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The Wingham Times, 1903-12-17, Page 3ummeam*aiNIUMBIONinuesoersememoaretisseceseeenEetete032e0S=MM Eon. SPlldiiY, Founder of Dr. Spinney 8. Co. tra We make no rineteseing statements Or imbecile element, propositions to the afftioted in order to see cure 4neir petronaze. We cure to stay oured. Stricture,. varicocele, Nervous Debility. Stool Diseases, Weakness, Kidney and urinary Diseasee and all d.seases due to inheritance, habits, excesses, oe the results of speciac die* yeses. The Many years ef our successful practice in Detroit proves 1 teat onr special treatment for men is safe and certain. You do not want to be mutilated and maimed for life in trying to he cured of Varicocele. Stricture and kindred troubles by surgical procedures. We Guarantee a. &WEAN') POSUl 1VE Cyan in the shortest possible, t'me without injurious atzer-effects, our charges will he as tow as eciesible for cone:0=1011s, skin- ful anti successful services. . Enissuf-ravfort Fang, sPr,..Crier, BOMB TRZaTerfUN'r ror valetas who Cannot Call. aestlea Maar Sent Free. Consultation Froo. Cureo Guaranteed. HEY 84 290 Wood- ward Ave., 133 Detroit, Itfil0114** Largest Established, Most Successful, Reliable Specialists in Diseases of Men. leenietemecnifteetwagillerfleseXil '1:(4410 1 THE WINGITAU TIMES, DEBEMIIER 17, 1903. • Burdock Blood Bitters holds a position unrivalled by any other hlood, sneelicine asa ewe for ;DYSPEPSIA, BILIOUSNRSS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, 11EARTB1JRN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, • DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, BOILS, PIMPLES, RINGWORM, or any disease arising from a disordered state of the Stomach, Liver, Bowele er Blood, When XoU require a good blood medicine get 1 BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. THREE SILENT •••••••••••• Death of One of tho World* OreateOto. kierbOrt: 80.91190r. LAST QF TIffi VICTORIAN.AQE Pointed Paragraphs. From the Chicago News. Progress is the offspring of discontent. Cold cash has burued many a man's fingers. Ignorance is far lose odious than false affectation. Ingratitude makes a man look like a dollar minus 99 cents, Many a man who owes something to himself refuses. to pay it. Where there's much smoke there's likely to be a lot of soft coal. ' Each day brings its separate and dis- tinct opportnnities for doing good. Any man who emiles when he pays his taxes is too good for this wicked world. Listen to what your friends say of others if you would know what they say of you, The more a man has to say about hin. self the less he likes to hear others talk of themselves. Life is a circus with many sideshows. A failure to start often saves a miser- able finish. The hard-working clerk is usually working for a raise. • A womau doesn't necessarily love the man she admires. .Au autocrat, Alonzo, is a man who owns a $10,000 automobile. Poker is not a genie of chance—or at least, the novice has no chance. When a man thinks he knows it all he is happy until he wakes up. If tbe wolf had any 801188 he would hang around the rich man's door. Experience often provides the raw ma- terial for unnecessary conversation. It tithes a political orator to say things c„.that sound well and mean nothing. Befor attempting to stand by his col- ors a men should first make sure that he ]isn't color-blind. Last year Siberia's butter production amounted to over 100,000,000 lbs. Si- berian butter is now being sold in the London market. There are now over 2,- '500 butter making industries in Siberia. nooses, Ilsoosoleue *wader $1I$ ostl, Reused ,A.woe Without )fl—ells Pert In Revolutionising the Entire World of ;dodos% Thovight-44VO4 t" ,lrlenspk—Edgese *iota pad methods. London, Dec. 9.—Pferbert " Spencer, the ftunoue author, died yesterday morning at his home In Brighton. His health had been failing for some months. The illness toola critical turn a few days ago, and he became unconscious Monday bight, passing away without pain. By his, own de- sire, the least possible information was given out during Mr. Spencer's illness. The last of the great Victorians— such was Herbert Spencer' e title to BRITISH NEW YORK FASHIONS Evening Dressese, CorSairee, Sleeves. gloves*, Shoes., flotsam Chile!. mal Gifts. Irdla Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wounds, Ulcera, Open Sores, Bruises, Stiff Joints, Bites and Stings of Insects, Coughs, Colds, Contracted • Cords* Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Croup, Sore Throae, Quinsey, Whooping Cough and all Painful Swellings. A LARGE BOTTLE. 