The Wingham Times, 1908-10-08, Page 117
BANK or HAM!LTOW
A
SA i9tl N
ACCOUNT
is the best investment for
idle funds, It offers
absolute safety, and
• pays interest four
times a year.
W1NCxHAM, BRANCH
C. P. SMITH, AGENT.
THE WZNOIAM TIMES, OCTOBER 8, MO
DOMINION BANK
HEAD OFFICE : TORONTO.
Capital paid up, $8,976,000
Reserve Fund and
Undivided profits $5,297,000
Tota! Assets, over 48,000,000
WiNCHANI BRANCH.
Earners' 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, Jona, September and Deoem-
ber each year.
D. T. HEPBURN, Manager
R. Vanaten°, Solicitor.
WHEN YOU ARE GONE.
[Life.]
When you are gone
The tailors' bills will still lead on,
Still flutter beyond thy ken
To lure and crnsh thy fellow men;
The tramp of many feet shall stili
agme hurrying with many a bili,
Pursue thy kin for ever on,
When yon are gone,
When you are gone
And suns and systems still wheel on,
That grocery bill will yet hold pace.
With all thy brooding, mourning race;
The butcher's boy will ease your door
Remembering his unpaid score;
Your washerwoman, lingering where
Tbe tun glints on her rich, red hair,
Will scowl and mutter and pass on
When your are gone
The rains will descend upon
The just and unjust, as they did
Upon their unpaid Derby lid;
The comets and the stars perforce
Will bold upon their wonted cour se;
The gambol through the corn
As from the day that you were born;
.And wild geese honking in the air
Will Bonk as wildly remote there
As they have thus honked everywhere;
The sunset glow will still silt down,
Your doctor, lawyer still will frown,
The "ten" you owe me still lead on,
When you are gone.
Was A Total Wreck
From Heart Failure
In such eases the action ut
MILBURN'S
HEART AND NERVE
PILLS
in quieting; the heart, restoring its nor-
mal beat and imparting 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 Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills have been to me. I was
a total wreck from heart failure and my
wife advised me to take your pills.
After using two bores I was restored to
perfect health. I am now 62 years old
and feel almost as well as I did at 20."
Price 50 cents per bot or 3 for $1,25,
at all dealers, or mailed direct by The
'T. Miiburtl. Co., Limited, Toronto,Ont.
IT PAYS
IN AD
VEItTIS�
TAMES
EAST HURON ELECTION RE-
TURNS.
Dominion.
November 3rd 1904
BLYT$-
Macdonald Chisholm
No. 1
No. 2
46 47
48 38
94 80
Maj, for Macdonald.... 14
BRUSS1cLS ^
No. 1 30
No.2 41
No. 3,,. 51
122
Maj. for Macdonald,.. 11
GREY-
No.2 44
No. 2 51
No.3 70
No, 4 65
No.5 69
No, 6 64
No. 7..... 75
438
Maj, for Macdonald.. 124
Howler --
No, 1
No, 2
No. 3
No. 4
No. 5
No. 6
50
51
49
73
79
' 47
3.49
Maj. for Chisholm
Monnis-
No. 1........., 67
No.2 60
No.3.... 41
No.4 50
No.5 53
No.6 56
817
Maj, for Macdonald. . .15
TURNBERRY-
No. 1 40
No.2 64
No. S 68
No.4 55
217
34
54
23
111
57
19
35
35
V4
57
47
314
102
82 ,.
112
113
85
72
566
217
41
46
56
39
47
73
802
92
58
64
• 54
268
Maj. for Chisholm
WBOXETER-
No. 1 63
Maj, for Macdonald... 16
WINGUAnl--
No. 1 32
No, 2 •35
No, 3 41
No.4 63
172
Maj. for Chisholm
EAST WAwAN0SE-
No, 1 .,.....,.. 65
No. 2. .. , 65
No.3 57
No. 4 56
51
3d
54
56
71
119
300
128
53
71
41
45
Maj. for Macdonald243 83 210
..,
RECAPITULATION
Macdonald Chisholm
Blyth. 14
Brussels. ..., 11
Grey 124
Howbeit. 217
Morris 15
Turnberry 51
Wingbam. 128
Wroxeter .,, 15
East Wawanosh, .. 33
212 396
Maj. for Chisholm,.,.,.,,, 184
FARMERS
and anyone having'Ilia stook or other
articles they wish to dispose of, Should adoer.
