HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-10-19, Page 3THE WIN GUAM TIMES, OOT B1 R i9 1894.
W. O. T. U. COLUMN.
« `F 1Cosou0Tr11 8X TUE wi:,"GUAat liltAtieU.)
(inti trft+I Home and .lrrttil•d Land,
Well cull tho attention, of the mothers and sisters
to tho face, that the Woman's Christian Temper-
ance ltnlen n ioctri clary ,Monday td, three o'clock
sharp, for ono our, at .lint. Helm's residence, Pat-
rick street. All ladies are mad,. welcome.
As tau lsdttor has kindly i:iven us part of his
• apace, for our work, we asst friends of the cause to
sand items of Interest ou all moral questions of the
day to au t of our mutnhere.
Tempt arlee Safeguard:3.
A young mall of our acquaintance
passed through many temptations in
v"j1l'' town and city, in college and in
university, and never formed the
drinking taste or habit, The secret
of his safety lay in the fact that he
was taught froiu his earliest years,
not only temperance principles but to
hate liquor in every shape, The
power of early education is great,
and is an important factor in the
temperance -reform. Mothers and
fathers who begin in childhood to
• teach their children the evil effects of
strong and who create in
'' them a disgust for it, and who follow
up their precepts by prayers and
example, have little reason to fear
they will go back upon their training
or fall into intemperate ways. In-
telligent,and persistent home instruc-
tion and example are among the best
and safest temperance safeguards
ever invented. Presbvteriau.
#4 Wonderful Conqueror.
No disease is more common among the
people. than scrofula. Handed d
own '
from generation to generation, it is
found in nearly ever family, in some
form. It may make its appearance in
dreadful running sores, in swelling, in the
neck or goitrd. or in eruptions of varied '
forms. Attacking the mucous membrane 1
it may bo known as catarrh, or develop-
ing, in tho'langs it may bo, and often is,
tha prima cause of consumption.
In whatever form scrofula may main -
fest itself, Hood's Sarsaparilla is its
ioreterato foe and conqueror. This
' medicine, has snob powerful alterative
and vitalizing effects upon the blood
that every trace of impurity is expelled,
and -the blood is made rich, ',pure and
healthy. .
Margaret Shepherd as an Actress.
•Sta
rtiug the Roeder.Ths Summer QQutirig. t Boailtriinl Homes.
We never bad a coal stove around1 One of those hard, worldng news -1 One great trouble is, we are try -
the house until last Saturday, Have • paper men, who put' in abort twenty- . ing to bring city house furnishings
always used pine slabs and pieces. of four hours a day hi the effort to :and ways into our country homes.
our neighbor's fence. They burn supply themselves and family with Z'lti'irlcis as a rule are tined when
well, too, but the fence got all burn edulions matter was •sitting at his.; through their day's work°oriel will
ed up, and the neighbor saki he desk the other afternoon looking appreciate a 'tonic furnished for
wouldn't buy a new one, so wo went fresh and sweet as a daisy, when a : comfort. The farmer's wife istired
down to Shannon's and got a eoal friend drepped in an him. + enough not to be getting up• every
stove. 1 My, exclaimed the visitor, you I few moments to change dishes
You see, we didn't know anything look good enough to eat. I serve different courses. This may be
• about coal stoves. We filled tile• stove . I do eat, responded the worker 1n ;well .enough when one has the means
about half full of pine fence,. and a tone of veneration for the antiquity Ito hire it don' but is a needles bur -
when when the stuff got well going we of his harmless little oke: (^' s i
j ,don when the wife has all to do. Let
The study comfort more and fashion
less; get things useful rather than or-
namental, and make every part of
the home as comfortable as possible
and our means will permit. On the
outside let us have beautiful vines,
plants, etc, We can each and all
plant seeds of love, patience, content-
ment, kindness and charity, for
without these no hone can be beauti-
ful.
filled the artesian well, on the top' visitor laughed just because
with coal. It simmered and sputter- il,o was feeling good.
