HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-05-13, Page 3TUE WINO H9,,11 TIMES,MAS' 13, .1009
THE PEACE OF THE NATIONS,
a
is
Head Officio, Haa,iltoa,
W
The great drawback to
the average investment
lies in the locking up of
money, rendering it un-
available when desired.
A WING for the moment the question of relative risk
of loss, the desirability of keeping money on deposit
in a Savings Bank (where it is at once obtainable
for any emergency) renders it most important that
every business man, or any other man or woman, should, if at
all possible, keep a substantial sum on deposit in a separate
Savings Account.
It is most unwise to lock up every dollar in business or
permanent investment, To the same degree, it is wise to keep
a ready cash surplus laid safely aside in a chartered Bank.
A private savings account is carried by every prudent busi-
ness man.
THE BANK OF HAMILTON specially invites the
opening of such accounts, both by its regular business clients, and
'also by those who transact their current banking elsewhere.
Every courtesy and convenience is extended to such
customers.
BANK OF HAMILTON
WINGHAM BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, Agent.
A HUNDRED MILLIONS A YEAR.
For all the exohanges in the Un-
ited States the amount of money
tied up in circulation will not aver-
age less than $800,000,000. A five
per cent interest charge against this
amount costs the patrons of the
brokers the tidy annnaI sum of $40,-
000,000. We have already determined
that the annual expense of maintaining
the brokerage and commission houses
is $70,000,000 for New York City and
$100,000,000 for the United States;
therefore we find that the banks in-
crease the load which our epeonlative
friends must shoulder to the piotures-
que total of $140,000,000 -and we have
not yet paid our brokers a penny of
profits.
If the operating expense of the spoon-,
lative game in New York City alone
be planed at $70,000,000 it will be oon-
servative to increase the amount to
$100,000,000 for the entire United States.
Boston has an active stock exchange and
more than two hundred recognized
firms. Philadelphia has as many more,
Baltimore supports seventy-seven stook.
brokers. Chicago has its own stook
exchange but its importance ie over-
shadowed by the vast transactions in
grain on its famous Board of Trade.
Lasalle Street is the Wail Street of the
metropolis of the Middle West, and in
and about it are the offices of hundreds
of brokers, many of whom do an enor-
mous speculative business. Hundreds
of millions are wagered by the public
on the finotnatione of wheat and corn,
and an unceasing toll in the form of
oommigsions pours into the hands of
those brokers who are members of the
i
1
Board.
There is no escape from the non.
elusion, my speculative friend, that you
and your fellows who dabble in stocks,
wheat, corn, cotton, coffee, and other
seouritiea and staples, must first pay to
your brokers a sum not less than $100,-
000,000 each year so that they may keep
their offices open. Who else is to pay
it? Deny that perquisite to them rind
you will find their houses closed. You
always have paid it, you are now pay-
ing it, and you will continue to pay
the posts of the Wall and LaSalle
Street games as long as they continue.
The only satisfaction you have is that
your money keeps an army of probably
80,000 at "work" in the useless employ-
ment of soliciting, recording and ex-
ecuting your gambling orders.-Freder•
ick Upham Adam, in the May Every-
body's,
V
EJANCEilS OF NEUECThft
A SORE.
jN S\1I R neglect a Cut or sore,
however trivial it may appear.
Mrs. B. E. Iiedwell, of 337, Proven.
cher Avenue, St. Boniface,Winuipeg,
had a small sore on the second finger
of hersof hand. . She thought ht i
o
t t
g
would get rightunaided, ded u
tltai
a„ t
Instead, blood -poisoning
set in. She
Says :---" 1 then tried poultices and
en ordinary salve. '!hese, however,
did not have the desired effect, and,
as the finger began to fester, I had to
call in a doctor, who lanced it.
Despite his care, however, it again festered, and
the ointments, liniments, and other prepparatioes
which the doctor gave me seemed absO1ately unable
M bring about any relict. We were told of a case
similar to my own in which Zam-Iiuk had effected
a tuns when everything else had failed, and we,
therefore, decided to give Zed -1 ek a trial, It only
needed a tew days to show the wisdom of this
step. The blood•porsoning and inrn
flamatlon wete
reduced. and the pain became less acute. /it
under three weeks front first eomntending with
Zan*-lluk the finger wee quite stoned again."
