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The Wingham Times, 1910-07-21, Page 3THE WiNGU M TIMES, JULY 21, 1910 A strong, rich super.glutened Flour from "hard Western Wheat Makes good bread )irf�t/tMlRMIN All that the name implies e Campbell Milling Company, Limited, Toronto: 1'OR SAIab; BY IC,I'Bli & BU RD. W1NG11Aet, FORGET IT. The ability to pat things out of one's thoughts is ane of the moat valuable meets in an et -query schedule. It comes by.training of the will only and can be carried to such a pinch thea the request `'Forget it" can actually be literally oar• Tied out. A man of affairs who remains clear - beaded an alert at his work until a orisre is over, even although home happ eniogs are of tragic or joyous import, a women who can give her whole mind to some urgent duty while events of mom ent aro transpiring which - ordinarily absorb her being and cause her wild de- light or utter despair, have le rrned the force that is in eaoh•of as to say ''I will think of what I must and, then of wbat IXtieP.se," This praotice of controlling Abe rubjeot of our thoughts means happ- ineab and peace or the reverse. It oblit. erates worry, that tail•chasing bewilder- ing circling of the brain, which exhausts withouta000mplishing. The unpractised - will doubt its power of ohaaging a train of thought, of switching the mind to saner or pleasanter or more important considerations. Sometime§ one is ob• liged to get the body to help with motion exercise and new stimulant, but it can always be done with normal will power and even with an enervated one braced by a belief in snooeas, while Tine feels the thrill of kingship in one's being the aahnranoe or•mastery which is wag- nifioent This paragraph came to be written after I heard a penitent mur- mur: "Father I have thought a si'na' and heard the father's sad comment:ea It all begins so, my son Your safe guard has been down Malaga -r rem• ember that oontrot of thought kills hill, It is veiy well to keep an open switch on your main liue, a i,wtto,. the leads up to some big station of pure and hilh and inspiring things end thick )(revolt onto it oeoaster ally." SONG OF THE GERM. '-' UNTER We have harried the germs, in spite of their squirms, and have Blain the same in their lair; Wee e atter the ilv with a baneful eye, and the skeeter must say its prayer; ,We have purified wells and killed off stnells that have risen nntn the §kiss, Bat in Spite of our toil, and the rater we boil the public ups and'die . • Wehave swept the atreete, !fi`ti'eend fruits'and m3ats, we have th., milk pasteurized; No beetling thrives upon human lives which we've properly sterilized; The insidious bug in the barber's mug we have given a rude surprise, Bat what's the nae? -some screw is loose -the public ups and dies. In the days gone by no "swat the fly" was the usual snmuaer sign; But it somehow fell men lived as well - their lives were as yours and mine; So something's wrong with the germ fiend's song -what it Me we can't surmise; But)he oiaoh remains that in spite of our pains the public ups and dies. --Denver Republican, Rocking Down vs Shaking Which • Do. You Prefer? Look at the man above. He's SHAKING an ordinary furnace. He bends nearly double, exerts all his strength, works up aprespiration, and gets a sore back. Now, look at the woman, She stands nearly• erect, gently moves the lever to ami fro, a few inches, and the ashes are dropped into the Sunshine ash -pan. This is called ROCKING DOWN, It's so easy a child can do it, Which method do you prefer ? Why, Rocking Down, of course. s4 Go to our agent in your Iocality. Let him show you the many other time -saving, labor-saving and fuel -economizing features of the Sunshine. Order him to install the Sunshine with a fj'uarantee to heat soul' home to your entire satisfaction. 61,,ECiarys shin I" e, /111[1,\\\ oeden, Toronto, Mantra ealWttnilpeer, Vxtcauver, et John,lst13.,, Ildiiitan, Celerity. $iVi41BY W. J. BO10Ey INGIIAUL ,a. OAU STOMACH Many in Wingham are Being Thor. oughts, Purified by 'M,ona, the Guaranteed Cure for Indigestion P,notenf Winghem wet aiatt'ir from yspe s a and oih,r htomn,'h rroublee ea, iretaug ti('d tit taking le operations eon aiatng pepsin because pepgiu simply dig,sr.e the food anifiei.