HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1900-02-16, Page 2TI -IE WINGIIAM TIMES, FEBRUARY it two.
Sixteen t'it-+uperat.•vd+ bakeries iii Scot- Winter Satter Supply. 7'bu Slugs* Oreoteet Cru, o. • with at ;Rosh;, udder.
hence nave a teen d Yat d.i` twee ee,b00,000 a Expert observers of the taunts of the, . "The greatest eurae of slurudon is un- more susceptible to
year. butter trade are of the opinion that the questionably the low saloon were sten Fannon pay toe 1
Pa'iu in the bowers, Dierrhove anti
Dysentery are eared. more quickly awl
t+iied'tuttil v by 13r. Fowler's 1 ..traet of
"v ilei Stat wberry :Wei any other remedy.
Beware of t+tlbeiitntes.
Out in St. Joseph, llt'o.. a bounty of
41000 has been offered to the police for
every Int etewayrnen that is killed.
Notre. After, Wood's Phoepboainet
The Great Rngliah Remedy.
Sold and recommended by all
druggists in Canada. Only reit.
able medicine discovered. Six
packages guaranteed to cure all
forms of Sexual Weakness, all effects of abutto
or excess, Mental worry, Excessive use of Ta-
bs, Opium or Stimulants, mailed on receipt
of price, one ackage 41, six, 45. One tad Meese,
whew**Owe.pramphlets free to any address.
The Wood Company, Windsor, Qnt.
Sold la Wingh<aw uy Cain At. Campbell
Druggist.
These pills are a specific for all
diseases arising from disordered
nerves, weak heart or watery blood.
They cure palpitation, dizziness,
smothering, faint and weak spells,
shortness of breath, swelling of feet
and ankles, nervousness, sleepless-
ness, anaemia, hysteria, St. Vitus'
dance, partial paralysis, brainfag,
female complaints, general debility,
and lack of vitality. Price 5oc. a box.
A TVJICE TE TAL
A St. Thomas Lady in May, '97, Told
How Doan's Kidney Pills Cured
Her of Backeloseand Mack Her
Strong .•..d stealthy.
In a recent le' • -- ••'• + tells how she has
enjoyed ttivc • :.c half years of splendid
liealth—free ..,m pain or suffering.
There are. . y few remedies now on
the market Lea wille stand the test of
time. All they dais to give temporary
relief. They never go to the. seat of the
trouble and root it out of the system.
Not so with Doan's Kj.diney Pills.
Their action on the Kidneys is of a
permanent curative character, alto-
gether unlike any of . the substitutes or
cheap. imitations. '
One strong proof of this is the two
statements made by Mrs. E. W. Trump,
of St. Thomas, Out.
The Era of these, made May 10th,
1897, is as follows. "When I commenc-
ed taking Dean's Kidney Pills I was
sick era miterubll,' with severe pains in
my back a_ ki+,ueys. I was also very
weak and n.ervous. Since using these
pills the reins have been rcmated, my
nerves hove been strengthened and good
health has been restored to me: They
are a $ :ienaid medipine for Wiley
:f
troubles , any kind,''
The second statement which we give
below is of recent date,' and shows what
splendid health Mrs, ,Trump has . had
Since P!'r-i',i W'dliinr: Pills erred her
eve t', -
"Over tee years age .;r; t' tellit:g of
the cure made in any case by :Moan's
Kidney Pills. At the, present time I am
enjoying the very best of health, sleep
well, Eat well and any old enemies,-
backache
nemies;backache :ind kidney trouble have never
returned. Instead of misery and a
broken down constitution, I have for the
past two years enjoyed a fresh sense of
the valne and beauty pf life."
1
wiuter make will be matslia1ly curtail-
ed, says the Breeder's Gazette. Certain
it is that greater demands base Leen
made at this season upon the se ld stor-
age stock of ,summer goods than for
years past, and a general survey of the
' field develops the fact that in the stttes
of greatest butter production conditions
as such as warrant the conelusiou that
not oven with favorable weather -will the,
! output be up to ant average. Clearly the
adv. Itee in prices of beef cattle has had
1 its effect in discontinuing dairying operas-
" tions on quite a number of farms, arid
creameries are greatly in need of a larger
I milk supply. At the present time the
price of the best creameries show.; au
advance of f emits a pound over values
current a year ago, and this fact ought
to have some itithienlee iln stimulating
milk T•roduetiu. Bat else trouble in
many sections is a leek of cows, as they
have gone to the bane:Tr.
