manufacture—for the United States soldier has to'be well dressed in :lothes that will stand the strain of weather and of work. Ott Governors is. land, New York city, there is a teat - ng laboratory for cloth. A specification >f the weight, per linear yard of each kind of cloth Is mentioned. Each ball at gobds is weighed, and if it fails ;bort of the proper weight, it is thrown aunt, Next the question of wear and tear is considered. and again the speed- . licatfon is stated that each special kind, if cloth will stand u strain of so many pounds to the inch work way and sot many pounds to the inch filling way. So, after weighing, the next text is to gut a sample and try in a machine the etren th of the cloth. if it won't stand this test the cloth is thrown out. After the cloth has been pronounced perfect for weight and strength the lye tests are made. It must stand two acid tests for perspiration, and the ma- terial must stand boiling for ten min- utes in a certain soap solution, show- ing that it will stand washing with strong alkalis, and finally comes the weather test. the material being ex- posed thirty days on the roof without 2hanging color appreciably. If the Goth has passed its examinations. sue- 2essfuliy each yard of each piece of zloth is inspected, being run over'Ma- ehines for the purpose, while inspec- tors watch for any imperfections in the weave. An eighth of a yard for each imperfection is charged to the manufacturer. So when the cloth is finally sent. to the contractor to be made into net - forms it is' known to be of really good material. Bach spool of thread. each button, each lining, each filling used in the clothes of soldiers has its own special test.. It is officially estimated that only about 3,500 persons in Russia have in- comes of $25,750 or upwards. The av- erage incomes of these richest of the Czar's subjects fs is about $70,000 a year, Why Some of the Interests Are Opposing Reciprocit Two Sufficient. Mr. Austen Chamberlain tells an excellent story against himself. When he left his Alma Mater he traveled on. the continent for some months, and then returned. to Birmingham with, the intention of devoting him- self seriously to politics. He had been at home only a few days when he met his old nurse, who inquired what vocation.. he thought of pursu- ing. "Oh," he said, in reply, ,'I'm going in tor polities l" "For politics," was the exclamation of the old lady. "Oh, Mr. Austen, I should have thought two in the family, your fath- er and Mr. Richard, enough to have in politics t Why don't you go in for something useful?" The Parrot and the Nut. Brutes are able to eompare and dis• t anduthrowA parrot down will take again withou .. at- tempting to crack it. Ile has found that it is light; this he could discover only by comparing the weight of the 'good nuts with that of the bad, and =he has found that it has no kernel; 'this he could only discover by what :philosophers would dignify with the grand title of a syllogism—namely, "all light nuts are hollow; thea is tr light nut, therefore the nut is hollow.", --Max Muller. • . ... The Lisenchanting Phonograph. The best story I have heard recent- ly is that told of a well kaon Oxford don who was asked to speak into a phonograph. A little later the ma- chine was turned on again, sad he was requested to listen to his own voice. The don then turned to the assembled company and said, "It is strange that through this machine I am made to speak in a peculiarly bare/Aims and affected manner."-- London anner.,•- London Tatler, Power o1 Praise. There is one thing Which no than, however generously disposed, can give, but Wlaioh every one, . however poor, is bound to pay. This is praise. e Ios,A1 of give it because it is not his owsi, since what is dependent for its V 7 existence on something in another cart never become to him a possesaion, nor can he justly wall, hold it when. the presenoe of merit debts it ea a;cona,tnienea. "Who are the three classes who in parti- cular are opposing reciprocity ? I ask this question because, even before I answer it, I want Sen to bear in mind at .all times, who they are. Our chief opponents are the bank- ers, the railroads, and certain financial inter- ests, which expect to benefit if this interchange in natural prcduets can be prevented. The manner in whieh these combined interests work is very simple; these financial interests which are concerned in packing and kindred industries, borrow money from the banks, conseqently, the bankers are tied up with those to whom they lend money. The railways are concerned in transporting the products which these concerns handle "Three years ago, a lawsuit growing out of a will contest caused some of the profits of The William Davies Company to be given in open court. Now, what were the profits? Listen, at the end of March, 1893, the company was paying 65 per cent, in 1894 it paid 34 per eent, in 1895 it had gone up again to 40 per cent, the following year it rose to 45 per cent, while in 1897 the return was 100 per cent, and in 1898 it reached the tidy proportion of 120 per cent on the investment. "I don't mind a man making a fair profit, or even a big profit, if he does something to earn it, and gives the other fellow some kind of a show. But that is just what those who make the loudest outcry against reciprocity do not pretend to do in many cases. Between the farmer and consumer has grown up an army of middlemen. It is their activity that accounts for the wide difference between the price re- ceived by the producer and the price paid by the consumer. I am thoroughly convinced that this is really the worst thing that Canada has to face at the present time. Do you wonder that men like Mr. Flavelle, of Toronto, are opposed to the pact ? • "We should smash these combines, and 1 believe we will. Meanwhile, a