tise the same for sale in the TIRES, Our large
circulation tells and it will be strange indeed if
on do not get a easterner. We can't guarantee
MAIM; will sell because yon may ask more
Mr the article or stook than it is Worth. Send
your advertisement to the TI>•tu and try this
pram o1 disposing of your stook and other
artic
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
snob e., teacher., \vented, business chailees,
mechanics wanted, articles for dale, or Jr feet
any kind of an advt. I. any Of the Toronto or
other city papere, may be Ieft at the Trains
office. This Work will receive ppromt,tAttention
and Will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding adverrtieententa. Lowest
raise Will be quoted on application. Lease
or aendyotlr nett Work of We kind to the
TIMES U}'F`I ,i , Winabans
AMERICA'S
EX.OHAM P1 ON
WRESTLER
SAYS:
"After mygreat wrestling g match
with 7 Mellor, of Staleybridge, at the
Crystal Palace, England, for the In.
ternational Championship, I was
covered with cuts and bruises. I ap-
plied my favorite balm, Zara-Buk,
and in a marvellously short time the
abrasions and cuts were healed and I
was fit and well again. At another
time I had a piece of flesh almost
torn completely off my arm above
the elbow. I anticipated being un-
able to do anything with the arm
for a long time, To my delight,
however, Zam-Buk closed up the
wound in two days. In three days
it was covered with new skin, and a l
few days after, there was no truce of a,
the injury. I recommend Zara -Bull
for cuts, bruises or skin injuries of
any kind.
Yours truly,
HUGH LANNON.
The above testimony given by Mr,
Lannon when visiting. Toronto shows the
great value of Gam -suit for injuries re-
ceived in out -door short,
Baseball. Football and Lacrosse
Players should always keep Zam-Buk '
handy. It prevents cuts and injuries
taking the wrong turn." It stops the
pain and smarting, and heals. It ni also
an excellent embrocation, curing stiffness,
sprains, twists, etc. Used and recom-
mended by Sherring, the Marathon win- .'
ner; Madrali, the world's second greatest
wrestler, etc.
For alt Injuries & Skin Diseases
and Stores, or from the
ZAM-BUK CO., TORONTO, for price.
8 Boxes for $2.50.
(0... P'ub'ord, Limited)
Whales and Dolphins.
About forty different kinds of
whales and dolphins are known, and
although they live in the open sea and
look like fish they are not fish' at all,
but are true mammals, breathing air
and feeding their young on milk, like
eows and horses.
Forcemeat.
Forcemeat is a corruption of force-
meat, from the French farce, stuffing
-1. e., meat for stuffing.
Monism.
Monism is ,the doctrine of the one-
ness of all things. Mind and matter,
God and the creation are one and the
same thing. There is no supernatural.
Ail are but parts of one stupendous
whole," the various phenomena being
merely incidental to the great unity.
Coats of Arnie.
Coats of arms are supposed to have
arisen in the eleventh century, out of
the necessity that existed of distin-
guishing between the multitude of
knights and nobffs who flocked to
Palestine in the first crusade,
For Diarrhoea, Dysentery,
Stomach Cramps, Colic,
Summer Complaint, Chol-
era Morbus, Cholera In-
fant€am, and all Looseness
of the Bowels
There is no Medicine Like
It has been a household remedy for 63
years. You can always rely on it in time
of noed to do just what we claim for it.
I)o not allow an unprineipalod druggist
to palm off a cheap substitute on you.
The genuine "Dr. Pdwler's"is manu-
factured by Tho Ti. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont,
THE max CURE FOR DIAX HCEA.
"I have used Dr.
1/Irs. lzobt. habil, Fowler's Ext. of
Burketon, Ont., Wild Strawberry
writes: -- for diarrhoea, and
I think there is not
a better remedy to be found, as 1 have a
large family and all aubjeot to it. I
would not tis without it in the house as it
is a quick cure, and 'the, only thing' that
will cure theta."
DEFIES ATTACK.
