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The Wingham Times, 1912-10-17, Page 3TILE WINGIIAM TIMES, OCTOBER 17, 1912 The 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 farmer tills the land. Railways, Wbeat, Coal and Water !! 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 bwipess Send for our illustrated booklet describing the property ye have to sell in) arma ga Work for your Money in the East, but invest it in the west CUT OUT THE COUPON Na'y ftl AND SEND IT TO US Western Canada Rei Estate Company Head Office ..-502 TEMPLE BUILDING,, Toronto, Ong BRANCHES: MONTREAL, QUE. HAMILTON, ONT. IS Sen Life An ..a 302 Litter Chambers LONDON, ONT. 11 Dominion Bank Cherubim 'WESTERN CANADA REAL ESTATE CO. 502 Temple Building, Toronto, Ont. Please send me without obligation on nay part, literature containing facts,, figures and .views of CARMANGAY, Name,...................•&...,..s.....�...,•+,:..r...+s•.,.....,.. Address ... e.......r.,.--»,..--.-e THE WINGHAM TIMES "1 7 Cents a Day" Offer Stirs all Canada! Whole Cnunfry 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" Puro':base Plan. 'th. (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 of the attractiye 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. I•t will make your business grow. Aids Professional Men To the professional man the typewriter is an i in place of slow, laborio p illegible handwriting, iai n "h ot °" The great business inter- ests are a unit in usifig type- `� writers. It is just as important to I Iif 1111 the general public to substi- tute typewriting for long ndisdensab e assistant. Barristers, Cler gymen, Physicians, ,Journalists, Ar- chitects, Engineers and Pub- lic Accountants have learned to depend on the typewriter. Typ e.wr You can masterina Thefew Olivemin- r Ir{, Qrjl typewriter 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 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. Join the National Association of a Penny Savers! Every purchaser of The Oliver Typewriter for 17 cents a Day is mane an Honorary Member of the National Association of Penny Savors. A small first payment brings the magnificent new Oliver Typewriter, the -regular 5 machine. rThen save 17 Cents a Day and pay monthler. The Oliver Type- writer Ceetalog and fell details of "17 Conits a Day" Piwcbase Plan sent on request, by cou- p'on or letter. Address SaleS Depattment The Oliver typewriter Co. Oliver Typewriting Bldg. CHICAGO. COUPON THE OLIVER TVPEWEITERCO Oliver Typewriting Bldg., (It ntlrhnen: Pleases( rd ynnh Art Catalog end (retails of '17- Cent,.a-Day" offer on the Oliver 'J 3' pews her. Name Address S W'OIDERFUI. DISCOVERY An eminent scientist, the other day, gave his opinion that the most won- derful discovery of recent years was the discovery of Zam-Buk. Just think! ,diS soon as a single thin layer of Zaxce-Buk is applied to a wound or a sore, such injury is insured against blood poison! Not one species of microbe has been Sound that Zam-Buk does not kin! Then again, As soon as Zam-Buk M applied to a sore, or a cut, or to shin disease, it stops the smarting. That is 'Irby children are such friends of Zam-Buk. They care nothing for the science of the thing. All they know is that Zam-Buk stops their pain. Mothers should never forget this. si') Again. As soon as Zam-Buk is ap- plied to a wound or to a diseased part, the cells beneath the skin's sur- face are so stimulated that new healthy tissue is quickly formed. This forming of fresh healthy tissue from below is Zam;-Buk's secret of healing. The tissue thus formed is worked up to the surface and literally casts off the diseased tissue above it. This is why Zam-Buk cures are permanent. Only the other day Mr. Marsh, of 101 Delorimier Ave., Montreal, called upon the Zam-Buk Company and told them that for over twenty-five years he had been a martyr to eczema. I-Iis hands were at one time so covered with sores that he had to sleep in gloves. Four years ago Zam-Buk was introduced to him, and in a few months it cured him. To -day --over three years after his cure of a disease he had for twenty-five years -he is still cured, and has had no trace of any return of the eczema! All€druggists sell Zam-Buk at 50c. box, or we will send free trial box if you send this advertisement and a lc. stamp (to pay return postage). Ad- dress Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. • THE CONTENTED TREES. Said the maple to the pine, "Don't you want a dress like mine, Turning into gorgeous colors In September?" "Well," replied the little pine, ''I will own i'ts very fine While it lasts you; but how is it In December? "I'm contented to be seen In this handsome dress of green; And to change it I don't see Any reason." "Now, dear maple," said the pine, "Don't you want a dress like mine That will last and look well In any season?" "No, I thank you,, little pine," Said the maple, "I