HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-02-02, Page 22
rile 77 1.91041.A11, TIMES, FEBRTJARY 2, 1911,
•
you have pro-
bably been in,
tending to try Red
Rose Tea for some time
but from "force of habit"
have just kept on using
another tea.
Break the Habit
and buy Red Rose
lleXt tirne.
NEVER SOLD IN :SULK
Your Grocer Will
Recommend It 83
I TO ADVERTISERS
Notioe of changes must be left at this
office not later than Saturday noon.
The oopy for °henget, must be lett
not later than Monday evening.
Casual advertisements accepted up
to noon Wednesday of each week.
. i
THE WINGLIAN TIMES.
ESTABLISHED 1875
U -R I 1.10ST. PUBLISHER ANDPROPRIETO
- • —
TEIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1911
EDITORIAL NOTES.
That Farmers Bank affair is the worst
finanotel mess that has been discovered
Ifor some time and the more it is stirred
np the more melodorone it grows. The
L!utterly cold blooded way In whioh oar.
inin persons set Omit skinning the sub-
scribers eo the stook by evasion of the
clearest provisions of the bank not is
simply abmirable if execrable. Surely
such an amendment of the law should
now be made as will render this the last
bank soandal of this nature. The emash
has marred at an opportune seeing that
the measure is before the the house.
Now is the time to close this gap. -Wind.
'Nor Reoord.
The dleolosures already made of the
looting of the Farmers' Bank will prob.
'ably lead Parliament to weigh carefully
the provisions of the new Bank Act. It
is apparent that Government inspeotion
cannot be any longer withheld, greet as
may be the difficulties of am& inspec.
'don under a branch bank system. The
Farmers', the Ontario, the Sovereign,
and the Central Banks all failed for
'causes which Government inspection
'would in an reasonable probability' have
iprevented. A manager would repro"
a speculative or criminal imputes if he
knew that discovery was inevitable
within a few days or a week. -Farmers'
San.
During theelirst nine months of the
preseht flaws' year Canada's total trade
tamounted to $577,999,628, an increase
,of $65,511,950 88 compared with the nine
months from April to December 1909.
The increase was entirely imports owing
to the rapid developement of the want-
iry and the growing demands of the home
market. Imports for the nine months
:totalled $221,764,869, a comparative in.
crease over het a million dollars. Exports
of foreign products fell off by about two
minim"' Exports of manufacturee total.
led *26,067,506, as compared with $23e
911,314. Exports of agrioultare totalled
$63,121,036, a smell decrease. For the
first time in the year end halt a meinth.
ly testament showe failing off in total
'redo The Daoetuber totalled only $65,-
541,816 as compared with $72,527,465 for
Deoenebtr, 19J9 Imports for the toonth
Itidney
Sufferin
Reattaches and tired feelings tell ef
weak kidney action -Prompt re-
lief by uelno DR.A.W.CHASE'S
KIDNEY AND LIVER PILLS
There is no treatment for kidney
divease whieh wilt afford you relief so
(prickly as Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney
seta Liver PIN, and none which will so
eertaitily cure the most coniplieated
forms of this disease.
There is a reason for this. Dr. A.
W. Chase's Kidney and Liver Pills
Awaken the action of the liver and
bowels as well as the kidneys and there-
by effect a thorough cleansing end
regulatingof the exeretory system.
Me. S. J, Argee, Kars, Ortrieton,
Oat, writes: -''I have suffered a great
deal wth kidney troubles and pains in
the small of the back and have tried
a good many remedies without obtain.
ing very mueh benefit. I wish to bey,
however. that I can heartily riteornmend
Dr. Chase '5 Kidney -Liver Pine as a
splendid medieine vie they have proven
ef very great vane to inc."
Dr. Chase 's Kidney and Liver Pills,
tine pill a dose, 25 cents s box, at all
dealers, or nItlinstelett, Pates is Co,
Toronto. Refuse tub/aft:Hoe
inortmeed bo few milltone, bat exports.
fell off by pearly ten millione.
