HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-10-10, Page 3The above is a picture of "Chief Little Bow," who was probably the first
inhabitant of CARMANGAY, where once the savage roamed at will, NOW the timer tills the land.
Railways, Wheat, Coal and Water 1!
CARMANGAY is a NATURAL RAILWAY CENTRL on account of the topography of the country.
It is situated on the Little Bow River, and has an UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF PURE WATER. It has
VAST QUANTITIES OF COAL close to the town.
OUR PROPERTY is WITHIN the TOWN LIMITS and ONLY TWO BLOCKS from the centre of (vines*.
Send for our illustrated booklet describing the property we have to sell in)
armang
Work for your Money in the East, but invest it in the West
CUT OUT
AND SEND ITE TO US N NOv� !!t
Western Canada Real Estate Company
Head Office. --502 TEMPLE BUILDING,
Toronto, Ont:
BRANCHES:
MONTREAL. 'QUE. HAMILTON. ONT. LONDON. ONT.
15 Ss Lits Ano... 302 Lister Chambers 11 Dominioa Deak Chambeis
WESTERN CANADA REAL ESTATE Co.
502 Temple Building, Toronto, Ont.
Please send me without obligation on my
part, literature containing facts, figures and
views of CARMANtiAY.
Name
Address..a.............p................. ,..........».,..a
THE WINGHAM TIMES
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Whole Country Applauds the "Penny Purchase Plan'
From a thousand different directions comes a
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It opened the floodgates of demand and has
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Speeds Univeral Typewriting
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TITE WINGIIA51 TIMES, OCTOBER 10, 1912
HIS STORY BOOK.
rOttawa Free Press.)
That was Sir Richard Cartwright to
the life. It was ten years ago, during
a most exciting debate in Commons,
that Sir Richard was observed to be
poring over a book. On a couple of
occasions during the debate, he was
asked a question, which question he
answered in the shortest possible man-
ner with a snort of impatience.
When 6 o'clock came, Sir Richard
left for dinner, leaving the book be-
hind his seat. Someone suggested that
the minister was engaged in studying
some profound work of finance or phil-
osophy.
"Come and see," said a press gal-
lery man who sat immediately above
the minister's seat and who knew him.
The little group stole into the Com-
mons and glanced at the title of the
book, now lying exposed on the minis-
isterial seat. It was "Blue Lights or
Hot work in the Soudan," by R. M.
Ballantyne, and its sub -title was "A
Book for Boys."
-POINTED PARAGRAPHS.®
Two's company -unless they are hus-
band and wife.
Far better the naked ;truth than an
overdressed lie.
The harder a woman is to please, the
less a man will try.
Birth is an accident from which it
takes a lifetime to recover.
Some men find it easier to make a
good living than to make good.
Self-control is the one thing a man
always has until he needs it.
No `;matter how -fast a young man
may be he can be overtaken by trouble.
When it comes to making a rapid
change of opinion every woman is an
expert.
He is a very particular man who in-
sists on combing his own hair in a bar-
ber shop.
In planning for the future, don't
overlook the present. - - ---
Some people waste a lot of time try-
ing to devise cures for other people's
bad habits.
A woman would like to have a good
figure in order to show her contempt
for those who haven't.
When a. young widow faces the par-
son for the second time, she is apt to
balk at the "honor and obey" clause.
Nothing shocks a girl quite so much
as hearing an elderly woman laugh
over the love disappointment she had
when young.
An expert cabinet maker can take a
new piece of furniture and make it look
as if it was two hundred years old -and
so can the average small boy.
When a man gets sick he doesn't
want to take any medicine; when a wo-
man gets sick, she wants to take about
seventeen kinds at once.
Deafness ttaunot be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is ohly one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con-
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus-
tachian Tube. When this tube is in-
flamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is en-
tirely closed, Deafness is the result,
and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its
normal condition' hearing will be des-
troyed forever; nine cases out of ten
are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing
but an inflamed condition of the muc-
ous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred • Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot,be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars,
free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
Important to Retain
Child's Temporary Teeth.
It is the duty of parents to wat•h
the teeth of their children just as csr.i-
fully as they do their general hea`.ti.
A child should be frequently taken to a
dentist; the temporary teeth can thus
be watched and filled, and so retained
as long as nature intended they should.
Parents should remember that it is just
as important for the health of the
child that the temporary teeth be re-
tained in a sound and useful condition
until the time of their exfoliation, as
it is that the adult's teeth should be
attended to. It is difficult for parents
to distinguish between the first per-
manent molars, which erupt about six
years of age, and the temporary teeth.
Many of these first permanent molars
are lost because of inability to distin-
guish, and the child suffers an irrepar-
able loss, for these first molars are
really the most important teeth in the
mouth. They serve the important func-
tion of preserving the requisite space
for the other teeth, their early loss
meaning an i.nperfectly developed arch.
Decayed teeth and an unclean mouth
materially affectprogrcrs at school.
This condition causes indig,stion, mal-
nutrition and eye -strain, and the natu-
ral result is retarded mental develop-
ment.
Humor and
Philosophy
.._.s
$y DVJVCA/V M.. vorsi
THE POET.
THEI poet is one
Who
in taking a view
Of the world
Can see
As a man up a tree
The whole total shebang.
Ho takes in the entire
Universe
With a glance of the eye.
