HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-11-07, Page 3TILE ' `ING1IAM. TIMES, NOVEMBER 7, 1912
The above is a plctare of "Chief Little Bow," who was probably the first
inhabitant of CARMANGAY, where•once the savage roamed at will, NOW the timer Os the toed.
Y
Railwa s, Wheat •. Coal and Water!!
CARMANGAY is a NATURAL RAILWAY CENTRL on account of the topography of the country.:
It is situated en the Little Bow River, and has an UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF PURE WATER. It has
VAST QUANTITIES OF COAL close to the town.
QUR PROPERTY is WITHIN the TOWN LIMITS and ONLY TWO BLOCKS.from the centre of kjjllness,
• Send for our illustrated booklet describing the property, we have to sell iriZ
armartgay
Work for your Money in the East, but invest it in the West
CUT OUT THE' COUPON NOW fl?
AND SEND.IT TO US
Western Canada Real Estate Company
Head Office., -502 TEMPLE UUiLDING;,
Toronto, Ont: •
BRANCHES.
MONTREAL. QUE. HAMILTON. ONT. LONDON, OM:
L6 3a Lit. Aao.s 302 I3.ter Chambers 11 Dominion Hann Cbamb 0
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 CARMANGAY..
Name. .........»-.»
Address,..:......a............,...........................a
THE WINGHAM TIMES
"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"
Pu chase Plan.
fitsliberal terms of this offer being the bene-
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 attractive
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
•
in place of slow, laborio ' i'in'ie.
illegible handwriting.
The great business inter-
ests are a unitinusifigtype-
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It is just as important to
the general public to substi-
tute typewriting for long
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.
1,;tThus 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. BIM
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
LIVE'
Typeveri
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affairs are his bulginess.
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
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Add to such basic advantages the many time-
saving conveniences found only on The Oliver
ndisdensab e assistant.
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to depend on the typewriter.
You can master The Oliver
rypewriter, in a few min -
Utes' practice. It will pay big daily dividends
of satisfaction on the small investment of 17
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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
made an Honorary 'Member of the National Association of Penny
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brings the magnificent new
Oliver Tj ewriter, the regular
$105 machine.
My Then swipe W Cents a Day and
pay monthly. The Oliver Type-
writer Catalog and full details
of "17 Cents a Day" Purchase
Dian sent on request, by cou-
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Address Sales Department
1 he Oliver Typewriter Co.
Oliver Typewriting Bldg.
CItI CAOO.
COUPON
THE OLIVER TYPEWEITERCo
Oliver Typewriting Bldg.,
C•lentdomtn: PIene$Erdyero
Art Catalog and deto 1. of "17-
Cente•a-Day" offer on the Oliver
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,Name
Address
DYSPEPSIA BADE I
NIM MISERABLE
Suffered Agony Until
"Fruit-a•ilres" Cured Him
Hundreds of people gladly testify to
the wonderful curative powers of the
famous fruit medicine, "Fruit-a-tives".
To those now suffering with Indigestion,
Dyspepsia or other Stomach Troubles,
this letter of Mr. Stirling, the well
known real estate operator of Western
Ontario, shows the way to a speedy and
certain cure.
Gr,1:NCOE, ONT., AUG, 15th. 191I
"Itruit-a-tives were so beneficial to
me when I suffered with distressing
Dyspepsia, that I wish to inform you of
their satisfactory results.
Although I have, in past, suffered
agony with Dyspepsia, I am now in
perfect health. "Frust-a-tives" accom-
plished the desired result"
N. C. STIRLING.
"Fruit-a-tives" will cure every trace
of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach
Bloating, Pain After Bating, Biliousness
and Constipation.
"Fruit-a-tives" is the only remedy in
the world made of fruit juices and
valuable tonics.
500 a box, 6 for $2.5o, trial size, 250.
At all dealers or sent on receipt of price
by Fruit -a -fives Limited, Ottawa.
THE FARMER'S DAY.
[Life.]
Sing a song of farmers,
Up at early morn,
With four -and -twenty chores to do
Before the breakfast horn,
When the breakfast's over,
There's little to be done,
Except to plow the fodder
And let the harrows run,
And mow the sheep and prune the beets
And curry up the swine,
And shear the hens and dig the hay
And shoe the gentle kine,
And saw the wheat and rake the rye
And wash and dress the land,
And things like that which city folks
Can never understand.
A bulletin of the New York telephone
and telegraph company rates the cities
of the world according to the number
of telephones. Among countries the
United States is easily first with the
almost incredible number 7,500,00!)
which is 82 per cent. of all the tele-
phones in the world. Yet no American
city stands as high as Stockholm with
one telephone for every 4.7 inhabitants
though on the other hand no American
city so low as Madrid, with one for 155
New York ren'ts below Copenhagen,
Christiania, Stuttgart and Berlin, but
above London, which has one to -26,
against one for 17 in New York. In
Paris the ratio is one to 36; in Vienna,
44; St. Petersburg, 65; Rome, 60; Lis-
bon, 115.
