The Wingham Times, 1898-04-15, Page 7. • •, •s,
44.04.....0,1,4.q.01001.4.410•44.M.MOOMOV0.1.01dom,•••”*.••.,,
GO
YON'S
11 WORK
THE BURDEN
Of Sickness and the Shadof
Graver Things
BEING LIFTED
From Thousands of if o m es
in Canada.
Mr. W. Z. Offen, brakeman on the Grand
'Truett Railway, residing pt 211 Logan aye -
moo, Toronto, Canada, says: "My experience
with the Munyon treatment for dyspepsia
alas been mostsatisfactory. I was a
'terrible condition" when I consulted
yon. 1was se bad In feet with dyspep-
isla and headache that I never exported to
Met better, The pains lit lay head nearly
shove me wild, and 1 was compelled to walk
the floor for hours. T had dyspepsia so
asully and my stomach Witft swollen so
lrightfully after eating heartily that I ant-
lered the greatest agony. I had used all
*roe/nettles in the effort to get relief, hut 1
1ept getting worse. Sine° I began Asinv.
• you's ...Dyspepsia Cure T hare /never
'telt in better health. T. can ent/nlmost
ainkthing and feel no bad after rrisolts. I
Ism now in splendid health and attribute It
mh! toMunyon's treatment, roar am dally
erenommending these wended -91 remedies,"
efuneenee neeuniatte Cae eldoui. fans to rito,
Malta In one to three hou� ansa cures in a few,
tango. Price 25e.
Iowan's DySpepaa. C cures on
kerma of indigestion nd,,eroznaen troubleso
Irrlse
ilenyou'a Cote! Cure vents Pneumonia nad,
%realm no A Cold in a ew 21013r/4 Pepe 26e.
0„tungon'u Cough Cure stops coughs, night
amvents allays soreness 41811 speedily penis the
*mum. 'Price 25e.
Mangan's. Kidney Cure ..sneedily cure i pains
▪ tho 10183 or grOhle, and all forme At
&Riney disease. Price 28e.
any's starve Cure stops nervotenese Gaff
munds no the systezu. Price 2Se.
_ alaitrates headache cum stops beadaebe hid
Circa minutes, Priee 25e.
Mangan's •Pile Ointment vositively euree ni
Jarman of plies. Prise 25r
tetIaZt(Inelogigu;507ndlCliteS en trinntritito. A
muneines Feuuile neinediee ore a been to en C
'Arnnien
, h:nnyon's Catarrh nemedies never fall. The
.Catrirrii Cure -price 2.1:47.-eradlarttmi the cilsraso
the system. and ish catarrh Tablets-priee
...00.-e}annee and beal the perm.
aluryon's Asthma lierneates relieve in three'
iminates and owe permane2tig. Prim 14.
• tinnyou'n 'Mintzer, a great tonic and
gams -OV vitrt strength to weak neenla. 1.
A separate cure for each disease., et all drug.
ttSts, 'mostly 25 cents a viai.
Per:Ionia tatters to prof, mungon. vi Albert
astrirq, Toronto. Ont.. answered with free mein..
„vat agviea for any disease,
Tile Stomach and the Brain.
r^•••-•••••••• •••
To tell a conscientious and gene
()us father that his children fail t
"get ahead" in school because the
4re starved at home is a commies'°
few persons would care to undertake
yet Prof. O'Shea, of the lintvereit
Wieeonsin, has not hesitated to do
elare that the .reason nutty oche°
ehildren are dull tied restless s the
they do not have enough to eat.
Enough, that is to say, of' the pro
per kinds of food ; for the brain
worker cannot heulthhally Hee upon
the food that nourishes the laborer-
,. fact that Pt of, lef eleelercs,
school teaches themselves are slow
to learn.
At an "institute" recently held in
a prosperous town, this venturesome
ecientiest asked the teachers what
they had for breakfast. The favor-
ite bill of fare seemed to comprise
fried potatoes, white bread, coffee
and cookies, to which, in several in
stences, fried pork was added.
It proved that not one of the
teachers had eaten a thoroughly
nutritious breakfast; in other words
that none was capable of the mental
exertion possible to one properly
nourished.
