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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1915-12-30, Page 2` age s THE WINGHAM TIMES a December 30th, 19 5 tibio Trunk Railway System Tawe Ticket Office We can issue through tickets via p(,folar rnUtes, to tiny point in America Beet, West. South, Northwest, Mani- toba, 1',ieitie Coast, ete. Baggage checked through to destine- ttnn and full information given whereby travelling will be make pleasant and. free from annoyance. Tourist and r"^urn tickets to above points also on s:,le at lowest figures, and with all pre trailing advantages. slinele and return tickets to any point i• linterio. Your business will be ap- 1 , toted, tee your trip a short or a t+• a one, "." e .n ticket you through to any p.• et i • Europe on all leading steamship h • - Prepaid orders also issued. It it's about travel, we have the in' "rm .tion and will give it to you (•s, • ..dully. H. B. ELLIOTT Town Agent G.T.R. Pones Office, Wingham, Ont. • rnr31USlt15J) hire W f Ai AA TINES. - or, Yu BLtSfER AND PROPIETOR TO ADVERTISERS Notice of changes must be left at this ".face net later than saturday noon. The copy for changes must be left not later than Monday evening. Casual advertisements accepted up co 1 i ,n Wednesday of each week THURSDAY, DECEYIBER 30. 19i5 EDITORIAL NOTES On his forty-fifth birthday. and after serving his native Province of British Columbia to elve and a half years as Premier, Sir Richard McBride on W ed- neday of last week handed his resign- ation to the Li utenant- Governor. He will go to London shortly after the New Year, where he will succeed J. H. Turner as Agent General for British Col- umbia. Turner's resignation ha, been in the nands of the Cauinet here for some d.Iys. Hone \V .J. Bowser, Attorney - General, has been entrusted by Lieu- tenant -Governor Barrard with the form- ation of a new Ministry. Mr F. P. Gutelius, general manager of the Government railway, is reported to have said. in an interview, that had it not been fur the National Transcon- tinental R iilway there would have been a bioskadeof the grain traffic this year. his quite tree that the frain traffic this year i"t more than usually heavy. But if, in 1915, the National Transcontin- ental has it -.en needed to move the grain crop of the West, how much more will it be needed ina very few years hence? This statement of Mr Gutelius forms a pretty entnplete reply to the members of the Gov^rnment and their followers wit ) hale been shouting all over the country and in Parliament that the Nat ional Transzentinental was not needed -11,)ntreal Herald -Telegraph. way to win a war, grinding down the resources, destroying the most effective manhood of a great nation, but it is tieing done. France, helped by England and by Russian diversion, saved Paris. Then Russia saved her own armies. England swept the surface of the seas, the solved the submarine menace,and then undertook submarine business on her awn account and closed the North Sea. For Germany to get from Con' stantinople to Egypt and India is a dream, She is beaten, if the allied people will it. Probably she cannot stand for a year the strain now being frankly re, vealed. It is even possible she may not stand it through the winter. But what a price: ab tut half the fighting men of Germany are supposed to be dead or crippled. Harper's Weekly. THE AMERICAN NOTE. If President Wilson and the United States Government had desired to give this country and the Allies generally a conclusive proof of the impossibility of their acting the part of mediator in the present struggle, or at its close, they could not have forged a more effective instrument than the new American note (regarding the block- ade). The inability to comprehend the significance of the titanic struggle now being waged, and the insistence on pedantic points are not consistent with world -vision. Moreover, the note is couched in a hard tone, which curiously contrasts with the meticulous politeness of the American communications with Germany. There are some people whose notion of impartiality is to be unjust to their friends and indulgent to the other