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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1908-09-03, Page 1Aloney placed In your care, temporarily or otherwise, by relative, friend or orga1i z atic.`Q, should at once be deposited in a Savi•n8 Barns- for your ownro, taction: Q ...., EXCURSIONS TO TORONTO FOR THE EXHIBITION SINGLE LOW FARE$3.65"I RATE $2.70 DAILY ON SATURDAY, AUG, 29 TO SATUR• SPECIAL EXCURSION DAYS. DAY, SEPT. 12 INCLUSIVE SEPT. 1, 3, 5, 9 and 11 All tickets good to return until Tuesday, Sept. 15 C. P. R. Official Programme gives full information regarding exouraiot rates, special train and through oar service, from all stations. For free copy apply to J. H. BEEMI+IR. Ticket Agent, Wingham, or write C. B. FOSTER, District Passenger Agent. Toronto, CANADIAN NATIONAL Aud. 29 EXHIBITION Sept. 14 TORONTO Greatest and Best Attended Annual Exhibition in all the World • Mammoth Massed Band Concerts Every Province • Sends Its Products $100,000000 in Prizes and Attractions Grand Art Loan Collection From the Paris Salon and other Old -World Galleries. International Military Tattoo and Realistic Spectacle The Siebe of Sebastopol With 900 Performers. Superior Vaudeville Performance 9,000 Live Stock on View For Nita Lists, Entry Blanks and all Information address 3. 0. ORR, pannier, City Hall, Toronto CHEAP FARES FROM EVERYWHERE ktAAAAP AAAAAAMMAAAAAAAAAA THE WIN(fHAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER 3, 19U13 DOMINION BANK HEAD OFFICE ; TORONTO. Capital paid up, $3,916,000 Reserve Fund and Undivided profits $5,297,000 Total Assets, over 48,000,000 VVVVVVVVvvvvvWVWVVWVW of C B ESTERN FAIR GREATEST LIVE SToenc EKHIBI- TION OF WESTERN ONTARIO Full Programme of Attractions twice daily, including 14 Kemp's Wild West Show. Best of Music, Fireworks Each Evening. ATHLETIC DAY - MONDAY, SEPT.. 1-1E Come and enjoy ourself at London's Popular Fair. � y � 1 WI#IONAM BRANCH. Farmers' Notes discounted. Drafts sold on all points in Canada, the United States and Europe. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT -Interest allowed on deposits of $1 and upwards, and added to principal quarterly -end of March, June, September and Deoem- ber each year. D. T. HEPBURN, Manager R. Vanstone, Solicitor. The annual amount paid in interest to depositors in Australian Government banks in 1906.1907 was $5,508,104. against $4,265,346 in 1902.1903. The recent census gives the total population of the Canal Zone as 50,0003. of whom 25,000 are employed by the Isthmian Canal commission and the Panama Railroad. Of the population 6,863 are Americans. REDUCED RATES on ALL RAILROADS` Prize Lists, Entry Forms, Programmes, and all information given on application to W. J. REID, President, A. M. HUNT, Secretary. A Sinking, Hollow, " A11= Gone " Sensation at the Pit of the Stomach. "THAT IS DYSPEPSIA" A remedy which has rarely failed to give prompt relief and effect permanent cures even in the most obstinate cases, is BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS MR, EATON ON ADVERTISING. If you advertise your stare to a few hundred people you oau safely bank on the feet that in due time everybody will hear about you. People have a way of passing along good news The fact that your advertiacmPut appears continuously ill a reputable newspaper stimulates public co,fiirvo Your hop advauoes step by step in the estimation of the people. Talk every day and make your talk as yon wish, Yon need not employ an interpreter, or t:,o a megaphone, Simply talk; that is all, Be sincere about it. Let your words ring trice; the people will listen They like it. Spend thousands a year on rent and electric light and experienced salesm, n and then squeeze out a niggardly hun- dred or two on advertising; on telling the people you have the store and the goods and the salesmen all standing around waiting. A retail shop that spends $500 a year on rent ought at the very lowest estima- tion, to spend $200 a year on advertising, Your advertising is not a thing apart from your enterprise. It is your enter - prize a contagion which yon yourself create and which if thoroughly spread, is as enduring as the everlasting hills It acts by regulating and toning the digestive organa, removing costiveness, and increasing the appetite, and restoring health and vigor to the system. Mrs. Alice Steeves, Springfield, N.S., writes: -"I have used Burdock Blood Bitters and find that few medicines can give such relief in Stomach Troubles and Dyspepsia. I was troubled for years with Dyspepsia and could get no relief until I tried 13.33. B. I took three bottles and became cured, and