''od about five or ten minutes and all .Haven't you been away some place
went out, and wo put on an overcoat this summer? he 'asked.
land a pair of buckskin mittens and Oh, yes,.I went away in Juno and
I"went out too"—to supper. Wo re-, returned in July,
I marked in the course of the frugal Ab, where did you go? •
1 meal that Shannon was a "freed" for I visited a foreign shore,
recommending such a confounded Is that so? No wonder you are
I refrigerator to a man to get warm looking well. Diel you have a good
' by. • time? But of course you did; you
' After supper we tools a piece of ice look it.
and rubbed our hands warm, and Had a fine time, but it was too
went in where that stove was, resolv- soon over.
ed to make her draw and burn if it Where did you go P
took all the pine fence in the block. I left Windsor at half past 7 p,m.
Our better half threw a quilt over June 30, went over to the United
her, and shiveringly remarked that States in a row boat and came away,
she never knew what sglid comfort at five minutes after midnight July
was until she got a coal stove. 1. •
Stung by the sarcasm in her re- Rats, ejaculated the visitor and
mark, we turned every dingus on asked the traveller to go out and
the stove that was moveable, or look- have a seltzer lemonade with him.
cd like it had anything to do with
the draft, and pretty soon the stove
began to heave up heat. It was not
long before she sputtered •like the when Baby wah Melt, wo gave her Castorta.
new Ronald engine. Talk aboutyour WItot{ slto Avas a Child, sl,o cried for Castoria.
heat! In ten minutes the rooiu was when oho becanto Miss, d:to clung to Castorla.
as much worse than a Tlirldsh • bath • wiles es°Imo esildron,Rlieissreuo:nt;astorh,
as Hades is hotter than. ]'rank i
Darke's ice house. The perspiration
fairly fried out of a tin water cooler
in the next room, but we couldn't
stop the confounded thing.
(Brantford Expositor.) •
The following advertisement ap-
peared in the columns of the Daily .
Ontario, of Belleville :
^~�
QUEEN'S OPERA HOUSE.
T. Y. ,r. POWER, Al:txnosa.
SATURDAY MATINEEt7 AND EV'G,
• OCTOBER, Gth,
• MARGARET L. SHEPHERD
And Company, in a great drama of her
own life, entitled
TRIED AS BY FIRE,
Supported by an Emipont English actor,
atA1LTES car.wouTH,
,end a specially selected company with
magnificent costumes and
sentry.
Prices 25c, 35o an L 50. Matinee prices
25e and 35o.
Ere long Margaret will 'doubtless
visit Brantford and take advantage
of her 'unquestioned talents as an ae-
tress, We wager dollars against
cents, however, that she will' not on
• this oeeasion be presented with a
Bible by her I3rantford admirers.
• She is nolonger "defender of the
faith," $ she found the job was not
paying.
Every -Day Topics. .
Never break any promise you
make to a. child. .
Work for eternity cannot rest on
a sandy foundation.
The Christian who is not doing
anything to help save sinners is to
blame for their being such.
Whoa, a man is wrong with God.
everything around bini tries to tell
;/' Hill! so,
There is good in every trial that
brings us nearer to God -
There .18 n0 USC in trying to reason
with people who are governed by
impulse or appetite.
"Whoso confessetli an(I feln•; aketh
his sins shall have mercy." ,
We have stopped following Christ
when we refuse to speak to some of
our neighbors. ,
13oi' owbr'.a of trouble never have
to go far to get it.
We nead to have a.gteeat deal, of
charity for those whose faults ``we
have discovered,
Are you ppanning to accoinlplish on 1115 farm. :Cho bigger the corn ion dairy oomnlissioner's staff, Inas
anything that you do not expect tO of vegetable eorn a luau raises' the boon alppointecl e:�pert in da lryl/1g to
"
be paid for in ln101icy 7 .bettor he likes. i ' 'btit the bigger . the the LV'ew Zaatlatrcl Government 'awl
nava Trott tgLtZir ll l>Cf'r•]7)ClttLlt crop of animal eorn, the better Inc sleeves for the laud i11+ t11e Maoric3 in
IL 5>, O. does titer like It. a few days.
Call Him Father.
