The Wingham Times, 1913-10-30, Page 6t'n1. \ mit A
i v ES OCTOBER. 30 1.013
RAILROAD MAN REETOED TO PARENTS
HAD TO LAY OFF
Until
tie Took GIN PILLS
Buffalo, N.Y.
"I have heed a Prelimeit conductor on
the C. P. It. and Michigan Ceutral for
the last three years.
About four years ago, I was laid up
Withintense pain in the groin, a very
sore "back, and suffered most severely
when I tried to urinate.
I treated with nhy family physician
for two months for Gravel In The
Bladder but did not receive any benefit.
About that time, I met another railroad
luau who had been si'uilarle affected
and who had been cured by GIN PILLS,
after having been given up by a pre.
alimentphysicians who treated hien ter
Diabetes. He is now running on the
road and is perfectly cured. He strongly
advised me to try GIN PILLS which I
did—with the results that the pains left
sue entirely."
PRANK S. IDE.
sec. a box, 6 for leas% Sample free
if you write NationalDrug and Chemical
Co. of Canada Limited, Toronto. les
CANADIAN BORN.
We first saw light in Canada, the land
beloved of God;
We are the puss. or ::anada, its mar-
rt.s and it tlor•i-
And Sr , i' e mea of Can.tde, can face
the world tee] bete:
That we were blrn in Canada beneath
the British flag.
It'l.w of us 1 a e the blood of kings, few
are ot c.rurtly tnrtn,
But few are vagabonds or rogues 01
dcuhtful name or worth;
And all have one credential that en-
titles u: to brag
That we were born in Canada beneath
the British flag.
We've yet to make our money, wt'Ve
yet to make our fame,
But we have gold and glory in our
clean colonial name;
And every man's a millionaire if only
he can brag
That he was born in Canada beneath
the British flag.
No title and no coronet is half so proud.
ly worn
As that which we inherited as mer
Canadian born;
We count no man so noble ae the one
who makes the brag
That be was born in Canada beneath
the British fiag.
The hutch may have their Holland, the
Spaniard may have his ;'pain,
The Yankees to the south of us must
south of us remain;
For not a man dare lift a hand against
the men who brag
That they were born in Canada beneath
the British flag.
—Pauline Johnson.
a HEST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
Mas. WINSLOW'S SOOTIIINO SYRUP has been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
T1 B einem with PERFECT SUCCESS. It
SOOTHES tate CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS.
ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for DIARRHEA. It is ab.
.olutely harmless. Be sure and ask for"Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other
kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
HEALTH NOTES.
Breathe deeply and drink plenty of
clear cold water if you would have a
clear complexion. Ice water is injuri-
ous when taken frequently or in quan-
tities.
Cleanse the face thoroughly every
evening before retiring. Dust and
grime left in the pores overnight
cause the skin to become coarse and
permanently discolored.
If the neck is firm and no lines show,
then keep it so by a good carriage of
the head and regular massage with good
skin food. A woman looks older than
she really is if she permits her neck to
become wrinkled and her chin baggy.
The graceful neck may be long or short,
but it must be molded in a circular
form and be firm and smooth.
Remember that rich foods are ene-
mies of a delicate skin. The rose leaf
skin of the baby comes from its simple
diet.
Sick headache caused by indigestion
tray often be cured by taking two tea-
spoonfuls of powdered charcoal in half
a glass of water.
The tendency to hair growth on the
face which is fostered by the use of
grease may be checked by using some
spirits of camphor with it.
A cupful of hot water with a little
lemon juice added to make it palatable,
taken the first thing in the morning,
will often prevent a bilious attack.
Hot water as a beverage is exceed-
ingly wholesome, especially when the
digestive organs are weak. It should
be taken before and after each meal.
Thomas White of Orangeville, was the
victim of amurderous assult, and Wm.
Carter is arrested,
The C. P. R. will hereafter not em-
ploy any person under sixteen years of
age.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
!Signature of
4140
l'i'4•IiS' CAPTIVE HOME .1"TEI:
SEVENTEEN Sx F ttr't.
The fioy, Who 1%'as Stolen From
Lachine When a Little i.ad Owes
!lis Return to the Fact That an
Old Woman Kept a !'aper With
the Name of Ris Home Written
e It.
The mystery has been cleared up.
