HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1912-06-06, Page 2,)
TIIi+J WINUUAIi ES JUNE (h 1912
TO ADVERTISERS
Notice of changes must be left at this
office net 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.
�GSTAf3Lii;ri161 t87i
Tut WIN1iuAIII TIMES.
H. B. ELLIOTT, PL`B41HIIER AND PROrIETOR.
THURSDAY JUNE 0, 1912.
EDITORAL NOTES.
It is officially announced that Edson
Joseph Chambertin, vice-president and
general manager of the Grand Trunk
Pacific Railway !has been appointed
president of the Grand Trunk Railway,
of Canada, to succeed Charles M. Hays,
who died in the Titanic disaster. Mr.
Chamberlin hes also been elected a
member of the Grand Trunk board of
directors, vice Mr. Hays.
A letter addressed to John McPher-
son, Postmaster, Tracadie Road, Nova
Scotia, is still undelivered, Mr. Mc-
Pherson having died five years ago.
The late Mr. McPherson is spared dis-
tressing news. The letter, written by
the Hon. Mr. Pelletier, postmaster -
general, contained notice of his dis-
missal on the ground that he had been
charged with offensive partisanship in
the general and provincial elections last
year.
Under the caption "Election Coming",
the Toronto Star declares that in the
opinion of some political observers
there is to be another general election
in Canada within twelve months. In
substantiation of this statement, the
Star publishes extracts from the first
issue of the Kingdom Papers, published
by John E. Ewart, K. ('., of Ottawa,
the preface of which states that the
publication will be of use in the general
elections next winter. Mr. Ewart pre-
dicts the first and second readings of
the Government's naval bill, the redis-
tribution bill, and voting of supplies im-
mediately after the House assembles,
and then an immediate appeal to the
country.
The first felt effect of the collapse of
the Ontario West Shore Electric Rail-
way was felt in Kincardine on Friday
night, says the Review, when the
Town Council had to pass a by-law
authorizing the Mayor and Clerk to
borrow $2,600 to pay one year's inter-
est on the bonds guaranteed by the
bonds of the Railway Company for $50,-
000, and now that the concern has gone
bust, the citizens have got to get busy
and raise the fifty thousand. Huron,
Goderich and Kincardine Tp. are other
places which are hard-hit by this fool
venture, and it will be many years be-
fore the citizens are through paying for
this dead horse.
Our staid old business men and much -
moneyed citizens go about their duties
here in a very methodic way, and they
are almost as quiet as the proverbial
clam; but let one of them land himself
out in Saskatchewan or Alberta or Bri-
tish Columbia, and he begins to jump
in the air and holler loud enough to be
heard all over America, and they shell
out their money in any game that
comes along. Ontario men make great
boosters when they become Western-
ers. The mystery is why they can't do
as much in Ontario. If we all began
to boost Ontario as much as we're
boosting outside places, Ontario would
be the greatest spot on the upper side
of the earth. And this old Province is
worth boosting. -Tweed, Ont. News.
Ontario has well been named "The
Garden of Canada." It contains some
of the loveliest fruit farms in the
world. Fruit that in England will only
grow under glass and with the tender-
est care, is produced in the most lavish
abundance, notably peaches, grapes,
melons and tomatoes. Last year, in
her 838,258 acres of orchards, she pro-
duced 75 per cent. of all the fruit
grown in Canada, the value of the
same being three million pounds. Al-
though four times as large as England
the thickest populated province in Can-
ada, Ontario contains only twice the
Suffered With Nerve Trouble
For Two Years.
WAS IMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM TO
SLEEP.
Mr. Chas. W. Wood, 34 Torrance
Street, Montreal, Que.,writes,-"Por
two years I suffered with nerve trouble,
and it was impossible for me to sleep.
It did not matter what time I went to
bed, in the morning I was even worse
than the night before. I consulted a
actor, and he g'.ve me a tonic to take
a half hour before going to bed.
"It was all right for a time, but the
t.':1 trouble .turned with greater force
t,...a before.