We forgot what Shannon told us Boys, when .you speak of your
aboutfor dampers, and she kept, father, don't call him the old man.
Of course you are , older now than
a-b'iling. Tile only thing. we could when you learned to call him father.
do.was to go to been, and leave the You are much smarter than you
thing to burn the /louse up if . it were then; you are much more man-.
wanted to. Wo stood off with a pole' iy looking; your clothes fit better;
and turned the damper everyway, your flat has a more modern shape
and at every turn she just sent out and your hair is combed differently.
heat enough to roast an o. We In short you are a • little flyer than
went to bed, supposing that the coal yea were .then. Your father has a
would eventually burn .out, but about I last Year's coat and a two years old
get up and sit on the back fence
12 o'clock the whole family • had to' hat' aria vest of still older pattern.
.
.Finally a man came along who He cant write such an elegant note
as you can and all that—but don't
had been brought Apt among coal! call Ilial the old: lean. Call him
stoves, and he put a w' t blant over father. For years he has been
him and crept up to' the stove and
hustling around to get things to -
turned the proper dingus, and srin ' nether. He has been. held to° :the
cooled off, and since that time has thoruyr path of uphill industry for.
been just as comfortable as possible, years .and the brightest half of his
If you buy a coal stove you want to life has gone front him forever.. • But
learn how to engineer it, or yon may he loves ou though he goes along
get roasted.—.Regina Standard. without saying much about it, and
if he knew you were bad it would
be . the !heaviest burden he has to
bear.
Prominent Niagara Didtriot People
Say:
Mr. A. E. Douglas, Druggist, Welland,
says : "Stark's Powders for Headache,
Neuralgia. Biliousness, and Liver, are
highly praised by all who have used
them,"
Mr, J. H. Burger,. Druggist and Treas-
urer Town of Welland, says : "Stark's
Powders' give good satisfaction and sell
readily."
Mr. Alex. Rumsey, Imperial Bank,
Welland, says: "Stark's Powders are
excellent.'
Mr, Wood, Manager Imperial Bank,
Port Colborne, writes ''Stark's Powders
do their work admirably."
Mr. A. E. Taylor,Deputy-Reeve Town.
ni \'Volland,says : "Stark's Powders
cured mo after two years of suffering
from Sink Headache and Stomach when
'other .medicines failed."
Price 25 cents a box ; sold by all
• medicine dealers.
•
Many Facts or Many Nations.
The human family living on earth
today consists of about 1,450,000,000
persons in round numbers. Of these
only about 500,000,000, or one-third,
are properly elothed; 250,000,000
habitually go naked; 700,000,000
have middle parts of bodies covered;..,
only 500,000,000 live in houses, 700,-
000,000 in huts and- caves, while the
ren:tining 250,000,000 have no home
Or shelter whatever.
l .�
In a fit of despondency Wm.
Rands, a young man of Shelburne,
thicw himself under a moving
freight train early Monday morning,
and was fatally injured, both legs
being cut off.
Belief in six hours.—Distressing I id-
ney and Bladder diseases relieved in six
boars by the "Great South American Kid-
nay Cure." Thin great remedy is a great
surprise and delight to physicians ou ac-
count of its exceeding promptness in reliev,
big pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and
every part of,tbe urinary passages .itt male
Suri female. It relieves retention of water
and pain in passing it almost unnnecliately.
If you want quick relief and :cure* this is
your retuedy. Sold at Chishohn's drug
store.
.A• Polite Young. Man.
There was a young man in the
tramcar in Liverpool the other day
who had good reason to be very an-
gry indeed. The car was crowded
when a corpulent .German, accom-
panied by an equally corpulent wife,
, elbowed his way inside. The wo-
The Small Bo 's Corn Essit [ man was not at all pretty or attra'c-
• y y tine and most of the finale passengers
Corn are of two kinds, vegetable' did not • even resort to any of the
and animal. ' Vegetable corn grows I familiar tricks of the . experi-
in rows; animal corn grows on toes. enced traveller when he conveniently
There arc'several kinds ofcorns— I wants . ,to overlook the fact that a
unicorn, capri•corn, corn dodgers, lady is holding on to the top rail
field corn, and the corn which is the while he enjoys a comfortable seat.