Since Otnifederatiou, shareholders in
(Uneaten banks have loot forty jnllflqa
dollen hi beak feitureil. Jittery failure
has been due to. gime:mining In the
need 0110e et the bank, In needy every
me, an independent inspection or audit
iespeotion araudit by an outsider -
would have Stopped the trouble in time.
An ipspeotor or other °Metal subject to
the general manager of a bank is nee -
lent Be e watolidog as regards the brink
head offiee. He sees there only what
general malingers are willing to let him.
He knows that if he is impertinent
enough to attempt to see more -and
there may be nothing to see -he is goiug
to lose his job, Four fifths of the °Mi.
'zed world reoogniza this in their bank
legisistion,and provide for either Gov-
ernmental inspection of Minks or Indo
pendent audit. Canada belotees to the
one fifth class and antlers for it. The
wretohed story of the Farmers' Bank
failure and its innocent victims should
cap a climax in Canada to the ending of
a violous lack in our bank law, Let's
get in out of the rain.-Ottevva- journal,
•
Goodbye to Beauty
It Is goodbye to beauty when ktdney
derangements set in. The akin became
hard and dry and the form becomes
- wasted. One cannot be too watchful and
the safest way is to keep the kidneys as
wallas the liver and bowels healthy and
motive by the use of Dr Ohase's Kidney
andLiver Pills. This ensures pure blood
and a healthy digestive system.
INTENSIVE FARMING.
Intensive farming would remove or
help to remove isolation, whioh Dr.
Oreelman says is the curse of rural life,
At the Dairymen's Convention he made
a reference to its profit, too, stating that
there were men in the diotriot between
Hamilton and Niagara Falls making as
mnoh off 4 five sore fruit farm as some
farmers were making off e hundred
acres. Meer an convinoing proof of
what intensive farming oan do is given
in a table oomparing the yield per sore
On the Macdonald agrioultural farm
with the average yield in Canada, in
Quebec and Ontario, recently published
in the Montreal Star. Some of these
results are thus presented editorially in
the Stan. -
Take hay, for example, the staple
product in this province; the average
yield in Qtiebeo and Oatario is one ton
per sore. At the Agricultural College,
the average is four tons. Olds in Qae.
ben average 29 bushels to the sore; in
Ontario, 39; at the College, 56. Roots
- in Cambric run about 324 bushels; at Ste.
Anne they average 1,000 bashele. And
other field crops are in proportion. The
real sigoifioanoe of these figure., how-
ever, becomes apparent when they are
translated into dollars and centre Take
our own provinoe and we find that for
last year's crop of hay and olover we
would have received C27,785,000 instead
of $51,114,000 if the Same methode
which are in vogue at the College had
keen applied by individual farmers
The $21,626 000 which we received for
oats would have grown to $41,185,000;
tor roots, instead of $1,763,000 the farm -
ere would have been the richer by $3,.
518,000
One more citation must be made.
According to the census bulletin, the
farmers of all Canada received for their
hay, oat, barley, roots and corn last
year, 5 total of $818,880,800. If the
yield bad been equal to that at the Mao-
donald College, the amount reoaived
would have been $689,890,000. An in.
vention which made it possible for a
manufacturer to double his output would
be snapped tip at any price in reason;
methods which will bring about exactly
the same result in farming are at the
free disposition of anyone who mires to
apply them. Once again the farmer
seems to have the better of is.
A pleoo of flannel dampened with
Chamberlain's Liniment and bound on
to the affeoted parts is superior to atiy
plaster. When troubled with lame back,
or pains in the aide or °best give it a trial
and you are oertain to be more than
pleased with the prompt relief whioh it
afforde. Sold by all dealers.
