HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-08-13, Page 6.IMI -Nara
Falk Term. Frohn. Sept. lit.
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HOMESEEKERS'
EXCURSIONS
MANITOBA ALBERTA
SASKATCHEWAN ,
Each Tuesday March 3 to October 27, inclusive.
Winnipeg and Return - $35.00
Edmonton and Return - 43.00
From Toronto, and Stations West and
North of Toronto. Proportionate fares
.from Stations East of Toronto.
Return Limit two months.
REDUCED SETTLERS' FARES
(ONE-WAY SECOND CLASS)
EACH TUESDAY, MARCH AND APRIL
Settlers travelling with live stock and
effects should take SETTLERS' SPECIAL
TRAIN which leaves West Toronto each
Tuesday during MARCH and APRIL
after arrival regular 10.20 p.m. train from
Toronto Union Station.
/ Settlers and families without live stock
should use REGULAR TRAINS, leaving
Toronto 10.20 p.m. DAILY. Through
Colonist and Tourist Sleepers.
Through trains Toronto to Winnipeg and I
West. COLONIST CARS ON ALL TRAINS
No charge for Berths.
Particulars from Canadian Pacific. Agents o I
write M. G. Murphy, D.P.A.. Toronto.
telarimeenaloillealinsassammegiv
Farms For Sale
200 acres, large brick house, 2 bank
barns, one mile south of Gerrie, good
stook and grain farm, 35 acres of
bush.
100 acre farm in Minto Tp., 7 miles
from Harriston, 7 miles from Palm-
erston ; school, church and store con-
venient, good buildings. A snap at
$5,600.
For full particulars for these farms,
apply to—
PHILIP HARDING,
Clifford, Ont.
■a...nse.t
Mr. Geo. Moir
Wishes to announce to the citizens
of Wingham that he is in the old
tand to stay.
Shoe Shining and Dyeing.
Cigars, Gum, Laces, etc.
Give us a call.
'Farm for Sale.
•
A. good 200 acre farm within nine
miles of Wingham, good bank barn,
good cement house, large orchard, and
considerable quantity of timber. Price
$6Ii00.00. Apply to R. Vanstone, Wing -
ham P. 0.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Aiways Bought
Bears the
Signature of
144
r•
SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH
WEST LAND REGV.I '.TIONS
THE E sole head of aWO:, or any male over
18 years old may umeetead a quarter -
section of available Deminion land in Mani -
Gabe, Sasketohewaa Or Alberta. The mini). -
sant must appeolin person at the Dominion
Lands Agenoy or;'4144-Agenoyfor the district.
1Gutry by proxy may be made at the office of
any Local Arley, of Dominion. Lands (not sub-
agent) en carton conditions,
Dutios.- 4ix rupiahs' restdenoe upon and oul-
tivation of the land in each of three years. A
homesteader may live within nine mles of his
homestead on a farm of at least SO acres on
oert,,in conditions. 4 habitable house is. re.
Allied in every case, creep► when residence
toilerfortncdin the vioinity.
In certain districts n,, homesteader in good
standing may pre-empt a quarter -section along-
side his homestead. Pride e3 per acre. Duties
Six months' residence in eaoh of six years
from date of homestead entry (including the
time required to earn homestead. patent) and
60 acres extra cultivation. 'Fho area of oulti-
vation is subject to reduction in case of rough,
scrubby or stony land after report by Home-
stead Inspector on application for patent,
A homesteader who bas exhausted his home-
stead right and cannot obtain a pre-emption
may take a purchased homeeted in certain
districts. Pride $3.00 per acre. Duties.—Must
reside six months in oaob. of three years,'otilti-
vete fifty aures and oroot a house worth $300.
W. W. CORY,
Deputy of the. Minister of the Interior:
N.B.-Unauthorized publioation of this ad-
vertisement will not be paid for.
Farm For Sale. -
Pleasant View Perm for sale, 120
titins, 100 oleaired, 20 hard wood bush.
t'Ge11 fenntld, good state of cultivation,
wlrim i, good water, bank barn 82x
iStl, 1 crit buildings, two storey
ire + . ttwge with 11 room»,
ROOT, LEATHORN,
Bluevale, On
RAILWAY, TiME-TABLE
Trains leave Wingharn stations daily as
follows s
G. T. R.
TO TORONTO and Intermediate
Points:—Passenger, 6,45 a.m.; passen-
ger, 11.00 a.m.; passenger, 2.30 p.m.
