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The Wingham Times, 1911-09-28, Page 6TEES WOOED! TIES SE TUBER 28. 1°1i There are mauy proper» aeonsthatwilt relieve acough ---few that will acre it. The first class, containing sucks drags as Opium and Mor- phine, simply deaden the irritation and stop the cough, but do little or no permanent good. Rev.Feither-Morrisey does not contain a trace of these dangerous drugs, but is an absolutely safe and scientific preparation of Nature's own remedies --Herbs, Roots. and Balsams, It entirely removes the irritation that caused the cough, by cleaning out the mucus, stopping the infiatntnatioll and healing the delicate membrane of throat and lungs. Moreover, it tones up and strengthens the whole system, particularly the lungs, and protects agaiust future coughs and colds. Trial size 25e. per bottle. Regular size soc. ;1.t your dealer's. Father Marriscy Medicine Co. Ltd. - 23 Montreal, Quoit ERNFLS FROM THE SNCTUM MILL Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges. Many a man's handshake is less sin- cere than the wag of his dog's tail. There is no time like the present simply because the present is the only time. r -0 S Boxes Cured Paoriaais. "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. There's nothing like the knife of candor for severing the bonds of friend- ship. The incompetent bookkeeper when weighed in the balance is found want- ing. It is not the quantity of food taken but the amount digested and assimilat- ed that gives strength andvitality to the system. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets invigorate the stom- ach and liver and enable them to per- form their functions naturally. For sale by all dealers. The professional women of Denver, Col., number sixty physicians, ten den- tists, seven lawyers and five ministers. About two thousand five hundred years ago, the first taxes were levied on the Athenian people by the legis- lator Solon. 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. Although there are as many as 250,- 000 consumptives in Great Britain, only about 2,000 beds are provided for them in the available sanitoria. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA The reformatory schools committee of the hliddlesele, Eng., County Council ,report that, with few exceptions, boys so itt to industrial schools deteriorate both ph eieally and mentally, even when th.> institutions are situated among the. most perfect natural sur- roundings. Eczema Not a Blood Disease Lexington will not allow wires on race track grounds in an effort to kill poolrooms. London's debt is now $555,000,000, of which $2,100,000 was added during the last year. The bodies of two more victims of the tug Martin have been found near Byng Inlet. Eugene Gouin, cook on the steamer Hebron, fell overboard into the Corn- wall Canal and was drowned. a REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND eHH.n. MRs.Wu stow's SOOTIIINO SSseiw has been needier over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS fortheir HER h CHILDREN WEI Illi TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, sor'rENs the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRE EA. It is ab. eolutety harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no cuss kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle, Mr. William Andrews, a well-known farmer, was run over and killed at Goderich. The prices of polished diamonds are controlled by prices of the rough stones and are really made in London. I 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. Per t:t:s reason internal treatment* tail to cure --Success of Dr. Chase's O'antetert, 1"C hlei' f';',.::,:, us' Dr. "t'.36...,1 nentrrent *met eters. corannes one. treat 1• tie .n if a e'e :ease d f tale 1 chid net est the b i`Cl' . D. 7 SiC rr: r . r A. t �Iu u i'� _ As. , a. S tol,ir` , errs t. I lane' st. *'S e,; ya '' on r y''g 1.1 ',.'kr five. yenta one, eeeed A many re hiean:es and t`.v rap1�� nee w;3 i1 %vitt:eo benefit, li e _ill e (Keene.. t • en- ?ate eserep:efely." Mrs. (”.11.8. t.n l,t t, llayt=sem. Pia- t`a la liter*, Nfld wry a. ,—"1 was a 2Yn,t.'s� ,r f:'anm . ti a t .meuttm fat ten nears i+; aria w is tined by tight Isexes cf Dr. Chas 'aOintment.. i 3r heartily tl y x �r ^� r t` el n1v #. t r r s`lc ler this ase 5! r, .oe. ,•r ei Dr. t.'"ttti,e':= detititetee to Weertan c get the euro etreet.u` to atty. If t,*1 a6' a sufferer' from eteezeia or tten tam LI itching skin diseos' ;you veill tliar;4 the day you heard of Dr. 