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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-07-22, Page 3TIXI WIN(J AM TIDIES, JULY 22, 1909 SiirMasUfga w ws vw c•\+�'"��y''7^E 11 at py Alex Young & Coi r C? + C SOME OF THE THINGS YOU WILL NEED THIS SPRING There is no season of the year so fittt d for brightening up as the present Look at the list given below and see if there isn't something you need for spring clearing, Then look at the price and see if you can afford to overlook this store. 1180PS A good Mop is alwat s useful, but just now with the muddy days it is especially so. We have excellent mops at 2 eitb for 25 cents. PAILS Don't be handicapped by a leaky pail, we has a pails of all sizes The following prices should appeal to you. Best Gale Iron Pails 30e. Strong Tin Pails 20e. Good Fibre Pails 30e. these are all guaranteed to hold water. Scrub Brushes Our Scrub Brushes are made to stand the baldest kind re' work. Strong solutions will not effect their fabric. Price 10e and 13e. Carpet Beaters Times have changed, no more whips or bambco roles, we now have some durable Carpet Beaters that can be used by any housewife, any shape for 15e, Step Ladders Hanging pictures, washing woodwork, etc., all require the nee of a step ladder, and it is not a pleasant sensation to be on a rickety step ladder. Let us show you some of our good ones. We are agent for Sherwin Williams' Paints al d Varnii-bes and will be glad to give you figures on ''Brightening up" your place inside or out. Come in and talk the matter over, YOUNG'S BIG HARDWARE MEM aka its? Itq7 gA Sunshine Furnace has four triangular grate bars, each having three distinct Bides. In the single -piece and two-piece grate no such -like provision is made for expansion or contraction, and a waste of coal always follows a shaking. On the left- and right-hand sides are cotter pins, which when loosened permit the grates to slide out. These four grate bars are made of heavy cast iron, and are finished up with bulldog teeth. The teeth will grind up the toughest clinker i and SUNSHINE furnace because the grates are made in sections, not only can nothing but dust and ashes pass through, but after each shaking a different aide can be presented to the fire. Also, with the Sunshine grate there is no back -breaking movements attached to the shaking. By gently rocking the lever, first on the left and then on the right, the ashes are released on both sides,and fall through into the pan. _ C ' �Iar - s FOR Ski TA 13Y J. G. STEW.9.RT & CO. - WINGHAM. WE REPAIR WEAK MEN ONE SECRET OP OUR SUCCESS. Every este submitted to us receives the personal attention of our Medical Staff, who consider the symptoms. complications and chronicity, mad then decide as to the disease and curability. Specific, remedies are then prescribed for the case and are compounded by our own chemist in our own 1 -boratory. Such appropriate treatment cannot fall -to eure, as specific medicines are selected to Cure the symptoms that trouble you. We have no cure-all medicines like most specialists use *ho send the same miedteiues to alt patients nuke and erre none. We have treated patients throughout Canadoforover twenty year and can refer to any Wok as to our responsibility. We Guar*etee Cures or No Pry'. WO Trete all Diseases of Men tend Women. ter CONSULTATION FREE .40* if UnisMe to Ciel, Write -foe a. Ciaestion List for Hone `l'reata ent. Ds.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave, and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. QF INTEREST TO FARMERS. Mr. Justine Britton finds that Ernest Mctutosh, a young farmer of McKillop township, who was driving a load of hay on the Baron road between the town- ships of McKillop and Tuckorswith an the 0th of October last, and when his load shifted and he dismounted to adjust it, he was not guilty of negligence in leaving the reins on the ground when be went to the roar of the waggon to Ioosen the binder, with the help of a than who happened to be pasting. His horses were quiet and there was nothing on the road to frighteu them but when the binder was loosened part of the bay fell on or near them, causing them to run away and collide with a buggy or wag- gon which had passed them causing alight injury to Martin Ryan, a farmer of McKillop township, and severe in- jury to Margaret Ryan his wife. The notion was brought by these persons against McIntosh and his brother, Geo, Steward McIntosh, for whom he was driving. His Lordship, Mr. Justice Britton, who tried the notion at Gotta - rich without a jury, has dismissed it without costa. If, he says, in the opin- ion of a Division Court the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, in hie opinion the damages should be in favor of Margaret Ryan for $300 and Martin Ryan for $100 for his injury and pain and to include reediest services for himself and wife, and nursing for his wife, with costs. It appears in the evidence that Ernest Mo Iutosh was willing to contribute some• thing tangible towards reduoing the loss of Margaret Ryan, and his Lordship hopes he will even yet do so. His Lord- ship does not see what other thing, In the light of all that was present to his mind, wonld have suggested itself to him to do than what