now I can eat anything without it hurting me. I will recommend it to all having Stomach Trouble. NEW Telephooe Directory THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. OF CANADA is about to publish a new issue of the OFFICIAL TELEPHONE DIRECTORY for the District of Western Ontario, including Wingham. Orders for new connections, changes of firm names, changes of street ad- dresses, or for duelicate entries should be handed in AT ONCE TO L. BINKLEY, Local Manager. THE THRESHER FICTIONIST. Threshing operation, are in full blast, and when the whistle blows at night and the men flock in to supper, someone will tell a yarn about how he "t'rashed" seven thousand bushels of wheat, more or less, in one afternoon for some big farmer on the mud road. The men chew on in silence, and in the agitation of the moment one takes hie third piece of pie. But the silenoe is soon broken. Some other fictionist - they are not liars; I wouldn't think of calling them that. I want you to know that some of them are in the same ola.s as Jules Verne, Defoe (the man who wrote Robinson Orusoe), and the late deeply lamented Baron Manohansen. To sit after supper or during the noon hour, or while they are lacing a belt or changing the sheaf table, and hear those noble li-ahem 1 fiotionists, I mean -tel• ling about the wondrous trashin's they're dose is a positive treat. It's as good ae a whirl at Dickens club. They are fine fellows, these hard- working, faithful, warm•hearted; but they will lie --I mean they will deal in a certain class of fiction of which Ed- gar Allan Poe was a master. Let them lie on. They certainly won't get a chance to lie tin bed these summer days, and if they get a chance to lie anywhere else -why, let them do it and welcome. The Shan. AREUAMLM LOCAL SALESMAN wanted for Wingham and adjoining country to represent "Canada's Diciest and Greatest Nurseries" While business in some lines may be dull, farmers were never more encour- aged as regards fruit growing than at the present season. High prices for all classes of fruit have been obtained the past season, and there ie as a consequ- ence, an inoreased demand for nur- sery stock. Our stock is complete in every depart- ment including a neW list of 6pecialties whioh we alone handle. The right man will obttiin a perman- ent situation, with territory reserved for him. Pay weekly. Free sample Out- fit, etc. Write for particulars, London Sep. 1149STONE WELLINGTON' ronthill Narseries (850 acres 3166600d.)& . MMAN/U_1MAAM/.!!_lAM0.1 KN1 manna, CANADA, IN A BREATH THERE'S REST Breathe Hyomei and be cured of Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma. BSOLUTE SECURITY, fanuinq Carte r's Little Liver Pills. Nature has a remedy for catarrh, epi- demic colds and bronohiiis that is far better than dosing the Stomach with medioine and drugs. It ie the healing oils and balsams of Hyomei which medicate the air you breathe, reaching the most remote air cella in the nose, throat and longs, kill- ing all catarrhal germs and restoring health to the mucous membrane. • Hyomei ants like a curative internal air bath. and has the same healing and antiseptic effect as the air where the Pine and Eucalypti° forests give off their fragrant and healing balsams. Breathe healing Hyomei and see how quickly you will get relief from catarrh and head colds. If it does not help you there will not be a penny's expense, as Walton McKibben agrees to refund the money. The complete Hyomei outfit costs only $1.00. Q�� Must Sear Signature of See Pae -Simile Wrapper Below. Very .mall and as easy to take as sager. FDR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. TOR.CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION oEE+nvmas HuainArsgynHAfi guas, „t, !rarely vegetable �6're v s+cG CURE 5101C I4EADAGHI", CARTERS lTTLE IVER PILLS. CULTIVATE PATIEVICE. MI NF. N eeoMa dII ABitM�t tM#lMhi N . CLUBBING • 1 The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below 4 - RATES FOR 1907 A Bad Thing to Pin Faith to Short Cuts. There is no quality that better re. pays cultivation than patience. Weak. ness has no greater bolster than the power of dogged hanging on till a point is won. The greatest gifts come to naught if one is wanting in sticktoitiveness. Pa- tience pays in the long run better than undue haste. Franklin is not far wrong when he tells us that he that can have patience can have what he will. It is a bad thing to pin your faith to short cuts; too often they bring up against a blank wall, which means dis- heartening retracing of the path. Never let a child get into the habit of thinking a thing must be done at once or