HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1898-11-25, Page 3t :. 1' V 1, I A M TIMES,
NOVEMBER
4gy
L St''5.
1..•�"0' Agricultural Experimental Union
✓� b Annual. Meeting.
m•
' We have received the programme
of the next aunual meeting of the
Ontario Agricultural and .Experi
Mental Union hich is to be held at
the Agrieultur41 College at Guelph,
Ttie " V t}iott" will eminence with ft
public meeting in the large Convo-
cation Hall on the College grounds
on the evening. of December ith.
There will be six sessions in all, and
the meeting will close on Friday
afternoon the 9th of December.
1'ue summary results of the field
experiments conducted this year on
over tures thousand farm will be
presented and discussed at the meet-
ing. 'Phis along with the reports on
co-operative work 'in' Horticulture,
Dairying, lies -Keeping, Soil Physics,
and the Weeds of Ontario should
make the meeting interesting and
profitable to all.
We als) notice that Prof. C F.
Curtiss, Director of the Agricultural
Experiment Station of Iowa, and Mrs,
S. T. Rorer, Principal of the Phila-
delphia Cooking School,, and an As-
sociate Editor of the "Ladies' Home
Journal" have been engaged to speak
at toe meeting. •
The Guelph Fat Stock andPonitry
Show, and the annual meeting of the
Ontario Bee Keepers' Association are
both to be held in Guelph on the 6th,
7th, and 8th of December, and the
annual meeting of the Guelph Poul-
try Association on Thursday of the
,aide week.
Arrangements have been made
with the railway companies for re-
duced rates to Guelph to attend the
Experimental Union Meeting, and
other interesting events which take
place during that week:.
Alt enquiries regarding railway
rates etc. should be made to U. A.
Zavitz, Agricultural College, Guelph,
Ont.
Melancholia is Grave )i eaoe and
Leads to Insanity.
lin Norm. 4ztia
of rigru'll,
Paine's Celery Compound Nature's
Nerve Bracer wad Health R.e;3 orer.
'Do sou brood from day to day and make
life a continued misery for yourself ani
family? If you are a victim of melanohoIi u,
munderstand at ones you are suffering from
a terribly grave dteease—a ti'uuole that in•
+sues suicide and homicide.
One of the 'most celebrated physicians of
the day s"rs that there are several forme
of melancholia : simple melancholia, mel.
ancholia agitate, inetench •ha attomtita, and
ilaelanulselia with stupor. The uses two
are the most difficult of reuogn:tton, and
are the forums that especially endanger the
lives of vietinms and their friends.
Some of 'the first and most important
1ymptonis of melancholia are s eepleaaness,
rdepressiou of epirits, slow mental move-
ments. terrifying hallucinations and aver-
sion to food. The whole nervous system
is Hoon in a most alarming condition, the
mind becomes aff, cted, and even iueenity
assay shout= its hideous farm.
. Expel -lei -mu has proved that the ordinary
mirledicaI treatment of melancholia fails in
t le • es ot the disease is not reached.
Hundreds of rases of melancholia in all
stages that have bailiel 'he best medical
men have been successfully cured by na-
ture's nerve medicine—Paine's Celery Com-
pound. This marveltcus medical prescrip-
tion does its work directly on the nerves.
It tones, strengthens and bra..es up the en-
tire nervous organization, and, as a conse-
quence, the tissues and muscles are built
up, and pure life-giving blood is treaty
supplied to every part, o• the body.
Reader„ this should be an all-important
subject to you if you are sleepless, despond-
ent, languid, out -of -sorts, depressed in mind
and mental fnoulties impaired. Your path
of duty is clear. Terrible dangers are
ahead if you fail to banish the first sym-
tome. Yonr present and future happiness
and health depend wholly upon yourehotee
of medicine. The use of Paine's Celery
Comoound at this time means new life,
health, vigor, activity, fall mental powers
:nine oases out of every ten, Simply because and a length of happy years.
Su1p'aur As A. Lice Killer.
The burning of sulphur in the p,ut-
try house is not a very reliable proc-
ess for getting rid of lice, The sul-
phur smoke will kill the lice in the
'building if produced in sufficient
volume'ai1d continued long enough,
, your way -yon mast go. after thein.
Ironical Ifs.
If ignorance is bliss it is sometimes
wise to be foolish.
If you rise with the Lark don't
stay up late on one.
