The Wingham Times, 1910-07-07, Page 4Say a GOOD Word
tt 16 wlse•to say a good
Word for yourself or your
Wiliness, whether your
stook In trade be March.
Sadist �r labor, Want
Ads. are the roost direct
lin% of. oommunication
to the best buyers.,
't.,.w,s wr M'.•W,r ,,
TH it WU GI AM 14M413, JULY 7, /KO
THE
II
Annual Meeting at 4 ungannon -+� 1,
D0 I'na n !Bank Mallough the New President.
FARMERS' INSTITUTE`
HEA1� Crrzcn: ToRPnO
Capital Stook (all paid up) $4,C00,000 00
Iteeerve. Fund and Un-
dlvi•ied Profitsto $5.GO0,O00.
.00
Deposita by the public . , $40 000,000 00
Total Assets, over,,,,$00,000,000.00
BR&NCII8S ANn AGENTS throughput. Can -
oda and the trotted States.
A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
TRANSACTED.
Savings Department.
Oarreut Rites of Interest allowed, and
Dee sots received of $1,00 and
upwards.
Farmers' sale Notes Collected, and
advanoes made on them at lowest
rate of interest,
WINGHAM BRANCII—Carver John and
Josephine Streets.
W. R, GEIKIE, MANAGER,
R. VANSTONE, Solicitor.
TO ADVERTISERS
Notice of changes mast bo left at this
office not later than Saturday noon.
The oopy for changes mast be left
not later than Monday evening.
Casual advertisements accepted tip
to noon Wednesday of each week,
11STABLISHED 1872
THE WINfIIIAM TIMES.
H. B.ELL1OTT,PMILISUER ANDPROPRrETOP
THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1910
NOTES AND COMMENTS
At the annual meeting of the Weet
Huron Farmers' Institute, held on Wed-
aesday, Jnne 22ud, at the Agrloultural
Hall, Dungannon, the following direo,
tors were appointed; Ashfield—d'as.
Hayden, ,Toho Long, Thee, Stothers,
West Wawanoeh—.Wm, Balite, Stephen
Medd, J, A. Mallougb, Bast Wows-
nosh—Raymond Redmond, A, 13, Ja-
cobs, M. Lookhart, Wingham'—W, P,
Grierson, A. Currie, J, A. Morton.
Blyth—F, Metoalf, Joe, Stothers, Hut -
lett —J, Flogland, J. A. Cartwright, 3
Snell. Olinton—W, Tiplady, Gode•
rich towhehip--J. W. Salkeld,J. W.
Yeo, Geo, Tebbntt, Goderioh town—
W. Warnock, W. R. Adloberteon, H, J.
Morrie. Colborne—John Linklater, R,
M. Young, H. Hill. John Dustow and
Ohas. Gtrvin were again appointed audi-
tors.
The retiring president, H. J. Morris,
reported eight meetings held during the
past year, thirty•nine addresses given,
and 1,440 persons in attendauee.
The directors met and appointed Jos.
A. Malloagh, of Dungannon, president;
Hugh Hill, of Benmiller, vioe•preaident;
and Wm. Bailie, of Dungannon, seore-
tary,
It was decided to have the regular
meetings next winter at Holmesville
and Kintail, and supplementary meet -
Inge at Nile, Dungannon, St. Augus-
tine, St. Helens, Londesboro' and An -
burn.
Theifinancial statement for the past
year was as follows: Receipts—On
hand from previous year, $20.47; mem-
bers' fees, $47.00; municipal grant, $25;
Legislative grant, $20 00; excursions,
$42 95. Total—$155.42. Expenditures.
—Expenses for meetings, $74.60; officers'
salaries and expenses, $65 00; postage
and stationery, $7.00; miscellaneous,
$5 00; balance on hand, $3.82, Total—
$165 42.
The appointment of Earl Grey for a
further year as Governor-General is
settled. His excellonoy will return to
Canada next month to fulfill the duties
of his officenatil the arrival of the Dake
of Connaught.
The minister of militia has just com-
pleted a profitable transaction for the
Government. He has sold for $120,000
about 120 acres of land in the north-
western suburbs of Toronto, which were
purchased jest six years ago at a cost of
$20,000, to be used for the site of the
military barraoka.
