The Wingham Times, 1910-07-28, Page 3s.
TUE WINGH4M TIMES, JULY 28, 1910
Says the Miller , 140.,4
"There ,nu:it be some good season why nearly every wise >'a. ousewifa prefers
CR, AM OF THE WEST' Flour,
because 1 turn
Out About a barrel
every minute of every
twenty-four hours. That sounds
good for. • CREAM OF TIM WEST,'
doesn't it? And it's made at the R Model
Mill•' too."
The Campbell Mang Company, Linitcd
Toronto •
FOR SALE BX KERR & BIRD. WINGHAM.,
LOVES SOOTTISM SONGS.
Sir Wilfrid'bas always had a warm
uoreer in his tieatt for the Scotch, and
he always enjoys a meeting among
them. D,rpiy bedded ha his sensitive
nature are the roots of a lave for Soolt•
tiah ioy,lty and Scottish tolerance,
which (wee to hien from his residence
res a boy with to Scottish family named
Fraser, in the Province of Qoeber. At
aFreuch °arm:lien concert, not long ago,
a friend maths the remark that no son{zet
equalled tbr, French. "Bat that is not
io," replied Sir Wilfrid, "There are
no aon;ri+ diet tounh my heart like the
Scotch." Phe spell of these eweet
simple la;r., of Scotland, to whioli he had
listened so often In the days of hie youth,
bad never been broken 'mid all the
changing aoenos of his after life, and
this ie charaoteristio of the In: n• -bis
diraetneas, his broad•mindneae. and hie
steadfastness of purpose.
Tramp Printer's Opinion.
The following opinion of. a country
newspaper, editor..,is given by a tramp
printer, and from what is generally
known of the class referred to, the truth
herein embodied eau be vonobed for"Daring the eight years I worked in a
country newspaper ciliac, I bad ample
time to atndy and absorb the• daily inoi•
dents in the Life and work ot a country
editor. I learned for a certainty ,that a
man to qualify for such a positien must
be a machinist, e. politician, a financier,
diplomat, a printer, besides having a
smattering- of all profesaione. He must
be versatile, forgiving. brave, prolific,
calm, temperate in all things, and with-
al, be mast have excellent bodily health,
abundant Fhysioal strength and a head
filled with concrete knowledge of his
village, the country, the commonwealth,
and all the thinge of national and inter.
national importance, from the beat
xnethod,of treating pip in light Breviaries
to the latest revolutionary disturbance
In the Balkans."
is the best. remedy
known for sunburn,
hest rushes, eczema
sore feet., stings and
'blisters. A skin food!
411 Draypt,tt and Stares. -60e.
•' ,, - /7/
- 1', ioX4,/�%G /
. 9
LONDON, ONTARIO
Business & Shorthand
SUBJECTS
Resident and Mail Courses
Catalogues Free •
). W. \C/eatervelt, J. W. Westervelt, Jr., C.A.,.
Principal, Vice -Principal.
+awseeoma71111.11111,.
USE OF SAWDUST.'
(Forest and Stream.)
Spruce and pine sawdust, thrown
aside by on' millmen as worthlees, com-
mando a steady price in Norway. There
it is ground into holzmehl, or wood
flour, kiln dried, packed in sacks made
in America for the purpose, and sold to
linoleum and blasting powder mann-
facturers. Itaelis for about $12 a ton,
and in 1907 the exports of this material
from Norway were valued at nearly
$60,000.
In Franoe a new process, whioh is
said to have proved successful, is em-
ployed in extracting an excellent grade'
of alcohol from sawdust. .About twenty-
seven
wentyseven and a half Rations ot aloobol and
forty•two pounds of aoetto acid were
extracted from each long ton of saw
dost, while the residue is sold for fuel
in briquette form. .
As the latter process is patented in the
United States, it is to be hoped that it
will be placed in operation here, and
that the eawdnet now thrown into trout
streams will be utilized for a more
worthy purpose.
A Nice Compliment.
(Mitchell Advocate; Con,)
When Lady Laurier bade Sir Wilfrid
goodbye at Ottawa as he left for his
western trip she wished that if anyone
were to be left behiud it might be her
husband. The -incident is indicative of
the home.loving character of the pre.
rater. Although called upon to appear
in the limelight perhaps more than is
the fact with regard to any other Cana.
digin, Sir Wilfrid has after alt a good
deal about him that would impel him to
remain in the enjoyment of life at home
rather than to undertake the severe
taxing trip through the great West,
which it must be freely admitted he hag
done a very great deal to upbni.id during
his' protracted term of office. Cana-
dians without respect to politics will
join in the hope that the veteran pre.
rarer -may have an enjoyable and suc-
cessful tour, end that he will be return-
ed to his excellent helpmeet in good
health.