If you wnuld have things conic
but the greater or less propurtiou ot
the liee will decline ti) stay in the
building to be killed if they can tied
any way of escape, and in the peel
dry house of the ordinary pattern
they can find a way of escape throu-
gh the creeks atul will cratnp on thtt
If yt.0 would have a good time
wherever you go take it with you.
• If at man rides a hobby is is use
leeis t'm ask .him. to disiuotuit and walk.
If it weren't for tombstone; lots of
men in this world would never be
hear'i1 of,
(outside until the sin ,ke le gone: and It' a 'lain is not g •eat in little
then return to their old (l tatrter thine i lie lacks the elements of true
This explains why the fumigation of gt•eatneti,. ,
the poultry house with sulpiti'• often If cupid expects to do any hu -ii
fails to cie,.n it of lice. • it seems nese this winter he will have to dost
that nothing could live in eueh a a blue ueifurni .with brass buttons.
smudge, but the line are not "in it'
-when it is at its. Ntirdr and owe their
escape to that, •fct. If the wally of
the poultev •lioaie are sprayed with
lerosene eru'th,ion or painted With
any good liquid lice killer; the fumes
will remain for a numher of d:tys,
and if any of the Tice should seek to
get•avxay from the;u by etetptng
through the cracks they will encou-
nter the death dealing odor on their
return. Burn sulphur in the poultry
lease, bat do n )t plaue your depend-
ence entirely upon this for keepint-
' the premises tree t'rorn lice.—\Vail
71G:'s 1 at'tnet'.
If thi;.expansion business keeps
on it will be necessary for the preei
dent to appoint a secretary of the
exterior.
Mks Annie Grllesl-ie, Orillia, Oat
writes: "1 had a bad cold and eevert
cough for solus time and could net, t e
•
ritl or it uutil 1 used Dr. •.t+od'a N
wt►v Pine Syrou, a'hr, h qu okly cured
me." Price 25c.
The esiasus-t•tlaer could not find
-?O )) il►h:tItitance in. Port Elgin, eat
twit meeleip►lity will have to was'
s auto ti(il t Off aro bei g incorporated
61.1.1..M•
KID y EY - SICK PEOPLE !
337peorple the
ut lt�y farm the la sufferers
o t array army ofn hthe cured oneshe attributeitail ill.
• release from disease to the great youth American Kidney Cure—
Cures Bright's disease. Cures diabetes. Cures all bladder ailments.
Kidney diseases are the mostin-
sidious'of all diseases common to
humanity ; within the past few •
years medical science has made
wonderful strides icy coping with its
ravages. South American Kidney
Cure has proved rich in healing
power, and every day testimony is
piled up for its great curative quail -
ties. Where kidney disease exists
it is generally indicated by certain
-" ' changes in the urine, such as mucus,
sediment, albumen, brick dust, acid
and blood—pain is not necessarily an
v accompaniment. which only aggra-
vates the insidious nature of it. Test-
ing and experimenting has disclosed
the fact that 'the passing through '
these organs of ,the solid particles
in the ordinary course of circulation
do in a remarkably short while clog
up, grind out amid impair them so
that the functions of these organs are
not performed and disease lays hold
on the patient with a ruthless hand.
Kidney diseases require a solvent—
t"— t 1►n`-� South American Kidney Cure is a
solvent—it is a kidney specific--
`-a- —� claims to be no more --it has been
tested by eminent medical authorities ondide
ey dis
thein , and
ps vedd andbladder.resfied to by
' them as the surest and safest cure for all
• purifier --a healer ---a health builder—efficacious alike to man or woman.
Good News from the North Country— began to realize for himself that his case was
young Northern Inaarioe 11 a victinngocon-
the termin dtofightforshis4lif in
experimented
coon is Northern of Ontario, fell a uteri
dropsical fcha gc kidney following
his throughat. with many
yKidney Cure was brought to his melee,
t ef. South
limo continued his w r funtil al{ hesdcoy lcommanded
ann d Amer Yhe
ils
to quitbythe his
fromswhotn he had 'been astonishment ishment heebeg netoejf el better rounder its
T to and use He continued to gala strength -he
took
an ix
WAR TERRORS
Pale Into Insignificance to the Man
who is 'Tormented with .Piles—I)r.
Agnew'sOintment will Cure'.Dhem.
Ot all flesh ailments the most distress -
Ing rs piles, blind, bleeding, itching or
,teerating—and the remedy that will
give the quiukest relief and the surest
,lure is 1)r. Aguew's Oiutttient. It bolds
t phenomenal record as a certain curt].
