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The Wingham Times, 1913-08-14, Page 6(i UNBURNo eta t`aE. F E E.T., Everybody TOW adtnit,s Zam-buk beep:: for these. Let, it. giVs,'Y01.1 ease and corniest. D,Ys; :fists and Stores ere,ywher+a• A b ,ut aa'da. The 'avin,: Of T" • people are tt hit~':est pr r t' ;tlila cf any country. s;;, 1 411,tl:•,,: oo 1. ' t,1 -s now p,. through the Cot.: : r ir,t, pest dikes to nually. The tine( 'tn d:( is 3,729,665squa mile: or 2,3-11,1141.1 rw acres. Canada's live stook numbers 14,5.14 OQO ani,nnl;, v ('n 11 at $593,765,65), Th- m•xt 1" ,] e•11 Parliament will hi., tk eleven a.l lt(5 , t •1 :llem')er5, Ontario I. leg four, N •,5 :Irons viol. tw ), Nov Scotil two, \'vitae L:•lward Island one but 'root. a-. 4 -• ; pr.)5i:aces gaining fiv each. I-Ldifax was founded in 1749, and cr• ated aci:y In 1841. Its harbor, si: mil:., long k protected by eleven fort:.. Ontario has collected sioce Cunfeder ation $41,(5:0.0:.0 in revenue from tin. bar. The Hudson Bay Railroad will be 41s nail.'; long a.nd will cost five miilien dol lar.,. The een•u. of 1911 gave the numhe of Roman Catholics in Canada is 2,383, 041. making them the largest denomin ation. Catnada has 850 rural mail delivery at i 25,000 delivery texees. $5.•.4.185. 111/0 is planned to be spent in St. Jian on public works, railway ter- minals, etc. T:.:• expenditure on public works by the i%•,:r:il,ion Government during the last (>ca] year was $13,928,666. Tie Canadian Pacific Railway, ctosse,. four range, of mountains, the Rockies, the S- kirks, the Gold Range and the ContLunge. Th' proportion of population to the :-.tit :,°: • mile in Canada is 1.93 as com- pare:' with United States, 25; England and Wales, 558; British Empire, exclud- int, :::iia, 4. l!1;1 was Canada's record building yew, 47 cities and towns expending $1 :QS.535, an increase of $54,000,0(J0 over the figures for the preceding year. Our country's annual trade increased from $131,037,532 at Confederation to $.474.1117,704 in 1912. Ia thirty years the members of tilt' Hebrew persuasion m Canada have increased from 667 to 100,000, in- cluding 45,000 in Montreal. 22,500 in Toronto and 12,14u0 in Winnipeg. lieu the Trouble Stur0, • Cor' tipation is the cause of many ailments and disorders that. make life miseraile. Take l'h'atnberlaia's Tab- lets, 1:.ep your bowels regular and you will avoid these diseases. For sale by all dealers. Nineteen horses were burned in the third stable fire in Hamilton within a few da;s. Several other tires are re- ported from various points. Always work as hard as the boss does. Th,,&, is no betterway.of brightening rugs Y° carpts thaii to wash them, ( 3ffte. ,.:.thorr,ugh sweeping, using a 'so 1ptio: •?f ox gall dissolved in tepid water. Aftar an hour rinse the floor covering with a washing of clear tepid water. Wirt, nut the laundry tubs after each wash 'ay with a cloth, using' either kerosene or a cleansing po.vder. A tt•achc'r for cooking says that for every ;part of cooked -Vegetables, four even •tablespoonfuls of butter, a tea- spoeaft:t of : alt and an eighth of a tea-, sp?:,:iful of popper should be uso•d for sasonirg. l; sl,;,:ach, peas, dandelions and °limn green tegetables are cooked covered. the co'> will he Or.. better preserv•.d. A gin;•h of soda. too, enhances the green. tiara) for'`ti 1lrrltnbl ifystericai, ; ire,;d, 1; Health. o Trete :s a r.nt:n„e r•: • th•,us•ttlds Of Rtnnen inr; fr.al. hroh t -tit , . tents. Sleepless nights, \:rut ,: bility •1w.,r little things, pAtir.9s •inti nervous 1.i :. , .• rt •• : arsL)l1 the symptoms. You Y. 'ty not tealivp the:.. c,(!your •111, tend tt,n);ii 1•. r•wn:•:: (,•..,t*•• ,!,, ' comes neon you.' But, in Wt15tt,•.•1 • Stage s • i 61.41 p.) ;•.,•li,. Lr. Nerve ie*•od i:: rt a 'y t', heli, y ,. :,Ino. V. J. t•.y. ti .•\11n(•ttt• a;•• t, Toronto. writ-;.: ",,oritc years a.ru D: bufi.