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The Wingham Times, 1911-10-19, Page 3• DIE WINGRAX TIMES OCTOBE1t 4911 IMPROVE DAIRY HERD,BY TESTING, THOUGHT IT WAS CANCER "Frult-e-tivcs" completely restored 114 SYDNEY MINES, KS„ Jan. 25th. 1914. "For many years, 1 suffered tortures froth Indigestion and Dyspepsia. Two. years ago, 1 wits so bad that I vomited my food constantly. I also suffered with Constipation. I consulted physicians, as 1 was afraid the disease was cancer, but tucdicine gave only tetnporaryrelief. I read in the 'Maritime Baptist' about Pruina-rivesand the cures this medicine. was making and I decided to try it. After taking three boxes, I found a great change for the better and now I can say 'Bruit -a -dyes' has entirely cured me' when every other treatment failed, and I reverently say "Thank God for'Fruit-a-tives'." EDWIN ORAM, Sr. "Fruit -a -fives" sweetens the stomach, increases the actual quantity of gastric juice in the stomach and ensures com- plete digestion of an sensible food. Fruit -a -tines" is the only medicine in the world made of fruit Juices. 5oc. a box,, 6 for 5z.5o, or trial size, as. At all dealers, or from Prait-a-tweet Limited, Ottawa, JUST TO MAKE SURE. :The Scheme Looked Good, but the Old Man Lacked Confidence. ' Living on a plantation fifty or sixty miles out of New Orleans is Ian old ,poker playing, chicken fighting, horse ,racing sportsman, 'who is always will - lug to gamble on anything and who Isn't averse to .gamble even when he bas a shade the better o1 It.. Not long ago a professional gambler came to him and said, "Squire, you know that Phillips man who used to play cards un the river?" ,il, do." "Well, he's 'showed up here with a tot of money. Now, I've got a scheme `'get that money." "Go on, you interest me." ,. "Well. I'll get him down beret and pot him into a game of poker- just the two ot us and him. Then I'll iSOId deck him, you'll get the money. And we'll divide." "How de you propose to do that, ;tori?" - 1 ";Why, I'll deal him four queens, and dial you four kings, and he'll bet ;all the money he has. All you've got to do is to bet against him, show your tour kings when he's through, and we'll split the pile." "You mean you'll deal him four queens^and deal me four kings out of a cold deck?" "That's it." "A11 right, son, all right. But when you are dealin` them tour kings to me just deal me one ace also for a sort of 'confidence card." - Saturday Evening ,Post. Big Noses In Japan. The nose plays a very important part in Japan, owing, probably, that a difference in -noses constitutes about the Only distinction between one Jap- atiese and another. The nose is the ;only feature which attracts attention. As there are very few large noses to be found in Japan, a lady with a targe nose is regarded as one specially gift- ed by nature. She is invariably a 'reigning beauty and the envy of her ;less favored sisters. Irl, all, Japanese ,pictures in which ladies are portrayed the artists are particularly careful to 'make the nose of liberal dimensions. --London Telegraph. Sweet Child. "Vein" said little Elsie, "mamma 'Nye she Is ativays glad to tet me Come to parties at your house." "It is very nice ot your mamma to say that." "'Cause she says you're so savin' that there's never any danger yon'll give me anything that will be rich enough to hurt me."- Chicago Record - Herald. Her Undeveloped Sense of Humor. "The trouble with you women," .he said, "Is that you have no sense et hu- mor." "1 know 1t" his better half admitted. "1 suppose I ought 'to think being mar, tied to yon is a lovely joke, but I can't seem to see it." -Chicago flecOrd•Her• ald. Foellishheaa. "1 tine yott•65." "Judge, f only sassed a policeman" "1 One you for foolishness. When there are so tnafly things you eould have done, why did you select tbist"r- Washington Herald. Makiti'g !nye Is easter than oinking is fortuflei. tett it ittro}Gea greater arltnl;t'5n CALLED IN THE DOCTOR: Then He and thePatient Found They Ware Two of a Kind, In the Metropolltaq theater the house pbysletan rase a sect given him tar