A HOT ROAST FOR WHITNEY,
The Toronto Telegram Rites the fol-
lowing reesons why ()Marie Minnie
nettle:Um Sir Janie. Whitney as the
head Of it government that a great pro.
vine can be justly proud ef:
1 -The Provincial Tredieryship that
certified to the seitindilese of the Parm.
ere think 'by depositing 440,000 of Oa-
mieney therein, the deposit being
Reedeilly reduced to $25,000,
2 -ha AttOrney.Gentitaiship that
fiddled arritand the edges of a great
crane against the toil tend thrift of rnral
Ontario teem Dee. 0181, the date upon
-Which Traria* was arrested, until an,
14ththe date tipeil whioh i*Wane
WW1 lisaed for the *trait Of Dr, 'Seattle
Nesbitt,
8 -The itatestrianship that manned
the Railway and Board with
jurists who tie a Weld Mffidelfftiiii
halide while an iniolent and tytinnioat
I ertrpetiatitill slept that intinoltialitee
' We.
The Whitney Government is hardly
1101 enough Wits Job.
1
international Newspaper
Bible StudyCourse„
Sitlierrit Prrintrl in tire Loseon for SloldaYr
OtY0a in a Series of ttaestlanie by
Rev, Dr, Linseott.
( 021starea In a000rdanoo with the Oopyrightl eb.ot.1
RIO tit the Prophet Appears in Israel?
I King*. 17
Golden Text -They that aeek the
Lord Oen not want any good thing.
P.'171v:reIQ
(1.)e I-14 the spirit of proph.
eoy a thing of t tie past? Give your
reason.
(2) Hew did Elijah know of the
o intim of famine?
(3 ) Why did God send tins famine?
(4 ) Dose God in these days aver send
famine, or other oalemity, to punish the
people tor their stile?
(5) v ,rt -.e 2 4 - Wast reason ie there
to be 1, ve tbat God's word to Elijah, to
go to the broae Cherith. was any differ.
ant to direotions true Ohriettans receive
tredey to move from one place to an-
other?
(6) What, if any, difference is there
bet "men God's method of telling a man
that Ms sins are forgiven, or telling him
to nrive to another twee?
(7 ) When Gati answers our prayers
for guidenoe, dose he use any different
voi tnan the one with whioh he epake
to Rajah?
(8) Verse 5 -is there any dang ir of
a true man mistaking the voice of G
or is tt always safe to follow without
dente?
(9.) Verse 6 -Wnat reason is there
to believe that literal ravens fed E ij tb?
(10) DA the ravens bring the food
direct to him, or did they deposit it
where he could pinata it, and all un
corm:ions that they were feedtngElijib?
(11.) What rearm is there to believe
that food, raiment, and home, are guar.
anteed to the Christise ?
(12 ) Are daily needs ever miraelons
ly provided for us in these dap'? Give
some reasone.
(13 ) Verse 7 -When our supplies
fail, from one source, what does God
4
Mahogany or any cello mitered wood
may be darkened by polishing with oold
drewn linseed oil.
A BAD COLD
Developed Into
BRONCHITIS.
Neglected Bronchitis is very often the
direct cause of Consumption, and on the
first symptom appearing Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup should be used and
the Bronchitis cured. ,
The symptoms are, tightness across
the chest, sharp pains and a difficulty in
breathing, a secretion of thick phlegm,
at first white, and later of a greenish or
yellowish color, coming from the bron-
chial tubes when coughing, especially ths
first thing in the morning.
Mrs. Dan. T. McCormack, Cleveland;
N.S., writes: "My little boy two years
old caught a bad cold which developed
into Bronchitis. Ile was so choked up ho
could hardly breathe. Reading about
your wonderful medicine, Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, I decided to try a
bottle and with such good result I got
another which completely cured him;
without having a doctor. I cannot say
too much in its praise; I would not be
without it in the house as I consider it a
sure cure for Colds and Bronchitis."
The price of "Dr. Wood's" Norway
Pine Syrup is 25c. It is put up in a
yellow wrapper. Three pine trees is the
trade mark. Be sure and accept no
substitute for Dr. Wood'.
