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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1896-02-28, Page 7-----1°-.4.441.4ro9r410,111111, , . ..... • ... Accommodating ourselves to Cir- cumstances. Happy, indeed, is the man who can, without worrying or trouble, accommodate himself to eircum- tames as they may befall him. The .workl„ mifortunately, does not con- tain many of this kind of men, the majority ot' mankind. belug achliOed to grumbling when ml versity or hard times overtake them, even though they frequeetly bring this unfortun- ate condition on themselves through their own negligence or culpability. From time immemorial farmers have been set down as inveterate .grumblers, it being said of them that they are seldom contented with their crops, even when they have been good, and, to illustrate this, the fol- lowing story is told of an English farmer who, for several successive Tears, had been unable to save all his hay in good condition on account •of wet weather, and had used the -damaged hay to feed his heifers. It happened that a fine dry summer -came, and every farmer saved his hay in prime condition. A friend meeting the farmer referred to, who was a great grumbler. said, "Well, this year at any rate you cannot ,eomplain about things." Yes I can," he said, o`there will be no heifer hay this year." The story we believe is a true one. Whether farmers, as a class, are more inclined to be grumblers then either people are open to question. There is, however, this to be seid for them, tbat this business is one 'which is more dependent on the weather, temperature, and the sea- sons than that of any other class of men, and it is, therefore, a great 'deal out of their control. In bad seasons, then, it is not altogether the farmer's fault if he has poor crops and falls behind. To -day the cry all over the land is "hard times." Prices for farm products are low, as a rule, hay ibeing an exception, and of it but -few farmershas any to spare. "Will there ever be any great improve- ment in prices, and when will it came ?" is a question that everyone is asking of his neighbor, the reply received being favorable or not ac - Sawing Wood. ,A TORONTONIAN OF Q.5 Y'2AR3 CAN STILL 11.L.NrdiiIi, DZICIICZAW. THE -STINGRAY'. TIMES, FEBRUARY 281 1890. • To find a man of 85 sawing and :TM. 'ling wood without any trouble would surprise most of us to whom such vigorous 'exbrciso is -to say the least-dis'arter7.1, but to hear the circumstances mid& wh:th it took place but increases tho wonder. Our representative visited Mr. John dyn, x7.1 Stckvillo st., City, a sufferer from kidney trouble for the past so years, having undergone two operations during that time. Mr. Clyne was for some 30 years engaged in the express and cartage business fot such well-known firms as Swan Bros., Hugh Miller, J.P., Wm. Rennie, etc., and having been a resident of Toronto for 5o years, is well known. Mrs. Clyne was interviewed at their residence and said; Mr. Clyne was in a very bad state, his urine almost black with sediment and :he was expecting- to have another opera- tion such as he had before. The pain in his bask was at tittles very severe and kept him from doing any work., Mr. Clyne got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at J. R. Lee's drug store and was relieved from the rst dose; the urine is now clear, no !trouble or burning sensation, and to -day you would say that although 85 years old, he has taken on a new lease of life.' Mrs. Clyne then took our reporter to the yard, .and to his surprise found Mr. C. sawing wood for over Sunday. He emphatically -endorsed every word Mrs. Clyne had said. From the very first they did me good; -mu well known here and you can use rny name as reference. Two weeks ago X expected to be operated on, perhaps to .die -to -day I am well and strong, better :than I have felt for a score of years.'" wyearimeoFywiyis/wbil • ••• .. a, ".. '' ',', lo,'I'll''•,:t 41 . • • .. o'' . ' ;- I, ::TV...," 4.,1 " , i•;or'S' \\,...y.‘; 13 f,-... " .14 N •,,, t, '''':;*Nt?/ r"*•. '",*.t 11'Oillt.lt pleasant mad per- ' ou for C.tughs; Colds, Asi.hina, I .c•noriti.4, Hoarseness, Sere Threat, I-, . VI, hooplti g Cough, Quinsy, :.-,;a, in the Chest and all Throat, t-encittal and Lung tliseaseS, yrs.!, healing anti -consumptive virtues itnof the Norway' Pine are combined in this medicine v•''.). Wild Cherry and. other per' oral ;.. 