HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1904-05-19, Page 3Tar WINGHAM TIMES, MAT 19 1904
BRITISH
�..a ',
r' �� • `;;;• l ir'
TROOP OIL
LINIMENT
FOIR
Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wounds, U''�m,
Open Sores, Bruises, Stiff Joints, Bites and
Stings of Insects, Coughs, Colds, Contracted
Cords, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis,
Croup, Sore Throat, Quinsey, Whooping
Cough and all Painful Swellings.
A LAIR= BOTTLE. 25o.
WESTEBN'9AILWd➢$
Creed for Money.
The vice of the age is money gather-
ing. It seems to effect everybody.
People are putting money before health,
Lnppittess, friendship, sympathy ant
honor, Now, money is -a good thing in
its place. It is a handy thing to have
and a peer thing to be without, but it is
a curse when, either in getting or speud-
ing it stultifies manhood or promotes
wrong. When a man becomes possessed
of a demon or money getting, he is sev-
enfold more the heir of perditiou than
the poor uitfortuutete whom whiskey has
in Fits clutches. The drunkard hes
usually some heart but a greedy man
has none. The man who is content to
be neither rich or poor, but is satisfied
with "food and raiment convenient for
him," has the best of it even in this life.
Fear cOvetousness as you would small-
pox. "A man's life cousistoth not iu
the abundance of the things which he
possesseth." Do you desire a long and
happy life? "He that hateth covetousness
shall prolong his days." He that reaches
ont after more than he can chew, gets
nervous prostration and soul paralysis.—
Treherne Times.
re
ABS
TE
SE';
.
t
t,,
i
R1TY.
Cert �,.Ine
Carter9s
Little Liver Pills.
The Settlers. Are Now 'Left With.
Oa Seed or Supplies.
MR. SCOTT AGAINST MR. OSLU R
Northwest M,I', Again Dlsensoes the Affaira
of the gu'Appelle, hong Lake and
SaskuteheweNL and Calgary and Ed -
!neaten ihailway In Which 7tH
Osier Iv. Prominently Ideatl-
Sed—lash Bebelllontla11U5.
Ottawa, May 10.—Yesterday was
essentially a Northwest day in the
House. Private members' business
had precedence, and Mr, Walter
Scott, immediately atter routine,
again brought to the attention o;
the House the grievances of the peo-
ple along the lino of the Qu'Appelle,
Long Lake & Saskatchewan Rail-
way, who have for some time been
deprived of all railway communica-
tion, owing to the carrying away of
a bridge at Saskatoon and the flood-
ing of the track. Tho prolonged iso-
lotion of the settlements along the
line has aroused fears that scarcity
of seed and supplies may cause suf-
fering among the settlers, unless
prompt measures aro taken to repair
the railway. The matter has upon
previous occasions been brought to
the attention of the House, and it
was pointed out that the company
lacks means to properly maintain the
road, which is leased and operated
by the C,P.R. In the afternoon Mr.
Scott again dealt with the exploit-
ation of this and the Calgary &
Edmonton Railway, with both of
which Mr. E. B. Osler is prominently
identified.
Must Boar
St nattlrm of
:ice Fac Simile Wrapper Below.
Very small and as cus7
to take as sugar.
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR D 7211lESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
_.(6313.1.7Vinfin MUST MVL ' NATU„L,
IS ones I perm. vegetable ;�tl+o iesG
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
IT PAYS
TO ADVERTISE
`•. • IN TI.E
•
1
t
TIMES
These pills ewe all diseases and dis-
orders arising from weak heart, worn out
nerves or watery blood, such as Palpita-
tion, Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering,
Dizziness, Weak or Faint Spells, Anaemia,
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Brain Fag,
General Debility and Leek of Vitality.
They area true heart tonic, nerve food
and blood enricher, building up and
renewing all the worn out and wasted
tissues of the body and restoring perfect
health. Price 50o, a box, or 8 for $1.26,
at all druggists.
Hon. Clifford Sifton.
