The Wingham Times, 1896-05-29, Page 7Inexperienced motormen naturally
make bad. breaks.
"Hands off!" as the clock said
When it was taken to be cleaned.
THAT HACKING. PERSISTEN'P
DISTRESSING DOUGH can be quick-
17 cured by using Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup. It cures ail Throat and
Lung Troubles.
Don't be too intimate with the
man who shakes hands with you
expecting to find a dollar in his hand
when he lets go,
An Zasy Cure for Drunknness,
Drunkenness, Morphine and Tobacco
habit may easily be eurkd by the use of
Bill's Double Chloride of Gold Tablets,
No effort is required of the patient and
stimulants may beas
Y taken usual until
'voluntarily given up, Tablets may be
given in tea or coffee without the patient's
knowledge. A cure guaranteed in every
case. For sale by all first-class druggists,
or will be sent on receipt of S1.0O, For
full particulars address, The Ohio
Chemins! Works, Leena, Ohio.
It's not always safe to hit a man
'When he is down. Be might get up
.and knock the stuffing clean out of
you.
REMARKABLE CASES
Chronic Iuvplids Raised from Their Sick
nods After Giving Up elope.
London, Ont.—Henry R. NichoIis, 176
Rectory street, catarrh ; recovered. Dr.
Chase's catarrh cure. 25c.
Markdale—Geo. Crowe's child, itching
tezema ; cured. Chase's Ointment.
Truro, N,$ H. H. Sutherland, travel-
ler, piles—very bad case ; cured ; Chase's
jaintnacnt. OOe.
! Lucan—Wm, Branton, gardener, pin
trams ; all gone. Chase's Pills.
L'Amable--Peter Van Allan, eczeano, for
three years. Cured. Chase's Ointment.
Gower Point—itobano Bastard, dread -
Sul itching piles, 80 years. Well again ;
Chase's Ointment. OOc.
Meyersburg—Nelson Simmons, itching
0) Des ; cured. Chase's Ointment.
Malone—Geo. Richardson, kidney and
Ilver sufferer ; better. One box Chase's
Pills. 25c.
Chesley—II. Will's son, crippled with
rheumatism and suffering from diabetes,
completely recovered. Chase's Pills.
Matchard Township—Peter Taylor, kid-
ney trouble, 30 years ; cured. Chase's
Pipit. 2+,e.
froroa>'•tc—.lfiss Hattie Delaney, 174
Cilium -ford street, subject of perpetual.
colds. ['tired by Chase's Syrup of Lim -
seed and Turpentine. 25 cents.
Dr. Chase's remedies are sold by all
;dealers. Edmanson, Bates & Co., mane -
lecturers, Torouto•.
EXPERT ADVICE
-ens.•
IICY'b - y l
Is
Is always worth considering.
We are not afraid of any ex-
pert judgment upon our
WALL
PAPER
The better the judge the
higher the appreciation of its
merits. For quality and new-
ness we cannot be beaten.
WINDOW SHADES)
We are bound to please in every
particular of our business and es-
pecially in the platter of high quality
of Window Shades. We se11 the
best. Don't buy cheap truck. A
Good Roller and Spring is elle cheap-
est in the end.
HAMMOCKS.
¶rli4 ROME OF BURNS,
TILL WI IC•RAM TIMES, MAY 29, 1896,
On a recent visit to Scotland, Robert
G. Ingersoll, wrote the following poem
an the Home of Burns.
Though Scotland boasts a thouaaad
ntunee of patriot •king and peer,
The noblest, grandest of thein all wad
loved and cradled hero,
Here lived the gentle, peasant prince,
the loving cotter Ming,
Compared with whom, the greatest bsrdt
has but a titled ring,
1 News Notes,
Alexander :McIntosh, a Wallace
farmer, while plowing last week
found a gold chain which had been
lost by his daughter 40 years ago,
It was little tarnished.