4-I have found," the profesior
adds, that perhaps 7fi per cent. of the
dietaries ,of teachers and school
children alike are inede up almost
wholly of starchy foods, which when
digested, are c.tonverteci into earbo-
hydratee, and farnieh heat tothe
body, but du not afford either brain
or muscle power to any. extent."
The foods denentic:ed in these cases
are those that are rich in albumen.
Careful 'analysis, made under the
direction of the department of agri
culture, have shown what these are,
nd the precise nutritive value of
ach.
Broadly speaking, it may be said
that the ideal dietary ler the brain
-
worker would nimbi up, in a
large ititgisilre, of dr:eel peas and
beans, lean, fresh beef, deb of ell
kinds, especially dried codfish,
cereals of all ldnds-particularly
wheat, corn and oats --eggs, cheese,
elatine And milk.
No one pretends that these foods.
entici transform an unprogressive
etcher into a Heretic Mann, or push
1'1 Ii.; Pit:\ 6 11A.M '11, FA" PR Ji
I •
IShall wo Live on Fruit /
IIE'S
r The ade leo of those modern die-
o trtie reformers who tell us to subsist
y largely on fruits does not commend
n itself to The Alienist and Neurologist
; (St, Louie), which has the following1
y to say on the subject:
The fruitating craze is possibly
1
t
•
TAe Judge Paid.
---
A certain Irish judge before WhOrn
xale Dennis O'Brien was to he trie.I, te
received a magnificent pair of car-
. riage horses. 'Phe judge accepted
them and ehareed the jury .so as to
eecure a verdict in O'I3rien's favor.
Soon afterward Denis sent in a bill in
ler the horses, The judge called it
Penis aeide and privately expostu.
laved with him.
"I didn't think you intended to
tho stupidest boy to the head of the
class ; et it is certain that a coin
Mort Sense diet would strengthen the'
purpose and increase the ability of
mny young persons who now find
hard to study.—Youth'i Com-
panion. •
.1111!KLE DEEP zza- PAIN.
leharge m0. toil these liOrSeS"• said he
4udge. "Come, now, my dear friend,
Ityny should I pay fu' them P" •
• "Upon my soul," answered Donis,
"'that's queer talk. I'd like to know
'why,. your lordslilp Shoal(' nut pay
for them?
The judge held his peace And paid
the bill. -Brooklyn
A COM?IETE MEDICINE CHEST.
Taken internally or omitted esaarnally
Yellow Oil 1,; ellieacious.ft (Junta
Croup. Q liniiy, Stye Chest. Cues, Burns,
Bruises, Sprains, (liked Breages,
eleinte end dozen Of other coin plaints.No
lousehold should be without it. it costs
only 25e., and IA a Whole medic ne chest
dm itself,
Consumption.
The people of the Province of On -
trio must unite in the fieht agninst
the dreaded disease teinsainption.
Its ravages are alarming and even
now it produces more deaths than
cholera, smallpox or any other
(disease that has visited the coantry.
glittnallpox in one year carried c.ff
IO% of the victims which tuburoulosis
kills, the people would rise in their heavy t-
er prevented the bees hem
'working, although the flowers were
eon not a bee Was SCOD .atnotig them
The reselt was that, tot a peach
dropped at the stoning season, the
lime all sterile fruit falls. The crop
wns so heavy that it hacl to be thin-
ned ent. As a Cheek teat 1(130 tree
was protected so that not a bee eradd
get at it. On this tree the fruit
dropped at the stoning period. Bees
and other insects have a dew upee
form in the orchard, for IVitiett there
is no substitute prnvinen. This is
the distribation of the pollen erne)
flower to flower and from tree to
tree. They insure StWeeSSIhi the
Like biliOnsness, dyspepsia, beadacher coast!. , d d "
•
Sinking in Rheumatic Mire -South
American Rheumatic Cure Was
the Saving Strong Arm.
— -
4
W. ]i. Bestas, Vatmatuw, R. 0., says ;
"Five yours ego .1 was afflicted with a
very acute form of rheumatism. causing
great pain in My ankles and feel . 1. tried
everything I could read or hear of, and
consulted many ph eeiciune, find a Tor-
e'', It tipeOinhAti, without receiving any
benefit. I was induced to tev Sou th-
Americn Rheumatio Cu reeTh e first dose
we've me relief --the first uuttle greatly
helped -and two botelee brooeht me a
n uomplete core." Sold at Chiehohe's
Drug St"rAo •
Bees in the ore ard.