Canada's custom8 revenue continues
to inorease. For the first two months
of the fiscal year endingTharsday the col-
lections totalled $16,887,096, which is a
betterment of $3,797,098. In June alone
the onetime; revenue was $6,052,998,
which is a betterment of $1,221,339 cow
pared with last year. ,
The new premier of Alberta, former
Chief Justioe Sifton, has been eleoted
in Edmonton. The same good fortune
has befallen former Judge Mitchell,
who is Mr. Sifton's ohoioe for a cabinet
portfolio. These triumphs appear to re-
fute the notion that the Liberal party in
Alberta has been disrupted by the down-
fall and dissensions of the Rutherford
Government.
The Canadian Club of Boston, Mass.
is arranging for a grand reception and
banquet in that City next fall at which
the two guests of honor will be, Presi-
dent Taft and Sir Wilfrid Laurier'. It
is hopedthat the Premier of Canada and
the President of the United States wiU
meet on the same platform and speak
under the most amicable conditions of
the great question now before the two
countries.
At a Dominion Day banquet in Lon-
don, England, Hon. Mr. Fielding obar-
acterized as "amazing" the statement
made by Admiral Douglas that annexa-
tion is behind the polioy of the Domin-
ion Government in regard to the treat-
ment of immigrants from Great Britain,
Mr. Fielding said that there never was a
time when there was less thought of an-
nexation in Canadaa
a hthan atres nt
p e
Ten motor boats have entered for a
purse of $1,000 and a trophy offered by
a Cleveland magazine for a rage through
the whirlpool rapids in the Niagara
River. Over forty years ago, it will be
remembered, the little steamer, Maid of
the Mist, succeeded in navigating these
same rapids in order to esoape being
seized for debt. That is the only reoord
of a boat passing in safety.
Newspapers may help to create the
sentiment they reflect. This is true of
this prizefight. Were it not for the
newsmen the question of whether the
blank bruiser or the white slugger was
the better man in a pugilistic sense
Weald be bothering the heads of dom-
peratively few people to day. This is a
tactthatehould not be lost sight of in
estimating the responsibility of the
press. It le not the views expressed in
the editorial columns alone that influ-
ence public opinion; ranch may be done
by a jadiolous nae of the news Columna.
The way the newts is selected and the
way it is presented dount for maoh.
The wide -spread interest in sports
throughout the worldeto•day is largely
the result of the work done by the
nswepaper mese in the presentation of
sporting newe-Woodatook Sentinel Ile
aietw,
THE WOMEN'S INSTITUTE.
The annual meeting of the West
Huron Women's Institute was held at
Dungannon on Wednesday, June 22nd.
The attendance was. very small, only
Wingham and Goderioh branches being
represented. Owing to the absence of
both president and secretary of the dis-
trict, not much business could be done.
The reports from the two branches were
encouragieg for future work. A new
branoh has been organized at Blyth.
After a ,general talk on Institute work
the following officers were elected: Pre-
sident, Mrs. Swanson, Goderioh; vice-
president, Mrs. Gillespie, Wingham.
The appointment of a seoretary and an-
ditors has been left over until a meeting
of the executive committee.
CHURCH NOTES.
NERVOUS SYSTEMS
Always Follows a Run Down
Condition of the Blood.
it le au old story how that nervous
people tell of how the blood beoomes
poor and thin, and then the nervous
symptoms followed. How many really
know that the thin blcod was
xes nasi
b1e for the nervous disorders? The
nerves get all there nourishment from
the blood, and as thin blood is deficient
in nerve•building material, the nerves be•
oome starved and pain and nervous break-
down is the result, Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills area tonic for the blood that sup.
ply the necessary elements to nourish
and tone up the nerves and, the cause
being removed, nature does the rest and
health is tally restored. Mrs Harry
Pederson, Danphin, Mao„ tells how she
was cured of nervousness and general
debility through the use of Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, She says: "A few
years ago I was all run down, and my
nervous system apparently broken
up, I was weak, tired an. nervous all
the time. When I got • . in the morn.
tug I seemed to be mor: tired than when
T went to bed, I con i not walk up an
ordinary flight of e • irs without sitting
down panting fo reath, and my nerves.
trembled like a eat. I got so that it
was almost impossible to do any house-
work, ant so nervous that I wanted to
ory about everything I did, I took Rev
oral different medicines without the
least benefit; then I read of Dr. Wil -
hauls' Pink Pills and deoided to try
them. After taking two boxes I felt a
little better and I got a further supply
whioh I continued taking for about a
month when I was as well as ever ; could
do all my housework without difficulty,
and could walk for a long distance with-
out being all tired out, In view of the
wonders Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
done for me I sincerely recommend
them to all weak, nervous, run-down
people."