"One of the boys, wino works with me,
rC the half a box of Milburn's Heart
c ,.l Nerve fills. I took them and I got
,.1'h satisfaction that I got another box,
before I finished it I could enjoy
...'eLp a.m.,d
tr:xn 10 p.m. until 6 and now
I. t good."
The price of Milburn's Heart and
dt r ra Pills is 5) cents per box, or 3 boxes
f,,, ;1.25. They are for sale at all
reK! is, er tvill he mailed direct on
receipt c,f price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
number of people that are in Glasgow.
She has an area of 140,000,00 of acres,
and only one-third of these has yet
been surveyed. There are still 11S,O1i0.- ,
000 acres belonging to the crown, and
containing every form of agricultural
land and mineral wealth known to man, '
only awaiting his advent, to yield it to
him with bounteoushands."-Shetiielc',
England, Daily Independent.
WHERE WILL IT END,
(Kincardine Review.)
Lots in towns out west are selling at
prices ranging from $100 to $1,501 a foot.
Take the higher prices and figure out
what they mean to the ultimate purch-
aser -that is the man who buys it to
build on for business purposes.
Suppose he pays $5011 a foot for a
fifty foot lot, that is $25,000. He builds
on it at a cost of $25,000. He ought to
get rental enough out of that to net
him 10 per cent on the money invested
viz, $5,1100 a year.
His tenant has to pay that rental to
start with and he charges it up to his
customers. Where is the chance of
reducing the cost of living in the west?
There is no real value for half of the
money paid for a building by the ultim-
ate purchaser, and the tenant has to
pay interest on the unearned increment
that -went to the speculator.
Unless there is a "bust" to the boom
of western property and a general lev-
elling of values, the cost of living out
west isn't going to decrease but increase.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, S SS.
LUCAS COUNTY.
Frank J, Cheney makes oath that he
is senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State afore-
said, and that said firm will pay the
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
for each and every case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's
Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this Oth day of De-
cember, A. D., 1880.
(SEAL,) A. W. GLEASON,
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern-
ally, and acts directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Send
for testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
MANY GREAT FEATURES
COMING WITH SANGER'S GREATER EURO-
PEAN SHOWS.
The shake-ups to the nerves, the rag-
time beat of your heart, the fear that
someone will be hurt, with the accom-
panying apprehension that they may
not, all of this - and this is the delight
of the Sanger's Greater European
Shows, to be in Wingham,Friday,June 7,
must be given by the professionals who
shake dice for their lives with fortune
every performance.
One of the big acts is the original
Earl Family. What this wonderful
family does, looks easy. Suppose you try
it, and newspapres will write a story
about it, with a diagram showing the
place where your body struck.
Another of the best -ever acts is the
leaping contest. Fifty leapers take
part. Dan O'Brien is the champion
and does a double somersault over ele-
phants, camels and horses. Marie Mc-
Phail, Riding Russels and many other
big acts are presented in many new
riding stunts.
You will see the Ben Hur herd of
Arabian stallions and the Black Hussar
horses perform. They prove what a
perfect world this wonld be if all men
had as much intelligence as horses.
You will see elephants waltz, teeter,
play hide and seek, and undress and go
to bed like people. Yon will see dog
shows and mule shows and countless
clowns. Sanger's Greater European
Show is a great show, presenting mag-
nificent good old barbarous sport that
makes you happy in feeling that civili-
zation has not elimated all the traits
your grand -dads of the stone age left
you as a message. The $25,000 Dublin
Gray Horses are also coming and they
are a show in themselves.
A Tribute to the Horse.
If one animal more than any other
has contributed to the welfare and hap-
piness of mankind, it has been the
horse. Forced into capitivity, domesti-
cated, and silent companion of the cen-
turies. He interbred, until he reveals
the highest qualities of brute intelli-
gence and beauty of form,
he has been
man's patient and faithful burden -bear-
er as well as he has shared with man
the hardships of exploration, the ages
of chivalry, the struggle for democrat-
ic freedom, and the advance of com-
mercial supremacy. In literature, in
art, in song; in war, as well as in peace,
he has stead by his master's side in the
glorious descriptions of human achieve-
ment. As we look upon this noble
friend of neglect and cruelty of com-
merciai greed and abject slavery, let us
not forget that, though he may be own-
ed individually, he is ours by race in-
hcritance, ours to use, ours to enjoy,
ours to protect, and that we owe it to
him as well as to ourselves to demand
for him justice and fair play. -Hugo
Krause, in Our Dumb Animals,
(From the TIMES of June 3, 1892.)