TO LONDON:—Passenger 6.35 a.
m.; passenger, 3,30 p.m.
TO KINCARDINE : — Passenger,
11.59 a.m.; passenger, 2.30 p.m..; pas-
senger, 9.15 p.m.
C. P. R.
TO TORONTO and Intermediate
Points:—Passenger, 6.40 a.m.; passen-
ger 3.05 p.m.
TO TEESWATER : — Passenger,
2.05 p.m.; passenger, .10.32 p.m.
SERMONS OUT—CI-CHURCH
By the Rev, Byron H. Stauffer
XII.—Our Limitations In Friendships.
William Jennings Bryan lectured in
my city once upon a time, and I got
into line to shake hands with the
Peerless One. Because I had lived
in Omaha' four whole months, I
thought I would provide somewhat in
common by filling up the fraction of
a • second spanning the greeting with
the whisper: "I'm from Omaha." The
phrase proved to be an open sesame;
nothing could have been heartier than
the Commoner's shake. "Hello old
man! Glad to see you again, old man;
very glad, very glad." There was no
time for it, and it would have been
rude, but I might have replied, "Say,
old man, you cannot be so very glad,
for never in your life .before this
minute have you ever set eyes on
this portly frame, old man. I've sat
under the spell of your betwitching
oratory, old man, but until now,
though I be from Omaha, you and I
have never clasped hands, old man."
But was Mr. Bryan playing the
hypocrite in his greeting? Not at all.
He has too many friends that is all.
He cannot carry them all in his
memory. His heart is big, his intel-
lect is spacious, but kis capacity for
faces and names is limited after all,
so he must grope and take a chance
at striking the right door knob in
memory's many chambers.
You cannot hold so very many
friends, To a multitude, you may be
able to say "Good morning." To an
inner circle you may throw a "how
d'ye do, Mr. Smith," or even a "Hullo,
Jim," but of real chums, I'll vouch
you have no more than yon can count
on one hand. Why no more? Be-
cause you cannot contain them.
You are too •small. The limitations
of your mind, your heart, your mem-
ory, your time, forbid.
And that is why the functions of
the social world seem cold. Society
tries to do too much. We vainly at-
tempt the cultivation of so many
friendships that, to properly care for
them all, we are compelled to resort
to such devices as large parties, at
homes, and standing luncheons. So
we have scores of formal acquaintan-
ces, but few close friends.
Nothing sustains the unity, the con-
tinuity, the zest of life as does the
close friendship of a great soul,
Eighteen hundred years ago Emperor
Marcus Aurelius gave Roman youtlia
(Grand Trunk Railway System.
Harvest Help Excursions
August ft and 18.
Via Chicago and Duluth. from all
stations in Ontario, Kingston, Ren-
frew and west,
$12 to Winnipeg plus half cent per
mile beyond.
First excursion applies to all points
in Manitoba.
Second excursion to certain points
in Saskatchewan and Alberta and all
points in Manitoba,
RETURNING—half cent per mile to
Winnipeg, plus $18 from Winnipeg to
destination in Eastern Canada.
The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway
is the shortest and quickest route
between Winnipeg Saskatoon—Ed
ntonton,
Full particulars at all G.T.R. Wicket
Offices or write 0. E. Horning, 'IPA.,
G.T.:Ity., Union Station, Toronto, Ont.
tattoo
111, 13, BDliotb, Tori passenger And Ticket
, HBur nian, 13
Tl t; phone 4. et Agent; puonb' F.
,
sage ay,vice which we well.
seize now: "When thou wisheet to de-
light thyself, think of the virtues of
Illy friends; for instance, the activity
tt one, and the modesty of another,
had the liberality of a third, and some
Other good quality of a fourth. For
nothing delights so much as the ex-
amples of the virtues, when they are
exhibited in the morals of those who -
are with us. Wherefore we must keep
them before us." The old philosopher
might have added: "There is nothing
so damaging, either to the digestion
or the morals of the family as to
spend the dinner hour in discussing;
the faults of your friends. It is a
blighting Habit to acquire. One° ad-
dicted to the vice, the breaking of it
is next to impossible.