Sold by all medicine dealers or by
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2 50 from the Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co. Brookville, Oat.
There are 157,161 families and 279,556
members in the Presbyterian church in
Canada. Last year $811,526.00 were
given for Missions and Benevolence and,
the sum of $4,078,304 was raised for all
purposes.
The Sunday evening service at the
Salvation Army will commence at 8
o'olook p. m. in future instead of 7.30
p. m. Next Sunday evening Capt.
Riches will take for his subject, "The
Critics Critioieed." Everybody cor-
dially invited.
Very peacefully, with almost his com-
plete family oirole gathered about his
bedside, the Rev. Dr, Alexander Suther-
land, Foreign Missionary Secretary of
the Methodist Church in Canada, died
at his home in Toronto on Thursday
last, in his 77th year. The Rev: Dr.
Sutherland for years occupied one of the
most eminent positions in the Methodist
Church of Canada, and his name was
practically a synonym for the Missionary
Society. He had at his finger ends the
details of the work of that sooiety in
Japan, West China and Canada, and di-
rected its affairs with a penetration and
a comma mg ability that developed
the work fp a degree far beyond what
could have been foreseen a generation
ago. Dr. Sutherland was one of the
pioneers in Methodism in Canada and
he will be greatly missed.
Da. RIE) CusltroN Silos.—The easiest
Shoe on Earth; Makes walking a pleas-
nre. See them. W. J. GREER, sole
agent.
MORRIS.
Four Or five publio schools in this
township will change teachers this sum-
mer.
Miss M. Cowardwho has
w taught
most successfully in S. S. no. 1, will at.
tend the Normal Sohool next term so a
new teaoher will have to be smeared.
Mies Coward's home is at Winchelsea,
Ueborne thwnship: We wish her ono.
cess.
Geo. A. Bielby, B. 4., of Georgetown.
has been engaged as soienoe master of
St. Marys Collegiate institute in place
of Mr. Foreater, who gees to Smith's
Falls. Mr. Bielby is a Morris township
boy who it proving his ability 10 pre.
mote. We wish him sucoeer,
Sunday, Jnne 261h, Enphemis ilio-
Dougall, relict of the late Samuel W.
Barr, paid Nature's debt, peeling away
et the home of her son, .'ohn, 4th line,
in her 85th year, Deoeeteed was hoed ill
Argyleshire, Scotland, and was the
youngest daughter of the late Peter Mo -
Dougall, She came to Canada with her
brother, John, in 1850 and lived in
Whitby township and in the fall of 1852
moved to the 5th oon, of Grey township.
A year after she was married to the late
Andrew Arnott, who died 7 or 8 years
later. Two daughters were born to
them, Mrs. Hugh Lamont and Mrs. F.
Coates, of Grey and Elma townships
respectively. Ten years after Mr. Ar•
nott's demise the subject of this notice
married the late Samuel W. Barr, of
Morris, who died five years ago. The
children are Peter and John and Mrs,
Walter Ynill, of this township, and Mrs.
A. Campbell, of Gaylord, Mioh. De-
ceased was an amiable, motherly woman
who made friends wherever ahe went.
She was a faithful member of the Pres-
byterian ohnroh and enjoyed the oom-
panionehip of the Friend that atioketh
oloser than a brother for many years.
Mrs. L. Blank, who lives on the 4th line,
is a sister of Mrs. Barr and the only sur-
viving member of the family. She is 94
years of age and is quite poorly just now
we are sorry to state.
BRLMORn.
Mr. Peter Terrill, formerly of this
place, writes the TIDIES from Warner,
Alta., that he, in company with. eleven
other men, is leaving on a trip to the
Peaoe River country to explore it. They
are taking an outfit of six horses,
wagons and tents, and expect it will
take them thirty days to make the 1,000
mile trip. Mr, Terriff promises to write
the TIMES from the new country.
Wingham
Atwood
Fall Fair Dates.
Blyth....
