HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-01-15, Page 3THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, I04
THA WING
BELL'S GROCERY
Vegetables
ge abXes
Fresh
Groceries -
Flour
and
Feed
Prompt Delivery. Phone 82,
BELL'S GROCERY
successor to W. J. Patterson
Asthma, Catarrh.
WHOOPING COUGHS $PASMOAtC CRCt1
ORONCHITI3 COUGHS COLDS
A yearago
he couldn't eat
i40011011.111S11111SISM ON
i
1
FURS
We manufacture all kinds of
Fur Garments and can sell
sets of Furs from $5.00 to
$15.00 cheaper than any
other place. The genuine
stuff. All furs guaranteed to
giveperfect satisfaction. Old
Furs repaired to newest
styles. Highest prices paid
for Raw Furs.
Joseph Graf
FORMOSA
Capital Paid Up
$3,000,000.
Reserve
$3,750,000.
— Total Assets
Over
545,000,000.
Your Successful
Friends.
dO�E envied toyhood
companions of yours
wh have 'made a success
in the bue,in-,ve world,
prolmb y made their own
for une's by t.38 ematte
sarin', When their Op-
portunities arrived, the so-
cnmulared saving -a wore
large enough to take adva--
tage of them,
Few successes ere attained
Without money—to the man
a ith a savings account many
thing4 are possible. '
Without further delay you
should open an account with
this bank,ne'd dollar g enough.
O o r i, env g .
Make Faving a habit; and your
regular deposits, together with
the interes they will earn, will
build ' p your balance in a sur-
prlsingly short time.
C. P. SMITH
AGENT - WINGHAM
EITast.IEHED tela
A almpts. safe and effective treatment for'bron.
ehtat troubles, without dosing the stomach with
drugs, Used withsuccesaterthirty years.
The air carrying the antiseptic varar, insptrcd
with every breath, makes breathing easy, souta.ea
the sore throat, and storm the Cough, assuring restful
eights.. Crosoleae is invaluable tomothers with
young: children and. a BOON to sufferers front
Asthma, &end us postai for desertpavabegklct.
AEI. DRUOOISTS.
Try CRE$OLENP
ANrISEPTl0 THROAT
TA I) L $T S au r the irritated
throat. 'they are simple,
effective and antiseptic.
Of your druggist or from,
us, lOc. la stamps.
Vapo Cresolene Co,
02 CartiandtSt., N,Y.
Leming miles 4
• Today he can eat three square
meals and sometimes one
"extra" because Chamberlain's
Tablets cured Stomach Troubles
anti gave him a good digestion.
You try them. 25c, a bottle.
All Druggists and Dealers or by
Mail, 3 f
Cbssberials liledicias Co., Tomb,
Winter Term from Jan. 5th
CENTRAL // li
I
STRATFORD. ONT. i
0„ tario's best Business Training School'3
Wo have thorough courses in. Comnier. )'
mercinl Shorthandand1111
Telegraphy de -
par
par-ments and nine competent 'nstruetors.
We offer yon advantages not offered else-
where You do not know what an up -to•
date business school can do for you unless 1
you have received our free catalogue.
Write for it at once. I i
LD. A. MCLACBLAN - Principal
b.
USINESS S AND
SHORTHAND
Subjects taught by expert instructors
at the
bPa "fake/
X, 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
17e-Princcpl •
trailliWEENEINNINI.a—.ieere•t
FOR SALE1
t1ond Apple Butter at Gc per
Ib. in any quat,tity, whir: it
fasts. Call and get a sample ;•
will di -liver to any part of town
FLOUR —R )bin Hot. d, Mayer -
ton, lelapte L.af, Five X.
Bran, Shorts, Rolled Oats, Chop
Grain and all kinds of Corrals.
Grain taken in exchange for
Iflour, bran, shorts and meals.
I When in need of any thing in
this line call or phr)ne 84.
Wingham Chopping MiUI
EZRA MERKLEY.
—grow imawww.O`.mr/
OVER 66 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description man
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention le probably patentable. Communion
done strictly confdoatlal. HANDBOOK on Patents
sent free: Oldest 'agency for seourmg patents.
