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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1889-08-30, Page 3i'nbltahea by Request, TOSSED ON THE 1 Welton sn the death of Ctiyrles Willits who died on • thoilthot June ib9U, mid Cv111tann Willits, who Mod on the 4th or August, UN. ilAPANE5g JUNKS, CAST AWAY iN, Dear brothers, though thou 'hast left, us bore, To mnnru and weep fez thee, Soou we'11 meet thee up in heaven-- l:leppy will that meeting be. Two brothers we helve oflames met, With hearts so Iip,ht tend gay, Have gone to dwell .M foreign lenels, From us far, far away, The forms we loved are mouldering -now, Within the grave laid low, .And cold the boarts,, and stilled, the veioes, Of those We loved so. True, we loons thy sad departure, And we miss two brothers dear, But in heaven they are waiting, Per their frieuds each use to 800. They have left .a mother clear, But it won't bo very long, - /�,++�r gyp_ at,awe,�r,www.,:w,+--r-riwpu,iw,r:.,w.w„wwxas,r,t-»...w.w:. .�#: ! ,I.;IA7�, F25+ I1t4+Q IZ�f �'(itll�tIiB�n�,' RTtx o/ d�- '��'`/�+�/�� � � ..—.....,..�..,,,,a,,,,.,�...�uuiel�`I'�� e asters has beenbtlatlUfa}Iy bridged, ifd s' '��*� 01 1.'.IA I. WOOL! W OL ! W wholly termluated, Japan baa now note'"”` *"*s ■ lw►�l rw,t only a cavy, but en excellent fleet. 'will be 0 pounds of Wool wanted, for which the highest market price coasting steamers .and well built Bailin g craft of modern construction, Belpre A. MILIaS. Soon she'll meet them up to heaven, And will joist their happy song. God bless their wives and children dear, That on this earth remain, Broteot them with the father's love, T111 all ellen meet again. Hew many hopes, how many fears, ETowttnuob of grief and woe, Htavo marked the peal pf eaolt of us,. Since one short time ago? To alive Dootora.ir+.l!s. Never go to berg with cold or damp feet, Never 'eau with the back upon any- thing that is cold. Never begin f1 journey until the breakfast bars been eaten. Never take waren drinks and then immediately go out into the cold,. After exercise of any kind never ,: ride in an open anrriage or near the window of a car for a meSment it is dangerous to health even, life. Never otuit'rega!ar bathing, for, un less the skin is in regular condition, the cold will close the, pores and favor congestion and other disease, • When hoarse; speak as little aspos. aible until the hoarseness is recovered from, else the voice may, be pernma- rintly lost, or diiliulties of the throat be produced. Merely warm the back by the fire, and never continue keeping the back exposed to the heat atter it has be Come comfortably yvarm. To do otherwise is debilitating. Never stand still_ in, cold weather, especially after having taken a alight degree of exercise, and always avoid standing on ioe or snow, where .the person is exposed to the cold wind. When 'going from a .warm atmos- phere into a cooler; one keep the mouth almost closed, so that the air Wray. be warmed by its'passage through the nose ere it reaches the Lungs. Keep the back, espeoially between the shoulder blades, well covered; also the chest well protected. In, sleeping. in a gold room establish the habit of breathing through the nese, and nevdr with the open mouth. Though the,7ohnstown disaster occurred more than two mouthssinee,the interest of the public in so remarkable an event has not oeased,to be active. 13, S. Good- speed at Co. of New York, have just issued a 'very complete sad richly pictorial history of the eveat, which is, a work. of the deepest interest and power. No reader will Dare to lay., aside this thrilling narra- tive unfinished. In *the world's horrible records of evil.wrought by the untamed forces of, nature, few oatastrophes have been more heart sickening. The fearful lees of life, ruption to business, destroying the complex machinery which. fed so Many thousand and contributed to the 'interests of the whole laud, are hard to match. Death and ruin take °, thousand shapes, but rarely have they. assumed a. guise so horrible as that in which they rushed down on the people of Conemaugh Valley, The reeord (annet fail to be of perennial interest, and to stir the hearts of all who read it for the next generation tcj come, for each a catastrophe, mercifully, comes but once fu a century, if ° so often. J1nough time has not elapsed to enable the proper verification of the facts to be made -and a oar'e{lil and studied statement to r be given to the publio worthy of so startling 1 a. subject. Any horrible and haphazard narrative of an event which stands unique 'T in our history, is far from doing it even - partial justioe. The author has given us in this book a record both vigorous and. - le