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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1900-03-09, Page 71 4, Ai • ,..........,.. THE WINGIIAM TIMES„ MARCH Q, How it Excels, io%q Nmiro‘'i Has Virtues that Meet the Most Obstinate Gases. Its Virtues and Powers Act Directly on the Nerves and Blood, The Great Spring ecli- 'Th cine for every Uomo. Pain's Calory Compound, excels all otlier.eombinatious and preparations as a spring medicine because it works direct- ly ou the shattered and unstrung nerves stud impure and poisoned blood, from which so many diseases have thou origin. Paine's Celery Compound must not bo • confounded with deceptive,worthless and short-livedremeclios such as sarsaparillas, nervines, tonics and pills that have little or no power over disease. Pail's Celery Compound has virtues and streugthouing powers that quickly brace the nerves, cloause the blood and restore perfect circulation and digestive vigor. The special mission of Paine's Celery Compound is to accomplish what thousands of doctors rail in—the banish- ment of old and obstinate disorders from the system, such as kidney and liver troubles, neuralgia, rheumatism and dyspepsia. All these serious afflictions rapidly . disappear under the cleansing and regulating actiou of Paine's Celery Compound. If you desire renewed health and true life in the spring season take Paine's Celery Compouud. Firmly aucl decided- ly refuse the SOMETHING JUST AS ',+GOOD that: nay be offered yon by some dealers. Paulo's Celery Compound "makes sick people well." Premier Soml n, of British Colombia, has informed Lieut. -Governor Melnues of the defeat of his g'.�vornm3nt. It is probable an attempt will bo Made to • form a coalition government for the re- maining two years of the life of the present parliament, For Infanta ani. Chi ern. 1'ho tan- sisilo iiguatun of • ,Oy%fir._ .. ,• oa f -4? -1 IT / e 4'41;�•.141 moi•'=f 7i'•dt • While trying to stop a runaway horse at Woodstock, Mr, Robt. Mackon was caught by the shaft, which wont right through his cheek and broke liis nose. He died about half an hour later. iiilente:—"War in South. Africa." wo volumes. First contains com- plete history of country and war to date; tells about our contingents, giv- . ing names of officers and men. Second ' volume to bo published when war is over. Only Canadian manufactured book: Everybody cancels their order for American books when seeing ours. If a hustler, this is your gold mine.. Prospectus free. BRADLEY-GAERETSON CO., Limited, • Brantford. • Agents:- People won't be deceived with American Histories of the war published now, as the war is only com- menced. Handle our two -volume Can- adian manufactured work. First vol- ume ready soon, complete to date, thus you get commission. Second veluumo published when war is over. Why waste time with incomplete books i' Prospectus free. THE LINSCOTT PUBLISHING Company. Toronto. Ageetts:—Christian Endeavor, Ep- worth League and B.Y.P.U. members, "Light of Life" is a treasure house of information. We need Christian men end women who desire to do good and make money to circulate this wonder- ful" book, BRADLEY-GARRETSON CO , Limited, Brantford. Agents:—Mr. Moody, the distinguish- ed Preacher of tlie century, is dead. Every Christian wants a record of his wonderful life. Our book recom- mended by the clergy. Demand un- precedented. Prospectus free. THE LINSCOT'I PUBLISHING Company, • Toronto. Agentls t—We have the authentic life of the great eveugelist Moody. Large book, liberally illustrated. Treat sell- er. Prospectus free. BRADLEY-GARRETSON CO., Limited, Brantford. "Canada, for the Canadians." READ THE CANADIAN DOME JOURNAL A monthly magazine full of inter , esting reading ,natter and useful in formation .for CANADIAN Ill/ OMEN AN1y CANADIAN IIObIES , Scbseription price One Dollar per; Anemia On you can receive it, with this paper for ono year at the seine price by sending your orders to the publisher of the TIMES at Wing ham. Send l0 mete 4()r sample copy.. You will lire it. Address. Canadian Monte Journal Co., r n)(tr LINT ! Yer:sr t) o>li Fc(6$g THE ABSENTMINDED MULE.. , Drying tip Cow:,. A New Piece or Poetry that Makes k:ilglrsit.. To dry up a cow reduce the foots, tak Nth! hien Smite. away tete grain, era when, the milk r 1 A. bit of parody which is malting M. yield