eacil. pertormance.. He is i;uPIK410d to be there revery evening. ;Netnraliy there comes. a time when tha Play be• gins to pas on him. One evening not long ago the stage manager 91 a local pI ybouee mallet) down the aisle to the doctor's seat and whlepefed; "Come back at once. The leading la* dy has bad an attack," In the lady's dressing; room all was confusion, "What'll we do, doereriett the stage manager. "Have 'yea .poured water on herr bead?" "Yes. a whole bucket, out of tbe one that says 'Not to be used except 114 case of are.,,. "Then don't pour any snore. I tear you have made a fatal mistake. Run out to the drug store and get this filled." When they bad run out the lady opened ber eyes. "Doc," abe gasped, "you're a good fellow, ain't yon? 1 know you know there's nothing the Matter with me. 1 Vent a day oft, and I don't want to go on in this act. Oen you fix it?" "I sure can," be answered, wringing her band sympathetically. o "2 ain't a doctor. 1 came in on his ticket. We'll lxx.lit."-Cleveland Plain Dealer. ARMLESS PAINTERS. Sarah Biffen, For instance, Who Made Remarkable Miniatures. Miss Sarah Biffen was a conspicu- ous example of -the skill which arm- less people sometimes acquire in spite of their affliction. She was . miniature painter to Queen Victoria, and her work was widely known for its beats ty and delicacy. She was born without arms, but as a girl, having a great wish to become an artist, she worked earnestly tor years until she could paint by bolding the brush in ber teetb. in 1821, ac- cording to the Raja Yoga Messenger, the judges, without any knowledge ot the means she was compelled, to use, awarded ber the gold medal of the Society ot Arts, a prize sought by bundreds of others. M. de Menthoton and Bertram Hiles were other artists wbo were deprived ot the use of their arms. The former had only one foot, which he used to paint with. Mr. Hiles lost both bis arms in an accident, being run over by a street ear when he was only eight years old and when he was Just beginning to ac. quire skill in drawing. He spent two years in patient toil learning to draw b holding tbe pencil in bis teeth, at the end of which time be won a first mass certificate from a local art school. An Antidote Handy. The woman was the author of a cook- book that bad been published at her request with wide margins and onca- sional blank pages for notes and ad- ditional recipes. Often she bad ex- pressed a wisb to tee an old copy of the book and find out to what use the blank spaces had been put. One {lay in a secondhand bookstore ber bus- band unearthed an old volume. No- ticing that it bad been annotated free- ly, be bought it. • After a day or two he said: "Etow abort the notes in that cook- book? Were they interesting?" "No," she said curtly; "they didn't. amount to anything." When be got a chance he looked through the book himself. Every note the book contained was a remedy for dyspepsia and stomach trouble. -New York Times. A Regular:Sheriook Holmes. Under the caption "A Triumph Of Sense" "Jugend" tells this story: "In the lower court of a matt town in Saxony William had served faitbfdlly and well as attendant to the presiding Judge for many years without ever having received any reward aside from his legal stipend. On tbe day of ad- Journment for tbe season, when vis- itors bad retired, the judge. wbo was also about to leave. asked, 'William. do you smoke? seeing a square hoz under the judge's arm.' be answered respectfully, 'Yes, your honor.' '1 knew it by the smell of your coat,' said the judge as he walked out." TheTerribie Pains of INDIGESTION Mr. a.Ma E eA '1 Mount on PALL, ssyea�'" For more than s year 1 suffered with all the terrible panne of in. dfgeetioa, and my life wee one of the great. est misery.; It did not seem to make any difference whether 1 ate or not, the pains wor. aiwayxl there, accompanied byaseverS bloating and a belching of wind. 1 did not even got relief at night, and sometimes hardly got bit of aleop. In my misery 1 tried man yremedies saidto cure indiggestion, but they did vie not one particle of good, aud I fully expected that is would sliver, be aillicted in this way. At this time my brother came 'home on a visit, and urged the to try MILBURN'S LAVA -LIVER PILLS, and•got me a few vials. By the i ma I had taken one vial I began to im- prove end could eat with some relish. I was greatly cheered, and continued taking the pills until all traces of the trouble had li.appeared, and I could once more eat all kinds of food without the •lightest incon- venieeee. I am so firmly convinced of their virtue as a family medicine. I have ao hesitation in recominending them." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 26o. per vial, or five for 61.00, at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto; Ont. First Title. of "Vanity Fair." Brighton, England, bolds memories of Thackeray. It was while staying at the Old Ship that he commenced a novel which was to be called "Pencil Sketches of English Society." One night as he was lying in bed a better title suddenly occurred to bim. "1 jumped out of bed," be told Miss Perry afterward, "and ran three times round my room, uttering as 1 went, 'Vanity Fair,' 'Vanity Fair,' 'Vanity Protection. "1 understand twit you don't speak to your neighbor. " "Not any more than necessary," re- plied r:r. Urour•her, "tlt course they ere tine neighoore, but the also have ,a fine tourrho WO don't rare to have teem get arr;nutnt-d with ber."-Wash' ibgtun Star. Peat en*ens*. t Miss Pno;ty- iaa have saved my Me. young man. flow can 1 repay yoiil flour t':trt 1 show tris grntitede? Are you married? Young 'slab-Y'es; mune aud be a Cook for us.-Woman't Houle Cotnp:Whit. Chitty. "Meet Any icebergs on your 'way ",Vo, but 'aarernl of uta tried to dirt w" ria Ilbrtoo girl tvllo Wee on board:', rr_I,tlull§villa cuurier•Jourtfal, DO YOU DO THIS? When beating upholstered' furniture in the house, place a damp .cloth over the pieces. The dust adheres to the cloth. An alarm clock kept in the kitchen may be set to ring; atthe time the vegetables should be put offer the fire or the hot bread or the cake or pud- ding is due to be done. Candles will last much longer if they are placed on ice and kept there for 24 hours before using. ' Before putting the stew pan on the fire, rub some laundry soap on the bottom several times, and when the pan is washed the black comes off like magic. The instep of a buttoned shoe `makes a handy iron holder. It fits the iron perfectly. Rubbing rusty knives with a damp cloth dipped in ashes will make them bright and shining. To keep a fine gloss on your var- nished floors, sprinkle with coarse salt; let remain for flee minutes, then sweep off with a soft broom. When buying carpet for stairs get an extra yard, and turn it under at each end. When the carpet begins to wear on the edges of the steps, it can be slipped either up or down and equal- ize the wear. The best way to clean wallpaper: Cover a board 4 x 12 inches with a piece of sheep pelt, tacking it on firmly. Then fasten on a long handle. Brush the walls the ordinary way. Encouragement. I used to work for Mr. Knox, a far- mer who had lots of rocks I left my couch at break of day, and toiled until the duck was grey. And when the evening meal was o'er I had to do chore after chore; I had to feed a mil- lion sows, and milk about a million cows. And never once did Mr. Knox remark to me: "Well done, old Sox!" He never cheered my dismal days by handing out a word of praise. What wonder, then, that in my ire, I set his house and barn on: fire, and swiped a wagon -load of straw, and carried off his mother' -law? I went to' work for Mr. Deans, and plowed his corn and hoed his beans, and when I came in from my toil, all plastered o'er with sweat and soil, he always had some kindly word; he called me a looloo, peach, and bird. And so my labor was delight, and though fagged out and worn at night, I trotted blithely out of doors and gaily did a million chores. If all employers only knew how much a word of praise will do, the sullen work- men that we see would do their little -stunts with glee. -Walt Mason. CARTERS LITTLE IVER b PILLS. i bleu inef nth and relieve E%11, the tro n Sick ideal c a lloo v dent to a bnh •i state of the system, such as Dizziness, 1tauaaa, Drowsiness Distress after eating, Pain it the Side &c. while their most remarkable success Ju s'ta m ahowe in curing SICK • Peadachn, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in t.onntipatton, curing enders• venting thin annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the a omach, otifm.atotho liver And ;et latethebowels. hveniftheyonly aired toi •"+lmOat Prieeleretoth.