aooilrate, and every - reader should have the work in his hands. The book is an - ecttavo handsomely ,printed and bound,. c and contains 522 pages, embellished with forty-eight fine full page illustrations. Agents are wanted, if 5 Goodspeed a&. Co b pay all the duty. —nom is samothing that everybcdy don't know. People who allow the Cann- d da, thistle to grow on their pretnisee Ari- c molested are liabie to a fine. It ie the t duty of every prep erty owner to see "that thethietle is exterminated on his own prem. l es as far tts h is in hitt power to do so, p The town is equally liable coneorning the growth of the thistle on the streets, HE PACIIJIQ OCEAN, Hterdsbipe 1,udttred hr Oriental Sailors Ira - Vox tho Old Alethoda--xwo Thousand Attlee Out Without Mast or itndsler—Z+'orty Beans to Hach Man lyes Any, An the morning of the 9th of Janus 1877, the City of Peking, on her outwa trip, sighted what at first appeared t be an abandoned vessel adrift at sea, The eteatner,bore away for her, when it wa Januar junk men from her coast as though they had the plmot now h t ���RE. �`RDr�.a n anclbco But we must sell our goods,. Therefore G�lron(ov, Great B.arga us are to be Rae er awakening Japan strove tawny the she her the rescues. el J 4. T'atriotio Day, o Spriggins-..Dreadful flay, this,. T;•ree kinds of weather in as many hours. , ,.�.T .,._,_, Iggu►s --,:ease most •patriotlo slay of the• p'an 'ants, Musliu5 Lawns, SeersuokeI s, a • s seasoxr, A roti s xu' , ' ., , ' xr brokParasols, era s for skirting purposes, ulletin- rsols, Silk and Kid Gloves, lB'or elle Credit of the Vam117. l ; Sheet ngs, Cottonades, Linens, A young gentleman was Massing e little girl ou Seventh street yesterday who was sitting on the doorsteps. and �-' making a melodious humming over a I , So j GOODS Iv DRESS GOODS! tune: lie was interested bythe• We make a specialty of Black Dress Goods, and would invite every sweet and intelligent aper thece l- lady requiring those good&, to see our large range and get quotations.. the child, and accosting her fol- before buying, See our A11 Wool Goods M 15 cents per yard, lowing; dialogue tools place : Sissy, what's your. pa's name? This was GENTLEMEN, GO TO T. A, MILLS FOR,. YOUR politely answered by the little girl. flow many brothers have you? lour HA'li , TEES, ��a+L.ARa7,. GLOVES, UNDERCLOTHING, C„ or sive, How many sisters have ou'I Pour or five. = and se© our range of, The young man's curiosity being satisfied be passed T WEEDS,. ,AN -TIN GS.., s,, cf 4, on. The mother of the litte four year.oid(who had neither brother nor for ordered clothing. All suits guaranteed to fit or no sale,. sister), overheard the conversation, and ' We have the largest range of goods in Wingharp, and we mean bnsi-. calling ]ter in asked her why she had Tress every time, so.C4lne. along and get- some of the cheap goods while storied to the Iran and received the they are. going,, following cute reply Well .mamma, I didn't want Cho gentleman to think we were so poor as to have no . child. Wizighatn., 801' XV) 18897 'ren.----Ciolunbus (0.) Statesman. . seen that she was. a Japanese junk wit one mast gone. An officer and boa crew were sunt off, who found that th junk belonged to Ha-Rodadi; that she wits partly loaded with rive turd sold (Japanese whialty), and besides the skip- per and supercargo hard a crew of five men. On the lstof Deoember preceding the ,junk, which, by the way, rejoined in the name of the Iiisayoshinaam, had been driven out to sea, and things having got badly mi .ed up in an unusually terrine blest it was found, to be the easiest way, of lowering sails tit chop the utast down. Then a heavy sea carried away the rud- der and stove in the bulwarks, after which the junk drifted and sloshed around in the old and unoriginal way of "at the Inercy of the winds and waves," riot' STUCS TO WIC 0Ax,$ Captain and crew had become so.com- pletely disheartened on the waste of waters, or so unduly jolly on a waste of saki, that when boarded by the officer of. the steamer they didn't know the day of the week or the month, hardly knew where they had come from, and certainly didn't know where they were going to., They . were informed that they were something like 2,000 tiles distant from, Japan, but despite this warning intelli- gence, only four of the crew would leave the junk --the- captain, supercargo and the ffth.man declaring their intention, of stickingto the junk so long as the rice and saheld out. The. Coos. Bay News, published at ylarsbfield, Ore„ in its issue of Julyt 17, • 1878,. had the following report from. the captain of the schooner Parallel, which arrived.at that port July 15 from San , FYanciscot "The schooner Parallelon the 7thinst,, in latitude 311 deg. 42 -min., longitude 180 deg. 211 min., at 4•a. m., sighted a Japanese junk adrift, Ac boat was low- ered and the strange vessel hoarded, when a terrible sight met the boarders. Not a living soul was aboard, but three corpses of Japanese who had probably been dead at least a month. Two of tho bodies had been.. shackled together, doubtless baring been crazed for want of food or water and fastened up by their .comrades. Two. of these bound bodies were lying amidships with their knees bound together with cords upon their breasts, their arias were drawn over- their heads and securely tied and Cords were bqund around their necks; in short, they were completely. inclosed fu a netting formed by the lacing and interlacing of cords. The sunken eyes and shriveled -condition 'of the bodies. were frightful to look at. • The other corpse was found forward, stripped to the waist, and .gave indications of the terrible sufferings that the man must have endured. previous to his death, I!rorn the numerous fireplaces and mats found between ,decks it was evident that the vessel had' -been manned by t3 large crew.., Upon exeumiation considerable water• was found:in the hold, but no evi- dence of her having had a cargo on board could be discovered, Tho only article of food that was'foundwas a portion of a chest, of tea, covered'with utold, In the cabin were several.; band - some pieces of furniture. • "The two bound- bodies were well dressed, and a lot of fine silk ladies' wearing apparel was brought off the wreck by'tho sailors. The stench of de- caying bodies was such..as to prevent a thorough inspection. Tho hull of tho junk was in . good condition, and when. last seen was drifting to the south and east and bearing with it, perhaps, a mystery of the Oriental seas," u 15e snow until noon boat i'ItOBABLY TE* tA.TEST CAST. When the steamship City of Peking ar- ived apt San Fzrancisoo from ,japan, Juno 2, 1881,, ono of tbo passengers related the €ollowing.otoryf to a Chronicle reporter: be tenth day out from Yokohama the steamer came across? dismantled, help - ss Japanese junk, which had been driven of froth the entrance to the bay of Yeddo during a typhoon that had oc-, urred on the Oth of December, or ton months previous to their rescue. They ad Jost their masts and rudder and had een drifting at the mercy of the winds they knew net where. ' After their own P were exhausted they had sub- sisted'on their cargo, mostly- beans and' ried. fish, and on such rain water as they ould.eatch. They had burned most of he small woodwork, doors, berths, win - owe, eto., of- their junk for fuel, and were on short food rations, fort* boats er day for cash man being the allow- arice, Thefrilrc, when putout from time to time, they had rekindled by rubbiur Chrouts 0eiigsis and Ale Al Diseases of the Th -oat and Longs ran he cored by the neo of Scott's E emits?on, es it contains se the healing virtues of Co 1 Laver 011 tend IIypophoe• phltee in their tulles; form. 'Seo what tV 8 Muer, la 'ti 15, L 01', oto, Truro, Iw e, ewe:, After three years' a eYperlefee Iconsider Flsntt'a gm:tlelon one of thavery tI1 first in the Markct, very ex'+ellpnt iu Throat afro tions. Sold by all Arudgists, 50o. and 11.00 tvia pieces of wood together. Ono -r=i heir number had died from exhaustlon. a rid they had given up all hope of ever in' sing land or anything huen a gain when they sighted the City of Peking. ley wore taken on hoard tho staamer, concert wan given in their aid, and on e next trip of the City of felling; they vt+ars taken bty*c1t to their tarn faunas , • then blue skies until dusk brings out the avec- Pittehnes 3. • Tabling , aro., _sko. Brow and Whoa to Drink Water.. According,taDr. Leuf, when water is takeninto the full or partly full stomach, it does not mingle with. the food, es we are taught,. but pesos along quickly between the fond and lesser clurvative toward the pylorus through which itpasses into -the intestines. The secretion of mucus by the lining membrane is constant, and during the night it consider: ante amount accumulates in the stomach ; some of its liquid portion is absorbed acid that which remains is think and tenacious. If food is taken into the stomach. when in this condition it becomes coat- ed with. this oat-edwith'this mucus and the secretion of the gastric jnice'itt,d its action are delayed. These filets show the value of a goblet of water before breakfast; This washes vett the tenacious mucus, and stimulates. the gastric. glands to •sbor'etion, In old and feeble persons water should not be taken cold, lint it may be taken with great advantage• taken warm or