HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-09-04, Page 6t►
TRE W.1 ,. t'AM 1'!MES, E11' MBI+;R 4 11)13
Canadian
National
Exhibition
EXI?AISIS1lQ}I9i YEAR
New Livestock Department
Everything in Agriculture
Exhibits by the Prole/ices
Exhibits by Dominion Government
Exhibits by Foreii;ta Countries
Acres of Manufactures
rdAtGNII' ICCNT ART EXHIBIT
, Paintings from Germany, Britain,
United States and Canada
Educ ntioral Exhibits
Cadet Review
Japane:,e. Fireworks
Canada's Biggest Dog Show
America's Greatest Cat Show
AND M RO THE
BURNING OF ROME
The Musical Surprise
The Musical Ride
s Auto -Polo Matches
Circus and Hippodrome
RtOman Chariot Races
Athletic Sports
Great Water Carnival
'IRISH GUARDS BAND
Score of other Famous Bands
Twelve Band Concerts Daily
Wreck of the Airship
Withington's Zouaves
New Giant Midway
Grand. Double Bill of Fireworks
I PATRICK CONWAY'S BAND
Aug. 23 1913 Sept. 8
TORONTO
THE GOSSIP.
� t;pNTA41tS
NOAN61At OlionfAT
NUR ANY MINIngesAl .,eeet
t� EjpE�`�e
inec
"Taizo my advice! 1
Iatlp3a Flv®lIed Yam—Buk
keel ' i' ®deme end skin
Asa iiaothor you owe it
to your taltiily to give it a
Moil It elude glans alid it
heals
50e box all Druggists & Stores.
Don't Be Afraid.
Fear is at the bottom of most of our
troubles -
We are afraid afraid that we shall
L e sick, afraid hard times are coming,
afraid that our coats don't fit behind,
afraid that it will rain, afraid that it
won't, afraid of being struck by light-
ning, afraid of our jobs.
We are afraid of something or other
t:;tist of she tune. And most of the
time we aro afraid without any reason
for being afraid.
In a word, most of our troubles don't
exist, outside of our own minds.
There is only one remedy for fear,
and that is courage. Folks who read in
the third reader of a generation ago
._.r will remember the incident of Harry
Nene can Hope to bold a c::edit' for
en -se :env., to the 1atdal who goes
,ttid:en :vandal up and clown the village
-tree; ; when he should be hoeing in the
.:artle'a I etch, or mewing, on foul er-
caetis ee is going, travelling on eager
;et'c, -.Have you heard the latest story
,f J. William Hunkydory I'" asks thio
monger hoary, as you try to pass
lite ne. "Have you heard what they
tr'e tenet' of Jim Rooster's sister.
1
.':lie'•, and the weird :::1 L:ii:i:r:4 nfel
e.t:r •
tem repeats some evil lie. Mete
wlen: this freak was younger for geed
t ti:•:: had a hunger, but become a
...r:..,'.monger, nothing suits him but
• .he :atm; ne'er a word of admiration
for :a soul in all the nation. net one of
appreciation ever trickles from his face.
Does he pause to wonder, why in blitzen
and in thunder people try to stand
from eneer when eis voiei Le wcei,i
upraise. why the people d.(.igo mid time
him—save the ones who come to dun
sim--why they show a wish to run him
from the village 'twist two (Nee This
Li true, my tri: nds, L•y jshbeee: If you
lie abouty(•sr neighbors, then tiie wanes
for your labors will be deathless scorn
and hate; telling stories not demanded,
doing actions underhanded, tinaliy will
see you landed where n::rlalas congregate.
'WALT. MASON.
and the guidepost, how Harry thought
it was a ghost. and how wheelie "march-
ed right up to it" he found that it was
only a friendly guidepost.
Well, most of the things we are afraid
of are merely guide pests. or even less.
The only way to put them out of the
b ughtar l: tie:r.t.s :s to march right up to
them and tag them. A bug` ear or an
i nc:rt^•a_ tagged ._ tereed. Often it is
U Ti:, i ego- as iargesliare
et r,. ,, r1.; s : . Vs- dee to rear—that
fear sett:a": ::*-�_-....v. ref_ _rs in our
bodies. and ti thee sisor.s are as
h
='+: •.i.L as thou
.and as effective c..
rpt:g they
came Irene iott:ts with sku: and cross -
bore ialels on them.
