HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1914-11-26, Page 2I'dFe 2
Grand Ralik Railway System
Town llitet Office
THE WINGHAM TIMES
November 26th, 1914
We cats issue through tickets via
ripelar remtes, to any point in America
-East, West. South, Northwest, Mani-
toba, Pacific Coast, etc. 1
Baggage checked through to destine -
tion and full information given whereby ,
travelling will be make pleasant and
free from annoyance. Tourist and
return. tickets to above points also on
sale at lowest figures, and with all ?
prevailing advantages.
Single and return tiekets to any pointl
in Ontario. Your business will be ap-
preeiated, be your trip a short or a
long one.
We can tieket you through to any
point in Flueepe on all leading steamship
lines. Prepaid orders also issued.
If it's about travel, we have the
information and will give it to you
cheerfully.
H. B. ELLIOTT
Town Agent G.T.R,
Times Office, Wingham, Ont.
Empire a large elements of "kickers",
of those who are willing to maintain
their uwn equality, and to ridicule and
resist all unfounded claims of superiors
Ity. It is because of this free demo -
erotic ideal that the British Empire is
worth fighting for. And it is by no ac-
cident that this Empire is now led by
the rnost radical Government that has
ever held power in Britain. The Gov-
ernment that legislation for the poor
and oppressed in Britain is the Govern-
ment that stood out for the rights of
little Belgium, We ire in this war,
not for a victory over the German pea-
sant or mechanic, but for a victoiy over
his oppressor. Unless this war results
in a tremendous victory and progress
' for democratic ideals, it will be fought
in•
vain. Law and order. progress and
• freedom, the rights of little nations and
of poor men, women and children; these
are the only things worthy of the ter-
rible sacrifices thatare now being made
on the battlefields of Europe.
TO ADVERTISERS
Notice of changes mu -t be left at this
office not later than saturday noon.
The copy for changes must be left
not later than Monday evening.
Casual advertisements accepted up
to noon Wednesday of each week
4STADLISHRD
T1111 WINchat TIMES,
A
R.B. EULIOTT,, PUBLISHER AND PROPIETOR
T7URSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1914
WHAT THEY ARE FIGHTING FOR.
(Toronto Star Weekly)
An esteemed contemporary says that
the war answers the contention that
British aristocracy is effete. The Brit-
ish aristocracy has fought bravely, that
is true. It is true also that Tommy
Atkins has fought bravely. If is true
that the Prussian junker has fought
bravely, and that the German peasant
and meehanic have fought bravely.
The world pays tribute to the courage
of the Belgians, from the King up to
the child. No one casts doubt upon
the courage of the French or the -Rus-
sians. It seems that courage is poss-
essed by all classes and by all races.
That shows that courage is a highly
valuable quality All the best qualities
are common. All the best gifts are
distributed as impartially as the rain
and the sunshine. Domestic'affection is
as strongin the cottage as in the palace.
As the Mail and Empire truly says, blue
blood is as good as red blood, and bet-
ter.
But we must look at the origin of
this controversy about the British peers.
It began, not because anybody denied
that the British dukes and earls were
men, but because some silly flunkies
said that they were superman, such
beings as we ridicule in the dreams of
German philosophers. A quarrel arose
because British peers claimed to be,
not equal to, but superior to, British
mechanics and clerks. It was claimed
that the British earl or duke had the
hereditary right to make laws for the
British people, and to transmit that
right by inheritance to his son. Nature
ally, that claim was fiercely resisted;
and in the course of that resistance
some hard things were said. and some
exaggeration was manifest.
The basis of the trouble, however, is
•the foolish notion that there are per-
manent distinetions or birth or rank
and divisions which must endure fro
generation to generation, This is i
real trouble with. Germany. German
men, women, and children are very
much like Canadian men, women,
and children. But Germans have been
imbued with a false notion that some
were born masters and others servants,
A. small class in Germany is too am -
gent. The masses of the German
people are too docile. This is the, real
cause of the war.
We do not deny that there are, in
the Britieh Empire, some who would
like to be junkets, and some who are
willing to (bey the junkers. But for-
tunately we also have in the British
MOTHERS!