The Wonderful Strong Room Under
the Bank of England.
There is a close analogy between
the Straggle of the locksmith against
the burglar and the contest bptweei;
armor plate and big guns. Time al-
ter time has the lecllsm;ith exhausted
his ingenuity in devising apparently
impenetrable chambers, and again '
and again have the marvelous skill •
and patience of the burglar toiled
his efforts.
A hundred years ago the Bathe'
"England kept its cash and securities
in a great oak box clamped with
iron. From this the strong room of
to -day, conatructed of armor plate,
has been gradually evolved.
If a mobovercame the guards and
"Watch clerks" at the Bank of Eng-
land, they could not possibly pene-
trate into the vaults, for their passage
would be blocked by large reservoirs
of water. The strong room here is one
of the largest in the world. The
foundation, un on, sixty-six feet below street
level, is a bed of concrete twenty
feet thick,
Above this concrete is a lake seven
feet deep, and above that thick plates
of iron specially manufactured to re-
sist both force and skill. Any one
attempting an entrance from above
would find a similar bed of concrete,
a similar lake and similar plates of
iron. The walls are impenetrable,
while the doors are one foot thick,
weigh four tons each and are made
absolutely undrillable.
Many years ago, when the strong
room was less rigorously protected,
the directors were startled one morn-
ing by a letter from a man who said
he had been in the vault.
Some days later a heavy chest,
which had been abstracted from the
"treasury," was returned to the bank
by the writer of the letter, who had
gained entrance from the sewers. He
was rewarded and given a pension
for life.
In the safe deposit, which has be-
come a necessary adjunct of modern
life, are to be found the most modern
developments in strong room con-
struetion. One of the largest in Lon-
don, which cost $1,000,000, consists
of thirty-two great vaults, whose doors
have no locks and are worked by
hydraulic power.
When the doors are closed the
mechanism is disconnected, and any
one attempting to connect it would
release 50,000 gallons of water and
flood the' place from floor to ceiling,
although the strong rooms would re-
main absolutely dry. Many and
varied are the valuables stored in
these treasure houses.
At another London depository the
writer was shown a room which con-
tained $150,000,000 worth of securities.
The next conte ned a collection of
rare books worth $10,000 each, and
another held a collection of old china.
In a fourth were paintings worth
$500,000, and a fifth contained tapes- 1
tries which could not be duplicated
for $250,000.
Gave Him Piece of Shroud.
Some time ago the New Kilpatrick
parish church minister, Rev. J. H.
Dickie, attended, in ministerial capa-
city, a funeral in Glasgow, and he
was somewhat surprised when the
chief mourner handed him a small
cutting of the shroud. Naturally he
asked the reason of the gift, but the
mourner could not tell him, merely
remarking that it had been an old
custom of her family to present the
minister with a bit of the shroud on
similar occasions. .An antiquarian
friend has been looking into the mat-
ter, and 'finds that away back in the
thirteenth or fourteenth century an
act was passed for the purpose of
encouraging the wool trade in Scot-
land, which ordained that every
corpse be shrouded in a woollen gar-
ment, and to make certain that the
order was attended to, it was .made
the duty of the parish minister
examine the shroud before the
coffin lid was "screwed down." In
the event of the minister not being
able to be present, a "swatch" of the
dead person's garment had to be cut
off and handed to the clergyman who
officiated at the "liftin,." The fact
that the old custom has been pre-
served in the mourner's family show-
ed that their genealogical tree had a
fairly respectable antiquity.
Queerest of Creatures.
The duckbill, or mulligong, of Aus-
tralia is one of earth's queerest crea-
tures. It is essentially an aquatic
and burrowing animal. The beak is
well supplied with nerves and ap-
pears to be a sensitive organ of touch
by which the animal is enabled to
feel as well as smell the insects and
other creatures on which it feeds.
The duckbill can run on land and
swim in water with equal ease. It is
covered with fur, which is thick, soft
and readily dried while the animal
enjoys good health.
The food of the duckbill consists
of worms, water insects and little
mollusks, which it gathers in its
cheek pouches as long as it is en-
gaged in search for food and then
quietly eats them when it rests from
its labors.
The Long Lived Parrs.