decline, Since for autumn reds and yellows I've a passion." "Those green dresses look so strange When the oaks and beeches change Why, I couldn't bear to be so Out of fashion." -Progressive Teacher. Deafness cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only 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. - Local Option Contests, The Ontario Branch of the Dominion Alliance has definitely decided to intro- duce local option campaigns this year in some fifty Ontario municipalities, more than half of which are large-sized towns and cities, including Peterboro, Lindsay, St. Marys, Wingham, Clinton, Essex and Parkhill. The province has been divided into six parts and Field Secretaries will be kept busy frow now until the first of January organising committees and arranging for the in- troduction of by-laws for the suppres- sion of the liquor traffic. The follow- ing municipalities in this country h: ••e been selected for the vote: Bayf. 1, Blyth, Clinton, Exeter, McKillop, ' ; Jr- ris, Stephen, Turnberry and Wingham. Fewer Homesteads Taken. Canada's remaining homestead lands in the west begin to show evidences of depletion in regard to their availability and attractiveness for new settlers. The settlers now going in, though even more numerous than last year, are tak- ing up in the aggregate much more land by purchase than by homestead- ing. The most accessible free land dis- tricts were taken up by the rush of homesteaders during the past decade. For the first seven months of this year the number of homestead entries made in the four western Provinces has to- talled 22,707, a decrease of 1,245 as compared with the first s('veo months of last year. Homestead entries in Manitoba for the seven months totalled 1,748, an increase of 3011. In Saskat- atchewan the entries fur the seven months totalled 11,090, a decrease of 1,249. In Alberta the total this year was 8,874, a decrease of :;07. British Columbia homesteads taken up during the seven months totalled only 170. r Humor and Philosophy 7sy DV,IVCAJY M. SWUM CAN'T SPOIL HER. ,.,: TT doesn't matter what the maid -11 May do by way of dress, Or whether garments comfort brine ?• Or cause her much distress, Or whether she may cramp her Net • In shoes that make her lame, Or hew she fixes up her hair, We like her lust the same. If she is slender, plump or tall Or only half and half, If she is sad eyed and denluro Or has a merry laugh, If she Is scholarly and wise Or silly, just a bit, Whatever she Is or Is not, She always makes a hit. That is the way our fathers were, For really they were glad Po take the women of their day At every chance they had. Were they in hoopskirts or in stays, Plain and precise or gay, They married them offhand and said They Liked them best that way. y , :�=•rl And men of modern times fall in ,?r And gladly play the game. A hobble skirt or peekaboo, ?« To them it's all the same. They like the way they fix their hair, Tho color of their eye And every detail and design, Because they're girls; that's why. Caused a Change. CeytR„ "He laced to be the leader of the bar." "Isn't he any more?" "Not now." "Why not?" "He became the leader to the bar." Substitute For Sugar. "You wouldn't think that stepladdez was very good for sweetening mate. real," said the wayside philosopher. "You are right; I wouldn't," replied the practical man." "And yet it the man who couldn't reach the sour grapes had had one he would have found that it sweetened them." Couple of Marks. "Another old landmark is gone," re' marked the plain citizen when he heard of the death of an old settler. "Another old easy mark, you mean," observed the man who had once traded horses with the deceased. Impossible. "See that little fellow over there. He thinks an awful lot of himself." "But I don't see how he can." "Why not?" "There isn't an awful lot of him to think of." The Only Kind. "How is the hunting around here?" "There is lots of it." "Any game?" "Only what game the natives make of you." Short Reliefs. "That was a terrific storm." "I rather enjoyed it." "But it thundered constantly." "I couldn't hear my wife talk." So Inspirational. "She's so fond of her dogl" "I wonder why?" "Gives her something to talk about." The Wiseacres. if all the knowledge of the world Were boiled in one short rime You still would find some men to say, "1 knew it all the time." PERT PARAGRAPHS. Either money or personal vanity le the big element that gets one inter• ested in a thing. The man you can't lose generally hal just that one thing to recommend him, and that's a drawback. . In this day of restaurants and eafe* the modern family gets together for 8 meal about once a week. And yet the moralists are asking, "Why are fami. lies dibintegrating?" Most married men forget that they are married, and the rest can't rement. ber that they are not single. Talk is inexpensive -when it is of the cheap sort. A bigamist is a