Each grate bar has
threesides-long wear
When only ane side of a grate bar is
continually next to the fire all the wear is
concentrated on that one side. The life of
the grate bar is thus naturally just one-
third as long as when the wear is dis-
tributed on three sides.
That explains why Sunshine grates have three lives, Each
of the four grate bars has three sides. Each time the ashes
are "rocked down" (no shaking with Sunshine) the side
next to the fire can be changed. Thus the life of the grates
is greatly prolonged.
When desired, the heavy
bull dog teeth on the grates
will seize hold of clinkers,
grind then up, and drop. the
particles into the ash -pan.
Buy the Sunshine --the
durable, Convenient, eConotfl-
guaranteed 12 ratlt
I al a cad b
largest furnace makers hi
British Empire. B2
M�ar
•
\1L/JLCIY'$shin
77////!i
``
1\ trace
London, fioronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, 'Vancouver, St, Sohn, N'.13., latuiiten, Cdi.lgarl+,
T'OItSArir, BY W. .3, 13015/01 1, WINGfXAM
St$E NOODIT TO MEI
I'm but an auld body.
Levin' up in Deeside,
Ia a two roomed bit inmate,
Wi' a toffs' beside:.
Wi' my ow an' my grumphy
I'ni as happy as a bee:
Bat I'm far praoder noo
Since she uoddit to me.
I'M nae sae far past wit -
I'm gey trig an' hale.
Oen plant twa-three tawties,
An' look after nay Kale:
An, when our Queen passes
1 ata oot to see
Gin my luok she mioht notice
An' nod oat to me.
But I've aye been unlaoky
An' the blinds were aye doon.
Till last week the time
O'her veseit nam' roan':
I waved my bit apron •
Aa bricks I could dee.
An' the Queen leeched fu' kindly
An' noddit to me.
My son sleeps in Egypt -
It's nae ease to freit-
An' yet when I think o't
I'm emir like to greet.
She may feel for my sorrow -
Sheet a wither, ye see --
An' may be she trent o't
When she noddit to me?
The above quaint verses appeared
anonymously in an obscure Scotch
paper, and it is said that of all the
panegyrics and tributes in prose or
verses ever written Queen Victoria they
pleased her moat.
No Disordered Kidneys
or a Weak Bladder if You Take
a Few Doses of
FIG PILLS
'MI LUC Rt$W NCE,
iihowirig That There Are Large Houses
at Bath Ends of the t -adder,
"Whatever became of Sills Wat»
son?" asked the span who had return.
ed to the little old town after the
gallas of many years.
"Do you see that big buildin' up
yonder, on the hill?" replied the old
settler.
„You don't niean to tell me that la
the borne of little Sim Watson, who
was always at the foot of his class in
school?"
"Yes,. I guess you could find hint
there right now if you was to go up
and ash• You see, Sim got to be a
great hand for inventive things. The
•first invention he ever invented wtts
a shoo brush that would go by turn.
in' a crank, and he might have made
a fortune out of it if he had only fixed
it so that the brush could have been
tilted. Being stationary, it would only
brush the tops of the shoes, .,and, be.
sides that, there were some other
drawbacks, one of which was that the
first time Sim ever tried it the chain
broko, one end hittin' him just below
tate right eye and nearly puttin' it
out.
"After that he invented a flyin' rna.
chine, That came party nigh endin'
his career, too.. Only thing saved him
was that Dave Henderson's oldest boy
wanted, to go up on the •thing first.
Sim was sweet on one of Dave's girls
at the time, and I guess he thought
it would be a good way to get in with
the family by lettin' the boy try the
flying machine, After that he---"
"But did he get tate girl?"
"Well, no; but I don't think Dave
Iaid up any grudge against him. He
had a big fancily left, anyway. Sine's
next 'invention was a dish-washin'
machine that was to be operated by a
dog on a treadmill. There was great
excitement when folks found out
about it, and a man came down from
the city to look at the thing, He
was representin' a company with a
lot of money that was goin' to take
it up and push it if it was all right."
"And Sim was bright enough to pre-
vent them from cheating him out of
the profits that his invention brought,
eh? How much do you suppose he is
worth?"
"Worth? He ain't worth nothin'."
"But I thought you said he lived
in that fine building up on the hill?"
"He does. That's our new work-
house."
All Backache and Distress from Out -
of -Order Kidneys or Bladder Trouble
will vanish, and you will feel fine.
