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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1915-07-22, Page 2Page 2 THE WINGHAIVI TIMES July 22ld, 1915 brand Trunk Railway System Town `ticket Office We can issue through tickets via popular routes, to any point in America -East, West. South, Northwest, Mani- toba, Pacific Coast. ete. Baggage checked through to destina- 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 tickets to any point in Ontario, Your business will be ap- preciated, be your trip a short or a long one. We can ticket you through to any point in Europe 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. ESTABLISHED lere THE WINklial TIMES. 11. B. ELLIOTT, PnBLIB$£R ANn PROeIETOa TO ADVERTISERS Notice of changes must be Ieft 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, JULY 22. 1915 EDITORIAL NOTES What will Mr. Rowell do? This question is being asked all over the Province of Ontario. Now that the Government has selected four leading members of the Methodist Church to control the liquor licenses of the Pro- vince, they will naturally expect some support from the members of this Church. One of the Commission is a preacher, who for many years com- manded a salary of about $1,000 a year. He is now drawing $4,000 a year and all fair-minded people will give him credit for improving bis financial standing. Credit should also be given to the men who are playing the political game. who played their trump card in sending two of their Commissioners to the Lon- don Conference to speak on the Govern- ment's temperance policy. It was up to the Commissioners to do something, for their salary, and they managed to break even with the leader of the Op- position at this religious gathering. But any person who heard or read their speeches could easily understand their mission was a political one. There is no change in the Government's policy -the only change is that they have appointed agents at a big salary to issue liquor licenses throughout the Province. At the Toronto Methodist Conference, the Commissioners and their open -bar policy were denounced in no uncertain sound, but at the Conference held at St. Mary's the Commissioners succeeded in not only getting an opportunity to make speeches, but bad their policy printed in the annual report of the Conference. -Ripley Express, There may be some weaknesses in connection with the prohibition act, but let us point out that it is the bar which that act will hit and hit hard, There is no defence for the bar -the man does not live who can cottediousiy 1 defend the bar as it has been operated in some of the hotels in this Province. It has been a money making concern, pure and simple --and in order to make! many the bar bas traded in human lives. has wrecked' homes and taken fort ales, has beggar -a men, glade pau- prr- .-f women and ereated hu ,teless and r,:• pie ss lit:12 et:i dr -n. We do not ice,!,. u .,n it as a crime to use liquor in rreme„'i"n the man wno leaves it: "For God's Sake, Let Me Stay ! " TTa pleaded with all the intensity bis weakened body sad soul could master. life voice trembled. 'rears lurked in his strained, anzioaa eyes. "I have traveled lar two days on the train," he said. "I have been turned out: of my boarding hoose. I Lave been turned out of a hotel in my own town. The local hospital refused the admission. Nobody wants Ice: Por God's sake, doctor, let me stay." This man had been a railway conductor. His had money to pay for hie needs; so he applied to the MoskokeCottage Sanatorium iv treatment of the diseaeb which held his itfe la its grip--eonenmption, But those Eoffererswithoubnitaeyaud uitltosstfriends. what of theta/ With their hopeless know- thataa *hub theta, they believe it to e�C xeliaf. 