HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-02-22, Page 66
THE WiNCRA 1 TOMS FE33BUA.RY 22, lina6
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Try it with a, dash of
Cold Milli
1711777 .,. ri.,m.,t: ,,
Kernels from the Sanctum
Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges.
ges.
Frederick Kemp, fernier, nearOhealey
hanged himself in leis barn.
James Tracey was caught in the ma.
abinery of the shipyard at Cotlingwood,
and almost instantly killed.
The essential lung -healing principal of,
the pine tree has finally beep successfully
separated and refined into a perfect
Dough reedieine-Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a
guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25
cents.
Since thetBritisb and . Foriegn Bible
society carne into existence the total
issues of the tacciety amount to 192,537,•
'146 copies of Holy Scriptures.
hears the
Gignatare
of
lie Kind Y.il Have got Baal
11r. Thomas A. Hastings, formerly li-
cense inspector for Toronto, has been ap °
pointed inspector of Dominion public
buildings for Toronto and western On.
tario.
SL'DDE1ti11: ATTACHED.
Children aro often attacked suddenly
by paiefni and dangerous Colic, Cramps,
Diarrhoea Dysentery, Cholera Morbus,
Cholera Infantnm, etc. Dr. Fowler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt
and sure cure which should always be
kept in the house.
Donald McInnis, who was recently
admitted to the House of Refuge from
Bayseld, suffering from eangrene in hls
feet, as the result of them being frozen,
died an Tuesday. Feby. Bete,
Chamberlain's Conch Remedy. The
Mother's I•aeorite,
The soothing and healing properties of
this remedy, its pleasant taste and
prompt and permanent cures have made
it a favorite with people everywhere. It
is especially prized by mothers of small
children, for colds, croup and whooping
cough, as it always affords quick relief,
and as it contains no opium or other
harmful drug, it may be given as con-
fidently to a baby as to an adult. For
Hale by F. H. Walley.
Dungannon is shortly to have two new
banks. The Sterling Bank is to open a
branch in tbat place in the near future
and the Bank of Hamilton branch at
Lucknow have arranged to open one on
Albert St., Wawanosh side of theviilage.
:Disorders of Digestion
"We have kept Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills in the house as a family med-
icine for years and find them the most
eatisfactory of any remedy we Can get.
I can personally recommend them to
anyone suffering from kidney and liver
derangement and stomach trunbles."-
Mrs. James W. Belyea, Belyea's Cove,
Queens Co., N.B.
•
Mr..?obn Mowat, a highly respected
resident of Seafortb, died at his home on
Sunday, I?eby 11th. He was nearly 70
years of age, and had not been enjoying
good health for several months. He was
axe industrious, well doing, honorable
man, and enjoyed the high esteem of our
citizens meet:rally.
1C:.ES. Si tit 3 Ata
130ata tiro Tte Kind You Hare Alelys
6ignataro
The Annual Report of the I•Iaron'lsrea•
byterian Church, Ripley, for the year
1905 has been issued. The total receipts
for the eetramounted to $e000.50, of
this amount $94:5.63 were received from
Sabbath collections, $195.25 for sheds,
and $1:1x.::0 for missiona. Total expendi-
ture was $.`;237.50. There was a balance
in the Treasury, at the annual meeting
to the amount of $$363:63
Dear Mother
)"out little (Jnts ares a consiar.t care itt
n W inweather, The
Fall eta tct ry y will
+emelt. old. De yeti kSow about Shiloh's
Cemempeen Cure, the Lung Tonle, and
what it has done fo; to natty? It is sail
to he the only retisirto tweedy for all
dsexr a of the air possess itt ttnttlrce.
It is aleolutely heresies* eel pl:asaat to
nice. Itiap uarttttcet1 to turn. oryout money
is teems :l. The pike ii tic. per bottle,
sand all dealers in medicine etifl s: a
SIIILOH
This trtt�tecigr thoala be i* every
The lowest price ever recorded far
cheese, sine cheese-tnakiug became a
considerable iudustry in Canada was in
weed, when the average price in Ontario
was i 8 ie. Same then in has never gone
below So, and in 1904 the average was
nearly S i3•4e, and Iast year it was much
higher.