Lame Back, Painful Stitches, Rheum-
atism, Nervous Headache, Dizziness,
Sleeplessness, . Wornout, Sick .Feeling
and other symptom, of Sluggish, Inac-
tive Kidneys and Liver disappear,
Smarting, Frequent Urination and all
Bladder Trouble ends. FIG PILLS go
at once to tbe disordered Kidneys, Blad-
der and Urinary System, and complete
a cure before yon know it, There is no
other remedy, at any price, which will
effect so thorough and prompt a cure as
a 25 cent box of FIG PILLS. Only
curative results come from taking FIG
PILLS, and a few doses mean Olean,
active, healthy Kidneys, Bladder and
Liver -and No Bankaohe,
For sale at all flret•olass drug stores,
25o. a box, or five for one dollar,
The Last Straw.
A certain judge in Kentucky by ori-
son of his bad temper, found considerable
diffioulty in controlling individuals in
the court room. On one ocoaeion there
was unnenal disorder, At, last the
judge could stand it no longer. "It is
impossible to allow this persistent con-
tempt of court," exclaimed his honor,
"and 1 shall be forced to go to iihe ex-
treme length of taking the one step that
will stop it." There followed a Iong
silence in the court. Finally One of the
leading counsel arose and without the
suspicion of a smile asked: "If it
please your honor, on what data will
your resignation take place?"
Weariness.
I worked with a pick and shovel, in
atrenoua seasons of yore; I lived in a
tumbledown hovel, and slept in some
straw on the floor. And then on the
morn when I'd waken, and brash all
the chaff from my head, I'd throw in an
armful of bacon, potatoes and onions,
and bread; my hunger Wee wondrous
and baleful, the strangest of wonder-
ful things; I poured down the grub by
the pailful, and chewed up the paper
and strings. I labored with brick§ and
mortar, 1 tunnelled big holes in the soil;
e as a bone and a quarter for
r
m
Wb w e 0
y
g q
eoseion of toil. I slept like
day'sp
a span of bay horses, I ate like a etude
among has; blast bet I know what
-
re -
more it -I threw my blessings away; 1
took to this areft writing- verso, and
doubtless I'll write till I'm dead;
the
boodle comes to nae in puraes, and bun -
diet as big as your head. But now I
ti k toa diet of sa duet eft
what 9 0 w d
Battle Creek Coe, a porterhouse 'teak?
r you con se our uncle
t d t it s e on
I
i r 9
y Y
k-en,M Works ars ail rust and eb
they balk M desirable ting,.
Alas
ter the onion and bacon! Alae for the
met Mid str nail, .=•„�.,,,,,p,i
A Short Lived Island.
In 1867 a new shoal was discovered
in the group of the Tonga or Friendly
islands. In 1877 smoke was seen
over the shoal. In 1885 the shoal had
become a volcanic island more than
two miles long and 240 feet high, and
a fierce .eruption was taking place
within it. In 1886 the island had be-
gun to shrink in dimensions, although
the next year its highest point was
325 feet above sea level. In 1889. its
height had diminished one-half, and
the ocean close around it was more
than a mile deep. In 1892 the island
rose only about twenty-six feet above
sea level, and finally, in 1898, under
the action of the ivaves, its complete
disappearance was reported.
1 -lis Unkind Fling.
"I saw hint holding your hand,"
said her small brother, whereat all
the other members of the family
looked up.
"Yes," she replied calmly; "he has
been studying palmistry."
"Oh!" said de small brother.
`Sea was rea:ling the story of my
life," she persisted defiantly.
For a moment it looked as if she
had s']bduecl the small brother. Then
he remarked, "You must be pretty
old, sis."
"What do you mean?" she de-
manded.
"It was a long story."
"Don't be absurd, Tommy."
"And a continued story.'
The Perfect Silence.
There is no sensation in the world
like that which comes over you when
walking through a dense grove of red-
woods. Their trunks rise hundreds of
feet into the air and are lost in the
dense roof of foliage like the columns
of an Egyptian temple grown to sup-
er -human height. On the ground
tilers is no underbrush, but only ferns
of a size and shape that suggest a
prehistoric period and fallen trunks
that have Iain unrotting for 3,000
years. There is no sunlight and no
birds sing. If a storm arises, it is an
hour before a drop reaches the
ground. Here all is as it was since
creation, and there is no time. It
is the perfect silence.
A Question of Hearing.
The burly farmer strode anxiously
into the postofiice.
"Have you got any letter for Mike
Howe?•' he asked.
The new postmaster looked him up
and down.
"Mike Howe!" repeated the farmer.
The postmaster turned aside.
