HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-03-14, Page 61 II WING BAN TIMES, MARCH 14, 1912
Last year almost 2:a0t.' head of
cattle were Shipp,ti from Alberta tt,
13rftish ('oir,mnia and the Y u'„ten.
rms-
1,'c Ind for :ttnilw
"My new ee wer.' very lead, :eel I
could not sl, It at right, ten' eatent
" t
eon trot n t t= t 1 le a ” �� etc t^7
ROW. 114E ., 1 e1 N. t. • rr:
('•h'ree's i.• : 1 t.re.t tee v,
I h:l:.'v.' isie tt•.s sd st, n.s
mote r Pitt•. ,.. :;
describe lei :'t 1 t rte?, tut r so 1
am eating:. . e.s t:.
lgovite :
bowl c. e. t.
D>i'. de Va+nn: Pia/I n:a ' Pink.;
Are: at:c+
pints ate cx: .,_e• ;' ,t5 .i
,r•eneratite p r t a' e F r., ;_
ail
caAsn a r atre tp i .t..at . <. D cis ace
tturat M t aee...._ce.s.
The Seobell ilvtr.4; C e., Si:. CathaxInes, Out.
The ealf e:.p of is 1 was very nail
in the We, t, act: cornet.:et r`::e ref else
delegates ae ti.. ii a stroll CeLft.TOre,e
in Ottt.wca.
Children a:.' tr ee% metes :in.:;r te>
contract ttne sire:.: es when tlena have
colds. \ eeep i.g eounti. r:a;:e th ria.
scarlet fever • •'i %ten:mire _ are' dis-
ease.; that een ovine eoetreetnd when
the chiles h..- �a cs k.l. That is why all
med'cal ane :critic ci say I:e':v:.I•e of c tlo:s.
For tie• quien care o: coin• ycu win
find sot .; better than Chamberlain's
Cough r -,rpt ; ea It can :t:t. care be de-
pended upc:r. en.. le p:easaet and safe
to take. Fe ea!e 1•y all dealers.
Daring ti:•:of September last
from Eerw;.:: •._ere in the eastern An-
napolis yet'.: e,' barrel- of apples
were shippe _.
REST AND HEALTH TO LOITER AND CHILD.
MRS. WINS.ow's SOOTHING SYxVP has hien
vsedfor over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
LfOTI1ERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETIHING. with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS tete CIMS
ALL.aYSanFAIN ; CT. Rhe sat
is the best r rne.iy f: r DItRRIIC A. It s a r
solutely harratess. Be s:;re and a::: kr ••
Winstow's S •, ; Syrup." and tai.e no oCaer
kind. Twenty -11...r. cc:::e a I:uttie.
The oat sacp cf New Zea:a±:d new
being liars -teen.: is estimated at 1:.4'
OCO leu&1: ':, ..i: Ira:re€e ever last year
o£ 4,cii',Qca�,x r a3e s.
You jud :r. tit by ▪ what ::e prem-
ises to dc,what he has done.
That is the"t •`true test. t natelar-
lain's Cane-. :et::e:mine t; by this
standerii L... :::��cr:'•s.I'et?.'.:; ev-
erywht re si -'f it in Co i i;;i.tdt
terms of pr For -ale by all deal-
ers.
An Erg;`..... _ c_..s _, at ..tilt a mam-
moth incur r.. _ with a leete a egg cap-
acity. it __ 4 f, .'t C !rah -
es twine, ..
s.
�cl "1
Winter tee
coral :.:ted ....:
dittoes are
lI-
won its e
ne it..
e, c o:cls and t:
nine:t. Try n.
lis`tn
'a
wee.. -.. F.
way hie &a,....
•'• (
u: •;.y,,• l
f teen • _
r. to
erne.-., tone tr „t4,
wnieh
ovate- e" is • -a^.' ort a et,; .. ,
Cele £ • N::.
tae .- •• '• :e.h':. 14
.9 •.'.'`+ . :.ate,` a ?;:: .:"": +
•
t► ., •`secs ?: y cats. Poet is
t. ' i r. e: ne ..m at maces
.e en .te a -• ..'; tsne. inteen.tt >;'_ bile
.
e 3•. . e`; a:. •.3- n:. as en ` glass
ieseze.11 part
pineed
• t . .: of tie: l;*:::L.. pressing
. ar3 re venting any
• ee. nines e e: a ': g `hiss win entero`
t . ': _ t eea : e t I av; n eiawin and in a
I. metes: or .Y,tees' s scant aril' extract the
.e':e..ee..:atthe seine time relieving an
inneennatien, This is a simple bit of
m oorm:W en. but ave it worth having.
