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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1898-12-16, Page 3Pulr 1:q S t 4 ^l ti i I3 o;;a,ilinitl �. , t k.a.a{ NV IZN HAM Il,al •ES,� DECJ1 5i .C -;E s A'. it is not one hat many ceases at cenetant work which go to the 'mraking of a well-managed hfnise• Paid 's ci;1517 Cor5'I jo i� i the Osi" hold ea it is true that the e4t'11>116h• ly liaya All w',ifiLii? from u oilii The Great Il'ied.leino Quickly Ezpols all Por anti rt etyma the rete'ted ; and. one of the best gifts System.•which Gad can give its in thi' life i, a happy home. As with tale indi- vidual,. he or she. .can make or mar his or her own happiness in iife,'Qo is it tai•.._ the most importaet of all eenim cries --the QCTnmlinity of the homy Phis making or Marring is brought about by a variety of eir• comstanees and conditions of daily life within the view and reach, as ve; s,•;gil;ng:, 9vr `;,^°, tot.gs,iW??11 'ia LL1t1C' the G?`lti'Q', more or heirs :-.i� theei`i; a:Zen1;t, et?, Ir;.ls, of the household. VV'hat iome • Pure blood represents life ; foal and of the most imp'.rrtal:t and potent of poisoned bleed menus suffering and these are we may have occasional death. Strength, action and the beam of all parte of the h'arnan system are de- opportunities to pi)int oat. Amongst pendent upon .,he blood. the influences at work amongst us The only true way to cleanse and en- all, one thing is veru clear, that if • rich the blood th use Paine's Celery au individual be in the action of Compouu,l. Its vitalizing and purifying effect upon tee blood of old and ; uuog some more or less malign principle, is rnaglcat. The eetet virulent bioou the chances aro all again; him or diseases quickly et eld to itl healing and her ministering in the • happiness of oleausiug power. No other medicine 'o,her member's of the household, so known to man has over achieved the victories over obstinate blood troubles that it praetically comes to this; that that Paine's Calory Compound has an- the battle of life—so we call it—must comphehed. he fought out by n3 individually, so 1f you have a trace or ep:nptom of as to crush oat of existence those blood diseene, your life is truly in dan- ger. It you turd anxiously seeking for x enemies to that iudivdival serenity cure,. have a tare how you make nae of and healthiness of mind which best the widely advertised "blood purifiers ;ministers to the wellbeing of our in the great majority of instances they noiglibors. - are frauds. Aelt your druggiert for Paine's Celery Coat pouud, the only indi- ohm that can Make your blood and flesh clean, pure and huulthy. meat and the ntrtinteuanco of tt happy horns is depc•rldent not upon one lent on all its weu.ilwrs. Unless all work heartily and continually to one cuin- Innn end that end will never be Soroftila is one of the most terrible stud t:'ariengof Weed til»a:seri; it usually eievelops in earn' life, ,tea in the major ity of crises is hereditary. Many medi- cal twin eoulentl that scrofula is the parent of consumption. When the blood is thin, impoverished, Impure and Paul, its poisoned 000dition shows up clearly in pimples, sores, tum- ors, nbs.es,es, tllututies, erysipelas. can - Earache Cured. "I was troubled with E.iraohe for a long time and could •get no ease until 1 tried Hagyard's Yellow Oil, which made Tragedy in the Churoh. a complete euro." Miss AunaOhapntaq, South River, Ont. The Baltimore News says that not Build Your Ice Houao Now. )long ago an official bishop was• a st at a dirinet• art • in 13¢1 i • ane p ) • mole. 'By the way,' said) one of the guests, woman, `do yen ,know that there are times •when it 14 dangerous to enter an Episcopal church ?' 'What is that, madam ?' said the bishop with great dignity, steaig-ht. ening himself up in his chair 'I say there are tirtaes when it is positively d+tngerons cu enter the chtireh,' she replied. 'That cannot be,' said the bishop. Pray explain, madam.' , 'Why,' said she, •1t is when there is a canon in the reading desk, a big un in the pulpit, when the bishop is charging his clergy, the eboir :murdering the anthem and the or- ganist is trying to drnwn the choir,' A hearty laugh went the round of the table at the bishop's expense, and be aeknrrwledged that at snob a time he could well imagine it dis. Agreeable at least if not dangerous to be present. No [)iseane Can resist the powerful et:edieal properties of Burdoulc Blood Bitters, as is prove(] by the fact that ithouaands or the most obstinate eases Itavebeen cured and permanently oared by tee ue.t+ or Ole best of all remedies. No building gives better returns 'foe the money invested than a small ice house. On a farm where dairy- ing is carried on at all extensively it is indispsnsible. If yon have