Boars the % Tte Kind You Have Alcrars Baub,1
Signature f fyf��r
at 4.6% /,
Mr. John Wyatt has sold his one
hundred acre farm near Hctrlock, in
Hallett, which he purchased a short
time ago from Mr. Crosby, to Mr. Peter
Taylor for $4,530, Tho farm is a good
oue tut the buildings are not first class,
Mr. Wyatt intends moving to New On.
tario in the spring to push his fortune
there,
a.
Afraid of strong Medicines.
Many people suffer for years from
rheumatic pains, and prefer to do so
rather than take the strong medicines
usually given for rheumatism, not know-
ing that quick relief from pain may be
had simply by applying Obamberlain's
Pain Balm and without taking anyniedi-
cies internally. For sale by F. H. Wal-
ley.
A Swede and an Irishman were out
walking together *hen a storm Dame up.
The rain fell violently, They took re•
fuge under a tree. The toe for about
fifteen minutes made a good refuge.
3 Then it began to leak, The eold rain-
drops began to fall down the Irishman's
neck, and he began to complain. "Oh,
never mind," said the Swede; there are
plenty of trees. As soon as this one is
wet through we'll go under another."
For Ovsr Sixty Tears.
An Old and Well -Tried Remedy Mrs
Winslow's aoothingSyrup has been used
for over sixty years bymiilionsof mothers
for their children while teething, with
perfect success. It soothes the child;
softens the gums, allays all pain, cures
wind colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhcea. It is pleasant to the taste.
Sold by druggists in every part of the
world. Twenty-five cents abottle. Its
value is incalculable. Besnre you ask
for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and
take no other kind.
t The death occurred on Tuesday even-
ing, Feby lith, of Mrs. H, P. Kennedy,
an old resident of Seaforth. About four
i months ago she suffered a paralaytio
stroke from which she seccum.bed. The
deceased went to Seaforth twenty-five
i years ago from .dlitchell and with her
hnsband occupied the Grip Hotel, where
Ithey lived for a number of years, after
which they retired to Egmondville
where they have since continued to live.
After a painful illness of over two
years, Mrs. Geo. E. Sutton passed to her
reward on Monday morning, Feby 12th.
The deceased, wbose maiden name was
EIiza Plowman, was born at Northamp-
ton, England, April 2nd, 1837, and was
married to Air. Sutton in l8Ge. Ten
years later they came to Canada and
settled in Goderich, where they had
since resided. Mrs. Sutton was a faith-
ful and consistent member of the Metho.
dist church,
1
Violent ifeadacne%
I"I was troubled for a long time with
headaches which would ooine on With
etch violence that I could not eat or do
my work. Headache powders and quick
I cures did no good, Eight months ago I
took six boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food, and I have not been troubled with
headache since." -Mr, 0. Ferber, Sim-
.
coo, Ont.
Mr. W. J, White, inspector of Cana-
dian imrnigratfon agencies in the Unito3
States, has
oatr@tu'
rned fromthe west
and eon it
h nes the estimate of fully 10,000
of an inoreas@ in the number of settlers
front the Stater this year, as Compared
with 1005. The movement, he sags, has
already begun. The chief difficulty,
Mr. White tears, will be to obtain ade-
quate means of transportation for this
large influx of settlers. During the
month of March alone 3,000 ears will be
required to transport settlers. Live stock,
and effects from the United States to
the Canadian West, Later on it will be
fteceststrrf' to ran three or four large ex-
cursions nertli from the *tete of Iowa,
Oar readers will regret to hear of the
death of Samuel Jackson of Con, 2,
Huron Tp. He had been In poor health
for over a year but had recovered sof-
fioently to be out. At the time of his
death he was taking dinner at Joseph
Smeltzer's. Death took •bun soddenly
and painlessly. Ur. Jackson was a nat.
ive of TCileenny, Ireland, but has been
in Huron for many years He leaves a
wife and small family, He was about
56 years of age.