'i.ntse';l *Ent:neut. 60 ets. it bwx, alt deeteee, x,r Btlwansohl, Batt* & CO., Terontee If a man is unable to gcvern himself it is up to him to invest in a marriage license and sublet the job. An average woman requires but nine - tenths as much nourishment as an average man. Many people merely exist now hoping to live an ideal future. They sacrifice their bodies, health and minds, to gain gold. Wipe off screens with a duster each morning and beat with a soft brush. The beating should be done lightly hr order that the wire be not bulged. DR. A. W. CHASE'S ei CATARRH POWDER C is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages.. stops droppings in the throat and p r naeently cures Catarrh any Illy Fever. ;Sc. blower free. Accept sualers bstitutes. teneaeo,BatesdCo, T out. Embroidered table linens should nev- er be folded when put away, but rolled Ii a long roll with tissue paper rolled up with It. This will save a great amount of pressing. It required three floors of the big Plaza Hotel, where the late John W. Gates made his home in New York, to accommodate the 2,000 people who attended the funeral of the financier. To resuscitate persons Who have ' nearly drowsed, an European doctor ! tree invented a simple machine to which the arras and body are fastened find bowie's widow has .announced her in- tention of .creating a new colony of the :bowie faith at her mummer home, Don Mac DIM, near Whitehall, Mich. Experiments with a process for ob- taining a textile fibre, with merits be- tween those of cotton and linen, from the nettle are being fostered by the Australian Government. The United hatters of North Amer- ica have decided to conduct their elec- tion on the referendum plan instead of at the eonventions, as heretofore. The plan will go into effect next January. A gambling house patronized exclus- ively by women in the higher walks of life, and operated by a woman, has just been closed by. the Minneapolis pollee, acting on the advice received from their husbands. The Governor of New Zealand has received a letter from the Prince of Wales, in which he asks him to tell the people of New Zealand that "I hope one day to be able to visit their beautiful country." "iI have embarked in a new enter- prise," said the unsuccessful man, "and now I should be able•to keep my head above water." "What business are you in now" asked the sympathetic friend. "Life preservers," replied the unsuccessful man. Sheep have a fit of joy eating the young asafoetida plant, and Persians and other oriental races relish it as much as sheep. The juice of the asa- foetide plant when fresh Is so strong that a teaspoonful turns out more smell in a house than a hundredweight of drug store asafoetida. • A New York state miser died six years ago in his eighty fourth year, and since then his possessions have been stored in a barn on his farm. A tramp went into the barn recently to get a night's lodging. In the morning he saw an old shoe, and bethought him- self of substituting it for one of those he was wearing. In the shoe he found X200 in bills and coins. 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. A wide-awake breeder will now begin his preparations for winter, and the first cold snap will not catch him with several hundred choice pullets in sum- mer quarters, necessitating quiek ac- tion and in many cases, crowding into small quarters, twice the number of birds thathon 1 The s ld be so placed. ed successful poultryman always keeps a little ahead of the season and is pre- pared for emergencies as they confront him. At a recent session of the law court in a certain Yankee town, one farmer sued another for selling him a horse with a guarantee of soundness, when the horse died the next day of inflam- mation of the brain, or blind staggers. The judge found defendant guilty. Thereupon the latter remonstrated with his lordship, saying that he was a Iawyer and didn't know anything about veterinary diseases. Said the Judge, "I guess I know more about blind staggers than any veterinary surgeon in the country. I get about ten human cases in here every day." Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will sorely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on pre. scriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Rail's Catarrh Cure, man- ufactured by F. J. Cheney and Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testi- monials free. Sold by Druggists. Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation. There are two hundred vacancies for the position of officers in the American army, which are open to civilians this year, but there are not more than 175 applicants fat these positions, and some of these applicants will fail to pass the examination. This is one gratifying evidence of the gradual dy- ing out of the spirit of militarism. Post offices were first established in 1464. Printed musical notes were first need in 14 3.The r fist sr watch e s were mado at Nuremberg in 3477. Modern ma';ig-Ig"to produce artificial res ryeetiles first carte into use in 1545. The tslratien. first knives were used itt England in Wi;an you've get a job to do, do it 15;;3, The first wheeled carriageswere neev! If it's e neyexi wish was through, 'need in Prance in 1555. The first news - da it row! If y°err're sure the job's paper was published in England in 1581 your own. just tackle it Cone; e; don'ts ewspaper advertising began in 1652 hem sed haw ted groin -6 it now! ! The first balloon ascent was made in Don't :�,. $/ bit 7 0 a o: wC�YiC dirt Ii' , t nowt l ts,,. Gloss windows ows 'were first_ intro - It doesn't pay to shirk,do it now! If duced into England in the eighth een- yoetvrnrtt to ilii a place, std be useful tufty. Kerosene was first used for light - to the race, just get up and take a ing purposes in 1826. The first sul- brace, do it bow! Don't anger by the phur match was made in 1828. 'the way. do it now! Yc,:r'il lose if you de- first iron steamship Was was built ill lay, do it now! If the other fellows 1830, The first steel pen wait made in wait. or postpone until it's late, you 11840. Ships were first "copper -bottom. hit up a faster gait --do it now 1 ed" in 1837. One of the latest prominent gen. Homan to speak highly in Zam Buk's favour is Mr, C. Fr. Sanford of Weston. Kind's Co.. NA, Mr. Sanford is a justice of the Peace for the County, and a member of the Board of School Commissioners. lie is also Deacon of the $aptist Church in Berwick. Indeed it would be difficult to find a man amore widely known and more highly respected. Hero is his opinion of Zani.Buk. He bays :-- "I never used anything that gave me such satisfaction as Sam -auk. I had a patch of Bozema on niy ankle which had been there for over 20 years; Sometimes also the dieeaso would break out on m shoulders. 1 had applied var.ous oint- ments and tried all sorts of things to obtain a cure, but in vain. Zxm•Buk, un- like everything else 1 had tried, proved highly satisfactory and cured the ailment. 1 have also used Zatn•Buk for itching also.' I take comfort helpiuug completely men, audit the publication of my opinion of the healing value of Zam-Buk will lead other sufferers to try it, I should be glad. For the relief of suffering caused Py Piles or Skin Diseases 1 know of nothing to equal ZZam•Bukk cares ulcers, abscesses, blood•poison, ring•Worm, festering or running sores; bad leg, varicose ulcers, eat rheum, prairie itch cuts, borne, bruises, baby's sores, eta. Purely herbal, 60o box, drugeiets and storea RetuseImitations. One on the Preacher. It has just been told us of a prom- inent Cleveland clergyman that he was in Atlantic City a month or two ago, and on the beach saw an urchin mak- ing mud pies, statues and all that sort of thing. "What are you doing, my boy?" ask- ed the cleric, kindly. "Makin' church,"answered the h kid, without looking up. "I see. There's the spire, there's the bell, and there are all of the con- gregation. But where's the preacher"' "1 ain't got mud enough to make him," replied the sculptor. The parson Wandered away and fixed up a sermon on the theme. The Vital Isanes. I do not care a tinker's cuss about those vital things, concerning which the statesmen fuss and craw and flap their wings. I saw my little pile of wood. and pay up as I go, and all the world's serene and good and I am shy of woe. If men would cease to fret so hard o'er public ills and crimes, and tinker round their own back yard, they'd have much better times. It is a narrow, selfish view—of course, that's understood—but folks who're always in a stew don't seem to do much good. I think that I do just as much to help the world along when I mow weeds or sing', a Dutch or Alpine yodiing song. I do as much when I produce my little roil' of bills, and pay the milkman for his juice, the druggist for his pills. I've often noticed that the men who paw the air and bawl, are slow at digging up the yen when bill collectors call. I'll let the nation go its gait, I'll simp- ly let it slide; I couldn't keep the blam- ed thing straight, rio odds how hard I tried; I'll let the statesmen blow the foam from lids that never rest, and I'll just tinker round at home, and do my little best.