The Wingham Times, 1905-12-28, Page 3x
a
.1
111:
11
Steaming Cupof \\ Li ,
gives the player
strength to play,
and keeps the
watcher from
a catching cold,
10
THE
�rtrrll�;wee
�'it
�;a„(
At an editorial convention in Kansas
one of the country editors offered the
following toast: To save au editor from
Btarvetion take his newspaper and pay
him for it promptly, To save him from
bankruptcy, advertise in his paper lib-
erally. To save him from despair, send
him every item of news of whish yon
can get hold. To save him from pro-
Pr,3UU9AI.IDO of wren are prisoners of disease as securely' o?�
a• as though they were confined behind no bon, Many,l
Lava tergal their own chains by tlta vices of early youth,
exposure to contagious disease, or the excesses of nunhood.
They feel they are not the mon they ought tube or need to be.
Thovi:n, vi„urs and vitality of manhood are lacking, Are
you nervous and despondent? tired in the morning? gave you
to force yo_trseif through the day's work? have you little am-.
bit'_oa and energy? are you irritable and excitable? eyes
au:: u, daprsse_.t and haggard looking? memory poor and '
brain fagged? have you weals back with dreams and losses at
night? t!.;to :it in urine? weak sexually ?-you have
fileinr.:3 ami seminal Weakness.
Ourp,.-0,7 tee erean 'ME J.T It iii: NT is guaranteed to
curve or r3v Pay. 25 yeaso !n ii)ctroie. Bank
bbeeenrit7 F:.wa:o of quacks -Consult old established,
• rrli.tblo Ftt^.s::iz:ts. a.oilaaaitatlon Free. Boone
/ ^ 'Chita far nuestiou Blank for Flonte Treatment.
fanity, write your correspondence plain-
ly on one side of the sheet, and send it
in as early as possible. To save hila
from mistakes, bury him. Dead men
are the only ones that never make mis-
takes. Newspaper readers would do
well to remember that there are no per-
fect people -editors or readers.
Pao Ire?Ftaal±e g i 15 r ,'IL
04,3 emu: LflY€ T itEET. 4► PTTmor, coca.
AmPk°ary
.iER8(
d lit►: y
1
1
WAITING FOR DEATH, BUT
NOT WITHOUT HOPE
"1'hero is a poor woman in this
parish apparently just waiting for
death to comp through conuumption.
She has not the oleins to go to a
Sanutoriutn, or she would probably
be at one before this. ;+he is still
comparatively strong, walls about
quite a lot --deices sontetiule:, too --
hut every day, of course, is growing
worse. Would there be any peasi-
bility of her being taken into your
Home for Consurnptivesi It would
boa mercy if site could he permitted
to enter it. I would much appreciate
an early reply, as every clay means
80 0111(1." -Piro. Ifeeow S1TTON,
Incumbent, Belmont, Ont.
LOST TWO DAUGHTERS
Ga
"I am advised by Dr. J. D. Wilson
to write you eonr•eruiug how soon 1
could get my wife admitted to Con-
sumptive hospital itt Uravenhurst,
also please send me pamphlet re
terms while there. 1 have been told
that it is free, so please let azo hear
from you soon as possible. I have
Iost two daughters, and my wife con-
tracted the disease from our eldest
one, who (lied ten months ago. I
Inn a working aunt and not able to
pay a high rate, but still anxious to
(10 What I eau." --A. CAilllnliLr,
London, Ont.
(I The above are typical of scores, indeed hundreds,
of appeals ccnaarAly coming before the trustees of the
askoka eros
ospita
ter.&^ 2.,.. .�..........+ - .
for Constrniptives
No effort is being spared to meet every call. . .
jJNot a.single applicant has ever been refused admission
to the Free Hospital because of his or her poverty,
ii:w PATIE\'I•a 0 WAY TO 11UsrrTer,
and the anxiety mf the trustees to keep done waiting
is shown in the decision reached a few weeks ago
to increase the accommodation by twenty-five beds.
--7 hLi Increase a art patients will add
benvily to disc I,airden of nitaitateylfa'i('c
and can only be covered by increased
generosity on the quart of friends in all
parts of #111nraaa(taaa I,'ndienits Italie been
admitted front every Praviaree in the
Dominion. and 16 is with confidence
in the response to our at?lalo('aaN, that
the trustees d
w c'es believe wilt c one front
Canadians everywhere. when'e . tbtaat these ad.
cilitiao>titat hardens ba.a'sc been aatilat1U('ai.
