The Wingham Times, 1908-09-10, Page 1ii4
r
THE WINGIiAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER 10; i;uoti
Every 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.
WINGHAM BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, AGENT.
WE WANT TO HAND YOU OUR
INTERESTING
FREE BOOK
About Qualifying Yourself for a
Successful Career.
To learn the folly of entering !:business
!Ile' without a !'business seducation"-
read our Free Catalogue:
Why desirable to secure this "business educe! • ft
ttop' et Forest City Business College- v.
read Catalogue.
Why the big mercantile houses prefer
F. C. B. C. graduates -road Catalogue.
Thio FREE BOOR explains In detail
our Commerolel, Shorthand end Typewriting
Courses: Tells why L. C. B. C. methods of <oRi
Instruction ere superior! Shows value of
Business Educators As!
soctotion s Diplomat
Just send your name 1 rp
and address- Catalogue
will roach you
promptly. `•�"� e
Students 1't ✓ �4 ��
Admitted
Any Time
Special
Openings -
Sept. and
Jan.
The Forest City
Business & Shorthand College
London, Ontario,
rJ! WI Westervelt! J: W: Westervelt! Jr! C1A1
Principal Vioe.Prinoipalt
meorieramifilinch
ARELIABLE LOCAL
SALESMAN
wanted for Wingham and adjoining
country to represent
NEW
Te1ephoe Directory
"Canada's Oldest and Greatest THE
Nurseries"
While business in some linea may be
doll, farmers were never more encour-
aged as regards fruit growing than at
the present season. High prices for all
classes of fruit have been obtained the
past season, and there is as a °onaequ•
enoe, an increased demand for nur-
sery stook,
Onr stock is complete in every depart-
ment including a new list of specialties
whish we alone handle.
The right man will obtain a perman-
ent situation, with territory reserved
for him. Pay weekly. Free sample out-
fit, eto. Write for particulars.
STONE ' d(c WELLINGTON
Foothill Nurseries
(850 acres
TORONTO, CANADA,
BELL TELEPHONE CO,
OF CANADA
is about to publish a new issue of the
OFFICIAL TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
for the District of Western Ontario,
including Wingham.
Orders for new connections, changes
of firm names, changes of street ad-
dresses, or for dnl.licato entries should
be handed in AT ONCE TO
L. BINKLEY,
Local Manager.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
twEsTE
NFAI
GREATEST LIVE STOCK EXHIBI-
TION OF WESTERN ONTARIO
Full Programme of Attractions twice daily, including
Kemp's Wild West Show. Best of Music.
Fireworks Each Evening.
ATHLETIC DAY MONDAY, SEPT. 1.1E
Come and enjoy yourself at London's Popular Fair.
REDUCED RATES on ALL RAILROADS
Prize, :Lists, Entry Forms, Programmes, and all
74nformation given on application to
W, J'. REID, President. A. M. HUNT, Secretary.
London, Sep. 11-19
6666Milit66660/WeithigYAMAN ZWWI!N1AMMA11WKhAM1.1MA11Sa
4
DOMINION BANK
HEAD OFFICE : TORONTO..
Capital paid up, $3,976,000
Reserve Fund and
Undivided profits $5,291,000
Total Assets, over 48,000,000
MUM BRANCH.
Farmers' Notes dieoonnted.
Drafts sold on all pointe in Canada,
:he United States and Europe.
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT -Interest
allowed on deposits of $1 and upwards,
and added to principal quarterly -end
of Marsh, June, September and Deoem•
Ger each year.
D. T. HEPBURN, Manager
Vaustone, Solicitor.
MY MAMMA'S LAP.
(American Motherhood.)
I like t' play wif dollies an' like t' go t'
school;
I like t' jump my skippin' rope in morn -
begs when it's cool;
I like t' playvisitun when dolly takes
her nap,
Bat sometimes puffin' else'll do but sit
on mamma's lap.
I like t' climb th' peach tree, an' I like
t' make mud pies;
I like t' play wif puppy, and I like a
birfday s'prise;
I like t' go out ridin', an' ist wear my
little sap,
But when I'm tired an' sleepy, w'y I
want my mamma's lap
I like t' 'tend my playhouse -it's the
fines' plane in town;
I like t' play big lady, wif long skirts
a•hangin' down;
I like t' go t' Sunday school an' woar my
new silk wrap -
But when a lump gets in my throat I ist
want mamma's lap.
