HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1916-06-22, Page 8Page 8
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WANTED
Steady Employment
G uaranted,
Apply to
Western Foundry Co.
LIMITED
W INGHAM, ONTARIO
ANNOUNCEMENTS, &c.
Notices Under Thia Head ten cents a line
for first insertion; five cents for subse-
quent insertions.
Fora SAI.ra-Cabbage and cauliflower
plants at Isaac Cole's.
WANTED -Live Poultry.
prices paid.
tf W. Tall
ighest
RMOUR.
FOR SALE -India R er duck eggs
for sale. Apply to R nt Smith.
TRUNKS AND VALISES: -131g stock of
select from at lowest prices.
W. J. GREER.
To RENT -Three r oms over the
Advance printing offge. Apply to C.
N, Griffin.
To RENT -Comfortable house to rent
with garden, corner of Alfred and
Centre streets. Apply to Walker and
Clegg. tf.
CEMENT -St. Mary's cement. Guar-
anteed to be the whitest and strongest
cement on the market. Get our prices.
Wingbam Salt Works. Aux YOUNC
GARDEN FERTILIZER -For sale in
small quantities, suitable for Lawn,
flowers and vegetables. A. H. Wil-
ford, produce dealer.
NOTICE -A two-storey eight roomed
brick house for sale or to rent; a six
horse -power gasoline engine for sale.
.a boat house to rent. Geo. McKenzie;
CEatENT-St. Mary's cement. Guar.
auteed to be the whitest and strongest
cement on the market. Get our prices.
Wingham Salt Works. ALEX YOUNG
WANTED AT T0R0N. Good girl for
general housework.,s 20permont and
good home. Foe particulars pply
promptly at TIMES office. 2-2
NOTICE -All parties ind -. ed to the
firm of Duff & Stewar e requested
to call and settle their mounts on r
before the 15th of Jul.
2-2. DUFF & STEW T,
FOR SALE -Range "Huron ' .rona",
, with water front, refrigera coal oil
beater, 3 burner coal oi. stove with
oven, lawn mower, ru ron bed, all in
.good condition, also garden tools.
Apply to Mrs. N. T. Sinclair, Francis
street.
CORN THAT WILL GROW -We have
an extra good sample of seed corn this
year. Purchased from J. O. Duke, one
of Canada's pioneer seed corn growers.
,Call and see this before placing your
order. Varieties are Leaming, White
Cap, Wisconsin No. 7, Bailey, Golden
Glow, Longfellow, Crompton's Early,
North Dakotas. We also have some
.splendid seed potatoes.
HOWSON & BROCKLEBANK.
MINOR LOCALS.
-Dominion Day celebration will be
kleld in Goderich, Brussels and Tees -
water,
-Mr. Robert Calvert has accepted a
position in Stratford and moved his
family,to that city this week.
-Young People's Society, of White-
church, are holding a garden party on
the 7th of July on the Manse grounds.
Mr. Tom Hardie, of Wingham, is the
man in charge of the office end of the
new Ford garage here. -Lucknow
Sentinel.
-Mr. E. B. Hart has taken a position
with the Canada Furniture Manu-
facturers and will return to town from
Uxbridge.
-A Garden Party will be held on the
Bluevale Methodist Church lawn on
Thursday evening, July 6th. Further
particulars next week.
-Mr. R. Mowbray, the contractor,
bas commenced work on the new side-
walk on Albert and Water streets.
Mr. Wm. Guest has been engaged as
inspector on the work.
-Mr. Geo. Turner, of Winghatn, is in
charge of the repair department of the
Ford garage. We understand that Mr.
Turner intends moving his family to
Lucknow, -Lucknow Sentinel.
-Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Stewart of
Dungannon announce the engagement
of their only daughter, Iona Pearl, to
Mr. John Elmer Cartwright of Pres-
ton, Ont., the marriage to take place
late in June.
-The annual meeting of the high
Court of the Canadian Order of
Foresters is being held in London this
week. The delegates from Court Mait-
land of thio town are Robt. Allen, J.
W. Dodd, Geo. Olver and H. B. Elliott.
-Rev. J. F. Dingman, the new
pastor of the Wingham Baptist Church
has leased Major N. T. Sinclair's house
on Frances street and will take pos•
asession on the 1st of July, and will then
:move his family from Mount Forest.
1 RSON.AI,.S
Dr. Smith, of Ripley, was in town on
Tuesday.
Mrs M, Telfer is visiting with friends
in Toronto.
Mr. V. R. VanNorman left on Tues-
day an a business trip to Bra"don, Man,
Mr. Geo, Howatt, of Westfield, was
calling an old friends in town on Satur-
day,.