LOCAJ, NEWS.
Workmen are busy this week com-
pleting the plastering of the Meyer
block.
Chief Bullard had the misfortune t.s
sprain his ankle one day this week, and
is now seen on the street with crutch-
es.
Arrangements are being made for
grand celebration in Wingham on July
let, by the C. O. F.
Mr. John Swarts, of the Exchange
hotel, is having his house repainted.
Mr. John Swarts sold his gray pacer
to Mr. Harry Day on Saturday last.
The price paid was $165.
Mr. Geo. B. Roe has purchased from
Mr. R. Campbell, Turnberry, a filly
eleven months old, paying for her the
sum of $1.i0. The filly is a full sister
of Miss Garfield,
A team of horses belonging to Mr.
John Cole, took fright at Hutton &
Oarr's mill, on Friday morning last,
ran away and did considerable damage
to the wagon.
Every hotel stable and shed in town
were crowded with rigs on Sunday ev-
ening last, people coming from all dis-
tances to hear the evangelists, Hunter
and Crossley.
Mr. J. S. Jerome has disposed of his
fine brick residence on Centre street.
Mr. T. Bell has purchased from Mr,
J. H. McHardy, the safe that has been
standing in the main passage of the
town hall.
Through Samuel Youhill's Real Es-
tate Agency, Mr, John Martin, late of
the Brunswick hotel, has sold at a fair
figure his residence, lot 6, Leopold east,
to Mr. George A. Newton, harness
maker, of this town.
The Salvation Army band, of this
town, is making very good progress,
considering the time they have been
organized.
The weather during the past week
has been very warm, with several
showers of rain, which makes it fine
growing weather.
BORN.
Bradley. -In Wingham, on May 30th,
the wife of Mr. Wm. Bradley; a son.
Crowston. - In Wingham, on June
2nd, the wife of Mr. Isaac Crowston; a
son.
MARRIED.
Dickinson -Kennedy. - At the resi-
dence of Mr. Amos Tipling, brother-in-
law of the bride, on the 1st inst, by
Rev. S. Sellery, Mr. C. M. S. Dickin-
son, of Toronto, to Miss Laura Kenne-
dy of Wingham.
THE MEASURE OF A MAN.
[Rudyard Kipling.]
If you keep your head when all about
you
Are losing theirs and blatning it on
you;
If you can trust yourself when all men
doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubt-
ing, too;
If you can wait and not be tired of
waiting,
Or being lied about don't deal in lies,
Or being hated don't give way to hat-
ing,
And yet don't look too good, nor talk
too wise;
If you can dream -and not make dreams
your master;
If you can think-- and not make
thought your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Dis-
aster
And treat those two impostors just
the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you've
spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for
fools,
Or watch the things you've given your
life to, broken,
And stop and build 'em up with worn-
out tools; -
If you can make one heap of all your
winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch -and -
toss,
And lose and start again at your begin-
nings,
And never breathe a word about your
loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve
and sinew
To serve your turn long after they
are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing
in you
Except the will which says to them:
"Hold on!"
If you can talk with crowds and keep
your virtue
Or walk with kings -nor lose the
common touch;
If neither foes nor cooing friends can
hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none
too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With siicty second's worth of distance
run,
Yours is the earth and everything that's
in it,
And -which is more -you'll be a Man,
my Son!
The June Rod and Gun.
An illustrated story descriptive of a
journey up into the Arctic slope is con-
tributed by Dr. Luther Harvey as the
opening number of the June issue of
Rod and Gun in Canada published at
Woodstock, Ont., by W. J. Taylor,
Limited. "Vacation Camps" follows
and will furnish a pleasant solution of
the problem what to do with the boy
during the good old summer time. In
an article on the Grand Cascapedia,
the great salmon river of Eastern Can-
ada, Mrs, M. G. MacNeil McWhirter
recalls famous sportsmen who have
fished in its waters, including Sir Char-
les Ellis, Lord Dufferin, the Marquis of
Lorne, Lords Lansdowne and Stanley.