'11 Where a cause more urgent ? Where a greater
call to help suffering Canadians? Where will your
money do more good ?
Contribntiees may be s1•11t to Silt Wm. 11, Mtttuntrn, lit„ Chief
Justice, Os;u,iilc Hall, 'Terme.), or W. d. (+tesla, lig., ;it Front Ht. l'V.
FEEDING HOGS
MGM TIRES, DECEMBER 28, 1905
I've often watched hogs eat. They
run from ear to ear, or parry one along,
spending more time trying to get the
whole feed than in eating. When it
comes to drink, they rush to the trough
with you, upsetting your dignity if you
are not careful, then pile up in the
trough where you pour is the water.
After a sip they are off again to the corn.
You could carry a dozen pails of water
to them and they would repeat the per.
fotmance, If 'twere rich swill or milk
they would gorge themselves and not
leave a drop.
It thews that they know enough to
quit when it's only water offered. This
has 1ec1 me to think tbat a better way
could be found. Joseph E. Wing told
at the Ames short course, how he feeds
his hogs with a self -feeder, Puts the
grain in theta and the water in auother
place, The bogs eat when they please.
They are compelled co eat slowly and
chew the dry reed, for they can't hog it
dawn. He said they didu't waste a bit.
What got rooted or pushed out fell on
the feericg platform and was picked up.
I don't believe sour swill is any better
for hogs than sour soup is for man. One
day sweet and one day sour is not right,
The sour swill barrel is a good breeding
place for disease germs. It is little
wonder the country sufferers such hogs
losses each year, when we consider what
the hog has to eat. Out in the alfalfa
country where grass and water' are the
hog feed, there is very little loss of hogs.
-Kimball's Dairy Farmer.
Cracker
Charm
There is
all the diff-
erence in t
the world
between
eating bis-
cuits a n d
biscuit eat-
ing. O n e
may eat a biscuit and not taste
it, but when you think of bis-
cuit eating you think instantly of
Mooneiy's Perfection
Creams sodas
Crisp, delicious and tasty.
Absolutely and dist distinctly
superior to any other make.
Say "Mooney s" to your grocer. .
The Delineator for January.
The Delineator begina the New Year
with an attractive cover and a display of
ail that is new in tile fashion world, to
say nothing of the many 'features of lit..
erary excelleucs. Of particular tuterest
is an Arnold by Post -Master -General
Qortelyou, describing woeuau's place and
share of work iu the poets! service. The .
article iu the "Safe Food" sezies is de-
voted to t1 dtaouesiuu of the rein value of
glucose as a food prQdu t. Cecilia Loftus
gives her impressions of "Ophelia" a
a character watch she has noted with
success, and N. Huasou Moore writes of
"Old-Faehtoued Beds," '.The President
ofauex", Helen M. Wiuslow's drub
story, 18 continued, a serious note being
introduced in the dismission of child
labor, "At Spinster Farm" is coueluded,
as welt as douu Luther Loug'd °lever
story of the stage, "Castles iu Spain,"
The edneatiuu of the child Is the subject
of a thouguttul paper by Dr. Grace P.
Murray, and the pastimes for the little
folks iuoluda the first of a series of fairy
tales by Alice Brown. The various de-
paruueute are tilled with matter of iu.
term and value to the woman of the
home.
A Hint for Farmers' Wives.
Every farm woman knows that it is
almost impossible to keep the white
linen tablecoth clean for more than one
day when the meal folk are working in
the field, and seven long tablecloths
make quite an addition to the weekly
Wash. The time came in one farmer's
family when it seemed best to call a halt
and plan to make the housework easier
during the heated term. To this end a
plain white oilcloth was purchased. It
was ono yard and a half in width and
long enough to fall over the sides of the
dining table all round about five inches,
This was neatly pinked all round, the
regulation white linen tablecloth spread
over the silence cloth and then the white
oilcloth spread over that. Of course the
white linen cloth shows several inches
below the oilcloth and the table loops
very neat and tidy, and best of all the
oileoths can be washed off after each meal
and no washing of a tablecloth more
than once. a mouth. That farmer's
family enjoys its meals with no disquiet-
ing thoughts of untidy table linen, but
With the consciousness that wbezt unex-
pected gaestee arrive the oilcloth may be
Whisked off tied the nicely laundered
white cldth Will be ready for service.
How Is
Your Cold?
Every place you go you hear the same
question asked.
Do you know that there is nothing so
dangerous as a neglected cold?
Do you know that a neglected cold will
turn into Chronic Bronchitis, Pneumonia,
disgusting Catarrh and the most deadly of
all, the 1° White Plague," Consumption.