side. President Wilson seems to be fashioned in this way; but he can hardly be surprised if the friends of the United States refuse to regard• him as an ideal arbitrator. The main point that strikes us about the note is the failure . to realize that Germany's frontiers, from the commercial point of view, are, by reason of the railway system, in those neutral countries which lie between her and the sea. If the right to prevent goods reaching Germany through neutral ports is denied to us by international law, it follows that only countries which have all their frontiers on the sea can be legally blockaded. In other words, Great Britain and Ireland may be blockaded, tiut no other European country -which is manifestly unfair. This is the central point of disagreement, and to all suggestions concerning an abandon- ment of the right to biocltade Germany through neutral ports, this country can only return one answer - a polite neg- ative. Our case is amply supported by the precedents created by the Ameri- cans themselves during their own civil war. The other matters are merely questions of detail, and we would cer- tainly concede such points as the charge for pilotage, wharfage, etc., upon vessels detained at Kirkwall. But accommodation on the main issue raised is obviously impossible, and the Ameri- can Government must be told so, courteously but firmly. -The Methodist Times (London.) Recruiting figures up to December 15 show that Canada has now called to the colors more than 200,000 men. Duringthe past three months about fifty thousand men have enlisted, and at the present time recruiting is report- ed to be brisker than it has been for months past, especially in the rural dis- tricts. During the first fifteen days of December about 12,500 recruits were obtaiued, or at the rate of nearly 1,00t) per day. Of this total, Ontario con- tributed nearly 6,000. Quebec furnished about 1,000 recruits, the Maritime Provinces about 1,200, Manitoba and Saskatchewan about 2,200, Alberta 2.200 and British Columbia and the Yukon 1,150. Why have the comments of Germany's press become so frank on the sufferings of the people, from loss of men, from hunger, from the price of all necessities? They cannot speak without permission. It may be that the Government is pre- paring them for peace terms that are eof avictor: that are not rhos t o at the best those of a drawn battle, Germany hasn't achance if the people of France, Iussia and England keep their nerve, and apparently they will. It is a terrible MOTHERS i W_Iat if this were your son? o 't anxious, grief-stricken mother ap- p, el to us recently, She wrote • f have a eon fifteen years of age who 1,:.- uberculoeie in orae lung. I have not l „• aeons to give him the care he should b:,. •.. The doctors say that with pro s and attention there is every hope iihhaatbt le • light fully recover. 2 woofs Le very 1,1 • kful if he could be admitted to the le .: •koka Free Hospital if possible." oppeee thee your noon or steer date t.r were a consumptive. Suppose that he or *be were pale anti wasted sod shaken by s harking, etrei.gth-mapping cough. u pro that you hadn't the motley to provide the hadlyy.needed medicine, tiouriabmente ar.d skilled medical treetlnenb. Think wt=:,t' a bloeeed relief lb would be to you to ut,..w that the Muskoka Free Hotipled far r:(tf,eu)nptiveb steeds ready to help I Contrihntions to the 'Muskoka Free Hob- .rit.cl for Constimptivee will be ristefislly 'rk lid itaVY e(I W. Gage, a t hafiraeitaa fC !f , l{xecutive Committee. i±t Sp,sdina. Avenue, R. reuniter. Scarf;try - Treasurer, r•, 347 leteg onset West, Toronto. STEEL FOR ARTILLERY, Tremendous Preeeure the Barrels of Rig Guns Must Dear, Modern high powered guns could not be befit without steel strong enough to resist the enormous pressures to which they are subjected. Few understand how great these pressures are -almost as far beyond ordinary comprehension as are the distances of the stars or the number of atoms in a glass of water. An attempt to state the matter in e foie» that will mean something to the ordinary mind is made by u contribu- tor to La Nature ip an article entitled "The Strains Resisted by Gun Metal." He writes: "When the marvels of modern artil- lery are described perhaps we direct our admiration too exclusively to the mecbaniciaus who have combined to construct it. We must not, however, forget the metallurgist, for it is owing to the astonishing qualities of the metal that the gun is so well able to resist the enormous strain due to the detona- tion of the explosive. "It is interesting to cite here some figures .published by Commaudant Reg- nault. 