7! their' lives tat to IX* they mast be eiot2gLbont: and sup- plied nourishment, medicine, and trend teiit. To do this oasts looney. Will on Contribute s trifle to help in thftt ei'f'ort to lava Heist 1'Iesea soli griekly. Winter hint kart Oontribatioes to the Trina kaka V' res Hos rr1 of tea will be wean lied by W. raf$s, Claartuaal l.seeett,we f ealratttee, M hraulitst Arentrer, sr B. Dunbar. tioerrttry • Treasurer, 347 I.ins i4t vet Won„ Totanso. alone, however, is the best o', for it will never get him anything. But the traffic of the bar has been a crime, and it will remain a crime against man, woman and child just as long as strong whiskey is left in the bar. The pro- hibition net may not meet the desires of ninny men because it does not separ- ate the bar and the whiskey. But it will wipe out the bar, and it is better to wipe out the bar altogether than to have a bar where whiskey is sold, That is plain to everybody; and, if there is anybody who will defend the present bar and its whiskey as against an act that will eliminate that bar, we would like to bear from him. It cannot be conscientiously done. The bar is beyond defence, and it has no de- fenders. Calgary News -Telegram. Militia officers ought not to be saying that they can get all the recruits they need. They ought, instead of that, to be asking for the aid of all the publie speakers in Canada. Sands and par- ades are good so far as they go. But no band or parade can show the young men of Canada what they are asked to fight for. The men who can do this are the orators of Canada. We have plenty of them. If an election were going on to -day there would be hundreds of "spellbinders" of both parties going through Canada and telling us that the life of Canada depended upon a party victory. We want to see all these spell -binders standing on the same plat- forms and telling Canadians that the life of humanity and civilization depends upon a British victory, a victory for the allies against bestialism and tyranny. Fighting against each other, the Grit and Tory orators might bring out nearly two million votes in Canada. Fighting side by side, tbey might bring out at least a quarter of a million Can- adians ready to fight for the things they vote for. -Toronto Star. A STUDY IN SOIL CULTIVATION An exceptionally valuable Bulletin to those interested in soil culture is No. 83, "Field Husbandry: Summary of Results," issued by the Division of Field Husbandry of the Experimental Farms and that can be had by applica- tion to the Publications Branch, De- partment of Agriculture, Ottawa. Re- ports are given of work carried on at tbe central and branch farms and sta- tions. The results of experiments in rotation of crops furnish information of great value. These experiments cover a period of eleven years and the results with advice founded thereupon are set forth in the Bulletin according to years. Foliowine are a few of the benefits given as derived from adopting a judicious system of rotation: 1. The appearance of the farm is improved. 2. Every field receiving at regular in- tervals its fair share of manure and cultural treatment, the entire farm is in a condition to ensure a maximum yield. 3. Cost is lowered by the saving of time due to all the work of a kind being confined to one field. 4. Fewer fences are required. 5. Machinery can be more econom- ically utilized. 6. More live stock can be kept, thus increasing the quantity of available manure. 7. Profitssand yields are increased. 8. The farmer is not dependent upon a single crop. 9. Permits of a more even distribu- tion of the season's labour. Following details of the rotations that are outlined is a summary of the characteristics common to all: 1. Grain fields are always seededdown with clover, even though it be used only as a fertilizer. 2. Grass and clover seedings are heavy. Increased crops of hay and rare failures of a catch have justified them. 3. Hoed crops form a large proper- ties) of every rotation- An attempt to farm a small area without a hoed crop was nut successful. Weeds could not readily be kept in cheek. 