The Wingham Times, 1908-01-30, Page 2mflton
A aving 1 x 'aunt Ifs yowl
best friends
SECURITY• ---Total Assets, $.33,000,000.
CONVENIENCE -No frormali 111 open-
Ing accounts, or in d ositing or
withdrawing mon y
PRIVACY --Information as to savings
accounts is confined to trusted
clerics, pledged to secrecy.
WINGHAM BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, AGENT.
MIAIINNV�,,
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
BEAD OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1867
B. E. WALKER, President
Aa-Rle LAIRD, General Manager
A. 11. IRELAND, Superintendent of
Branches
Paid-up Capital, 810,000,000
Rest, - 5,000,000
Total Assets, - 113,000,000
Branches throughout Canada, and in the United States and England
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED
commeeC1AL AND FARMERS' PAPER DISCOUNTEDI
84
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT
Deposits of $1..and upwards received, and interest allowed at
current rates. The depositor is subject to no delay whatever in
the withdrawal of the whole or any portion of the deposit.
WINGHAM BRANCH - A. E. SMITH, MANAGER.
-r+
LOCAL SALESMAN
WANTED
for Wingham and adjoining country to
represent
"Canada's Greatest Nurseries',
A permanent situation for the right
span, for whom the territory will be re-
served. Pay weekly. Free Equipment.
Write for particulars.
STONE et WELLINGTON
Foothill Nurseries
(over 800 acres)
TOROZ%TO, -. CANADA.
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
tnochanleeowanted,articlesfor sale or in feet
aothertcitya• papers,vmaybe leeft the
heoTntsora
Wilco. This work will reoeive promptattention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
Tor and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates will be quoted on application. Leave
or send your next work of this kind to the
TIMES OlErk'ICE, Winghans
.-..100.M ,
DOMINION BANK
HEAD OFFICE : TORONTO,
Capital paid up, $8,848,000
Reserve Fund and
Undivided profits $5,058,000
Total Assets, over 48,000,000
WINCHAM BRANCH.
Farmers' Notes discounted.
Drafts sold on all points in Canada,
the United States and Europe.
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT -Interest
allowed on deposits of $1 and upwards,
and added to principal quarterly -end
of March, Jane, September and Decem-
ber each year.
D. T. HEPBURN, Manager.
R. Vanatono, Solicitor. ,
After stitching down a seam press
with a hot iron, and if no seamboard is
at hand it is useful to know that a
rolling pin, wrapped in a clean cloth,
will answer the purpose equally well.
.44.40.40••••••••••••••••••• 41...••.......i...1...♦.f..i
1AFTERwa-110LIDAY
BARGAINS
We have bargains in many lines of goods which purchas-
ers will do well to look into. We are going out of
certain lines and will sacrifice the goods in
order to clear them out.
R. KNOX
Opposite Qu6eln'b Hotel. - P111011Allf.
CARTERS
VER
PILLS,
TUE " 4PINfzitAll TIMES, FEBRUARY G, 1'3U8
CURE
Sick Beadicheand relieve alithe tronbfosfncl-
dent ton Mono state of the eysteur, each as
eating Pain ii'n the' Side, eze. While Distress
eir moat
remarikagtg eucceae luta'been shown in curing
sI-
Ueadche, yetCarter's, Little Liver Pills are
equally
Constipation,
ovnnt!anoggompFait whilthel
correct all disordcrsolthoslomach, atlmalatethe
liver
regulate t bowels. .k yen 11 thgyonly
Ache they would bealme yt�pricelesetothee°who
Buffer from this distreeaiieg complaint; but forte.
Lately their goodneeedoea nvtend hcre,and those
who once try them will andtheao little pills vain -
able In no many were that they wili not En wQ.
Beg todowithout them, nut atter ail al* head
ACH
Ie the bane of so many lives that hero is where
wo mice our great boast. Oar pilla emelt while
others do not.
• very easy toltake, Oneorttwopilsmmasmall doze
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe. or
purge, but by their gentle action, please all who
gigs thorn.
dBElistIOnlilCD., 21LWY43L
hal1 ImaOl Doses bull ln
s
TEPEE ETIQUETTE.
Never Pass Between an Indian and the
Fire --The Seat of Honor.
