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The Wingham Times, 1895-02-01, Page 3
THE ' JN( AFM T .ES,. FE R ARY 1.t 189;1, W. R. T. U. 40/31.1114111 the nlarvclocls organization of which • she has long been president." eusgarez tory me TRU wricuitaiT 1tli;g cul.) AiitiS 'Villard has published eight (',r 0.4t"ttrt M ilic+etl(rt ;t'(t�ire land. Vohi11U S. Among theme wefiner, __ "Women andTemperance," Weil rail the atFentfou, of !the u,thrtn and sorters"f alimpsea of Fifty Years," "flow to: to es. t:•,•t,. that, the W' neves (:ln'eti,.0 Temper. Win," "Wolman i11 t11({ Pulpit" and xueu (talon newts the third Stontlty at •rt month at three ti ••ern i; .horn, forme! hour, ut Mrs. nelnt's ''•\, threat MOth(+r''—tile latter a resider •e, P.tttivlt e.treeit. AR iaeilectre :nude Vivi- memorial vanilla of that titlinte&l OU As the Editor has kindly given tut put of hls w110 has ryillge{1 her way to worlds ' space, for unr wmk, wctask iiieemn of th,• eauso to Of li:;'!lt. send items of interest OH ill moral .t,ttttstinua of the day to an:, of our memouts. 'vrtA3s oEtI Ill, Y1P L'LfitA D. i\ HKI L )H OF HER, (1'tTtl.(I001), 'WO- MANHOOD . AND ,V4. UK .phi' 'mat CO(IHIN', AUSA IRENB FOOL{•I,ER. Iii 1868-70, Mi:lh Willard journey - eel through Europe and, the east., The rare opportunities Of study in' Paris, Berlin and Rome were thoroughly improved, and nearly y every European capital was visited. She also travelled in Palestine and Egypt, climbed the pyramids Find visited the art treasures of Italy and i ' Snugly nestling amidst the profuse. Germany, and devoted more than a 'foliage and deep shadows et an old year 'to study in the College de oak forest, on the sunset shore of Franee and the Petit Sorbonne, Lake 1lfiehigan, is far -fanged •elassie attending the Iectures of Guizot, the ;Evanston—tile home of Frances. historian, anti other famous lend Willard. Down a shady street In•one of a series of delightful letters' :where stately elms meet their friend since.published by her, under the t . ,Iv. heads, is vine -cover d,:picturesque, title of "A Schoolmistress Abroad,"; , Rest Cottage. ' Here, amid the •dainty', we come upon this characteristic bit : i brightness, yet simple surroundings. "It is good not to have been born , or'.this ' charming home, have been earlier'that •the nineteenth century, i .entertained the poet and peasant, the. and for myself, I could have rested j statesman and the seer; .and all alike; content until the twenty-fifth, by have felt the indescribable •eharm of which .date I believe our hopeful j tile•exquisite home nest,olvitll its dain- dawn of reason, liberty and worship ty furnishings, its books <i,ed brie -a - will have grown to noonday. Oh ! brae. Here is Miss Willard'.shistoric native land—the world's hope, the `idea," where thoughts have been gospel's triumph, the millennium's I breathed and holy purposes born; dawn, tare :all with thee, are all and from the upper balcony, over- with thee." looking the pretty lawn with its trees While absent Miss Willard wrote i and .flowers, grape arbor and rustie ,often for 11ome;papers, the New York i d yocote, the whirling work -a -day Independent, Haiper's Monthly, The I world of the nineteenth mutual.' chriatian inion, and bhicago jour - seems lost in view. +✓ naps. Thus .the training of this' Miss -Willard was born in the„di'ttic tireless traveler went ceaselessly on, village of Cliurchville, near.Rl.'oehes- she gathering :much material for ; ter, N. Y.:, September 28(1839, of future usefulness, which has erystit- Tui'itan parentage,; her girlhood was lized with the years. . passed on the banks,Af Rock river, _ • - ._: r..:_ _ Soon after her return to America 'Wisconsin, then a with and beautiful she was elected lhtiesidont of the health she comes back to her place •It is by adding to our good pur- environ111ent of wood and prairie, i Woman's .t�ollege at Evanston, and as leader of the great temperance poses, and nourishing the affections utterly isolated „from the influences later wlien the eal:le a became a host. Almost the first news to greet rvhich are rightly placed, that we and demands .o modern conventional , shall best he able to combat the bacl life. She rvaJsnder the guardian- part of Northwestern University she ; her when she landed in New York ones. was made its dean, and professor of was a telegram read at the great ship of pa' lets whose nobleness oft • Esthetics in the' university. Here meeting of welcome that the Ohio Heart Dist ase ttelleved in 30 mind an sensible methods of living 'she developed .a method of self gov- Wesleyan University had conferred Minutes.