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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-09-30, Page 2zifl VIE WINGEAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER 30, 1909 Can Do Her Own Work Now, Doctor Said She Had Heart Trouble. Weighed 125 Pounds. Now Weighs 185, Mrs. M. McGann, Debec Junction, N.B., writes: --"I wish to tell you what li3,ilburn's heart and Nerve fills have done for me. Three years ago I was so run down I could not do my own work. I went to a doctor, and he told nie I had heart trouble and that my nerves were all unstrung. I took his medicine, as he ordered me to do, but it did me no good. I then started to take Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and load only taken one box before I started to feel better so I con- tinued their use until I had taken several boxes, and I am now strong and well, and able to do my own work. When I commenced taking your pills I weighed 125 pounds, and now weigh 185 and have given birth to a lovely daughter, which was a happy thing in the family. When I commenced taking Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, I could not go up- stairs without resting before I got to the top. I can now go up without any trouble." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1,25, at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of Trice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, oronto, Ont. TO ADVERTISERS Notice of changes must be left at thie office not later than Saturday noon. The copy for changes must be left not later than Monday evening. Casual advertisements accepted Tap to noon Wednesday of each week. ESTABLISHED 1872 THE \VIN1UAM TRIES. d, B. ELLIOTT, PUBrasisR AND PROPRIETOR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1909. NOTES AND COMMENTS Temiskamiug and Northern Ontario Railway is now paying its way. Hon. A, J. Matheson, the provincial treasurer, announced Thursday afternoon that the net receipts from operation for the seven months ending July 31, were $379.698, while the proportionate share of the interest at four per cent. on the expenditure of construction and operat- ing the entire system was $350,000. The announcement, while anticipated for some time, eignalizss a new era for the people's railway, The minister's re- turns show that the gross earnings from July were $148,111, with expenditures of $75,587, a net earning of $70,524, with $9,813 received in royalties brings the total for the month to $80,337, as against $29,584 for the name month last year. ESTIMATE OF SIR WILFRID. Would pay no attention to generalities, brat he has invariably pledged himself to appoint a seleot committee to examine into the truth of any straightforward oharge. CANADA'S COMMERCE, The second of the annual depart- mental reports to appear this year le that of the customs for the fiscal year ended March 31 last. While the sta. defies themselves have been publish. ed by totals months ago, en analysis of them brings some interesting features to light, Teat it was not a good year is well known. The imports showed a de- crease of $61,029,817, reaching only a total of 8309,750,608, but the exports fell off by only $18497,447, their ag- gregate being 8261,512,159. This is a record which no other country equal- led during the panicky conditions of 1907 8, and Canada can congratulate herself on coming through the ordeal so well as she did. The bine book shows that the farm- er remains the bulwark of our trade. The exports of domestic produce reached a total of $242,003,584. Of this the produce of the farm made up more than half, amounting to $123,346,853. The forest provided $39 , 667,387; the mine $37,257,699; the fisheries $13,319,664; while the fao. tories only exported goods to a value of $28,967,050. Great Britain continues to be our beat customer, taking 8133,745,375 worth of our goods. The United States was again second with a total of 892,604,357, a falling off of $21,000 000* in the year. France, Italy, Hol- land, Belgium, Newfoundland and China and Japan bought more from us than in the previous twelve months, while there was a deoided falling off in our exports to Germany, Spain, the West Indies, South America and Australia. We continue to buy more from