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The Wingham Times, 1895-03-08, Page 2,40.00011.~0.4.4.00,010.4.4.1.1.. TffE WINGHAM TIMES, M It (11I thiri PlIDICR RA.Y.NoR$ swBET. , Prince, recetwei three dives beore,. "You telegbeaphed l'AllbMW?" Stn.!. Physical Dome ' eight times the length of the body.. 'IOW a Dreyer Maxie ten Acienett- ITEART. i he had eaid he vonld Wee arrive an asked. tam -Ye a "Granny elerrisen.'. If the repair were lawaysidoltie,il so judgiag .e. Ian by hie teethe his • - • • • Ethel Vere had been poor zdl her hour before the eeremony, I teeth the waste, tufo wow,' teen only. attennele and ldd inteMineol, 110' is During the, brief administration of and he "Yes, DM he pot tell yen?" , life; so sbe laughingly eaie, ia the I had asked her te be ready dreeeed.be termipeeted hv iteeldelez, tweet. i,,,, nnturally and primitively frugreor- President William Henry llarrieon— Ethel shuddered. "Ah 1! did you Mimes of her happiness, mite Primo' that she might aot keep him see that 1 luee lost all toy money ? i old net!. •ftehie is as foot Niel) known MS, and Wtli$ not intended to eat •who was faneillarly known to the Raynor's love had made her rich. 1 that they might end the hear i she asked. Ito terwhe,.havo investigated the mile, flesh. Prole le aperient, atm apples Whigs 115 the "Oineleatus of the But it wile only Ethel who called Mem together- Ah, pet, thotip.to Mr. G. 11. Lowes in his ea en tho liver, and are good brain West," and to the Demoerate as she could. favey "Yes, darling. I own it,. aud—you. Ethel poor. )a„ the wood miss I the glad light in his eyes, as site will forgive 15ae—rejoiced that it was pilysiows or common /Life, nuo„,.. ibOd 111$0, 11.13 diley contain muele p4oe- " 0 minty Morrieon " , --- a plainly Vere was recognized an heireswould etaed bete him a vision so. 1 .woul0 rather hand my own , the seamen; quote& in earie !.111lerie acid. As to the effect of• eer-, dressed man,. lookinr, like a solid, tts s, white s eul 1da, with only the nest for my bird then *id her la . Nieuwe of the human 'and this fact of itself, spite of her k11 aitain climates, perheps too melt stress hottest farmeie appeared on Saturday years the \Arming ways, her fitecination of jewels teTleal of Pulite'. any gilded eer•gei It .vdas let system le adenroblY preeereee. As ;has been bet upon that. We. fend at the horse inarket in WashinVton, manner, brought her uo, poverty of It was scarcely vanity whyth istrange that 'ol iro.w t., not ,.yo!. man ntheanees in ilk however, and, ,that Thomas, Parr, who lived in. Eng e where drovere, are wee to come he broueht the wenn blood inantiong! snow. Perhaps 1 intewepted him. • ets up to, 50 or the he lesoins to tret land, died be his 1 53(1. year, and wee' from the willowy to sell their cattle.. friends, bis eves she would ' "I think you did " she said Muffle. • 1, • e • e, . No wonder she had been a littie, her cheek, that in . , , .• • -, - 'e stil ut the joints, midi experienees, dissected by the celebrated dieeever- b beentiful But the clock had while a prayer of thanksgiving rose if wira eln, feeling ht.is, Ige. u . er of the circulation of blood, Dr. -,,just a little, spoiled, or that touch of chimed the hour and he did not to God tnat her first impulse to bide !novatiene oe vartoue o•teentne of the, William Hervey whoeexpressed no• coquetre pervaded all she did, even : body depends on ,the blood i e•durinir the time she had kept Prince come. They bad left her alone to her pain at any cost front the world's how the minutes eyes had not borne ,ii.ts, harvest. At : this eappir is n4t at, all times fur - i in 1 i ,f doubt of his age), was never out of the drover. .: Rayner in suspense. She would welcome him- Olh .........— in sufheamt eu his native (wintry. Accouets, of men ; "To the White House, I will show. if she dragged themselves. along, dragged least for this clay ehe mast spare ..,e,ehea, '. - . .. ., • - . who have lived to extremes age in you the way." '' Pave Prolonged it longer _ , quality, a gradual deterioration nutty and Could, so wonderfully sweet was the and yet tiew, as iemorsselessly -they P.rinee the Itnowle - e of his friends Ecuador and Mexico indicate possisj "Why,. you don't mean to &IT,. new delicious. conseionsness which approached the'. hour need for the tieachery. But, id his coming , takes ow, .util.t , bilities, A ellmate that allows much ; friend, that you've bought this 'ere' and arteries Ise- • - s . 