25o, ,Oompa rietively inexpeneive, yet p'etty dresses for eversing, are matte in net that begins egins at the eimplo point 08,1)44 and gees up. to meanings in •pe (acme more or les intricate, on the order of lao3., yet by no xneans to be classed as imitation*. Light quy, alit crepe de °bine is sometimes net with aah bargains and when so eletainc4. terms lovely and not costly gowne. The same can be said of light quality silks, All the mere in vague, because light weight. Patterna arc small and :useceaspicuous on The 'ill +ever ordar. In flowers for evening wear, orchids. are extremely fashionable and as var- iations Isere are almost exlltsss, cor- responding range Is afforded - for choice, Roses seem, never to become, amiss and buds are a lovely. finish; especially or the hair. Half , gar - laude of small blossoms are extretnely fashionable as a completion to the coiffure, but (not to ths exclusion of butterflies, pompons "or other high rising adorpraents. Corsages Tor overeat; show. :sleeves ca all lengths, from o.raore strap around (he arm ie guar as come to the wrist, but the gyrator number are between these two extremes, and of lee there seems to be a reaction against the ungiaceful puff below the elbow and many 11.1lY sleeves show the upper portion, comparatively full, with an elbow 'draping falling over a :close fitting wrist portion. Evening gloves are of all lengths to suit sleeves and are chiefly 'in white, either dressed cr undrese`ed, with a proportion in pale pink, blues or the pastel ,shades in undressed kid. Illendserati isheei for evening are embroidered- there being something of a ruin on this style of I iuish and hosiery is embroidered .in keeping. . Christmas Presents are now a sub- ject of great interest and many use- ful and most attractive holiday gifts have been selected frena furs, especial- ly iv the. lines of Itudson Bay and Russian sables, .sine having been par- chemcl at great advantage, they are offered at 'prices impossible to ether For Seizure of Kitty D. Toronto, Dec' .3.—Four ciPeitts dam- ages and twenty cents esosts are the magnificent sums the owners of the '4American fishing tug Kitty D. may receive as compensation for the dep- rivation of their vessel from July till October. The Kitty D. eva.s seiz- ed by Captain. Duna, of the Canadian revenue cruiser Petrel in July last for pouching in Canadian waters. Mr.1.1cdgiae, Judge of the Admiralty Court, liberated the veasei on the grower! that the evidenee as to her position at the time was too conflict- ing to warrant confieeation. This morning 'application was made to the lkiaster-in-Ord:nary on behalf of the owner, Xessrs. 'Ryan and Deck- er, of B.uffalo, for costs against Cap- tain Dann and the Canadian Govern- ment to the amount of 5400 01'$500. Mr. L. Kinnear, of Port Colborne, on behalf of lhe Crown, pointed out that tbe Catadian statutes provide that where a seizure has been made on rea- sonable and probable grou,nds, and where there is room. for an honest doubt, as in this case, not more than four cents damages and twenty cents costs shall be awarded the owners. In regard to this, Mr. Uedgins said : "I must say. that I think there would be an extrema hardship to the w oners of the Kitty D. that it should betaken: and tied up and its owners deprived of its use and put to the necessity of having to maintain a watch over it during the time that it was 'in the possession of the Crewn, and then get, as the statute says, twenty cents. It does not seem to me to be in harmony with what I believe to be the honor of the Crown," judgment was reserved. In case substantial costs are refus- ed by the Canadian courts, the only resort of the overs, who are Araeri- cans, will be to make an internation- al question of it, which is not likely to happen. HERBERT SPENCER. present day pre-eminence. To he a great Victorian is in itself a title to glory, for only the Augustan age in Rome, the age of Pericles in Athens and the Elizabethan age in England can rival it in its brilliant array of poets, artiste, statesmen, historians, and .scientists. Especially was it great in science, and Herbert Spencer was among the greatest of its scientists. He stands