Yea can: ray ieeJbye to Ceinstipation
wi£2t a e".eareerseenceifyeuuse Chatn-
i*.rlair's Tablets. Many have been per-
manently curets by their use. For sale
by all d.al,rs.
More Trouble for Poor Borden.
[La Patrie ('en.), Montreal.]
"We will ret tolerate that Mr. Do-
herty, Mr. Ames or any other short-
sighted politicians shall knock the
rights of the majority. If our warn-
ing is not heeded so much the worse
for those who believe that we deserve
neither consideration or respect. The
carelessness with which the patronage
is exercised in the Montreal district,
the deadliness which characterizes the
smallest acts of the harbor commission-
ers of Montreal, the denial of justice
which is daily exhibited in regard to
the French Canadians; all this is not
caleulated to advance the interests of
the Conservative party.
•'A :d La- Patrie has the courage to
say this before it is too late.
••Mr. Graham has just won a victory
in South Renfrew.
"What enlightened Conservative
dare affirm to -day that the Govern-
ment would be any more happy in any
county at all in the district of Mont-
real?"
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CAS T O R I A
---
Janes Stark, a farmer living four
miles east of Hagersville, was driving
a sleighic,t:d of green lumber when the
ensee'c'e-"`� ` ;i'ig.: overturned burying Stark ut.2er-
c• 3 t1.-�t`,� ej
••� �' 1n When four.d he was dead. The
i `° '• • "' ' C returned to the farm by then-
r.s Ca!: -.:T . -
Flay Fete:.
' •_ a c•- Edre,. neon. •
t -.r:ted, Tcz: C C h i l d r e n C r Vy
FOR FLETCHER'S
EI -I- O FR I A.
her juet Ine':.
_see. arni wt:ie_._. con-
_.•
...
Rage.
•
�......v a.:d ee t• .:...
... _. ._• thee
e s f:4.::t
• n.
. H :..:s:..
• es.tte the
i.•4„ seeense.
el i nee
1' t air ti_e -
dame nte
tiettei .
that C raera
readies.
••
-
e.
e n Children.
•r View ofNiodr
One
C . area are ,:ever chillren to them-
eeivee. From tlaa standpoint of the
gr ,. •i.0 . the real -children we. meet
in theee plays are few and far between.
T', be a real child implies uncon-
s-neushe-s of ore's superiority. The
tr- •ub,:e with many of the children of
t. -nets is that they have discovered
that tele; are cheerier. Their advan-
are rt.u..n treater than ours
aei
^.r k�.l it and they rub
an.. T e I licking has
east and nv.::t it the child. In
• ~I," e Lea recede-;ieerior crea-
alined approach-
ise uI. ier continued
ten:'1 • : are degree of
ente .- hie • he. ruffled.
:eta it-
a ayy
a � ,
B;,fFsty
• fOnilgb ::ark
e''41dren Cry
a bre FI.ETCtIEr;'S
C,.STOFRIA
oa9.
Chark.'s I_'•::e ; ,. of C.:iifornia, has
appealed befere tie _' Harvard faculty
with the objet t of ;. nvir.eing theme of
his ab;"sity to tai;. tenser animals. His
life }me been spent among the Sierra
Nevcue:, and his sl'.:dies include; the
vocal sounds made by bears, squirrels,
. I• and
lizalel_ rattlesnakes In-
deed, are claims pouf eieney in fifteen
animal language's. He has a peculiar.
palate. with no tonsils, and entirely
lacks the cord connecting the teeth
with the lips. To these peculiarities
he party ascribes the ease with which
ho imitates the sounds of insects and
*Maude.
Lsnteres in China.
- _._ e_ete 1 among the
ire :•arks and
_ -•• tense• ealie•1 China
e__F_ : and the term is
e _ _lee. -:` every rir,rt
.. a.al as soon
... _• et en make their
•._ en.; at the
_._.te.ey swing as
hag dos;
every
. . r',uri the
men. up the
are barite
e'. _ .. _eave1ers, and
ar.d the
tF THE L1ER IS LAZY
STIR IT BP BY THE USE OF
M1LBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS.
a u� 11;. A .ARMY.