The butter factory at Walkerton
, station is in full blast, and is ander
the management of Messrs. Jackson
and Hallett, of Guelph. Last year
the tactory was idle,
The plot of ground in which the
remains of poor, murdered 13enweil
d
about 120 other plots in Princeton
cemetery, Will be sold by public
on n
au ti
C 0
June 2, under a power of
mortgage. It is a pity to have the
grave of the wronged, young man
sold in this manner, as the grave
plot was bought in good faith that it
was free from mortgage,
On Sunday afternoon a rumor
spread through Walkerton that Han-
over was on fire, and the Walkerton
firemen had gone over to lend their
assistance. Tho rumor fortunately
for Hanover, .proved to be untrue,
although there was a fire in a swamp
close by, that seriously threatened
the village with danger.
It is reported that the section of
country in Grey and Bruce that last
year suffered so severely from drouth
and where a fodder famine prevail-
ed during the past winter, is again
experiencing privation from lack of
rain, scarcely any having fallen this
spring Owing to the dry weather
last year and the tack of frost in the
ground last winter, the soil has be-
come so hard that plowing is a very
difficult if not impossible undertak-
ing unless copious rains come.
'Tie but a cat. roofed in with straw, a
bevel made of clay,
One moor shuts out the snow and storm,
one window greets the day,
And yet I stand within this room and I
bold all thrones in scorn,
It or here beneath this lovely tbatah,
love's sweetest bard was born.
Within this hallowed hut I feel like one
who clasps a shrine,
.When the glud lips have touched the
something deemed divine,
And bere the world, through all the
years a* long as day returns,
The tribute of its love and tears will
pay to .Robert Burnt,.
Jessie Kieth Memorial.
A very handsome granite monu-
ment, crowned with an Italian
statue of the Goddess Flora, in
marble, was erected is Fairview
Cemetery, Listowel, on Thursday
in memory of the murdered Jessie
Keith. The memoriol is a fine work
of art, and presents a very artistic
appearance. The statue was kept
veiled until Sunday afternoon last,
when the ceremony of unveiling
took place in the presence of a large
crowd. Mr, Wm. Algie, of Alton,
Ont., who is a close friend of Mr.
Keith, was present and delivered a
memorial address. The inscription
on the granite reads: "Jessie, born
Dec. 20, 1880, daughter of Wm. and
Jane Keith, Elma. While defending
her honor'lost her life, Oet.14, 1894.
We miss her at home. Erected by
her parents and sympathizing
friends." On another face of the
monument is cut the ancient coat.of-
arms of the Keith family.
Kind Words from the Fred Victor Mission
Bible Class.
On behalf of the Fred Victor Mission
Bible ('lase I wish to express our grati-
tude to you for the box of Cbase's Oint-
ment which you supplied in aid of our
charitable work to the infant child of
Mrs. Brownrig, 3.62 River street. Ten
days ago the child was awfully afflicted
with scald head, the face beings literally
one scab from forehead to chin, and in
that brief time a complete cure has been
effected, Surely your gift was wortk
more than its weight�;1in gold.
EDMUND Mur t, YEiGH,
264 Sherbourne st., Toronto.
One Hundred and Eighty Miles.
On Friday, Wells, of Stratford,
tried to cycle to Goderich and back
to Stratford twice in one day, and
succeeded in doing it. The cyclist
left home about 4 a m., and reached
Goderich shortly after seven, and
after a short rest wheeled eastward
at winning speed. He reached
Stratford safely, and after a rub
down was again on the westward
course. At half past three there was
a large gathering on the Square.and
some time previously a. number of
the Hurons wheeled out the Huron
road to meet the racer. At 3.40 a
tandem was seen to turn in King-
ston street, followed by a number of
wheelmen, among whom vas the
Stratfoed. electrician. As Wells
turned on to the Square he received
a rousing cheer, and the salute was
repeated when he stepped off his
cycle at the "British," After rest-
ing fifteen minutes he started on the
home run, and from the seeming ease
with which he manipulated the
pedals, all who saw him were con-
vinced that, barring accidents, he
was a sure winner. Wells, apparent -
]y an athlete of good grit, has, by
the tide of one hundred and eighty
miles last Friday-, between sunrise
and sunset, shown what can be
aecomplished on a biey le over ordi-
nary country roads. At the "British"
throughout the afternoon the rider's
progress was posted so that all in-
terested in the run knew within a
few minutes, when he would reach
Goderich. When between Clinton
and this town the wheels passed a
gorse and buggy, the latter contain•
ng a woman and several children,
and just is the riders got clear of
the vehicle the horse shied and upset
the buggy, throwing the occupants
out. A stop was of course made,
but when it was found that woman
and children were uninjured, a
cyclist rode to the nearest farm and
sent assistance while the racer and
the tandem proceeded towards the
lake,—Goderich Signal.
