The Wingham Times, 1908-02-13, Page 2THE MOST IMPORTANT
FACTOR IN THE INVEST-
MENT OF SAVINGS IS
SECURITY
Bank of Hamilton
Capital
Reserve
$2,500,000
- 2,500,000
Deposits of $1.00 and upwards received.
WINGHANE BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, AGENT.
THE WINGHAM TIMES, FEBRUARY IR, 1908
THE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1887
13. 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 $5
Business xray be transacted by mail with any branch
of the Bank. Accounts may be opened and deposits
made or withdrawn by mail. Every attention is paid
to out-of-town accounts.
WINGHAM BRANCH - A. E. SMITH, MANAGER.
!►••••••••0•••••eeeeee••••• ••••••••••1•N•eteeee•••••
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
!AFTER...01.41ply}
1 C
1 BARGAINS }
i
1 ?
c
We have bargains in many lines of goods which purchas- y
ers will do well to look into. We are going out of }
'•c certain lines and will sacrifice the 'goods in
Order to dear them . out.
!C
R. KNOX
WINGHAM, j
Opposite Queen's Hotel.
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AN OPEN LETTER
From W. J. Gage, Esq., Toronto
A Problem of National Importance
Dear Friend :-
A bright young lawyer at the Muskoka Sanatorium for Consump-
tives some weeks ago, speaking of the burden placed upon him by having
consumption, said :
"One has to lead a life of concealment. If I go away from this place
people are afraid of me."
This is the sad lot of those who suffer from this dread disease.
On behalf of the thousands who are sick and will not be received by
other hospitals, I Make this appeal for the Muskoka Free Hospital for
Consumptives.
Nearly 10,000 people from every part of Canada aided in this good
work last year, sending us $26,000.
The Trustees have faith that a still larger number will help.
The Physician's offices, throat rooms, etc., up to the present have
occupied rooms in tho hospital that rightly belong to patients.
To make better provision for the work, and furnish more accommo-
dation, a new administration building is now under way. A cottage for
the Physician and his young wife had also to be built.
To provide for this outlay, and to care for patients for the coming
year, we must secure at least $50,000.
The Muskoka Free Hospital for Consumptives never refused a
patient because of his or her inability to pay. It cares for those whom
other hospitals refuse. It cares for those whom other people are
afraid of.
"I was sick and ye visited mo," was Christ's commendation.
Should not a richer benediction be yours if from a loving heart your
dollar makes a golden visit to this hospital, bringing health and joy to
those whom other people fear, and whom, in many cases, nobody wants.
Will you have the luxury of giving ?
Faithfully yours,
Toronto, 1007.
Ilio. 2
Must Sour signature of
See Pec -Simile Wrapper Below.
Von' smell and as ease,
to take as euagura
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS:
FOR BIL1OUSNEtt.
FOR TORPID W.I IER'.
,FO3•,CONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
,ingVll'eE MU.TIUV& "AYU"[.
Irarely'vegetah1c., r iesG
�� .•..moo ae.`L
vommtarmearp
CARTERS
LITTLE
OVER
CURE SICK HEADACHE..
DOMINION BANK
HEAD OFFICE : TORONTO.
"MOTHER "
[James Whitcomb Riley, in the October
0Entury
Capital paid up, $3,848,000
Reserve Fund and
Undivided profits $5,088,000
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, June, September and Decem-
ber each year.
D. T. HEPBURN, Manager.
R. Vanetone, Solicitor.
Willing To Please.
[London News.]
A parliamentary candidate was being
heckled. One of the questions had refer -
eine to the religious denomination to
which he belonged.
"Well," he said, you have asked me
an honest question, and you shall have a
straightforward answer. My grand-
mother was a Scotswoman -a rigid
Presbyterian."
Obvious disappointment was shown on
the faces of the audience, so the condi•
date proceeded:
"My grandfather was English, and,
therefore a member of the Church of
England."
Still no enthusiasm, but rather the
reverse.
"My father, on the other hand, was a
good Baptist," went on_ the desperate
candidate, who was still unrewarded by
applause. He grew anxious, so hurried-
ly added: "But my dear old mother,
long since dead, was a Methodist."
Instantly all faces were radiant, so he
concluded:
"And, gentlemen, I follow the precepts
of my dear old mother, I'm a Metho•
dist, and I don't care who knows it!"