Many fruit 'growers do not thole
oug,hly appreciate the liable of bees
in an ore!oird or re thewould he
more mehards with bees in them.
Their valve in an Orchard was then
onetrated in a most praeticel wary at
the re ('1 Experiment Station some
years ego. A few peach trees were
foie ed ieto bloom in Novembee
ntid a colonv of bees was placed in
the house when the trees began to
bloom. Me' some days, however a
might and stamp oat the disease.
But sines consemption steals along
With a citeitlthy tread it passes un-
amtie.ed Dr. Bryce, secretary. of
the Provincial Board of Health,
points out the enormous Increase in
the number of eases of consumption
in the Province of late, advo-
cateethe erection of a sanitarium in
every comity for tbo insulation and
•A re of eeeifti t.
4.1,....1.....rerrearirihroratrrtorrertr40..........•••••••••••1•••......-rworr.4..sto,
patron, sour stomach, indigestion are promptly
cured by rills. They do their work
ot c tar an e‘ y nit grower
should tinektiele the bees in their
work by nut spraymg, or doing arty.
thing that be lejerlotie to the bees
weee the twee t1 11 in fun btoom,_ efe enmes Clition eorebeitelV:ikeetarre. Wtlekite for a, ieddy, hitt Mee
,••••-•:•V
• 4.
CONE
• r,
11
C
recent' fads, The fruit -eating and Nervous Weal( Sick and Broken down
9 9
'len and W men.
the most degenerate . of the many
pot-hellted natives of the tropics and
their next lower relatives, the, apes,
are truly inspiring objects of imita-
tion by civilized man ; not even their
out -door and arboreal lives save
'24.a 4,04a VAIV 14.4.4$5.1‘.0 a, sip
Meager and irritating' regimen. It
is truly pitiful to,seethe army of
neurasthenics, dyspeptics,rile= at ies,
starving theireiesuee and acidulating
their blood, at the beck of a few, to
put it charitably, hair -brained . en-
thusiats. It is fair to suppose that, a
troop of rickety children Will later
rise np and call them anything out
blessed, a fate from which the ape
saves benself by abundant potations
of river water.
"The fact with regard to fruit is,
that although it eontains little mane,
'aliment it agrees well with many
people endowed with a vigorous
gastric mucosa and fairly alkaline
blood. To them it brings looseness
and joy. In many dyspeptics state
11 is the first food, stuff to disagree,
and to the illnourished neurasthenic
it is a miserable substitute for the
better tisene-buildere..
"An appeal to the facts of evolution
gives little coutfbrt to tne cranks of
one dietary idea, Primitive man has
as hunter and herdsman thriven on
an animal dietary. Nets and fruit
have served his tarn as well, and
encouraged him to the cultivation of
the cereals. There no evidence to
show that the people of any nation
have become longer -lived or shorter -
lived on account of anexclueively
vegeta Id e filets , or tliot any ri astiCin-
Lion Of Cralik.S. liaS Pintl cubed the
longevity of its member:I by any
exclusive system whatever,"
THE GLITTER OP GOLD
Lures men on, so that in the rush for
wealth, they too often neglect health.
'rhey have Dyspepsia. Constipation,
Diver Disorders, impure Stood. which
make life miserable. Ten they look
for st cure- Phey get Bumf...toff Bloed
Btttere. There blood becomes rich 'and
pine. Th c liver tronoles arm oonstipa-
dor disappear, they are hearty and
healthy again. B. Ti, B. is to them a
greater prize than gold.
Foundations of Portu.nes.
Senator Farwell began life as a
surveyor.
Cornelius Vanderbilt began life as
a farmer.
A. T. Stewart made his start as a
school .tencher.
Jim Keene drove a milk wagon in
a California town.
• Lucky Baldwin worked on his fa-
ther's farm in Indiana.
Pulitzer °nee acted as stoker on a
steamboat
eyrie; Field began life as a clerk
In a New England Store.
Dave ,itintem sold seem. over an
Ohio counter for a dollar a. week.
Geo. W. Childs was an errand boy
for a book seller at 64 a month.