'What if this were yoUr son?
sen anxious, grief•stricken mother ap.
ruled to us recently. She wrote:
r hay° a hoe fifteen years of age who
has triberculosie in one lung. I have not
l. means to give him the care he should
leo e, The doctors say that with proper
VA! 0 and atention there is every hope that
topkt fully recover. X would be very
1'..!.!,ful if 1.0 ootott ho admitted to the
M./.41.0k:. lice Hospital if possible."
thee your Son or your daughter
• i.(emu:melee. Suppose that he or
t.1 pal0 EIN1 warded and shaken by a
h Ling, etierigth empping cough. Sup-
!, 4; l' r:' t. yriii haeliet tho money to provide
medicine, nourishment,
• sl.. itlediPsil treatment. Think
ed relief it would be to you to
11...t t 46 Muskoka Pres linspital for
ives ittanalt toady to help 1
rebut ions CO the alueltaka. Free Hes*
• for Voneetrnpiivta will be grateAdly
alged hy W. J. Gage, Chelranut
ve.erei. e Commit tee, 84 Spridine. AVCRRelo
4, 1,.Islinher. Secretary - Treasurers so
Knjeleeet Weet, Toronto,
HOW TO EAT AN APPLE.
(By Peter McArthur.)
So many people are now shouting
"Eat an apple" or "Have you eaten
your apple to -day?" that the proper
method of eating apples has become a
matter of the first importance. There
are many timid people who would eat
apples if left alone with them, but they
are foolishly shy about eating them in
nubile. Like the gentle ladies of Cran-
ford who always carried their oranges
to their private apartments so that
they might suck them at their leisure,
far from the sight of prying eyes, they
want to carry their apples away with
them and enjoy them alone. In this
way a large number of potential apple
eaters - malophagians, I might call them
if the lexicographers will permit me to
coin a new word - are lost to the trade.
Apples are offered to them publicly and
because they lack the courage to eat
them except in pr;vate they de'cline the
profered luxury, Emerson tells us that
the app:e is a "social fruit" and it is
certain that many people regard apples
as a proper part of an evening's enter-
tainment. When the guests are met
and the fire roaring they bring out a
plateful or perhaps a basketful to be
eaten during the conversation. The
more hardy souls in the company fall
to at once and munch the apples to
their hearts' content, but more timid
natures shrink from the exhibition they
imagine they would be making of them-
selves and in that way lose an import-
ant part of the evening's enjoyment.
Unfortunately I have no book •of de-
portment by me and I am unable to say
whether there is any dainty way of eat-
ing apples approved of by the best
usage of good society. As for myself
I hold that a man has a right to eat an
apple in any way that pleases him, so
long as he does not try to talk with his
mouth full. Most people begin by tak-
ing a huge bite out of the apple as an
opening and then they bite off pieces of
convenient size from the sides of the
chasm made py the first bite. In this
way they proceed until nothing is left
but the core. Then they eat around the
core with dainty bites until their host
passes the plate and they make a fresh
start. There are others who always
use a knife and either peel the apple
first and eat it in slices, or eat it in
slices without peeling it. All author-
ities agree that the choicest flavors are
just under the skin. so the custom of
taking it off first is not to be recom-
mended, even though some people are
so expert at this that they can take off
the whole peeling in a long spiral, with-
out breaking it. This feat always
pleases the children on account of the
dexterity shown, but it is nevertheless
to be deplored. Among the old there
are many who take a spoon and scrape
the apple to a cidery pulp. Judging
from the gusto with which they eat I
1 imagine that this method has its good
i points, but I am not yet old enough to
I try it. While my teeth continue to be
lgood and my under -jaw flexible I shall
• continue to eat my apple with straight-
forward bites even though I may make
;my mouth "look like a steb in the
dark." Speaking of the under -jaw re-
minds me of the fact not known to
everybody that it is with our under -jaw
that we do our biting. If you take a
i hard apple, snch as a King, you will be
eurprised to find that yon did not bite
it where you intended, but lower down.