—All causes of organic) or sym- -were in themselves a rare moral and pathetic he'trt (llsease relieved in 30 ernmeut for stadents which has been' upon her the title of LL. D. •tnlnutes incl quickly oared, by D. Ag.• religious education. adopted by several institutions. ! Probably no woman has accom- now's Cure. Sold at Obishu.1wLi'e Drug It was after the great ,crnsade in' plished a more - extraordinary work store, Wiu hang. Ohio in 1873, that Miss Willard gavein any reform movement than. Frances • to the temperance reform the splen- ' Willard, and during those years of 13y taking revenge, l+.• Wean is but did service for which, owing to her .labor in which she often traveled even with his enemy, but in passing unequalled ability and genius, she is from tea to thirty thousand miles in it over he is. superior. renowned; and in 1874 s1Je . was , the twelve months, and built up the ' .......... --- �-- made national corresponding seem- greatest woman's organization that ' tart' of this new movement, and at !the world has yet known, the en- i once began the .work that bas been thusiasm and intelligent interest of; au astonishment in its breadth and a . the mother, who waited patiently in blessing to hundreds of 'thousands.1 the solitude of home for tidings of i Her marvelous faculty for organizing her daughter's success, were perhaps ' developed. and made itself manifest ; ! among her greatest sources of in -1 she purposed to herself to visit and I spiration. So closely interwoven SPAVIN CURE � ' E }_, +,4�..•S..tiki' � !-osrtfirw�,��..:.ia�{�iY'�.'..°.�:�1b.:�:..�,w'aii6.:,+�wF%�K7d4•iM��',%*Y."'N1.2,=== for 6nif% rltS and Children. - TN ,m t, a You Otnovv th«.t Paregoric, Iia(emau's Drops, Godfeey'c Cordial, many so-eaUed Soothing Syrups, and .most remedies fez children aro composed Of op1U.'i or morp)-tine2 1t)o "5trrt Koro that opium and morphine aro stupefying narcotic poi: on:: De "Zen K Low that in most countries druggista are bot permitted to s. " ,. 1111thoutaaboling them poisons? Tic, Ton Thum that you should not portrait any medicine to L* • ' ...a yt eu or yourphysielan know of what It is composed ? "'-) Iron Know -that Castoria, is n purely vegetable preparation, rut:; • -. . • •'clients is pubilshod with every bottle ? '"i Elnorn that Cactorla is the proscription of the famous Dr. Sa-nr.: ,': has been in. use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now soil t.:.-. . •.., other remedies for children combined ? 1:?ta Vou Tcrmmow'that the Tatent Office Department of the United States, and cs! •.tla? conatries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word '` t ;ku tox1 " and its formula, and Hutt to imitate them is a state prison offense 1 Do Tern kitnow that one of the reasons for granting this government protoctionwas muse Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmloos? Do Yon Krnn'vr that 35 average doses of Castoria are furuichad for 35 mints, or one cent a dose? 330 Ton Euow that '..hen possessed of this perfect preparation, your children, may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest ? '9707813','thro t7tiirr„s are worth knowing. They are?theta. Thia She to riercroret of ( wr,nT) F ar. eritrigei in nvy fore iteitates Ca S efilae �(F��, �'a'rr•�n.1c�\v ytm.. y•. :� �,:.�.�'•.>+uT?YQt Edi � ^' '� r. ;m'goF"y, rce+p.''fj!� ey;�y�,��•�-r, ova ri, �ltl�ailW�W�t W..'.R...0 � . �t•C 'Yt�::l!%.6�L':Y-� �'iL''i.:ut..sk..�1.