abandoned. Insist on the .task attempted being finished. If we learn patience in our youth our hearts will know fewer pangs in age. The woman who has learned to wait is usually the woman to whom come things worth waiting for. Patience may cease to be a virtue, but impatience never was one. An impatient manner is responsible for more business and social failures than the owner of that manner would believe. Patience is often but a matter of nerve control; therefore ,it should be cultivated from a health standpoint if from no other. Some women act as if they thought patience was an attribute of the weak- ling; it is the truest mark of strength. Patience should never be confounded with pusillanimity. The one puts up with wrongs from faith in the right- ing power of the future, the other be: cause it is the line of least resistance. Lamenting the past, holding on to dike agreeable experieneee, Pitying yourself and bemoaning your laok of opportunities. Comparing yourself with others to your own disadvantage. Work once in a while and take time to renew your energies. Waiting round for chances to turn up. Go and turn them up. Writing letters when the blood is hot, which you may regret later, Thinking that all the good chances and opportunities are gone by. Thinking of yourself to the exolusion of everything and everyone else. Carping and Criticising. See the best rather than the worst in others. Dreaming that you would be happier in some other place or oircumstanees. Belittling those whom you envy be- cause you feel that they dre superior to yourself. Dilating on your pains and aches and misfortunes to everyone who will listen t0 you, Speculating as to what you would do in some ono else's place, and do your best in your own, Citi a berlain'S Cough Remedy IS UNEQUALED FOR Coughs, Colds and Croup. Diplomatic Women. Almost all the celebrated women have gained their fame by diplomatic means, The famous women of Jewish history were all subtle in their methods -Rebecca, Jael and Herodias, to name but a few of them. What born diplomatists, too, were Catherine of Siena, the great saint, and Catherine de' Medici, the great sinner; The list of them down the ages is un- ending. The royal road to fame as well as to peace would seem for wo- men to be marked by the signposts of diplomacy. -Woman's Life. To Keep Them Separate. Were you ever annoyed by having your boiled dumplings come to the ta- ble in a more or less solid mass instead of in well shaped separate balls? If you have been, watch the cook. She probably dropped the dumplings into the water together instead of put- ting them in one at a time, as should always be done if they are not to stick together. Peanut Kisses. Shell and remove the brown skin from one quart roasted peanuts. Put them through a nut grinder and mix them with one-half pound powdered sugar and the unbeaten whites of four eggs. Beat all together with an egg beater or whip and drop by spoonfuls on buttered paper, spread on a fiat tin and bake a golden brown, A Beautiful Life. 1 A fife need not be great to be beau- tiful. There may be as much beauty In a tiny flower as in a majestic tree, in' a little gem as in a great mountain. A beautiful life is one that fulfills its mission -that is what God made it to be. -J. It. ;Biller. The "mother of the Gracehi" neck- lace Consists of gold disks which each contain the likeness of .a child or other dear one, and they are naturally much i prized possessions and expensive teiu- I Icets as well, Turpciitinu mined wlt'i carbolic mist and kept in open vessels about the toori will greatly lessen the risk of contagion in scarlet ;lover, diphtheria and kindred diseases. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .I. 4. 4. 4. 4. •i. • • • O • • 0 • e • • • 0 • 0 • 0 • 0 • for any of the following publications Times and Daily Globe Times and Daily Mail and Empire, Times and Daily World ....,. Times and Toronto Daily News.,.... Times and Toronto Daily Star Times and Daily Advertiser Times and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Weekly Globe . . ..... , Times and Weekly Mail and Empire Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star, and premiums Times and Weekly Witness Times and London Free Press (weekly) Times and London Advertiser (weekly) Times and Toronto Weekly Sun Times .and World Wide Times and Northern Messenger Times and Farmers' Advocate . We specially recommend our readers to subscribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine. Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times and Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times • .. lt......