4. No field is left in hay for more than two successive years. The records show that the second crop almost always costs more per ton than the first, and that succeeding crops are liable to be grown at a loss. 5. Barnyard manure is preferably applied frequently • in comparatively small quantities, rather than at long in- tervals in large quantities. Expenditure required and derivable profits are fully explained along with the values of commercial fertilizers and the relative virtues of deep and shallow ploughing. Due regard to whether eanditions are to the different varieties of soil make the Bulletin of national importance and ane worthy of close study and wide inquiry Capt. Uohn Munro of Southampton. a veteran Great Lakes sailor, was d owned while trolling for trout; he anus seventy-three years of age. George Winters, a Bothwell widower er tied to kill three of his children with p ,ironed candy having first tested it cn the dog, Which died; then he took a dose himself. HUQBARD GLACIER Alaska's Gigantic Frozen River as It Meets the Sea. THE MOTHER QF ICEBERGS, Rumblings and Roarings That Come as the Masses of los Break Away From the Face of the Lofty Cliff to Start on Their Ocean Voyages. The birth of an iceberg is strikingly described in a report matte to the Na - daunt Geographic society by R. S. Tarr and Lawrence Martin, who beaded the expeditions of the society to Alaska for the study of the behavior of gla- ciers there. "The front of the Hubbard glacier, measured in a straight line, is three and one -buff to four miles Wide. But since the' Ice cliff has a sinuous form with projections in the center it is in reality much longer than this, the total length being between four and one - bait and five miles, This cliff rises be- tween 250 and 300 feet above the wa- ter and extends an unknown distance below it. "One usually needs to wait but a few moments to hear from some part of the cliff the thunder -like rumble or roar which is the first announcement of an iceberg's full. folloyred a few moments Inter by the appearance of a great swell. which on reaching the shore forms a line of white breakers even at a distance of several miles from the ice cliff. "13y watching the ice cliff one may see the huge masses fall from the ice front and a fountain of water dash perhaps even to the top of the glacier and then in a few seconds hear the re- port which the rending of the glacier sends out "One Is fascinated by the perform- ance. Sometimes it is only a small piece that falls, and then a sharp single report like the crack of a pistol goes through the air; again a part of the front crumbles and the down- -aiding Ice, broken into small pieces, seems from a distance like. a foun- tain of water, while the report is only a low rumble; et other times huge masses break away, forming large icebergs, and thq noise then produced (s like the heavy Tumble of distant thunder. nnu at rare intervals one may see a huge mass of blue or black ice thrust itself up from be- low the fiord, some distance from the glacier front, as a part of the sub- merged Ice foot Is broken off, and then no report is heard, but the wave that follows is far greater than usual. "The water waves which follow the discharge of Icebergs from the front ,If Hubbard glacier are of great mag- niture. In September, 1913, for ex- ample, the big steamship Princess Maquinna was aground on a reef Just west of Oster island with the members of the international geo- logical congress, who visited Yakutat bay under the guidance of the junior author. The ship lay somewhat over a mile from the glacier, and yet the Water wave following the discharge of icebergs from Hubbard glacier caused the steamer to roll until she took in water on the main deck ae first one side and then tbe other was tipped far down by the iceberg waves. "There are periods when for an hour or two there is very little discharge and then periods, fully as long, when scarcely a moment elapses without the sound of icefails from some part of the glacier front. It is possible that these differences are in some way related to the ,state of the tide, but we have not determined whether the periods of quiet and activity form part of a regular cycle or are merely Irregular intervals due to accumulation of strain and relief from strain or to expan- sion and contraction under sunlight "While there are periods of relative quiet, they are not periods of absolute repose, and they occupy far less time than the periods of activity. Day and night the ice falls, and the reports that pass out through the air are so frequent that it is fair to speak of the glacier as almost ceaselessly ac- tive. The noise disturbs one's sleep at