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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-07-19, Page 2Kidney Disorders Are no respecter of persons. People in every walk of lift are troubled. Iiave you a Backache? If you have it Is the first sign that the kidneys are not working properly. A neglected Backache leads to serious Kidney Trouble. Check it in time by taking DOM'S KIDNEY PILLS "THE GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC." They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles .from Backache to Bright's Disease. 500. a box or 3 for 51.25 all dealers or THE DOAN KIDNEY PILL CO.. Toronto. Ont. TO ADVERTISERS conditiouiu'liee.te 1 fa these coin us re- cently, ea being the lot c t many clergy not only in Western Canada, but in the Ottawa district. The explanation of Mr Lewis' prosperity is to be found in the habit of thrift for which he was noted daring hie probation iu the Metho- dist ministry, and whish followed him into the rauks of the Anglican clergy, where he shared the better cies? of ap- puintmeuts, and, remaining a celebate, he was not taxed, as so mauy useful clergymen are, with the expenses of a wife and family. This estate illustrates the old saying that it ie not what a man receives that makes hem rich, but what keeps. -Ottawa Citizen. Notice of changes must be left at this office not later than Saturday noon. The copy for changes must be left not later than Monday evening. Casual advertisements accepted up to noon Wednesday of each week. ESTABLISHED 1672 TIIE WIN6lAl1 TRIES. R. ELLIOTT, l'DELIS/MR AND PROPRIETO7' THURSDAY, JULY 19. t90G. PULSE OF THE PRESS. One of the signs of the day is the re- vival of the old-time demand for the Bible as an adeuuet to the•hotel bed- room. Ten or twelve years ago every room in a hotel of any pretensions had a Bible on its bureau.. Then it was the practice of most hotels to inolade a Bible in the list of neoessary furniture. Grad- ually the people who were back of the enterprise 1o36 interest and the books disappeared. It now seems that many persons, particularly -commercial travel- lers, complain of missing them. Fre- quently they read a chapter before going to ted just to drive assay the blues, but now they never get the chance to look inside a Bible. One Toronto hotel -keep- er has realized the need for a revival and has given au:order for seven dozen Bibl- es. "It shall not be said that any man stopping at my house is driven to perdi- tion for the want of a Bible," is the way in whish he puts ft. -Stratford Beacon The crop reports from the west are again coming into annual prominence. All statements are preoisely as in pre- vious years, viz., that the forthcoming yield will be the greatest in Canadian history. And year after year previous records are. broken. It all goes to show that Canada is indeed a growing coun- try. -Brantford Expositor. A writer in one of the reviews an- nounces the rediscovery of the secret of longevity. It is optimism. Be cheerful, hopeful and optimistic under all circum- stances, and your days will be long in e the land, is the new law of life. Now, if someone would discover the secret of optimism all would be web. "Be op- timistic and you will be healthy," is easily said, but how are you to be op. timistio? There are those who believe that health is the secret of optimistic. "Be healthy and you will be optimistic" is the rale of life. Thus we become in- volved in an endless circle. Be optimis- tic and yon will be healthy; be healthy and you will be optimistic. The moral of the mix up seems to be that advice is cheap.-Woodstook Sentinel•Review. fasted Lives In Wingham Men and The attention of the newspapers which were so shocked because Mr Aylesworth finished some briefs whish he had ac- cepted before taking office may fittingly be directed to the case of the Hon W. J. Hanna, Provincial Secretary. Mr Hanna appeared the other day before the Provincial Drainage Referee in a snit of the township of Sambre vs. the township of Chatham. If it was im- proper for Mr Aylesworth to appear be- fore a Judge who could not be removed except by impeachment by Parliament, what shall be said of Mr Hanna appear- ing before a judicial official whose head he could shop off on a day's warning? We should like to hear from The Mail and World and a few other of Mr Ayles- worth's rebnkers. We feel sure that their indignation will know no bounds. -Toronto Globe. TIIE WINGIIAM TIMES, JULY 19, 1906 w•.;TOWN DIRECTORY. TWENTY YERS AGO, (From THE WfNGHAK Times of Friday, July lG.h,. 