0 e lied &over, marriage. She had read in books of been an hoar later,, had she carried , come clogged aed the whole delicate 1 outdoor living is the best for health. , beast fey Granny Harrison 9" •de - Here he purehased a fine Durham. from. a Montgomery county drover-. "Whores/tall I drive it?" inquired! ked tlx op.,p, 8e,za1l1e to her inner laggard bridegrooms and waiting out Iler tirst mac iint ee, s 110 wouict , nourishment.' Deposits of phosphate mechmery suffeee. from the lack of nature, lie depths even she knew brides. Coald seeh humiliation be linv.e been,,penalise even now thine inel he had eenetreted hers? Again flaslwd through her trilitor s wife. tnc th (11 111.1(.11zwy aleleteuilietyleizzliutted hflL in!r I the words, "If he should lose It was.. long past le wedding hour, w1-1011. ta° fl'OM going to tilts extremities ef the linportant things. in July, 1 893, Tie drover left Ids Lettere, la the Hitherto, with the many fluttinere it to -morrow, aye, int her wedding^ and the isseinbled guests had well , one, by which the 'Mood es hindered. abellt the lialee, ELI'lei had felt. that day, Prince Il-alsnor wertid give her mgh. lost ,their. pi!ttle„nce, „ ' the Courier ,Tournal, of Loeisville, eitiv. of his son and drove the Durham its gol.len light Was lev meane its tiP. though he stied with her at the , 0' 111 4)0 Lit tort trrumpnant • — I • ' resent. • re, published a long account of .Tames tee direetiee itelieeted, heenilimr system \voile of least nstiasiion. a a g 'War Afore dee-tends oil food than ou any mande(1 the drover, with dilated climate, fresh air to live eyes. in and to sleep in, daily bathing, "Yee,. indeecl, I have," replied the and freedom from medicine are the - other. ,• st. tune in t ei Payse. of all p pair and renovaion. Old age, then McMullin, who died in Carlisle ' the tedium of the way With frieedly gestem ellOtlitr 6tilly the purity of 11 m, as if in answer to it, the `1.110Y teld of a ly a: a triumph. P County, Ky., at 1 17 years of arre • chat. "I am a Demeenit myself . - o is the result te? the el et In" ' i 1 th ' Prince line norie love for her mew door (veiled, and the servant enter- the eare of the b -de alone they blood, which 1, " . crossed, lesr mind, though he lived in ed, bearing a card, on Which rt'aS whispered but one vord—"Saved!" t earthy salts, lea' another town, Mid wee but a struggi- written the name ot the man who , jENNY IVIIEN'• ' in the system, a - ires la weer all the world said, a had spoken thene Tome loaased with When Buffett, Hufeland, Mums, he voinnteered, "and voted for Van, es its refuse matter and men of that class, wbo had or coarse, hat the other day at the d the -valves of the studied the subject, believed in the inauguration, Ill be doggttned if 1 possibility of' 150 or 200 years of life, didn't throw up my hat and hurrah the subject is not to be laughed at, for Grauny Harrisou with the rest." —William. Kinnear, in Harper's I "Thank you," ,said the other. Weekly. ' "011, you are a Whig ; but I might • ., have known that, for of course you. . Mayor Burger. have a situation in the White House I , heart become cartilaginous. Becom- e , i yet, MAN'S INGRATITGDE.---W0 hare , inn' thus, the heart is not able to pro - promising one, , "He bade me iay, Miss, be must . it on ShakespearelS authority that ; e It Was 0111!. a fortnight before the speak to you, if 'but for a moment. " ' the winter wind. is iot more irne-ind pel the blood to its destination, &- time appointed for Ethers wedding "Bid him enteie" she answered. than , ,,, ; series also enehig ;become ossified, a , man s nveraeitude.