Manufactured only by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited Toronto, Ont.
rob.
71+
TOWN DIRECTORY,
BAPTIST Oetraoli,-Sabbath eerVieee et
11 m and 7 p m, Sunday EiobooIat
2;802. m. uenerel pryer meeting
on W01348447 0Yenheile, Rev, G.
Viotor Oins,paetor. D. Y. P. 13, meets
Monday nTeelinge 8, p,m. W.D Ffingle,
5, S,8. Superintendent,
say to tie through that foot?
(14.) Is God'a guidanoe of ne through
cironmetanoes, as real and as profitable,
as it He were to speak from the cloud"
With an audible velem? Give your
reasons.
(15,) Verses 8.9 -Whet reason is
there to believe that when all the 11204136
we know fail that we oan rest with 00T.
tainty that God knows a way, and will
in due time reveal it unto ns?
(16) "Our extremities are always
God's opportunities," but does help
generally come to us from the emcee
whioh we would naturally expeot or
from unlikely sources? Give your rea-
sons,
(7) In extending HUI kingdom on
the earth, whioh means does .G3r1 most
frequently nee, the weak or the mighty?
Give examples.
(18) In what sense oan God cont.
mend us to do a thing without our being
conscious of 11?
(19.) Verses 10.16 -How did Elijah
recognize this woman when he met hor?
(20.) How would it affeoS the spirit-
ual value of this story it it should prove
that God had ffireoted Elijah to this
widow by wholly natural mem" Elijah
having known hor in advanoe?
(21.) What induced this widow to
divide np her twenty supply of food and
water with Elijah?
(22) Is there any way to explain
this story except by God's mirtioalons
increase of the food?
(28) What is the practical import of
this story to us?
(24 ). Verses 17 -24 -WHAT is THE
PROOF THAT EVERY TROUBLE TO A CHRIS-
TIAN IS A BLESSING IN DISGUISE? (This
question must be answered in writing
by members of the (nub.)
Leeson for Sunday, Fab. 12th, 1911.
Elijah's Victory Over the Prophets of
Baal. I Kings xviii:1.3, 17.40.
Failures in 1910.
Both in Canada and the United Satter]
there were fewer failures but greater
liabilities in 1910 than in 1909. In Can-
ada (Newfoundland also being inoluded)
there were 1,468 failures, oompared with
1,588 in 1909 and 1,715 in 1908. The
nobilities were $l5,3,135,539 to .010, ells •
811,184 in 1909, and $17,582,304 in 1908.
The assets were $7,029,858 in 1910, *6.-,
195,615 in 1909, and $7,770,207 in 1908.
In the United States the failures in 1910
numbered 11,583, compared with 11,845
in 1909. and 140441n 1908. The liabili-
tea were $188,399,702 in 1910, own psred
with $140 687 84 in 1909 and $295,901,-
640 in 1908. The assets were $94.718,-
389 in 1910, $69 362 373 in 1909, and
C68,433,290 in 1938, Bradstreet'a notes
that owing to the larger number of those
in busineee and the lessened number of
failures the oommeroial death rate was
lower 1910 than in all but two of the
past twenty•nine years. Taken alto•
aelherthe figures are not discouraging.
MitritomeT Chtufetne-Sabbath sertiooe
at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday Sohool at
2:80 p m, Epworth League every Mon-
day evening. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev, W.
L. Rutledge, D.D., pastor. F. Baohan.
an, S.S. Superintendent.
PRESBYTERIAN 011uitim-Sabbath ser -
vim; at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sunday
Sohool at 2:30 p m. General , prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev.
D. Perm, pastor. Dr. A. J. Irwin, S.S.
Superintendent.
BT. PAUL'S OTIUROIT, Eeniceonsa-Sab.
bath services at 11 a in and 7 p m.
