HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1902-11-27, Page 3TWE WINGII I NOVEg[ ER 27. 002
Malt Breakfast Food
The Most Delicious and Nu-
tritious of all Cereal
- roods..
The soient'P of our, n' ogrossive age has
evolyee on. ills a%L fowl oun)biihing the-
hl3iltli %viug praperprfes of par" Malt
with ihit virrnrs of ;lie ulinioen4 Oat inti.
au Whtat, Tv i:i the fond shut is
ed. and creed rn,day by all (dries. of our
goottliaa penile. Malt 13reakta•tt rood
leas heroine on *Olivier imivel'snl .ervt,rIte,
The vriet, putd it wi hi) roach 0f evcny
family, Xt is ns .ehet,; *t ordinary one•
meal stud gives happier r.tsni►d iti health
and strength building. Beteg purtinlly
predigeeteti, Malt l3reakrnst Fla >t fluee
not tax digest ent like oatuntiti and othee
common gren folds. It eantaitts all
the true elements of niuritiou, tuft is
adepterl for Lila support of life from day
to day. Ir bn:lds up flesh, bone 81)11
muscle; it gives nativity curl viewless
to the brain. Ask your Grocer for it.
Canadian Forestry
7
immense Possibilities of our Forest
Resources
The official report of the third an-
iuul meeting of the Canadian Forestry
Association, which has just bean re-
ceived, is exceedingly interesting and
(carotins a .great deal or practical in-
formation on n ,subject about which
too little is known ant to which too
little atteent1on le given by the gen-
eral public. The immense responsi-
bilities of our noi'';.'her'n resourc,,s etre
;shown by the following extract from
the paper by Mr. Thos. Southworth,
Birectot or Forestry for Ontario.
"Although we have at present only
2,6134,000 acres in forest reeerves. I do
not think it unreesonablc to expect
thee ultimately the Crown forest of
Ontario will comprise. fully 25,000,000
mires, re State fort larger than is
poassessed by any other country I know
sof. What a forest of th.s s'ze, owned
by the p oplo tet a oh le, eh ch means
to the reeenuo of the Province when
placed under scientific control and
lssystemr.,tieally worked is difficult to
conjecture. Already, with cur waste-
ful methods, and when only it small
part of this territory is being operat-
ed, the Province 'receives in revenue
about $1,000,000 per year, and that this
taum could be enormously increased
under the conditions referred to no
one, 1 think, will entertain any ser-
.rous doubt. The composition of this
vast forest is such, as to make it the
most valuable in the world. While
it contains a large quantity of spruce
and birch, the paper and furniture
•woods per excellence, it is the natural
lebitat of the most valuable tree of
them all — the lordly white pine, the
tree -thee hie already been: se largely
the cause or the unique position occu-
pied by the Province of Oatario in
being a country without a 'debt, and
where the people n.re not subject to
any direct tax for State purposes."
The papery aro valuable and inter-
esting, and the illustrations ere ex-
cellent, showing the lumber industry
in all its phases. , ; .
�:t3�11
saumor
Conuine
a rte EA S
s, !,Tj� ��:;via.'"--•,
tl- e:3.
T �� � � V�
�.Y
Mist Cesar Sigensttlro of
`ate
Sec Fac-Sittt]!o .','rnp:Icr Below.
Vary small l :IIs els a 2cy
to take as stgar.
CAla's
TTL I
killPi WI
Pr
lto GXONY75r I MUST RAV& O,ATUNt.
s a u Pucely 17egEtab:a.,:Z.J.V
CURE $!CK HEADACHE.
), Liver Has
s
'That's what you need; some*,
thin; to cure your bilious-
ness and give you a good
digestion. flyer's Pills are
liver pills. They cure con-
stipation and biliousness.
25c.
Gently laxative. Alf druggists.
Waht ^n,e" tnonst:r.•h be trd a beautiful
pbrown
h
vr ricblaek? Then use
DUCKUWH.AM'S DYE1fNirniskeerta
6O CTS 00 . C nUOGNT! ON R, '. HALL b CO„ NASM.A,
Why Vote for the Referendum
Substentiel Reasons Why tho Ontario
Liquor Act Should bo carried.
Mie take Silo Pollowint; front Tho.
Prosbyierian, the representative:
paper- of the Pr'e,xbytoriun hotly iu
Canada.,
Oa December 4, the electors of tho
Provinw of Ontario will have.othu ep-
port)lx>ity to pronounce for or t'.gainst
the liquor tra1 io, Theft. 'opportunity
is one oP euprome impot'tance, The
voto cast on that day will effect in
to very vital .way ilio tomperanca re-
form movement, not in Otituriu only,
but throughout all the Provinces.. So
vast>y important is tho present ague.
Lion and .so oritiani Is the occasion
that Ivo venture to press the question
up:rn the attention or till evho will tee
(Dive our 'words, appealing to reason
and: to aousolonce, that the issue of
that 'ley may tell for the best things
in on.r Canadian life.
