HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Times, 1891-04-24, Page 3se etarefnll !' OV*
)on mettles ln"bnth;gi
oroughly dried.Ite
ping the window a•
ore using it again..
ave been neglected,
rad Qondition,raltke
rt of lime, three oftyo..e,Qa
t,of.8oftp;.
at eperinglY withnse
then thither and dry
.�r
be soaped.
Ind duet it well on
pe it with a clealt.
Balt and water,
tbe,otherhand as
y rate, as quickly'
t
may retain none of
same remark ap-
; of wickerwork,
of baths is often a
ugh it need not be
l never he allowed
u a "well -regulated
dried thoroughly
and scoured once
necessary), to re-
cap marks often ins
'ater,etc„It will keep
; but if it is just
half dried, or not
: very Boon present a
'once. Where this.
ip is the best remedy
uy stains from any
A bath will wane
shows signs of rust,
ns to crack—prob-
eighteen months.
t home with little..
.ny bath euamel of
., The;great secret of
g Beta in adhering
:n directions, e8peO1-
1 all traces of old
ith sand paper and
en this accomplished,
1 with boiling soda -
dry it with perfectly '
1, and not till then,
►mol.- ...
1e done with a variety
Itiona, but a very sat-
ple polish is amixture
and vinegar, put in s
en before use. Duet
yell, then rub on the
1. ,old piece of flannel
area it a time, and
d briskly•with two or
8, ending up with an.
erchief. This homes
i is reoommended for
gent polishes, creams,
satisfactory result as`
nee` goes, but in time
of cake over the fur
the mixture of oil and
s as wotl as removes
e.
and other floor cloths
e time and look much
ind polished after the
lied • floors, but with
ttion, Some people,
o the more fainiiiar
,in which case it should
eat care Use a softer
boards, with soft soap.
Iprovement to polish
ter drying with a soft
ad with sweet oil. If
i stained use hot soda
tle turpentine and Car.
'ors take a piece' of clean
1 dry, dip it into some
rub it over the glass,
immediately after withh
ba or whitening sifted1, wipe oli' the powder'
skly with a soft 1, w
elfish with an 010' `1l f`
Do not go over 'nsoitil•
10e at a titre, so that
Wine may be wiped ott'
Gad, which it dormgniak-
le Secret of the proctis
tepidity.
rttt tlt..Iadttlherios Non
00 ltHktlaitt,&Ii ;trot thrt
40,4A ,4 ardor PHRANCE COLUMN, rr
fore the golden i.„',i' r't till coling;t+
BURNED sr Tura Y. W. Q. r, D. Whl fl Ifawthome, to )),a±' ,
°tint, r tren aft(rw:n•d famous
MOWN G>3tapX, w re students, he kelt' irl tough
TU>t Orn 8 temente.
with college mete flit) potiv, r of
"Lit ten, my incl s. -tet ma apedk a while, at stralotiotl was greet. 1[n lost biol..
in.
On the oldest here to•+day,
Aud though it oomph hard to tell my tale,
It it keep you frern going astray
I feel that 1 ought not raiud the shame,
Qr maybe Borne bitter "nears,
God•kuows how much I have been to blame,
fie knows that I mourn with tears,
Over a waated, blasted life, caused by the
love of drink,
Why, lads, I've been to the gatee of hell,
Slipped well nigh over the brink?
',Paving my churoli and Sunday-sobool
count NB my first mistake,
Since thea I have travelled the down-
grade track,
With scarcely a panss or break,
Right I well knew I was all astray, but I
would not panne to think,
Deliberately choosing the downward path
for the
I'of drink.
ve travelled it hard pitiful �and fat, friends, for
• welt nigh thirty year's,
1u spite of my father's warning voice, ip
spite of my mother's tears,
fythought I would shut down the brakes,
lads, and leave off drink in a day,
Itut found it a sad mistake, lads, for one
and all gave way.
I'm alone to -night and a total wreck,
Yes, these are the Words for me,
Oboe I was healthy, young and strong
Look at me now, just see !
Why, scarcely a vestige of manhood left,
no one to take ray hand,
Wife dead! home ruined,andohildren gone,
surely a scattered band.
Sometimes I sea my two tall sons, as I
walk iu the public street,
'Tis little they hays to say to me whenever
we chance to tneet,
How eau 1 blame them either ? I brought
them nothing but shame,
Row can they care for a parent,
Who ruined their once fair name ?
Little they know of the oryiug—crying
with bittter tears,
Little they guess how I'm trying to break
off the sin of years,
Staggering along the upgrade track,
Trying so hard not to wander buck,
But there's One who can see my heart,lads,
I know Ile eau understand,
So I'll never go back on the dowu..grade
track
So loug as He hold my baud,
Die J.ocka, Lake/1W, One.M. • iMnanAtt,
"La Grippe"
Ie aimply epidemic Influenza ; Wilson's
Wild Cherry.wilt oure it safely and quickly.