I.;16,y!nn:ttl and its heist.
Writes a private of Sir George NV/either
fordo:• -"],ea en t en i:irty, islthy holes,
commune, me to Ladysmith. Nothing
but (lest storms, day in and day out. Ia
fact I ate more dust thau rations. The
last night we lay there was a peau: y.
We struck camp in theafternoon, bivou-
acked out at night. About six p. n:,,
the wind seemed to collect to !sive s a
parting salute. It blew sometime -ea . -fr1 i
the whole night through; roofs ever.'
brown off houses. All the tins had been
collected and placed in stacks. These
commenced to have a race across the
camping ground in the night, chased by
Ineimets, boots, and light articles, sash
as blankets, waterproofs, hesets, eta, in @
the rear. In fact, it sounded as if the
devil and all his legions were haves a .,
night's jollification at our expense.
The Ideal rattier.
"0f all relations among individeais, i
in all combinations which life offers in
this world, there is none that is more 1
wonderful than motherhood, a a father- ;
hood comes next," writes Bdractta t
Brown in the February Ladies' lime
Journal. "The mother may 1e rcples-
ented as a dove, with love au:i gentle
care brooding over theyoung; the, father
as au eagle, strong, eager to defend end
help. The mother should be an eznbedi-
ment of sweetness and gentleness; the
father a citadel of strength. A father,
then, to avoid his failures, mnst be of
fine, large gnnlity, strong, sane and lov-
ing;. a self -forgetful, pleasant guido, a
chum for his boys, a lover for Lis girls
a comprehending husband, a comfortable
man. With. a father like this, and a
mother such as we have sometimes seen
and often dreamed of, the pathway of
childhood becomes not one of thorns,
but one besprinkled with flowers, and
life is changed from a dreary round of
mistakes and failures into a comfortable,
successful and beautiful journey, bright-
ens 1 by cheerfulness, gladdened by com-
radaesl ip, sweetened by love, and enjoy-
ed alike by mother, father awl child-
ren.
with maul -mod sapped away, audwonnen
trodden clown intotlio very dust, gather
night after night to laugh rind dance
and drink, flinging away their poor,
blighted lives iv. reckless revelry,:" writes
Mrs. Baliington Booth, -in the February
Ladies' HOME) Journal. "It is ghastly
airy-niakinng---lieu ;brei; without sound
of mirth, dancing without step of agile
feet, and a, drinking that nuvblens the
desperate lxaint and .burns the parched
lips. I have spent hour after hour with-
in these places, tallting to the hopeless
women, and the utter despair of their
life is something never to effaced from
the memory of those who have seen the
bitterness of the poor soul beliiurl the
mash of brazen iii iinarenee. 1 have
never gone down into these shadows and
I come back the same. I have always felt
older after each experience, and life has
been sadder to me forever afterward.
now Canada Gets ser Name.
"Canada" is a corruption of the Span-
ish phrase, "Aca nada," reeauing "There
1 is nothing here,":; The,S.panitit'd,, visited
Canada before the Frenilch, and they
looked diligentl" for precious. metals,
but found none, ;tt fact they often ex-
pressed to each'' other in the words,
"Acs nada." The Lelians grew to
understand the phraze and its meaning,
and when the French arrived the natives,
anxious to get rich of the intruders, in-
formed them "There is nothing here,"
using theSpanish language, never doubt-
ing but that these foreigners uuderstood
the lingo as well as the last invaders,
The French, hearing the continually re-
curring words, thought they could ap-
ply only to the name of the country,
and according they dubbed the large
dominion Canada, a name it has borne
ever since.
Died of Heart Spasm
(G. N. w. Press Despatch,.
Walkerton, Feb. 9.—Mr. Thos. White-
head, a - prominent business span of
Walkerton, died suddenly this morning.
Mr. Whitehead was President. of the
Board of Trade, and carried on a very
large mercantile business on the depart-
mental store system:.Ile also had'.branch -
stores in several neighboring vr'1'lages,
and was visiting oneof these at Clifford
early this mertrning when he was seized
with spasms of the heart and died! in a
few minutes. Mr. Whitehead was•fifty
eight years of age and of English de-
scent. He was au exceedingly enter-
prising malr„ enol very highly esteemed.