Mr and Mrs. D. E, McDonald are
visiting relatives at Windsor and
Detroit,
Miss Cora Hingston spent the week-
end visiting with Mrs. H. J, Marshall
at Blyth,
Miss H. Roderus is away for a few
weeks visiting with friends in Buffalo
and Fairport.
Mr. Peicy Patterson, of Toronto, is
visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Paterson.
Miss Irima Kennedy left on Tuesday
to spend a few weeks at the Elgin
House, Muskoka. •
Mr. Thos. A. Powell, of Ponteix, Sask.
is visiting with relatives and friends in
Wingham and district,
Mr. Allen S Reid, of the Tnvls
staff. left last week for Detroit, where
he has accepted a position.
Mrs. Wm. Miller and family, of
Calumet, Mich., are visiting the former's
sister, Mrs. M. Robertson, Frances
street.
Miss Garrett, of the High School
teaching staff, left on Saturday to
spend her holidays at her home in
Windsor.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Rintoul and
family and Miss Campbell were away
for a few days on a auto taip to Galt,
Paris and Brantford.
Mr. John Angus, of town, a graduate
of Clinton Business College, has secured
a position with the Williams' Manu-
facturing Co. at Toronto. -
Mr. Geo. B. Naylor, of East Wawa -
nosh. has secured a position is London
and has been in that city for some
time. Mrs. Naylor, accompanied by
Mrs. Geo. Naylor,, of town, left for her
new home in London on Monday.
CHURCH NOTES.
Rev, Mr, Howson, formerly pastor of
Wingham Methodist Church, who has
been pastor of the Methodist Church at.
Glencoe for the past four years, has re-
tired from active work in the ministry
and will move to London in a few days
having bought a home on Askin street.
METHODIST CHURCH.
Regular services will be held in the
Methodist Church next Lord's Day at
11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Pastor, Rev. J.
W. Hibbert will preach at both services.
You will be made welcome. Come.
BAPTIST CHURCH
Service will be held next Sunday
morning at the usual hour. The pastor,
Rev. J. F. Dingman will preach, On
account of the jubilee services in St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church, no ser-
vice will be held in the evening.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Jubilee services will be held on Sun-
day and Monday, June 25th and 26th.
Rev. Robt. Law, M.A., D.D., of Tor-
onto, will preach at both morning and
evening service. At 2 30 o'clock on
Sunday afternoon a children's rally will
be held at which Rev. Jas. Hastie, the
first pastor of the church and Mr. R.
D. Cameron, will deliver addresses.
The choir is preparing special music for
these services and the public is cordially
invited to attend
On Monday afternoon and evening,
June 26th, social gathering will be held.
In the evening addresses will be deliver-
ed by Rev. Jas, Hastie, Rev. W. A.
Bradley, B. A., of Teeswater, and
others. There will also be a musical
program.
The first Presbyterian church was
built in Wingham, near where the salt
works now stands, during the summer
of 1$66, fifty years ago.., A jubilee
souvenir booklet has been printed,
giving.a short history of the church as
well as illustrations of the church,
manse, pastors, members of the differ-
ent organizations, as well as a number
of the pioneer members of the con-
gregation.
on-
reation. These g g 1` se booklets are to sell
at 50 cents each and are now on sale at
the stores of King Bros., Hanna & Co.,
It, A. Graham and the TIMES stationery
store.
ntaitattisto
FITZPATRIOIC MCCortatect - In
Sacred Heart Church, Wingham, on
June 21st, Miss Leah McCormick, of
Turnberry, to Mr. Morris Fitzpatrick,
of East Wawanosh.
DIED.
SHAW --In Fordwich, on June 10th,
Sarah Jane Spinks, wife of Mr. John
Shaw, aged 64 years.
NI:TukrnY '-In Morris, on June 16th,
George Eldon Nethery, son of Mr, and
Mrs. John Nethery, aged 22 years, 4
months and 13 days,
McGir,totRA r -In Toronto, on Tues
day, June 20th, Christina McGillivray,
wife of Mr. David Robertson.
NlciroL-In Wingham, on Tuesday,
June 20th, Agnes Mitchell, wife of A. J.
Nilicolsl,
Sonne Fine Steers..
On the Tuesday market, Toronto,
McDonald and Halligan reached the
top-notch, with two steers, shipped by
Stinson & Bradnock, Gerrie, weighing
3650 lbs. These twQ Durham steers
were bred and fed by Mr. W. R. Yeo,
2nd concession, Turnberry Township,
and price received for same was $10.75
per cwt„ netting a total of $392.40, and
sold to Geo. Rowntree, buyer for the
Harris Abattoir Company, at $11„10
per cwt., the highest price ever realized
for two steers on the open market, out-
side of the show. Mr. Stinson for
years past has purchased and sold Mr.
Yeo's fat cattle, Each season he ob-
tained the high mark of that day's
market. Mr. Yeo certainly deserves
credit for raising such fine cattle.