not an ice house, put one up now and then it will be ready for use when the ice is ready to harvest. The ice should be kept 12 inehee from the side walls, and the space left filled with saw- dust. If sawdust is not available, use dry etraw, but in that case make the space 18 inches. An efficient form of cheap floor is m•tde by using • 12 inches of cobble or broken stone, crewed with coarse gravel or sand. The top of that should he covered with not less than six inches of dry sawdust. The sawdust becomes an insulat- ing layer, preventing the warmth of the ground from melting the ice. Where dry sawdust is not available, a layer of dry straw, ohaff or hay 18 inches.thick before the ice is put nn it may be used inotead. The bottom of the ice house should be so I arranged as to prevent any current • Iof air inwards or outwar'Os and yet permit ready drainage of any water from melting fee. " Handsome is that hand- some does," is the old theoreti- cal adage, but after all it's the skin-deep beauty that's attrac- tive. It would take a big lot of handsome doing to com- pensate for a skin that is diseased and whose appear- ance is distasteful to all who see it, and the torment of the patient whose daily burden it is to bear it about. Da. i '�r _ ''�"` ✓ Ilir' � +'. r Z. 'Sa' F •� + AGNEW'S OINTMENT is won- derful cure for all sorts of Skin Diseases—itching, burn- ing, stinging sensations which` are accgmpaniments—tetter, Salt rheum, scald head, ring worm, eczema, itch, ulcers, erysipelas, liver spots, and all eruptions ef the skin -one ap- plication allays the irritation, and perseverance in its use results in a speedy cure. Por blind, bleeding, itching, and ulcerating pile.+ it's a magical balm: one application gives comfort and relief in an instant, and in from three to iftve nights the trouble disappears. Price, 3s cts. A tendon lady had comma for years so A Toronto gentleman, living nn Dovercourt badly, her face and neck were so disfigured she Road, spent a small fortune In trunnions nts and >'°ent into a life of seclusion, and the stinging remedies for piles In their very worst form. was vain of it was so intense that, to use her own treated bq electricity with temporary relief only, words, she " went next thing tomact" She tried and had decided to go on the operating tablet and s zany otntmettts,aalvesandwttihe,-•'-was treated have a snrpietl operation performed, but was by specialists oti skin diseases without getting recommended to try lin. Arai w's OiNratcrr-- lastingbenefit. Sho bought a box of IA, he did so. The first apidi. ail .n of it relieved ibCaxw's 0i Ares 'C-�-cne application gave her the intcnsedistress--he. ptrsist.'.d In Its use and mf.+rt, and to-dx9,•after using three boxes her to -day he's rewarded with a cure after years of tc is as dear and pink as a baby's. :meetin ;. 1?11. AGNEW'S CURE POR THE HEART--Ttelteven smothering, palpitation and fluttering. A r,'r;ularlife saver Iti cages of meanie 11,art troubles. 10RAaNi,s CATARRHAL POWDER—Relieves told in the head in it, minutes. Cures hay fever and catarrh. AOC MINIM'S. LIVER PILLS*-R`leuIa cite 40 bowels.to ilt vitt; the20 system. item. :ever gripe. Pleasant lit i itWS OINTMENT BIMJTI S int - SOLD BY A. L. XXAlari 'ON, WINGIIA.ILI. Ellitsseatesee Wlrnt Do Your Children Read? ilory many parents keep traek of the reading their children clo ? Anti still more important, how many provldc effect ehlld"•en with a sufilt:ieul, , amount of suttrtble reading ? Ia tilts days of public libraries then: 1 is little excuse for those parents who neglect this part of their duties. Yet we are afraid many do. Thele are i two evils to be avoided. Tile one is • the entire absence of counsel and • direction as to the books to be read; and the other is too great restrietiou of the range of reading, there is ' great danger in both eases that It will acquire a taste fur books that i can only do it harm. Unfortunately I in the later case, where the parents I have very prim or ponderous notions of what it ie a;r.tt for chilrireit to read, there is little drt,nryer t'eat they will form a taste for the books their parents select. .On the other hand, they may early get a distaste for books they niighc afterwards probit by, or for reacting altogether. The chief danger in this case is that the children will secretely read books which their eotnpanlons at school or on the street recommend to theut and lend them. We wonder how many parents realize the amount of this secret reading that goes on. There are few classes in school, and few groups of friends, in whicu oue or inure books are not in circulation. The very secrecy with which so much of this is done adds to its perils. The books read are those that in some way stir up the iulagin- atiuu and the