SPRING MEDICINE.
As a spring medicince Burdook Blood
Bitters lees no equal. It tones up the
system and reruoves all impurities from
the blood, and takes away that tired,
weary feeling so prevalent in the spring.
The Exeter Advocate less au egg story
as follows: -In the last issue of the
Advocate, Mr. T. B. Carling was asking
who could beat the egg record. Mr. 1).
Rowcliffe has a Wyandotte pullet, which
Toyed her first egg on October 411, an-
other which commenced a couple of
weeks Iater, and the two of them on
December f0th had layed 37 eggs. Mr.
Roweliffe has 17 hens and in the month
of January up till the 27th they layed
2:2 eggs.
Many people say they are "all nerves,"
easily startled or upset, easily worried
and irritated. Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills are just the remedy such
people require. They restore perfect
harmony of the nerve centres and give
new nerve force to shattered nervous
systems.
A well known former resident of
Listowel died on Tuesday, Feby Oth, in
the person of James Green. He had
been for some time afflicted with a can-
cer, and about four years ago was oper-
ated on iu Montreal. The deceased was
born in Woodstock, Ont., and learned
the trade of blaoksmithing with the late
W. G. Hay in Listowel. He was mar-
ried to Susan, a sister of the late John
Zimmerman, who survives him. While
the family were still youug they went
West and took up land near ' Virden,
where they have prospered.
Startling But True.
People the world over were horrified
on learning of the burning of a Chicago
theater in which nearly six hundred
people lost their lives, yet more than five
times this number or over 3,000 people
died from pneumonia in Chicago during
the same year, with scarcely a passing
notice. Every one of these cases of pneu-
monia resulted from a oold, and could
have been prevented by the timely use
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. A
great many who had every reason to fear
pneumonia have warded it off by the
prompt use of this remedy. The fol-
lowing is an instance of this sort: "Too
ranch cannot be said in favor of Cham-
berlain's Cough Remedy, and especially
for colds and influenza. I know that it
cured my daughter, Laura, of a severe
cold, and I believe saved her life when
she was threatened with pneumonia."
W. D. Wilcox, Logan, New York. Sold
by F. H. Walley,
The Hon. Nelson Monteith, Minister
of Agriculture, has this to say about the
hog question which seems to be a burn-
ing issue just how. He says: "That
while many would rejoice at the exclu-
sion of the American hog, it was up to
Ontario farmers to see that the supply is
kept up from home hogs, It is important
to insure continuity of supply in order
to retain the important trade in hog pro-
ducts, etc., which has grown up through
our large packing houses, hence the ex-
clusion of the American hog should be
accompanied by greatly inorcased pro-
secution of bog raising in this country
upon the most approved lines." This is
perhaps, good advise to aur farmers anti
if acted upon would, probably', produce
beneficial results. But, there is not
much sentiment or patriotism itt grow -
mg. It fanners find that branch of
agricultural more profitable than any
other, there will be no scarcity of hogs,
but if it is not profitable, the packers
will likely' have to go short.
A terioAri sTATHML8NT
This a tin u
a o n mn
oe e t is made wvftltont
any qualifications, Hem -Reid istheone
preparation in the World that guarantees
it,
Dr. Leonbardt'e Hem-ROfd will cure
any case of Piles. Itis in the form of a
tablet.
It is the only pile remedy used in
ternaiiy'.
itis impossible to onto an established
case of piles with ointments, suppositor-
fee,. injections or outward appliances,
A guarantee is issued With every pack.
age of Dr. Leotnhardt'e trem.ltbfd,whioh
contains a hxonth's treatment.
Go and talk teoour druggist about ft,
The
Wilson- Ci,, Limited, Niagara
Valle, Ont.