188(1 ) THE TWELFTH How the day was celebrated in Wing - ham -The largest gotheriug ever seen here. -From 8,000 to 10,000 straueers visit the rising young city. -The County Orange Ledge of North Huron celebrated the 196th anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne in Wingham on Monday Last, and it is safe to say that Wingham never witnessed such au immense gathering of people as it did on that day. The Queen's hotel fed 1.300 people, the Central 1,100, the Brunswick 800, the Exchange and Diusley 700 each and the British 200, while innumerable tempor- ary eating houses throughout the town fed from 50 to 200 people each. NEIGHBORHOOD N1W5 Mrs. John Bird, of Morris, has a hen that hatched 17 chickens out of 14 eggs. G. S Kidd, of the Queen's hotel, Kincardine has skipped for parts un- known. Brussels has deoided to grant exemp- tion from taxes for ten years to Thos. Smith, should he erect a planing mill there. The Seaforth council has resolved to submit a by-law to raise $5,500 for high school purposes, the loan to extend over a period of 20 years. Thos. Wilson, J. P., proprietor of the Fordwich mills, died ou the 27th ult., aged 58 years and 8 months, of au af- fection of the lungs of several years Women Who are in Need of standing. a Helping Hand. It is hard for those who are never ill or have simply a sick day or week oc- casionally, to realize the wretched exis- tence and wasted lives of those beset with chronic indigestion. There is no more irritating or nerve- racking condition than that caused by a weak stomach. Ir gnaws and wears up. on every nerve fibre in the body and re- sults in sleeplessness, headache, back- aches, rheumatic pains, furred tongue, distress after eating, poor appetite and general weakness and debility. As we may look to a weakened stom- ach for moat of the chroniopr lingering ills that weaken and rack our lives, it is of the greatest importance Ito know that a remedy for stomach troubles is at last offered by the reliable drug firms in Wingham. Knowing the formula of Mi•o na, we feel that it will be successful in every case where it is used in accordance with directions, that is, one tablet before each meal. A large box of Mi-o-na, tablets costs bnt 50 cents, if it helps yon; nothing un- less it restores health. If you cannot obtain Mi.o na of your druggist, it will be sent by mail, poet paid, on receipt of price. Write us for advice on your case from a leading stomach specialist which will be sent free The R. T. Booth Company, Ithaca, N. Y. The late Rev John Pitt Lewis left an estate valued at $G6,435 52, of which $12,160 is in real estate, $49,075 in mort- gages, $2,707 in cash, book debts, forms ture and works of art make up the balance. This presents a contrast to the The Weakness of Old Age AS the years go by the blood gets thin, watery and impure, and fails to supply the nourishment required to keep vitality at high water mark. Circulation gets bad, and the nervous system suffers. Besides the pains and aches, besides the weakness and dizziness, there are feelings of numbness which tell of the approach of paralysis and locomotor ataxia. Judging front the experience, of the thousands of old people who have tested Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, it seems to be exactly suited to overcome these conditions, conse quent on old age. THE CRAZE FOR SPEED. (Toronto Telegram.) The disaster at Salisbury will be traced to an origin in the craze for speed, , on the part of the railway company and the steamship company. How many journals, how many in- dividuals are free from the guilt of shar- ing in the public opinion that drives railway companies and steamship com- panies into this oraze for sped? Speed for speed's sake is a craze. The folly of this craze must bave reached its supreme manifestation iu the insanity of starting a train out from Plymouth at 11.30 to tear through the night at 70 miles an hour and reach London at 4 Unlike ordinary medicines, Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is entirely restorative in action, and cures by forming new, firth flesh and tissue, Maiieaging the face is quite as much and building up the system. 