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The Wingham Times, 1896-03-20, Page 3. „ 1 a° i y" "' ' i "3" %yI !t;' ^' MAP C"J � :'L1 lel)!` i a't A L AV. A. .4 4P.-41 ; I ( t �. W.' C. T.1,641, COLUMN. (colyucTJ u 13 'luL WINenASW raltANpli.) Fur God and Rome and ,\ cadre ].and ' We call the attention, of the mothers and sister to the fact, that the Woman's Vliristian Temper anee union meets the third Monday e+cfr aiO M three o'clock sharp, for one hour, nt Airs 'John' residence, Patrick sired,. All ladle:, are matte weI come, As the ldito • has in, Editor 1 k d v ,. n ly Ki en us ] tt t h2.1 CO. for OW WQrk, we tisk fuouds of the oausu to nd Items of interest on all moral quentions of the day to any of our members. roan a coward who noes snake surrli lrowe, f ahrulcl takf' t!'c• t+v,..•liot"•ef up by engraving':;, which seem to insinnario is? Will they let hila ' corn cultivator with the narrow bull- support hint in WS assertions. The know that ho has lost caste? tongues and loosen this surface and illustractions from photographs aro Plenty of reasons are to be found I them crass harrow till ting, with a exceptionally striking in this issue, and if the camera cannot lie they will plead the cause of the Homes most effectually. The very tient: engraving in the magazine repre- sents a boy of ten or twelve, who 'caught' by the: artist at the Annual Supper for Waifs and.. Strays, held The Ira January last. littlo fellow is clad simply and solely in a mucli- patched pair of loan's trousers, the pockets being utilized as armholes. On the whole, this, is `an exceptional- ly interesting issue of a magazine ' which, above all others, displays the romance of charity as well as its most sordid realities. A copy will bo sent to any one who applies for it to Dr. Barnardo, 18 to 26, Stepney Causeway, London, E. A r such a line of conduct. True common harrow or Scoteh harrow. " manliness, regar(1 for the woman- [Often the land will be dry enough 31 hood from which we spring, self ,so that a ]:dank harrow will do good " respect, and, above all, the fear Of : work; and I think U. preferable to a God which should. be before ei'orV;roller at this fieaeon of the year, as ,.,. man eyes, point to It as the way Of : it levels the land and pulverizes the life. The Judge beibre whop] we . clods, without packing it. shall stand on that' last great day ! It is very desirable to get a stand 1 quires even more than clean lips; ' of clover with clots, and particularly He demands, and offers to give us, so this year, as the drouth of 1895 clean eyes and a clan heart. killed most of the clover :own last ' If these considerations do not amine. grid there are ti„olrrhly 11101.0 weigh with Englishmen, it cannot be' farms now without a clover field expected that such as may be drawn than there have been for many a ; from our nation's position and pros- year. There is less difficulty in ; I peas will be of any avail; and yet it clover corning up on oat land than may be pointed out that our strong- on fall sown grain, but as the oats ' est national safeguard is a pure make greater demands on the mois• - I mortality. Personal purity is the ture and shade the land more, the; marrow of our strength. Political, clover is frequently killed by the hot' I economical, and social reforms are sun soon after the oats are cut. I useless if the heart of the nation be am sure that if the oats are drilled ' eaten out with sensuality; but if we instead of sown broad -cast, it will keep the law written in our nature, lessen the danger, es the clover; and the law which our Redeemer between the drills will get more sun ! fulfilled, we shall find that no weapon and grow stronger than if the oats thatlis formed against us will pros- are sown broadcast. - per. 1 I would advise also;' that when cutting the oat; when clover is grow- I ing in the field, the sickle be raised! so as to cut the stubble six inches high c'r more and this will protect' "The blood of Jesus Christ. His Son eloansetll us from all sin " * * * CLEAN LIPS. DV RI11V. J. 1'. GLADSTONE. IP tIs it not a painful fact, -chat many our offices, warehouses, and work- shops aro flooded to the unclean language of men, and turned into pools or foulness in which thousands of young boys' souls are drowned every year? Is not the following true experience of a boy also the experience of a number which can- not be told, a few of whom aro saved, but most of whom perish ? A boy fresh from home and from religious advantages found himself junior clerk in an office