Many a life history would read different
if, on the first appearance of a cough, it
had been remedied with
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Pine Syrup
This wonderful cough and cold medicine
contains all those very pine principles
whioh make the pine woods so valuable to
the treatment of lung affections.
Combined with this are Wild Cherry
Bark and the soothing, healing and ex-
pectorant properties of other pectoral
herbs and barks.
For Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Pain in
the Chest, Asthma, Croup, Whooping
Cough, Hoarseness or any affection of the
Throat or Lungs. You will find a sure
cure in Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.
Mrs. C. N. Loomer, Berwick, N.S.,
writes : " I have used Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup for coughs and colds, and have
always found it to give instant relief. I
also recommended it to ono of my neigh-
bors and she was more that pleased with
the results."
: Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup 25 eta.
per bottle at all dealers. Put up in yellow
wrapper, and three pine trees the trade
mark. Refuse substitutes. There is only
one Norway Pine Syrup and that one is
Di', Wood's.
Discontent
The mall is frill of e t m•,
Anc1 the rt rip is tui, ,•t' peas.
ThPrs's "ugnt o, t hr• or 11 A.
And the �ar''yltd ur t•rees;
The fields ar., full ' f stuble,
And t ha -re '8 ,'r..s ntr, n the gronud ;
But the amid is full of trouble
It we only loose around.
The cora is full O" lune),
There HT,. lilts•' its til•' books;
The to'' ns a -s I'tlni of people,
There are '.tore•i in the hooks;
The orelier('a toll of armies,
And the meadow's full of hay -
Bat what tio'tbles we ctisnover,
If we're ot,ly built that way.
The liiar.'s full of blossoms
And the trees ere full of leaves,
The meadow's full of clover,
And the fields are fall of sheaves;
The bread is full of flour.
And the rain is damp and wet-
. But how notch there is to fret us,
If we really want to fret.
The bees are full of honey,
And the apples full of juice,
: The banks are full of money,
But -be happy? What's the use?
The beach is toll of pebbles,
i There is water in the creek-
' But nothing reaIIy suite us
If we really want to kink.
SOLTE
SEC s, R FI1TY
Cenuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills,
Must Boar Sit nature+ of
See Pced It.111a Wrapper Boloar,
Vary await en.a as 0aa * .
to t5k,e ns ct;;a1,.
a... t,
y
-Ma 1 r;:at Ar'rdt,61r.,
'L +��`d .Mil DIVI EN.
1 nIv, FOR a1@.9b SIDISC.
r;'t' FOR (� tii13M .
pi . FON lei T PATION.
FOR $ALLOW SK114.
FOR ThECOMi'LEt1 I M
}yam 014%41t.11Mil a4.TNAVt,t NA71111
tit s f $emery oasts bre ,a1eiWee e
CURE WOK HEADM HE.
HAVE PLANTS EVES.
Plants are by no means so stupid or so
helpless as they commonly get credit for
being. No matter how a beech bappeus
to be planed in the ground the root will
turn down and the stem grow up into
the air, and there manage, somehow or
other, 10 find its way to the rtearest sup,
port.
Especially remarkable is the behavior
of vegetables toward light. House plants
as 'every one knows, grows in the oireo-
tion of the window, but, if the pot be
turned half -way round the leaves will
nevertheless manage to screw themselves
back into their ola position, and the sun.
flower will "rubber round" all day long
SO as to stare at the sun. let temperate
couutries leaves grow at tight augles to
the rays of light, to get as =oh of it as
possible; in the tropics they set them.
selves edgewise, to get as little.
Evidently, thea, plants come at least
as near seeing as do some animals.
Pretty much alt that has been known
about the matter, however, is that they
attend Duly to the blue rays of the sou ;
for though they will grow perfectly well
iu red or yellow light, they show not the
slightest iuolinatiou to turn towards it.
A German botauist, 13aberlandt, who
for muny years has been studying these
problems, bee concluded that the wbole
upper surface of each leaf is a sort of
compound eye. The thzu, translucent
bkin which, in most plauts, covers the
green, sncculeut tissue et the leaf, is it-
self, in certain cases, composed of in-
numerable rounded cells. These, thinks
Pr ofeesor Haberlandt, are so ninny
mimic() lenses which concentrate the
light upon the living substance below,
and enable the plant to distinguish be-
t ween light and oarkuess, or between
weak light and strong, though not, of
course, to see objects, Such primitive
lenses he lh,de iu the fig, ivy, maguolia,
wood -sorrel, and other plants. Certain
plants, like the pepper and the balsam,
have in addition little eye -spots, which
in atructure approach the eyes of many
of the simplest animals, and appear, iu a
stnee, to be real eyes.