50 world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is inoaleolable, Be Rare lion ask coats a boat at all dealttr . of a help to nerves pea predentine or for Mrs Winelow'a Soothing Syrup, and wririnkter, I taste no other kind. Wm. Rattenbnry, the founder of Clin- ton, and one of the beat known gentle- men in this section of the country, died at Clinton on Sunday of last week at the advanced age of 81 years. He had lived in that town since 1844. LOCAL NEWS. The school board is having a high tight -board fence built in the=rear of the school grounds and otherwise improving the school property. Loeal history of the early 8 Os. Items from The "Times" fyles Inmbia, and the deputation from Wing - ham have on that account been unable to have a day fixed upon when they could approach -the company relative to the matter. The new residence of Thos. Bell, on the corner of Minnie and Alfred, is rapidly approaching completion, and will, when oompletedbeone of the finest . ss Last Saturday a handsome new fiag pole, measuring about 90 feet, was erected 011 the market square and made a present of to the town. It cost $40, besides several days of hard work, and was paid for by a popular subscription taken up by John Hanna. At a meeting of the town council some time ago the Ga T. R. asked that a portion of Albert street be closed so that the company could go on and fill up the trestle work at the western approach to the bridge, but then council and rail- way company could not come to terms, and it was decided not to comply with their request. The stoveand tinware firm of Whit- ney & Duffield has been dissolved, Mr. Whitney retiring and the firm has been re organized under the name of Jas. Duffield and Son. The funeral services of the late Dan - can Kennedy, who died on Tuesday last, were held in the Catholic church in thin town yesterday morning and were well attended. No new developments have come to light of late relative to the proposed ex- tension of the Canadian Pacific Railway into Wingham. Mr. Van Horne and the other officials of the road have been away for a oouple of weeks ou a trip over the completed line to British Co - residences in town. PERSONALS. W. H. Kerr, of the Brussels Post, and Joseph Laing, of the Kincardine Re- view were callers at the TIMES office on Monday. Dr. Tamlyn, H.E.W. Meyer and Thos. Bell are in Windsor this week attending the annual meeting of the Masonic Grand Lodge. Rev. R. McOosh, rentor of St, Paul's church, is one his way home from Cali- fornia and is expected to reach home next Wednesday. Wallace Bell, the salt well contraptor, was in town this week. He is at pre- sent engaged in drilling a well for the water works at Goderich. Mrs. W. F. Brookenshire, acoompan- by Mies Ella Brockelishire, left town yesterday for Genoa, I11., where they will visit friends for a couple of months J. A. Morton returned last Friday form Lindsay where he had been attend- ing the annual Meeting of the Ontario Fruit Growers' Association, whish was in session last week. B.J. Smallhorn, the popular G. T. R. agent here, started on Tuesday for a trip to the British Isles. He will be absent about six weake, and his place is being filled by Mr. Nicoll, of Galt. BAPTIST Qatnum--Sabbath seri-Wee at 11 a m. and 7 p m. Sunday School at 2;30pp m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. E. R. Fitch, B.A., pastor, B.Y P.U. meets Monday evenings 8 p.m. Abner Cosens S.S. Superintendent, METHODIST Oau&Ou-Sabbath servloee at 11 a m and Z p m. Sunday Sohool at 2:30 p m. Epworth League every Mon- day evening, General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. J. R. Gandy, D,D„ pastor. W. B. Towler, M.D., S. S. Superintendent. 'RISSBYTERIAN Cxunon-Sabbath ser- vices at 11 a m and 7 p m, Sunday Sohool at 2:30 p m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. D. Perrie, pastor, L. Harold, S S. Su- perintendent. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, EPISCOPAL -Sab- bath services at 11 a m and 7 p m. Sun- day School at 2:30p m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evening. Rev. T. S. Boyle, M. A., B. D.. Rentor and S. S. Superintendent. John Taylor and Ed. Nash, assistant Superintendents. . SALVATION ARMY -Service at 7 and 11 a m and 3 and 8, p m on Sunday, and every evening during the week at 8 o'clock at the barracks. POST OFFlds-In Macdonald Bleck. Office hours from 8 a m to 6:30 p m. Peter Fisher,' postmaster. PUBLIC LIBRAnY-Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon from 2 to 5;30 o'clock, and every evening from 7 to 9:30 o'olook. Miss Maud Robertson, librarian. Towx Cone/ma-Thos. Bell, Mayor; S. Bennett, David Bell, Thos. Forbes, Geo. 0. Hanna, D. E. McDonald and Wm. Nicholson, Ooanoillors; J. B. Fer- guson, Clerk and Treasurer; Anson Dulmage, Assessor. Board meets first Monday evening in each month at 8 o'clock. PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD. -A, E Lloyd (chairman), J.D. Long, J. J. Homuth, T. Hall, H. Kerr, Wm. Moore, Alex. Ross, 0. N. Griffin. Secretary, John F. Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson. Meetings second Tuesday evening in each month. ESTABLISHED 1672 THE WIN6IiA '► has, s, IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING -AT- The Times OMee, Beaver WINGHAM, .ONTARIO,. Block TERMS or SunsORIPTION-$1.00 per annum in advance $1,60 if not so paid. No paper discon- tinued till all arrears are paid, except at the option of the publisher. ADVERTISING RATES, - Legal and other casual advertisements loo per Nonpariel line for first insertion, 8o per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements in local columns are charged 10 cls, per line for first insertion, and 5 cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements of Strayed, Farms for Sale or to Rent and similar, $1.00 for first three weeks, and 25 cents for each subsequent in- sertion, Ooara&OT RATES-Thefollowingtable shows our rates for the insertion of advertisements for specified periods: areas. 1 rn. 6 go. 8 go. Igo. ..........$70.00 $40.00 $22.50 68 00 Half Uolnnui .... 40.00 25.00 16.00 0.00 QuarterOolumn. 20 00 12.60 7.60 8.00 One Inch 6.00 8.00 2.00 1.25 Advertisements without specific directions will bo inserted till forbid and charged acoord- inrein. adTransvanceient, advertisements must be paid fo Tim Jos Daennrx ter 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 ants for all styles of Post- ers, Hand Bills, eto., and the latest styles of choice fanoy type for the finer chases of print ing. H. B. Rr.T.IOTT, Proprietor and Publisher HIGH SCHOOLBOARP.-Dr.A. J. Irwin, (chairman) Dr. J. P. Kennedy, Dr. P. Macdonald, John Wilson, V.S., J. A. Morton, C. P. Smith, W. F. VanStone. Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Owens, treasurer. Board meets second Monday evening in each month. PUBLIO SCHOOL TRAOHRRS.-A, H. Musgrove, Principal, Miss Brock, MissReynoids, Miss .Farquharson, Miss Oornyn, Miss Matheson, Miss Wilson, Miss Cummings and Miss De La Mater. BOARD OH' HEALTH -Thos. Bell, (chairman), R. Porter, Thomas Greg- ory, John Wilson, V.S., J. B. Ferguson, Secretary; Dr. J. R. Macdonald, Medical Health Officer. • Getting It In The Neck. The following from the Southompton Beacon applies to more than that town: "While certain local merchants decline to give their job printing to the home paper and insist on sending it to Toronto, it is useless to expect the home paper to preach for loyalty to the home merchants. We know of a considerable trade from this town in printed stationery that goes to Toronto and which could be done just as well and as cheaply in this office. But these patriotic gentlemen who desire factories brought here and look to the Beacon to support every by-law that will bring an increase of population, must show a little more consideration for other people before they yell so much for their own pockets. Now you gentlemen who send your printing out of town, jnet to see how much the Toronto printers will a.m. help in bringing new factories and build - Whoever wanted to reach any' place • ing up the town. Some of you are whin - at 4a.m? The steamship company and the rail- way company may have wanted the advertisement that could be supplied by the miraculous speed of the trip from the dock at New York to the station at London. They might have been cheated out of this advertisement if the train from Plymouth had been timed down to 30 miles an hour. Thirty miles an hour would have brought