:The teeth in your upper•jave merely
serve to hold the apple in place while
Ithosa in your lower jaw are plunged
into it. 13ut no matter how you eat,
apples you should never fail to eat them
plentifully. All doctors agree that they
are excellent for the digestion, and
John Burroughs, our most literary
authority on the apple, Says, "It is
the nateral antidote of Most of the ills
fleeli is heir to. Full of vegetable acids
and aromatics, qualities which act as
refrigerants and antiseptics, what an
enemy it is to jaundice, indigestion,
torpidity of the liver, etc." 3y all
means tat apples. Eat them whenever
you feel like it, in public �rin private,
and If you have more than yOU can eat,
"ROLL TEEM TO TIRO KinDIES."
A WAR OF PEACE. -THE WAR
AGAIN:3T TUBERCULOSES.
Further news of the Xmas seal Cam-
paign is at haod, The General Man:
agers of all the important Banks in the
Proviece have written cordially endor-
sing the Campaign and 'instructing
seals to be placed on sale at the branches
all of theie banks. The organization is
straining every nerve to get a supdly of
seals placed in the hands of every
teacher in the Province within the next
few clays. This has a particular im-
portance, as a means for school children
to put ioto action the inkructions and
*exhortations of thousands of teachers
on Monday, llOth November, Tubercul-
osis Day in the schools, Committee of
busioess men, manufacturers, merchants
and others,•are sending out appeals to
their friends. The Sunday School
Secretaries of all denominations are
enthusiastically endorsing the Campaign
as a method of petsonal service for
Sunday School scholars. His Grace
Archbishop McNeil, head of the Catho-
lic Archdiocese of Toronto, has approved
of a circular of the priests Special
speakers again place the Campaign be-
fore the Boys' Work Conferences,
shortly fo be held at Belleville and at
Guelph, Secretaries of the Y,M.C.A's
throughout the Province are already
sending in their orders. Every organ-
ization which co-operated in the Cam-
paigns in former years is hard at work
again this year and ground has been
broken in new quarters. The seals
serve a three -fold purpose used on the
back of mail matter, they carry a mes-
sage of Christmas cheer; they proclaim
far and wide the existence of the Mus-
koka Free Hospital as a beneficient
Institution for those afflicted 'with con-
sumption and in need, and they provide
money to carry on and to extend that
great life-savidg work. Work on the
distribution of the first three million
seals is already progressinsg. Supplies
can be had at headquarters, Netional
Sanitarium Association, Corner of
College and Ross Streets, Toronto,
Ontai io.
VibesPresidentpaVid MeNieoll of the
has resigned owing to 111 -health,
and is to be stiteteeded by Vie -Presi-
dent George 13UrY.
PRACTICAL PROHIBITION.
The announcement of the United
States Life Insurance 'Company that in
future it will give special rates to total
abstainers, and that it will place all
aprlicants handling, or in any way
dealing with intoxicating liquors, in the
extra hazardous class, is an indication
of a movement in the direction of prac-
tical prohibition. It is often said Unit
prohibitory laws do not prevent liquor -
drinking. That may be admitted to
some extent; though it is equally cer-
tain that they do place serious obstacles
in the way of drinking. and remove
muck temptation from men who are
disposed to drink. But there is some-
thing of unquestioned value to the tem-
perance cAuse in the unobtrusive, but
emphatic boycotting of the drink habit
by sound businesss corporations, who
cannot be charged with being under the
influence of sentimental considerations.
When great railroad corporations re-
fuse to employ a man who uses intoxi-
cants; when insurance companies place
abstainers in a favored class. and put
operations of the liquor traffic among
the extra hazardous risks; and when
large employers of labor ostracize not
only the iatemperate, but in many cases
the moderate drinker; then we . have a
force exerted which renders prohibition
laws easily operative. If all insurance
companies followed the example of the
one to which we have referred, the
cause of temperance and clean living
would receive a decided advance. With
the innumerable corporations doing life
insurance business, and with the com-
petition each one has to meet from the
others, it might be difficult to secure
unanimity in this respect. But it would
certainly be a move in the right direction
if it could be effected. -London Adver-
tiser.
TOOTH BRUSHES FOR CATTLE.
Foot baths and tooth brushes have
been added to the appointments in
stables which house the exclusive herds
of cattle with which wealthy Chicago
men play at being farmer.