When ou fed fear taking t;ossession
of yt;ue rarer: it _,i.:.rely ; show it up for
wi:ag it rea:�y' i.. If it is well grounded
it , - -:r....?l i_ e les. e:ted. If it is un -
f. I:cd d it v: i;: be haeghc ti 'Jut of court.
Fur ee-tear without any foundation can
stand the test c.f careful inspection and
.f tht:'.aughter that such inspection in -
s1• +iPr8.
I. you can't shale orf the fear wholly.
ACT as though you were not afraid
r'ny h' w, That will go a long way to-
w rd sarin„ th;e fear anyway.
FALL FAIR DATES
A nord oft.r.ttltactt.. j The following are the datesof a n
. l;er of fall fairs:
eetint cccc � • •4<eeseseenenVeniesenee
DAIRY POINTERS. <t
s A good way to salt the cow is
to keep a plentiful supply before
her and trust to tier judgment In Le
using what she needs.
The best profits lu dairying
come from the best Panus and
herd It takes more than a good it
creamery to mete a large hill=
rhec•k.
•
"la ustieerto hunntuity I went to t. Mildmay Sept.
tell •:tyre that I was as greet sufferer Itiiil. v ... Sept.
irons itching piles, "lad have found Dr. ; Ii'ncarditie ... Sept. 1
Chaetae Ointment the best tri-atrtent I ucknor; - Sept. 1
,btainatee," writes ir. Fred Binz, . l alkerton Sept.
Krodhagen. Ont. "It gives instant'. Treswater Oce.
,relit.' and I can recommend it to any . Tiverton .. Sep
sutierAr from this dre udful discs e." t trnderwood Oe
•
.>
•
•
sed is an important factor ei
t"
making 0 cow pretitable. but the 'ite
best feed cannot nvall unless r
>
5
a
0
_sv^:� s•• 04$ t .f14004\4 4CO 00
good rare Is given also.
Does silage fed to the dairy
vow taint the milk? No. But the
odor of the silage if allowed to
get into the milk to open pails
will taint it.
A ratiou for a dairy cow should
fulfill the following require-
ments: it should be balanced.
palatable, home grown as near
finally t
as possible, and n y tt should
be economical.
PASTURE FOR SWINE.
important Points to Consider In the
Hog Raising Business.
While clover is the very best pasture
for pigs and hogs, 1 get good results
by letting them run on mixed wild
grass, writes a Minnesota hug grower
t
in the Orange Judd tat suet. 1 like
white clover and timothy pasture in
the spring, then hare ready a mixture
of oats, barley and rape to turn them
ou the last of May and a rape lot for s
the latter part of July and August. It
i, aiw a good phtn to have ready n
small sweet corn field near at hand. t
always sow rape when I cultivate corn
the last time, and this makes a fine
rape pasture. After the green corn is I
cut I open the gates and let the hogs i
clean up both the corn and rape. I
Pumpkins pre a good feed for old hogs
late in the fall.
One of the advantages Yorkshire
breeds have over other types is tbat
they can be marketed at almost any
age. With good. liberal treatment they
reach prime weights nt six and seven
months. weighing 145 to 200 pounds or
better. They can be held a little longer
and turned off at 225 to 250 pounds to
advantage. if held a year they can be
made to tip the scales at 400 pounds.
With extra care they can be made to
(lo better than that. Tbere are many
kinks in the hog business. One that I
consider Important is to know and like
yonr hogs. If you like them and study
them this kink will let you on to all
the other kinks in time.
Select good stock and use only a
pure bred boar of your favorite breed.
Then treat this foundation herd well.
Put them on pasture and give them
plenty of pure water and provide com-
fortable Feed a va-
riety
quarters. s.
• •1 !e sleeping u
ret t, b 1 e q
of foods, but do not overfeed.
Disinfect troughs and sleeping quar-
ters and the pigs themselves either by
siltiukliug or dipping. Keep thein free
nt all tunes from worms. \Vend males.
soot. sulphur Dull elmreoal free good
things to keep before the hogs. Do
not keep too tunny hogs together.
These things in my experience are the
fundamentals Of sueetss in the hog
business.