with nine men, nearly every one of whom ought to have washed his mouth pure •rom the defilement of oaths, but More especially of filthy remarks, and conversation. He was under Christian influence, and did in fact become an open and professed fol lower of the Saviour after he enter- ed that place; but do what he would he could not avoid hearing much of what. was said, tales of revelling s and of abominations which it is a shame even to mention, and which he has never recounted to any one, because he rightly judged that they frere best left in their native dark- ess. Not one loving respeetfui cord was spoken of women in his hearing all the day long; and yet the men around him had brothers and sisters, and some of thein even wives. Occasionally the storm of unclean words was too strong for him to endure; and he was compelled to go out amid laughter and jeers, and wait until he was subsided. His temptations never proved too strong for him, • but they have left their mark behind. His memory cannot forget what he was forced to hear; and bis imagination cannot lose the pictures he was compelled to see a3 wicked tongues drew them. He would willingly give anything in his t* ower• if he could wash those years his life away in waters of forget- fulness. Now there is only top good reason for believing that that boy is but one of thousands, and that office is a type, not. at all, but of many other places of employment, where work for the devil is done more earnestly than any other kind of work. How is a change to be affect- ed? By whom is it to be done? No one can do it, where is it to done, but the men themselves. We there- fore make our appeal straight to the.hens, and ask theta if they will own down all bad talk? Will remember that as the t Y justY have no right to paint a man's coat, or to black his eye, or to break his leg, so they have no right to polute his imagination and heart, no more right to hang an ugly picture, than they have to go into his house and hang one over his fire place ? Will they keep a glass of water for every foul -tongued man, and ask itim,after every unclean word, to be good enough to wash his mouth out? Will they have the manliness, the father- liness, to shelter every boy from temptation, and to defend every woman's name, as well as every woman from insult ? Will they act on the good and sound principle that the insinnations and double meanings which a lean dale not make before a• woman's face, lie ought to be ashamed 10 speak behind her baek? 'Will tl.ey brand that Constipation Causes fully half the sickness in the world. It retains the digested food too long in the bowels and produces biliousness, torpid liver, itltit gcttioll, bad taste, coated tongue, sick headache, in- somnia, eta IIood's Pills III rtljrc constipation and all its results, easily and thoroughly. 25c. All druggists. 'Prepared by C. I. flood & Co., Lowell, Mass. The only rills to take with hood's Sarsapar111a. Seeding Oats and Clover. Occasionally we see a resolution in methods of farming in some particul- ar, and it is usually brought about to a great extent by the successful example of some fanner, and is largely aided by the agricultural press. Less than 20 years ago all our farmers broke up the land Mi- nn ortin oat crop, and if anyoho had sug- gested that more oats could begrown to the acre, and that there would be fewer failures of the crop, if a fine mellow seed bed three inches deep were prepared, he would have been ridiculed, and classed with the lazy, "shiftless" farmers, I will confess that I should have denounced the the plan assure to prove unprofitable, for the oat crop needs much more moisture than wheat, and the sup- position that a deep seed bed would hold more moisture than a shallow one seemed correct; but fifteen years' experience with the shallow seed bed has shown that successful practice is better titan any amount of theory. I was the first farmer in the town- ship to get a disc harrow, and so far as I know the first in the county,and since 1880 I have prepared the shal- low seed bed for oats, and I feel safe in saying that I have grown crops fifty per cent. heavier than I did for the preceding fifteen years. I;have also ,grown single crops that yielded more, having exceeded fifty bushels to the acre several times,and sixty bushels once, and have not had a single failure. while in the preeeding fifteen years I had one or two failures of the crop. We have now quite a variety of tools with which this fine shallow seed bed can be prepared, there being