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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-04-27, Page 6e -::77:.1%.:1..r7=1--;7:- • it all e an loaf, tie H4 fug br bei to v qui alll of dalPIA ma, ....ter..0 KERNELS FPC THE SHCTUM MILL iteresting Paragraphs from ouroura Exchanges. t Canaries have been known to live twenty-one years. Only one-tenth of the population of the United States is of unmixed descent. A Lumberman's Opinion: "1 was troubled with palpitation of the heart and sleeplessness, writes Mr. Wm. Pritcoard, Lumber Inspector, Lumsden Mills, Ont., "and used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food with very great benefit, as my whole system was strengthened andbuiltup." Dr. Chase's Nerve Food forms new, rich blood and restores the feeble, wasted nerve cells. Farmers in Prince Edward County say clover crop has been ruined by the late spring. The Right Hon. Sir Elzear Taseher eau, P. C., died at Ottawa Friday morning in his 75th year. Deceased was stricken with paralysis about a month ago. CASTOR I A 'For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ' AZefo 1 W. B. Billinghurst, caretaker for the Elgin Golf acid Country Club, accident- ally shot and killed himself at St. Thomas last week. Seventy-seven additional communica- tions, received from public bodies, were presented to the Commons by Sir' Wil- frid Laurier, every one of them endors- ing the proposedreeiprocityagreement. f i When a medicine must be given to young children it should be pleasant to take. Chamberlain's eChough Remedy is made from loaf sugar, and the roots used in its pr ti p epata on give it a filavor similar to maple, syrup, making it pleas- entto take. ethos no superior for colds, croup and whooping cough. For sale by all dealers. The body of Annie IMIalloy, a domes- ticinToronto, To onto, who disappeared last November, was taken from the Bay on Friday afternoon. The body had evi- dently been in the water all winter John Stewart, aged 60 years, of 128 Markham Street, Toronto, was knock- ed down by a run -a -way horse, and re- ceived injuries which may prove fatal. HAD HEART TROUBLE :''' NERVES WERE ALL UNSTRUNC. Wherever there is any weakness of the heart or nerves, flagging energy or phy- tical breakdown, the use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve fills leill soon produce a healthy, strong system. Miss 13esaieinsley, Arkona, Ont. writes: -"It is with the greatest of pleasure 1 write you stating the benefit 1 have received by using your Milburn's !Team, and Nerve Pills. )'his spring I rias ell run clown and could bardly do any work. I went tore doctor and he tort me I had heart trouble and that my nerves were all unstrung. I took hie medicine, as he ordered sue to do, but it did me no good. I was working in s printing office at the time, and my doctor said it was the type setting caused the trouble, but I thought not. My father edvlaed me to buy a box of our pills es he hirci derived so much (len o sour them. Before! had finished robed ono box I noticed a great difference, laid eoul.i work from morning to night with out any smothering feeling or hat flushes, I can recommend them hihly' to all nervous and run down people." Price 50 (writs per box. of 3 for $1.25, as all dealers, or mailed direct on teeeipt rot oder by The T. Mem tie., Limited, eteserito, sen l.. THE WR 'WIAN TIMES A.PIUULi 27, 1911 • On Monday, April 17, the wedding of Helen, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs, A. M. Polley, Goderieh, to Victor W. Major, of Toledo, Olde, was quietly celebrated. The bride wore a gown of chiffon over Dresden silk, and was at- tended only by her sister, Mrs. H. W. McFadyen (Greco Polley) of Seattle, who wore a pretty costume of pale coral silk. Immediately after the cere- mony Mr. and Mrs. 1Sfajor left •for the southern States. While tramping over a field the other day to make a short cut to his home at Sharon, Pa., George Hoven stepped on the boards of an abandoned well and fell through, He was able to grab hold of a crossbeam and succeeded in linking his arm about it. Then he screamed for help but his cries were not heard. After clinging to the