Thomas Parr, who died in London
in 1635 at the age of 152 is notable
not only for his longevity, but also
for that of his descendants.' Parr lies
buried in Westminster Abbey, He
worked his farm at the age of 130 and
married for the second time at the
age of 122. Robert Parr, a great-
grandson, died in Shropshire in 1757
at the age of 124. His father lived to
be 109 and his grandfather 113. John
Newell died in 1761, aged 127, and
John Michaelson, aged 127 also, died
in 1763. Both were grandsons of
Thorns P.
CARTERS
ITTLE
P1L S.
Slrl: Headech, and relieve all thootroubles Inca,
dent to :i Spleno state pi' the system, such es
D1ssinees, ivauser., limn's:nese, Distress atter
eating Pato in the 131•te, Rc. While tbetr roost
Ta;ua. �t%ata success a s iiwn st.otvrt lo. GU;tub
Rcadacbe, yet Carter's di;tttre /Aver pine are
ala
equallyvableln .oa4 pet,en,curingmutpre.
venting tillsanne, s;' olplait:t,sibtietheyatso
correct ell died derac1thos ouwth, ettma atethe
liver and regulate the bowls, hveuitthoyoniy
cured' _. .
Ache the
wanks.
a
almost
rrr cl
i
serhe
sOwho
auger rrorr3this'fr rex l ecmpIrlrt butiortu•
nary ly t.teirgoodnt sr'oes not end hero ma: id those,
who once try them will f :dt rej411t le pilin vale.
able in so many •a e•; s tlu.t they v 111 not he wig.
ling to do without them. listafter whack bead
Is the bane of so many lives that he o is where
we make oar great boast. Oar pills cure it IsWla
otheredo nit.
verye +ytoitt` .LOneorltswoMl emakeaewe-d
They aro Strtetty vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action. please ell who
use them.
0d878SII II AICI3Z mazy YORE.
Et ;xi Dose. honk&
The 's Nest.
The wasp's nestWarpis equally wonderful
with the beehive and forms a regular
elty, fortified agninet encroaclunentil
and containing 15,000 or 18,000 cells
for young,
The Parseea.
Tbe Parsees expose their dead to be
devoured by birds.
Euclid. In the schools of the present day
Euclid's elements of geometry, written
over 2,000 years ago, is used as a text
book. Euclid also wrote on music and
optics antedating much we think we
have discovered.
California Gold.
The historical committee of the So-
clety of Pioneers of California report.
ed, after a tong and careful investiga-
tion, that the discovery of gold in Cali-
fornia was made by James W. Mar-
shall on the 24th day of January, 1848.,
in the tail race of his sawmill at Co-
lonia, on the south fork of the Amer-
ican river.
The Danger
of Piles
Is greater than some people ima-
gine. be you realize this?
It is a mistake to look on piles or
hemorrhoids as merely an annoyance, for
they are serious and dangerous as well,
and in their chronic or aggravated form
bring keen distress and the ruination of
health,
The cause of piles is very different in
different cases, but there is always relief
and with regular treatment thorough cure
in the use of Dr. Chase's Ointment.
It is the only absolute and guaranteed
cure for every form of Itching. Bleeding
and Protruding piles. Try it; thousands
have.
Mr. D. MacVicar, Caledonia Mines,
writes: -"For years I was troubled
with bleeding. protruding piles and could
not obtain a cure. .1 would be laid off
work for weeks. Two boxes of Dr. Chase's
Ointment completely cured me."
Dr. Chase's Ointment has an unparallel-
ed record of cures; 60c. a. box at all deal-
ers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto.
Drp.A. !'.Chase's
Oi fitment
r
Ancient Locks.
Locks like those in use today, which
could only be opened by the knowledge
of a certain combination of numbers,
were known to the Chinese centuries
i ago, while Hobbs gave his name to a
lock found in an Egyptian tomb.
Ono Billiarde Board&
This Is a description given of a bil-
liard table made for Queen Elizabeth's
successor and paid for oat of the
exchequer; "One billiarde boards
twelve foote longe and fower foots
.broade, the frame being wallnuttree,
well cwrought and carved, with eight
great skrewes and eighteen small
skrewes."