At the regent Boston Poultry Show
$150 was veld, for t4 Plymouth Rock hen,
the biggest price ever gtven for stook of
that hind. According to the usual as
tont, a price may be set upon any entry,
and these prices are published, so that
any purobaser may secure anything iu
the show that has a pride listed. In this
particular case the original owner
thought he had put a prohibitive pride
on his Plymouth Rock Biddy when be
named $100 as the selling pride. How-
ever, the bird was snapped at this figure
mad the pnrohaeer afterwards resold her
at $750 to a firm which wanted her for
the Crystal Palace Show,
Doan') Kidney Pi11e act on the kid-
neys, bladder and nrinary organs only.
They cure backaches, weak batik, 'tomat-
o/sue, diabetes, congestion, intimation,
gravel, Bright's disease and all other
diseases arising front wrong action of the
t;idueye and bladder.
A Peel farmer who is known for work.
ing his men long hours recently hired a
Dutchman. A day or eo later he was
going to town and said he would buy a
bed for Jacob. Said the latter: "1
vonld not peso extravagance, mine boss;
ov is vas all the same to you, shust you
buy me a new lantern and some alarm
cloaks, 80 I gets up in der middle ov to-
morrow and stays up until yesterday,
all the while already,"
AN AftflERIGAN DISEASE
Indigestion is Responsible for More
Sickness la America Than
Any Other Disease.
Some doctors go so far as to say that
indigestion is the national dieeaae of
America. Repeated attacks inflame the
lining of the stowaoh and cause the
glands to secrete mucous instead of the
'ni ea r
0 0£ natural digestion. t,•estign. Conae-
quently the blood is poisoned, nerve
force is reduced, the vitality of the en-
tire system le weakened.
There is but one national remedy for indi•
leestion and that remedy is Dr. Hamilton's
Pills, which are used by thousands with mar-
vellous success.
Dr. Hamilton's Piles aocelerate the
action• of the gastrin glands and give
tone to the digestive organs. They
cleanse and purity the blood, and thus
add general tone to every organ of the
body. Flesh and strength are fast re-
stored and the patient can eat and digest
any food be pleases.
Under the vitalizing effect of Dr.
Hamilton's Pills your system will soon
rally; once more you'll enjoy the bless-
ings of health. Test Dr. Hamilton's
Pills yourself. 250 per box or five boxes
for $1; at all dealers or by mail from N.
C. Polson Ss Co., Hertford, Conn., U.S.
A., and Kingston, Ont.
Donald Guthrie, K. C., of Guelph, In-
spector of Registry offices of Ontario has
made his report to the government for
the year 1904. From it we get the fol-
lowing interesting particulars of the
business transacted at the county of
Bruce Regieiry office during the year,
by Mr. Walter M. Deck, Registrar,
Total number of instruments 4,358.
Pees therefore $5,112 se. Amount paid
to the County $1,443 48. Net amount
received by Registrar $2,547.32, Fees
earned and not received $822 59. Grose
amount of fees earned for the year 1904,
$6,480.85. Paid the Deputy Registrar
$1000. Other expenses of the office
$g;8s 83.
CASTORIA
For infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Hears they( �
Signature of.�J" 7 f��,�.
LL
It is expected that the Province will
receive in succession duties from the
estate of the late T. R. Wood of Toronto
about $100,000, perhaps a Iittlemore than
that. The estate is valued at $1,350,000,
and most of it is left to two sons. From
til@ estate of the late Mrs. A, E, Ross, a
Canadian lady, who died in England,
the succession dues will probably, total iii
alightly over $40,0 ' She left an estate
of about $700,000. .nostly in Toronto
realty, The estate of the late T. R.
Merritt of St. Catharines will yield in
dues about $31,000. j
•t e• et 1
'run tatexs. 1 Ayortz E.
