HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1910-08-25, Page 2VIE WING] 4#L %IMES, ,AuGIIST 26, ii+l•Q
4
in tea may mean
to you flavor or
strength or fragrant
richness. Rad Rase
Tea is blended with
such nicety that it is
the combination, of all
three points of xnerit.
Wilt you try a pacitage.
daetry not occupied by any ober o9bint,
et minister anywhere.
"Mr, Kim; ie the yonngeat minister in
t us eebtnee, next in eeatorite to M.
1 Hon Mr. Lamiettx, etirea'iy he hail
been extravagantly talked by some, of
Weaedeutadmirerses a possible, SUM
east:r to Sir Wilfrid LeUrter,"
Your Grocer Will
ecomme :d. It 81
TO ADVERTISERS
Notice of ohangee most be left es this
office not later than Saturday noon.
The Dopy for changes most be left
not later than Monday evening.
Oasnal advertisements accepted np
to noon Wednesday of eaoh week.
ESTABLISHED 1872
O,mmons would have cause fdr regret,
MURPHY THE VANDAL
Fret° the Calgary Herald.
Hoa Charles. Murphy, Secretary of
State, etrikes at the very root of repre.
eentetive iostitntioas whenhe threatens
to take away from. Senators and Mem-
bers of Parliament the boxes of free
statieaary supplies which have been
given them in the past. What is the
nye of being a member of Parliament it
one does not receive the usual trunkful
of free stationers ? Esoh season it
comes alone like an extra surprise from
Santa Claus and the curiosity as to its
oonteute and dtson88ione as to its merits
are more interesting to the members
than the solution of a naval bill oe the
adjustment of .a. tarriff, Even to the
press gallery is jay carried, for ite reoog
nixed menlbere also eaoh reoeive one of
the mysterious and delightful little
trnnklete with its packages of paper,
plain and crested, its leather portfolios
and parses, its pencils, pens, and pen•
knives, and its one extra valuable arti-
cle suitable as a gift to one's beat girl.
Mr. Murphy cannot realize what he
is doing. There is little enongb lndaoe-
mient already, goodness knows. for a
man to serve Ms country in the halls of
Parliament, and what there is would be
$most entirely removed if this cher-
ished privilege should be taken away.
And, by the bye, if members of the
THE WINfir ill TINES. what about the Senators, whose trunks
1� I1 of stationery compare in brilianoy and
E.B.ELLIOTT.pusiasuaa ANDPROPRIRTOn splendor with that of their humbler
brethern in the" -other house as an Al -
THURSDAY. AUGUST 25. 1910
Canada's Boy Minister.
Under the above heading the Cana.
digin. Conrier Lays:
"The boy minister has soared again.
Honorable Meogenzte King is entitled
to some credit for the settleniint of the
Grand Trunk Strike. He saw a gap
and he filled it; whin Ostawa was jest
about Olean out of cabinet ministers; the
Primier prairie -touring with Hon.
George Graham; Minister of the Inter-
ior up in the Yukon -beyond the reach
of railwaysor strikes; Hon. Messrs.
Alyeeworth and Sydney Fisher at the
Hagne;ileaving the minister of labor
quite the heavy end of the mediation;
though the public will never know what
lattergrams passed between his ofloe
and the prairie Pullman that nearly got
wreoked the other day.
"Oae way or another it's :needy all
over now; freight moving; some em-
ployees going back -but in some res-
pects doubtful yet who won the day ex-
cept that the Grand Trunk must begin
to standardize sooner than they intend-
ed, though to just suoh hands as they
see fit to reinstate at whatever time
snits best their convenience. General
I•however,fetortheresent satisfi-
public, p
ed; inolined eomewhst to beland Mac-
Kenzie King, whom Sir Wm. Mollook,
discovered about thirteen years ago.