At any rate, plants do act as if they
could see, and Professor Haberlaudt has
found that each of these supposed sense
organs eau be made to pt:ut a bright
epot on a photographic plate.
HYOMEI RILLS CATARRHAL
GERMS
Its Healing Air Reaches Every Tissue of
Nose, Throat and Lungs,
All the stomach dosing in the world
cannot do any actual good iu the treat-
ment of catarrhal troubles, unless the
nose and throat are completely freed
from oetarrhal germs, and the poison
that they produce.
Hyomei is Nature's true cure for ca-
tarrh. It destroys all germs in the air
passages and lungs, soothes and heals the
irritated mucous membranes, and effect•
nailer drives from rhe system all traces
of the poison. When using the Hymnal
treatment, the air you breathe is like
that on the Mountains, high above sea
level, where the pine woods fill the air
with puritying and healing qualities
that give health and strength to those
suffering from diseases of the respiratory
organs. Breathed through the neat.
pocket inhaler that comes with every
outfit, the healing air of Hyomei reaches
every tissue of nose, throat and lungs,
and immediate relief is given, and a per-
manent cure is soon made.
The complete Hyomei outfit, consist-
ing of an inhaler, medicine dropper, and
one bottle of Hyomei, costa only $1,00,
extra bottles 50e.
If you cannot obtain Hyomei of your
dealer, it will be forwarded by mail,
postage paid, on receipt of price. Write
to -day for consultation blank that will
entitle you to services of our medical de-
partment without charge. The R. T.
Booth Company, Hyomei Building, It-
haca, N Y. Sold by Walton McKib•
bon. Winghani,
WHEN THE FURNACE FIRE GOES
OUT
A man may be a model man and very
seldom swear,
And times when he is roused to wrath
may be exceeding rare;
But don't you think he'd be a saint be-
yond the slightest doubt
Who would not cuss a little when
The
Furnace
Fire
Goes
Ont.
A man may bear hard slaps of fate and
bear 'em with a grin,
Because he knows perhaps 'tis sent to
punish him for sin
And fortune's frowns he e'en may face
with heart that's brave and stout,
But there's a lituit suck as when
The
Furnace
Fire
Goes
Ont
The furnace, too, as most folk know, is
an unrelenting beast
It is the grinning skeleton that sits
around the feast
And in a fiendish garb and guise it lurks
around about,
And when the weather's very cold that's
When
the
Fire
(Toes
Out
It mostly happens when you've gone to
bed to have a sleep,
Or when you have forgot a store of
kindling wood to keep,
That's when you feel to lift your voice
and imprecations shout,
l?or 'tib on such occasion that
The
Furnace
1''ire
Goes
Oat
10,
Short Gut to Suocess
Thera is none -if you would succeed you must work.
Some colleges claim to give a complete course in less
time than the
The Forest City Business and Shorthand College teaches
the different courses in the time found by long experience by
the best colleges, to be necessary --no more and no less,
If the work is done in less time it cannot be done thoroughly.
After you leave the F. C. B. C. you waste no time in learning
what you should have been taught in the College,
Our free booklet tells all about plans, systems, charges,
positions after graduating, etc. Write for it.
School term -September till June inclusive.
J. W. WESTERVELT, Y. M. C. A. Bldg.,
Principal LONDON, ONT.
. o , ill 11 i. 1 Ili 111 :I p dw +r dl4ik1,1 .15111,a o iJ.t.JO LL+15W,Yat+3id:ut{E.n#.:1.141441i111,1741..31414 iY
.7{n Education for a Urethrae
When you attend the Merlin Busi-
ness College, you may look for
practical results.
We Wee a tr.tini•tg that not only
fits for tate hast otil.•o positions, but
every sui j.'rt of o,:r courses is of
actual, every flay t Sd to any man,
anywhere.
We send mere stene•_r'•pliers and
bookkeepers to good positions than
any - similar school in lee tern
Ontario. This is 0 2'ltii coniury
business s. lunol conduct. d tut strict
business principles.
Elegant catelntrne feet..
Enter at any thus.
One of the famous Federated Colleges.
W. O. EULER, Pei foil ;t.
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l.hilts'iiteas i kasse.0.0 616. •.,l SaIiest itAS!
a
wall000 1/000/000 ,aassw*0011)aaes
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FOR 1906.
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