the United States than from Great Britain, but this is largely due to our geographical position and to the fact that our neighbors to the south produce many of the raw materials which are needed in our industries, such ae cotton, tobacoo, corn and coal. The trade with Great Britain is developing satisfactorily under the operation of the preference and ow- ing to the determination, daily be- coming more prononnoed, of the British manufacturer to take advan- tage of the Canadian desire to pur- chase where possible from the Moth- erland. But there is much left to be done before the British trader will over- come the geographical advantage enjoy- ed by his oompetitor In the United States, even though he is aided by the tariff preference. The duty oolleoted upon the im. ports -the rate of taxation in fact - was 16.11 per cent. as compared with 16.27 in the previous year. Some people would have ns believe that be- cause we pay more in the aggregate in customs duties now than we did under the Oonservative regime that the rate of taxation is higher. It is the rate and not the amount by which the weight of the burden Is to be gauged comparatively. The Toronto Telegram makes an allusion to Sir Wilfrid Laurier as a small and petty tyrant, who it bigotted, intolerant and unjust, and adds that "Canada never had a Premier more prone than Sir Wilfrid Laurier to rest content with the undoubted clean- ness of his own hands and life." One of Sir Wilfrid Laurier's chief oharaoteristice is his toleranoe, perfect fairness and lack of bigotry. His whole life has been devoted to the task of oementiug the races in harmony and mutual self.respeot. In this he has ono. seeded to a degree that has earned the unstinted support of both races in Oen- ado. The tribute to the Integrity of his personal life and public record was nn - necessary. The man is unborn who can charge Sir Wilfrid with a dishonest or nnjaat act thronghont his official life. The advent of Sir Wilfrid Laurier to the premiership was the dawn of great prosperity for Canada. The Telegram conolndes its panegeric by the statement that the premier is in- capable of seeing to it that partlean un- desirables keep their own hands and lives clean, or else keep out of pnblio life. No man has ever charged that Sir Wilfrid would oonnive at wrongdoing, neither has any man brought a apeoifio charge against any member of the Gov- ernment. The premier has at all times expressed his willingness to grant the most searching investigation. Time and again the premier has intimated that be Armin Baby Eczema -- Suffered Agony Treatments proscribed had no affect -- DR. CHASE'S OINTMENT made thorough sues. Many O. mother's heart has 'been torn by the aufferiAgs of her little one who has fallen s victim of eczema. Only such mothers appretiete, to the full, the veclae of Dr. Chase's Ointment u a cure for this horrible ailment. Mrs. Oeear vaacett, St, Antoine, Soak., writes: "I have found Dr, Chase's Ointment to be x perm&*eat cure of Edema and ours kI]i n diseases. ': My sen, while hurting, broke out with rousing est- cry soli e11 o''et his head stud mound tine ears. Many salves were preactibed to ice effect. Tho child's hood became a mass of scabs s*d lee suffered agony etatolel, He became weak and, frail and would root eat said we thought w* would lore, hint: "ProvIdentiatlly, wo heard of Dr. Chase "4 ;Nutmeat tad it some thorough• i3+ cored frit. Ile is neve* years old seal strong and weal. Wei hope o people will learn *bout it, to their 91 tinea may bit saved 'from suffer• Ma, a hem, all dealers, or Edmsan- 84tdrN A GYIr,; Tatott*s. WHERE CANADIAN WOMEN EXCEL. (Western British American Chicago). A great deal is beard nowadays about the men of Canada who have acquired fame and fortune in the United States, but of the Canadian women who come hither and rise tp proficiency and sitcom not so much i9 said. There are two special call- ings in which Canadians of the gentler sex distinguish themselves away from home - namely, profes- sional nursing and sohool teaching. Whether or not the climate of the Dominion tends to the development of the qualities which make its worsen ideal helpers in the sick -room, it is a fact that they are found on the staffs of our principal