�4c:i�rXt�J1+'�(..;../w++4.S.'i�hlj .I^tt^, TQT.F.'1G((�� [ ji (��,,,,,,. r `� iNGHAM SAW MILI.3ix PEOPLE'S PAPER.. The undersigned in returning thanks ;p ptQC�C���,{�C yCC�' or past favors,bel leave to say that they N 1 fi i + have a very large stook of LUMBER, SHINGLES, LAT t, RARRELS, WOOD, &C,, o- on band, which will he sold tit very close prices to meet the requ`.ren,ents of the hard tithes. "Forest Home," says Miss Willard, "was a queer old cottage with raanUl- Ing roof, gables, dormer-win(�vs And little porches, crannies and out- of-the-way nooks, scattered'(here and there. The bluffs, so characteristic of 1'Vinconsin, rose' ale it on the right and left_ The cautiful Roek river flowed at the Aveat side.; to the east.a prairiestrete'hed away, to meet the horizon, yetiliw with grain in summer, flew with snot it;n the winter," dslint there werewail lisorts of i tEllectual feasts in tbis simple h le, and during twety , speak in every town in the United , were the lives of these two --this l happy y ars of her girlhood, ljiss states which numbered ten thousand • great daughter of a great mother- 1rVilla' basked in the stinal►inch .of inhabitants, (she afterward included q portrayal I !�that the exquisite ortra. •al from the .nature find health, developing eIi many tg fivthousand) organizing pen of Lady Henry Somerset ntay vigor of body and In which hes l and energizing the W 0)nan'§ Ohre*,' not be deemed inappropriate, as she 1rClyeci lips Ucsr�",isritaae.! troth Ter prance -Gnwhh, �1I1 nearly l thus beautifully speaks of Madame �)ttil in 1Siio the family left! tilts 1 eversi WWII Which she visited. For ',Willard and those rare and hallowed picturesque country home fol'Cver, { ten years she averaged one public days. "She was hi the evening of and removed to Evanston, Ill., the meeting a day ; writing letters and life the center of her little circle ; as seat of the Northwestern University, ( articles. and planning work while ori ,she sat in her favorite rocking chair -where Mr. Willard because a partner transit between the towns at which in the quiet of Rest Cottage, her in the Chicago banking firm of Pres- she spoke. In 1879 she was made face would beam with interest as she ton, Willard & Kean. Previous to . president of the National Woman's ' listened to the various stages of the this Fane, however, :hiss Willard Christian Temperance Union, and great reform movement to whieh attended the Milwaukee 1j'emale her skilful presidency and unprece- her heart was so wedded, and her KENDALL'S SPAN CURE rt\ College, founded by Milwaukee. dented travels throughout America quiet ,Voice would lead Morning SnELnx,Mlca.,Dee.16,1893. Beecher, and in 1859 graduated from 'have given it the unique position it after morningin prayer, in those Dr. B J. have" sed your Kendales Spavin Cure the Northwestern University at holds in the world to day. •The re- early hours when we assembled in with good success for curbs on two horses and Evanston. Three' years later she workitis the best Liniment I have ever used. markable feature of her is that the little parlorbefore the busy days Yours truly, AMOUNT rnEnEEteB. Prion $1 per Bottle. became professor of natural science she manifests equal capacity with began —wonderful prayers—the For Sale by all Druggists, or address in the Sallie institution; after which pelf, voice and in administration. outpouring of a soul that lived and Dr. 13. J. ICL1y71d7L coi1u'dXY, she was called. to Pittsburg Female As a s coker Jliiss Willard is most walked with God, that understood kNO8OURGH FALLQ.vr. College. In 1866 she became prim- unique, v ith a�rare combination of t the deep things of the fuller life." cipal in Genesse Wesleyan Seminary eloquence, pathos and humor. As an Miss Willard has come to hear— JOB PRINTING at Lima, N. Y., where she remainedorganizer she has no equal among great success chiefly because of a for two year's. women. Her office is not only to high purpose. Life has been for her NOLUOING Boom, t'Mnphlrt.t, Poder9, 1311 a couStallt work -clay since 5110 j Heads, Circulars, hn., tee.. erocuted in the hest Meantime a }n,►'etlt s01'rw had. come , pian work;, blit to be the life alld ( style of thu art, st nladerate pH rev, anti on short into her life—the death of iierbeauti- •inspiration of the workers. Every sketched by the river side at Forest . notice. Api'e, or added, ELT,rrnJ7', fol and gifted .si'st'er, Mary, and a movement for the uplifting of human- ; Home, and every day has told upon Tule, ,,:;hen, svingltam. few years later "Fife father and