cross- beam for about two hours, Hoven be- gan to grow weak. He offered a pray- er and then allowed his arms to relax, expecting to fall many feet and be kill- ed or drowned, Instead he fell 'only six inches. The fright attending the moment while he hung suspended in the air completely un -nerved him, and it was many hours before he was able to crawl out and make his way home. A recent estimate from a reliable source placed the number of telephones in the world at 9,000,000 on 12,500,000 miles of wire. A catch with which a window may be locked open at any desired height con- tains a fusible link connected with a weight to close the window in event of excessive heat. The word bungalow is an Anglo-In- dian version of the Hindoo bangle, which primarily means Bengali,, or of Bengal, and is also applied to a thatch- ed hut. In cases of rheumatism relief from pain makes sleep and rest possible. This may be obtained by applying Chamber - run 's Liniment. For sale by all dealers. The wife of a well-known Boston physician is reported to be conducting a "course in 'everyday ethics for the benefit of the favored daughters of the Back Bay." A fatal accident occurred at Roebuck cheese factory, a few miles north of Prescott, when Robt. Graham was caught in a belt and whirled around the fly -wheel, being instantly killed. ,Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CAST"ORJA The Nile is the most regular.river in the world as to its periods of flood and decline. It rises steadily from June to August; then it begins to fall, rapidly at first, and afterwards slowly, till next June. It is never a month early or late. Lame Shoulder is nearly always due to rheumatism of the muscles, and quick- ly yields to the free application of Cham- eerlain's Liniment. For sale by all deal - bre. A parrot saved a Chatham household from a terrible death in the early hours of a recent morning. All the inmates were asleep, when they .were aroused by the bird shrieking, "father, come quick!" It was then found that the house was full of smoke, and that a room downstairs was in flames. Some difficulty was experienced in removing a tenant named George Pett, who is partially paralyzed, from one of the rooms, but everyone was brought safe- ly out, and the flames were quickly ex- tinguished by the fire brigade. The cry of the bird, which probably saved several lives, is one of several which it is fond of repeating. Children Crit FDR FLETCHER S O!-sirS1 ORIA &,LATE 01' OHIO, CITY OE TOLEDO i LUCAS COUNTY. i Ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & CO., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afore- said, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot becre thes cured by use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY, Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of Decem- ber, A. D., 1886. (SEAL)" efA. W. GLEASON, e q [NOTARY PUBLIC. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- nally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO„ Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa- tion. Charles A. Mustard, B. A., son of Alex. Mustard, of Brucefield, has pass- de his third year examination at Knox College, Toronto, taking very high standing. Mr. Mustard and A. A. Scott, another third year student, tied for the post graduate fellowship, which includes the David Smith Ross, the Jane Hunter and the MacWilliam scholarships of $200, $175 and $25, re- spectively. Instead of dividing the prize .of $400, the senate has provided an additional fellowship of $400. —•----ate•.