"King has always bean a feather in
the Mellook Cap. When Sir William
became P. M. G. he discovered that
poet -office uniforms had been Tory- made
by sweatshop methods. He wanted a
man to investigate. King just out of
the University, had been doing a series
of sweatshop articles for the Toronto
Globe. He was a good Liberal -and a
investigator. Sir William sent him af-
ter the uniform people. He got enough
information to reconstruct that branch
of the service; result being the estableh-
meat of the Labor Gazette with King as
editor; Tater the department of Labor
with Mr. grog at deputy'; two years ago
the portfolio of Libor with William
Lyon MacKenzie King a minister; a
whole eeriest of interventiooe under the
Mu lock and the Lemieox acts; ( utwin
atiog in this settlement of 1910, all or
which gives the Canadian Labor Mini -
boo a standing bet weea ospits' and in-
berte ens with the pile and misty moon?
Should Mr. Murphy persist in his deter•
minatton we may expect rebellion, if
not riot, among our representatives at
Ottawa.
RICH RED BLOOD
International Newspaper
Bible Study Course..
Salient Points In the Lesson for Smudgy, Ans..
Given i;n, ft, Series of Qttestione by
Rev. Dr, Lin.tcott.
2$.
't Rsrietere.i is aoeerdssce with the Qopeeteht.aes,:
Jesus Entering 'Throttle in. Matt, xsl.;
1 17.
Golden Test -Hosanna to to son of
David; Blessed is he that oometh in the
name of the Lard. ; Hosannah in the
highest, Matt, xxi; 9.
You Will Never Have it as Long as
You Have Dyspepsia.
Jest as long at+ yon have dyspepsia
your food will not properly digest, and
the natritions elements in the food will
not be extracted or absorbed. and im-
poverished or watery blood will follow.
This condition may not be apparent
at first, but it will come just as sure as
the sun will rise again.
Any stomach ailment, inolading all
forms of indigestion, can be promptly
cured by using Mi.o•na tablets, a soien-
tifio treatment unsurpassed.
It stops fermentation, belching of gas
and taste of sour food almost at onoe.
The mightypower of Mi•o-na to in-
vigorate and restore the stomach to per-
fect condition is known everywhere.
¥i•o•na cures by building np-by
banishing the oanae. For thin people it
in a great flash bnilder;'beoause it muses
the stomach to give more ,and purer
nutrition to the blood. It cures sea and
oar sickness and vomiting of pregnanoy
almost immediately. Walton Math
-
bon sells Mt-o=na for 50 cents a large
box, and guarantees it to cure or money
bank.
NowCuredof
Rheumatism
Cost him $100.O0for medicines which
failed -Cured by DR. CHASE'S
KIDNEY -LIVER PILLS:
Mr. James CIark, Maidstone, Sask.,
writes: "I suffered .for four years with
rheumatism in my shoulders and Could
not lift lay arms above the head. T
tried nearly all the advertised reme-
dies but none of them gave me re.
lief. It Cost Me at least $100.00 for
nie(lieines before I used Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Nike -Liv ' I c
's
"With the use of this medicine, it
toot found relief. I followed up tide
treatment for six months, and was theta
quite free front rheumatism. Wile
tiling Dr: C'hute's Kidney -Liver Pills
I else wird Dr. Chase's Backaeke
Plaster when to stiff that I eonld
rearcely bend. They always found the
weak spot and gave relief *bile the
internal treatment was bringing about
* thorough cure."
The ]traces of Dr. Chaser" Kidney -
/Aver Pills has been llhenoitienel,
One pill a (lose, 25 Cents a box, at all
dealers or Ednlanson, iiatee & Co., Tor-
onto, 1)r. Cheer's Retinae will he sent
free on request,
EVIL OF PROORASTINATION.
Verses 1.2 -What did Jesn9 want of
this ass and her oolt?
How did Jesus know where these an -
mate where?
Was Jesus limited in his knowledge or
did he, when on earth, know all things
inoluding future events? (Sae Lake
2:42, Mark 1$:32,)
When God speaks to the soul now,
concerning the future, may we d spend
on that happening whioh we think he
has said t0 no?
Verse 3 -Did Deana have any right to
take these animals without the vermin -
ion of their owners?
Why has God a right to take anything
we have, with or, without asking, our
permission?
Why is there never any need to in-
dulge in regrets at what God takes from
ns?
Verses 4 5 -Did Jesus, plan these to
fit this propheoy, or did he sot without
thinking of it?
See Zee. 9:9, and say if you think the
writer had Jeans, and this event specifi-
cally, in mind, or did he write wiser
tben he knew?
