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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1904-08-25, Page 3•v TIF WINGJO.. i TRRRES, AUGUST 2f 004 3 ,Make Weak Hearts Strong, ,1Iake Shaky Nerves Firm. They area Sura. Duro for Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Loss of Energy, Brain Fag, After Ef fects of La Grippe, Palpitation of the Heart, Anemia, General De- bility and all troubles arising from a run down system. They regulate the heart's action slid invigorate the nerves. • This is what they have clone for others! They will do the sante for you. GREAT RELLEF. I have taken I'Iiiburn's Heart- and Nerve Pills for palpitation of the heath andshattered nerves, and for both troubles have foundgreatrelief. Mrs. W. Ackert, Ingersoll, Oot FEELS SPLENDID flow, Before taking Milburn's Heart and 17ervo Pills I was all run down, could nob sleep at night and was terribly troubled with my heart. Since talon; thein L feel /splendid.. I sleep well at night and nilr heart does nob trouble me at all. They have done ria a world of good.—Jas. D. gr1efood, Hartsville, P.B.I. CREAMERY K.leHousga, Modern t oustruction *'lavorii Dose ltatlpn qt the A reader of Cola Storage iunulres of that paper, "CM We build An icehouse Lor a creawery without covering the leo wJth eawdust or packing material of nuy elude" To this inquiry lttadison Cooper, the refrigerating expert, nneweee; "It is eounpfu'atively Steeple to con- strnct an leeltouse even on a small scale, such ae would be retjuIred by n small creamery, without using peening Material around or on the lee, Tlds eau be accomplished by insulating the floor, walls aunt ceiling of the room with front ten tofifteenn inches of mill shitvlugs, dry sawdust, cut straw or any similar packing material. It is lee. material What form tho building takes and whether built with gable roof or flat roof. If you use a flat gravel roof, ft might be advisa,.le to have an attic story above the Gelding of the ice room, Which will give space for the eircula- tion of the air by providing suitable ventilators on the ends and sides of the blending, Tills will protect the ice room from the sun beating on the roof. A gable roof will give sligbtly better ventilation than a fiat roof by placing a reasonably large ventilator at the peak of the roof and slat ventilators of liberal proportions at the ends.' With a gable roof the ceiling of the ice room may extend up to the rafters and ven- tilators be placed in end of each gable. This makes an economical construc- tion, more so than a flat roof, If you desire to snake the building more fire- proof than the shingle roof would be, the toot may be covered with slate or with galvanized iron, "The construction of icehouses by in- sulating the walls Instead of using covering material on the lee wilt be more universal in the future than iA the past, even ou the small capacity icehouses. The loss for meltage is no more than with the old method of cov- ering the ice with sawdust or similar Material, and the advantages are se great that, even though the builtling cost more at first, It would be cheaper in the end. In constructing a building with insulated wails circ should be taken that the walls be mule air tight both an the exterior and interior sur- faces by main;; a good grade of insulat- ing nsulaeing paper." The Men Who Work Farms. (Tweeto Stare The Canadian r by travels through ti e United States will, especially if he ie familiar with the flue aeriuultt,ral •country of Western Outario, get the eminent that he is going through a land where the prosperity has been garnered in heaps, Ieaving large expanses bare and uurnviting. Michigan and Illinois and great States, and rated as wealthy, but, to the eye of the traveler, signs or rural prosperity, as we see them in •Ontario, are lacking. The farm housee and barns do not compare with ours; the tences are poor and neglected, the farms seem to be badly run down. Prom Detroit to Chicago a man passes through a country that does not begin to compare With the district between Torwite and Detroit. The little villages seen to be patched and slapped up without any of the thrift and ambition noticeable in an Ontario village. But, when you have crossed down -at -the -heel rural regions for an hour or two on a train you come to a big town or a city whore all is bustle and euterprize, and where wealth is plentitul. It would seem that' every man in the Republic who inherited a dollar or au idea pulls up states and goes into one of the cities, leaving the rural districts to &gift as they may. ABS TE SEC nit Cerauirte Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-SIwIle Wrapper Below. Very small abd as cosy IA take as sre•*ar. FOR REAOAC1Ii:., FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR, TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIM. FOR THE COMPLEXION ;irk A�7ri�t XNJ1 MV.7MVl,rMMU.. CURE SICK HEADACHE. CARTERS ITTLE 1VER Pt LLS. