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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-09-26, Page 3IMARTIN SENOUR '"'PAINTS Sold Subject to Chemical Analysis ! ! ! This means that you can take any can of " Martin- Senour 100% Pure Paint " off our shelves, have it analyzed by any reliable chemist in Canada. ,_ If you do not find it abso- lutely pure and exactly as we claim, we will pay the charges and make you a present of $loo for your trouble. SOLE AGENT IN-WINCHAM. J. D: BURNS. C� �i�r�.�.'�=,Z��,R-'ir.-�r.._..rr�r�.sr�.,�r .-t�?�3�� ti�.tir��G r ��'tl' 'ir�i�_�_�•7�--s`��' A Bank which has conducted a conserva.. Give business since 1872, and has steadily increased its assets until they now amount to over thirty-two million dollars, is surely a safe institution to be entrusted with your savings. BANK OF HAMILTON WIN61IAM BRANCH 4a C. P. SMITH, AGENT. THE CANADIAN BANK F COMMERCE , HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1887 B. E. WALKER, President ALEX. LAIRD, General Manager A. H. IRELAND, Superintendent of Branches Paid-up Capital, $10,000,000 Rest, - 5,000,000 Total Assets, - 113,000,000 Branches throughout Canada, and in the United States and England BANKING BY MAIL 85 Business may be transacted by mail with any branch sof the Bank. Accounts may be opened and deposits made or withdrawn by mail. Every attention is paid to out-of-town accounts. WII.GHAM BRANCH A. E. SMITH, MANAGER. The speedier a stenographer can typewrite a letter the more valuable she becomes to the busy business man. Practice does a great deal, but correct fingering • and the " Touch System,': which we teach thoroughly, are of paramount importance. When the " Touch System" is 4 mastered the operator never looks at the keyboard, but keeps her eyes on her notes. She saves the time lost 4 Thy the "sight " operator in glancing from notes to keyboard and back to notes again -a considerable item in a day's work and a severe strain on the eyes as well. Our large, free catalogue tells more about our stenographer's course and gives much valuable information about the diplomas of the Business Educators' Association. The supply of our graduates is not equal to the demand. FOREST CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE i'Iembers of Business Educators' Association. J. W. WESTERVELT. Principal, London. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• A••••••••..••••••••.••••••` COAL COAL COAL. We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL, • which has no equal. Also the best grades of Smithing, Cannel and • Domestid Coal, and Wood of all kinds. always on hand. • LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH (Dress Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc. We carry a full stock of • or Highest Price paid for all kinds of Logs. -M J. A., McLean.,1 •• Residence Phone No. 55. Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44. 4• •i•••••••••*•••••••••N•!••i ••••••••••••••••44404)4••••a IT -PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES . Learn Dress -Making by Mail in your spare time at home, or Take a Personal Course at Sehool To enable all to learn we teach on cash or instalment plan. We also teach a personal class, at school once a month. Class commenc- ing last Tuesday of each month. These lessons teaches how to out, Sit and put together any garment from the plainest shirt waist suit, to the most elaborate dress. Thn whole family can learn from one course. We have taught over seven thousand dress -making, and guar- antee to give five hundred dollars to any ono that cannot learn between the age of 14 and 40 You cannot learn dressmaking as thorough as this Course teaches if you work in shops for years. Beware of imitations As we employ no person outside the school. This is the only eklierienoed Dress Cutting School in Canada and excelled by none in any other country. Write at once for particulars, as we have cut Our rate one•thrrd for a short bine. Address: Sanders' Dress-CuttingSchool, al Erie St., Stratford, nt., Canada. TAE WINGHAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER 26, 1907 DOMINION BANK HEAD OFFICE ; TORONTO. Capital paid up, $3,633,000 Reserve Fund and Undivided profits $4,720,000 Total Assets, over 51,000,000 WINCHAM BRANCH. Farmers' Notes discounted. Drafts sold on all points in Canada, the United Stacey and Europe". SAVINGS DEPARTMENT -Interest allowed on deposits of $1 and upwards, and added to principal quarterly- end of March, June, September and Decem- ber eaoh year. D. T. HEPBURN, Manager. R, Vanstone, Solicitor. On Removing Warts. Why some people go through life with these unsightly spots on faoe and neck, is surprieing, when they can be so easily and safely removed. They are simply an overgrowth of flesh covered with a hardened skin of two varieties, hard and soft. For home treetment there is a safe remedy, a simple one, within reach of all. It is this: -.Several times a day moisten the spots with water, rub them with a piece of washing soda. This re- moves them and no scat remains -that is, to stay. Frequently a little white spot appears after the wart is gone, but that will soon wear away. A home treatment does very well to remove warts on the hands and face when they are small, but the larger ones should be removed by electricity, particularly those that appear near the ears, on the throat and ander the chin. These are glandular, and under no circumstances should they be treated save a specialist. OUR NATIONAL DANCER Time to Cry a Halt Before a Panic Comes. The business spirit is crushing oat the eweeeter elements of home life. We are in danger of a great commercial decline, because men, as a whole, think only of getting wealth. There are thousands, both men and women, who do not take time to eat properly. They rush through life, and as a result we have an age of indiges- tion, nervonsnese, irritability,` sleepless nights, and morose disposition. 