sentimentality of tee children. if there is a necessity for restraining in the homes all outward signs et the effects produced, very serious results may follow. Nothing is worse for children than brooding in secret over emotional experieueus. There should be an openess and ex ter nality about these experie'lces. Children Beed stimulus for their imaginations and proper objects for their emutrutis. They crave these things. And uney find satisfaction it there is any to be found. Starting with a recognition of this fact, parents should see that the best fables, mythological tale, stories of adventure, historical iuci dents, biographical sketches, nature startles, and other reading of alike kind, are available to their children. The books with an excrescence in the shape ef a carefully formulated nior•al at the end are seldom accept. able reading to children. One reason for this is that children below the age of thirteen or fourteen do not learn by precept as much as by example.. 'the best reading for them is that which will inspire.their ad miration or love for noble characters and deeds. Ideals influence a child much -more than doctrines. Of coarse the best of a:1 is for the parents to read much to their'child: ren, or to read much by themselves and graphically retell, to their child- ren all that has true human interest. Parents' duty toward the reading of their children is very real. It may be avoided, but its responsibility cannot be escaped. Matte a New Man. "I count say Lava -Liver Pills made a new man of me. I was troubled with Indigestion, Fluttering of the Heart and. pain in the small of the Back, and after taking the Laxe-Liver Pills for about three weeks they cured me." Melville miller, Benefort P. 0., Ont. A Novel "Ad." • Printer's Ink: An original form of advertising comes to us from Rus. sia, where a shop keeper pasted up the following announcement: "The reason why I have hitherto been able to sell my goods so much ,cheaper than anybody else is that I am a bachelor and do not need to make a profit for the maintenance of a wife and children. It is now my duty to inform the public that this 'advantage will shortly be withdrawn from them, as I am about be married They will, therefore, do well to Make their purchase at once at the old rate." Tho result was there was such a run on the shop that, in the course of a few days, this shopkeeper had made enough of money to pay the expet.ees of his wedding nn gt. very lavieh scale. An ?engineer's rthoumatlsm. • Mr, David Weeks, of Owen f niind Ont., Engineer of the Owen Henna Branch of the C. P. It.. vvritrs : "'Nita' boles of Milburn's Rheumatic lilts mir- ed me of Rheumatic point; in Inv steed. der, from which 1 suffered for some years. They alae nnra.t tnv wits of R!.in. matisnr of 17 years' standing." Price 50e„ all dealers. t�,•. fir• ^. ""c 4 herr has been for sixty years the popular medicine for colds, coughs, and all diseases of the throat and lungs. It cures Asthma and Bronchitis, and so soothes the irritated tissues that a refreshing sleep invariably follows its use. No mother fears an attack of Croup or Whooping Cough for her children, with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the. house. It is a specific for that modern malady, La, Grippe. It prevents Pneumonia, and has fre- quently cured severe cases of lung trouble marked by all the symptoms of Consumption. It is Sta.t. mar �._�- .Ct = ,K r for Colds, Couglis, and Lung Diseascs0 «At the age of twenty, after a severe sickness, I was left with weak lungs, a terrible cough, and nearly all the symptoms of consumption. My doctor had no hope of my recovery; but having read the advertisements of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I determined to try that preparation. I did so, and since that time, I have used no other cough medicine. I ant now seventy-two years old, and I know that at least fifty years have been added to my life by this incomparable preparation." A. W. SI'ERRY, Plainfield, N. J. "I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for nearly fifty years and found it to be an excellent remedy for all bronchial and throat diseases." L. H. MATFIEWS, Editor Acres-Disj'atch, Oneonta, Ala. "My first remembrance of flyer's Cherry Pectoral dates back thirty-six years, when my mother used it for colds, coughs, croup, and sore throat. She used no other medicine in attacks of that sort among her children, and it never failed to bring prompt relief and cure. I always keep this medicine in the house, and a few'doses quickly check all colds, coughs, or any inflammation of the throat and lungs. J. O'DONNELL, Seattle,,Wash. I have sold Ayer's Medicines for forty-five year¢. I know of no preparation that equals Ayer's Cherry Pectoral fur the cure of