he did. HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM To cure rhenmatiem, it is necessary to rid the system of the exoees of nrio acid; and to do this a proper diet is even more important than the use of drags, though in very severe cases the latter are not to be despised in oonjunotion with the dieting that is absolutely essential. The Massachusetts General Hospital of Boston allows the following diet for its rheumatic patients: Graham or brown bread, white bread (limited to one-half slice daily), Dorn grannm, rioe, milk, eggs, flour, puddings. craokere, beans, peas, all kinds of vegetables ex- cept potatoes, tomatoes and asparagus, rhubarb, fresh fish, butter, oboese, buttermilk, cream, alkaline waters and toast. Avoid:' Red meats, starch or patatbes, white bread and sugars. The sensible use of water, both inter- nally and externally, plays a large part in the prevention or cure of rheumatism. One or two glasses, either hot or cold, taken before breakfast every morning is excellent to start the organs of digestion for the day, and at least one glees should be taken between meals. Often. the plain water will be enough to move a slightly oonstipated person, but, if not, a mild medicated water may be taken instead. It is very essential to keep the bowels open in cases of rheumatism. Uric Acid in the system is a poison, and it most not be forgottou that poison- ous waste matter is also eliminated through the skin. The pores of the skin must be kept freely open and not allowed to become clogged, if we hope to obtain the best results with rheumatic cases. A hot bath at bedtime is often very helpful, --The Delineator for August. Beautiful Hair Makes the Plainist Face Irrestable Attractive, Any woman can have beautiful and luxuriant hair by using Parisian Sage. the great hair tenio and dandruff cure. Parisian Sage is the favorite Hair Tonin of refined people, and since its introduction it has met with wonderful suooess. If yon want beautiful, lustrous hair that will be the envy of your friends, go to the drug store of Walton McKib- hon and get a bottle of Parisian Sage today and_ Ilse it for a week, If at the end of a week yon are not satisfied that Parisian Sage is the most delightful and refreshing Hair Tonin you ever used, take it back and get your money. Parisian Sage is guaranteed to cure dandruff, and stop falling bair. It coats only 50 gelate a bottle at Walton Mo - Ribbon's or by express, charges prepaid from Giroux Mfg. Oo., Fort Erie, Ont, BUTTERMILK'S THE STUFF The maple syrup And the bnokWheat cake, The bread like mother Used to make; The chicken like My mother fried, That Used to line My small inside, The ptimpkin pie, The doughnuts brown The candy dad Brotrglrt out from town, Don't very miioh Appeal to me, But buttermilk Of those days! Gee! 1 feel 1 wouldn't "Gine a dura It 1 (bold stand Beside the ohtirn And drink again The way I did When I watt just A little kid, Ifbuttermilk I ntoxicated I'd alwayi be Inebriated. S O E gni Everybody now admits Zam-Buk best for these. Let. it.ive YOU ease and comfort, '-'---- Druggrita and Slams ,s+•rytvhe, e am-Buk GETTING EXPERIENCE. Yon see an apple large and green, Your appetite is young and keen, Yon double up across the tenon, And so you get experience. A mild eyed cow with coat of silk, Wrong -sided you essay to milk. She shooks you by her violence, Bat so you gain experience. Ian durability to test, Yon poke into a hornet's nest. You find the pain in most intense, Still you have gained experience. You're injured while your wound is raw You seek a balm in t,ourse of law, And when you've figured the Expense, You've gained a large experience. You see no reason you shonld miss Your measure of connubial bliss. Yon marry, and you have immense Profound and sad experience!. So each experiment will give You newer knowledge while you live. Its wonderful what little sense, One learns from such experience. WHY WOMEN DO NOT MARRY Leaving entirely out of the question the substantial improvements demanded by the suffragists, and those ill -balanced ohildrea of their old age called suffra- gettes, there are certain more intimate disadvantages pertaining to the im- memorial status of woman, which, un- consciously or otherwise, influence the thousands of girls that deliberately enter upon the independent life before man shall have a chance to marry, desert, negleot or bore them. It is pos- sible that the woman never lived who was born without the instinct for love, and its lest romantic ssquele, marriage and maternity, says Gertrude Atherton in the DELINEATOR for August. Being the only hope of the race until science learns to manufacture estimable Frankensteins, every sort of woman, when young, is as prone to the disease of love as to the microbous afflictions of childhood; but the sharp- ened intelleota of the modern female teach her to observe not only that in- dulgence in the primitive blessings is often productive of a tame happiness at beet, but that it is mere chance if she does not waste several years of her aotive youth waiting for some man to exert his inalienable right to woo and propose. A man may trample down barriers, make opportunities, persist, overwhelm, but a woman, with double the fermium tion and