corn you feel. • But a well dressed young man
Ii is said that .the gophers . like arose and touching the woman's arm
corn; but persons having corn's do, to attract her attention, politely said:
not like to 'go fur' if they can help 1 Here is a seat for you, madam. The
it. Corns have kernels, and some 'woman started towards the vacant
ooloncls have corns. 'seat,. when ,her obese. companion, 1 MISS D, A, HURD, Secretary,
• Vegetable corn growsbn ears, but witch a sigh of satisfaction, settled ; , Oshawa
animal corn grows on feet, at the down la the seat before she could - -.. --.. .. • .• ...
otfet
her enc/ of the body.
ULLEE
O JLLWB'A.
An Institution where none but board-
ers are admitted; has been running about 1
19/ears•
.
Stanr
Employs a very Efficient Sta
of Ten Teachers.
SCHOLARSHIPS ARE SOLO
embracing' a full course yearly, includ-
ing all the Engliah branches, Sciences,
French and German, Classics, Music,
Drawiu,r, Crayon Portrait, Oil Painting,
Ornamental branches, with Vocal and
Elocution, in classics, at remarkably low
rates. .
This institution draws students: fromToronto. Montreal, Ottawa and the
towns and cities from Canada, as well as
from New York, Chicago and other cities
?rota the United States.Zit• particulars address,
•
reach it.
Another kind of corn is the acorn. I The young man was surprised but. K U'i HAMILTON
(
This kind grows on oaks, but there his surprise soon gave way to angor.
is no hoax.about the corn. • I At first ito thought the puffing old . W I N G H A M e
The acorn is a corny with an in- German land made a mistake, but he .Capital, N1,') -o 000. Rest, $1650 000
definite article indeed. Try it and was soon convinced that the action .
see it. Many a man when he has a was intentional, Tapping him gent- rresideut-Jens asass's.
corn wishes it was an acorn. . , ly on the shoulder, he said •quietly: , V viee:eresident-A.,U. RAMSAY.
VOWS' that have corns sometimes I beg your pardon, but l gave My ' ' ari;srcTox�
send for a doctor, and if the doctor! seat up to this lady and not to you.. i ,t as Paolrrcn, oM.n, RaAcu, V, outeox, Jl P, A. T
X :nnself is corned, he probably won't i Oh yab, dot is • all right, mine l woo», A. 11. Lxs (Moronto).
do as well as if le wasn't. • front%t, said the fellow,.she was mine • • cmihter—J. TvztvBvr.L,
The doctors say that corns aro wife. 1 butriage Eank—Houre,letto 8• Saturdays, 10
caused by tight boots and. shoes, ,1 .oa ,oslt,t oryl and npwaads received And intern.
' Which is probably the reason why. Heart Disease Believed 111 30 allSow Sini Dbpoeits aero received at current
when a man is tight, the sal that Minutes,hear eases of organic or e�yln. ' car p tit h,terost:
3r pathetic heart dit-ease relieved in ;30 Draftnon aroatIltttain and the United States
he is corned. If a pian manages WAIL'tee and quickly cured, by, Dr. Ag- bought and sold
well he can get good deal on the new's Cure, Sold at' Obteholtriss Drug 1 13, tvILLSo , Aaiit.r
acre but Y T /low n farmer who has store,.'V' ingham..
•
r S.
a corn that malice the biggest `;ncber Mr, r7, j3, me wan,,of' tiro fluxnitn L' t' 1)IoZINSO i, luliaitt'l'.
•
: 1g
r
a.
1vRES II ERE All'ELS
PLS.
Beet tith;8rxnsyrup. Tam.*
Ld
e
in time,
Said b ` dry • hits.
A Blessing to Every Uousebold.
HOLLOWAY'S PU' i T
These remedies have stood the test of Afty yo,:rs exusricnee, and ora ell„ '+umvi the hest tit tilrhloo for
Fatally use.
TTI.M PIXJ142-.