Patents taken through Munn do Co. reoul10
special notice, without charge. fu 1t9
$`kalifs` Kusa .
A handsomely illustrated meekly. Lernrst ole.
culatlon of any scintilla journal., Terme for
Canada, 51113 a year, pottage prepaid. Bold by
all newvadealers.
MUNN &Co 381rad y,Nw Ynrk00. 428 IP 8Washington.1..
HIGH CLASS LIVERY
GOOD HORSES
NEW RIGS
Quiet horses for Lady
drivers.
Drivers supplied.
BEATTIE'S LIVERY
DIAGONAL STREET
Livery Phone 2.
Residence Phone 133
RAILWAY TiME-TABLE
Trains leave Wingham stations daily as
follows a
G. T. R.
TO TORONTO and Intermediate
Point€:—Passer'g-r, 645 a.m ; pgseen•
ger, 11.00 a.m.; passenger, 2 30 pm,
TO LONDON:-• Passenger 6,3.5 a
m.; passenger, 3 30 p tn.
TO !INCARDINE : • Passenger.
11 IA) tt.m ; passenger, 2.30 p.m.; pas-
senee'r, 9 15 p m.
C. P. R.
TO TORONTO and Intermediate
Pointy:—Passeuger, 6 4) a.m.; pasren
ger 3 05 p.m.
TO TE1'.SWr1.TER :—Pnasrt,gor
12 50 p.m"; pass • ager, 10.32 p.m.
SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH
WEST LAND REGULATIONS
MBE sole head of a family, or any male over
I 18 years old, may homestead a quarter -
section of avaIl..,hle <Dominion land in Mani-
t.uba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The appli-
cant must appear in person at the Dominion
Lauda Agency or Sub-Agoncy for the di.trict.
Entry by proxy may be made at the oRt,•o of
any Local Agent of Doniiuion Lands (not sub-
agent) on certain conditioner,
Duties.— 'ix months' residence upon and cul-
tivation
ubtivation of the land in each of three years. A
homeates.,er may live within nine miles of his
homeat•• ad on a farm of at least. 80 acres on
certai0 conditions A habitable house is re-
quite" in every eaeo, excel)) v hen residence
,s erf..rmcd in the vicinity.
In o. rtain districts a homesteader in good
sta,.,:'ugg may pre-empt a quarter -section along -
s1,1. his homestead. Price 43 per acre, Duties
—sae months' residence in each of six years
fr on date of homestead entry (including the
1 ate required to earn hem, stead patent) and
n acres extra cultivation. The area of eulti-
,ation is subject to reduction in case of rough,
scrubby or stony land atter report by Home-
stead Inspector on application for patent.
A homesteader who has exhausted his home.
stead right and cannot obtain a pre-emption
may take a purchased homested in certain
districts. Price $3 00 per acre. Duties.—Must
reside six months in eaoh of throe years, culti-
vate fifty acres and erect a house worth $300.
W. W. CORY,
Deputy of the Minister of the Interior.
T.B.—Unauthorized publication of this ad-
vertisement will not be paid for.
IT means best quality ---tested
quality -- full measure and
thorough satisfaction.
h is on every bag of
NLESS youh ave facilities for testing cement eY ou must
f
depend upon the manufacturer for Cement that is
reliable Emerycar of Canada Cement is thoroughly
t�stea, and unless it passes every test it is not allowed to leave
ie mill.
You ean dgptilc upon Canada eltnent.
Be sure you get its
Canada Cement Company Limited, Montreal
nomis sta
t da Cement stealer in your neighborhood. if you do not
know Min, askus for hie name.
Mite *err ittAemadat Barras f r.r, frrr. oho o. ,f� the fek.?Aare .&oei "nal
al
tfir Amour atm Dr ?Pith Cowrie."
THEY LOVE w EIR PAJAMAS.
Englishmen Sttitt t oke a. Delight In
Waring Thom Pubtioty,
Writing from South Africa about the
/tights to
be soon ithat country, E.