-�----• Makes Hair Grow. $X WN AND OUT. [Edgar A. Guest, in Detroit Free Press.) "Down and out" is a phrase we use Too oft in a heedless, careless wase, Because one battle a man may lose 'elle is down and out," the scoffers say, But many have risen to win renown Who have felt the sting of fate's knotted knout; It doesn't follow because he's dawn, That a man has also been counted out. There's always a chariots to rise again; If a man has faith in himself and tries, He can win the cheers of his fellow men And some time capture the golden prize, To -day's defeat isn't worth a frown, Keep your eyes ahead and your cour- • age stout, It doesn't follow because you're down That you have also been counted out. "Down and out!" Man is never that If he has the courage to start again; If fate has humbled and knocked him flat He still can smile on his fellow -men. If he has the courage to hide his frown Remember this as you go about, Although to -day he is surely down It's n mortal cinch that he isn't out, "Our baby cries for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy," writes Mrs. T. B. Ken- drick, Rasaca, Ga. "It is the best cough remedy on the market for coughs, colds and croup. For sale by all dealers. F. J. Hind has an invigorator that will grow hair or money back. The time to take care of the hair is when you have hair to take care of, If your hair is getting thin, gradually falling out, it cannot be long before the spot appears. The greatest remedy to stop the hair from falling is SALVIA, the Great American Hair Grower, first discover- ed in England. SALVIA furnishes nourishment to the hair roots. and acts so quickly that people are amazed. And remember it destroys the Dan- druff germ, the little pest that saps the life that should go to the hair from the roots. SALVIA is sold by F. J. Hind under a positive guarantee to cure Dandruff, stop Falling Hair and Itching Scalp in ten days or money back. A large bot - tie costs 50c. The word "SALVIA" (Latin for sage) is on every bottle. Pew people know that plays in Eng- land, Germany, Italy and ?ranee were fostered for religious purposes by the church centuries before they were taken up as a separate seculiar busi- ness. Moreover, few visitors to St. foci's Cathedral, in London, realize that : let church during Elizabeth's reign, and the first years of the reign of James I., set aside one of its adja- cent buildings for use as a secular the - etre. Its little stage was .famous, and the company of choir boys as adore preeented many of the great plays of Sheakespeare's time. Theyacted from about 1598 to 1608 under the manage- ment of Edward Pierce, their master in music, who as church almoner had business control of these adjacent buildings owned .try the church.- Lon- don Chronicle. Old Brown had just been burried, and his faithful wife was sorting out his be- longings when she came across an in- surance policy for $10,000. She was so delighted that she ordered the local sculptor to erect a large tombstone with the words "Rest in peace" carved upon it. When she presented the policy to the insurance company she was told it had expired the previous year, so, in her thirst for revenge she ordered the sculptor to carve on the tombstone, under the words "Rest in peace" -"Till we meet again." Psorsic,sis AUU Over Body Most dreaded a.f skin t'ieeaset was - cured by Dr. Chase's Ointment, P edesie is a sort of chronic 'eczema. The itching it eaumes is almost beyond human endurance, and it, is usually ee eeelerrel ineusable. But this case proves that Dr. c'hase's Ointment is a mire, in espito of the doctor's predic- tion. Nettle 'Massey, Consecan, Ont., writes.--"1'or 11 w, years I suffered with ;tihilt three donors railed psor- iasis. They eouid not help me and one of them told inc if any tele offer- ed to guarantee a cure for $50.00 to keep my money as I could not be cured. The disease spread all over n•e, even on my face and !lead, and the Belling and burning was hard to bear. I ustd eight boxes of Dr, Chase's Ointment, and l ani glad to say 1 ani -entirely. cured, not a sign t.f a sore to be risen. I earn hardly praise this ointment enough," Br. i'! '.. '.