To Stop Hie Laugh.
patient When 1 laugh my side hurts
me. Doctor -.&h, well, we'll soon put
that right. Send for your mother-in-
law, to fitay with you and 1 will send
in my bill. -Pell Mele.
Money and Time.
Money and time are the heaviest bur -
dent of life, and the unhappiest of all
lnortalli are those who have more of
either than they know how to use. --
Johnson.
Heard In a Street Car.
Big Man (with a grouch) -Will you
be flo hind as to get oft my feet? Lit-
tle
ittle Man (with a bundle) -I'll try, sir.
14 it mach of a walk? -Boston Tran'
Scissors.
A young fellow
big newspaper,
'`coley.' easily
called the other
shop.
"What do you
th' l olity s'tr.i.i•,
'111" 1 ri lion;
in i'•, •! . :i
, a reporter on a
who t.tras out
and in abundance,
day at a hardware
require?" demanded
l,,.t.,
e;'"t+el. was eu;:ac;ed
n s.teryd ;tl,s.mtly,
• weretl, with an in -
ie, • d air,"tic is.•"r: -
SHOWED HIS CONTEMPT.
The Performance Was Costly, but It
Relieved His Feelings.
At Dussaux'e restaurant, in th6
4raud Morakol at St. Petersburg, slat
officers of the Imperial Horse guards
sat drinking champagne. Not far from
them sat an insignificant little man
with a shabby coat and an unkempt
beard and a glass of liquor In front of
him. It was not long before he became
aware that be was being ridiculed by
the officers aforesaid.
By and by, as they became more and
more offensive in their remarks on his
personal appearance, etc., he called for
the waiter and said, "Bring me six bot-
tles of your best champagne." The
waiter hesitated. "Divi you not hear
what I said?" asked the little man
The waiter brought the wine and six
glasses. "Take these glasses away and
fetch a basin, one as large as you can
find." The waiter again hesitated, but
obeyed instantly at the peremptory rep-
etition of the order. ".A. piece of soap,"
was the next order. It was brought.
"A towel." The waiter handed him
one. "Now open the bottles." The
waiter did so.
The little man now filled the basin
with the contents of the six bottles,
rolled up his sleeves, washed himself
in the costly fluid, wiped his hands,
laid a hundred ruble note on the table
and, casting a look of withering con-
tempt on the of vers, strutted out of
the room. -Argonaut.
Had a Weak Heart.
Doctored For Three Years
Without Any Benefit.
Through one cause or another a large
majority of people are troubled, more or
less, with some form of heart trouble.
Little attention is paid to the slight
weakness, but when it starts to beat
irregularly, and every once in a while,
pain seems to shoot through it, then it
names great anxiety and alarm.
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will
•ivo prompt and permanent relief to all
hose suffering from any weakness of the
heart or nerves. • -
Mrs. M. Shea, 193 Holland Ave.,
Ottawa, Ont., writes: -"I write you these
tines to let you know that t have used
ii,ilburn's Heart and Nerve Fills. After
torit.g for the last three tears with all
.ds of medicines and pills for wen
r"art, 1 heard of your Heart and Nerif
I ills, to thinking Y had never used any-
.l.ing that did me so much good, 1 kept
nt using them, and I had only used four
,.nay, when I was perfectly cured."
' s't• n l dealers,, orb mailed boxesreon
- •rpt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
THE MOON AS WE SEE IT.
Its Mountains and Craters and Its
Lights and Shadows.
The visible part of the moon is about
equal to the superficies of North Amer-
ica. It is very mountainous, and around
the vast dry plains which form the
dark spots seen with the naked eye are
volcanoes whose funnel shaped craters
resemble old wells filled in by the de-
posits of ages.
Maps of the moon show more than
33,000 such craters, some of them.200
kilometers in diameter.
The radius of the earth is supposed to
be nearly four times that of the moon.
Proportionally the moon is much more
mountainous than the earth. All the
lunar volcanoes are extinct.
The moon was formed after the earth
was formed. It has gone to its doom
faster than the earth because, as its
mass is much feebler than the earth's
mass, it cooled faster. The moon's light
and shade are clearly seen because It
has no appreciable atmosphere.
The moon has been called the "pan-
theon of astronomers" because its vol-
canoes have been named for astron-
omers. Riccioli gave his own name to
a splendid lunar "circus," and to a very
small and insignificant volcano he gave
the name of Galileo.-Harper's Weekly.
David Garrick's Ways.
David Garrick was a Celt and Anglo-
Saxon combined, and that is why he
was so successful an actor manager.
That also explains why be was careful,
even parsimonious at times, in small
matters, but ever ready to give freely.
"He had," says his latest biographer,
in an almost regretful tone, "a beauti-
ful habit of sending back 1. 0. 17.'s
with such words as 'I beg you will
light a bonfire with the inclosed' "-
beautiful indeed, and very rare. John-
son declared that whenever he drew
Garrick's attention to some case of dis-
tress he always received from him more
than from any other person and al-
ways more than he expected. "Sir, he
was a liberal man. ]3e has given away
more money than any man in England.
There may have been a little vanity
mixed, but be has shown that money is
not his first object." -"David Garrick
and IDs French Friends."
The Holiday Headache.
