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The Wingham Advance, 1909-08-05, Page 4air aks lis Iho 316 as Die .141 5164 r TRH WINGTIANI , -DV .NCB, TIIURSI .y, AUGUST SUMMER PARASOLS pit111tYMYVMMMYYYYkYM1'YYYMYYYYY4YIIWYV1iYYV Tile week we aro offering fer sale Ladies' Parasols—some in pale shades with dainty designs ; some inwhite, trimmed with insertion ; Shore in nark, rich colorings. To complete a lady's outfit, one of these dainty Parasols is necessary, Call, and we shall assist you in ohoosing one of these pretty sunshades, SPECIAL BARGAINS We feel that we are always offering Bargains to the people of Wingham and vicinity, but at present we have some very SPECIAL BAEGAINS IN FIATS, BOOTS & SHOES, OAR - PETS, MATTINGS, and in many other lines, It will ,pay you to ingpeot these linea before purchasing elsewhere. LADIES' SHIRT WAISTS AT CAST Only a few left -- come and get One before all are gone. Highest Prices for Produce. Eggs 200. D. M. GORDON PANywimptokimmymmikmAnymmintA Ilgromermar King's For Bargains I I We Want Your Trade Our Sale has been a grand success—have sold a lot of goods, and have a lot more to sell. SUMMER MUSLINS—Some dainty patterns in floral designs -- just the thing for the hot weather—half price. JUST-AS-DELAINES—About ten patterns, fast colors, the best wrapper goods nut—regular 20c and 15c, for 12&c. GINGHAMS, DUCKS AND STRIPES—Regular 150, for 10c. DRESS GOOD REMNANTS—About 20 pieces -2 to 5 yards in the' piece—at next -to -nothing prices. NAVY FLANNEL -5 pieces, suitable for Men's Shirts, Under- skirts and Children's Dresses—Regular 25c, for 121c. 10 pieces Fancy Tartans for—per yard .$ .05 10 If Heavy Towelling at—per yard :05 100 pairs Flannelette Blankets—the big size—Reg. $1.35, for1.00 Better get you supply of these ; they won't last long at the price. A full stock of the best Staple Goods to be had—with prices to suit everybody. Eggs 22 Cts. Tub Butter 20 cts. GEO. E. KING Good Goods 1 Cheap Prices Whiteohurch llard*are Store News 1 Imersonmarommormommorn Look here I Are you going to use Cement „this fall ? If so, place your order now. There is a big cement combine going through, and when it is an accomplished fact, the price of Cement will soar ; so get busy now and save money. Call and get my price for September delivery. It will suprise you—but act quick, as present prices are apt to advance any day. Do you want a Roof ? I will roof your building with 2 -ply PAROID for $3.25 per square ; or AMATITE at $2.50 per square, for the finished job. I also sell Safe -lock Galvanized Shingles and Corrugated Roofing. Use Zenoleum or Animal Dip to keep the fies off your cattle and horses. Worth its weight in gold. Get it here.' J. T. HQIrnos Whiteohurch Milei...r...:.,r.....,.•.,.•••••••••. .,.,r„w,.,Loom...,.....a:kdn,.,....rnl.,.,...o...-.... Subscribe Por The Advance And have a Paper of your own, instead of always borrowing your neighbor's. The price is only. .00 PER YEAR • No. Authority Whatever, Several cases have occurred—recently where officious American officers at the border have caused Canadian tra- vellers considerable annoyance and loss. In this connection, the follow- ing from the Vancouver Sunset may be appropriate "When an American immigration officer in Vancouver or anywhere else on Canadian soil asks you where you are from or where you are going or any other questions, you are quite within rights in telling hint it is none of jilts business. When a Canadian Immigration officer in Seattle accosts you with questions you may advise him to run away and sell his papers. Neither an American officer in Can- ada nor a Canadian officer in the States has the slightest tittle of au- thority or right to question travellers. They are both aliens in foreign coun- tries. They are where they are on sufferance, They have no rights whatever. They are intruders, inter- lopers, meddlers and men without status. Their questions need not be answered, The True Religion. The Western Publisher has this to say on this subject :—Many are the styles of religion to -day. There/ are creeds and sects and red tape as long as the string on Johnnie's kite.. Even learned inen quarrel and 'let rancor