Sunday Sohool at 2:80p m. Rev. E. .1:I
Oroly, B. A., Reotor ,• O. G. Van -
Stone, S. S. Superintendent ; Thee, E.
Robinson, assistant Superintendent,
SALVATION Arasy-Servioe nt 7 and 11
73). and 8 and 8 p m on Sunday, and
every evening during the week at 8
o'clock at the barracks.
POST Orrion-Office hours from 8a m
to 6:80 p m. Open to box holders from
7 a na, to 9 p m. P. Fisher, postanaster.
Fume° Irraitenx-Library end free
reading room in the Town Hall, will
be open every afternoon from 2 to
5:80 o'olook, and every evening from /
to 9:30 o'olook. Miss Mande Plenty
librarian. 4
Toww Ootavoir, Gorge Spotted,
Mayor; D. E. MoD3nald, Reeve ;
D. Bill, William Bone, H. B. Elliott,
'rhea. Hall, G30. McKenzie, and Simon
&Inchon, Ooanoillors; John F. Groves,
Clerk and Treasurer. Board meete first
Monday evening in eaoh month at 8
ongook,
HIGH SOHOOL BOARD.- W. F. Van -
Stone (chairman), Wm. Nicholson, John
Wilson, 0. P. Smith, W. J. Howson,
John .A.. MoLean, Frank Buchanan,
Dudley Holmes, sooretary. A. Omens,
treasurer. Board meets seoond Monday
evening in eaoh month.
PUBLIO SCHOOL BOARD. -0. G. Van -
Stone, (chairman), Alex. Rose, John
Gslbrititli, Wm.Moore, P. Oatupbell,
E bard, Maley Holmes, A. Tipling,
Searetary-Treasarer, John 8'. Groves;
Meetings seoone Tuesday evening in
eaoh month.
HIGH SCHOOL TEACHEES-J, 0. Smith,
B. A.. Prinotpal and Olassioal Master;
H. A. Paroy, Setenoe Master; Bliss Rice,
Teacher of Mathematios; Miss M J.
Baird, B. A., teaoher of English and
Moderns; Mies Anderson, fifth teaoher.
Puma(' SOHOOL TEAOHERS.-Joseph
Stalker, Principal Miss Brook,
IllissReynolde, Mise Farqu.hation, Mae
Wilson, Mies Cummings, , and Miss
Taylor,
BOARD op HEALTH - Gao. Spotton,
(ohairman), Richard Anderson, Wm.
Peasant, Alex, Porter, John F.
Groves, Seoretary; Dr. R. 0. Redmond,
Medical Health Moor. .
'Greatest Nurseries
Canada's
North Brant Liberals have nominate d
J R Leyte% budder, of Paris, Oat ,
for the Legialatnre.
SKUNK WANTED
IN ANY QITANTITY
AT BEST MARKET PRICES
I pay best in prices for Blink, Coon,
Muskrat, Weasel, Lynx, Bear, eto.
I pay all express eharges, charge no
ommission. I hold furs separate on
requeet.
Write for nig latest ptiee lilt.
J. YAFFE,
72 Colborne St., Toronto, Ont.
-IS YOUR HORSE .LAMEOR
Bli.E.141511ED?
D0 Tenagr's Sete Oare is a positive oars. It is the latest and greatest
reined, ever pot on the nieirket No Matter where your horse is lame, Sure
Onre will make him sound.
Sore (Jure is a poaitiva onre tot otirb bplint, bowed tendons, hog spervid,
thoropiti, capped hedka, wind grills, or buy similar trouble. Sure Dere will
onto deep seated lameness in hip, 'boulder, beck or stifle. Sure Oare will
take the soreness out of old stilliated np borate, and will grow a new foOt
qttioltar then any ether remedy.
Sues dare will Otire Maoge Or Illozeitie on thy edited with One ftp
Sure Ones will onre soratohes WOO/to spblioation.
tmealber Sate Ooze has never felled to do what we recommend it to do.
