The Wingham Times, 1889-09-13, Page 9TIO Mom .'. r iCiittmant ,
'l, I aro thy husband, thou allait
leave no other husband but Ino, whom
thou clidst vow co, honor and
•ohey,for I lave'; ti.lll
h old ulaiclislu
and rescued theta othe terror of
single blessedness,.
2. Thou shalt not look upon any
other man to love lir to admire hila,
for I thy liusbantl alts t1 ,jealous hus•
'baud,, who will visit ' the sins d the
wife upon lior followers, therefore
keep thou faithfully to thy marriage
vows,
8. Thou slialt'uot backbite thy has.'
fund, nor speak lightly of him,neither
f'shalt thou expose Lis faults to thy
neighbor, lest •lea should hear of ht
'and punish thy perfidy by a deprive.
tion of sdndry items, st'toll.as bon'ne'ts,,
7 dresses, 'elle
4. Rohmmber the seventh day to
fIceep it free from all unnecessary labor,
for t1tere 9 re six days in which to do
thy work. Thou shall have thine house
demi and tidy by 1 ()'clook on Satur-
da'y afternoon, and there shall be no
Washing of children 21ar 'baking after
'WA hour. Thou shalt tie '1,11y market,
itng alone, lest in the company of
other women thou buyest ribbons for
'thyself, instead of cigars for: thy
Husband.
5, honor thy Husband's father and
mother and net let tihy thoughts wan-
der selfishly ` towards their cupboard
laud pockets while so doing.
6. Thou shalt not tox the cbild'ren's
'a'.:rs, nor • thump thein, for plundering
the sugar pot, or rq`ining away with
'the pastry or jix l; for an hungry
litorilach. knows no law, save cut d'nd
tan. •
f. Thou shalt not listen to flattery,
tier accept gifts and trinkets from say.
snap save thy husband who esteemettll
woman's' purity her greatest ores-'
Ment.
8. Thou sbalt not rifle thy hueband'si
pockets for coppers when he is asteep,
neither •shalt thou read any letters
'thou niayst find therein, fur it is gals
business to look after his own affairs,'
'and thy business to let his alone—ask
-.nut questions but believe. .
9. Thou shalt conceal nothing from
shy husband, a'ways speak the titch,
colo; make no falser representation of
the state of thy pantry and purse, f,lr
thy husband abllot•ietli, petty larceny
in the domestic ile;e:l,rtment, Ivhteli
shall be punished iby closing tiro 'ex
*shall
till such' financial frauds aro_
abolished. .
10 Thou shalt not covet thy neigh
lint's Ito use, thou shalt not • Iso vet. thy
neighbor's furniittiro, nor her dross,
1.or.her caps,nor.fen`ything that is hews;
tai d when . thou 'pest out with thine
dtnsbttnd thou shalt •not wear acrino-
•line nor any other dangerous machine
Cicely to 'coine ia contact• with his
;routes. -
Ill, Look +for no jewelry from thy:
husband on the anniversary of thy
wedding, for it is written, "blessed are
they Which expect nothing, . tor they
-shall not be disappointed."
Fourteen thousand acres of Mani -
*,—ha 'faun lands were sold recently for
4'40.000,
Northwest ranchers will begin ship-
ping cattle to Great Britain in a few
weeks,'
Mr. E. Eiffel, son•of the builder of
Eiffel tower, Paris, arrived in Toronto
vn. ,Saturday.
• Mrs. Cobwigger—My husband, I'm
sorry td say, is a roan of very little
taste. Cora—That must be real nine
for yon, for I beard ma say your cook-
ing wasdreadful.
Shelborne, Ont, waterworks debenl
tures to the value of $12.000 were
lately bought by R. T. Hann,
-manager of the bank of Hamilton in
Orangeville, at 106.
The memorial to tele late Oolonel TLE. LEADING BOOT SND SHOE ST
Williams was unveiled last week at
Port Hope by Sir John Macdonald.
ONTARIO MUTUAL .
Cash Income 'for 1888 ...... ..,,...,,..,..... 0
New Assurances written in 1888
Assets, as at Dee. 818t, 1888
Assurances in force, Jan, 1st, 1889
Surplus, Dee. 81st, 1888,..,..
SPECIAL FEATURES
LIFe.
$98,074 00
2,518,05Q 00
5,318,858 00
12,041,914 (10
90,3137 09
•
Prompt Payment of Claims, Annual Distribution sof Proflta, Guaranteed
Surrender 'q'taues, and Liberal Policy Conditions.