"If you should ever go into an Indian
tepee," said John II. Seger, "remember
they have rules of etiquette that are
more rigidly adhered to than in our
parlors.
"Do not think they are not sensitive.
for they are more so than the Japs.
If you make fun of his layout the
whole family will remember the insult
for a lifetime.
"The.seat of honor is just opposite
the door, across the fire pit. Wait
until you are invited before you take
that seat.
"If yon go bolting into an Indian's
tepee and rush over and take this va-
cant seat he may not take you by the
nape of the neck and throw you out,
but he would like to if he thought it
could be done without cutting off his
rations. •
"In leaving the tepee never pass be-
tween any one and the fire. An old
chivalric warrior will crawl around
the side of the tent and kick a hole
in the wall on the north side in a biiz-
• zard, before he would violate this rule
of etiquette and. itl,ss between his
guests and the, smoking embers."
WINGHAM POISON FACTORIES
•
You Will Be Surprised to Learn'
Bow many There Are.
Did you ever feel stupid and dull after
eatiug a hearty dinner?
When food is retained too long in the
atomaoh, oeoause of stomach weakness,
the poison factory works overtime and
there is giddiness, confusion of thought,
despondency, heart -burn, sleeplessness,
nervous trouble and other forma of indi-
gestion.
The general use of Mi-o-na stomach
tablets puts within the reach of everyone
a reliable and positive cure for all stom-
ach weakness. Mieena quickly cures
the worst case of indigestion, and the
pain and distress which is often felt
after meals will soon disappear, suoh is
the wonderful curative power of this
little tablet.
Mi-o-na acts upon entirely different
prinoiples from any of the other remedies
that have been need in stomach trouble.
It is taken before meals, and has a spe-
cific strengthening action upon the mute
cues of the stomach, increasing the flow
of digestive juices and making the atom=
ach get to work and digest easily and.
naturally the food which is eaten,
Walton McKibben bas seen so many
cures made by M1 -o -nn, that be gives a
guarantee with every 50 Dent box that
the remedy costs nothing unless it mires
A girl can make an awful lot of trou-
ble by not letting you kiss her when
she wants you to.
A person always has an idea that
when he is half asleep with a fishing
rod in bis hand he is a great man.
Bilious Spells
A HABIT
Year after year you suffer from attacks of
bilious headache, indigestion, constipation al.
teoiating with looseness of the bowels, dizzi-
ness, despondency and ill temper, until your
trouble becomesa habit, or develops sato
Bright's disease of the kidneys.
You can break this chain of bondage by
the use of
Dr. A. W. Chase's
Kidneytiver Pitts
They cure biliousness and constipation by
twee of their direct and specific action on the
liver, ensuring the filtering of the bile from the
blood, where it is poison, and passing it into
the intestines where it is necessary toted ages.
tion and regulate the bowels. This great
medicine h backed by the akin and integrity of
the famous Receipt Book author, A.W. Chase,
M. D. One pill a dose, 25 its. a hot, at Ali
dealers or Edmattson, Bates & Co., Toronto.
Mt. Jos. S. Hubbard, Sr., Raglan, Ont.,
Writes :
wife
a great enterer from lielt
headaache aancwas
biliousness, .but Dr, Chases
Kidney -Liver Pills have made of her a neW
cresatute. These old troubles (save entire)
THE APRLE CROP.
indicattione Point to Good Prices In
the East,
It 100.0 as if the .apple erop of New
England and New York state would
'be worth u good deal of money this
year, Apple will be searee in most
other parte of the country, and COD.
tractors are already trying to buy Im-
portant orebards, offering prices which
indieate an expected scarcity of fruit.
growers should be eautioraed against
shipping their fruit at prices which
seem fairly good now, but which slay
be much below the level established
later on.
The Country Over.
The prominent apple growers of
New York and New England are de-
veloping a very confident feeling with
regard to the corning season. It has
now become evident that rnost of the
apples in the country are located in a
small section of the Pacific coast, in
comparatively small districts of the
southwest, principally Arkausas, the
balpnce in New York and New Eng-
land. There ` will be some apples in
the lake region and a good many in
Canada, but the Canadian apple will
Probably not come to American mar -
acts. The Pacific coast anti southwest-
arn apples will certainly all be needed
.or western markets, and it is almost
.ertain that these markets will try to
draw on the east for what surplus :sp-
ares can be spared.