'Is and noisome to alt0 a tette itt,,... t ::o for All retail of disease oright.kti .0 front colds. • . "ilYelrWrik.,,,er '1/410Nr41/3.411/110 cording, to the temperament, or, it may. be, the political bias of the one giving the answer. Our opinion le that 'niece will improve, although the improvement may be slow in coining, but there will be no boom unless something unprecedented turns up. Times have been just as dull, again and again, in previous years. 'History,' it is said, "repeats itself," and so do hard times. Years of inflation. are regularly followed by years of de- pression, and vice versa. Mo will it lie again, and to the end of the world. What, then, can farmers do hard times prevail, in order to their business a profitable one the first place, they must try • Proparing for Spring Troo Plantinx The land intended to be set to fruit trees next spring should /IOW be fitted for that purpose. If well rotted manure is available it should be scattered thickly over the soil. If the new are to be sec twenty-five or more feet apart 8 strip ten feet wide where the rows aro to stand should be covered and plowed under • at least eight inches deep, following each furrow with a subsoil plow stirring the soil to an additional depth Of at leiter, rex Welles. The ridges should be harrowed down as level as possible. This process in-; when sures a thorough intermingling of the Costripation Cared. make manure with the soil, the action of (11TH,• -1 was in very poor health for ? In ; rains and frost making mueli of it over fourN'eard.4het ClOOtOr hilit.1 it WitS • much !Joules Bestfor— Wash Day makes clothes sweet, clean, white, with the least labor. Its remark- able lasting and cleansin, properties make SURPRISEmost economical and Best Every Day , • . . . • u .,54.Y, • u .Y4 4 -4141:* I k to tie- , immediately available for the food Constipation. sh I got three of Bur - cat wanting to spend too commodate themselves to paella', 1 To be more economical with the dock Blood Bitters and took it regularly. stances. This, as we have said :manure, stake cfi where the trees I _ eiln Certify that 1 ant now to tne very above, is a thing that most men very ' are to stand and thoroughly cover a best of heal ,11 talc' trees very grateful to I B. B. B. mueh dislike. It must be done how- i spot at least ten feet in diam, eter . ever, and the quicker it can be done ; spading or plowing it under. By k3 Virri.);14:1,1111Xio, Que. the better. Accommodating our- : this plan in excavating for each tree : selves to circumstances can be clone in the spring the soil is still further .: Use for Old aIrk,. in various ways, no one way being worked into the proper condition.Corks are thrown, away i» great applicable to all collectively. For Trees cannot flourish on poor soil. lquantities, and very few' people instance, one man may be farming -- in too expensive a manner, and yet Dent Tobacco Spkwor ,Ssnolto Your Life tthinknthink that thereis :my value it has served its- purpose once . , - may have been making money in , the truthful, startling title of bortit about Near.. I as stopper. Neveeuheles ie has good years, because he was raising E.3, 1 1 elt sigels=e61;i'snanrizilertreidle r()ebria.eceolinhiattittesnig: ne poison, makes, weak ,aten gain strength, ; CO , become one of the most valuable good stock or some farm product for rti mponents of ' a eitv,s refuse. which there was a good demand, 1,1T,.re';',1.(1 ,`:! 4: is 1111:41.1o11,.°o!Ancliclitsiorlilln tilli°1'cl.):rh)l'elueaaira°1ritileelimt'e- 1 Great quantities of 'medcovite art' which still continues, but the prices tiiiieliniteeedrsiyon„eATtz.ifgti!dit:adttli roerill)i; used again in the tilesiuthetere of are considerably lower. Here the policy would be to curtail all expen- ses, short of depreciating the product and to watch for such lines as are in popular demand, and to raise such. Another man has been raising 0. E. Williams, Windmill. v :insulating covers et steam pipes. and Delicious Chicken: Pie. 1 . , boilers, of ice boxes in hotese and i other points to be ppoteetede from Take a pair of chicken*, net too the influence of hoses Powdered young, that have been carefully . cork is very useful. fhr felliasers in dressed ; remove all the fat and skin, ' horse collars and the very Detest nothing but grain all his life, and and the tendons from thealtramstieks. 