bronchitis. It never fails to give prompt relief." C. L. SHIER\VOOD, Druggist, Dowagiac, Mich. "1 have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral both in my family and practice, and consider it one of the best of its class for la grit pe, colds, coughs, bronchitis, and consumption in its early stages." W. A. WRIGHT, M. D., Barnesville, Ga. " Sonne years ago Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cured me of the asthma after the best medical slcillbad failed to give me relief." F. S. HASSLER, Editor /Punts, Table Rock, Neb. Free Mcd!cal Mv1cc0 We have organized a Medical Department, with a physician of the highest standing at its head, and invite the sick and ailing to write, and receive the best medical advice, absolutely without charge or cost. • t. u e.8.. Ltsn ,,urvL, to. A cough is like* en.oke. temelte indi Dates that there is lire snorewhere'. A cough Indicates that there is a serine« disease holden awe) in the breathing or. gave. Put out the tire with water one the smoke will disappear. Put nuc throat and lung dit.eases tviih Shilnh'e Consumption Cure and your trough will disappear. 25 cis., nib et•+. and r;l.On t• bnttle Guarantied to .ri.> ev.erythint' claimed for it. A young bride. It n ecustnn'd to giving or'dt rc, walked into „n,• of our Main street groceries the other day. "I want ten p,alnds of paralyz- ed sugar," she bei -an with :t business like air, "Ye:.'nt. Any thine else ?" "Two cans of condescended milk " " Yee' in. i•lt' sat. down "pnit'erize(1 sumer" anti "enndi'tlesel milk " "Anything more, ma'am ?" ".l bag' of fresh salt. Be sure its fresh." Yes'm. What next ?" "A pound of desecrated codfish," Ili: 'wrott' t+lit>ly `•desieented cud." ":Fortino more, =tam 'e" We have mune horse r'i'll -h ,1141 in." "Nn;" tli• 4aid, "It would he of n'+ ilvt' We don't ket+p a ltnrt:e," 'Tilt' tr,"t.••• :tt rlowu anti t+mtit'd himself with lialellt War:111)0rtrlt, ttlti1n11tf11 t Ite ten peril ttu'e WA; the t of 1)eerenihrl'. eP ir. V V '•.a in thi» ur•dr t„ twan t.e crit hn»iu rn in their >u, an.I trh, nr,tie.. Is "Willy nrtte cork rettretre at hen .. Salary straix•t tort* ct•,,r mrd 1,r,101,,e4 drflntte, boto111•10, un,n -t•. nn 'era Wart. dtenrhlt $i •. tt..r+r•••'ere, t'..el'r•,o %..1*. Ida a! •nnq,o'r ttti'op•,, limit. ;. 1r•tea. Perot.. beet. li. t'hicatto. The Pleasuro of Your Comp A San Francisco hostess, famous for her tact and resou'cefulness, tells a gaud story on herself. It seems that an officer in one of the Tennessee companies, a very shy young man. brought letters with brim when his regiment carne to the coast, and pre- sented hitntielf one evening at the Van Ness Avenue residence. As he was a son of a well known public amen, and a member of an old family, his hostess exerted herself to entertain hitt*. "We should be glad to have the pleasure of , our company on Friday at dinner," she said, as he was leaving; the Hawaiian con mieeinnera are to be with us." Friday Came, and so flid the cam• rai'si'n. Shortly before tits, hour for flintier the butler excitedly entered the room : "They's a regiment o' soldiers, . mum, outside." "No doubt in honor of the commissioners," the lady re- plied, "I will telt them." Just then the !len tenrint 't as annnuneed. lie Carne up to the lady surf shill:. "When Pott are rertfy I will have tiie ntt'n mare)! to their places in i f,rmeticm," 'lice lady teas nnnplu"-ed and said: "Why. tht. .xn?" "It's ►nv coin- n bane," tx:let the r(•irlt', "all but ten, rttlrl thee- we're sorry, flat they w(,1,C! under orders and could not come." An old and highly respected . resi- dent of the township of Kinloss pass- ed away recently, in the person of M1'. Norman Kerr, at lot 15, on the 7th concession. Deceased had reach- ed the ripe old age of 713 years, and had beena resident of the 'township for nearly thirty years. Persistence Cures. —The most ohro- nic case of lJ,y pepsia or Inditreetion will succumb to the all -healing power of Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablete. What this wonderful medical discovery bas done for the thousands of prt;claimed hopeleie. helpleso stomaeb , invalids it . cau do fur von. One Tablet will relieve --and eriirtence will cure. 35 cents. Sold by :\ Ta, Hamilton. The town of Cob >m g charged the Ontario Governmeet $1,405,05 for pr.>vwittg care, comfort and medical attendance for the lady who suffered: from smallpox. Much in Little Is especially true of Hood's Pills, for no medi- 'eine ever contained so great eurattve power to so small space. They are whole medicine. e 1 these alms ready, el- i ways efficient, always Sat. + tete v >a ti tY, prevent A :told:toldp or fiver, Dere all liver i1hr, 'telt lteatlaebr, jstnedire, ec>tutpattei, eta, *o. The may rills to taint ttftll Moeda Ili