breed within their hearts over the way to be religious. All this when the most human, the simplest creed is the hest—the belief and practice of being kind to your fellow men. "Do unto others as you would be done by." A man who is kind and who does be others as he would be done by, needs no other religion. He need not neces- sarily forswear creeds or remain away from church, but if he lives up to this simple, yet grand, standard, he will have been truly great and good, a sin- cere follower of Jesus of- Nazareth. What we need is a practical softening of the heart of this money -grabbing world, a kindlier interest one in the other. There are too many scowls and not enough smiles, too many bard faces that should be bright in the en- joyment of an ennobling siiirit of brotherhood, Be kind 1 "Do unto others as you would be done by." It means a lot, and is worth a great deal of mere profession. , Cow Testing Associations. In one cow testing association the average production of 126 cows was 520 lb. milk and 20 Ib. fat, not very much below the average of exactly 126 cows in another association close by, which was 609 Ib. milk and 26 lb. fat. But notice how tremendously that comparatively matt difference affects the total yield ; for in the one case the 126 cotes gave in the month 86,845 lb. milk and 3,267 lb. fat, but the other lot of 126•cows gave only 65,546 lb. milk and 2,510 ib. fat ; or allowing butter fat to be worth 25 cents per Ib., actually a difference of $189.25 in one month. Why are not thousands more. of our dairy cows made to earn an extra.dollar and a half per month for their Owners ? When the owners are perfectly certain through having test- ed each cow in the herd individually, which animals are bringing in a gd'od profit, then the average yield and the total income can be largely increased. Another contrast shows that 100 cows inone association produced just twenty-seven pounds of fat less than 72 cows in another association 10 miles away; there were thus 25 cows more to be milked, and to have capital locked up in, and to tramp round on the pastures eating good feed that the other cows could have used -to better advantage, for twenty-seven pounds less fat. Weighing and testing is the quickest and surest way of detecting those that are below par value, Korean Wedding Customs. The new movement In Korea means that there are to come changes in all matters of love and marriage. Al. ready the Christian girls, of whole there are many, are demanding that they be married in the church after our ceremony, or as near that as Ko- rean ideals will permit. To -day the million -odd marriages which take place yearly are as barbarous as those of darkest Africa. Children are often betrothed at birth, and a 7 -year-old girl may be married to a man of 20, or, a boy of 9 to a girl of 19. As a rule, the marriages take place before the children have reached the age of pupils of the first class in the high schools, and a girl is an old'reaid at 18 or 20, Among the queer wedding customs is the gluing the bride's eyes shut, so that she can see nething, and keeping them so for two or three days, An- other le that the bride will not speak to the groom for at least a week after the wedding,.and a third that a .light takes place between her friends and his on the way to the ceremony, and the one represented by the party de. feated is considered unlucky. Neither bride nor groom sees each other until they are married. After that, the girl is practically the slave of her husband and his parents, who may treat her as they please. As the grows older, or when her husband is tired of her, he brings one or more secondary wives into the hou:to and she has to submit. Divorces are easy on the part of the husband, but they are oottsi,lered die. reputable, and domestic troubles usu- ally result in adding a concubine or so to the eetabitslatnetit rattier dash shot ftyg tlt'rl old wife taut into the ool'dt What. To Feed Fowi, I feed a mash in the morning which ie composed of bran and corn, chops or meal, made crumbly with milk, says a poultry woman In Reliable Poultry Journal, This mash is fed in troughs and on boards. They are given almost as much as they