- In many j . - still further obitructiou takes place, day. She bad • gone to a party . Was she changing into leo she cases this is Ofortienately only too ,!and Incwhol body lanenishes. given in her honor, and hating torn wondered, that she could stand so , , trae. l'nere itre times, wever, 1 131 .1 . . . , . . - e her drese in the dance, lad. run still and. cold end ealm ?" oce is life. it is kept continually hastily up to the dreesieg. room to In another minute Frank Folbrow , when the benefit re 'eived is so great genet ordet our years are pro- • • ti 1. wee- One man entPred iler rooith nrrayed in full that ingratitude b ;Melee impossible. jul bodies, as in youth A a burden to :longed. New p. e, When i e is RC se. standing in the smoking room ad- drew, with a whik rose in his but - us by sickness, am joining, saw her shadow as she ton hole. Somehew it seemed to 1 1 ig.hi y strung Item 1104, and restores us to . . passed—saw 1111E1 recognized it. Was bee, so • it for this reason that he purposely /101"reS, that eraee would have been be base Indeed toll Thus• millions are . raised his voice, that it might pene- more approprinteet tioe mid cause the decrepitude of Holloway's Pills and Ointment, which trate to the room where she was, as "I must offer tou aliibralprobltaagt yi, Now if some means were dis- he addressed his cempanion? • Miss Vere," lie began, have cured them of all stomach and , age* covered by whielt-the blood could be liver troubles, banished headache, "Beautiful girl, 'Miss ye ! -e• Great am about to say, but I love you too kept in a condition like that of • ity thourrh that site ie about to well to keep silent. Nav, (10 no, flatulency, indigeslon and low spirits, , . • , , .t. (),. t et-outh, it would throw off these and early maehood, ecd riceuniu- someme ce ealth, we should te these :fibrin:ate and. gelatinous :deposits. welch, as the years go be, ratefeel un.grateful. f 1 help the grade& process of o'ssitie-a- v,s4 t Mr. Geo. H. Burger, Postmaster and , Mayor of Welland, Ont, says: "From "Wa-al, now, what be you. Gar -- experience in my own family cannot 0.ener speak too highly of Stark's Powders as a pleasant, immediate and permanent cure "Coachman or body servant 9" for Headache, Neuralgia, Biliousness "Neither. I suppose I may call and Liver troubles. am also aware of several severe cases in our own town myself a general servant." and neighborhood which hhve been "Oh, •,.es I know; run errands, cured by them after the patients' bad wait on the tabk4 and. answer the suffered for years, had tried all kinds et door knocks, ?" remedies and bad been treated by doc- tors.—Guo. H. BURG. "Something' not very unlike that," Two preparations in each box ; nice to responded his interlocutor, with a. take. Sold by all medicine dealers at smile • throw herself away on a penailess start! The man whose loyalty would ai !elev ' c•tithv salt8 which obstruct the tie- eac a box, box s al. young 18'w er. She is a woman who have made )U words to you, dis deserves to be leved for herself not honor, has proven himself a denble ! her money. If she shored lose it ; traitor --a traitor to yon and to hima to-morrew—aye, on the morning of self, He has beard of your loss of her wedding-day_prince e!eyeue fertune, and has deserted you. The would give her up, though he eteed: Western train did not number him ' -with lat• at the altar. 1 speak n amone its passengers. Ethel, onee little warmly perhaps, but to you, betbre I offered you my hand and ' Ale old fellow, I. tan acknowledge Ai:eerie and yen refused it. Yon the trail. I hare loved and lees. were rich then ; you are poor now , her, but I coed hotter give her up --(lonely Nor, in loss of fortune and • did I not feel that eke was marrying. of the man yon loved. A few min- a man utterly unworthy:* ' rtes and your shame must be pub- . With parted lips and sewn -flash- fished to the world. I am come to ing eyes Ethel heard each word. An :save yoa, to ask you to come with - impulse seized her to confront the line to the church, - to let this false slanderer of Prinee'shonor. Shekaew , man see that you' bear no broken . him well. She bad recognized in heart, to let, the world see that it is ' the first moment Frank Folbrow's he, not yon, who is the jilted one. ' specious tones, but could not recoil- Then I will not 'force your love, elle his words regarding her with. Yon shall have time to accept the the instantaneous ' flash