1 application of this mateemi. iis the finds to his cost that there is no Place m a saucepan, cover with boil- twine in of pneuinatie tires, with profit in it. He should be encour- ing water and allow them, to 8411411er - cork shavings. Mats Mr bath moms aged to try dairying or cattle rais- gently for about two hours,,keeping 'are made of cork exclusively, and ing or feeding, from all of which ho them tightly covered during the it also goes into the . compostribm of will be abb.: to make a good living, entire time. Remove theehiekens linoleum. Cheap life peeservella are and. if he is intelligent even more from the fire, and add to the liquor now filled exeinSivelyv with beetle followin the rofession of thicken with two tablespoonguls of Scientific American thoroughly five- mioutes. Add the farming, there aro none that feel the flour creamed with one oft batter, ; hard times worse than those who i season with a very little eflyetale ' Milburn's clod Liver Oil • Eirmision, with have been blindly farming on in the ; pepper, some Onion juice and seat, VT (%terry _and fiypophosp bitetlof" If4ane a, and pure Norwegan (Ad, Liver old ruts in which their•fatners walk- and when thoroughly cooked and ; Ve seSs perfectly palatable form, It is tiao 1 ed, totally oblivious, or wilfully just before removing from the lire. best far coughs, colds and alb .,teng blind, to the great changes and add the well -beaten yolks- or twa.. trooeies. price 50c. Rad. ifl.t0(11 per advances made in modern farming eggs. Pour over the chickene which j bottle. to suit the times. Of these men it should previously have been- cut into; Heart Disease Relieved' ins 30 may be said that they refuse to ac- pieces and placed in a deep eacthen-; FiLtylut.es.-All cases of organic. on:sym- pathetic heart chsease relieved! mi ao commodate themselves to eirctou- ware pie dish. When . both, "'wee! minutes and quickly cured, by Di'.. Ag - stances, preferring their owleignor- , and chicken are quite cold: ploee. neves Cure. Sold at Chiehonnle Doug These cakes are only good when mice to the lessons they might learn I over all a rich cover of good, paste,1 store, Windham. from their more advanced neighbors. I making an incision in the centre for' luted as many scabby potatoes as the Immured part. Our expericree convinces us that 11 18 not as much in the manure as in the season. We never tried to soak the seed in the corrosive sublimate preparation. My belief is that the scab is • in the soil. Tho purerseed perhaps the lessscab. But pure seed is not p,sitive proof that the potatoes will he exempt from scab, A. SHIRE'''. Mrs. T. Si Hawkins, Chattanooga n Tenn, says, “Siviloh's Vitalizer 'saved my life.' 1 considtT it the best remedy for a debilitated ty.stem I ever used." For Dyspepsia, Live.r or Kidney trouble it excels. Price 'Lets, Sold at Chisholm's Corner Drug Store The Breath of the Pines. when lirbr T'ati [MVO he'!" Castorla, 'When she was a Child, o,ht, cried for Caatorla, 'When rhebname 7.11w, she clung to Custoria, Wen she had Children, she gave them Castello, •••••••••44.1aciwi 0 777 qt1 IN THE, PEMAN Ifs 416 nvsPEPstA 1110030c.TICK niA,ouTLD 11E (iett DO? Cou,rths, asthme, bronchitiq, sore throat n n haw t rot) b los are c red , • by Norway Pine.lityrup. Price 25 and 50 oents. It breathes, oat the healiog. vir- tues of the pi ne•foreetS. For an Afternoon Ten. Very daintiramail cakes for after- noon teas are. nide from half a poundtof batter; a pound of powder- ed sugar, four epee and a flavoring. of orange -flower water and lemon jaice. Beat the butter to a mane sift the sugar andi add it gradually. When well mixed and smooth, add than this. Of all these, however, in the saucepan a pint ofi intik • stoppers, cut into linie pfeces.— the yolks of the, eggs lane beat who are tablespoonful of orange water and the strained juice -and grated yellow rind of one leinom. 1.;'e• -at, the whites of the eggs as stiff as possible. Measure half a pound of rice flour, a fourth of a poundi or pastry flour and a level teaspoonfitall or baking. powder, Sift them, then adidi the whites of the • eggs and the trellis gradually and alterhately until, ale of both are in the batter. Bake•in patty•pan tins. Just spend his Four t cviarters for a bottle of ,;,•5rdock Blood Bitters tt.) • • • tt, all sensible people do; be.- cv if) canze it cures Dyspepsia, Con- stipatton,, Biliousness, S 1 c k .01 Headache,. Bad Bleed, and all se Diseases of t4e Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bowele and Elood from a common Pimple to the worst cao" Scrofulous Sore. I fresh, but then; they ere deicious. The numbers of such men must, the steam to escape; ornans..ehe The Smallest Oxen iia,the "VT ri at 1 Rheum attsm Cured; ue a day. -South however, decrease every year. With :prettily, brush over with the. white! One of the greatesteuoioseties f AshericanItheinua;tio Mere of Rheumatism the need for intelligent farming be- of an egg, and bake in a modes aud 11.xtitoaLeciaayn..li tetely ;amNeuralgiaaction ong the domesticated, anirnalS of t ..cnown; to I mysterious. It rbet‘r;;aves atonce the cause ' 1 coming more pronounced, these lag- 1 hot oven. When. the paste is-eooked "Ceylon is a species of eat 1t.e1 the pie will be done.