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HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Times, 1891-08-28, Page 24m nuts J1 BIl)A.4, Ax/GUSJ...2$, 1801. BOYS WAISlCD• "Wanted. -a boy." How often we These very common. words may neo Wanted --a boy to errands run Wanted for everything under the sun. All that. the men to -day can do To -morrow the boys will be doling too, ' I'Qr the time is ever Coming when The boys must stand in place of BOG.. Wanted—the world wants boys to -day, And she offers them all she has tor pay, Honor, wealth, position, fame, A. useful life and a deathless name. Boys to shape the paths for leen, , Boyo to guide the plough and pen, Boya to torwards the tasks begun, For the world's great work is never done. The world, is anxious to employ Not just one, but every boy Whose heart and brain will e'er be true To work bis hands shall dnd to do, Honest, faithful, earnest, kind;; To good awake, to evil blind; Heart of gold without alloy. Wanted—The world wants such a boy. —Chicago Post. How .Old is an 014 Maid. When. sloes a maiden' become an old maid ? Ali, there's the rub 1 . Tf somebody will determine this point the social' world will feel a shook of relief then go whirling an more smoothly than ever. 'ou who baye never been old maids, and never will, have no idea of the worry a certain. class of women endure ,As they approach the 30 -year-old period they begin to get nervous and show signs of impatience. they will. not admit that they' are scared, but by their eagerness to attract attention. and the eagerness with' which they discuss matrimonial and kindred .topics. it is quite apparent that' they are merely whistling to.keep their courage up. If they only knew that worry,., and anxiety bring Wrinkles. iri,itate,;'the nervi?s;. and disturb the circulation. they would try to be calm. Nervous nese ages them more than hard 'W orb, while disturbed circulation is a sure destroyer of good complexion. It used to be thought that•a giriJlad dost her best gpporiunities' if she were not married before •reaching the age of twentyeone, but that notion bas been effectually upset. She may sail along safely ubtil•she is thirty, and if she doesn't fret and worry herself into a fright she can even.go several years longer without being branded with the obnozous letters 0 M. There are old maids who haven't seen twenty summers and there are maidens who have seen forty winters who are not old maids. It is a condi-, tion of mind and heart rather than a question of years, *arms a writer in the Pittsburg Commercial, The records rrf the 'lieen court show that a very large majority of Aineriean women marry between the ages of tweLty and. thirty, with more over the latter age than under the former. With .foreigners it is different. The women tarry anywhere from fourteen to tWenty. Hungarians and Poles ' are given to early marriages. Old inen marry young bits of girls, but,old wnlnen rarely marry young fnen, The Hungarians laborer wants a wife to' help Ilial snake a living, and he wants' her to be strong and healthy. Their wives know what is expected of thein and, assume the burdens of wifehood with the feelings of one entering upon a lifelong servitude, American women look Bron it as the beginning of the best and most enjoyable part of life.. Itch, Mange and Scratches of every` kind, on human or animals, cured in 80 minutes by Wood• .lord's Sanitari' Lotion. Sold by W. B. Towler. There was ft:WI: int. A tegument on the verboseness,. or ; e'rbaps itettitr,'the spread•eagle style 1 :of some oratory, is furnished by the tkrowittg ineidetlt .