lirsl, and sometimes, When an 'un- usually heavy fall ucetlts, wakens one even atter he has grown accustomed to the ordinary rumble. A sense of nervous relief is felt when camp is removed to a part of the fiord to which the iceberg roar and the breakers on the coast do not reach." True Devotion, Little Katharine had a big dog which she coved dearly. One cold night she asked if the dog could come into the house for awhile. Her mother said: "Yes, but as soon as be begins to acrateh you must put him right out." Later Katharine was heard to ex- claim: "Ob. Bertie, don't scratch; tell me wbere it itches, and I'n scratch it for you." --Chicago Tribune. A Possible Reason, "Bermuda raises onions and lilies," "Seems a queer arrangement. I wen - der why they picked out that particn- tar combination?" "Maybe the smell of the one offset* that of the other." -Louisville Cautier• Journal. Hi* Application. 9 Mother--lMfy son. yon should never defer until tomorrow what yon can today,Son-•"Teti mother. we'dbat- ia ,. ter eat the rest of that mare pia to night. hadn't we? ---Judice Good Is positive. All evil lit tto retieb death or nonentity.-.Brotttaib1. WING1AM • 20 Years ASO prom the TII+tgS of July 19, 1895 Mr. Milton S. Blackwell, we under- stand, has purehased the baking busi- ness of Mr. James Siemin, and will take possession next week. Mr, Simon Mitchell has been' on the sick list for a week or more. Mr. Halsey Park has opened a jewel- ry store and repair shop in Ripley. He will continue his Wingham business as usual. illessrs John Carr St Sons are putting in an engine and.boiler at their figuring mill. For some years back the supply of water to run the mill has been very short, in fact, sometimes they have not had sufficient to run it. In future they will have steam power when the water supply runs short. Mr. Sather Gilchrist, of town, while working a shaper in the organ factory at Goderich. on Tuesday of last week, had the misfortune to have his Tight hand come ir, contact with the knives, and it was pretty badly injured, and the little finger so badly that it was neces- sary to have it amputated. Mr. Gil- christ will not be able to work for a week or so yet. On Thursday evening of last week, Mr. D. Sutherland's store narrowly es- caped being destroyed by fire. That evening about dusk, a customer called to get an oil can soldered and Mr. Suth- erland went into th'e back shop to do the job. He went to start the fire to heat the soldering iron, and by some means the fire came in contact with a can of gasoline, which is used as fuel in the fire pot to beat the irons with. In a moment the blaze was running up the side of the room to the ceiling. Mr. Sutherland grabbed the can, which con- tained nearly a gallon of gasoline, and started to throw it out the back door. When he got to the door, he found it bolted, but he pluckily held to the can and unbolted the door and threw the can out in the back yard, where the gasoline burned out without doing any more damage. Mr. Sutherland's right hand and arm were badly burned. and it will be some time before he will be able to use his hand. Mrs. John Sullivan of town has been seriously ill for the past week or so. On Monday her life was despaired of, but since she has rallied, and her re- covery is lookedfor. A clot of blood on the brain is her ailment. Mr, and Mrs, J. A. Morton and Mor- ton, are visiting relatives in Brampton. Mrs. Thos. J. McLean returned on Wednesday from a trip to Algoma. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Johns and Mr. and Mrs. John Galbraith spent Sunday and Monday in Kincardine. The walls of the new Presbyterian Church at Whitechurch are up and the roof is being shingled. The church when finished will present a fine ap- pearance. The large barn of Mr. Edwin Day, of Fordwich, father of Mr. H. Day of Wingham, a short distance north of Gorrie, was burned to the ground about nine o'clock on Wednesday morning of last week. Mr. Day and the boys were at work in the field and no one was seen near the building. The cause of the fire is a mystery. Mr. J. C. McCracken, of Bluevale; who was ordained recently, has been appointed by the Bishop as pastor of the Chesley Episcopal Church. BORN. Currie -In East Wawanosh, on July, 15th the wife of Mr. 