will eat. There is plen- ty of grass in their runs. At noon I feed small grain in the straw and at everting corn. In addition to this I feed all kinds of vegetables that they will relish, feeding them raw, but cooking them sometimes for a change, They do relish the vegetables, and are very fond of meat scraps, which are fed occasionally, perhaps once or twice a week. The litter in the pen should be changed as often as necessary. The house must he kept clean. Sometimes if cleaned"once a week It is enough, but every other day inwarm weather is the better plan, Keep oyster shell and grit before the fowls all the time. When a hen becomes broody, place her in a box, first placing in the box about three thickness of paper; sprinkle London purple on the paper, then cover with good straw to make a thick nest. Mark the eggs and put them in the nest, Take the hen, gently sprinkle her with good insect powder once a week and set her on the nest. It is well to s;3rinkle her with insect pow- der once a week while she is sitting. I give her fifteen eggs, as too many in the nest will cause some of them to get chilled and make a poor hatch, Be gentle with the hens always and they will not become frightened when you approach them. Give them a gentle pat on the back when you ap- proach the nests and they will soon, know you are a friend, I have no£ one hen that will resist when I gently stroke her. About The Physician. At the opening of the Middlesex Hospital in .the old land, Rudyard Kipling said :— "It has long ago been decided that the doctors have no hours which any one is bound to respect, and nothing but extreme bodily illness excuses them in the world's eyes, from giving their help and skill at auy hour of the day or night, to any one who needs it. Who cares whether a doctor is in his bath or his bed, or on his holiday, in church, or at the theatre ? If any of the children of men have a pain or a hurt, he will be summoned quickly, and what vitality he may have accum- ulated during his hours of 'leisure will be dragged out of him. In all times of flood, fire, plague, pestilence, fam- ine, murder and sudden death, it is re- quired of the doctor that he report himself for duty, and remain on duty till his strength fails him or his con- science relieves him, which ever shall be the longer period. This is the po- sition of the doctor, these are some of his obligations. They will not grow less with time, Has any one heard of any proposed legislation to limit his out -put ; any suggestion for an eight-hour day for doctors ? Has any one noticed any change in `public opinion, which • al- lows the doctor to refuse to attend a patient who he knows will never pay him ? Is there an out -cry against those people who are perfectly able to pay for medical advise and surgical appliances, but who "cadge" around free hospitals for bottles of tonic and cork legs and glass eyes ? It is laid down„ that the doctor must save Others. It is no where laid down that he need save himself." "As to the doctor's privileges, Kip- ling says :—"The doctor is the only person whose explanations the police will accept, when he exceeds the legal speed limit ; on presentation of his visiting card, the doctor can pass through riotous and turbulent crowds unmolested, even with applause. He can hoist a yellow flag over a centre of civilization and turn it into a desert ; he can hoist a Red Cross in the desert and turn it into a centre of civilization." Why Catarrh Is Dangerous. Usually it comes with a cold. Be- ing slight it is neglected, but the seed seed is sown for a dangerous harvest, perhaps, consumption. To cure at once, inhale Catarrhozone. It de- stroys the germ of Catarrh, clears away mucous, cleanses the passages of the nose and throat. The hacking cough and sneezing cold soon disap- pear and health is yours again. No- thing known for colds, catarrh and throat trouble that is so curative as Catarrhozone. It cures by a new method that never yet failed. At all dealers 25c and $1, (let Catarrhozone to -day. Western Excursions. The C. P. R. is at present endeavor- ing to arrange excursions from the east, but reports received indicate that men there aro scarce. When the