—Fehilhary the zoologist as the sacred running 0f the disease immediately disappears. The tile, specimens of: s eau teed t 3uslioni grime store. whole ox family, gards must join the ranks of the progressive farmers, or else drop out. Keen competition and low prices must bring this about, while the spread of knowledge through the aericultural press, colleges, and LadieS' Home Journal. oxen. They treithe- dwarfis oD the T. Catarrh in the Read I the species never exceeding 30, ; , , ,,,.irlailMrtsfAte,:t_t,41:- lagLii, is due to impure biood and cannot Ise. liaC1,1e5 in height. Oslo sent. to, the cured ytilt local applications., Hood'S0 Marquis of Canterbury ith 1091, I ii:1 iiiiJ 40A,g,., 1,1). a .:--ao• or, w114011 is still livings- toadt is believed'' fa cured t hundrArmus' institutes among the rising Sarsaparilla h RS ases of catarrh because i;mettles, the' ; generation, will greatly tend to de- the blood and in this way removss. the to be somewher e near tenyears of ei I ItIF'Yo,:i-tMei FAO'IS FOR D1SEASE.D VICTIMS. mrt• r crease ' the numbers of out -of date cause or the disease. It also bulide ttri, age, is only 22 inches high;. weighs; :! 1 the system .ttud prevents attacks etbut,10q pounds.. Ih , Undue they 1 is:4 ,,,,,,„... farmers. pneumonia, diutheria. and typhoid fever. I are nsed for quids. tripe- OCTOSS. the i V 1:::ra C1:(11fi:43 GUARANTEED' OR NO PAY i It must be recognized by all farm- I -- . itl ma43ter and I II ttiltlis+V a: tft. LL1 z 0 The modern stand- . ard Family Medi- cine: Cures the common every -day ills of humanity. EAK. ers that they must prepare to meet •CT t J.00D'S PILLS become the- favorite! '2'1111t4 Y w 1express-• the new conditions of affairs in the cathartic with every one who, taos.thkaa. I other light loads, and it is., said that If -our a them can.pull the- (hirer of i la two wheeled, cart and a 200- I to, yarn, • Alt i i 11 us matter I , (4,01:: world. There must be improve- ment all along the line. and that improvement must be made without increasing expenses. This can be done in many ways. For instance, the farmer's wife who is making an inferior class of better that sells at a low figure can easily, with little care, make a first-class product that will fetch the highest price. The best will always sed, while poor stuff is a drug on the market. If the demands 'of the market are catered to, and first-class goods areproduced, produced, it matters not how hard the times are; the farmer who showd eneugh to cultivate that ma,rket have no reason to complain that farming is a failure.—Farming. Horses Teeth. A horse's teeth need examining as often as a man's, and such examina- tionmmay save the life of any a valuable animal. Improper grinding of food produces a general derange- ment of the entire system. As the sharp edges of the teeth cut the cheeks on the inside, the horse naturally objects to doing any more work with his jaw than he can help, and the food does not get the second and third grinding. Only about one-half of the food given is digested and there is a big loss. This impels. feet digestion also gives the horse spasmodic, colic, imflamation of the bowels, worms of all kinds, weakeycs, eyes, with many other troubles. See that tho teeth aro kept true, for it will save lots of troubles! Shiloh's Care ui gold on a guarantee. It cares Incipient Consumption. It is the best Cough Cure Only one cent a dose 25ots., 5octe., and $1. Sold at Chis- holm's Corner Drug Store. Humor at tho ar. 1 pound load ofni sce anee Some funny stories aretold about I for 60 or 70 milts adaye They keep k".4. V.CsRED TO All ANNOOD BY DRS. K. el- K. the marriage service. One of them ; up a constant sevingiugs feet or run, I 1.1 ( • . A.171',I N. jOIIN A. MANLIN... relates how an old man., broughtj and have beeniknown to. travel 1001 ' 0.0-14". e .. • Herouo and despondent;wcalt or dohililated; tired mornings; 7:10 nr.n. el.N;tesione-a-nittl:nle,esrivtineaningrutlicli,orrd4;eniosii,olzrfe..gitgliaecwtaablemitisidai7ciltIfilibili:1 he -•••1•11 looking. weak back-. bone pains: hair loose; ulcers; sore thronti ,e141 .11),'4(4 ;n and drains at stool; distrustful; want of confidence; lack 41444d("WE CAN CURE Y'OU 1 rather unwillingly to the altar, who; miles in a, day and. without responses. "'My good man" at could. not be induced to. eepeat the food or water.. tt's .1.; :te length exclaimed the. elergynaan, Wok Hes.dachal "I really cannot marry you unless Dyspepsia, BillieusnesS, finir Stomach and you do as you are told)." But still Constipation wise from, wrong action of I - the stomach, Iver and Iteutels. Burdock N Blood Bittersi cures all sweases of these organs. I Catarrh relieved in ?Atte 00 minutes.