Verses 6.7 -What reason is there to
believe that if we obey Gad, we shall al-
ways get what we go for?
IL Jesus had been rich, would he have
put on more style than riding upon a
lowly ass?
Is God pleased or displeased, when
Much of the unhappiness and improv-
idence in life is oansed by early habits
of procrastination, habits oontraoted un-
consciously, perhaps, when character is
in its formative stage, and at the very
tame when most attention should be
given to the untrained nature. It is so
easy to jog along unconcernedly, doing
the things that snit us beet and perhaps
which oonnt for the least, and leaving
undone all the sots, and unspoken all
the words, and unexpressed all the
thoughts, and unused all the advantages
whioh are really so essential to a better
nnderstandieg of ourselves and the won-
derful lite being lived about no.
Whet a bright world of promise fol
filled this would be if reeponsibility
could only be made half as attraotive as
some of the minor diversions which
seem- 'to fnrniah so ranch pleasure to
their partakers. It the hard planes
could be made soft, the rooky roads
smooth, and diffiinit underakings easy,
there would be small need of putting off
from day to day the fulfilling of any
task whatever�0 As it is, with the oer
tainty that happiness unalloyed is not
within thegrasp of man, and with the
knowledge that sorrow and trouble
must come at some time into eaoh of
oar lives, it seems strange that for all
weak Inman nature we cannot learn the
1 aeon that prooraetination teacher and
benefit thereby,--.. Oharleston News and
()butler.
TOWN DIRECTOR'.
8.0'T1bv UHpROLI-elabbath seryloes at
11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday Sohool at
9;30 p m. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W.
r. 2•',ievae, iiaator B. Y. 1?. U tiieete
Moudee ovapau,;a x p.m. W.D. Pria,tle,
S.S. Superintendent,
METHODIST Oletel en--Sabbarhetreuse"
At 11 a m and 7 p n1. Sunday School at
9;80 p m, Epworth League every Mons
day evening, General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W.
Christians put on style? L. Ratledee, O,D , pastor. F. Buohan.
Verse's 8.11 -Did this crowd an, S.B. Superintendent.
their own shout? PRESBYTERIAN OaUROi2--Sabbath vers
ha is the evidence whichproves vioed at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday
W t e School at 2:30 p m. General prayer
believe
th•tt the shoat of a crowd cannot ba de-
pen fed upon?
Why is it a thing bath natural and to
be euooaraged, to sing and demonstrate
when Jesus is triumphing?
Verses 12.13 --What right had Jesus
to tarn these people out of the temple?
Why did ahoy make no resistant*?
D,u Jeered curl oat mese trafftoarb in
an even and quite meaner, or did he
manifest anger?
What is the moral andtepiritnal differ.
enoe between a baa tar in a obnroh, or
anything else of a commercial, nature,
and these money changers and dove sel-
lers in the temple.
WHY CAN IT, OR NOT, BE WELL PLEAS-
ING TO GOD FOR OUR HOUSES OF PRAYER,
IN THESE DAYS, TO BE TURNED INTO
PLACES FOR SELLING CONCERTS, LECTUR-
ES, REFRESHMENTS, etc? (This question
must be answered in writing by mem•
bers of the olnb,)
What is the differenoe:between giving
to the Wealth, and buying something . in
the church to help support it?
Verse 14 --Should the charoh to -day
look atter the bodies as well as the souls
of the people? Why?
Verses 15 19 -Way ware the chief
priests so mnoh displeased at the wond-
erful work of Jesus?
Are children, and those ;with the child-
like spirit, better judges of spiritual tru.
th than the proud soholarly man?
Lesson for Sunday Sept. 4th, 1910.
Two Parables o1 Judgment. Mutt. xxi:
33 46.
being tilled and cropped a thousand
years before the ancestors of the owners
of those "worn-out" farms had ceased
going around in breech clothes, and
hunting and going to war with clubs.