Foot bathe every morning and every
night keep the cloven hoofs of milk -
giving cows clean and free from gertns
of the dreaded foot and mouth disease,
while the regular application of tooth
brushes at night safeguards the ani-
mal's mastieating apparatus against
germs that might lie hidden in hay,
oats or fine feed.
Arthur Meeker's superintendent at
Arcady Farm is responsible for the
foet bath additions to the toilet arrange-
ments fer bovine beauties belonging to
the packer. Antiseptic solutione be-
tween the 'loofa night and morning,
with inapection twice a week, have kept
his herd free as yet and are expected
to keep them healthy hereafter.
Joseph M. Cudahy's farm superintend-
ent ht Libertyville has arranged a
soft reVolving brush on an old horse
clipping deice and givet the cows a
tooth-brusbing every night that is ex -
pleated to keep danger Of infection from
hay dr grain at Zero.
Rev. Carieri D. E. Bogert of 13elieville
passed away after an extended illness.
WINGNAM
20 Years Ago
From the TIMES of Nov. 23, 1804
Mr, John Forster is this week driv-
ing piles ia the river to protect the
wheel house of the water -works from
being inundated, It is expected that it
will need fifty or mare piles to make a
good job of it.
Mr. John Kerr has rented the prem-
ises now occupied by Mr. E. 0. Clarke,
tailor, next door to Mrs. Herdsman's
millinery establishment, and will move
his stook of groceries, &s., also house-
hold furniture, into said premises, the
first week in December.
We had quite a fall of snow on Sun-
day night, and some ha e fallen since,
but the eoft weather on Wednesday has
taken it nearly ail away
One day last week, a couple of loads
of town nimrodi drove out to the neigh-
borhood of Blackhorse, and spent a day
hunting. They secured a large num-
ber or rabbits, &a.
Messrs. W. J. Chapman, of Wing -
ham, and R. P.- Chapman of Ripley, left
the other day for Denver, Colorado,
where they have considerable property
in the shape of real estate, left them
by the late Mr. Thornton, formerly of
this town. They expect to be absent
about a month.
Mr. John Elder is laid aside with a
felon on one of his hands.
Mr. E. C. Clark has sold his tailoring
business and outfit to Mr. Wm. Bar -
rand.
If winter sets in now there will be a
water famine in some sections. Many
wells are still dry and the best of them
have only sufficient water for present
us e.
Messrs Mahler Bros. of the fruit ev-
aporator, have closed down operations
for the season.
• Mr. J. W. Green, late of the Mild-
may Gazette, has accepted a position
as canvasser for the Toronto Mail.
Brussels will hold its first horse fair
of the season on the 6th of December,
Why cannot our Council arrange for
the holding of such a fair in Wingham,
monthly.
Mrs James Johnston, of Palmerston,
whose property was damaged by fire
last week, has made a settlement with
the insurance company in regard to her
loss, and intends to repair the building
as soon as possible.
Mr. Colin Kennedy, son of Mrs. S.
Kennedy, of this town, while working
in Teeswater, on Friday last, killing
pigs, overlifted and injured himself
seriously. At last accounts he was do-
ing as well as could be- expected.
BORN
Wilson -In Wingham, on the 16th
inst., the wife of Mr. John Wilson, V.
S.; a son.
Wood -In Wingham, on the 14th
inst, the wife of Rev. L. G. Wood; a
son.
' DIED
Johnston -In Turnberry, on Novem-
ber 10th, Jane; daughter of Mrs. J.
Johnston, aged 19 years, 10 months and
20 days.
mARatEn
Leech -Jackson -At the residence Of
the bride's father, Morris, on the 15th
inst, by the Rev. L B. Wallwin, of
Stratford, Mr. Charles Leech, of De-
troit, Mich., to Miss Annie E., - fourth
daughter of Abraham Jackson, Esq.
Brown -Smillie-On the 14th inst., at
Dungannon, by Rev. H. Wes Jeanes,
Chas. Brown to Minnie Smillie, both of
W. Wawanosh.
THE POLITICAL PLAY.