.
W. Ilowe in his tuonthly says:
"0u the flue between. Billawaya and.
Salisbury there aro a good many
tures, including one built around the
best gold mine in Rhodesia, And how
the people turned out to see the train
come in: At one place we estimated
that there must have been 500 around
the station,
'"`rains travel over the line only two
or three times a week, and people
seem to co►uo from great distances in
the country to see the trains go by.
Rut between the stations there were
millions of acres of land as wild as it
was In the days of Adam,
"Early in the morning our English
Passengers walked about in pajamas
when we stopped at stations. English.
men love that sort of thing. At Vic-
toria falls they visited the Rain forest
Iu pajamas, audio Johannesburg I was
told that on Sundays and holidays pa-
jamas are worn around houses and
yards until lunch time,
"Englishmen show their pajamas so
much that 1 cordially hate that partie_
tiler - form of uightdress. Englishmen
have the same passion for running
around pajamas
that American sun boy€
have I'or mulling around in baseball
suits."
JUMPS THE EYE MAKES.
It Sees an Object by Piecemeal and
Not at a Glance.
The eye does not take in an object
at 11 glume. but piecemeal. It follow,
the outline of the object, but does sc
by jumping from 1101111 to point in at
irregul;lr manner, never tivio0 alike.
In looking at at large circle, for In
stance, the movement is not regular
the gaze passing from point to point
until a complete mental image of the
circle is formed, even tbongh the pen
sort undergoing the tests starts at the
top of the circle and attempts to fol
low Its outline all around back to the
starting place. Stich ocular move
meats ate so rapid that one is not
aware of them.
Proof of the irregular movement o1
the eye may be provided. according tc
the Optical :ioenail and Review, by
means of the motion picture camera.
.1 small, bright light is placed across
the rooul, and this forms a small image
ion the cornea of tete eye. As the eye
aitempts to follow the curve of the
test object the motion picture enrnera
takes a rapid succession of views of
the rye :1ntl its bright spot. 'Then a
om1)1111sun of 1110 resniting prints n11C
1110 position of the bright spots In taut
eitows the mnvetnents or the eyelet!)
m following the ,e'li'de.
RUN-DOWN WOMEN
Find Health in a Simple Tonic.
How many women do you,,, know
who are perfectly well, strong and
healthy as a woman should be? They
may' not be sick enough to lie in bed
—but they are run-down, thin, nerv-
ous, tired and devitalized.
Women are so active nowadays,
and oh much is expected of them,
that they constantly overdo and suf-
fer from headache, backache, nervous-
ness and kindred ills.
Such women need Vinol, our deli-
cious cod liver and iron tonic with-
out oil which will create an appetite,
tone up the digestive organs, make
pure blood and create strength.
Mrs. Walter Price, Biloxi, Miss.,
says: "I was in a run-down condition
for months, I had taken several medi-
eines but they seemed to do me no
good. Finally Vinol was recommend-
ed, -and from the first, bottle I began
to improve until I am strong and well
as ever."
Try a bottle of Vinol with the nn•
derstanding that your money will be
returned if it does not help you.
j. Walton McKibbon, Druggist, Wingbam
Good Salesman
Wanted.
For every town and district where
we are not represented.
Fruits are bringing high prices and
Nursery Stock is in demand.
Make big money this Fall and Winter
by taking an agonoy.
Experience not necessary.
Free egaipment, exclusive territory,
highest commissions paid.
Write for full particulars.
STONE & WELLINGTON
TORONTO ONTARIO
Nox A Cold
108
While You Sleep
The soo-t remarkisble Cough and Cold
remedy known to science. Fur all lung
and throat tro.,ble it hal no equal. 250
and 50e per bottle, at all drug stores.
Turnberry Agricultural Society
Annual Meeting.
The annual nnrettng of the T ruberry'
Agrioallural i8oei-ty will be held to the
Connell Ohatnb-r. 'W'inghars, en Tues-
'day,,danuary 901, 1914, at 2 O'olook
p.m. lei the porpoise of reeeivit,g the
Direi tore end Andtort' reports, fhb
election of directors for the current year
end the transaction Of other bnsin4i.