—Walt Mason. ORRISRRES 1 THESE QUESTIONS knd find out 'f you have kidney die• orders --Aho make this test. Have you pains in the back over he kidneys? Have you urinary disorders? Do you suffer from severe head- •tiles, dizziness or deieetiva eyesight? Is the skis dry and harsh? failing i health and a: i, n Ar you f ,3 strength and suffering from rheuma- tic. pains or swelling of the limbs? These are a few of the symptoms of kidney disease, and here is the test. If the urine after standing for twenty-four hoots is -cloudy, milky or has particles floating about in it, or if there is a sediment in the bot- tom of the vessel, your kidneys are A.114.3'401; There. is no time toeleee in begin - ilia the tree of lir. Chase's tidier/ Liver rills. They will help you more quickly than any tteatmdit you can obtain, and that is one reason why they are so aueoesaful and popular. Dr. A. W. Chase's Sidney -Liver Yids, one pill a dose, "fir cents a box. St all deaters, or Edmonton, Eaten do Co., Toronto. RAISING SWINE ON HIGH PRICED LAND1 Swine breeding and feeding oceupied. much attention at the recent Minot* roundup meeting at Ottawa, A frost. interesting address and discussion were led by A. J, Lovejoy. He has bee* ridging Berkshire bog a for thirty -fair years and is atilt active in the beat peas. 1 e advisee starting with any breed you like and then sticking to It. The breed must he a good one, and you west like hogs, You must Glee keep the breed pure, selecting brood sows with strong, broad backs and good length, feed well, give plenty of ezer. else in winter and your pigs will be all right, lie uses the individual houses and devotes one -ball acre to each sow and Otter. The houses are built in the shape of a capital A, have a floor, pave an opening at the top ao that ventilation will be good and are placed to the opposite cornerin the lot from the feed troughs. This makes it qec- essary for the sow to get out and take exercise, even when there is snow on the ground. He insists on a variety of feed. He finds that a feed made up of one-half cornmeal and one-half mid- dlings. to which a little oilmeal or tankage is added, is exceedingly sat- isfactory. Be sure to get enough pro- tein. This protein, of course, is se- cured through the tankage, oilmeal or middlings. Tankage is very high In protein, and Mr. Lovejoy considers It one of the most valuable hog feeds on the market. For fattening bogs he feeds tankage and eorn in proportions of eighty parts corn to twenty of tankage. He believes this combina- tion exceedingly satisfactory, as it keeps the bog in good health and also puts on fat cheaper., Mr. Lovejoy does not breed his gets until they are about a year old. He deplores the tendency to breed sows coo young and also to dispose of ma- ture sows. He keeps his old Sows as long as they will bring good litters. He finds that they always do well• until nine or ten years old. He breeds for two litters a year, but, of course, it is not always possible to have each ,sow farrow twice a year. About one- half of his breeding sows do this. He thinks eight pigs make a good sized litter. He would prefer eight to twelve, as he figures that these grow more tbriftily and give better results than a larger number. How to Cure Corns In Horses. Corns are sauced by bad sbneing or from allowing the shoe to wear too long without resboeing and also from having too much of the foot taken o'tr. My remedb, by whirl 1 have never failed to etl'eet a permanent care. says .W. J. Grand in the Alichigun Farmer, is as follows: Have the shoes pulled off, the feet pared and then poulticed until they are as soft as jelly. Get your knife again. cut the corns down to the quick, extract the score of corns by means of a pair of small pincers and they apply spirits of salts to eat away any remnants of the corn which may remain. By this time the foot has been s• much reduced that time must be al- lowed for a new growth of the foot, which may be satisfactorily and quickly attained by placing the foot of the patient in bine clay for three weeks, or more if necessary. It than directions are followed a new foot and a permanent cure will be the re- sult, and although it takes time yo should remember that anything worth having is Worth waiting for. Rubber pads and bar shoes will help a boeai temporarily only, but