The boy Patrick, many times los:.,
strayed and stolen, wbo kept Lachi.e
and the Valley of Silence at Aka agog
for many weeks, has found his par-
ents. He is said to be living happily
with them at Potsdam, New York,
from which plact he was originally
stolen by gypsie,,
Some gypsies travelee through the
Montreal district a couple of months
ago, and about a month or six weeks
ago, a youth named Patrick ragged,
and uneducated turned up, hungry
and useless, for he apparently had
been taught no tract?. of any kind, in
the vicinity of Lachine.
Here he was taken in charge, by
Chief of Police Robert, to whom he
told, bow he bad escaped from a band
of gypsies and had stolen a ride on a
St. Lawrence giver freight boat, whi h
had turned him off at the Lachine
wharf.
Chief Robert did not know what to
do with him, at he did not seem o
be able to read or write and abso-
lutely had no idea of who his people
were, having been w'th the gypsies
ter some seventeen years. There-
fore the cater sent him to Oka, , •
Trappist Monastery, and the monks
gladly welcomed hint. gave him sot•e
light work, and named him Antoine
Oyer, as he came to them when their
honored Atbott Dom Antoine Oye.
died.
His story at the time was published
in the daily press with a picture of
him, and this attracted the attention
of his people, who wrote to the chief.
The chief told them that the best
thing they could do was to come here
and look him up. They got an aunt
or the boy in Montreal to interest her-
self in him, anu through her efforts
he was gotten home, and there is not
the slightest doubt of his identity.
The last Chief Robert heard of him
was at Oka. Le seemed to be well
satisfied with his lot of novice to the
silent Monks, but suddenly two weeks
ago he disappeared from there. The
news that he is now with his family
in Potsdam came next. It also ap-
pears that be had all the time a piece
of paper containing the name of the
place where he came from hidden in
his clothes.
This was given him by his adopted
mother in the gypsy camp when she
lay dying, and the most valuable point
of the boy's experience, to scientists
lies in this very fact, for it proves
beyond a doubt, 'what many scep-
tics have combatted, namely that for
some reason or other never yet fully
explained, gypsy women, will of her
personally, or loupe] their meat to
steal children for adoption not as has
been usually intagieed for ransom,
but for some other and sentimental
reason eq'.aiy unexplained as yet.
In this case I'rederick P.rousseau's
parents were so poor that they cer-
tainly Goold not pay a ransom, anti
the gypsies who had camped near
Potsdam for some time before Fred-
erick disappeared must have known
that. Elis disappearance happened
about ;Ieventeen years ago, when he
was a boy of seven,
There was much :umber amend
Potsdam at that time, and his father
was a woodcutter, who besides his
wife had Frederick, another boy
younger than the latter and a little
girl.
One evening when the came home,
Frederick was missing. His wife like
most mothers would have done under
similar circumstances expressed her-
self as certain that the child had been
kidnapped.
Search parties were sent out, day
and night. but not a trace of the boy
was found. Finally Brousseau and his
friends came to the conclusion that
the wife was right, for it was ascer-
t fined that a band of genuine Rom-
any gypsies bad camped for some
time in the environs of Potsdam, and
had left about the day Frederick was
first missed.
Some efforts were made to trace
them, and it seems that they were
found when on their way to sail for
Spain, but denied knowing anything
about Frederick who -they had then
hidden :somewhere. Frederick became
the adopted child of a gypsy woman
named Fenella Lee, who in the gyps.•
language was known as his "Dai" and
she had a great affection for him in
her own peculiar way, which might
have been returned if she had not
drank, smoked a pipe, chewed tobac-
co and beaten him when he cried for
hie home and mother in Potsdam,
That real mother, by the way, kept
waiting for him to return year efter
year, and when her husband, saw
better prospects ahead somewhere
else, she insisted on remaining where
they vera, as the only place where
rrederick if he was alive, and her
mother Instinct told her he was,
would be able to find them,
According to Fvederiek's story to
his people the gypsies sailed for
Spain, and for the next ten years
Frederick followed them in wande
legs which inclnded all of the South-
ern European countries. He learned
to speak some French, Spanish and
Italian and probably saw enough in-
teresting ruins to keep a Cook tourist
contented for the major portion of
his life.