Lot there bo no mistake as to the
inil>ortenoe of the present opportun-
ity. %here may bo public apathy, a
t eedening of the public conscience, a
drawing of the nerve of puolio mimeo'
vor, but itt thl9 momont there is no
question before the public' mind to
Lai at ell .compered with this question
that tuucilee the vory springs of in-
dust•iul, commercial, social, political
uxid religious preslxr•ity. Questions
of imperial relations aro distinctly
subordinate to the character of our
pl i> tau citlece ship and the ridding of
politico and industry and domestic life
frons the burden of the liquor I:ruf1'io
and the bondage of intemperance.
The vexed question of 'the tariff
iy but a trine in comparison. ' The
fuel. famine is only a tompurery seii-
s.ition. 43 ut drunkenness is tho
blieshit of our civilization and the
liquor traffic is the slunding menace
til political freedom tins social pro -
gross.
IT PAYS
TO Ai.DVERTISE
IN THE
TIMES
'Wnl
atevcr viols may be hcldl on
qui:stione at license, or prohibition, br
.tutu ownership of tiro liquor traffic
this ugly and ultimate foot stands.
tlait the bur -room as we know• it in
Canada. in cur cities, towns and rural
hamlets, is at (nee the breeding -Natio
end the rends z ouy of the o:.mmunity's
ulg trite* and hoodiuinism. There is
not an cpm brit• -room anywhere that
is not ti menace to decency and order.
The number of lioonsod bar -rooms
has leen greatly reduced in Ontario
-during the past quarter century, and
in moue instances the surroundings
have been greatly improved, but the
burden n.n,l the curs; remain, a burden
to honest industry and a curse to
domestic pence. There are few great
industrial or commercial institutions
th•et hive not .suffered loss through
the Incipacity or the negligence Or
the offence of patrons of the saloon.
The Church hies suffered, the pulpit
has bten disgraced, the pow has been
paralyzed, and the atmosphere in
which the Church has sougpt to do
Ler work for the salvation of mon has
been poisoned by the presence and the
Lowe: et' the 1 quo: tr f c. 1' h t
.sorrow has come to thousan'de of•
lioines, sorrow whose voice is often
smothered in sli ime, because cf the
blighting of hopes and the embitter-
ment of domestic life! There can, he
na compromise. The light is too
white u,od too fierce which recent
years have thrown on the liquor traf-
fic an' it;..muohinations in Canada to
Jake Olen mutt alit y possible. Along
► r:,e fine cr along another the fight
roust be. pushed. Only let it be a real
fight,
and a a fight i' • to a finish.
The ens thine now before the friends
of temperance reform in Ontario is
the opportunity offered by the Refer-
endum c•inpaign. The Act framed and
s • bythe Legislature of ..1, n1'
. sstdc
p.
tobe, approved by the Privy Council.
and adopted by the Legislature of
Ontario and referred to the electors
for confirmation, is the must advanc-
ed and strongest piece of temperance
legislation ever entered en tLe st.ltute
books of Canada. It. goos.to the limit
of the Province's authority in the dir-
ectaan. of Prohibition. It would close
every bar -room in the Province, and
ii earriel in (laterite the terms of the
Referendum will ,secure for its en-
forcement a ,substantial and tiegros-
sivo public cpinio•n, the Govornalrnt
is pledged to enforea It, and the Act
iteelr provides the necessary machine
cry fur its own ridministration.
Were them any doubt about the
thorotghgoing character of the Act or
the fitnces of the machinery provided
tor its enforcement, The unusual act-
ivity of the Licensed Victuallers' .As-
t•ociation in organizing and planning
for tee defeat. of the Act in the Refer-
endum would dispel that doubt. Rare-
ly, it ever, in the pest did th -brewers
anrt distillers and these with largo
property interests In the traffic mani-
fest such genuine ooncern. "They ' re.
raising a large- fund for the defeat
of the measure. .They will use theft
fund in a variety of ways known to
practiced election managers. Whore-
d= passible they will muzzle tho
press, or rru ke it the vehicle for the
(hutment Lan of views antagonistic 10
prohibitory legisintion. Not always
ie. the c.p'n field, but secreliy and in
OH MY HEAD1
Wa'N 17' ACHY8l
NERVOUS
PTILIGVS
SICK
PERIODICAL '
SPASMODIC
l �.
1
HEADACHES,
Tiouhtoho is not of !twit a disease. lint is
gonorally caused by sotno dtserder ef. the stam-
acb, liver or bowels.
]before you can be cured you must remove
the cause.
Burdock Blood Bitters
will do it for you. •
It regulates the etomarll,liver and bowels,
purlites the blood raid toned up the whole opt -
UM to full health sad vigor.
REJECTED
BECAUSE OF BAD COLOR.