It was tilled for several thousand years
before the descendants of those interest-
ing anoestors had discovered those now
"worn -oat" forme. During the breech
cloth and club period of the smart Wes-
terners, while present "worn -oat" farms
were lying fallow and gathering rioh-
nees, Japan kept right en cropping this
land (devoting herself to art and litera-
ture meanwhile) and she has kept it np
ever einem Today Japan has a popu-
lation of fitty.one and a hall million,
and this same land that she has tilled
and cropped so long, is supporting that
fifty-one and a half million, and her ex-
ports for the year 1909 of food, drink,
tobacco and silk -drawn from that soil
-exceeds her imports of those four items
by more than $12,700,000. The secret
of the oontinned fertility of Japan's
soils is dne to her system of fertilizing.
Makes Hair Grow.
moomagromaterwarg
Japan a
Maryel in Agricultural PrO
duction.
Japan is a marvel in agricultural pro.
daotion. Her total area is loss
by Stene•
thing over 20,000 :quare miles than the
area of Illinois, /owe, and Haines, and,
browning the Country le exceedingly
tnonntainons, the area of land that oan
be tilled does not exceed all of Iilinclt
A correspondent of au Amerioan jour,
hal. writing from Japan. say s he be,
Berea he has ridden pelt More alleged
"worn•Ont" faseii is the "United States
than would etivat the total tilliable land
In Japan. Thtii tame land .is Japan was
Mr. Hind has an invigorator that will
grow hair or money bank.
The time to take care of your hair is
when yon have hair to take care of.
If your hair is getting thin, gradually
falling out, it can't be long before the
spot appear!.
The greatest remedy to stop the hair
from falling is SALVIA, the Great
Amerioan Hair Grower, first discovered
in England. SALVIA furnishes nour-
ishment to the hair roots and mots so
quickly that people are amazed.
And remember, it destroys the Dan-
druff germ, the little pest that saps the
life that should go to the hair from the
roots.
SALVIA is sold by Mr. Hind under a
positive guarantee to pure Dandruff,
stop Falling Heir and Itolling Scalp in
ten days, or money back. A large bot-
tle posts 50 cents. The word . "SAL,
VIA" (Latin for sage) is on every
bottle.
Canadian Writers and Writers on
Canadian Subjects.
The announcement made recently by
TORONTO SATURDAY NIGHT that the
journal had arranged for the publication
of a series of artiolet by Dr. Stephen
Leacock, and Dr. Andrew McPhail,
once more serves to remind as that the
Canadian writers are now reoeiving de.
served recognition at home as Well al a•
btoad. Dr. MoPhail's published veinm-
es, eaoh as •'Essays in Fallacy," and
"Essays in Paritanism," to name only
two of the many, have now a circle Of
readers both in Canada and in England
which the most Optimiitio would hard-
ly havve'predtoled at the titne of pubtlee-
tion. The work of Dr. Leacock, who is
the anther of "Literary Wien," a vol.
nine whioh has set the world ewiling, is
of a lees serious character than that of.
Dr. MoE'bail. His optimtetio humor
sound. the note, rand the reader laughs
fa Spite of himself.
he article!, at arranged for by Ton.
ONTO 8a-tunnA9t NIGHT, are twelve in
number, and will alternate from Week
to Week. For installer, on Aug. 0th sp.
geared an article by Dr. MaoPhail, en
titled "Canada's Loyality," and on the
following week Dr-. Lea000k's first hum-
orous sketoh, "How to Slake a Million
Dollars," appeared. The third artiole
of the series, appearing the week of
August 20th, is by Dr. MacPhail, and is
entitled "Nation of the Empire." The
eeoond of Dr. Leacook's is entitled,
"Men Who Have Shaved Ale," and will
be printed in TORONTO SATURDAY NIGHT
on August 27th.
Through such journals las TORONTO
'SATURDAY NIGHT, 0anadiltin writers on
Canadian.snbjeots are finding a home
market for their work, and are no long-
er obliged from necessity to patronize
British and Amerioan Publishers.
meeting on Wedneeiay. evenings. Rev.
D. Perna, pastor Dr, J Lr e_in, S.S.
Superintendent.
ST. Pane's OHQROB, Emsameax.--Bab-
bath eervioes at 11 a rn and 7 p m.
Sunday Sohool et 2:30 p m, Rev. E .11
Ocoly, B. A., Rector ; 0. G. Ten -
Stowe S, 8 Superinte dent ; Thos. E.
Robinson, assistant Snerintendent,
Salve.rw n ,'.RMY-nervier at 7 and 11
a nt and 3 and 7 p m on Sunday, and
every evening during the week at 8
o'olook at the barracks.