At the end of ten years the tri'
came back to America. At the end
Of thirteen Fenela Lee diet-. Shortly
before the •nd.she called Frederick
to her.
'Patrick,' she said—the tribe had
given Frederick a new name ---"I am
going to Duvl's ker," Duvl's ker is
Romanyfor heaven. I have e stme-
thing to tell you." Frederick listen-
ed. "'Your nitme is not Patrick, but
Frederiek. You were stolen fro'n your
parents thirteen yeas; ago. I have
kept all this time a paper with the
name on It of the town where you
were stolen. Here it is."
This paper has been the means of
his being United to his people main,
PRESIciiVATiON OF FISH.
New Method Does Ana) With Use chi
Solt, Ire and Pickle.
A new method ot curing fish re.
Gently Introl.ueed in Halifax, N.S.
and, being expe•imeuted with by one
of the largest shippers of (lab in that
city, promises to revolutionize the en•
tire fish industry to the Maritime
Provinces and in other countries cat'•
vying on this industry to any markec
egtee. This method does away en•
tirely with the use ot Ice, salt, pickle
or other preservetives and so perfect.
ly preserves the fish that two week:
afte. preservation (which 1. sufficient
time for this important foou article
to reach cities in central United
States, West Indies and some port:
in South America) the ash is exactly
as it was when drawn from its native
water.
Previously it has beon the practice
to salt and sun dry all fish to be pre•
served, or should they be Intended
for nearby markets either ice them
or ship in cars equipped witb refrt•
gerating apparatus. The new method
it is claimed, abolishes 'his slow and
expensive practice and enables the
shipper to prepare quickly and in.
expensively his shipments in such s
way that the product two weeks angel
shipment and in a foreign market
would rival the highest quality of
fresb fish. The process used is as
follows:
The fish are dumped into a tank
holding sea water which has been al•
tered through four cylinder -like tank:
containing willow charcoal and
screens to remove the noxious gases
and foreign substances.
Next brown sugar is placed in the
tank holding the fish to serve as a
germicide for such organisms as may
be active at freezing temperature.
Then 1 y refrigeration the tempera.
tura is lowered to 10 degrees C. below
zero, during which time 16.1 per cent.
salt is added to prevent ice formation
and to assist the formation of a thin
protective coating over the fish them-
selves. Having allowed the fish tc
remain in this treatment for twc
hours, they are ready for shipment.
removed from the tank and placed in
the package or barrel to await trans•
portation to market.
This process 1s base.' upon the the.
ory that putrefaction of fish is dr -t
caused by bone taint, due to the fad
that in the old methods of curing
fish tbe specific or animal heat is par.
flatly left within the fish. The new
method which has been introduced
acts as a preventive to bone taint
completely removing the specific or
animal heat from the fish to be cured.
Station Farewells.
Great as are modern accomplish
ments, the ancients still had some
points of advantage on us.
Love lorn Romeo, in the moon -lit
balcony scene, co ..2 sigh ana tinge'
and linger and sigh:
"Parting is such sweet sorrow
That I shall say good -night till It ler
to -morrow."
But if the heir to the Montague.
shou'd wish to try tbat stunt at the
observation end of a vestibuled traic
in one of the great railway terminal:
he would discover that tbe hard-
hearted gentlemen who conducted
our transportatit n systems have con-
spired to put a time and distance lim-
it on the farewells of travelers.
The edict has gone forth in nearly
all big Canadian cities that friends
seeing a traveler off must be kept out
of the train shed.. To .e sure, that
has long been the rule. But it was e
rule in some cities more frequently
broken than obeerved And the re--
s
h' because
suit of it..Q
breach was at,
of the clingietg good-byes a+ the car
steps or in the coach aisles, trams
were delayed; the entrance of unat-
tended passenge''; was is iped::-1; and
accidents happened v,hi:h added tc
the railways' burden ,f d•l.cagres.
Here, then, as in unary relations.
of life, private griefs live way to pub-
lic necessities. So in rarewelling a
parting guest in the big cities, pre-
pare to do the hugrri.lg, kissing and
tearfu swapping of farewells on era
vate or neutral groan:ea—Wirt tipar
Tribune.
Pound-rad-a-fielf tZ1pte.