drops, hill, first once a clay, thele Riplhzg's countrymen sniilo is entitled otzCO in two days, and in one to two Will "The elbseutniinded Mule," by M. T. weeks the average cow".11 be dry, with f2V . Clxaflantl. Koro is a''orsa: her under in good eozulition. With l:or- Wlwn yu11'ro walking out your Clotice:ite o+ I eistcnt milkers there is seldom difficulty if alfalfa only is fed for a time. If a • Teen VI fth �N end your Irinllfuaikers, And you feel ilia slapping Kruger in tele, mouth) Don't forget to keep an trete on a little chop with cars, t1 gentleman in floor bombe just come south. He's an absentmincltd beggar and his style is pretty high. ri'hough of course wc'ro got to take hint as we ilea him; Ho is hero on active service, and he's been and done a gay Anel loft lots oi' little things behind him! Old mule, bold mr_L',, mule of the hairy tail— Mule of spirit and swift hind foot and flabby, scornful lip -- Each of him doing his country's work, how when he happens to fail Never go nap on an army mule, 'cause he'll skip, skip, skip( n a a 0 e u a He'd been trained to smellblanlc cartridges and wink the other we; iitrdcllghtcti ill tho musks of the band, But he never seen no bolticrs, and iso diclll't want to die, And shot and shell were more than he could stand. Re' an absentminded beggar, though he heard • his country's call, And his regenlent didn't need to:;Send to find him; He clucked his job and bolted, and the job be- fore us all Is to get the mon he's wont and loft behind him! • Rough job, tough job, job for Buller and Co.— Job o.Sob for fifty thousand men, that the bloom- $tg tipl Each of•111m doing his country's work, each of 'em having a go. Eich of 'em 'ware of the army mule what'll skip, sldp, skip! Passed 16 "corms. I gave De. Low's Worm Syrup to my little girl two aucl a half years old; the result was that she passed 15 round worms in five days. Mrs. B. Roy, Kilmanagh, Ont. The War and the Empire La Petrie points out that in the list of dead and wounded. there are English, Irish, Scotch and Fronoh-Canadians,and wo have already had recorded the losses suffered by Australians and New Zea- landers, so that the blood of men repro - senting all sections 'of the empire has flowed freely in South 'Africa for the cause of freedoi}l. This is a significant thing, and it is not possible yet to say what its full effect will bo. British aro not very emotionable; they aro not given to spending much strength in sentiment- al expressions, but when they ttre deep- ly stirred something comes out of it. We believe it will be so in this case, and if it be something that the Boer does not like it will be for the strengthening of the empire and the good of the world. Wo can see now that although the. Southerners had high qualities and pro- duced brilliant soldiers, it would not have been for the good of this continent or the world at large for them to have succeeded in their divisive course. The torrents of blood that flowed to abolish slavery. and make th.o United States really united, did not .flow in vain. It was through the "baptism of blood" that the great German Empire was built up, and we believe that the blood now shed in dofeuse of the British Empire will be a united force. We seem to bo at the parting of the ways. In tho days to come tho componeht pasts of this great empire must stand in. closer union, a uuicn which will combine home rule and a large co-operation. When the• jingoism is chastened out of us, a nobler im- perialism will grow, and men of British race will face the world in the defense, not defiance. . Tho Canacliau and Australian blood that has been shed will no doubt contribute to this. The whole subject will be treated in a more serious manner.. In the war itself there is serious work still to be done, though we trust that before long British territory will bo cleared of tho invaders. Thos( upon whom this stern task has been thrust deserve our fullest sympathy. Men like Roberts and K itchener are not bloodthirsty creatures, who pant eager- ly for'wer.. • They know too well what it means. Lord Kitchener showed his wisdom, as well as bis courage, at the time of the Tt.ashoda incident, and he would no doubt have enjoyed a well- earned rest. But the crisis is great and Britain has had to send her best; men to the front to moot it civilising enemy. The "common people,,, 1rro too, haveo well their share of the burden, and we feel sura that the result of this great effort will be i o unite the veiled ele- ments of the Empire into a living whole. When this eemes about, .ugh the process may have boon 'eii;ful, Cana- dians will not need to bo amhaniod of the part they played in a great world luowb- mmont, To PATENT Good ,does I iney'be seemed by our ofd. Address, ,THE Naafi? RECORD, 3 Br,tintatL M4. €kied9Piatih Ares prepared from N`aA tures mild laxatives, and while gentle are reliable and efficient. They Reuse the Liver Ctire Sick Headache, rail. iousness, Sour Stomach, and Constipation. Sold everywhere, 25c. per bo z. riveted byd.I.flood &Co.,LOuwetl,l'tams. cow continues to give milk under this treatment or if the udder is Hard and feverish, the work of drying up must stop and the ration be (hanged to a light milk ration, with loosening fees, ante the cow milked regularly. Forced dryiug up under these conditions injures the cow.. Il' by oversight the drying up process bas been neglected until within three or four weeks of calving, do not attempt it, as there is arisk of injury to the health of the cow and her udder. After becoming dry the cow will need little attention before calving if she is o11 good pasture.—Live Stook. ,,The Noblest mind The best c utoutmcnt has," rot, how- ever noble in mind, na man or woman can have perfect contentment without physical health. ' The blood must be kept pure and the stomach and digestive organs lu good order. The best means for this purpose is Hood's Sarsaparilla. It promptly cures all blood humors and eruptions and tones up the system, The favorite cathartic is Hood's Pills, 2:i cents. The Low -Priced Vallaoy. Low-priced goods have been so per- sistently brought to the front of late years that the term low-priced has al- most becomeesynonyinons with value, We believe it is no exaggeration to say that in a majority of stores the low- priced and ififorior article is first shown. to a customer, and not the ;high-priced and better quality one. The same spirit is exhibited in the ad- vertisement. He is a wise merchant who keeps low- vricad as well as high-priced goods in his store. Bothe who is eternally hold- ing up before his customers his low- priced goods is practising methods which aro as far removed from sound business common-sense as it is possible to conceive. Low-priced goods are, as a rule, high-priced goods, as far as the merchant is concerned. They cost just as much as high-priced goods to sell, while the profit they yield is relatively less. And then we have riot taken into consideration the danger of giying dis- satisfaction which always arises from the sale of low quality merchandise, no matter at what figure it sells. Because of this interminable pushing of low-priced goods people are becoming educated to the fallacious belief that the prices asked for high-quality of goods are extortionate prices.. The price which is ordinarily asked for an article, whether . the quality is high or low, is its value. The figure at which au article sells is, under normal conditions, basel either upon its cost of production, or what it would cost to re- place it. Tho man, therefore, who pays $2 for a certain article may be getting just as good if not better value than he who pays $1.50 for a similar kind of article, but not of as good quality. That which business men should keep before their customers is value. Impress them with the fact that mere figures do not determine whether an article is cheap or not. It is the value that one gets for the money expended which de- termines that. f In the advertisement, in the window display, in the offering of goods in whatsoever way conceivable, preach quality. By pursuing this policy, instead of that now so much in vogue, an influence will be set in motion which shall ex- plode, and not strengthen, the fallacy that an article which can be purchased at 25c. per lb. is necessarily cheaper than that winch sells at even double that figure. -Canadian Grocer. iIIore Suicides—Cap be traced in- directly to disordered nerves caused by disordered digestive organs and the con- sequent mental derangement and weak- ness, than for any other cause Hader the sun. This is proven by statistics. Dr. Von Stan's Pineepple Tablets come as a universal blessing to mankind. No stomach trouble is too trivial for atten- tion—no ease to deep seated that these wonderful Tablets will slot ultimately cure—GO in a box, 35 cents. Sold by A. L. Hamilton. DIAMOND DYES Are Imitated 3ut ]Never Equalled. Por ever a quarter et a century Dia- mond Dyes have steed the severest tests in millions of 1t Smes, anti have won a fame (111(1 popularity that has made them the wolld'a standard home dyes. Speculators, for tete salte.sof largo profits, have oreleavore4 to imitate the Diamond Dyes, but tlo1>• productions ;erablo failures as lituoh differ- uine Diamond have always proved In and deceptions.. There ii once between t.