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The Wingham Times, 1915-01-28, Page 2.rage 2 *awl Troak Railway System Town ' T i k i Office can issue through tickets via popular routes, to nog point in America --East, West, South, Northwest, Mani- tobr., Pacific Coast. etc, Baggage checked *trreu„h to destina- tion and full information given whereby travelling will be make pleasant and free freta 'ignorance. Tourist and return tieeets to above points also en sale at lowe;.t tigm'es, and with all prevailing el.. cera,,,'., Single and return tickets to any point in Ontario. Your business will be ap- ppre'iat'il, b" your trill a short er n. long ons', We can tie'. - et you through to any point hi I':u.ol,e on all leadin'e steamship lines. 1'r . peel orders also issued. If it's about travel, we have the information and will give it to you cheerf c ily. B. ELLIOTT Town Agent G.T.R. Times Office, Wingham, Ont. .:.-e!':.lt1,It3r-il;o net ,Iii ; 5 (rri:s8 is 1'1140r $ B. erzi r) x r, Ponrasara AND PROPIETon TO ADVERTISERS Notice of changes meet 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 THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1914 WHAT SOME ?PEOPLE DON'T UNDERSTAND. (Hamilton Times,) Sometimes people come around and tell the editor that The Times should go for this one and that one and show up this concern or the next, Some- times they want us to publish a letter making serious charges or insinuations against persons or business concerns, signed with a bogus name, of course, and when we refuse they hint that we are interested in the person or company or lack the public spirit and courage to attack t1 a wrong in the interest of what they consider the right. The Victoria (B. C.) Times refers to a case in point which we consider worth quot- ing. This newspaper says editorially: "We are in receipt of a letter in which grave charges are made against certain persons connected with a finan- cial institution. The writer wishes to have them printed under an assumed signature, which would be against our invariable rule, and we may as well say now as later that we would not print them under any circumstances. An impression prevails among a great many people that a newspaper can escape the responsibilty for publishing statements that may be libelous by dis- avowing. or by compelling the writer to sign the letter with his own name. This is a great mistake. The publican tion of a libel is an offence no matter by whom it may be actually written, e and a newspaper is liable in damages to the person libeled and all connected with its publication may be fined or im- prisoned or both. We know that our refusal to print the letter referred to may be construed as a desire to shield some one. It has unhappily come about that a great many persons think every newspaper is influenced by unworthy motives, when they refrain from doing what they are requested to do; but when a newspaper editor or publisher finds himself haled before a court of justice and put to great cost and incon- venience, if not to heavy punishment, he will derive mighty little satisfaction from the fact that he showed he was not afraid to print things. A libel suit or a libel prosecution is an expensive luxury, and those in the editorial charge of newspapers have to be con- stantly on the watch to avoid them." The experience of our British Colum- It�1i5 TRAK INTER--- hiow Would you answer ft t Between the linea of this short letter yen can read grim tragedy. If its appeal were made to you, personally, hots would yon answer it? Suppose you held the power tc receive this poor woman or to turn het away, which. would you do? 4, Will you kindly give me information eoneerning admission of a very needy woman near me. Her hubband is dead, and she is in consumption" Site has two email children, at present in an orphans' home, tis the mother is net able to care for them, and their only income is what an aged mother earns. They live in one area room." "Why, is cagy to iiay, of eoureo, I would offer relief, if ib were in my power!" But, think I Are you sincere when you Inky that/ Ars you in carnotite 1)0 you really