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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1899-09-15, Page 3Perfect idols Nee. essary for Perfect Work. A Perfect Medicine is Required far the Building up of Nerve, Tissue and 1esh and for Cleansing the Blood. F Paine's Celery Com- pound the true Disease Banisher anBest health Giver. As well toads and perfeot tools are neo- essary for the ooustruotion of the perfect,. Wonting machine, so is a perfect medicine necesaauy for the establishment of a healthy appetite, complete digestion, regular action of the bowels and other excretory-°rgane, '1'be fact is tirrnly established that Paine's Celery Compound is the only true and reliable medicine fur the perfeot ; rebuilding of worn out tissues, uubraced and weak nerves, wasting flesh attd wan- ing strength, If the poison seeds of dipease have made your blood fowl and sluggish, Paine's Celery Compound will purify and cleanse it, causing the life stream to course healthfully to every part of the body. Ifthe small ills . of life, Buell as headaches, sleeplessness and etomach irregularities make unhappy days for .you, Paine's Celery Compouud will speedily drive away the tormentors. No other medicine ever given to Intel- ligent humanity has bestowed such showers of blessings on individuals and families. Coe single trial will convince you of its won.lerous powers and virtues; It makes people well, and best of all it keeps them well. A Twice Used Stamp. The Galt Reporter says; Mr. Ma• loney, of London, the assistant post office inspector, was in Galt yester- day on rather peculiar and interest- ing business. It appears that some time ago a Gall woman affixed to a letter a postage stamp that had, been. used before. The letter was de- teeted at the local office rid was sent to the dead letter office, where it was opened and the sender's name ascertained. The sequel was -a visit' front Mr. Maloney, who interviewed the lady, and fined her $10, She claimed to have committed the offence in ignorance.° This should be a warning to any who are tempt- ed to get ahead of the government. English ,Spavin Liniment removes all hard, eoft or calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses,, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, Sweeney, Stifles, Spraines, Sore and 'Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonder- ful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by A. L. Hamilton. ' The tug which »went out from Goderich to search for trig survivers of the schooner Lisgar has".returned, and reported thatno traease& tb'e wreck can be found. It is extremely probable that all hands have, perished. Porridge for Pudding that is made from that light, wholesome, • easyso digest Tillson's Flake Barley is often undersalted rather than - oversalted in the mak- ing. A pinch or .two more of salt used even by the best of cooks. • will add just that need- ful touch that may, de• eide you to keep on buying tOlake Harley of your grocer, However, " every woman to her taste "— the pudding or porridge , may be just right as you are making ft now. The Tilton Oo.'10 Limited, Tilsonburg, Ont. Tricksters at Fairs. As the season , of fall fairs ap proaehes it is 'hoped that directors will do all in their power to protect the public from tricksters. A cor- respondent of' the Country Gentle, man has the following timely dig. sertation on the rsubjeet ;— Wherever large nanibers of peel pia gather, a' Blass of persons Is usually round, who make a living by deceiving the nubile. They have eebetnes and tricks innumerable that appear' to ho simple and easy ; but in reality they pre quite difficult, but in some .cases impossible success- fully to perform ; 'they have wheels and Machines that are doetered to run tis the proprietor may wish to make theirs. They have cocoanut headed negro dodgers to arouse the brutality in men and boys. They have tented shows which are dis- gusting in coarseness and vulgarity, Among the throngs at agricultural fairs these leeches are out of place. They contribute nothing helpful or good. They do not add to the at- traction ot• the fair. They are not wanteel. by honest farmers. They are sbunned with fear by, thoughtful parents. Because of their presence, even the fair is not patronized by many -of -our best citizens' families, The harm accomplished by these fakirs, Would . doubtless surprise us, wore it possible to gather and trace back totheir door all the results. of their work, They, distract. .the thought, they divert the attention, they destroy the interest in he real