only ity has found in lief a cordial friend • the futjire of our people. *brother, Oliver, died, and the dough- and helper; and every field of in-; "Miss Willard is distinctively a '.1' ter and mother were left alone. quiry or investigation has shared in woman of the future. She is not a While teaching in Pittsburg, Miss her quick, intelligent sympathy. !prophetess, but a prophecy, and one • Willard wrote her first book, a In 1892, on the death of her mother, ' of the types of the larger and diviner touching tribute to her gentle sister, ' she visited England by invitation of I womanhood which our land shall yet 1Iary, entitled "Nineteen Beautiful Lady Henry Somerset, and received produce, and which all lands shall Years," which was published in 1864 in Exeter Ilall the greatest welcome :call the "fittest." by Haller Brothers. "The simplici- vet accorded to any reformer by I Statesville, Wis., December, 1894. ty of this memorial volume," writes the united philanthropic societies of, Cady Henry Somerset, "the quaint the British nation ; and although in i Theonly way to rare catarrh is to candor and the delicate touches of impaired health she gave a new ilia- i puriCy'the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla humor and pathos were a revelation petus to the woman's temperance *nes o ��eystem b)ooci and tones up tf e - to inc eta, character that remained movement by the introduction of on ray mind as belonging to one modern methods. On June 20, 11803, ' We are all apt to forget that whole I placed in A niche among the she returned to America, and ,from happinessrgrows at our own fireside, ideal lives of whom I hoped to know mass meetings on the •other •side and is not to be picked tipill strong- more, tt an field s., Win/thee Irt,u hr O. E. 11'1;Name. a ttu.;Int snore, and at whose shrines I wor- of the water, held asfarewell'trilbutes ,brs,;lrouses, p g• shipped. • My first visit to America of respect to her, she cainc •te.enthtts- ' • was as inuell to see and know Miss iastic receptions en this side, .given li,eligion is not something that is Willard as for any other purpose, by the leading cities, which vied fastened upon the earth outside of and to understand from her the with one another in bidding her lifeibut is the awakening of the truth ptineiple upon which she had worked. welcome home; and ttith renewed tinside of life E of Canada. - Young people will read; the only noes - tion is, what are they to rm.!? Their peculiar wants are not Icily met ny any general newspaper. In t.ileUnitecl Mateo • several excellent periodicals are prepared for their benefit, but they are all expeti-' sive. flarper's Young I'ctopie (New York) costs $'„ tt yea r; The Youth's 00111)0,1ioa (.Boston) 131.75; Golden pays i•Philadel- first Class Shin lesV 170 per ' Pima) 63; and St. Nicholas (New York) Square. t63. They are worth the money, but they 1 are luxuries.. The YOUNG PEorr z:'s Per= is a weekly UUU 15CtS, per Cord, delivered, Kingston, C nada,ld©signecdforthep� u-. w Everything else equally k w. Come and see us before buying, as we will not be undersold. KENDALL'S THE MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY FOR MAN OR BEAST. Certain in its effects and never blisters. Bead proofs below: KENDALL'S SPAVIN DUNE Mumma., L.I., N.Y., Jan.15,1894. Dr. B. J. ICENDALL CO. Gentlemen—I bought a splendid bay horse some time ago with a etpavl b. I gothlm torn). I used ICendall's Spavin Cure. The Spnviu !s gone now and I have been Offered $150 for the same horse. I only had hint nine weeks, so I got $120 for using $2 worth of lfendalls Spavin Cure. Yours truiy, W. S.IJAnsDEN. Mel,BAN it SON. Oti ingham, Jane 7111, 1898. WANTED. LncalnnuTrateling R,lrantrn to handle om• iJnrdti O u.adiui, Grown Nursery Stook. V, a lt:NAIL:e,tati.ft, n, to r. present:hires and Customer, furt,inr:.,,•ie:i are the. largest 1n the Dominion —ore,. 700 :•c.,us, No snbathtetion in o..ters. liseltu,it'e trr it iy and liberal terms to w;,ote or p time 4,ete. Write us. fi'roNN , !flood (itemm.)'r,anute, (int. The only Nursery in Canada )ntri, g testing orchards. ook'sCottonRoot COMPOUND. Arecent discovery by aaold physician. SucceufuUy nevi monthly by thousands of Ladies. Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine disc cohered. Deviate of unprincipled druggists who offer inferior medicines In place of this. .sltfor Cook's Cotton hoot Compound, take nosubstl• tuft, OP Inclose $1 and a cents In postage in (otter and we w111sdnd, sealed, by tetnrn)natt rullscaled particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, S stamps. .Address The Cook Company, * indsbr,Oat.,Canada. Piso'a Remedy liar CAtgrrh Is the Best, Reeked to (+se, and Cheapest. Sold by druggists or vont by mai:. Pk. JC.t. nateltlw..warren. 1'N. ALT O T ]3_._IT =la±S_ Josephine Street ' - b�f ng;lam, Opt, J. A. JIALn7'HD, J. W, Scorr, Mount Forest. Listowel sal of young persons of both sexes be- tween the ages of ten ane twenty, with a department for children. and issued at a price within the reach of all. It will contain the cream of all the leading American periodicals of the same class us well as the many publications of like. nature to be found in &giant', in midi - tion to a due proportion of original.. platter. Young people like stories, and these will be given in abundance. Among the miscellaneous contents of the paper may be mentioned aeconnts of travel, adventure find discovery, explanations of ' wonderful hiveniiiips.in'-tar.eos of re- •uarku1,1e inta:II.;,pl•re• to di,ia,t'l:=. )inee- iinter',e•itt. Parent'. limy +t• -t. NSF I1rt'$ that the Morel toue•ut. the. pl,,.er v ill be the very highest. 1'rict,. ;Ott n year; trial trip for two months. 10 cents. • The best way toremit is by postal order at it cost of two Cents, though small silver is r.Hrried safely enough 11' wrapped in soft paper. Ad- dress T. ,T. Shanks, 63 Rideau st., King- ston, Ont. Deposits Received and Interest allowed. Money Advanced to Farmers and Business Men, On long or short time, on endorsed notes or collateral security. Sale notes bought at a fair valuation. Money remitted to all parts of Canada at reasonable charges. Special Attention Given to Col- lecting Accounts and N otes. agents in Canada—'rhe Merchants' Bask of Canada she, Hours—From 9 a. nn. to 5 p. nn. A. E. SMITH, A en . T. 2a4 COR Cls UNDERTAKER, • ZETLAND SAW MILL GEORGE THOMSON, Proprietor. Lumber of all kinds, First-class Shingles,. and Cedar Posts. Gar Load Orders a Specialty. WOOD delivered to any rart of Wing-. horn. .Ui' 0r ierit by omit promptly atttud„ THONSOI4,. Loa 195. WIngham . 0 YOUNG' LADIES ANI) (xi EI`N'i'LEMEN. Rend 0 cents in +loin's, or le cents silver, and we will sent) you uv return mail tite t4 i PeREEO T LET rERl WRITER, A neat little Bonk, beim; n portent Guide in the art of Latta. lvritincr It contains letters of Love, Friendship and Business, etc., with minable instruo• Mons and advice. Every young man and woman should have this Bot k, Address, NOVELTY PUBLISHERS, Ingersoll, Ont 0 1 TIN CrHl ..!''$, ONT. A Blessing to Every Household. HOLLOWAY'S P LIS AND CU 11 WNT e These remedies have stood the test of fifty years experience, and are pronounced the best Medicines for Family use. THS PILLS Purify the blood, correct all disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH, ifTDItEFS AND B('rr•81 S and invaluable in all complaints incidental to females of all ages. TIM O.I1I-T1V1.11NYT Is the only reliable remedy for bad egs, sores, utters, and old wounds. FOR 1iIIONCII11IS, SORE THROATS, COUGHS, ".OLDS, GOUT, RY.EUMATISAI, GLADULAR SWELLINGS AND ALT. SKIN. DISEASES IT tlAS VO EQUAL. Manufactured only at 78, New Oxford. Late 533, Oxford Streit, London, and sold by all Medicine Vendors throughout the world. . tits -Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots. If the address is not 533 Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. WEBSTER & CO. have decided, for a short time, to reduce the price for MAKING MEN'S TWEED SUITS TO 1') $4.00 SPOT GASH. If you have any Tweeds at home, now is the time to save a dollar fort the making of each suit, and get a good fit. First-class Trimmings supplied at wholesale prices for spot cash only. If you want to buy a Suit or Overcoat you Can 'we front $8,00 $10,00 on each, by purchasing from us, WEBSTER & 00.1 Opposite the new yMacdollald Block, Winghanl. Mer4Iltint "wailers•,