UNINTERESTING PEOPLE.
[Maurice Brown lirby.]
They live in a quiet sort of way,
In a quiet sort of a street;
They don't meet a great many people,
nor,
Impress the people they meet.
The newspapers never mention their
names,
The world doesn't care what they do;
They never go in for anything mush,
And their intimate friends are few,
He never has had a favorite club,
Though somebody said he might,
For a little fat nose on the window pane
Awaits him every night;
And eight little fingers and two little
thumbs
Undo the work of the comb.
He site in the quietest sort of a way
In his quietest sort of a home.
She doesn't belong to a woman's club,
She hasn't a single fad;
She spends ger time with a bine• eyedlass
And a mischievous little lad.
She never unraveled a problem in life;
She doesn't know lots of things;
She plays with the "kids" and works
all day,
And most of the time she sings.
He isn't like most ether husbands at all,
She ien't like mast other wives;
And they never attempt to make a
change
In the course of their quiet lives.
But once in a while they areas the "kids"'
. And go to spend the day
In a nice little quiet country spot,
In a nice little quiet way.
ARTHUR ENTERPRISE SOLD.
The Arthur Enterprise changed hands
with the last issue, Mr. H. E. Bywater.
who has ably conducted the paper
during the past six years, having
disposed of the business to Mr. Rixon
Rafter, B. A., of Arthur Township.
Mr. Bywater conducted his paper from
an independent standpoint, but when
occasion arose was not afraid to express
his oonviotions with no unoertain
sound.
The new proprietor's venture into
the jonrnalistio field will be watched
with interest by his confreres in this
district, and is charaoteriatic of his
industry and ambition. When a mere
child he had the terrible misfortune
to lose the sight of both eyes, 1 ut by
hard work and perseverance educated
himself and succeeded in taking the
degree of B. A, at Queen's University.
He has had special training in news-
paper work, and has an ingenione
system of shorthand by which he over-
comes his blindness in reporting speech-
es, eta. The typewriter enables him to
supply printers' copy that will be much
more legible than the written copy of
his more fortunate brethren• itt the
work, and we trust he will be heartily
supported and encouraged by the liberal
patronage of the residents in his
territory.
Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy
1S UNEQUALED FOR
Coughs, Colds and Croup.
CARTEKS
ITTLE
Iv A ABs
Sick Ileadeche pea relieve all the troubles int!.
dent toa Mous state or the system, ouch as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress atter
eating, Iain lc t .e S! to dc. '?bile ths!rrio;,t
reutarkabie success bus been shown In curing
Beadache, yet Carter's 3.fttle Liver P1115 aro
equally valuable In l.onstip.:tion, curing t.r,d pre-
venting this annoy ,::.'complsiat.t 1:istheyalso
correct till dtamde: v.jlhontomach, athnn atetho
liver mad regull:te tie bowels. Ls cuff tucyouly
cared
Achothey would he al must price], se those who
suffer from this dletree:a•.'g comp,„int; but fortu-
nately their goodness 'lots nntcntl Itero,and these
who once try them will i r:d these little pills valu-
able in so many wars tht.t they v i11 not bo wil-
ling to do withoutthem. Eutafter all sick head
Is tho bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our groat boast. Om•pills cure it wails
othiss do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are ver; small and
very easy to t ke. One or two pII is make a doze.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by t:ieir gentle action please nal who
Qr use them.
caaTua 11EDI01ii:1 00..11)3W 700K.
Small o51,, Sraa1121109,
TO SETTLE LABOR DISPUTES.
Scotch Railway Men to Try the Arbi-
tration Plan.
The following information concern-
ing a scheme of conciliation and arbi-
tration between the representatives
of labor and the Scotch railway com-
panies for the settlement of questions
relating to rates of wages and hours
of labor is furnished by Consul Max-
well Blake of Dunfermline :
It is proposed to group the various
grades of employes into sections, each
section to choose by election one or
more representatives for each district,
and these will compose the employes'
sectional board to meet the represen-
tatives of the company. Under the
scheme there will also be formed
conciliation boards for each company
to deal with questions of wages and
hours of labor which cannot be mu-
tually settled through the usual
channels.
In. the event of the two boards in-
dicated failing to arrive at an agree-
ment the subject of difference is then
referred to arbitration. The appealed
reference is to ga before a single
arbitrator appointed by agreement
between the two boards, or, in default
of an agreement, to be appointed by
the Speaker of the House of Commons
and the lord president of the court of
sessions, or one of them. The decision
of the arbitrator shall be final and
binding on all parties.