Hon. Mr. Sifton said that he had
given his officials instructions to see
that everything possible was done to
protect the settlers along the line of
this railway from suffering. He
thought that the local officials of
the railway were doing all in their
power to give an efficient service,
but when it was mentioned that
three or four miles of the railway
was under writer it would pe under-
stood that the difficulty was no or-
dinary one. He had telegraphed his
officials at Regina, asking for a fur-
ther report,.
Mr. Davis spoke till 8.40 and the
matter then dropped.
Rebellion Claims.
Mr. T. O. Davis' motion for pap-
ers in connection with the payment
of claims arising out of the 1885 re-
oldtopic of
cillo opened upan
re-
bellion, oP
n
more than passing interest in i the
Northwest. Ile gave an interesting
review of the methods of the claims
commission, who, he asserted, who voted
recog-
nized `
nixed the claims of those.
for the Conservative candidates in
the election of 1887, and either cut
down or rejected entirely the claims
of those who voted for the Liberals.
Second Readings.
The following bills were given their
second readings: To incorporate the
Cedar Rapids Manufacturing & Pow-
er Company—Mr. GeotTrion. To in-
corporate the Vancouver Island Rail-
way Company—Mr. Macpherson. To
incorporate the Crawford Bay & St.
Mary's Railway Company 11.r. Mac-
pherson.
Re Newfoundland.
+ Min-
ister
to Mr. Sinclair, the . [1 1
Replying 3 n
to D
aster of Finance said that the Gov-
ernment had not thought it neces-
sary to appoint a commercial agent
in Newfoundland on account of the
close business relations between the
two countries. Ile promised, howev-
er,should
er, that the suggestion be
carefully r full considered.
a C
THE EXPLOI.ER DEAD
Pleurisy Claims the Man Who
Found Livingstone,
STANLEY CONSCIOUS TO END
tiir merry Auto to lieeogaise His 'Wife,
end He Made a Request About Iiia
Burial Before no Passed Away-.
,Wonderful Career of Mae Who
Explored the Dark
Continent.
London, May 11.—Sir Henry 14I,
Stanley, the African explorer, passed
away peacefully shortly after six
o'clock yesterday. He was quite con-
scious to the last and was able to
recognize his wife.
Before he died Sir Henry expressed
a wish to be buried at his country
seat, Furze Hill, Pirbright, Surrey.
The question, however, is being dis-
cussed of burying him beside Living-
stone, in Westminster Abbey.
Stanley's Cai.•eer,
BOW TO BILL WILD MUSTARD.
One of the worst weeds that far-
mers in Ontario have. had to ecntend
with, and the hardest to exterminate,
!; what is known as wild mustard.
it has been discovered. at the On-
ttrio A'ericuleurn1 College, Guesph,
that a solution oI bluestctie, proper-
ly applied, will kill wild 'mustard,
without atjuring the crop among
which the mustard grows. Demon-
strations throughout Ontario for the
destruction enc wild mustard have
poled that, in the to:ijority of cas-
ts, under favorable c.ondi;tions, spray -
leg with capper -sulphate almost en-
tirely eradic.t,tes this tt••oublesame
weed from growing cereal crops. The
following directions for applying the
Bluestone aro given:
1.—Pleee an ordinary spray hump
to width is attached the 6 -row spray-
er, on a care or light wagon, drive
along slowly tbalough the field, apply
the solution to the mustard I:lants in
the form o: a nos spry. When the
Cield is badly infested, it is advisable
10 spray tlL crop in Strips' in order
that no plants may cscnp• the •spray.
2. —The Tilu2stone'isolution is mat de
by patting, 9 pcuttds of Bluestone,
(copper -sulphate) in a. cc'arse sack or
barn and su .enc io'* ie. in a vessel`
ct > 1 -
conttlinilig 3 gallons of boiling waf-
er. •T11a Blues.one will usually (t's-
selvt ;n 15 cr 20 an:nIU :li. ' Si rain
barrel c,f h ,
�'1 1 1 E t <
the solution int, thee rt
al • fill u within eo1 1
lire •'pump mad 1
� 3 n
water io mike 40 to 45 gallons.
