HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-01-14, Page 3to
a
Head Office, HaHatailtoa.
THE WINGRAll TIMES, JANUARY 14, 1009
: iriMdr.�
As a general rule, it is
the man who earns the
money and the woman
who saves it... e .
A LARGE porportion of the Savings Bank accounts
opened with THE BANK OF HAMILTON are
opened and conducted by women. Out of the house-
hold income, the thrifty wife quickly lays aside, in the
safe custody of a chartered Bank, as much as can well be spared
from the husband's income. a;When unforseen reverses come, or a
home -or other commendable thing is desired -,-quiet saving
(hardly missed from the regular income) are available.
It is surprising how rapidly Systematic Saving grow.
Many accounts, matte up of small deposits, reach a total that
is quite important, and which makes the family independent when
extra money is needed.
THE BANK OF HAMILTON specially invites the Sav-
ings Accounts of married women, and has inaugurated a
system of caring for such deposits, that is both simple and
convenient.
Money may be deposited or withdrawn in any amount at
any time; and when starting a new account, a simple enquiry
for the Manager will secure all desired infosmatlon, and` every
attention to requirements.
BANK OF. HAMILTON
WINGHAM BRANCH - C. P. SMITH, Agent.
TEADY
EMPLOYMENT
for a reliable Local Salesman repre-
senting
"Canada's Oldest and Greatest
Nurseries"
in Wingham and adjoining oonntry.
Yon will find there is a good demand
for nursery Stook on account of the
high prices the growers rowers
have realized
on their fruit this seaa.in.
Onr salesmen are turning in big busi-
ness to tie this year. Be one of them
and earn good wages through the winter
months.
Territory reserved Pay weekly.
Free sample outfit, eto.
Write for particulars.
STONE Ar, WELLINGTON
Foothill Nurseries
(850).
TORONTO
CANADA
-60 YEARS' '
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS I
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone Sending a sketch end description may
?Maly ascertain our opinion free whether an
banentton 1s probably patentable. Communloa,
tions strictly conildentiaL HANDBOOK on Patent*
sent free. Oldest agency for eecur;ing pates.
MinnPatents takes through to t
co.o reeelve
special notice, wlthouboharge.intim
Srltnfthlc JIaferkcan.
A handsomelyCjoralrrscir-
culation anyetent n. Temr
Canada113.75 a year.postage prepaid. Bold by
all newa.terdere.
MUNN & Co esiumlt ar,New York
Stanek mdse. bah Fit., Washington. D. Ce :
FARM ERS
How to Keep Boys on the Farm.
A correspondent of The Farmer's
Advocate writes as follows:
I am going to say a few words on
the much -debated question of keeping
boys on the farm. It is a very im-
portant gneetion, too, because it
affeote the welfare of the whole
country. If there were no farmers,
all other trades and professions would
go out of business, because agrionl.
tare is the real heart of the oonntry.
Now, to my mind, the trouble is not
all with the schools, bnt u large propor-
tion
ro
rr
-
tion of it lies with the parents. We
will look at it in thin light. A young
man eighteen yearn of age is working
on his father's farm; he works hard
all the year round, and his holidays
are few and far between, but he does
not see a Dent for it, only his olothes
and board. He has a faint idea that
perhaps some day his father will buy
a farm for him when he wants to start
in farming, but he is not sure but that
ho might be turned out on the roadside,
instead. He has not much to work
for, and when he meets a young fel-
low of his sognaintanoe'who has gone
to the city, and sees him ao smartly
and anyone having' live stook or other .
artiolee they wish to disports ot, should adver-
tise the ease for sale in the TIMTle. Our large
circulation tells and 9 will beebrange indeed if
ton do not get a customer. We can't guarantee
hat yon will sell bonnets you may ask more
for the article or stook than 9 9 worth. pend
your adtertisement to the TZMRYs and try this
plan of; disposing of your stook and other
arti
IT PAYS
TO ADVERTISL
IN THE
TIMES .
1111-11i1111 111111111
dreamed and hears him jingle the
change in hie pocket, he feels rather
cheap. Although he may be better
off, it does not look that way to him.
Now, this is not as it should be. The
father should come to some agree.
ment with the son as soon as he is old
enough to earn good wages in any
employment, and then he will know
what he is working for, and take an
interest in thtoge. He should also be
given a small allowance of oaeh to
spend or save, whichever he likes.
He ahould also be consulted i t a
nt 8 rm
matters, and his opinion not laughed
at. And he ought to have some stook
of his own on the farm, especially a
driving -horse. If a father treats his
son in this way, he will find that he
will not talk about going to the oity.