Discussing the probability of an im-
mediate Dominion eleetion, the Weekly
Sun, which is by no means partial to the
Liberal party, diagnoses the situation
very accurately when it says:
It is again rumored that the Borden
Government will go to the country in
February or before:* Signs of an elec-
tion are not wanting, among which the
most important is the interesting play
which Mr. Bourassa as a central figure
etaged es usual to make Ontario vote
solidly for the Conservative party
against Quebec and to make Quebec
Vote ss heavily as possible for the
Conservative party against Ontario.
We so interpret at all events Mr. Bour-
assa's girding at Britain and the howls
of "Hang I3ourassa," which are already
raised by the Conservative press of
Ontario. The Liberal press which
seeks to repudiate Mr, l3ouraasa, would
be better employed in explaining the
play.
The rictuses of the Government's
fright are pretty Clear. The public
finances are getting into A bad way.
The revenue is felling fast and there
ifs not in the inieistry the courage to re-
trench The war taxes imposed at the
emergency session have been unproduc-
tive and the imposition Of productive
war taxes against which the public
anger will rise is inevitable. Even more
serious political dangers loom, nOt the
least of which is the danger of another
assault by Mackenzie and Minn, whose
case it is now acknowledged ought to
have peen squerely met last session.
BUSINESS AND
SHORTHAND
Subjects taught by expert instructors
at the
Y. Di. C. A. BLDG.,
LONDON, ONT.
Students assisted to positions. College
in session from Sept, lst. Catalogue
free. Eater any time.
J. W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr,
Principal Chartered Accountant
10 Vite-PrinciPal
• CENTRAL
. STRATFORD. ONT.
C t\TI2RA.L BUSINESS COLLEGE,
Ile Stratford, Ont., is a school
With a continental reputation for
high grade work and for the sucsess
of its graduates, a school with su-
perior courses and instructors. We
give individual attention in Com-
mercial, Shorthand, and Telegraphy
Departments. Why attend else-
where when there is room here?
• You may enter any time.
Write for our large free catalogue
D. A. fAcLACHLAN
PRINCIPAL.
H. DAVIS
WINGHAM, ONTARIO
Agent for
• Allan Line
Cunard Line
Donaldson Lines.
Canadian Northern Lines
Ocean Steamships.
, ----...g.....
FARMERS
and anyone having live sock or other
articles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise tIte same for sale in the TIMIS. Our large
circulation tells and it will bestrewn+ indeed if
you do not get a customer. We oan't guarantee
that you vr111 sell because you may ask more
for the article or stook than it is worth. Send
your advertisement to the Times and try this
plan of disposing of your stook and other
article:.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCliER'S
CASTOR IA
HINTS'FOR THE HOUSE.
The age of five or six is the time to
teach children to swim.
Any glass that is to be subjected to
heat -lamp chimneys, for Instance, or
tumblers which are to hold hot water -
should be boiled before they are used
in order to prevent them from cracking.
When lace is too much yellowed with
age wet it and lay it in the sun to
bleach. AS a rule laces are not ironed,
but if this finish seems necessary, lay
old muslin over the lace and iron with
a moderately warm iron.
Any one with a delicate chest will
find great benefit in wearing a piece of
wash leather on the chest and between
the shoulders. Have the leather cut
like a deep blouse yoke, and button it
on the shoulders.
One glass of beer with no food taken
with it does more harm to the system
than three or four glasses with food.
Without food the organs are excited to
action with nothing to work on, and the
consequence is the system is' made to
pay for it.
Sleep during digestion always results
in weakening the action of the stom-
ach and increasing the acidity of the
gastric juice a fact attributed to the
irritation caused by the half digested
mass remaining abnormally long in the
stomach.
Oil and grease spots can be removed
from the most delicately tinted wall-
paper without seriously marring it.
Some French chalk, powdered ,in cold
water, should he applied to the spots
and permitted to remain for at least
twelve hours. The chalk can then be
brushed off. If the grease spots are
still visible put on more chalk, place a
piece of brown paper on this, and press
for a few moments With a warm iron.
Babies at birth have a pulse beat of a
160 times a minute in the case of girls
and 150 a minute in the case of boys.