>. It 1s related in a Pennsylvania x114 140 that on a'aurtlr of .duly, many I. ' ran ego, a certain eloquent member: 'Li'f ODnsgreea watt delivering an oration.. had reheartted at some length tile. tue11 nd aebievetnenis of the signers he • Declaration 'of Itidependeiace, talon, up the enbject of the great sees ofWaeilinxton. Working up t the full height of his exeelienoe, b asked In what place shall rto put thi peerles& Man of Blount Vernon'? Shal we put him among the kings o earth 1 No ; for he scorned theirtitle Shall we put him among the sot diets ? No .; for be was much mor than a soldier. Shall we put him among the states men 'I No ter the 8implioity of hi lofty., genine rose superior to tis devices of statecraft. In what place, then, ehall we pu him—this peerless man=-'•— Just then Sandy McDowell, Scotehman, whose acquaintance wit American history was not much great er than his liking for Amerioan ora tory, rose from his seat in the raids of the audience. Hoot, mon 1 be said ; ye earn e' putt 'im in my place 'ere, for I'm ga' got 1 0 0 4 f e' s 0 a li n n CONSUMPTION `CURED. An old physielan, retired ;from practice, having had placed fn his hands by an Nast India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy far the s5eedy and parmanont cure of Consumption, Bron- chitin, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and Lung Affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Nervus Complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, he has feit it his duty to make it known to his suffering. follows., Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, l will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this recipe, in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using: Sent by Mail by addressing with stamp, natningthis paper. W. A.. NoYEs 820 Powers Block Rochester, N. Y. reeding Sheep._ ,. The idea that breeding animals 'are more efficient when thin in flesh bas kept many a sheep from reaching its greatest possible standard. The ' 35 years of practical experience and obser• nation that T nave had in keeping and breeding sheep have failed to bring to my knowledge a single instance, where a flock given plenty of,•open air exere else and other' reasonable treatment has been fed into a condition of flesh too high for successful breeding or sheltering. Among the causes of failure the most prominent ones are ,close confinement, housing in close, damp stables without proper ventila- tion, irregularities in feeding and abrupt changes in 'the kind - of feed: In the care of lambs there should not be any other than the most liberal policy presented. Plenty of pasture and a well supplied feed trough is the only way to secure a rapid and corme piete development. I know of no period in their lives'wben a change in such a policy is advisable. True money can be secured. from the flock by those who diligently and intelli- gentlyseek'to find it there.—Presi- dent Day of the Illinois Wool Grower's Association. Owing to the unpreoeuented demand for plate glass,it has advanced considerably in price. Messrs McCausland & Sou,Toruuto, fortunately made 'a Contract before the advance for a very considerable quantity, and are thus enabled to offer their patrons: this season a decided advantage in price, the quality being superior to any ever pre. viously imported. Observe hour FingerNaile. Broad nails indicate a gentle, timid and bashful nature. Pale or lead colored nails indicate melancholy people. People with narrow nails are ambi- tions and quarrelsome. Small nails indieate littleness of mind, obstinacy and conceit, L' overs of knowledge and liberal sentiment have round nails.. Oh:Aerie, martial men, delighting in a war, have red and spotted halls, Nails growing into the flesh at the points and , sides indicate luxurious tastes. Tourish No 1, male That Indian is a fine specimen of a fellow, See how he carries himself. Tourist No 2,. female; Yes, and see how be lets his wife carry everything else. I feel like a woad pile after a hard wintery your honor, he nlurinui:ed, as he rose from the bench and faced his aeClisers. Bow's that P kindly inquired the judge. Alt used up, yotit honor, Sixty days to recuperate, smiled the court, laid it eame'to pass. Hot Weather poet*. Don't hurry, Don't worry, Don't complain. Don't wear etarchefll linen oreuspe i dere or a vest. Don't swelter in rooms when you can sit in a balcony or out of doors, Dant debilitate your system with tame baths or political discussions, but take your baths: as invigoratingly cold as you can and leave politics