"I don't understand," he returned
stiffly.
"Don't understand!" roared the ap-
plicant, "Can't you understand plain
English? I asked if you've got any
letter for Mike Howe."
"Well, I haven't!" snorted the post-
master. "Neither have I a letter for
anybody else's cow. Get out !"--
London Scraps.
The Nicotine Water Habit.
The hookah, hubble bubble or Turk-
ish water pipe is always .being s
wok»
ed by Burmese women, partly bet
cause they like
it,
but meanly to
sup-
ply
u •ply the men
with nicotine water. This
hubble bubble nieotirio water habit
is, in fact, a lazy form of tobacco
chewing. A mouthful of the nasty
beverage is held in the mouth as long
as possible. Tliey carry about gourds
fait of it and riot
'nt it preserves their
teeth.
No Royalties Cailed "Baby. •
t
One notevvertby feature al -
ties is that about ut rn v
none hes been called
"baby." Pram their earliest years
tine royal chil,'.ren are always called
by their nnmea or possibly by some
t lis rinse or
1t English Ii i
�t c but , r
net name, g p
1)rinee,s is newt* celled "baby" eith-
erhis het
• byrelatives, o byis or
i ,
z,r
nurses. 'From the age of five a prince
is styled "sir" by his attendants and
a : tit.cess,"medain..'-M.A.P.
THE WORLD'S ESTEMATi,
ES, E. 'Kiran )
Ile bat a cultivated mind,
Be hes ideas that are High;
lie is intelligent, refined,
And would not steal or cheat or lie;
He never soughtby book or crook
To gain an undesired reward;.
Elio page is fait within the book
Where anger all rneu'o acts reoord,
Bat he'e a failure, atter all,
Because bis +salary is small.
His reoord hears no ugly ,tains,
He romps with children acid is glad;.
He would not sin for worldly gains.
The tears of orphans make him sad;
The soups of running brook' he Bears,
His teepee are high, his 'dealings fair;
The trembling drop of dew appears
To him a jewel riot), and rare;
But he's a failure, alter all,
Beoauee his earnings are so small.
He eoornp to try to profit by
The poor mistakes thatothers snake;
He sleeps in peace while othere lie
Through half their dismal nights
awake;
He keels tbe spirit of the law,
Hates meaunese, though 'tie riohly
dreeeed,
Beholds tree worth alone with awe,
And grips bis honer to the breast;
But he is petty, after al1--
Because his income is so small,
SOUR STOMACH
Is An Almost certain Sign of
Acute Indigestion.
If you 000asionally have a taste of sour
food in your month, it sorely chows
that the food you are eating is not being
digested, but instead, is fermenting and
giving out poisonous gases.
Belching of gas is a common symptom
at mach times, and aleo that lump of
lead feeling, es if your stomach was
carrying a much greater load than it
could stand.
It you want prompt relief and per-
manent cure go to J. Walton MoKlbbon
and get a large tin box of Mi-o-na tab-
lets for 50 cents.
J. Walton McKibben knows that
Mi-n-na is a highly recommended Bolen -
tido remedy, and that is why he is
ready to return your money if it fails to
cure acid atomaoh, belching of gas, diz-
ziness, sick heada:he, foul breath, and
all atomaoh troubles.
Get After the Weeds.
Every farmer owes it to himself and
to hie neighbor to see to it that no in-
jurious weede are allowed to make'
headway on•his farm, The obief aouroe
of weed dissemination is through the
seeds. Nature seems to have endowed
weeds with many facilitiee for spreading
their kind over the country that plants
nsefnl to man have not got. Why this
is the case we do not know, but the
fact remains, and the weeds neglected
and allowed to produce ripened seed
are no reapectar of farms. They will
lodge on the well -tilled farm as well as
on the poorly tilled one, and begin to
probagate their species and gain
strength for further expansion. Thus
it is that weeds in any neighborhood
cannot be kept in check unless every
farmer takes a hand in the game and
prevents the spread ot weeds from his
own farm. A carefully planned weed
campaign with every farmer co-operat•
tug, would, in a comparatively ahcrt
time, rid the country of a great deal of
damage oaused by weed pests. Some of
the more pernicious weeds such as the
perennial sow thistle that spread both
by seeds and by the roots. These need
exara watching. It takes time and lab-
bor, a serious matter in these days of
help soareity, but the effort would be
worth while, A beginning could be
made with the more obnoxious weeds.
Make a dead set say on the sow thistle
thie season. Next season enter the lista
against another one and be sure that
every weed out down is kept down.
Coarse Russian braid is used a great
deal for trimming coats and capes.