'With the discovery of Mi•o na tablets, there is no longer any excuse for one to have ill health from stomach weakness. Mi•o•na strengthens the walls of the stomach, stimulates secretion of the di- gestive juices, regulates the liver and restores mnsoular contraction to the intestines and bowels, so no laxative is needed. Sick headaches. palpitation, bad taste in the mouth, yellodv skin, irritability, coated tongue and melancholy are a few of the many distressing results ot indi- gestion. Mi -o na never fails to dispel all these troubles. Walton MoKibb in sells Mona in 50 Dent boxes, and guarantees to refund the money if the remedy does not give oom• plete satistaotion. ONO .•••••••••1111.1••• Lord not only loves a cheerful giver; He loves a giver of good cheer. Do nothing in a hurry; Nature never does. "More haste, worse speed," says the old proverb. If you are in doubt, sleep over it. But, above all, never quarrel in a hurry. Think it over well Take time. However vexed you may be over night, things will often look differ- ent in the morning. If you have written a clever and conclusive, but scathing letter, keep it back till the next day and it will very often never go at all. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver rills. Must Soar Signature- of d7-enee-O-Ze See Pae-Slmite Wrapper Below. Very small and as easy to 'take as sugar: FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. EOR,CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR"THE COMPLEXION osizquirms su*,$AVt pAYU11t. 1Prir'etrlaigbtable:/9W- /•• CARTERS Lr rL1 PI LLS CURS SICK HEADACHI.. DRESSES FAR WEE GIRLS.. Empire Fashion* Still the Ruling Mode For Little Ones. Empire fashions still rule the choice of the nursery authorities, and a quaint fancy in the construction of many of the little coats la the devotion which is shown to military braidings and "frog - Rings," Little white eerge coats adorned with coarse white eilk braid interwoveu. with threads of gold will be seen on all sides, while pale pastel blue coats in the finest faced cloths are often trim- med with silver braid in the military designs. Box plaited effects may utmost be said to be ubiquitous where children's frocks are concerned, and this Is amply Justified in very many cases. Nowa- days one pretty child Is nttired in pale blue Irish frieze, the skirt, with its am- ple box plaits, being gathered into a band, while a novel effect is given by means of the straps of narrow braid, to mateh, which are applique to the material between the wide plaits a lit- tle above the ben). The plaited bodice, which Is crossed in front over a vest of white and blue spotted foulard, is ornamented with buttons covered with the same, the cuffs being turned back with a kilting of foulard to match. Another dear mite Is clad in a check- ed red and white ribbed fabric, the dart trimmed with a band of white flannel and the round yoke of lace bor- dered with a hand of the same, finished wlth pearl buttons. A dear little girl Is dressed in fine navy blue serge, with extra full box plaited skirt. The vest tucked lawn is outlined with a wide band of white serge adorned with white and blue braid, two long hretelles of the same being brought over the shoulders and depending to the hem of the skirt in front and behind. POINTERS ON GAS STOVES. How to Avoid Unpleasant Odors When Cooking. For the woman whose troubles arise from the odor of cooking the remedy lies lu having a small pipe between the range and the chimney to carry off the odorous gases. .A. large bowl of water placed near will also help to prevent odors of cooking penetrating the house. If there is a constant smell of burn- ing when cooking is going on, examine the burners. They are probably filled with sediment from "boil overs" of yesterday. The smell of gas when a rubber tube is used (uo leak being apparent) Is usually caused by the tube itself hav- ing become saturated with gas. New tubing is the only remedy. When having the gas range put In be sure to see that tI \e supply pipe is large enough to allow sufiicieut gas to enable all the burners to be used at the same time, This is very necessary. It is annoying to discover you can't boil two kettles when the oven is In use. See also that the oven is large and commodious end that there Is plen- ty of room off •tbe'top for boiling, fry- ing, etc. It is poop economy to use a gas range that is too small, says the Philadelphia Press: WOMEN WHO DO THINGS. Miss Mary A. Stubbs of Indianapolis was appointed head of the Indiana state bureau of statistics some time ago. - -• The only woman ever elected in of- fice in Texas by the qualified votes of n general election is Miss Zena Dal- rymple, who was elected county and district clerk. To have discovered more stars than any one else in the world is the repu- tation of Miss Dorothea Klumpke, an American girl astronomer, who won renown for herself at Paris. Miss Marianne Farningham is probe. bly the oldest woman journalist in England. She joined the stair of the Christian World at its birth in 1S57, wrote for the first number, has written for the latest and for practically every number in between. Making Use of Grandma's Gown. Seldom has a gown handed down from a grandmother been put to a stranger use than was the fate of a flowered frock owned by au, ingenious girl. From one section of it she made a large square for her luncheon; of tide odds and ends she constructed doilies. The silk was a soft moire, with deep pink roses and variegated leaves spread over it as generously as ie it were a June