Boils and pimples are due to impure
blood, llotnove them by making the
blood pure with hood's Sarsaparilla.
We have a, large stock of Hammocks
which are selling fast. Try ono
before they are alt gone.
CROQUET SETS.
We sell more Croquet Sets than
other firms and consequently we can
afford to run then off:' at smaller
advance on ergs,
Call and se. stock.
A' ..:,x. ROS.
'WINGIYA d.
lie, together with the monument an
Paisley Advocate :—A peculiar
case of disappearance is reported
from Bruce. About a week ago a
young girl named Fergasan disap-
peared frotn home. Shortly after -
words word was received from her
that when her mother received the
letter she would be hundreds of
miles away. The letter bore Glamis
post office mark, She purchased
some millinery and other clothing
there and also bought some things at
Mrs. McLeod's in town. She was
about sixteen nears old. Her father
works in the G. T. R. shops in Ham-
ilton, while her mother runs the
place. Like many farmers they bad
difficulty in wintering their stock,
and to this discouragement the act is
attributed.
The Ontario Government has com-
piled a census report of the various
counties of the Province, for the
guidance of the commissioners who
are to divide up the counties into
electoral districts, for county council
purposes. The population of the
county of Bruce is given as 64,603.
The population of the rural munici-
palities is 47,408 and of the towns
and villages 16,195. According to
municipalities, the population stands
thus : Albemarle 1829, Amabel 3890,
Arran 2913, Brant 4929, Bruce 3793,
Carrick 5503, Culross 3345, Eastnor
1487, Lindsay and St. Edmunds 847,
Elderside 3047, Greenock 3389,
Huron 4125, Kincardine 3618, Kin-
loss 2803, Saugeen 1813. Towns
and villages, Walkerton 3061, Kin-
cardine 2631, Chesley 1437, Luck -
now 1285, Paisley 1328, Port Elgin
1659, Southampton 1437, Tara, 695,
Teeswater 1128, Tiverton 550,
VViarton 1984. Except where abso-
lutely necessary, the boundaries of
municipalities as they now exist,
must not be changed.
Alexander MCKenzie, the Toronto
man who is supposed to have been
murdered in Cleveland by the woman
with whom he was living, turns out
to be a Seotchman, 50 years of age,
who in early manhood taught school
at Wing -ham, Goderich and other
to vns in the Huron district, In;886
he latent to Toronto, where he secured
emplo"went on the G. T. R,,4esiding
with hiss wife and family on Rose
avenue. \1;'our years ago' he remov-
ed to Cleveland, where' he obtained
a responsible's position with the
Pennsylvania 'Company. It was
arranged during the spring of 1894
that Mrs, McKenzie and the four
children were to join him, but the
husband notified there not to go
until the fall 1895. Mrs. k41cKenzic
thoughtithe message peculiar and
commdnced investigation, w th the
result that she ascertained thh.t be
hahecorrle enamored of another
Ionian whom lie had married pd
.wa.s then living with. She th `o -
upon decided to have nothing further
to do with hint. This woman it is
who is now under arrest for causing
zr
Alc an
The es death,
wotnrin is
Mrs, Lottie Everingbam, whose
maiden name was Case.
Blind Staggers,
This is not a common disease among
cattle, but I once bad a cow that was
troubled with it. She was a good
milker and was bought by 'tae on
that account, and, as a rule, was as
quiet and orderly a cow as any of
the rest, but, once in a while, she
would be attacked with the disease,
on which occasions she would foam
at the mouth, bellow, stagger and
fall. In a few minutes she would,
apparently, be all right again, As I
was moving to a new farm some time
after the last attack she had, I sold
her with a number of others, and so
know no more about her, but I always
thought that it must have been some
brain trouble that brought on the
attacks. Personally, I know of no
other cases, and shall be glad to hear
from anyone who knows of a similar
,one.