Hundreds of paeltages of butter are
rojected et uh wtrult by exert butter
buyer„ in Oetunilh, simply beeause the
uttiur is brad, '!he ifhads dat)itiuded t>y
home commune) sand for export int the
Jana golden tint which can only be pro-
duced by Webs, lttcuterl•sn)l & (1s'2.,
Improved. Butter Color, Q. her color,
HOW .t,y seine t rtJt)trirr 4$tti I) * 4' 11�1itltClUti$,
and ulna; continua to give trim 4,0 and
at,nde loss of Manny to ail who Witt t IWD,
t'ha goYern!uent 04t101132rt,is and f-a'luold
cud the most experienced (ii Ilrr'llten
41111 dairymen In t,).►14arba aid Wells,
Richardson & Co'd. Improved }3uriet
th.lor at all seasons fur the pro. notion of
prize butter, N1) )dud, no iu►,sunties;
every drop pule unit clear. All druggi.ce,
Mid Healer
Helping the Farmers
The Q. P, R. Starts a Catnpaign of
Instruction
Ott')wa, Nov. 14,-- Eeoognizintt, t1.4t
tlic .spread, o'1' instruction among the
fermiers rind the development oL ueerie
culture ruee.n more freight and passe**
ger traffic and greater cunnings for
the railway's, the C. lt, R. Sas resatvcd
to adopt nleu,sttres along these lines in
the iAl,u,r1timo l'rovixices and: the west
ett its own expense, The first indica-
tio,l uY ti a C'.P,lt; s pt 1 cy is t141 dfree.i
Lion is the .engagement all ,411,800 per
antrum of 11r. W. W. Ilubbat'd, form,
c'rly editor or the Maritime Farmer
aim Secretary of the Maritime Stock_
33reoders' Asauctation, and the Marl-
time 'Winter Fair. Ur. Hubblyd
wilt travel through the districts in
the Maritime 1!roc;inccs which are
served by the C,t).1., and devote hien-
self to lecturing and writing on the
following .subjects:— (1) "Lncouragc-
merit of live stuck raising, especially
cattle, with a view of trade in stock-
ers." (2) "Apple growing, with' u
view :uf supplying the southwest
Wide." (3) "Potato growing for the
West India market." (4) "Model
roan building near manna stations."
A good deal Ls already using done
by railways of the United States for
the development of trade in ugrical-
•1ura1 products, Oa two roads there
is a poultry department, which buys,
for (;.week of all.the farmers. along the
route, running poultry cars which
are .eclicduled for certain stations on
certain days, with cash buyers in
•cllnrgc. 'On three other roads there
are travelling agonts who go over the
.lines three times a year, stop at every
central station and visit,. every mere
ebant in the town and every farmer
of mercantile prcclivitios in the coun-
try. These ,len mike pluin the alti-
tude of their railroad toward tho citi-
zen, enquire after 'the ,state of his
business, ask him wh it difficulties
are i:nu what, iP anything, can be done
t0 strengthen and ifnprove his situa-
Lion. L•e,slly, there le it department
of .sub -:;gents under the gonernl froi-
ght agent, which, by individuals, rep-
resent the rood in the great cities.
These latter study the mtri•kets, look
after incoming shipments and work
for the interests o fthc merchants and
termer:, along the line of the road by
finding ct market for their produce:
The rev. axe for the road for all this is
nothing more. than an increase.? of
fletght and passenger traffic which
flows from and to a successful cum -
mu
,lit•. F. W. Hodson, Dominion Live
Stack Commissioner, starts to-niglit
for Winnipeg, where .ho will meet the
Executive of the Cattle, Horse, :beep
iijid Swine Breeders' Association ee
hereitoba, and the Northwest Ter-
ritories Pians are in contemplation
for an active development of live steel
interests lend 'armors' Institute work
in Manitoba and the Torritorics dur-
irig• the coming season. Special ef-
forts will be made to obtain the servi-
ces of some or the lest men available
to : c;• as expert judges at the next
season's fairs, not only in Manitoba,
and the Territerics, but in British
ColurnLia and Oatar,]o. The demand
for' expert judges this year has boon
beyond the capacity of the Live Stock
Department to respond to. Very great
etre lure been exernised in the selection
a11.d only men of known ability and
special training for the work w'haso
integrity is beyond question have
been ,selected.
•
ways least likely to arouse suspicion
of ,sinister motives, effort will bo put
forth to damage. the temperance cause,
to engross public attention with other
lssuis,. to disparage the Act itsttlt* as
n temperance uicasuro, to magnify the
tinano,ai !log •y to colossal pri,l ort:o s
toed in other wt ys to discourage acti v-
ity in this campaign on the part of
the. u:eetors. But all this need deceive
no one. It is too late,, in the day for
liquor •traffic to pose es a public
benefactor. !ts serpent trail is toe
long and too dt►ep-fixed to be so soon
eruoicaied or .so readily concealed. 13y
their agitation and thoir determina-
tion to kill the. measure ut the polis.
an December 4, the liquor scalers as -
.sure temperance people of the ,writ
of the Act, ani, their energy ,2nd re-
soluteness is a chttlleugo: which can
not be refused.
