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Wingham Times, 1891-12-18, Page 9• How to Run a country Weekly. " Iinole Lilly Bowers, of the Bowers, ville anion, is "up to snuff," says the At- 1auta constitution. Here is the list of things that he proposes to take on subscription Corn, wheat, rye and oats, Bogs, cattle, sheep, and goats, Beef, pork, fish and fowl, Brom partridge up to hooting owl. Fodder, shucks; hay and straw, Victuals sottud, cooked or raw, ' Butter,, eggs, meal and flour, Apples, plums—not too sour. Beans, peas and whortleberries, Onions,'taters and black cherries, Mauls, wedges, axes, hoes, • : Pickled beets, and tomatoes. Pants, shirts, socks and hats, Pet squirrels aid white rats, Taper, ink and good books, Pins, needles, small fish hooks. Fruit, brought in by Bennett or Duncan, Whether good melon or yellow pumpkin, (';hopping, hoeing or branch ditching; Bridles, saddles, or buggy breeching, Cups, saucers, knives and forks, Plates, pitchers, jugs and corks, 011, matches, beeswax and hooey, 'Gold, silver and greenback money, • iltousohold Hints. A paste of whiting and benzine will remove spots from marble. Silver can be kept bright for months by being placed in an air tight case with a good sized piece of camphor. Remove oil spots from marble by covering them with a cream of calcin-, ed magnesia and benzine, and brushing off the fernier after the dissipation of the latter. For coffee stains try' putting thick glycerine on the wrong side and washing it out with lukewarm water. For raspberry stains weak ammonia and water is the best. Never• bite or ':pass sewing silk through the lips, as lead poisoning has been known to result from such a habit, as it is soaked in acetate of lead to make it weigh heavier, In the new Parisian 'fashion stock: Ings are made with separate compart- ments for each toe. This is said to be a sure cure for corns,whioh are caused by the rubbing of the skin against that of the neaghboring toe. Oneoteaspoonfgl of ammonia to a teacupful of water will clean . gold or silver jewelry ; a few drops' of clear aqua ammonia poured nu the under- side of diamonds will clean them im- mediately; melting them verybrilliant. Burnt alum is the best• cure for proud flesh in Man or beast. Remove ink stains from silver plat- ed ware by rubbing them with a paste composed of chloride of lime and water ; then wash and wipe dry. A solution called Diamond ink has been invented. which. enables one to Write upon glass. It is necessary to allow it to remain upon the glass about fifteen minutes before wiping off. Furniture polish may' be made by taking one and a half ounces of alcu- hot and butter of antimony, one-half ounce' of muriatic acid, eight ounces linseed oil, one-half pint of vinegar,' mix cold. This will be found good. A most excellent cement for fasten- ing leather, paper or wood to metal can be made by adding a teaspoonful of glycerine to a gill of glue. White spots on varnished furniture Will disappear if you hold a hot plate froni the stove over them, or rub them with essence of pepperment or spirits of camphor. John Wanamaker, the Philadelphia merchant says that, during the ten days previous to Christmas, his sales hovered about $100,000 a day, so that the grand. total for the ten days was only a few dollars under a million. He .adds, I spend $5,000 a week for ad ertising, and I pay a skilful mmn,a fo +ler editor,and a good ono—$1,000 oath to do it for me, 1 Make rn iney b Advortie•ing is ' the leverage which his store has been raised I do riot see how Piny large and .ssfui busiuess can be done with. t liberal advertising, It Seldottt Voila. tiro Sxns,-4 took two bottles of Hag• d's 1'eotorei Balsam, and it cured me of roomed and tightness of the chest after r things had failed, I have also tried Iii., it works splendidly for weakness