•l► 11 attilt* inter( teed in the Wingham
Tall Fait are invited to attend.
W J. C'OikIt1 , Preeid.nt
17-19,- fl. B. t:LLt0tr, Seeretery,
.N
The MacTavisli
Mystery
It Occurred on. Long Island
In Colony Days.
I'raiiteny, • As to iEunds, iae"Mr1sh lard
orily what tats eargtu uf. vegt0tabh's
world bring, a mutter of about P.10
in the currency of the Present day.
Moreover, :lies. Aim:Talli h was as sure
• Si 1 6
filer 111 bttu t
d s t e'tio
ffC or her t
1n
d
his rltildreu 115 she was of the rising
anti, the fulling of the title. After ih0
finding of the fishing smelt she be-
lieved that he wee alive. 'What roars
keeping him away from, her site could
not know, but she believed that some
day he would return to her; Ile :night
do so when she was away, and in
MS case she wished that lie might
find everything in conditiou for his
reception, IIs had always occupied n
bedroom alone, His wife kept his mem
just as it was when he went away so
that should he return at night it would
be ready for hint. Whether her com-
fort was at the bottom of her action is
uncertain. i.t is likely that the poor
woman was trying to comfort herself
in knowing that his room was as it
had always been and In thinking that
it would in time be again occupied.
Two years passed, and not a word
was heard from MncTavish. Then one
day the family y ou
Long
Island receiv-
ed a terrible scare. Toward evening
of an autumn day a sail eras seen to
the westward, much nearer the coast
than it was usual for ships to pass.
As it came nearer its hull was seen to
be very low and its :nasty very high,
enabling ing it to carry a large amount of
canvas. It floated no flag,
These were the days of the bucca-
' veers, whose depredateons were Largely
on the Spanish main intercepting gal -
(eons laden with gold from the mines
of Mexico, but not averse to attacking
any merchantman worth making a
prize or ravaging a craft. Long Island
had received one or two such visitors,
though there was scarcely enough
plunder among the scattered settlers to
make a landing worth while.
The fears of the MacTavish family
were confirmed by seeing a horseman
come dashing eastward,• who passed
the house without stopping, shouting:
"A Pirate! She's coming up the coast!
Go inland as quick as you can!"
Mrs. MacTavish. cast a glance et the
rakish vessel and. gathering the few
valuables of small compass she pos-
sessed and taking her children, ran as
fast as possible and kept running until
she had put several miles between
them all and the coast. Coming to a
thicket, she entered it, and, sinking on
the ground, the faintly occupied them-
selves in regaining their exhausted
breath.
They remained there the rest of the
day- At evening they saw from their
hiding place the mum who hrd warned
them and caned to him. He was look-
ing for them) to tell them that he had
seen a 131(113 dressed in. the fashion of a
buccaneer on their farm. A fog had
rolled In from the ovea1 and enveloped
the pirate ship. They should ilioke
sure that the pirate he had seen ryas
not there before they returned. Then
he rode away;
Mrs. MaeTavish kept her children in
the thicket till late that night. 'Then
they began to cry for food, and she
doncluded to take thea) to a point near
the farm, leave them there and go ler-
ward herself `to reconnoiter'. It was
after midnight when silo 0111110 to a
clump of trees a short distance from
her house. Leaving• the children in
care of Alex. she stole forward. There
was no sound except the splashing Of
the wares ou the beach beyond nor
sign of any one within the building.•
The fog had chewed away, and the
moon in the third quarter shone bright-
ly. Entering the house, she listened.
The door of her husband's room was
open. and she heard some one breath-
ing in sleep. Tiptoeing to where she
could get a view of the chamber, she
looked inside. A man was sleeping in
the bed.
She drew back: Clothes were on a
chair—clothes that site recognized as a
pirate's gnrb. Several pistol; aind
knives lay on a table, The man in the
.bed mmst•be the pirate 'who had been
seen in tike place. She was about to re-
tire in terror when, casting n glance at
the buccaneer's fare, lighted by the
moon, something in it reminded her of
her husband. Advancing to get a near-
er view, she struck a chair. The man
opened his eyes.