as one of that extrerdinary quar- tette which forced John Bull and the Philistine at large to accept the doc- trines of evolution that have prac- tically revolutionized the entire world of modern thought. • Item In 3.820. • S LUTE The author of this comprehensive revolution was born in the first quar- ter of the century (April 27, 1820), the son of a poor schoolmaster in Derby. He had few early advantages. His education comprised only' a smat- tering of the dead languages, and no knowledge of the living ones, not ev- en German, the lack of which he free- ly deplored. In his seventeenth year he became an engineer and followed that calling for eight years. . In his leisure luiurs he interested himself in the study of social science, the first fruits of which appeared in 1885, in "Social Statics," a book which, appearing four years before "The Origin of Species," dimly an- ticipated some of Darwin's conclu- sions—for it purported to interpret the phenomena of mind on the gener- al principle of evolution. Tho book was received with curi- osity and approval by the learned and progressive, with scorn or • ne- glect by the unlearned and conserva- tive. -world% Chortle of Fraise. Beet of all, ho lived to see the world, which on its lower aut. more numerously populated levels had been inclined to hooet at him, turn around and applaud him as one of the great- est intellectual leaders of his time. His eightieth birthday, in 1900, was greeted with a chorus of praise in which all the civilized world joined. Herbert Spencer was ono of , the most simple and unostentatious of men. He repeatedly declined acade- mic honors from universities and col- leges and titular homers which ,Queen. Victoria was milling t� bestow upon him, with, it must be confessed, a somewhat niggard hand. She who mado Disraeli an Earl never offered to make Herbert Spencer anything higher than a baronet. But in truth the earldom would have been even more distasteful to him than the baronetcy": In' his early, days Spencer had shown inventive talent. He construc- ted a velocinieter, to indicate the speed of locomotives, and long ••Ipe- fore Francis Galton produced com- posito photographs Spencer had sug- gested the idea and pointed out its value. During the last illness of his mother, to whom he was devotedly attached, he invented for her a bed which moved in any direction at a touch. Likewise he was something of a painter and tlether more of a sing - or, possessing in the latter capacity a strong bass voice of good timber. He continued to sing as an amateur in part music until ill -health forbade the exertion, Daily Average, or Work. ITT. Cenuine arter's Little Liver Pills Must Bear Signature of See Pao -Simile Wrapper I3elow. wiry small and os easy :to take as sugar. F01 liEADACIIE., FOR DIZZINESS. Fan BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION CARTES ITTLE 1VER PILLS. fram..;* ,...,Grartrvions swarea AVI eraPurer iregeteun • ,......**************.* t CURE SICK HEADACHE, Biliotts? PHYSIOLOGIC CABE CF COLO. OIPM., That the condition called a cold is one of repletior. may bo readily dere,- onstratedo Atoong other evidences thin is that treatment based cat this theory is uniformly Sucoest- fal. Its acqUisitiorr is frequently at- tributed lo some expeosUrea It clay he freen lack of weitirng apparel Or frora atmospheric changes. Bat a closer ex- aniination, will show this to be an er- roneous'conclusion, for on Many PC.. cialono the observer has been exposed to a great Variety of changes without any cold resorting therefrom, wheel, again, under other cond:tionarith the slightest exposure, in even the hottest weather, one may suffer from the hardest kind of a cold. This results frora imperfect elisalumeion. or an ine active condition of the exoretory or - gams. In fact', it 'is the condition, at the individual rather than his expos - sure. The impurities of the ayistent are •being discharged through the mucous membrane, particularlY of the head, instead of the newer eliminat- ing organs. Many a time leas thin con- dition been brought about by a too genereue dinner. The sudden chang- ing from heat to cold by going frotaa warm *room to the cold air ontd.00rs, whena. leers -en is debilitated and of ecoble reactive rewers fre,qreatly pro- duees the coed:Lion called 'cold. Any overwork or ea:haw-aim of the nerv- ous system plaeas the body in a nega- tive state, so