Each side of the conciliation board
is to elect its own chairman. Any
proposal agreed to by a sectional
board and rejected by the employes
is referred to the central board (com-
posed of fourteen employes' repre-
sentatives, two from members of each
sectional board), and a proposal agreed
to by the central board and rejected
by the employes is referred to arbi-
tration. A proposal agreed to by a
sectional board and rejected by the
employes is referred to the central
board, and a proposal agreed to by
the central board and rejected by the
employes is referred to arbitration.
Where the central conciliation board
fail to agree, an arbitrator is appoint-
ed, and where the central concilia-
tion board have agreed, but the de-
cision is not accepted by the directors
or employes, the arbitrator is called
in as before.
The total number of employes' re-
presentatives on each sectional board
is eight, two from the employes in
the section in each of the four desig-
nated electoral districts. The central
board is composed as indicated. The
company's representatives on each
sectional and central board do not
exceed the employers' representatives.
Daniel Mewhort, of Monet Denis, near
Toronto, was shot by Thomas Armstrong
in mistake for a coon. The shooter was
less than 50 feet away, but he saw only
the head of the victim, and the accident
occurred in the early morning of Tues•
day, during a heavy fog. Both men
have families. Mewhort w:ll lose one
eye.
Was A Total Wreck
From Heart Failure
In such cases the action of
MlLDURN'S
HEART AND NERVE
PILLS
in quieting the heart, restoring its nor-
mal beat and itnpartiug tone to the nerve
centres, is. beyond all question, marvel-
lous.
Mr. Darius Carr, Geary, N.B,, writes :
"It is with the greatest of pleasure I
write you a few lines to let you know
the great blessing your Illilburies Heart
and Nerve Pills Irave been toane. I wits
a total wreck from heart failure and lay
Wife advised me to tutee your pills.
After using two !loxes I was restored to
perfect health. I ant new 02 years old
and feel almost as well as I did at 20."
Price 50 eents per,box or 3 for 81.25,
at all dealers, or mailed direct by The
T. Milburn Co,, Limited, Toronto,- Ont.
MAXIM RIDDEN WOMAN,
Sage's Have Waxed Eloquent Over
Her Failings.
Would there be any maxims in this
world if it were not for gentle woman?
Hearken to the sages of old, how
they waxed eloquent when considering
her and ger failings. Listen to the
sages of today. See them wag their
beards as they tell ger what to do and
how to do it, stopping awhile to call to
her attention the terrifying things that
will surely happen to her if she doesn't
do as they suggest
Poor, poor, blundering, headless,
heedless creature! From time immemo-•
rial she hath don's what she ought not
to have done, and she bath left undone
the things she ought to have done, and
the wonder is that there is any health
in her.
If she is a spinster, she is told how
to comport herself with due spinsterian
dignity. If she is a wife, she has a per -
sect library of ponderous tomes to draw
inspiration from. How she ever could
go wrong is something hard to con-
ceive since she is so hedged about with
advice, so beset with counselors. To
be sure, many of the 'counselors are
men -indeed, have always been men
and always will be men -but that does
not seem to alter the case or detract
from their ability to advance ready
made rules for her deportment. tIow
to bring up her children; how to care
for, manage, control, beguile, yea, even
how to capture, a husband -these be
the stupendous and awful topics ably
discussed for her enlightenment.
Young maids and old maids, young
wives and old wives, mothers and
grandmothers -yes, even hoary beaded
great -grandmothers -are not forgotten.
Tbere are maxims and maxims. All
you have to do is to wear petticoats
and take your choice, and, having cho-
sen -well, having chosen, you just look
sweet and smile beamingly and pursue
the uneven tenor of your womanly
way.
KITCHEN UTENSILS.
How to Clean Them After Using
Onions.
Cleaning utensils after using them
for onions has always been an impor-
tant question with housewives, for it
seems almost impossible to remove the
trace of the extremely odoriferous veg-
etable. This is especially true after
having used a steel knife to pare the
onion, because before the knife is
used again it is necessary to clean it,
and yet mere water does not seem to
have any effect upon it. It has just
been discovered that if a paring knife
is run through a piece of raw potato
the odor will be entirely removed, and
as this is such an easy method it will
surely be helpful to those women who
are interested in household affairs.