POST OFFIQs-Ofi}.oe hoaxes, from 8a m
to 6:80 p m. Open Id box holders from
7 a m. to 9 p m. P. Fisher, postmaster.
PUBLio LIBRA :'Y -Library and free
reading room in the .'Town Hall, will
be open every afternoon from 2 to
5:80 o'lock, and every evening from 7
to 9:30 o'olook. Mise Lizzie Attridge
librarian.
Tower OoUNOIL-William Holmes,
Mayor; Dr. A. J. Irwin, Reeve ;
J. W. Magieeea, H. B.Etliott. William
Blue, Dc. Rabat 0. Redmond,
Thomas Gregory and D. E. McDonald.
Coanoillora; John F' Groves, Olerk and
Treasurer. Board meets first Monday
evening in eaoh month at 8 o'olook.
Hum SoHooLBod.ar,- W. F. Van-
Stoue (chairman), Win. Nicholson, John
Wilson. 0. P..Smithi W. J. Howson,
John A. MoLean, Frank Bnohanan,
Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Omens,
treasurer. Board meets second'Mondey
evening in each month.
PUBLIC SoHooL' Bo.Rn.-H. E. Ieard
(chairman); G. 0. Mianuers, Alex, Rose,
Jno.G-'lbraith, W D.Pringle, Wm,Moore,
0
G V.saStune. P. Campbell; Seoretary,
Treasurer, John F. Groves; Meet-
ings second Tuesday eveningin each
month,
HIGH SunooL TEACHERS-J.G. Work-
man, B.A., principal; J. 0 Smith, B.A.,
classical master; Mr. Forbes, B. A.,
mathematical master ; Miss M. J.
Baird, B. A., teaoher of English and
Moderns; Miss Anderson, fifth teacher
PUBLIo SCHOOL TnaoHEDe.-Joseph
Stalker, Principal. Miss Brook,
Miss Reynolds, Mise Farquharson, Miss
Wilson, Mies Cummings, and Mise
Hawkins.
BOARD OF HEALTH -- Wm. H0l121e9
(chairman), Samuel Bennett, Wm.
Feseant, Alex, Porter, John. F.
Groves, Secretary; Dr, J. P. Kennedy,
Medical Health Officer.
March ing Strengthens*The Heart.
Those of us engaged in the work of
oorreoting deficient hearts and lungs
will tell you that in building np these
most important organs, we spend little
time with the exeroisea: involving the
arms. In the arms we:have a fairly
large .balk of mnsole, but it cannot be
�
compared with the hngh balk of the
lege- Therefore, when we ase the lege,
with the large number of heavy muscles
involved, we call on the heart to send
an increased amount of blood to. the legs.
In marching, therefore, the blood is not
only called for in increased quantities,
but in a most regular rhythmical man-
ner -the most efficient means of
strengthening the heart. Similarly,
when we ask the lege to work, we must
send more oxygen down to the muscles
of the legs, and take away from them
the waste matter manufactured, that is
the oarbon dioxide. This can only be
aocompliehed by the lenge whioh are
the medium for exohange .with the at-
mosphere. Therefore inoreesed amounts
of oxygen sent down and inoreaeed
amounts of carbon dioxide thrown off
from the system, mean increased efforts
on the part of the mechanism perform
ing these functions, that. is the loons,
Hence the position of the body in march-
ing not only gives the lunge and heart
tree play, bat the marching itself is one
of the best means of developing these
organs,. -Busy Mans Magazine,
RAD TRIED MANY REMEDIES FOR
CONSTIPATION
FOUND NONE TO EQUAL
Milburn's Lam -Liver Pills
Constipation is one of the most
prevalent troubles the human race is
subject to, and is the greatest cause of
many of our ailments. Keep the Bowels
open and you will very seldom be sick.
Mrs, M. tell, 467 Harris
St.,V
an
-
couverB C.' writes: -"I had tried many
remedies for
Constipation and never found
any so satisfactory as your 1Miilburn's
Laxa-Liver Pills.
We always keep them in the house a'•
would not be without them,
"1 recommended them to a neighbor
and she is highly enthusiastic about them,
as her'b is a very difficult case, and she
expected no geed results from them.