hospitals and infirmaries. Phystoians often testify to the rare toot, patieuce and adapta- bility displayed by the trained nurse from Canada.. She is evidently in love with her work and anxious to be an adept in all its branches. Her ambition is not matrimony but mastery of the details of her chosen pursuit, Promotion and a good in. come reward her as a matter of course, A few weeks ago a daughter of West. ern Ontario was asked to take the position of superintendent of a lead- ing hospital in Sonth Carolina. Grad. nates of Canadian institutions are to be found holding similar executive poste' in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and other centres east, south and west. As a teaoher in American schools the Canadian girl has made her mark. In this sphere, also, she seems to possess the necessary requirements in proper proportion, and to bring to the duties a native talent that quickly forces her to the front. One of the very best public sohool instructors Chicago ever had was Mies May C. Duffin, a graduate of the Toronto Normal Sohool, whose death was chronicled mite long ago. For no less than thirty years Miss Duffin taught a plass of boys and girls in the Jones school, and some of the prominent Chicagoans of today made their first acquaintanoe with elementary knowl- edge under her guidance. During her long sojourn here she was known only in a limited circle, but since her demise former pupils by the score have come forward to tell of her many virtues and bless her memory. Canada is still backward as a pro• diner of the masculine type of female with the noisy "mission," but she is sending us experts in the two vooa- tions above indicated that are hard to beat. Australia Yesterday And To -day. Australia is a continent containing two billion acres with a coast line of 12,000 miles, and it is all exclusively the property of the British race. Sixty years ago this great territory had a population of only 400,000 and no rail- ways. Today she population numbers nearly 4,500,000, and 96 per Dent. cf it is British- that ascription no doubt in- cluding Irish -and this number is get- ting quite wealthy. It has £112,000,000 deposited in ordinary banks and £46,- 000,000 in savings banks, depositors in which number one-third of the entire population. Since the beginning the value of the minerals produced has ag- gregated £713,000,000, and there are now 2,000,000 sores of land under crops. Last year Australia produced 62,000,- 000 bushels of wheat, and exported but- ter to the value of £2,887,000, and wool to the mane of £23,000,000. It pos- sessed 90,000,000 sheep, 10,000,000 cattle, and 2,000,000 horses, with an oversea trade which in 1908 represented $114,- 000,000. Flies and Typhoid, The theory that flee carry typhoid germ is, says The Springfield Republi- can, made the basis of a remarkable report by Dr, Swarts, seoretery of the Rhode Island Board of Health, oon• waning a recent ,typhoid outbreak among the offloere of the Rhode Island state prldon. He finds, in substance, that swarms of flies carried the germs of disease from an insanitary toilet, poorly oared for bnokets, an open vault, stag- nant seepage in the now ydrd, and from portable vaults to the kitohen in which the food eaten by the offioers of the prison ie cooked. No other explanation of the typhoid cases is possible, in the doctor's Opinion, the wetter, toe and milk lupply being free from otentamles Mien. The growlag disposition in toed - foal oireled td traoe typhoid to flies ie notable, and the sooner that the pnblio mind la educated to this vies" of disease origins the sooner will there be a loather war on these little ppeester in *I1 penal and eleemosynary in intim*, betels, res• 1Mttrst,xtw, beeedim-iwlt*es fair! homes. Itooiteetery N. Y. THE WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC. Readers of the "Times" know some- thing of the heartless traffic: in young girls for immoral purposes, carried on by abandoned wretches of both sexes, who do not sample to traffic in guile- less and weak humanity. Hon, E. W. Sims, of Chicago, believes that there are not less than 15,000 foreign girls imported and sold into this traffic annually in the United States and Can- ada, and probably three or four