•r • l :rota ri: rvous trouble, an.1 to•,+,: lie c'it'e c%; Nerve 1'(•0(1. wt.! •..b H011!411 -.3 , t•urt'd me. About ei i i •n1. 1 ed a shkv. c 1'(•11 ag:li>y ,h •it'll•"(i 11:V nee,rl•ous sysi..n: ter seek tit extent that I was irritable and 11y.7 visas, an.1 could not deep nights. 1 1tegan to use the Nerve. food •&gain and was not disappointed. /improvement was apparM)t from th., :first box. and now T am entirely well." Dir. Chace'a .terve rood, 50 cents a )oir„ 6 for ^re..GO, all dealers. TIII £1mEs. AUGUST 1pi 1913 BOWSER BUTTS IN Called to Arbitrate Between Union and Bosses. MEETS CRISIS BRAVELY. But Finally Things Come Too Fast For Him, and Mrs. B,'s Advice 13 Vindicated — Arbitrator Then Gets Patched Up. By M. QUAD. [Copyright, 1813, by Associated Literary pros.) ()It all of half an hour as I11r, Bowser sat and pretended to ,Ra rents his paper be was listen- ing for the doorbell to ring, '!'here are times when Mr. Bowser is a tory grandpa. or thinks he is, which is almost the same thing. Ile telt that Ir was up to him to say sonlethu to break the Ioug silence, owl he hail 1115 lips open to remark that be thought a change of weather was mining- t\ lieu the sound of the bell jumped hitt out of his chair. "(loud lands!” exelutitued Mr. Bowser as he trotted down the halt to open the flour. lie stepped outside and held some sort of diseussiou with two or throe sten 011 the doorstep and at the end or tela 11511111tes re-entered the house to soy to Mrs. Bowser: "I tied I shall have to go out for an hour 05 so this evenins" "Soule club matter?" she queried. "No 'Those gentlemen who just call- ed Were a committee, or, rather, two enaunittees, appointed to secure my servines as arbitrator between two un- ions. 1 ata to meet them at headquar- ters. 1 was sole eted over scores of others mentioned, and I feel a bit proud of the honor done me." "lint what do you want to mix up in a quarrel for?" she asked. *In the first plilcee. there is no quarrel, but only a disagreement; in the next, I shall hear the statements of both sides and smooth over the little trouble." "What is it about?" The Question at Issue.. "Why, Its 1 understand it, the Moving Van union and the Moving Vag em- ployers are at loggerheads its to what c h -r.3-✓ •• '"TaAT 15 ENOUGH, WOMAN 1" constitutes a back load for a man to carry np three flights of stairs. The ti IMI holds to it that when a man is loaded down with a sideboard or a bu reau that's enough, while the employ ers bold that a mattress or an iron bedstead ought to be added: 1 shnll,' of course, hear more particulars at headquarters. It has been agreed to leave the decision to me, and 1 feel somowbat flattered over it." "1 wouldn't if t were you," quietly observed Mrs. Bowser. "Hey? What do you mean?" "I mean that you had better let them fight It out among themselves." "Woman, what in thunder ails you?" "I sltnply nsk yon to keep out of trouble. What is it to you whether a moving van man carries six bedsteads Or 0(11,7 a hatbox at a toaal?" "Do you understand that this mat- ter may become a great national is- sue within a month?" he asked as he bung on to himself. "No, 1 don't." "Do you understand that it may. eventually spread to the remotest parts of the earth?" "Nonsense: I understood that if you.' mix up with it you'll come home hat- less and with your coat torn diff your back." Bowser Shows His Independence. "That is enough, woman—that Is :enough!" said Mr. Bowser as he waved' her aside. "Don't sit up for me. I Ethan come home when i get ready. What in blazes"— IIe referred to the eat, which was sitting up and grinning at him with her left eye half closed. He jumped at ber with fell intention, but she sought safety under the piano and' chuckled as be pat on his overcoat ands hat and passed out of the house. Aft- Qr a walk of ten minutes he reached the place designated. It was.a