Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Wingham Times, 1912-09-05, Page 3
TILE WING11AR TIMES, SEPTEMBER 5, 1912 .y '� 1a TRADE MAA REG. must r Geri' AbSSOI'beY gild ..t Itcl��nSes ralp el P ^ flo • hten .-- ors_c�nd brl� J., qr .kms=..;rd ,a,.• 0 �'1 yy'�� N �s FrY . Y• + �.in m l: VsG 'QTATAWA CANADA. FACTORIES 0:-MAN ,AE._-rT'AVW� MAN''STJOHN' N.13 O Spring Time, in fact every tine ,.0 sweep is just the time to use DUSTBANi Dust caisiid in ,weaping is the dried hn0 lfi'h that h,,, been tracked in from thy- s reer, 1t"riiti i',o0• :1 . h or :;i: rnrri t' it of a human f it and w th every stoke: of a h. nom ti' n•, be sat b.0 1 j' rt eryone who inhabits th4 home. Just a handful or t•vo of DUSI'BANE is all that is required to sweep an ordinary rosin either floor or carpet. It I i- ghtens the floors and cleanses the eve pets leaving the room in a sanitary condition. Order a can on trial for one week. All Grocers sell DUST BANE Packed in barrels a +id kegs for nee in schools, stares- and public buildings. DUST BNNE; 11tF(. CO. LPD., OTTAWA. Australia, which for some years dis- couraged emigration, is now actively promoting it. I.f Canada were to spend per bead of the existing population as much on this service as Australia is now doing, the appropriation for the department would exceed $3,50',( 00 a year, compared with the present ex- penditure of only a million. The man who believes in the survival of the fittest always trics to convince the world that he is the fittest. Electric Restorer for Men Phospilonol rtorrynvithb to eses its propeveer tensioneren ;Tees vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at once. rlrosphonol' will make you a new pian. Price $3 a box, or two for $5, Mailed to any address. The Scoboll Drug Co., St. Catharines. Ont. TORTURED FROM BABYHOOD "Frult-a-tives" Cures Constipation Mese E. A. GOODALI. ADatoxTox� AI,fA., Nov. zoth. 19rr "I have been a sufferer since baby- hood from that terrible complaint, Constipation. I have been treated by physicaus, and have taken every medicine I heard of, but without the slightest benefit. I finally concluded that there was no remedy in the world that could cure Constipation. About this time,. I heard about " 1 ruit- a-tives" and decided to try them. The effect was marvellous. The first box gave me great relief, and after I had used a few boxes, I found that I was entirely well. "Itruit-a-tives" is the only medicine that ever did me any good and I want to say to all who suffer as I did -"Try this fruit medicine and you will find - as I did -a perfect cure" ' (bliss) E. A. GOODALL "Vreit-a-tives" is ,the only medicine in the world made of fruit and the only one that will positively and completely , cure you of Constipation. soc. a box, 6 for $2.56, trial size, 250. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Pruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. jimmy Talks. My Grandma has a pocket Its awful deep and wide, She knows it Isn't stylish, but She hasn't any pride. An -so in all her dresses One side she calmy wrecks To make a place for keeping snug, Her handkerchief and specs. Course mother dosen't like it, I think it would delight her If Grandma's rustlin Sunday skirts 40 Were just a leetle tighter But Grandma says the hobble Is quite the worst of sights, I think so to, My sister's clothes] Is just like swimming tights, When I go out with Grandma She never likes to start Till she can hear the whistlin of A travlin peanut cart. An then she finds a nickel, An sends me off to buy. She tucks away the peanuts And we eat them on the sly, �G9i I go to church with Grandma An wiggie quiet a bit, You ought to see how stiff and straight An' starchy she can sit, She never turns to see me Her face is hard as But every now and then you bet, She finds a peppermint. My Gran'ma has a pocket, It's awful deep and wide, It's just the sort .0f place you know For peppermints to hide I guess she always had 'em Though mother oft objects, When we can ketch the odor on Her handerkercher an' specs. Wm. Ewing, a young Scotsman, was drowned while bathing near St. George. The men are giving the Province some return for their previous lawless- ness, and the Province is giving them a return