the train that left Plymouth at 11 30 p.m. to London at 8 o'clock Sunday morning, The train that jumps the track at thirty miles an hour is safer than a train that jumps the track at seventy-four miles an hour. Nobody wants to be dis- graced by travelling in a slow train, al- though the train that gets in at 7 or 8 a. m. is more comfortable than the train that gets in at 4 a.m. Comfort is nothing. Safety is nothing. Speed is everything. while you keep sending your oras for Speed's for speed's sake is "np-to- job printing to Toronto. Candidly now, date." do yon think it's a square deal?" It is this craze for being "up-to-date" that creates creates a public opinion to good Por Over Sixty Years. steamship companies and railway corn - An old and Weil -Tried -Remedy --Mrs panies into a mad race for speed at all Winslow'? Soothing Syrup has been used coetit. inghbout the Beacon now and you expect ns to pat brain power and energy and money into this, shout, "Progressive Southampton," and a lot of other shouts, and when you have a job of printing to do, off it goes to Kilgonr Bros. or some other. firm. Yes, you're truly loyal to local interests, are you not? If you can- not practice the same principals towarde the home paper that you expect the home paper to advocate, and won't help to sus- tain the home paper, then don't expect the Editor of this paper to yell for you. He won't do it. Another thing we would just like to refer to. The Beacon put up an intelligent campaign through Mr. Fleuty in asking the people to support by-laws to bring factories here. As a positive fact, these same factories haven't spent two dollars a year in work in this office. Truly, a nice bunch. Eli! And we're expected to get out a second edition of the Beacon boom everything in sight, pay printers, shout for factories and a dozen other things to boom the town Bsalfght Soap it better than other seep', bat is best when used in the !twilight way. *5y twilight goo and follow dinettes'. for over sixty years by millions of moth- ers for their children while teething, with perfect iaecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, ailayi all pain, nareswind colic, and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. It is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part 01 the Batt Attack of La Grippe. "A year ago I had a bad attack of la - grippe and all the doctor's prescriptions proved of no avail. I was told to try Dr Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- tine and•found it a great blessing as it thoroughly cured me. I told my doctor that Iintended to recommend it to all my friends." -Mrs R Hutton, 12 Claremont St., Toronto, Ont. SONG OF THE THERMOMETER. (John Kendrick Bangs.) Hurrah for the merry midsummer days! Hurrah for the shimmering sheen 1 Three cheers for the weltering July haze • That hangs o'er the pastures green! Oh, here's to the red hdt sun above, And the white hot pave below, When even Oapid, the God of Love, Grows faint in the noonday glow 1 Here's hail to the blazing stretch of sand That borders the summer main, And gives out heat with a lavish hand, And never a thought of gain! Here's frail to the blistering mountains high, That now in the red can's glare, Grilled, roasted, baked and scorching lie In the grip of the aiming air! Ah blessed times indeed are these - Ablaze are my inward fires, As I mount up to those high degrees Toward which my soul aspires! Twenty Minutes Time Enough? To Cure the Worst Headache From Any Cause -New Reduction Method. Most headaches and pains yield instantly tel the new Reduction Method -Dr. Shoop's Twenty Minute Headache Cure. alit calls° for these )atnsis congestion- a rushing of blood to the ervo centers -which distends the veins to nearly the bursting point. Swollen and enlarged. these veins and capillaries exert an irritating pressure onthemyrlads of nerve branches and fibres. Then,there's a /' pain, and finally that excruciating, cease- i \ less ache. This non Reduction Method i disperses the blood. distributes the , • overflew, and ed. rectslttothe pro- / per chanfOls. It frees the nerve ' roe °enterstrom an pressure and \ irritation --the pains and / \aches disap• may pear cause ; ti H e CId-' } their cause has been re- may e• • / moved. You IN THE may tryathou- {{�- sand