there is loss power of vital resistance to morbifio changes. A langued, *!Xiltttltitied f1ig, if often accompanied by a headtehe. or inactive stomach and tiowelslithe ordinary amouric ot labor is impost d upon those organs while in that condition, it is necessarily imperfectly perform- ed, Theia is the body poisoned by its own impurities. Too frequently ton - ice are taken. to spur on, and still further exhaust an already weaken- ed system, In Icoking for the cause of cold, or any oilier disease, it is well to cone s'der lhe firs tcauee rather than the necrely exciting or eecondary one, which, is only incidental to the dis- turbance. By doing this we can shape our life, so as to avoid most of the disasters common'to modern Ignorance of the laws of life and a man's relation thereto makes of Of the 813.02 'Heels luting British porte, 278,887 are iu the coasting trade, eertrianY'll °I4 Seagoing war ship. the Kron, was buile iu Zeeland in 1807. Of the 967,121,836: acres cootraPoigroff EarOpeare itelega 181.600,049 are OWneel by the nobilit,y. pain, Left 4rm Shbut. der Dizzy? Headache? Pain back of your eyes? It's your liver! Use Ayers Pills. Gently laxative; all vegetable. Sold for 60 yeare. MTV Want your moustache orbeard a beautiful brOwa Or rich black? Us* BUCKINGHAM'S DYE OTS. , , . . SOK ILItth 00.1•10.11. AA*, Fsrblf ed Francs, left an OM steeediug sit tilts became foceesed thee* set the resole sliseltite the pentad. CA,LLED RIIEWPIA40 TISK, There IS a great deal of pale and ache fennel Rhea - matte —rennetimes called Kidney pain. The back aches, shoulders, side, and hips. le, cold will cause pain and distress in the boa, Eldney and, Illadtler trouble. In- cases of this kind nset apd see how quickly you will got relief. It Acts on all the large glands Of the body. Any one who doubt* should write for a free simple to' Illetwe-'ran Co., Mem Veils, Ont. Dr. Leoneardee is a perfect System Treat- ment. recce 50 cent*, FOR BALE IN WINKIAM BY WALTON AlcKIBBON. deakrs. 'Russian sables come as him a slave, -while knowledge of these laws gives him freed.= to instantly accept and e.njay the fruits of obedi- ..... cam The invariable cause of colds comes from within, not without. No one nearly under the head ce everlasting, as anything mundane can ba, and Hud- son Bay in its beautiful softness and wearing qualities; Is a perpetual de- light and comfort. In the way of small presents, calendars remain as popular as ever and something quite takes cold .wb.ea in is vigorous state raetty can iba had for 25 cents. The of • health., with pure blood coursing 1 cover simulates a book, with the port- through the body, and there is no rait of some wall known author. • On good reason WAY any one in ordinary the 'inside is an extract from his wozks, and of coarsa the. calendar. Unless under exceptional circum- stances, an expensive present frcoa a lady to a gentleman, or a gentleman to a lady, is in bad. taste. Books are always acceptable; gloves or handker- chiefs are unobjectionable or either alone or as an accompaniment to the latter. cue or more bottles of choice perfumery are always acceptable. Murray & Lanman's Florida water is a favorite selection, its refinement and delightful fragrance commending it to the most fastidious. There was never before se varied an assortment of bags and purses showa as at pres- ent, doubtless ebeeause dress pockets not being allowed a receptacle of some sort becomes a necessity. Silken bags with metal clasps are prominent ; ex- quisite bead, begs are. very choice and in leather the range is almost limit- less, and here red. leather is very fash- ionable. A new presentation, in leath- er has handles, and when opened shows two large purses and a port- folio on each side for bills or papers. This of course ie rather bulky, but woeful •to a business man or woman. In the other extreme, are dainty lit- tle bead purses for change and small leather purses .have round handles of the same, %hat can be placed: on the arm ,or give &celerity when held, in the hand. These and, other novelties, however, do not hinder large assort - intents of nurses and bags in stand- ard •Styles. Small picture frames are in gilt, silver one gun metal, chiefly the former. A most appropriate holiday gift to a 'literary lady or gentleman would be a handsome fountain pen. LUCY CARTER. • • - • The Editor of t'he Canadian Poultry' Review', Canada's