ALEX. DA'Vif'SON,
GENElAri,t Aeeln'iT.
Wingham Ont
any
ETABLHMNT
Has & most complete assortment of the LAT> sT, CHOICEST, and
MOST CHARMING, ARTICLES in
'Watches, Clocks, Jewelry
acrid Silver Goods.
Top cait 1'6't m g AT BABIGDdb J.
fu" CLOSE ATr'ENTION 'GIVEN TO REPAIRING, AND WORK ALL'.
WARRANTED.
G0 RIGHT TC) URE8N'a BLOCIt k'OR YOUR JEWELLERY,
DUFFIELD
NEW PATENT TOP MILK CAN,
Cream a Vis•,
HAVETHOUGHINGLT
Bain: •Pails,
p.Buckets,
and Milk Pans,
ndlev ything la Dafry ,1 �.
PromiAly d �
MOST CERTAINLY WE GAN SUIT YOU I
H USE D-EOORATINS,
CONSISTING 0 'CANADIA.N AND AMERICAN
NV L PAPE.RS ari BORDEES.
Our Stook is Varied, St fah and Cheap. Beautiful,
WIND -s'V : _ITL S
of Latest Desi
Colors a
CROQUET SE
Best Quality,
Excellent and Cheap.
Everything inthe took ne, Sohool re -sites, Stationery, •L arosse
Sticks, Kase Ball Bats, Ball- &c.
ROSS' POP
-,AT. BOOK STORE,
C-IIAi'JI,
The premier and Sir Adolphus Caron 'x'
delivered eulogies on the departed Owing to the late Boom I have made room or and have,1" a 'd
hero.
George Morse Brawell, late judge
of the united counties of Northum-
berland aiid Durham, passed away
eacefully at Oobourg, on the 28th
ult., in the eightysixth year of his
go.
The organ committee of Brox
church, Galt, Have Iet' the contract for
the building of their organ to Wads-
worth do Song, of Montreal. The
contract price is $8,400, and . the in-
strument is to be in position by the
end of December. -
Love may exist without jealousy,
itlthough.this.is rarer but jealousy
ay exist without love, and this is
nmon; for jealousy oan feed on
iat which in bitter, no leas than on
,that which is sweet, and it sustained
ily pride as often as by afl'dtliive,
I AM GGN'fihfii1
•
no soldier sai 1 mat ' was tQ diets
"I an eouteilte
13nt tell lily uxx r -t In the ell
illy sn eethe;trt l , the aorta„ N
To pray foe me with folded
",t
The soldier's dead: his motllers:4d biesweotheart,
Tho, i ra i t Win with f01.101 -feuds.
They dtt ;leis #,I:tve uiron 11 o bat11ell4
d,
,tail all thn tattlt Ku;:+ rad,
Whcreis they laid Min.
The.sun beheld him thus, and said;
"I ameontentod."
And 'glowers clustered on his grave
And were eonteuted there to bloom.
Aud whet the wind would roar
Among the trees,.
Then asked the tsoidior from hes dean, lurk grave;
"Was it the flag that fluttered T"
"Nay I" sold the wind, "my gallant hero,
Nay; thou bast Bled In bottle, but the tiag
flat wen the day. Thy conirades
Have carried It away fuluiappily,"
Then said the soldier front Ids deep, dark grave:
"I am contented."
And then be hearkened to the wandering
Of herds and shepherds, and he asked:
"is that the din of battler'
"Nay I" they said; '!nay, my gallant hem;
For thou art dead; the war is over;
Thy fatherland is tree and happy."
Then said- the soldier from, his deep, dark grave:',
"I atn'come: ted."
And then he hearkened to the lovers' laughter;
And thus the soldier usked:
"Are thee° the people's voices, who remember
wee" •
"Nay:" spake the lovers; "nay, my gallant bete.
For we are they -who never do remember;
For spriug hutheome, and ail theivarth lssmiling;
We must forget the dead;."
Then said the soldier from his de, p, dark grave:
"I am contented,"
--Carmen Silva in Independmtt.
a
Experiments with Splints,
In 1835 one of the well known tights
of English modern surgery began mak-
ing experiments, looking to the ultimate
invention ,eef a splint that would hold the
head in an upright position when the
neck coutel Ito longer be used for that
purpose on:aoco uit,of 'fracture. In the
course of his experiments lie tried pow-
dered egg shells and plaster of Paxis in
equal parts. The great didersity in the
sizes of the human neck rendered this
apparatus almost useless.