New York and New England.
The northeast, by which is meant
chiefly New York and New England,
certainly has a fair crop of apples and
one which is more uniformly distribut-
ed than that of last year. It would he
called a fair crop were it a bearing
sear, and for the nonbearing year it
may be considered a large crop, but
whether It be large or small it is hard
to see how prices can be anything but
good. -American Cultivator.
ROCKY FORD MELONS.
They Are Successfully Grown Over a
Large Area.
The far famed Rocky Ford eaata-
:oupes are being successfully grown
over a Iarge area. The specimens here
shown. were 'produced in the Blue
Ridge mountains in Washington coun-
ty, Afd, The most common and uni-
form grades shipped from this section
run about forty-five melons to the
nowty tour) CANTALOUPES.
crate, the crates measuring 12 by 12 by
:2d inches. The larger melons run
thirty to the crate. Another grade
runs forty-eight to fifty to the crate
and, as a rule, are not packed,uni-
fornily. Still another grade packs from
seventy to aowentyfive melons to the
crate. In the Rocky Ford district of
Colorado a good crop is estimated at
130 to 150 crates to the acre, says New
England Ilomestead. It is not uncom-
mon to find cantaloupes grown in Cali-
fornia wrapped in tissue paper and
sold in the New York market at cer-
tain times in. the year at fancy prices.
Farmers who produce high grade mel-
ons are reasonably sure of good prices
in leading markets. The production of
these melons is becoming more popu-
lar each season.
Keeping Quality of Fruit.
A cold, dry, pure air is ideal for the
preservation of fruits of most kinds.
Cold alr checks the ripening process
and retards the growth of diseases.
Dry air may prevent the development
of rots, and pure air preserves the deli-
cate quality of the fruit. The ripening
must be cheeeked soon after the fruit
is picked to prevent premature dete-
rioration, Ripening proceeds much
more rapidly when a fruit is severed
from the tree, so that it comes nearer
the point of deterioration in a few
hours or days than it would have been
if Left hanging on the tree in the same
temperature for a much longer period.
In cold storage the rots develop, and
most fruits ripen if the temperature
remains much above 32 degrees Fahr-
enheit for any length of time. The
molds grow if the room is moist; the
flavor deteriorates if the air is Im-
pure. If the temperature throughout
the room is not Uniform, the stored
products ripen unevenly. If the prod-
ucts are not piled so that the air can
circulate freely about the packages,
the ripening may proceed and the rots
develop before the fruit is cooled. --G.
If. Powell.
Ptantine Cherry Seeds.
r stocks Cberry s o l s are commonly grown
from seeds. If the ground is in reads.
neSs acid in proper condition, the seeds
may be planted in fall or even as soon
as they are ripe. If stored until
spring, they must be stratified and
kept very cool to prevent germination,
and tbey should be sown at the earn-
est possible moment. They de not
treed to be cracked by hand. Care
tenet be taken that ehertg pits do not
beeome hard and dry*. This preeau-
#ion le more important with cherries
dgappeared for which wr thank Dr. Chasm thou With. peabes and liluan8.-F3gliCy, ,
Spezt Eighteen Ilihrs
''GerLtl nen,--.-f hove pleaseue i
statleg that I have nse�l $rF'ltl worths
Payclhhne, and as a milt was en red
vete ecu ohs throat awl !ling trouble*.
PIy easy was t most diflu'ult olio, am
the doetors had practically n'tiri that
could not get well. I tried Psyeitine,
and it diel pre so niueil good that 1 eon
tinned its use until I had taken $18.0
worth, with the result that I am uo
a new mea physically. I have gained
thirty-five pounds.
" is with the greatest confidence
that I recommend Payable to all who
are afilieted With throat or lung trouble.
Yours truly, C. A. PINKIIA I.
Seotstown, (?ue., Sept., '07.
`.phis rnan speahs from experience.
P ychine cures all throat, chest, iucg
and stomach troubles and givea renewed
strength and vitality to run-down peo-
ple, At all druggists, 50e and $1.f10,,or
Dr, T, A, Slocum, i inated, Toronto.
COAL COALCOAL.