Get the geuuiue, in white wrappers only,
and use it as directed for Influenza.
Baking in Japan.
The Japan Daly Jlerald describes
bread of the land of the Mikado as
follows : +lost remarleible' is the mile
versa, favor that bread and similar
flour
y concoction e are beginning to
enjoy. , This article of food has also
been completely Japanized, and sells•
in forms unknown to Westerners.
Tsukepan, sold by peripatetic vendors
wt.() push their wares along in a tiny
roofed handcart, is much liked by: the
poorer classes., I1 consists of siices—
thiclf,generous slices—of bread dipped
in sos and brown anger and then fried
or toasted, Each .slice has a skewer
passed through it, which the buyer
returns after demolishing the bread.
One cannot speak highly of this bread.
The dough is heavy, end the color an
unhealthy yellowish gray. But the
best Japanese flour is equal, I am told,
to California No. 3, which is high
praise indeed, Flour is now
used in many other ways l.eeides
the manufacture of simple
.read. There is iasllieban,.cake-bread,
which is sold everywhere. As the
name implies,. it is a sort of sweet
breadstuff, made into cakes,of various
sizes and artistic •figurea, according to
the shill and fancy.of the baker. To
a European palate this Kttshi•ban is
rather dry and tasteless—too much
crumb, as the precuuioos youth said of
Sairy (1 'amp. But it is very cheap,
and for fiv0 cents one can get a huge
paper bag fu:l. liasuteria or sponge.
cake, is not so much Bought after as
it used to be. Yet some l:akeries,such
as the k'ugutsu-do and Tsulfoya, excel
in producing the'lightest and most de -
'Helens of sponge -cake,: •
Rare Abaorptidss, is watt.
The latediiiiief j.ustiee of Maine,
John Apple ofl who has just died at
a great age, had a literary as well as
'lege' instinct Re was born to read
And to love books .tf.4 wellas to he a
;fudge. Therewas a litaraty 1ltor ii
lois Written opinions, Ile kuew'Wltat
WAS fresh in literature, here and
*broad', Ile found time towed navels't
geed ono' Asa tilt*. of 3ow4e u
„
a'lf in a 011 fie, Absorbed in the de.
toile of a procedure,le.would go about.
in au ahseiltecnill(IAfl way, slime
oblivious of sight and sounds, One
day be met his own son, stopped him,
and said cordially, When do you ex-
pect your father home ?' Lift) to -day
seems so much. on the bedecks, there
is eo little time to thick, so much to
do, that this picture of a great lawyer
and judge absorbed in bis work is
particularly attractive. ”
Salt for Swine.
Salt er no salt for pigs ? The ex-
periment stution at Geneva, N. Y„has
experimented a little with pigs to
determine the question whether they
will do better with or without salt.
It perhaps' cannot be considered as a
final.,, settlement of the question, says
Mirror and Farmer, but the experi-
ment brings out some interesting facts
which all point to the economy of
feeding salt. Those having salt show•
ed better gains under every one of
the different rations fed, bled made a
profitable growth only when fed grains,
They drank more water also under the
graius rations, but when ftd a more
succulent ration they drank less than
those who had no salt. While prickly
comfrey was fed the pigs without salt
required 52,8 per cent More water free
food for a pound of grain, the cost
being 55.7 per cent, greater digin with
salt—but neither peu wade a profit.
able growth on comfrey. We shall
expect to find ailcareful experiments
teaching the save lesson of economy
in feeding salt. T11oee who are so
sure that salt ie hurtful or not ueces.
sary we suspect do not know as much
as they think they do,uotwithstanding
their positiveness.
Agriculture Int BUM#io Sohsole,
An address ou the above subject by J E
Bryant, !VI A, delivered before the mem-
hers of the Ontario Teachers' Association
at their SOt11 annual couventiou has, at
their request,been published in pamphlet
form by order of the "Hoo Mr Dryden,
Minister of Agriculture: It is well worthy
thoughtful perusal of every teacher, and
farmer who desires the;rdvancemeut of his
calling iu the Province. In arguing for
placing of agriculture ou the list of studies
iu our rural schools Mr 'Bryant naturally
makes as his strongest point that of its
utility, but he does not neglect to present
its claims as a dLsoiplivary study and in
lesiheticai and ethical cultureas the
educationist understands these terms. Iu
order to stimulate the people of Ontario in
regard to this matter, Mr Bryant shows
how far ahead of America iu attention to
agricultural education are such nations as
Germany, France, Austria, Denmark,
Belguim, Sweden and others,. Very truly
he says in concluding his admirable
paper:
'If Canadian agriculture is, as we be'
lieve it is, the foundation etruoture of all
our industries, and the principal support
of our material well being, than in order
to maintain: Its position in the‘ -world in the
faoe ofl the world's competition it has tot
become more eefontifie; and it it is to bar
made more scientific,, the place to begin,
the work is in our public schools."