also. Perhaps in this New Ontario scheme Hon. Mr. Doherty, Minister of Justice, will see a suggestion and those of his 1,700 prisoners who are not fitted for any reason for road work could be employed in the establishing of another farm of this kind. Canada has thousands of farms of 600 acres which are merely awaiting work such as is being done near Fort William to blossom like the rose. -Brantford Ex- positor. "17 Cents a Day" Offer • Stirs all Canada! Whole Gauntry Applauds the "Penny Purchase Plan" From a thousand different directions comes a mighty chorus of approval, voicing the popular- ity of The Oliver Typewriter "17 Cents a Day" Purchase Plan. The liberal terms of this offer being the bene- fits of the best modern typewriter within easy reach of all. The simple, convenient "Plenny Plan" has assumed international importance. It opened the floodgates of demand and has almost.engulfed us with orders. Individuals, firms and corporations- all classes of people- are taking advantage or the attractiy e plan and endorsing the great idea which led us to take this radical step - To make typewriting the univeral medium of written communication! Speeds Univeral Typewriting The trend of events is toward the general adoption of beautiful, legible, speedy typewriting Typewriter, and you have an overwhelming total of tangible reasons for its wonderful success. A Business Builder The Oliver Typewriter is a powerful creative force in business -a veritable wealth producer. Its use multiplies business opportunities, widens business influence, promotes business success. Thus the aggressive merchant or manufacturer can reach out for more business with trade win- ning letters and price lists. By means of a "mailing list"- and The Oliver Typewriter -you can annex new trade territory. Get this greatest of business aids- for 17 Cents a Day. Keep it busy. It will make your business grow. Aids Professional Men - To the professional man the typewriter is an r in place of slow, ]aboriou"'I n•�►,,.,��. illegible handwriting. r!y OLIVE1 The great business inter- ests are a unit in using type- writers. It is just as important to the general public to substi- tute typewriting for long Type*, hand." For every private citizen's personal affairs are his business. Our popular "Penny Plan" speeds the day of Universal Typewriting. A Mechanical Marvel The Oliver Typewriter is unlike all others. With several hundred less parts than ordinary typewriters, its efficiency is proportionately greater. Add to such basic advantages the many time- saving conveniences found only on The Oliver ndisdensab e assistant. Barristers, Cler gymen, Physicians, Journalists, Ar- chitects, Engineers and Pub-' lie Accountants havelearned to depend on the typewriter. y� You can master The Oliver ,r" j�{, Q. Typewriter in a few min - Utes' practice. It will pay big daily dividends of satisfaction on the small investment of 17 Cents a Day. A Stepping -Stone to Success For young people, the Oliver Typewriter is a stepping -stone to good positions and an advance- ment in business life. . The ability to operate a typewriter counts for more than letters of recommendation. Start now, when you can own The Oliver Typewriter for pennies. .loin the National Association of a Penny Savers! ir. Every purchaser of The Oliver Typewriter for 17 cents a . Day i§ made an Honorary Member of the National Association of Penhy Savors. A smalifirstpayment brings the magnificent new Oliver Typewriter, the regular $125 machine. Then save 17 Cents a Day and pay monthly. The Oliver Type- writer Catalog and full details of "11 Cents a Day" Purchase Plan sent on request, by cou- pon or letter. Address Sales Department Ihr Oliver rynewriier Co. Oliver Typewriting Bldg. CHICAGO. COUPON THE OLIVER TYPEWEITERCo Oliver Typewriting Bldg., Gentlemen; Please send your Art Catalog and details of 17- Cents•a.Day" offer on the Oliver Typewt Her. Name Address ....,.,.... Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTC R I A Moths and Carpet Bugs. At house cleaning time -which should be whenever you find it necessary to exterminate any kind of house insect - get a supply of permanganate of potash; one-fourth of an ounce of crystals is placed in an old pail and over it is pour- ed one quart of boiling water. Then apply this solution to the floors of all the rooms where moths of any kind are suspected - especially the carpeted rooms, for two feet around the edges of the floor; apply it boiling hot, with a cloth swab, but not enough to leak through and ruin the plaster of the room below. When first put on the boards, it has a bright magenta color, but this turns to a shade of brown which is very nice for a floor border, and it can be gone over with a floor varnish or some floor finish. The solu- tion sinks into the wood, killing the life in the crevices of the wood, wheth- er insects, eggs or larva. if the floor under the rug or. carpet is covered with a layer of newspapers, this will act as a preventitive of moths, buffalo bugs, silver bugs and other vermin. GROTESQUE DANCES Yaqui Natives Wear Antlers and .lump. Like Derr. Natives of the Yaqui region in Mex- ico make use of queer costumes in their dances, Seated on the ground around a fire, four good singers chant dialogues between the deer and other animals and birds, such as the coyote, the jaguar, the wolf, the bear, the eagle and the hawk. Their music is made by beating with small sticks, saturated in blood and then dried, on "guegas" or • tightly stretched mats of plaited tule leaves, The dancer ties on his head the skin and horns of the bead of a deer -which is often better than his own -and from his belt of deer bide hang many deer hoofs, which rattle continuously as he goes through the steps of the dance. In his hands be carries two large rat- tles. made of gourds partly tilled with pebbles. These he also shakes to keep time to the music, The dancer tries to imitate, as far its possible, the movements of the deer. He shakes himself sideways and with his hands makes motions similar to those of the deer's long white tail as the animal goes running swiftly over the plain, leaping through the un- derbrush or trying to free himself from the files which infest the valleys of the mountains. He whirls around, jumps and leaps straight up and down luno the air. When, we are least ex- pecting it another pascola appears, wearing the bead of .a coyote, a bear or u puma, chases the deer, tries to bite him, leap on bis back or otherwise bear him to the ground, but the deer always escapes. -Cleveland Plain Deal - 9 S boxes Cured Psoriasis. Mrs. Nettie Massey, Consecon, Ont., writes: "Three doctors described my trouble as psoriasis, and said I could never be cured. The disease spread all over me, even on my face and head and the itching and burning was hard to bear. I used eight boxes of Dr. Chase's Ointment and am entirely cur- ed -not a sign of a sore to be seen. I can hardly praise this Ointment enough." Whenever we build a war vessel Eng- landbuilds two, and Germany,France, and Japan build one; thus six ships, not one, are involved when the Congress of the United States increases its navy by one. At least $75,00,000 of energy are wrung from five nations and wasted as utterly and remorselessly as by fire. -United States Senator Johnston. If you knew of the real value of Cham- berlain's Liniment for lame back, sore- ness of the muscles, sprains and rheum- atic pains, you would never wish to be without it. For sale by all dealers. A man minus a grouch of some kind misses a lot of fun. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Russian Place Names. The Russian has not applied bin names without reason. In 1565, avl: .t he founded the capital of the Am • ,r province, he named it Blagotes- cbcnsk. This means "good news" --to all save the proofreaders in newspaper offices. Three years later he founded the capital of Primorskaya and gave It a name that -plainly showed what it was intended to be -Vladivostok, "rules of the east" Near the end of his great transcontinental railway he made a brand new city and called it pain, "farthest," a very appropriate isam , for a place 4,500 'miles from the Starting petal of th9 rola Hie Profession. "Now, Robert, what de you intend tet ell you become a maul" ques- ;Aunt Ellen as she looked ap- tey upon her small nephew. 