work of the fair, The competitive exhibitors, the merritorious displays,. the awarding of prizes, ate all robbed .of the undivided interest that belongs to them, and which the managers have labored day and night to develop. The morals of the country suffer seriously, I believe, from actions and words that, without warning, are sprgng upon inquisitive audiences in the tent shows. For Over Fifty Years. An Cid and Well -Tried Remedy—Mrs Winsla?v's Soothing Syrup has been used, for over :ifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- ing, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best .senicdy for tliarrhaea, 1t is pleasant to the taste. Sohl by druggists in every part of. the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incaituable. Be sure you .ask ter ;4lrs, Winsfow's Soothing Syrup, and sake no other kind. Dr, C. A. Clinton on Cigarettes. stair. W HA4iY i'11.1ES,y SEPTEMBER 15, WO. t Ten: New and Original Songs W titch Can Re Had Free, ! w hat will the great metropolitan pa- pers do next? This le thequeation Bowe one asks nearly Avery day, But there is etre wbicb leads all Obese. It has Rain- ed the sobriquet of"America's Greatest Newspaper" by just such remarkable ' Ocoee of enterprie.e as the one which has suet now attruoted the atttention of the press all over the country. Lust week the New York Sunday World announcer] that it would give away an album of new and original tun- sia, eoneisting of ten of the up•to•date class of songs that are now so popular, such as songs of sentiment, ":soon" songs, "cakewalks," cFo. These ten songs the ' Sunday World proposes to distribute one eaoh week, with every copy of theSun- day World, When it is considered that the average price of new ntueio, written' I and composed by popular authors, is I from 30 to 95 vents, the unparalleled en- , terprise of The World in giving the song away with a Sunday newspaper, for which only 5 cents =barged,isapparent. The World requests that we publish the following announcement: A musio Album Pree, From Sept. 3 to Nov, 5, the Sunday World will issue weekly a song in sheet music form, with handsome colored cover. The entire set will bemailed,postage paid, for 50e. Re- mittances received after Sept. 3 will get the back numbers and each new number issued, Besides the song, The World will also send its. colored Art Portfolio, which is a marvel. of journalism; its Sun-• day Magazine, whioh equals the monthly periodicals, and its Comic Weekly, which excels every oon.io weekly in the United States except two, and in its comic scope equals these two 10•cent publications. Write a postal card to the Sunday , World Muiira Editor, Pulitzer Buildigg N. Y., for a list of the songs. • Dr. C. A. Clinton, of the San Fran- cisco Board of Education, has been making a special study of the cigar- ette smoking among the public school. ebil.dren and expresses himself in the following forcible language : —"A. good deal has been said about the evils of cigarette smol'ing, but one half the truth has never been told. I have watched this thing for some time, and I say calmly and deliber- ately that cigarette smoking is as bad as opium smoking. A cigarette fiend will lie and steal just at mor- phine or opiums fiends will lie or steal. Cigarette smoking blunts the whole moral nature. It has an appaling effect upon the system. It first stimulates and then stupefies the nerves. It sends boys into On: sumption. It gives , them• enlarge - merit of the heart, and it sends them into the asylum, .I am a. physician to several boy schools and I am often called in to prescribe for palpitation of the heart. Innine eases out of ten it is caused by the eigarette habit," Immediate Relief. - Mr. 11. M. Kemp, 2® Brunswick Ave., Toronto. writers : "I have used Mil - burn's Rheumatic Pills for Rheuma- tism. I was so bad that I had to be assisted in getting out of bed, The pills gave immediate relief, and atter using one box the pain left and has not returned since." A little sixteen-months•nld ebild the daughter of eJ McGeehan, who lives on the farm of W. A. Harwood, of East Z rra,, had a terrible experience tuts other day.