+r0Rhe, eu4or ••• .9o.0 ung cempinintt Lt.t iertn. antelyheir, oesnotendhero;ond theeo who once tryth.'ia iandtelittle pills vela• able in aerial Ira d thattrey'till nethowit. ling to 50without them, But after all sick head YM rba bee" . ii",ua . ,.,.ter limn aro ver; small and .o. to tultl. Oneor twopillsmake a dose. !th1lyasre atribt}y vegetable awr do nut grapo or purge, bm14t by their Pantie notion plea,oallwke timg situp s t aa.Y lii*'i bit 12111 R➢I�+g 1911 The story is told hour a Mr. Klerb, a aawedisb dairymen, increased the j'teld of iris herd of cows, In 1000 he was l'nilk1ug seventy Cows, which pro- duced an average of 7,320 pounds of milk per vow per -year. Most Kansas dairymen wouldconsider thlg'a very fair produetlon Yin Kinch, however. was not satisfied, and he began to systematically lest bis eows by keep- ing a ret•ord of the amount of rank given each day by each cow and by testing it for batter fat nud thus ,de- terminiug the Amount of butter fat civet) by each eow for n year. EIe found that in the year 1000 each <'ow gave him an average of 245 pounds o! butter fat, Of the seventy Womaus World ,A. Feeilpie Mistretta. of the White House. The Ayrshire cow McAllister's Betty, whose portrait Is herewith shown, is owned by the Penshurst farm, Narberth, Pa, Tested under the Supervision of the Pennsylva- nia experiment station, the cow In twelve months produced 14,208 pounds , of - milk -58L41 pounds of fat, equal to 678 pounds of butter. The cow lacked a few clays of be- ing four years old at the beginning of her year's test on April 21, 1810.. The cost of her teed was 8138,28. She was on pasture six months, which cost was figured at 818, the balance being cost of grain, hay and ensilage at market prices. cows, however, be found that at the end of the first year's testing only twenty-eight were good enough to justify him in keeping them for breed- ing and dairy purposes. He sold the others and kept only these twenty- eight with the heifer calves, in the year 1901 these twenty-eight cows av- eraged him 272 pounds of butter fat per cow. in' the year 1902 he had forty-six cows. which averaged 317 pounds of butterfat. In the year 1003 he had fifty-five cows, which averaged 350 pounds of butter fat. In 1904 be had sixty-one cows, which Averaged 376 pounds of butter fat; in 1905 sixty-four, whicb averaged 399 pounds of butter fat, and in 1906 sev- enty-one. which averaged 401 pounds. At the end 0! six years he had reached his original number of cows, but each cow's milk during the year 1906 averaged 156 pounds of butter fat more than each of the cows that he was milking in the year 1900. He not only increasedthe production of each cow, but he decreased the cost of feed. For., example, in the year 1900 he got 10:1 pounds of butter fat for each 100 feed units, while in the year 1906 he got 13.2 pounds of butter for 100 feed units. In other words, he not only increased the. production by ever 6 per Cent, but he reduced the cost about one-third. A. Swedish feed unit le equal to 2.3 pounds of bran, or eight -tenths of a pound of oil cake, or thirty-six pounds of silage, on,,seven- teen pounds of green clover. What this Swedish dairyman.' did in these six years can, be done by, any farmer who will put his mind and his time tothe work. All that is neves' sary is to first begin to weigh and test the milk of the cows you have on hand at the present time. At the end of the year or sooner you will know which of the cows are Baying yon for their feed and which are not.' Sell the poor cows, keep the good ones and their heifer calves, or