1 . polo to be soldier" replied promptly, "cause Bien 1 can it whenever 1 want to without be- ipantfed for Ib." -Youth's Tiompan- fa Suggestion. "Mies 1 asked our new girt it she +g do anyn ting in the Rue of putting Vegetables she replied, iI can can.' " Ira dear, that sounds as it die was p'rencti chorus girl." -..Baltimore Wai scan. er. ,COLONY'OF THE CRAZED. A Belgian Town Where Insane Folks Are Wholly Unrestrained. In the year G00, according to leg- end, a young Irish princess named Dymphne. seeking to escape from her cruel father, traveled to the continent of Europe and in Belgium established herself in a hut, where it was her misfortune to be discovered and mur- dered by her parent. A temple was afterward built to the memory of the princess, and it later became a refuge for the "sick in mind," Huts and houses were gradually built to accom- modate those who came until after many centuries it became the town of Gheel, known far and wide as the col- ony of the crazed. The remarkable thing about this Bel- gian town is that the residents accept patients into their own homes so that they may enjoy the beneficial effects of domestic and social intercourse. Nearly every house contains at least two mental incompetents, and except in certain cases the patients are per- mitted to go about town and enjoy themselves. A stranger may not know whether he is meeting a patient or a sane resident in bis walks through the town. For more than 100 years this system has prevailed at Gheel. Attempts at suicide are few, the death rate among the unfortunates has averaged about 4 per cent during the past few years, while in England the rate has been 7 per cent for the past ten years. The percentage of recoveries for twenty- five years has been almost double that in England. -New York World. Insect Curiosities. Insects do not follow the rule ob- taining in higher life -that of a brief, youth followed by a longer period of adult life. The May fly lives two years as a grub in a pond and then is grant- ed a life of but a few brief hours. The dragon fly spends more time even than the' May fly in seclusion and then is cut off after a few weeks of ex- istence. But the palm goes to that strangest of American insects, the ci- cada. Pestilent swarms of these sweep over the country for a few weeks -a veritable scourge to all whom it visits, planting, the while, its eggs in the bark of trees. As grubs they crawl out and bury themselves in the soil at the roots of the trees, whence, in. sixteen years, they issue as insects, having thus spent seventeen years in matur- ing. Tragedy In a Clock. Hogan was late at work several times and was advised to , buy an alarm clock. It worked finely for a time until one of the kids got to monkeying with it and took it apart. When it was put together again it wouldn't run. Hogan couldn't understand It, on ac- eount of past performances, and did a little dissecting on his own account When he opened the clock he found the remains of a large insect mixed up with the machinery. "No wonder It won't run," he said to his wife. "The engineer is dead." - Chicago Post, A Transposition. "There is one thing 1 cannot under- stand," said the student of theology. "What is that?" inquired the pro- fessor. "Why Moses, the lawgiver, should be called the meekest of men, while Solo- mon, with hundreds of wives, was Called the wisest" -Washington Star. • +*+*++t.++**+**++***+*e+*+q*a**+***+*****4*o*****++ 4 • • IAN IOPP 1;21-1.,JNITY • gp For a Live Man in Wingham O to make some clean, honest money, giving ir'fermotion to: those who have requested it, regarding an original West- ern townsite-nota subdivision. This is a gentlf man's proposition, and we want only men of good standing whoa will not misrepresent. Address a 9 e * Western Canada Real Estate Co. k 502 TEMPLE BUILDING - TORONTO •;.410.1.4440*44)•09(041E4.440)4b40 v'p •'•' es•o . y . •. :i 9.;? .a • • . _,., 0 4' * 0 4' 4j Fame's a Bubble, Man longs for fame at any price, if it's for but a dap, for one brief hour to cut some ice and then to fade away. Where are the great celebrities who flourished yesteryear? Their fame was borne on every breeze in either hemi- spere. Then in the limelight were they all, and honor crowned their names; we hung their picture on the wall, in large and gilded frames. But for their pictures we've no