- The youngster had taken a stroll through Mr. Harwood's yard, coming in contact with a soya r w i h at once at-- tacked t- t on s htc t cke the littlegirl, When assist- ance arrived the sow bad the baby in her mouth, shaking her violently, RS a terrier would •a rat, If assist• ance had not been close at baud the little tott would doubtless have been devoured try the brute. But as it was the baby escaped with a few scratches, Children Cry for CASTOR 1. is Frances Willard's Monument. It will be interesting to every Wbite Ribboner to know sometbing. of the appearance of' the place where the ashes of Frances Willard and her mother rest, The stone selected by Miss Gordon to be placed at he • head of the grave, is a. small boulder of .granite,. brought from a Vermont quarry near the childhood homes of.. Miss 'Willard's father and mother. The front is smoothed to receive the inscription, but the rest . of the blue grave stands in its native beauty just as it came •from the Vermont hills, Side by side on the stone's face are the names of mother and daugh- ter with the dates of' their birth into the earthly and heavenly life. Be. low the mother's name is the title by which she was familiary and fondly known, "Saint Courageous," followed by the words, among the last she uttered, "1 should like to pronounce a benediction on the whole.world." Below Miss Willard'sname is "Founder of the World's Christian Temperance Union." "She made the world wider for women and' inore homelike for humanity." How beautiful to be with God. ,Diamond Dyes Can't Be Washed Out - With Soapsuds. When any article. or erarment is dyed with the Diamond Dyes no amount of washing with soapsuds can le the alight - est degree weaken the color. No other dyes in the world are as strong, brilliant and unfading its the Diamond Dyes. Plain Directions on. each package tells how each dye is used, and the whole work is so simple that even a child can use them with profit and success, As there are vile invite. tions of Diamond Dyes, 'see that your dealer gives you exactly - what you ask Por. , To Save Your Teeth. People who are victims of teeth that crumble and acquire cavities readily, may • do much toward checking this dental decay by the use of a simple remedy. An'author- ity says a bottle of milk of magnesia should be kept on the washstand, and each night after brushing the teeth just before retiring, some of it should be held in the Wdti b far a minute, that it ii,ay reach each side of every tooth, 13y this process a coating of magnesia is formed over the sensitive enamel, which is thus protected from the action of the acids that forth in the mouth during sleep. The magnesia: will remain on the teeth for three or fottr hours. Washing the mouth with a', solution of bieairbonate of soda after eating some fruits or salads is recommended by dentists, as the soda, like the magnesia,: counteracts the injurious effects of the acids upon the enamel. Cured of Lczenza. I was troubled for several week) with Eczema and tried several doctors but to no purpose. Then I was advised to use 13ufdock Blood Bitters, and did so with the greatest suecest;, as aix bot`ties en• tirely eared toe, Wm. (3, trulow, ]'ort Hope, Ont. . _ E R SSING B•UG, MR, JQLN LZVINGSTONE, MR, JOHN DI;ARtiESs' OPINION oIi Tim 1ttYSTB8Y.. "Ilave you heard much or env - thing of the kissing bug in your.. Listowel, Sept. 6.--Mr.John Lfv Ali EI,MEIR SMOTHER. OR 'rB FAMOUS AFRICAN RF.PbORER DIES AT' L1S'BowEL. travels through the country?" was ingstone died at his home here to• • • Charles Watson, aged 70, dm dead ws the roadway at Guelph. On Wednesday at St. Mary's a 13• year-old son of Robert Mears was caught in thebeltint .nf.I, D. Moore's planing drill and his right arra cult asked of Mr. John nearness, public night in the 89th year of his age. -- .-. - school inspector for East Middle- Mr. Livingstone was the last surviv- ing urviv.ing member .of the family of Dr, sex. "Yes; I have heard of one or two Livingstone, the African explorer, cases," and was two years older than bis. "Then you think it has reached fa.weus brother. There was a these parts," strung gamily resemblanee between "Yes; it is probably as prevalent the two brothers, and they maintain. here as anywhere else in this soil.- ed an intimate correspondence until rude," I the doetur's death. Mr. Livingstone • "What of the instances that have f here treasured many letters and come ander your notice?" personal mementoes sent him by his have no personal knowledge of brother from Africa. The deceased, them, only hearsay. One was the John Livingstone, was the eldest case of a young lady who had been soli of \ell Livingstone, of Blantyre, trying a new face powder- It is Scotland, where. ne was born on the supposed the cosmetic attracted the 15th of platy, 1811. He was married kissing bug, Another was that of a in Scotland in 1834 to Sarah Mac• young man who came to the city kenzie, who predeceased him in ostensibly to play baseball and bee 1 Listowel nearly nineteen rears ago. the street cars, When he returned. 