HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1899-09-01, Page 3tilvIlopi Muscles
STRONG NEW ANO PURE
BLOOD MARK THE STRONG
AND HEALTH,
Pain'sQ.1;iiry
Bestows All These Blessings.
Well developed muscles and strong
nerves belong only to healthy and
vigorous men and wotnen.
Paine's Celery Ccmpc.und. will give
the weak and sickly full muscular power
strong nerves,pure blood and fall digest-
ive vigor, It will do more to counteract
the on -corning of Ili health, sickness
and disease than any other medioine in
the world.
In an untold number of .cases where
other remedies have failed. Paine's'
Celery Compound has brought about
the wished for -results, making old and
young happy and j.>yous in the possess.
ion of sound health.. It is criminal for
any intelligent man or woman to con-
tinue suffering from disease that Paine's
Celery Compou,ac3 is able to banish.
Honest and able. physicians, the trusted
family druggist, clergymen, members of
parliament, and the best people of Can-
ade, recommend Pains's Celery Com-
pound with pleasure and satisfaction.
One Who Suffers,
"One who suffers," *rites from
London. towuship the following sen-
sible letter ; —"keys the voice of the
'thresher.' is heard in the land, and
the dread of the farmer's wife, the
monstrous dinner to be prepared is
on her mind. Ono of those who
knows hew it is herself raises her
voice in behalf of her kind to pro-
pose some relief, if possible, which
is for . the manager (t' a machine to
employ a cook who will furnish,
prepare and serve the threshers'
dinner at a reasonable rate, furnish-
ing dishes and -tables, serving it out
under the trees, so taking out of the
farmers' wiles' lifeone bugbear,
and certainly any farmer who can
afford to have threshing done can
afford to pay" for a wholesome plain.
dinner for the men for the sake of
saving the housewife that . added
burden ofwhich there is need of
reliefinstead of addition. Let us
patronize the thresher who includes
a. cook in his outfit.
Wliey for Fattening Hogs.
One of our cheese factories . which
makes from 120 to 140 tons of cheese
ina season utilizes all the whey in
growing and fattening hogs, of which
it keeps about 400 during the busy
season.. This prevents what is one.
cause of trouble .at some cheese fac-
tories --sending home sour whey in
the milk cans which taints the next
day's milk. The piggery is situated
at a distance of 600 to 700 feet from
the factory and kept as clean as
possible, that it may not give off
offensive odors to taint the milk,
Porridge ;of
Pudding'
that is made from
t li lit, wliolesom
so digest test Tiels s
.Barley is ten.
ted rat than
in a mak-
ny L or two
sa ed even
Ua e n
of. cooks ,
Just •t need.
•ch that i"y de•
+,, = you to ke _ on
yfng t'lake Ba' ey
of your grocer.
However, " every
woman' to her taste "—
the pudding or porridge
May he jest light as
you are making ituoly.
g
ea d
Fla
under
overeeth
ing. A
more of
by the '
will a
fel t
Ci
The Tinton Oa'y Limited,
Tilsonburg, Oat. •
M,A.I"1 WING ERVIT TREE$>. slow Trams.
11'I1Sl3' TIfl % NEED A.1 EXTRA Al?VbI-
oATIaN Or SOLUBLE I.T'fT* LIfffS
]tis a great advantage to trees I
that have blossomed freely and set
mueli fruit to give them sutra
applications of soluble manures, at
the saute time applying water
enough to carry the fertilizer where
the roots: eau get it. Most fruit'
trees suffer from leek of water in
the sail during the season when they
are forming the seeds, The chief
requisite for the shells of all stone
fruits is potash. Bet it requires a
great amount of water in the soil to
enable the roots to; use it. Trees
get but little benefit from the average
'summer rains, as they only wet
downa few inches, and under the
foliage the ground is often almost
dry after a heavy shower, the
leaves absorbing . and holding so
much of it, This watering of bear-
ing trees will not, however, make
unnecessary the thinning of fruit
where the setting has been too
large, If one-half the frait is re-
moved before the seeds begin to
firm, what is left will develope into
much finer specimens than can be
secured without thinning. A bear-
ing tree never makes so much wood
growth as one that is not bearing.
By thinning the fruit each year the
tendency to grow foliage and wood
rather than fruit is checked, and
most trees which , bear only every
other year may thus be trained to
the habit of annual bearing, thus
giving crops when the fruit is dear
as well as when it is only a drug on
the market,—American. Cultivator.
Slow railroad trains are probably
not peculiar to any locality. The
story of .the conductor who waited
for the hentocomplete the dozen of
eggs for the market is a part of the
folklore of widely diverse regions, j.