A pound and half weight for an
apple, a Beauty of Kent, grown in
the orchard of Mr. E. W. Moyle, 01
Langstaff, looks like a record for
giant fruit. This apple was picked
on the 15tb of September, and was
weighed on Government -tested scales.
Its dimensionr are si:teen and a hell
inches by fifteen, and it is only one of
a number of monster apples which
Mr. Moyle has picked from one tree
this season. There were man. weigh-
ine a pound and a quarter each,
while, 01 last season's cro-, five
weighed six and a quarter pounds.
The Beauty o' Kent is a fall apple,
and this particular tree did not re-
ceive any weeding -out process to in-
crease the size of tLe fruit. The only
attention given the tree was three
sprayings. The first was composed of
lime and sulphur; the third spray had
arsenite of lead mixed in.
Shot Bear With Small Rifle.
Ontario deer bunters have become
anxious teat the bush fires have spoil-
ed their hunting grounds and scatter-
ed the deer from their old haunts.
:'Nord comes from the Ragged I:a-
pids that George Page, superinten-
dent of the Orillia power plant, met
a bear three or four miles below the
Ragged Rapids and killed it the first
shot with a 22 -calibre rifle, the only
weapon be had with him. Bruin
weighed 198 pounds..
Mr. Strachan, in charge of the Gov-
ernment work on the Severn, shot a
cub wet„ hin;, 10 pounds a few days
ago.
The "flocking" Bell.
Mr. Glenn Curtiss, the airman,
tells a rood story in bis "Aviation
Book" of Dr. Alex. Graham Bell, the
Canadian inventor. "Dr. Bell," ho re-
lates, "has a strong aversion to the
ringing of the telephone bell --•- the
great invention for which be is re-
sponsible. I occasionally went into his
room and found the bell stuffed with
ound round with towels.
'Little did er, or w1 think when 1 invented
this thing,' said Dr. Bell one day,
when he had been awakened by the
jingling of the bell, 'that it would
rise up to Mock and annoy me',"
,opine ,A0
CURE®
THREE VIALS OF
Ibaint.af°ri'z Lrem-.Liver Pills
camu•:) Ili M.
Could Hardly Eat Gil Iceetliti of liltllgestioll.
MR. DAVID IIERRIDon, Claremont,
N.S., writcse--"I have had indigestion
for some years, and could hardly eat.
It hien turned into a sour stomach, and
the dretors said I could not get cured.
I•used a 1st of medicine until at last one
of my friends told me to use MILBURN'S
LAx. -LIvtn Piees, and after I• lead used
three vials, I was completely cured, and
I always keep them in the house'now,"
MILBtt tN'S LAXA-LIvgR PILLS. are a
wouderful remedy for all diseases or dis-
orders of the liver, and have been univer-
sally used during the twenty odd years
they Have becu on the market.
Price 25 cents a vial, or 5 for $1.00,
at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
After the Game.
Home they bore the team;rhalf dead
from the fcotball field in haste;each
dismembered form in bed carefully the
doctors placed; long and tirelessly they
Lull' , ..hilt to - }•lt' W Lhrck. t•.rth
groans, getting twisted necks uncolied,
patching u,o the busted , •sorting
out the teen and e.:es from a pile .,r
human scraps, grading thumb;• bi
shape and it o" the hang;:ed 1o,tb+.11
chaps; eurge..rns hurried here ao.l ,heir.
nailing on louse hands and feet, stitch -
in up torn 't eels of hair, mei:: kt asvet-
al wish -bones meet; nur c's ',uetled tc
and fro, carting hammer''. >.::'s ere
saws; lint anal bandages and glue' t ub
tier noses, ears and jaws. ' Ween I • au
these human wrecks, briny !'..ire sea
u ted my lamps: "Must tt ey thus.: ea..
in their checks ere they've whiplike
-est season's champs? Must they in 11 e
flower of the youth time ingloriou.:lN
eroak ere the season's o'er fors loth?"
thus I sort owfully spoke. But the deet n:
still worked on with their faces set and
tense, fto.nthe twilight till the dawn,
mending up those football gents,—Sher-
wood hart.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
C A T R I A
Strang pressure is b ling brought to
be: r upon the Government at Ottawa
by western Conservative members to
take Gil he eu kw cn whew, flour and
senunolr , ul order to take advantage
of the American tariff. changes.