for cooler. weather, Don't eek anybody if it .is hot enough for bim, and don't answer the question if it is put 'to you. Live. calmly and you may enjoy life with the mercury in the nineties as well as at any other ti:,pae. For Influenza or *'La Gripe" Wilson's` Compound Syrup of Wiled Cherry is a Imre and safe remedy, Tbererisno better medi- cine for the eure'of Influenza, Bronchitis, Coughs, Oolds,Croup and kindred diseases. Get the genuine in whitt� wrappers. Mark was Moving. Mark Twain was once an impeoue thious reporter in San Franoisco,often not having money enough to buy his dinner. Ile was standing .discousol: ate one day on the ' corner of Monte gomery street with a cigar box under his arm, An acquaintance saw bins' and asked him wharf he was about. I'm moving, said til` bumoiist, and carrying with me all m,y worldly goods. He thea opened the box and displayed his entire wardrobe, vas he styled it— an old .clay pipe, a paper collar, and a well -Worn necktie. He- is now worth probably $100,000. Beetish Spavin Liniment all hard, soft or calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Splinta,Bing Sone, Siveeney,Stifies,Sprains, Sore and SWolleu Throat, Coll hs, eta. Save 880 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever knows. Sold by W. B. Towler. The Canadians carried everything before them in the Scottish • games at Buffalo lately. John .liattray and: Frank •Wilson, of Loudon, captured prizes in the dancing contests. Charles Currie, the young Parkhill. giant, George Perrie, tie redoubtable athlete of Brussels, and Wrestler R N Harrison, of. Toronto, heft everybody in the rear in the throwing matches. Filing the?Silo. In filling . the.. silt, the excessive tramping of, the past; is not followed, exoept in extreme cases, writes John Gould to the Practical Farmer: In Ohio, tramping silage as the pits are being filled has been abandoned, as far as I can learn, exoept a very little alongthe walls to overcome the frio• tion of the•. silage :against the wails. Some do not practice this even t6 any great extent. The 'siluge as it comes from the carrier isyusually allowed to drop into the centro of the pit, and is then forked about the pit by a man whose business it is°to keep the silage level and the sides tramped. • A far better way is to lay two scantlings across the top ofutbe silo three feet apart, and" on' th4so lay some short boards so as to make it platform at least 3• feet square. At the silage falls upon this table it, quickly forms a pyramid,and the silageass it falls upon this is shunted to abdut every part of the silo ands needs very little attention an hour during the-tday is about all the labor needed in aa16x16•foot silo` The silage will be muclh the highest at the wails, and this efra weight then forces down the silage about all that is needed. Sometimes the silage will not f&q 'uniformly, and it way need :a� little spreading. This is a, great labor- - p R saver, and in our silos nota bushel has been lost in eortterk or sides in two Winters with this plan of self-sacrifice ing. and packing, and has saved the expense of One man, save the last aay, when the nearness of the silage to the platforms did not longer give the falling The Itauteit Milo, As AiAI)Jd oil LIMES, ON TCl?i, ON RAC TRACIXt ETC,. The following items will prove offi forest to young' folks; `f'he fastest mils run by a railraa train was made in 5Q seconds. The fastest mile mode in rowing i a single beat: took 5 minutes send. second. The fastest. mile made by a lean o a tricycle was made in 2 minutes an 49 2-5 seconds. The fasteettinte'an snowed ons f a wile is recorded es l minutes 39 aeconds.: The best.time for a mile by a ma on a bicycle is recorded as 2 'minute 20 3.5 seconds. The fastest nlileever made by a uta swimming was done iti 26 minutes an 52 seconds, ?. The ftistest mile evfir aocomplishe by a man walking was made in minutes and 23 second. In running the fastest mile mad by a man was accomplished in minutes 12 -seconds, The fastest. mile over made by running horse was run in 1 minut 85* seconds. . u glow