T ORKING mon and Vro111en throughout the Dominion find that
Zam-Bek is the greatest boon they can ha,ire as a healer
of accidental outs, burns, and bruises, as well as skin diseases.
Mr. R. as Purchase, conductor on the Toronto Street Railway,
tells how this great herbal balm benefited him when he met
with his accident.
The trolley pole of his bat slipped oft
the live wire, and the rope was caught
in the standard, purchase held on to
the ropehand until
his shed xras pulled up
to the top of the car. There it was
held, and the rope, pulled through his
fingers by the force of the moving ear,
torn and lacerated to a shocking extent
three fingers, tearing several pieces of
flesh completely away. Zatn-Buk was
applied, and cased the pain very
quickly. `Writing to this effect, Mr.
Purchase says t -.-
"I had pre'rieuel had oicperlenee of
the healing h 1 n giver y
of Za -�u
m k and d th
way it scathes cats and ilijuries. 1,,
therefore, bound the fingers in Zara-Buk,
and it was most gratifying the way in
which this balin soothed thep sin. Two
days after the accident the wounds
were closed, and new skin utas begin-
ningto
form over the top. Each day
Ire
d sand the wounds
and I am nosy back again at Work with
the hand as sound as ever. To look at
it you would never know it had been
so terribly torn and lacerated.
".1 do not think there Is anything to
equal Zairn•Buk as a healer of akin
injuries and diseases."
WHAT YOU 48HOUL6 USE ZAM«BUK POB.
Zoog-
Bak
c
u
r Di*
ai
lib
'
skin
ers
tra
ntbtr,s, cus, ieskaiag steers Ksorsa,
btoarLpdiso Hg, salt rheum, ris itch
ri„gradata. bat kg, diseased ankles,
sirs
ou
w ,nlr mama, C Cq,f/
and rill 30o. ro . Ths, All
Dauggisfs aid Stories $ell�T�t 804. bait, !hers AO
$t 25, or joss free from Zal;,.Bak Co.. Torgrtto,
for briar.
e
3
[8, E. Kiser. j
Peace is the ory that the people utter,.
And peaoe is the promise the nations
yield,
130 over the barren#, the proud ]lags
Rutter,
And
ready
yTeDreadnoughgnsere avely
waiting,
The
ha ttobder chains,Ad ()ruttier
owed y p hat ,
Where only a withered hope remains,
The statesmen plead for appropriations,
And they promise peaoe as a fair re-
ward:
Bat day by day o'er the burdened ria•
H0218
There fall the shadows of pike and.
sword;
The toilers give that the Rnns may Rile'
ten,
And ask if ever the strain shall oease,
And the rivals, arming for sotion, listen
For the shot that shall signal the fall
of Peace,
In the hearts of men there is dark fore-
boding,
The nations jealously watch and wait;
There is endless baiting and ceaseless
goading,
And the mighty navies grow still more
great
Peace is the cry that the people otter,
And peaoe is the promise the nations
send -
Why should the Sags at the mastheads
flutter,
And why should the folly be without
End?
AT EVENtNGCAME TO THE
WOOD.
At evening I came to the wood, and
threw myself on the breast
Ot the great green mother, weeping,
and the arms of a thousand trees
Waved and rustled in welcome, and
murmured "Rest-erest-rest 1
The leaves, thy brothers, shall heal
thee; thy sisters, the Sowers, bring
peaoe."
At length I stayed from my weeping
and lifted my face from the grass;
The moon was walking the wood with
feet of mysterious pearl,
And the great trees held their breath,
trancelike, watching her pass,
And a bird called out from the eba-
dews, with voice as sweet as a girl,
And then, in the holy silence, to the
great green mother I prayed :
"Take me again to thy bosom, thy
son who so close to thee,
Aforetfine, filial clung, then into the
city strayed --
The painted face of the town, the
wine and harlotry,
"Bathe me in Instral dawns, and the
morning star and the dew,
Make pure my heart as a bird and
Innocent as a $ower..