FOR GROWERS OF TOMATOES,
Staking Is Necessary if Finish of
Early Fruit Is a Consideration.
Whether to stake or not to stake
tomatoes is a much debated subject,
says a correspondent of Gardening.
Like a good many others, this one will
never be settled to the- satisfaction of
all. Where it pays one man to stake
and sucker part or all of his crop an-
other would lose money by doing so.
Many experiments are misleading
because they lack the practical side.
By this we mean the ability to take
the crop to market and bring home the
money.
We find that for the early trade it is
absolutely necessary to stake our to.
matoes, as we cannot sell the product
from prostrate vines. It lacks the fin-
ish which is so necessary for table
fruit. There are other considerations.
During rainy spells the trained vine
will set fruit where the other will not,
and when it comes to picking the crop
we gain all the time and labor lost for
staking. '
To us it is more a matter how to
stake than any other. We have had
very good results by transferring the
greenhouse system outdoors. This id
simply setting stakes about ten feet
apart and stretching a wire over these
to which the vertical strings are tied
upon which the vines are hoisted. We
generally have four plants between the
stakes and use American twine flax.
We used to stretch a bottom wire, but
found it very much in the way for box
ing, hence quit it and get along just as
well by simply tying the twine loosely,
to the tomato plants near the ground.
Cured DisOasad,
oi the Uneys.
And h, Irellencled On to Bight Ste.
mach used T leer Ili;a: tier's.
(Thee Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver P1118
are introduced into the family and
their etflr•lenty Lecon:es i:nat:n they
are usually foam] too val:'ai :i: to do
without. I'••r everydir ills arising
ft'nla 1!•. •r ,i1•.1 ' r :vc1 r1'r:orders they
i tint 1'•1 tiv, au 1 when Com-
p1ica,tCrt t c':,. kidneys and
glee•:• d••' t Lila... 'we tn•..c•e a Sin -
tea.. .et: c:, t•:r a have tailed.
As, art :'l :ttiun, yen may read the
follrtwin . till via:, receive:l a Yew
day tri.
;airs.lot 'i`rit;icr, -u3 McGee street,
Tor ..neo, t :t.t . ot:ltts: "We have used
Dr. (i!,•t. r. • t.tvcr Pills for ten
t t +: 1 .ti:'. • • •t he without them.
My , t ;1 ,n 1 ere ! from kidney
t;o:•1.1:•, a" af'-,- talon.. treatment
front sr.VOral dl•+ t trig wits. -'rt 1 er•eIt'-
icr. .:y i ' ,c rt. t ...1 Dr. t ' e
nFy-I.`l' e t' •11 'e'' i:r',' .1 re ill•
theta e+nr p 5 ' t'.,i t tit.::: we 'WING
I•�'e•' tt' '-, Y^. c!i stomach and liver
Ono pill a doe fie ceutn a box. all
dealers, or Ednlaac,on, ;i.t,cs d Ca.,
Limited, Toronto.
RYPNOTIZEO.
!ttebeo Railroad Man Tells of And..
mals Fascinated by Track.
As the engineer In charge of a
railroad track running through the
Megantic, Que., district was runt- g
over his division in a track car pro•
pelted by a gasoline engine, he saw
a fine deer on the track before him
His bridge inspector, who accompan-
ied him, being a keen sportsman, tJ
once sent the car along at full speed
after the swiftly flying animal.
These cars are supposed to be utile
to run along at the rate of thirty
miles an hour, so that although the
deer had • good seam it was caught
up with after about a mile's racing.
leor rear of a smash-up resulting
!runt t rear -end collieion, the foreman
slacked up as the ear came up t , the
frightened creature, and both men
shouted vigorously to it to clear the
track. The only result was another
spurt of speed, which was kept up
until the nimble feet slipped through
a high trestle, and the helpless deer,
a three-year-old Male, as made Into
veelson, w
The curious rt ._ure of this not un•
exciting hunting was the persistency
with wi 'el. the stag kept to the track
between the rails, instead of turning
aside to the safer-' which a bound of
two.would have ai'forded in the bush.
The engineer, in reporting the oc-
currence, says that three or four
times during the past summer he bar
been obliged to stop bis motor cr, tc
get the deer to leave the track. 'his,
and the fact that the engine dr ver,
say that they have several times run
down moose and deer in hunting dile
tricts led to an enthusiastic sports•
man doing a little investigating on
his own account.