'At each discharge of a gun, in the case of our field pieces, in less than three -tenths of a second the pressure exceeds twenty tons to the square inch, and the speed of the projectile leaving the muzzle is more than 2,500 feet a second. a "The energy developed may be put at about 500,000 foot pounds. In oth- er words, considering the cannon as a motor working during an exceedingly short time, we may place its rating at. about 20,000,000 horsepower. "Not only must the metal be made to resist these strains time after time, but to do so uuder uufuvorable conditions. such as the high temperatures produc- ed by the explosives. And not only must the metal of the gun be as strong aN this, but it is the same with that of the shell. The shell of our 'seventy- five' supports a pressure estimated at seventeen tous. The work of the de- vice that takes up the recoil reaches about twelve tons to the square inch, and the mount neutralizes at each dis- charge about twa tons. "In fact, these conditions are realiz- ed in quite a remarkable way. it has been possible to test in the tuaciiine shop the pieces of a battery that has fired several thousand shots and to shim that they have suffered not the slightest defortnation. "This is why it is necessary to em- ploy sir,-ln1 steels. The use of nickel. in proportion of 1 per cent to 2 per cent. gives to steet special qualities." SHOPPING EARLY. As regularly as the coming of Christ- mas, comes the advice to shop early, and as it is kindly meant but seldom t,ken, the same want of regard of this advice must be expected when given in respect to purchases of necessaries for the farm. Spring is not very far away at the end of December, yet more spare time can be found at this time of year than any other. But the more time there is to spare, the more of it is wasted, and all too often the rush of work comes on before adequate preparation has been made for it. The area of fall -sown ;rain is smaller this year than it was last, and the big production of the past season may have the same effect on spring sowing, but what land is left without cereals will have to be looked after in some way, and where not seeded to grass, as they should have been, the last season's grain fields will need more and better attention than ever; one thing these fields will need is manure, and whole it ie impossible to purchase this a low price the buying and hauling should be done now. Shop early may he taken as good ad- vice with regard to all farm seeds, provided the salesman can be depended on and if saitable storage is ready for them. 'Winter temperatures force the buying df potatoes, either (tatty or late, but mast other seeds are independent of the weather. Georg( Pearn was burned to death in , a lire at vault Ste. Marie, being unable terough illness to make his escape Lambtrin and Perth County Councils 1left eve) for next year the granting of aid to recruiting. And the former ' decided not to insure any more meet enlisting froth that county after married men of the 76th battalion, HIS ViEW OF TIPPING. It Was Not the Mere Money That the Old Waiter Craved. 