There used to run over a Vermont
road—and also, it may be remarked,
over a Wisconsin road—what was
known as the "huekleberry train,"
the jebt being that it was80 slow
that passengers could jump off at
the front end of the train and .piclt
huekle"berries for awhile and then
get on at the rear and of the train as
it came up.
The engineer • of the 'Vermont
train of this title is imaginatively 1
declared to have shot two partridges i
one day from his cab, which the
fireman "retrieved" without any
additional "slowing up."
Cured of Eczema.
I was troubled for several years with
Eczema and tried several doctors but to
no purpose. Then .I was advised to use
Burdock Blood Bitters, and did so with
the greatest success, as six bottles en-
tirely cured toe. Wm. (x. Uglow, Port
Hope, Ont.
THE HEA.T1-I'EN CAN WAIT.
A SQUATTER'S IDM OF WHERE
Q XSHOULD
iLtRIT BEGIN.
The other day an olcl squatter
came to the city and attended divine
services at a fashionable church,
The old fellow listened with.. rapt
attention to the sermon, occasionally
nodding inapproval or shaking his
head in uncertainty. When a man
with the contribution boy approach=
ed, the squatter asked
"What's up ?"
"We are taking up a collection for
the heathen, and as you seemed to
be 'so much interested'in the sermon
k didn't know but you would like to.
give a few dimes."
"What's the matter with • the
heathen ?"
"Why, :he doesn't know Anything
about the gospel; and we want to
raise money enough to send it to
him."
"Wall, I tell yer, I don't think'
hell spile. afore .mornin. I've got a
boss swap on hen, an of I ken get
'nuff boot come exoup an we'll sorter.
took inter the matter"
?Bat, my 'friend,the heathen
children need clothes,"
"So does mine, by jingo. Bill
ain't worn nuthin but a shirt for six
months an baster stay outen perlite
society. Ike's got a vacancy in his
britches biggern 3er ha"
an Jack
baster stay under the house when a
Istranger conies, 'case be got his
clothes scorched durin hog killin.
Come aroun tarter the swap, fur I
don't .think the heathen will spile
atore mornin."—Arkansas Traveller.
Rheumatism Can't. Exist
Wben the kidneys are kept healthy
and vigorous by the use of Dr. A. W.
Chase's Kidney -Liver er
'v Pills. It is, uric
acid left in theblood by defectivkid,
heya that causes rheumatism, Dr. A,
W. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills imake
the ktdneys strong and active in their
j, work of filtering the blood and thus re-
move the cause of rheumatism. One
pill a dose, 25 cents a box.
Immediate Relief.
Mr. II, M. Kemp, 209 Brunswick Ave,,
Toronto, writes: "I have used Mil -
burn's Rheumatic Pills for Rheuma-
tism. I was so bad that I tied to be
assisted ingetting out of bed. The pills
gave immediate relief, and after using one
box the pain left and has not returned
since."
Throw Out ;he Lite -Lute.
• A. gospel song, much sung by Mr.
Sankey when be and' Mr. Moody
were on their last campaign through
England and Seotland,` and one
which met instant favor everywhere,
was "Throw Out the Lite -Line"
Particularly along the coast where
the sight and story of ship wrecks
were best known and. it was exceed-
ing popular. The Rev. Edward S.
Ufford, the author •of this Anions
song, was born at Newark, NA.,
and reared in Conneticut. His first
charge wasea yEast Auburn, Mass.,.
where his mini ey .v is very success-
ful. He is: noinns v ''at Dedham, Mass,
Mr. Ufford is ally inclined, and
has composed' a i'gtrge number of
gospel sozigs. His fame, however, is
based g"n the one song, "Throw Out
the Lice-Lioe."
A day at Nantaskett on the coast of
Massaehusetts where the author saw
for the first time the life -lime with its
silken threads, and had explained to
him its use,..was the inspiration for
this production. A schooner was
thrown by the raging elements on
the coast, and there it lay exposed to
the bitter blast and the icy waves,
all the while,bnmping and threaten-
ing to go to pieces every minute.
Soon the wreckers came, joined
by willing hands. They . could see
through the breakers the large
schooner and the eight men and one
woman which comprised the crew.
They were holding on for their lives
amid the blinding snow and the
fearful gale. The lifeline was shot
out towards the vessel; but the dis-
tance was .:too great, Again and
again it fell too short of the doomed
eraft, but at last a shot was fired
which went over the vessel, and
with loud cheers those on the shore
began preparations to•haul the ship-
wrecked ones in. "Throw Out the
Life -Line," was a' title that struck
him instantly. He went home, took-
the pencil ' and 'wrote the words in
ten minutes, then seating himself at
the instrument he seemed to play
the mihsie at once as if by inspiration,
and thus it was the song was born.