'V, J. Currie; a son. McLaughlin -In Howiek on July 8tb, the wife of Mr. Wm. McLaughlin; a daughter. Dane -In Howick, on July 7th, the wife of Mr. Vane Dane; a daughter. MARRIED McKenzie-Batlagh--At toe manse, Wingham, on Wednesday, the. 17th of July, be the Rev. Perrie, Mr, Daniel McKenzie of Culross, to Miss Caroline Ballagh of Turnoerry. DIED Fisher -In Morris, on Saturday, July 6th, Samuel Fisher, aged 75 years. A3.O11E TRUTH THAN POETRY. It isn't so bad to take things as they come, if you only know what to do with them. Some people work themselves up to the boiling point trying to follow some other fellow's printed directions on how to keep cool. It's an easy matter to nail a lie, but you can't always keep it down. The age of miracles may have passed, but many a man turns night into day. Many a person's idea of economy is to save the pennies and spend the dol- lars, Many who can hear pleasure whisper a mile away can't hear duty When it shouts in the ears through a megaphone. We are always inclined to be lenient with the faults of people who are bigger than we are, The people le who want their p pto money go a long ng ws y generally have some dif- ficulty in letting it go at a11. t Some people waste entirely too much time waiting for the unexpected to 1 happen. Busirites,,ait'd''+` '- Shorthand `Shorthand W(: sterszelt School y. M. A. Buiiezag .. I .ondon. Ontario Colh-ge in Session Sept. 1st to July Catalogue Free. Enter any time. J. W. Westervelt, Principal H. DAVIS WINGHAM, ONTAR1 Agent for Allan Ling Cunard Line Donaldson Lines, Cins.dian Northern L::ros Ocean Steamships. ert" aastut a h10114 !iv• ra,- a ,r • e ar rr, it *et w:yh t0 dinpc . of 4," a t,: • r• s+f• fr.. sere for oateth th. Tia, al. • lira oletion telly and it aril! be tarsus ".*,qtr it trot., 740%gbthone'Omf,r Wt, Chr$Kr4,r,,t rht that t• a will sell because yon may a -t m, re for *he article, or stook than it is worth. Asad your advertisement to the Trays and try title plan " disposing, 0? your stook and tithe,' artlale•. When Archers Fought Napoleon. We think of the bow and arrow as medieval weapons of war, abandoned by the nations of Europe four or five centuries ago; yet it is only 140 years since soldiers fought with boar and arrows in European wars, and that, too, on the fields of southern. Belgium, where the present war be- gan. It wns in 1813 when all Europe was armed against Napoleon. Every one of the allied nations brought every possible resource of men and, means to further this end. Among them was Russia. To the war she sent soldiers from the newly -con- quered tribes that dwelt upon the Steppes of Asia; Bokharans and Turkomans and Tartars and other half -savage peoples. Many of these regiments were armed with bows and arrows. Jomini, the military histor- ian, says that these bowmen held their own against the French infan- try. Their aim, he says, was sur- prisingly good, and they could shoot an arrow with effect almost as liar as a musket ball was effective -but in those days that Was not much more than 100 yards. Apparently s Total Loss. Two cockneys went down the river Thames for a bank holiday. In the the afternoon they decided to try fishing. The owner of a stream side mill rented them some tackle, and as neither one of them had ever wet a line before he warned them that they must stand financially responsible for any damage occurring to the outfits as a result of their inexperience. Presently, when they had been fish- ing a little while, one called along the bank to his friend: "Garge, wot does yer call the thing that bobs abaht on the water?" "The float." "Well, then, I'll 'ave to pay that there miller for mine -that's all." "W'y so?" demanded Garge. "Because the bloomin' thing's sunk!" West African Natives. In all parts of West Africa there are evidences that for centuries be- fore the natives began to import or to buy European cotton goods from the European trader they grew• their own cotton and wove on hand looms their own cotton goods. They also manufactured soap and have made free use of it in keeping both their clothes and bodies elean, as may be observed by those who travel through the country. Some wash their bodies, as a religious ceremony, two and three times a day. HAD CHOLERA MORBUS. SO BAD COULD NOT SIT UP. Attacks of cholera morbus are caused mostly by indiscretion in diet, the use of unripe fruit and new vegetables, and usually occur during the hot summer months. On the first sign of this very weakening trouble I7r. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry should be taken. Mrs. George Lee, Ruthven, Ont., writes; "I was taken with cholera morbus, and I was so bad I could not sit up any more than five minutes at a time. My husband said I looked as if 1 had been sick a month; he got me a bottle of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Will Strawberry, and I took the whole of it in one day, and it completely eared me. We are never without it in the house for I don't think it can be beat." 'When you ask for Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry see that you. get "Dr. Fowler's," as imitators have gone so far 5.5 to imitate our wrapper both itt color and style, and have adopted similar names, each es Strawberry Compound, Wild Strawberry Compound, Extract Of Strawberry, etc. "1`)r. Fowler's" has been oa the market for tit: ras"Q years, and is acknowrlcd cd by all who have used it to be a sure cure for all bowel complaints. rriee,135 cents. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Ont. TOWN DIRECTORY. BAPTIST CHURCH -Sabbath servleea at 11 a. m. and 7 p, In, Sunday School at 2:74,1 p. m. General prayer meeting and B. Y. P. U. every Wednesday at 8 p. m. A. C. Riley, B. A., Pastor. Geo, Pocock, S. S. Superintendent, METHODIST C$URcg-Sabbath ser- vices at 11 a. at. 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. P. Buchanan, S. 8, Superintendent. PRESBYTERIAN CHVROH-Sabbath ser- vices at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School at 2:30 p. m, General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings, Rev. D, Perrie, pastor. Frank Lewis, S. S. Superintendent. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, EPISCOF bath services services at 11 a, m, and 1. p. m, Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Rev, E. G. Dymond Rector. Alex. Al- deron, S. S. Superintendent. SALVATION ARMY CITApEL,--Service at 11 a,m., 3 p.m, and? p.fn. on Sunday. At 8 o'clock an 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. in. to 9 p. m. C. N. Griffin, post- master. Push LIC LIBRARY -Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon feint 2 to 5:30 o'clock, and every evening from 7 to 9:30 o'clock. Miss M, McTavish, lib- rafian, TowN Comm-Dz.. A. J. Irwin, Mayor; S. Mitchell, Reeve; L. F. Binkley, A. M. Crawford, W. A. Currie, V. R. Vannorman, W G. Patterson and D. Bell. Councillors; John F Gloves, Clerk; and J. G. Stewart, 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. 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, 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) PIeasantly situated. .Beautifully fur- nished. Open to allsregufarly Licensed physicians. RATES FOR PATIENTS --which include board and nursing), $4.90 to 515. 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 SYSTEM. TRAINS L'IAVR rob London --....... _ 6.950 a.m.:. 8.S0p.m. Toronto &East 8.45 a.m_.- 8- 20 rrcardlne_11.50 a.m - 9.15 p.m, ABRIVJ 180Y Kincardine .,,.6,80 a.m ., 9.90 p.m, London..-..--�..... 21.54 a.m- 7.85 p,m. Toronto .2 ast..,-._ 2.50 p.m.... 9.15 p,m. W. F. BURGMAN,Station Agent. Wingham. H B ELLIOTT, Town Agent, Wingkarn. CANADIAN PACIFIC SAILWAY. TRAINS Lx4vit YOU Toronto and East.. - 6.40 a.m-. 1.10 p.m. Teeewater -. • .. 1.00 p.m- -10.22 p.m. ABRIvz rao& Teeewater_.. 6.40 a.m.- - 8.05 p.m. Toronto and Haat.. - .,12 4r p.m_10,27 p.m. x. H.BtaaMES. gttent,Wingham. "ANTED. Good Local Agent at once to represent the Old and Reliable FonthiII Nursuries A splendid lis;, of frl.it ,and orn-t n Intal stock for Fall Delivery in 19r; an d Sprtnri Delivery in 1914. Start at once and secure ex- clusive territory. We supply hand4ome free out• fit and pay highest com- missions. Write for full particulars. Stooa& Weitioatont Toronto - - .7at trio OVER BB Y1=ARS' EXPERItNeE PATE TftAOt; MARK* OastGNI AntotteSending asketchaida sccrlptli An10517f sarertelr, mit' opinion free Whether an iarenaon le probably bbaterita t5, Comtnunlce. tioneetrl0tiyr0nddentral, tlMtuu22K en t'atente sent utdeet aaeeneyforecce tents. Patents taken taros h thein & Co. t0011v5 e eels[settee, wltbotz raet tntb�i im ,R heledtodret [line tis all. 1 tad wroatt b. +•MtYteet e,ii. eulAtl6n of IWC eCtentleo 7ontnal. Terole for ,enaannri, .