Brussels
Dungannon
Fordwioh
Goderioh
Harriaton
Kincardine
Sept. 29 30
Oct. 2 3
Oct. 4.5
Oot. 6.7
Oct. 6.7
Oot. 1
Sept. 19 20.21
Sept. 99.30
Sept. 21-22
Listowel ....................Sept,.20.21
London ....
Lncknow
Mildmay
Ripley
Seaforth
Teeewater.
Tiverton
Walkerton,,,
Sept. 9 17
•. Sept. 22.23
Sept. 26 27
.Sept. 27.28
Sept. 22-23
Oct, 5.6
Oot. 4
Sept. 15 16
Jaok Johnson (colored), won the
prize fight at Reno on Monday over Jim
Jeffries. Jeffrfed' was knocked out in
the fifteenth round. The negro had the
better of it all the way through.
Through the generosity of Mr, John
Roes Robertson a pavillon for tubereu-
lasts ohildren was opened at. the Lake-
side Home.
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
is the only emulsion imi-
tated. The reason is plain—
it's the hest. Insist upon
having Scott's—it's ,the
world's standard flesh and
strength builder.
ALL DRUGGISTS
NEWS NOTES.
Belleville has started a ten days' cam-
paign to raise $40,000 for a new Y. M, C.
A. building.
Fire at Gillies Bros.' lumber yards
near Arnprior, destroyed sixty million
feet of lumber valued at $1,000,000,
A big storm at Aberdeen, Sask., blew
the fronts out of several stores and
wrecked a large number of barns.
It is believed that the diffioulty be-
tween the C. P. R. traiumen and the
oompany will be settled this week. All
danger of a strike is considered at an
end.
The Coroner's jury on The Montreal
Heral fire viotims found that no one
was responsible for the disaster, and
recommended a regular inspection of
water tanks. •
Charges made by Mr. W. J. Taylor
against an immigration official at Wind-
sar were investigated at Woodstook.
The official al.ologizsd to Mr. Taylor,
and a report of the investigation was
forwarded to Ottawa.
Are You A Pessimist?
Are you a pessimist? Are you inolin-
ed to be a kicker? If so, take a drive
out into the country, Feast your eyes
on the growing crops. Rest them on
the restful green of a verdure that looks
good enough to last forever. Reflect
upon the wealth of the country you live
in. Contemplate the glory of sky and
air, the beauty of trees in blossom, the
promise of fruit and grain in. abundance
and if you still feel inclined to kick,
try your kinking on yourself, for it is
you who is to blame, and not the world
in general or anyone else in particular.
This world is all right in Jnne and in
July, too. It may go bad some other
time, but not at tbis season.
Sermons in Sentences.
A man's faith is his real fortune.
Love gives away in order not to lose,
The more a man hags himself the
smaller he becomes.
Love lifts up when it does not know it
is bending down.
You cannot listen to God by turning a
deaf ear to men.
Any kind of thoughtless charity is
pretty sure to be heartless.
A little sunshiny practice ,is worth a
lot of moonshiny poetry.—Chicago Tri-
bune.
'fru; Manufacture of Pins.
In 1775 a prize was given to the
colonist of Carolina whon roduced the
first native• pins and needles, During
the war of 1812, when, owing to re-
strictions upon commerce, theprice of
pins rose to the enormous sum of 51
per paper, the manufacture was actu-
ally started in the United Staten but
does not seem to have met with suc-
cess. as the enterprise was soon aban-
doned. The industry was not fairly
started in this country until the year
1536. The early pins in this country,
as in England. were made with globe-
lar heads of fine twisted wire, made'
separately, and secured to. the shank
by compression from a failing block
and die. 'These old pins had the Mis-
fortune of often parting with their
heads. It was to overcome this diffi-
culty that the attention of early in-
ventors was directed. 'rbe solid head-
ed pin, 10 common use today, took the
place of the old form about 1840.
Same Results.
They were discussing the transitory
nature of baby beauty.
"Yes," said the very lonely than,
"baby beauty is abotit as evanescent
a thing as can be imagined, Why,
when 1i was a baby,whenever my
nurse 'put me is a carriage acid wheel-
ed me about the street everybody
turned and Stopped to look." I
"Weis," raid the other man, "i!'data;
db it; ti wit would have it Atte $.
teettetOl
A. E. SMITH
BANKER
tVINGHADI, ONTARIO.