if necessary tiny a few more good ones and keep up the work of testing year after year. Within five or six years the yearly yield of the herd can be increased from one-third to two-thirds. To Grow Good Wool. To grow wool without fault or flaw in its fiber it is necessary that the sheep be kept in uniformly good and thrifty condition every day in the year and not exposed to extreme degrees. of heat and cold and especially to wet In <•old weather. It must not be over- fed or underfed nt an' Limo if the 'sheep are allowed to get out of toed'. tion or to lose flesh the wool de' io- rates in direct proportion, and t uere will be a weal% place in the fiber, no platter how their condition is after - weird Improved. It 1s n fact beyond clis;nrre that the tloeitmaster has the uu4l:iti,« of the rplality of the dere al - , tea t'4L•+lvin l;is o:t•11 'L1nds. turd If !;is ('lits of ma is not brat class be has only hirur'eif 40 binroe. Condition:0 For Hogs. 1' olera and o' hnr dieense, of eztino tttt04 k r•r+'ca 4 w 4411••11 are In pner enndi+ Linn nud consr''nenily most sneeenti• We. An exce'tent recipe for keeeins dipeetiVe r" •mans in genii rendition is '1'44x4 huthely e',arenal. One bushel hard. wood 1481i0s. toe, "nu11d t•npperas. one Pound emotive; salt. ('hop the cher. coal Into snarl tuutiis the size of hick- ory nuts, puivrri`~e the copperas, mit all thoroughly nod urate tinder shelter �. h r 4e .as they ant it w e e the how,. can eat t ey w a' Hints 1=or Cheosetiiaicers. When fitting the 'cheese hoops pack the tetra weti in the center. -e ti'* when pressure is tipr''1:'41 lu•' c41*c, Clew up In the center Heat 41111 the air and whey will have a eb onto to escape. Apply pressttret gradually,• - Amerielin Ag'ricttlturist. Q J. C. Strauss. etas. Josnvn W. FOLK. Should Joseph W. Folk succeed Wil. liam Howard Tart as president of the tbited States his wife will prove a gracious chatelaine of tbe executive mansion. Mrs. Folk is a delightfully cultured woman of soutberu birth, Tennessee being her native state. Although she is not strictly speaking a society wo- man, the gubernatorial mansion dui', in;; her husband's administration as governor of Missouri was the scene of ninth charming hospitality. Like Mrs. Taft, Mrs, Folk is an ac- complished musician, and her tastes are decidedly literary. Woman and the Home. A house without a woman in it amounts to very little. It may be u sojourning place or it hermitage or a makeshift, but it c•unnet be a home. Woman is forever the renter of home. and home is forever the center of things. Christianity looks hack toward the home at Nazareth. and reverent painters portray the holy child in its mother's arms for conntless shrines to enthrone. Nationl1 glory rests upon the •plliars of the home. Business' gathers its millions only to adorn chosen homes in the end. and each toiler at the bottom strives for his dream, too, of a happiness between four walls with wife and child. Woman at present. however, is tempted to decentralize herself. The kingdoms of the earth and the glory of them seem to her to be offered for he: choice. She desires to work forhire as then do, and to prove herself in in dustry outside the houses. All this L well enough if he realizes in time that bonne is better still. But the moll• eru world Is full of decentralized wo men who either cannot get !melt to the center of things or have lost the wish to do so. Even if they marry they do not want to he "tied down" to how's and children. And It is perfectly pus• sibis in the first part of their lives to remain out from the center and still find life worth while. But after thirty years or so the de, centralized woman must lose by it She is not the soul of anything. She is not vitally necessary anywhere Her life is essentinny shallow. The house. without 11 woman in 1t, the w r - man who is. not making a home for others -these mean life without a ten ter, life gone ,awry, i f It cannot be helped it Is sad enough. If It can be helped is 'it not the worst and bitter• est kind of urist1LeT-Itarper's Bazar.,. Hat and Bag Match This