FreePublicity
There is one sentence which every
editor of a newspaper is very fam-
iliar with and which appeals to
him with every issue of his paper
that is; -"We trust that you will
find it of sufficient interest to give
it space." In most cases editors do
find the articles would be interest-
ing to the readers of the paper.
They are both entertaining an in-
structive showing that a capable
man has prepared them. But the re-
quest usually comes from some so-
ciety, organization or branch of
work that considers the subject in
hand so sufficient importance topay a
capable man to further its interests
Then the newspapers are asked to give
the necessary publicity to make the
work effective. The only thing a news-
paper has to sell is publicity and it
cannot afford to give away this com-
modity to every worthy organization
any more than the merchant or the
farmer to give their merchandise to
whoever might ask.
- THE GOOD WIFE.
A Treasure, Holding In Her Hands the
Destiny of Posterity.
When a woman enters the marriage
relation her sphere of influence is at
once extended, and her horizon is no
longer bounded by the people and cir-
cumstances of the moment.
She is .building for posterity. in the
joy and thoughtfulness which charac-
terize her mind in the new relation
there is a prophecy of unborn genera-
tions. Her life is to color other lives;
her aspirations are to fix to a great ex-
tent the position and future of hus-
band and family.
If she is cultured, pure and refined
these qualities will characterize the
home which she creates. The higher
the degree of her culture, her purity,
her refinement, the more will these
dualities characterize the home of
which she is the center.
The personality that a woman takes
with her in her marriage is her real
dower, If her dower can be reckoned
in numerals only, no matter how many
they be, wrecked indeed will be her
husband, impoverished her children.
But if she possesses industry, gen-
tleness, self abnegation, purity and in-
telligence, combined with capability,
she is in herself a treasure of treas-
ures.
LIGHT ON LIGHT.
What It Really Is and How Its Waves
Affect Our Eyes. -
How many of us could sag what
"light" is?
Could we explain why the gloom of
the streets seems increased tenfold
when we leave a well lighted room?
And do we know why all of us suffer
discomfort, if not actual pain, when
from darkness we enter a brilliantly
lighted place?
The discomfort on entering a lighted
room after darkness is because the
optic nerve, which receives light just
as the drum of the ear receives sounds,
is suddenly burdened with light rays
before the pupil of the eye has bad
time to.contraet to receive them. The
pupils dilate very much in the dark
in order to admit every ray possible,
and a dilated pupil cannot, without
discomfort, suddenly receive an abun-
dance of light rays.
When the pupils contract there is tin
automatic adjustment to the quantity
of light. When we "peer" we are
really only adjusting our pupils. Go-
ing from brilliant light to darkness,
the pupils do not dilate instantly.
They remain contracted and cannot
for a time collect what light there is.
So the darkness appears intensified.
Cats, owls and other animals see in
the dark because they have,the power
of enlarging their broad pupils and
collecting light which is invisible to us.
Light itself is a fluid• of luminous
ether, hieh fill thethe
w s up spaces in
air particles. It has an undulating vi-
bratory movement, which strikes on
the optic nerve, giving us the sensa-
tion of "light."--Pearson's Weekly,'
TEACHER WAN
For 'Inion School Secti o. 7, Turn -
berry. Second el certificate.
Applications to be in fore July 15th•.
Duties to comment st of Septembr,.
1916, Apply Jamds Godkin, Seer • ary-
Treasurer, Wingham, Ont. 2-4
TEACHER W TED
Experienced Tette • .r wanted for
school sectionTo • Turnberry. Ap-
plications to he'll) July 156. Duties
to commence kpterhber 1st, _ 1916.
Appply to John E. Tomuth, Sec-Treas,
R.R. Wingham, Ont. 2-3,
THE WINGHAM TIMES
June 22tb, 1916
SflO[ SALE FOR WOMEN I
The Biggest Bargain we ever Offered
52 PairsWomeo's Law Shoes
OXFORDS AND PUMPS
Perfect
in Style
and
Comfort
in sizes 2 1-2, 3, 3 1.2, and 7 only
rVE,RY Ready -to-
Wear Garment,
Suit, Waist, Hat, Coat,
separate Skirt, or pair
of Corsets sold here is
perfect in Style and
Comfort.
PRODUCE . WANTED
Butter
Highest Prices
Eggs . Wool
Cash ,or Trade
KING BROS.
'Phone 71
eramastamoncesumsairannowninsmanianimanatimar
Wingham
MARBLE WORKS
P OBERT JOHNSTON, formerly
of Cochrane and Johnston, is
now in charge of the Wing -
ham Marble Works, where
there will be kept on hand a
large and well assorted stock
of Scotch and Canadian Gran-
ite Monuments.
Call and see us before giving
an order.