A third article on the Culture of Black
Silver Foxes also appears in this issue
and other stories and articles are in
keeping with the character of the mag-
azine and the time of the year,
Agriculture supports nearly 19,000,000
of the inhabitants of the German .Em-
pire.
Horse Hints.
See that the harness fits the horse
properly.
See that the mane is pulled out from
under the collar, and fore top from un-
der the brow band.
See that the blinders are properly ad-
justed and do not rub the eyes (the use
of blinders should be discouraged).
Walk horses when leaving the stable
for a few blocks, also after watering.
Never drive with a slack line,
Never jerk your horse with lines.
Never strike your horse over the
head.
-When starting a load, always have a
tight line on your horses.
When pulling up hill zigzag from side
to side, and give breathing spells cif
necessary.
Always show your horse such consid-
! eration as you would like to have shown
to yourself,
I Always water horses before eating.
Do not water or feed when horse is
too warm.
Do not overfeed; use judgment in
graining.
T(.) WN DIRECTORY.
BAPTIST CHURCH -Sabbath services
at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School
at 2:30 p. m. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. G. Vic-
tor Collins, pastor. B. Y. P. U. meets
Monday evenings 8 p. m. 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.
W. L. Rutledge, D. D., pastor. F.
Buchanan, S. S. Superintendent.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH -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. Dr. A. J. Irwin, S.
S. Superintendent.
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, EPISCOPAL -Sab-
bath services at 11 a. m. and 7. p, m.
Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Rev. E.
H. Croly, B. A., Rector. C. G. Van
Stone, S. S. Superintendent.
SALVATION ARMY -Service at 7 and
11 a. m. and 3 and 8 p. m., on Sunday,
and every evening during the week at
8 o'clock at the barracks.
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.
Pasture for Hogs.
A pasture run is almost essential if
hogs are to be carried through the
summer at a cost low enough to leave
a profit when the animals are market-
ed. Not only can hogs be carried
through more economically on pasture
than where everything is carried to
them in a closed run, but they will also
be more vigorous and healthy where
the wider run is afforded. In arrang-
ing for pasture the crops should be so
that hogs can get into the pasture
early and stay there late. Rye sown
in fall will make a good early pasture
and rape furnishes a most excellent
feed for later on in the, season. It is
estimated by Farm Stock and Home
that three to five pounds of rape seed,
sown to the acre will furnish pasture
for three sows and their litters.
The Dominion Mining and Exploration
Company, with a paid-up capital of $2,-
500,000, is being formed by a number
of leading Canadian and American
financiers, to investigate mining and
other propositions in Canada.
QBER-OIO
P1lkeirlalausew
.'1* ROOFING
(IA )A\A.
will not warp, rot, crack,
blister, crumble or rust.
Strongly fire -resisting.
Ru-ber-std roofs lald 21
years ago are still sound
and weather tight. If
you want a roof to last,
investigate Ru-'her-oid.
3 Permanent Colors
Red, Brown, Green -
and natural Slate. 76
Sole Castdi.w Rifat,
TIIISTMi>sllfafilTlUNTi e.
seCaltade,lnottot.Beric d.
J. A. McLean, Wingham.
PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free
reading room in the Town Hall, will be
open every afternoon frim 2 to 5:30
o'clock, and every evening from 7 to
9:30 o'clock. Miss Maude Plenty, lib-
rarian.
TOWN COUNCIL - George Spotton
Mayor; D.E McDonald, Reeve; William
Bone, H.B. Elliott, J. A Mills, Simon
Mitchell, J. W. Mckibbon, and C. G.
VanStone, Councillors; John F. Groves,
Clerk and Treasurer. Board meets first
Monday evening in each month at 8
o'clock.
HIGH SCHOOL BOARD -Frank Buchan-
an, (Chairman), Win. Nicholson, Theo.
Hall, C. P. Smith, W. J. Howson,
John A. McLear, W. F. VanStone.
Dudley Holmes, Secretary. A. Cosens,
treasurer. Board meets second Mon-
day in each month.
PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD. -Peter Camp-
bell, (Chairman), Alex Ross, John
Galbraith, Wm. Moore, Robt. Allen
H. E. Isard, Dudley Holmes
A. Tipling. Secretary-Treas., John F,
Groves; Meetings secondTuesday even-
ing in each month.