watt to help poor, mitering Can. temposee? Then her ae your chence to pew yoetr» sincerity. Arabi to the. )aakoilat Fre* nos- •' tail for Consumptive'will, belly tlalteowiedged by W.J. Gage, �an Iliscentive Committee, 84 Spadina Avenue, air L Mabee, Secretary a. Treasurer, J47 Pic Strutt West, Toronto. bia contemporary is not unique. We are frequently called upon to refuse in• sertion of libelous letters, end our motives are often questioned for so lo- in;;, insinuations being made that we are under some sort of oblig axion to protect the people or organ :ration at- tteked, The motive is generally our own protection or to protect the good name or others wantonly attacked. THE SPIRIT OF THE W 4ST. (Winnipeg Tribune,) The opening of spring in a few were., will witness the greatest agricultural activity in the history of the Canadian Week. It is from the soil that we de- rive nur basic wealth. Our prosperity de ends in the long run upon the pro, ducts from the farm. Never bcfoe' shave there been such preparations. The interest in agriculture is on the in. crease. Men are thinking of farmin;' today where before attention woe wholly centred on real estate specula- tion. peculation. We are in for a new era, in fact it will prove the best era in Canada': history. Men of wide vision tell ue that we have not yet fully grasped th. possibilities of our country. We be- lieve them. While ever mindful of our gigantic task in the war, we should re member that the statesman -warrior. Kitchener, has impressed upon tht Empire that it is a patriotic, necessary duty to devote energy and enterprise inthe developement of trade. The ma- terial strength of the Empire lies in the developement of natural resourses. A great and joyous task lies before us it Western Canada. IA QUEBEC DOCTOR SPEAKS. To the Editor - A Quebec Doctor spoke in part as follows; "I am only one of those poor met: you call doctors that goes out at night and works hard all his life time. You will excuse me if I only giveyou a little talk about what we are doing in Quebec. "In Quebec we are fighting very much. I may tell you that the laity, in this fight against alcohol, follow the Clergy. From the Archbishop down to the priest, including the nun, and the monk all fight against alcohol as an understood thing, every moment of their lives. "I will speak of alcoholism as the greatest cause of all diseases, the greatest cause of criminality and the greatest cause of all financial trouble. Thanks to the labors of scientific men, we now know that 'alcohol, no matter in what form is one of the greatest poisons we can take, "A doctor who understands his busi- ness puts alcohol on the same footing as morphine and cocaine. We do not use alcohol any more, When I say we I can vouch for ninety-five per cent of our doctors. I see a large number of patients in my private practice and at the hospital and I never prescribe a drop of alcohol. In Quebec we are teaching scientific temperance proving that alcohol in any form is poisonous. "Alcohol in the blood of a father is an awful thing. You may say of a drunkard, let him drink and die through it but what of the children of an alco- holic parent. Morel has dictated a law and after years of trial it has proved to be right. He said that the children of an alcoholic father will disappear in four generations. "Science has also proved that in the case of a mother who drinks during pregnancy the effects on the children are terrible. Most of those children die before birth or very shortly after. W. C. Sullivan a great scientific man has proved that the children of a drinking. mother will die fifty per cent sooner than other children. In your insane hospitals as well as in the insane hos- pitals of Quebec forty-five or fifty per cent of the adults who are there for lunacy are there because they drank too much whisky or beer. "These are only a few of the things that Dr. Dube said last February but are they not enough to set us wonder- ing what is to be the end of it all." II. Arnott, M.B.,M.C.1', 4. GERMS LIKE GIRLS BETTER THAN BOYS. "Fathers and mothers lucky enough to have both boys and girls know