Wear should be done? Every man.
must answer that question for him-
self. But 'reeked at from the highest
stuudpoialt, swayed neither by iho ex-
travagance of temperance fanatios on
the nue letud nor by the exigencies
of hi; d -pressed politicians on the
other, the duty of every true friend
of hunperatico, whether total abstain-
er or anodoratc drinker, Is plain..
Things cannot remain as tbcy aro, Tho
presiuit system has served its day.
vAdvt,ayco must be made along sono
line. The Referendum offers an op-
pertuntty never before presented to
the o]eetore to vote for a measure of
edvaneed restriction which is care-
fully safeguarded and is furnished
with the authority and power of g;ov-
ern.mtntn.l enforcement.
We Will give full support to the
iiioasura now anion' tied to the Prov -
Ince. We approve of its prohibitive
..nd reelricLive fee tures. We accept
the tern's under which it is rrCorrcd
to .ti.e electors for their approval. We
went"tothe Government's demand
em' a dcrosivo populur vote in its
favor ns a condition of its becoming
Lew. We give title measure unhesitat-
ing ::no hearty approval beenueo if
c 1.
1: • is will close every to r-1 own
ten•.' will have bahin..1 it a body ' of
public opinion which cannot bP (dere-
g l reed i:r terrified or turned elide.
.'till further, we cornmena this course
to every one who cares at ail for the
progress of the virtue of temperance,
not beeeuse this is the bast or the
lest method of' dealing with an ac -
cease 1 traffic and an increasing social
evil, but because if carried the Act
can, Ire enforced, and if not carried
Clic: way will ba open for notion along
same other line, and the vote for i'ro-
hibi .on under the Referendum will be
the vr.ningc ground for future action
end will be ncocptcd as the measure
of the ]•rovince',s interest in any pro-
gressive temperance movement.
Every vote for this Act under such
conditions will count for temperance
reform and the vote of cvcry friend
orf tcmparencc in Ontario ,should be
counted. 1
Den Cannot be Curet.
by local applications, as they cannot
rea:ll the diseased portion of the ear.
There i, uuly tete Wily 40 (.211 11 denfnt'ss,
atltfl that i d Sly to.istat.ut Loma remedies.
Deafness is caused by tin inflamed con-
dition of the 11sncon5lining of this East-
eobitul Tnbe. When this tribe gets in-
flamed yon have a rumblings Eon tel Or
imperfeetbearing, and when it iseutire-
ly closed deafness is the result, suet uli-
lt•ss the inflammation eau be taken out
and this tube regtorotl In }1s normal
oolulition, h+•nrino will be destroyed for -
#%'t1': Hine yeses fiat of ten ares caused
by catarrh, t• high i. nothing batt nu in -
Hemel eontli tem of the nano, t snrl'aces.
Wal et•ia i.iv.' Unr Hand rod Dollars for
'tnv cause of Deatuess(cansa'i by eat -
eel)) that eau not l,t' enrol by Hai1'e
Catarrh Cure. Henri for ri=•r lders, flee.
1?. T. CHE;TEY 1'C; CO., Toledo, O.
ol,l l y Drug: tire. 75..
'Elai]'e Family Pills aro the best..
L lr,5i� 11
Science
Cola Lot Sava
Death of Ms: Louise Hop, who
was Under Healer's l'reatrnert ,
W^shin 'ton, Nov. 13. --Miss Louise
Hoge, of Evanston, 111., who has been
i}1 hero for almost a month, and who
has been under treatment by a Chris-
tian c'enea healer, died last night.
Miss Hoge is tLe daughter of 1To m:s
Beige, the assistant e.t.hier of tho
First National Dank of Chicago. She
cam. here Oat. 17th, intending to act
as bridesmaid for her former school
chum ,Miss Ethel Il, Began, the dau-
ghter of Dr. Samuel A. Ilogen,
While th'a we de inn; pre.peretions
wore., going en ;lithe Hogs b. came ill
and remained at Dr. 13cgan's house un-
ttt her death.
No physician or the regular school
was oiled in, bat the 0•ttient, aprr-
tion of the time of her illness, sbeen
in chains of Mira Ellen ]3rown'Lilrs•
Cott, a Christian seienu'3 Ela"'ler, who
csa'ne inginight the L Misr liege
had
suffered from typhoid foyer.
The parents of Miss Hoge are Chris-
tian ceiettti5ts and they gave disco
Line that their daughter should re-
reivc medical ilttention ]P 8124' desired
hitt ,she, preferred Christian
Science treatment.