Season. Smell hats and huge hand bags -this is the mandate of fashion for fall, and some of the smart little helmet hats to be worn with tailored suits of worsted and mohair ate shown in the • V41' wlTir BAG TO MATCH. milliners' shops, accompanied by baba bags to Match, This hat and• reticule are of gold colored Velvet braided with fins white eoutacbe, a heavier black eotttnohe being worked into a bolder pattern over' this growuld. When 1" ae 1 V, tar Mere Mat,... ',..i..t are those littlte statues in front of the ballot boxes? Poll Clerk -Those are reprodutitimns of' the +rarlou* eandidates. A woman couldn't think of ordering anything •z$pt !cell A pattern, roe L?rBllnlr . EKU EISILITir Q1p NEW _MlTREATMENT win owe you and =eke a men of you, sou Under its influence the brain becomesactive,the bloodPunitad sr.thrt! pimples, blotches and ulcers hoar upt the permitbecome strong ries 1141411414so that nervousness bashfulness Ana despondency disappear• the eyes become brag�ht, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and th 4 moral, Physical and inoatal syystemsare invigorated; all drains .ocase-no more vital waste frou1 the aYstem, You feel yourself a man and know marriagge cannot be a failure. Don't let quacks And fakirs rob you ot your hard earners donate. RPP' NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT TII.REATENED WITH PARAt.Y818 Peter E. Summers relates his experience: "l was troubled with Nervous DobilitY for many years. 'lay it to indiscretion and excesses In youth, I became very despondent and didn't care whether worked or not, 1 imagiled everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams at night weakened me. -my back ached, bad pains in the back of my head, hands and feet were cold, tired iwthe morning, poor appetite, fingers were shaky, eyes blurred, hair loose, memory poor, etc, Numbness in the fingers set in and the doctor told me he !eared paralysis. I tools all kinds o' medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric beltforthree months, but received little benefit. I strops Ti tarateNT Was induced to consult Pre. Kennedy a mita TRLATM4NT Kennedy, though I had lost all faith in doctors. Likes drowning man I commenced the New Marnon Tnat,TMENT and it saved my life. The improvement was like ma ic-I could feel the vigor going through the nerves, I was, cured mentally and physically. I have sent there many patients and continue to do so. CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY We treat and cure VARICOSE VEiNS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and ali Diseases peculiar to Man. CONSULTATION FREE,. BOOKS FREE., if unable to call write for* Questiota. Blank for Home Treatment. DRs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave, and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. ~N QTI C E All letrers from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- oniostmemmus meat in Windsor, Ont, If you desire to see us personally Call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. ► Write for our private address. +•P t'•i'3"k1"!F•i�d'lb:-i�3��"k3'd'd�'++.t•.t.�. r The Times Times and W eekly Globe . Tunes and Daily Wobe ..,... Times and 1"'amily Herald and Weekly Star.... Timet and Toronto Weekly Sun Times and Toronto' Daily Star Times and Toronto Daily News.. Times and Daily Mail and Empire Times and Weekly Mail and Empire,.......,... 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For instance : + The Times and Weekly Globe $1.60 IThe Farmer's.Adyocate ($2,35 less $1.00)...., 1 35 + $2.95 making the price of the three papers $z95. + The Times and the Weekly Sun.... $1.80 The Toronto Daily Star (42.30 less $1.00)., 1,30 The Week15 Globe 01.60 less !11.00) 60 + + + + + + + + 4. 4. $3 t0 + + the four papers for $3.7o. + + + If the p4ib kat ori you want is not in above list let t 4. us know. We - •n supply almost any well-known C ana- + diad or A rrierican publication. These prices are strictly + + cash in ad :ante + post S .nd subscriptions byo t office or e rens ors r e to pppress Tte� es + ' Stone Block W. NGHANM ONTARIO tP