excursions are en route this year every effort will be made to prevent a recur- rence of the rowdyism of last year, and if neceesary a special cartstable will be placed on each car. Last week Magistrate Daly of Winnipeg decided to try an experiment. Hearing of the scarcity of men, he released all short- term prisoners on condition that they get employment. Do• You Belch. Gas? This is a disagreeable result of food fermentation that Nerviline stops at once. Take ton drops of Nerviline in sweetened water. The stomach is warmed and soothed', digestive trots" hies corrected, the rising of gas ceases and you are well. When such a ohm pie remedy does sq much its foolish to be withopt it, J7or itldi dodo, sourstomach, heartburn and sic head- ache you'll find nothing half so of - lout Poison's Nerviline, Got a bot a from your dealer to-dsy, 1909, 'Pews Items 5 —For the second time within a ye*r the Milverton Postofflce bas been visited by thieves. —Local option campaigns will be conducted in sixty 'Ontario munici- palities next December„ —Percy Shannon, a Walkerton boy, was killed a few days ago by falling off a mountain near Banff, B. C. -The Grand Trunk Pacific crop re- port front Winnipeg to Wainright, 060 miles, shows that the grain is in excel- lent condition, —Patten, the wheat king, is leaving Chicago for a long rest in Europe. He is said to have cleaned up $4,000,- 000. on his May and July deals, —The number of passengers carried west by the Canadian Pacific Railway this season will surpass all previous records, said 0. E. E. Usshor, assis- tant passenger traffic manager of the C. P. IL • --Rural delivery service has been inaugurated on the mail route served from Dobbinton to Williscroft, Salis- bury and Mount Hope. This route gets a mail three times a week. —Information from Niagara and Es- sex fruit districts, states that the peach crop is the largest for many years. In many instances trees are being propped and tied up in order to prevent destruction from the burden they bear. —A report was recently made by the National Tuberculosis Association of the. United States to the effect that 1,000,000 school children in the United States will probably die of tuber- culosis before they reach their eigh- teenth year. —On the 18th day of August the property owners of the village of Exe- ter will be called upon to say by their votes whether they are in favor or against the proposed by-law to authorize the borrowing of $22,000 for waterworks purposes. —An idea of the methods, used in colonizing Western Canada may bo gained from the record of the town.- ship ownship of Hutton, where less than five weeks ago fertile soil was undisturbed by plow, but is now the home of no fewer than 58 hustling American families busy cultivating land and building houses. Have You Corns ? There is but one painless care--Put- nam's. Takes out the corn, root and branch does it harmlessly in twenty- four hours. Insist on Putnam's Pain- less Corn Extractor only. —Kincardine is ft favored town so far as a local general hospital is con- cerned. Some timb ago Mrs. Gualce endowed the institution in Kincardine with $25,000. Then she donated a building lot, and last week she has given. $2,000 cash towards the con- struction of the building.' Besides this the hospital at Kincardine has a grant of $4,000, and work has now been begun in earnest on the build- ing. � 1 CoNtMNa 0 AMINAL co Le* SAT I,• NOR AHy MINCRAL • PUPFlifOr Star° 4 •soneseuansss • 'PIILY•PIMpus. ECZEMA' ',Boa• sulAi SDI•SS�11ATICA•DAD LEGS. NI•CHAPPID HANDS. Vito t/AiLCD 'oA R/CkE'TERS• qy0!