"The friends thou least, and thole
adoption tried,
Grapple Item to thy soul with hooks
of steel."
SFiRMONS OUT OF CHURCH
By the Rev, Byron I -I, Stauffer
XIII,'—Making Home a Club Houce
The best antidote for Gang Alley is
an attractive home, And the pleasant•
nese of a- house does not depend on
the style or cost of the furniture or
the size of the rooms, but upon the
atmosphere Of the place.
Do not effeminate your house,
housewife. Why have a holy of holies
in the shape of a formal drawing
room with meaningless pictures such
as any hotel parlor might select? And
why have the best room shut off, by
tradition or by doors, from the every
day use of the whole family? Of late
years, it is true, father has been given
a modest concession in the form of
what we suggestively call a den, the
implication being that the old bear
needs such limits, But this upstairs
room has only tended to make the
downstairs stiffer than ever. The par-
lor- chairs are not intended for rest-
ing; there must not be too many
books lying around; a davenport or a
servicable table is entirely out of the
question.
Why not turn the whole institution
into a den? Let home be a club house
for father and brother. To satisfy the
whims of a few fastidious callers an
afternoon a week by keeping a con-
ventional reception a'ooln for their ten
minutes of empty talk is not nearly
as important as to keep your boys
at home evenings, Let the tools for
an hour's pastime be within easy reach
of the young fellow the moment he
rises from the evening m.eal.� A chess
board and a deck of cards, parches'
and crokinole, an easy chair and an
entertaining book, and good indoor
THEW I dM 17f LJ A
three-yer :old bite eat there so lonely -
1001414, as If she knew why It was
that no one chose her to be their child.
Her big dark eyes seemed to beg,
"take me." Not being able to come
to a decision they called back the
next day, and there sat the little hair -
lipped girl again with the salve wistful
'look.
Tho lady suddenly came to a con-
clusion. "Husband, let us take her,'
said site, "She looks as if she were
just hungry to be loved, the others
will easily find hones, but re one will
want this child and site, above all,
will need a home and what little
money we can leave her,' They on -
milted a surgeon, but he told them it
vac too late ' to even improve, let
alone altogether correct, the inalfor-
pnation, "So much greater the reason.
Why I should take )ter," said the wife.
They took the child and bestowed
upon her all their devotion and love,
She was responsive, both in her men-
al development and in the affection
he showed for her foster parents,
the has grown to be a fine young woe
khan, and her pleasant countenance
more than counterbalances the blem-
ish of an otherwise handsome face.
' She 'graces any parlor with her cheer-
ful presence. She has nursed both,
man and woman through serious ill-
s the es. No wonder that t e husband
followed her with loving eyes while
he told me: "She is the best invest-
ment we ever made," so she is, and
she will be in years to come, as Ruth's
baby was to Naomi, a restorer of their
lives, and a nourisher of their old age.
Meanwhile I submit to you that the
love of that woman for that deformed
child is akin to the love of the Christ
for maimed humanity.
•
SERMONS OUT OF CHURCH
• By the. Rev. Byron H, Stauffer
XV.—A Ride With the Ragman
In my desperation to catch an in-
terurban car, the taxi having broken
)down, I literally threw myself on the
first conveyance that happened along,
buying up the driver with - Phileas
Fogg enterprise and was well on any
way before I noticed that I was riding
'With a ragman!