'rips are said to be au evil of our times. but the mau who has to give chem mikes the statement. That vast number that receives the largest has in'obably found )t no crime. There is touch to be said on both sides, but I matelot think that it is a system which should be, indeed, can be abolished, for the giving of u tip is the recognition of personal service. It is the only way one can thank a man wile Is not, in his present capacity at least, in the class of the one who' dispenses the coin. And there is another reason -to argue r"r the other side -that was meet beau- tifully exemplified in n story which earn° to me recently. A friend of mine took into service as indoor man one who had attracted her attention as a most perfect waiter in a hotel. She paid him the same amount that he averaged as a waiter, and she found him as satisfactory in her own home as she bad expected him to be. Vet at the end of a t'ew months he beg- eted to return to his more exuausting duties in a great earnvnnsnry. "•I don't know as I can make it plain to you, madam," he said to her ear- nestly. "but it's the tips that 1 look forward to. Not that they ttre any more, on the whole, than I get here. but there's always an uncertainty about it. I keep wondering if tam to get a good deal or very little, and it roakes the day interesting. It's a kind of an adventure, in a manner of speaking. madam." - Louise Ciosser Elate in Century. Leading Up to it. "Please. Mrs. Brown." said the little boy at the kitchen door, "pia wants to know if you'd be so tc;nd i«s to tend her aft egg beater to beat some eggs with." "Why. certainly," replied :firs. Brown. "here it Is," "And If it ain't too much trouble," continued the boy. "would you mind lending tier a couple of eggs to beat with it?" Very Thoughtful. Customer (at railroad restaurant) -- Here, boss, this coffee la cold. Proprietor --ares, sir; you see, the train only stops a few minutes, an' if the coffee was hot you wouldn't have time to drink it." The Lianas, About the heaviest load that tt llama will allow to be placed on its back is a weight of 125 pounds, Tf any heav- ier load be rilaeed on the ttnimsl'e bark the wise beast lies down, and no :!mount of coaxing or beating run inako it move an inch. 'twa View*, "Wouid yon like seine views of the hotel to send to your friends?' "Sir," said the disgruntled glued, "1 presume It will be better for in. to keep my elevrs to myself." WINGHAM 20 Years Allo From the TIMES Of Dec. 27, 1895 Miss Maggie Fisher was visiting friends in Wiarton this week. Mrs. McKibban and Master Walton spent Christmas in Teeswater,• • Mr. Frank McLauchlin, of Detroit, is spending the holidays under the parental roof. Mr. Jos. Kincaid, of Chicago, is spending the Christmas holidays with his family in. town. Miss Nellie Gray, teacher of Clinton, is spending the holidays under the parental roof in town. Miss Charlotte McDonald, who hijs been residing in Detroit for some time, returned home on Monday evening last. Mr. F. H. Kerney will move his barber shop into the shop lately occupied by Mr. Thos. Drummond as a butcher shop. Mr. Gregory, the owner of the building, is fitting it up for Mr, Kerney. The following officers were elected at the regular convocation of Lebanon Chapter No. 8.1, G. R. C„ at the Masonic hall, Wingham, am t lost: ng on the 10 h Comps, J. McGuire, Z; J. S. Smith, H; R. Vanstone, J.; T. L. Jobb, P. S.; B. Wilson, Treas.; J. A. Morton, S. E.; R. Mainprize, S. N.; J. Fleuty, Jan. At a special meeting of the Town Council, on Monday night, Chief Bul- lard tendered his resignation as chief of the fire brigade, and Mr. Thos. H. Manuel was appointed to the position. Mr. A. Griffin, son of 'Mr. C. N. Griffin, of town, who has been spending a term at the Philadelphia Dental College, has just passed a very success- ful examination, being at the head of his class in many of the branches. Mr. D. M. Gordon's residence had a close call on Monday evening. The fire originated in the pipes and drum up- stairs. setting fire to a clothes -press and destroying a considerable quantity of clothes. The window curtains and carpet were also badly scorched. Through the presence of mind of the family the fire was got under control, before any more serious damage was done. A double surprise party took place, one evening lately, at the residence of Mrs. Ritchie, Wingham, when Mr. J. W. Hogart's Sabbath School class presented him with a beautiful leather cuff and collar holder. After briefly replying to the address, Mr. Hogarth asked to be excused for a minute, and presently returned and presented each girl with a dainty napkin ring. On the evening of December 24th, "Christmas Eve", the teachers and officers of