Babies With Daggers.
The art of self defense is inculcated
early among some of the wilder tribes
of the Caucasus, who instruct their
children as soon as they can walk in
the use of the dagger,
Ether.
Ether was known to the earliest sci-
entists.
Arizona.
The original name of ArF.x nn was
Ariztrma, a 2unl word signifying "sil-
ver bearing" stat omen era l,ly repor-
ting to the gorses worker ate tienr
precious metal even before the (11 ' .•\ •
ery of America,
Cause Por Resentment. bacon and Cnioni.
"Yes," said Mrs. Newrich, "I treat Lord Paeon 1"":1.4111' T "'' " Sn '.,..
nay domestics as equals." he dcelaretl t'lr t••s:n' wined • „
"And don't they resent it?" queried planted in a Led or tem.
Mts. Oldgald,
The
t+1'iys#erious Time,
Boots (who has overslept}--W±I1 qo
to get tip, sorrf It's an hour:
thalz it was this toime yesterday
110rOtten', sofa. - .
•
n e ry
tl 00 .
d
California redwoo 1 cont;trip er
catty no resin, but n lar;:a' amount
water, which snakes the :r; on W•,.,ti s.
exceedingly heavy that often tht. tow
er log of a tree will sink in water.
CLUBBING
RATES
FOR 1907 - 08,
i
Z The TIr Es will receive subscriptions at the rates below
• Times and Toronto Daily Star............
for any of the following publications
Tiznes and Daily Globe„,.,. ...«..,...,,. 4,50
,1. 4.
Times and Daily Mail and Empire,
Times and Daily World,4,50
.., , . ,..,,...,.......... 3.10
Times
and Toronto ro
n
toDil
News..., �. .
.1.4.
1..;',$0
+ Times and Daily Advertiser. ... . .. ...,....... 2.35
Times and Toronto Saturday Night .......... ., 2.60
Times and Weekly Globe . l 60
Tinges and Weekly Mail and Empire.. , ..... ,, , , 1 35
Times and Family Herald and weekly Star 1 85
Times and Family E eraid and Weekly Star, and
+ premiums 1061,“ 2.10
4. Times and Weekly Witness 1 85
• Times and Loudon Free Press (weekly)., 1,80
4. Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1 60
4.
+ Times and Toronto Weekly Sun.... 1.80 ,
• Times and Wold Wide 2.20
+ • Times and Northern Messenger 1.35
41.
+ 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
4. 4.+ Times and Presbyterian 2.25fl
Times and Westminster ..., 2.25
Times and Presbyterian and Westminster3.25
4. Times and Christiana Guardian (Toronto) . *•••
4. Times and Youths' Companion 2.40
.«...,.., 3.25
+ Times and Canadian Magazine (monthly)
4.2,130
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 Sb
Tinley and Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95
Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1,55
Times and Good Housekeeping 2 30
Times and McCail'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,
Times and Mnnsey's Magazine 2,5040
Times and Vick's Magazine 1.60
Times and Home Herald 2,60
Times and Travel Magazice 2.25
Times, and Praetical 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, Winnipeg.,,,., 1.25
Times and Canadian Pictorial 1,60
3
The above prices include postage on American publications to
,i, address in Canada. It the TIDIES is to be sent to an American address, add
a 50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be sent to f
A American addresses a redaction will be made in price,
• We could extend this list. If the paper or magazine you want is not in •
the list, call an this eflice, or drop a pard and we will give you prices on the •
i♦ paper you want. We club with all the leading newspapers and magazines, i
4
When premiums are given with any of above papers, snbsoribers will •
II Bemire such premiums when ordering through us, same as ordering direct le
from publishers.
•
~ These low rates mean a considerable ,saving to subscribers, and are •
M STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal note, post A
O office or express money order, addressing
* u
•
sit
alo
any ;3*.
TIMES OFFICE,
WINGHAM, ONTARIO.
•
b
i
s
40440e0r400414/14400a.er Basra he 4444444444444410walw.ilf.*444
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ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS --CURES GUARANTEED. No Treatment sent
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READER
i3ns,KENNEDY&KENND
Cor, Michigan Ave., and Griswold St., Detroit, 1Ntir✓h.