hot. This removal of the accumulated mucus from the stomach is probably onerof the reasons why taking soup at the beginning of a meti.l has been found so benellcial. Here is an nein of information which is,as tate old country newspapers say, importnntif true. A leading New 'York physician is the authority writ- ing in the New York Pirorld,; -- When I. have, a patient who is.sub- ject to cramp I advise hint to provide himself. with a strong- cord. A long 'narterwill do. if frothing else is handy. When the cramp, conic on take the enrd, wince it around the leg over the plane that is cramped, and take an end .in each hand and, give it a sharp pull, 'One that wiil hurt a little. Instantly '"the craven tv=J1 cease, and the sufferer cau go to bed assured it will not come on again that night. —The Grand Master of the A. F. xt A. 111, has issued a, mandato throughout the country that in the lodgeroomsroper of '-„he Order no dancing shall be allowed, and lodges are in future to understand that •places sacred and dedicated to the work of the graft should not be used for purposes that are not either a fittiug sequence to .craft work or in harmony with the teach- ings of the Order. Fon Dxarxrsxa and Liver Complaint you have sprinted guaraatep on every bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer. It nevor fails to Corp. For sale by C. E. In milking a cow always sit on the side furthest from the -caw and nearest a soft shot in the pasture., Srrmon's Cunt will irarnediately relieve Croup,whooping Cough and Bronchitis. For -sale by 0, E. Wiittan,e, . The prudent fanner- husbands bk corn, tthich is very unbind, as cord is vary apt to be henpecked, The good Samaritan helps the en, fortunate, wayfarer without asking hits how rte intends to vote, One -of the inementous questions of the time is, %'4'ho cut the route of that hammock 1' First actor (p7lnrnnsly),—Whitt will fou drink, guy boyo Second actor— The salve as yon. Pirst actor --One beer. Charles, drink first. A Itenturky man Sella miles by the pound. A mule ought to be able to 'kick the bean" at alinvst any weight. T. • MILT, a, EMT Me 0_____.• JflQ tc b pMv ft: 1st,. THAT I HAVE THE BEST ASSORTED STOOK Or WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELLERY IN WINGHAM, 2nd. THAT TRE QUALITY OF MY GOODS,'',IIS EQUAL - TO THE BEST. • 3rd. THAT MY PttIMS AIM SUCH THAT' IT IS SAFE: A11'D- F;ITABLW•FOIi, ALL.TO DEAL WITH ME. TEST. ` IlIS 7 'OR O•TCTRSMTe - BY. CALLING ON, F. GLRSTER. THE MISSES MALLOY have, changed their business premises;. to the shop.Jately occupied by Mrs. McCance, next door to S., Graoey's furniture warerooma, where tiny will welcome old and new patrons. Customers will fiald amongst the numerous articles usually kept ina fancy store,. Silks for Art Needle;; Work. Medfevai Lace for Trimmings.,. GLOVES, .HOSIERY, UNDERWEARS, - APPLIQUE ,EMI3BOIDERIr, MAVRESQUE EMBROIDERY, POINT LACE. POINT LACE' AND EMEOIDERY MADE . TO ORDER. • AZir'Stamping in. newest designs. Knitting Silk. Material for Point Lace, The. Tailor system taught, Feathers. Stitched Braids, D1tESSMA]tING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Oat Kcal ECM Opened. BBOC1ENSHIRE'S The undersigned desire to inform farm ars and the people generally that they hal reopened their Oat final Milt in it�lihwtlz, And are now prepared to purchase Oate in unlimited quantities and at the Ilighost Haricot ; rico. They 'will supply customers with the Basi • Guava in Oat Meal. ELD :n & CL GG, 07'111 CY.a rtmns'G 11,4TUS. Any of the following metropolitan weeklies ban be obtauted with the Wingltam Tutu 4 thy ilhu es here rivets Tina snit C:lobe... „$1 75 Touts, Mail, encs 1'.tir.uAnd fireside, .. 1 75 Tam, Globe mai aural Canadian,. fi 03 Trusts and tondrn d ertlsor, .. ,. 1 75 Tnarkaand Tuareg lvitness, .. .. 1 75 Ttut:sendToronto Nen's, ., .. ..175 Tama and tinily 1Verld g 7r. Tom midweekly New* with premium "'Cluist before 1,114 0,"., .. 1 75 Arae, "footers of euutairtratteu." . ,. t Photograph take,. Long Experience,close attention and unexcelled facilities, enables me to turn out uniformly a e'ass of work equal to that of any Gallery in the west,. , *Wori: of every desoription artil, catty, promptly and satisfactorily deny, CJIBINETS AND FA ILY Gipps. —A lil?EO1ALTY. A Largo Assorttnent of Frames kept Constar.t)y on hand, Prices as low as are consistent with good work. O itnwr.. A stdendid IellIC8. 1,TCi SB: rentevallti located ren Josephine street, o• posits the esrunewlek hotel, The building h 78 lose lie 0I, tso a:ones and Keo,' fir. !l:.r. ago. Second flat suitable for residence. Apply to J. i1J1AlI, Proprietor, 11.ltihltk, Conaraciar, Marnoch, 11 'Wingtmlraa eaela ii