the Wingham Presbyterian Sabbath School took peaceable posses- sion of the residence of Mr. D. M. Gordon, the esteemed Superintendent of the Sabbath School, and presented him with it large and handsome rocking chair, of antique oak, richly carved and beautifully upholstered. Mr. Gordon replied suitably. At the last regular meeting of Wing - ham Lodge, A• 0. U. W., held on Fri- day, December 20th, the following officers were elected• Master Work- man, A. H. Musgrove; Foreman, J. S. Smith; Overseer, Geo. Good; Recorder, R. Vanstone; Treasurer, J. W. Walker; Receiver, C. N. Griffin; Guide, W. Fox; ton; Inside Watch, S. Vanstone; Outside Watch, R. Weir; Medical Examiner, Dr. 'famlyn; Alternate Delegate, J. W. Walker. In our last issue we reported the serious illness of Mr. Adam Gordon. The first attack of hemorrhage, which he suffered on Wednesday, was follow- ed by others, terminating fatally on Friday night, and on Monday afternoon his remains were interred in the Wing - ham cemetery, ;t large concourse of friends and relatives following, among whom were R. D. Cameron, Wm. Core, nell and David Taylor, of Lucknow. Deceased was at the time of his death in his 36th year. He was a man of excellent character and highly esteemed by all who knew him. :MARRIED Mowat -Groves -At the residence of the bride's brother, Mr. E. W. Groves. Toronto, on the 25th instant, by the Rev. L. G. Wood, Mr. John A. Mowat, of Wingham, to Miss Kate Groves, daughter of Mr, Jaa. Groves, Wingham. DIED Gordon -In Wingham, on December lath, Adam Gordon, aged 36 years, 1 month and 22 days. The New Brunswiek branch of the Dominion Alliance has asked for th•) • preparation of a prohibition measure, to be submitted to a referendum in the latter half of February. The German Government has refused Business ant.'., Shorthand Western irefolool Y. M. C. Building Lon II, Ontario College in Session Sept. 1st to July. Catalogue Free. Enter any time. J. W. Westervelt, Principal to li',erate Ilon. Dr, 11. 8. Deland. former )'estmaster-General of Canada, but is willing to exchange him for Lioat« Rintelen, under sentence of death for espionage, Acting in accordance with Mr. Justice Riddell's mandamus, the Owen Sound I +vorked with patience which nitrate , iCouncil gave the first and eecond read- 61mo11t potter.-i1ra. Drowning,liege to the toter option by-law, which now goes to the electors. H. DAVIS WINGHAM, ONTARI Agent for Allan Line Cunard Line Donaldson Lines. • Canadian Northern Lanes Ocean gteatnships. T. R. BENNETT J. P. AUCTIONEER Sale dates can be arranged. at TIMES office. • Pure Bred Stock Sales a Specialty Sales conducted anywhere in Ontario Write or Ph3ne 81, Wingham 1 IFOGREAM WANTED 1 Having an un-to•date Creamery in full op..r,tlou, we solicit Sour cream patronage We are prepared to pay the higheot market prices for good cream and !rive you an honest business, weighing, sampling and te'ting each can of ereatn received carefully and returni, g a full statPm.+nt of Name to each patron. We In ,i -h two cam to e,e h patron pay ail express charges and pay every two weeks. Wr,te for furth(r particulars or send for eana and give us a trial. SEAFOR FH CREAMERY CO SEAFORTH, ONT., U kt DIRECTORY. BAPTIST Gunnell -Sabbath services at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School at 2:30 p. m, General prayer meeting and ,i. Y. P. U, every Wednesday at 8 p. ia. A. C. Riley, B. A.,, Pastor. Geo. Pocock, 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.. 1. W. Hibbert, pastor. F. Buchanan, S. S. Superintendent. PRESBYTERIAN CHUMS -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. Perris, pastor. Frank Lewis, S. S. Superintendent. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, EFISCOF .L -Sab- bath services at 11 a. m. and /, p. m, Sunday School at 2:30 p, m. Rev, E. G. Dymond Rector. Alex, Al- deron, S. S. Superintendent. SALVATION ARMY CITADEL. --Service at 11,a,m., 3 .