An autopsy will be pertnrxned by
Coroner Novitt, to whom t]>a'caso was
reported. The p'lrents Of ale young
Tidy Were with Ivor nt tho time of
her death. 'they refuse to make any
Ai; Omen t. 1 /
fl,e Referendum Vote.
Reasons Why it .Should ReceiY0 the
Support of the People
The ILev. ,T.. A. M edcnald, the editor
of The Wostminater, '.foretuto, in
spoak,ng to the members or the Mace
kenzle Club, the. other evcnipg, gieva
the following reason. for his approval
or the propo c l liquor uot:
It wcu , call attention t0 the drink-
ing habit, It would close the bars, end
it was workable, IL;) considered the act
as it was (brawn a Ye)y".$L1..Ong one, "as
strong as ,the baric nu it birch tree,"
one of the strongest piecce of legisla,
Lion uimiag• Lt tl•e iolution o" til) tem-
pci"anee ,queetion ever drawn in the
counting. 4, r
He referred to the liquor h tblt ns
taking away tiro energy of men and
wonhtlr- who were needed in the build-
ing up of the country,arid sold that if
the present campaign would only call
public :attention to this danger it
would havo tin important effect.
The act dealt with the problcni in a
way that his judgment approved. It;
w.oulo (lase every, barroom in tee Pro-
vinee, The open leer was a ' burden ;
there could be -no apology for it ; it did
nothing useful for the community, and
he ceuld approve of an not that closed
up the bar. Then, too. the conditions
were such brit if the net was adopted
he was holo: ul ih:•t it could and w•cu d
he enforced. Last year he could not
have undertaken to advise the Ontario
Legislature to introduce such an act,
back of
Janke it a law, and undertake'its on
forcemeat, for it should be known
whether public opinion wars
such an net. For this reason he ap-
proved of the requirement of a large
vote. Now, if the act because law it
would have behind it such , it solid
body of unterrified public opinion the t
'.either the liquor treat:, nor any Gov-
ernment would dare to ignore it. As
to the ,special day being set apart for
the noting eh•tt would show ,lust
where the electors stood. The man
whe,wun d not take the trouble to go
to the polling booth on that day could
not be counted upon in niter clays of
adminj•stration to make public opinion
for the enforcement of the cat. The
Vote would be a. register of sentiment
such at it would ,tit be if it were
Intron on a mmnie)lral or Provincial
election illy. Ever' if the 'set raid not
carry, but the vote Indicelect a strong
sentiment on Go pert of the electors~
they couid ask for n reduction; of 50
per cent. in the number of .saloons,
Abont 100 townships. or 25 per cent of
the municipalities of the province, have
abolished statute labor inf favor
f a di-
rect tax for improving the hiyliways.
Mr. John Barber we hear has bought
Mr. 0. Halma'ul's forte in Ilowick, 100
acres for about $5.503. Mr. Berber has
now a fine fart, with good buildings in
a good locality, a mile and n quarter
from Fordwiele
The Brussels 'lent of tiro Dlnccabt'es
is t0 be eongratrlated on the commend-
able enterprise it hes shown in establish-
ing a brass baud. It has cost them in
the vicinity of $400 to procure a full set
of new iustruuteuts. The band meets
twice a week in the Maccabees hall fur
practice nu ler 6113 arta tuitia.i uf
:vl.r. Jones.
Make Weak Hearts Strong'.
Make Shaky nerves Firms
They are a Suro Cure far
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Loss
of Energy, Brain Fag, After Ef-
fects of La Grippe, Palpitation of
the Heart, Alta rnia, General I7e-
b:lity and all troubles arising from
a run down system.
They regulate the heart's actioti
and invigorate the nerves.
This is what they have done for
others ! They will do the same
for you.
GREAT 1R.rt.L:c,F.
I have, taken 1tlilhurn's Ilear•t and
Nerve Pills for palpitation of tate heart
abllshatOwed nerves, and for both troubles
have found greatrelief.—:ell's. W. Ackoi t,
Ingersoll, Ont.
FEELS SPLENDID NOW.
Before Orkit4' \Illbern's Heart and
Nerve 1'ills 1 was all run down, could nut
steels at night and was torribly troubled
with my heart, Sittoo taking* them fool
splendid. 1 sleep well 1'.t eight and my
heart does blot trouble oto at all. They
Lave clone .to n world of good.—Jas. 1).
