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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-10-12, Page 3414. .444444, 7"A., WI; • 4 4.140 igAir.4-' ;ir '41 4,1 t,e,44, I• • hovIto T; I:cot "•-.4f477.1" 'T.. U. COLUMN, (CONDUCTBD3r TRI4 wreeesar ausarce.) Ie.». Gad and !lame and Naa re Land Well call tie; aPontion, of the mothers nod stators to the fuer, that tho Woman's Christian Temper- ance Union meets 1.11 cry Monday at thtve o'cloo shstrp, Ow ono hour, zt tIIino reAlonce, Pa rick ttroci.411 ladio. aro ;mole welcome As too 1us Id othy oIvon 101 1r1rt 01 hi t.paco, for our .i h, w ask blond.. of the cause t soon a mt8 of le:Tr....too nil moral questions of th du to no, or nor nannhors. THE W1NGHAM TIMES, OCTOBER 12, 1894. the average of the met ten years. Of the persons convicted a2,ira were males and 3,502 females. The Uis- proporth)fl stands nearly 10 to 1. 'The total eumber of convictions. for drunkenness during the year 1, amounted to 11,651, ,being 236 e greater than the year previous, but 5.45 less than the average of the ten Years from 1881 to 1891. The 0 "drunks" _alone, it will be seen at a glance at the above figures, constitute - nearly One-third of the whole, It is lye say to the young, do not touch strong drink ; it is poison to tho body and the mil, The danger of the drink habit is far greater than you can know. Yon may see no danger in the drink habit. We do, and earnestly warn you of it. The path you propose to travel seems smooth and fair to you, but you may find it, as milliobe of men have, treacherous as the quicksands upon the seashore, which swallow up all •who tread upon them, leaving no trace behind. —Hon. Neal Dow. As opportimities come to mo to go around in homes and at public places find that I do not occupy a solitary position. The tendency •to abstain from liquors is growing more and more among young men of today. The •brighteat young men I know, young men who are filling positions of power and. promise, never touch a drop of beer, wines or intoxicants of any sort ; and the young man who to -day makes up his mind that he will be on the safe side and adhere to strick abstinence will find. that he is not alone, He has now the very best element in business and social life in the largest cities of our land. —Edward W. Bok. The peenliarity of the liquor trade is that it is so corrupt, and so essenti- ally the centre of all corruption, that every base and evil influence in the land -will rally to its defence. The whole system of sensual lust depends upon the demoralizing and st•apefy- ing influence of alcohol. Everything that is immoral. everything that is criminal, looks to the liquor trade as its best friend and • patron. We mention all these things, not because we doubt for one moment the final issue, but because we are perfectly certain that the friends of temperance must be much more active and. .energetic before the battle can be • won.----FrOal "The Peninsular Methodist."' * 4 * The Countess of Aberdeen during her recent visit to Halifax endeared herself to the White Ribbon Women and all friends of' Prohibition. She gave an "At -}tome" and garden party - on the magnificent grounds of the: official residence of the Admiral com- manding t1 13riti.1t squadron in., North American waters. It was the. most brilliant and successful affair of the kind ever held. there. Among the many Anierieans present were Gen: Schofield, coremancleain-chief ofthe 'United States army, and ladies, and United States Oonsul General Ingraham. 'Tile feature of the funetion was the entire absence of wines and. liquors. ' This is trt0 first time in Canadian history. that the wife of the Governor-General ha8 held as receptions without dispensing liquers, and marks a new era in Canadian high social life. * "The eause of temperance is in our time and generation the orifhunme of moral progress, the moving indicator on the soeial and political dial plate that botokcns the regenerating publie energy and the reforming religious life. In other times and places it has been the regeneration of slavery, the overthrow of polygamy, the repres- sion of murder 1111d theft; but our grapple and struggle are with the demon drink in his entrenchments, Organization, malign power and terrible reign. The Hoer traffic is so decided an evil, at once so open in effrontery and so insidious in artifice and in manners, so dietinetly opposite to every movement ofoar holy religion