several styles of disc harrows, the Acme, an excellent slicing' harrow, and several • kinds of spring -tooth harrows. A' good disc harrow is probably the best for the first harrowing to break the surface andget a start, but the Acme does the best work for cross • - harrowing and covering the seed if it is sown broadcast, and for the past ten years I have used a disc to start with, and cross harrowed with the Acme. the high clover. Oats being shorter than wheat, and the straw heiug con- sidered more valuable for feedipg, it is a common practice to cut very close to the ground, leaving the young clover with no protection. I Oats are generally considered ex- haustive to the soil, but I tun not sure that this belief is well founded. It' it is, there is all the mare reason 1 for taking especial pains to get a f stand of clover with them, and if 1 they are only grown once in three or . four years in a rotation, and we can o mannage to get a stand of clover with thele, we need not fear their , effect on the soil. Oats are probably : t more valuable for feeding. to work t horses; and also to growing animals t than any other grain, as they con- • a tain muscle and bone forming s material and are very nutritious. I a doubt if any other grain is so vain • - able to feed to poultry. i I W. F. BRowx. 1 1 Country Gentleman. ! t t Easily Cured. Drunkenness, Morphine and Tobace., habit are easily cured by the use cif Hill's Chloride of Gold Tablets. 1\o el* fort required of the patient, who is al- lowed the use of stimulants until ho vol uutarily quits their use. May be given ' secretly in tea or coffee and a cure guar- anteed in every cuso. For solo by all first-class druggists at 81.00 per package J.Por full particulars and book of testi- monials address The Ohio Chemical Works, Lima, Ohio. Highland Ponies. The Highland pony is remarkable for his docility and general good manners, on account of which he nakes the best showing pony in the world, and can be taught almost everything, except, perhaps, to galop with the race horse. These ponio: lave, like the old Welsh breed, the orination of hindquarter called "cat tams," but this only gives a greater power of using them, and especially f creeping over broken ground, in vhicil they are unapproachable. their intelligence also is so great hat it is almost impossible to get hem into a bog; and if by chance hey find themselves sinking, they void the struggles which are in- ductive in other breeds, and Man- ge either to creep quietly out, or wait patiently till assistance to come. n size they vary from 124; hands to 3•, and in shape they present little o be remarked except their neat leads and eat hams. They are able o carry considerable more weight han their frames would lead one to xpect. Sometimes a six-foot,brawny cotchman may be seen on one of hem without causing them any pparent distress, and with difficulty eeping his legs off the gronnd.— tonehenge. For Ovor i'lfty 'Years, 1 i a AN OLD AND WELL -TRIER 1tEnnur,—SIGs. Ws -C lows S.othinL• Syrup has boon used for over 'fty S years by millions of mothers for their chilaren while teething, with perfectsuce>."s. It soothes the child, t sotfens the gums, allays all ., '�, cu -••s wind coffin, a and is the best remedy fat tr. a r e^ Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Dru;:,d,-, +• , air part or the k worin. TWentytive cent+ a ,,.,tile. Its vain° Is S incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing i'yrup, and take no other [tion. .A little deeper seed bed may bo made by using the two, than with the Acme alone, but I never grew a better crop of oats than one I put in on very heavy clay land with the Acne harrow only. I harrowed the land three times, getting al very fine mellow seed bed less than three inches deep. One great ndvantago of this meth - ad of' putting in seed oats is that we can sow therm earlier than if we broke the land, and in this latitude Barnardo's Homes. You Don't Have to Swear Off ass the St, Louis Journal of Agriculture hi an tiro rial about No•To-13ac the famous tobacco habit ore. "++'e know of many cases oared by No -To. ae, enc, a proutinent St. Louis architect, smoked nd cho.rcoil d fol' twenty years; taro oozes aired h{n, that even the smell of tobacco makes him sick " o•To-dao sold a,:d i;tutrauteed no cera no pay, ook h oe, Sterli,ip Remedy (o., 374 St. Fnu1 Se., Iontreal. Sold br C. E. Williams wincham. ' el ° For thirty years Dr. Barnardo's u Homes have now been engaged in Miele philanthropic labors, and their r. rescues average