Another thing 1 often wonder about
is this: Many farmers are all the time
grumbling about what a hard job
farming is, and saying they wish they
had never stuck to a. Then, when the
boys all go off to the city, the father
thinks they are en ungrateful lot
But is it any wonder they go, co nuid-
ering the way they aro brought up?
A FARnfttR.
Prince Edward Island.
f BLOOD DISEASES CURED 7
Drs. K. & K. Established 20 Years.
'-NO NAMES USED WITH-
OUT WRITTEN CONSENT
He was surprised at how the.
sores healed- "I took your NEW
METHOD TREATMENT for serious blood `
disease with which I had been inflicted
for twelve years. I had eonsulted a score
of physicians, taken all kinds of blood
medicine, visited Hot Springs and other
mineral water resorts, but only got tern-
porary relief, They would help me for a
time, but after discontinuing the medi-
cines the symptoms would break out
+i:•" p ? ` again -running sores, blotches, rheum-
' atic pains, looseness of the hair, swellings
of the glands, palms of the hands sealing,
BEFORE TRCATMENT itchiness of the skin, dyspeptic stomach, AFTER TRCATMENT
etc. I had given up in despair when a
friend advised me to consult you, as you had cured him of a similar disease 8 years ago.
I had no hope, but took his advice. In three weeks' time the sores commenced to heal up
and I became encouraged, I continued the Naw Manion TREATMENT for four months and
at the end of that time every symptom had disappeared. I was cured 7 years ago and no
signs of any disease since. My boy, three years old, is sound and healthy. .1 Certainly
can reeommend your treatment with all my heart. You can refer any person to me
privately, but you can use this testimonial as you wish." W. H. 8.
We treat NERVOUS DEBIUTY, VARICOCELE STRICTURE, VITAL WEAKNESS,
BLOOD, SKIN and PRIVATE Disea.es, URINARY, BLADDER and KIDNEY complaints
of Men and Women
READERAreuryobtoaovibteemn f deueyHlaBoysoe? anAy ewaukinnete? ding to marry! Ex$n
TREATMENT will cure you. What It has done for others it will do for you. Con.ultatton
Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge.
Charges reasonable. Books Ftee--"The (`olden Monitor," (illustrated) on Diseases of Men,
NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Everything confidential,
Question list and cost of Horne Treatment FREE.
DRS� KENN EDY& KEN N EDY
Cor. Michigan Ave.. and Griswold SL, Detroit, Mich.
THERE ARE OTHERS.
(Exohange,]
Don't imagine, my boy, if you throw up
your job
That the firm that employe you will
fail:
That the whole office force in their an-
guish will gob,
And the senior partner tarn pale.
You are highly efficient, and active and
bright --
So yon say. I'm unwilling to doubt
you;
But the chance of all this ie incredibly
slight,
There are plenty of othere without you.
Don't get mad at the girl, andato make
her feel bad
Fail to go for your oanal call.
It's the troth, though I know it sounds
ae:'fa11y sad,
That she may never miss you at all,
It's a mighty poor policy staying away,
Though I grant that at times she may
float you.
But I know that I'm in a position to say
There are plenty of others without you.
Don't get soured on the world and do
anything rash;
Not to speak of the good of your soul,
If you jump in the lake you may make
a small splash,
But you'll never leave mnoh of a hole.
Don't expeot folks to make auph a ter-
rible fess
When they think very little about you,
And to use common language, aren't
oaring a cuss -
There are plenty of others without
you.
CROUP QUICKLY CURED.
Don't let the Child Choke to Death
While Waiting For the Doctor.
Hyomei, the miraculous, antiseptio
dry air treatment, will cure croup in
either the first or second stages. - Easily
inhaled, even when the breathing 9
irregular, it reaches more promptly
than any other remedy the terribly
inflamed membrane of the windpipe.
Its soothing balaame act immediately,
the inflammation 9 allayed and the
swelling reduced.
Geo. H, King, of 22 Wellington
Street, South Woodstock, says: "We
would not think of keeping house with-
out Hyomei. It hoe warded off colds,
croup, coughs and sore throat for all
of our three children many and many
a time. When a child breathes badly
and through the mouth and the glands
around the eyes and nose commence to
Dwell, then 9 the time that we find the
Hyomei quickly relieves the trouble
and gets the bronchial tubus, lungs and
throat cleared up."
Hyomei (pronounced High -tense) 9
guaranteed by Walton McKibben to
Dire catarrh, eonghs, colds, asthma,
bronohitie and croup, or money back.
A complete outfit, including a neat hard
robber pooket inhaler, costs only $1,00
An extra bottle of Hyomei, if afterwards
needed, poste but 50 cents.
SNOW.
