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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Gazette, 1893-10-05, Page 7eigh adv, eiu:. nasty. n eio• nuc in his emy; until t ves to and rove a about animal was & s to a all her armth y hab- r days would r, but, harden it upon almost e great biimest e love reside Iies in d, will hem to r friend athetic more and do - bout a 'ulness, hope, hick he is of its an be - belongs lations, by the by the ard, by makes w. r char- t prob- your ls, and nrnent he gods create, seekest owhere, , every ery bit- es' little vement toward s of this h gen- tended, hat will tinually ow- ball r, along vince of th of a ediately ith an d the h. She d down, of the y, just an old ed cries chapel he was ed the n. The as the woman, syncope, position. raged at of the had to int in a ,—of the e Occas - advance e details is mpress, Ives, the oyes of ills, and thinery. is con - pastry 'ate de- s, s, made and not € erne - meting on the [led of d. The r every stobe rate James' ,rly in 7 -like gust Received by stone Bros, at the W1P1CHAM Mrbie & Stone WORKS A fine Assortment of Granite Monuments of every style. Also a large amount of the BEST NEW YORK MARBLE. We are therefore prepared to furnish Monuments and Headstones at GREAT- .LY REDUCED Prices. It yxlr Q) m m • oe -0 to ee ten eta O 4-0 tn CI) U) cn t~ O cd rd � • ct cd U O tt� rt • 1.4 R5 i-4+ vl"d cd cn P� O WE will pay you to call _before placing order. VANSTONE BROS. age WHAT YOU DON'T SEE, ASK FOR ; Carpets, Stair Carpet. Window Carpet. Window Holland. Lace Curtains, 40e. to $5 Art Muslin, bleaehed and colored. Tabling. Cretonnes, Salisbury Cloth. Verona Cords. Printed Challies. Wool Delaines. Pink and cream Cashmere Brei every other shade +urs' Veilings. Net ceilings. Navy and bl'k DressSerges Lawn. Vietorias. Lawn checks. 'gouge stripes. Flanueletts-17 patterns. Slacker Flannels. Carpet warp. Weaving warp. Black Dress Si1ke Black Sateens. Velvets and Plashes. Brown Holland. Valises. - ch Baskets. C}I rns. Batter Trays and Ladles. Washtubs. ,rockery. Glassware. Hardware. Patent Medicines. Top Onions. Potato Onions. Dutch sets. Garden Seeds Brushes, all kinds. Washing Soda. Whitting. Raw Oil. Lye. Turpentine. Castor on, by the lb. Stene Crocks. Earthenware Crocks. Milk Pans. Milk Pails. Weak Boilers. Tea Kettles. do copper. Dish Pans. - Felt Hats, just to hand. Straw Hats for 500 heads. Lace Frillings. Ties and Cellars. Top Shirts. Dress Shirts. Scissors. Knives and Forks. Spools. Teapots. Canned Goods. Plow Lines. Bed Cords. Marbles. Wire Clotheslines. Baby Carriages. Croquet. Spices. r'N rat � Cyt r -r C, L»' O' o, KEEP EVERYTHING, AND SELL CHEAP. Lake -le d N Q. B R ETH O U R, FIRE AND STOOK InsuranceAgent REPXESENTS:. Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Waterloo Mutual Fire Insuranee.Co. Perth Mutual Fire Insurances Co. Economical Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Mercantile Insurance Co. Etna Insurance Co. Give John A Call. PETER .HEPINSTALL, FordWjeh.- General insurance' Agency'. Call,and get your Will made. Or call aa4 get Dr. Wilco d fall's Hygienic pamphlet: ' !iIai nelous umph Over Disease WitfioutMedi• l" elite," at half foririet cost. :Or ANVINSUALSOB. either on village or :seine "farm property. require. ostate attbeloweitrategt. • i Preventing Disease• It should ever be borne in mind that ihaVery much easier to prevent diseas to cure them. It is equally certa hat our health is as much tinder our pe ,oral control as our education and l_usines 't is a preposterous idea that disease •cnt upon us maliciously, with no regar 0 our- conduct, with no reference to th manner in which we treat this body, s ru fearfully and wonderfully made." A fe ulesh•ill aid very much in securing goo Do not exhaust the vital forces b were taxing every organ of the body, o even a n It es rj :?3.4, but it seems to be impossible for it to } change manydegrees from the normal point. sometimes to 106, but' it seldom stays_ ; his point for any length of time: if -it ;oes ap to 108 the good phyeician: who is watching at the bedside of the sick person :ouclud'es that death will soon put an end to the suffering. .Sometimes, as in cases of :holera, it may drop several degrees below s' 5 There are cases recorded where the temper i d retire ran up to 110 or 112 and the patient e The pulse, on tee contrary, may change w many beats, ; and still the sick person Will d not be in danger of death But as a rule • recovered. 