The Wingham Times, 1908-07-23, Page 1Every Treasurer of Church, Lodge
or Association Funds should at once
open a SAVINGS ACCOUNT for these
Trust Funds.
We specially invite this class of
Accounts and pay highest current
interest.
-'4.16144 e3',,44411,0 300404010344,
d
WINGS LAM BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, AGENT.
DOMINION BANK
HEAD OFFICE : TORONTO.
Capital paid up, $3,848,000
Reserve Fund and
Undivided profits $5,068,000
Total Assets, oyer 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. Vanstone, Solicitor.
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
such as teachers wanted, business chances,
mechanics wanted, articles for sale, or in fact
any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or
other city papers, may be left at the TImes
office. This work will receive promt attention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates will be quoted on application. Leave
or send:your next work of this kind to the
TIRES OFFICE, Winghani
THE SCANDAL MONGER.
Be shut of the scandal monger
And listen to what I any,
For he who will parry you soaudal
Will carry scandal away:
Of all the stories be brings yon,
Half of them are untrue.
If you harbor him under your roof,
some day
He'll tell such stories on you.
AT THE CALL OF THE ROAD.
[New York Snn. j
Let's go out on the road today,
Out on the winding wide highway,
Oat where the shimmering vistas ,shine
Wide and wonderful, yours and mine!
Time there was when we were not free;
Custom thralled ns, you and me;
Old Convention bade us bide
In stuffy stalls of a house inside.
Bat by the eager epirita etroke
All the chains at last we broke;
Slipped the leash and burst the bond
At the oall of the road so luring fond.
Now there is none to eey ne nay !
Let's go out on the road today;
Staff in band let us take the road,
And travel far to the god's abode.
Staff in hand and soul aglow,
Over the halcyon hills we'll go;
Over the hills and up the height
Where the road dips down in a bath of
light.
FARMERS
He is ever a traitor and cur,
And 'twill ever be his delight
To tell the neighbors 'bout "him an'
her,"
Which will serve you perfectly right
You are worse than he if you listen
To slanders about your friende;
You're foolish, too, for he'll tattle on
you
Before his campaign ends.
In a neighborhood dark I'm a candle,
I'm flinging a warning ray;
That he who will carry you eeandal
Will carry some scandal away.
-The Khan.`
and anyone having ltv. stook or other
articles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale in the TIMES. Our large
oiroulatlon tells and it will be strange indeed e
yon do not get aonatomer. We can't guarante ;
that you will sell because you may ask more
for the article or stook than it is worth. Send
your advertisement to the Tnass and try this
plan of disposing of your stook and other
articles.
IT PAYS
•
MARSHAL YOUR FORCES,
ABSOLUTE
$ECURITYU
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
No mind, no intellect is powerful or
great enough to attract wealth while
the mental attitude is turned away
from it -facing in the other direction.
One of the greatest problems of
modern science is to discover means
by which the great energies or forces
which are going to waste all about tie
may be uitlized, It 18 a well-known fact
that the finest locomotive yet made has
succeeded in utilizing only about fifteen
per cent. of the energy of ite the'
Eighty-five per cent. of the sun's force
stored up in the coal is lost. Great
forces of nature are everywhere going
to waste because man does not know
how to control them, to marshal them,
to harness them to his uses.
On every hand .we see great human
ability doing the work of mediocrity
of running to waste, splendid possi-
bilities in rags and hovels; men of
quality and talent living shiftlessly in
narrowness and squallor; thousands of
men and women, who have reached
their gray hair period, having still
seventy•five, eighty, or ninety per
pent. of their ability undeveloped, nn -
touched. They are small, mean and
pinched, when,. had they discovered
themselves, they might have been
large, ' broad, full, and complete. -
Orison Sweet Marden, in "Success
Magazine."
TO ADVERTISE
IN THE
TZMES .
CANADIAN NATIONAL
Aud. 29 EXHIBITION Sept. 14
ITOK0NT0
ton in all the World
Greatest and Best Attended Annual ExI3j
Every Province
Sends
Its Products
sioo,dao.00
in Prizes and Attractions
Mammoth
Massed Band
Concerts
Grand Art Loan. Collection
From the Paris Salon and other Old -World Galleries.
International Military Tattoo and Realistic Spectacle
The "Saede .of Sebastopol
With 900 Performers.
Superior Vaudeville Performance
9,000 Live Stock on View
For Prize Lists, Entry Blanks and all information address J. 0. ORR, %nailer, City Hall, Toronto
CHEAP FARES FROM EVERYWHERE
amaimia
'Bust Boar Signature of
See Pac.Slmlio Wrapper Below.