Make sweet my thoughts as the mea-
dow.mint-O make all anew,
And in the strength of beech and oak
gird up my will with power,
•'I have wandered far, 0 my mother,
but here I return at the iast,
Never again to stray in pilgrimage
wanton and wild.
A broken heart and a contrite here at
thy feet I oast,
0, take me back to thy bosom. "
And the mother answered, "Child!"
-Riohard Le Gallienne in The Deline-
ator for June.
WATER AND SALT FOR COWS.
Eight gallons of water a day is the
average quantity reqnired for a cow,
and the milk given is about eighty-seven
per oent, water. In some pastures there
is no water, the cows being supplied
night and morning, which forces each
now to drink four gallons at a time in
order to be supplied. As the cow does
not know that she must drink four
gallons, she may use less and she will
reduce her milk supply a000rdingly.
Extensive tests and investigations
have been made by the experiment
stations to determine the advisability of
adding salt to the ration of dairy cows,
As a result of theta trials, it is reoom.
mended that dairy cows be given al
least one ounce of salt a day. Exoep-
tionaily heavy milkers will require more
than this. The uniform results ob-
tained with all cows employed in these
trials indicate that salt in addition to
that obtained in their food is absolutely
essential to the continued health of a
dairy cow while producing milk. It ie
evident, moreover, that the amoubt of
salt whioh must be supplied directly
will vary greatly in different localities,
it being more at high elevations and at
places remote from the sea.
DON'T BE CHEAP.
Do not hold yourself too cheap, If
you det not thick well of yourself others
are not likelyt
tht
to nk much of you.
You are usnally taken at your own
value. By this is not meant a foolish
Belt eenoelt, but a proper self.retpeot.
Have a regard for the esteem of
those whose opinion is worth having,
Ito one can be admired by all. He
who has no enemies niay doubt
whether he has real friends, Try
50 win the regard of the good and
the wise; if the foolish take olifenee,
pass it by.
Think tOO well of yonrbelf to stoop
to anything coarse, mean or nntrn. ,
However humble your station in life
may be, yon may think yonrsolf
worthy only of that whioh is good
and true. To be genuine puts yon on a
high le'ral. Whatever your purse, yon
may be rioh in oharaoter. Think your.
self worthy of the best to whish yobs
Cart attain, Alan for the highest .you
see, told should yew( fail to reach it you
will still be higher than it your aim bast
been lbw.-,.-DillWdrskee &'barlaal.
A Splendid Record.
Christian Guardian.
Last year the British railways again
MOO a hnemerable record, in that, dur
loq the whole twelve months, they oar•
ried on their operations without the lose
of a single life. The last time this hap•
paned was the year 1001. Since that
date the following bas been the record;
In 1902, 6lives were lost; in 1903, 26; In
1004, 6; in 1006, 80; in 1906, 118; in 1907.
18, Tbo fatalities in 1906 and 1006 were
mainly the result of three disasters,
whioh were found, upon investigation,
to have been due entirely to the failure
of the human element, and not to oneo.
hauled defect or imperfeotiou in road.
bed. This record, when planed along-
side of the United States or Canadian
reoord, is not apt to make one proud of
the way in whioh the railways of this
continent are operated. Is seems only
too plain that we hold human life all
too cheap, and are content to saorifioe
men to larger dividends, or in the
interests of a wholly unnecessary haste.
Bow long can wa afford to pay the
awful toll of human life which each
year's reoord reveals?
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
&suet Bear Signature of
See Fac -Simile Wrapper Below.
''Spry small and as easy
to_take as anger,;
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR.RILIOUSNE3t.
FOR�TORPID LIVED'.
FOR�CONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
t ir�2lTAtMD NU.TM.Y* NATU1 C.
Grits (FurolT Yegetsble.�#u'.,i
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
GARTER'S
IVER
piLLS.
The Law and Stray Cattle.