We presume that persons desiring copiea,
of this address can obtain theta by making
application to the IIlinister of Agriculture,,
Toronto.
John Kennedy, aged 76,a retired farmer'
was killed on the G. T. R. at Acton, Out,,
Saturday while walking on the track.
An unmarried woman named' Fannie
Robb, residing with her brother and sister
near the village of Aucaster, committed
suicide Saturday morning by hanging bey
seat,
The property and plant on the Hamilton
Electric Light Company have been pure
chased frem the Canada Permanent Loan
and Savings Company, of Toronto, by a
syndicate of Moutreal,Toroutoaud Henan.
ton capitalists, the purchasing. Moe being:
ece;Oo0.
.z,,,,,,,...... _
young. old, or middle ag fad, who find n
tltenl$4VP.lxteryotl6, week or exhausts • LEAJed, vibe are brokendown from e*oeslilt
or overwork, resulting in many of the
following eylnptome . ?dental depres. $ .'Si$ M R,
si'1n pr m are old dna loo f ('
.rirli r,
vitality, l:xrs'af memory, load dreams
dimness of eight, palpitation of the
heart, etnission, lack of energy, pain
in the kidneys, beadake, pimples on
the face or body, itoliing or peeular
sensation about the scrotum, waisting
of the organs, dizsiness, speeke before
the eyes, twitching of the muscles,
eyelids and elsewhere, bashfulness,
deposits in the urine, lose of will
power, tendernes of the scalp end
spine, weak and flabby muscle's, desire
to sleep, faildi•e to be mated by sleep,
constipation, dullness of hearing, loss
of ,taice, desire for solitude, excite-
bility of temper, sunken eyes sura
round's with LEADEN CIRCLE, Oily
looking skin, eta., are all symptoms
of nervous debility that led to inanity
and dead useless cures. £he spring
or vital power having lost its tension
every function wanes in consequence.
Thos(, who through abuse ' coinnlitted
in ignorance may be permanentely
cured. Send your address for book
on all diseases peculiar to reran.
Address M. T. LUBAN, 50 Front St.
L,, Toronto, Ont. Books sent free
sealed. Heart disease,, the symptoms
of which are faint spells, purple lips,
numbness, palpitation, skip beats,
not'ilushes, rush of blood to the head,
dull pain in the heart with beats
strong, rapid and irregular, the emend
heart beat quicker than the first, pain
about the breast bone, etc., can
positively be cured. No cure, no pay.
Send for book. Address M. V.
LUBON, 50 Front Street East,
Toronto, Ont.
has Mr t4tgd & ltlr)te ,Moak of
HORSE BLA.NKSTll,
CU1tRY00111 1,
RIPS,
TR ells
VALISES ria,,
Which will be sold at bottom prioat.
BARENESS, double or angle,
abort notice n aattetaouttoe arae :to calci
, and guaranteed:
tali. tail -solicited.
JP--Opposlte the Bank of Hamilton.
MATTHEW AMBLER,
ngnam, Feb, tth, 18011,
OD
P, CHAPMAN,
Lie
ISSUER or MARRIAGE. LICENSES, NOTARY
PUBLIC, CONVEYANCER, Ere,
0rrrce. «' Big” Bookstore,
RIPLEY, ONT.
)(cue. to Loan on Farm Security at Low Rates of
interest No commission charged.
WINRHAM
PLOUflj6 MILL
The tinders' nod wish to tender their behCnk
for the liberal patronage given to our 1i
sevoratyeare prior to the burning, Of ottr i
cendiarlern, During the past season a•o'
noddelled the tow., mill to the latestapprovecf sy
tell of Hungarian Boller Process Mil ling,
Ilene ',Moan nowive better acoonmodatton th4
ever before. We oder
Prompt Dispatch, raw iia
QIIALITY S F,' Fair Returnse
COND i O NONE IN THIS
ea
SEOTIQr*.
And by close personal attentlin to the busbies,
hope to bo again favnred with a trial by all ofd
friends and many new ones.
Yours moat respectfully,
HIITTON & CAR
Wingham Mill. Oct 29. 1b$0,
J. GOLLEY,,
VETERINARY SURGEON.