"Mary!" he exclaimed. and, throwing
offf the covers and jumping out of bed,
he clasped,her in his arms.
Her thought that her husband might
return when she was away and find
his room ready for him was realized.
After the children had been brought
ID and the younger ones had been em-
braced by their father and put to bed
MacTavish told his story. On his voy-
age to New Amsterdam he had been
met by n buccaneer, who appropriated
his vegetables and gave him the option.
of joining the pirate crew or walking
the plank. Ile had chosen the former
alternative, hoping eventually to make
his eseape. After he had lived a dread.
ful life in the West Indies for two
years the buccaneer sailed for the
north, She passed the Long Island
const and sent bonts ashore to loot the
settlers and gather provisions. Mnc-
Tavish had been in one of the boats,
and the coming of the fog enabled him
to get :Way from his companions un'
der its cover. The ship had sailed with-
out him, and finding his haute deserted,
as was to be expected on aec•out)t of
the vicinity of the buccaneer, he had
decided to go to bete and await the re-
turn of his family.
There Was n long period of rejoicing
in the Ma0Tnvish family nt the return
Of the 'husband and father, and that
was the last of Ida taking his produce
to the city by Water.
Mrs. MacTavish lived to be an old
woman, and to the day of her death
when any one of the faintly was :away
from Donne site Wottld keep the absent
one's nein ready that It might ht3 00 -
tripled by its ijt•rcistonled inmate.
There were frequent clepall'tnres, lett'ne
one of the family ever returned in a
pirate's gash.
By P. A. MITCHEL
4-++++++4-1-1-14+++,+-1-14+++++++.
In the olden time when .New York
was called New Amsterdam, when tile
rotund Dutchmen of Manhattan, In-
creasing and multiplying, were spread-
ing eastward. on •Long Island, meeting
the lean Yankee, also increasing anti
multiplying, frons Connecticut, there
lived on that coast a family named
MacTavish, but recently arrived from
bonny Scotland, Long Island in those
days was not crowded with settlers,
and the Indians were getting scarce,
t The McTavish family lived a lonely
life, their home being built on rising
ground overlooking the ocean, All day
long they listened to the waves rolling
in ou the sand and watched the gulls
hovering over the venter, every now
and again descending to pounce upon
some luckless fish. Farther out on the
horizon at rare intervals a sail would
appear and while passing served to
Jessen somewhat.,, the loneliness, for,
though they could see only a spot or
white canvas, they knew that there
were living human beings there.
111acTavish was both farmer and fish-
erman, giving his personal attention to
the latter, while his wife and his eldest
son, Alex, attended to the former. The
bulk of the product both of the farm
and the nets was consumed by the
family, but MacTavish would occasion-
ally in summer sail to New Amster-
dam with n load of vegetables and
when the weather was cold enough to
transport fish would carry his hauls to
the same market.
One autumn he bade goodby to his
wife and children, intending to take a
cargo of potatoes and other vegetables
to Manhattan.. They watched him sail
out of the inlet where he kept his boat
and, riding the waves, grow less and
less in the distance till at last they
could see him no longer. Then Dame
MacTavish gathered her children about
her in the house, as she always dirt
when her husband went on his trips,
to steep off the IonelIness that persisted
in stalking in as he, sailed away.
Mat:Taoist' was usually absent as
week, sometimes more, sometimes less.
A week passed. a1nT his family began
to took for his return. One, two, three
days more elapsed, and they saw noth-
ing of trim. When two weeks had gone
by and he did not appear his wife be•
gen to worry, for he had told her to
look for him in from a week to ten
days, Still another Week slipped by
and no sign of the father of the fam-
ily,
Mrs, MacTavish, BOW thoroughly
alarmed, determined to go to New Am-
sterdam to .learn if her husband had
been there. Iter only route was by
land, and in those days there was 110
public con soya nce: So the family
horse was saddled, saddlebags were
put 011 111111. Con titinilg, besides cloth-
ing, n stock of provisions, and leaving
Alex, a boy of sixteen, in charge of the
other children, she sallied forth on her
quest.