wagon whop. It was next door to a saloon. There were two men in the wagon i3bop and thirty-four in the saloon, and, Os tbo thirty-four refused to joie the two, the two finally decided to join the thirty-four. Mr. Bowser didn't look tipon this as exactly parliamentary, but he wad nob there to split straws. He toad expected He was greeted as "old', bean," "boss," "Ilowser," "pard;' and )o forth, and the president of the Mov- ing Van anion took him aside and said: "Bay, now, but you`d better set 'em tup for the bop l before we begin bust - (less. They done you prim . and they'll want (u set' that you oleoteri:tte it." \I'r. Bowser hesitai,•cl. but only for 51 11)rille111, It 15(1s :r 1.1 Ws. and he never shirked n c 11sis, The thirty-sev- rn )4lns.,'s 11(1(1 51.1111V1,1, I,eeu emptied when the presideul of the Moving Iran ]ilupluyers winked lite into a corner amt whispered: •,113epent the dose, old elan. 'flint \Ills ,t treat tut Iht' union. 1'uu Must now trent lite employers." Bowser Meets Crisis. Air. ltutvser treated. It was another risis. nod he Met it. '1'lu'n the meet - m:; wits willed 10 order. and the pres- lti ant of the \I. V. E. prureetled to state Ins side of the cane. When be hired a 1111111 on one of his wagons be expeet- eel that man to do his duty. If that enol was broad enough In the lelek rind was strong enough in the legs to :urry 0 piano upstairs he was looked to go ahead. If he was a weakling and could only bear the weight of an icebox and a bookcase, no fault would be found with him so long as be did his best. What the employers found fault with tuns that two glen would conspire to do one roan's work. (le cited ease after cost: where he had seen men climb three and four pairs Of stairs with no other loads than a cookstuve ou their backs anti a dining room table in either band and where he had seed two Bleu make a great ado about getting a thousand pound safe on to the fourth floor. Ail the employers asked fur was a square deal, They didn't expect 003 one man to earry a whole vauload of goods upstairs at one trill, but neither was it felt• or fight that it man should waste wtlll1:11(1t( minutes. mopping the sweat from his brow or figuring how a six foot bedstead could be pushed tip a three foot stairway. Another Crisis Arises. The speaker did not sit down when he bad finished. On the contrary, he edged around to 311•. Bowser and sug- gested that another crisis was at hand, 'i'hat crisis called for more beer, and Mr. Bowser met it. Then the presideut of the M. V. U. arose tend stated his side of the ease. lie didn't ('1111 it a ('tide where entitle( was sucking the life blood of labor. It was that ea91- tat was breaking labor's back by over- loading it with bnreaus and refriger- ators. Ile pointed to his bald head and declared that his hair had been worn off by rubbing against family iceboxes. IIe pointed to his bowlegs au(1 declared them to be the direct re- sult of back loads of bedsteads rend tables. Under the slave driving system pur- sued by .the el. V, 10, the members of the M. V. U. all over the world were becoming squat, baldheaded and bow- legged, and a year hence would see them humpbacked its web. It was a feeling speech -that is, he felt for Mr. .13ow'ser after concluding it uud said \tint a terrible crisis could only be avoided by another evil for beer. It vns called for then the arbtlra• for arose to arbitrate. 31r, Bowser will norer remember whether he began his remarks at the lauding of Ilse pilgrim fathers or stiu'1ed in at Valley Verge. At any fate. they were interrupted by rails for morin beer. lie will naso be :It a loss to recall just what started the ruction when turtle,' -alts for beer were uubeet1,t1. some one tt)ay have called some one else :a liar, (Jr there may have been n ditter'(('0 of opinion OD 8010 of the pt!itt••:rl questions of the day. A rncton value. however, :nal two minutes after the first Icnoek- (hiwu everybody was trying to p'urh erel'ylIUOy else's hall. Escapes With Difficulty. '!'here was no opportunity i'or 31r lio\t•ser to bear himself nobly in this rtisis. '.