J
Ons of the. Best Stories I Byer Heard.
,In the way of Irish bulls, I never
heard anything better than the
story of the Irish soldier in the thick of
a battle, to whom. awounded man,
whose leg had been shot away, appealed
to be carried from the field.
The Irishman stopped and picked
up very carefully, and gathered him in
his arms so that the main's head was
over his shoulder, and started off with '!
him to the field hospital with the shells i
screaming round him. One of them
shot away the wounded man's head.
a
Preseutly an mincer steppes ale ivr- i
man and shouted, "Drop that thing!
Aren't there wouuded enough to look
to without you carrying corpses?"
"But it's wounded he is, sir," said the II
Irishman •'His ieg's shot away, as ye
see, sir." y
:each euws ars
t:
tlo attexttioln to
breeding. Thera are oo many scrubs
is the country. Ser. b cows moan
AU
financial ruin, All, ea not bay thor-
ou llbrod cowsto start fr , but all can
weed out the poorest cowl and bred
from tete- boat ones,
The thoroughbred bull wee a need, -
sity to success in breeding up to higher
u'eftiluess in the dairy. Alwayil discard
the scrub bull. Pedigree is all right as
far altet goes, but individuality and per- .
forananco are of more coussqueuco.
Malting Shells in Battle.
Ail old army officer, says the Loudon
Standard, speaking of dodging shots and
shells in battle, •said that in all his years
rf experience h4 had only soon three or
four shells actually in the air. and they
cine from the glen he himself fired.
Ire explaineii that there aro a few
guiis with, somewhat slow muzzle ve-
locity, and the men firing these can
sometimes catch a glimpse of the shells
fin their .richt, but, it would be 'Mmes..sible for any man 0see a shot comiug
toward himself. -
Dodging shells M is done by getting
ander cover innnieaiately before a gun is
actually fired. '?
"For instance," said the officer, "if I
were climbing a bill, at the top of which
a gun was directed against Me, I could
tell exactly when c shell was likely to
come bounding.ulong. Before the order
is given to fire the .nen in, charge of the
piece 'stand clear,''and'that is the ware.
ing note, so to speak. Keep your weath-
er eye ou the gniirectpd against you,
and when the grope: `testand clear you
dodge the shot." a
Saved. a Shilling.At a certain cloth factory in Scotland
it was the eustt ni to fine the work.-
people for turning out bad word; One
day a workman brought a piece of cloth
to be examined, arid, the manager found
two holes about an. inoh apart. He then
showed these to the inau, and demanded
twa shilling fine-ashim-rig for each
hole.
Is it a shilling fors each hole? asked the
warn -
Yes, said the manager.
And is it the smile for every hole—big
or little?
.Yes, exactly the sante, said the man_
ager.
Well, then, I'll save a chilling, and
putting bis fingers in the holes he quick -
1
y
uick:ly made the two into one.
Tate London papers say that final
steps have been tekeac in for ring a, hat
trust to control the trade in England.
The capital of the cembiue is ell(l,0i0.
"Throw him down!" shouted the l
officer. ='Can't you see that his head is
gone?"
The Irishman looked over his shoulder
and then flung the body down in digest.
"Dom him," he cried, "he told me it
was his leg."—General Joe Wheeler, in
Life.
Suceessfal Dairying -
Henry Van Dreser, of Cobleskill, N.
Y., told! his hearers at the meeting of
the Maine board of agriculture that his
cows average 300 pounds of butter per
cow per year. ' Butter is made in one
pound prints and solei in the New York
market at,25 and 30 cents per pound.
His cows are tested each mouth, and
the Babcock ' test is the measure of
quality in this herd.
Milk is perfect food. For the -best de-
velopment of the milk prodncing•capac-
ity the cow should have the best of care.
The dairy caw is amachine. Thetlairy-
man should study his machine: While
the enormous figures of over 1,100
pounds of butter in a year had been at-
tained by a Holstein caw, breeding is
yet in its infisncy., Discount the cow
f er rt
After doctors had 8aid no cm e— A.eute
heart disease had put Mrs. Fitzpatrick
`e11 nigh in the center -of the "Grimeap-
tJr1
�� But Agnew'r6 Cure for heHeart
i>et her at the hospital door,
e-,._.•,;