Having reached the bank of the East
river, leaving her horse, she was fer-
ried across and proceeded to the house .
of Dietrich Van Vorst, who she knew
was accustomed to buy her husband's
produce. There she met with a shock. !
Van Forst told her that he had seen
nothing of her husband. I3ad MacTav-
ish been there Van Vorst would un-
doubtedly have seen him, for the town
n'as then a mere cluster of houses
gathered. about the battery,
Mrs. MacTavisb, though .without
hope of receiving a different answer,
asked others the same question. No
one had seen MacTavish. What had
become of 111111? The weather had been
fair at New Amsterdam and at the •
:McTavish home. There could have
been no storm to swatnp the little boat,
nor had there been any fog, The disap-
pearance or the husband and father
was a mystery.
There was nothing for the poor wom-
an to do but go back to her home and
wait. She started, hoping that she
alight find her husband there on her
arrival. She was disappointed. He had
neither conte nor sent any word.
Every day that passed added -to the
discotiragcment of the mother and her '
children. One day. a month after
?1iieTavish had sailed away, a neigh-
bor living solos ten miles eastward
of the MncTavishes went to New Am-
sterdam. hearing that he was going,
she sent to him requesting him to make
inquiries In the town with a view of
getting news of her husband. The
traveler returned aind said that a Brit-
ish ship had arrived and reported hav-
ing seen ori' Sandy Hook a deserted
tisiting smack, with notlihig Whatever
in her except a few scnttcred potatoes
and onions, She was not considered
wont' bringing in and left where she
was. When last seen she was drift-
ing southward along the New Jersey
coast.
It was believed that this was Mac•
Tavish's bout. If so he must be alive,
Itut why had he deserted her? What
had he done with his stock of rep -
tables? And why had he not returned
to his home? In these days men's dis-
8PIWarauces aro usually attributed to
al woman's influence, and the missing
man's accounts are investigated. But
at that time the womlon were all rear -
tied and settled le their ho nos 'iVl1e{i
very young;, and their tithe was ail
spent in taking earn el their Puret•qug
6---Sgle of Shortlloriil Bulls -6
Broadvlety Shorthorns --Herd Headed by
"Favorite Character." (hap.)
Por We are Ai* bunt., eight te twelve
months old, These are chol_ee•ynun
bulls with the brut of hreedingand will
be sold reasonably, if you Beed any-
thing write one or give as a rail,
3' (. FVI'E, Winghani, Ott.
(lt'arm li miles south of Winghatti,)
Pauli Por Sale.
Tae undersigned offers for Atria hie.
farm, let 8, eon. 7, 'Furnberr;v, con -
tattling 107 acres of land. On the.
premises are a gond bath, *it I -ea -:sent
stabling, good hone, d,ilkd rti4'1t and
'dvindti,ill. Possession .1•et of March
:hitt. Get full partieulars frurq,
Cl. S. 1IINTOtTl'.,
Rural route No. 4, W-inghaam, Ont,
l8 21
National Sathe.
tire was a gentleman who was h
Washington as a minl2ter representing
Honduras, Diplomats, according tc
the popular caneeption, never say the
They wroug ihlug^. i hey are believed to Ifs
the deltenev of language and the
Unease of vocabulary. This particular
diplomat entered an uptown barber
shop in Washington and got a shave
after be had exptatned what he Wttnt'
ed in words w liicli were more full of
accent than of fluency,
"Now, sir," said the barber bl'lskiy,
"can't we give you a Turkish bath."