that the issuceis direct." ---Rev. Dr. Carman, General Superintendent of the Methodist church of Ganda, in Opening Address of the London General Conference, 1894. Crime in Canada; • According to the report of the honorable Minister of justice on the eriminal•statistics of Canada for 1893 just published, the total number of eonvictions for all erimes in the Dom- inion during that year amounted to S5;053.. This is quite an increase on either of the preceding 3rear, and on a well-known Met, however, that drunkenness does not constitute 011e- ; half the crimethat collies out of deinkbig. As the news columns of the TIMES of this week, and. of most weeks, will testify, a large number of the assaults and murders, and other crimes have their origin directly in the fact that the men who com- mitted these crimes did so because they had been drinking. Iii a large!. proportion of the cases there is good reasons to believe that no crimes of I any kind. would have been committed, had there been no. drinking before-. hand. Then, there were 2,669 convictions during the same year for violations of liquor laws, such as unlicensed' selling, selling • during prohibited.1 hours, violations of the Scott Act and the like. When these various offenses are added together they well confirm the several times repeated I assertion of the venerable Premier of Ontario that three-fourths of the crime, poverty, misery and insanity of this country has its origin in in- temperance. dell$414.441,1110A.NCIRA4.01991/51.111911.1.1itall.A.01111=1.141aMalltire HOLLOW -4 Pmts.—Weary of Life.—Derangement of 'the liver is one of the most efficient causes of dangerous • diseases and the most prolific of those melancholy forebod- ings whieh are worse than death itself. A few doses of these noted Pills act magically in dispelling low spirits and repelling the covert attacks made on the nerves by excessive heat, impure atmospheres, over -indulgence, or exhausting excitement. • The most shattered constitution may derive benefit from Holloway's Pills, which will regulate disordered action, brace the nerves, increase the energy of the intellectual faculties, and revive the failing memory. By attcntivcly studying the instructions for taking these Pills and obediently petting them in practice, the most despondent will soon feel confident of a perfect re- covery. MacWherrell at Kingston. GWEN' UNIFORM N.O. 2, AND AS "G 160" um IDE:MITT -IS LOST TO THE • °LUST= wonera Kingston, Oct. 3. --On hie arrival here this :afternoon MacWherrell was at onee taken to the steward's hall in the penitentiary. In the hall .his clothing Wits changed and he was given uniform No. 2. By good be havior he can pin No. 1 garb, or by bad conduct can be reduced to No. 3. The steward questioned hint, meas- ured him, weighed him and. made inventories of a very critical charac- ter, After his bath, hair .eat and general transformation he was con- ducted to the warden's' office, where he was again sabjeeted to investi- gation, his reeord, age,mime, etc., being noted: His previous history was gleaned as far as he would. divalge it. Then lie was sent off -to woilcs and as No. C. MO, he loses Ws • identity to the outside world. One Better Than Thirteen. 1?. Goetehins, Esq., con- tractor and builder, Alice 552 Seventh Avenue, New York City, writes: "1 I have suffered froin dyspcpsia for a I number of years and was confined to my house for five months. Have had thirteen New York and Mount Vernon doctors (will name them if necessary) attending inc • but failed I to get any benfit. I tried. X. D. 0., and are pleased to say the effect was magieal1 have tried probably every known remedy for dyspepsia, and found none to benefit me, until T took X. D. O. 1 recommend X. D. 0. as the dyspeptic's best friend. 4 Try it Ana prove what I say." Parkhill's rate of taxation is 29 mills on the dollar. It is important to keep the liver and kidneas in gobd pondttiop. Hood's iitirsaiatrilia is the retired). for invigorat- ing these Organ& A mistake is apt to sttraet - Attention to us than a Virtile. reammli,00iliaMairktmttlsim=xasTEmmsalgamma ,„ ,,I,11 sal; s • sessawsseessaass , .masays-ssie ' 1 .?, 'A i1 4 '' ''4' ' t :i 441'; ,,.. ,,o,,,.. . t : ,4 ,, e, t.