+if) etelent, t„i its, n box, all fie:tiers or 1•,dinausun, flute- et Cu., ''*rout♦;. • Morals and Chickens. • ' There lived a man in seine one's town -his name need not be written down -who talked and preached of right and wrong, and always stood for virtue, strong. He liked to show the shining way to every guy who roamed astray, andhe was full of texts and saws, and vital truths and moral laws. And folks who heard him talk and preach would always say he was a peach. His next door neighbors didn't rise to boom and praise him Oa the skies. They said: "His chickens come and scratch the stuffing from our gar- den patch; he knows they're driving us to drink, he knows what allhis neigh- bors think, and yet he Iets his doggone hens go skitting blithely from their pens to knock our gardens upside down -he is the meanest skate in town." The world is stocked with solemn frauds who deal in sounding moral gauds and platitudes and good advice, and helpful hints fresh off the ice; they wag their jaws and wield their pens -and let their neighbors fight the hens. To treat your neighbor right will count for more gran any gross amount of bulging words when we are called, and to the bar of judgment hauled. -Walt Mason, Heins of'i11ii1ileyTrouble. In the early stages kidney troubles are known by backache and urinary disorders. Later come dropsy,. stone, rheumatic pains and perhaps diabetes. But don't wait for these. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills will help you in a few hours. Their thorough action on the liver, kidneys and bowels will clear away the pains and aches and make you well again. Practieal Uses of Turpentine Ink stains in muslins can be removed with soap and turpentine. Add a few drops of turpentine to the water the clothes are boiled in and it will whiten them. Sprinkle turpentine in cockroach haunts and they will leave. Ants dis- like turpentine, also. Moth will leave if it is sprinkled around. Pitch, wheel.grease or tar stains can be quickly removed if the spot is first oovered with fresh lard, then soaked in turpentine. • Put a few drops of turpentine on a woolen cloth to'clean tan shoes. Moisten a sponfie with turpentine and wipe off your gilt picture frames. Add a little turpentine to a pan of your broom in it warm wtiter, dipping , and sweep the faded carpets. It will restore the colors. Equal parts of linseed oil ant')' turpen- tine will remove white marks on, fur- niture caused by water. e Wash closets and bureau drawers with strong turpentine water; it will drive moths away. For cramps wring clothes out of hot turpentine water and apply. When pneurnoniathreatens, rub the regions of the lungs with turpentine and apply heat. -Dorothy Judkins in Twentieth Century Fanner. [. ,. ..,4., Yr A..,. _. CR«;AT INV N ` ON$, Some Things That Have Pone the Moat Good for Mankind. The savage didn't invent; be covered. When he first rubbed two sticks together and produced fire lie changed the course of the universes. Man and woman had bi'en •hunting and gathering herbs side by rias bs, fore; now one must stay at home anti mind the fire. The woman ohose the hearth, and the man the heath, It is zo at the present day and ever wi:1 he. When an early woman drolipe.l a hot stone in a wicker jar and made soup she had done more than the per- son who first oomuluuicates with: Mars, The greatest little invention thet has been given to the world is the beefier snatch. It was invented in 1827, It is small, but, Pike I'ortia's 'candle, it bas shed a great light into the world. It gave man mastery of fire. Before this fire had been a eon- trary hired man, but now it became an obedient servant. Mankind was centuries old before it produced the first great invention --- the compass. Man had been kept at home, made to 'hug the seashore for fear of being lost should lie get out' of eight of land. Over the horizon of the sea was the end of the world., Marco Polo, the first globe trottex, brought it from China, where it ha,d been known about for centuries. It was a piece of iron stuck on a board floating In the water; no one had tie alighte,st idea in the world why it 'should swing around to the north. Could Marco Polo, or Flavin Gioja- who was the real inventor -see a mod- ern compass they wourdn't know what it was. When Columbus got a com- pass he got more than he did .when the queen gave him her jewels. The compass gave us the new world. Waren James Watt h:'ld down the 1'd of his mother's tea kettle, he put him- self into every chill histroy, and solv- ed the question of powcr. Steam is mankind's best servant. One pant of water made into at •ain will 1.f1 t7 tons a foot off the ground. The , u y arm of man, that the !)../v:s Ni about, becomes a nilgl:ty arm wh.n backed by stein:. A companion s'rvart To , t am is electriety. 