•llo gc Dyes and the imitation as there is be- tween a genuine bank note and a count- erfeit. If you 'wish to dye successfully, profit- ably and well, avoir} all imitation package dyes. Ask fo s the "Diamond" and see that you. get tl onl- Money Value of .t%leaulinoflq. An instance of • theli actual financial value of aleauliness, says the Irish Heulestead, in tho handling and make up of butter has come upjder our notice, There are two adjacent parishes in Mun- ster, not 1,000 miles from the County i Cork, in each 0f which tier( is a cream- ery. In one of teles% creameries the conditions whioh produc . (lean, present- able butter are lamentaiy absent, and the price which ou a recent occasion was obtained for the product of the creamery in question tas GO shillings per hundred weight ply. In. the neighboring creamery, $while washings and scourings, carefuln handling and cleanly habits were the litho, the butter fetched no less a price tlsin 113 shillings at the same time and Meier the same conditions of market, et tis determin- ed the price in the provipus case. in other words, through neglect of the simplest =finest elementary conditions of butter making nearly 100 per cent. cu Itheactual selling price was lost to the I creamery. it c . Rules to Itise by Find your purpose and fling your lifo out to it. Try to be somebody with all your might. n' What is put into the first of life is put into the whole of life. Start right. The first thing you do, if yon have not done it, is to ,fail in hove with your work. Don't brood over the past, nor dream of the future; but seize the instant, and get your lesson from theeltour• Necessity is the pricelels spar. Don't wait for the extraordinary op- portunities; seize common occasions and make them great. Tho lucky man is the. man who sees) and grasps the opportunity. The world always listens to a man with a will in him. Silage Crops. The reports concerning sweet corn u for silage ate quite conflicting, says Hoard's Dairyman. Some say that it has a tendency to make a very sour silage, ant others claim. that it is as unobject- ionable in this respect as any. If we had the sweet corn growiug, we would not hesitate to put it in silage, but we would not plant it especially for this purpose; neither would we plant Kafir corn for silago when the ordinary maize grows to perfection. Kafir corn is especially adapted for semiarid climates because of its drought resisting capacity. We aro not aware that teosiuto has ever boon tried in the silo, but alfalfa has boon, and sw cessfu]ly a'), especially in California. _.. _._,_ t(lruhard and GardenPine, rich ooiupaat wakes the best fer- tilizer for delvers. If mildew appease on the rosebushes, dust them with sulphur. More• i',flit s required 'iml the market- ing of fruit than with almost any other kIPd of farm products. •Welunt, hickory, peean and outer ant bearing trees snake excellent 'lied( trees along the roadsides and in thin pastures. • One of tate dost wa S of protecting fall grown peat], trees is to mulch heavily under the tree as far out as the branches extend.. Peach trees growing near the. Mous, whore dishwater and wash water aro thrown out are eon;' lived and free from worms and .disease. It is not the severest freezing that in- jures the strawberry plants so much es the repeated thawing and freezing. Ey proper =Welting in good season this ins jury may be avoided. A, Tribute To Sheep. Rider IIaggard, the well-known writer, has been trying his hand at farm- ing in England, and has published bis balance sheet showing a small profit. Iso is grateful for the result which is bettor than that obtained by some of his neighbors. Ho adds: "But it is my belief that 