[Archibald Lampman.j
White are the far-off plains, and white
The fading forests grow;
The wind dies out along the height
And denser still the snow.
A gathering weight on root and tree,
Falls down scarce audibly.
The road before me smooths and fills
Apace, and all about
The fences dwindle, and the hills
Are blotted slowly out;
The naked trees loom apeotrally
Into the dim white sky.
The meadows and far -sheeted streams
Lie still without a sound;
Like some soft minister of dreams
The snowfall hoods me round;
In wood and water, earth and air,
A silence everywhere.
Save when at lonely intervals
Score farmer's sleigh urged on,
With rustling runners and sharp bells,
Swings by me and is gone;
Or from the empty waste I bear
A sound remote and clear;
The barking of a dog or nall
To oattle, sharply pealed,
Borne eohoing from some wayside stall
Or barnfleld far afield;
Then all is silent and the snow
Falls settling soft and slow.
The evening deepens, and the grey
Folds closer earth and sky;
The world seems ehronded far away;
Its noieoe sleep, and I
As secret as yon buried stream,
Plod dumbly on, and dream.
SAVE THIS, ANYWAY,
CA S
rrne
PILLS
RE
Bak Headache and relie9osllth° tronbleelnel-
dent to e bilious state of the system, each as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowatness Distress atter
eating, Pain in the Side .te. While their moat
remarkable enecesa has been shown In curing
SICK
ldeadaehe, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills ere
equally valuable in Constipation, coring and pre,
venting this annoying complaint, while they also
correct ell diaordcrsoftheatomach, atim[Late the
livaied U
dregulatetheboWcls. Event! they
HE' iD
Ache they would be almost priceless to those who
suffer from this dletressibg complaint: but forts-
natelytheir goodness does not end hcrc,andthew
who once try them will find these little pills valu•
able In so many ways that they rill not bewil-
ling to do without them. Butalter all sick head
ACHE
In the bane of so many lives that here Is where
we make onr great boast, Onr pills emelt while
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills ere very small end
very easy to take, One or two pill smakoadose.
They arc strictly vegetable and do not gripeor
purge, but by their gentle action please an who
use them.
�..�{{CLU�B,��Trz II1EDII1Ila**ao...... NIV7 7.Oat.�,•�
kaiWl EL hall Da hall Irk%
Human Nature.
This was overheard in the lobby of
a hotel when a bus load of travelling
salesmen name from the station. Every
man of them, as he signed the register,
paused to shake hands with the hotel
clerk -a fatherly old fellow who had
been there many years,
"Ah," said one of them to the clerk,
"it's a good thing you're still on deck,
Unoie Dave; I don't think the house
could run without you,"
"Couldn't it, though!" said Uncle
Dave. "You fellows would come in
here, and if there was s strange olerk
you'd say, 'Where's Uncle Dave?'
And the clerk would say, 'Why, didn't
you hear? He died a month ago.'
And then you'd say, 'Well, I'll be
darned! That's too bad. Say, when'll
dinner be ready?' "
Put it in Some Safe Place, for it May
Come in Handy Some Day.
Here 9 a simple home-made mixture
as given by an eminent authority on
Kidney diseases that makes the state-
ment that it will relieve almost any
nate of Kidney trouble if taken before
the stage of Bright's disease. He states
that such symptoms as lams back, pain
in the side, frequent desire to urinate,
especially at night; painful and discolor.
ed urination, are readily overcome.
• Here is the recipe. Try it:
Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half
onnoe; Compound Kargon one ounce;
Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces. Take a teaspoonful after each
meal and at bedtime.
A vi'ell•kaown druggist here in town
is authority that these ingredients are
all harmless and easily mixed at home
by shaking well in a bottle. This
mixture has b peoniiar healing and
soothing effeot upon the entire Kidney
and Urinary etruotnre, and often over.
mines the worst forms of Rheumatism
in just a little while. This mixture is
said toarembve all blood disorders and
cure the Rheumatism by foroing Kid-
neys to filter and strain from the blood
and system all uric acid and foal, de-
composed waste matter, whioh canoe
theme t ffliotione. Try it If you aren't
' well, Save the prescription,
SKIN DISEASES
Those troublesome afflictions aro caused
wholly by bad blood and an unhealthy
state of the system, and can be easily cured
by the wonderful blood cleansing proper-
ties of
Burdock
Blood
Batters
Many remarkable sures have been made
by this remedy, and not only have the un-
sightly skin diseases been removed, and a
bright clear complexion been produced,
but the entire system hes been renovated
and invigorated at the same same time.
SALT RHEUM CURED.
Mrs. John O'Connor, Burlington, N.S.,
writes :-" For years I suffered with Salt
Rheum. I tried a dozen differebt medi-
cines, but most of them only made it worse.