•/Srs.,00r».iL PLAyER$ 5FORTSMv t OINtPALLy -.0Rficntlo�' uv r' n-• ct When troubled with sun- burn, blisters, insestings, sore feet, or heat rashes, apply Zam-Buk ! Surprising how quickly it eases the smarting and stinging 1 Cures sores on young babies due to chafing. Zam-Buk is made front pure herbal essences. No animal fats— no mineral poisons. Finest healer 1 " Druggists and Storrs euery:awe. AnTrook C. N. GRIFFIN GENERAL AGENT Issuer of Marriage Licenses. Fire, Life, Accident, Plate Glass and Weather Insurance, coupled with tf Real Estate and Money Loaning business. Office over Malcolm's Grocery A. E..'SMI`i'H BANKER WINGHAM — ONTARIO N b''artners who want money to buy horses, cattle or hogs to feed for mar- ket can have it on reasonable terms. Money transmitted and payable at par at any Bank hi the Dominion. RAVES,—$3,00 and tinder, 3 eta, , to to $30, 10 ots, $30 to $50, 15 cta, Same rates charged on principal banking points in the U. S. Jas. Walker ex Son IVINOt1ANM Furniture Dealer and LIQ dertaker: 'w'e ars sflootally +Iualitiod ilnd r. taketn and .Embalmer*, and thoms ontrttstingq their work to tie MAY rely on it being well done, Night sane reoetved at reddened. O11100 I'thdnr 100 lgonso Phone 194 einsiessaionislolameasiiissilliessomistriumet Take Comfort. Hot weather is here, To enjoy it, get one of our Coaloil Stoves Gasoline Stoves And . Save Fuels and "Cook in Comfort. Graniteware,and Tinware. Ranges of Best Makes. Reliable Garden Hose. Plumbing our Specialty. W. J. BOYCE Stone Block - Wingham TRY MALCOLM'S —FOR— Fresh FOR Fresh Tomatoes Green Beans " New Potatoes Also remember that this is the place to buy Flesh Groceries and best Teas & Coffees. - —.moon New China Just Arrived. Call and see it. CHERRIES WANTED ' Produce Wanted. Malcolm's L PRONE 54 J t Fall Term Opens Sept. 1st ELLIOTT TORONTO, ONS'. This school is unquestionably one of Canada's Greatest, Best and Most Suc- cessful Colleges. Our graduates readily secure employment. Lot us educate you for positions worth from $35 to $I00 a month. We know how. Write to -day for magnificent catalogue. W. J. ELLIOTT, PRINCIPAL. Cor. Yongo and Alexander Ste, Fall Term From Sept. 1st. CENTHAL STRATFORD, ONT. After twonty-two years of splid work wo he.Vo become the largest, best and ,most successful practical training school Ln Western Ontario with no superior in Canada. Three Ontario, mercial, Shorthand and Telegraphy. Wo assist graduates to positions as well as give a most thorough training. Got our free cataiogue at•once. ELLIOTT 14 MCLACHLAN ,'SINCIPAL* ➢OPINION BANK. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. Capital (paid up) $3,976,000 Reserve of °xoiit'de>- $5,297,000 Total Assets, over $48,000,000 WINGHAM BRANCH. Interest allowed on deposit of $1,00 and upwards. Venders' Notes discounted. Drafts sold on all points in Can- ada, the United States and Europe. U. T. HEPBURN, tanager it. iranstens, Benoit/at The AuvANcn is North Huron's leading news- - paper. Are you a sub. scriber ? If not, why Only $1 per year, 4, 1 The People's. Popular Store Agents Ladies' Home Journal Kerr & Bird Agents Home Journal Patterns Some Lines of Hot - Weather Goods —AT— SACRIFICE . PRICES New Goods ! But they must be sold at once. They'll go quick at the price. LADIES' WHITE WAISTS. ---New styles, handsome goods, well made. $1.00 waists for 69c to 74c. $1.25 waists for 98c. $1.50 waists for $1,15. $1.75 waists for $1.29. $2.00 waists for $1.48. $3.00 waists for $2.29. SUMMER PARASOLS.—Colored and white ; not many ]eft, but we don't want them. . Every one new. Regular $1.25 for 94c, $1,35 for $1.00, $1.50 for $1.12, $2.25 for $1.69. MEN'S AND BOYS' SUMMER HATS.—Straws, etc,, must go. Regular 25c for 19c, 30c for 23o, 50c for 38c, 750 for 56e, 60c for 45c, $1.00 for 75c. Common Straws— Itegular 20c for 15c, 15c for 10c, 30c for 8c, GIRLS' SUMMER HATS.—Away down in price. A few 350 hats left, now 25c. An assorted lot of 50c hats for 37c. New goods, latest styles. We had a Big Sale of Dinner Sets in July. Only two of that lot are left. Come and take them away. 1 only, Printed Semi Porcelain, 97 piece Dinner Set, regular 87.00 for $4.79. 1 only, painted and Gold Stippled Stone China 97 piece set, regular price $12,00, now $7.98. MEN'S HARVEST BOOTS.—Reduced in price. Regular $1.25 harvest boots for $1.00, to clear- . Leave your order here for the "LADIES' HOME JOURNAL." 150 a month. You are sure to get it every month if your name is on our list. -41 T. A. Mills WINGHAM Sugar! SUGAR IS FlltillI3R! But having bought one car load before the advance, we are going to sell it at Less Than The Old 'Price. This is guaranteed No. 1 quality. Special Preserving Purity Guaranteed. $4.90 Per zoo Pounds 4 20 Lbs. for $LOo ' Goods delivered to any part the Town, T. A. MILL5� • plioN.NE f30,