M0140d,11ar iville, 15.11L
KIDNEY TROUBLE
A 1IISEASE THAT. OFTEN TEAJ1tIN,
ATES FATA1.I.Y,
?dr, l., Lussier of Sorel, tells How
lltf Overcame the Trouble Atter
liepsut'burns,
There is no trr,td,iu ,tore 11a1l3KHlqus to
Ile 414014 disease of r•>te stulat1ss, for the
Yemeni they before may sp. t•i..1 syu2ptclti$
hate wade th•'usselvrs nlitfiftiat, the di"
s are has gaudily ul•nn.lrrct 1► foritteleble
t4iii'et:teq, '.elle symptoms Mot first
main test t111'lilseIVe$ »1'a u.nally Wt•ak-
DHSS 111 1h" :wall of the hark, ;mind 414
rhH i*egioll of aha lob)4, The urine id
891l.etin11'$ highly colored, while. in other
oases .t it extleualy pile, )rt.queotly
depositing a $tethutelu. s,s the trouble
progresses thts,l sy'lupt• bus grow ,tort
44 TATO, and fruq..eutly terminate in
dropsy, Briefly 's dii.tuso e.r diabetes.
Dr Williams' Pink Piits are s► sprt'ifie
fur all k!lin'T,t troubles, and brays m2r'4
111r111y ('1112121 8 mltri'. 1nlediei4rs
have failed. Mr. L. L0s'rier, n well
k' own navigator of ; 01'*1, Qile., ;arra
his rxpl'rdenoe fu1• rhe ho,ietir, ell' other
sufterrrs. He say.; "Tor suvernl years
I erefereet veru 'untie from khi-
n1•y trutiele. '1:111 symptoms uturl-
ly triode themselves ltlanifest by
sever e pals sin the bl ek and lcidneys,ant
sometimes they wt tint be so bad that I
would be confined to nay bed for
several days at a time. I tried
tt number of itinerant medicines,
reentnnlrt.d 11 for he trouble, but not no
relief. and tiaally became so etiseournged
aI thout rn•wd iur,
41th14.1t4t•11Q).'));lrt►kulng; itiH$eUi►•tit12. 1poss]blShortly
;after this 1 react in our Meal paper of 1'.t
case of lrid:Jwy trou111H (-need by the ase
1 of Dr. Williams' Pole Pelts and this hi-
d teed n e"to try •1415 snwii tine. 1 anon
felt that these pills w•'re n ,h like the
other tie dicin s I lead been taking. for in
the courre of a few week1, I hegen to eY-
1 tJt 1'('rtab, of month:, numb, tisk-
tog the pillsry
whieh time all syniph1115•of the trouble
hart ilisappeared, midi leave not .lues
had the slightest rotor 1 of the eis(12e.
These pills also strenl;thened me in other
a '1 nus! I !n IievH th.m to be *h., best
o sl l ut'1rleUt 31.••24 "
Tr. Wilhwn-' Pink Pills teri•h nnrl
n ii l gr 1hn blood end st1Pneth'•u the
nerves. It is thus that they 2'10.0 such
trnnbl(s as dv,p•'peria. Iti•1n"v ailment,,
rh.uniatisnl, p rrinl lnt'•ulysls heart
trouhlr4, St. Virus' ''.arm. and the ail-
ment+ that m111:11 31,14 rives of en many
women a s mr:e of mit 'r r. Do not Sake
He•y pills without 31:44 full ie,.nlr•, "Dr.
Williams' Pink Piller for Pale People,"
on the wrapper ernm d the box. Sold
h: 'ail ruPdfr Lne 111'211..8 or sent i'ost raid
at 50 rents n hnx or Six hn'nq for 411 50
by ,trldresring the De Williams' Medi -
eine Co., 13roekvilIe. Out.
We heard it pre limed "salt," "Soli t"
and r'o,esinl:l1 y tl•e t t 114 rt thing, the
'.Son," bar. VA At had still t1'+ b'nru nnotl e1'
when an e'rlrrly Genre, ire k a seat in
the shoe shop the other evening. 'Vh, re
vas dot pay Iieury,rlo' s 1'1111('$'" he ask-
ed. Toni vem tired to repel tint he \t•ns
np in Owen Sound. „Oh, nn. thine
friendt. he luf'lt dare. I think dot
Henry wits no l•y dear Suit' i.uw."
"Snide? Vi hitt 'lo you woteu t'y the:
Susie?" was this puzzled 0 q iiry.
"I shust menu dot ' Susie Miry" what
iv up by der lakes?" .siei:,l the placing
G••rm'tir,-1.3:ncu 1'.1 raid
DR. WOOD'S
ww
GRAY PINE SYRUP
Stops the irritating cough, loos-
ens the phlegm, soothes the in-
flamed tissues of the lungs and
bronchial tubes, and produces a
quick and permanent cure in all
eases of Coughs, Colds, Bron-
chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore
Throat and the first stages of
Consumption.
Mrs. Norma Sweeten, Cargill, Ont.,
writes : "I tithe great pleasure in recom-
mending Dr. Wood's Norway Pi11e1Syrup.
I had it very bad cold, could not sleep at
night for the enughing and bed loins in
my (Sheet and lungs. I only used half a
bottle of lir. Wool's Norway Pine Syrup
and was perfectly well again."
1'. ice :15 oasts a bottle.
HIGH COURTOPJUSTICE.