WINDHAM POISON FACTORIES
You Will Be Surprised to Learn
How Many ThereAre.
I'w gettin' old -I know --
It seems so long ego-
So long since John was here!
He went so yonngl--our Jim
'S old now 'most as him, -
Close on to thirty year'.
I know I'm gettin' old-
I know it by the cold,
From time 'at first frost flies.
Seems like --since John was here -
Winters is more severe;
And winter I despise I
And yet, it seems, some days,
John's here, with his odd ways -
Comes soon -like from the corn-
Field, calling "Blether" at
Me -like he called me that
Even 'fore Tim was porn!
When Jim come -(Lal how good
Was all the neighborbood 1 -
And DootorI-when I heard
Him joke John, kind o' low,
And say : Yes, folks could go -
"Pa" needn't bo steered')
When Jim come -John says-'e-
A•bendin' over me
And baby in the bed -
Ana jes' us three-eaye 'e,
"Our little family!"
And that was all he said,
And cried jes' like a child! -
Kissed me again, and smiled,
'Cause I was cryin', too.
(And here I am again,
A-oryin' same as then -
Yet happy through and through.)
The old home's most in mind,
And joys long left behind!
Jim's little h'ietin' crawl
Aorost the floor to where
John set a-rockin' there!
(I'm gettin' old -that's all!)
I'm gettin' old -no doubt! -
(Healthy as all git•out I)
But, strangest thing I do -
I cry so easy now-
I cry jes' anyhow,
The fool -tears wants ms to!
But Jim he won't. be told
'At "Mother's" gettin' old!
Hugged mo, he did, and smiled
This morning, and bragged "shore"
He loved me even more
Than when he was a child!
That's his way ; but of John
Was here now, lookin' on,
He'd shorely know and see:
"But, 'Mother,'" e'pect he'd say,
"S'pose yon air gettin' gray,
You're younger yet than me!"
I'm gettin' old -because
Our young days, like they was,
Keeps oomin' back -so clear,
'At little Jim, once more,
Comes h'istin' 'orost the floor
Fer John's old rockin'-cheer!
Oh, beautiful 1 --to be
A•gettin' old like me!
Hey, Jim Come in now, Jim!
Your supper's ready, dear l
(How more, every year,
He looks and ante like him I)
Did you ever feel stupid and dull after
eating a hearty dinner?
When food is retained too long Hi the
stomach, because of stomach weakness,
the poison factory works overtime and
there is giddiness, confusion of thought,
despondency, heart -burn, sleeplessness,
nervous trouble and other forms of indi-
gestion.
The general use of Mi-o-na stomach
tablete puts within the reach of everyone
a reliable and positive cure for all atom-
uoh weakness. Mi•o-na quickly onree
the worst case of indigestion, and the
pain and distress which is often felt
after meals will soon disappear, such is
the wonderful curative power of this
little tablet.
Mi-o-na acts upon entirely different
principles from any of the other remedies
that have been used in stomach trouble.
It is takenbefore meals, and has a spe-
cific strengthening notion upon the mus-
cles of the stomach, increasing the flow
of digestive juices and making the stom-
ach get to work and digest easily and
naturally the food Which is eaten,
Walton MoEibben has seen so many
cures made by Mi-o•na that he gives a
guarantee with every 50•cent box that
the remedy costs nothing unless it mires,
Mankind is or leen doglike and, has a
wholesome respeot for who is able
and perfectly willing to give it a good
drubbing,
r HLBURN'S
.re a combination of the active principles of
the west vIhial)le vegetable reined irs for
;..us •tnddisordcrsof the Liver, Stomach and
Bowels.
• Its,
Sick x3earinch°, Ja.undico, lWenrt-
bur.n,Ctturrhortl*..t oniacll,Drzzl-
aIz s„ ;3ioto:Ies and Pirrp1eo.
Didn't Aree with Me
Mr. Arthur Tennison, Sa London
Street, Toronto, .writes enthusiastically
of the Illerite of Psychine for all
stomach troubles,
"For seven years I have bad indiges-
tion and dyspepsia. I tried scores of
remedies. My room resembled a drug
store with nostrums i bleu I had bought.
Eventually I used Psychine, and every
lose brought permanent relief."
All throat, lung and stomach troubles
quickly cured by Psychine. 'It is the
proscription of a great specialist. At
all druggists, 50c and $1.00, or Dr. T.