times as many native born girls find their way into the same hopeless life of vine. And all to line the pockets of wealthy traffickers in women. Two comparatively poor women have recently sent in each $5, the one to Rev. Dr. Garman, the other to the Rev. Dr. Shearer, President and Secretary reepeotively of the Moral and Social Reform Council of Canada, which has undertaken the laudable and difficult task of fighting this horrible traffic, This Council is interdenominational and represents -The Ohurch of Eng- land in Canada, the Methodist Church in Canada, the Presbyterian Ohuroh in Canada, the Baptist Church in Canada, the Congregational Church in Canada, the Trades and Labor Congress of Can- ada, the Dominion Grange and Farm - ere' Association and the Salvation Army. Are there not countless other wom- en, as well as men, throughout Can - ads, who would eeteenl it a privilege to have a similar abare in this humane and much needed work? If so, money may be sent to, and will be duly acknowledged by the Treasurer, Mr. Henry Moyle, or the Secretary, Rev. Dr. Shearer, either of whom may be addressed at 435 Confederation Life Buliding, Toronto. These gentlemen end those associated with them, are do- ing this work entirely without remune- ration.-0om, THE LADIES' FAVORITE, WHEREVER PARISIAN SAGE 15 KNOWN If HAS THE CALL. Parisian Sage, that moot efficient of all hair restorers, id a very delightful and (refreshing hair dressing. Besides poeeedsing these qualities it will positive- ly make any woman's hair soft, luxur- iant and attraottve, Walton Moliibbon sells it and Will return your money if you are dissatisfied. s Just read this: "After using one bottle of Parisian SAge, I now have a better growth of hair and I found your Hair Restorer pleasant to use. After the first application, the dandruff die - appeared and my hair stopped falling Out, and it has been reetoted to ire niitn. ral color. I now recommend your Parisian Sage to all my lady friends. -tattle Real; 111 'Mt. Hope Aye., How the Mason and Risch continuous brass action, flange assures purity of tone in the piano. "'HE hammers of the Mason and Risch piano action al- ways strife a firm, clear blow on the strings, giv- ing the full tonal value of each note. They n ever rattle or wobble from one side to the other. This is because the hammers are supported by a continuous brass action flange instead of the usual method o f each hammer being supported on a separ- ate wooden flange. Section of Mason and Risch action showing method of attaching to flange. Mason and Risch The piano with a soul. The Mason and Risch action ,flange being of ;.metal instead of wood will not bind, shrink or warp ; being of metal it preserves the unvarying alignment of the hammers. As you'll note in our illustration we attach the knuckle of the action to the flange by a metal piece, the tongue on which fits into a metal groove pre- venting the slightest variation of the hammer from one side to the other. This is one of the little but extremely important details in the sound, scientific, rl,'-tistic and up-to-date construction of the Mason'and Risch piano -the little it.Iprovements which have placed it in .,.he enviable position itholds to -day. Send us this coupon and we'll rn ail you a booklet which ex- ;.:iairls the entire story of the ./ 'Construction of a Mason and / Nemc. Risch piano. The Mason and Riscn Piano Co., Limited city 32 West King St., T o ro rite. Province MASON „ and RISCH PIANO CO., LImited, TORONTO Send me your ilias- trated booklet explain- ing the reasons why I should own a Mason and Risch 'piano. This in no way obligates the to purchase. Street International Newspaper Bible Study Course. Salient' Points in the Lesson for Sunday, Oct. 3,1I Given in a Series of Questilons by Bev. Dr. Linscott. tR)ristereiin. accordance with the Copyright Act.i PAUL A PRISONER - THS ARREST. Acte 21:17 to 22:29. Golden Teat.-Thon therefore endure hardness as a good soldier rof Jesus Christ. 