•.ily. Papeiu re- lieves, it never enre.,. And remember, pepsin only digests animal food; it has no effect on starchy food, snob as prtatoes,rice, bread, etc. Mi•o ca cleanses and purifies the atom - sob and bowels, and tones up and puts energy into the atomaoh walla, so that they properly mix the food with the natural digestive juices of the stomach. MQi•o nil tablets quickly arouse the gtomaob from its inaction, and in a few nays it is able to do its work easily and without exertion. There will be no more sour -stomach, fermentation of food, dizziness, sick headache, belohing of gas, or foul breath, Mi-o•na only coats 60 oeote a large hnx and is guaranteed by J Walton McKibb m to cure car sickness, vomit- ing,of pr,guenoy, and etomaoh sickeesa resulting from ovi•r-indulgence of the night before, or money bank. THE IMPORTANCE OF PEAT. In a letter to his paper, The Brookville Recorder, the lion. Geo. P. G-aham in- dicates that the government experiments in the prodnotion of a commercial peat at Alfred are pointing to final encoeas . Ontario hail many peat bogs. Mr Graham pointe out that Brockville hoe one of the riohest deposits in Canada. Many other places have a•supply •ot peat Available, but hitherto have failed to take advantage of it because` the mach hurry Hoed heti failed in both economy and efficiency,• The value of peat fuel, in view of the fast diminishing ooal supply. anew a reserve in case of prolonged strikes eith- er on the railways or at the mines, needs no emphasizing, But the impor- tance of Mr. Graham's intimation as to the probable success of the Government's experiments is only realized when the extent of $thecountry's peat bogs ie taken into oonsrdereition, They are said to cover approximately 26,000 square miles, an area which would ptodnoe about twenty-eight billion tons of air- dried peat, equal in fuel value to about fourteen billion tons of ooal. Stroh a supply, at the present rate of Canada''s goat importation, would replace import- ed coal for over a thousand pease. seseasees Growth of Rural Telephones. rre.resormr aro To any one who travels the °omitry roads, one of the most striking features is the oontinnons evidence of the growth of the rural telephone. Even the most remote and eperaety settled parte of the oonntr have ave their strings of wired poles, spreading like a network !gong highway Atter highway and branching off here and there to take in some farm- house that, were it not for the oonneot- Ing link of electricity, would indeed be isolated. The oe11 of the telephone bell is no 0noommon sound ire the farm- house today. Men Are nettled for the threlhing+ prices are learned, buying ngg and selling is done, others go to the but- cher and grooer, and friendly goeaip and chat are all among the many things that keep the rural linea: buzzing, The farmer with a,telephone is no more iso Wed than bib brother in the city indeed, Often far leer so; for the oity.man, as a rule, does not know hit next door neigh, bot. The farmer knows everybody and, thanks to the wonderful invention of 13rof, Graham Bell, bah talk t0 "them all day or any minute of the night, 'NHEN YOU THINK THE WORLD'S AGAINST YOU. So you think the world's against you, Mau? And you say you can't keep hoping- ' oat you can! Jaen beoanee you've seen some other Make A venture that has paid, You've ben.)me disgruntled, brother, Bnt press onward, unairaid- Dan't sit down, resigned to be an also rai. So yon think the world's against you? You are wrong! Doe's become a foolish weakling, but be strong. Xr the world had time to scourge yon It would hardly takethe pains; There should be no need to urge you To be daily making gains, You should have the will to straggle right along. Do not get the foolish notion that it's Fate; Possibly tt'emerely something that you ata; Take a fresh grip on ambition, Trade your frown off for a smile; Yon, may better your oondirion If you briskly walk a mite; Luck will never Dome to find yon while yoir wait. -S E. Kiser, in the Chicago Record. Herald. Growing Old Your eyes may fail and your limbo grow weak, and the blood in your veins run cold; deep lines may furrow your shrunken cheek. and your heart, that was strong and bold, may do its work with a feeble beat; the road may weary your stumbling feet; you may sigh for friends that you'll no more meet -but that isn't growing old. The years may number four score, er more, that over your head have rolled; you may hear the wash on the other shore of .the waves that are dark and cold; while your brain is keen and your soul is strong, and your heart is full of a hope- ful song, you still are one of the youth- ful throng, and years will not make you old. When your veioe is bareh and your words are mean, as you sit by the fire and scold, and your mind is fat and your heart is lean, and your thoughts are blue with mold; when you bring to the breasts of the children fears, and bring to the eyes of women's team, it is not needful to count years --we know thkt•yon are growing old, --Watt Mason. ararrirriarro ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signs turb 0? See Paf.5lmlls Wrapper Below. Vary Aman and AS +Dairy 't&tltke as tngaire FOR REXQACNE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR'antousRES3. FOR TORP1D LIVER« ib1aCQMSTIPATIOM FOR,:ALLOW SKIM: FO0-111tCOMPLEXIOM oratatusies e able.: 11111iE $IClt HEADACHE. SCENE 31F "GR;RRE.