Lata -Liver Pills are the ladies' favorite 1
medioine. They cure Constipation, Sick t
B'eadache, Billiousness, and fyspepsia
teitbout griping, purging or sickening. I
w
Baron Eraulwell once appeared for the
crown in a case in Wales. The counsel
for the defence asked permission, as the
jurywas Welsh o
, t address its members
in their native tongue. As the case was
simple, the b r
ol made no objection.
The Welsh barrister said only a few
words. The baron also was brief, but
he was somewhat surprised at a prompt
verdict of acquittal, "What was it,"
lie afterwards inquired, "that Mr. L --
meld to the jury?" "Oh, he just said: -
"This case, gentlemen, lies in a nutshell.
YOU tee yourself exactly how it stands,
The ,judge is an Englishman, the prose-
cuting counsel is an Englishmen, the
Complainant is an Engliehtru n. Rut
you are Welsh, and I am Welsh, and the
prisoner is Welsh. Need I tray more? 1
leave it all to yore,"
Otto. day a village parson was suraroeu-
ed itt baste by iters. Johnson, Who bad
been seriouely ill. He went in some won-
der because she was not of his parish and'
was known to be devoteri to her owe
minister, the Bev. Ur. Hopkins. While
he was wattittg is the parlor before see
ing the slot woman he passed the time
by talkihte with her daughter. "I am'
very pleased your mother thought of mo
in her illness," he said. "Is Mr. Hop -
eine away ?" The lady looked very
shocked. "Oh. dear uo1" she replied,
"but we are afraid mother has some
thing Contagions and we don't like to let
dear ter. Hopkins ride any risks,"
In the past 73 years there have been 14
winters of a decidedly mild type. 01
these that of 1841-2 was the mildest,
with an average temperature of 30.5 for
the four months December4Marob, and
those of 1881.8 and and 1880•90 wore not
much colder, with a neat temperature
in each iustanoe of 20.9 degrees, It is
of interest to note that in eight of the
14 years the mild weather of Deoember
and January On tinned during Febrn.
ary, while in three of the other years the
temperature was very slightly below
average, and in three it was consider-
ably below, Iu only two of the fourteen
years was March much below the aver-
age, while m ten cases it was above aver-
age, and in six of these decidedly above,
Reflections of a Bachelor.
Yrota the New York Press.
If you Iike a blond girl enough all the
refine:a seems to conte out of her hair.
A woman gets married to have babies
so they can grow up and do the name
thing.
Mast of the friends you have look
every day for some excuse to become
your enemy.
When a man is walled up by the cook
going down stairs to get his breakfast
and goes to eleep rigbt away again, the
only way his wife can paoify him is to
tell hien he never closed his t yes all
night, and it is wonderful the way he
eau go to work without having bad any
rest.
The local option bylaw carried in
Sombre by only 0 votes.
The Hamilton City Council refused to
vote for a reduction of Iiquor licenses.
How's Tilts?
We carer one hundred dollars reward
for any care of Catarih that cannot be
oured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHE)\EY & Co., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Chewy for the last fifteen years, and
believe him perfectly honorable in all
baseness tratleaotiaiis and fionnoially
able to carry out any obligations made
by his fires.
Welding. Kinnan & Marvin.
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Onre is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Sold by
all druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
,.n41 i tiTh,on*.
The French schoolboys had recently
to pass a government examination at
the close of the primary tour, e. The
invention of balloous was tate subject
given. "Balloons -were invented," wrote
one boy, "by the brothers Montgolfier,
who were paper maker's, They took a
tare balloon and filled It with paper.
They then set light to tite paper, and
the balloon went up." Another boy In.
eluded a treatise on ballast in his es-
say, with disastrous consequences.
"When the aerostats, such being the
name given to nlen who ride in bal-
loons, wish to come down they fetch
some sand and gravel and put it In the
balloon. The latter is thus rendered
heavier and more elongated." A pithy
statement evade Is, "The aeronaut
places himself within the balloon, the
basket being used for provisions."
How Is
Your Cold?
Every place you go you hear the sante
question asked.