`. In looking over the report of . the
United States Bureau of Animal In
dustry on diseases of cattle, I tipd the
disease, referred to pretty fully. It
is known•by various names; such as
staggers, stomach staggers,inad stag-
gers, sleepy staggers, frenzy, and
coma. It may be caused by blows
on the head, by tumors in the brain,
or by food contaiihitig ergot or other
fungi which contain. narcotics. This
latter is said .td' be the most frequent
cause. The' �symptoms vary much,
The first signs may be those of fren-
zy, but' generally at the start the
animal is dull and sleepy, with little
head
11 or
s if
bran slops or glass should he allowed.
During the convulsions the animal's
head should be held down to prevent
it injuring itself, and cold water or
bags of ice should be applied to the
head. A blistering compound of
mustard, 1 ounce ; pulverized can-
tharides, x ounce; hot water, 4 ounces,
well nixed together, may be rubbed
in over the loins, along the spins; acid
back. of the head on each side of the
neck, This is occasionally beneficial.
If the purgative acts, and the ani-
mal improves 2 drams of iodide of
potassium may be given, night and
morning, dissolved in half a bucket-
ful of drinking water, or given as a
drench, if the animal will not take it
naturally. After some progress is
made toward recovery, ?; dram of
pulverized nux vomica, in addition to
the iodide of potassium, should be
given twice a day till the staggering
gait ceases.
i Post-mortem exarnina.tions reveal
congestion of the brain, and, in cases
showing much paralysis, of the mem-
brans of' the lumbar region (loins) as
well. In all animals that die of this
affection the lungs are also very
much congested, but this is only a
natural consequence of the brain
disease.
Such is a summary of the descrip-
tion given in the report mentioned
above. It must be evident, however,
that the symptoms given there are
for severe cases, and, judging from
the single personal experience I have
had, there must be many slight at-
tacks of the disease which do not
result fatally. I may state that the
animal which I am referring to was'
in my possession for several months
'after the last attackthat I noticed,
I and, except during the short time
when they came on, was otherwise'
as well as usual.
-i
inclination to move about; til
"ay be pressed against the w
fence and the legs kept moving,'
the animal were endeavoring to walk
through the obstruction ; the body,
especially the hind part, may be
Iea.ned against the side of the stall, as
if for support, The bowels are con-
stipated; the urine is small in quan-
tity; and darker in color than usual.
There may be trembling and spasms
of muscles in different parts. In the
dull stage the animal may breathe
less frequently than natural, and each
breath may be accompanied with a
snoring sound, The pulse may be
large, and less frequent than normal.
If suddenly aroused from this dull
state, the beast appears startled and
stares wildly. When moving it
staggers, and the hindquarters sway
from side to side.
When the delirium ensues, the
animal seems matt, bellows, stamps,
runs about, grates the teeth, and
froths at the mouth. If confined to
the stable she rears and plunges,
rendering it dangerous for anyone to
go near her, The body is covered
with perspiration. She may fall.
The head is often raised and dashed
against the ground till blood issues
from the nose and mouth ; the eyes
are bloodshot and sightless; the limbs
stiff'; and the urine squirted out in
spurts, After the convulsions cease
a quiet period ensues, and in a short
time the animal may rise and feed as
usual, though this is not always the
case. In bad cases death results
before long.
The treatment of this disease is not
satisfactory, Recoveries are rare,
even under the most favorable cir-
cumstances. To be of service, the
treatment roust be prompt at the
outset of the disease. Bleeding is
called for, and eight or nine quarts
of blood should be taken from the
jugular vein. This should be fol-
lowed by a purgative, the following
being for a cow of average size:
Epsom salts, 24 ounces ; pulverized
gamboge, •Is ounce; croton oil, 20
drops ; warm water, 3 quarts. Mix
all together and give at one dose.