The mustard. ',should be +-prayed on
a c.11m, br'Pub day', just as, the
plants are coming into bloc•ui. ;Should
lu.avy rain come imme4)iately alter
spraying it will be necessary to spray
ng+tin. A barrel of the soluilea is
sufficient to spray an acre, costing
about 80 or 90 cents. Successful re-
sults are cbi:tir.od when the straying
is coni• ',harawrhly. Experience
sh sthat young wheatbarley,o
1 s
e injured, be-
yond
'-
c• • clover ,plants r., not t o t ,r J
„
r.+r browning , ^�w a low 1 s
c a ..a ht hr.. gin for f . ( ,
yon li, r r1 .
1 c
by the Fiu^•s,oar ..tray. Partners -ted
others wantinit further inform:ltien en
the subject will do well to write to
the B:e raphical Depart meta, Ontario
()allege, Guelph.
Two Mountains Indian Reserve.
A motion by Mr. Leonard was car-
ried after an hour's debate, for a
return of correspondence in. connec-
tion with the Two Mountains Indian
reserve. .
Mr. George Taylor, in moving for
a return of the expenditure on the
cheese cooling rooms at Brockville,
Cowansville, Que., and St. Hyacin-
the, Que., said that not only had the
Minister of Agriculture spent large
sums of money upon these rooms,
but had, through the dairy commis-
sioner, advocated the paratf)ning of
cheese, with the result that the Eng-
lishmen would not buy it, and Cana-
dian cheese had not realized nearly
as good a price as last year.
Hon. Mr, Fisher regretted that the
Woodstock cooling room had not
been included in the motion, and
Mr. Taylor at once amended his mo-
tion. Mr. Fisher pointed out that
the cooling rooms were asked for by
the cheese industry in consequence of
the complaints made by those hand-
ling the cheese in the old country.
It had been found by experience that
the trouble with regard to Canadian
cheese arose from the inability of
the cheesemakers in Canada to con-
trol the temperature in the curing
room, and the work was undertaken
by the department as an experiment.
The work has been an absolute suc-
cess, so that the applications for
accommodation at the cooling room
were far greater than the capacity
of the rooms. Although at first the
English buyers were doubtful of par-
afrtned cheese, subsequent experience
had demonstrated that the treat-
ment was productive of excellent re-
sults,
The Souse adjourned at 11.40 p.
M. .
Il'our 'CommISsioners.
Ottawa, Bray 10.—Sit' Wilfrid Laur-
ler has given notice of an amendment
to Section 9 of the National Trans-
continental Railway Act, so as to
provide for the appointment of four
commissioners eif the Transcontinen-
tal Railway instead of three.
BMWs Connell Amendments.
Sir e
to the Militia i
fixed p 1 tin the Glover
T''r deride Borden has given
notice
of seberal more amendments
fa Att.,The acts to
Come into force upon adate to be
by roc tuna o ofe
nor-aenteral t
CONSOLIDATED. RURAL
SCIiQO1,S
joint meeting of the trustees of a
number of ; obA.ol Lections interested
in the cOnsiolidated school :movement,
was held at Guelph, a. few clays ago,
'Iho meeting gats a very, enthusiastic
one, and addresses were delivered by
a number of gentlemen. The school
will cost about 919,000, aha there will
be about 300 pupils. Fixe school sec=
tions have decided to go into the
scheme and others will follow, no
doubt, The cost o'f the school, and
equipment and mahntenance will bo
borne by Sir I1 Donald, Pref.
Robertson, who alas been meting for
Sir Wan. McDonald, was asked to ad-
dress the mating, when be went
into details as to the movement.