Ind the words "relieved like magic,"
nave been heralded round the globe, and
are but the voices of the nations tlllog
.ir ire curative powers. It cures all skin
llseases. eczema, salt rheum, scald head,
,tu. Sold by A. L. Hamilton.
receiving treatment. He visited oron _
consulted The
eminent e ihomewithon kidney
asf peful found atthtsanmeylathesworkingforthat same
e torsent hinthearty as the first eiay he went
rases. The. d c
a story of 0himself as g man's
give, but wrotet Concern, hate and l the
<,
;arlvmtcty to the yoitngnea{p�thp hili inntilldcath KiQney Cuc gives all the credet to South Atnerrcan
was only a matter of time
'would claim another kidney victim. When he
SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE ---Is a nerve healer. Cures indigestion and all stomach troubles
*ditch are form -miners of nervous collapses. .
es
SOUTH AMERICAN RHEUMATIC oCURIs,
DR. ADNEWS OINTPI lras lifted men off a bed of pain after a few days'
lase, who have not been free from sttii cotes blind, bleeding, itching or ulcerating piles In from throe to
live nights. 33 cit.
SOLD I3Y A, L. HAMILTON, WIN(*HAM.
Keeping Celery in the Cellar.
"The greatado about keeping
celery through the. winter has deter
red many from raising it in the
airily. All I do," 'says a writer in
he Denver Field and Farm, "is to
a.rk it away in a box in the cellar,
getting the bunches in an upright
position, this roots resting upon the
'tom) of the hos. I have a box of
18 or 20 inches in depth and some
:.we or three feet square• 1 dig the
telery as late in the sanson as I can,
leaving it in the ground until pretty
cold weather ensues, even after the
frosts of early fall nave arrived, and
handle•it very carefully, as the Nt,w
Rose which I grow is very brittle
and often breaks apart of its own
weight. This should be done only
on a dry day when the celery 13 dry.
Then I carry it to the cellar, where
I have four or five inches of garden
soil on the bottom of the box. I
track the bunches in a vertical posi-
•,ion as closely together as possible
And leave it there until wanted for
'ise. My cellar is dark, or practi-
sttl l y so, and it does not freeze.
1Vhen we want celery for table use,
we simply go down cellar and do
not have to worry through any frozen
•oil to get it. I lose a small por-
.ion from 'decay, but the most of
t keeps hard and crisp, and that
which was not well blanched when
'int in soon gets all right, like the
rest."
is the
EST 'SA SAPA . ILLA,
"Best" is an easy boast. But there's no best without a test. You
expect something extra of best ; something extra in bread from best
flour; something extra in wear from best cloth; something extra in
cures from best medicines. It's that something extra in Ayer's Sarsa-
parilla that makes Ayer's the best. That something extra is quality.
Remember it's quality that cures, not quantity. Geo. Smith of the
People's Drug Store, Seymour, Conn., says: " I have sold your goods
for twenty-five years and when a customer asks rase for
Theatt �e r
a
for t
I say: ' If you -will take my opinion, use Ayer's Sarsaparilla; I will guar-
antee that you will receive more benefit by using one or two bottles of
Ayer's than you would by using half a dozen bottles of some other kind'
When they take it, I never hear any complaint."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla cures all diseases that have their origin in impure
blood: sores, ulcers, boils, eruptions, pimples, eczema,, tdtter, scrofula, etc.
It cures cheaply,' it -cures quickly, and it cures to stay. That's why it's best.
"After twenty•years' experience as a druggist, I consider Ayer's Sarsaparilla superior to
any similar, preparation on the market, and I give it the preference over all others."
A. C. WOOD WARD, Worcester, Mass.
"In our estimation, es regards Sarsaparilla, Ayer's is the standard. We have never
heard it spokea•of in other than the very highest terms."
W. E TERRILL & CO., Pharmacists, 9 State Street, Montpelier, Vt.
"I consider Ayer's Sarsaparilla the best blood purifier on the market."
Dr. GRISE GRISE & CO., West Gardner, Mass.
.c During fifteen years of experience with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I have yet to learn of a
single case wherein it failed to cure if used according to directions."
F. O. COLLINS, Druggist, Paris, Mo,
"I believe .Ayer's Satsaparilla contains more medicinal value than any other similar
compound." JAMES DOANE., Dispensing Chemist, Kingsville, Ont.
ars
r
Nothing Like it.