1)o 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 "White Plague," Consumption.
Many a life history would read different
if, on the first appearance of A cough, it
had been remedied with
stwo� a • tl A 9/ irR
Norway
Pine Syrup
This wonderful cough and cold medicine
contains all those very pine principles
which make the pine goods eo valuable in
the treatteeut of lung affection,.
Combined with this are Wild Cherry
Hark and the soothing, healing and ex-
pectorant properties of other pectoral
herbs and barks.
or Con
h, G'oids uch
I~irb t d pa'it rY
g , tt,
y
tilt) 99
Ci t
h tI
As tutee roupp,� thea "
1 Cough, Hoarseness or any affection. ofpthe
Throat or Lungs. You will find a cure
tura in Dr. Wood's Norway rine Syru
Mrs. y C It hornet, Berwick ILS.,.
writes . 1 lima used Dr. Wood's Norway
Pias Syrup for cough, and colds, and hate
Always found it to give in,t*nt relief. 1
*leo raemernended it to one of my neigh -
borer and she WAS more that pleased with
the results,
fir. Wood's Nerway'Pine Syrup 2$ ate.
peer bottle at all dealers. Pat up in yellow
wrapper, and three pint tree* the trade
mark. Refuse substitutes, There is oxine
sins Norway Pine Syrup tad that orae 1*
tk. Wood''., _ ___.
A GOOD IIEALIII
To preserve or restore it, there is no better
prescription for men, women *and children than
Ripans Tabules. They are easy to take. They
are made of a combination of medicines approved
and used by every physician. Ripans 'Tabules are
widely used by all sorts of people -but to the
plain, every -day folks they are a veritable friend
in need. Ripans Tabules have become their stan-
dard fare: r remedy, They are a dependable, hon-
est rmn-t.dy with a long and successful record, to
'a•iigest'cin, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn
..o ..a 1pation, c .ffensive breath, heartburn, dizziness,
')i' .ttion of the heart, sleeplessness, muscular
st. ,atism, sour stomach, bowel and liver coin-
'- .'.'ts. They stregthen •tiveak stomachs, build up
i t h"'wn systems, restore pure blood, good appe..
• ' .., .id sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives
doll tacit benefit° from a regular use of Ripans
'a`..butes. Your drl'ggist sells them, The five-
c.:nt packet is en .gh for an ordinary occasion,
The Family Bottle. 5o cents, contains a supply
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U
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Times and American Illustrated Magazine 1.90
Times and American Boy Magazine 1,65
Times and What to Eat 1,60
Times and Bookkeeper 1,65
Times and Recreation 1.75
Times and Cosmopolitan 1.65
Times and Ladies' Home Journal .... .
2,15
Times and Saturday Evening Post 2,45
Times and Success - 1.80 e:'t
Times and I':tonsekeeper 1,50
Times and Pilgrim 1.60
Times and Poultry Keeper 1.40
Times and Hoard's Dairyman .. 1.90
Times and McClure's Magazine 1.90
Times and blunsey's Magazine 2,00
Times and Rural New Yorker • 2.00
Times and n'ick's Magazine 1.40
Times and American Gardening 2,25
Times and Health Culture 44040444........ , 1.85
d•
•
4.
4.
4.
4.
4.
4
4.
4.
Times and Ram's 1`lorn,,..... ',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2.45
Four T
Timand es Track ackN,w ,..... ,.. 1.90
Times and Breeders' Gazette ... .. . t ,... 2.25
Times and ?rectical Farmer 1.85
'When pretnttims are given with any bf above papers, subscribers will
secure snch premiums when ordering through ns, same as if ordered direct
from pttblishers.
These low rates mean it nonsidetabie saving be subscribers, and are
STRICTLY CASH IN ADVANCE!, Send remittances by postai note, pobt
office or express inane, order, addressing
air I ES o xirJJI..A.
WINGIIAM, ONTARIO.
1100111011100110.401001111111000011141.0* 1