A. Slocum, Limited, Toronto.
It le of,en diffloult to prevent the pie
of velvet from being crushed in stitch-
ing it and a good plan is to place a piece
of the same material face downward on
it. The fingere resting on this, will
not flatten the pile.
The heavy brooades intended princip-
ally for costume trimming have been
found so serviceable and attractive for
belts and girdles that the pieces are be-
ing matched in rich oatneo elides and
buckles for that purpose,
Always make tho neck of a blouse
slightly smaller than the base of the
collarbend and in taoking it into posi-
tion it is an exoelleot plan to cut a few
notches in the blouse so as to avoid
wrinkles when the collar is finally stitch-
ed on,
Dys ,eps a, Sour Storr]ueh, Wator
1- ..is:i, Liver. Complaint, Sallow or
'Haw.** Complexion,
Sweeten the breath and clear away all wasto
and neisonon4 mn.ttrr from thr system,
l' -ire 25e. a huttlr <,r 5 for $1.00. All dealers
J1 Tna 2''. Ain. o r..1 Co., Limited, Toronto,
Get.
FROM TILE PINE WOODS
Hyomei's Aromatic Air is Guar-
anteed to Cure Cattarrh or
Cost Nothing.
N• EMMA
When using the Hyomei treametnt,
the air you breathe is like that on the
mountains high above sea level where
the pine woods fill the air with aromatic
healing that gives bealth and strength
to those suffering from diseaees of the
respiratory organs. Breathed through
the neat pocket inhaler that comes with
every outfit, the healing balsams of ' Sr
Hyomei reach the most remote air cells
.44.104,++11....•••••••••••••• ,1qi ••••
COAL COAL COAL.
We are sole agents for the celebrated ?;3V.ii1;A,NTON COA
which has no equal. Also the best grades of Swithing, Cannel and
• Domestic .Coal, and Wood of ail kindsalways on Band.
1=-:f LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH
Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
yam"' ii l best ['rice paid for all kinds of 1140V.
JAMcL.eans4
♦���••••A •4t�••••�••tttwA•w•
00.00 ••••••••••••••••• It•e+M
(Dressed or Urddressedl
Rest Cance Phone No, E5. Office, No. 64. Mill, No 44.
t
C
Lehigh
I -
C
COALI!!..EL.TftY1
Come with the crowd and leave your order for
Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from dirt and
clinkers IT HAS NO EQUAL.
1
moVVVWAAAIAAINPdAA AAAAAAA VVVVVVVVVVVV4/VVVVVVVI/VNVVV
t ••eeeeeelieeee•••••eteeel a •!•s•Of•••i•••s*ease llis•fl1t
0 f
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CLUBBING
RATES
FOR 1907 - 08.
I)
in r••
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1 -
and
Daily Globe 4.50
and Daily Mail and Empire 4.60 .1.
and Daily World 3.10
and Toronto Daily News.. 2.30 +
and Toronto Daily Star 2.30 r.
and Daily Advertiser 2.35 '*i•
and Toronto Saturday Night 2.60 4.
and Weekly Globe . 1.35 +
and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.35 +
and Family Herald and Weekly Star 1.75 +
and Family Herald and Weekly Star, and +
2,10
Times and Weekly Witness 1.85
Times and London Free Press (weekly) 1.80
Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1,60
Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1.80
Times and World Wide..... 2.20
Times and Northern Messenger, 1.35
Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35
We specially recommend our readers to subscribe
to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine
Times and Farming World 1.35
Times and Presbyterian 2.25
Times and Westminster 2.25
Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3.25
Times and Christian Guardian (Toronto) ... 2.40
Times and Youths' Companion 3,25
Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly) 2.90
Times and Sabbath Reading, New York 1.95
Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto)1 85
Times and Michigan Farmer 2.15
Times and Woman's Home Companion 2 25
Times and Country Gentleman 2.60
Times and Delineator 2.95
Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95
Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1.55
Times and Good Housekeeping 2,30
Times and McCall's Magazine 1.70
Times and American Illustrated Magazine 2,30
Times and American Boy Magazine 1 90
Times and What to Eat 1,90
Times and Business Man's Magazine 2.15
Times and Cosmopolitan 2.15
Times and Ladies' Home Journal 2.75
Times and Saturday Evening Post...,. 2.75
Times and Success 2.25
Times and Hoard's Dairyman . , 2.40
Times and McClure's Magazine 2.40
Times and Munsey's Magazine 2,50
Times and Vick'sMagazine 1.60
Times and Home Herald 2.60
Times and Travel Magazine 2 25
Times and Practical Farmer 2 10
Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.40
Times and Designer ... 1 75
Times and Everybody's 2 80
Times and Western home Monthly, Winnipeg1.25
Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60
of the throat, nose and lungs, destroying
all catarrhal germs and giving quiok
relief and cnre.