Writer Asserts its Praises Have Been
Too Loudly Sung.
Tae idea heli by the world in gen-
e1 -a: that the Berman army is a model
E.•r ail et:tere. anl.l that it is far
sir. t'; r than any other, is challeng-
ed by Hilaire liolloe, member of the
Isterneh Pa: inment tied critical write
er• Mr, Rene: ha' served as a con.
a , eg't an the Freneln army, and has
tine, studied the strong and wean
rivet of the German forces for years.
Ile says ae a reeult of his investigal
tune tlaat the German army will b
eitsa•vere,i to be something much o
a par with any
other conscript
forcee
with ativantagoe and also with dis
aivantases of its own.
r. .uut'ng the advantages hereckon
that al.t army ,rill be mobilized s�
sttt''.'th:y as the German. The Ger-
man proletariat has shown no capac
ity f.: tesistane to the orders of
government. or of theft economi
masters. "Tire Socialist vote is onl
,has
.tt ande!
n 1 no
feet on the conduct of affairs—none
whatever on the military arrange.
marts. It is otherwise in France or i
Russia. .esu
ail�. hesays the Ger
mans have not to fear jealously be•
tweets their chief commanders, an
lastly, that the rapidly increasing
population of Germany ensures a
choice of the best material for their'
fighting force.
But conscription in Germany is nod
universal—as it is in France, for ex=
ample. Every single person you see`
in France has been a private soldier;
But of five German men not three
have been real soldiers. The larg
German population allows for an in/
creasing number of exceptions. The
young men let off have a few weeks'
training, and form the compensatory
reserve. Hence the nation is not the
army, as in France. Mr. Belloc sug
gests, as a parallel, a population with
20, S0, or 40 per cent. of illiterates/
as compared with a universally edu'
cated people.
In Germany, also, what he calls the,
articulate part of the nation — those
who write and speak and direct
thought, though they wear a uniform
and are called soldiers for one yearH
do not live as private soldiers in the
barracks, as do Frenchmen of the`
same class.
The writer says that the PolisI
element in the army is a source o •
weakness and in addition he finds
fault with too much system. System
is overdone; it kills initiative, it
spells utter collapse when eircum-1
stances upset the systematic plan. I
'(Ley stimulate the sluggish liver,
-:n the coated tongue, sweeten the
breath, cleats away all waste and poison-
ct:.:natter from the system, and prevent
as well as cure all sickness arising from
a disordered condition of the stomach,
liver and bowels.
'sirs. Matthew Sullivan, Pine Ridge,
writes:—"I had been troubled with
liver complaint for a long time. I tried
most everything I could think of, but
none of them seemed to do me any good,
but when I at last tried Milburn's Laxa-
Liver Pills I soon began to get well again;
thanks to The T. Milburn Co. I would
Explorer and the Eskimo.
In his recently -published book, "Its
Northern Mists." Dr. Nansen has exs
pressed great regret at the inevitable
disappearance of the Eskimo civilizes
tion before what he calls the "trivial" -
civilization of the rest of the world.
"Our civilization levels up all ink
equalities, and in the process it dee
stroys personality to a very great ex-
tent. We have the frightful prospect
of a world-wide monotony before us.
The modern man is a machine -made
creature; and he lives so much in
the trivial rush and hurry of life that
he has no time to find himself—which
is the moat important of all discov-
eries.
"The Eskimos ha - e plenty of time
for this kind of exploration, their civi-
lization is a good one and a fine one.
They have very little art, it is true,
but they have beautiful fairy tales.
Their folk -songs are good, too, their
music is rather melancholy and rath-
er monotonous, like most primitive
music. They have a scale of five or
six notes. But they pick up modern
music with surprising ease.
"The Eskimo lives his own life,
and depends on his own faculties of
brain and eye and nose and ear; he
is an individual. And yet, in spite
of this, Eskimo society is organized
on a Socialistic, almost a Communis-
tic, basis. This is their rule; 'I have.
made a bad catch to -day, but I shall
make a better to -morrow, so will you
An eminent selentist, the other day,
:ave Itis cminion that the most won,-
ierful discovery of recent years was
ho discovery of Zam-Buie. Just
.link! As soon as a single thin layer
'1 Zam-Buk is applied to a wound or
sure, such injury Is insured against
'lard poison! Not one species of
nierobe has beenfound that Zam-Buk
',t s not hill!