of baffled, Position forced upon you, and I—I -purpose she laid seen in his keen must trust that same time; with its .gray eyee the morning she had told gentle healing, to bring me my re - him, in answer to his wooing, that ward." -she could never be his wife. Like a piece of marble Ethel When. ere she slept that night, listened to the end. This Mall, too, ;she sat writing in her own room, no believed this wretched story—ebe- -word of what slim bad heard found lieved her poor, forsaken, and yet place in the eleseiy tilled sheets she, came forward, even in the moment sent to the man who, in two short. of ber bitter humiliation, to save her. weeks, was coming to claim his The clock on the mantel chimed . bride. She felt she could not sully twelve. Already the wedding guests her page with its suspicion. Ere his answer came, more than a week afterwards, fond and true and loving. ' it had been well-nigh forgotten. Alt! the day was coming when it would now her future We. when the fruit resurrect itself upon her memory, in bad turned to her ashes in her very letters of fire. -grasp? — , She glanced ue4, into his face, with But thrice twenty-four hours must its gray eyes fisted upon her as intervene before her wedding morn. though they weldread her very Three days, and Prince would be . seat Her soul ! eel) ! what mattered with her, never to leave her snore. , what the world thought if she dared - Strange that no letters tame from ever look within at the purity of him! What could be the reason? On - her own soul? Because one man was the morning of her wedding she false should she betray her woman - picked up a paper, lying eonspicu.. hood? s .0usly on her table, bearing date "o r' answered aloud, "Ten three days before, and read in its, thousand times no le. And yet I thank most prominent column the failure of- you for the thought which -would a large and influential hank, 4114(11 have saved me, and' bid the weddhij Among its heaviest losers—in fact, 1 gaests disperse ?" almost heading the list—she read But even as the ''ords cscaped her her name. Ilips the door op. , and Prince,- "%Vitra nonsense! She had not more soiled and travel s med, bnrst into than a few thousand there, waiting the room. investment elsewhere; a loss she should scare* feel. Whv was it, "My darling!" he exclaimed; but that at the Same Instant- flashed , Ethel lay white 41 fainting in his acr oss her mind the words see had arms. ,I i.i overheard two. weeks before, and When she °penci1 her eyes they that, like a lightning ,ehain, she eee, were alone, and 43 111y his kisse,s in. fleeted them with her lover's =wont. terrnpted his exAnation of the long ed silence? shame, shame! could 'delay of the train iltwenty.four hours I she ever wipe rout the unworthy re-::81low'bound. , fleetion upon .them both ? All that ' "1 telegraphy Folbrow .yester. day her thong were tenderer of4 day," he said, " . at we tould not Pence, as thotth m atonement. f arrive before night -fall, but the snow - Syr wedding morn dawned clear plough* worked tts out imexpeeted- *nd bight. ln her last letter from' ly." were assembled. Should site not de as he asked? Had he not proved himself so noble that she might trust herself to him? What mattered kumaisem, sciatica, and. all similar ' - • ; tion of the heart and arteries. Our food and demk make ens hined, It SC'01M, then, that it is to then1 WC I should. look primarily for the quality HE BIDS ElOOD-DYE TO VIE SAIX.i- MN ARMY IX': CARNEGIE HALL— Withialt eating and drinking HIS (1.11E.S.T necint). : there ie no life, but we may select certain kinds of food containing a NEW YORK, Fe. 28e—Gen. J3ooth :minimum amount of the element, bade ferewell lest night to the mem- which cause the mettle blockages in bers of the Saleation Army at. a the system. An English physician, meetingin Carntie Hall. Every Dr. C. F. DeLacey.Evans, who made seat is tho house was occupied.. researches in regard to our foods, The boxes were filled with friend6 Of comes to the condlusion that more the army who, In' interested hi its fruit should be 'eaten, especially work. Field and stair officers sat on apples, grapes, mil bananas, they the stage. Commander