You ehou,d remember that no taller
medicine is like Shiloh's Cousuwptrou
Cure in any respect. If other remedies
'lave furled to relieve your cough or amid,
.hat is all the more reason why you
ihouhl try Shiloh's. AIwayy ljold,aoiler
t positive guarantee. If it does rot help
nu, the druggist must give 141•k
stoney. 25 ots,, 50 uts. and $100 a 1)0(.1 10.
Dr. Bryce, of the Ontario lla'and
of Health, estimates that the itf
'onannlptives in Canada is `i in ere, v
'250, or 1 in 50 familie+. 1 ie -11
]
Cll 1 ilt.t.E , ll 1 t 1
t(�
Or Bryce deems i ,
,reinset
e it of tuberculosis.
If you have catarrh, don't, ri i l iv .t I I h
local 'remedies, tett emery ""at i+t:rie•h
your blood with Itoo :'s Saestrpm itla,
Impure Blood.
Aire. Will Varner, New Canada, N. S„
writes: "I have used Burdock blot.:
Bitters for Headache and Impure lilocd.
One bottle made a cure.] think.there is
no bettor medicine made."
Tho Rey. Irl R. Hicks
Annual Altnauae and monthly paper,
Nord and Works, are now known
from sea to sea. We are pleased to
call the attention of our readers to
the Almanac for 1899, now ready.
It is a splendidly printed and illus-
trated book of 116 pages and the
storm forecasts, and diagrams and
astronomical and scientific natter
are superior to anything that has
ever been seen before in a 25 cent
book. His monthly journal, Wore
and Works, is one of the hest liter-
ary, hone and seienr.if1e magazines
in the conuti'y, besides containing
his monthly storm forecasts with ex.
pfanations. The subscription price
of Word and Works is 81.00 per
>ear and it copy of the IIteks Al -
mantic i3 sent its a pi emit'' to every
yearly subscriber. Single copies of
Work and Works, 10 cents. Price
f Alumnae
alone, 25 (tents. s. ;e
id
Pub
your order to Word andtl'far•l.s I uh
Co., 2201 Locust St., St. Lotus, Mo.
When the rhilrlran grin.l their teeth,
have a ravenous appetite. yet don't seam
to thrive. stile them Dr. Low's Worm
Syrup. It will clear net every worm
,ithout harming the child. price 21e.
Its Origin.
Rev. Mr. Howson, of 111eafcrrd, gives
this little piece of information about
that popular hymn, "What a friend
we have in Jesus. ' There lies buried
on the shores of Rice Lnke, north of
fort Hope, said Mr. Howson, one
James Scrivener who was an extreme
ly liberal ruined man and eventually
become veru poor owing to his
liberality. Friends forgot hills, as
they often do in such extremities.
and it was then be wrote that beauti-
ful hymn, "What a friend we have
in Jesus," of which it is said more
than lifty million copies have been
printed.
Is This Plain Enough p
If ou have a nagging cough and arelos-
ing flesh, go to a drug store ane get a
bottle of Shiloh's Consumption Cure.
'fake two-thirds of it, and then, it you
tire not benefited, return the bottle tr
the druggist, and he will return vote
motley. lsn't that fair. No one could
ask more. 25 eta., 50 cts. and 0100
bottle.
Milk Por Calves.
] ,•
the : t•t h
in h I <
From i e!c Ell invents
1 t
P
station it :s concluded that:
Calves may be raised very profit.
ably on skim milk when. it i3 proper-
ly fstd,
From the standpoint of gamin in
calves, but it makes too expensive a
ration to he profitably fed. Butter
fat has been worth 16 cents per:
pound. The gain in live weight of
these calves at 4 cents per pound
returns but 10.7 cents per pound for
the butter fat fed and at 3 cents per
pound for the gain but 8 cents per.
pound.
'rhe calves whose rations were
composed largely of slam milk, while
they gained one-half pound less per
day yet required practically the
same amount of dry matter to each
pound ot' gain as did those fed on
whole milk. They made just as
good use of the food.
The calves fed whole milk alone
gave greater proportion of dressed
meat to live weight than did those
ted on skim luilk, and also gave more
fat nn the carcass,
iliousne-ss
Licensed by torpid liver, which prevents diger-
tion and permits food to ferment and piltrify 15
the stomach. Then follow dizziness, tmeadaehe,
O
insntnh's, nervousttess, and,
If not relieved, bilious fever
'or blond potsnnieg. Hood's
i'llls stiuutl tto the stomach,
liV() weight and q'aality of merit tense the liter, ease headache,dt
stkiatinn, etc. :., yeasts. Sold by 1
whole milk is the best food f:tr The mutt, Palle to take with iiooers
r
lis