1Slectricay :s .la • tir.r ve •- satile, but as yet has not lien su h an important factor fn i u 's 1. at 1 • with nature to steam. But its iut..r is all before it. Like gunpowder, it was kn w about centuries b: f .re it was :rut to use. Thaler, of !tile tns, knew t t amber rubbed together wou'd a:tr:e; leaves and broken bits of straw, 60) years before Christ. It was 1, ft o Dr. W. Gilbert, in 1651, to rn'k? :he first practical discovery; and it Wm; more than 200 years after this t: at electricity was induced. Dr. Gi-brt thought that it was the heat in the amber that attracted the leav s, or something that way. And that is t.bout r all we know about it yet. • George Hr Clark, seed commis- sioner of Canada, has issued a proclain- mation to farmers generally through- out the Dominion advising the greatest diligence generally with respect to the mangei and beet seeds which they this year propose to sow. In the European Countries from which mangel and beet seeds ate usually obtained the eifmatie conditions in 1909 and 1910 were most unfavorable aed it is feared that the e , pe rc ntagt, of vitality will be very low. The •department of agriculture advises fanners to sow from at least one-half more mangel seed tifthe acre than or- iginatly intended or generaliy done. The department also strongly advises buying; the seed from reputabl firntee and the bags or packages of which are branded with a percentageof vitality. - Died From Terror. e Perhaps the most remarkable death from fear was that of the Dutch paint- er Pentman, who lived hithe seven- teenth century. One day he went into a room full of anatomical. subjects to sketch some death's heads and skeite+ tans for a picture he intended tsi paint. The w aaber .was very sultry and While sketching he fel asbeeese He was aroused by bones defacing around 1( 'n and the skeletons sass, pend cif from the cel ng ..1i seeng. te- ht sInt a fit of terror he ihreir & :foam a window.. on*, 'though he :a.ed no serious ice' tea' tenverrdonned stightissadhquate belch cauzsed+.the commetaon ntoo gheew earsy sin 48, z o nrvouhe died in * ls transit The Soft Answer. "Do you 'law you. are '•&'s'balg•iii forte water?" roaredez vedce• twine the •fie. "No," said dile Saltomatait adasjie; bank quietly, {o" et meats )fie #hat west: "It isved vsatet, xtr�n1, •are his anew Sound fra'i4 " Mk.* lot of motley is doilIC vdtia, tett'" asked -the amgiber,t intent tam rads anifzne. "math, sit, rroa.c'tr!" sapiicd the "Then thereto Ix), need for Thu di worm" �,&Wing�: "for I happen -Loudon Man. Needed. A young minister bed obtained a; kirk in a ,mining district in Seotlund.� After a deal of difficulty be managed to seourc lodgings. The first morning following hie arrival the landlady' knocked at the door with the unusual query as to whether he lead washed himself. • „Yes,„ he said. "Why?" "Becatuse," she replied calmly, "1'ni' guar to intik' a dumplin' for the ditia nor, an' I wad like the len' 0' the` basin !"-Tit-Bits... What's In a Headline? Sub -Editor -•--A. correspondent send ue a full it,eou.nt of a. cock fight, wit% photographs of the steel spurs used,. the cockpit, spectators, birds in bat- tle, etc., with'every round described: Great, I'ld'itor--Gra.aiouet Get it all in, Subel di'tor (doui tltilly)-But tha is a morel Sunday passer. Great Ikditor.•--'ii-e-s; I know, head! it: "A lirutul Sport -Where Were eta Police?" BtAlt Ugly. He (relating leis adventiures)-Attd Marvetson stared me itt :trite lace. She (who does flit admire him)--' 1yqual unpleasant for both of yeti. I ikon think. Illustrated Bite. Had HIS Preference, hospitable 1 airier --Now, stranger, sit right down to the table. You are me to etre dittnet but l wvrXtrayou'll Y r have to eat .what the rest of ues do. Stranger -Maas, .'batt 1-er- i1 ala the same to you, VII oat what the rest of You don't. 