`.�'t�a y+ 744 poetase proteid, Bold br re. C0t33gaaroa>,tttrl;, New York lob .,..k. at.. Waahinstoo. D. L'. The Winijham Times 18 >r'USX.ISR*D EVERY THURSDAY MORNING The Titres OmaeStora Block. WINOUAIIi, ONTARIO, Watts or SQ iseatrTroN-f1,00 per annum in advaaoe, 21.601f not paid. No paper discon- tinued tilt all arrears are paid, ezeent at the option of the auhiidher. ADVORTISING RA'T'ES 1nr67Pr.AY ADVERxr8id!Nga One year *4.16 (8o each inaerion! Six Months 2.80 (100 Three Months 1.69 (13o " „ One Month .64 (16o „ OnellWeek,.....,, .26 Legal and other similar advertisetnenta, 100 per line for first insertion and 4o per liue for each subsequent insertion. Measured by a noapariel scale, twelve lines to an inch, Business cards of six:lines and under, *5.00 per year. 'Advertisements or Sitn'ttoas Vacant, Situ& tions Wanted, Rouses for Sate or to rant Articles for Sate, atm„ not exceeding eight lines, 25c each insertion; Sl for Erat month. 50c for each subsequent month, Larger ad- vertisements in proportion. Business lie as local or nes ws matterr.10o p0 er lir ne each Insertion. Medical DRS. KENNEDY & CALDER Oealoss-Corner Patrick and Centre Sts, Paoxus: Offices Residence, Dr. Kennedy 14488 Residence, Dr. Calder 151 Dr. Kennedy apenialtzes to Surgery-. Dr. Calder devotes special attention to Dis• eases of the Rye, Sar, Nose and Throat. Brea thoroughly tested. Moises Properly fitted. DR. ROM 0. BHDMOSID, 111.23.C.8. (Dem) L. R. 0. P. London. PHYSICIAN and 81312011014. Ofine, with Dr. Ohleholm W. R. Bambly, B.Sc., M.D., Q.M. Wingham, Ontario. Special attention paid to diseases of women and children, having taken post graduate work in Surgery, Bartoriology and Bole/Wile Medicine, Office in the Kerr resideuoe, between the Queen's hotel and the Baptist Charoh. All business given careful attention. Phone 54. P. O. Box 118. Dr. J. R. !acdon Wingham, Ont. Office -Stone Block, over the TIMES office. DRS. PARKER A; PARKER Ostegpathic Physicians Oculists, NeuroIogists Winghalll--Listowel Diseases Treated by Drugless Method Osteopathy cures or benefits whet other systems fail. Wingham office over 3hristie's Store Tuesday,to sWed- nesday, to 11 a.m. 9.00 p.m. 4 9.00 p.m. Friday, 9.05 to 9.00 a, m. or by appointment. Chiropractic J. A. FOX, D. C. GRADUATE CHIROPRACTOR When the spine is right the body is right. A Chiropractor will keeyur e ht that mahave continuedgood health. If your health is already poor a course of Chiropractic Spinal Ad- justments will putyour spine right. Wingham, Ont: Dental ARTHi7.11 J, IIiWI8 , D. D. b., D a. Dental Doctor of Dental SO rgerx t f the Pennayivania Oo,jjpge of Dental SSurgeons of Ontarlo.e tae 311 acdonaldBlook, Wlnebam. fromfficMaytat oOe closed otclet Wednesday afternoon O U. ROSS, D. D. ti., L. D. S. B'cnor graduate of the Royal College of Dental nurgooas of Ontario and Honor gradu- ate of the Lfitversity of Toronto, Faculty of Dentistry. ham, Ont. ulnae over E. E. Isard & Co's., store, Wing - frons May osed Ist to Octlsedue dap afternoon Legal D VANtTONB, • BA.RRISTBR. SOLICITOR. BTC rateofinterest. Mortgages, town and wrist property Oot, earbouer Btoakt and bWingham A. MORTON, • BARRISTER ata wieen tn. Ont. DUDLEY twines Barrister, Solicitart Etc. Office: Meyer Bloek.Winghartl, OUTSIDE 'ADVERTISING yuck a erteaehera 1W nted,l bus nese ehen ee i,, meohanioe wanted arta oleo for Sale, Or In feat Y kind of an a dvt.1 n any of the Toronto or 'Thine other pity paPere, may be left at the These office. This work will rebels* prompt attention and wilt alert people the trouble of reMittinr: [or and fortwarding etetertisenlettte. Lowest tutee Will be quoted on eppltOetlon. Lear or send your next work of this kind to tb. rune M OVTIOE. `1 I1,shlw ut O