3, C. Hood, the Califoreia mil-
lionaire, kept a saloon in San Fran-
cisco,
J;av Gonld canvassed Delaware I
Co., N. Y., selling limps at el..50
apiece.
P. T. Barnum earned a salary as
bartender in Niblo's Theat"e, New
York.
Andrew Carnegie did his first
work in a Pitsbueg telegraph office
at S3.00 a week.
IVITT; l'ilf11113 MUM AMY, airram
The Great
•••••••...........scmssamaaaummotoasmeou
pring Medicine That Cures
Others :Tail.
TI 1&AV
When All
tming Ilrofu;kTal l'ff)14 of naltil tho Nolaro
tht P 1Q tyuilEas
Wells & Richardson Co,.
Dear Sirs take this opportunity
to express my gratitude for the good
that land my friends have re tem vett
from your valuable dist:livery, Paine's
Celery Compound,
For yeare 1 have suffered from con-
stant molt headauhe ; at times I have
been so bad that I have been unable to
sleep two hours a meht for weeks.
I have tried many medieinee and have
doctored a grent deal, but never renew-
ed a hundredth part of the value from
them the!: I have minified from Paine's
Celery Compound. After neeig three
botztes 1 can ideep mY
hors ceased. and I feel healthier and
fresher than 1 have clone for years.
ez ons of the en rliest settlers In
this pine-% tim known to allthe Alirrounct-
triv, uottetry1 f. el it 8 duty to lor oth-
er' know almot the tiled cine that has
done 018 80 nitteh good. I send This tea-
tintonial without may solicitation
Yours with gratitude,
Mae. E. Wireeox, Creemore. Ont.
Sweet Peas and As.ers.
Sweet peas whieh were sown in
pots mttr. he pricked out into pans or
fiats and put two Mattes apart,. Such
plants may go eurside by the first
week in -April if not earlier. It may
be stated for the benetit of those who
do not uederstand the florist:3' term,
in "pricking oat" a peinted stiek a
little' thick& than a lead pencil is
ivied, this being pushed down at the
. side of the seedling mid then lifted ....
up, thus raising the tiny plant with-
out injury to the roots- The same
tool is used for replanting.
• March arid April are good months
f»' sowing astereinaide, end in May
they may be sown if desired in a
garden seed bed, to be afterwato,
transplanted. Such a bed will give am:
good material for felling up gap,
later in the season. The dwarf
Arysanthemum flowered asters are
gond bedders, ineluding a wide range
of color. Among the tall growers the
peony flowered type is very showy.
There is really 1,0 excuse for growing
Sea 11 t petaled, dingy hued varieties.
- Rural New Yorker.
Wells tk Rlebardson Co.,
Dot r Sirs :--It is with great pleasure
that I testify to the value of your great
tuedio ne, Paine's Celery Compound Per
nearly two years I suffered from indigos -
tion, hidney and liver troubles. After
trying several medicines that dirt not
effect a cure, I decided to try your Clom-
p° u nc Before using it I was so low in
health that I could not eat or sleep. I
could not lie in lied owing to the pain
in my back ; it was only by resting on
elboes and kneed that I was enabled to
obtain a slight degree if ease. Before
tied fully taken one brittle of your me-
dieine I began to improve, I have now
taken in all fourteen bottles with grand
restif s. an a farmer and am now
Work ng every day. Anyone may refer
to me in regard to these statements, or
to ray of my neighbors arroand
Shell eld, where I am well known I
am a living witness to the worth of
Pali. Ws Celery Com po Lt lid,
Yours yery truly.
GEOlIGE J. SelYee
Sheffield Ont.
4)
FINGER NAILS CAME OFF.
A wonderful story cornea from Beier
i eon, Man., to toe effect that Mrs. alltlieti
Saunders of that place lost her finger
nails through a severe attack of Sett
B,ticuita. Nothing- beamed to do her #rls
good till she coininenCed taking Bur-
. doek Blood Bitters, with the result tied,
the Salt Rheum has all gone and her
finger nails gradually grew on agaiu.