It has always been difficult to man-
age to cook cabbage and relations of
cabbage so that the fumes do not en-
ter
nter the rest of the house. This may
be done by covering the pot in which
the vegetable is cooking with a large
piece 0.2 bread. This seems to absorb
all Vie odor and keeps the master of
the house in ignorance of what is be-
ing prepared for his dinner.
HINTS FOR HOUSEKEEPERS.
When you purchase a bottle of
poison run a brass headed tack into
the top of the cork. It serves as a
marker, and children will be more cau-
tious of the marked bottles. If the
label comes off or is discolored the
marker remains as a skull and cross-
bor,es warning,
Valuable old lace which will not
bear washing may be cleaned with
powdered magnesia or French chalk.
Tbis should be sprinkled all over the
lace and the pattern then dabbed all
over gently with a soft handkerchief,
the lace being finally wrapped in blue
tissue paper.
A white sauce for fish that will be
nice to serve with the dinner is made
by paring and grating one cucumber
and mixing with salt, white pepper
and thick sour cream. Serve a spoon-
ful in the half of a boiled egg, first
removing the yellow to mix with
cheese balls. Place the egg in the
heart of a small lettuce head. This is
pretty and appetizing.
Try this once and you will always
follow it: When you put your roast in
the oven put a small dish of vinegar
in also. It will not only keep your
neat from burning, but will snake it
much more tender than it would other-
wise be, improving the flavor as well.
A tablespoonful of vinegar put in a
five pound pot roast will make the
meat more tender and palatable.
Serving the Olive.
Olives may be a cultivated taste, but
to the trained palate they offer end-
less novelties when used in clever com-
binations. The modern cook bolds the
olive in gentle regard and with its aid
prepares many a surprise to tempt
palates that sigh for something new.
Olive Sandwiches. - Tiny ovals of
thin bread spread with butter, then
with equal parts of grated celery and
chopped walnut meats, put together in
pairs, with a stoned olive pressed into
the top, are popular at teas.
Russian sandwiches are made by
chopping olives' fine and ;lust moisten-
ing them with mayonnaise. Cut thin
slices of bread in narrow strips.
Spread the olive upon half the Dittos,
spreading the others with caviare.
Press togcth'er in pairs.
Stuffed olives have the stones re-
moved and replaced by any salpicon or
forcemeat preferred. A variety is pro-
duced by stuffing them with some
savory butter. They are separated
from the stone spirally, as one peels
en apple. The stoned olive Is then
figded, about the filling --which should
bel theist the size of the stelae --until It
rrsztntts tts•.riginsl shape.
............................ •i.sr N
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Times and Farmers' Advocate - 2.35
We specially recommend our readers to subscribe
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4.
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Times and Michigan Farmer . 2.15
'e Times and Woman's Home Companion 2.25
+ Times and Country Gentleman 2.60
4. Times and Delineator 2.95
4. Times and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95
+ Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1.55
1 Times and Good Housekeeping 2 30
4 Times and McCall's Magazine 1.70
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4.
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4. Times and What to Eat 1 90
8.
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4. Times and Ladies' Home Journal' 2.75
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4.
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4.
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4. Times and 11luns.yis Magazin ?.i~0
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WINGHAM, ONTARIO. o'
Aoomoste memostoslanionea etsateaishom siasso* 0611IMti*••.8•••.Odt!•r9
F
Nervous, Diseased Men
DRS. K.
& K. ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS
Consultation
FREE.
Question Blank
for Home
Treatment sent
FREE.
Reasonable
Fees for
Treatment
A NERVOUS WRECK + ROSUST MANHOOD
We Guarantee to Cure all curable Cases of Stricture, V'arieocele,
Nervous Debility, Blood Poisons, Vital Weaknesses,
Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases, and all
Diseases Peculiar to Men and Women,
Don't traits your time and money en cheap, dangerous, cvperimentai treatment -
Don't increaee at your own cost your suffering's by being experimented en mini r,'titeoies •
which they claim to have just tlitcover,'d. ilut come to us in cenfelence. 13.'0 um trot*,
you e>nseientiou 11y, honestly and skillfully, and restore you to health in tee s roc trot pt e-
sable time with the least melicine, discomfort and expense toacticablc heels case i
treated as the symptosis indicate. Our Now 11tethod is otigiaal Find has steal l tree b -it for
twenty. years. re* OP
DRS.KENNEDY&KEI(QJW
L Cor, Michigan Ave., and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.