A few years later, probably about
1842,- an eminent New York surgeon
tried the virtues of closely woven cloth
bandages which bad been previously
dipped in a solution of plaster of Paris
and whites of eggs.
He must have cried "Eureka!" upon
the first application of his newly discov-
ered and curiously treated bandages, for
they worked like a charm; the trlbumen
of the egg supplied the necessary adhesive
component; the plaster of Paris caused
it to set firm and hold the parts immov-
able. Tho plaster cast splint was soon
superseded by the light and airy albunlo
plaster bandages.
Broken neck is placed on the list of the
modern surgeon as one of the curable
accidents incident to humanity, provided
the spinal cord has not been lacerated
by the broken bones or drawn out too
far to admit of it being _reduced to its
normal state by the head being pressed,
downwards, backwards •or sidewise at
the time of the accident. There is one
case on record where the patient recov-
ered after the cord had been drawn out
two ,inches by the head being pressed
down upon the breast at the time of the
accident.—John W. Wright inSt. Louis
Repubho.
Trees and Light.
Trees nearly always develop best—in
other words, make most wood—in the
full enjoyment of light; but their capa-
city of developing under shade varies
greatly. :The. yew will thrive in •the
densest shade, while a few years over-
toppirlg kills the ]Arch; the beech will
,grow with , considerable energy under
partial shade, where the oak would only
just keep alive and the birch would die.
When planted in moist places, all spe-
cies are less sensitive to the withdrawal
of light. In the open, maples, elms,
sycamores and others grow well and
snake good shade trees; in a dense for-
est they thin out and have but scanty
foliage. Conifers, such as spruces and
firs,which preserve the foliage of years,.
have perhaps the greatest capacity of
growing under shade and preserving
their foliage in spite of the withdrawal
- of light.—Once a Week.
A Model City, •
Only one city in the world las ever
undertaken by legal supervision to put
every house under positive and absolute
sanitary control, and that city is Buenos
Ayres. The purpose is within three
years to have this accomplished. By no
other means can a city be rendered safe
on hand
for residence, and in no other way can
—A Large Stock of the law' that city residence rapidly de-
generates the population be reversed.
READY
BOOTS and
The matter of sanitation cannot in an
1 phase of it be lft to individuals; it must
In addition to lay Custom Business, defy Competition in Quality, Sizer'y
anti am determined to sell for CASH, AT OOK BOTTO' ?RIO E S;
'Repairing as usual, and Cement Patching a Specialty. T solicit
a share of the patronage. Don't Forget the Place Opposite the Central Motel,
Rips sewed free in all boots purchased from me.
Butter and eggs taken es cash in exchange for goods.
lir V SIc
P. H. RODER r1.I x,71
WINGHAM, ONT
VV1ALEDONIAN .ISALL. ..sill
Tho soteety meets.every thlr Monday
MISS NEt r.ri10 1Vic�'EAB,»y. month, Visiting brethren welcome.
This Commodious hall can he sodured tot .014a
[..LA8S1t3 Olt mat Ri1C1'toN' O# P1Alt0 Al1D lainments of every kind M A very low nom. Yor
J Orgin, It Yore. Capute and netaiiayt leans Ito,, apse- 'i41
Mfrs *.i.s at Warta twos . �l f 1i 9 Ctet i ello.
be a public provision, rigidly enforced,
Now that two ninths ofon our people
live in cities, the subject is one that can-
not bedefa-red.—St. Louis Globe -Demo,
crat.
The Difference.
Speaking of the pioneers -h1 electrical
application who leave reaped golden har-
vests, Prdgressive,Age says Professor A.
G. Bell ';vas at one time walking about
Washington anxiotiir to sell telephone
stook for ten cents on the dollar. Before
thathe was teaching a deaf and dumb
school in Boston, THe telephone brought
him' flame and riches, and he has now an
Moodie bf hundreds o2 dollar-- a day and
a forttltib bf ;8,000,004, C. F. Brush is
said to lig*Ie been working at $15 per
week before he struck the eleotrio ligthb,
which wade hi:n Millionaire.
M
°
t,,
4.
Brilliant!
Durable!