national Poultry magazine tells us that this paper has been enlarged to 48 pages and upwards, filled with all that pertains to poultry in every department. Prof. A. G....Gilbert, manager of the Government Poultry Farm it Ottawa, remains in charge of tho "praetical 'Poultry" Depintment. Then there is a Turkey page, page for Waterfewl, Ducks and Geese, page for Bantams, and, departments of Diseases, Artificial. Hatching and Rearing, full show reports, many original engravings from live specimens, and several other interesting features. The subscription rate to readers of this paper is but 50c. per year, or three years for $1.00. A sample will be sent for the asking. Addresses, Canadian Poultry Review, 124 Victoria St., To- ronto, Ont. The Italian Government has for sale 600,000 rifies[neade in 1887, together with 1,370 obsolete cannon. It is recorded that on good morn- ings he could produce as much as a thousand words. They were poured out naturally, with no apparent ef- fort, but rather slowly. Evidently they had been thought over and ate rafted in his mind during the pre- vious afternoon and night, for he rarely used notes. But the first draught was not allowed to go to the printer. At the end of a fort- night or so of dictation he would re- vise tho product, Substituting short words for big, pruning away unneces- sitry sentences and generally lying the text. What with those labors of revision and occasional lapees Into hickness, the daily, average of words when he was in his prime was reduced to about 825, He wits nevaa groat roadet. Indeed he was wont to say that it he road as much as other people hs *auto lekeyt till little aoe ....„ STRONG AND VIGOROUS. Every Organ of the Body Toned ' up and invigorated by 4 • Mr. F. W. Meyers, King St. E., Berlin, Ont., says : "1 antlered for five years with palpitation, shortness ot breath, sleeplessness and pain 111 the heart, but one box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills completely removed all these din - trailing symptoms. I bars not Antlered sines) talingthem, and now sleep well and foal strong and vigorous," Manta% Heart and Norvo Pills Mire fill diseased tetieing from Weakbeart, Weirn out ISOM tiSSUOS, Of 'aleatory blood, I health should have a cold. It may come from insufficient exeroisc, breathing of 'foul, air, want of whole- some focd, excess of food, lack of bath- ing, etc., but always from sof= viola- tion of the plain laws of health. Thera can be no more prolate cause of colds than highly seAon.ed foods, as well as frequent eating. These give no time 1 or the digestive organs to rest, and incite an increased. flow of the digestive secretions. Thus larger quantities of nottrishment are absorb- ed, than can bo properly utilized, and the result is an obstruction,pmmonly ceded a coild„which is simply an. effort of the system, to expel the use- less material. Properly speaking, it is seltepoisoning, due to an incapability of the organism to regulate and com- pensate tor .the disturbance. A deficient supply of pure air to the lungs is not only a strong predispos- ing cause of colds but a prolific source of much graver condititins. Pure air and e..xereisJi are necessary to prepare the system for 'the assimilation of nutriment, for without them there can bo no vigorous health. The oxygen of tha air eve breathe regulates the api- petite as well as the nutriment that is built up in the system. The safest. and best 'Way to avoid. colds is to sleep in, a room with the windows open, and to remain out of doors every day, no Titatter .what may be the meather, for at least two hours, pre- ferably with scene. kind. of exercise, if no more than. walking. One should not sit down to rest while the feet are wet or the clothing damp. A pore son may go with the clothing, wet through to the skiut all day, it he but keeps moving. Exercise keeps up the • oirulatioa hid prevebts taking cold. The Physiologic care' of colds is the prevention of their occarretice. The person who does not carry around an oversupply of, Alimentation. :in his sys- tems mid furthermore secures a puri- fied circulation by strict, sanitary cleanliness, 'thus plating himself in a positive condition, is immune to eolde. L. starving Man cannot take. cold. A careful diet would exclude the uses of all narcotics and all. Toed that is not thoroughly appropeiated. An ov- cited Person; is worse off than one