Lt, spoke at some length midi gave
a clear and ample expluna,•tion. Man
should take a, keen interest •in edu-
cation; if foot, he misses the mean-
ing ea ananhood. By it he gains pow-
ers for, !t'is faculties and ianxrroves
en Itis talent. 'filo men who- have
done. the most Lor education :aye• the
mer, who nave taken: the greatest
interest .in it. :the progress on the
country depends on Ibe educaLional
activity and the people• in the( early
years .must be trained ':fit : ntelli.-
gence and learn to manage the co`,tn-
try in after years, and tire• only menus
of doing that is by education, and
the men of today are responsible
for the intelligence of their chil-
dren. There is no complaint against
the Provincial , educa,tianal sys-
tem, bat et is 'not sufficient' to
cater to the n:::ods o. the boys and
girls. T,he progress of the country
culls for a better system. The town
uud city schools ' are conducted ac-
cording to papulation, The buildings
arta better .,aid there are inoro courses
than -in the rural schools. The
teachers .are. of a h:giier grade and
the scholars consequently receive
the, better 'education. The lithe
rural school, however, is no batter
Wan it was levent,-five years 'Igo,
but on the contrary ]verse ins some
instances. : The an't jority of the
teuclters are y done, ladies without
experience, who chance every six
months. That the children should be,
Let in the hands of such raw young
ivo:men is a blot. on thee educational
system of the country, and thte titne
of the children is, only beim;; wast-
ed. „.,t they wive is a. teacher
of experience, but lie, could net, be
secured for ;115 or $18 n r retentit,0 s
being paid the rural teacher.•, o8
'
Quebec t�:-eat A teacher should a
secured 'at $500 per .ye.tr, one who
will accept it as a life work. But
how can the u:str;ets pay .41011 m
high, salary if enly ten children at-
tend. Tana is only one way to
se ire the difficulty. Unite se vent]
sections target her, employ one good
teacher, with assistants, and tbctt
vuId b" better than six teachers
in. rural districts, A m..txt is pre -
Sir Henry Morton Stanley, the
most famous of modern explorers,
was born of poor parents near Den-
bigh, Wales, in 1841, and at first
bore the name of John Rowlands.
When about fifteen ho worked his way
as cabin boy to New Orleans, where
ho was employed by a merchant
named Stanley, whose name he as-
sumed. Ile served in the Confederate
army in the Civil war, contributed
to several journals, and in 1867 be-
gan his connection with Tho New
York Herald. As its special corres-
pondent he accompanied Lord Na -
pier's Abyssinian expedition, and the
first news of the fall of Magdala was
conveyed to Britain by The Now
York Herald.. Stanley next went to
Spain for his paper, and in October,
1869, received from Mr. Gordon Bon-
nett the laconic instruction, "Find
Livingstone." But first he visited
Egypt for the opening of the Suez
Canal, .and traveled through Pales-
tina, Turkey, Persia and India. In
January, 1871, he reached 'Zanzibar,
and in March marched into the heart
of Africa. On tho 10th November he
"found" Livingstone at Ujiji. Tho
two explored the north of Lake Tan-
ganyika, and settled that it had no
connection with the Nilo basin. In
March, 1872, Stanley set out for the
coast. On his arrival in England he
was awarded the medal of the Royal
Geographical Society, and his book,
"Ifow I Pound Livingstone" had an
enormous sale. An expedition under
Stanley, who had followed the
Ashanti campaign for The New York
Herald, was fitted ol11 jointly by The
Herald and The Daily Telegraph to
complete
L
g
ivin stone's work, and in
August, 1874. he left England for
Bagamoyo. Thence he glade for the
Victoria Nyanza, cireunntavigated
the lake, formed a close friendship
with
King
artesa
of tianda next de -
'ermined the shape of I.nke Tangan-
yika, passed down the L,,alnlra t n
Nynlig We, and by a tun months'
journey from Nyaugwe treeml the
course of the Congo to the sea.
having publishe:l '"dinmecth t
!)ark ('ontinent" in 1878, in 1879
he again went out to found, under
the auspices of the 1. big of the 11,`1-
giaus, the. Congo Free State. 11e
took part in the Congo Congr•-as at
Berlin in 1.88.1-5, and lectured in
(treat Britain and America on his
African work. In 1880 he was sum-
moned from America to take tom- fined as 0 teacher. Hs has marc
) '• ' e re-
f the e� cJltiott for th
mend A
I r
.inch c ,(ltd 0or t
in. c'3
is AL!,. IfAIRS A1EB• 1N `CI1la..pI'.Cla11tih1
1$1r. U. 9, Cowan, ;Superintendent of
Agricultural Societies, is at present
enquiring 'into the operation of town-
ship olrganizations, which,. instead of
holding annual exhibitions, use all
• the Government grant for the ,p'ur-
obese of thoroughbred stock. This
plan. bas been in <lpera•tion ire Que-
bac and the bfaritime Provinces for
several years, and 'the Department
of Agriculture of the, former Province
has aunt 'written bir, Gowen, stating
that it is being parried art) with
great success. A meeting was held
recently for the purpose) of retina -
Ing the number of annual fairs in
Qu ,boo, and substituting* the scheme
for the purchase of stock for 'tile
use of mamba's, Several townships
of Ontario have already made the
change, with apparently satisfactory
results,
Complaints have been common that
the usefulness pif the township fair
has gone very largely. Mr. Cowan's
object is to ascertain whether it is
advisable to advocate the other me-
thod as n. substitute.