rem- their may acf�e drug and stu- pify the nerves / into submiestoq but the remedy \ whieh bringa prompt relief and • . / permanent Cure will be successful beeause it reduces the congestion --it must embody the Reduction Method. Medicine has thus found a way -simple and sure, yet the linty way -10 thoroughly overcome these attacks of Head- ache and Neuralgia, The effect of Dr. Shoop's Twenty Minute 1teadache Care is Urompt-•-per• featly' suited to all terms of Headache and abao lwte17 positive in every temperament, For Gale DRUG STORE,. ' ad recommended WALLEY'$ TIME • OUTSIDE ADVERTISING J• P KENNEDY, M. D.O. M..P, S. O. • Member of the British Medical Associa- tion. Gold Medallist in Medicine. Special attention paid.'to diseases of Women and Child; ren. Office hours -1 to 4 p. m.: 7 to 0 p. m. DR. MACDONALD, Centre Street Wingham, DR. AGNEW, Physioian, Surgeon, eto. Ontario. Office -Macdonald Block, over W.McHibbon'a Drug Store. Night calls answered atthe office. DR. ROBT. O. REDMOND, M. R. C. S. (Eng) L. R. 0. P. (Load.) PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. Office, with Dr. Chisholm. VANSTONE, • BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Private and Company funds to loan at lowest rate of interest. No commission charged Mort- gages, town and farm propirrth bought and - sold, Office, Beaver Blooi W J A. MORTON, • BARRISTER, &o. Wingham, Ont. Orders for the insertion of advertisements such as teachers wanted, business chs oes, mechanics wanted, articles fee sale, or intact 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 advertisements. Lowest rates will be quoted on application. Leave or send your next work of this kind to the TINNIES OFFICE. Wfngham. IT PAYS TOS ADVERTISE 8 E. L. Diexnssog DUDLEY Homes DICKINSON & MMES BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Etc. MONEY TO LOAN. OFrxoE: Meyer Block, Wingham. JOHN RITCHIE, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, Wingham, Ont, SCIENCE BREVITIES. A kind of paper is made from sea- • weed which is so transparent that it may be used instead of glass for win- dows. Prussian blue is made by fusing horses' hoofs and other animal refuse matter with impure potassium carbon- ate. Dr. Pallets has given the name "Slatin" to the small planet which was discovered by him on the 9th of March last. A medical expert contends that out of 1,000 girls studying the piano before the age of 11t about 000 are afflicted with nervous troubles in later life. "Gossamer iron," the wonderful prod- uct of the Swansea iron mills, is so thin thnt it takes 4,800 sheets piled one on tt•.i? other to make an inch in thick- ness. Hydrogen light is especially favored • in hospital work for hygienic reasons, aside from the advantages of economy, and the recent experience with the new Strache lamp at the Vienna general hospital confirms the favorable reports already received. In German varnish factories an easy way to extinguish a burning pan of oil has been found in the use, of a fine - meshed wire net. As soon as this covers the burning surface the iron wires con - due; off the hent so rapidly that the gases can no longer flame. Phrenologists say that the higher in- tellectual processes are performed in the front part of the brain, but recent studies have led some physiologists to • conclude that the posterior lobes of the cerebrum are the real seat of men- tal power. These lobes are more de - 'eloped in man than in other animals, and are most conspicuous in the highest races of men. The c.:1 theory that the apparent en- largement of sun and moon near the horizon is due to comparison with ter- restrial objects has long been unsatis- factory. It is now explained as a re- sult of some peculiarity of the eye, which accounts also for the late deter- mination that the shape of the sky is a horizontally widened convexity, with . a singular depression in the zenith. DON'TS FOR BEEKEEPERS. ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D. D. S., L. D. S. Doctor of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania Dental College and Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Office over Post Office, Wingham. ALES. KELLY, Wingham, Ont. LICENSED AUCTIONEER For the County of Huron. exiles of all kinds conducted at reasonable rates. Orders left at the TIMES office will receive prompt attention. FARMERS articles thend anyone wish to having of stook other adver- tise the same for sale in the TIMES. Oar large circulation tells and it will be strange indeed if you do not get a customer. We oan't guarantee that you will sell because yon may ask more for the artiole or stook than it is worth. Send your advertisement to the Timis and try this plan of disposing of your stook and other articles. RAILWAY TIME TABLES. GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM. TRAINS LEAVE TOR London 6.40 a.m.... 3.80p.m. Toronto & East 10.408.m6.49 a.m.... 2 40p.m. Kincardine -.11.15 a.m... 2.08 p -m.... 0.I5p.m. ARRIVE FROM Kincardine .,,.6.40 a.m10.40 e.m.... 2.40 p.m. London 11.10 a.m.. -, 7.95 p.m. Pairaurston 9,86 a.m, Toronto & East 2.08 p.m.... 9.16 p.m. L. HAROLD, Agent, Wingham. CANADIAN PACIFIC IIAILWA'2. TRAINS LEAVE FOR Toronto and East6.53 a.m.... 8.84 p.m. Teeswater 1.25 p.m.,..10,51 p,m. ARRIVE PROM Teeswater.. - 8 46 a.m..... 8.28 p.m. Toronto and East ,1. 17 .m....10.48 p.m. ,T. H. BEEMER, Agent,Wingham. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE moots DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our is probably popinion free whether as atentable. Communion Dons freinvention West age icy. for Handbookpatents. Patents taken through Mann CO. rwean *riot notice, 'without charge, !n the Sieg ftHc Borer Can. A handsomely Itihatrated Weekly. Largest eta% ouiattotr o an7 ?tient o lOarhal. Tema, $$ 5 ear : fCnr 5110068,, $L S0 d b7 all ne iltSildvax,twleudeaterw an �iMoe SS111' w nsl r� Don't allow any colonies to run short of feed. Don't raise a herd of careless drones to eat up the profit. Don't expect the supply dealer to fill all orders in one day. Don't tear open the brood nest unless there is a real necessity. Don't put off making or buying hives until the swarms hang out. Don't encourage swarming unless you can sell bees at a profit. Don't expect anything from weak colonies with poor old queens. Don't expect each colony you have to give you a 200 per cent. profit. Don't spread the brood nest in the spring by inserting combs or frames of foundation. Don't invest big money in newfan- gled traps tdcatch Inoths or keep them out of the hive. Don't think bees will do just as well in an old keg or box behind the garden in weeds ten feet high as your neigh- bor's kept spick and span. -American Gardening. HINTS FOR THE DAIRY. A cow abominates an unclean per- son. Many dairymen feed too much; more feed too little. Cows need roots from October to May for best results. Salting the cows is one of the things too often neglected. Do not milk your cows before they calve. Reduce the food if udder is get- ting too hot, but do not milk. There is good reason to believe the colostrum, or first mess, should be di- vided between the cow and calf. In dairying brains are needed as much as "blood;" yet the amount of brains is not as essential as the quality. Most cows prostrated with fever can be cured if prompt attention is given. The remedy is not physic, but warmth. The greatest blessing that ever comes to a dairyman is a sweet -tempered wife, who can make fine butter. I know this by experience. The wife appreciates having her husband say nice things about her and her work. - Midland Farmer. STRANGE SUICIDES. Forked branches of an apple tree were used as a noose by o Stroudsburg (Pa.) suicide. Because his mother would not let him go in swimming an Arkansas boy cut his throat. Her husband wanted to move and she did not This led a Connecticut woman to drink poison. Champagne with arsenic in it was used by a San Francisco man as a means of self-destruction. "Ah, to see the moon at a distance of one meter," was the note left by a Paris suicide explaining his motive for death. Fearing that his wife would ,scold him for getting home late, a. newly - made London bridegroom committed suicide. NEW ENGLAND EPIGRAMS. The future keeps her secrets for his- tory to tell. Touch is 'a magic wand that atir:s the blood and rakes the eon!. Mistakes pervade our lives; they are our teacher', but in this school di- plomas are 'withheld. The wind makes steps at every door, but when the friendly hinges turn the phantom feet are gone. -Springfield (Mise) Eeptablican. N.•Ai,At.sy1 ) r