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The Wingham Times, 1894-06-01, Page 3chopped (lawn, imps a-stande' s. It mast be :s say it don't its head to thele )(1S, and a-lY£Lnt- ! But it can't lett tree must a crooked," incl is own conceit; m there was 110 id see how to valked on in si+ 'reseittly Shocky l Ralph's eyes to ass that tree feels - you ?" n't feel?" td • lonesome, and o die, you know. • senco they put graveyard, and 1G poor -house 811(1 means's. What poor -house? Is than Means's? I and one of them n' me and Banner where father's 1` wonder if God. poor folks when and their mother -house? Do you Seems so to me. • .ek of niy father ly from • England le sea, Don't no- ek keer fer God, net leer fer Flat Id, though, of he'd' 1i of the poor -house ,'ay from Means's, my mother every, and sleep on my like I used to afore -to speak but he Shocky, With his • Olt ahead, and as if presence, told over ho had often talked Abel, the trees. fit Me. Pearson to ? Else I'd a been I was twenty-one, lean man like Ole n't but seven. And • fourteen years to mel I never could nether again after her time. 'Cause, '11 be through in and I'll be ten and. d we'll get a little as Granny Sand - hear another Word aid that afternoon. t before thele, was a log cabin, with its llflower stalks, now front, with its rain- ;hc.side of the low barrel by the fence... a alone the old and whose hideousness nutation for almost • owledge. She was' ltcl newspaper. She ;Uninated medicinal ail gossip. She was nlllispensable to the the neighborhood. hr medical skill we eln opinion, for her to be found in the geiet1CC. All's breath was to Itie, faultless horse 31 deer. Whet did a1 to visit; this old CONTINUED.) .. NDALL'S. 7N CURE THE. rSSFUL REMEDY 4 OR REAS?. eta and never blisters. roofs below SPAVIN CURE ¢t;, L. 9., N.Y., yaw 15, 1894. t a e iondtd bay horse tomo in. I got him for Oso. I used ,. The P.Ainivin is gone now' reek, so I gotO4120 for horse. Spavlu Cure._ . s. *sltsbstf, SPAVIN CURE InsLZT, MFcn., Deo.18,1898. rbur kehdall's Spavin Curs Oaths on two horses Led I have over used. MAIM Fakbaktelt, 1 het nettle, Iyiyt1ul1ggyyi.syt.e,yo..radddroit ,may ff4tN ?%Atte, VT. ''11/.1. I . Tr a11a COLUMN, THE WIN€1RAIVI TIMES, JUNE t,1894, An Angel 'Unawares. About Berries. ! Sleeping -booms.. . le'e\»F'(:a'IAU ]lY Tttt9 wI\t}FI.1tI n1i1NCI[.) An insurance agent, albeit -_£L useful For growing berries of all kinds I What e11a1l we put into our Bleeping. and at tilers attracttvo person, is. not ' select well drained soil o11 which tsulno moms? Nothing that cannot be cleaned ('� 1 ! 11 •) t,' tete!•n'it r j rtJttl ' always a welcome visitor), To some hard Crop was produced last Season, Or removed. The "ideal" sleepiug-room T 'r nt)r + r I9 ' people, indeed. 11e is a decided bora. tYr II eath,+ atwe.ttiun. of the mothers and sisters One of this class owns a iianclt4Olne -tn the ::mr, that Ow wnlnan'x tlhrl+sign Towner- residence, and even the thought of an aue,0elm meets utere Monday at three ociock ]iovelCed llifi al'e', • O11e(1VU11- sharp, forum, boar, ret A£i'+ nelul'•t iNklu r:e, Pnt• - T•04.41.0 1 trek .tevei,. All ladles aro Made welcome ing recently he was e11,jOyillg 111:3 Ax &.0 I.dltor h,,d Icleedl,v given na pert nl ldx otium cum dig, when a 111a11 walked spnoo; 1nr our work wa ash Yttuu4x of the cauxo to send items of interest on all moral questions of the 111011 him very unceremoniously. The day to any 09 our minium.. .. • visitor was a total stranger to hien, and before he had time to throw alt Beer Drinking and Tenip..rance. inkstand at flim or to ask him to sit During the taking of evidence by down ho began quite (shiny and i11 a our Royal Commission several Can- business -like tone to tall(, adieu ministers, who have had quite i Have you any insurance on this a reputation as public) teltehers,and re- house 'said he.. ligious loaders, ekplessed themselvesWell, Mr. Otium eine dig was afire decidedly opposed to prohibition and in a minute. encouraging do you mean, shell() stormed, ecidedly in favor of e beer drinking "in the interests of by breaking' into my house, sir, temperance." No doubt some of in this manner—breaking into my these gentlemen