I was advised to try . Burdock Blood Bit -
tors. I got a bottle and before I had taken
half a dozen doses I could sec a change so I
d its use
and now
I am completely
c ntinu� P y
0
cured. I cannot sap too much for your
wonderful medicine.'
it+i11NN1E.M0i111111AN10100 Iir1111.
CLIIBBING
RATES
• FOR. 1908 - 09.
The
A pioneer of the Township of Ashfield
passed to hie reward, the funeral taking
place the last day of the old year. Mr.
Jae. Drennan was a native of Dumfries
Scotland, and name to this country in
1852, settling in the Township of Ash-
field, whioh bas been his home ever
since. He was married a short time
after coming to this oonntry, his part-
ner in life's joys and sorrows being also
a native of the old country. He 9 sur-
vived by two brothers, Geo., in Ashfield
and John, in Fargo, North Dakota; by
his wife, and by a family of four sons
and four daughters, John and George
at home; Tenant in Goderioh; Wm. in
Ashfield; Mrs. W. J. Bell and Mrs.
David Sproul, of Goderioh; Mrs. H.
Ellen and Mre. John Little of Ashfield,
Mr. Drennan was 81 yaarn of age.
PINK NIS#EC iTh
PENT IfDAMES
.tl Old-toshictidd, Bore -Made Mix-
Liv- whoubtesits Cu,res Kidney ant` THE WINGHAM TIMES, ONLY $180
Liver i'r
TIMES will receive subscriptions at the ra
for any of the following publications :
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Tinges and Toronto Daily News,. 2.30
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Times and Weekly Globe . ,..., 1.60
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire, 1.60 '
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star 1.85
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star, and
premiums - 2.10
Times and Weekly Witness ..... 1.85
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Times and Northern Messenger. 1.35
Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35
We specially recommend onr readers to subscribe
to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine.
Times and Farming World. 1.75
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Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) ... 2.40
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Times and Ladies' Home Journal. .. 2.75
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Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60
A
The above prices include postage on American publications to any
address in Canada. If the TIMES ie to be sent to an American address, add
50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be sent to
American addresses a reduction will be made in price, f
We could extend this list. If the paper or magazine you want is not in
the list, call at this office, or drop a card and we will give you prides on the
paper yon want. We club with all the leading newspapers and magazines.
When premiums are given with any of above papers, subscribers will
secure such premiums when ordering through as, same ss ordering direct
from publishers.
These low rates mean a considerable saving to snbecribers, and are
STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal note, post
omoe or express money order, addressing
+I
TIMES OFFICE,
e WINGHAM, ONTARIO.
• woossstasiessoastoossamessesenone s,aaebesisis $AtM•S$S i$3l*IMsr
analISMISSMIZZCSIMIer
There Is Money in Farming
li you keep posted in up-to-date methods and read each
i.week the most complete and comprehensive
MARKET . REPORTS
sr
which appear in
THE WEEKLY SUN+ The Sup
is the Farmers' Business Paper. Be sure you subscribe for
The Sun to 1st January, 1910, in combination with
A prominent local druggist states
hat since the celebrated prescription
,f a d.iainguished specialist has be -
:c, iio.re or less known it is inter -
with the sale of secret mesh
e:;.x•riatly the patent or ad•
:ertiseil kidney pills. The `prescrip
•'nn, -: Sic:, first appeared in a dead.
journal, .s reproduced sere,
:is originally written :--
F lu,d Extract Cascara.......t/, oz.
Car,'idna (7onpound t UZ.
Syrup Sarsaparilla ......,6 oz.
I)ii ecthc,ns . One teaspoonful after
•ach meal and at bedtime. -
Any rood druggist can dispense
his, or, even better, a person can
buy the items separately and mix
them at home by shaking them well
together in a bottle. It is stated that
tli, ingredients being vegetable, art
harmless and simple. It .has a gentle
and natural action, and gradually
tones up the eliminative tissues,
leaving the kidneys int, a perfectly
healthy condition.
A, merchant well known in public
affairs states that this recipe cured
kis rbteumatism. Save the preecrip.
tint..
SUBSCRIBE NOW
•i11.0d t lk.400•+►40“4asti t tsw*M se *44.4s10.4I
•
•
COAL COAL COAL.
We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL,
which has no equal Also the best grades of Smithieg, Cannel and
Domestio Coal, and Wo d of all kinds. always on band.
;11pt00k
WeearryOf LUNIER SHINGLES, LATH
a
(bw
reed or Lndrebsed )'
• Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
laiskest Frit* paid for *11 Mails of 1,001.
Residenoi Phone No. 66. Offion, No. 64. XIII, No. 44.