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES HOISTIN. Q. RAPES. The Tt,ressls ic* Wiro lemet 7eiliaieb So Muter Wes Deny nevem', LS ltilc the longest ropes are Used for Imtillug purposes, soiue of the most In- teresting tints iu conuection with sure ropes etre olttained. with their use for hoisting purposes. hundreds of thou. sands of lives are literally meet day hung by a stead wire throne as tee teen are lowered into moil hoisted from the bowels of the eartb, and in many cases the only preens of cuuununicntl'on between the surface teed the under- ground workings, which are from a few feet to n mile in depth, is by a compel atilt 'ly annuli bolsuug rope, Think of banging front the and of a iia• ble only a few !melee la dtai eter And a Stile long, being holsted at a rete which is faster than that of the Aver- age ritilroud train, And some Idea of the hoisting problem can be gained, To the honor of the wire rope manufactur- ers it must be said, that very few abaft acchteuts aro due to the leeuking of tho rope, excepting wbere the cage is ovcrwounut anti uuwnrranted demands Are made upon the rope or which are tracenblo to false economy on the part of the users of wire rope. No part of a mining plant Is more mainly' It. r,peeted and watched than the hoisting .ape, Sud very few rite managers Swill. take any unnecessary risks in the hoisting of mon. The skill of the wire rope maker is taxed to the utmost to provide ropes for hoisting front great depths, To make a rope of practicable elm that will be sufliciently flexible and that will bear even its. own weight Is no mean problem, for in such eases tete weight of the rope Is often touch utore that the material lifted; hence we baro taper rope Intended to give a varying section dependent on the amount of rope off the druru or reel, -- Mines and Minerals. Feeding For Milk Production 1 � 3r Many farmers frequently feed pump- kins to dairy cattle with satisfactory results, while others feed them with comparatively little benefit, says Pro- fessor Watson of the Pennsylvania ex- periment station in American Agricul- turist. It has frequently been observed that pumpkins may be fed with good effect if the cows do not have good pasture. Pumpkins are frequently giv- en to dairy cows to supplement intrude elent pasture during the latter part of the season, Undoubtedly they may be fed most advantageously in connection with other footle. Nearly all o.". the , succulent cattle foods are fed with the greatest economy with other foods with the exception of pasture grasses and soiling crops. Corn and Cob Meal. The Now Jersey experiment station several years ago Stade experiments to determine whether it is more econom- ical to grind earn, cob and all, for milk cows than to feed ,ear corn. In this experiment one cow was feel twelve days ear corn that had been run through a feed cutter, and another was fed corn and cob meal. This process was then reversed, giving each cow the other form of grain. The yield of milk on the corn and cob meal ration was 0.3 per cent greater than with the ear corn, evhile the yield of butter fat was 4.0 per cent greater.—Breeder's Gazette. Corn Stover For Cowie. Two hundred and eighty pounds of cornmeal and 302 pounds of wheat bran fed in connection with' 2,374 pounds of corn stover produced at the Wisconsin experiment station 1,120 pounds of milk, from which fifty-seven pounds of butter were made. Feed Station For Dairy Cattle. For dairy cattle, if it comes to a choice between bran and oats at $22 for the farmer and $21 for the latter, then • the bran is much the cheaper, says Breeder's Gazette. lly feeding the cows corn and cob meal, bran and o(I- meal a highly satisfactory ration of concentrates may be prepared. Unless the cows are milking heavily a ratio of I to 0 is eminently satisfactory. Corsa on Paietnre Need Grain, Feed some grain to cows on pnbtnre. It may not apparently be of advantage in the summer, but the cows will win- ter better.•—y armer's Advocate, Supplemental Sommer Feed. Good pasture grass Curries an ample supply of protein, but is deficient if at all in the carbohydrates. Theoretically this would call for corn alone-, but we add bran to extend or dilute the con- centrated ground Corn. Also give the Bowe a little hay for its hygienie effect, Cows are as crazy for dry forage in summer, as for grass in early spring.