Then again. As soon as Zam-Bub
4 applied to a sore, or a cut, or to
':'n disease, it stops the smarting
'bat why .children are such
friends
r I
am- 1 c. They caro nothing ng far
he science of the thing. All they
:now is that Z'm-Buk stops their
'lin. Mothers should never forge'
'lis.
c gain. As seen as Zam-Bulc is an
'79dto a warned or to a disease.:
et, the cel]; beneath the skin's sur -
,:e are so stimulated that nev,
earthy tissuo isq uickly formed. This
erl.ring of freeh healthy tissue from
:'lore' is Zam-Burt's secret of healing
'he tissue ins formed is worked ul
the sur • .e and literally casts of.
e t?iseae .i tissue above it. This is
hy Zem•;:ult cures are permanent.
(:ely tee ether day Mr. Marsh, o
91 t'c'ln•'i iler Ave., Montreal, calle'.
:len they :elm -Bilk Company and tor"
;ra t:•.'t. for over twenty-five year
E• L,i't '...'n a n' irt; r to eczema.
t " ; ':eco at one ;Pee eo covert'
t;t
soroe that h;, h.;;l to sleep i
eves. Four years ago Zam-Buk
t•.'t?uc•td to him, and in a ft.
h; it 'eared him. To-day---oe
rro years after his cure of a dish.
' had for twenty -,ire years—he
11 cured, and has har] no trace
retarn of the eczei'!'.
'.1' dt tr,giate ee.l' Zai:±-Buk at 5C
er we will e. ed free trial box i
.'ufl t'.:'s edverti:etaent and a it
• ( to pay return postage). Ac
.1- On . Tom: ontt).
IN GOOD OLD DAYS.
The good old days, the good old days,
When Eve and Adam wooed,
Eve did not yearn for taxicabs
Or want expensive food;
And after they were man and wife
She did not turn her head
And point to some chap passing by,
As one she might have wed.
The good old days, the good old days,
Of Mother Eve's romance;
She never dragged poor Adam out
At night unto a dance;
No operas Metropolitan
E'er took him from his door,
There was no high brow stunts like that
Good Adam's life to bore.
The good old days, the good old days,
When Eve and Adam dwelt
In peace; he never had to wear
His trousers with a belt;
There was no woolen underwear,
Or e'en a fuzzy hat,
And Eve was never known to say,
"Am I as fat as that?"
—Detroit Free Press.
When Blood is Poison.
The blood must be filtered, . other-
wise you are poisoned. If the kidneys
fail the liver is overworked, and be-
comes torpid. By using Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills get both these filt-
ering organs working right, and also
ensure healthful action of the bowels.
For this reason these ills are an ideal
o p d
family medicine. They , cure bilious-
ness. constipation, chronic indigestion
and kidney disease
• TA TED
A live representative for
1
give me some of your fish? Then, to. WINGHAM
morrow, if you have bad luck, you cited surrounding District to sell
shall have some of my fish'."
Preaching at
Probably the oldest officiating min, THE FON HILL NURSERIES
ister of any denomination in Britain I
• is Rev. Alfred Brandon, who, though' More fruit trees will be planted
• he is just past his 95th birthday, It the Fall of 1911 and Spring of
still preaches at least once a month
P g
high-class stock for
in t e little creeper -clad Baptist ' 1912 than ever before in the history
chapel near his home in Drayton '.f Ontario.
' Gardens, Chelsea. Mr. Brandon has' ; rhe orchard of the future will be
' been a minister in Chelsea sixty-four` I
years, and has lived there seventy-two: :tile best paying part of the farm.
A remarkable fact concerning. Mr.1 ? We teach our men Salesmanship
since he wasn is hat he has a baby of two,twhenpone' i free Culture and bow big profits in
of his legs became paralyzed. , ' nit growing can be made.
Another wonderful Baptist minister pay weekly, permanent employ -
is
Rev. Grey Hazlerigg, -who, although ,
gaged in ministerial work in Leiees- •` '' particulars,
nirity-three years of age, is still en ! I' it, exclusive territory, Write
ter, in which town he has lived an
worked for a period of sixty -on 1 ; S.iOtE & WELLINGTON
years.
1_
it Was Doing Duty.