You may imagine her surprise and
gratification when she found that they
completely cured her."
llfitburn'e Laxa-Liver Pills25
are c per.
vial, or li vials for SIM, et. alt dealers, or
'4ritt be emailed direct on receipt of price by
The T. Milburn Co. Limited Tomato,
.
Ont. '
STEADY
EMPLOYMENT
for a reliable Local Salesman , repre-
senting
54
Canada's Oldest and Greatest
Nurseries"
E5TABLIIlii11D 1,872
THE WOO TRIES,
113 PUBLISHES)
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
-AT-
The Times Wiles, Beaver Block
WING B 5 M, ONTARIO.
•TaKs or SnssonIPTI 4x -I1.00 per annum la
advance $1,601! not ao paid, No paPer disoon'
tinned t10 all arrears ars paid, xcupt at t0Q
option of the publisher.
,ADvsITiBINO RATLB, -• Legal bad Other
oaenaladpertisements 100 per Nionpsriel line ter
first insertion, 00 per Una for each subsequent
thou
in local columns ars charged
IQ cte. per line for first insertion, and 6 oents
per line for each subsequent insertion, -
Advertisements of Strayed, Panne for Bale
or to Dent, and similar, $1.00 for first three
weeks, and 25 Dents for each subsequent in,.
sertion.
CONTnaoT RATTe•-The following table shows
our rates for the insertion of advertisements
for specified periods:
SP4os. 1 Ya. 8 xo. . $1 811. One0olmm�.., -....570,03 $49,00 1282°.o50 53.00
Half Column ..,...40.00 25,00 16.00 0,00
QuarterQolumn,_..,. 20.00 12.50 7.60 8.00
One Inch 5.00 3.00 2.00 1.25.
Advertisements without specific directions
will be inserted till forbid and charged accord.
Only. Transient advertisements must be paid
f or in advance.
TSE Jos DEPARTAMNT is stocked with an
extensive assortment of all requisites for print•
ing, affording facilities not equalled in the
county for turning out first class work. Large
type and appropriate onto for all style° of Post -
ere, Hand Sills, eto., and the latest styles of
choice fano,' type for the finer olaases of print
ing,
in Wingham and adjoining country.
You will find there is a good demand
Lor nursery Stook on account of the
high prices that growers have realized
on their fruit this season.
Oar salesman are turning in big busi-
ness to ns this year. Be one of them
and earn good wages through the winter
months.
Territory reserved. Pay weekly.
Free sample outfit, etc.
Write for particulars. •
t3TONE 41t WELLINGTON
Foothill Nareeries
(850).
TORONTO, CANADA..
FARMERS
and anyone having live stook or other
articles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale in the Tines. Our large
circulation tells and it will be strange indeed if
you do not get a customer. We can't guarantee
thatyou will sell because you may ask more
for thartiole or stook than it is worth. Send
your advertisement to the Tams and try this
plan of disposing of your stook and other
arttolea
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
H. P. BLLIOTT,
Proprietor and Publisher
T P Zm1NHi Y, M. D., M.O.P. 13. 0.
• Member of the British Medical Associa-
tion. Gold Medalltet to Medicine. Bpeolal
attention paid to diseases of Women and Child
ren. Office hours -I to 4 p. m.: 7 to 9 p. m,
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
such as teachers wanted, business chances,
mechanics wanted, articles for sale, or in fact
any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or
other pity papers, may be left at the TIMES
offioe. This work will receive prompt attention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates will be quoted on application. Leave
or sendyour next work of this kind to the
TINIER OFFICE. Whitehare
t30 YEARS. •
EXPEIRIENCE
EST
�►T
?mot MARKS
DESIGNS.
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone bending a sketch and description tnav
gntckt7 ascertain one opinion free wether. an
Inventenlaprobabl7r patentable. �mmnnloa.
tlonaetnotlyconSdenttaL` RANDI OOK on Patents
sent free. °Iciest agency for_eecuringonts.