Farmers who want, money to buy
horses, cattle, or hogs to feed for market
oan have it on reasonable terms,
Notes disoounted for tradesmen, mer-
chants. or agents, on favorable terms.
Loans on real estate at the lowest
rates going.
C. N. Griffin
GENERAL AGENT
FIRE
LIFE
ACCIDENT •
PLATE GLASS
WEATHER
**mem
Insurance
Coupled with a REAL ESTATE and
MONEY LOANING Business.
Issuer of Marriage Licenses.
Office over Malcolm's Grooetry.
i.ive Stock Markets.
Toronto, July 5.—City Cattle Market.
—Trade was only moderately active, the
commoner grades of cattle going off
slowly. It was a light ran of 66 cars,
including 861 head of cattle, 1,221 sheep
and lambs, 700 hogs, and 287 oalves.'
The quality of the cattle` all round
was poor to medium grassers, the pro-
portion of ohoioe butcher being very
small. The light run tended to give a
steady tone to the market, prices being
practically unchanged for the best
qualities and easy on the poorest
grades.
There were praotioally no export oat.
tie offering.
The following are the quotations:
Exporters' battle— Per 100 lbs.
6 50
$7
0 6 15
75
5 25 6 25
660 6 75
550 5 60
Choice
Medium
Bulls
Light
Cows
Feeders—
best 1000 pounds and u3-00
3 00
1 50
wards
Stockers ohoioe
" bulls
Butohers'—
Pioked 6 15
Medium 6 00
Cows........ 3 60
Bulls 8 60
Hogs
Best - 9 00
Lights 8 65
Sheep—
Export ewes 4 00
Bucks:,,. 3 50
Calla .. 3 76
Spring Lambs eaoh.. 8 50
Calves. each 3 60
3 50
400
2 00
6 40
6 25
5 26
4 50
4 26
4 00
4 25
8 60
6 60
WINGISAM MARKET REPORTS
Wingham, July 6th, 1910.
Flor r per 100 lbs.......... 2 40 to 3 10
Fall Wheat ........ 0 90 to 0 90
Oats 0 32 to 0 33
0450
Berle .. .. to 48
Peas y 0 68 to 0 68
Batter dairy ,,,. - 0 18 to 0 20
Eggs per dos
Wood per cord
Hay, per ton
Potatoes, per bushel,
Lard
Live Hogs, per cwt... .
017 to 0 19
260 to 250'
11 00 to 11 00
080 to 035
020 to 020
900 to 900
1
1
usinssissmonsow
"THE PEOPLE'S POPULAR STORE"
KERB & BIRD
Summer
Ho//day
Features
Are you going away? Did it ever strike you this
way? What shall I wear and where to get it.
COOL DAINTY MUSLINS, of course you need
light dresses and right here you have the best selection in
Cool Muslin% plain white and a variety of colors. Then
too we have the Horne Journal Patterns and these are
readily acknowledged to be the very best.
PARASOLS are other necessaries ; we have black,
white and colored ones; then they keep one so much cool-
er that they are necessary for comfort,
DO YOU KNOW we have a new idea in Dainty
Verandah Matts made from genuine Japanese Matting in
various dainty designs at 50c..
Taylor's Borated Antiseptic Talcum, healthful
sanitary talcum with a delicate violet perfume, at only 25c.
Have you a summer cottage or a large airy
verandah? Then you need Curtains or Screens, and here
is the place to find the most suitable Art Sateens and
Muslins. We studied this thing ourselves and all you have
to do is procure the requirements and arrange them to
suit yourself.
YES IT IS too hot to do much cooking, now we
have Peanut Butter at only 20 per lb. and its ever so
much cheaper this way, than in bottles.
We are right into the fruit business and will have
first-class Bananas, Strawberries, Oranges, etc., at almost
any time.
1
i
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAMMMAAAAAA AAAMAAAAAAAAKAAAAAAAAAAAA
i FOR TWO s`
C t
i WEEKS
;,
C Y
1 KNOX'S ANNUAL UAL SALE y
I ,will be continued for two weeks longer until
LONGER
JULY 14th
}
1 ;, }
f UNHEARD OFPRICES IN
Watches, Clocks Jewelry
}
hen
C aw r
ae
ancy 1
Z
Goods etc.