The fell 'ri't•jttrc kitting it the TIM)
Cnnrt of Tnottr'e emem.d nn W-"1•i^ellny
nftet•'lnnn n!' lest week et Goa 'rife' 1P.
fere the Hon. Mr :Notion 11Mr Tlinhnn,
Tho canima were r]icpncr'rl of in short
order, ami thnngh, the Court diel not sit
ti'1 near'v 3 n 141., it rose es the clock
strnck six, with til' hnsineso (dosed.
The first ease. W:trsov vs. Gu3HAar
at al, was Pn notion to rocorol' for spry -
'lees. no nurse of the lore \V, T Br•ta•n,
of Hnllott. After nrrnment TIis Lord-
ship Qflvn ]11'1T1E
n' tu n^oor]duce with
onncentminntoc Wm. Peels foot, IT.CI,
for plaintiff; Higgins and Dougl•ts for
ded
IiANfer,rgnt of Toros'rn v.. MiLAu»V. an
potion M1 n innetcrl4P, K•nO withdrawn
hr RnngPnt, 1721 Prnr,ilfn^t. TSL 61., for
pincntifF. T. Ti Feat Fn A, Peiuiant,
Brnrr lir AT, r•;. DAYS wits nn notion
to restrain r'efendant fere) Parrvint; rat
a drug bu2111"ao in tbn villnee of trod: -
now. RS par alleged "ereen'cnt. At the
nrnlnlasion of the oril,nnn His 1 orrlchip
r'sarverl jndeeinen'. 14IPa:r11 W. Prone.
fr•ne. E' C , nee P. A Alnlenmsson for
pltt'f., H Morris in for Oaf t.
BlIOW\LLT. r; :f.NOre14. tilt net'nn to
aPtagirle a rift of n'-•Tn.r1•v =nad'a daring"
lif.tintc, was 5Pttlarl by consent "4(1
in'lnlnent ni"o't nnenriincly. J til. Best
for.
plttf. and F. TTnw"3ed +'n1' r1Pft
Rrmv 4,. Rrtnr. nn n' tier for alim-
n•tv, The 12)7]40,: a 11avt,,.F hne,t 1t"a 112,
Hi. Lrn•rlshi" grnv: i•TA,tmant fn" Senoo
P, S. Tiny. far rleii'tifie the ("ef?ndaut
not born:; represented by cnnesel.
Wirelee s Telegraph;'
The weneorful experiments in wire-
less telogr:ilthy rs derl'nstrated for
+'tae first time by exchrn'ging ,igna.ls
from it 'railway station. to a train
running 144 a rate of sixty miles an 1
hour, made on the Grand Trunk spec-
ial train, Oct. 13th, 1902, carrying the
riremleite of the Amcricin Association
Rt' Ciezeral 1'us 110(1 Ticket
Agents to their forty-,t'v;'nth :'nnual
convention held et Portland, Moine,
Ostobot lith and 15th, 1901], bits prom-
pted the Pusee114;ilr 't)rpartia•ent cf
the Grand Trunk Railway System to
iest1e'11 publication giving a (l^scrip
lion of tl.e experiments 1c.;;eihrr With
al centrist), pcptilnr treat180 on tho prin. ,
ciples of wireless telegraphy, dealing
~vitt, the subject else from en histori-
oat paint of v'ew and ire:uc]inr a (,hap -
ter on the re^,ant developments of
c his branch of )rhysical se•ienee. This
' rtiole is from the pan of llower4 T.
Br VIIP9 3).52'., h.R.S.C., or the. 'e cden-
a ld Physical T1•tbara tory or McGill
University, Montreal, and i1', meat op-
portune in Vk2w of tile, great interest
Rreleienett by the recent nrri` el
(.lace 131y. Cape Breton, of . Signor
Marconi, on an Italian t••Artllip, with 1
the obj ee of 1> rfcctin; his plans for
wireless telretra
c1cst the \i
1 an-
Sir
O:•r•,n. In l:ddit]rn to the a.t•tkcla •
C
', "
V > ' ` tho
r h. subject, ct a d sc i t,C.l of h
n t. ( � , l
luxurious Sloane Trunk special train
on rwhirh the experitl Itt•1 were nt' de,
nmol a shott resume. of the trip from
CI.ic^h'. to Portland, isLtine. is given
in un interesting manner. 'Copies of
this valuable. publication . have been
twilled to the princiip2l officials of tho
great rrlilwa.y evertus at the world,
and. nny0nc desiring a ropy ran secure 1
one 1)3 sending a two cent:'stalltfi to I
(i. 1'. Reil, General Passenger and I
Ticket Agent, Grand Trunk Railways
S3, 8111M, Montrettl.
What is Public Worships'
Soon) go to ehuruh 3ityf« for fl Isla 1
30428e to stern, boll 1411'414 .41111 tailll,i
$Itlowuule e go
their thereid1totf 811 ftiaatott rtasptrlerudttl;l,
1�
Some for funeral, obat'rytitT0il,
8101140 ltvsfla r,'t•nitttiott;
804410 totar larkri11)241 dpnli 1) luvai`,.