will keep hint going in a cramped way. But if you are impatient you can take your a bole $ bettreen quickness and thorOughaees. Two ,Mills Using Same Quality of Wheat May Not Produce Same Quality of Flour The quality of flour largely depends on the milling. Twp mills might grind wheatof the same quality and the product of one far outclass the other. It is not only the high quality of the hard wheat used, but also the superior milling facili- ties, that places "PURITY" flour so far above all others. ''Our milling plant at St. Boni- face, Manitoba, cost nearly, $I,000,000, and is one of the most perfectly equipped mills in the world, The wheat itself is subjected to the most won- derful system of cleaning and scouring, pas sing through twenty distinct machines. ,Fifty-five steel rollers, the largest in Canada, reduce the wheat into flour. Then it is purified and dressed by "bolt- ing" it through silk sifters.of fine mesh. Not a c' branny " , particle or speck of dust is ever found in. - "t Purity" Flour. You may have to pay a little more for Purity, but baking• results, quality and quantity, prove it is worth far more than the slight difference. We have two other modernly equipped mills at Brandon, Man., and Goderich, Ont, URITY FCOUR "M&re Bread and Better Bread." la Western Canada Flour Milts Co., Limited. MILLS AT WINNIPEG, GODERICII, BRANDON BOLD BY WM. BONE AND .1. F. MoGILLTVRA'Y, WINGHAM. Cut crystal is one of the trimming articles strongly indicated for fall and winter. It's a pretty good fault for a yet). .man's elbow to be sharper than her tongue. Place For the Separator. /net where tt place a =earn steam• tor for convenient tree is 'sometimes a question. Convenience requires that the place be in of near the barn, though it is sometimes placed in the kitchen or some portion of the home building. b room with cement floor and plastered walls can be construct- ed in some part of the hart where it well be convenient and more sanitary than if pieced in the kitchen or in any open portion of the bats where It is likely to be affected by dust and odors. This room should have it water cistern and proper drainage BO that it may be kept dean and swept all the time. The work necessary in prepare lag this room is not expensit'0 not does it require expert help, but sheh a room in some loeu't1it' is absolutely necessary for the prodnetion of clean milk prod - nets and in lessening the work of the dater. Care in handling the milk and• plenty of hot water in cleaning the to et els will remote very man' of the crltieismo that ate made against the Lunt dhefryman,,, Ration For Gtewiny Piga. A. good ration might be tirade by tiling two pard* by weight of corn tubd +One part seek of gt'otintl rye, *tothnd 'tits and oilmeal E'or little pigs the Vets should be around line enough so that the hull it reduced to ft Ureal. If this a anlot be done it *snit be batter to elft the 'hulls out for a time after weaning. All of the trotrnd feeds Werra be better if May eoald be gn.61l fie. the Pigs tthaotd Sot be fed es teach Of tines mi*ture as tbay *tit eatt bat aboard be fed lather Stetted gralnt#ttou up to t ml's err six tatettbil mt ttge Atter, sit Menthe of ate, f* the pigs *re to be fed for mar, tot t1H elwow idiot b. *pawl. . Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA In mashing potatoes it pays to beat the milk, adding the butter to the milk before turning into the mashed pota- toes. When sewing -machine needles be- come blunted, rub them across a whet- stone, which repoints as good as new'. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA We may all be slightly twisted, but we don't care to have other people try to follow our crooks and turns; Experiments with a process for ob- taining a textile fibre from the nettle are being fostered by the Australians Government. PRINTING AND STATION ERY We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple, Stationery and can supply your wants in. WRITING PADS ENVELOPES LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PAPER PAPETERIES, We will keep the best and sell at WRITING PAPER BLANK BOOKS PENS AND INK TOILET PAPER PLAYII -G CARDS, etc stock in the respective lines 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 NOTE HEADS BILL HEADS STATEMENTS ENVELOPES WEDDING INVITATIONS CALLING CARDS POSTERS CIRCULARS CATALOGUES Or anything you may require in the printirng line. Sulmeriptio ii taken for all the Leading New: papant and Magazines. The gimes Office 3t"ONE BLOCK WhighantoOUis