& se- for infants and Children. GTHERs9 Do You KrA,vw that Paremaric, I3ateman's Drops, Godfrey'a Cordial, many so.callod Soo -thing Syrups, end most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphbae no You Know that opium and morphine aro stupefying narcotio poisons P X90 Ton Know that in most countries druggists aro not permitted to sell - Without labeling them poisons ? nc, Ton Know that you shoulcj not permit any medicine to be --leis you or your physician know of what it is composed ? '''ITAo You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and ,rodionts is published with every bottle? '• 'Vora Rnow that Castoria is the prescription of tho famous Dr. Samuel V:. .• it! Las been in use for nearly thirty years, and that' more Castella is now sold . . other remedies for children combined ? 'DO Iron Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and ot *Atter countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to Ilse the word Castor -la" and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense 1 3)o.You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protecclonwas because Castoria had been proven to be absolute/7 harmless? Do Ton Know that 35 average dosos of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, or ono cent a dose Do Ton ?Knorr that .:hen possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest? Wall,theao things are worth knowing. They are facts. The fan-sinx4e OP:nature of is on every wrapper. OtalEdrenCryfotePitcheeseastoria. toaw-awymeamr...Tirazar,?,,e,Aztamaksareammus:.,,-, Gems of Thought. A happy fireside is better than a big bank account. There are souls in this world that have the gift of finding joy every- where. Good manners art a part of good morals, and it is as much your duty as interest to practise both. The reathappiness of life cannot be bought with money, and the poor may have it its well as the rich. Man and 'wife are like a pair of scissors so long as they are together, but they become daggers as soon as they become disunited. There is a medium between velo- city and torpidity ; the Italians say it is not necessary to be a stag, but one ought not to be a tortoise. Too much idleness fills up a man's time much more completely and leaves him less his own master than any sort of .employment whatever. It is certain that neither wise bear- ing or ignorant carriage is caught, as men take diseases, one of another ; therefore let men take heed of their company. In youth one is surprised that he knows so Mach. When „he has readied matured life he is surprised that there are so many things that he doesn't know. There is a care for trifles which proceeds from. love of conscience and is most holy ; and a care for trifles which comes of idleness and frivolity and. is most base. Each one mast build his character for himself, and the best service that can be rendered to any ntan is to enable him to build it upon firm fottndations and with cnduring terials. Whenever you see want and mis- ery or degradation in this world about you, then be sure either in- dustry has been wanting, or industry has beeu in error. HO is net worthy pf the honeycomb that shuns the hives because the bees have stings. Mart Disease Relieved in 30 Mnattres.— 411 casts of organie Or sym- pathetic heart disenee relieved in 30 minutes and quickly eared, by Dr. Ag. neves Cura. Sold et Ohiehelee Drug store, WinghaaL TIMM are certain qualities which are seldom .combined in due pro,. portion In any one individual, yet which are steadily needed to sup- plement each other and to guard against an unlimited elKereise or either. Melt are eententmerit and unbitten. Their union forms • a fine diameter, but a very rare one, Cleanse the stoniaoh and sweetemt the breath with K.3). C. D. O. acts like magic on an overloaded stomach. Rheumatism Cured in a day.--Boutli American Rhenniatio Cure of Ithenmatism andNeuralgia radically oures in 1 to 3 days. Its action on the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause of the disease immediately disappears. The first nose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Warranted at Chisholm's drug store. Toronto's population, according to the assessment returns for 1895, is 174,108 as compared with 167,653 for 1894, or an increase of 6,455 in the year. The assessment returns for 1894 showed a decrease in popla- tion of 1446, as compared with 1803, while the returns for 1893 also show- ed a decrease of 1,552 as compared with returns for 1892. DELL COLLECE9 OH SAWA. An Institution where none btit, board- ers aro admitted; has been running about 18 years. 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