$ O 'AL."I,AH." Biskra, Made Famous by Robert Hichens, Attracts Tourists, Bila Wheeler Wilcox and iter hus, band are spending some time .et Biskra, that strange town that Robert ,Lichens made fatuous by his "Gar- den of Allah." Possibly no writer bas succeeded better h eonveynng the atmosphere of a locality than .Xlichens has of this queer, sleepy town in Africa, wllicli contains about •8,000 Arabs and " 400 French. In propor- tion it has many more natives than' Algiers, and therein lies its charm. Tbe natives are Arabs, Kabyles and Nomads, or tent dwellers, who lead an easy life, living on sous -eons and dried dates. ' As the sun shines all the year they have little need to work, and the word worry ie not in their vocabulary, fi The better class of Ariilis are fine, looking and aristocratic, but, rich or poor they are bright and interesting and process occult powers to a mark- ed degree. In marry cases the lower types seem mind readers. The most interesting diversion for the'foreign- ers since the "Garden of Allah" made the place famous is to walk through the long and narrow native villages about half a mile from the fashion- able hotel which the tourists frequent, In fact, after a few drives there is little for foreigners to do but lounge, visit the beautiful public gardens and let the natives, guides and children amuse them. At night the tourists walk around the streets, which are filled with Arab men and dancing girls of the neigh- boring tribe of Outed-Nail, who come. here for the season. These girls live in two streets end have a hospital devotee) to their exclusive use. If sick or injureu they are obliged to 'go here, where they receive the best of care. Since Biskra has become celebrated it has, as a rule, been filled with tourists, but the season this year has been poor, both at the Riviera and in Egypt. Even Algiers has felt it, and the wreck off the Balearic Is- lands about finished it, for the disas- ter occurred to a boat that was fre- auented by toprists..., Lost Five Children With DIARRHOEA Saved the Sixth One With DR. FOWLER'S Extract of Wiles Strawberry. Mrs. John Firth, Craighurst, Ont., writes: -"I have had six children and lost them all but one. When young they would get Diarrhoea and nothing would stop it, As I lived in a backward place, I did not know of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. I saved my last child, who is now eight years old, but I owe it to Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. Had I known about it before I feel that I would have saved the others. I shall forever praise and bless it and will never be without it again." "Dr. Fowler's" has been on the market for over sixty-five years, and has a "world wide" reputation for curing all Bowel Complaints. Do not be imposed upon by xny un. scrupulous dealer who wishes to sub- stitute the so-called Strawberry Com- pounds for "Dr. Fowler's," Price 35 cents. Manufactuted only by The T. Milburn Co,. Limited, Toronto, Ont. IL Dr. Cbase'd Dint mentis a certain and guaranteed oureforeaohand every form of itching,bleeding • and protruding piles. See testimonials in the press and ask Your neighbors about it. You can use it and 5otyour money back if not satisfied. sec, at all feelers o. Enusxsox, BATIGS &Co, Toronto, 911. CHASE'S OINTMENT. For Cooler Houses. [Springfield Republican.] The next great forward step in mater- ial civilization is likely to be the cooling of houses in summer. The thing is eo entirely feasible that it is surprising that riob people who build fine houses have not mhde refrigeration se muck a mat- ter of course as heating. Many must have read with envy of President Tattier artificially cooled offices in Washington, which helped him tbrotigh the tough fag end of the season. Some of the new fruit ahips plying to the tropine ate be- ing constructed with the refrigerator her- vioe extended to the cabins and' state• rooms as well at to the hold. Here and there a private house may be equipped, Mit such a case is the