Isn't he spry?
He senses all the stars,
And on the canals of Mars
He sees a man fishing -
That is, be gets the whole
Prom pole to pole
And also the details,
Little things, that and this,
That a duller mind would mise.
He sees poetry in a plan
Of battle and in a garbage can.
Nothing escapes him.
His vision is clear
For a year
In advance.
He sees at a glance
The big and the small
And all
Of the major and the minor
Points. The finer,
Frailer fabrics of the web
Of life, the dimpled cheeks
And the mountain peaks.
The granite gray
And the new mown hay.
I tell you, it keeps him
Busy looking, and where
'He can spare
Time to write
Even at night
Is more than I can see.
The poet is incurable.
Also endurable.
If you take him the right way.
But, say, with all his .powers
He cannot make "automobile"
Rime with "thrashing machine."
v et
Can't Scare Them
This Is a very
exclusive part of
the town."
"It looks it."
"No tramps
ever come up
here."
"Or bill col-
lectors?"
k k
Boastful Betty.
°"Isn't Betty a lovely girl?"
"Oh, 1 don't know! She's such an
awful boaster."
"I never noticed it."
"Ohl Haven't you? I've tried and
tried to tell of prettier clothes or nicer
parties or more men than she does, but
she always beats me to it."
Careful Girl.
"I want you to marry me."
"Really! That's a stupendous propo-
sition."
"Don't you think you could accept
it?"
"Well, I might do part of it."
"Part of it?"
"I might marry, you know."
No Turn About For Him.
• "We only joke with people we like."
"Think so?"
"Sure."
"Well, there's this about it -we don't
like some of them long when they
work off on us their idea of a joke."
Useless Regrets,
"He married a widow."
"Yes?"
"And now he is fighting mad."
"About what?"
"Because the other fellow died."
Must Have.
"Grouch has a grudge against him-
self."
"What makes you think so?"
"He seems to be making himself mis-
erable all the time."
Comfort.
The man without a collar.
The man without a coat,
May not appear so handsome.
But will you kindly note
When speaking of the weather
It hasn't got his goat?
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
five a woman her way and get a
reputation for generosity. She'll have
the way anyhow.
Just because a man likes to boast
about how he used to beat the other
boys skinning the cat don't imagine he
yearns to keep in trim by running the
Vacuum cleaner.
Yaws
Some men are so weak spirited that
they will even pay the taxes on their
wives' poodles.
The young man who doesn't think he
knows more than his boas hasn't
enough gumption to pick up a good
thing when he sees it.
Being found out is the only thing
that makes some people feel guilty.
Idmelight fever is like measles -
easier to catch than to recover from.
The eat In a strange garret probably
thinks that the world has gone and lost
Itself again.
Ever notice- how hard it 18 to be sat.
;stied when you are thoroughlydiscon-
tented? _
••$••••••••••+••••.O•$•1$• •,$$O$•♦••4••••••••••••+••*
AN OPPORTUNITY
•
•
•
•
a
•
For a Live Man in Wingham
t
to make some clean, honest money, giving irforrntion to
those who have requested it, regarding an original West -
6, ern townsite-not a subdivision. This is a gentlt mans •
• proposition, and we want only men of goad star cling who
will not misrepresent. Address 'o
9 •
a•
•
v
4
•
Western Canada Real Estate Co.
F
502 TEMPLE BUILDING - TORONTO
*4c44".•”*44•13*44440444•45 A.•t ".�?•G •A.,>4pos.4�C<3.•>• • ••
THE INSOMNIA HABIT.
Sleep is the most simple of nature's
restoratives, and unfortunate is she
who cannot fall into a deep slumber the
minute her bead touches the pillow.
Nothing could be worse than to toss
from one side of the bed to the other
throughout the night, and to rise in
the morning more tired, if possible,
than when you sought repose the night
before.
If insomnia habit is yours, try in
every way possible to get rid of it.
Perhaps you have fallen into the way
of taking an undue amount of coffee or
tea at dinner time; and you may even
be one of those foolish people - of
which there are a considerable number,
I much regret to say -who insist upon
drinking a huge cupful of coffee, black
as jet, just before going to their bed.
Don't do it. It is a habit that can be
broken and it is part of your duty to
yourself to see that it is broken, and
at once. Become a nonevening coffee
or tea drinker from now on and reap
your reward in sound sleep.
Another cause cf insomnia is lack of
exercise. The woman who stays in the
house all day with most of the windows
closed and the shades at half-mast, as
it were, is sure to lie awake at night,
while more sensible people sleep the
sleep of the just.
Become a lover of exercise in the
open air. 0 ye sleepless ones! ad'Ivll
wager you a box of chocolate creams
that inside of three days you will be
sleeping as sound as a top.
+++.1.4.4.44+1.21334341444+++.1.4.44 4.4.:+x'.' 3..74K+" " ' 4:411.3.4.4.+ i.4.d' ' ,
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1 The Times4444
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Times and Daily Globe 4.50
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Times and Toronto 'Weekly Sun 1,75
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3.25
34'0
2.50
1.75
2.909
1.35
3.10
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The above publications may be obtained by Times
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* the price of The Times. For instance :
The Times and Weekly Globe $1,60
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
The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1,D0).. 1,30
The Weekl3 Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) . , 60
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ONTARIO 4,