2 Tim. 2:3. Verses 17 -19. -Why is it that there is no class of people who so love each other, and rejoice in eaoh other's felloW• ship, as real earnest Christians? Why did the Christiane at Jerusalem receive Paul so gladly? Paul told them about the wonderful things whioh God had wrought through his ministry among the Gentiles. Should Christians always tell eaoh other of the victories of their faith and works, or is it liable to engender pride and look like boasting? Verses 20.22 -Does a good man al- ways "Glorify God" at the success of others? What, either among men or angels, is the greatest cause for joy? (See Luke 15:7.) What is it the sign of, when a person criticises or is not glad when hQ learns of the' goodness of enbther? Could a Christian, either then or now, be fully led of the Holy Spirit, if at the sante time guided by, or "Zealotte of the law?" In bridging the two dispensations, id it likely that God, so to speak, winked at the Apostles trying to graft the law of Moses into Christianity, or wee it God's plan that Jewish ()hristlant should still keep the law? Is it likely that even Jamee and the alders at Jerusalem knew of the full liberty of 0hriet's gospel, or that "the law" wan to be abandoned? (See Gal: .5:1.6, iHeb. 818.18 et seq ) ° Verses 28:26 -Did James and the elders give Paul good advice in this matter of the vow, and obbving their he nei ads, end call you collo vo it as pos- sible that they were direoted by God in the advioe they gave? Did Paul do a wise thing to join With these four Hien ht the matter Of the vows and what he must have known to be a timeless ceremony in connection there. With? Paul in one plaoe states in dubstenoe that he beoarne all things to all then that he might win men to Christ. flow far Oak we carry out that principle with- out being guilty of deception? (See I Cor. 9:I0). Verses 27 -28. -What is the difference between a Christian who, from pre- judice, speaks evil of another Christian and these Jews who, spoke falsely of Paul? Verses 29.30. -Should we ever form an opinion or spread a rumor from mere appearances? Which generally raises the more excitement and why: a rumor of some- thing very good, or of something very bad about a man? Verses 32 -40 -What is it in hum- an nature which makes one class or race, or political party or religious body, so cruel against another class or race, or political party or relig- ious body, when their passions get stirred? (This question must be answered in writing by members of the club ) Ohep. 22:1.5.- Ought the fact that Paul had once been one of themselvae, and had changed to be a Christian from convictions of duty to God, to have giv en him favor with God fearing and reasonable men? Verses 6.2L -1s the narration of our personal Christian experience a duty, and is it an effectual way to preatih the gospel to sinners, and a help to believers? Here ie a man with hatred in his heart for Jesus, on a}mission of wee - cation to Jeune' followers; on the road he sees (1) a great light from heaven; (2) he is stricken to the ground; (8) he is spoken to by Jedne; (4) he sake Jesus who he is; (5) Jesus answers hie tenes- tioni; (6) those with him saw the light but did not hear the voice; (7) he mks Jesus what he shall do; (8) Sent told him 16 go on to Demeans and he dhould there get full inutrnoilone; (9) he is line and ledthe hand b to Damasond byr (10) Ananias teetotal his sight and gives him instruction whet he must do; (11) he is baptized, New what are the most striking features in this experlenoe of Peta'it conversion? Verses 22 -29. -Did Paul's experience stir their anger beeanse they did not believe hie testimony, Or beodnse they thought it was tree and that it Was likely to oanse We release by the ttOtnano? Leeson for Sunday, October 10th, 1909. Paul a Prisoner --The Plot, Acts EittIO to Min. TOWN DIRECTORY. Barron. CHPRo0-Sabbath eervioe6 at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday Sohool at 2:30 p m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W. L. Steeyee, pastor. B. Y, P. U. meets Monday evenings 8 p.m. W.D Pringle, S.S. Superintendent. MRTsoDIST Ornjiioo-Sabbath services at 11 a m and. 7 p In. Sunday Sohool at 2:30 p m. Epworth League every Mon- day evening. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings, Rev, W. L Ratled„a, D.D., pastor. F. Buchan- an, S.S. Superintendent. PRESBYTERIAN OHURCa-.Sabbath ser- vioes at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday Sohool at 2:30 p m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. D. Perrie, pastor, Dr, A. J. Irvin, S.S. Superintendent. ST. PAUL'S OIIURCH, EPISCOPAL ---Sab- bath services at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday School at 2:30 p m. Rev. 0. E. Jenkins, 13. A., B. D., Rector ; Ed. Nash, S. 5, Superintendent ; Thos. E. Robinson, assistant Superintendent. SALVATION ARMY -Service at 7 and 11 a m and 3 and 7 p m on Sunday, and every evening during the week at 8 o'olook at the barracks. Pose OFFICE -Office hours from 8a m to 6:30 p m. Open to box holders from '7 a m. to 9 p m. P. Fisher, postmaster. PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon from 2 to 5:30 o'clock, and every evening from 7 to 9:30 o'olook. Miss Ethel Elliott, librarian. Towle OouNOIL-Thomas Gregory, Mayor; Dr. A. 3. Irwin, Reeve ; Geo. Spotton, J. W. McKibben, H. 13. Elliott, William Bone, Dr. Robert 0. Redmond, and V. R. Vannorman. Councillors; J. B. Ferguson, Clerk and Treasurer; Anson Dulmage, Assessor. Board meets first Monday evening in each month at 8 o'olook. HIGH SCHOOL BOARD.- W. F. Van - Stone (chairman), J. A. Morton, John Wilson, 0. P. Smith, W. J. Howson, John A. MoLeen, Frank Buchanan, Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Comma, treasurer. Board meets second Monday evening in each month. PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD. -Alex. Roes, (chairman), G. 0. Manners, S.E. Isard, A. E. Lloyd, W. D Pringle, Wm. Moore, Theo. Hall, C. N. Griffin, Secretary, John F. Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson. Meetings second Tuesday evening in eaoh month. HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS J. A. Tay ler, B.A., principal; J. 0. Smith, B.A., olassical master; J. G. Workman, B.A., mathematical master ; Miss Helena Dadaon, B.A., teaoher of English and Moderns; Mies Anderson, fifth teaoher PUBLIO SCHOOL Ts&OHsRS.-Joseph Stalker, Principal. Miss Brook, MissReynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss Wilson, Miss Cummings, and Miss Fraser. BOARD Ow HEALTH -Thos. Gregory, (ohairman), 0. 3. Reading, Abner Corium, Wm, Fessant. J. B, Ferguson Secretary; Dr. J. R Macdonald, Medical Health Offioer. STEADY EMPLOYMENT for a reliable Local. Salesman repre- senting "Canada's Oldest and Greatest Nurseries" in Wingham and adjoining country. You will find there'ie a good demand for nursery Stook ou account of the high prices that growere have realized on their fruit this season. Oar salesmen are turning in big busi- ness to us this year. Be one of them and earn good wages through the winter months. Territory reserved. Pay weekly. Free sample outfit, eta. Write for particulars. STONE arc WELLINGTON Fonthill Nurseries (850). TORONTO, CANADA. FARMERS and anyone having live stook or other articles they wish to dispose of, should adver- tise the same for Bale in the TIME&. Our large oironlation tells and it will be strange indeed if tou do not get a customer. We can't guarantee hat you will sell because yon may eek more for the article or stook than 1t le worth. Send your advertisement to the TItus and try this plan, of disposing of your stook and other articles. OUTSIDE ADVERTISING Orders for the insertion of advertisements eaoh as teachers wanted, business chances, mechanics wanted, articles for sale, or in fact any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or other city papers, maybe left at the TIAtss offieo, Tkie work will reoeive prompt attention and will save peeple the trouble of remitting for and forwarding advertisements. LoWos$ rates will be quoted on application. Leave or sendyonr next work of this kind to the TIKES OFEIC,E. Winlsbani i60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS Titxot M*ms. Delicans i Commute Ito. Aliases seedieriseket dppi�p�y sial► "violas'eacertain our ape Mhnib r eo ince t n pro blr.D Ymm antes. !tont strict dentlao. cm onp area qt a maw eo OI eM s toots taken h 11 •sl n t e. twttos;, wftboit'cie 1 xxt i a "r r4e1aN dennift et1 A attoa °of array col$ ttl ai�si rw•eoill10? Largest eir- 76 s rear tostan a --- r . sU IEAaies7: �a Co IN r we t Wat�AZ EBTABLIBRED 1872 THE WIN UAll TINES. I6 PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING -•AT- The Times Oface, Beaver Block WINDHAM, ONTARIO, Taunts