UM -
29 -30
23-24
8-19
8-19
11-12
▪ 7-8
t. 16 There were sixteen herds, with a
t.
1 F,lyth. Sept. 80-0
Ilrussels... Oct
As. e .tme timr in his lie,• rtsariy every i Goderieh.... .......... .. Sept.
boy wishes he could b.: an orphan for a' I.istowel ...... .. ... .....Ce.
win'•:,:. id eaj.ry aiittle perliberty. I Seaford]Sept.
Labor is so cheapin Trinidad that it 1 ii Ingham ..... .. ... Sept.
'lurid►., ... Sept.
does not pay to buy lawn mowers, as
coeiies 'vitt eut the grass with at small'
sick -: ��: knife at a trailing cost.
A woman isn't always true to her
colo:, el en when she applies it herself.
Out taction of a lust:y man is one who
can -:area family of daughters anti
acyl?ire no sons-in-Ina.to support,
Superiority of Silage Fed Cows.
The following remarks on the econ•
omy of silage are token from Varna
stud Fireside:
The results nt c'u-ut:erativo cosy teat -
lug In :N1iunesuta during 1912 lutes been
annommed. one of the most reuin)'ka•
ble cele):•arisen{ was that between
silage Pett her.Is and herds which r'e-
eelvt't1 no silage:
'I'lte silage fed herds which were
tested for milk and butter fat produc-
tion were twelve in number and in -
eluded 210 cows. The average net
profit in the silatge fed herds was $33.03
per COW.
LIRE
Sick Iicndncho and rvlieso all the troubles inci-
dent te a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nnnaea, I)rot •eines, Distress after
eating, l'nin in the Side fie. while their moat
remarrablo success has ban chows in cartel;
1 C
Efeadaebe yet Carter's :ittlo Liver Pflls are
cqualty varluableinConstipatinn,enringandpre•
venting this annoyiugeosuplahtt,while theyalso
correct all disorders of the stomach, slimulatcthe
h -t r and regulate the bowels. Ls eitif thcyor 1$
ourtal HEA
`�e, •
Achethey would bo almostprleclees to thosesvho
suffer from this distressing complaiut; button's.
natelythe1r goodnestloee noteudhere,nndthos)
who once trytltem will iindtheso tut to pills volt.
able in so many was e that they will not bewit-
ling todorsithontthetn. Lutafteranaiokhoe
ACHE
Is the bane of so many lives that hero Is where
we make our great boast. Oarpills emelt while
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are Very small and
very easy to take. Ono or two tilismake a dose.
They arostrictiy vegetable anddo not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
ase them.
DABTE . MEDIGIl1 DO.e l:1 7 YOBS,
Imal 1 Sit 111�asai,1;nia11
Don't "Let Yourself Go,"
A woman whose thronging duties
eern to leave no time for personal
adornment, or even for tasteful met -
nets, not only feels herself to be a
drudge, but conveys that impression to
every one about her. In one of his
jungle stories, Kipling tells of a lonely
Englishman, isolated among woodsmen
and hunters, and many days' journey
from the nearest white fere. He is
ab'olutely cut off from all we call civi-
lization, but he never omits changing
his clothes for the evening meal, 1e -
cause he feels that if he does he will
begin to "let go," and degenerate into
semi -savagery. Many a womar, cut
off from her friends by the exactions
of endless toil on some lonely farm, dis-
plays just the same spirit, and puts on
a clean white apron and a fresh cotton
gown, no matter how scant her leisure,
that she may at least hearten herself
as well as her family by her trim neat.
ne;s. Tidiness is a tonic, and anyone
who says she has no time for it is losing
something more important than she
dreams.
14 total of 230 cows, which did not receive
silage. and the net profit of these ant-
mais was $22.9S per cow.
In round ituttibers the cows receiving
silage made a profit of slightly over
$10 each more than the cows which did
not receive silage.
et. 1
• 2-3
17-19
16-17
18-19
25-20
17-18
ibltdowlosi
'Nothing Like it Fur Colds.
Mrs. Holland Ferguson, Sheffield, N.
13., writes: "Dr, Chase's Syrup of Lin-
sey, anal Turpentine hat cured my
children and myself of severe colds.
We are never without it in the house.
liege is nothing like it for colds and
tl !. at trouble an' it tln're and
tda'asant to take: sty children would
drink a whole best:e If they were
mitted."