'without the help of the little filock of ewes all this would have avail- ed nothing. From the beginning I was a constant advocate of trying a few sheep, and ever since those sheep were bought about three years ago, things began to look up. The reason is plain, comparatively speaking, they cost little to keep, for they will eat anything down to thistles orivy off the trees, and much of what they eat would bo otherwise practically wasted, Then they are pro- ductive, and as old Tusser says, 'good lamb is worth gold.' Lastly, . their presence is of great benefit to land Where young pastures aro being built up into sound productive meadows." -- r - . Find a way or make one. is either pusher or pusheei. 9 Bluffs When doctors disagree sometimes desides. • A hungry parrot comes very near be- ing a hollow 'mockery. Be sure you aro right—thea let your wife have her own way. The olcl black diagonal now shines un- seen under the charitable ulster. A man can talk himself out of a job easier than he cau work:: himself into one. s. To marry for money aid miss it is less• painful than to msrry;for love and miss it. et When a man is in trouble his friends console themselves with thinking it will be a lesson for him. • t Au old bachelor says thedind of love that endures forever is f eluded upon the rocks of the girl's fath. Nature works wonders, " d the enter- prising dime museum manager gathers them in, and works the public at 100. por head. AN IMPORTANT MATTER. The selection of a druggist who can at all times truly and honestly ciispeusewhat has boon proscribed by the physician is an important matter. We can assure you of devotion to your commands and interests. Wo are noted for our full stock of Toilet Requisites, Perfumes and up-to-date goods at Popular Prices. Pain's Celery Compound is the best of spring medicines. It gives wonder- fel results to rundown and ailing people. Tho use of Paine's Celery Compound means rich, pure blood, and increased vitality. A. L. H. nt'rov, Druggist, Winghinn, Ont. Everything the coroner Slower than a Snail. A well-knowu lawyer of Buffalo is an enthusiastic entomologist who has devot- ed many hours in soarchirg for "big bugs and little huge." He is reputed to to very slow in his movements, so that when our friend judge Byrnes was toil that Mr. Dodd found a largo manic dryly said, "It must have been corning toward him" A remark which seemed s'tc said, "the Galva Ajahr is butifult to fit the ease so well that it tvns greeted 1 A+.1' that Lrolean ('l lyuni how touchiui with a shout of laughter.-•-lltaiper's An' the bleedin' heart, swately purity] An' out here 811 came h .1110r of—,"0 a e , the Y f t t1 t 1 ;) ` 1 aliitl �..... t,t�,tc4u the opp utuutity. . y t g "°�• assess ;1'u alncll•m, t':C wounder liow," and •pU(1 d 1. arcapi.rilla 1k0'w you may build � M. Theodore Donner, a well-ltilb'tt'll GUARDIANS OF LIFE. Skilfal, accurate ant properly quali- fied druggists ate guardians of hnmau life. To such, you may with confidence intrust tho filling of every prescription. Our conveniences, advantages and im- mense stock of pure drugs, enable us to fill prescriptions to the satisfaction of doctor and patient. Paine's Celery Comnpound has a won- derful sale with us, and is giving grand results to the sick. Our supply of this noted medicine is always fresh and the genuine. If you would regain. lost strength, brace up the nervous system, and banish disease, use Paine's Celery Compound. Comex A. C_vlirnELL, Druggist, Wiugham, Ont. - Curing a Cold. Here's the experience of one poor man who suffered from a complaint that is always with us. That more of us do not share his fate can be ascribed to our superior luck Mr. Blifkius had a cold, It settled in his head, "Always hits the weakest spot," Funny friends all said. Mr. Blifkins coughed and wheezed, Shivered, sneezed and shook. Listened to his friends' advice— This is what he took: Box of anti-kamnia, Douched his nose with brine, Mustard plaster on his chest, Camphor balls Quinine, Bottle Dr. Killem's Care, Onion stow, Some squills, • Horehound tablets, Licorice, Anti-febriue pills. Porous piaster ou hi:3 back, Spiritus frumented, ". ' Menthol inhalation tube, Ginger, Rock and lye, Bottle of coufih syrup, Whisky—just a sip, Mutton tallow on leis Week, Box of anti -grip, Electric shocks, Vapor bath, Brandy, Cure