up to close upon 1,000 children for everyyear of their, existence. In Night and Day for February, just to hand, Dr. Barnar- 1 do snakes an urgent plea to his world- s wide circle of helpers to celebrate the thirtieth year of the work by i relieving 1the (. e, u g fends once and fair 811 of the liability which has been in- eurred for the erection of the num- erous buildings schools, dormitories, workshops, eta) necessary for the! success of the Institutions. The 1 annual income, he explains, is ade- s quote to the demands of the situation if ouly it could be relieved from the g It don't pay for a woman to fol - ow the profession of being a man: he loses too many privileges. No one will dare maintain that it s better to do injustice than to bear t.—Aristotle. Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes.—All cases of organic or syni- ,uthetic heart disease relieved in 30 minutes and quickly cured,.by Dr. Ag- 3ew's Oure. Sold at Chisholm's Drug tore, Winghatn. He is a wise man who does not rieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has. It is right to be contented with what we have, but never with what we are. Relief in six hours.—•)istressing I�rd- ney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the "Great South American Kid- ney Cure." This great remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians on ac- count of its exceeding promptness in reliev- ing pain hi the bladder, kidneys, back and very part of the urinary passages in male lata female. It relieves retention of water nd pain 10 passing it almost immediately. f yon want quick relief and euro this is our remedy. Sold at Chisholm's drug tore. The innoceilse of the intention abates nothing of the mischief of the xample.—Robert Ball. Shiloh's cure, the great Cough and Croup Cure, is in great demand. Pocket ize contains twenty-five doses, only 25c. ('hildren love it. Sold nt Chisholm's Corner Drug Store. heavy toll levied upon it for the re- duction of this serious burden. Foundation Fund for this purpose, as a special and extra contribution, will be raised before the end of the year. The task should not be difficult when !spread over the array of 80,000 !donors, to say nothing of the British taxpayers far and beyond these, • woo have been benefited by these !Homes doing so much of the work the earlier we can sow, the better of the State. That there is still e our chance is for a profitable crop, ample need for the wort: of the Homesi To break the land and. get it in good this issue of Night and Day abun- condition and get the oats in, a man dangly testifies. Nearly 5,000 y and team can only put in an acre children, admitted solely on grounds a a clay, but three acres a day to the of destitution or of moral peril, are team can be put in with the harrows, • now under the care of the Tnstitu- and as in March and early April, gens. Last year they dealt with when oats should be sown, the land 11,861 separate cases ofchild misery, dries slowly and the rains are usually ; of whom 2,301, representing the frequent it makes littlo difference absolutely destitute and homeless 8 whether Ono acre or three acres is rosidum after investigation, were at put in in a days. I have often known ' once admitted. It is pitiable to! a farmer to got half a field plowed ,learn that 95 of these Were babies and sown early in Marco, and bo under three years of age, and that . stopped by rain, and three weeks or' 71 were deaf and dumb, blind, or more pass before he could work the little incurables. Di'. Barnardo land again; when if he had simply pooh-poohs the optimists who would harrowed the land, the entire field fain deny the fact of present-day could have been putt, in, in the time. homelessness, and his "Personal Xt' T had nolle of the unproved liar- Notes" bristle with life storics,backecl .,.......:r, w,rag....,,...=e..,,,..,....�.,..,,, ci /il�l�l:�\`'�•`..�`'�t,. �.`�e.`�.'�i}`*.�i„'++i`�1.'�iw`'�::"'�`ia'�a",� '; .s What is Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infanta and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria, destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea, and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assmilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cm= toria is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend. Castoria. "Castors is an excellent medicine for chil- dren. Mothers have repeatedly told mo of its good effect upon their children.” Da. G. C. OSoo0D, Lowell, Mass. " Castoria is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children, and use Castoria in- stead of the various quack nostrums which aro destroying their loved ones, by foredugopium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves." nn J. Y. MI PO 3ELOE, Conway, Ark. The Centaur Company, TT ..