1
Call in and take
advantage of
some of the greatest values
ever heard of in
Wingham
1
1
R. KNOX
OPPOSITE BRUNSWIOX HOTEL, 1 DOOR FORTH X I1 G'S
axv..YVV,!gV_V1iHti100.V.VA NAJMVWW ti MMMt1N_1AMMl_1A6AMMAai
..�:.._T',-;-....-......_._., : ._,..-_._.^ ...__., ..._.........-, ,.., -:_
Une Dollar deposited m the Bank
of Hamilton might mean the first
step toward the accumulation of a '
:
fortune.
The man Who scorns the sagacious
investment oi his savings has yet to 1
learn the Grue principles of t'rugalit ,
and thrift. -
_'_"
,,,� ��
3
ill
;' iii
- iii'
': ii
ll I
nonan,.
--
f" lr
i lg
(
' '; I 'j
VII/
it IR L
Deposit one dollar to day—begin
to provide against old\age and finan-
tial reverses.
WINGHAM BRANCH
C. P. Smith Agent.
,�,'jm�
31^
-
W
..
-
NEWS NOTES.
Belleville has started a ten days' cam-
paign to raise $40,000 for a new Y. M, C.
A. building.
Fire at Gillies Bros.' lumber yards
near Arnprior, destroyed sixty million
feet of lumber valued at $1,000,000,
A big storm at Aberdeen, Sask., blew
the fronts out of several stores and
wrecked a large number of barns.
It is believed that the diffioulty be-
tween the C. P. R. traiumen and the
oompany will be settled this week. All
danger of a strike is considered at an
end.
The Coroner's jury on The Montreal
Heral fire viotims found that no one
was responsible for the disaster, and
recommended a regular inspection of
water tanks. •
Charges made by Mr. W. J. Taylor
against an immigration official at Wind-
sar were investigated at Woodstook.
The official al.ologizsd to Mr. Taylor,
and a report of the investigation was
forwarded to Ottawa.
Are You A Pessimist?
Are you a pessimist? Are you inolin-
ed to be a kicker? If so, take a drive
out into the country, Feast your eyes
on the growing crops. Rest them on
the restful green of a verdure that looks
good enough to last forever. Reflect
upon the wealth of the country you live
in. Contemplate the glory of sky and
air, the beauty of trees in blossom, the
promise of fruit and grain in. abundance
and if you still feel inclined to kick,
try your kinking on yourself, for it is
you who is to blame, and not the world
in general or anyone else in particular.
This world is all right in Jnne and in
July, too. It may go bad some other
time, but not at tbis season.
Sermons in Sentences.
A man's faith is his real fortune.
Love gives away in order not to lose,
The more a man hags himself the
smaller he becomes.
Love lifts up when it does not know it
is bending down.
You cannot listen to God by turning a
deaf ear to men.
Any kind of thoughtless charity is
pretty sure to be heartless.
A little sunshiny practice ,is worth a
lot of moonshiny poetry.—Chicago Tri-
bune.
'fru; Manufacture of Pins.
In 1775 a prize was given to the
colonist of Carolina whon roduced the
first native• pins and needles, During
the war of 1812, when, owing to re-
strictions upon commerce, theprice of
pins rose to the enormous sum of 51
per paper, the manufacture was actu-
ally started in the United Staten but
does not seem to have met with suc-
cess. as the enterprise was soon aban-
doned. The industry was not fairly
started in this country until the year
1536. The early pins in this country,
as in England. were made with globe-
lar heads of fine twisted wire, made'
separately, and secured to. the shank
by compression from a failing block
and die. 'These old pins had the Mis-
fortune of often parting with their
heads. It was to overcome this diffi-
culty that the attention of early in-
ventors was directed. 'rbe solid head-
ed pin, 10 common use today, took the
place of the old form about 1840.
Same Results.
They were discussing the transitory
nature of baby beauty.
"Yes," said the very lonely than,
"baby beauty is abotit as evanescent
a thing as can be imagined, Why,
when 1i was a baby,whenever my
nurse 'put me is a carriage acid wheel-
ed me about the street everybody
turned and Stopped to look." I
"Weis," raid the other man, "i!'data;
db it; ti wit would have it Atte $.
teettetOl
A. E. SMITH
BANKER
tVINGHADI, ONTARIO.