mean well, but they house with your infernal insurance have certainly come to conclusions business ? It is no' concern of yours, sir, whether' without giving anything Like careful r this house is insured or study to a very important question. not. Get out or I'll throw you out. Beer drinkers seldom get so drunk I The visitor was as calm as a May aril helpless as spirit drinkers, and morning, some of them never get stupidly It is 110 concern of mine whatever, drunk at all, but few of them escape he replied, but I thought doing themselves and their posterity You have no right to think of serious injury. This is just the fin- what does not concern you, sir, info portant Consideration that superficial terrupted the house Owner. I wLiit observers overlook. no i1151ara11C0 agents forcing. Germany is generally pointed to as,selves upon me, sir.. r, a beer drinking country and a sober I utulorstatld that pc' ' div, and I country, and the beer advocates are stn 80 Insurance mit.- I 11'!.15 fond of pointing to it. A mall • and merely passing Rea. .House, and I his. wife and their children often gather round the same table, even in the beer house, and imbibe in a 'slew and social way. Drunkenness and brawls and fights may not conte of such customs, but serious evils do come nevertheless. Recently Dr. Brendel, a well-known German physician, nave a scientific lecture before the Anthropological Society of Munich, right in the ?mart of the best beer consuming part of Germany, in which he used this significant language "Prof. Dr. A. Bellinger, of this city, has proved rk, the prevalence of various disease's of a definite nature of the• internal organs caused by the universal drinking of beer. A normal heart or kidney is the exception. Here in Munich. This state of affairs RISC) .,/ injures the progeny in as most serious string body, sharp appetite, and in a manner. Dr. Dennie Amid that of word, heath and happiness follow the "the Children of non-drinkers 82 per usl'ho stron;i p ant abouts Hood's same cent. were sound, while of those of permanent, be- observed it wire'' on fire in the rear, and it eactirred to me that if you had no it iirance on it perhaps you • did not wish it to burn down. That's what the visitor saicl.r' rut illr. Otium cum dig didn't heal.' it all._ He had gone to ' the lie'; and- the Detroit Free P,i:ess. • K� Tired, weak; Nervous, Means impute blood, and overwork oi` too much strain on brain and body. TI only way to cure is to feed the np�aRes on pare blood. Tbousauds ol', eople certify that the best blood p�ue'itier, the bebt uer('e tonic and etrel,t i'Vh builder is Hood's . Saraptn•il1a. , Pat it has done for others it will also for you—Hood's observed visitor smiled aitcU • d lowed Cures. Nervousuesti,•11oss.ot sleep, loss of ap- petite (ind�,geoeral debility alydisappe(fr when Food's Sarsaparilla is pdrsisteutly talce,.w;"and strong nerves, sweet sleep, tato glouilcl being best, will have neither paint nor paper on its walls. The woodwork will be of hard wood • Sod. ground may be used'by plow- • iinisbed in oil 'or simply varnished. The. ing very shallow• ---two inches it' pox- walls should be finished in hard plaster',and siblc, Cut fine with. clise or spading tinted ; t11011 they can be easily oleaned, harrow, then plow deeply, turning The windows will be low fund of large sizer sod entirely under, to let in all the sun mid air possible, The Cover heavily With well -rotted floor will be of hard wood, oiled or varnish- Cover and harrow until well mixed e(1, and have the dust wiped up every day. With fine and mellow soil, I There will be a fire -place, where ,a little fire on (110 hearth in cold weather will help Extra work in preparing' the soil, ; ventilate, espeoially in cases of bieknesa. adds much to growth of plants, size ape may have rugs on our floor as cheap and quality of fruit. You cannot 1 or costly as our purses will allow, but the grow fine berries. with peer ealtiva- :less we have the better the air. The dra- tiQ11. I peries at the window will ho of thin, wash - Long, straight rows are easily eul- able material, and often washed. The tivated and kept from weeds. +furniture will be light, without carvings to catch the dust. Stuffed chairs, lounges Soil and location have a marked and woollen hangings will not find a place influence on variety and quality, here. A sot bowel, with bot and cold 'Thoreffre,select well tested kinds, water, is very oonveuient, but not always such as do well in your vicinity, safe ; therefore leave it in the. bath -room ; Leave high priced novelties to the r have a portable one in the aleeping•room, House - professional grower, They are genor- 1 seed be on the safe side.