•-' Hoard's Dairyman, Grinding' Foes) leer DUO? Cowie. While there is Canttderabte difference of opinion as to the edeleebiiity oft grinding grain for sense #arm animals, it is generally conceded that it pays to grind tor the dairy herd. A eew giving A targe fioW of Milk needs all iter ener- gy to secrete her milk_ and to dlgeet the large amount of feed wbtdlr Moet be aged for that purpose. It is for tied reason important to make the procese Of digestiolt ns, east and rapid at pot- able. i► good grinder, With tenable potter to tint it, should bi pent of the iautanalat of ore*' w.ti tenducteil dila; tirnft,"-btlRietlrt E'a erittlelit $ti. UM TOD MAPS TELL NOT AEOUIT LOCQA7JPN, BUT IN THE MATTER OF NAMES. rear lln+ets see, Greenland Isn't Green, by AUT Me+aus, Nor la the Macke Sri Wl#alk-''fico German Doe#u lsi't German, 004 It lsrb't in oeelaa. Xn. few plaees wi l you find more OUT OF WORK, Tragedy ot Varia,$$Qynte?iit ta! tb. sins Wino is Aatais. The tragedy of unemployment deep, ens In the ease of those well who are visibly aging, passing prematurely in- to that condition when society has net-, ther use nor regard for their services. The development of tate modern city life in its feverish thirst for gain Shells up the activities of the young. Healthy, robust Iles to the square inch Work can always be found for the than an average map, and this is the children. lint the Stan of forty bus al. Qocuutotlt that le Salty placed in the ready become suspect. At fifty there la halide of our youug. evidently stretching before bine the Begin up north and take Greenland, bleak old age of the unwantted poor, Was there ever it more flat rout hopes• tetra than the Slane of thls country? It isn't green and never was green and never will be green. Here iswhat the gazetteer says about title "green" coun- try: "It PS high and rocky and barren. It Is covered with eternal snow end glee The despairing clutch ot the aging at any degrading occupation Width be. fore they would have scorned Is one of the -commonest and pitltulest sights of modern life. I think of those whom I E MIRROR. TELLS TUE STORY. ANTI0PILL E]1QVES THE CAUSE. When the tongue is coated or the breath Minted, alien an ont-ofe sorts feeling, as of burning or feverish stomaeb, red- ness andaching of back or hips, tbere le trouble in the steered* which may develop in malaria or other severe siekuees. If you have Dr.Leonl►ardt's Aisne Paz, at hand, one at night and one In, the atornthg will remove the trouble. It Is the Manlier greenlet system treatment. it is r. guaranted cure for six, biliousness, or constt- patron. It yon want to prove its merit, write Wiry pas . Fn.% C0., Magus Palle, Ont„ for free .am- pls. Sold by druggists, 60 cents per box, FO1i. SAGE"; IN WINGHAlI BY WALTO:T McKtBBON. have known, those who dye their hair - ' • . ..�.. to keep the appearance of youth, the applicants for positions, their efforts toward respeetnbility, the ink lined niers. July la the only Month in which coat, the shabbiness concealed, the at- there tthere is no snow." There's a picture of tempt, always so grotesque and Ina - greenness far you! fective, to strike the right note be- How did it get eafed green? Well, tween a dignity that will command re - by au unscrupulous falsehood on the specs and an eagerness that will be - part of A tenth century reprobateConte a mere mendicant pleading for culled Eric the Red of Iceland. 'phis aid, ancient shark accidentally ram agalnst I remember one with a record of the ice patch in question with a few over thirty years' consistent service, other Icelanders of his own kidney, exhibiting hands twisted and gnarled He cut back to Ieeiaud and "boomed" with disease, who shuttles daily it for all he was worth, : through ins work with the help of He called it Greenland and to delude . kindly comrade's, fearing each day to the Icclaud investors and general pub. be detected. Though the work itself is He said it was a wonderful green conn- an agony, the one panic fear is not try, which he wished them to visit teat he shall be compelled but that he with their families and take shares in shall be forbidden to eoutinue. I think some Seines he had discovered. LS'eiI, of others tucked away out of sight in some of the deluded creatures went. the recesses of tenement dwellings, They never returned to good old Ice- thing aside from the active machinery .and any mare. ' of the world, who "cannot quite bring 1 But there are plenty of equally gross themselves" to join the unemployed ! Impostures, Take the Black sea for processions or solicit a promiscuous Instance. 