All bitting horiementwe using it,
Price. $2 60 Vitr ono. Portrait at
Jo W. McKIBBON'S
DRUG StO1tF
or 129 Met Street, Olathe/A, Ont.
Spedial atteritifin gireti tit Will WON,
Ernie Crammer and Harry )Graham, Head Agent Jar Canada
Want a repreitntative for Wingham,
0 it. and surrounding disrriot.
The reliability, healthy condition of
our atook as well as trueness to name
must be appreolated by the public or
they would not hsve helped ne to in-
crease oar baldness yearly since 1837, the
date of oar establishment.
Oar firm's name leedseirestige to our
representatives
°tinplate line of Nursery Stock for
Spring 1911.
Write for full pertioulars.
eiT ONE & WELLING TON
FOnthill NUNZIO!.
(850).
TORONTO, CANADA,
FARMERS
sad anyone having live stook or other
artieles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale in the Tzmee. Our large
circulation tells and it will be strange indeed if
you do not gets customer. We can't guarantee
that von will sell because yon may ask More
for the article or stook than it is worth. Send
your advertisement to the Tani; and try this
ohm of disposing of your stook and other
articles
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
such as teacher.; wanted, businesi; chances.
mechanics Wanted, articles for sale, or in feet
any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or
other city papers, may be left at the Times
office. This work will receive prompt attention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding advertisemente. Lowed
rates will be quoted on appalettion. LenVe
or serldbamr next work of this kind to the
TIES OFFICE. Wingbarn
CO YEARS' '
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
Thant Mama
- Dellarli
COMvistaitre Ake.
Abbot Waal a sketeh and desatIptIon in ay
kulokly
saventainie mum], patiatab romenntioe-
*swum our opinion , wote Whether an
eons striou_rooneasnuaL Hemp it on mamma
ee_nt ft8111. Olden agency/or sttner etenta.
p ma .teket. tero n m CO.,move
sionse„ without!, *int
416,111=1
OPflt . !INV*.
CAM 161trilt lespald, =it
elkirlitt*I'V, a 'rift Ilk. ' T 1 M E S. I
THNI;6111;Tmis DRAWING A 110111
IS ptpitasxow
EVERY THURSDAY MORNINO.
-44T-
Tbe TIMOS. Ofilue, Beam litigelf
W4,1408.101, ONTARIO,
advent*, 21.60 if not eo paid. (M
0 paper eow,
TERM or SunsoroPTIoN---t*1700 par annum in
tinned ell all arrearli ore palil, exoept at the
option of the publisher,
ADVARTIfnmet RATXS. Legal and other
gat: treliTtratie, trzta: Pgr'vanor mtrt
,n, on.
Advertisements In looal oolumna are °barged
10 ots, per line for lint insertion, and 5 cents
per line for each subsequent infiertion,
Advertisements of Strayed, Arms fog Sale
or to Rent, and similar, OA for first three
weeks, and 25 cents for each subsequent in-
sertion,
CONTRACT Beame-The following table shows
our rates for the insertion of advertisements
for aneolfied periods 1-
isPA01. 1 YR. 6 mo, 0 mo. lato•
OneColumn ' $70.00 $40.00 $22,50 $2,00
Half Column 40.00 25.00 15.00 too
QuarterColumn20.00 12.60 7.50 11 00
One Inch - 6.00 0.00 2.00 1,00
Advertisements without specific; direotiona
Will be inserted till forbid and 'Merged sector&
ingly. Transient advertlsemento must be paid
for in advance.
Tun Jon DapenrmeNT is stooled with 811
extensive assortment of all requisites for print -
Mg, affording faoilitiea not equalled in the
oountyfor turning out first class work. Large
type and appropriate outs for all styles of ers, Rand Bilia, and e latest styles of
&doe fanoy type for the finer classes of print
Ing.
H. B. ELLIOTT,
Proprietor and Pnblisher
DRS. KENNEDY3 CALDER
Oericats-Corner Patrick and ()entre Sts.