—Good House - ally disappointing. Never buy poor 'keeping. . plants, The best are cheapest. i Solace for affliction,—�'irrong Tho space allowed. for different , conditions entail suffering. If we plants should be determined by the 1 knew and obeyed every law of nature varieties grown the quality of soil and the method of trimming and training. the doctor might go a-bcggieg, and drugsmightbe pitched out of Window. The small ills of'life, fn their annul - The effect, produce more real sufier- The follotvin • - distances sive best i results in most cases : • b ing than the great afflictions which Strawberries set in rows three and give a wrench and aro then done one half feet apart and about two with. For the ills of sick and nerv- feet in the row. ous headache, neuralgia and bilious, • ness, Starks Powders were specially Blackberries • and raspberrids, in prepared, They erre these, however rows seven feet apart . and three feet obstinate. They Cure them speedily. in the row. ' They have never failed. They will Currants and gooseberries, in rows . not fail in your case. Try them. 25 five to seven feet. apart and three j cts, a hos: to five feet in the row. • 1 Dr. Low's Worm Syrup cures and re moves worms of all kinds in children or adults: Price 25c. Sold by all dealers Grapes, eight to ten feet apart +each way. , In setting„remember that from each plant may spring many generations. If thou you would have health, vigor and productiveness in future crops, you must guard the parent plant well. The Pulpit and the Press. The Canada Presbyterian throws out the following timely hint to clergymen and church workers generally: "The press being friendly as a whole, and having immense Set it carefully. Dig a good hole powers and unrivalled facilities for reach - and spread dvery little fibrous root ing the people, might not the church make out in its natural position. Fine more use of it than is novo made? Is there .1t10iSt dirt should be firmly and care- any reason welly a minister should not give My packed around each small root. i the local press an occasional extract from • his sermons and thus reach a mach larger Value every plant, not by the congregation than the one he preached to pariila is th((t they are penny or nickel it cost, but by the 1 from the pulpit? Is there any reason wbv cause they start from the solid founds- climes snd dollars it should produce. t a minister or any other good man should tion of purified, vitalised and enriched Afore loss comes from careless sett - blood. ing than from any other Cal1SC. . Origin of a Bad Habit. Black raspberries aro shallow A. horse that never gained his rooted, and. should not be set more liberty by breaking his halter never than three or four inches deep. became a halter puller, says a practi- cal writer. • Pool halters or bridles have always been the cause of horses acquiring the habit of breaking loose. It is, therefore, of the utmost import- ance that whatever a colt is tied with drinkers only 17 per cent. were sound. "It . (beer drinking) has spread *everywhere and increased to a most alarming extent. It has been intro- duced into country communities, incl . the only inevitable consequence Will be the thorough degeneration of the human race, if the evil is not checked before it is too late. Although it is contended that beer contains less alcohol than either wine or whisky, ft is nevertheless as injurious as either of them while its vaunted nutritive it be beyond his power to break. If ' the first few attempts to free itself �yalue stand in no, proportion to its -are in vain there is very Tittle danger Vice., A great retrogression, in all of the colt trying the experiment soon ethical sense, is undeniable, the