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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-06-16, Page 3Vis, eta YG TIM WW1NGU At*. TIMM, JUNE 16, 1810 4;2 4A,Atli. rya. Says the Millen; m '• +Mr. and Mrs. Grocer' were down to -y place for Sunday dinner awhile hack -and what do you think 1 We had awirhiag contest -to see who could'wish!!oe the eiest delicioni and whole. 'some eatable: We all closed our ayes and whhed. Aqi• beheld.. if we didn't all four of us wish for the mule thine. Suns rind dreadmade of • f:f Cream of. the WestFlour So we had 'em -sty wife always' has 'era ready, because: they',, iu- ere, demand at our house." A " Model 'Mill" product. • The Campbell Milling Company, Limited, Taranto. Caaads FOR SALE 131 KE1t1 & BIRD. WINGHAM. FAITHFUL HEN. The Chicago Journal of Jane 2 has the tollowiog in reference to a hen own. ed by Tom Gilmore. sot► of Harry Gil nure, formerly of Stratford, " "Old Ben" fe deed. :She is mourned :by n. daughter, "a • grand.danghter, and seen -granddaughters to the fifteenth generation, . lo Old •Ben' long lite the sixteen ' years the race suicide theory was never applied to her. She added more than 150 Bastes and Henrys to Chicago's Wade. For fourteen.years the hen was the pet of Tom Gilmbre, son of Harry Gil - n ars, 4927 Washington boulevard: "Thathen." said Mrs. Gilmore, "laid su egg every day after Feb. 1 until last Satertiay. After she had laid 112 eggs era notioed she was becoming blind." weho hen was 2 years old when Tom "ought her to hatch some eggs. From rhst time on she did not miss raising a "amity until this year, when she showed Is desire to 'eel'. "'All the obiokens we have now. are neseendants =of 01d Bess. She will be :missed not °MY in the hen yard but among the children. Being a friendly len and disposed to play, she was the .het of all the children in the neighbor - lased " There. iu much Milk among the young- er-Git'moresits to where Old Ben should be irtiried, and what ' met of headstone should be ereoted to ' commemorate hei sixteen years of faithful work. Bess was% member ot the clan known ` es White Rook's: She went to the ee, ebioken yard without any load neer esion,. . U. S. Thoroughly Alarmed. Frani the Baltimore American. President Mitt it bent upon checking the .tido of tropniition to Canada that as. been sweeping with great volume EMI the border at the invitetfon of the Dominion MithoriiielI, who have pre• rented ,the mine of Canada in attrao- rive ways. The remit hal been that a •east grain country has been developed that is almost without parallel in North America. Much of this is being tilled at the expense of American capital and labor. The opening of 4,000,000 agtes sit ti s North-West for settlement will *sun to check the side to Canada and preserve for . American uses • American labor and enterprise.' The vast acreage Mai wee withdrawn by the Roosevelt Administration 'upon whloh there were Ito forests to preserve and which con- eeiued`aceminerals 'to'warrant their in oorperatibn into the federal reservation area war 3be"direct incentive to the flight torose the dabadien line. Mr. Taft iii' thoroughly imbued• with the prinbiplel of ooneervatlon. ' But he is as ardently imbued with the 'prinoiples of exploitation. He does not believe that Minding is any more a national than it is a bedtime virtue: sMalavA Joke was on the Joker. A correspondent sends the following anecdote anent Colonel Beloher, of Southampton. The colonel was in Tor onto mine time ago on his way home, from s grand Lodge meeting in Orange- ville.• •With bio •fuss •Oaplein, Billy. Thompson, of'Mitohell,'another Orange d britt' and a great jaker. The colon- el was at that time Mayor of Southamp- ton. He is a great booster of his home tows and frequently refers 40 it air the Chicago of Canada. Captain Thompson,• invited the colonel and. another friend to have . lunch 'withbin at the King' Edward. In the rotunda before" lunch, happening to meet the steward of the hotel, Thompidn introduced the colonel as• the Mayor of Chicago. telling him they were to have lnuoh and wanted to be well looked atter. The steward, by the way, is a Chicago meq. When. they went to the Date they found a table. reserved for them, with a special wait - dr, arid was told it was not neoessery to! consult the menu as the "towards had arras ed°the cos see. , The lunch was ie deoided moons, the guest" enjoying it immaturely, as did Captain :Thompson until. after $he cigars he ;was handed the the oheok,'whioh was for $42 50. -Tor- onto Saturday Night, Jane 4, '10. Caught Cold By . working In W ate,. ♦ Distressing, 'ridding Sens- tion ars The Throat. Mr. Albert Ma4Phee, Chignecto Mines, M.S., writes:-" In • Oct., 1908, I caught Bold by working in water, 'and had a very bad cough and , that distressing, tickling sensation in my throat so I could not sleep at night, and: my lunge 'were so very sore I had to give up work. Our doctor gave me medicine but it did me no good s&i got a bottle of Dr. Wood's 'Norway Pine' Syrup and by the time I sad Used ' two ` bottles I was entirely cured. I am always recommending it to my friends." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup com- bines the potent healing virtues of the Norway pine tree with other absorbent, expectorant and soothing medicines of recognized worth, and is absolutely harm - les., prompt and safe for the cure of `• Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Croup, Sore Throat , Pain or Tightness in the Chest, and all Throat and LungTroubles. •'Beware 'et imitations of Tar.' Wood's Nortiny Pine Syrup ; Ask for it and insist Writing what eon ask for.: p It 'is put up in a"yellow wrapper; "three, pita twee the trade mark, and OW price' 25 Manufactured only byThs'T. Milburn Co., Laaited, Toronto, .Out. ELECTRICITY IN THE HOME. Electric lighting 3n the borne le .now oommooplace, but recent developnen$ hive gone'muck further than this. " In many oat es this form of energy 11 need toe cooking apd heating las well, as le has been found partioulerlx'valuable' in. redaoing She labor orieash day. Amo for is need to drive the washing meohtpe• and wringer+'end to heat She mangle: A few oents worth•ipnourrent 'will operate the washing machine, tits operiior'hav- ing nothing eo do beeond' putting in the Clothes, and then when eliey';are done, Mewing them- through -the ' written.; Irdning consists of handling and folding after they have paned the rolls, the ironing being done With eleotrto 'stone. Wash day thus becomes not wash dy, but wash hour, and with labor ' Orman Dally el iminated. With the development of minor water powers allover Ontario, as hinted at in lair week's article "Along the 0ono1e• 'iton Liuei," ell these oonienienoes will ere long be brought within an easy of ihonsaudi of farm homes in this Pro• vinous that' now are ' in the cafe of homes in liege cities. Coupled with this 'something else is nom log; thio is the oemen*house. Speak- ing on this subject in Papule" Eleo- triolty, Thomas A. Edison' says that the proposal is to construct iron monads in Which a single home mu be oast in six flours. A complete wt of these moulds Will oost'$25,000 and the working plant 415,000 morseling not less than l44 houses can be boilt en a year with Shit equip mint. The intense and depreoiatlon of plans;Meech house will amount to $125 and, Mr:' Edison says he believes that i} house oan • be ereoied,' complete' with pinmb1ug and heating, far 111;24Q.. " Eaoh house may be different not only in nom• binasion of design, bus 'with different coloring wad other feetniesAir well. In taut an 'endless vartation'of style is pos- eible. Such a house will ' have a floor 26x30 feet, be three stories' high, with cellar and with six large living and Bleeping rooms, airy halls, bathroom and every comfort. Snoh a hoose, built of ont stone, woUld'oost $30,000, while, as stated, the Dement house, "equal in ap- pearance, can be built for $1,200: ,JUST A LITTI' GIRL. [Now York Amerioan.) Site. Wil Daly a little Bid, And I wee six feet three l And her meter [(Odes/owned head Just reached the heart of Inc. Hep handl were .malt and white. White mine were large end brown; And I was her proud protector• An thronph the lighted town. I knew notwhence she came, But thought 11 a pity 'het able ot WEs alonerris In the grshelplessathing oby,: Uo r eyes "Aandd n ly wtwatfiiordlto 'looherk -,, Hunted; I think they oalt it; I, spoke 1► ki And eagerly.aought ate Welleh It' wasn't there-I'turned to "peek • AS con torfpe;rtores she, word to .rise pretty ore She, loo, Imd fled, and then I' knew . Thi$ wee no plane for the eon of a preacher. . -•--,ems-- A CURE FOR TUBERCULOSIS. A Wisconsin man, Wm. M. Ron, bas written a book in whioh he gives his personal ' experience with inberoulosli. His b noluslon is that the sooner: people ;efflfoted With the disease learn that they cannot continue to live as they did be- fore 11 saddled itself upon them, but Emil; undergo a sane and systematic elaauie of 1ife, the sooner will tnberon• loris nesse to be It national scourge. Ho is no' believer in •the climate oure, be cane he has /sled 11. In s.l�joUrn in the southwest, he says, he made 11 a point to discuss with as many health seekers as. he could the methods they were ;employing in pur- suit of health. Th8 results were amen lug. Where getting well was their only business, they had generally negleoted to barn even the essentials of'Ihat bust. neer, but viers following, "a hit or miss road to.heallh-or destruction." Mr. Ron' avowtd object in writing the book is to enable consumptives to save their lives -to give an exposition of the modern sanatorium treatment as he saw and studied it at first hand; with a view to its 'application by consumptives who are ',lithe first stage of She disease, and 'who elect to