Some a 00ur:ship 10 Hist•f•vt)';
Sotue go their to 0512 tutir 8Ye5,.
f1:,ni1 llc'wrst fisstuous 0114iuisr;
laume ice: show (44(211' uwlf slnartdress,
,5'rlllla their tieig11bord. to emelt;
Sonto to 24(11(:* a rol.i' or bonnet,
t5'ome to price the triminil)gs au' it;
Rome to torn the hetet news,,
Tlntt:rieudd at bum) they ,may
utuc'tr•,
ee to l.ts24t;fp, f9
h'
and tt'u2.
Sale hfrl brhiu't tilt' sl4ritrrnlg pew;
Some their &rig:hters tofidn'ire;
Home this parson ten to fawn,
Some to lou442(0 aid seem ro yawn,
Sonia to 111:200+ tree 1>urisll delete
Soule+ for 44111241 ttt'il $11031 for c0ttlet
Sntae heit15u5t, fr's �ho aitt genteel;.
Soule to taunt (122 )r pions z al,
Some to show flow sweet -thee sing;
some haw loud their vt•wos ring,
Some the preacher go to hoar,
His style or voiee to ])raise A r jeer,
Sonia forgiveness to inild0rr,
Same their sins to v,arnilih u'rr
Sonne to 812 and dose and nod,
But few to kneel and woiship ,God,
l>piniun,a of Leading' Pla,'siid,ens,.
Ihave examined th1,'cotepo:titit n of t4trotlg's
',Jolene, and melt roe et.et.,ra•il •01 t ftito,•nnl
piles with st ,.uu0 E. .1. D WILaON, M.D.
Pri, a 1.00. For sale by Oruggists,er by mail
en -e a Sin of 11,1••12.
W T. ST1,ONG, Atanufeeturinit Chemist
Ltnel.ill, Cntaer•i°.
The.lioss lionlo ii►1 lest; tial, the gift
of Mr. Janus; Ross of Montreal, was
formally opened et Lind>lty.
Rev. Dr. Gordon of Halifax College
has been uppoiuted Pi inuipal of Queen's
'University, Kingston.
It was officially uuuonucr.l iu Landon
that the Gomel Truck Railway and
allies will build a new trona 011 iuentul
line froutNorth Bay t.* the Pacific.
The trustees of Lairs school, Carrick,
have engaged Geo. Stewart, sun of Rev.
A. C.:Stewart, of Bottum., f'•r .teacher
fur 11303, tit a salary of (300. There
were over 80 applivauts in nuswer to
advertisement.
A WORD OF CAUTiOrtl.
Dr. Pitcher's Back-
ache Kidrrey Tablets
are prep:wed from the
prescrilaiun of Dr.
Ziva Pitcher (formerly
Professor of Materia
!1Teclica and (lenito-
Urinary Diseases, Mich-
igan Collo;e of Medi-
cine, Detroit, Mich.,
U.S.A.), which he used
with wonderful success
eerier over tevelvo years in
private practice n i
n the
Western Hospital, De-
troit.
They contain specific
iingredients
found
ate' 'tt inst t other kidney
47.
it remedy, and it is nob
; surprising, therefore,
t .'drat they make cures
kin very many eases
of where other remedies
144' had proved altogether
ineffectual
We would caution
')p
�,vou in purchasing the
' l'ablets to see that the
t�acoompan; •int; cut, prin-
t t� ted i:t R:'sen ink, and
Dr. l5itreer•'s portrait
and signature, are printed on the package.
Refuse substitutes and imitations, as these
aro sure to disappoint.
The price of the Tablets is re. a box,
or three boxes fur $1.115, at all druggists,
or sent. by mail by athlrl, sing the Dr.
Zino Pitcher Co., Toronto. One
To preserve or restore it, there is no better
prescription for men, women and children lllan
Ripans Tabules. They are easy to take. They
are made of a combination of medicines approved
and used by every physician. Ripans T abuios arc
widely used by all sorts of people—'but to the
plain, every -day folks they are a veritable Lricnd
in need. Ripans Tabules have become their stan-,
dard family remedy. They are a dependable, hon-
est remedy; with a long and successful record, to
curs indigestion, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn
constipation, offensive breath, heartburn, dizziness,
palpitation cf the heart, sleeplessness, muscular
rheumatism, sour stomach, bowel and liver com-
plaints. They stregthen weak stomachs, build up
run-down systems, restore pure blood, good appe-
tite and sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives
constant benefit from a regular use of Ripans
Tabules. Your druggist sells them. The five-
cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion.
The Family Bottle, 6o cents, contains a supply
for a year.
. ,. , 1'r. v. . S':, -a' ' sr.•#2'...