- i the man remained Kleine At this unexpected hitch the bride lost all patience with her fatten. spouse, and burst out with : "CID, on, you old toot! Say it after lafiln just the same as if you was moekin' him." The same difficulty oceurred in another One short pull or til:s• breath through . the Bleivem su !wiled Ilk each bottle of e Dr. Agnew's Coto rrIttal. Penviier, doses thisTowdrer over the.surtnee of the nasal passages. Painless clad del gh til tO case.relievoi instantLy, and perntauently I The clergyman, after explaining' oures Oistarrh, Sine Fever, Colds. Head- ' • T anti Deaf • ness. 0) taints. At °limbo( at's Drug the slighest effect, stopped in dismay, what was necessary and going over 0.0 e. n. the responses several tames withoutStore. CHAS. POwERS. CHAS. PnWEltS. 1411 / leo .11 tilthiduirsT. No NAIVIES OR TES.TINIONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. =Font; '1%.1tATALEXT. Ar141t ...117:PesICOCELE, SIoNS AND 3 ?1:.) ik-NCY CVRED • • whereupon the bridegroom encour- Scabby Potatoos. aged him with 'Go ahead, pass n, Shall we plant scabby potatoes? go ahead! toou'rt doin' bravely." I would surely say no, if we Upon another occasion it was, , some without seab. But it is not strangely enoup,t, the woman who I prndent to dewed ours, if we have John A. sayst-"I was one of the coumt'eaic- tuns of early ignorance commenced at 15 eate of age. I tried seven medical firma and spent Sta witutout t Cite% 1 gave up in despair. Tho drains on my szeht nt. were weakening my intellect as well as my sexualand physical life. lily brother advised me as a last resort to consult Drs. liennerly Xergan. 1 commenced their New Illothod Treatment and in a few weeks was 3 new man, w•th now life and ambition. This was four years ego, tout now 1 run married and happy. 1 recommend theso reliable stAtelidiets to all any affiicted fellowmen." ,s1 CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.- CONFIDENTAL. Tu7nTlielvinet.e,t ri,fmentr;J?igbioyhompaid tho foundation of m • y life and exposure to blood diy- Syphilis, Emissio curen:' ..e• ttn Go spese:4 rompiet,41 tiro wreck. I had all thoyraptente of 8 1 triod Drs Kennedy Ifla,4sIri‘vi,:iu7s1:0)elitt,ziillr.enery.es, In)ifitSonst, drain in urine,ancoceie andhappiness." CITAS. POWERS. I t beprevailed upon to speak. 1 d and rush into the market con d no p I goo( see , When the clergyman remonstrated and get scab -proof potatoes. The with her she indignantly replied; eause eause of scab is still unknown. The "Your father married me twice belief that stable manure is the before, and he wasn't axin' me any IM e direct PP is not well founded. of them impertinent questions at all. Manure may be the means or help- ing to develop the spores that are A Merohant Testifies. • already in the soil. I have seen Cinerrenstex,-I write to tell yon bow I potatoes taken from the same pile; good 1 have found Hagyard's lellow 1 , part of. them were planted. on soil Oil for sore throat. In one family alone . e --- and my customers now recognize. its I hist twenty ,ciirs, neither pastured. theYellow Oil mired several bad eaties, that had received no manure for the great, vaino, They Gem to prefer it to The other part of the seed was plant ll°thes.. M.metes, nmnured ground, Atdigging Whole ea Retail Grocer. £8aanStation, N. B dine tho unnutnured ground pro. '4f ff76, Treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous DebilIV, Seminal weakness, Gleet, StHettere, SjOhilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. :7 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK. READER! Aro yon a victim? Hare rot lost hope? Are yon contemplating roar - risco? Has your Mood boon diseased? nave you ttny 'weakness? Om Now Method Treatment will cure you. 'Whet it lots done for others it will do for von. nfl S LIATIO N rn EE. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Torso of t'Inirgo Climes reasonable. BOOKS FREE -"The 'olden Monitor" (illnstrated), on Disonsra of Alen. lactose postage, 2 cents. Sealed, rtl-NO NAIVIES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI - VA re.. No rn.dlein0 s. nt C. O. D. No names on boxes Or onvoi... nr,Os. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Tres4- P•op 1. FRE it. *r•NNY RAN No. 148 SHELWKL EDKEG DETROIT, MICH.