\ blow on the nose pelt hill out of it almost nt the start, and he had been walked on for 1015 minutes before he tinnily reaches] the door and got out. 115:5. Bowser and the cat Were waiting. The sil,tu'e of the evening was sodden- ly lrokiu by whnt seemed in he the ;zebu') of :1 horse :long the sidewalk. I1 ('m1e nearer and nearer. and 5bere %w:(s n !titch and a limp In the gallop as it turned in at the gate. Then therm • tens a rush up the front steps, a bang at the door, and 311'. Bowser stood in the hull. Ile was 11 human twre-k. lie bad got it bad. Ile hail met the en• truly, au(1 he was hip n "\'ell " risked Mrs. Bowser as he leaned up against the wall and panted. Ills eyes rolled, -hut 11e (mold not ut- ter 11 \t'ol'd. "i see," she vontinne(1. "Arbitrator Bowser hos tu•hitreted,.:ltd the result is .what might he expected- nose snlnshcd, lint gone, ciothee ruined and your eyes turning black. If you man- age to crawl upstairs I'll )c't some bot •-•,iter and the medicine chest and see if I cue patch you tip." "We -woman"— be hegau, but she raised leer band and stopped him, and he wilted. The Poor Orphan. An old country woman stepped into a euburban drugstore and laid on the counter a prescription for a mixture containing two decigrams of morphia. The druggist exercised the utmost care in weighing the dangerous drug. "What a shame!" she cried. "Don't •,be so stingy; it's for an orphan girl."- - Liff ineott's. I A Cold Woman, "What's ,tbe matter? Abridegroom shouldn't loots so depressed." '1)isillusloui?ed, Ihut's what." ' Bow now?" 'l offered my wife two kisses to l+ti.:i Lite bre, and she flatly refused." l.uuiswiilc Courier•,lournal. The Usual kind. '"(low fast is .yngr ('ar, ,iimpson?" asked ilerko way. "Well." said •Ilntpson, "it keeps about 415)1rllis 11lte'nrl of my income genera' ally."•--llarpgr's3 Weekly, • BURNED BY COLD. Liquid Air Will Produce a Worse Wound Than intense heat, Whoever bas applied a moistened finger to a piece of frosty metal in winter well remembers the painful ex- perience thereby gained of the fact that cold as well as heat can blister the skin. During some experiments in the pro- duction of excessively low tempera- tures i'ictet, the French investigator, burned himself with cold several times, and the effects were so remarkable that he deemed them worthy of description to a body or scientific men. it appears that there are two kinds or degrees or cold burn. In the case of the less severe "burns" the shin at first turns red, but becomes blue the next dory. The inflamed spot swells, and a period varying from a month to six weeks elapses before the wound heals. When the contact with the cold sub - stn nee Is longer and more complete a burn or the second degree is produced. :1 malignant and stubborn wound is formed, end the process of healing is very slow. A drop or liquid air falling on Pic- tet's hand produced a cold burn whhieh did not ennlpletely betel in six months, while a scorch from treat aceidenlally iu1fetcd on the same Maud and nearly 01 the sante time tw1s healed in ten or twelve duty's.