'Why black? Who said it charity of the crowd, who cling to the SETT ING TH E CLOCK FAST, j Was black? It Is no more black than desperate hope that one day the cloud Dunlop Ideal Ilorsesl.oe Pad For Sale at Hardware Stores and Blacksmiths Put new • legs on your horse q Base the thump of the Hoof against the hard ground and protect the frog send sole. (food for clavicular disease. Make the horse sound In the feet—give him a longer working life. The DUNLOP TI1U3 Co., Limited, Toronto, Ontario eammoommonoultalease Ayer Vegetable, liver pills. That is what they are. Tiley cure constipation, biliousness, UAW::: Ca., sick -headache. >x,,, A Pleasant Sort of Deception Coni - It is pink or purple The ancients call- will lighten, the miracle happen that W ed it the "Dunne"--tthieh means "int• some one will be found desiring their ant your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM'S D 1 E mon to on thing People. hOs !table" —sea, That Mus another set t•iees. 7 h�s is in no austere :ttid abeautiful. brown or richblaclt? use raaTZ ors. or nonce ms ma . r.ILl.La co., n.eev..u.rt; It is a cntmott f to find the ' good old. Action. It is not at all an in- frugal community, with difficulty sup- j I � clocks 111 nine meet of ten households hospitable sen, for, having no tides, it porting its children, but fetid wealth ; ft, either fifteen minutes or heli an hour is ono of the easiest to navigate. Now pouring into its borders beyond the Post, ford should you happen to be in a and agnilt there are big storms, just to . dreams of avarice and such luxury and hurry or mention the fact that you give the sea a realistic touch,but gen- vain display as can only be paralleled gen- have to be going you are at onto rens- rally speaking it isn't black, and it , in the later days of ltome. sured. by the fact that you have no i isn cause to burry, as the clock Is so much t inhospitable. 1 The Cape of Good hope! Good t ahead of the time. Hope, indeed! Ask anybody who has i Has it ever occurred to you why been round that promontory what they clocks are usually put ahead? Some think of it. The only "good bope" they , physicians have said It is duo to laze- experience is a good hope that they 'less, for it is such a satisfaction to the will soon get ashore, for it is one of lazy Sian to find when he bus to get the roughest and stormiest places up at 7 in the morning and strains his known to mariners. What we should half. closed eyes to look at the clock call a cyclone on the North sea would with so w that it Is half an hour first and tho Las ' be smiled at round the cape as a bit of much more time doze, the breeze. They. gentleman who called it result that he oversleeps himself any ,Gape of Good Hope was a crude sort any- how and misses his train or boat. of humorist. He made his money in the king business, styling himself John II. of Portugal. His faithful subject Diaz discovered it and told his majesty that he bad called it the "Stormy cape." But the king would have none of it, Ile said that he hoped Diaz would find something else round the other side next time he went to the cape, so he called it Cape of Good • Ilope. Why tate Dead sea? The locality may be as dead as a doornail, but the sea itself is pretty lively. It is the sattest piece of water on the face of tho earth, ten times as salt as the ocean. Of course there is no particular vegetation roundabout, and the Bea is free from monsters, but that doesn't make the sea itself dead, It Is really Said a watchmaker when asked about the subject: . "Yes, it is a peculiar thing with most people to put their clocks fast, and. while there may be some satisfaction in It when it comes to dozing a little longer, there is really no advantage in it, for when you wake up, say, at 0 and glance at tIle clock and it registers half past 6, the fact remains that it is a half hour fast. While this Stay make you feel easier, kuonting that you still have thirty minutes to doze, I confess I don't see much advantage in it. "Why not have the clock right? It is the same thing in the end. Suppose e• tofids ♦ re to put this Otto practice, how many trains do you thick people would miss thereby? This patting clocks fast is really only a pleasant form of deception which pco- a most live sea. pie like to practice on themselves, but Why English channel? It's no more it does more harm than good." English than it's French. The French themselves don't call It English at all, • !but