how clean the shops keep themselves, and how the boy disregard dirt," says Dr. H. W. Hill, of the Minnesota Public Health Association, "From earliest childhood the little girl's hands and face are washed, and she evades dress stains, combs her hair, and tries to look nice. But every normal boy, up to the age of 14, revels in dirt, and looks for- ward to the Saturday night bath with virtuous contempt or dread. But boys do not suffer infectious diseases as girls. This was brought out in an in- vestigation made of 5.9130 children of all ' ages and ems. We requested the mothers themselves to report what ' diseases their children had had. Girls Thad had more infekt'lnm than boys of 3 the same age. This goes to support the modern view that dirt and disease have no necessary relation. It is not the dirt boys revel in that does harm. It is the germs in other people's bodies th tt•-tumid be drag:led. The r;ir'.•; en ea>unter hits' tin t in•:re arra the beta .1) -y n a.feiite., e..,t oa her 'atl r /nor.", •.nit awl tt>• tt itti i.:tiera t.':v than It .L lt'111 iJ K•A :�1�• l'i'?:. e. Jen. :15, 15'S V.".• .• e.''1al- al of space this • revert of they \Vest Huron l• ..i:n` • , •.•etlag, which was '' lhill on 'Tcursday .. • . , e Tee 111,4'i.44',.; were lar'ge- ut, .,. i, r l and d, t the addresses .1 n .. 1: it Adv,xeatt': Rev. Mr. Wood, ',til.sh:fre, l't•. • :,nod two able and in• v.• '..one e: in Trinity clim'ch on Z;>. i 1 ':.::r, t;-' i+ cn" or• the ootid•; eee : he Choc.'.+•: , and Wine hath cu. - , :.agstiett is to he congratulated on hay -o «lnq',ent and earnest a rector. M. I. E. Swa rts, of town, has pur- h-taG+d the celebrated trotting hors+, Lend Tennyson, from Mr. Lack. Ken- +aedy, of Clinton, for the sum of $175 The assailant of the editor of the .ztrderleh "Signal" has been fined SIO Ind costs for assault. Messrs H, C. Sperling, Reeve, and War. Holmes, Deputy -Reeve 'are at .Jaderich this week attending the meet- og of the County C.mncil. Mr. Wm. H. Campbell, of Lower Wingham, received a handsome ealen- iar from the Ladies' Aid Society of the elnbro Presbyterian Church. It is nice :o be thus remembered by old friends ind former co-workers. . On Sunday last, Charlotte, the belov- TJ wife of Mr. Geo. A. Bisbee, of town, .raid the debt of nature. The deceased rad been ill for a number of years, and ear death was-notunexpected. She was an her 51st year, and leaves a husband and a large family to mourn their loss. rhe funeral took place on Tuesday afternoon. We are called upon This week to re- cord the death of Mr. W. H. McDonald, dentist, of this town after an illness ex- tending over several months, from lung trouble. The sad event occurred on Wednesday evening, in the 33rd year of his age. The deceased has been a resi- dent of the town for many years, and was universally esteemed. He leaves a wife and two children, who have the sympathy of the townspeople in their sad bereavement. The funeral under, the direction of the Oddfellows, of which society he was a member. This section was visited by the worst snow storm for years, on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. The roads were blocked with snow several feet deep and there has been but little traf- fic for the past three days. The early train from Kincardine was cancelled on Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday mornings, but all the other trains went through, though most of them were late. The main street of the town, along the business portion, is drifted full, the snow banks in front of some of the stores being five feet deep At this writing, the streets,.and sidewalks are being cleared, and the town will soon present its usual appearance. The storm abated on Thursday about 9 o'clock a.m., having lasted from '7 o'clock Monday night. MED BISBEE-In Wingham, on the 20th* Charlotte, beloved wife of Mr. Geo. A. Bisbee, aged 50 years, 9 months and 14 days. 111cDoNALD-In Wingham, on the 23rd W. H. McDonald, in his 33rd year. STALKER • In Morris, on the lith, Francis Stalker, aged 02 years. BOYS AND COURTESY. There is scarcely a woman who does not comment on the rudeness', ill -breed ing and