—llarper's Weekly. A DAINTY TABLE FEAT. Victor Hugo's Wonderful Orange and Sugar Combination. In "31y Autobiography" 31Ine. Judith, the great t" rend artre,s, (ells a story of Victor lingo. :\t a (limner wldeh .Jn(1Ifh attended with Alexnudl'e Ihunas somebody quot- ed A5Ised (le 1lusset, :Ind lingo was led to express his opinion on his illustrious Yellow nulhor. -Yes," he said, "be has immense tat - eats Ile even boasts that there are spine who consider hill as good :1 poet as 1 tau," Dumas jogged Judith's elbow, and it was nil she ronld do to keep front laughing. •':1t the end or Die meal," our nuttier relates, "Hugo treated its to a eery strange exhibition. lie put a whole er:urgc, fled and nIt, into his mouth rend then nlnnaged to thrust ns ninny pieces of sugnu• as possible into his cheeks This achieved. he begun to sc'runc'h it all up with his lips lightly rlostd In the '51(1.4\ or thls operation ho sn^rli0trt41 two liqueur glasses of ic]rs-h and 55 few minutes hater opened his mouth wide. It was empty: No 0150 nl:ie ally al(0urpt to imitate Ilia, pn'si 113 because no one else had teeth geed enough for such a feat," One Way to Cook a Snipe. "Ainerie:u cooking," said a foreign e , 1 F t ho'. i t this 1 L t c] id country. "pleases ole very tntteh, 'lour southern dishes I p:u'tieulnrly like. The French chef, whom we tied in the large hotel all over the world, would do well to adopt some of your •dishes. IIe would do writ, for exnnlple, to snbstitute 'chic'k- en Maryland style' for such a dish as p111)hd ortul:un blains, '5''ach41 ortolan brains—no exag- geration." he said. "are of the sort or dish,s a certain type of French diet (oyes to serve. Stich a chef -..the goer- an•I's -her--cooks fish that fire not ,•Ica 'd 811(1 birds so rare they seem )"t to be 01elced a5 all. indeed, these fellows hilt•e an nxloin that the way to enol( a snipe, is: "'I.et It fly olive through a hot kitch- en English Literary Consuls. If :\merice is famous for its am":lssa- d)rs who have 10011 men of letters, England ('iu1 boast of her literary con- suls. G. P. R. James, probably the most prolific English novelist (except, pert, qrs. Miss Braddon), wrote three novels a year for about forty years and died in 1800 as consul general at lecke. Sir Richard Burton likewise wrote most of his travel books and translations of • eastern works when consul in various parts of the world. At his last consulship at Trieste, wide") he held from 1872 to 1890, he sneceeded Charles Lever, the Irish novelist, who had occupies] the posi- tion for fifteen years. But is there a famous English literary consul at the present time?—Exchange, At the Minstrels. - "Mr. Interlocutor, if a baby swal- lowed a key what would you call it?" "1 don't know, Mr. Bones. What would you call it?" "A key in A minor." "Mr. Baker will now oblige with a recitation entitled 'Ragtime,'" (tags nuke paper. !'aper makes money. Toney mattes banks. Maliks Iu:1lce loans. Longe 'mike poverty. 1'overt3 urake.s rags.- C)lncinnatf 1110• (piker. A Matter of Measure. ile.','11t•ll,b!\`t,'r.o'tho �nnyrof thI i)se'A. [. O 5 alit '( to net name, but she's tea bet :toed pint,' :1n right: ltfileher )5414h. nal 1 want •'ne Milt 11 feeol'd and soul, d..,..1 tl:lirel:l,'l'$ You (•1(51 I's'le then' 5,) Ihel( '1);15•(5 (111(1 g:113.--- I•.5.4utlet• Overcon4.renco. 'ru hlo I 1ttit I best , t tl In,• abort over •''1.n1le1er* is 11x1 lir rt tart didn't have r .he wieml15't ever In:(rry.-'5Ineveeton '1ewe `o tread "stet en 10 a mai) (•it(4 05,11 •1.•.;41111• 1,11)1 rte.. .(!till 1'.:n sI.•11(11111 11s 1i I. 51. belt 111• 0.1.0;5115.s Wluw.t .- 5)utah 41a1111 el meek trails. Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol restores every nerve In the body to its proper tension; restores vinl and vitality. Premature decay and alt saxnal weakness averted at once. Phoephonol will make you a new man. Price 413 a box. or two for $5. Mailed to any address. The Scobell Drug Co.. St. Catharines. Out, Clerical Bowlers. There was a curious inci lent at the Western Bowling Tournament, A- mongst the competitors was a rink of four Protestant clergyman, Rev. A. 1i, Macgillivray, Rev. W. H. Sedgewick and Rev. E. A. Pearson, of Hamilton, and Rev. W. B. Smith of Hespeler. There was a rink from London, all of whom were Catholics. These were Itev. Father Larondeau, Mr. Edward Shea. Mr. A. Tillman and Mr. Jas. Mcdougall, Father Larondeau is a French. Catholic, Mr. Shea an Irish