Pallington ; being rich in nuiritieus elements. Booth, who opened the meeting, read Being deficient in nitrogen., they are the general's nddrees to the troopa. , best fur elderly people, as they keep In the order it was announced the blood in a better condition than ailments. Gen. Booth to Return. thnt the general had been in Amer- ica about for monthe. In that tame he traveled 18,4-53 milee, spending 1,817 hours on lie ears, 3(19 of which were consumed in travelling by night. He linsw rittcn 216 letters mid 11 11 0410105 1011 his work, and spent 4-2e3 hour," in memo business. Forty-seve11 shert and 2e43 long ad- dresses have neen runde by him to audience nutlet:wing 437-,500 persons. While the general has been in Am- erica 2,200 have joined the army. \viten he spoke for the 0011050 of his Mohammedan mis- Gen. Bootie himself, said 111 address that th stemma were more successful than the Christian teachers. They have captured the tribes, of Africa, while the Christian missioparies have Gen. Booth said he intended to return to Atm:ries next year, and would continue to revisit the country every year until he died. aieseelessem zieueu c. I suffered eseeytieng but death from Indic iittribg four years and tried all sorts of medire to no effect, at last was advi,ed o try Burdock Blood Bitters, and beffire iieishine the second bottle 1 was osawell IIS 1 ailed be, end have bed good health evvr B zsz, Ortm.tirr. nn.twasi or; Zionville, N ft Hera s,the Man a It. "I can't for Ithe life of me see how women can be so vain, nonseneical and fond of (tenement — confound it !" His train of thought was suddenly broken off by tli sticking his finger through the bitdge of the Dunk Social Club whi 11 he was fastening conspicuously oi his vest before the mirror, il "13y the wayl Maria, I want you to clean the feather of my regalia suit for the parade next month and --where's that charm 1 wen at the raffle? 1 want to bang it on my watch ehain.---Philadelphia Times, flosh After the lige of 60 people should eat less beef' and mutton, and use more apples and nuts of all kinds, the latter being rich in many of the nutritious elements of meat. Fish and poultrychtive not the ob- jectionable certlasalts of beef. In order to retard iysiea1 decay and to keep the blo d in a wholesome condition distillud water is recom- mended. It 43 solvent (realities which act upon ,dlie eaeary salts in the blood and e4pel them from the body. A goblef of this water taken three times a di*, with ten or fifteen drops of dilutedi phosphoric acid iii each glass, has i tendency to assist the blood in eliminating the obstruc- ting salts. , A mini is as old as his arteries. If thei, are soft and coin - 1 pressible, the deteriorating effects of old age leave not appeared. Illourens, in his well known work !on "114148:41) Longevity," cites the !case of the Italifin centenarian Oor- ' naro, whose recipe for health and long life was extreme moderation in all things. Flotoirens himself insists that a eenturyl is the normal life, but that 50 'eare beyond, and 200 years are humeri possibilities under advantageous co. ditions. Hufeland !also believed in 00 years as an ex- : trent° limit. Sir James Criehton . Browne, M. D., concedes, in a late address, that Flourens was right. Duration of growth gives the length of life. Hufeiand Minolta the human body grows till the age of 25, and that eight times the growth period was the utmost limit of man. But if 20.years be taken as the time of growth, -- siren five times that will give us a century. According to nourens and Cuvier, Mil is of the frngivorons or fruit and nut eating class of animals, like theprillas and other apes and monkeys. Man has not teeth like the bus and earnivor- atm beasts, neither has he teeth like the cows and herbivorous ones. In- testines in the man are seven to "'4'a -al, now, do yotl see much of Dleb.es fer GrAZ Men, Pius IX, during most of his ponti- ficate, ate only an egg and . a bit of bread for breakfast. Meyerbeer said that no man could work who di(1 not live well, He was a hearty eater. Swift said: "No bread is so bitter as that of a dependent." He spoke from personal experience. Locke