rare eitoeption now. But the improvement is in the air, and it will be surprising if a nation Which attaches se maoh importance to Waited comfort does not take it pp With avidity, and very likely overdo o it, in the with steam heat winter. There ought not to be too maoh difference be- tween the temperature inslde end out side; a Very few degrees W0utd bring relief and oaube no danger of inlnry from going in or out. A obrreapbndent of the New Y'otk Times suggests what he calls an "anti -stove," whioh at small COM can be put into any room. It oon. este simpler of a tack holding three gal Ions or so of ice and salt and a half pint b ammonia. With a drip pan to batch the Water. Odoe a day it 15 bald is often enough to replenish the tenk. AN• Dr. hearl Stop, Madan t Do not throw out that old piece of furniture. It's marred and the worse of wear, true, but some of your fondest recollections are associated with it. " Lacqueret," the specially prepared Lacquer" will restore its original beauty, concealing the mars and blemishes of wear and tear and mak- ing it as. good as new. The next best thing to a new suite for any room in the house is a coat of oL,acqueret"-the wonderful furn- iture renewer. • Our free booklet, "Dainty Dec- orator," tells the story of "Lac- queret"-the home beauti- fier. A post -card brings it. Interesting and informing. Write for it to -day. Leading Hardware and Paint Dealers sell "Lacqueref." International Varnish Co. Limited 2362 TORONTO -WINNIPEG 3' MOTE, "LACQUERET" is sold in full Imperial measure packages only FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO., WINGHAM. fe•••••••••••••••••••••••• C, •s s•••r••eassss•••••Oa•• •1oLuBBIINTG • •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • The TIMES will receive subscriptions • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • 2 ••• • • • • • • • • 4. RATES FOR 1909 - 10. at • 1 • • • • • ••i•• • x• • •• • • • at the rates below• • • • 4.50 • • 4.50 3.10 • • for any of the following publications Times and Daily Globe Times and Daily Mail and Empire Times and Daily World Times and Toronto Daily News...... Times and Toronto Daily Star Times and Daily Advertiser Times and Toronto Saturday Night Times and Weekly Globe . Times and Weekly Mail and Empire Times and Family Herald and Weekly -Star Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) Times and Weekly Witness Times and London Free Press (weekly) Times and London Advertiser (weekly) Times and Toronto Weekly Sun Times and World Wide Times and Northern Messenger. Times and Farmers' Advocate . We specially recommend our readers to subscribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine 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 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 Home Companion 2,25 Times and Times Country Gentleman 2.60 2.95 Times andand BostonDelineator Cooking School Magazine 1.95 Times and Green's Fruit Grower 1.55 Times and Good. Housekeeping 0 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. Times and Cosmopolitan , . , , . , 21 , *••• Times and Ladies' Home Journal 15 5 Times and Saturday Evening Post. 2222::77311550 Times and Sncceas,,,,,,,,,,,,, 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 Viek's Magazine ... 1.60 Times and Home Herald 52.605 a Times and Travel M gazi ce , . 2,25 Times and Practical Farmer 2,10 Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1.60 Times and Designer 1 75 Times and Everybody's 2.80 Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg1,60 Times and Canadian Pictorial.... 1,80 2.30 2.30 2.85 3.35 1.60 L60 1.85 1,60 1.85 1.80 1.60 1,70 2.20 1.35 2.35 • • • • • LT • 4 4 • • • • •• • • • • • The above prices include postage on American publications to any A address in Canada, If the Ttritirs ib to be sent to an American addreee, add = 50 cents for postage, and where American publications are to be Bent to American addresses a reduction will be made in price, t We could extend this list. If the paper or magazine you went is not ib the list, call atthis office, ordrop s card and we will give yon prices on the paper yon want. We glib with all the leading newspapers and magazines. When premiums are given with any of above papers, subseribere will: aooer'e such ptemitrtns when Ordering through us, same ae ordering aired from publishers, These !ova rates mean a considerable eating ' to subscribers, and are STRICTLY CAS17 IN ADVANCE. Send remittances by postal .note, post oilioe or express money order, addtesait:g TTMES O FTO Vy11 GHAtsI ONfrtlt'•ft 1