for crup, Emulsion of cod liver'• oil, Ugh! Some strong beef soup. Every remedy they urged Mr. Blifkius tried; Now they say they cured die cold, But Mr. Blifkins diode } Once a son of Erin came to New 'Zack and went through the usual stages of evolution. First he was a: corporation laborer, working with his pick and mat- tock in a ditch; Caen ho becameapolice- mau and worked not at all, but aeguired influence, and tools cess; then he enter- ed the inner ring of Tammany and be- came a contractor. He died wealthy, but all through his life he and his wife were very tender to allusions of his humble beginnings. When Murphy was dead and the casket reposed in the (busying' room his widow came down stairs to see the floral tributes. "Ah" 'Dile, Ueuorel o . ! O. R. made a teip•Q�rer t40 flee L. " . a. (iter• jug the recent .0 w,,aaidlon a itsttelY u•tot., and f slant three of the tepeese i loaf plitrollieg their 1este he t1teeets,ta.i Vigra, says the Clinton forwen tlisaha' god were t'lo -. at Can- tralia, Clanieboye >tbit:l Daufteld. The former had been twenty-three stoles on. the road, deice Vie latter hauler big gime for thirteen yearn. All throe were prornineut during the sti ik e, awl it is alleged their disudsa4 'nett the ou'`tt�:1110.. Dawson banks eitlnint+i t l;altl out- put for t.:o par et 02'),000 COO. Work on the cl.i its is' p:o r.vssiug we 1 but g,e tt.ral busutes, 1'9 reported du 1. A 111 n•iher of tl1 i Willie. , t eouuoil lie's beta u': ; •used b t ; his clerk sold tt,me stati'i�t' y t.rtlt•;:tol. 2cil. The Exeter tos'n1 e:e 1 :Isar: ,' (ma- in; the yetis lt'dll, 1t bxtt'.et; 31 itt:lr. riagcs t:lt(12) deaths. Keep your nose too t:lese to t:i f grind- stone, mill some 0l' year r ihtii.r^ a will. bnuy it and the rest 0 yrnt at th., Amp time. tell ;tour health and prover, serious 111-• nu'r.)hant of Orangeville is dead. rens. Mr. William "t'n lhopr, sen., founder Oh t l d re t) y 'C? of the Tudholx) ,;:tyre:,,;( (!.u,,, tuy, of •O. w r I Oriliia,i$ tisane. 1 �,�'e�•�� A. her oyes eeappo: , "I wonder Who the ('.evil ;.int that p r's1" • ;utiles it tnaa:i i,i.'':a it 1•rorui50 simply became, 1 c dot rc,'t want to keep it. ARTENS S Rut PHIS o fl liE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia,. •1nfiigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy' for Dizziness, Nausea, prows:. ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pugs. Small D0set Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's *Little Liver Pills. Two s3vere cases that were completely cured by the. Great Blood Purifier and Healer, Suffered For over eleven }'ears I 1 :(ears. suffered with Dyspepsia and tried everything I could think of, but was unable to get relief until I took Bur- dock Blood Bitters. I had only taken one bottle when I commenced to feel better, and after -taking five or six bottles was entirely well, and have remained so ever since, and feel as though B.B.B. had saved. my life.—Mrs. T. G. Joyce, Stanhope, P.Q. Covered My little boy, aged so With Sores. years, was a complete mass of sores, caused, the doctor said, by bad blood. His head and'body were entirely covered with sores, and we could find no cure. Finally I got a bottle of Burdock. Blood Bitters, and before one- hail the bottle was gone he began to' improve and by the time it was finished there wr.s not a sore on him. I used the B.B.B. as a wash as well as internally, and it seemed to give great -eller as soon as it. was put on.—Mrs. '11i:ip Mitchell, St. Mary's, Ont. Don't Chide the : Chi1dren. Don't scold the little 1 one if the sea is wet 1 n the morning. It isn't the child's tanit. It is stiffer- ing from a weaknes' of the l:itzneys and baui lar, and weals l:rdtloys neva strength- snitfg-.•that's all. You cent refwii to risk delay. Negl.ot may entail a I.ietitno of sefforing raid misery. AN'S :H dTD!'VEY PILLS 0tteegtltf•n the tidneys and hail ler, than ' all tree le is at ail et.t1. Mfrs. E. ltidtler, ^ Isoglan, G:it,, mother,° Heim!, :it d: 1i a roy fit , rap: "ptzv 111110 (I intettes, Me Iters old, hag % hs:l,-ealt k•tinevi sires 1i'fft Islet Feb - r• yhl'te.1ssef..es.e'e.. •.frvfills tt ; :m.ia'ed. ng sales`, t . i.. ; tient - Ft • Lee let I roll:10 t) 1,3111 w ; r , - -)f r..ny k )• 1. 1 gladly nt !.e t t : t'•1)ih rill a of the beeafls tee co' a:.......1.ai+iwi , from .Li? nitdiai.sg" -1