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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1899-02-24, Page 28 Matt or Beast. "I have round Uugyard'a Yellow Oa to to the heat thing for cailc'u;t'd lumps and vett[ an man or beset. It it; n [•peel[• did all -rental remedy," 1)nititrl Brown. Banks P. O.., Oat. The rayalcrown of i'ersin, which dates b ick to remote ages, is in the forgo of a ,).)t of il)',vt're, surmounted by an unset ruby, the size of a hen's egg. h h9Eroft 5'r Poc t!.vely cured by theme Little Pills. They also rel' -c v,: Distress frora Dyspepsla, Indipestian and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect er- tct remedy for Dizziness, 3 ausea, Drowsi. mess, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They T,cgulatc Vac Bowels. Purely Vegetable. .wa5t"B&r�$F MO. .^aril Ei DoSea Stan all Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. Sec you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. Tanen E. we of heu 6 Qu The permanent cure after per- manent cure that is being published week by week has placed Burdock Blood Bitters far above all other remedies in the estimation of the sick and suffering. :Even the severest and most chre- nic diseases that other remedies fail to relieve yield to the blood purifying, blood enriching proper- . ties of B.B.B. Salt Rheum or Eczema—that most stubborn of skin diseases, which causes such torture and is so difficult to cure with ordinary reme- dies—cannot withstand B.13. B.'s •• healing, soothing power. . The case of Mrs. Jas. Sanderson, Emerson, Man., shows how effec- Aioe E.B.B. lain curing Salt Rheum :at its worst, and curing it to stay • 'cured. h This is what she wroth : t' Burdock Blood Bitters cured me of a bad attack of Salt Rheum three years ago. :It was so severe that my finger nails carne .off. I can truly say that I know of no more valuable medicine in the world than B.B.B. It cured me completely and permanently, as ',have never had a touch •of Salt Rheum since." :csrssvt*W ssma nsisur,:>CiCER/fEirix,ui CURE ALL YOUR PAINS WITH Pain -Killer. A MRedicine Chest In Itself. Simpie, Safe and Quick Cure far GRAftiPS, DIARRHOEA, COMM COLDS, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA. 25 and 130 Dent Bottles. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. BUY ONLY THE GENUINE. PERRY DAVIS' 44).ga.1: cixeeliRGyNRyene6ma ' 7e guarantee that these Plasters will relieve pain quicker than any • other. Put up only is �11•i "I•��j� 23c. tilt boxes and $1.00 t� 1' r yard rolls. The ttcr Rhee you to cut the DSLany size. !~very family ni tell should have one ,ready f;br an emer- 1144..•.••.,•4......• - .t. 1: ay't, Tl..;nerlatace [Wrath l amberg- er Otteese. ''ga sent me down to pay a hill at theerouvr'e last Saturday. The 'boss' helli.ttl the eauutet' made hie a resent of something w'stoned in a Iet•t,e of silver pale..., whet) , he told 111:1 wa3 et lJll:.'p• of Linibt;rger cheese. When 1 e outside the shop I opened Oa, p, per, and when I smelt •chat was inside I felt tired I tool: it; home attd put it in the coal shed, ° to tgi t til:)1'nin€, 1 went to it again. lI' wits still there. Nobody had taken It. 1 wunderest what I could do .vith it Father and mother were getting ready to g() to church, I put t piece in the back pocket of father's pant: and another piece in the lining 'rf u11.'; lutuf. I walked behind when we started to church. It was begin - '1'141,4' to get warm. When we got in church, and after singing the first hymn, ruother told father not to sine; -gain, but to keep his to loth •shut, end breathe through his nose After player, perspiration Stole 00 father's niece end the people in 1133 neat pew to ours got up and went out. After the hytnn father wlusperecl to mother that lie thought she had better go out. After the second lesson, some of the churchwardens came round to see if there were any stray rats in the church. Some more people near oar pew got up and went out putting their 1•andkerctiief f;o 'their noses as they went. The parson said they had better close the service and hold a meeting outside to discuss the san- itary condition of the church. Father told mother they had better ge .some one at a time. When they got home they both went' into the front room, but ' id not speak for some time, Mother spoke first, and told father to put the cat out of the room, as she thought it was ping to be sick. It was sick be,"ore father could get it out. Mother then turned round and noticed that the canary was dead, Mother told father not