who is underfed, because the overfed Ude, is taxed to dispose of what cannot Ise appropriate, and when not proyerly — THE — WINGHAM • , • TIMES Announces the moet remarkable proposition ,ever made by a Canadian pub- lication to its readers ; TWO DOLLAR -PAPERS FOR $1.15 By special arrangement, and tainty of !al gely increasing our our paper and The '"ONiTil" Lra R. I. P. (PertOpolis Post.) He adopted the no -breakfast fad. He out out noon lunch for health's sake. He walked ten miles a day for taxer - He abandoned tett drinking. He quit drinking coffee. He gave up meat. He stopped eating vegetables. He slept in the open air. Now he rests in peace beneath the beautiial snow. • .••*•dlille** Mr, T. B. MeNaughton, manager of the Merchants' Bank, Tilbury, commit- ted stucide by shooting himself through the heart. Ontario's largest cOunty, Grey, con - at heavy cost—justifiable only by the (ter - subscription list—we ale enabled to offer EERY a great dollar weekly, for S1.1.5 per year This offer te made bv no other paper, as we have purchased the h iv oietriet. RE..sFPBER THIS FACT—Every subsorD,er navin-; one eollar in ad- vunee tui otil vapor will receive The Montreal Weekly Herald for one year for an addit (nal 15c. The expense to us is so great that- we can make ••‘) deviation le om this rule—the money must be paid in advance, and all arrear - ages must be paid. ese BALD is exclusive, and can exclusive rights for A3 a RelAispape; THE MONTREAL WEEKLY HERALD was established In 1808, :land is the second oldest Canadian paper. In it- o'd age it has renewed Its youth. and stands in the forefront of Canada's great lemmas. As a newspaper, it is edited with epee/5l reference to its ccnstlts- eney of readers, who desire a compre- hensive summary of the world's news of the welt. Everything is viewed from the standpoint of the Canadian who wishes to keep abreast of the times, without having to wade through col limns of irrelevant matter. Careful con- tismsation marks The Herald's treatment of every line of news. Do not confuse it with other papers of somewhat s'snilar names. The Herald is a compact paper. not a blanket sh.et. As a Home Parole,. THE MONTP.EAL Ni'vEKLY ERMA') 3 pro-CM:I-WM IY a pspei for 'rhe Home. n the nu onus>, no htng is permitted ;n Its columns that cannot be read with nrofit and in,t/ru, tion bv every member of the household. in the smond place. t Is edit. w`th spec al reference to ,.. .1.,1 1 .1. CI, "MAdgt. Merton's" wetly talks with her women readers cons'inte the molt popular de- Partment of the kind in any Canadian paper. They are v/ ritable "heart to heart" talks with the women of the Den:Milan, and are appreelated in thou- sands of homes. In th's depnernent are given Hints to Mo hers; Vine -tested Cooking Rectors: the latest Fashions. illustrated, and a hundred and one topics of feminine interrst. THIS COMBINATION is a great one. Tour home paper gives you in full the local news. the local markets and the local gossip. The Montreal Weekly Herald gives you the general news of the world, reports of the great markets. departments of interest to farmers, and, in particular, fea- tures of value and interest in The Home. One paper is the complement of the other. The" dovetail into each other, and never overlap. SUBSCRIPTIONS may begin at any time. If your subscription is al - ren dy paid in advance, and you want The Montreal Weekly Herald at dace, *tend in 15e, and your subsPription will start immediately. Addross all commtnileations to— i :"El Wingham, Ontario. tams 1,071,042 acres', and has a poPu- dispoord -gi.:, remains only to be an lation Of 69,50e. The smallest oottnty element of dangere-Scienee of Uealth. is ilrant, with 190,890 acres and a pou. . lation of 38,140. • ay. se Br et) vt. pc .a... uso Lever'a Dry Seep (re tieteder) to Beaearro. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought , zt.,..vonwoviNy, 4 'Pe .191gslamt,t4-a4 a6Leg dim CicyCL,0 imenc., do rc:f7. tuoinSrev ..,••••••• I eteerseit , ii/1 Don't ploi along Re your grandmother dia bofere you, scouring and scrubbing; bonding cud rill); &kg, "I'te)4"—al 410 if =takes housework easy. I 'loans ovcryibIng sx.4 wash woolens and flannels,—you'll 1ik.ij Signature it. 32 of A injures nothing. Moroeconomical thui Lcap. fil;....dn only b.,; ?EH V. 1:: I'Altium eti!cac6. POW 'iltA Poston. Se Lula. •- 111.6Atte l. IrT17.4117,is$75741:‘,.Mr/I-V,T.In*,;