Ho had a twinkle in his eye
mingling the mien of humility with
somewhat of self-confidence. His left
hand was dwarfed and his drawn -up
left limb indicated that he had been
a cripple from his birth. He bad a
bag or two of rags, some scrap -iron
and a few yards of old garden hose
behind him.' He had a German ac-
cent, and it )developed that his parents
had come atpross by the steerage route
coaxers. passing thrpugh old Castle garden in
not puritanize_your., home. To , the statutcry way.
get away from' -feminine austerity, f The rag business? ,. Oh, it was pick -
youths escape from high class rest- ing up, tha'nk-you.. A good hand could
gather. fro in four hundred to fax hun-
dred pounds a day. He had just been
down to New York where he had a
cousin in the business, and had picked
to smoke a pipe at home than a cigar- up some new tricks of the trade. He.
ette down town. Suppose you cum-' would soon have has own bagsto
leave with steady customers so as to
stimulate the accumulation of rags and
rubber by the children, New York,
he said, is the best rag town on the
coast. There, a thousand pounds is
' a good day's work. He 'proudly denied
,, that any fodl could be a ragman but
said that anybody at the point of star -
year ago when I found that he erasl vation could 'keep soul and boyd to -
smoking cigarettes on the 43ly. We gether by gathering newspapers from
door to door. An active man with a
I cart, or better still, with horse and
i wagon, could earn a good living in
this way.
The old revival hymn, "Where is my The ragman. became eloquent con -
wandering boy tonight" will not need cerning the price of land. The vacant
to be sung so often when religious lots we were jest passing did not sell
people will exercise a little more corn- as well as those he had just disposed
mon sense and a little less puritanical of on his street. How had he bought
prudery about their children. And if the lots? With rag money of course,
mothers and fathers will ask where "And there was no gold in the rags
their boys are evenings during the either," he added with a chuckle,
first fifteen years of life, they will. ` "still rags make gold and lots of gold
not need to sniffle while the Evangelist.: in the hands of the prosperous makessings the question In after years. 1 good rags; it works both ways." By
To .make )tome a real club house the way, he is a communicant at Saint
father must be at the head of the ' Ann's Roman Catholic Church, pays
house commiittee. His evenings must $12.75 ,a year for his pew, helped to
be given to 'the children. Away with. pay for the church with his first say -
the lodge land the club! Tht night- Ings and glories in the boast that with
after -night lodge man, tht every-° a congregation of poor folks there had
evening club member, yes and the, never been a dollar of debt on Saint
man who thinks he must attend every 2 Ann's.
committee meeting at the church, is: Well, there is nothing more to tell
losing hit opportunity of sustaining' ;' and you may not see anything very
the one ?(edge of which the eternal. i Interesting in my ride with the rag -
pass -Word is "Success." :'man. It occurs to me, however, that
list country which_ can do that for it
SERMONS OUT OF CHURCH '',crippled. immigrant is a great country
By the Rev, Byron H. Stauffer to ,begin ;with. I remark also that a
rcri) ule with some hustle can not only
XIV. --Making Forks Handsome by ca the almsliouse but can put by
Love et cecompetency withal. Again, there
We may develop goodness le others: 'are =IV' 'ettys of making a living out-'
by our mental attitude, towards them.. side of the conventional avenues
Yes, it is even possible to love people. which the thoughtless multitudes
into handsomeness. I know a husband. throng to their 'own loss.
and'wife who, as they had no, children. li' In a western town I saw this legend,
of their own,, went to an orphanage r. pungent even though not very Web•
to select a.Bate 'girl for adoption. sterlan, in a shop window:
There werei some twenty tlittle tots. «�
in the group, smite goldien haired,.
j j, Tis grit makes the man,an,some with snappy iSlaick eyes, Nearlyi The want of it tho chump,
A11 were pretty and it was quite a task ; The Ines' who win, lay hold,
Hang on and hump!"
dences to the club, and from cottages
to the dive, and sometimes the club
is nothing but a more comfortable
dive. Better allow your young fellow
A D V AN G E
SERNIONTS OUT blit CHVRCH
• By the Rev. I3yron II. Stauffer
XVI.—Ability Forr Swallowing Things.
'Good old Doctor Shaw was pastor
of the Brick Church In Rochester,
N.Y., for over fifty years. Somebody
asked him the secret of lies unusual
pastorate. The reply came instantly:
"My ability for swallowing things,"
No, that is not . slang, my dear
Prude, Webster's fifth definition of
the verb, swallow, is, "to put up with;
to Baer patiently, as an affront."