Superintendent 'Putnam has just
completed the list bf farmers' in-
stitute meetings for the approaching
season. Over '200 Meeting's will be
held, and on each of thin delegations
will be tw'o women lecturers,
lief of Iletin Pasha. In \furca he, his
officers, Soudanese soldiers, etc.,
r
h Congo.
the mouth f.
t l ane alt l at t
landed at 4
is' n steachers • ilow
._ a -
hie decisions. I da
3
too anucll favor, a feature that' is
On the 1:,tlt of .lune the expedition. dctrimmutai to education. It is pro -
had readied Yanlhuya, on tee Aru- l•.s_u t o establish 01) eonsuliciat"ed
wind, where he; left a part of his
0,50 men under .l1ajar Barttelot, and
with 388 mets marched into the for-
est. Disaster overtook the rear col-
umn, news carne
F erlongdelay n
ltnn but after '
t
-
that Fhnin and Stanley had joined
A. man wl•.o was accused at the Man- hands on the shores of the Albert
siou House et stealing a check success- Nyanza. The return journey was
fully pleaded au alibi, proving' that he mad, overltux(I to the east coast,
tuul I3nganun o was reached in De -
was in prison at the time. He' left the cembcer, 1889. In 1890 he received in
court without a stain on his London a reception almost royal in
its splendor. The Geographical So-
e'rto gave him a special gold medal,
—"Punch."
character.
TO
NAIL
YOUR
FAITH
BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS.
As a spring medicine it has no equal,
It purifies and enriches the
blood. Acts on the Kidneys, Liver,
Stomach and Bowels. Cleanses
and invigorates the entire system
from the crown of the head to the
soles of the feet.
Don't be sick, weak, tired, 'worn
and weary.
;THIS SPRING
TAKE
Burdock Blood Bitters
seh•ools in Ontario In :en years.
Il.•rl the ehildr,'a oif the stone age
at a country school are sometimes
graded differently and are not a1 -
lowed to associate. The tearlter is
often toe far away from the dull
pupils. The course of study should
be improved ; nature study, domes-
tic% scienoa auto nil Mist treininfx
should be introduced and will be' in
the new consolidated school. , It
even oif a dog, which he, ''Wase about
tta pturchas , •;se<.s, n(r oee'lst( +''rote
pr test if a sickly .natn would
take to Wife a pu.ro and healthy ;girl,
or it du: 1W, -tattier hand a. ratr+ologo
robust titan should join with a ai'ckiy
or .depraved 'u'on an. ' It is no face
maw, but rather, a. (•endem'natioft air
his intelligence, to say Jt1tn is at frim
agent, stats arts with a full xespoael.
bility for the consequences. Whether
the legislation asked :Croby the l.'ro••
gressive Health Club would meet the
evil or not, they have, dine n. „great
geed, by' direeting poetic mttentien to
an. evil tiett has been ltegleeted over
long. "^-
HEALTH AND MARHIA:TE.