general lack of courtesy a' some of our m.dern young men, says a recent writer. The blame rightfully placed, should be upon the young men's mothers. And as some of these same fault-finders are mothers of boys, the blame would be of times rightfully placed upon themselves. Courtesy, like charity begins at home, A finishing school may endeavor to give him polish; but to become a habit, an inseparable part of your son, court- esy and a general cultured atmosphere must surround your son at home. At a very early age, say six years. a boy should be taught to offer his seat to a woman in the car, raising his hat at the same time, Raising the hat may begin at five years of age. Begging a person's pardon at two and a half to three years. Rising when a woman enters the room at five years. Opening the door for a woman leav- ing the room at six years, Picking up a dropped article for a person at four or five years. "Thank you'. and "You're welcome" should begin almost as soon as a child can talk. "Phase" ,should .1106141 */* at the same time. . Germany in 1914 devoted 1,342,4C0 acres to sugar beets, I ; Ni l :ry • January 28th, 1915 MEI; i'L17218 Dumboy, Their National Dish, Is a Gastronomic Wonder, TO CHEW iT MEANS LOCKJAW, The Sticky, Cement -like Moss Has to De Dotted In Lumps, Washed Clown With Soup -When Allowed to Stand and Harden It Is Used For Bullets. Doan boy, tin- national dish of Li- „ o, 's gastro- nomic , Om �t t td a, t o- brrfa • is one al t t a- nomic ,wonders. if allowed to stand lung after being prc,,,.red for the table It becomes very baud, broken pieces of it twine, a favorite eine of shut for rise iii the long muzzle loading gulls of the an; ‘.e..5 .1 easing of du an boy is also used to stiffen tile letitbdr sheaths of the native sword:; and knives, amoral, ing to G. N. Collins in a eonatnunica. tiou to the National Geographic society at 1Vtishiugton. •'To attempt the description of some novel food Is like attempting to de- scribe a landscape," writes Mr. Col- lins. , "The constituent parts may be de- scribed and the manner in which they are combined, but it requires some- thing more than accurate description to reproduce the sensation of the origi- Intl. The principal ingredient of dum- boy is cassava, or 'eassada,' as it is called in Liberia. The edible roots of this plant are the source of tapioca and some forms of sago. "To prepare the roots for dum boy they are peeled, boiled and all fibers from the center removed. The cooked roots are then planed in a large wood- en mortar and beaten with a heavy pestle. This beating requires consid- erable skill and experience. in the hands of a novice the result is lumpy and inedible. "The beating requires about three- quarters of an hour and is bard 'work. As the beaten' mass becomes homo- geneous the pestle produces a loud crack each time it is drawn from the mortar. These sharp reports can be heard long distances through the for- est and are very welcome sounds at the end of a day's journey. "When the dumboy reaches this stage the operator may rest without injury to the product, but once the beating is carried past this point it must be rapidly completed and the dumboy eaten at once. The natives say it is actually dangerous to eat dum- boy that has stood for more than a few minutes after it is beaten. "As soon as the beating is finished the dumboy is taken from the mortar and placed its the shallow wooden bowls. The native method is to place the entire quantity in one large bowl, from which all the partakers eat. If divided the customary portion for each person is a piece about the size of an ordinary loaf of bread. "A soup which has been prepared while the dumboy was being beaten is now poured into each bowl. There is great variety in the soup, which im- parts most of the taste to the dish. There is always a stock of some form of meat. This may be either chicken, deer, fish, monkey or even canned beef. To this are added as many vege- tables as can be obtained. "As soon as the soup is added the dumboy is ready to be eaten, and, 'while the ingredients are somewhat bizarre, the method of eating strikes the traveler as