Ability to swallow things is the
great essential to continuity in any
thing. I can imagine some of the
things Dr. new had to swallow dur
ing those fifty years. On a drizzling
Sunday morning, an uti ter came int.
the Minister's vestry ten minutes b:'
Core service to say that the two dear
old spinsters in pew 39 wore giving
up their sittings because the pastor
hadn't called on them. That was the
Sunday morning when the audience
kept straggling in until the second
hymn. The ruling elder sat sideways
In his pew and looked bored. The
choir girls whispreed can'in'g the Dec-
tor's long prayer, and et the begin-
ning of the sermon there was it fust,
lade of coughing. Towards the eer-
mon's close, a child kept up a nagging
whine, And atter the benediction
someone asked whether the preacher
was i11? One spring, the W,C.T.U.
ladies offered to take one Sunday
evening service each month during
the summer for a temperance meeting
with women speakers, and the ses-
sion really thought it would increase
the. attendance. At a chinch social,
somebody confessed to running over
to the neighboring church last Sunday
to hear the new minister just gradu-
atcle from Yalr and said he had to sit
on a campstool, the church being full
to the rafters. Someone else com-
mented that a young clergyman bad
such an advantage in freshness of ma-
terial, nimbleness of mind and strength
of body.
Yes, to be in one pulpit, or in one
kitchen for that matter, during fifty
years, one must have a throat as
large as a cobra. The humblest ser-
vant and the most eminent jurist, the
poorly -paid clerk on. his stool and the
successful merchant in his office, the
much -abused telephone girl calling
"Number please," and the far-famed
prima donna earning a thousand per
night, all these must alike pratcice
the muscles that squeeze and hurry
the lumps of chagrin and insult past
the clanger point of choking. All great
permanent successes include 'the pa-
tient baering of unpleasant situation.
It is fatal to have your name on the
kickers' blacklist. A young fellow
throwing up on position after another
because he choked on some harsh
word or some druging task will sool:.
have a record • that will put him in
the not -wanted class. It is astonish-
ing how soon a defective swallowing
apparatus will be discovered. One of
the most expert proof-readers I ever
knew had to tramp from city to city
just because he had acquired a repu-
tation of flying off the )handle every
time a printer triumphed over him by
securing a "ring" from the foreman.
Every "Chapel" in the town soon
found hien out. He didn't get the
chance to hang his hat in an office
for everybody ).new he would not
leave it on the peg very long.
But once established, the habit of
not noticing will become a second na-
ture. Each victory over sensitive-
ness will help us some other to win.
Unless the agront is really a grave
insult to manhood or womanhood we
will become expert in ignoring it and
rivetting our eyes on the goal of
achievement ahead of us.
promise with him on that basis. After
dinner I passed the cigars to a com-
pany which included a gentleman andhis eighteen -year-old son. When L
asked the father whether I should
offer the young man 'a smoke he as-
sented saying: "John and I reached
an understanding on these matters a
agreed that he should give 'up the
cisearette, but that he and I would
smoke a cigar together every evening
after' dinner." Wise man!
to choose among thein, But one was
--'
Badly deformed, having a hairlip of a
grononneed tym._ , That_ poor little E,
' C NA01A11
,PACIFIC
*any Tho tis
ant! Farm Lakorers Wanted
FOR HAFlVtSTCNG IN WESTERN CANADA
"GOING _TRIP WEST."
$12.00 TO WiAN1PEG
1
GOING ,DATES
kueuat'11th- J rmit n11ntattons. Mogan, sherbet Lake lttntrety and west to Aztide and
i
, nit Ste. Marie, cint...10 511 wilntsin'Menttoim.
August 14th --a From all stations east of 1tlnar ton, Shinto Lake -aunt Itcntrc*, in. tho T'royinees of
ontar1' and Glueht e, to pit paeans in Manttabn.
Menet Seth-. Trom an stations. Elvaston. 1-harhor Lake, twee, end went to Asllila and
saint rite. Marie, t sit., to an ponds in Manitoba all to eertmin points in Basket-,
ebawan and Albert August'1lst-•3 'rein ail stations igq tofEtngstan. t4bAebotLake nu5 Renfrew, In rho Prosiness of
Ontario Aad rasb , to alj pelma 1n Ms tuob% meat to amain points in Bsakat•
ortti , - i
. � wietv.ao lied Alta _
br. US MVO* ! res� tat rrrelept!tation Wait el winnl , 41a',, ri tour... a P.n. it gra, ai•'a'rita-•
�, L. IsTt• Ro : A�rsls t ,IKA, t'07:9•NW HY, tS M.Ar, tense, Tosses.