to sit so near.. the fit e, as it made platters worse. .Just then the hired man came in, and asked if he would throw open the windows, as the room smelt very close. Father went up stairs and changed his clothes and had a hot bath. Mother took father's clothes and offered them to a tramp, who said, 'Thanks, kind lady, they are a bit too high for . me.' Mother then threw them into the creek.. Father was summoned for poisining the fish. Next morning father had a note 'sent to hien. Father came to wish me 'Good night' at 1 o'clock, withrthe note in one hand and razor strap in the other. I . got under the bed. The people next; door thought we• were beating carpets in our house. I cannot sit down comfortably yet. I have given my little sister what I had left of that Limberger cheese. I thought it a pity to waste it." Then They Moved On. A man in alight check suit stop- ped at the corner and looked intently upward. His gaze appeared to be directed at the roof of a tall building directly opposite. Two men stopped and began to look fn the same direction. ' A moment later several others joined them. Business men hurring along the road on the way to their offices were seized with like curiosity, and stopped short to gaze with the ' others. "What's the matter ? "What is it ? "What's the excitment ? These questions flevS from lip to lip, but nobody seemed able to answer. "Move on. there !" exclaimed a policeman. "What are you block. ing the road fur ?" But the crowd ',was too big to be dispersed by a single policeman. "I say," asked' the officer, forcing his way to the centre of the throng itnd grabbing the: man in the light ,heck suet, "what. are you looking at ?" "I'rn not'looking at anything," re- plied the other, without lowering his head, "I've a stiff neck and I al- ways carry my head this way. I stopped to rest a minute. I don't know what these .chumps are doing here," And the crowd melted silently away. You Try It. It Shiloh's Cough and Cotdlumption Cure, which is sold for the email price of :.5 eta .• SO eta. and $1.00, does not cure t.tr +v Ina hottte bnck and we will refund emir leevteey. Sold for over fifty years +An tliia guarantee. Price 25 otl, and l ala ct3. rj jjki WING.. AM TIMES, ELiTR ETAR'Y ) 7, 1.899 The Ideal. Fountain Pen .. We Cully believe, from many seers, eonstlint usage, that the ideal fountain pen is the 1t.'aterinan. "'There are others." but it would Luke a great deal to convince us that any other could possibly have the distinguishing merit whiuh attaches to the Waterman 1•',,uutain Pen. These are made in a great variety Of sizes and styles to suit tees parttoular fancy or any person, The ,:uses are plain, simple,. ornate—anything any one wishes. They are a very graceful pen, and our es- erienoe is that they are the proper pen for a person writing eoustaotly, as by using them there need he little fear of writer's paralysis. Watertnan's Ideal Fountain Peu can he had at' almost any primo, depending, or course, upon the erns mentation and fancy of the purchaser. Their distinguishing characteristics are, excellence or materials and workman- ship, writes the moment the pen touches the paper, doesn't overflow or skip, and is cleanly,—From The Inde- poadent, New York, Denetnber 10, 1897. THE PRODUCTION OF PORK. CANADA COULD QUADRUPLE HER OUTPUT ADVANTAGEOUSLY. In 1892 it was estimated that there were 102,172,224 hogs in the world. Of that, number Canada was credited with 1,706785, If such methods of breeding, rearing, feeding and fattening Canadian hogs can be followed as will make the bacon from them acceptable us first- class to the British consumers, the number can be doubled orquadrupl• ed without much, if any, fall in the e_ ice, says Prof, Robertson. A large portion of the bogs are raised and fed in such a way that they are saleable in October and November only. These are '•the months at which hogs usually will sell for the lowest prices. It ° is '.important that there should be a steady supply of hogs, marketable at all seasons of the year. That can only be done when farmers cease regarding the keeping of a few swine as of no consequence in' farm management, and instead rear and fatten hogs systematically. It is not desirable that many farmers in Canada should become specialists in hog breeding ; but it is desirable tnat most of thele should keep more swine, and tbus find a profitable Market for grains, for skim-milk,butter•milk and whey. Swine breeding is a paying invest- ment as an adjunct to or a branch of dairy farming. . The