An Irish soldier while on furlough '
lost his left eye; but, not wishing to
leave the service, he got a glass one
in its place before returning to hie
regiment. Being somewhat absent-
minded, however, he appeared on pa-
rade one day without it. "Pat," said 1
the sergeant -major, "you are impro-
perly dressed. You have e%rno on pa-
rade with only ane eye." Pat was in'
no way nonplused, however. With'
characteristic; Irish readiness he anz
swered, "I left it. in my quarters,)
sorr, to keep an eye ',n my kit."
Auburn Haired Women.
ECistory avers that women with aUJJ
burn hair wielded a strong influene l
in all ages. The wominn familiar 01
history who belonged to this sister -I
hood were Isabella of Castile, Helen
of Tray, Catherine I. of Russia, Joan
of Are, Elizabeth of England, Marys
Stuart, Anne of Russia, ex -Empress
Eugenie, Lucrezia Borgia and Beatrice
Cenci.
not be without them if they cost twice
as much." Cutting Herbs,
Rfilburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25 cents The active principle of all plants is
per vial, or 5 vials for $1.00, for sale at
all dealers or mailed direct on receipt
of price by 'The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
strongest just when the fioworing pro.
OW is going on, but before seeds ar6
tdually formed, • and this is, there.
store, the best ime lot egtth4 ill
Ary_rlg herbs._
TORONTO.
"Only a Cole
r' NEEZING and running at the
3 nose, stuffed up feelings in the
tread, sore throat, tickling in the
_hroat and coughing.
This is the natural development of
hatisinthe beginning"only a cold."
t is the way in which scores and
1 thousands are allowing colds to de-
velop into bronchitis, pneumonia,
ar consumption.
If olds were promptly cured there
would be no need for sanitariums and
tospitais for consumptives. Because
People have weak lungs they need
alt become consumptives if they will
rut guard against colds and cure
gem promptlyb using
Dr. Chase's
s
rup of Linseed and Turpentine.
This great medicine has proven its
right to a place in every home -by
:.ering croup, bronchitis, whooping
cough, asthma and all sorts of coughs
and colds. 25 cents a bottle, at al
dealers or Edinanson, Bates & Co.,
Limited, Toronto.
SAVED THE NORTHWEST,
Dr. Whitman Kept it From Being
Traded to England.
But for the foresight, it is said, or
missionary this country would have
"traded off" to Great Britain that im-
mense territory that now forms two
of the greatest states of the northwest
—Oregon and Washington.
Marcus Whitman had creased the
plains and the mountains to Oregon
and knew from a ,year's residence the
value of the country. fie also knew
that the Hudson Bay company was
anxious to n 10of
aobtain possession the
whole northwest and tend circulated.
the report that it was Impossible for
emigrants to cross the mountains In
wagons.
At a dinner given in 1842, at which
Dr Whitman and several of the com-
pany's chief officers were present,
news was received that a band of
British emigrants had crossed the
mountains. Toasts were drunk in hon-
or of the event. "Now the Americans
may whistle—the country is ours'" one
of the Englishmen is reported to have
exclaimed jubilantly.
But Whitman thought otherwise.
The next. day he started for Washing-
ton on horseback. He made the jour-
ney in winter and with frozen limbs
called on Daniel 'Webster, then secre-
tary of state. Upon his presentation
of the situation Whitman was gruffly
told by Webster that the country was
worthless and that he. as secretary of
state, was about to trade that "worth-
less region" for valuable concessions
With reference to the Newfoundland
fisheries.
Finding that a treaty had already
been approved by the senate and was
awaiting formal ratification and proc-
lamation by President Tyler, Dr, Whit-
man sought the president. When the
missionary had P'u'shed his story the
president said:
"Sir, your frozen limbs attest your
sincerity. Can' you take emigrants
across the mountains In wagons?"
"Give me six months and I will take
1,000 across," answered the doctor.
"If you can take them across," add-
ed Tyler, "the treaty shall not be rati-
fied."
In 1843 a band of emigrants under
the guidance of the doctor started from
Missouri for Oregon. A deputation
Prom the Hudson tiny company met
them on the plains, advising them that
It was impossible for them to cross the
mountains in their wagons. The emi-
grants decided to leave their wagons
and finish the journey on horseback.