A quart of milk into which the juice
61 r+ r.; . `tin' a (
of three _oftL( !1in 'oranges ihns been
iLa(A7 ii
squeezed makes a fine lotion for the
teal ;;I.'::: m.
iiiere'018, Proctrntion of '1'iir.' u'o. 1 i Tie- haste -ken tan tilt' world is Syn -
Standing. Curvet a '.'ear Aro by In Y
Chase's Nowa Food. tax.
Anyone what knows tl'n glcr•.!;';*, 1lially a n::t:,'8 e•,ldial hatdsbake is
rnent and despair which to roine,anie.
tile helpiee mess of nervous pr. sera • due M the tact that he nerds a dollar in
ti•.n i'i taper...elate the grt.t:t .7 ° .'. hi.4 • +;::• `.
1,q '11 writer of this• letter.
rttr . FY. f•. Jones, sent= la i:Ikc• 'Greece poeseesee a curious criminal
C. F; . writes: 1 suffered f'..' • • re • law. A per:iO!) sentenced tod(-ath there
ego pr•.,stratlttn for nt':Irle ti;!..• veetr.- Waits two yei(r;, before tht execution
I had s cceitent head.; •ha•.. l,.:al r:.: ,.- r
petit+ +.nil shirr ti' .s:) l: e1 1), O. th.± 3a'ntunC.-.
h4'St.:. Sf+.• a..a}lf.:t:t1`IL t"•t ,. toe A new Iingli:•h mine re9'n'
t. t ai)pn'c -
atlas does away with the helmet and
weighs only 2e pellet's. yet with it a
tots •1'e a:gee Hearty t sn :r man can wed: ea deadly h.iec..s more
ins t ? t ;ewe hurl mote. ogees:- tll:tli five' houro,
1 T
T , a tit? �• t , :• t'i !1 'tames City scleed childrt'n this year
l,t ..1 • t fer f. IIId nt, • 1 1 t(i d -pointed $50,3t'tllt in ha1'lts.
h . seateat:: ni
ill,, or (;, I '' Nt : t•(' Pond.'
' t. a-a•.l. . „ i r ).()1'.1.1 to }'o
rlt • t 1 frt•�.:.iP; ,• ,•f
roc,:' env?. es Ray 1„• clay it f. tt .1
rtre:
114,.,a)(1,411141 ir(tiMs lip
It) t .. 3 iI box. C fait- seen., n)1 ei • '1.
et'a, er Ld11iansol1, Lnt(r C.- t`u., hire.•
itCd, Toronto.
wi±In,y.. n&)t••;..it ....at,r•f: e r,• et.,.. lac,
11 (...eat' tee t; t f I sr. ('hc.s. 's N t
F rr.T;1 y . 1 .• .• . ,• f:leteir • .. 1.;.
Electric Restorer for Men
phostihonol„OI restores- every nerve in the iettiy
Its proper tension; restores
vin and v(ta',tty. Premature dere/ anti all s,nua1
woaf;ne;s averte 1 at once. P11oop1tenol wi)I
mala t o x t new elan. Price CI a box• or two for
SI Mailed toenv st,Lir.tca. TheSeobeilDrug
Coo St.C//tbarinebeOniu
Mother or Eighteen. Children,
"I am the mother of eighteen child-
ren and have the praise of doing more
work than any young woman in my
town,” writes Mrs. C. J. Martin, Boone
Mill, Va. "I suffered for five years
with stomach trouble and could not eat
as much as a biscuit without suffering.
I have taken three bottles of Chamber-
lains Tablets and am now a well woman
and 168 pounds: I can eat anything I
want to, and as much as I want and
feel better than I have at any time in
ten years. I refer to any one in Boone
Mill or vicinty and they will vouch for
what I say," Chamberlain's Tablets
are for sale by all dealers.
Profit In Horse Raising.
Good colts are about as paying an
advertisement as a farmer can have,
and one of the strongest incentives to-
ward getting good colts Is a determina-
tion to show them at the grange fair,
the county fair or the state fair, says
the Kansas Farmer. This determina-
tion results in increased interest In the
individual animal and better care and
feed for tho colt and its dam. In gh--
ing this care the farmer is training
himself and is learning how to de-
velop n prize colt. RIe should know
that late runts or these In poor email -
don are not likely to show well alongi
side of early once or those which have
been well cared for. '1'1m first six
menthe of a colt's life is not expen':lve
to the owner, and such coke Ord :t
ready sato at good figures, but, of
toaree, the little n(ldcd espouse to
bring him to a yearling more than pays
for itself.