PHONES:—
' 061oes 4.3
Residince, Dr. Kennedy 143
Residence, Dr. Calder 151.
Dr. Kennedy speeializes in Silrgeri. 11
Dr. Calder devotes special attention to Dis-
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Eyes thoprreoupgehrllyytnesttteeda: Glasses
DR. JAS. L. WILSON, B.A.
Physician, Surgeon, Acconcheur. Special
iatatgtretd.n to diseases of woenanI
izigi:4yez: Nose
rcarh3.;my,4tel31.pei
(Dr. Macdonald's old stand,) fea
Wingham, Ont.
DR. AGNEW,
Physician. Surgeon, eta.
Offloe-Macdonald Blook, over W.Molubbon'e
Drug Store. Night calla answered at Shea:W.
DR. ROBT.O.SNDMOND, M. 8.0.8. (Eng)
L. R. 0. P. London.
PHYSICIAN and SUEGRON.
Office, with Dr. Chisholm.
lle VANBTONB,
aeis
BAItaismit, SOLICITOR, BTO
Private and Company lands to loan at lowest
rate of interest, mortgages, town and farm
property bought and sold,
mos. Beaver Block. Wingham
Jr A. MORTON,
.
BARRISTER, &o.
Wingham, Ont,
B. L. DICKINSON DIIIMAY HOLMES
DICKINSON & HO'LMES
BABBIBTBBS, SOLICITORS, Eto.
MONEY TO laciAN.
Orrzoa: Meyer Bleak, Vingharn,
ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D. D. S., 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 Blook. Wineham.
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May 1st to Oct. 1st.
Wingham General Hospital
(Under Government inspection)
w J. P8I011, 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.
Nike closed every Wednesday afternoon
from May lst to Oct lat.
Pleasantly situated. Beautifully fur-
nished. Open to all regularly licensed
nhysicians. RAMIS NOR PATIENTS-
(whioh inolade board and nursing), $9.50
to $15.00 per week a000rding to looation
of room. For farther information,
address
Miss L. MATTHEWS,
Superintendent,
Box 228, Wingham Ont.
RAILWAY TIMR TABLES.
GRAND TRUNK lt,A84141 SYST811.
Takeo LION rime
Toronto & Bast 11.08 a.m. 0.45 2.40p.m.
Ethicardine..11.50 a.m... 9.08 p.m.:- 9.15 p.m.
£5111v1 rEO11
Kineerdiew aan -11.00 - 9.40 p.m.
11.54 7.85 p
' ;124:a
Toronto& NAI ;72.:0a
„ *.(4r£6t,
0.05 skin-. 8.80p.m.
CANADIAN PA01,10 11AILWAII,
:rause LEAVE' NOE
Toronto find Beet..... tees genie.. 0.80 p.n.
Teeevrater !..1004.t1,..10.17 pad,
Teeswater.., CPI,. 6.25 OW
Teretite and'H.61." p.M.
- RB88M, ASetil.Winghant.
IT PAYS
Tushmakers Pulling MachineVdas
a Wonderful Invention.
KILLED HIS FIRST PATIENT,
But That Simply Couldn't Be Helped,
and the Autopay Showed Why the
Victim Lifted His Right Leg Each
Time the Lever Was Turned.