As this course would have ruined
Whitman's plan of saying the country
to the United States, be labored with
the leaders of the- band until they con-
sented to follow the doc!tor's advice
and guidance. The band did cross the
mountains In their wagons, the treaty
was not ratified, and the fertile north-
west was saved to the United States.—
New York Herald.
An Odd Superstition.
A strange superstition is that of an
otherwise perfectly normal western
man who as a buyer for a very large
department store of the country tins
had marvelous . success. His talent
seems to lie in reading the hidden
thoughts of men and in that wary se-
g bargains others surto stns few ors can ever
seem to get. To a few of his intimates,.
not his trade' friends, he gives a weird
explanation of this power. Wherever
he can he says he drinks water from
the same glass as the person with!
whom he is about to do business, tak-
ing care to drink after Mtn. There Is
not n doubt in his mind that there Is
truth in the old belief that if two
drink water out of one glass the last
to drink will know the other's secrets.
At all events this man says the test
never fails.—New York Sun.
Amulets of the Burman.
Highly prized by the Burman are the
following gems: Ituby, diamond or
crystal, pearl, coral. topaz, sapphire,
catseye. amethyst and emerald. Col-
lectively they ward oft sickness or dan-
ger. The catseye is supposed to se -
euro invulnerability in war. Incanta-
tions are muttered over some of all
of these stones, and the water in which
they are immersed is drunk in order to
secure immunity from all evil. Spells
are uttered over rubles, and they are
inserted as amulets in the flesh of men
who desire to be immune from wounds
Inflicted by sword, spear or gun.
One of Tom Hood's.
There was a noted brand of tobacco
which the sailors of England chewed
in the early years of the nineteenth
century—"pigtail." And it Is commem-
orated in one of the most ingenious of
Thomas Hood's punning verses, in
which he recounts the life, love and
sorrow of a sailor, a British sailor:
His head was turned, and so he chewed
His pigtail till he died.
The lower deck today would be puz-
zled to see the joke of that!—London
Tatler.
Brought the Wrinkles.
On One occasion an actress grew temd
pestuous with Perrin, the Parisian mane
ager, and gave him a stormy quarter
of an hour.
"And what did you do, my ddar Per-
rin?" asked Febvre. I
"I said nothing and watched 1i0"
grow old." •
He Knew,
"The Malays have a queer hitirrhtif
custom," remarked thatraveler.
,
Th
groom holds his nose against ama1 l
cylindrical object. 1 couldn't guit4
make out what it was" --
•'A grindstoxte probably," 1uterpalsi
Mr. Qronch,-111xcnanga.
•" y nit - ,� .�Ht"r%rei' ; ,
SOLD IN AIRTIGHT; PACKAGES ONLY
Reaseuring "Miss Blake."
As they boarded the train they had
every look of being a bridal couple.
The young man carefully escorted the
young woman to a seat, while the in-
terested passengers smiled indulgently.
Then extending his hand to the sup-
posed bride, he said, in a very loud
voice, Well, Miss Blake, the train is
about to pull out. I wish you a very
pleasant journey," and doffing his soft
hat he hurried off the train. The par-
sengors looked disappointed.
But the young woman seemed ner-
vous. By and by she called the porter,
and in a whisper gave him some mys-
terious errand. He came back in a
moment, and said in a voice audible to
everyone:
"Yo're all right, ma'am. He's in de
smokin' compartment."
Everybody smiled, and the bride
blushed prettily.
A Denver woman, 47 years of age,
recently became a great-grandmother,
her grand-danghter having had a child.
This young great-grandmother was
married in Tennessee when 14 years
of age.
DON'T FORGET.
[Chicago Record -Herald.]
Strive
With all your might;
Keep hope alive,
in sight,
Keep your goal g ,
Be fair,
Be square;
13e worthy of success;
Let your hands be clean,
And your soul serene;
Keep no room in your heart for bitter-
ness.
Deserve the praise
You long to hear;
So shape your ways
That fear
May never haunt youin the night!
Be strong, be right!
Hold honor dear,
And when
'Another is pressed in a splendid fight
Dont forget to cheer
For him, now and then.
Electric Restorer for Men
Phosphonof restores every nerve in the body
to its proper tension; restores
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weakness averted at once. Phosphene' will
make you a new man. Price 38 a box or two for
E8. Mailed to any address. The Senball Drug
Co., St. Catharines, Ont.
Subscribe For The
Times $1.00
a Year
it
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