��COIy
PORTLAND vift
\J CEMENT /t9
The only building material that has not increased
m Price is
CANADA Portland CEMENT
It makes concrete that you can depend upon for satisfactory results, whe her you use it for a silo
or a garden walk.
High quality and low price are made possible by efficient organization and manufacturing
economies due to a large and growing demand.
See that every bag of cement you buy bears the "Canada" label—it is your guarantee
of satisfaction.
Canada Cement Company Limited, Montreal
Write for a free copy of the book c r What the Farmer Can Do With Concrete."
MITA - Diarrhoea Quickly Cured
"I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr.
Yorks, the merchant here, persuaded
me to try a bottle of Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
After taking our dose of itI was cured.
It also cured others that I gave it to,"
writes M. E, Gebhart, Oriole, Pa.
That is not at all unusual. An ordinary
attack of diarrhoea can almost invari-
ably be cured by one or two doses of
this remedy. For sale by all dealers.
their allowance gradually than when
abandon the habit abruptly.
Let the owner of a nervous heart
persuade himself to humor that faith-
ful servant. Let him give up running
for trains, carrying -heavy bags, and
overtaxing himself in any way; by and
by, he will find that his heart has had
the rest it needs, and is willing again to
toil for him with little or no complaint.
Caught a 11Ntt Cold.
"Last winter my son caught a very
bad cold and the way he coughed was
something dreadful," writes Mrs. Sarah
E Duncan, Tipton, Iowa. "We
thought sure he was going into consump-
tion. We bought just one bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and that
one bottle completely stopped his
cough and cured his'cold." For sale
by all dealers.
Help for the Nervous Heart
A person who has a nervous heart c
must first find out what causes it to be a
nervous, says Youth's Companion. The
condition hag so many different origins
that there is no single course of` treat-
ment for all cases. At the same time,
some form of excess is usually at the
bottom of the trouble. Whether it is
excess of play or excess of work, the
symptoms will be similar, and the re-
sults will be equally disastrous unless
the fault is corrected. Neglected func-
tional heart trouble often becomes an
incurable organic heart trouble.
When your heart begins to show
signs of irritability—when it palpitates
or works irregularly or feels occasional
pain—have a physician who understands
the heart examine it. He can deter-
mine how serious the condition is: self-
diagnosis in heart trouble of any type
is simply a waste of time.
When the excess consists in a youth-
ful over -indulgence in athletics, alcohol
or tobacco, the proper treatment is
evident. Relief depends on the com-
mon sense and self-control of the
patient. Wtfen, however, the trouble
affects the busy and rging bead of a
family who Cannot yet afford to retire
from work, it is a more difficult mat-
ter. And yet eareful management and
good sense can do much to help these
cases, too. Those who cannot take as
much rest as they ought to have, often
fled it possible to take enough to get on
with. If they cannot go to the Riviera
or Switzerland, they can get an extra
hour in bed every night, a quiet half
hour after the evening meal, a tranquil
And restful Sunday, and the light and
vo irishing diet for which their condi-
tion calls,
It is true that some cherished habits
must be given up temporarily, at least
Tobacco in any forth is bad for the
nervous heart and tea and coffee come
under the same condemnation, At the
same time, those who are accustomed
t t tea or coffee, especially at breakfast
time, often dobetter when they decrease
Salt the Cows,
Cows should be salted regn:arty. �vin•
ter and summer. Salt is an eseemist
part of the railer even though it may
not have much direct food 1111110.
Matey farmers who otherwl,o ere ease•
tut feeders neglect the salting of dietr
stork, e:tpeeintly In whiter. The best
Oen iq to mix a certain tlere('ut:lge of
salt in the grain feed when It iy mixed.
A nomad anal a half of salt per 1000
pounds of grain is about rluht. Tito
salt Witt make the grain more palate,
brei and ono will not be eo apt to nog -
feet feeding hay. it is a wise plan i0
keep a supply of salt where the eattte
igt4 nett It *hoover theZ'sre loose.