Farmers who want, money to buy
horses, cattle, or hogs to feed for market
oan have it on reasonable terms,
Notes disoounted for tradesmen, mer-
chants. or agents, on favorable terms.
Loans on real estate at the lowest
rates going.
C. N. Griffin
GENERAL AGENT
FIRE
LIFE
ACCIDENT •
PLATE GLASS
WEATHER
**mem
Insurance
Coupled with a REAL ESTATE and
MONEY LOANING Business.
Issuer of Marriage Licenses.
Office over Malcolm's Grooetry.
i.ive Stock Markets.
Toronto, July 5.—City Cattle Market.
—Trade was only moderately active, the
commoner grades of cattle going off
slowly. It was a light ran of 66 cars,
including 861 head of cattle, 1,221 sheep
and lambs, 700 hogs, and 287 oalves.'
The quality of the cattle` all round
was poor to medium grassers, the pro-
portion of ohoioe butcher being very
small. The light run tended to give a
steady tone to the market, prices being
practically unchanged for the best
qualities and easy on the poorest
grades.
There were praotioally no export oat.
tie offering.
The following are the quotations:
Exporters' battle— Per 100 lbs.
6 50
$7
0 6 15
75
5 25 6 25
660 6 75
550 5 60
Choice
Medium
Bulls
Light
Cows
Feeders—
best 1000 pounds and u3-00
3 00
1 50
wards
Stockers ohoioe
" bulls
Butohers'—
Pioked 6 15
Medium 6 00
Cows........ 3 60
Bulls 8 60
Hogs
Best - 9 00
Lights 8 65
Sheep—
Export ewes 4 00
Bucks:,,. 3 50
Calla .. 3 76
Spring Lambs eaoh.. 8 50
Calves. each 3 60
3 50
400
2 00
6 40
6 25
5 26
4 50
4 26
4 00
4 25
8 60
6 60
WINGISAM MARKET REPORTS
Wingham, July 6th, 1910.
Flor r per 100 lbs.......... 2 40 to 3 10
Fall Wheat ........ 0 90 to 0 90
Oats 0 32 to 0 33
0450
Berle .. .. to 48
Peas y 0 68 to 0 68
Batter dairy ,,,. - 0 18 to 0 20
Eggs per dos
Wood per cord
Hay, per ton
Potatoes, per bushel,
Lard
Live Hogs, per cwt... .
017 to 0 19
260 to 250'
11 00 to 11 00
080 to 035
020 to 020
900 to 900
1
1
usinssissmonsow
"THE PEOPLE'S POPULAR STORE"
KERB & BIRD
Summer
Ho//day
Features
Are you going away? Did it ever strike you this
way? What shall I wear and where to get it.
COOL DAINTY MUSLINS, of course you need
light dresses and right here you have the best selection in
Cool Muslin% plain white and a variety of colors. Then
too we have the Horne Journal Patterns and these are
readily acknowledged to be the very best.
PARASOLS are other necessaries ; we have black,
white and colored ones; then they keep one so much cool-
er that they are necessary for comfort,
DO YOU KNOW we have a new idea in Dainty
Verandah Matts made from genuine Japanese Matting in
various dainty designs at 50c..
Taylor's Borated Antiseptic Talcum, healthful
sanitary talcum with a delicate violet perfume, at only 25c.
Have you a summer cottage or a large airy
verandah? Then you need Curtains or Screens, and here
is the place to find the most suitable Art Sateens and
Muslins. We studied this thing ourselves and all you have
to do is procure the requirements and arrange them to
suit yourself.
YES IT IS too hot to do much cooking, now we
have Peanut Butter at only 20 per lb. and its ever so
much cheaper this way, than in bottles.
We are right into the fruit business and will have
first-class Bananas, Strawberries, Oranges, etc., at almost
any time.
1
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i FOR TWO s`
C t
i WEEKS
;,
C Y
1 KNOX'S ANNUAL UAL SALE y
I ,will be continued for two weeks longer until
LONGER
JULY 14th
}
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f UNHEARD OFPRICES IN
Watches, Clocks Jewelry
}
hen
C aw r
ae
ancy 1
Z
Goods etc.
1
Call in and take
advantage of
some of the greatest values
ever heard of in
Wingham
1
1
R. KNOX
OPPOSITE BRUNSWIOX HOTEL, 1 DOOR FORTH X I1 G'S
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