The tiniest of roses are used for trim-
ming naps of muslin or lace for the baby.
CARTER
iTTLE
IVER
PILLS.
U RE
flick Headache and relieve all the tronbiea fact -
dent to a billoL.l State of the system, such as
Dizziness, 'Nausaa, Drowsiness Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side,&c. While their tnost
remarkable success has een shown in curing
S I C
tleadache, yet Carters Little Liver Pills orb
equally hall
vai1ab1c in Constipation, curin
gond
pre -
Venting this annoying cowPlatatovhi1ethe also
correct ell disorders ofithesumach, atimn.a tetho
liver and regulate the bowels. Evenif they only
Coxed -
Aehe they would be aimoatprieeiristothoso oho
suffer from this distre,sl'ni P
con ,a nt•
natelytheir goodness dors notend.)ero;andthose
'who once ttythcros1lIrind csalittle pilla v
ht -
able
in so many paps that they r 111 hot be wit -
Mg to do without them. Butafter allSickhead
BCH
le the bane of so many lives that here Is where
we mato Of great boast. Our pills cure it while
abets de not.
Carter's Little Met teas aro very emelt and
r easy to take. w ill elte'a dose.
voy yt.itl. oneott o em
oto strictly h 1 o Or
The St etiy �e etnbio and do not U
purge, bnt by their gentle aetinh please rill wbo
use them.
Cell Li$1�t1bNMI CO. UV ten.
Ilia Ink Small grew
That's granted, But the furniture in that room is worked
overtime, To buy a new suite every few years costs.
money, YOU don't need to. " J.AGQVEtRET" will restore
the original beauty of your dining -room suite, snaking it
just as attractive as the day you bought it.
LACQUERET is not a paint, :per is it a varnish,
but a beautifying lacquer shade with soluble .and
permanent colors.. It is elastic, hard drying and
lustrous, and easily applied. Itsoriginal beauty is
lasting. Q Write for our booklet, #' Dainty Decorator"
It is entertaining and informing. A Post Card brings it.
„Most Hardware and Paint Dealer, self "Lacqueret"
International Varnish Co., Limited
2363 TORONTO -WINNIPEG.
TRAaato4RA
NOTE.---" LACQUERET" Is song In full imperial measure packages on y
FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO,. WINGHAM.
�
eeesseeeaweee>satsaeieasexten•ee ; eeseeamee0eslei�aiase
ete ae0to>tiesr
•
iy
toL ING •
•
a sr
•
RATESI c.
FOR 1909 - 1 O. •••
•
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! •
® �'
e The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rdlt. 1�eloW�
afor any of the following publications : •
•
•
Times and Daily Globe X1.50 •
M
•
•
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•
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Times and Toronto Daily News., 2.30 +-
•
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Times and Weekly Mail and Empire.... •
160
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•
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Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 1,60
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•
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• to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine'F
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Times and Westminster 2.25 i
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Times and Outdoor Canada (monthly, Toronto)1.85'
•
• TimesTimes anandd MhFarmer 2.15
•
• Woicmanigan's Home Companion 2.25.
•i. Times and Country Gentleman 2.60 ,,t,,
Times Delineator 2.95
4.
• Times andand Boston Cooking School Magazine 1.95
Times and Green's ;Fruit Grower.. -. 1.55 ,Times and Good housekeeping 2 80
Times. and McCall's Magazine 1.70
Times and American Illustrated Magazine 2.301
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 2.1.5 •I.
4.
Times and Ladies' Home Journal 2.75 'r'
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Times and Sueeess 2,25 n
Times and Hoard's Dairyman 2.40 It
'��.
,� Times and McClnre's Magazine 2.40 •
Times and Munsey's Magazine.... 2,50 w
Times and Vick's Magazine ..
1.60
Times and Rome Herald, 2.60
Times and Travel Magazii e.. .. 225
Times and Practical Farmer . ` ` 2.10
erik i
4. Times and Home Journal, Toronto 1,60
e
• Times and Designer 1.75
Times and Everybody's 2 80
Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg.. 1.60 i`
Times and Canadian Pictorial ... .... .. 1.60 +•
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i paper per
you ant.
We with thalltoo leading newsPa
era and
Magazines.azines.
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When premiums' are given with any Of abbee papers„ subscribers vrill
secure stela premiums when ordering through as, same as orderirp direct Ar
rowpublishers,
f
These low rates meati a considerable cawing to subscribers, and are
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rs al nate t
ittancee by note
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TIMES 11'
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01100110.1101ilrl>Y1M1IMtli41e 4.0001$606000i *SAwt 1 y