It has. been sung around the world,
and Mr. Sankey says of it that it
has been the most used gospel hymn
of any produced during the past ten
years.
Road Maintenance.
Aver's Pill
Without proper care the most ex-
pensive road may go to ruin in a
few years and the initial pxppense ot'
constructing it be nearly lost. It is
of great importance, therefore, that
in every mnnieipallty a _ regular
system of inapeetion and repair
should be provided, They do not
only wear out, but wash out and
freeze our. Water is the' greatest
road destroyer, ,
It is necessary, to the proper
maintenance of a road, that it should
"erown1' or be higher in the middle
than at the sides. Alit is flat in the
centre it soon becomes coneave, and
its middle becomes a pool or mud -
hole, if on a level, or a watercourse
if on an ineiine,
A hollow, rut or puddle should
never be allowed to remain, but
should be evenly filled and tramped
with the same niateriat of which the
surface Was originally constructed..
A 'rake should be freely used, es-
pecially in_ removing stones, lumps
'
t
Car ridges. It
us v ma be avo'ded by
Y
using wide tires on all wagons'%ilia.
carry heavy loads. If this is no
Outspeeded the Swallow.
A swallow is considered one of the
swiftest of flying birds, and it was
thought until a short time ago that
no insect could escape it.
A naturalist tells of an, exciting
chase he saw between a swallow
and a dragon fly, which is among
the swiftests of inseets.
The insect flew with incredible
k speed and wheeled and dodged with
1 such ease that the swallow, despite
its utmost efforts, completely failed
to overtake and capture it,
Children r. for
C
Y
C�ISTO�i 1�4»
t
E'.
•k
are
ofr
so far as perfection can.bc .attained. They mark the highest point in pili
progress. To many people, any pill is a fit pill, and so long as it acts
they don't .consigner whether there's any recoil in the action. Dynamite
has a very moving effect, and so has an earthquake, but the consequences
that follow are apt to be disastrous. There are pills as damaging as
dynamite and as dangerous as an earthquake. Dr. Ayer's Pills are
Perfect in 'repar:� ti
Perfect in Operk:tbn,
C "1'
• and their use is not followed by violent reaction. A grain of sand stops
a watch. You don't use blasting powder to eject the grain and start the
. mechanism going again..the machinery of the body is more fearfully
greater delicacyin
11 than watch and needs even
and wonderfu y made ha i a,
dealing with it. Ayer's Pills give just the necessary stimulus to start the
bowels into healthy action. They correct the ill -conditioned liver and
give a healthy tone to the stomach. Thus they cure dyspepsia, sick
headache, heartburn, constipation, piles, and all diseases that grow out of
the disordered condition of the liver, stomach, or bowels.
"" Ayer's Pills are the best cathartic I ever used in my practice."
J. T. SPARKS, M. D., Y eddo, Incl.
""I don't know of anything that will' so quickly relieve and cure the. terrible suffering of
dyspepsia as Ayer'8 Pills."" JOHN C. PRITCIIARD, Brodie,. Warren Co,, N. C.
Ayer's Pills do' their work efficiently and do not gripe nor make one sick like so many
other pills." JOHN M. small, Atlanta, Ga.
"" Although mild in action and less liable to gripe than other purgatives, Ayer's Pills are
thorough in operation and can always be relied on to cure diseases of the stomach or
bowels." PETER J. DUFFY, Rockport, Tex.
""After twenty years' experience, I know that Ayer's Pills are an absolute cure for tertian
ague, btlious fever, sick headache, flux, dyspepsia, constipation and hard colds"
J. O. WILSON, Contractor and Builder, Sulphur Springs; Texas.
"" We always used Ayer's Pills in my father's family. I am now: fifty-five years old and
always have them in the house because I have found no better pill than Ayer's,"
MARY JACO SUS, 711 E. Chestnut St„ Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
possible
.r
possible the Horses should be hitt bed
so that they will walk cti I} in
front of the wheels. This can be
accomplished by malting the double
or wiilletree of suet' ti 1" ngth that
the ends may be in line with the
waggon wheels. A horse will not
walk in a rut unless compelled to do
so, and, consequently, if all horses
were hitched in this way nits would
eventually disappear from stone
roads.
t
If stones are cracked on a road
with a hammer, a bumutll surfau'e" is
out of the question. Use stone clips
in repairing stone ricins, mid re
luemlier that all Torii, n In:aerial!
and rubbish will thin 11 e best road,'
and that dust and mud will double'
the east ofmainteit,tnew. Ordinarily!
the chief work done by country
people on highways is repairing the,
'damage 'resulting. from neglect.