The severe headache which often fol-
lows a long railway journey or a pro-
tracted tour of a museum or a picture
gallery is usually wrongfully attributed
to bad air. As a matter of fact, says
Dr. Sidney Stephenson, such head-
aches are more often than not due to
the fact that the eyes have been over-
worked. The cure is not a cup of tea
nor a bottle of smelling salts; it lies in
a pair of spectacles. From exactly the
same type of headache clerks, typists,
dressmakers and students are great suf-
ferers. In the great majority of these
cases, says Dr. Stephenson, examina-
tion has shown that weak and over-
worked eyes were the cause of the
trouble, which has disappeared with
the use of a pair of good spectacles.-,
Pearson's Weekly.
The Magio of September.
September seems to me to be the
fairy among the months of the year.
She is so crowned with gold, so full
of play and magic spells, she has'no
work to do, and it is she who trans-
forms the green woods and gray
marshes to wonderlands of fairy fire
and brings the great pale moon back
round and full night after night into
the skies. Yes, September has a magic!
-Htldegarde Hawthorne in St. Nicho-
las.
1 althfui to the End.
Nobody will know how many dis-
reputable looking relatives you have
until you dle. The disreputable looking
relative Sometimes refrains from at-
tending the wedding, but he always
comes to the funeral. -Philadelphia
!,edger. • L:;c.
4444*4404,040♦44*441044.4040 *444♦♦♦4444+44144++.4411+$+*♦
4
• AN OPPORTUNITY
e
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For a Live Man in Winghar n
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0
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Fj
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♦
,.S
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to make some clean, honest money, giving irfcrmation to;
those who have requested it, regarding an original West-:
ern townsite-not a subdivision. This is a gentle man's:
proposition, and we want only mon of good standing who:
will not misreprest:nt. Address
♦
Western Canada Real Estate Co.
♦
502 TEMPLE BUILDING - TORONTO o
fa,”.„..tJtsG9.94PiaC•*44.0E,•1• •+:•7'•*:00 3.4,4.0' '•-
Silo Best Form of Storing Corn.
There has been considerable work
done by the Experimental Stations in
determining the relative value of corn
fodder and silage, but there is so much
variation in the fodder and also in the
silage that it is hard to state just what
might be expected.
Good bright corn fodder in the early
fall is very appetizing and nutritious
food for all classes of farm animals.
The trouble with the stover is that un-
less it is carefully housed, loses any-
where from 25 to 40 per cent. of its
feeding value from exposure. If it is
cut up and put,into the silo in the fall
in the proper manner, it will be just
as it was when put up in the fall, or
perhaps a little better if anything, The
silo is certainly the most economical
method of storing feed for all kinds of
farm animals. -I. H. C. Service bureau.
Tho Better Way.
"Don't put all your eggs in One bas-
ket," said the ready made philosopher.
"Don't put any of 'em in a basket,"
replied the enterprising dealer. "Pit
'em In cold storage» -Washington Star.
A virtue always outltQ_eilhe rt'talquted
Momariori, ,_,,,“;'k'j.i
Fifty-nine nations have been invited
by the Canadian Government to attend
the International dry farming congress
at Lethbridge, Alta.
According to the record of industrial
accidents maintained by the Department
of Labor, that for the month of Sept-
ember shows there to have been 89
work -men killed and 419 injured, a total
of 508. Compared with the record for
August, this is an increase of one fatal
and 114 non-fatal. The trades and in-
dustries in which the greatest number
of accidents occurred were: Steam rail-
way service, in which there were 28 fa-
tal and 123 non-fatal; metal trades with
3 killed and 72 injured; mining, with 10
killed and 42 injured; and the building
trades, with 10 killed and 33 injured.
The
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Times
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Clubbing List
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SIOSSISetinEMISNASSIOSIONOMIEnten
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 blclr.il g
Edition
Evening Edition ....
Times and Montreal Daily Witness
Times and Montreal Weekly Witneso
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 Munscy's Magazine
Times and Designer
Times and Everybody's
These prices are for addresses
1.60
4.50
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
290
3:50
1.b5
2 25
1.60
2.25
2,25
3.25
3 40
2.50
1.75
2,90
1.35
3.10
2.90
1,60
3.15
2.EiG
2.40
2.80
2.50
2.45
?.60
2.55
1.85
2.40
in Canada or Great
Britain.
The above publications may be obtained by Times
subscribers in any combination, the price for any publica-
$ tion being the figure given above less $r.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). 1,35
+ $2.96
making the price of the three papers $2.95. x
The Times and the Weekly Sun..., $1.80 +
The Toronto Daily Star ($2.30less $1.00).. 1,30 +
+ The Weekly Globe ($1.60 less $1,00) 60
+- +
+ $3.7O 4-
the four papers for $3.7o. +
+
moi., If the publicat on you want is not in above list, let *:
�
us know. We ' •n supply almost any well-known Cana-
� dian or American publication. These prices are strictly
cash in advance 4.4. 4.
SI:nd subscriptions by post office or e'press order to 4.
OfficelThe Times
Stone Block +
WINGHAM ONTARIO 4.
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