3' if the temperature reaches 108 or 109 death one ne of them. Do not eat withou reasonable appetite—since the appetit ndicates how much food is needed if natur al, and Since food -taken without an ap petite will not be well digested. Do not depend on tea, coffee, cocoa, tobacco or any kind of the intoxicants to aid digestion, for ,.one of them will do it, proper labor and a lecessarNatural state of the 'body being all that is has beery' provided the food -is proper and properly taken. Do not eat irreg. lariy, ten often (three mealsa day are all that need betaken, while some of the ancients took but one), or more -than is needed, well in thisfair regarrd appetite iDo not dare uite dry wet clothes while still wearing them. Do not wear much clothing while exercising, or enough to duce perspiration while at rest --just enoughuto be comfortable at all times, it being safer to be comfortably cool rather than uncom- fortably warm. Do not "cool off" eudden- 'y,after having been engaged in hard work, hy sitting, half clad, in a cold current of sir, as it is better to continue Svork moder- ately,or put on extra clothing as soon as one begins to feel a little chilly. If about to take a bath, while in perspiration, do not wait to cool off, as all of the warmth of the body is necessary in order to success- fully resist the chill, while it is unsafe to allow a chill to follow such a bath,and con - iftinthue for any considerable time., Indeed e w ✓ soon follows. s A tiny thermometer, called a c e thermometer, is used to indicate the perature. It is placed under the t or close to the skin in the axilla, or a and left there for a few minutes. ingenious arrangement the mercury i slender glass tube is self -registering, s eon may tell how high it was any tim the temperature is taken, if the merc net disturoed.—[St. Nicholas. • linical tern- ongue, rmpit, By an n the o that e after ury is armth has been caused by violent exercise; the body being then exhausted, a bath is improper and should be deferred. Do not attempt to gain time by depriving yourself of needed sleep, but retire early and sleep till nature says "enough." When there are any symptoms of disease do not neglect yourself, but remove the causes; if a cold, break it up immediately by a sweat. - - Liquors and Strength. It might seem strange that the great mass of the people are so ignorant in re- ference to the effects of alcoholic liquor upon the general health, aside from the fact that we are in a fallen state, having sadly degenerated from the original state of the human body as it came from the hands of the glorious Creator. Again, some doctors are very much at fault in this matter, so often advising a little (much) whiskey, brandy, wines, ale, beer and porter, to "build up," with which to "pull through," to "rally," teaching the people- that these will give strength health and endurance, instead of advising good and wholesome food, the only thing that actually gives strength of itself. If they do not know better, in these days of scientific research, I pity them, but their victims still more. If ignorant, we have just to pity them for what, as physicians, they should know. If they do it to gain the patronage and the. favors of their patrons, I pity them for their want of conscience, and the world stili more. When they give such advice they should know that recent chemical ex- periments, conducted by an eminent chemist and scientist—who was.a "Rummy" when he commenced—with quite a number of others co-operating with him, have proved beyond all question that alcohol, the active element in all liquors, the intoxicant, has no power to afford a single particle of strength, but that it always and everywhere wastes it, by a stimulation which is always, everywhere, followed by a depression and weakness. When they advisee stimulating intoxicant for the purpose of aiding the digestion, their victims are to be pitied since it has been amply. proven that the op- posite is true, alcohol always and every- where reducing the digestive" power, while it should always be remembered that when food is well digested we may expect health and strength as the 'result,. and no good when it is not digested. When one is told that he- should to such intoxicants that he may have a bett appetite, he is deceived, .if he believes t statement of his medical deceiver—if n ignorant—eince it is as well known th the opposite result always follows. If h is told that whiskey will warm him, whe exposed to cold weather,' he is equally d ceived, if not imposed upon.. The apparen good effect of alcohol, affecting the syste only for a short"time, are very deceptive the increased temporary activity, only t be succeeded by fatigue, languor, debilit