'He carne to Canada in 1840, and a day or two later both lips were lived in Lanark for twenty years, badly swollen. He attributed it et engaged in mercantile business. He the the bug. His case was quite a canoe to Perth county in 1860, start a serious one; his left eye, too, had ing a genet al store in the then small been effected ae,d had been poulticed hamlet. ' He was among the largest with beefsteak, A third case ealne merchants of the place, and built up under the notice of one of the city a large t ed prosperous trade. Air. physicians recently?" Livingstone indulged his fondness "How can you tell it? What is fur travelling for many years, peculiar about it?" spending his summers among his "Its chief peculiarities are its friends in Scotland, and of late great variation in form and size and passing the winters with his sons on the secrecy with,svhich it does the the Pacific coast, his last trip to the work, If, as seldom happens, the coast being in the winter of 18'35, victim should be awakened by the The surv`itting members of his family; are:—Mr. Neil Livingstone, Rock- woe•d, Out.; i)r, Henry Livingstone, Califeruta; Alas. J. W. Scott, Listowel; Mr, John Livingstone, jr,, Listowel, and Mr:\ •Ct;arles Living- stone, Seattle For the past eight years he has made his home with his son in Listowel. Htz was entirely free trout pain or disease of any kind, enietly sleeping away and conscious to the last. He bad been a titan of vigorous constitution, and, in spite of his great . age. was of 'retire habits 'until . his strength began to fail hint in the spring, since I ivilictt time be gradually sank until I the enc1 cause, His wide reading, his travels, his fund of anecdotes, his quiet and genial humor and the k?rrelncs, of his heart made him a most .et:tertatining and agreeable eompanit.n, and he was held in general tateetn for his honorable and manly characteristics. He was a Liberal and an elder of Knox t l,na eh, Listowel. osculation and,get.up • and light a lamp and search around the bed and in the corners of the room she may find the bug, but it is useless to des- cribe it, because the description would be so. unlike all the others that are going the rounds of the papers. A French journal in Mont. real, La Presse, on the 8th ult., in formed its readers that it was re- ceiving a large number of insects ('an timbre incalculable des bestioles') with inquiries whether they were the kissing bug. It answered all- its correspondents in the negative,.stating that the only and authentic kissing bug is black, it measures an inch in length and its body resembles that of the bee, and adding that it has not yet made its appearance in Canada. Seven days later the same journal announc- ed that the kissing bog had appear- ed in Montreal and environs in large numbers; and two days later it described a presumed kissing bug from Sherbrooke, two and a . half inches in length. Simnl- taneously another French paper, La Petrie, published an 'image veritable' of the kissing bug, and, lo and be hold l it proved to be a butterfly. It may be that some sleepers have been bitten by the bed -bug hunter (Opsicoetus) a dark -colored bug, about three fourtbs of an inch in length and one•third as wide, which preys upon bedbugs and other in sects, and which has a sharp, strong beak capable of making a deep puncture Tills bug is more fie gnently seen in its younger stages. when it may easily be recognized by the gray dusty covering that cin teals its true •color. One has hoard of bed -scum in which if there bad s , been more such kissing bugs the oc- cupants would have enjoyed less de; tubed slumber. Dr. Murray -Aaron contributed to a • recent number of the Seientiris American an account, of his efforts to corner the kissing bug Three out of forty reported cases he traced to the black•lsgged. Mclanblestes, which he says, is no eoinnioner this .year than usual, around the electric lights in the parks." "Then you seem to think the kiss ing bug is somewhat of a myth ?" • "I think it is a 'mythical genu. the interest itt which centres around the discovery of •the originator. 1 seems to be either a pretty fletion ' •f Washington society or the invention of a disehurged war correspondent ' -• -London Advertiser. 1 Stiff" Joints 4 3r'oars. Mr. Arthur f3yrus, Rook ]till, Our.. writes: "I was laid up with Atilt join: Li for about four years and oould'get no :fa lief until .1 used three bottles t f Hagyard's Yellow Oil which, elated bei . Chatham has granted exemption brewery,to'C anew havea J 00• tor barrel capaerty. e Mr. Will. Perry, t3lenbeiitt, Ont., says: "I can recommend. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup ne the very best medioine;tor coughs, Colds, sore throat Mid weak ]tinge." Js.Yt�a,.:.rt'•--- .sae.:. _-- :wc! !.' 3, sc... .. ir�'�.9. „J d� ,'��,�„ ,, �'''• '�..r'-.1:• -t "'1'!•t1Pt but to Appearances," but put pour ruin in Hood's Sarsaparilla, which n'"'' ••lt.rpittiryir•, 11 is the best ui •,l+• in- ill• u. -y , An bite',. tt CARTERS'''. ;TILE ERJ ELLS r'ositively cured by ];hese Little I'i.xla. Ther also relieve Distress front Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. tress, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Strvaali Pill. Cmctl Cliaatyda Small Pricod Substitution the fraud of iho day. See you get Carter's, Ask: for Carter's, Insist and demand. Carter's Little Liver Pills. A- Paying Business. There is no singer in the world who can draw more than a $12,000 house. There is no orator who can much raise the $1 admission fee without exposing himself to the danger of speaking to empty beneh. es. If the four most popular debaters selected by popular vote would advertise a discussion on any question of the day, they would be. fortunate if an audience could be gathered which would net each 111,000. Yet it was stated that there was 80,000 in the box office of the Coney Island club house on the night when Robert Fitzsimmons and James Jeffries met to see which could punch the other the hardest and which could stand the most punishment. The best of any class of performers always represents a mnnes' value, but the . best lighter cart ies err the largest, prize. Mr. G. 0. ARCHIBALD'S CASE. Didn't Valk for 5 Months. Doctors said Locomotor Ataxia. M , Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills Cure a Disease hitherto regarded as Incurable. The case of Mr. G. O. Archibald, .of Hopewell Cape, N.B., (a cut of wliom appears below), is one of the severest and most intractable that has ever been lt,tl,I reported f -mil the eastern provinces, and Itis cure by Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills the more remarkable from the fact that he was given up as incurable by worthy and respected physicians. '1 The disease, locomotor Ata+cia, wit. t Which Mr. Archibald was afflicted is considered the most obstinate' and incur- able disease of the nervous system known. When once it starts it gradually but surely progresses, paralyzing- the lower extremities and rendering its vic- . thn helpless and hopeless, enduring the indescribable agony of seeing himself die • by inches. That Milburn's heart and Nerve Pills can core thoroughly and completely a disease of such severity ought to encour- age those whose disorders are not so serious to try this remedy. The followingis ]Mfr. Archibald'slotter: J MESSRS. T. MILBUaN & Co.—"I can assure you that my case was a very severe one, and had it not been for the use of Milburn's heart and Nerve fills I do not believe I would be alive to -day. I do. not know, exactly, what was the cause of the dise=ase, but it gradually affected my legs, until 1 was unable. to walk hardly any for five months. "l: was under the care of Dr. 'Morse, of Melrose, who said I had Locomotor+ Ataxia, and gave me ul, as incurable. " Dr. Solomon, a wolf lcnowtt physician of Boston, told mo that nothing could be done for me. Every one who came to visit me thought I never could get better. "I saw Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills advertised and thought I would try them anyway, as they 'gave more pro - raise of helping inethaitany thingIknew of. " If you had seen me when I started taking those wonderful pills --not able to get out of my roots, and saw me now, working hard every day, you wouldn't know me. " I arm agent for P. 0. Vickey, of Augusta Maine, and have sold soo sub- scribers in 8o days and won a fifty dollar prize. "Nothing else in the world savers me but those pills, and I do not think they c have an equal anywhere. " The seven boxes exes I took have restored ma the full use of my lens and given me strength and energy and batter health. than 7 have enjoyed in a long time." 0. 0. Artexinun. Hopewell Cape, N. D. In addition to the statement by Mr. Archibald, we have the endorsation of two well-known anerchunts of Hopewell Cape, N. B., viz.; Messrs. 3. E. Dickson and P. 3. lrewster, who certify to the genuhtetiessand accuracy of'tire facts as given above. Milburn's Heart and, Nerve Pills are me..a box, ora for Sees, at all drug gists,. or sent by mail. T. Milburn ,7c Co., Toronto, Ont.