From personal experience, and
rnucb information received a very is
genlous explanation of the refusal of
the deer to leave the track between
the metals has been deduced.
it is a feet, known to experimen•
talists, that if a chicken's bill is held
to the floor to a chalk line drawn
straight before it, the bird becomes
fascinated and apparently unable tc
withdraw itself f2'om it. So it appears
that when fear is driving from be
hind, the two shining rails from the
right and left 'lave a fascinating or
hypnotizing effect upon deer, and as
long as they are kept moving swiftly,
t'cey are unable to turn to either side.
The driver of a freight train in
tee Gatineau Valley drove a pair of
deer twenty-four miles in a little over
ar hour, his train moving at a fairly
uniform rate all that time. At the
end of the run, one of the deer whieb
was very fat collapsed, and fell. The
other stood stupidly staring at the big
engine as it stepped, but when the
men descended :rum it, jumped from
the track and escaped.
The deadly fascination of the steel
tails was well exemplified on the Kaz-
rbazua plains in the same section,
when a pair of Scotch :stag hounds
e ere seen passing from th'i open
country from the north driving a deer
before them. Without heeding the
shautt, of the men at the station, the
hunted thing, which had evidently
comae from a long distance bounded
along with some difficulty following
all the curves of the track down tc
the Stag Creek Bridge, througb
which it tripped a'd was then killed
by tbe hounds.
Tho section men on the Pontiac
itailway chased a little herd of three
deer on a down grade, for some miles
with their hand car, and ran them
right up to an approaching engiee,
As they stopped to lift their machine
clear aof the track, the. poor things
Slackened their speed looked helpless•
:y as they ran on to right and left
end allowed the engiaa to send them
ell to destruction. Probably at night
't is tele glare of the headlight which
• ttraets, confuses and thea hypnr tizes
deer, and causes their death.
Sir William's joke.
Sir William Whyte, of Winnipeg, it
,articularly fond of sho ,'in;, and
t eery fall he goes out to his lodge on
WI': prairies, and spends a few days in
•.'zest of prairie chicken. Last fall
is got a party to go out for the an-
nual shoot, and W. R. Baker, of the
k'.P.R„ Montreal, was one of the
guests. The birds were shot in plenty
by all but Mr. Baker, who was a par•
ticula?ly poor shot. For a while he
seamed to lose interest, and seine of
the party thought they would rouse
him a bit. They riot one of the dead
birds and placed it very gracefully on
a bush. Soon one of the guides of the
party called Mr. Bahev's attention tc
tl.e bird. He took aim five or Ma
times and the shot always landed on
a dead tree at some distance. Sir
Wiliam and his friends had been
-etching the proceedings, and joining
Mr. Baker, Sir William remarked: "I
think that Is only a waste of time,
r. Baker, for that tree looks as 11
It had been dead for yearn."
A Faithful Redskin.
There Is a town in New Ontario
often called Onwatin after the lake
into which the Vermilion river flows;
hut it is now generally settled that 11
is to he called Capreo' ,the name of
sn Inafan, after whom the townsh'p is
called. The Indian worked under the
surveyors who laid out the township,
and they, out of esteem for his faith•
fulness, called the township afte
him, But there is no postoffice yet.
;:ail is all sent care of Angus Sin-
^lair, eudbury, and forwarded. The
final name of the station and post-
oElice will determine the name of the
hewn; but Capreol, with the accent on
the a, 1: recognized as the favorite
name, and is not readily confused
with other Indian names.
Six Ladies In Law School.
In the ranks of the first year at
the Osgoode Law School in Toronto
this year there are four ladies who
are reading for a call to the Bar. This
makes a total of six ladies altogether
in the school.
Tine young ladies who have entered
this year are: bliss Charlotte Wegg,
or St. Thomas; Miss Gertrude Alford,
of f3e,.0'll1e; Miss Mary M. Maund,
of Kingston, and :Mass Lena Olive:
c
'i hardson.
E,, The ladies in the senior year are:
Mrs. H. V. Laughton, who commend•
ed her studies as Miss M. D. Buckley,
and Miss Patterson, of Vancouver.