imports of bacon, hams and lard into Ureat Britain in 1896 amounted to 653,487,607, of which only $5,163,849 worth was obtained from Canada, To meet the require- ments of the British markets, hogs with plenty of fleshy, not lardy,meat are wanted. Large numbers of thein should be fed, fattened and marketed during the summer months, and as a rule they should be said alive by the farmer or feeder in order that they may be slaughter- ed at packing houses, where the carcasses can be cut and cured in the manner to suit the preferences of the different markets. When Canadian bacon and hatns become i better known in Great Britain they will be sought after at relatively higher prices, - Unable to Work. 1VIr. Jos. Currier, Victoria Harbor, Ont., writes: "I had Rheumatism' in my knees, fent and elbows so bad 1 was un- able to work, Nothibg did me any good till I got Milburn's Rheumatic Pills. One b -lx and a half completely cured me." No Moving the Quaker. Some short while back a Quaker, driving in a single horse chaise up a lane that leads from one part of Cottonopolis to another, chanced to meet with a young man who was also in a similar carriage. There was not enough room for them to pass each other unless one of them would back his carriage. "I shan't make way for you," said the young marl. "I am older than thou. art," re• plied the Quaker, "and therefore have A right to expect thee to give way so that I can pass." "Well I won't," resumed the young follow. He then pulled out a newspaper and started to read; as be sat still in his carriage. - The quaker, observing hitn,pttlled a pipe and some tobacco from his pocket, struck a light, and sat and puffed away very eornfortaply. "Friend," said he, "when thou hast read that paper, I should be very glad if thou Wouldst land it'to me.rt The young lean gave up the con- test. iJ 11 Literary Notes. . The March nutuber of the Delineator is called the early spring, number, and commends itself to subscribers as a wondei'i'ully emits plate epitome of what it is to be the vogue in every . department of dress far the coming season. The literary features are of exceptional tetra and the household and sociat discussions marked by a singular quality of originality and utility. 0 Kikusan, the Chrysanthemum Maiden, by Prances Stevenson, a romance of New Japan with an' American as suitor, reveals much of the Japanese woman's home Iifo. Consumption, the first of four papers on The Great Scourges of Iiuinanity, by Dr. Grace Peckeam 'Murray, is a con. elusive treatment of the disease and conditions that 'repel or invite it, Some Woman's . Occupations, by Elizabeth Robinson Scovil, suggests remunerative applications of talents possessed by many women who wish to increase the family income. Go ing to School, in the series The Boy and his Development, by Mrs. Alice Meynell, is a delightful reminder of the rigors of former school days and a sympathetic plea for little fellows of tender age. Eleanor,Georgen's artical on The Cultivation of the Voice—a splendid analysis of emphasis—will be of great value to the student in voice culture. New England women especially will be interested in Club Women and Club Life, by Helen M. Winslow. The Spring Awakening of Nature is the basis of the lessons for March in the new kindergarten papers, by Serail' Miller Kirby. ' College News, by Carolyn Halsted. and Girls' Interests and Occupations,• by Lafayette ItIc- Laws, are fall -of bright, chatty good things. An enjoyable house party is outlined in A Culinary Entertainment, by Grace . Atwood. Of particular hodsehold interest is the group of domestic subjects : Another Chapter. on Soups, Some Crecle Recipes, Cream Deserts and Menus for the Week. The regular departments as usual are replete with entertainipg matter : Sncial Observances, Fancy Stitches and Embroideries, The Dressmaker, Millinery, Knitting, Crocheting, Tatting, The Newest Books, etc Order from. the local agent for But- terick Patterns, or address' The Delineator Publishing Co , of Toron- to, Limited, 33 Richmond St. West, Toronto, Ont. Subscription price of the Delineator is $1 per year, single copies 15 cts. What She'Believes. "I believe Hood's Sarsaparilla ie a good medicine, because I have seen its good effects in the case of my mother. She has taken in when she was weak and her health was poor and she says she knows of nothing better to build her up and make her feel strong." BESSIE M. KNOWLES, Upper Wood Harbor, N. S. HOOD'S PILLS cure all liver ills. Mailed for 25c. by C. I. Hood Sc Co., Lowell, Mass. • A bachelor may have no real happiness, but he escapes a lot of real misery. i After a suspicion is once directed toward a man it is difficult to side track it. lentlgier - raCri4S:w. naw.