intelligence, must either stoop to contemptible scheming or proudly bide her time, ae likely as not to miss her one chance of happiness because cir- cumstances do not give her the oppor. trinity to reveal herself to the kindred spirit. If she can not pursue a man as a man pursues a woman when he wants her; if she has not the supreme attractious which bring a man to a woman's feet with the flash of the eye, she eau at least avoid the mean enbterfnges of the husband -hunters, and lead a life in which man as a love -factor is praoticel- ly eliminated. She can also enjoy much the same privileges as men, until, perhaps -who knowse-one day she may meet in this larger, fuller life a con- geaiel, many-sided oreatnre who wants something more than a reproduction of his grandmother. A Marked Turtle Away bank in the summer of 1890 as bunch of 8th concession school boys were playing on the banks of the Tees- weter river, near where it crosses the road, they captured a large mud -turtle - that is, one with a shell about a foot square. Among the boys was Mr. Mat Scott, now of Revelstoke, B. 0, Scott wished to make a record of the incident and with a pocket knife carved in the shell of .the turtle his initialsand the date ---1890. The reptile watt then given its liberty and was net again heard of for ten years. In the bummer of 1900 it fell into the hands of Mr. Walter Pin. nel, who reading the record of its prey ions capture, carved on the bank of the turtle his initials and the date. These foots were recalled a couple of weeks ago -nineteen years after it first made its aoquaintanoe with man and nine years after its second ftd'ventnre---when Mr. Thomde Elliot was the °ensurer of this old denizen of the river. He very naturally followed the example of Soott and Pinnell and added his initials to those already on the tnrllo'a shell. The tact that, each time, the turtle was naught within a short reach Of the fiver, Would indibate that these oreatnreh live $heir long and sleepy lives within a my limited area. If this one rivet out the SoO yeah Which t *idle be the life of a turtle, it may yet be carrying on Bth back a lengthy iiihkrry.-Teeawater NeWa. THE PERFECT HOSTESS. Hottssses are undoubtedly born and. net made, as no matter tow perfectly her sooial duties, oho may fail to matte her visitor, feel happy or perfectly et home if she it not endowed with taot, quick perception and sympathy. One of the happiest duelities in a hostess is affected ignorance. If she be a woman even a little Above the average it goes without saying that she must bear, over and over again, silly remarks, mangled quotations, lit tie histories and extraoitiinary inci- dents, vonohel for as true and per- sonal, which she knows to be absolute- ly devoid of found gtion, and to which she has listened dczene of times before, as the special experituce of the teller. The hostess who corrects, or who does not try to keep others from cor- rooting, makes a misery and humilia- tion for her guests, while the one who eau smile brightly at hoary ohostnuts, Affect et surprise and interest as she listens to hackneyed adventures, and rapt attention and amusement as elle suffers under the most unmitigated of bores, dogs a kindly act in allowing mediocre guests to remain under the delusion that they have contributed hugely to the gaiety of the party. As regards success in entertaining, personally, I think the great secret of that anocess is not to entertain at all, but to leave visitors as much as pos- sible to their own devices, after having made full provision for their various tastes. -Mrs. Pepys. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Cen�a;ne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear S(gnature of Seo Fac-Slmile Wrapper Below. Tony small and a8 easy la take as sugars FOR 1i1:AUAc111:. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR 8IL1OUSRESS. FOR,TORPID LIVER. EOR CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIM. FOR IRE COMPLEXION girtditrarely PPYNtaMues„t. CARTEaS LITTLE IVER P_I LIS. € LJRE SICK HEADACHE. Failure Not a Disgrace. What an unfortunate thing that the idea should bo dinned into the ears of ycnth everywhere that it is a disgrace to fail -that is, to fail to make money, to soommniate property. It is not a disgraoe to fait; bat it is a disgrace not to do one's best to succeed. •-Not failure, but low aim is crime," Multi - Under; of poor people today who are not known outside of their own little oommunrties are really great snooesses when measured by all that makes true greatness -their heroic endeavors, their brave battle for years with obstacles, pleyiug a losing game with heroism. Their great patience and wonderful self- oontrol ender the oritioism of those who do not understand them ate evidences that they have suooeeded. The posses ston of a noble character is the greatest evidence in the world that oho has sne- oeeded. On the otber hand, if a man has obtained a fortune, but has left his manhood on the way to it; if he hat bartered his good name in the process of getting it. he is still a failure, no matter how much money he may have aconm- ulated. A clean record is the greatest kind of success. And how few men who make big fortunes manage to save their good