lmsai,daeohe, NATIONAL E'RIi JUD10ES V AN- QUIIyHF,D, . TIIE TItIIIDII's Or A Gatwr fTSCuV1;ItY, Tho magnetic influence of gold at, tracts the people of every chine to our shores. Men of all nations, and speak, inn all the languages of civilization, are to be found congregated on our auriferous plains. Differing in all other things in their custom,, habits, and religion—yet there is one point upon which their opinions coincide, Englishmen and Americans, French, Swiss, Germans, Swedes, Italians and Chinese adroit, without, a dissenting voice, that the gr atost remedies in• troduced to the world forty years ago by Holloway are the better adapted to the cure of diseases in this climate than any other preparation in exis- tence, This appears, in fact, to be the experience of mankind in all parts of world, and hence the universal popu- larity of these medicines, We consider, however, that the boundless confidence !,laced in their efficacy by the repret sentatiw's of so many nations at the mines, is a striking phelnomenon in medical history. Many of these people in their youth, and even at maturity, were accustomed to the use of drugs and nostrums peculiar to their several countries. These remedies were cou- netted in their minds with associations of home, and endorsed, as it were, by their 'national prejudices, Yet they have been thrown aside and utterly repudiated, while Holloway's Pills and Ointment have been adopted by a common impulse throughout the entire gold regions. There is only one way of accounting for this movement. It is the result of conviction—conviction grounded on personal observation and experience. The Ointment• is used with such wonderful success as a dressing for wounds, ulcers and sore legs, and for all the external diseases and casualit- ies to which the adventurous gold hunter is peculiarly liable,that scarcer a digger's tent can be found within the vast area of the gold fields unprovided with a stock of. this healing, soothing, cooling preparation. The hard fare of the digger, and sometimes his habits, tend to vitiate the blood and develop running sores and purulent ulcers of the body and limbs. Bad legs, espec- ially, are very common at the diggings, and seriously interfere with the labors of the diggers. The worst cases of this class are cured by the Ointment with extraordinary rapidity. The best method of healing sore legs; and sores 'and ulcers generally,is by rubbing the Ointment into the inflamed parts around the orifice, first opening the pores end softening the flesh with warm fomentatiorts. The part affected is then dressed with lint 'or linen saturated with the Ointment.. Such is the external treatment, but it isalso proper to give the patient a few doses of the Pills during the progress of the cure, as they serve to purify •the'blood and discharge morbid matter from the system, while the Ointment is doing its work on the surface: ---The Scientific Witness A man may be lantern ,jawed and yet his face may never he light up. You may be able to find a choice cutin the butcher •shop, but you seldom find one in the daily, news, papers, Itch, Mango and Scratches of every kind, 'on human or animals, cured in 30 minutes by Wool - ford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sold by A. L. Hamilton. When there is work to be done the buzz saw is always willing, to take a hand. So your son has been starring as an actor, Mr. Cashcouncer l 'Yes. Do tell me all about him 1 Who is sup., porting him ? 