►,+ ` •a.5.i..1-•u.�.a'...n.a•ad.a.... n .,..:;w,.�.�i.iu] What '0 Castoria is for Infants and Children. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drop; and Soothing' Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by 1tl:illions of + Mothers. Castos;ia destroys Worms and. allays Y'evcrish- ncss. Castoria cures Y3iarrheea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Islatnlcncy. Castoria assimilates the p'ood, regulate:; the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria it} the Children's Panacea -Tele Mother's Friend. Castoria. "Castoria is an excellent medicine for children. Mothers have repeatedly told rue . of its good effect upon their children." Da. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. Castoria. "Castoria 1$ mi Luca minim to children that I recommend it I. eup..riur to ally pre- scription Imtnen to me." It. A. Axcur:n, M. D. Th-ool.•lrn, N. Y' THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF etF' APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. -rHe CSN4n.en COMPANY. 77 Muannv rrneer, fee'! Yoar.' Cr,. v"' wn Ott P•uPtyprii9S R~7E • ry r. tr «`µr37 s.':>7s7,:.r 11,'"H The total income of the British foreign missionary and kindred so- cieties is $8,054,19G. • One of the latest journalistic ventures in Japan is 0 newspaper devoted to the interests of laboring men.. Both well's town clerk • receives a salary of 12. Worms Bothered Baby. "My baby suffered terribly with worme.I used one bottle of Dr. Low's Pleasant Worm Syrup, which accomplished the purpose, tor which it was intended, and cured him." Mrs W M Messmer, Wat- ford, Ont. Milton and Homer were both blind. This i conclusive evidence that out of sight isn't always out of mind.--Ohieago News. MURR.AV LAN FLORIDA WATl Z swentEsT MOST FRAGRANT MOST REFRESHING N. ;( AND riN DURING ON ALL PERFUMES FOR THE issaeaMICHISrs To10ET o,2 A11. iRRRSS1STS, PEREU it lig Argil' c.....•.w:....,....,�a..G.w..,s,..awo.s.wrwa. • --areas OERERAL DEALERS, bhUdrdt'l c. ry for ip j Queen Mary used the first sidd saddle with a ponenlel ever seen in. Scotland. The I3anlc of riamllton has opened[ an office fit Vancouver. ' WE MAKE • Between 7,000 and 9,000 pounds of plug tobacco erre yearly furnished to the penitentiary inmates in Missi- sippi, - The recent cold snap has caused a heavy loss to the oil business in Petrolia and vicinity. WHOES OF S3 A Book for Young and Old. OUR. 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It droves bnw wo can GUARANTEE TO CURE ANY CURABLE CASE OR NO PAY. Wo treat and onro—EMISSIONS VAIi0OCEIrE, SYPHILIS GLEET; (RET 7 TIAINS niiNNATUBAL4 DSIS- CHARGES, KIDNEY and BLADDER disoadcs. - CURES GUARANTEED "The Wages of Sin" sent free by ehelosing 20 stamp. CONSULTATIONQSuncall, write LARfoIOrE TREATMENT. KENNEDY & K ERGAN Cort Michigan Ave, and Shelby Ste DETRorr MICl4. • Sewer and • Culvert Pipes 1 All Sizes &rent 4 in. to 24 in. Also h Connections. WRItE FOR PRICES; TIIE ONTARIO SEWER PIPE CL 060 I-2 ADELAIDE ST. E., VICTORY AT mance. TORONTO aveats had Trade•Mara obtained, and Apia* business conductcd for NODEgg.4T1i PEES. Mir office 0 in the immediate vicinity of the PatentOgiQ, and my facilities for securing patents ire unsurpassed Send model, sketch or photograph of invention, wilt, description and statement as to advantages clamed. A•1-:1ro charge is made for an opsnion asks patentabllt.a , and my fee for prosecuting rho application toile nos be called for ufttillkit patent raliOWed. "INVR%TOR:i' QUID[„" tea. twining foil information scat free. All ColnntuaJ cations Considered as Strictly Confidential.; FRANKLIN H. HOUG 8ss r Sr.mett, titi's'i.91111t7QTON.D: t3O VEAREVI EXPERIENCE TtADE MARKS UEstaNs COPYRIGFiTS-stC. Anyone sending a sketch and description mar" gniakly turortafn oar opinion free whether nel Invention IH prohatly p tte"tehle. Comtnhutra. thins strictly confidential. Handbook on. Patentlt sunt free. Oldest agency for social nr. atente. Pntenta takon throurh Munn .ct co, reeet4ee special t��tootAtite,,qq��without chem. in no n A handsAmoly I11nrtrated weakly. Largest Mr. ciliation of any ndouttan 'i•gnut^nil. Terms. FS e. ear;efatmttrp mouths, Wt. Sold by m..1 newedeeah;7... MUNN Ct; CO,361/trendway, Now Tdrl( Branch Oaice, r,,:5 If lit.. Weahin. on. b.`0.. IT PAYS TO .t .DVERrrxsr IN THE TIMES . ..