"RETURN TRIP EAST."
$I8.00 FROM WINNIPEG
TRURO
Save Money! Buy Youir New Fence
DIRECT FROM PAGE
Freight Prepaid
Wife's Message of Reproach
Letters reproaching her husband for
his laziness were read at the inquest
held by the Liverpool coroner con-
cerning the death of • Ellen Moyses,
twenty-nine, who was discovered hang-
ing from the banisters at her house.
The husband joined a ship for West
Africa, but left it before it sailed, and
his wife wrote to a friend saying she
felt "broken up" by his action.
The coroner remarked that .the hus-
band had not been seen since, al-
though the police had searched for
him. An extract from the woman's
letter read as follows: "My sin is
great enough, but I consider it is a
greater sin to bring children into the
world, and be too Iazy to provide for
them." One witness stated that on
hearing of the tragedy she went to the
house and found Mrs, Dfoyses lying
on a couch dressed in a suit of her
husband's clothing, and with a photo-
graph of the husband pinned on the
clothing. A verdict of "Suicide whilst
temporarily insane" was returned.
Street Promenading Girls
Street promenading by young g Ihe
r -
sons was called attention to at a con-
ference of the Dundee Committee on
Public Morals. Chief Constable Car-
michael stated that the practice of
promenading the chief Streets was
moreprevalent on Sundays than on
any other day of the week. No offence
appeared to be committed, and the
police could not, therefore, interfere.
It was reported that the Aberdeen
committee wait prepared to co-operate
and it was decided to ask the pollee
and the Salvation Army to unite in
endeavoring to deal with evils attend-
ant upon street premenadIr .
STYLE
fi
x.
No, 9 Page Wire Throughout in „0
30 and 40 Rod Rolle, Freight Patti
x o.cS : Spacing; of Iioruontalu t:a Incl co
4 30 lit 10, 10, 10,
537 22 8, 9, 10, 10
.
6 40 22 ?J, 7, 88i, 9, 79
7 40 22 5, 51, 7, 7, 1, 8
7 48 22 5, 6t, 71, 9, 10, 10
8 42 22 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
8 42 161 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6.— . . .........
8 47 22 4, 5, 5/, 7, 81, 9, 9
8 47 161 4, 5, 5/ 7, 8/, 9, 9 ..... , .
9 48 22 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
9 48 161 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 0
9 51 22 4, 4, 5, 5/, 7, 8/, 9, 9
9 51 161 4, 4, 5, G, , 7, 8±, 9, 9
10.48 22 • , 7, 5, 4, 51, 7, 7, 7i, 8,
10 48 161, 3, 3, 4, 5}, 7, 7, 7.i�-, 8
10 51 161 3, 3, 3, ' 4, 51, 7, 8i, 9, 9,-
10 51 22 3, 3, 3, 4, 51, 7, 81, 9, 9.,
11 55 161 3, 3, 3f 3, 4, 5i, 7, 8i, 9, 9
SPECIAL POULTRY FENCING
No. 9 Top and I3ottom. Intermediates
No. 13. Uprights 8 inches apart.
18 48 8 Close bars
20 60 8 Close bars
PAGE "RAILROAD" GATES
a
u
1
4810 -ft. ap'ng
48 12 -ft. op'ng
48 13 -ft. op'ng
48 14 -ft, op'ng
WALK GATE, 48 in. high, 3; ft. opening,.
STAPLES, 25-1b. box,
BRACE WIRE, 25-1b. rolls,
STRETCHING TOOLS, Complete outfit...
.2'
•
.Ms 4J
.31
29
,31
.3 1
.33
.33
,31
.36
.47
3.80
4.00
4.25
4.50
2.35
.75
.70
8.00
Y, .AVG,
l0,I4
WELLINGTON MUTUAL
FIRE INS. CO,
10atabllobod 1$40.