-
Yen small and as e:.y
to take as angora
CAMTE+ FOR AEADhrAI'.
MO FOR DIZZINESS.
I'ITIE FOR BILIOUSNESS.
��ER FOR
jrO� CONSTIPATION
Pl ll% FOR SALLOW SKIN:
FOR TNECOMPLEXION
pEr(
V1O E MU5?WO YATUI, C.
t G I P ,..0)0 TegTeta
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
York Loan, 40 Per Cent.
Vork Loan shareholder wilt share in
a dividend of 40 per cent.
This was the offioial announcement
made by O. D. Scott, the liquidator.
All the various claims have now been
settled, and as a result almost all the
shareholders are on an equal basis. If
the claims of the preferred ahareholders
had been allowed there would have been
little left for the ordinary holders but
the preferred shares have been out
down from $1,250,000, to $69,429, thus
effecting a big saving.
The spacial apt which obviates the
necessity of palling each one of the
122,000 shareholders saved $200,000.
Then the settlement of all the claims,
prevents .,ontivaed litigation and the
oairying of cases to the privy council
thus affectiog another big saving. The
ordinary claims, which amounted to
$2,883 435 26, have been redaoed to $2,-
293,435 26, in addition to whioi there is
only the (09,456.16 of preferred claims.
Pretty Hands Are An Added Charm.
The matter of keeping the hands
young and pretty is one that every
woman should consider seriouely, and
before the time that it is really neces-
sary for her to do so, says the August
DELINE,1TOR, The hands begin to age
at thirty, and there is no greater telltale
of a womau's age than hands not proper-
ly cared for. The woman whose hands
are shcrt and thiole, whose nails look as
if they had been chopped off with a
coupon clipper, has much to contend
with. She arouses antagonism the
momont any cue locks at her hands.
Without well•groomed hands, a woman
is unolassed; she can not possibly im-
press one as being refined. And, after
all, well-groomed hands are merely a
question of care. Women nowadays
are beginning to realize that pretty
hands are second only in charm to a
pretty face; a pretty hand is not fat and
pudgy, as so many people think, nor is
it necessarily dimpled. Whether the
akin be white or tanned to a deep brown
by the rays of the sun, it must be
smooth and firm and well cared for,
Even a bony hand, under these condi-
tions, is attraotive to look at, and ten
minutes devoted each day to the care of
the hands and nails will reap a rich
reward.
��,e���+�v��s��� ®iii®�sss.o �������sr�+..,s�et�L.���s+••4i
COAL COAL COAL.
• We are sole agents for- the celebrated SCRANTON COAL,
[4' which has no equal. Also the best grades of Smithing, Vannlel and
xj Domestic (foal, and Wood of all kinds, always on hand.
We carry a
R; full stook of
I
F♦t
LeUtBrER, SHINGLES, LATH
Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
Highest Price 'paid for all kinds of togs. "ea
S
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Residenoe Phone No. 55. Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44. •
ill**.. r33%S4:i***104.s44 it ivs•44.4ortcw :�3wklok-
S
1
J. A. McLean!
Preserving Eggs.
When eggs are cheap, they should
be put down for household use. Like
everything else, it is good to buy
when the market is down, and sell
when it is up. Just now a hint along
this line will be timely. Experiments
have been conducted with all kinds
of processes, ands from all these ex-
perts turn to the simplest and best
method, known as "liming." Piok
out absolatoly fresh eggs, and having
obtained a clean, watertight barrel,
p ut in carefully the quantity or a
portion of the eggs intended to be
preserved. They may be put in any
way provided they are not cracked.
Take a separate receptacle, and make
a saturated solution of lime as follows:
Slake a pound of good quicklime in
enough water to make a sort of milk,
and when thoroughly slaked stir this
into five gallons of water. Keep this
stirred for a few hours and then allow
it to settle. Draw off the clear lime•
water, the latter made in the proportion
indicated, until there are enough eggs
in the pickle. The barrel should be
kept covered with a fairly tight lid to
keep away the air, and put in a cool
plaoe, The eggs will keep almost for
an unlimited time, but they must be
kept covered with the liras water. A
little sweet oil poured on top will act as
a protection against the air, or a piece
of sacking covered with a pack of The
lime makes a good cover.
TO A SUMMER GIRL,
(Puck.]
Maiden of the matchless
Form and face divine,
Yon have turned this thatohlese
Cranium of mine;
And with love I'm frantic,
Though 'tie tree that I've
Reached the unromautio
Age of forty.flve.