<:t`a':'�'sYrciii��Si'd�':wee•4�ili��in:"tv;i;:at.�F4bi�:` iliMiu Castoria'. "Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." II. A. Anoints, IPC. D., 111 Se. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y. "Our physicians in the children's depart- ment have spoken highly of their experi- ence in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet wo aro free to confess that the rnerits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it." UNITED IioSPIT.tr. AND DlsprxSAry, Roston, Mum Ma Amax C. &arrn, Pres., 1' array ^Street, Now ?]tone City. 1 '�i'?o"... �a"'.rssal"')/S)y'u..%aiW'af:w,°w'y."ris`+is uf'�:•'�,�aie`u''Ps,as- ;tt6 u 141144 ti^'A;, f?` ; But it is done so quickly, and at the same time so neatly, that all are pleased with it. Bring along your Job Work to the TIMES Office and see them do it. Prices right. LevaaWataWaacaseaazacaasewaaasearsareaaaaW How He ,,lade Himself Pleasant, Brown—How is it you are such a favorite everywhere you go White—Oil, that's easy enough. Whenever anything pleasant hap- pens to me I keep it to myself so as to ]mike nobody envious, but all my misfortunes I tell to every- body who will hear me, and yon can't • imagine how happy they make everybody I tell them to. They say, you know, that misery loves company. I don't know how that is, but company loves misery i every time. ---I hiadelphia American. Suffering for others strengthens our own powers of endurance. We lose then] if we exercise them. Karl's Clover Root will purify your blood; clear your complexion, regulate your Bowels and snake your beau t•dear as a bell. 25c., 50e., and 81. Su,d at Chisholm's Corner Drug Store. Half virtuous intentions accom- modate themselves to. whatever is most convenient and agreeable. Old age 10 cnnsecratt'd with the dignity of experiences and the tenderness of Farewells! Captain Sweeney, U. S. A, San Diego, Cal., rloyc: "whiloh's Catarrh Iien,'cly is the first medicine 1 have ever found that would' do me any good." Price 50c, Sold at Chisholm's Corner Drug Store. Trresolntion is 8 heavy stone rol- led no a hill by a weak child, and tnoved a little up just to fall back again. ";r -••moi ��1 Caveats and Trade -Marks obtained, rnd all patent business conducted f.•r iM0DE R :TI, FEES. My office ,sin the immediate vicinity of the i atmuOif,ce and my facilities for se-u•i ng patents are unsurpassed Send model• sketch a pitotngr:.ph or' invention, with description and statement as 1o:, -iv-•; rage, claimed. •3i -T -27n Moran du ,node for are ,.pin ion era to patentability, and ry Los kcr prnsecutiL4 the application coil] .,OE DS cane-! for ante' the patentdaallowed. "Iow..s,r,.' Uurx,t" con- tain:6full information sent free. An fognlattl• Ca(IOn9 Couside^td '•.; et'lCtly •.enlidrstial. 528 8' IS.5rxc;e i J„^. v..'s. _;: 1:':D 5g., 83. el. TAKE BEST 23 eta.. SO cis. and 81.00 Bottle. Ono cent a hone. It in sold on a guarantee by all druggists„ It cures Incipient Consumption and is the best Cough and Croup Cure, .field at Chisholm's Corner Drug Start . For Suits that suit, SUITSSUITgive comfort to the , wearer and satisfy ,�.,,..�nz,� your frien(ia,youhad j OVERCOATS: itirtiyAT! better try tie. Our garment n3akere Tif1 At;. knowhnwtcttit'their work; don't think there art, any !Getter + and vet we charge no morethan others 1 1 for inferior work iii r' is a2 new cu oe c c ia i s ut _ - �'^ ,^• -' s fail and winter einnpiee to chtaras from, at privet; about half what you h:_,ve to UREfFITS! lacy for old goods. \\''r,rk done for parties uruwhiug their own cloth. :'animals aresuch agreeable friends vainrtlo treatise and Lottie of medicine sent Free fn ani If still think that fi 'iw''d shit !'drnnoti 9aiA•rcr. (irvo t:eprrss oriel Post Ofnte address, lt, e. --they ask no questions, they pass itn re nt r lies wo.c e �, Tnronao, int._ - - - btu properly made fol' <i Spot Cash. call 110 criticismB. 1 .. - anti site our work. Our tel'004 ate cash. There can be no excess to love, to knowledge, to beauty, when these attributes are eonsidered. in the purest sense.—Emerson. r: io'S Remedy for Catarrh is the Rost. Easiest to t'se. and Cheapest. A S, 1'X11,) lis u.0;('i>l.0 or sett by mai:, saasiiuw.Wnrren, I'a. \VEBBSTi,11 CO., Oplxr+it,• t},c• \+•,,•,1r.,, illi 1r, , t•' 101f1:. (ant,