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 -Once hours from 8a.m. to 6:30 p. m. Open to box holders from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. C. N Griffin, post- master. PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon, f' 'm2 to 5:30 o'clock, and every evening from 7 to 9:30 o'clock. Miss Della Reid, lib- rarian. Tower COUNCIL -Dr. A. J Irwin, Mayor; S. Mitchell, Reeve; L. F. Hinkley, A. M. Crawford, W. A, Currie, V. R. V annorman, 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 -Mr, G. R. Smith, B. A., Principal and Specialist in Mathematics; Mr. Southcombe, B.A. Specialist in Classics; Mr. Anderson, Specialist in Science; Miss M. 1. Whyte. B. A„ Specialist in Moderns and History; Miss E. C. Garrett, Art and Mathematics; Miss B. Anderson, B A., Commercial Work and History. PUBLIC .SCHOOL TEACHERS. 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.Fessapt, Alex Porter, John F. Groves,Secretary; Dr. R. C. Redmond, Medical Health officer. Children Cry FORS FLETCHER'S C A +�',a T O FR I A THE MAN WHO STICKS. The man who sticks has his lesson learned; Success doesti't come °by chance -it's earned By pounding away; for good hard knocks Will make stepping -stones of stumbling blocks. He knows in his li^art that he cannot fail; That no ill fortune can make him quail While his will is strong and hie courage high, For he's always good for another try. He doesn't expect by a single stride To jump to the front, he is satisfied To do every day his level best, And let the future take care of the rest. He doesn't believe he's held down by the boss - It's work, and not favor, that "gets across," So his motto is this: "What another man Has been able to handle, I surely can." For the man who sticks has the sense to see He can make himself what he wants to be, If he'll off with his coat and pitch right in- Wby, the man who st:ei' can't help but win. -Chanes R. Barrett. COUGHED SO HARD Would Turn Black In The Face. SHE WAS CURED BY USING DR. WOOD'S Norway Pine Syrup. Mrs. Ernest Adams, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., writes: "My little girl, six years old, had a dreadful hard cough. At nights she would cough so hard she would get black in the face, anct would cough for several hours before she could stop. We tried different kinds of medicines and had several doctors, but failed to do her any good. Site could not sleep nor eat her cough was so bad, and she was simply wasting away. A friend advised ane to try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I got a' bottle and saw an improvement, and got another. Now 1 ani only too glad to reeotnmeud it to all mothers." Ton touch stress cannot be laid on the fact that a emelt or cold should be cared inunediately. 1)r. Wood's Norway fine Syrup will cure the cough or cold and prove a. pre- ventative from alt throat and lung troubles such as bronchitis, pneumonia and consumption. "Dr. Wood's" is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 25e and ay 0c, per bottle. Manufactured only by The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.' Wingham General Hospital The Wtnghdm Times IS PUBLISB$D. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING The Times Office Stone Block. WINGHAM, ONTARIO, ., j4 \ TERMS or Sonsoaurr'toax--41.00 per annum in advance, 51.401f not paid. No paper disarm. tinned till all arrears are paid, except at the, Option of the publisher. ADVPi(1TISItrO RATES nisrnAY ADV5trtaSttsrrTs Otte Yegr $4.16 (8o eaoh inserton) Six Months 2.00 ileo " Three Months 1.09 (trio " ". One Welt; (180 Legal and other similar advertisements, l00 per line for first insertion and 4o per line for eaoh subsequent insertion. Measured by a nonpariel stole, twelve Lines to an inch. Business oards of six lines and under, $5.00 per year. Advertisements of Situations Vacant, Situs tions Wanted, Houses for Sale or to rent Articles for Sale etc , not eaneeding eight lines,25o eaoh iusortion; 51 for first month, 50o for snob subsequent month Larger ad vertisements in proportion. Business notices (news type) Se per counted line; as local or news matter. 10o per line eaoh Insertion. (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 Time Table GRAND TRUNK RAIL WAY SYSTEM TRAINS LEAVE FOR London .. .. 6.35 a.ln. 3.22 p.m. Toronto and East 6.45 a.m. 3.15 p.m. I:incardine 11.59 p.m. 9.15 p.m. ARRIVE MOM Kincardine 6.30 a.rn. 3.15 p.m. London ,. 