reciprocal agreement with the United. States would at least hold them in check for some time. "Consider the situation in regard to canned goods. Year after year, the prices of all canned fruits and vegetables have been steadily . mounting. For example, take the particular case of tomatoes. Tomatoes in cans never cost ' more than they cost at this -time, and yet,never were tomatoes more plentiful. And the canners do not believe in reelprocity. No, I should hardly expect they would "if you would see this situation in its fall gravity, look at the difference between New York and Chicago, and Montreal and Toronto, on first the raw, and filen the packed and pre. Montreal el in on hfehs 1s ..o w Pork pared article. for $26,05 sells the same day in Chicago for $19,21, yet hams which are selling at $18 07 in Boston and New York, aro commanding $15.0t in Canadian cities on the same day. Although begs are lower here, bacon is $16.01 in Montreal% and $16 03 in Toronto, when it is selling in New York for $15,07. -From a speech by 11013, Mackenzie Ding, Minister of" Labor y Figs For- Melancholia. Dr. William Bulleyn. of the same family as the unfortunate Anne Boleyn. was a contemporary of Sydney. Raleigh. Drake, Hawkins. Grenville. Spenser and the rest of that famous galaxy that illuminated the Elizabeth- an era. The leading physioiuo of his day. be took great interest in vege- table remedies. and his "Milk of Sim- ples" was an honored atithority for generations. He recommends the free use of sage tett and of figs. saving: "Figges he good against nmlancholy and the falling evil fepilep9yi to he eaten. Figges, nuts and herhe grasse do make a sutricient. M.glis..•e against poison or the pestilence. :on: te.S make a good gargarism to Cleanse the throat:" -Charles Winslow atilt in Na. tional Magazine. Saves Time on the Firm T-HE farmer with the. Bell Tele phone Service at hand doesn't; have to travel in rainy* weather. y The Bell Telephone Service saves him all that,. There are always a,lot of rainy -day chores about:. the farm, ?, Instead of spoiling a day going totown, the farmer. goes to his Bell Telephone and does his business.. The: time savedcan be spent profitably. That is why he would not think of being without: the Bell Telephone Service. It is poor• economy to try to get along without it, • THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY has already a large number of Rural Subscribers in this district: The Company's lineswill be considerably extended during the present season. 4 To avoid delay or disappointment when you may require the Service urgently get your .contradt now before the lines are located and built. CONSULT THE IOCAI, MANAGER OR THE CONTRACT ACDIT THE HELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF NINA, MONTREAL: • Farmers in the vicinity of Wingham andi Lucknow who, desire telephone service can secure same over the lines of the North Huron Telephone Co Leave'your order with the-' Secretary, H. B. Elliott, at the Times office, Wingham. Not Loaded. No other language under the sun Is open to so many interpretations as the English language, as witness the con- • versation between two Sharon Hill girls the other evening: ' "Oh, May," said the first one, "Jim• and Bill tried to fight a duel over met" "Sow romanticl What happened?' • "It was terrible. I came into the room, and those foolish bo,sswere pointing big pistols at each other?' "Pistols? Heavens! Were . they loaded?" "Not a bit. That is just ?dist made Lt really 'eery serious. They both were sober.":—Philadelphia Times. The importance of the Beard. The importance of the beard was M./ ly recognized in the middle ages. Hese Is a passage (quoted by J. A'. F. :Or - bean in "Sistine Rome") from a letter of the writer, Bartolomeo Catena: "It Is well that those who have to bead and govern should have a long and fine beard. And I can assure you that the government of cities and provinces has been given to more than one prelate be• cause be had a long and fine beard; otherwise he were not worthy that honor." Educational. "Do they teach domestic science at Your college?" inquired° the *bolter of the freshman. "Only sewing," replied the freshman. "Good idea," said the visitor. "And what do you sew chiefly" "Wild oats," replied the freshman.-- Harper's Weekly. 'look It to Heart. "Didn't you hear all of the pro- fessor's lecture?" "Why, no. He began by saying that Sleep is the secret of right living, and ?then 1 tame home and went to bed."— Cleveland Plain Dealer. 't'e'rminological Inexactitude. It is what might be called a "tenni•. nologtcal inexactitude" to say that Man is "inclined to be bald." As a rale, to become bald Is absolutely against a tnan's inclinatibnll. Home Tralnin4. Mather -•Robert, tome bete to me Ina btantly. itobert-Aw, shut uPt Mother •--Robert, how date you, talk to too itis tbatt Say,. "'Mammo, bo diiieb"" Pack. .. _ 'rbey are slaves •+baht asci not !lied lip the right With two vuss.—Loltsh. PRINTING ANO STATIO lV ERY We have put in our office Stationery and can WRITING PADS ENVELOPES . LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PAPER PAPETEItIES, a complete stock of ;Staple supply' your wants in WRITING PAPER BLANK BOOKS PENS AND INI( TOILET PA PER PLANT 'G CARDS, efc We will keep the best stock in the respective lines and sell at reasonable prices. JOB PRINTING We are 'in a better position than ever before to attend to your wants in the Job Printing line and' all orders will receive prompt attention. Leave your order with us when in need‘of LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES CALLING CARDS CIRCULARS NOTE HEADS STATEMENTS WEDDING INVITATIONS POSTERS CATALOGUES Or anything you may require in the printing line. Subscriptions taken for all. the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Wilighillinj a lair t 4- 1