HIGHSCHOOL TEACHERS -J. C.Smith
B. A., Specialist in Classics, Principal;
H. A. Percy, S. P. S. Science Master;
G. R Smith, B. A.. Specialist in Mathe-
matics; Miss C. E. Brewster, B. A.,
Specialist in Moderns and History;
Miss B. E. Anderson.
PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS. -Joseph
Stalker, principal, Miss Brock, Miss
Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss Wil-
son, Miss Cummings, and Miss Taylor.
BOARD OF HEALTH -Geo. Spotton,
(chairman), Richard Anderson, Wm.
Fessant, Alex Porter, John F. Groves,
Secretary; Dr. R. C. Redmond. Medical
Health officer.
FARMERS
and anyone having live,ptook or other
artioles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale in the Timms. Our large
oiroulatton tells and it will be strange indeed if
you do not get a customer. We can't guarantee
that you will sell because yon may ask more
for the artiole or stook than 9 is worth. Send
your advertisement to the Timms and try this
plan of disposing of your stook and other
artioles
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
such as teachers wanted, business chances,
mechanics wanted, artioles for sale, or in fact
any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or
other oity papers, may be left at the Trams
office. This work will receive promptattention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates will be quoted on application. Leave
or send your next work of this kind to the
TINES OFFICE. Wingham
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the�j ,
Signature of a <�K�K
Canada's total trade for the past fis-
cal year amounted to $862,699,732, an
increase of no less than $103,605,343, as
compared with the preceding fiscal
year. Imports totalled $547,382,582, an
increase of nearly $86,000,000; exports
totalled 315,317,250, an increase of near-
ly $18,000,000. The year's increase in
trade, over fourteen per cent., is one
of the largest, if not the largest, in the
history of Canada. According to pres-
ent indications the Dominion's trade for
the current fiscal year will run 'very
close to the billion dollar mark.
OVER a YEARN'
EXPERIENCE
Reps MA KO
DCsIGNfi
CoPYRtdirrs &a.
Anyone sending a ',ketch sad deettly' ton may
au
inventioy n M probably bei'tsnntegealike_eCommunice.
tion.striett conedenttel IIAND!00KonPatents
seat•free. Oldest agency
at mn e
for
Patents taken ImeshMMunn
Go.O.
receive airtpretl4o0ks,withott% orm in the
A Slaacmeu4lwii
y wffctiat.alrreekl, IC es
gelation et ray ',d.ninalovtna4 Terma
Tor
Ca ta.43.'75 w year,poetase prepaid, Sold by
inaltortftztlislitit. TIMES.
'E -T 4 Ktd'iED Ian . ISUNDAlf SCHOOL.
� II�fibAr TIMES
t.Y YJti..lnd'tU
EVERY THURSDAY naUKINIING
--A�—
Tad Limas 0,Ueo Stone Block.
WIN l4116.01, ON TA Mu
TaBAie or t1 u,, tieTitli•- 44,00 per annum 1n
advance, 81,60 if act so paid. No paper discon-
tinued till ai ar verb are paid, except at the
option of 44. pablibher,
ADPnat,e two RAPA5. — bagel and other
casual advar t'setneuts leo per No'ipe fie' line f, r
first lucent,". 20 par a"o to► ua"h
insertion
Adver'ta,, uouts 1 , to„u1 u,lumuc ,e. aunrgaa
10 ots per ane for inn ineartiou, end 5 ueut
per line for exon subsequent insertion.
Advertisements of Strayed, Marine for sale
or to Rent, and similar, 41.00 for first three
weeks, and 25 cents for sac& subsequent in -
CON RATas —The following table shows
osenrrion,
atcs for the insertion of advsrttsements
forepeotded perlods:-
5PAOA, 1 Y$, 6 MO. 6 YO• 11L0
OneOolumn .- -.- _$70.00 44000 422.50 $b.00
H"alt Column 40.00 25,00 15.00 6.00
QnarterOolmm� 20.00 12.50 7.50 3.00
One Inob .- .......... 5.00 3 00 2,00 1.00
Advertieemeute wlthoat speolfio directions
will be inserted till forbid and charged accord-
ingly. Transient advertisemente must be paid
for in advance.