EWe are sole agents tali the celebrated SCRANTON4 A
I. i which }Mess *o equal. Also the best grades .of Snattatina 57 anal Head
I * Domestic Coal, and Wood of all kind always on band.
fi I fnli tooyaf
L[JMI3 ER LATH
w (Deemed or Inalreeeedl�SUINO-LES,
%stat° Posts, Barrels, 74tc.
COUNTRY HOUSES EXPENSIVE.
What It Costs the Aristocracy to
Maintain Their Seats.
It is said that there are at least
sixty country houses in the 'United
Kingdom which require a staff of
from two hundred and fifty to aye
hundred servants and involve ,,an
annual bill for wages ranging up to
$100,400, and in many of them the
gardens alone account for more than.
$25,000 a year, saysThe Bellman.
How large are the number of servants
employed in Connection with these
estates is shown by a relatively mod-
est establishment in Suffolk. The
total numller of servants employed is
one hundred and seventy-three.
This, it should be remembered, ie
but a seeond-class establishment, al-
though its wages bill reaches $40,000
a year. Of still smaller establish-
ments there are about six hundred in
the United Kingdom employing be- t osla.w4.Nlt�..rlaw..i�i tisli0tt.110118yriMli.111100 iglu► !t
twee fifty and a hundred servants . a;
with wages bills averaging at least 1 a
20,000. p
Highest Price paid for all kinds of LOCO.
411011lihr ilifeLean.
,,,,tree Pk cat Iwo ll.'s. Office, No, 64, Mill, No 44, ►
seeAll♦+1*A'k#*+►+►*********414** eleas eN #e►4 4N.41.AM +►4tstese e
s'aPIA 0/1d1AAANSAN lIAReA/1eif thAAft
t
1
h
towwwwwwwWWWWWeeteeratiVWWWWW
COAL
Valley
Come with the crowd and leave your order for
Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from dirt and
clinkers IT HAS NO EQUAL.
B"II'RNS.
MAMAAAWAAAAAAAAAAAANiiA VVVVVVVWVVVWVVVVWVVWWV
Expensive as country seats are to
maintain, they are little more costly
than town houses. For a tiny house
in Park Lane, such as would be pro-
curable in a London suburb for $300 a
year, a rental of $15,000 is asked,
while some of the larger houses com-
mand a rent running into five figures.
In Grosvenor Square the rents range
from five to thirty thousand dollars
a year, in St. James' Square you may
pay as much as an annual $50,000;
$300,000 has been paid for a house in
Carlton House Terrace, and Lord Bur-
ton gave $750,000 for a house in South
Audiey street.
And town and country houses are
but a part of the expenditure of the
wealthy class of Englishmen. A steam
yacht may easily run away with $25,
000 a year; a similar sum is by no
means uncommon for a grouse moor
and a deer forest; a London season,
with its costly entertainments may
easily account for $50,000, and so on
through the long Iist of items whish
figure in the annual balance sheet of
the rich and which are considered as
necessary to them as is tobacco to a
poor l attmany pee howghasa man would be
if he were suddenly brought iaee to face
with the necessity of cutting down his
expenditure to a pitiful $250,000 a
year.
FROM THE PINE WOODS.
Hyotnei's Aromatic Air is Guar-
anteed to Cure Cattarrh or
Cost Nothing.
When using the Hyomei treametnt,
the air. you breathe is like that on the
mountains high above sea level where
rhe pine woods fill the air with arosnatio
healing that ,fives health and strength
to those suffering from diseases of the
respiratory orpans Breathed through
the neat pooket inhaler that comes with
every outfit, the healing balsams of
Hyomei reach the most remote air Celts
of the throat, nese and lunge, destroying
all catarrhal germs and giving quick
relief and core.
Hyomei has performed almost mime
tithes aures of catarrh, often restoring
health in ohronj.c oases that had given
up all hope of recovery. Its best action
is at the start of the disease, when the
breath is becoming offensive and when
discharges from the nose, droppings in
the throat and frequent sneezing or
spasmodic coughing began to make life
a burden At the first symptom of
catarrhal trouble, use Hyomei and see
how quickly you get relief and cure.
The complete outfit costs but $1 00
and is sold by Walton McKibben, under
guarantee to refund the money if it does
not give satisfaction.
THE WINGHAM TIMES FOR $180
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TIMES OFFICE,
V.Af,J,
1 WINORAM, ONTARIO.
> A%ii rw .iml-