.fpsin's Grapes.
Spain ekuluaily uses the hugs itimai
tity of 276,000 tons of grapes foi
making other products than wine,
'CARTERS
lTTLE
IVER
PILLS.
CURE
sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci-
dent to a briions state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &c, While their east
remarkable success las been shown in curiug
SICK
]headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pine are
equally valuable in Constipation, curing andpre•
venting this annoyini'eom iaint.whiletbeyalso
correct all disorders of stomach, etimulatotho
liver and regulate the bowels. Been lf theyonly
cured — —
Acbethey would be almost priceless to thosewhe
suffer from thisdlstressingcomplalut; butfortu.
natelytheir goodness does notend hero,and those
who once try them will andthese little pills vola•
able in so many ways that they will not be wil-
ling to do w•ithoutthem. Butafter all alck head
ACHE
Is the bane of so many lives that hero is where
wemake our great boast. Ourplllscuroitwhile
others do not,
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
pscvery easyhem, to take, One or two pills make a dose.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
CASTES =MGM 004 VW TORE.
small M .:mall Prioe,
We don't know much, but enough to
tell that no trance medium can com-
municate anything of impor tante.
Eyery year over 18,000,000 sheep and
lambs are slaughtered in Australia for
export, and beef totalling over 100,000,-
000 lbs. is sent out annually for oversea
consumption.
The British consul at Bigots reports
that a boot and shoe factory equipped
with American machinery is soon to be
erected in Bogota. The output is ex-
pected to be about 1,500 pairs of boots
and shoes daily.
Do not suffer
another day with
Itching Bleed-
ing, or Protrud.
ing Piles. No
surgical oper-
ation required.
Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once
and as certainly pure you. 66a a boxall
dealers, or Edmaneon, Bates & Co., Limited,
Toronto. Sample box free if you mention this
paper and enclose 2o. stamp to pay postage.
SOME OTHER DAY,
There are wo'hderful
pthings we're•
going;
wonderful to do
Soule other day,
Some lans we'll carry
through
Some' other day.
There are loving words we are going
to speak.
There are burdened souls we're going
to book,
We are going to help the poor and
weak
Some other day.
Some glorious victories we're going to'
win
Some other day.
We are going to conquer besetting sin
Some other day.
There are beautiful flowers we're go
ing to pick,
There are wreaths of kindness we're
J'
going t h make,
We'll visit the poor, the needy and
sick
Some other day.
Ah, yes, but perhaps it will be too late -
Some other day.
There are wonderful changes while
we await
Some other day.
For the tender wards that hearts now
crave,
And the wreaths of kindness which Ir
we now save
May be kept to be laid upon the
grave
Some other day.
- N. P. Neilsen.
More than 300 Missouri editors make
less than $12 a week from their labors. .
Durieg the past twelve years the
railway mileage of Manitoba doubled,
and is now about 4,000 miles.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Inventors in France are said to be at
work on an apparatus that will enable
a man to fly without the aid of a motor.
He will use only his arms as wings.
Don't blame the early discoverers
because they overlooked a good many
fine real estate opportunities.
The Texas owner of a large dairy
believes he is the only man in the Unit-
ed States who cultivates the prickly
pear, raising a six -hundred acre field of
it annually and feeding his stock •'e
pods after removing the thorns.
LNTIN
AND
'TATIONERY
We have put in our office a complete stock of Staple
Stationery and can supply your wants in
WRITING PADS
ENVELOPES
LEAD PENCILS
BUTTER PAPER
PAPETERIES,
WRITING PAPER
BLANK BOOKS
PENS AND INK
TOILET PAPER
PLAYII; G CARDS, etc
We will keep the hest stock in the respective lines
and sell at reasonable prices.
JOB PRINTING
We are in a better position than ever before to attend
to your wants in the. Job Printing line and alI
orders will receive prompt attention.
Leave your order with us
whet in need of
LETTER HEADS
BILL HEADS
ENVELOPES
CALLING CARDS
CIRCULARS
NOTE HEADS
STATEMENTS
WEDDING;' INVITATIONS
POSTERS
CATALOGUES
Or anything you may require in the printing line.""
Subscriptions Liken for all the Leading Newspapers
and Magazines.
The Times Office'
STONE BLOCK
Wingham,
Ont.