said that the proper break- fast for a studious man was a bit of fish and a piece of bread. Cowley liked fried eels. He said that when properly cooked they were a dish to set before a king. Allan& Angelo, during the greater part of his life, lived on the plain food of an Italian peasant. Bare Ben Johnson asked no bet- ter treat than al pork pie, with an abundance of Caeary wine. Bernadotte, Ntipoleon's marshal, who afterwardsi became king of Sweden, liked gore and onions. Walter Scott lased venison better than any other Meat, and potatoes better than any other vegetable. Itheurnrittiem Cured. Rheumatism is;j, caused by lactic acid in the blood attacking the fibrous tissues horiZt44°-knott;3•Tolt(i dilejvVio In1;tbilloaotle r=aci- lien,. noon's larstiparilla gives the blood vitality a ' richness atiti tones il the whole body, n utralizes the acidity of tae blood and t us cures rheumatism, • ROOD's Pr -..s are the best after-dinaer pills, assist digestioe, core heodaehe. Powerful AgInets of Progress. Yes, eiterybocli needs to read the newspapers. T my may not be per - feet ----nothing is; but they are power. flit agents in thea progress of intella gence and eth4ttion, they contain the best thinker, and are quite as well gotten up, good friends, as you I could get thern up, no matter what you may think to the e,ontrary. They :solace our weary hours, they amuse our idle mbinents, we look for them as we look ifor our breakfast, and whatever else we dispense with we will not disperse with our news - I paper. And we nwill pay for It and let everybody else do the same, if he wants an easy conscience. i The path of tlk newspaper editor is a hard one td travel. He gives generous notices and says pleasant 1 things about people and societies for 1 years and nobody ever sees them. Then perchanee, he unintentionally treads on some one's toes and how quickly it spreads, and verily he is the meanest man on earth. But the newspaper man mindeth it not for be is used to Snell things..—Wilson Star, Granny Harrison 9" "Quite a good deal." du :eels like the old fellow ?" -That is hard to say to . well; most likely," 13v thisstime they had readied the White House, and the purchaser opened the gate that leads to the stable. Several men servants came fbrward, touching their. hats. "Take care of this cow and atten(1 to her," said the purchaser, and then turning to the drover, he asked him to come into the house and take some breakfast. "Thank you. I don't care if I do, Say, could you get me a sight of old , Granny Harrison?" ' "Didn't you. see hiin at the in- augaration ?" "Law, yes, but not nigh enough to know what he looked like. 1 would like to get another squint at him, anyway," "Then come in, friend," and. the stranger ushered him into the family breakfast room, where breakfast was standing ready. Here were more servants, who, with deep bows, placed chairs at the table. The drover began to be alarmed. ' "Look a -here," he cried, "ain't you taking on great liberties? Granny Harrison would't like this 'ere, now, would be?" "014, yes, lie would," But still the drover hesitated. ".Now, just look a -here," he safte, "ain't yea too fresh? Who be you, anyhow?" "The people call me 'William Henry Harrison, and have made me President of the United States," quietly replied the other. "Lord a -mighty !" cried the drover, and he bolted from the house and never stopped 'nal he was off the grounds, where he sat dams on the curbstone, and, Its his wife afterwards describe it, eursed himself gray'. Worse Titan Rum. Indigestion spoils more lives than rum. But you think you have "Malaria" or "grip," or something worse. The trouble is all in the digestive tract. o Ripens Tabules brings a sort of Millennium with them. One gives relief, and their habitual uee keeps the whole system in tone. Get them of your druggist. What sttbjeets are treated in your new book? None. It's a plea for prohibition and dosen't treat at all. To emit* out impuritiee and drive them from the system is the work of Burdock 13leed Bitters( ; thus 11. IL 13. eines dyspepsia, coestipation, bad blood bilioustmee and all assumes of lila stomach, Dor, bowels and blood.