young men Judge a • Girl. Young men very oft a judge a girl b her sisterly qualities, says the editor o the Ladies' Home journal. "I' lone she would make a loving wife from tb way she treated her brother when, to fl appearances, I was apparently unobse vant," said a friend of mine recent' when 1 5sked what guided him in hi choice of a wife. _ "Tell me what kind of a sister she i and I will tell you what kind of a wif she'vvill be," is a common saying anion 'men. "• Tho Fruit Crop in the States. Detroit Free Prots. The fruit crop of the United State bids fair to rival its grain crop tbi season, and the importance. of the cir cumstancee is scarcely less. Last yea there was an almost complete failure i apples, the staple fruit, and the mor perishable products were too costly to b bought by the poor Ql to 'be preserve in large quantitiesbyithose in moderat circumstances. ` e'b.bizirel or tivo of goo sound apples iri the cellar. is as impor tont to the econorny of; any household a the filling of the potato bin and, whe these become more costily than oranges there is to be physical suffering, for frill diet is necessary to the health of mos people. This year will be an exceptio and one may have apple sauce to hi heart's content and not of the canne variety. , .Fresh Peaches, Pears and Grapes a Jas„MoXelvie's Star restaurant. Silage for DairyCows. Mr S M Tracey, director pf the Mis sissippi Experiment Station, after an ex perience since 1882' with the silo, sum up his conclusions concerning its value as follows : It increases the yield of milk fully one third. That such milk• is equally good' fo sale or for making butter as that from cows fed on dry feed. That while the quantity of milk is in- creased, there is no diminution of the percentage of butter fat. That cows to which silage is fed keep in much better health than those con- fined to dry feed, and suffer much less from running down when turned on the pastures in the spring. The Cr p The drop report from. the Ontario Bureau of Industries may be summariz- ed as follows t Pall wheat a very fine 1eld, estimated to reach 20,800,000 bush - 'els as compared with 14,300,000 last year; spring wheat, above the average yield, 9,600,000' bushels as against '7,600,000 in 1890; barley, ttgood crop; peas, excep. tionally good ; oats, good ; hay and clover unusually light ;. roots, fair ; apples, light; small fruits, at abundant yield. Mamma, tearfully 1 Tommy, it gives me as much rain as it does you to punish; you, Tommy (also tearfully(; Mebbe it does, but not in the came place. • Oh, What a Cough. Will yon heed the warning? The signal perhaps of the sure approach of that more terrible disease Consumption Ask your selves if you can afford for the sake of saving 50e.,te run the risk and do nothing silage a obalx ce to scatter sufficiently Those tvho.practice the no-treadingplan are wholly in favor of it, and it is' rare that one hears of anything but success with it, while those who advocate much treading in +corners and sides do have more or less trouble with mold and lows of silage. The center of a pit where it is not trodden always keeps: If the wallaare perfect, why should not the sides and oorners'keep as well untrodden Stir it, Ws know from experience that as does the center 1' It will if the walls " Sliitolt'a Cure will cure your cough. It are air -proof. ,leve fails. S (E.' EVERY e 6 . TIMES OFFI d W INQ•kI4 Subeoripttonprioe, A Qr 11 r- r 11 d n 8 d - is r .: til#0111 ..•1.8 PIJBLLSIIED,_• PItfltll Y 410BNXI`iG, _Ar Txa-- E, 4OSEPHINE.STPIEg'i' t, ONTA1RIO. tet 1f perYeer,lnadvanoo ADVERTISING BATES; 1 Space 11 Yr. 1 O mo. 1. 8 mo, 1L mo, Ono Within' Half ", n quarter " one look 060 00 86 00 JII 20 00 I 400. 