About two quarts of warm soap-
suds should be injected with a syringe
or tube into the rectum every three
or four hours. It is best to keep the
animal in :i quiet, sheltered place,
where it will be free from noise and
other cause of excitement. All the
cold water the .animal will drinttk
should be gives it, but no food except
Jacob Livingstone, of the firm of
J. & J. Livinstone, the well known
flax kings, of Listowel, droppers dead •
on the street on Thursday forenoon, !
21st instant. '
R•I•P•A•N•S
The modern stand-
ard Family Medi-
cine : Cures the
NOLONSIIMI
common every -clay
ills of humanity.
Wanted—An Idea
Who can think
of some Simple
y thing to patent?
Write TORN WEDDEitBtflU{ g C0?,gPatent Attar.
neva Washington, D. C., for their t,1,SOO prize ober
wad list of two hundred. lnvcntloua wantod,
Laid Low by indigestion«
1 was so run down 1 had to give up
work.
Scott's Sarsaparilla the kind that
cures.
Indigestion or dyspepsia is the bane of
thousands, and is one of the most de-
pressing of afflictions. It arises from an
impure or impoverished condition of the
blood, which weakens the digestive and
assimilative ergans, rendering them in-
capable of performing their natural fungi-
tions, and if neglected, the sufferer loses
flesh, complains of exhaustion afterslight
exe••tion.and becomes rapidly debilitated.
Mr, Wm. W. Thompson, a prominent
resident of Zephyr, Ont., in a letter dated
Aug i2th, 1895,.says: "It gives me great
pleasure to testify to the fact that Scott's
Sarsaparilla has caused a most remark-
able change in any condition. I was so
much run down I 'had to give un work
and felt as if life were not worth living.
Mr. Dafoe induced me to try Scott's Sar-
sapa^ilia, and after taking four bottles I
am now reeling as I formerly did years
aso, and 1 want to say for the benefit of '
those suffering from indigestion and feel- '
ing, to • use slang phrase, ` completely;
knocked out,' don't despair until you give i
Scott's Sa••saparilla a lair trial."
Scott's Sarsaparilla is a blood food, it
stimulates all vital organs to healthy ,
normal action, enabling them to throw
off all poisonous and dcbilitatinghumors. .
Sold by drugo•is.s at Si, but there is only
one Scott's. 'The kind that cures. •
WATER- .
AMAN
To veil Canadian and U. S. growae
trees, berry plants, rove, shrubet,
hedges, Ornamental tree, suui bred potatoes, tor
the only uureery having twill orchrrns in Can.
ada, We give on thr helmet 01 our rXperiti,ce,
HO your vuccc.$ IS uur hart . It no are not
earning* ate per tno th aura rtipruses, N•t ite ue a%
once for particulars, Liberal conmuiesions paid
part time ,no,, Par tot is' s..e, should look into
this! it pdya better than ,• o, I I,Jt oh the frm,
and offers a ehnncr for proutotitnl. Apply now
and get choice of tor holy.
STONE & WELLINGTON,
Toronto, Canada.
DOAN'S
Kidney Pills
DOAN'S
Kidney Pills
DOAN'S
Kidney Peals
,,Remember..
DOAN'S
Kidney Pills
ARE THE BEST
0
B. B. B.
Turns
Bad. Blood
Into
Rich Red Blood.
hti 'Spring Time get Pure Mood by using
No other remedy possesses such perfect cleansing, healing
and purifying properties as Burdock Blood hitters. It not
only cleanses internally, but it heals, when applied externally,
all sores, ulcers, abscesses, scrofulous sores, blotches, eruptions,
etc., leaving the skin clean acid pure as a babe's. Taken inter -
flatly it removes all morbid effete or waste matter from the
system, and thoroughly regulates all the organs of the body,
restoring the stomach, liver, bowels and blood to healthy action.
In this way the sick become well, the weak strong, and Hoose
who have that tired, worn out feeling receive new vigor, and
buoyant befall and spirits, so that they feel like work. If your
appetite is poor, your 'energy goner your ambition lost, B.D.B.
will restore you to the full enjoyment of happy vigorous lite,