Tushmaker was never regularly
bred as a phyglelan or surgeon, but he
possessed naturally a strong mechan-
ical genius and a fine appetite, and,
finding his, teeth of great service lis
gratifying the latter propensity, he
concluded that be could do more good
in the world and create more real hap-
piness therein by putting the teeth
of its inhabitants in good order than
In any other way, oo Tushmaker be-
came a dentist
Be was the man who first invented
the method of placing small cog-
wheels in the back teeth for the more
perfect mastication of food, and he
claimed to be the original discoverer
of that method of filling cavities with
a kind of putty which, becoming hard
directly, causes tho tooth to ache so
grievously that it bas to be pulled,
thereby giving the dentist two suc-
cessive fees for the same job,
Tushmaker was one day seated in
his office in the city of Boston when a
stout old fellow named Byles pre-
sented himself to have a back tooth
drawn. The dentist seated his patient
in the chair of torture and, opening
his mouth, discovered there an enor-
mous tooth on the right hand side
about as large, as be afterward ex-
pressed it, "as a small, polyglot Bi-
ble." "I shall have trouble with this
tooth," thought Tushmaker, but he
clapped on his heaviest forceps and
pulled. It didn't come. Then he _tried
the turnscrew, exerting his utmost
strength, but the tooth wouldn't stir.
"Go away from here," said Tusk -
maker to Byles, "and return in a week
and I'll draw that tooth for you or
know the reason why." Byles got up,
clapped a handkerchief to his jaw and
put forth.
Then the dentist went to work, and
in three days be invented an intern.
• ment which he was confident would
pull anything. It was a combination
of the lever, pulley, wheel and axle,
inclined plane, wedge and screw. The
castings tier° made and the machine
put up in the office over an iron chair
rendered perfectly stationary by iron
rods going down into the foundations
' of the granite building.
In a week old Byles returned. He
was clamped into the iron chair, the
. forceps connected with the machine
attached firmly to the tooth, and Tusk.
maker, stationing himself In the rear,,
took hold of a lever four feet in'
length. Be turned it slightly. 910
Ryles gave a groan and lifted his
right leg. Another turn, another
groan, and tip went the leg again.
"What do you raise your leg for?"
asked the doctor.
"I can't help it," Said the patient.
"Well," rejoined Tushmaker, "that
tooth is bound to come out now."
He turned the lever clear round with
a sudden jerk and snapped old Byles'
head clean and clear from his shim!.
ders, leaving a space of four inches
between the serfired parts. They had
a postmortem examination. The roots
of the tooth were found egending
down the right side, through th‘ right
lete:aind turning up in two prongs un-
denethe sole of thoiright foot.
"No wonder," said Tushmaker, "he
raised bis right leg."
The Jury thought so, too, but they
found the roots much decayed, and,
five surgeons swearing that mortifica-
tion would have ensued in a few
months, Tushmaker was cleared on a
verdict of "juktifiable homicide."
He was a little shy of that instru-
ment for some time afterward, but
one day an old lady, feeble and flaccid,
came in to have a tooth drawn, and,
thinking that it would come out very
easy, Tushmaker concluded, just by
way of variety, to try the
Be did so and at the first turn drew
the old lady'skeleton completely and
entirely froth ber body, leaving her it
mass of quivering jelly In her chair.
Tushiseaker took her home in a pillow-
case. She lived seven years after that,
and they called her the "India rubber
Woman." She had suffered terribly
With the rheumatism, but after' this
Occurrence nerer bed a pin In her
bones. The dentist kept third In a
glaes case.
After this the machine was sold to
the contractor of the Boston custom
house, and it was found that a child
of three Yelling Of age CORM. by -11 sin-
g% turn of the sere*, rale a stone
Weighing twerify-three tons. Sinaller
ettes were made on the Bathe principle
aM sold to the keepers of hotels/ and
'restaurants. They Were used for bon -
lig turkeys. ntro is no Moral to &it
itory whatever, hint it is possible that
the circumstances zesty have betoree
litighay exaggerated. Of course there
tin be no dotibt of the 'truth of the
gain
He Told Nor.
Mr. Economle-Old you write to the
'Shen who adrertlses to tilinte peeplit
T6 ADV • *4"
to niektir ihddinee With, m I.
_ end have lteth rit1a,r1
tits Eel %eq. i111 ..1.1 1,111 a
dollar.
"What Mil
"Use 4'tOS (1 "
IN TTIE
t...16:1:Akwa•
To tread be eve lin, • .
longue. is the prow- h,„ Itt.
34)1,
•