Punt) the blood, comet all disorders of the LOTH, tiT"yte.t'I1, lilt) +' 3 h .-' U i t' • t,
. invaluable la all complaints incident./ to fon,.;leo or aft ages.
TIM O IJ"• `Ta)...s?,,:.i:;T
Is the only; reliable remedy for bad es, d»'", ulcers, and old wom:d•. Ft 6 Ali•.:�„ 1. t i'•'. Win
TilltOAxry ()Qualls, ian.b8, t,uti'r, 1:r (L%i'bL.i: : 5'!'r.t.,::t,t. .+A t•
DISEA5E5IT IiAS:10 T3tiIJAL. Manufactured only et 7S, New Oxford. /Au •)x0 &e; s.e.l L, it.uatioa.
and sold b' all Neddiclno Vendors throughout tho world,
L.=1.-,rchasers should look to the Label on the Brxes and Pots. if the at'.c'rtss is not
583 OdOrti titret',t, L"dt:ion, they ,.ro Fll:lr tn::F:.
y.q.e.,urv.uy...r.w.-,.•,r--..n1..Mv.1ua...r.4 ...n.m..rv..� .... .a- ..•.w.•
,
better filing 1.,:• f°;vrstr .s
t:..' any oth 1 r,. n mG t;.ri:>i..
"f=ar:',i1ierhone" C .ts ell . ttau.'.;;jil-
er a :.'1 more c: •:r: ,l ."rlY
r. t1..r make, a3 i:asy c:n'tirciy
filled with quills (,='C4,i l,.r•:....18).
To be had at all Retail Dry GC:o.Js $cores.
MIPI9PFM??PP9P?????PP1PPttIMMPIiM
FURNACES]
OXFORD
WOOD
rand...
COAL
. FOR ALL SIZES OF
Capacitv from 10,000 to
"t CYCLONE STEEL RADIATOR"
ta>P—
ta►▪ -
1111110▪ ..
tsCO-
-
BUILDINGS ..
£30,00 Cubic 'PM r
WOOD FURNACE
HEAVY GRATE, especially
adapted for wood burning
Heavy Steel Plate Fire Box Dome
and Radiator, which heat
qnicker and are more durable
RADIATOR of Modern Construe.
tion and Great Heating Power
LARGE A5H PIT
a
COAL FURNACE
Large Combustolon Chamber
Long Fire Travel,encircling radiator
Large Heating Surface
-Large Feed Door
Sectional Fire Pot
a
Rotating Bar Dumping Grate
. DEEP ASH P;T
OXFORD WOOD FURNACE —
�i>a
t- Full Guaranteed Ca acct5.e./V=
p y : attdTESTIRfON)AL BOOK.
....Manufactured by.... •
-Tithe GURNEY FOUNDRY COMPANY Ltd., TORONTO.
a
SCHOOL ST : :7j.rtI ,s.
A full stock of all kinds of
J s Q,,•'
:....+,v f r
for both High ural Public Sell, °h. just- :t•reived.
Also a large sti.elc of
AsF'r. 1°�v J:t1a k .s1'.tV
v"r'optsir .t:cc.`:'ko,, ':: a.s LIDas,
^'., a -, �
• r
moi a .. `i'.ls� a ;. +t ';i• 4 �1 g c.
�pp pg , lam. P' JR .lt V. ���t7f rp��A� pp R r��! � Vl c :,• p9 ter, tr'�n ��7+"
3 MALI PA L'S, Yi EY\:1 C. BLUE., rro•eAT NEE
f
a full stock, as usual.
A CND
Wlv it4 i X L
Roller and all complcr,'.
AL E
The Popular Bookstore, SVinyhlam.
For
$ck >tgk
ONE APPLICATION paxnS
OF THE • ,. ,.....r..Wi
"In
t "NitNTHOLP
r s PLASTER
i l` WILL DISPEL THE PAIN LIKE MAGIC,
' O QC
ROSS.
USE � o•'�� ��
PERRY �s' FOR +�
�p� �����• 'Own;�`1
�T' ':.TROUBLES/
PAI .,y:
KI LIE Ft
•