simply "La Manche." A Way Spencer Had. Then was ever it more absurd name Herbert Spencer had n passion for given to that bit of water which sepa- ratescalled Spencer would the German ocean? Why German? geuerallzation. If you remarked It was iengintui from Ilolltttad a fine day, answer, , "`Yes; anticyclonic conditions like , There's nothing German about„ it and ; those of yesterday seldom break up never has been. Dutch, Belgian or ; without warning of tate advent of a British, it you like, but not German. depression from westward.” ee you Then why ocean? It is not an ocean at all. There is a piece of water that size between Australia and Tasmania, if anything rather wider, which they call Guarding the month. Remember the disgust witielt over- spreads the fares in a railroad ear when a woman was seen to give ger poodle a drink from the public drink- ing glass. No one else touched it dur- ing that trip, but it is mere dangerous and not fess dlegusting to drink after human beings than a dog. Fortunate- ly most disease germs die easily, and it is chiefly by the quite direct means of eontnct jest suggested that the con- tagious diseases pass from one to an- other. If we put nothing into the mouth except what belongs tbere, we might ride in n ear with a diphtheria patient and run no chance of catching tate disease. Disease germs do not fly about seeking whom they may devour. The matter of protection is largely in our own Bands.—Good Housekeeping. Hopeless Case. The forgetful man was stepping jauntily along with a smile on his • cheerful face when be was accosted by a friend. "Look heir," said the man. "Why in the world are you carrying brelias 1" "Why, let me think," said the forget- ful man. "Oh, yes, I know how it hap- pened.to get her wife wanted me e Myt I t t t l umbrella that's been utenekel, and she thought I'd better bring along mine to remind tae, it being a pleasant day, and then I thought I'd better bring two in case I stepped in anywhere and hap- pened to forget one of them.`" observed that Mrs. Jones was a pret- ty woman, Spencer 'would reply, "Her father was a west highlander and her mother an Irishwoman, and intertnar- a strait—Bass strait. :Just fancy the absurdity of teaching the child mind to think that crossing to Ostend or Ant- werp is an ocean trip. North sea, too, is absurd. Why north? It is not north of anything in patrticu- The Original Anglomaniae. lar. It is east of Britain, west of Hol. 'Wayne bad just wan riage between lnigbinnders and Irish al. most always produces physically hand- some but intellectually interior chin dren." ChiegriM Little Dick - 1 etiolated, what it chagrin? Uncle ltlehatd--Diekte, chs, grin le that feeling you ought to have when you kick at the eat and fall ovet baektward. the battle of land. Bel turn and Denmark and south Sten y Point of Norway and Sweden. It is not a "Itttt why," ingulred the Britisb, "do north sea et all. they Cali you Mod Anthony?" There are some ibinttds lx the Faci9e "Because," replied the dongbty gen- —Why Pacific, by the way? Where oral, "1 ani the original Augiomanine." doee the pence come in on that deca- 1 t , esa-late, typltoony, billowy, tidal wavy wil- derness called the Friendly islands? Look At the encyclopedia's version of their friendliness; "They are voleanic, and earthquakes are frequent. Islands SeriouN Defect. are frequently upheaved. hurricanes "Young man, this elevator Is out of are constant" Then the friendly na- e vee a eo usa reason the islands were hban, dtubo ie nn assistant elevator called Friendly Or bemuse wben Cap - Putting his statement to the test, he pressed onward, taking with him sev- eral cannon of the latest English Man- ufaetnre. order. 1 Shall certainly report it to my t na- l. Th t inspector." tarn Cook visited them he found the "Wh-wh-what's the matter with it, natives bed not got any same. So tbey ma'am?" were friendly. No doubt! But when "'The mirrora are soiled and dingy, the missionaries tried to convert them ter." they bad a different tale to tell. For thirty years they endured "a perilous struggle with the savage paganism of the inhabitants." 1 could earl your attention to dozens more 6t eases of monstrous mendacity on the part of the map. tut the editor has just taken away my atlas. zeteeriateeretee it#abel-1 de believe Miss fonder 15 in love with that poor young lawyer. Chinn --What a shariiel Arid she would Stake such a good wife for some fellow crib WAS nnarrying for money.