chief again. When horses have once been Cause of which is principally due to accustomed to breaking loose the the increase of drinking because the best way to break then is to fasten beer saloon has become, the center thein securely with strong straps or and focus of social life.” ropes and then give then( an oppor- So much for • soeial beer drinking, tunity to pull away Auntil they get where the beer is supposed to 1)e tired of the sport. few lessons of purest and best. These Wren speak this kind will sometimes break them from their own scientific observation. of and professional experience. Their off the habit. As the habitis one the worst that a horse call contractCt testimony is• worth many times more ever precaution should be taken to ��'h,ftn. mere theories of inexperienced prey nt-it, or when once contracted • len. 1 it should be broken up as speedily as possible.—Rural Life. Tried and Recommended, I have used with beneficial results HOLLOWAY'S YILLB.—For the Cure K. D: C. and have recommended it to of debility, bile liver and stomach a great many of hi friends, all To complaints this inappreciable inedi- whom speak very highly of it. .Co cines s so well-known ' in every part all istaffer fro>ti indigestion I can of the world, and the cures performed heartily recommend it as the best. J. H. TI1ISIIS, by its use are so wonderful, that it now Secretary -Treasurer, City Printing .otherItemedfcps1 more particularly for ove all and Publishing Co., Montreal, P. (y. the cure of bilious and liver corn - '1 clisorders of the stomach, Gallant. dropsy, and debilitated constitution. A really polite Frenchman call be In these diseases tlte.beneficial effects complimentary in the faee of unkind of the Pills are so permanent that the •1 Irks whole , system is renewed, the organs not send the editor a fresh news item ? We abhor puffing, and above everthing else clerical puffing, but an enoasional striking paragraph from a sermon, or a newsy item is not puffing. There is a proper as well as an improper use of the press. One The crown of the strawberry of the worst varieties of improper use is Should be just even with the surface badgering the local editor to insert dead - of the ground, neither too deep nor head church notices. Never do that. too shallow. , ' Other plants grow deeper natural- ly, and should be set accordingly. Broken in Health The grape, especially, should have a; depth of ten or twelve inches. The! That Tired Feeling, Constipation top of the dirt should be firm around and Pain in the Back all newly set plants. • ' Appetite and Health Restored by Cultivate or rake over the ground Hood's Sarsaparilla. at once after setting, and continue every few clays, until plant is well started. For Oyer Fifty Years AN 8018 AND W1ILleTa1HD I3BMNDY.--MTS. It in years S,.othlntr Syrup had been used for over fifty slow' by millions of mothers for their ohilirou while t„othh,o, with perfect 841c0oa8. It soothes the child sotfens the g0108, allays all pain, cures wind colla. m,d.Is thobest mined v'for Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by'brnyrrists in in err salt of the Work,. Twentydve 005t4 a oottle. Its %mine is •htca.leeleste. Ile sure and ask for Nes. winalnw 8 Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. Whether in' the garden, or upon the farm, if one can secure a given product from a few plants or front a small area, there is no use in grow- ing more plants or cultivating more I Ifo >, good d Co.; Lowell, Mass.: ground to seam the Sante result. I "For,a number of years I have been troubled As an illustration, let us take the With a general tired feeling, shortness of breath, tomato. A single vine inay easily be pain in the back, and constipation. I could get made to produce a half bushel of only tlttlo rest at night on account of the pain and had no appetite Whatever. I was that tired good fruit; but the average gardener in my Umbs that I gave out before half the day requires a half dozen vines to am= was gone. I tried a great number of medtclnes p- but dtdnot get any permanent relief from au lish this end. Our method is to dig • A Blessing to Every .EousebioNN.. HOLLOWAY'S PALLS AND I T ENT These remedies