Economical!,
Diamond Dyes excel all others,
Strength, Parity and Fastness.,
None other are just as good,,: Be -i
ware of imitations, because they
are made of ebeap and inferior,
materials, and give poor,' weak,,
crocky colors,' • To be sure of,
success, use only the DIAMOND
DYES.for coloring Dresses, Stock -4
Ings, -'Yarns, Carpets,' Feathers,
Ribbons, &c., &c. We warrant
them to color more goods, pack-
age for package, than any other
dyes ever trade, and to give more
brilliant and durable colors. •.Ask
for the .Diamond and take no other.
A Dress Dyed
if Coat Colored
Darments Renewed
FOR:
itis
CENTS, .
FA Child can use them!
At Druggists and Mercbanta. Dy. Book Ata I
WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO,
• Montreal, P. Q.
The Moat Succosefnl Remedy ever die.
Covered, as it certain in its erects and. . .
does not blister. Read proof below.
STaEETsvu rx, P. Q., May 9, 1889. .
Da. B. J. K1tirpua..Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vt,,
Gentlemen.—I have used Ken.,
dell's Spavin Cure for fipavine
and also in sense of lameness and
StifJ pinta and found nature
euro inevery respect. I cordially
recommend it to all horsemen.
Very respectfully yours,
Cants J. BLAos-Ata.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CUREII
ST, Tomas, P. 4, April 22, 1889.
Da. B. J. KENDALL.Co., Enosburgh Fans, Vt.
Gents have used a few bottles of your Ken-
dan's Spavin Cure on my colt,
which was suffering from ,Infiu.
enza in a very bad form, and can.
say that your Kendall's Spavin
Cure made complete and rapid
cure. I can recommend it a9 the
best and most effeetivelinlment
Ihave ever handled. Kindly send •
Elf, ole ned Trea.lseo0thIloe."Yorespectfully,
I.
I. F. WILXXNSON.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE.
EMT ELLICE, Mut., Die'1C 1889
Da. B. J KENDALL 00 , Enosburgh False' alt.
Gentlemen:— I always keep your 'Kendaall%
Sand thevin y have andBlisterfaointed IIhand
what you state they will do. I
have cured abad case of Spavin
and also two eases of Ringbone
ofyearsstanding on mares which
I bought to breed from, and have
not seen any signs of disease In
their offspring. Yours truly,
D. J. O` Ceessm.
Price 91 per bottle, or six bottles fur $5. All
druggists have it or can get it for you, or 1twill be
sent to any address on receipt of,prlea by the
ppropriers
1113. B. T. kENDALL "0U , Enosburgh Falls, Vt.
SOLD BY ALL D11UGGISTS.
•
I CURE
FIT$! -
When! say CiuRE I do not mean merely to
stop than for a time and then been them return:
again. I MEAx A' RADICAL 0UI;,1S.
1 havo made the disease of '
FITS, EPILEPSY" or
FALLING SICKNESS
A fife long study. I WARRANT my remedy to
Cunt the werst eases, ltecauseethorsltavofaiied
is no reason f0r not now receiving a eure. Send
at once for a treatise and a FREE BOTrLIM of my
INFAI zfELE REMEDY. Give Express and Post
Office. It costs you nothing tor a trial, and It
will cure you. Address: .1 G. SOOT M.0..
Branch Offieo,164 Wiest Adelaide SStreet,
Toronto. .
t `1iwismilis
•9s 9ewtrlratilithlgr; }' E
'".T ade°it ill faullby jHjjHj
ti
plating ,let machines
and goods *hex° the pebppis ea. sea
pthaerm, wewill Had fr�y to one
cr, in lath lobaluy,fhs setas
Wet .Sw1sS-maeb38e rade bz
t5, werld,witr rasa
s s times its,
O. Millais, n.d ,104 e. noble Mt
EN.5.., eMM1y .ad ♦.Iuaate art
Nei. In urea we ask that r;
, atm wW wu NIA t►°ta who
(, may an.tyou* hem.,.ad°ilts*
maalheall►W11 betomb yoke tlt►q
in '4 .. Toe *..d r,nrbine t.
,� eta a. a, e5. seeer 'Slam..'
V WhiellhiVetn.oatsbalbre•pau.ts
rot srtittsN tar OM . withth.
tithWpW, 554 saw ee1M for
Oa.. afsl.ettn,[M. mOtt WN,
Ml,Mahtae lull Um world. 411 55
s! :. st.... rtes. rtlititrha°al'l M
letrs *two sea iss.
'W*wy�i. tier i'>.1,rwewylrt-oras;.. Y d► italyd, OM tall
Till On °4s eo.f:.ISY►X '1440 Amy*
A''di111