0. P. rIuetingeo» sold butter and I Mistaken.
eggs f" what "0 could get a PAnd ! "Look here, Bridget," said an in-
-
and dozen;
dignant lady, "I have missed thing •
- • ever since you came to live with me,
Alk and to -day 1 took the liberty uf
searching yonr room, 1111(1 1 f;:tind
my lace handkerehief
in you,
elA bureau dra.wer. "Luk at tho i bow 1.
"Yes, and 1 tound my la.cejabot and ,
one of my veils in your trunk,' "Did
nny 000 ever 1" "And you haul a
pair of my gloves in your mole"
era, "LA at that alein, now!" "I have
taken all my things *0 my own rmin
and I want you to leave the piece
SKIN DI3A3513 ritl.leVnD 8Y Oi AP. te-deet." "Olt, hitt on love Thshi
. PeeneV1014 enough, tor it's not 01 Unit wantti
Dr• Affnew' Ointment
• ti Wtirrilk for enny !eddy dee ee
- 7 forgits herself as to go 'round
3 C WAITS. in at gtirteills room! 01 t'ot 01 was
naming,
Rest atter dinner pilia.
ettsily and thoroughly.
tI Tie- fee
eeents. MI droggistS. 1 S shells
Prepared by I. Med St Cs., towell,"efe3s. cfitI/htr4
•The mile PM te take with Ileed's SarseParlihe
Pal •I • '
disfigured •e,:ne „.:11 1,,1'.1t,git found nut inemistake, an 0111 hive
1119 at last I bare found a Pure in ne ElliS atinuter,
eeitewei tdelimeti. My skin Is now
smooth and :4or)' nee tees tree, 1,"ery
itet 1 ish. The nen impleaitine geve men inal raorijoinos aro indgea by what
"04. two/
.c.e.,44.444( writAti. Sota entleholnes Drag tore. Sthey do. The great enrei by Hood's 4( give it it geed Deem everwhere.
1 Well & Richardson Co.,
Gentlemen :-No living mortal can
imatziee the terrible sufferings that 1 en-
riur&d tor fear years, owing to liver
trouble, headache and sore back. I may
say that i addition to the dangerous
ailments just mentioned, I was contin-
ually sick at my stoniaeli, with a sour
taste and my mouth all furred and coat-
ed. I tried many patent medicines and
was uniter the treatment ct doctore, but
received no benefit. I thaek God for
having Heard et your wonderful Paine's
Oelery Cornpoud. I procured a supply
and used it, and experieneed a great
change. No other remedy gave we smile
wonderful results in so short a time,
now find myself a new woman, and can
sleep woll and enjoy my food No soul
can dosnair when they can prooure
Paine's Celery Compound, the surest
and beet of all medicines.
.Yours truly,
MRS. J. Cennie,
280 Delaware Avenue
Toronto, Ont.
Al,iT,Cfcr.,11:_702=Mat..12L 91MraltZ =Nauman*
3:1 arm 44.4rati; 4r...94T,
tfaxa,1 ti'
L11 4.44i!'
30
'ii tii'n
slg xeb.•
BILL HEADS,
LETT.EB
NOTE HEADS,
STATE:IV:M.51:11S, ETO.
. o .k.t a lows, pri:e
than ever before
.ar•csnaavanizza..1..a..-r,ise.calerootaxtramo
1\TV-.M1.10PUS
We have the best stock of Envelopes inItown, and we ca
print and supply them as cheap as the cheapeet.
Giye us a call when you are in need of anything in the Printing line
we will use you right.
THE TIMES, Winghanis
CN:. GIVES REUEF.
C" -,VCrh ,C,•g,+Q
)
a
for
,°,
e
lr
L k,,ser
••••••••••••••
D "ar
until you have tried
You can buy them in the paper 5 -cent iartons
Ten Tabules or Five CeN:-
riel sort Is put on cheaply to gratify the tireyerul 1nes3nt demand 1 • • r
If you don't find this sort of
Tans T
At the Dru
1
g S
I Send rive Cents to THE Iteretes
; J Spruce lit , New York, and they will 1a3 s >, r •
l‘t;l7 I 11 bo mided for 45 emits, T
tee that Ripaue 'rebates tire the veler ler .
teem%
•
O. 10
tY );, !,y mail; air
erit ten to
,1 teed.
••••••••,•••••••.....aii.•••••,••••*•41,•••i,