The laws of Ontario regarding astray
cattle are definite. In oases where cat-
tle are at iarge and wander onto prem-
ises of one who is not their owner, there
are two courses to pursue. As soon as
the animal is discovered on the man's
premises he may drive it to the pound
and notify the clerk of the municipality,
who will attend to its release or disposi-
tion, or he may seoure it on his premises
and retain it white he is complying with
statutory requirements for its disposi-
tion, which are these: He must first
publish a notice of the presence of such
beast on his property, in a newspaper
published in his Iooality, for three con-
secutive weeks. I: the owner fails to
claim the animal, its custodian meet
keep it for two months, and if its value
exceed $20 it must be sold by public
auction. The notices of sale, whioh
may be either printed or written, must
be posted in at least three pnblio planes
n the municipality and shall be con-
inned for three clear daps. They roust
peolfy the auimbt will tbeisold. e and pAfter lace aall t. wexpe exhioh penses
t harboring and tale, whioh must not
xoeed $20, have been deduoted, the bal.
noe must be handed to the treasurer of
he municipality, in Date the lawful
weer of the animal bas not in the
Meantime been found. If the value of
he animas is below.$20, it becomes the
roperty of the person on to whose
remises it has strayed atter he has
roperly advertised its presence. When
n animal is claimed and expenses of
astnre or feeding are determtned, the
w makes provision against exorbitant
bargee. Any person harboring ani.
alt whioh are not his own, and does
of advertise their preemies, it liable
prosecution, when a heavy fine may
imposed by a emit*of the peaoe,
e
0
e
a
1
0
i
p
p
p
la
a
m
to
be
HAD GIVEN trr
ALL HOPE OF
LIVING.
Heart Trouble Oared by
YILRN"S HEART AND NERVE PILLS
Mrs. d,ndres'v Savoy, Grattan's, N.$„
writes: In the rear Of 2006 I was taken
.ick toad did net think I could 11ve eby
length of time. Ely trouble was with m
hart and people told me that nothing could
fro +lone for a case like mine. I consulted
the Tarr beet doctors but they could de me
no good. For 'fovea Weeks I could hardly
Brow the floor. I had no pain, but was eo
weak nobody
in the e !ro i
r d can believe ohs
met had, given my littven le girl hopes my NOM tet-iri
a0.. ay a friend tame to see ma, and can-
ing wouldt name, a of Milburn s Heart and
Ito** Pi11t as they aro goad foe heart
lrottbls.' My husband trot Yee 'A but. bat
for Iwo days I was not feeling any better,
brit en the tobhth day My hasnmid sem: '1
believe there tdi1u ars doing yytt gcod,l I
leak able to say •T e�I feel a, geed felts
iNtttlrIbi.Myou ende z erale.'wel)Idrin
tight away. Y teak
Iwsbone* and three dos.. Mit of the third
oar. aid 1 *as pettedly well And arAiyt fact
besot reek kine. $Mesa
I will never be witbort there in my lichee
beetled kbowk if it bad bet beta far Mil.
basil'. Beare aAit Nen* PMMla, I would bat
bars berm altar trove,"
Pries SOosnteyorb.x,
S boxes f r$lar
ThL tetu..'Mitbatit 7eer eat.
4
•
3•
LITTLE 18 `31'Qt'7,F STOMACH WRONG?
?
P1GESTEFS
will put it right
quickly and surer►.
Money back if they
do not rust:,
At en Druggists.
4r•ow„s 11411010,1
N DY».6Ag1A,
595' »TDMaGX �.
.,.T,R
• oa
"loan
,.,'CIO Mi Ge/
25c. a Box.
or direct from
WSJ -COLEMAN
Inman CO,
TORONTO
414411•44090* E44;at4411144131 t►414+1410.44144414441*4q 400+0 it
•4 We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL,
whioh bus no equal Also the best grades of Sod -thing, Cannel and
2 Domestic Goal, and Wo d of all kinds. always on hand.
o We carry a
4 1ullstook of
COAL COAL COAL.
4
o Dr- Highest Price paid for all kinds of Lugs.
4 ,
ift4
4
0
4
iDLUMBER. SHINGLES LATH
Cedar. Posts, Barrels, Ete.
&IN AN McLean -1
esidenoe Phone No. 55. Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44.
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,.�as�cssoe a� 44 4+►sa►+c�avra .4 6.104rosli4rrs#"$.4er4.4s►oitoth r1
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