JOHNSTON MARBLE' WORKS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE ESTATE OF SAMUEL YOUI ILL,
DECEASED.
Notice is hereby given pursuant to
the provisions of The Trustees Act,
that all persons having any claim or
demand against Samuel Youhill, late of
the Town of Wingham, in the County
of Huron and Province of Ontario,
real estate agent, who died on or about
the 7th day of January, 1905, are re-
quired to send by post prepaid, or to
deliver to J. A. Morton of Wingham, in
the County of Huron, Administrator of
the estate, of the said deceased, on or
before the 12th day of July, 1916, their
andfull
names addresses and partic-
ulars in writing of their clais and
statements of their accounts and the
nature of the securities, if any, held by
them,
And take notice that after the said
last mentioned day, the said Adminis-
trator will distribute the assets of the
said deceased among the persons en-
titled thereto, having regard only to the
claims of which he shall then have had
notice, and that the said Administrator
will not be liable for the said assets or
any part thereof to any person of whose
claim he shall not then have received
notice.
Dated at Wingham, Ont, the 12th
day of June, 1916.
J. A. MORTON, Administrator
1-4
Form and Crop for Sale
The undersigned offers for sale his
fifty -acre farm, lot 41z concession 1
3,,
East Wawanosh; 2t6' miles from Wing -
ham.' On the premises are a good
house and barn; good • supply of water
and land in first-class- state of culti-
vation. Will also sell .this season's
crop and give immediate possession.
J. R. TYREMAN,
R. R. No. 5,
1-3 Wingham, Ont.
COAL
—0-- 0
Best D. L. & W Scran-
ton Coal.
Every advantage is
with the consumer in buy-
ing his coal early, better
service, less cost, none of
the disagreeable features
of winter delivery, and the
added satisfaction of hav-
ing your coal in your
owns bins. •
Place your order by the 20th
inst. for delivery at June prices
Dressed and undressed lum-
ber, lath, shingles and wood.
•—o --
J. A. McLEAN
DEALER IN
LUMBER, COAL, WOOD
AND SHINGLES.
PHONES :
Residence 55, Office 64a, Mill 64b
rsi•�a.i
AUCTION SALE '
OF VALUABLE TOWN PROPERTY
PaRstIANT to the Power of Sale
contained in a certain Mortgage, which
Will be produced at the time of sale,
there will be offered for sale by Public
Auction at the Queen's Hotel in the
Town of Wingham in the County of
Huron on Monday, the third day of
July, A. D.. 1916, at two o'clock in the
afternoon, by Frank McConnell, Auc-
tioneer, the following valuable property,
namely:
The North West Half of Lot Number
Twelve on the South side of North
Street in Jane Sadler's Third Survey
in the said Town of Wingham.
On this property is situated a one
storey stone dwelling 25x25 with frame
addition 12x14, in a good state of repair.
TERMS of SALE -Ten per cent, of
purchase money on the day of sale and
balance in twenty days thereafter.
The property will be offered subject to
a reserved price. Further • terms and
particulars will be made known on the
day of sale or may be had on applica-
tion to the undersigned.
Matti at Wingham this Twelfth day
of June, A. D., 1916.
R. VANSTOIE,
Vendor's Solicitor.
1-3
ChUdrei Cr
•toil. t'LETCHites
OASTO R I A
Lines that are regularly sold
for $2.50, $3.00 ani,
$4.00 for
$1.00
PER PAIR
On Sale any time on FRIDAY AFTERNOON
of this week
KINDLY NOTE—Our store will be closed eve)),
Wednesday afternoon during Juy and August.
W. II. WILLIS
•
Sole Agents:
for Ladies
and Derby Shoes for Men
1
1
1
LIVE POULTRY
WAIN
111111111111111111111111111111111111/11111
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
EGGS WANTED
In Large or Small Quantities
IA/. J. ARJVIOUR
Centre Street,
Wingham
r
TRY the "Times"
Job Printing.
and at ways.
Lowest prices.
with your next order of
We do good work always
Satisfaction guaranteed.
SWAT THE ROOSTER
FERTILE eggs do not keep as well as if they weren't
1 fertile. If you will shut up or sell your roosters, we
will pay you from 1 to 3c per dozen more for non -
fertile eggs. When you deliver your eggs to your
merchant, ask him if he has an arrangement with us
for handling eggs bf this kind. If he has not, get in
touch with us at once, and we will take care of you.
If' you will co-operate with us in this movement, you
will be doing a great deal to save Canada from this
great Ioss which she sustained every year up the
present.
ft
MARKET" YOUR ROOSTERS THIS WEEK 'I
1.0
•
1+1. •
1.0
A. H. WILFORD
Phone,: -Office 174, Residents 108
Produce Dealer
Wingham Ontario