Crtholic, Mr. Mcdou- gall, a Scottish Catholic, Mr. Tillman a German Catholic. They called them- selves the "Mixed Slicks." These two rinks came together in the semi-final game in the consolation services when the representatives of the ancient church triumphed by 20 to 12. It may be worth adding that as the record shows there were few better bowlers at the tournament than Father Laron- deau and the Protestant clergymen. The "Four Parsons" were cheerful losers, but did not lose easily. They gave a stiff game to any 'rink they met and there was no more popular rink at the tournament. Moreover they will be the better ministers be- cause they are .good bowlers and can get very close to their kind outside as well as inside the church.—Toronto News. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR IA Some men will gamble on a "system" until they have nothing else left when they get through. A mean man wishes society were more exclusive, so his wife wouldn't try to break in. The price of coal may be advanced on Sept, I by at least CO cents a ton all round, says a Montreal despatch. On a charge of bigamy, Charlotte Meekes, twenty-three years of age, was arrested at Kingston at the instance of a Rochester man, who claims to have married her when she was fourteen. Dr. de Van's Female Pills A reliable French regulator; unser fail::. These pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the generative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. Dr. de Van's are sold at Th• box, Drug Co., St. Catharines Ont, Fire in Athabasca Landing, Alta., did $750,0110 damage; in Charlottetown, P. E. L, $25,000; in Hensa;i, $1(1,(101; in Chateau Richer, Que., $15.100 to $20,010, and further losses occurred elsewhere. A Japanese press note states that 1,000 boxes of navel oranges grown in Japan were exported last winter to the United States. The funeral of Miss Davison, the Derby suffragist, cost betweet: 5750 and $1,000. Twelve hundred Timi_kal,:ing farm- ers visited the Provincial Government farm at Monteith, Ont. During I912 there passed through the Suez canal 5,373 ships of 20,275,12.1 net tons, a gain over 1(1I1 of 404 ships end 1,95(1,326 tons. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AHD CHILD. Mts. WiNsrow's SOOTHING SyRrr has been esed for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES tate CHILD, SOFTENS the Gyms. ALLAYS all PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for memo:Nee. 1t is an. solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other; kind. Twenty -Svc cents a bottle. It isn't, as a rule, the gent who can afford'it who pays the highest price. The fibers of wood are strongest near the centre of the trunk. Friends money gets you are not al- ways a bad sort. There is more eoulttel'feit dignity than counterfeit coin.' If a poor man has rich kin, he mar- vels at their good health. Get Next To YOU lever. IF YOU DON'T Something Serious May Happen. ,At times everyone :, hili',+:, the !,icer becomes overworlr.,', l,a,] Ululated, and enter, the hl•'pci. lee' 51 general cl('13i0) Up 1.' 11,, s:. •• • Wizen thin hupl,ens n . one • 5 Constipation, J(a i:ci.it'c•. lit •' 1 Heartburn, Inc rc - it": , r C. r plaint, .:•plaint, and 104•.0 .i: (1 ::c:.,. .' which follow the •e: ::;. U.5,. • LiverI. . Metele 'e I,r•x +.•I,1\'ase I'::,. ' 54•... 11• late the sluggi.h L ;sir e:tan teeted tongue, ewe( ten the i.r:.4;'. : ,'•` t' awall u v. .:.1(i 1 ri... r::u:. .1 from ay the tlsystemt.,.•*., Mas. II. A. McCs.Aka:'. l:.:r ` e•r, : . , writes:—"I have used 1\1r;•i teee'r I,rvliR Pfie,s, and am greatly with the results.. I had IIe'.:eestiri and shell a titter taste in try 71 i 1.111 • after r•ter r• a. rt , e: 1 ' 1 ulil ret !.1c• t wiz', n• s ,.terr. ..,' Il:)•.P 4i1•1!11 • " , �' i ..: t1, .. `15.111 L s,n,1•'' IN It:.•".d' .. Co., Il, 51Ult„tl. 