TSA Jon DiPAaTMeNT le stooked with an
extensive assortment of all requisites for print.
ing, affording taoilltios not equalled in the
county for turning out drat class work. Large
type and aupropriate outs for all styles of Post.
ere, Hand Bills, eto., and the latest styles of
choice fanny type for the Omer olass.s of print
lag.
H. B. ELLIOTT,
Proprietor and Pabftshor
DRS. KENNEDY & CALDER
Onerous—Corner Patrick and Centro Ste.
PsoNss:
Offices 43
Residance, Dr. Kennedy i43
Residence, De. Calder 151
Dr. Kennedy specializes in Surgery.
Dr. Calder devotes special attention to Die•
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Eyes thoroughly tested. Glasses
properly fitted.
DR. ROBT.O. REDMOND, M. R.O.S. (Eng)
L. R. 0. P. London.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
Office, with Dr. Chisholm
vnignONm,
BARRISTBS, SOLICITOR, ETC
Private and Company funds to loan at lowest
rate of interest. uortgages, town and farm
property bought and sold.
Offioe, Beaver Brook, Wingham
J •
A. MORTON,
BARR1STita, nae.
Wingham, Ont
B. L. DICKINSON DUDLAY HOLMES
DICKINSON & HOMES
BARRIBTBRS, SOLi JITORS 6to.
MONaY TO LOAN
Orman: 'Meyer Block, Wingham.
ARTHUR .1. IRWIN, D. D. B., L. D S.
Doctor of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania
Dental College and Licentiate of the Royal
College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Othce
in Maodonald Blook. %Mecham.
Office olosed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oot. 1st.
Go H. ROSS, D. D. 8 , L. D. S.
E3'inor graduate of the Royal College of
Dental Surgeons of Ontario and Honor gradu-
ate of the University of Toronto, Faculty of
Dentistry.
Office over H. E. Isard & Co's., store, Wing-
hamOffi, Ont.
ce closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oot. 1st.
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), $3.50 to $15.
per week according to location of
room. For further information, ad-
dress
Miss L. Matthews.
Superintendent
Box 223, Wingham Ont.
RAILWAY TI 1,E TABLES.
GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM.
TRAINS [AAVs ron
London......_ 6.35 a,m�_ LEA/p.m.
Toronto &East ... 00 a.m.. 8.45 a,m.- - 2.80p.m,
Kinoardine..11.59 a,m... 2.3J pm... — 9,15 p,m,
ARRIVA raoM
Kinoardlns ...8.80 a,m..11.00 a.m-... 2.80 p.m.
London.... -- _ - --......11.54 Sao- - 7.85 p.m.
Palmerston...-__.---_ 11.24 a.m.
Toronto & East -.,, .-.- 2.80 p.m__ 9.15 p.m.
4. LASMONT, Agent, Wingham.
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY.
TRAINS LRAva POR
Toronto and Bast.. _..- 8.40 a.m.. . 8.10 p.m.
Teeswater ...... 12.52 p.m __10.27 pan.
ARRIva "EOM
Teeswater_..............8.85a.m._.. 8.05 p.m.
Toronto and Bast.... -12.41 p,m_-10.17 p.m.
J. H. BREMER. A gent,W ingham
IT PAYS
TO ADVER,TISN
IN THE
Lesson X.—Second Quarter, For
June 9, 1912.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Luke vi, 39.49,
Memory Verses, 47.49 -Golden Text,
Jas. i, 22 -Commentary Prepared by
Rev. D. M. Stearns.
This seems to be our last study' for
the present from the sermons on the
mount and on the plain and reminds
us of one of our Lord's sayings on the
night of Ells betrayal, ''If ye know
these things, happy are ye if ye do
them" (John sill, 17). See also FII;
words in Luke viii, 21, "My mother
and my brethren are these while's hear
ttie word of God and do it.” In verse 40
of our lesson His words, "Why call ye
ale Lord. Lord, and do not the things
which 1 say?" are very similar to
Matt. vil, 21. "Not every one that saith
unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into
the kingdom of heaven, but he that
doeth the will of my Father which b
In heaven." There Is no conflict be-
tween ail similar sayings and such
words ns these: "Being justified freely
by His grace." "To him that worketh
not, but believeth on Him that justi-
lieth the ungodly, bis faith is counted
tor righteousness." "By grace are ye
saved through faith. * * * not of
works." "Not by works of righteous-
ness which we have done" (Rom. ill,
24: iv, 5; Eph. fi, 8, 9; Tit. iii, 5.