man who is overwill' ing to tiike chances. Each day is an integral portion or ypur life with just demands upon you. If you disregard them don't be toenail enough to expect harmonious results. There are people who think they earn the right to a Incurious existence by the simple act of standing by and watching the rest of us labor. Tlaeh of be has to live after all, blit it is hard to make the rest of the world see the necessity. It generally takes more than a lotto* of introdnctiou to get both arida t0 meet. 0000-0+.04,04.4004,00...40 00@ 4so+440.4040044,49900+0¢004Pf • AN OPPORTUNITY 0 For a Live Man in Wingham ° to make some clean, holiest mcney, givirg irform tion to* those who have requested it, regarding an original. West.4 ern townsite----not .a subdivision. This is a gentlt man's proposition, and we want only men of gcod standing who: will not misrepresent. Address Western Canada Real Estate Co. 8 • • • 3 • a d 0 Q 9 502 TEMPLE BUILDING - TORONTO I 6834. 1-14<,O,I,'. S'C4b4,-0.0 e>,'.dv�AF Facts Aboutguberculosis, It is an extraordinary fact that a cow may present a perfectly healthy appear- ance, thrive well upon her feed and give a good flow of milk and yet been a badly diseased state with tuberculosis. This is very clearly brought out in a pam- phlet prepared by, the International Com- mission on the Control of Bovine Tuber- culosis. Photographs are shown of fine looking animals that are known to have been diseased for years without cough and otherwise apparently healthy, and yet constantly passing tuberculosis germs that when consumed by hogs pro- duced the disease. Such animals are a constant menace not only to the health of the herds to which they belong, but also to the people who use their milk, or are otherwise associated with them. Apart from the health standpoint, the disease causes the loss of millions of doll- ars annually in cattle and hogs besides materially decreasing the food supply of the country. The disease is commoner in some regions than in others, in some districts it being no uncommon thing to find as many as 70 to 80 per cent of the cows in a herd diseased. In order to lay these and many other important facts regarding the disease before cattle rais- ers and others interested in live stock, a large issue of the Tuberculosis Primer was printed by direction of the Honour- able, the Minister of Agriculture. Those who have not already received a copy may do so by applying to the Pub- lications Branch of the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa. Nearly half the population of France is engaged in agricultural pursuits. ++++++++ 1.314.44E+++++++++++++ i'3'3'"i'3'0+'F+++ The Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Times Clubbing List and Weekly Globe . and Daily Globe and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... and Toronto Weekly Sun and Toronto Daily Star .. and Toronto Daily News„ and Daily Mail and Empire. and Weekly Mail and Empire and Farmers' Advocate and Canadian Farm (weekly) and Farm and Dairy and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press, and Daily Advertiser .................. and London Advertiser (weekly) and London Daily Free Press Mcrnir•g Edition Evening Edition .... and Montreal Daily Witness and Montreal Weekly Witness and World Wide ... , and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg..... and Presbyterian and Westminster , Presbyterian and Westminster and Toronto Saturday Night and Busy Man's Magazine and Home Journal, Toronto and Youth's Companion and Northern Messenger.. and Daily World and Canadian Magazine (monthly) and Canadian Pictorial and Lippincott's Magazine and Woman's Home Companion and Delineator and Cosmopolitan and Strand and Success . and McClure's Magazine and Munsey's Magazine .... Times and Designer Times and Everybody's These prices are for addresses in Britain. 1.60 4.50 1.85 1,75 230 2.80 4.50 1.60 2.35 1,60 1.80 1.60 2.85 1.00 3.50 2 90 3.50 1.85 2.25 1.60 2.25 2.25 3,25 34'0 .2.5 0 1.75 2.90 1.35 3.10 2,90 1,60 3.15 2 PG 2.40 2.30 2.50 2.45 2.60 2,55 1.85 2.40 Canada or Great The above publications may be obtained by Times subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica- . tion being the figure given above less Sr.00 representing the price of The Times. For instance The Times and Weekly Globe $1.60 The Farmer's Advocate ($2.35 less $1.00). 1.85 d - d $2.95 making the price of the three papers $2.95. 4. '1 d: The Times and the Weekly Sun.. $1,80 * The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30 less $1.00) 1,30 The Weekl3 Globe ($1.60 less $1.00) 60 #3,70 the four papers for $3.7o. If the plrb.icat on you want is not in above list, let + us know. We ,n supply almost any well-known Cna- dian or American publication. These prices are strictly 4 cash in ad ,ante 4 Send subscriptions by post office or evpress order to TirnesThe Office ' Stone Block WINGHAM ONTARIO