PatentS taken through manna GO. receive
pietas notice, S without oarge, is the
tientiC ,
if lerkra»
Ahati6bofa A•eI5itI1 wesrna• Largest eta-
Eliatria. of nay aria lf0 jOnrne�. Terale roc
tall o *� 75 a 7ear.poat.se taeP4 sold ir;r
ilii!
c
flfosd4rsy
b awY
M tk
ilii 1� SL, w Il,
aahrn,t
oe. �
DR, MACDONALD,
Centre Stra•t
Wingham,
Ontario.
DR. AGNEW,
Physician, Surgeon, oto.
e80itaaOver datthoDrg8orNghcisnswereateffice.
DR. ROBT. C. REDMONb, M. R.C.S. (Eng)
L. R. 0. P. London.
PHYSIOLaN and SURGEON.
Office, with Dr. Chisholm.
DR. MARGARET C. CALDER
Honor Graduate of Toronto University
Licentiate of Ontario College of Physicians
and. Surgeons,
Devotes special attention to diseases of Eye,
Bar, Nose and Throat. Eyes thoroughly tested.
Glasse, pro erly fitted.
OFFICE -With Dr. Kennedy.
'Mice Hours -8 to 5, 7 to 8 p.m.
I VANSTONB,
•
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, BTO
Private and Company fonds to loan alowest
rate of interest. Mortgages, town and farm
property bought and sold
Moe, Beaver Block, Wingham
rA. MORTON,
• BASBISTEB,
? PIngham, Ont.
•
E. L. DIOBnasolf DUDLEY Honuxs
DICKINSON & HOMES
BARRISTERS, SOLICIT,)RS, Eto.
MOMIY TO LOAN.
terms: Meyer Block, 'Wingham,
PHYSICAL. EXERCISE.
Po You Take jr-msoU7 to Kest? Your
Arteries In, Condition?
Dt, Woods Hutchinson, 111 criticising.
the different fads, of exorcls° in Ont•
fug, says;
"The worst el'rer of exercise, the
tnost dangerous fad of physical cul -
Duro, Is not to take enough of it and'
to sneer at every form of it that does
not Dear the dollar mark, By one of
those cynical peetic justices of nature
the very men who denounce all phyla•
teal culture and recreation as fads are
those who pay the heaviest personal
penalty for this delusion, They use tho
vigor they have gained in early youth
in nature's open all school to chain
themselves to the desk, to bury them-
selves in dungeon -like offices or airless
workrooms twelve or fourteen hours a
day. They 'feel fine' and are sure they
are going to live to be a hundred, but
one day, to their astonishment, a little
artery whose coat has been hardened
for twenty years unnoticed becomes
so brittle that it snaps suddenly, and:
down they go with a stroke of paraly-
sis, like a winged duck. 1t is never
safe to jeer at the gods, whether the
imaginary ones. of Olympus or the real
ones of modern science.
"The men who jeer loudest at phys-
ical culture and who sarcastically ad-
vise college and high school students,,
ambitious for gymnasia or athletic
fields, to 'go and git a bucksaw and a
cord of wood' or a hoe and a potato
patch and develop their muscles 'like I
did, when I was a boy' are the very
ones who die suddenly when they,'
should be in their prime for lack of
exercise and open air recreation. It is
really an astonishing thing how many
giants of industry and transportation.
particularly executive railroad men,
die or suddenly go to pieces between
fifty and sixty years of age. It is a
common saying in railroad circles that
n big general superintendent or de-
partment chief will seldom live beyond
forty-eight to fifty-five years of age.
Many break down before that."
ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D.D. 8.. L. D. S.
Dootor of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania
Dental College and Licentiate of the Royal
College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Office
in' Macdonald Block. Winsham
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oct. 1st.
'exy J. PRIOE, B. S. A., L. D. S., D. D. S.
Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental
Surgeons of Ontario, and Graduate of Uni-
versity of Toronto.
Office ; Beaver Block.
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oat 1st.
Wingham General Hospital
(Under Government inapeotion)
Pleasantly situated. 'Beautifully fur-
nished. Open to all regularly licensed
physicians. RATES FOE PATIENTS--
(which
ATIENTS-(which include board and nursing), $3.50
to $15.00 per week according to location
of room. For further information,
address
Miss L. MATTHEWS,
Superintendent,
Boa 323, Wingham Ont.
RAILWAY TINE TABLES.
GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM.
vett TRAINS MUM foe
London 0.85 a.m,-- 8.80p,m.