_. Farming World . Presbyterian Westminster Presbyterian and Westminster Christian Guardian (Toronto) ... ... , Youths' Companion Canadian Magazine (monthly) .., Sabbath Reading, New York . Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto)... Michigan Farmer Woman's Home Companion Country Gentleman Delineator Boston Cooking School Magazine Green's Fruit Grower Good Housekeeping McCall's Magazine and American Illustrated Magazine and American Boy Magazine and What to Eat and Business Man's Magazine. and Cosmopolitan r and Ladies' Home Journal and Saturday Evening Post and Success and Hoard's Dairyman and McClure's Magazine and Munsey's Magazine Times and Viek's Magazine Times and Home Herald , Times and Travel Magazine Times and Practical Farmer Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Designer Times and Everybody's Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg...,.. Times and Canadian Pictorial 4.50 4.50 3.10 2.30 2.30 2.35 2.60 1,60 1.35 1.75 2.10 1.85 1.80 1.60 1,80 2.20 1.35 2.35 2 1.75 2,2' 2,2555 ' 3.2 y3• 2.40 3.25 2.90 t+ 1.95 1.85 2.15 2.25 2.60 2.95 1.95 1.55 2 30 1.70 2.30 1 90 1.90 2.15 2.15 2.75 22.75 2 10 2.40 2.50 1.60 2 60 2 25 2.10 1.40 1 2.8075 1.25 1.60 4++++++++ +4+++++ O 4, The above prices include postage on American publications to any 4 address in Canada. If the TIMES is to be sent to an American address, add '3'. 50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be sent to Ve American addresses a reduction will be made in price, We could extend this list. If the paper or magazine you want is not in l the list, call at this office, or drop a card and we will give you prices en the g paper you want. We club with all the leading newspapers and magazines. i1 When premiums are given with any of above papers, subscribers will 0 secure such premiums when ordering through us, same as ordering direct 0 from publishers. • These low rates mean a considerable saving to subscribers, and are • STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE, Send remittances by postal note, post 0 office or express money order, addressing i TIMES OFFICE,• Ai WINGHAM, ONTARIO. •w • • ar+•SSllt••sa$,011Miectll**OaSms eses a••I0S* ***t 0* 0$Sl08 es VARICOCELE 0 re -7- NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confined to His Koine fior.l''eeias. r "Heavy work, severe straining and evil habitsin y.1:.t?tr mu lit. w dun, le v it a 'elf, 1t',:'_n I worked hard toe a1.i•.l woolil sear a 4 e= severe ail 1 was often :aid up for week at a time. to„sr y phys:c!an tol I :rt, an . .et ton was my only boo,- l.eit I tat r cd it i tried several slse ah ts. bat wn o f u 1 tit all tnuy wt e 3 1,a; my money. I commenced to lot k upon ad dot's iitt..e Itur than rogues. One das. u,ss r. • u: why I ..,as o f work. i I tUld hira my cunc'ton, Ile advised n.'to&'cuwt 1 1rroly. Kennedy. as it , had taken rt t Ment from ti c t r 1C t c .. ‘11....t: knew they were squares -i 'i. ] Iwrcte rhum an, got Trr.vr SLL,. tat t.r. r r. s•r teas sfm nl al kt 4l 1 s ,.somewhat tt e iue:� mntlt s tr i mc�nt I was se r t v hat t1 s c +r a e l T;: I, .:.t- tinu.1 t ti tneut for three ntc the lc r , r and was rew.u.,i with 1 eompi i. cure, I could cn y c ar n Sh,l ,reek in a n a•.1 r rn I fore tr atuent, now I em arning Sei mill never tis_ a ti .. I t1•i,h all sufferers knew of your -.mina :,lo •ire atmer:t. IIIINIiV LOCUST. 8T. HAS YOUR 115.00D BEEN INSEASEIV BLOOD POISON'S ar., the most pre al nt and most tmt a l ceaw. s '1l.e t; nate very life blood of the victim acid u tic.:? eat ireiy eradicatedfrom th sy nit :'id e r tins cortplieations. I e:varo of Mercury. It oniy sapl;res s the sy,npt.,rn, ear .".NEW bIE'l II. 1) °urea all of . ,d dt t YOUN<+itrlt MIIDLE ASI Ir :til''`Imprudent arta or late e ce --.;have l,roken down your system. Yon feel ttte symptoms stealin, ov r you, it,.r t i ly, Irhyei. calix, ani vitally yon are not tit: man you -os: d to he cr t i,..u.1 be, 11:11 you L_ed tl.-3 danger signals? READER Aro y.,a avi•• t _1.? 1faro ynulolt hope? sir lntr intcndin:; tot :•rv? lies ,r,,nr blood oo.l ue n tli ear d' Lave you any t't;caan ...r i r yr METni,`) 'l'nrare :t'r will mire you. 11 eat it luis duce fur others ra it will ort for Yon. Conseltatkn Fres. N. nutter :fim bas treated wet, f‘,1. an 1 c t.t „l,i_rwn Frac of chess . nooks ;:nee--"'iLot,o..lenMe tor,t- .rated eariwca a,!fMom NO NAMES'. USED WITROUT 'WRITTEN CONSENT. P31VAi . "to rahtares t+rt he o"o cr n•ntietopes, ;:tie Ohi^-c confidential. Quentio:a lint And cast ai: Tteatmertt; FREE FOR 1%CMG 'rtc'"ATai1 'lT. DRsKW Rs. KEN`l°. Cor. Michigan Acre,, and Griswold St., nctroit, :i'Ecdi,