Honorary Graduate of Ontarto Veterinary College,
Do tottreat l Diseases of Domesticate Anims
pre-
paredn the latest scientific manner.
Calle promptly attended to. Moe and Infirmary,
RIDD'B OLD STAND, Wingham..
I.Caltnrs by night will find him at the office.
FCB 'THE BEST VALU E
ORDERED CLOTHING,
—.00 TO--
WEBSTER'S
C. P. R. TIME TABLE.
Trains arrive and depart as hollows :
LEAVING ARRIVING
5:35 a, m ..........For Torouto ..........5:35 a. m
2:20 p. m 2:20 ,.tu
22:20 00 chin For Toeswater 210 '
10:30
•
0-176.A. LTD 21R'CT.N 12,21r
A. C. STRATHDEE, AGSN7, WINOMAII.
Throuin America—Noh.
Wer, Pae fic Coast,, etc.h tokens to all ,"ovias the shortest andrtalt
popular routes. Baggage checked through to
dentivation. Lowest freight rates to all points.
-"TIME TABLE.
LEAVE WINOIIAN. ARRIVR A7 WINOIIA3,
6:30 a,ut.Torollto.0uelph,Palmeleton, deo. 8:30 pan,„11:10 "" iOtl0
3:40 p.rn, ". Clinton,
7:25 Palmerston, Mixed 10:15 a.m.
6:45 a.m London, dac...,...,,,11:00 "
3:40 p,rn. " 7:45 p.m.
11:10 am Kincardine, &o ...6:80a,m,
3:30 P;l" " 11:10 ""
101,1 6:50 p.m
HATS,
CAPS, SHIRTS,
COLLARS, MIFFS', &C.
Cheap for KASH.
AT— -__--,
►S.
IfEli I ag
MUS.C.
CM I
INSTRUCTIONS, ON PLANO AND ORGAN, ALSO CLASS 1N
HARMONY,
For particulars regarding terms, etc, please gall at
my home, corner Fr Alois and Patrick stt Bets,
FLORiLLA SPARLINO.
DAVIS
IS OFFERING
.--ON
F A..M PPOP R TY
AT VEf3,Y LOW RATES.
OFFICE—OPPOSITE THE MARKET.
Wnne,rat' OCronnn 4511, 1858
Pro erty ror Sale in Belmore.
The undersigned offers for sale a desirable pro
d
dwelling in houaovillage office stable andodriving hed, of a with
one acre and u•half of land in connection. Splendid
garden, with all sorts, of fruit trees. Will bo sold
at a bargain. For particulars, apply to
FRli1Elf1CK COOK,
I/e11110. 0.
BANK OF HAMX .ATON,
vq,.. 7 G- MI A. WE
Capital, $1,000,000. Rest, $450,000.
President—.ion& STUART.
Vtce•Prcaideut—A. Ge. AMSAY.
DIRECTORS
Ions Pnooroa, OMAN, GURNEY, MO ROAou, A. T
Woos, A.11. LAN (Tomato).
Cashier—J. TURNBULL.
Savings Bank hours, 10 to 3 ; Saturdays, 10 to
1. Copoelts 02 $1 and upwards received cud .interest
allowed.
Speoiat Deposits also received at current
rates of interred.
D:afts on•Great Britain and rho' united states
Sought and meld
B. WILL8O.tt, AGENT.
'ItSiEYii1i 1DICKINSON,
SoLzoitoss.
(1)11S,' AVIA
0 y'ttra It Dt1r t:
groats Iafora; • .1ur tsa isra OW t 6uval a tlotltivlt reitlsdy for rho s•,lite t;
limo. Ely Ito timely un t& :$suis afhnt*leis oa►ot kava eutly en rettX curly
t glad `to rend two hallo of tee r d). PRICE at any .2 a 'readttra watt Wowr..tt
tr kr' d Phe
Has removed to E. F. Gov'ster's cld stand, where he has a large and •
nicely assorted stock of
'atekes,, Meeks, Se , ellery, Silverware a
Speetaeles,
Which he is selling away down in price, and will he pleased to
have youi,eall andtake a. look, through his Stock.
Repairing' a Specialty
WAR worl*:avarranted and , done promptly.,
E. D lisle v
Mason's Bleck.
—eacce@eo» to: .5i IttMneot,•ntanufactirergra 04—,
ERSi,LAN13, RQLLEES,,
ri.Lp:*$i,, G4140 PLiO•s'i i S,: BICC;
Qsiition
k.itzt e
:rt. ZopaSiy
.u��if ti
: ` ^
WM:ANTS .FOlt 'lt^ SGV• t1r mAsro ,A ttel 'tr'ct 3iAti, rat.
Bousiut 1N4•1 �i,,`PPLU S.