'flawed Irqueth. I'fiquests have to be held lett tree& ore -frost in Nngland, as Well as alit 'bodied and fires. "For Tea You 'an't Beat Lipton's" Give it a Thorough. Test, Try it Alongside the Rest; You Will Agree That the Best i5 IPT 9 TEA Sold Only in Airtight Packages Education Report. From the Minister of Education's re- port for 1910 we learn that school teachers throughout the province are getting higher salaries than they did the previous year. In urban schools tb0 average salary for male teachers is $1;000, an increase of $14 over 1909, and for female teachers $532, an increase of $16. In ruIal schools the average sal- ary has increased $22, being $484. Fe- male teachers in these schools are re- ceiving $17 more, the average being $399. Total amount expended in pub- lic schools during 1910 was $17,321,289 on 5,918 schools, with a total school population of $401,268.• Expenditure separate 1 s 184 0 on pa schools s wa $ 82 Q, . S , number of schools being 467, school population 55,834. There are 145 col- legiate and high schools in the province with 820 teachers and 33201 pupils. Total expenditure $621,685. Forty years ago urban schools supplied only about 18 per cent. of primary school pupils in the province. Cost per pupil in the public schools increased this year from 17.52 to 17.84. As ccmpared with this 32 per cent. increase in public schools, there was an increase in cost per pupil in high schools of $5.57, the cost now being $48. A quiet wedding took place on Wed- nesday afternoon, April 12th, when Miss Margaret Mcllwain, Bayfield Road, became the, bride of J. Thomas Ryan, of Dungannon. The bride was tastefully dressed in brown. The cere- mony was performed at the Leeburn and Union Manse, by Rev. J. Hamil- ton, B.A. The young people start mar- ried life with the good wishes of a host of friends. A lcte t; Io School Teacher Ouoe a Dyspeptic -Now Weil, Th;mir s, to Father Morriscy's No.11. Ricliibucto, N. 13„ Nov. nth rgog, Pallier ..i.orrisey Med, Co., Ltd., I have been teaching school for up-• war is of thirty years, during the last twenty-five of which 1 have suffered seriously with stomach trouble, indi- gestion and dyspepsia. I have tried many remedies, and while l would get temporary rel of from some of them, yet the old t. oeble would return, and with it the svfferiu„ s only known to the chronic dysp. ptio. Last year Ihad made up cry mind to abandon my profession, .feeling that in wy condition I could neither do justice to myself or to the ninny pupils under my car„e. A friend suggested to me that I fry 'father Morrisey's No. it Stomach 'tablets ; I did so, and have coatinuca to use them with the result that my stomach trouble is cured -my indigestion and dyspepsia gone and 1 feel as well as I ever did, I have, thanks to the Tablets, been able to continue in my profession, and, feel that I am once more enjoying my work and am able toigive justice to the. fifty-four pupils under my care. Yours Gratefully, (Signed) MA°xst Cxxtrsraz.• Are you one of the many thousands who, like Miss Chrystal, are prevented from doing their best work, or really enjoying life, by stomach trouble? • If you are you cannot do better than she did -take Pather Morriscy's No. it Tablets. Poch No. ix Tablet, when dissolved in, the stomach, will digest it pounds of food -a good, hearty meal -so that no matter how weak your stomach may be No, xx Tablets will enable you to get• the nourishment out of your food and. build up your strength, while the sto- mach, thus relieved, recovers its vigor. 5oc. a box at your dealer's or from the rather Morriscy Medicine Co., Ltd., Montreal, Que.. 94. PRIINT!NG AND STATION ERY We have put in our office a complete stock. of Staple Stationery and can supply your wants in WRITING PADS WRITING PAPER ENVELOPES BLANK BOOKS LEAD PENCILS BUTTER PAPER PAPETERIES, • We:will keep the best and sell at PENS AND INK TOILET PAPER PLAYING CARDS, etc stock in the.. respective lines reasonable prices. JOB PRINTING We are in a better position than ever before to attend to your wants in the Job Printing line and all orders will receive prompt attention. Leave your order with us when in need of LETTER LEADS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES CALLING CARDS CIRCULARS NOTE HEADS STATEMENTS WEDDING INVITATIONS POSTERS CATALOGUES Or; anything you tlnay4require in the printing line. Subscriptions taken for all the Leading Newspapers and Magazines The Times. Office StONE BLOCK Wingharn, Ont.