use, since all their glory flew; oh, what's become of Captain Loose,, and where's I-Took- a-Thoe? To -day with pride man's bosom thrills, next week his name is Sox! oh, where is Beechen now, whose pills where worth five bones a box? To -day the widely touted chap all self - complacent grins; to -morrow he is off the way -and where is Johnnie Binns? Man takes an axe and kills a friend, Mdney. "Say, pop, what is money2" "Iirloney, my son, is the root of all evil -that is to say, with It you can buy a wife or keep expensive bachelor apartments. No matter which one you choose, you'll wish you had the other." Philadelphia Record. Many owe what health they have to' the unquenchable flame that burns un- dimmed In the faculty, of hope. -Wal' ter De Voe. . • . and goes upon the stage; he thinks his fame will never end- he'll always be the rage; then some one takes a gun and kills some six or eight or ten; the first man's name goes orf the bills, and ne'er comes back again. So let us humbly toil and sing, content to be obscure, for fam's a vain and trifling thing that seldom will endure. -Walt Mason. IL another dayys with Itching, Bleed- ing, or Protrnd• !ng Piles. No surgical open. anion required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure yon. bee. a nox• all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample box free If you mention this paper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay postage. No fewer than nine newspapers are published in Waterford, Ireland, which is the equivalent of one for every 3,000 inhabitants. +++ 4.4.44.41. +++it.+.t.++++ *++++:44 +.++++++++4' 4, 4. 3� 4. 3 ' 4. • • Clubbing • • • +; ••4 .14 Tile Times Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Daily Globe Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... Times and Toronto Weekly Sun Times and Toronto Daily Star Times and Toronto Daily News.. ,..... • Times and Daily Mail and Empire. .. Times and Weekly Mail and Empire Times. and Farmers' Advocate Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times and Farm and Dairy Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press. Times and Daily Advertiser Times and London Advertiser (weekly), .... Times and London Daily Free Press Mornirg Edition Evening Edition Times and Montreal Daily Witness Times and Montreal Weekly Witness Times and World Wide Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... Times and Presbyterian , . . Times and Westminster Times, Presbyterian and Westminster.... .,. Times and Toronto Saturday Night ..... Times and Busy Man's Magazine Times and Home Journal, Toronto Times and Youth's Companion Times and Northern Messenger.. Times and Daily World Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) Times and Canadian Pictorial Times and Lippincott's Magazine Times and Woman's Home Companion Times and Delineator...... Times and Cosmopolitan Times and Strand Times and Success Times and .McClure's Magazine Times and Muns©y's Magazine Times and Designer Times and Everybody's • These prices are for addresses in ÷ • Britain. 1.60 9..50 1.85 1,75 2.30 2.30 4.50 1.60 2.35 1,60 1 80 1.60 2.85 1.60 3,50 2 90 3.50 1.b5 2 25 1.60 2.25 2.25 3.25 .k 3 40 ''. 2.50 1,75 2.90 + 1.35 3,10 '+ 2.90 + 1.60 3.15 + 2,6G 2A0 2.30 2.50'+ 2.45 2,60 •t 2,55 1.85 2.40 at° Canada or' Great + + + • The above publications may be obtained by Times 4 * s• ubscribers in any combination, the price for any publica- ÷ tion being the figure given above less Si.00 representing 4. the price of The Times. For instance : • The Times and Weekly Globe el.60 + The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1.35 + + + $2.95 + making the price of the three papers $2.95. + The Times and the Weekly Sun..., $1.80 is The Toronto Daily Star (62.80 less $1,00) 1,30 + The Week13 Globe ($1.60 less $1,00) GO _.. + 63.70 • the four papers for $3.7o. *r., If the pub•icat on you want is not in above list, let $ us know. We ^ .n supply almost any well-known Cana- 3 dian or American publication. These prices are strictly ▪ cash in advance ' + Send subscriptions by post office or e‘ press order to $ 1Tiie Times Office t Stone Block + WINGHAM ONTARIO 43:'1'++ +.4*.*'ir14.4'3'+++,++++++++ ;•+++++47 +4�l �f �Jf"i? 144. rte