even more startling. The mass or dumboy, which can best be described as a sticky dough, will adhere instantly to anything dry, but is readily cut with a wooden spoon it the spoon is kept moist with soup. "An incredibly large piece is cut off With the moistened spoon, taken up with a quantity of soup and swallowed whale. No one thinks of chewing it, and it is customary to caution the nov- ice by tales of the frightful operation necessary to separate the jaws once the teeth are buried in the sticky mass. "As might be expected, few Euro- peans like dumboy on first acquain- tance, and with some the initial dis- taste prevents further experiments. If a second or third attempt is made, however, and the dish has been prop- erly prepared, the habit is usually formed, and before long every night spent in the hush without a meal of ' dumboy is counted a privation. Among • the white residents of • Liberia tona- 1 nese for the dish amounts almost to a cult, It is regarded as a sort of guar- anty that one's tenderfoot days are over." Curvature of the Earth. The earth's curvature is very nearly eight inches for the first mile, thirty- two for the second, seventy-two for the third, l.IS for the fogrtti, and so lon. Law; Curvature of the earth's 'surface on a true plane at sea level is close to the product of eight inches multiplied by the square of the num- ber representing miles. Thus 128 equals eight multiplied by four equat- ed, equals eight multiplied by sixteen. ►-New York Journal, Affable Polk*. "Boston people are mighty nice to book agents." "Good customers, 'eh?" "Not so much that, 'They've read all the books in the world. But they're a1• ways willing to discus 'em With you." i -,-Louisville Courier -Journal. .,.•Thott must Mount to Or pink doWito lutist rule and win or serve and Jose, enter or triumph, be Onvii or bem Wert-Gasthtt , Tee if V. I,q. ,datU:eCi1tS i:55i'.,''e'I " it3 moseioa from r> �•., free. Enter env trete. Westerv'vlt d.'• :' Principal t' 1Z' • ' G161t1 AL Il 4 aTBAT> F' RD. ONT. Ontario's Best Practical Training School, We have thor- nu gh courses and experienced instructors in each of our three dspertments Commercial Shorthand and Telegraphy Our graduates succeed and you should read our large, free catalogue. Write for it at once D. A. tAt°iii' PRINCIPAL. H. DAVIS WINGHAM, ONTARIO Agent for Allan Line Cunard Line Donaldson Lines. Canadian Northern Lines Ocean Steamships. FARMERS and anyone having live stock or other articles they wish to dispole of, ebonid naives - Wee the same for sale in the TIMMS. Onr large circulation tells and it will he strange indeed If that you willtsell because Wo can't guarantee you may ask mere for the artiole or stook than it Is worth. Send ronr advertisement to the Thos and try this pian of disposing of ronr staph and other article+, DON'T QUIT. Don't talk to me, son, of crops on the hum Or of money that's tight in the banks, Don't tell your old Dad that business is bad My son, that's the bunk of the cranks There's a few pesky guys, just chock full of lies, • Who go spreadin' the slanderous tale, But son, don't be quittin', just stick to your knittin' You'll get your good share of kale, There's fun and there's joy and mamma my boy For those who will pull in the collar. But life's pretty tough, for the guy who's a bluff, . So just pass him by, let him holler. W. M. Massachusetts street railways may legally charge six cent fares. Hawaii has an electric railway sys- tem. Springs and clips for the outside of shoes hold them stretched properly on a new rack without the use of last shaped trees. • HAD A BAD COLD WITH PROLONGED COUGHING. TRIED NEARLY EVERYTHING FINALLY • DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PiNE SYRUP CURED HIM. - Mr, Wallace H. Grange, Vancouver, B.C., writes; "During a cold spell here about the middle of last October (1013), I caught a cold which got worse despite alt treatments I could obtain, until about November 22nd, a fficnd said, 'Why not try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup?' Really, I had no faith in it at the time as I had tried nearly every other remedy I had heard