11,54 a.rn. 7.40 pen. Toronto and East 11.45 a.ln, 9.15 p.m. W.F. BURGMAN. Station Agent, Wingham H B ELLIOTT, Town Agent, Wingham. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TRAINS LEAVE FOR Toronto and East 6.25 a.m.• 3.05 p.m. Teeswater..' 12,50p.m. 10.32 p.m. ARRIVE FROM Teeswater. 0,20a.tn. 3.05 p.m. Toronto and East 12.47p.m. 10.20 p.m. J. H. BEEMER, Agent, Wingham A Representative Wanted AT ONCE for WINGHAM and DIS- TRICT for the OId Reliable Eonthill. Nurseries Farriers! Why remain idle all Wintery when you can take up a paying agency? Choice list of varieties for Spring Planting. Liberal Terms. handsome Free Outfit, Exclusive Territory. Write now 1'('r particulars. Stone & Wellington TORONTO, oNT. bVEFt HO YEARS' EXPEfIENOE /BADE MARKS DEMONS COPYRIGHTS &d. Aurone sendfn a eketrh and deseripptionma/ Unlckr aeoertai our opinion rep Whatnot.an invention is pia ant+yr'ttgptfylq, ,orn uatoe- oneetricttyronndentlal. IIANOBU Mat 00Pti sent flee. t 1de.t money for .eon nS patents. Patents tekert tIirouch Munn etn. Native special 'testiikes rout cosi o, in talc nt ie A tr an A hand e)y Illustrated weakly. 1G rgeet air. A)khan any'eotenuae iogrnfi, Terms 1yr nnaoe, b rae yea('.poetettb prepaid. aold oy JJjjr`��a�e;w�■, 9f#Yaid ge �►Y Mg. }t!j���y,,,, N ark 5' Wevhi `7�alee, tKrD 1'11,. tt�T� G Medical QRS. KENNEDY & CALDER Orrloes-Corner Patrick and Centro eta. PUOZES OMces 48 Residence, Dr, Kennedy x98 Residence, Dr. Calder 151 Dr. Kennedy specializes in Surgery. Dr. Calder devotes epoolai attention to Dia eases of the.Sye, Isar, Nose and Throat. Eyes .',horoughly tested. Glasae9 properly fitted. D. ROST,O.RBDBI.OND, M.E.C.S, (Bugg L. R. O. P. London. PHYSICIAN and SURG)3ON. OMoe, with Dr. Chisholm W. R. Hambly, B.Sc., M.D., O.M. Wingham, Ontario, Special attention paid to diseases of women and children, having taken post graduate work in Surgery, Bartcriology and Soientifto 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 1181 • it DRS. PARKER & PARKER Ostegpathic Physicians Oculists, Neurologists Wingham--Listowel Diseases Treated by Drugless Methods Osteopathy cures or benefits when other systems fail. Wingham office over Christie's Sto.e Tuesday, 9,00 a.m. to 9.00 p.m. We nesday, 9 to 11 a.m, Thursday, 4 'to 9.00 p.m. Friday, 9:05 to 9.00 a. m. or by appointment. Chiropractic. J. A. FOX, D. C. GRADUATE CHIROPRACTOR Chiropractic removes the cause of practically all diseases. It matters not what part of the body is affected, it, can be reached thru the centres •in the ,spinal column by adjustment of sublax- atecl vertebra, Consultation free.. Member of Drugless Physicians' Association of Canada. Wingham, Ont. Dental ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D. D. 5., Dootor of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania Dental College and licentiate of the Royal Oollege of Deutat Burgeons of Ontario, ()Sloe in"biacdonaid Elook, Wingham. OiBoe closed every Wednesday afternoon` from May lot to pot. let. H. ROSS, D. D. S., L. D. S. honor graduate of the Royal College of Mental Surgeons of Ontario and Honor gradu- ate of the Uni versify of Toronto, Faculty of Dentistry. Office over H. E. Isard & Co's., store, Wing - ham, Ont. Office closed every Wednesday afternoon from May 1st to Oct. 1st. Legal R VANSTONR, 13AI3RTSTBR, SOLICITOR, RTC Private and Coatpeny runes to loan M lowest rate of Interest mortgagee, town and farm property bought and Bold Otnce, Beaver BIock. Witghata rr•A. MORTON, e 6AT1RTSTRR, bio. Wingham, Ono. DUDLIi f`UOLi'iS Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Office: Meyer B1ock,Wingham. OUTSIDE ADVERTISING Orders for the insertion of adverttsetaents such as teachers wanted, bcsiaeee ohanees. ineohanioe wanted, artiolee for sale, or in feat. an kind of an exist. in any of the Toronto oe other pity papers, nifty be left at the Mem oSlae. This wot'k win rooeive promos attention and wilt neve people the trouble of reediting ror And forwarding advartieemeute. Lentent rates wilt he quoted eft applicettion. Leave or send your next work of this khtd *0 the riosE$ GFFICE. ''f?WW1'nlalthttio