Read Q1.ee GUELPH, ONT.
Rieke takers en ell classes of in'
curable property on the cash or pre
minim note system),
Ono. SLICE: AN, JOHN DAVIDSON
President, Secretary.
RITCHIE rk COSENS,
Agents, Wingham, Oat
DUDLEY IIOLiMES.
Barrister, Solicitor, etc,
Office: Meyer Block, Wingbaln.
M+til Your
Umar to Our
Barest
Brands
Page Wire Fence CoqLtd.
Montreal 1240 King St. West Walkerville
St. John TORONTO Winnipeg
Write For
104 -Paso
Free Catalog
•
"PAGE FENCES WARE BEST"
aTI
WaiiiMEIMENCIL
TEACHER WANTED
..
>tletdintg� second elaee certificate for
mence Sept. 1, A pl
5. S. No. gutted 9, Tarnbefry, duties to eom-
etati�bg ewe ry
r' - +stied to W. i . yVatu to'm'e, Sao.
Trews., B1ueval ,
11
BankIre
The
DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND
a�®4.v
a4Iji4
11
1'
R. VANSTONE
BARRISTER AND SOI,ICIToR
Money to loan at lowest rates.
WINQHAM, ,
ARTHUR J. IRWIN
D.D.S., L,D,B.-
Doctor of Dental Surgery of the Pen
nsyivania•College and Licent ate of
Dental Surgery of Ontario.
—office in Macdonald Block—
G. I3. ROSS, DRS., L,D.S
Honor Graduate oft Royal Collhg6
of Dental Surgeons of Ontario, Honor
Graduate of University of Toronto
Faculty of Dentistry.
OFFICE OVER II. E. ISAiD & CO's. STORE
DR. R. F. PARKER, D.' B. 0. A.
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
AND EYE SPECIALIST
SPECIALTY—Chronic and Nervous Diseases,
Eyes scientifically tented. Glasses fitted.
Office over Christie's store, Wingham.
Tuesdays -11.30 a.m. to 9 p, m, Consultation
free.
W. R. HAMBLY, B,Sc,, ED,, CJt,
Special attention paid to diseases
of Women and Ohildren, having
taken postgraduate work in Sur-
gery, Bacteriology and Soientifio
Medicine,
Moe in the Kerr residence, be-
tween the Queen's Hotel and the
Baptist Church. •
•
All business given careful attention.
Phone 54. P. O. Box 118
DR. H. J. ADAMS
Late member House Staff Tor-
onto General Hospital. Post grad-
uate London and Dublin.
Successor to Dr. Agnew
.OFFICE IN MCDONALD BLOCK
Iffice lVf,T? En.)
Physician and Surgeon.
(Dr. Chisholm's old stand)
is fully equipped todo
AliKinds of PRINTING
Sale Bills, Poster Work,
Letter and Note Heads, State-
ments, Bill Heads, Envelopes,
Catalogue Work, etc.
Anything from a Poster to
a Calling Card
We always keep on hand a fine
line of Wedding Stationery.
If. you want the BEST Results Bring
Your Work to The ADVANCE Office.
ADVANCE
E "��'
ADVERTI �l�l THE H
W. J-. MOON
VETERINARY SURGEON
OFFICE OF LATE DR. WILSON.
RESIDENCE—COR. PATRICE & FRANCIS
Office Phone 179. Residence Phone 182.
Ex Gov. Vet, Inspector.
G. N. GRIFFIN
GENERAL AGENT
Issuer of Marriage Licenses.
Fire, Life, Accident, Plate Glass
and Weather Insurance, coupled
with a Real Estate and Money
Loaning business.
WINO1 TANS
General Hospital.
(Under Government Inspection.)
Pleasantly situated. Beautifully furnished.
Opon to all regularly licensed physicians.
Rates foratients (which include board and
nursing) ---54 90 to 515.00 per week, according
to location of room. For further, informa-
tion—Address
MISS L. MATTHEWS
. Superintendent,
Box 223, Wingham, Ont.