Laxa-Liver Palls uu1•ta biliousness, siolt
headache, constipation, dyspepsia. st>nr
stomach, watrtr beam, 8411-wr nom plevton,
I ate. They do not gripe, weaken or
1 sicken. Small a..d sum to take.
Buckwheat in Orchards.
•
There is no grain crop that f a n 1m
grown in orchards til better anew,
tage than buckwheat. It is nor, ex
leaves t'
tdv and
its broad le
1 e. .
haus e
the soil that it does not 'make Ise
bind dry as o`her grain crops d
t
Besides, one of the effects of book
svl Pat' g'rowing' is to keep the soil
mellt•w su 'h>tt every rein will soak
into the soil instead of t" �� alindng' on
top surface until winds,.t;rl sun dry
out the moisture. It is thrr practice
of some orchardists to sew buck•
wheat in orchards two or three
times each ear, plowing under the
growth ae sunn as it was in blossom
or before. This fills the sail with
vegetable matter, milking it very
''orris it often turns the beck
� growthwet
vzl.tttoh Manic c
I
winter fnhnws.
.9.tdrlin, Insul' to Injury.
"Yes, sir. it i`+ ,it','lii1�' insult t't
injury," said voting 11r, Tl'nhlewoeel'
warmly. "Th >t's ,list wlnit it is!"
"What is adding Insult ,o injury?"
demanded w'utur Nei'. Point Breeze.
` Or, rather, who i, doing this thing?
"Mis.i Murrey 11111 ()nl',' 1t iennii
a,go she rerntaed Me " lfer i f in rri:ige. 1
aiidl to day she sends we Nil inviti"
'Lon t'' u1•' her arra t :rantllt'r.
shall bol e'ntnell•"I 1'r :.••1,11 "'r
h,11d ee.0. ter •" w...i1i"t,, ,•:t' e'i ••n
If that iy 1n' ill; it'' to in; il' ,
ti so''. k rev, whit 't. 1 "
Mr Wn>, Fer'y, Blenheim, Ont.,
tea's •1 a"tt room' mend Dr. Wood's
N wi as the 'ver beet
ti> Pine �
m r••cin e,* court rhe, Colds, tore throat
and we rk len
A Tardy Warning.
"Lnnk out!" he cried, for the
Advo" cirg vehicle was almost upon
1'•• 1' i' tel. "Look out 1 Here comes,
in alt se., Hit muter auto, an automq•
cur. n t.hiie-- there, hang it 1 'I've
,ails it. err. "tst, hut of course it's too
":f r•• :net he picked the bleeding
•• "" + f 1 is cv mnanion fare the
,.,•, t ars he wet. lied the maehifie
:• •,c • es a n' licenlun and erabeh to
;HI
et- 1r+ il'k ut of a streetcar.
• ti thine: fur the doctors," be
,:fill, ''titre#ss you've got your
i'lieaf'tin.y pith *you,'
+iri.e.1ri v ANIi,'l.. 1 Poi I'•i ;t,1P1, Atil•
A ti a,nwM 01 Ada r Itewe, ' •• •n+ittC,
t,'e r.'9t (1,"al peril t" 1.11• r •, +'1.' 1 i••
r ,
tn.l. P '.,l 1,11 •+imlr„ nt talo ., rr n a t 1 1. nit -
tituP .aha tow ho .k ., • ° ••, • , . aebt i,r••iU!s
n 'v loop •r.'•• i, drt Also', 'i • •. r1n1%' 51.G"
One Dose
Tells the story. When your head
aches, and you feel bilious, consti-
pated, and out of tune, with your
stomach sour and no appetite, lust
buy a package of
• Mood's Pis
M: r, ,,•m. ,i,,,, nut ally ,,, 1' • .q. ",.p
r"r,n " t" oe t "'1 *i , ,r u . ail,. 9 lla•k rho bouttnie:. •
Clotnptay SA None Caxton >lid,t., t,a,lsaco.
And take as dose, from 1 to 4 1>111s.
You win be surprised at how easily
they will tie their work, Sur
b yonr.
headache and biliousness, rouse the
happy a
liver and make you ft.t9 I Py ,. aiti,
tae
..v cents, sold u,'
all tnedkl ie d uicrs
441s
1.