At the age of four or five the pulse
beats will have fallen to 110 and 100 re-
spectively. Maidens' and youths' pulses
average 95 and 90; mature women and
Men average 80 and 75, elderly women
and men have an average pulse beat of
160 and 50. An old woman's pulse rarely
if etter, einkt blow 60, but anteing old
men a beat tinder 50 is very coMmon.
CASTO R IA
For Infants and Ohlidrea
Math. For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
axe;
TOWN D1RECTORY1.
BAPTIST CHURCH -Sabbath services
at 11 a. rn. and 7 p. in. Sunday School
at 2;31 p. in. General prayer meeting
on Wecinesday evenings. Rev. A. C.
Riley., pastor. B. Y. P. U. meets
Monday evenings 8 p. in. W. D.
Pringle, S. S. Superintendent.
METHODIST CHURCH -Sabbath ser-
vices at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday
School at 2:30 p. m. Epworth League
every Monday evening. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev.
J. W. Hibbert, pastor, F. Buchanan,
S. S. Superintendent. •
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH -Sabbath Ser -
Vices at 11 a. M. and 7 is, m. Sunday
School at 2:30 p. m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev.
D. Perrie, pastor. Frank Lewis, S.
S. Superintendent.
Sr. PAUL'S CHURCH, EFISCOPAL-Sab-
bath services at 11 a. m. and '7. p. m.
Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Rev.
E. G. Dymond Rector, Alex. Al-
deron, S. S. Superintendent.
SALVATION AR1VIY CITADEL. -Service
at 11 a.m., 3 p.m, and 7 p.m. on Sunday.
At 8 o'clock on Thursday evening.
There will be special music provided in
the Sunday evening service from 7 to
7.15
POST 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, postmast-
er.
PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free
reading room in the Town Hall, will be
open every afternoon fe im 2 to 5:30
o'clock, and every evening from 7 to
r9a:3rOo'clock. Miss M. McTavish, lib-
jan.
TOWN COUNCIL -Dr, A. J. Irwin,
Mayor; J. W. McKibbon, Reeve; L. F.
BinkleyS Wm. Isbister, W. A. Currie,
A. Young, W G. Patterson and D. Bell,
Councillors; John F Crioves, Clerk and
Treasurer. Board meet' first Monday
evening in each month at 8 o'clock.
PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD -H. E. Isard,
Wm. Robertson, W. A. Campbell, Dud-
ley Holmes, A. Tipling, A. E Lloyd,
Robt, Allen, L. A. Bisbee, John F. Groves
Secretary Treasurer. Board meets in
Council Chamber on the second Tues-
day of each month.
HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS -Harry E.
Ricker, M. A., Principal and Specialist
in Science; G. R. Smith, B. A., Special-
ist in Mathematics; Mr. C. M. Ewing,
M. A.'Classics; Miss M. 1. Whyte,
B. A., Specialist in Moderns and His-
tory; Miss E. V. Cooper. B. A., Art
and Mathameties; Miss B: E. Anderson,
Commercial Work and History.
PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS. A. L.
Posliff, Principal, Miss Brock, Miss
Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss Ans-
ley, Miss Barber and Miss Bentley.
BOARD OF HEALTH. -Dr. A. J. Irwin,
(chairman), Wm.Fessant, Alex Porter,
John F. Groves,Secretary; Dr. R. C.
Redmond, Medical Health officer.
Wingham General Hospital
(Under Government Inspection)
Pleasantly situated. Beautifully fur-
nished. Open to all regularly licensed
physicians. RATES FOR PATIENTS-WhiCh
include board and nursing), $4.90 to $15.
per week according to location of
room. For further information, ad-
dress
Miss L. Matthews.
Superintendent
Box 223, Wingham Ont.
Railway Timetable
GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTRAL
TRAINS-DRAVA 108
London .. 6.85
.- ._- 8.80pm.
Toronto &Basin:00 a".m.
. 0.45 a.m- 2.80p.m
.lioardine-11.59 a.m...2.80 p -re - 9.15 p.
ARRINA ruota
Kincardine - -.0.80 a.m-11.00 am- - 2.30 P.