have steed the test Df fifty years experience, and are pronounced the best Afcclkinee for Family use, puri! the Flood, TIS PIL2,S correct all disorders of the L1V5it, ST'iMACII, KIDNEYS DNE YS ANP1 t 1.1 1.11 d invaluable In all coalplaints incidental to females of all ages. 0.1T1111\6._1\11.'11 Is the only reliable remedy for bad legs, sorts, ulcers, and old wounds.Volt IIIONCIU'Us SORE TIIAOATI COt1GR5; rOLPs, GOUT, itgE1,3IATISAI, QLAI1ULAit SWELLINGS ASP ALL SKIN 1)ISE,},+3liil IT IUAS NO NUM,. Manufactured only at 78, New oxford, Late 9115, Oxford Street, Loudon. and sold by all Medicine Vendors throughout the world, k 'Puroltasers should loop to the Label on the Boxes and Pots. If the address is not 533 Oxford ,Street, Londou, tli ay are spurious. AME BACika iNEURALGIA,PIEURISY,SCIATI CA WHEN RHEUMATISM CURED EVERY TIME THE D.&L'.MENTHOL PLASTER asEv FOR THE BEST VALUE IN ORDERED CLOTHING, HATS, C,O TO CAPS, SHIRTS, COLLARS, CUFFS, Cheap for KASIT, AT Make a better filling for Corsets than any other known material. "Featherbone" Corsets are tough- er and more elastic than any • other make, as they are entirely filled with quills (Featherbone). To be had at all Retail Dry Goods Stores. &c. WILL QUI Lf C -'E DIPHTHERIA, QUINSY, COLDS AND COUGHS_ ONLY 1;, E . , file. Chas. Steele St. Catherine's, Ont. od's5 n� Cures out -a holo a foot deep and a foot ~vide rcll , for the plant. :P11i this with,fine rich ! sduraeoPr untii, upon recominendatioa of a friend, Such a man, who had been be- of digestion strengthened and a free soil, well mixed with a. ti rou„hly i p}lrchasea a bottle, of Hood's sarsaparilla, stowing upon a lady )dally coulpli.. respiration promoted. They Capel rotted Compost. Set the plant in this which made mo feel better at onto. I have con- p from the secretive organs and the bsubsequent tinned its use, having taken three bottles, and ments,;asked her 'ruby site kept ab and »•ivc, it the best of I I Feel Like a New_ Man. large alld appCal'ently savage dog, CirCulatiott the , morbid matter which cultivation. Tie it to a stake three 1 save a good appetite, feel as strong as ever I which had just entered the room, i produces inflammation,, pain, fever, feet high, and before it is quite to dld, and enjoy perfect rest at bight. I bavo �ought him only yesterday, site an- • debility, and physical (100[1y—thus the top pinch off the end of the plant. �,' [ la ;e off i nRgs sr, R f"gwintatoErfo Fro slvoied flipp'tlltly, and I alit going to annihilating, by their purifying pro- Pinch back the laterals so that they serving CO., St. Catherine's, Ontario.' ' devastating diseases. s. 250. M admirers, :painful land c evas . „ and make as stocky; tree -like a bush t "' b ernes the virtllene,e of the most ► keep kiln. in my front hall to Citi( up p do not spread all over the ground Hood*a Pills are prompt and oftletont, yeri 1 t t a 1 C easy in action. sold b! all druggists. c Ale ze poor anneal ! cxelahned the - - as possible. This will set vastly ' lilllan to clic of it Cation .—» Pilo nobleness in life- depends on more fruit than if left to rule wild , l+rens' :, its consistency, clearness of pur ose : youths Companion. p ' and the fruit will be of better size' IC ...,,yy C. Plies ton --e and regulate - J 'C Mtilt1. etnise your food tol of the danger of loss by rotting.; iti.V. quiet and ceaseless energy. And quality, and you Will avoid most 1• the liver. nourish you. Try H. • tt� Pine's nM.edy for Catarrh 1s rho )3fst. lrnsket to Ilse. and Cheeriest. :!el'1 br til•nggIsts or stilt by men. se:. 1(, 9. rlt+xeitl.%+, %irarren. Par. nII That will burn mon WC015 avid CAL ... Equally'/V�ll. -. fte oRiguuiE • • THE OXFORD'. • OIL GAS COOK STOVE without w Has the Largest Oven. IS A FARMER'S STOVE Is Everybody's Cook Stove. See it. ick. () rakes and Burns • Its Own Gas From Common Coal Oil. td NO DIRT, NO HEAT IN THE KITCHEN. •C.sob;. , a rarnily Dinner for Two Cent.. The ifITY11:111Y FOUTFIRT Uit, TOROI'TOI • -'b 1. /r/8 % '.8fi98-,;.,/Zv'+V: -'� "," Uti,.11.+'4VilVert8A1LliVt.A Tis" 191.WVINAr. •—•"--8Y0/9. SAL1; BY-- nnta, D. SUTHERLAND, WINGIIAM, Oe bLERA MORBUS ALWAYS PROIVIPT`LY CURED BY -. PERRY DAVIS' PAI N -KILLER. ... a tlrlan.e.