Snowflake
Steam Laundry
Having bought out Gong Lee'e
Laundry I am prepared to do all
kinds of laundry work,
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
Laundry will be opened
Monday, June 15th
T will call on all my old customers
and also new ones Monday morning,
June 15th.
A TRIAL SOLICITED
0. V. Hayden, Mgr.
New Limited Tis; In . S 'vice
Between
Montreal, Toronto - Detroit Chicago via
Canadian Pacific and Michigan Central
Railroads
via Michigan Central Gigantic Steel Tuba
between Windsor and Detroit. Leaving
Montreal 8 45 a te ; Toronto 5.10 p.m., arriv-
ing Detroit 1245 a.m. and Chleaso 745 a.m.daily. Equally good service returning.
Through Elebtrio Lighted Equipment.
TORONTO - WINNIPEG - VANCOUVER
Toronto•Vaneout'er lilxpress No. 3leaves
Toront't 5.55 p.m. daily, Vancouver -Toron-
to Express No. 4 arrives "Toronto 11.15 a.m.
daily. Manitoba Express No. 7 leaVes To-
ronto dal y except Sunday 10.60 p in, arrty-
ink Winnipeg aeoond day. Ontario i xprose
No. 8 ieavee Winttipe 0.26 p.mand arrives
Toronto 6.16 p.m, ctaalr' eroept Tiesseey.
[AentghamI
•
of HHamilton,
Capital Authorized - $5,C00 000
Capital, Paid-up - - 3,000,000
Surplus - • . • • - 3,750,000
THE MEN BEHIND
A. Banking institution gets strength as much
from the men who direct its affairs as from
the actual capital invested.
Money deposited in the Flank of Itamilton is guarded
by mon well knownfor business integrity, and son -i
mon—men who value security more than high profits.
To this policy, is duo a supine which is one quarter
longer than its Capital --the result of over 40 yeere'I
conservative management.
C. P. SMITH
s
• '
,:L
j
i
i".
1"rr a
in
ADVANCE
E "��'
ADVERTI �l�l THE H
W. J-. MOON
VETERINARY SURGEON
OFFICE OF LATE DR. WILSON.
RESIDENCE—COR. PATRICE & FRANCIS
Office Phone 179. Residence Phone 182.
Ex Gov. Vet, Inspector.
G. N. GRIFFIN
GENERAL AGENT
Issuer of Marriage Licenses.
Fire, Life, Accident, Plate Glass
and Weather Insurance, coupled
with a Real Estate and Money
Loaning business.
WINO1 TANS
General Hospital.
(Under Government Inspection.)
Pleasantly situated. Beautifully furnished.
Opon to all regularly licensed physicians.
Rates foratients (which include board and
nursing) ---54 90 to 515.00 per week, according
to location of room. For further, informa-
tion—Address
MISS L. MATTHEWS
. Superintendent,
Box 223, Wingham, Ont.
Snowflake
Steam Laundry
Having bought out Gong Lee'e
Laundry I am prepared to do all
kinds of laundry work,
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
Laundry will be opened
Monday, June 15th
T will call on all my old customers
and also new ones Monday morning,
June 15th.
A TRIAL SOLICITED
0. V. Hayden, Mgr.
New Limited Tis; In . S 'vice
Between
Montreal, Toronto - Detroit Chicago via
Canadian Pacific and Michigan Central
Railroads
via Michigan Central Gigantic Steel Tuba
between Windsor and Detroit. Leaving
Montreal 8 45 a te ; Toronto 5.10 p.m., arriv-
ing Detroit 1245 a.m. and Chleaso 745 a.m.daily. Equally good service returning.
Through Elebtrio Lighted Equipment.
TORONTO - WINNIPEG - VANCOUVER
Toronto•Vaneout'er lilxpress No. 3leaves
Toront't 5.55 p.m. daily, Vancouver -Toron-
to Express No. 4 arrives "Toronto 11.15 a.m.
daily. Manitoba Express No. 7 leaVes To-
ronto dal y except Sunday 10.60 p in, arrty-
ink Winnipeg aeoond day. Ontario i xprose
No. 8 ieavee Winttipe 0.26 p.mand arrives
Toronto 6.16 p.m, ctaalr' eroept Tiesseey.