London.... ........ 11,64 RM.... 785 D:
Palmerston .... : 211,8204 pa., juin: 9.15
Toronto & Neat
W. F. BURG1UN' Agent, Wingham;
AN.A.DIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY ,
--
arilL1A711Toronto andIstT..-640:. 0.10 pan.Teeswter ...... 1,00 p,n. p.m,ARRIVA YROX
Teeswater... ..... -6.40 a.m. 08 p
Toronto and Haat- ....12 47 p.m:
J. re. WISNER. Agent.WIng-lern P.
WANTED
Good Local Agent
at once to represent the
Old and Reliable
Foothill Nursuries
A splendid list of Chit and
ornamnta1 sto:k for Fall
Delivery in 1913 an d
Spring Delivery in 1114.
Start at, once and secure ex-
clusive territory. We
supply handsome free out-
fit and pay highest com-
missions.
Write for full particulars.
Stone& Wellington,
Toronto - ,- Ontario
OVER 05 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
THE WINGHAM TIMES
IS PUBLISMID
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
—AT.-
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Medical
DRS. KENNEDY & CALDER
05'„xam_corner Patrick and Centre Sts.
PHONES :
Offices
Residence, Dr. Kennedy
Reaidence, Dz. Calder
48
548
161
Dr. Kennedy speolalizes in Surgery.
Dr. Calder devotes special attention to Dis-
eases of the Eye, Bar, Nose and Throat.
Eyes thoroughly tested. Glasses
• Properly fitted. t
TNII. ROST. C. RHDKOND, M. B.C.S. (Eng)
_LA L. R. 0, P. London.
PHYSICIAN and SCBGHON
Office, with Dr. Chisholm •
W . R. Hambly, B.Sc., M.D., 0.81,
Wingham, Ontario.
Special attention paid to diseases of women
and children, having taken post graduate
work in Surgery, Bartoriology and. scientific
Medicine.
Office in the Kerr residence, between the
Queen's hotel and the Baptist Churoh.
Ali business given careful attention .
Phone 54. P. o. Box 118.
Dr. J. R. Macdonald
Wingham, Ont.
Office -Stone Block, over the TIMES
office.
DRS. PARKER & PARKER
Ostegpathic Physicians
Oculists, Neurologists
WInghamt-Listowel
Diseases Treated by Drugless Methods
Osteopathy cures or benefits when
other systems fail.
Wingham office over Christie's Store
Tuesday, 11.30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wed-
nesday, 9 to 11 a.m. Thursday, 9 to
11 a.m. and 4 to 9 p.m. Friday, 9 to
11 a.m. or by appointment.
J. A. FOX, D.C.
GRADUATE CHIROPRACTOR
Chiropractic is successful in suoh difficult
cases as Insanity, Epilepsy, Asthma, Rheuma-
tism, Heodaches, Constipation, Chronic Stom-
ach, Liver and Bowel Tronble,Fenaale Trouble.
Office in Knox house, back of Post
Office. Entrance over Presbyterian
Church Walk. 'Phone 191.
Office hours: 2 to 5 p.m., 7 p.m.
Dental
MEIM•41.11111.11
ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D. D. S., L. D 5.
Doctor of DentalSurgery of the Penneylvitaut
De sal College and Licentiate of the kW: N.
OOilpire of Dental Surgeon. of Criteria. effuse
luiduedonald Block. Wingham,
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon-
froan May 1st to Cot. 1s6.
IL ROSS, D. S., L. D. S.
lionor maaduate of the Royal College of
Dental Sue't,qpns of Ontario and. Honor gradu-
ate of the ciriversity of Toronto, Faculty of
Dentistry.
Office over H. E. Isard & OO'., store, Wing -
ham, Ont.
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oct. lit.
Legal
VANSTONH,
BARRISTRII, SOLWITOR, RTC
Private end Company funds to loan at low tan
rate of interim,, mortgagee, town and terra
property bought and sold. „
Ofdoe, Bearer Blook, Winghain
fr
r A. MORTON,
• •
BARRISTBR, tee.
Wingham, Out,
DUDLEY HOLCIES
AT Office: Meyer Block,Wingham,
earrister, Solicitor, Etc.
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