"No•o-o!" replied the wan from Ron.
duras, with some hesitation. "You
see, I'm no—no Turk."—Popular Maga.
zine,
Plants and Electricity,
The idea of growing plants by elec-
trlclty has been referred to as the "last
cry" in gardening and floriculture; but,
as a matter of fact, the Idea le nearly
a couple of centuries cid. As long ago
as 1747 electricity, as an aid to plant
cultivation, was advocated by a writer
in the old Gentleman's Magazine, who
mentioned the astounding results he
bad achieved frond electrifying a myr-
tle. seventeen times.—Lot.aon Tlt-Bits,
.w
Old r'ranoh in gffyotat %WA
One may not be .ignorant, perhaps,
that French, old 11'rcneb, remain* as
the language used in certain roysl
proclamations: in England.
filo when "the king's assent" 1s giv
en before the throne In "the painted
chamber" the clerk cries its the fatly
gunge of our father, "Le roy le veult:'
("the king so Pleases"). If the bill
that he is asked to approve is a money
bill the cleric adds after a profound
obeisance, 14TI►e king thanks his good
subjects, accepts their benevolence and
Is pleased." The proclamation on as.
rending the throne Is preceded by the
traditional call of the French heralds
of former times, "Oyez, oyez, oyez!"
Alas, that tttne has disfigured thiel
old world of our country, and today
the phlegmatic English herald cries
thrice to the people: "Oh, Yes! 0h,
yes! Oh, yell"—Uri de Paris.
A Theekeray Slip,
Thackeray asked Lowell to point ont
candidly any error of Queen.Anne
English in the novel "Henry Esond."
Lowell asked if people used at that
time the phrase "different to,"
"Hang it ail!" cried Thackeray, "No,
of course they didn't."
THE DOMINION BANK
SIR EDMUND 9. OSLER M.P., PRESIDENT. W. D. MATTHEWS, VICE•PREBIDENT.
C. A. BOGERT, General Manager_
Do Your Banking By Mail
if you live at a distance from a branch of The Dominion Sank.:
Deposits may be made—cash withdrawn—or any other Banking
Business inay be transacted by mail, just as easily as though one
made a special trip to town for the purpose.
A Savings Account may be opened in the name of two persons
—man and wife, or two members of a family—so that ether ono
can deposit and withdraw money from the same account.
WINGHAM BRANCH: N. EVANS, Manager.
Oximmeminumr
-' Children Cry for Fletcher's
C
STO
\
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made under his per-
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good" aro but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTO►RIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opitun, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it
has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething- Troubles and
Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTO R IA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
1.44,A
Iu Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
ITHE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
•:-£•d••i••F^i�i-•F•^i-•i• • -'! ' '-i••I••i••t••i••i •�-1-F•-i»i•
•
Hanover Place, Winnipeg
Past, Present and Future.
.I.
PAST
Previous to the year 1914 the north end of Winnipeg
was practically cut off from the main portion of the city by the
C. P. R. Terminal Yards. In 1911 and 1913 this obstacle was
overcome by the McPhillip Street suh-way and the over -head
• bridge en Arington St. Immediately development began in •;
this part of Winnipeg,
PRESENT
The a nor h ende
h tof Winnipeg, W peg, W at of 11lai.n, particularly
• between Mountain and Lansdowne Avenues, is the most rapidly
g owing residential l ortion of Winnipeg. Between these Ave-
nues and Hearn and Main t a person 8 , pe son might pick at random a
1 or more and make a profitable investment. The best how-
ever, is lots along the Sharp Boulevard and the Avenues on
each tide.
FUTURE
The profit marring pfsssibllities are brightest along the Sharp
Boulevard and the Avenues on each side, al prices will vont nae
to show a steady advance for many years to camp. Land on
the Boulevard that two years ago sold at $22.00 a foot IA now
selling at $60 00 a foot. Two more years will show equal if not
batter conditions on Hanover Place as by that time the Street
• Car line will doubtless be along the Boulevard. The time to
. invest is now. Prices of Tots, $:25.00 each and up according to
location. Write the
Reliance Investment and developing Company, Ltd.
Head Office --Hanover, Ont.
Branch Office --
John Haffner, 2751 Portage Ave., Winnipeg, Man.
Agents wanted in unrepresented diktrie•a,
W J. CURIt IE, Lool Agent.
'it..'.i..r.'i •++441- .$+ t.'" +18+
see