and real weakness, on the same principl that rapid running reduces the strength, a contrasted with walking. In the one cas the powers. of the system are so overtaxe .as to exhaust vital force at a very rapid rate, an actual prodigal use of human strength, while,.in the other, the forces are naturally used, really increasing our strength and health. Water, as a drink, satisfies the thirst, diminishing vital force'and strength. • Sir John Ross, in- his " Arctic Explora- tions," " says : " When, " men under heavy and strong labor, are given their usual allowance of grog, they soon become languid and faint, and attribute this to the severity of their exercise ; but if the experi- ment be made on two equal boats' •crews, rowing in' the same direction, it. will soon be ` apparent that the water -drinkers will greatly surpass the liquor -drinkers." ke er he of at e n e- t m y e s e d The Pulse and the Temperature. If you take - a thermometer on a hot sum- mer day and watch it until it runs up under the influence of the sunshine to 98.4, you will see it, when it reaches that point, at the exact: temperature of your body, if you are in normal health. Your temperature may fluctuate a fraction above or below 98.4, according_ to the time of the day- or night, but it never, varies to any extent until fever or some other kind of ' disease sets in.. 'Then the temperature begins to do what the pulse would not .do -tell just Sow dangerously sick. the person -tie. And one of the strange things about it is that it does not vary many. degrees from its nor- mal point at 93:4, nv =:matter _-how ill the patient' may become.- If there fever, it say run up: to Iot o N. UILDING ATERZAL. SUCH ,`-�,S Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty Wrought, Cut and Wire Nails, Spikes, Tools of all kinds, in great Profusion at EVENTS BEYOND THE OCEAN. EMPEROR WILLIAM'S REMARKS AT A DINNER IN CARLSRUHE. A Berlin special says :—A parade of the troops was held yesterday at Carlsruhe, capital of the Grand Duchy of Baden. The soldiers were reviewed by Emperor William. Last evening a dinner in the Emperor's honor was given at the palace of the Grand Duke of Baden. In responding to the toast to his Majesty, the Emperor referred to the visit he made to Carlsruhe last spring, when he was returning from Italy. He said while seeking a few hours' repose in Carlsruhe the thought had occurred to him and the Grand Dike of Baden, as well as to many other good patriots, will the German nation remain equal to its task, or deviate from the path indicated by Emperor Will- iam I., and show itself unworthy of the great deeds of Emperor Frederick as the decisive hour approached and it beca necessary to again direct the German pe in the right way for them to follow.' Continuing, the Emperor said, addressing his words to the Grand Duke : "It was your Highness who first of. all with pregnant golden words touched the chord which ever vibrates the heart of the nation. The' military spirit was reawakened within our people, a new idea permeated the entire country, and our nation became once again itself. I thank your highness, as I thank my other cousins in the empire. Each prince has done his utmost to bring forward his men and assemble them round the imperial standard. Through your united efforts Germany stands arrayed in fresh armor as the once divine hero Heimdal stood watch- ing over the peace of the world. May the nation ever remain true to the high mission - confided to it, and may it alwrys be blessed with such princes as it now possesses." me ople CHARLES DE LESSEPS RELEASED. A Paris special says :—M. Charles de Lesseps, who was sentenced to five years' imprisonment for complicity in the Panama Canal scandal, was released from prison to- day. The sentence of five years' imprison- ment was set aside on appeal to the Court of Cassation, which decided that the pros- ecution had not been inaugurated within the time set by the law. - Subsequent to the above sentence, - how- ever, a sentence of one year's imprisonment was passed upon M. Charles de Lesseps on his conviction of having corrupted ex -Minis- ter of Public Work Baihaut to support the Panama Lottery Bonds bill. The court ordered that this sentence. should run concurrently with the preceding one. This last sentence prevented his re- lease when the Court of Cassation decided that the five years' sentence was illegal. He had served about six months of the sentence when the prison officials were to- day ordered to release him. Most of this time was spent in the prison hospital. THE MINERS WILL KEEP UP THE STRIKE. A