Toronto &East11.03a.m 8.45 a.m- - 2.40p.m,
Kincardine -11.57 a.m... 2.08 p.m_- 9.15p.m.
ARRIva !mos
Kincardine .. 8.40 a.m11.00 a.m - - 2.40 p.m.
London.. .......-11.54 a.m- 7.85 p.m.
Palmerston.- - 10.80 a.m.
Toronto & East.......... 2:08 p.m.... 9.15 p.m.
W.IEv1W, Agent, Wingham.
CANADIA 1 PACIPIO RAILWAY.
TRAINS LEAVE Ton
Toronto and East. .. 6.82 a.m.. 8.18 p.m,
TeeewaterABW .. 1.10 p.m -:10.17 p.m. RIVI 015011
818 p.m.
Toronto d Engip m'H. BEMBR. Atten Wihan.
IT PA.S
TO 4.VER
TISK,
IN. T}lF
- :rl
TIMES
JAPANESE STREETS.
They Swarm With Sideshows and
Playing. Children.
A Japanese street is a delightful
place to play in, for grownup people
in Japan do not seem to mind if the
tail of a kite daps right into their
smiling faces • and only laugh when
they are turned out of their way by
some huge pegtop which hums like
an angry bee around their feet.
Wee, dark eyed maidens in butterfly
kimonos of brilliant coloring turn their
skipping ropes gayly, the tiny blade
heads of the babies they carry strap-
ped o their backs bobbing up and downs
like small round balls. Their brothers
plays at "flags," which is a favorite
game of theirs. They divide them-
selves into two parties, one carrying]
white flags and the other red ones. At
a given signal the "reds" attack the.
"whites," striving to wrest away their
flags, and the side which carries off
most of these is proclaimed victor.
Wonderful conjurers are to be fount]`
at the street corners. They make
swarms of birds fly from crystal bowls
and flowers spring as if by magic front
slender stems of bamboo.
Others show marvelous beetles har-
nessed with wax to paper carts or
command the snakes that accompany'
them everywhere to perform extraore
dinary tricks.
A little farther on you will find an
old woman who is making a curious'
sweetmeat of beans, called "toren,"
over an oval brazier, and you can 1357,
a big slab of this wrapped up in s,
cool leaf for a very small sum or, if
you prefer it, a piping hot griddlecake
costing no more. Acrobats, too. are
as common as conjurers, and surely
in no other land than this quaint little
Japan do they twist themselves into
such strange shapes. -Home Chat. -
Chamois Tobogganer'.
"Chamois toboggan down the steep
white sides of the Alps with the skill
of Norwegian skeers," said a million-
acre. "I know," he went on. "for t
have seen them do it. 1 spent a win-
ter at St. Moritz, and on many a skee-
tng trip I saw a chamois lie on his
back and go skimming like the wind
down a white precipice pretty sight.
The creature's paws would be folded
on bis breast. His head, uplifted and
frowning, woWd keep watch. Thus
he'd skim dawn a half mile slope,
growing smaller and smaller and final-
ly disappearing in a whirl of snow."--
Philadelphia
now."-Philadelphia Bulletin.
A Real Disappointment.
"Yes, sir," Uncle Eben said to his
nephew, "there are all kinds Of disape
pointments in this world, Charley. and
some of 'em are worse'n others. But
they're all jest ways of feelin' bad for
a minute, I guess. 'Bout the disap-
pointingist disappointment I ever have
is when I feel and feel like sneezia' 1
and it won't *sneeze! That kinder gives
you a notion of how all diaappolnt-
merits feel till you get over them!"--
Youth's Companion..
At It Again.
.OroweUs-This meat is scorched:
again.. Itsap1
pity cantgeta,
meal
without burning sonlethingi Mrs.
Growells-Itis a pity you can't sit
down to the table without roasting
aoniebodyi-Chicago News.
What Benham HIm.
"There's two things about thin -blame
00 grapefruit that I can't muleretand"
said tjneie Jerry Peebles. "One is -that
ifee called 'grape fruit and the. Other
is that it's ealled grape ',#reit;' n,;,C,
cago'Tribune, ,
Manners were defined b'y SOW)
smith ea the shadows of virtue:,