--1itick. in the hour of distress and mis ry the eye of every mortal torrid to friend. ship. 1t. the hour of gladness and eons I vivisiltt�} what lei your want? 1 1eude i.sty.h. tuiinetal. i.'tgI?leog tee buss'. Weal WSr*Ier. McJigget—Here's a rather Clever lit- tle book, "Doti[ For Clubmen." l,'hin gumbob--lInh I It isn't the'"don'te" that worry clubmen; it the dues. goer notice how eUlekly you ems pick oat the roan who takes up :gout time and with whom ion lifter de two um- Trapped in Armor. Trying on ancient armor is not al- ways an ngreeable experiment, judg- ing from the experience of a French artist. He had bought a quaint old helmet and put it on bis own head to 'Unfortunately the effect. nfortuuately ho touched a spring, the visor shut down suddenly, and, being alone in the stu- dio, he could not free himself from the mediaeval head covering without help. • At last he ran into the street, wherephis appearance created considerable amusement till 0 charitable, passerby managed to set him free:--� Hone" Glass, I An Odd Globe. { A great globe ornamented with the map of the earth carved in stone dee- orates the estate of an eccentric Eng- lishman at Swanage. It stands over- ' looping tiro sea ntid is visible for quite n dtstituee. One may walk about it and study it in detail. The plain surfaces, such as the oceans, takes and deserts, t are decorated with Scriptural texts, which aro supposed to apply especially to the locality they occupy. A Sheet Story'. Chapter I.—"I think you are just the bestest, goodest husband in all the world!" Chapter II. --"I wonder how much sbe wants?" Cbapter III. ---"And he gave it to inc Without fussing a bit, I wonder what been t ec nt p to?" be ' The yltisieeitt Man. "Don't you think he rather lines me?" "Oh, well enough to consent to your marriage to his daughter. but 1 don't think you'd better try to borrowv any money from him." unlit irbes i Friend In field. A. friend in nests is a good tiling,. sometimes, but/ always make thelimit S3. 11 1t man has any sense at all 1fz his ore affairs, he loses it when he stehte r aA-S A Practical Business Training. No young man should enter any calling in life without a business training. 'Doesn't matter whether the calling is a profession, a trade or in the mercantile world, a man can do his work better if he knows how to apply business methods. The Forest City Business and Shorthand College teaches business in a practical way—does things just the same as a business office. Students may enter any time during term. Booklet free. J. W, Westervelt, Principal, Y.M.C.A. Building, London. tee Mt eset Ganadian National Exhibition 1904 TORONTO, O NT. 19ca-& AUGUST 29th to SEPTEMBER. 12th Lena st and finest exhibits of Canadian manufactures, agricultural pro- ducts, live stock, etc„ eta., "ver shown. New buildings, improved facilities, and greater variety of attreeuens than ever. "BL.,3.CK NV ATOM BAND," The Band of the " Black Watch," (the fanions 42nd Royal Highlanders) will attend the Exhibitiozi.by permission of his Gracious Majesty the Kimmel officers of the Regiment, and will play three concerts daily throughout its entire course. THE RELIEF O1? LITCKNOW The grandest pyre -military display ever seen in Canada will be presented before the grand stand each evening with hundreds of performers,bribient ann. tumes, gorgeous pyrotecbnicssettiug,and assisted by pipers of the Black Watch. SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS "DAVE -DTVII. ScnniYEit" in his leap from a bicycle 108 feet into a taukaf water; THE I31CxETT FAMILY, world-famous aerial acrobats; Weescrienereex's woSnuRBre Tramp BEARS: Arum's TRorr OP LION'S, the most remarkable• group of traiued animals in the world, and many other acts of equal merit. Special liailway Rates. Ask your Station Agent for Particulars. Remember the Dates AUGUST 29th to SEPTEMBER 12th. W. K. McNAUGHT, President. J. O. ORR, Secretary and Manager rdwvivi,101.46411110,0•11~11,11110141eleliAlelieto‘ottoAvtivitl $WESTERN FAIR: London, September 9th to 17th, 1904 ENTRIES CLOSE 8th SEPTEMt3ER A NEW $10,000 DAIRY BUILDING Improvements all along the UnO. Exhibits unsurpassed. ATTRACTIONS THE BEST "IYRT.--$itamura's Celebrated dap troupe of 10 People, Tho Plying Banvarde, and the best Gymnasts, Acrobats, and # other specialties that money can procure. rive Rventngs of 1 ireworks, concluding each evening with a realistic representation of the tt BOMNANOMENT OF PORT ARTHUR." A holiday outing nobs elionld nibs. Speeiat excursions over alt lines Of travel. bur ail information, prize lists, etc„ address Lx.wCOL. W. M. ttAti SKbRE, J. A. NELslaSr, President. Secretary. Lipligelbethrib/114,0100111.11.t4411644.41.4.41.44411/11440410.