The former texts refer to the life and
works of saved people as an evident,*
before men o_ their salvation by tho
finished work of Christ, with an awful
warning that no mere "say so" on our
part will suffice. There will be many
who profess to be the Lord's, but who
are notbsincere, not born from above,
to whom FIe will say in that day, "1
never knew you; depart from me ye
that work iniquity" (illatt.vii,23). Mem-
bers of churches who are satisfied to
be such and rest on the fact of their
baptism in infancy or confirmation or
standing in the church or the com-
munity, but do not know the forgive-
ness of sins, having never been re-
deemed by the precious blood of Christ,
and while in their place in church
once a week are wholly in the world
and live only for this present world,
how fearful their future in the outer
darkness, where there shall be weep-
ing and gnashing of teeth (Matt. viii,
12: x111, 42, 50; Tali, 13; xxiv, 51; xxv,
30, 41).
While this will be the doom of many,
it is not for us to judge any one, but
to see to it that we ourselves are truly
the Lord's and- live to help others to
be truly His and to let Film work is
us to will and to do of His good pleas-
ure (verses 37, 38; Phil. 11, 13). If we do
not see clearly ourselves we cannot
lead others, and in Matt. vil, 15, we
are told of false prophets who out-
wardly seem to be sheep, but inwardly
are ravening wolves, not living to help
the sheep, but to devour, them. These
are more fully described in Jer, xxlii,
14-26, as speaking a vision of their
own heart, prophesying deceit, making
people vain, encouraging evildoers and
telling them that no evil would come
upon them, perverting the words or
the living God. Such people wanted
to kill Jeremiah because he spoke only
what the Lord told him ger. xxvi„
7-11). The word of the Lord is not
acceptable to the world and especially
to the worldly part of the church;
which cannot endure sound doctrine.
Our Lord so taught his disciples and
talked with His Father about It (John
xv, 18, 19; zvii, 14). The margin o4
lesson, verse 40, says that every die+
ciple shall be perfected as his Masters
and Heb. 1i, 10, says that the captain
of our salvation was made perfect
through sufferings. He was alwayd
absolutely perfect, but as our High
Priest, able to sympathize, He had to
be tried (Heb. II, 17, 18) and to learn
obedience by the things which He suf-
fered (Heb. v, 8, 9).
According to our Lord's heart search-
ing teaching when we think that we
see failings In others we .must re-
member that, while there may be a
trifle wrong with the other party, the
probability is that the greatest trouble
Is at our own end. We are not there-
fore to judge one another any more,
but endeavor not to be a stumbling
block in another's way (Roan. xiv, 13).
Ambitious to be quiet and to mind
one's own business (I These. iv, 1'1,;
R, V., margin, and Weymouth) and so
to abide as branches that the vine may
bear the desired fruit unhindered. The
last clause of lesson, verse 45, says,
"Of the abundance of the heart the
mouth speaketh." Compare Matt. ail,
34. "The mouth of fools pouretb out
foolishness; a wholesome tongue is a
tree of life" (Prov, XV, 2, 4). 1 have
just received ved a letter concerning
one
who was filled with pity for two nth-,
ers behind wbotn she walked whose
Conversation was wholly concerning
dress and the fashions. Soon she
found herself in the shopping district
and somewhat fascinated by the very
things she had condemned to others.
As she passed on the words held her,
"As be thlnketh in his heart. so is he"
(Prov. xxili, 71. tieing ashamed, she
determined to 1111 herself wIth the
words of Jesus that tier thoughts might
be controlled and that she might be
more like Him. She found It a splen-
did remedy and fins R.nr
tbeen r;rentiy .
blessed In the use tit ills words thus
Inid up in her heart, '1'hh: is a (tree -
Mal Illustration at Prov, xxll, 18, 21..
which I, tee, have for many 'sea N
proved in my life and tt'whing. It is
possible to be a well of living water
irpringlnj up for the benefit of others,