086 00 ' 020 00 20 00 12 00 12 00 7 00 000 200 56 00 6 Of 4 00 100 d : t,d'vat and other castle advertisements, 8q. per line for first insertion, andlie. per line tor each subsequent insertion. a Local notices 10e, per line for first insertion, and So. per line for each subsequent Maarten. No local nottco will be charged less than 25c, • a Advertisements of Lost, Found, Strayed, Situations, and Business Chanties Wanted, not exceeding 8 lingo nonpareil, 41 per month Houses end Farms tor Sale, not exceeding 8 lines, R $1 for Stet Month, 600, per subsequent Month These terms will be strictly adhered 10• fi Special rates for longer advertisements,, 01 001 tower periods, Advertisements without specific directions, Will be Inserted till forbid and charged accordingly. Tran. n sitory advertlsetnents lnust be paid in advance Changes for contract advertisements must be in d the office by Wednesday noon, in order to appear that week 11. ELLIOTT OtnTOa,AriD Pu1Lisa$u d PRlp G DR. MACDONALD, [l JOSEPHINESTREET, 0 i Wirsutit, °suunio ... -uu' B. TOWLER, Ai,D,O.M•, Et 1'Y.. • Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, 8 '—Coronor for County of Huron-- ' Office at "Tics Pr,AOIDIAOP" . Wingham, Ont • Or rtog IToWts.—O to 12, a. m., i to 0, p. iu., or at Residence, Diagonal Street. . J. A. MEI/DRUM, f eaRJ Honor Graduate of Toronto Universtty, and Member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of W Ontario. , e Otriee and Residence—Corner of Centro' and Patrick streets, formerly occupied by Dr. Bethune. Wotan/at • t . ors ' y T..1t. VANSTONE, e 11r BARRRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc„ Etc ' Private and Company fund% ,to loin at -lowest rates s interest. No commission charged. Mortgages, town e andfarm property bought and.sold. i. OFFICE—Beaver Block Waltman, MT , • 1 4.. A. AMORT'ON BARRISTF,R &e., s Wingham t- 1 Ontario t • Iv EYER & DICKINSON, ) LVI . ) H. W. C. MEYER • Q. C. I E. L. D; BoNaoN, 13. A. d BARRISTERS ,AND SOLICITORS, Ete., Etc., So Bettors for Bank of Hamilton, Commissioners for o, taking affidavits for Manitoba. ' Farm, . Town and VMUege propertybought and 'sold. Money (private funds) loaned on mortgage security at 5/ per cont. - Money invested for private persons, upon the best mortgage securities without any expense to the' 6 lender, Lands for sale is Manitoba and the North. welt. QMee--Eent's.BIock, Wingham, t DENTISTRY._ t LJ' .. ....'-e,„:::r . 1 /ftyAsmai J 5. JEROME, Winanan, Is manufacturing Celluloid Plates, Vuioanite plates of the best material as cheap as they can be got in the Dominion. All work warranted.. of teeth ,by the use of Electdc- Vapor. • will extract teeth for 25 Cents the Beaver Block, opposite the • t . ' Painless extraction ity or Vegetable TAKE Noriett—1 each. ; OFFICE • In Brunswick House. Wm. H.. • OFFICE, Opposite Will visit of'each month. Macdonald, L. .DENTIST. D. S., BLOCK i Mondays . - ---._ MASON'S the Queen's Hotel, Wingham, Gorrie lst and 3rd - Josue EITCIUE. GENERAL INSIJ BANbJ` AGENT %V1NOrtAri, . QNTAR10 ROBERT CUNNINGHAM, j� INSURANCE • FIRE AND MARINE, GUELPH,. DI DEAN, JR., Wmara Dt, LICENSED AUCTIONEER 11.41. THE COUNTY OP HURON,r Sales attended in any part off the Co. Charges Moderate, , JOErt CUItBXII, Wneowtt; (.)Nr., . LICENSED AUCTIONEE= reit res COUNTY Or tittnox. All orders left at the Toms office promptly attend. ed to. Terms reasonable, , JAMES ITENDERSON' LtosneS,Io AOCIr6NECE Iblt C0t1NTtil ItaROAr 3rtt BRu6E, Anseles attended to promptly and on the Shortest Notfee. Charges Moderate and Satistattion Guaranteed, Ali necessary arrangosnente can be made at the Totts' Office t WIN6rtAM a 0g4 BOLTON & HAwai:INS r. L. dt b. L SonvEronS AND Ower, )isai LISTOWEL APO 'WING1TIAtt . All orders loft at the Mee of the TINES will rd eche prompt attention ns' PATERSON, BAirnrp OP 2r00711 T vittolr Cent, tetssn OP litAlt ntAGSS LICENO0f1. WIIOGITAM 0111Y, • Have borne. One tq t yesterda Show does not Select bend all Angry of wrath, fiercely, Teke practical.: and poria Every by at leas A min cannot sa by to>mo Steadf needless the good When in the fa company, The to 'durable all his lif is Innoce Some things menta, li played ut blew the There portanit or even in the d good na Life i fices or which e obligati win an comfor In 'though the po when a know) can ad Soei gives 1 groan Wool to res ever 1 and to mete, again. It•i the h heard ours, bas n thein that core, good ours H did i II afte n �l�lo bod t Bli r