There's a rather clumsy
YDnth of twenty-two,
y And when summer comes he
Dances atter you.
With him you play tennis,
Ga1ph and row and drive;
And my came is Dennis -
i For I'm forty five.
Feigning to instruct you
How to dive and swim,
Often has he ducked you
(How I envy him!)
Would I were your teacher
When you learn to dive I
But, unhappy creature,
I am forty five.
So my love I'll smother
(Bitter though it be,)
And I'll woo your mother,
Who is fond of me.
She's a rich and merry
Widow, and I'll strive
To win her, though she's very
Fat -and forty five.
SENTENCE SERMONS.
[ A. F. Cope, in Chicago Tribune j
Self-mastery is half of all morality.
Lifo without diffionities is but death.
It takes a tender heart to do the really
hard things.
Tha desired haven is not reaohed by
catling before the wind.
Many ire willang to be soundly pious
so long as piety is all sound.
No man has said amen to hia prayers
until he gets busy answering them.
He who never said a harsh word of
anyone failed in his duty to everyone.
The problems of any day are the indi-
cations of the keenness of its conscience,
Bed times often come as a result of
too much living for good times only.
Cynicism is the atrophy that Domes
from refusing to realize our own ideals
The needy can better afford to miss
your gift than you can afford to miss
the giving.
It is hard to see in what way an im•
prated righteousness is better than a bor-
rowed reputation.
If the man who boasts of always say-
ing what he thinks were honest he
would say mighty little.
There's a lot of difference between
serving one of these little ones and kow-
towing to one of our great ones.
He who only prays "Give ns our daily
1 read -with same butter too," does not
pray at all, and he dies of hunger.
No man is of much use in this world
until he has found something more at-
tractive than hie peremal happiness.
It is a good deal easier to shut out the
sights of the world's needy than it is to
evade your answerability for them.
Some think they must be in the beat-
en way to heaven because they seem to
be so successful in beating their way
here.
It makes a lot of difference whether
you think of religion as a system of
medicine or as the simple life of full
moral health.
It has always been evident that it was
easier to talk about saving souls than it
was to serve for the salvation of society.
The Feeding Value of Bran.
Properly need, the feeding value of
bran is a very different thing to the
valve of bran as food. As a poultry
food, by analysis, bran has a plane very
near the bottom of the list, and many
poultry -keepers, noting this, avoid its
use; hut, even considered as a food, it
bounds in body-building .elements and
bone and feather -forming materiele,
and, at its price, compares favorably
with other food•stuffa as valve for
mone?.al Good, 'sound, broad bran has,
however, a very great feeding valve,
apart from the actual food it contains
for what may be called its mechanical
action. Besides giving necessary bulk,
it divides the finer and more expensive
meals, and so exposes them more folly
to the digestive process,
A mass composed of one part (by
weight) of bran to four parts ground
oats or barley meal is more thoroughly
digested, and in every way more
economical, than one of all meal. The
best way to make use of bran is to soak
or scald a auf]]oient quantity some hours
before, and to dry it off with meal when
required. By this method the bran is
softened, and to some extent, predigest-
ed. It not snffleiently soaked, the
roughness is apt to irritate the bowels
and pause aoouring.
Government experts are investigat-
ing seaweed with the object of deter•
mining its economic value.
The Transvaal Government has de-
cided to reconsider its attitude toward
Asiatics with a view to finding a less
objectionable registration system.
The Swiss Government has received
a petition with nearly 70 000 names,
protesting aeninst the building of a
railway up the Matterhorn.
Never use a third person as a phono-
graph to tell a man what you think of
hifn,
Women's Ailments
There is no need whatever for so many
women to suffor from pains and weakness,
nervousness and sleeplessness, anomia,
hysteria and melancholia, faint and dizzy
spells, and the hundred other troubles
which render the life of ebo many women
a round of sickness and suffering.
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
Have Restored Thousands of Canadian
Women to Health and Strength
Young girls budding into womanhood
who suffer with pains and headaches, and
whose face is pale and blood water, or
women at the change of life who aro nor-
vous, subject to hot flushes, feeling of pins
and needles, etc., are tided over these try-
ing times by Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills.
They have a wonderful effect on a
woman's system, milking pains and aches
vanish, bring color to the pale check and
sparkle to the oye. Tho old, worn out,
tired out, languid feelings give place to
strength and vitality, and life seems worth
living.
Prico 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for
$1.` 5, at all druggists, or mailed direct on
receipt of price by
Tut T. Msr,cunv Co., Lan,, Toronto, Ont.