London special says :=The question of continuing the coal strike in Derbyshire and South Lan:ashire was put to vote to- day. Though it is generally conceded by impartial observers that there is little, if any, chance o,4 the miners winning the fight that has • now been in progress since July 28, the men themselves think that they will eventually force the mine owners to con- cede their demands. This- was shown to- day by the ballots taken in Derbyshire and South Lancashire, an immense majority of the men voting in favor of continuing the strike. MAN(EUVRING ON THE FRONTIER. A Berlin special says :—Detachments of the "Russian and German armies are man- ceuvring in the vicinity of the Russo -Prus- sian frontier. The soldiers are often in sight of each other while performing their respective evolutions, but the utmost good feeling is manifested on both sides. In the neighbourhood of the fields of operation is Chorzele, a village of Russian Poland, prac- tically on the frontier. When the men and officers of the Russian and. German forces have met in the village they have displayed much good feeling"toward each other, and have fraternized as though they all belonged to one army. NEWS FROM THE 0E1E11 T. Chinese Destroy a Catholic Chapel --Fire and Earthquake In Japan. A Victoria, B. C , despatch says :—The North China Daily News of Aag.2;says that news has arrived of the destruction by a mob of the Roman Catholic chapel in the town of Genkiawana, near the city of Mienvung, about 198 miles west of Hankow. The for- eign priests in charge escaped to the neigh- boring town. As far as known no lives were lost, though " several native ,houses shared in the "destruction. The affair hap- pened on the 25th ult., and the French Consul is inquiring into the circumstances. 1 Japan has during the past month experi- I enced'fires and earthquakes. On Aug. 16 the village of Iyenokami, in -Tamba prov- io ince, was burned and sixty-four lives were lost. The village of Hon Toniari, Kitami i i province, . was destroyed twelve days previ- ous,124 houses being -consumed, but.fortun • ately without fatality. On Aug.f6 the ,town of Hakozaki, Flake 4 �1G meq► neer & enry s 1111nrv' Pordwjch z m. Hard -ware - ore, full stock of alkinds of Hardware. No need to go to the "big towns," for we have everything. Come and deal at a first-class house, where goods are way down cheat . Immense line of ALABASTINE for the walls, in all colors. Tinsmithing and Repairing a Speciality An elegant stock of :34001-118 AND P. H. SHAVER'S, GORRIE Something choice in gents' Walking Shoes, Ladies' Lace Boots, Boys' and Girls' Boots and Shoes. II have the choicest leather in stock and make a speciality of ordered work. Pe feet fits guaranteed. (REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. P. lei. SAVFrpi ARE -you MOVING TO ? We are going to C T P P -a=,/ A. Co., Michigan, near Sault Ste Marie. WHY DO YOU GO THERE ? , Well, we have five boys, !we have sold the farm for $5, boo. We can buy 640 ;acres petween Pick- ford and the Railway tnadt on at Rudyard, fhave a good farm or eaeh of the boys and have money left What c...n a renter do there? He can buy a farm on five years time And pay for it with one-fourth of the tioney he would pay for rents in that me, and own his own home. Is it good land ? . As good as any in Huron Co., Excellent dor Oats, Peas, Wheat Clover, . Timothy, Po - toes and all kinds of &pots. Prices are as good as any on the Lakes, owing to the nearness of the paines.and lumber woods . to the west- ward. What class of people live there ? They are nearly all from Huron Co. Tau meet there so many old neighbors that you can hardly believe you have home. — I want' to see that land. Who has it r sale ? Inquire - of E. C. DAVI DSON, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. no. MONTOO!#IIERY. FORDWICH, Ont; • owa prefecture, comprising iiixty ,houses, is st high was also destroyed and ,u ward r 10 P f X30 Plansd _,5, and. 8. 8. cOOK, Oki F-1,si`d�'� & Iiodq FORDWICH, ONT. o -- Money to Loan on Farm Se4 curity at the Lowest Rate of Interest. Good Notes discounted. 0 0 Special Attention given t CONVEYANCING ..s.qoolc, North of the Post Office, FORDWICI XiI130NPIT .-PLANING MILIr' AND •• ••-:: SASH AND DOOR FACTORY. H. S. SMITH & . the Wroxeter Planing I�w'th new macAVE fitted hinery throughout and are prepared to furnish IWO Sash, Doors, 1313Etds and all kinds of House Furnishings. ` PLANING • AND MATCHING DONE PR OMP Only first-class work turned ;persons rendered hotrieless, ° ' For Mpps, Circulars anal " fa far. ma; c •• •• • • ••• on. application. •