garden. With an edging of deep cream Lace to the centerpiece the effect was artistic. In this guise the silk will last many years, whereas had she cut it into a waist or skirt, as most girls would iso with such finery, It would not last a season. A Popular New England Cake. A, very popular cake among a dozen or more related New England families for more than fifty years past is dim - mock cake. To make it cream one cup of butter with two and one-half of sugar, add four Well beaten eggs, two cups of chopped seeded raisins, one cup of intik, five cups of pastry flour, a level teaspoonful of cream tartar, half as much soda, nutmeg and mace. This will make three loaves, which will keep good for a number of weeks. Making the Howie Look New. It is well after housecleaning If the housekeeper is unable to buy new fur- niture to chau„e the location of chaise, tables, rte., in a room. This is it pleas- ant change to the eye and often gives the effect of an entirely new furnish- ing. Perhaps it would be just as well, however, for the wise woman to put back in the exact same places the things commonly need by her husband, such as his tobacco. nines, etc. HAPPY DAYS. [Chioago Reoord-herald.} The vines where ropes Were are bare, The drowsy cattle keem to dream Of days that were serene and fair, Aod here and there on every stream A dead brown leaf goes floating by - Twill soon be time for pumpkin pie. The posters ou the billboards show That eummer's gone, that fall is here; The newest eters begiu to glow, The tan begins to disappear, A haze begins to dim the sky- 'Twill soon be time for pumpkin pie. The nights are slowly lengthening, The lamb that ou the slope was gay And skipped so blithely in the spring Hangs on the butober's hook today ; The summer's gone, but what ease I ? 'Twill soon be time for pumpkin pie.. IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE. I have a grouch agsinst my kind That I would like to satisfy, I want to squeeze and stamp and grind And hear my fellow creatures cry. I loathe the sound of merriment; I want to strike a smiling face. I'm just chock full of discontent And hate the blooming human race. My family is now in tears; I've growled and stormed the morn- ing thin, My faith•nl dog my coming fears; The oat has sought the garret, too. The sort of language that I've used. 'rho strong, seeznaquite inadequate, Mp oldest friend I have abused; I've whooped things at a lively rate. Ani yet I'm not a misanthrope, My nature's pleasant, mild and sweet; I'm joyous and I seldom mope. A kinder man you'll never meet. I know I'm different to day - Not as I am when at my best, But then I always feekthis way If what I've eaten won't digest. Chicago News. THE LiTTLE SCHQOLMA'AM. Speak of queen and empress Or of other ladies royal, Not one of them has half the power, Or subjects half so loyal As she, the little seboolma'am, Who trips along the way To take the chair she makes a throne At nine o'olook eaoh day. Her rule is ever gentle; Her tones are low and sweet; She is very trim and tidy From her head uuto her feet. And it matters very little If her eyes are brown or bine; They simply read your inmost heart Whene'er she looks at you. The children bring her presents, Red apples, flowers galore, For all the merry girls and boys This queen of theirs adore. The darling little eohoolma'am, Who reigns without a peer In a hundred thousand classrooms This gayly flying year. B G., in Farming World. Ten Commandments for the Home - Maker, 1. Make your household one har- monious whole, no matter how small the scale. 2. Use only what yon can comfort- ably afford in good quality and ample gnautity. 3, Let your home appear bright and sunny. It is not easy to be unpleasant in a cheerful rocm. 4. Treat your servants wisely and kindly and it will be impossible for them to either impose or oppose. 5. Have time for everything, and be never in a hurry. 6. A pertain formality is necessary to save everyday life from triviality, and freedom from looseness. 7. Do not forget that "society" is the death of home life, hospitality its flower. 8. Snow how to talk and how to listen, how to entertain and how to amuse. 9. Have many interests and no studies. 10. Do not forget -your home should not only he a well onndneted dorrhitory and boarding place, but truly a home, the centre and focus of all interest, pleasure and happiness, for everybody ornnected with it.- Boston Cooking School Map zine. The German proverb says that money lost is little lost, honor much lost, but heart lost is all lost. A BAD STOMACH! THAT IS THE SECRET OF DYSPEPSIA. This disease assumes so many forms that there. is scarcely a complaint it may not resemble in one way ot another. Among the most prominent symp- toms are constipation, sour stomach, variable appetite, distress after eating, etc. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS is a pesitivo cure for dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. It stimulates secre- tion of the saliva and gastric juices to facilitate digestion, purifies the blood and tones up the entire system. Mrs. M. A. McNeil, Brock Village, N.S., writes : "I suffered from dyspepsia, loss of appetite and bad blood. "I tried everything I could get, but to no pnr ose ; then finally started to use Burdock Blood Bitters. "From the first day I felt the good effects of the medicine. I can eat any- thing now without any ill after effects and alit strong and well p.gain.» 1 PERFECT KING aces This brand -on a bag or barrel -is the mark of a BLENDED FLOUR of Ontario Fall Wheat and Manitoba Spring Wheat, milled by the best millers in Ontario. Ask your grocer for a Blended Flour -and look for the above brand wherever you buy. 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