Hyomei has performed almost mirac-
ulous cures of catarrh, often restoring
health in chrouio cases that had given
up all hope of recovery. Its best aotion
is at the start of the disease, when the
breath is beooming offensive and when
discharges from the nose, droppings in
the throat and frequent sneezing or
spasmodic coughing begin to make life
a burden At the first symptom of
catarrhal trouble, nee Hyomei and see
how quickly you get relief and cure.
The complete ontfit ooete but $1 OD
and is sold by Walton McKibbon, under
guarantee to refund the money if it does
not give satisfaction,
/Men and Women of Ontario j
This
APPEAL
is for
YIN?
The Great Provincial. Charity, The
Hospital for Sick Children,
Calls On You For Aid.
Remember that this Hospital is not a
local institution, but Provincial.
It cares for every
sick child in the
Province of Ont-
ario whose parents
cannot afford to
pay for treatment.
Busy dollars are
better than idle
tears. Tho sym-
pathy that Weeps
is good, but the
Hospital has to have
the sympathy that
"I LIIYt: rIcTtrn&s" Works.
You Can Have Pretty Nails.
It's easy to have pretty nails if you'll
only half try yourself. And in an
imaginary conversation with one who
knew, a girl writer in the Delineator
tells the secret. "First they must be
washed and scrubbed -and I think one
must learn how to wash the hands as
well as learn how to do anything else.
I never saw hands really washed before,
with the brush all over them, until they
glowed. After that, 'with scissors and a
file she trimmed the nails into shaper
She likes them rounded, not pointed, and
just long enough in the middle to balance
the half-moon below. She warned me
against nutting the cuticle, as that makes
the flesh grow thioker. Her plan is to
take an orange stick and to pnah the
flesh back from the nail, getting ander
the edges so as to loosen the skin. But
this must bo done gently. When one is
rough about it, the young nail is injured
and this brings those white spots on the
nail which are so ugly. As mine were
being done for the first time she had to
out some of the hangnails, but she said I
would never have any more if I used the
orange stick every day, and always rub•
bed the flesh baok from my nails when.
ever I used a towel. Orange sticks are
better, than steel because they do not
bruise. You can gel a whole bunch for
ten cents, She told, me, too, that she
always kept a piece of lemon on htr
washstand, to take off stains. The
lemon alio whitens the hands when itis
rubbed oyer them.
Last year there were 1093 patients ad-
mitted. Of these 378 came from 254 places
outside of Toronto -all were children of
poor people who could not afford to pay for
treatment of their little ones.
Each child was in the B.ospital 4717 days
at a cost of
$1.31 each
per day, or
$62.22 for
the 47i days
stay.
If your
dollar could
straighten
the feet o f
a little boy MASSAOE
or girl with club feet, you would gladly
give it, and your dollar will do that.
Thera were 79 eases of club feet treated
BEFORE. AFTER.
last year. Out of the 79, about 50 were
from the country.
If you know of any child in your county
who is sick or has club feet, and whose
parents can not afford to
pay, send the name to the
Hospital Secretary.
Tho stock books aro
open. Won't you let
the Hospital write your
name down for a few
akaars in Heaven's own
aar,r k of healing little
children t
A great mine of Mercy
-the mining stock that
always pays dividends -
is boughtwith the money
that helps Tho Hospital
for Sick Children to ex-
tract tho Gold of Life
from the Quartz of
Death.
please send contributions to J. Bos+
Robertson, Chairman, or to Douglas Derid-
�a, Seo.-Trsas., bf the Hospital for Siok
. College Street, Tomato.
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Z'ra MOMS.
The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below
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address in Canada. It the TIDIES is to be sent to an American address, add '1`
• 50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be eent to
• American addresses a redaction will be made in price,
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TIMES OFFICE,
WINGHAM, ONTARIO.