1 am. Now Sarum Notes. Dina SIRS,—I have used six bottles of B. B. B. I took it for liver complaint. Be- fore I took it I had headache and felt stupid all the time, but now I am healthy and entirely well. In addition I have a good appetite, which I did not have pre- viously. Llnnxu Pouvn, New Sarutn, Out. Could ynu not, it you tried, grant me a place in that ice heart of yours'! My !heart may he of ice, as you say, Mr. Sophleigh. But, all the same, 1 aiu not in the cold storage business, The average country newspaper conies out in a new dress about as seldom as the editor's wife, Economy, rightly understood, is net refusing to spend money ; it is spend. in.? judiciously, For Iain ar Colds. QXAENTLI MBN,--- Fifteen months tgo I had a beating breast, I tried a num- ber of remedies but got no relief. I then tried Hagyard's Yellow Oil which gave me instant relief. It is the best thing I meal for all kinds of pain or cold, .,r.�..rr..r,.,,e,.n.St* ,.Aefs, ..; ¶ AI E SALMI To Oenerai Newborns and Soot an l Shoo Stoics, In connection with Any heather Dunham I keep e full stoat of Shoemakers Find1ogs and can supply the trade at lowest prices with IIEATON AND PENINSULAR BUTTON FASTENERS it3 SETS. IN 10, 15 AND 25e. SIZES. 13ATHAWAYS, WHITMORE'S, ZANONI, ECLIPSE, 3, gross lots at gross prices, -L� C M COTTON, all lengths, RIFLE, e LEATHER, Single Tag Horsehide, LEATHER, Double Tag Horsehide,.. GENUINE PORPOISE, ENGLISH LEATHER LA CES. SHOE LEATHER, Domestic and French, at the very lowest Prices. HARNESS LEATHER, Best brands always on band, in oak or hemlock tannage. GENUINE JA.CQUOT'S FRENCH BLACKING, AT REDUCED PRICES. Your patronage respectfully solicited. You will save freight, time and probably a percentage. Set the example of dealing at hone. W. J. CHAPMAN WINGIIAhi TANNERY. FfEEMPSt_ :.: WO`aM POWDERS Arepleasant %take. Contain; their own, .Purgative. Zs a safe, sure andcctual destroyer ofwormsrzr Children or Adults. SANITARY PLUMBING. AND HEAT.iNG. ALEX. SAUNDERS, LATEST METHODS : Particular attention paid to Sanitation and Ventilation. Plans and Specifications care- fully prepared. Repairing Promptly Attend- ed to. ' Three Trains Daily. Telephone No. 28. Correspondence Solicited. ZETLAND SAW MILL GEORGE THOMSON, Proprietor. Lumber of all kinds, First-class Shingles, and Cedar Posts. Car Load Orders a Specialty. • WOOD delivered to any part of Witigham. r Orders by'mail promptly attended to.' GEORGE TII0MSON, Winebam P. 0. WILL CURE OR RELIEVE BILIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS, DYSPEPSIA DROPSY INDiGESTION, FLUTTEi ING JAUNDICE OF THE HEART, ERYSIPELAS, ACIDITY OF SALT RHEUM, THE STOMACH, HEARTBURN, DRYNESS THE SkIN, HEADACHE, rT 1dtd��i__oww1r�x,�asfoe �Aaca talent WHERE DO YOU LIVE 2' Half of the people of our County don't know the position of ono Tosvliship from another. They can now overcome this difficulty by consulting, the COOPER MAP OF TILE COUNTY OF HURON�. Which has been long needed and looked for. The size is four feet by five feet mounted on linen and wood rollers. Six coloring are used, which makes it very distinct and effective, THE SCHOOL SECTION NEEDS' ONE, THE FARMER NEEDS ONE. THE BUSINESS MAN NEEDS ONE. .PRICE, $3.50. Published by W. COOPER & CO., Clinton, Ontario, Booksellers and Stationers. School Globes and all kinds of Maps and School Supplies, Write.for prices slid our traveler will call on you. FOR, THE BEST. VALUE IN ORDERED CLOTHIN GO TO WEBSTER'S HATS, CAPS, COLLARS, ...mss SHIRTS, CUFFS, Cheap for KASH. AT -- WEB 7TETi'S &c. ki OF ED lig113r1 Has removed to E. F. Ger,ster's cid stand, where he has a large and nicely assorted stock of ° ateli a Gleckaa Xemdlegyt Si1wi vrare gad S ee@tag! sa Which he is selling. away down in price; and. will he pleased to have you call and take a look through his Stock. -Repairing aids;�ecialty 'A11 work warranted and done prompt`fy, 1-41d. Dinslev, lIason's Block. W'INGEAM flPSTN i)RT MANUFACTURERS OF ROOT PULPERS, Four and Six Knife, the hest in the Market. Would invite the attention of farmers and those requiring the same that we are selling these at bottom prices. 'General Machine Repairing AS USUAL CA STINGS in BRASS or IRON; TO ORfE11. JAS- MURI. ,AY +c , 004