stay at home. He poloist .ant that every ogle of tuberon- lu.l. wits onto in an incipient stage, and deplane that 90 our of 100 become ad. minced oases beoanse of mistakes made by the patient. • "Yon will believe, if you have tuber- . cultists," he says, "that you are one of the chosen ten. The changes are nine out of ten that yon are one of the nine- Is is • oheraoteristio of the disease, he add., for the patient to fail to realize the Ierionsnesa , of ie,until he oatohe. M glimpse of the grim reaper. Mr. Rosaeodvinos& that the only known cure for tuberculosis is fresh air, rest and proper food. and on.the benefit of these he laystepeoial strem. He urges also die importance of observing She numerous precautions to prevent set - becks. He declare. that it requires from to to five years to be oared of tuberculosis, and 'he is reasonably Der• twin that the patient will stay mired. • Horses and Babies. James R. Keene, who *noted no len. as a horseman than as a fiSlncier,said at a luncheon at his Oedarhnrat residence: "My love of horses... has been a great comfort so me ail 'nay life I have al. way. kept my hones :.in their pleoo. though. I haven't allowed them to in. terfere with my business. Some men only their love of horses altogether too far. Snoh a one was a young father. who "tool with his. fair wife before ,*he crib of their first-born, • "Iun't he wonderful?" the . young mother Dried. "Did you ever,see any thing like him at twenty -"ix mnth"?" "Maternal love is all very well" the father retorted, impatiently, "but please don't try _/o compare II with a two-year- thoroughbred." ' It's easy to grow plants in • • Sunshine -heated hone , :PEOPLE living in homes heated with Ure,vvartn 1 ordinary furnaces often claim they cannot grow plants with any degree Sunshine Air. of success: This is due to the fact that or - A 4 dinary furnaces arc not provided with an ^ik_ Automatic Gas Damper, There is nothing to prevent coal -gas, which is deadly to plant life, 'being forced up 'through the registers. Now, when the gas in the combustion chamber of the Sunshine reaches a certain. 'pressure it stunt's open the Automatic, Cas Damper and passes tip the chimney, consequently there is no chance for ft to escape through the registers. Instead, the air that passes through the registers is pure, warm, Sunshine air, laden with the proper degree of moisture from the water -pan, It's the kind of air that makes plants thrive and is good to breath into 1yeUr own lungs. If If you want to guard your home (and who doesn't?) against evil- smelling, deadly coal gas order our agent to install the Sunshine 49,urnace (guaranteed) in your cellar. fi e jEiary's �'/�t ]•Celt SALE BY W, J. BOYCE, WINGHA t. LONDON TORONTO CALGAICY WINNIPEG HAMILTON lifoNT12EAL VANCOIJVIIt 6T. JORN, GOOD ADVICE FOR YOUNG MEN. Henry Clews, the New York banker, in the course of an address at the annual commencement of the State University of Kentucky, at Lexington last week, when the degree of L. L; D. was confer- red upon him, said: "And now a word for the young men only: Next to the nnwisdom of .eleot- ing and following bad and inoompetent advisors in the matters of bneineu, there are also certain persons whom, it you With to do well and make a fortune 'honestly, yon should be careful to avoid. Yon will nos always know them by their appearance; in fact, that 1e often the worst rale to go for they are 'gener- ally well diegnfsed. It is in their man- ner and conversation that you will find them out, Ind, that this be the easier I have made a collection of their ohar- aoteristios, as follows: Avoid a men who vilifies his benefic- tor; Who, unjustly amonmes others of bad deeds; Who never has a good word for any- body ; nybody; Who, when he drink", habitually drinks alone. Who -boast" of the superiority of his family; Who talks religion downtown in con• Motion with his daily business rs Who talksaffaire;okleuly against the virtue of respectable women; Who runs in debt with no apparent intention of paying; Who borrows "mall sums on his note or check dated ahead; Who will not work for an honest lb. ing; looks down upon those who Who 00 do; 1 p Who is always prating about his own n Who imvlraputesee; bad motives to those try- ing to do good; ' Who betrays confidence; Who lies; Who lshoneat only for policy's sake; Who deceives his wife and boast" of it to others; Who getointoxieated in public plane"; Who partake. of hospitality and talk" behind hie entertainers bink; Who borrows =nay from a friend and then blaekgnarde the londor ft TiME TO CHEER UP. Wfait's abs neo in fretting As yon go along? Might as well be getting In a ragtime song. It will chase the dolor That yon peek around' Back to region. Polar With a merry wand. Better be a-obaeing Rainbow "themes all day Than to sit erudite Any sonny ray, That the morning send. UM ' With your sigh or dole, Fretfulness offends net From a