or SUBSCRIPTION -$1.00 per annum In advance, $1.5011 not so paid. No paper discon- tinued till an arrears are paid, except at the of options pushe. . ADVxRTI9rhoIN0 bliRAT88r. - Legal and other casual advertisements I0o per Nonpariel line f or first insertion, 30 per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements in local columna are charged 10 Cts. per line for first insertion, and 5 cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements of Strayed, Parma for Sale or to Rent, and similar, $1.00 for Mot et three weeks, and 25 cents for euoh subae,laent in- sertion. CONTRACT R .rse•-The following table shows our rates for the insertion of advertisements for specified periods :- SPAM 1 wt. 0 sip. 3 MO. 1u0. Ono0olumn._-_-..$70.00 $40.00 $22.50 58.00 Half Column......., .. 40.00 25.00 16.00 0.00 QuerterOolumn ._,- 20.00 12.60 7.60 3.00 One Inch -- .... 5.00 3.00 2.00 1.25 Advertisements Without specific directions will be inserted tin forbid and ohsrged accord- ingly. Transient advertisements meet be paid for in advance. Tan JOB DEPARTii slT is atooked with an extensive assortment of all requisites for print- ing, affording facilities not equalled in the oonntyfor turning out first class work, Large type and appropriate oats for alletyles of Post- ers, Hand Biils, eta., and the latest styles of choice fano-type for the finer classes of print. ing. H. B. ELLIOTT, Proprietor and Publisher T P KENNEDY, M. D., M.O.P. S. O, 5100. Member Medf alllleet in sMedioine Medical Special attention paid to diseases of Women and Child; ren. Moe hours -1 to 4 p. in.; 7 to 9 p, m. DR. MACDONALD, Centre Street Wingham, Ontario. DR. AGNEW, Physioian, Surgeon, eta. 08100 -Macdonald Block, over W.MoKibbon'a Drug Store. Night oa11s answered at the office. DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND, M. R.O.S. (Eng) L. R. 0. P. London. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, Offioef'with Dr. Ohisholm. DR. MARGARET C. CALDER Honor Graduate of Toronto University, Licentiate of Ontario College of Physicians acid Surgeons. Devotes special attention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Eyes thoroughly tested. Glasses properly fitted. OFFICE -With Dr. Kennedy. Office Flours -3 to 5, 7 to 8 p.m. VANSTONB, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, BTO Private and Company fends to loan at lowest rate of interest. mortgages, town and farm property eaver Blockd , Wingham JA. MORTON, • BARRISTER, ,00. Wingham, Ont. E. L. DICKINSON DIIDL.Y Ileums DICKINSON & HMS BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Eto. MONKT TO LOAN. Orden: Moyer Blook, Wingham. ARTHUR J. LEWIN, D. D, S., L. D. S. Doctor of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania Dental College and Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Office in Macdonald Blook, Wingham. V1< . J. PRICE, B. S. A., L. D. S., D. D. S. Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario, and Graduate of Uni- versity of Toronto. Office ; Beaver Block. TAKE NOTICE That J. 5, Jerome, Dentist is making beautitnl sets of teeth for eight dollars, and inserting the Patent Airohamber. All work guaranteed. Office in Chisholm 'Block, Wingham. Wingham General Hospital (Under Government inspection) Pleasantly eitnated. Beautiful fur- nished. urnished. Open to all regularly licensed physicians, Remo FOR PATIENTS - (which include board and nursing), $3.50 to $15.00 per week a000rding to location of room. For farther information, address MISS J, E. WELSH, SperintendentSox 223, Wing yam Ont. RAILWAY TIME TABLES. GRAND PUUNH RAIL,*L ' SYSTEM. TRAixa ltlslivli *00 London .. A,40 a m.-. 8.80p.m, Toronto .tt1aat11.09a,ni., 6.s8e m.--; 2.44p.m, Kincardine ,11.67 a.hi,.. 9.08 p -m.._ 9.16p.m. Kincardine - 40 a.m', 11000 n.m.. 8.40 London.. ..........-11.54 ;tag!: !. - 7,86 p•m• Palmerston.. .. 10.8011.ra. P.m. Toronto da East e.08 p m..- 9.16 p.m. W. H14tZiti', a sent, Wingham. CANADIAN PAOI2'IO RAIILWAY. V tai IiiaAV! von R TeesitonndSset .-_.. 0.87a' m.... 8.16 p.m. Teeewater ..-.._-..- 1.00 Van. _10.24 p.m. ARRIvlr Toole Teeawater.....,:....-0.87a.m, 8.16 p.m, Toronto and Bast 2'tan n-..10.24 p.m. a. H. BSBM3R, Aeent,Wingham. I$ UNiQUALICIf Mott Coughs, Colds sod Croup.