The Progressive Hbaltli Club of
Ctdaago, esu organization of women.
has asked Iresiden•t Rcoeevclt's co-
operation in a, movement to restrict
the marriage of unhealthy I.eu•(1s. 1
The club wants Congress to pose a
law requiring all persons applying
Lor a marriage license to present a
physician's certificate of health, and
show that he Or she his pot laical
convicted oC crime. Pres:dont Rcose-
tel: h'•s takonli gh gat rued on ondebar
phase of thle ,social ;question. an
it will be surprising if he does _'tot
ked his approval ,to the aims of :he
club, if not the means .proposed for
their consummation, So much .erine
and misery are lirougli.t into the
world by the union of people moral-
ly uud physically unfitted to rear
children that it lis a matter dor won-
der that seam ,such step has not been
taken baforc now. Ii. is eurely e re-
flection on our boasted civilization
that men, who represe.nts the t her et
.
eat animal lite, and intelligence,
should be at less pains to elevate er
even maintain the standerl et the
human rice alien he is to improverav
e
the quality of live stock. Yet, the
feel remains •thm.t many a moo, who
would. make dil'3•anr enquire- as `a
the p,digr:e, of. a horse or cow, or
and Oxford, Cambridge, PEdinburgh will creane :1 wholesale habit of put -
and Durham conferred on him hon-
orary degrees. That same year he ting one's belief into practice. Ob -
married tite clever artist, Miss Doro- joct lessons wtlC also be employed,
thy Tennant. Ie 1891-2 he lectured at)ct they are .mos'l beneficial in
in America and Australia. Ile was tettcairt's, and this, too, will be
naturalized as a British subject in
1892, and stood unsuccessfully for Lound in tate new, school.. (Guelph
North hambeth in the Unionist in- will be an object lesson to the rest
terest; he was, however. returned at of the province, and the. Mater ',till
the general election of 1895. Among
his published books other than those
mentioned are a novel, "ltry Kahl -
hi" (1873), "Comassio and 1tTag-
dala" (1874). "The Congo" (1885),
"In Darkest Africa, or the Rescue of
Emin" (1800), "My Dark Compan-
ions and Their Strange Stories"
(1893), and "My Early 'Travels in
America and Asia" (1895).
To Revivify Royal College.
Kingston, May 11.—The Royal Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons is
t brev' ved with Senator Sulli-
o e
van, one of tho 'charter members, as
president. This corporation ]las a
royal charter, issued in 1866. Since
the Queen's Medical College resumed
its relation with Queen's the Royal
College has been dormant. It is now
proposed to revive it and utilize its
examining powers in granting fel-
lowships and the degree of F.R.C.P.
S. This degree can only be secured
on examination of a high standard
and a thesis by doctors of five years'
standing. since 1892 the. Royal Col-
lege has conferred one or two de-
grecs, but now it is proposed to
thoroughly reorganizo it and make it
a live corporation.
Capt. Richardson Dead.
Victoria, B.C., May 1.1.—Capt.
Richardson, Secretary of the Pro-
vincial Bureau of Mines, died sud-
denly of heart failures yesterday
morning. ilea was formerly private
aecrotary to Lieut. -Governor Dewd-
goy'. Ho hold'a captain's commies
idea ht the 93th Regiment of In-
tantry of the Dritiih Ary and
benefit by the fo:r:mer's experience.
Guelph should take pride in its. being
instrumental in showing the test of
Ontario what a consoiida tell Scheel
will du for the educational interests.
'Fite children will be brought to, 'lee
sehooLs in vans, ,and this will be elle
means of bringing the. scholars out
in bad weal her, when they otherwise
could not come. The building
will be er ected and eetuipped free
et cost and wt11 be managed by
ratepayers in the sebool sections in-
terested. It agar frost at little! 'gore
than the other schools, but in the
ene it will ba. *cheaper and the i
seh�oiers j ill receive a Itigit sechool
<c,,ucation. The school will be ntain-
taia)cit for Thee years by the'funds
provided by Sir William. Dla'aedoeald, •
after whirls it will depend on the
ratepayers. the. ire:steea can. ac •
-
cept scholars front outside districts,
according to their own dption.
RILEY'S FAVORITE POEM.
Let me come in where you, sit weiep-
lz g—aye,
Let nus, who have, not any' child to
die,
Weep with you. for the little one
whose love,
1 have known rot king of.
The little ur•:ns that slowly, slowly
loosed
Their pressure round your neck --the
hands you used
To kiss—such urine—Web hands as 1
never knew.
May 1 not weep with you.?