name, to keep their regards clean! -Great Thoughts. ConSt.5. ation Constipation is caused by the eating of indigestible food, irregular habits, the use of stimulants, spices and as- tringent food, and strong drastic pur- gatives, which destroy the tone of the stomach and the contractile of the lower bowel; therefore, when the liver is in- active, and failing to secrete bile in sufficient quantity, constipation is sure to follow, and after constipation come piles, one of the most annoying troubles one can hale, MILBURN'S LAXA4IVER PILLS cure all troubles arising from the liver. Miss Mary Burgoyne Kirtgselear, N.B., writes:--"I have used Milburn's Laxa- Liver Pills for constipation and have found them to be an excellent remedy for the cotnplaitet." Miss Annie Mingo Otrsloiv, N.H., writes:---"A friend AAvietd me to use Milburit's Laxa-Liver Pills, for conatipe. tion. I used three and a half vials and am completely aired." Pries 25 cents per vial, or S for $1.00, at all dealers or marled direct ort receipt of price by The Milburn C,o,, Limited, Toronto, Ont. LONDON, ONTARIO Business & Shorthand SUBJECTS Resident and ,Mail Course:. Cataloguer Free J, W. Westervelt, J. W. Wertervelt. Jr.. C.A.. Principal, Vice -Principal. Military Year. With the aid of the Militia De- partment, the Oauadian National Exhibition will this year present the greatest and urost comp'''ete military display and tournareet't over at- tempted in C:iorr!a. Its features will he a Mosel Military Oanip, Iguuieal Drive by the Artillery, Mnsioal Ride b, the Dragoons, and everything that m bttkht and z.ew in Military speoiaol s and compt:titter'. The Model Camp will be on the grenade during tne entire Exhibi- tion, and will evutaiu brevy and rai4d-fire guua and all the appliances of a modern military camp, 40 Gents will pay for THE TIMES to any address in Canada from now until January lst, 1910. scts•s•see•sss•sssaeees11000 ees•ee•••••••••••••esestrtl:e 0 i • • • • • • 0 • • • latIMIMMILemmiimagaisomowl c•i • • The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below `s for any of the following. publications : � CLUBBING RATES FOR 1908 - 09. Times and Daily Globe 4.50 Times and Daily Mail and Empire .. 4.50 Times and Daily World 3.35 Times and Toronto Daily News. 2.30 • Times and Toronto Daily Star 2.30 et Times and Daily Advertiser 2.85 w Times and Toronto Saturday Night 2.60 • 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 te premiums 2.10 f Times, and Weekly Witness 1,85 • Times and London Free Press (weekly) 1.80 '•► Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1.60 • s Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1,80 s Times and World Wide 2 20 • Times and Northern Messenger. 1.35 • Times and Farmers' Advocate 2,35 e We specially recommend onr readers to subscribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine, Times and Farming World. 1.75 Times and Presbyterian 2,25 Times and Westminster 2.25 '# Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3,25 ' Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) .. 2.40 et Times and Youths' Companion 3.25 Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90 Times and Sabbath Reading, New York 1,95 i Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto)1.85 • Times and Michigan Farmer 2.15 Times and Woman's Home Companion 2.25 Times and Country Gentleman 2,60 Times and Delineator 2.95 Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95 Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1.55 Times and Good Housekeeping 2,30 Times and McCall's Magazine 1,70 Times and American Illustrated Magazine 2,30 Times and American Boy Magazine 1.90 Times and What to Eat 1.90 Times and Business Man's Magazine... 2.15 Times and Cosmopolitan 2.15 Times and Ladies' Home Journal 2.75 Times and Saturday Evening Post 2.75 Times and Success ..... 2.25 Times and Hoard's Dairyman 2.40 Times and MeClure's Magazine . .. • 2.40 Times and Munsey's Magazine 2.50 Times and Vick's Magazine . - ... 1.60 Times and Home Herald 2.60 Times and Travel Magazine 2.25 Times and Practical Farther 2.10 Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.40 Times and Designer ..... 1.75 Times and Everybody's 2.80 Times and 'Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg...... 1,25 Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60 • • • • • • fr ,• The above prices include postage on American publications to any + address in Canada, If the Testes is to be sent to an American address, add, • 50 cents for postage, and where American pnblieatione are to be sent 10 American addresses a reduction Will be made in price, We could extend this list. U the paper or magazine you want is not in the lilt, o ill at this office, or drop a card and We will give you prices on the paper yen want. We olnb With all the leading newspapers and urhgezines. When premiums are given with any of above papers, strbeoribera will secure such premiums when ordering through us, tame as ordering direct froin publishers. '" t These loW rates mean a considerable saving to sttbtcribers, and are STILICTIX CASH IN ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal note, pest office or express money artier, addressing TIMES OFFICE, WIN'GRAM5 ON"TA1tIO. NDl1 0tIM ale