'f mato,•,V.;t. • IL Do t anothernodaysuffer with Itching, ailnutygi, u0Bleed- 1n'5I1r0lcteNddo-.surgicaeen 1m Dr. Chasm's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly euro Yoll. tine. a omit all dealers, or lidmansoa, I3:ttes & Co., Limited, Toronto. Sample box rreo if you tnention this paper and enclose 2o, stump to pity postage. A correspondent of the Ladies' Wori says that during an illness, with very high fever, when ('quids were forbidden the nurse b:uught in a cash of cold spoons. "I thought it a crt.zy notion, but 1 have lived to know the benefits of it. It was a deep d:s:1 packed full of ice, with a number of spoons standing about the edge. The curse would place one in my mouth, with the bowl upside down, and every few seconds replace it with another, putting the first back in the ice." ({5100 33L•W a 1t1., 8100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh be- ing a constitutional disease requires a constitutional treatment. Hail's Ca- tarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucuous sur- faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giv- ing the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease°that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address 10. J. CHENEY & Co.,'roieoo, 0 Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa- tion. The watermarks on porcelain are suc- cessfully removed by saturating a flanne cloth with kerosene and thoroughly rub- bing the tub; then wash with boiling water in which a little washing soda has been dissolved. People who keep houses dark for fear of the sunlight spoiling their carpets or furniture have no idea of the disease - destroying influence of sunlight and -air. A successful man is not necessarily a cleverer man than the failure. He may merely have worked a little harder. The Canadian Government has leas- ed a fine coal area in Alberta, 200 miles from Edmonton to American interests. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CA S `T' O R I A Canadian National Exhibition EXPANSION YEAR New Livestock Department Everything in Agriculture Exhibits by the Provinces Exhibits by Dominion Government Exhibits by Foreign Countries Acres of Manufactures MAGNIFICENT ART EXHIBIT. Paintings from Germany, Britain; United States and Canada Educatior:ll Exhibits Cadet Review Japanese Fireworks Canada's Biggest Dog Show America's Greatest ('at Show AND NERO THE BURNING OF ROME The Musical Surprise The Musical Ride Auto -Polo Matches Circus and hippodrome Roman Chariot Races • Athletic Sports Great Water Carnival IRISH GUARDS BAND Score of other Famous Lands Twelve Band Concerts Daily Wrer'c of the Airship Winking ton's Zouaves New Giant Midway Grand Double Bill of Fireworks PATRICK' CONWAY'S 13:;ND j Aug.23 1913 Sept.8 TORONTO BUSINESS AND SHQR .Y. HAND Subjects taught by expert instructors keibl/pWatoe,at the Y, M. C. A. BLDG., LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J. W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chartered Accountant 17 Vice -Principal PRINTING AND STATION E RY We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple Stationery and can supply your wants in WRITING PADS ENVELOPES LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PAPER PAPETERIES, WRITING PAPER BLANK BOOKS PENS AND INK TOILET PAPER ,. PLAYII G CARDS, etc We will keep the best stock in the 'respective lines and sell at reasonable prices. JOB PRINTING We are in a better position than ever before to attend to your wants in the Job Printing line and all orders will receive prompt attention. Leave your order with us when in need of LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES CALLING` CARDS CIRCULARS NOTE`HEADS STATEMENTS WEDDING; I? VITATIONS POSTERS ' • !CATALOGUES Or anything you may require:in the printing line. Subsoriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines. The Times Office STONE BLOCK Winghan, Ont. e