Fath waul1 I ocs of s'rvioe ,— gay,
something
Between the tears, that; would be,
cor:rf ort ante•,
But eb 1 — so sadder titan; yourself
am i,
Who have no child to die:
—James Whitcomb Riley,
IIOW IT SPREADS.
The first package+ of fleet -Roil (theta -
fallible Pile cure) that was put out went
to a small town in the State of Nebras-
ka.
It made the are of a case of Piles that
west cnnbicierfd hopeless.
The news spread and although this
wak only two years ago the demand
prompted Dr. J. S. Leonhardt of Lin-
coln, Neb., the discoverer,' to prepare it
for general use. Now it is being sent to
all parts of the world.
It will euro any cash of Piles. There is
a month's trenttnent in each box.
Sold for $1 CO. with absolute guarantee.
It is for sale by drnggists.
Sold iu Wingham by Walton McKib.
bon.
Seedless Fruits.
If a seedless apple has really been de.
veloped it would, says Mr, Grenier,
hardly be an occasion for great astonish-
ment. Years ago all the oranges we
found in our markets were supplied with
seeds. To -day most of the oranges It
ee o kept
Y g
P
in our stores are entirely seedless. We
also have seedless raisius. Mr, Burbank,
I believe has developed a seedless plum,
or later we shall havetheseedless
Soonerate ee leas
apple. In short, we could easily believe
this story if there had not been the in-
formation added that this apple develop•
ed without blossom,
WHAT HAPPENS AFTER FIVE HOURS.
Dr. Bouchard, the eminent French physician, has furnished facts which show that if
'tire and
food is retained in the stomach more than five hours it becomes 1'.+ruu+ntt
putrefactive,—not digestive, — and that this is the starting -point of disease.
1
i11, •: f>�I,
t'
�._ Eating
to much
starchy
foods
This food mass be-
comes putrid.
l
gas.
Generates
ch dilates.
The stoma
There is a seeming
lump -weight, burning. or
belching.
Blood, fibre, tissue, and
cells begin to absorb
poison from tbo stomach
and atirnentary canal in-
stead of nutritnent, and
right here is the produc-
ing cause of Constipa-
tion, Diabetes, Bright's
Disease, Uterine a n d
Ovarian troubles, llhea-
matism. (?out, Nervous
and Mental Distrees,
Bronchitis, Heart AITee-
tion, Pulmonary Con-
sumption, Jaundice,
Liver and Skin Diseases.
Inability of the stom-
achhandle
to properly
caused
n i. mainly
f
food
by
it r drinking too
• .rest) d
iP
O C„ f,r
gases a. I srn tch liquid,
1
g
gen-
erated font slow diges-
tion, pretentitt rthe
ing of food with gastric
juice to properly prepare
body.
it for use in. the3
Dr. ,T. 8. Leonhardt
worked for years iu per-
fecting Anti -Pill, so that
h
regu-
lar
r(
it would >;
lar stomach action, and
its astonishing cures are
proof of its mission be-
ing fulfilled; of its being
the greateet System
Treatment in the world.
.50 cents of druggists, or
mailed to any address by
\uses-Frt.t Co., Niag-
ars Falls, Ont. Sample-
free.
ample
free.
FOR SALE IN WINGHAM BY WALTON McIUBBON.
When t' sore Won't Heal
,
Because of its power toheal
flaming flesh, to allay the inflammation
and stop the dreadfnl itching, Dr.
Chase's Ointment has a world-wide
reputation. If you have become dis.
conraged by the failure of other treat-
ments put Dr. Chase's Ointment to the
test. Like thousands of others you will
be surprised and delighted with the re.
AND KEEP WELL.' elm haptics vieveroit cam400.4-,,'salt.
{y�r :K
i ,C �,r T',4 hRtte
lieedieeenee
"Ilett ifiso o cIti 4JST wins & yaw. warksx'
t=1
11
?a:
e
111114,.4t
•
Don't plod along like your grandmother did before
you, scouring and scrubbing; bending and rubbing.
GOLD DUST
makes housework easy. It Cleans everything and
injures nothing. More economical than soap.
Made only by THE N. 1C. rAIRBANK COMPANY,
iiioecc, flow York. Boston, St, heels. !Montreal,