Examine Your Furs to Avoid Moths.
The woman who values her furs, yet
annot afford cold storage, should clean
nd air them thoroughly, examining
them with care.
The more valuable the fur the greater
the danger from moths. Some furs,
like Russian sables, for instance, can-
not be mended, and in less than four
weeks a single moth can ruin an entire
sable garment.
If a small moth, or even an egg, is in
an article when it is packed, no amount
of so-called preventive will. kill it. It
is necessary. therefore, 'to have the
garments thoroughly cleaned and aired,
shaken and sunned, before packing. ,
Tailes seem to be the favorite nesting .
place for moths, so these should receive
special attention.
Dyed skins are comparatively safe
from moths, owing to the acids employ-
ed in dyeing them being poisonous;
thus you will notice that in sealskin the
moth eats only in spots—where there is
less acid—while in natural fur it eats
straight through the garment.
While they hatch in March, the moth
does not always begin its work imme-
diately, for it may lie dormant six
months in cold storage and then prompty
begin to burrow its oteioxious why.
Usually, however, they begin operations
early and their work goes on merrily
during the warm weather,
Interesting Facts.
A number of women have been ap-
pointed street -leaning inspectors in
Philadelphir.
Dried potatoes are extensively used
as food for cattle in Germany. Drying
reduces their weight three-fourths.
A man now earning $1,00( a year is
receiving for his money what could
have been bought fifteen years ago for
$693,
1
another dayswith
Itching Bleed-
ing, or lirotrud.
ing Piles. No
surgical oper.
a ,tion required.
Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once
and as certainly cure you. eoc, a box• all
dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited,
Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this
paper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay postage.
The discovery has recently been made
through the Lick telescope that the
North Star is not one star, but three
huge suns revolving around a common
centre.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Dr. de Van's Pernale pills
A reliable French regulator; never fails, These
pills are exceeding ly powerful to regulating the
generative portion of the tcraln system. Refuse
all cheap imitations, Dr. ee ee'sn'x are sold at
tEF n box, of three for 310. Mailed to any address.
X4 $00.11 Drug Coo lit. Cath Anes, lam
DOCTORS SAID
901.11.0 tiOT GET CURED
THREE VcIP.LS OF
i+7iin terra's E.^ '•:t•-Ldvcr Pill
curse tfalfd.
Could Hardly Eat on Amon: of Iildiuesilali.
Mlt. Davin 13111RTtlb0iy, Claremont,
N.S., writes: -=' 1 have had indigestion
for soffit]j carp, end could hardly cot t.
It then tutted into a sour ster.:eeh, and
the doctors said I could not get crural.
I used a lot of medicine until at last can
of my friends told -me to use 14MI1,nenn's
LexA-Ltvne. rt r,s, and after 1 had used
three vials, I was completely cured, ind
I
always keep them in IiaAns
c now,"
ISttll•treels'A 1.Ax?. T tt ,.A P1t,ns rre a
wonderful remedy for all tlf.,eases or Itis-
eidlers of the liver, t'nrl 1i; ve beea111ni vr%
s.:111y used dura;g il•e tti(nty odd :tuns
they have 1•een on t°e tunrket.
Prise. ':5I cents :t ti^.l, or , Per gt.nfl,
at alt dealers, or Malts .1 (lire •'t 00 rt • t
Of price by The. 1'. Milburn Co., I,ilat:.t.in
Toronto, Ont.
1NTiNG
A
TAT!,
We have put in our office
Stationery and can
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PI. PER
PAPETERIES,
EP
a complete stock of Staple
supply your wants in;tlS
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYII.G CARDS, etc f,
We will keep the best stock in the respective Fines
and sell at reasonable prices.:- R,11..„ ;CJ 1,
JOB PRINTING
We are in a better position than ever before to attend
to your wants in the Job Printing line and alit
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with usry-;
whe>r in need of
LETTER HEADS
BILL HEADS
ENVELOPES
CALLING CARDS
CIRCULARS
NOTE:HEADS
STATEMENTS
WEDDING; INVITATIONS
POSTERS
CATALOGUES
Or anything you may require in the printing line.
Subscriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers
and magazines.
The Times Office
STONE BLOCK
nt.
Wingham, i