of, to no avail, but I thought I would give this last remedy a trial. I purchased a 40 tent bottle, and in three days I was feeiing a different man. My cold was so hard, and the coughing so prolonged, that vomiting occurred after a hard spell of coughing. I carried the bottle in My pocket, and every time I was seized with a coughing spell I would take a small dose. I cad most heartily recommend Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup to anyonli with a severe cold, as its powers are most marvelous, and I never intend being without it at all times." When you ask for "Dr. Wood's" see that you get what you ask for. It is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade Mark; the price, 250 and 1 50; manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Oat, To wN DIRECTORY, CTORY, 13A3'TlST CIIURclt-Sabbath services at 11 a. in. and 7 p. in. Sunday School >tt 2:. > p. In. General prayer meeting on W ednesday evenings. Rev. A. C. Riley, pastor, B. Y. P. U. meets Monday evenings S p. m, W. D. Pringle, S. S. Superintendent, ME'cllonIST Cliunen--Sabbath ser- vices at 11 a. tn. and 7 p. in. Sunday School at 2:30 p. in. Epworth League every Monday evening. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. J. W. Hibbert, pastor. F, Buchanan, S. S, Superintendent, PItESRYTEaIAN CIiUi.Ci'I--Sabbath ser- vices at 11 a. in. and 7 p, m. Sunday School at 2:30 p. in. General prayer meeting. on Wednesday evenings. Rev. D, Perrs, pastor. Frank Lewis, S. S. Superintendent. z i '? ST P AU4 I.U1 i S C 2CI , Er Ma/PAL-Sab- bath services at 11 a. m. and 7, p. m, Sunday School at 2:30 p. m, Rev. Dymond E. G. Rector. Alex, Al- deron, S. S. Superintendent. ;SALVATION ARMY CITADEL. -Service at 11 a.m„ 3p.m, and 7 p.m. on Sunday. At S o'clock on Thursday evening. There will be special musie'"provided in the Sunday evening service from 7 to 7.15 POST OFFICE -Office hours from Sa,m. to 6:30 p. m, Open to box holders from 7 a. m. to 9 p. in. P. Fisher, postmast- er.- PUBLIC ostmast- er.PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon f+• >m 2 to. 5;30 o'clock, and every evening from 7 to 9:30 o'clock. Miss M. McTavish, lib- rarian. TOWN COUNCIL -Dr. A. J Irwin, Mayor; S. Mitchell, Reeve; L. F. Hinkley, A. M. Crawford, W. A. Currie, V. R. Vannorman, W. G. Patterson and. D. Bell. Councillors; John F Gloves, Clerk and Treasurer. Board meet, first o'clocMondayk, evening in each month at 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. C. Garrett, Art and Mathametics; Miss B. Kettlewell, Commercial Work and History. PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS. -A. L. Posliff, Principal, Miss Brock, Miss Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss Ans- ley, Mist. Barber and Miss Bentley. BOARD OF HEALTH. -Dr. A. J. Irwin, (chairman), Wm.Fessant, Alex Porter, John P. Groves,Secretary; Dr. R. C, Redmond, Medical Health officer. Wingham General lfosnital (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 T'RijNK RAILWAY SYSTRId. TRAMS LEA vs los Iondon .....,....„ 8.85 a.m _. _ 2.80p.m. Toronto tIlnst 0.45 a.m.. - 8.20p.m. • raeardine..11,b9 a.m -.. e.ib pan. ARRIvn rave Kincardine -0.80am -.. 8.20 p.m. London ........ 11.54 sand..., 7.05 p.m. oronto.eHCast.......... 2.80 p.m,-- 0.15 p.m. T. F. BURGHAN,Slation A pent Wingbam. K B ELLIOTT, Town Agent, Wingkam, CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY, m axima LISAVz ton Toronto and Bast..-.-.- 6.40 a.m.,-. 11.10 p.m. Teeawater- . 1.00 p.m. --10.22 p.m. �Atii1TV16 'nom Teeawater._. ,...... .0.40 a.m... 8.Oo p.m. Toronto and/lest- .,-.12 47 p.m -,10.27 p.m. �+ H. BHBMBR. Agent.W iagham. WANTED. Good (Local; Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable Foothill Norsuries A splendid list of frl, it and ornam.ntal stock for Fall Delivery in 1913 an d Spring Delivery in 19 14, 'tart at once and stcure ex- clusive territory. We supply handsome free out. fit and pay highest com- missions, Trite for full particulars. Slone& Welliogloo, Toronto - - Ontet,rno OVER es YEARS• EXPEMENCE PATENTS TRADE MARK* DESIGNS Cbfoffit6H78 ate. Anyone tending a sketch and description may (lnlokir. ascertain our opinlon free'whhetlotr an Inoenttton IN patentable,probably ommunla. teles etrLOLIy conedentlal. SANOOK On Patent* sent free. Oldest agency for ,'soaring�patente, Patents taken through inane ec Co. move epeaal niece, without Wargo, in the $cLQt!ftic Rnterlcaa. A handsomely 'tetan ted weekly. Largeet air• lades of say aelanttna Journal. :term, for nada, $ ,75 a year, pottego prepaid, bold by Ott OOtvedaaicre. MUNNosCortyet..WuL'Ne Durk �tC W�laa� limes IS PABLIIU$D EVERY THURSDAY MORNING -AT•-. The Times °Mee Stone Bleck, WLNG13Abf, ONTART° T4nerrs uta tlirtlaontt>rrnN-$100 per anrp: in ndvanos, 51,10 if ttor. paid. do pager disco , tinned till all nrrt'trs tare peid, except at the option of the puhlt�il r. ADVI.RTIS IRO k&t'L3 Drsii,AY Abvtilt'rtsataNT,s One Year $410 (ke each inserion) 11 Six Mt>, (hi in 110. • Three MonthsLr,s (18,+ ' One Month Out, Weak .40 (SJo , IJec:af and other eltnllor a lvartlsoments, 10e par line f -,r first iusertln's gni 41 per lino for e>ac111 subsequent ins+»"dnr. lfaxaared n a nunparrol soot,', twelve li+lea to >xa iuuh . Y Bnsin-oss oer:3s of six llass awl under, $5.00 per year. Advertisements of Cittiatioas Vacant, Situa- tions Wanted (louses ror ti•tip or to rent, Articles for title, etc., n>t et e -+ding eight line%, 255 each lasortton; •51 fo • first moatk, Ma for each snbs-+gas,kt inmt!r Larger i• 6 a vartIvnmuuts in proplrtiou. Business a(seerceieechlin :Ii or neices wmatt. 10perinsertion. Medical GDS. KENNEDY & CALDER Orrsrrozs-Corner Patrioh and Centre Si,,. Ptloiaims: Offices Residence, Dr. Kennedy 442 Residence, Dr. Calder 151 Dr. Kennedy specializes in Surgery. Dr, Calder devotes special attention to Dis- eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose anal Thrust. Eyes thoroughly tested. Glasses properly fitted. Dll. ROBT. 0. REDMOND, M. R.C,'s. (Eng) L. R. O. P. London. PHYSICIAN and S17HQIION Office, with Dr. Chisholm W. R. Hambly, B.Se., M.D.: 0.33. Wingham, Ontario. Special attention paid to diseases of women anal children, having taken post graduate work in Surgery, Bartcriology and Soientldc Medicine. Office in the Kerr residence, between the Queen's hotel and the Baptist Church. All business given careful attention. Phone 54. ' P. 0. Box 118. Dr. J. R. Macdoilait Wingham, Ont. Office -Stone Block, over the TIMES office. DRS. P•.UU(E[t & PA RICER O'stegpathic Physicians Oculists, Neurologists Wingham--Listowel Diseases Treated by DruAss Methodax 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 oases Its insanity, Eis pilepsy, Astccessful inhma, hdifficult Rheuma- tism, Heodaches, Constipation Chronic. Stom- ach, Liver and Bowel Tronble,1'emale Trouble. Office in Knox house, back of Post Office, Entrance over Presbyterian Church Walk. 'Phone 191. Office hours: 2 to 5 pm., 7 p.m. Dental .4.g ., ARTHUR J. IRW IN, D. D. p.. i.. L b. Doctor of Dental Sr rasry ,f the Psnn,,yvaia, Dental College and Liorntiete of too iaoyat QaJyge of Dental Surgeon a of Ontario. OBine bilmeadonald.block,'vingaam. Office closed every Wednesday afternoon, from May 1st to Oot. let, H. BOSS, D. D. S., L. D. B. donor graduater�of the Royal College of ateo theUdlyereity of rToro tooFacultydof Dentistry. Office over H. E. Isard Sc CO's., store, Wing - ham, Ont. Of$ce closed every Wednesday afternoon from May 1st to Oct. let. Legal R VANSTONIa, BARRISTBR, SOLICITOR, RTC Private and Company funds to loan at lowest rate of interest. Hortge ee, Iowa and farm property t Band sold. 011ier$ ,'ter Block. Windham J A. MOR'T'ON, i3A.RRXbT1111, aro, Weighting, Ont. DUDLEY 110L11 85 Barrister, soficitorf Etc. Office: Meyer Block,Wingham. OUTSIDE ADVERTISING Order! for the insertion of advertisements such as teachers wanted, bneinetb ahe>Uoel, meohaniea wanted, articled for eels. or in foot any kind of en adwt. in any of the Toronto or other city papers, may he lett at the Tirat! Aide. This Work will receivepprom tettention and will save people the trouble of remitting for tied forwarding advertiee eats. Lowest rated will be quoted on en toatfon, Leave dr (toad rent next work of th ! kind to the I'DI t51 U>X+` 'I1�iI+3. rnvintith*iwt