One Cent
Brings It
WOULD -YOU - I,IKE-TO-READ TH E -STORY
OF- THE
FURNACE ?
Just write
on a post-
card, "Send
Booklet A,"
and mall
t o nearest
branch. The
rest we'll
gladly at-
tend to.
LONDON
TORONTO
MONTREAL
WINNIPEG
ALEX. YOUNG
-Just how correct principles say it
should be constructed?
--Just why no other plan of cool-
struction will do?
--Just wherein lies its ability to be easy
on fuel, quick in action, simple in
operation?
The story is briefly told in a little booklet
called " Furnace Facts." lt's not an adver-
tisement. No furnace name is mentioned,
and you can read the whole story in 5 minutes,
To the parry contemplating purchasing a furnace h points out the
snags and pitfalls, and show exactly what to demand of an archi-
tect, contractor or dealer, in furnace construction and installation.
VANCOUVER
8T, JOHN, N.B.
HAMILTON
2 CALGARY
WING11si~li.
McCIarYs
LOCAL AGENT
25 CENTS- WILL PAY FOR THE
TIMES FROM NOW UNTIL
JANUARY lst, 1909.
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OIL FOR DOMESTIC WHEELS.' +
Ammonia painted over woodwork
will darken it,
To cover the pan in which fish is cook-
ing will make the fish soft.
Blank lead mixed with vinegar will
be found to give a specially good polish
to the kitchen stove.
A piece of flannel dampened with
spirits of camphor will remove stains
`rom mirrors or window glass.
Rub over new tinware with lard and
thoroughly heat it in the oven before
tieing it, for thus it is protected from
dust.
Whole cloves scattered plentifully
among clothes in drawers and boxes
will keep away moths as effectually as
camphor,
When cleaning knives add a little
carbonate of soda to the bathbriok on
the toard, for then they will polish much
quicker.
A neglected grate, or one which has
been red hot, should be rubbed over
with a cut raw potato before it is black
leaded. Tho result will be a brilliant
polish.
When washing lace never rinse it in
blue water, with the idea of improving
its color. Real lace should be finally
rinsed in skim milk, which will give it a
soft, creamy color.
Ink stains on silver or plated articles
may be removed with a paste made of
chloride of limo and water. This should
be left on for a little while and then
washed off in warm water.
Match marks on the kitchen walls,
which have been paused by carelessly
striking matohes on them, will disappear
if rubbed first with the cut surface of a
lemon, then with a clean cloth dipped
in whitening. , Afterward wash the sur-
face with warm water and seap, and
then quickly wipe with a clean cloth
wrung out of clean water.
A.-11,4•••'11.111000 !••••••00111941
CLUBBING
RATES
FOR 1907 - 08.
suiwani
The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below
for any of the following publications :
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X11 4.0111311111011* 1011401111000 0***11. lB,/11*e* ****B9191**ii•
Times and Daily Globe 4.50
Times and Daily Mail and Empire , . 4.50
Times and Daily World 3.1Q
Times and Toronto Daily News.. 2.30
Times and Toronto Daily Star 2 30
Times and Daily Advertiser2.35
Times and Toronto Saturday Night . 2.60
Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60
Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.35
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star 1.75
Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star, and
premiums 2.10
Times and Weekly Witness 1.85
Times and London Free Press (weekly)1.50
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 1.75
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 Florae Companion .... 2 25
Times and Country Gentleman 2.60
Times and Delineator 2.95 •i
Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95sv
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's Magazine 1.00
Times and Home Herald 2.00
Times and Travel Magazine 2.25
Times and Practical Farmer 2.10
Times and Home Journal, Torcntc 1.40
Times and Designer 1 75
Times and Everybody's 2.80
Times and Western Herne Monthly, Winnipeg...... 1.25
Times and Canadian Pictorial 1.60
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The above prices include postage on American pnblicetiers to any 4'
address in Canada. If the Tinos is to bo cent to an American address, ndd
50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be sent to 0
American addresses a reduction will be made in price,
We could extend this list. If the paper or magazine you want is not in •
the list, call at this office, or drop a card and we will give you prices on the
paper you want. Wo club with all the leading newspapers and magazines.
When premiums are given with any of above papers, subscribers will •
secure such premiums when ordering through ns, same as ordcrir g direct
from publishers.
These low rates mean a considerable saving to subscribers, and are
STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal note, post
office or express money order, addressing
TIMES OFFICE,
ICE,
AM ONTARIO.
VGIN�H ,