glad heart troll, Better be &•singing. Though you're off the key, Than some worry bringing Here for all to see. Diemen% all your trouble, Stand up and be game; Counts your pain a babble- Price i. just the same. Though the day be dreary. Overcast the sky. There'. perhaps a cheery Noontime drawing nigh. Anv way yon•take it. Weeping doesn'i win; Your mood's what yon make It-- Take t-Take a braoe-and grin. •-Ohioago Times. Stop, Madan ! Do not throw out that old piece of furniture. It's marred and the worse of wear, true, but some of your fondest recollections are associated with it. "Lacquerot," the specially Prepared Lacquer will restore its original beauty, concealing the mars and blemishes of wear and tear and Mak, ing it as good as new. The next best ,thing to a new suite for any room in the house is a coat of " acqueret"-the wonderful fur*. iture renewer, Our free booklet, "Dainty Dec- orator," tells the story of "L•c- queerer" --the home beauti- fier. A post -card brings it. Interesting and informing. Write for it to -day. Leading Hardware and Pant Dealer. sell "Lacqusret" International Varnish Co. Limited 2362 TORONTO -WINNIPEG URE Sick Headache and rellevee tbo troubles incl. dent to a. bilion., state of the system, such as Maimed, Names, Droweln'ese, Dl.trew aster eating, Pain In the Side, &c, while their moat ramarinbla success has been shown In curing SICK IIeadaehyet .Carters Lints: Lire. fMlls e. ace roe. equally valuable inconstipation. curinga¢dp• venting this annoyingcomplaint,while theyaleo correct all disorders of the stomach, atlmn.atethe liver and regulate the.bowela. bvenif they only cur" HEAD Ache they Would be almsq s,t prlccleesto those who sutler from this dletreeelhg complaint; butfortu- nately their goodneesdocs notend here,.nd.thew who once try them will ilndtteso little pills valu- able In so nanny way)s that they will not bo wil' Ung *0 do withouttheni. Bat after all sick hob L the bane of eo m CHE "here 11 where we make our greatboast. Oar Oilmen while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very ,®ail and very easy to take. Oneor two pills make a dose. They aro strictly vegetable and do not grape or purge, but by their genua action plewall who tree them. ea1TIi 1UOI••CIiII110.. *1R��Z--01 Z: Ali ii�h1•:iTi$i This Fateful Period. Itis a strange' and wondrous time; wierd.things 000ar in every olime, and portents do not 'cease; great comets whirl across the sky, and meteors go go whizzing by, and storms disturb the peace. Belated frosts destroy the fruit Wad lots of median ease to boot, untimely blizzards roar; great .hips go oraehing on the rooks and founder while the cap- tain walks his weary way ashore. efonnt Aetna went and had a fit, and threw up stones of rook and grit and ant up pretty bad; a money -laden New York girl turned down a belted British earl, and took a native lad. The share who study yonder stars insist that signal fire. on Mars are burning every day; and avalanches bury towns, and fright- ened monarob. loose their crowns - where are we drifting pray? What mean these wonders, grave and dire, which scourge the earth as though by fire from Zanzibar to Rome? These things that make the earth careen, these rare phenomena? They mean that Tumbo'" coming hornet -Welt Macon. Electrioity will accomplish almost any wonder. A reoept illustration of thin is shown in the cased an engineer in a Cleveland tannery, who hag been bald for years. Suddenly a little bluff began to sprout out on hie head and a few weeks later hie oranium was covered with a thiok bat short growth of hair. A doctor investigated the matter and learned that he bad been working under a revolving belt. His hair had been sprouted by electrioity. MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS Stimulate the Sluggish Liver, Pr. MOTE.. " LACQUERET" is sold In full Imperial measure packages ea" FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO.,- WINGHAM. • • :CLUBBING I RATES FOR 1909 - 10. TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below Clean the coated tongue, sweeten the breath, clear away all waste and poison- sus material from the system in Nature's easy manner, and prevent ss well as cure Constipation, SickIieadache, Biliousness, Heartburn, Catarrh of the Stomach, Sour troubles h and all • h Wester Brash, , arising from a disordered stab of the Stomach, Liver or Bowels. Mrs. J. C. Westberg, +4-44-#44. Swan River, Man., write& • Suffered♦♦ -" I suffered for years ♦ for Years. + more than tongue can + tell, from. liver trouble. .-.44+44-4- I tried several kinds o medicine, but could get no relief until I got Milburn', Lexa-Liver Pills. I cannot praise them too highly for what they have done for me." Price 25 cents a vial, or 5 for $1.00, at all dealers or mailed direet on receipt of Trice by Tho T. Milburn Co., Limited oronto, Ont. 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