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The Wingham Times, 1907-03-28, Page 3• J view Kidneys for 3c, a Day. Weak kidneys that are making your back ache --that are snaking you suffer with Rheumatism, Sciatica, Iaunrbago-• are changed into well, strong kitlueys by 13u -Ju. It is 13u-ju -- the Gentle Kidney Pill -that heals the kidneys; • gives you practically a new pair of organs and corrects all Bladder Troubles, Ti you know you have Kidney Trouble, or if you suspect it by the pains in the 1 aok,headaches,freclnent desire to urinate -take Bit -in on our positive guarantee that it will cure you or money refunded. 5oc. a box -at druggists, The Claflin Chem. Co., Limited, Windsor, Ont. 5$ 1316 00 Per Day. A Denver hotel man tells the follow- ing story, anti he says it's true; A few des s ego a bride and bridegroom /ram the oruntry registered at the hotel, "What are your rats for room and hoard for two?" asked the bridegroom, "Six dollars," was the reply. That was satisfactory, and the two got a room. When they decided to leave the brulcgrccrn asked for Gus bill, it was $24. He was staggered. "What!" he ejaculated, "Twenty- four Twentyfour dollars! That's an outrage. You said $6" "Six dollars a day" came from the clerk. Six dollars a day." "Six dollars a dayt" the bridegroom almost shouted. "I thought you meant 16 a week." The clank simply smiled. Finally the bridegroom paid over the money. "Now," he said, calming down some- what, "wait a minute. I want to go 'upstairs, Keep that money in your Band." The clerk didn't understand, but he decided to humor the man. The latter Soon returner] with a camera. Auniag it at the clerk, he took a picture. "This is the highest priced place I never stopped at," he explained, "I just -wanted a picture to show my friends that I was a real sport here in Denver." Then he and his bride gathered up their telescopes and west oat. -Denver Yost. EFFECT OF THE FOOD LAW. Driving Many Worthless Catarrh Medicines Out of Existence. The Pure Food and Dreg Law, which went into effect the first of January, has already shown the good that will follow rte enforcement. Many worthless remedies, that have been advertised for the cure of catarrh, a disease that is universally prevalent, have been driven out of existence by the Pure Food Law, The effect of this is to inorease the sale of remedies that are valuable and that fulfil the provi-nons of the law. Hyomei for example, is meeting with a larger sale than ever before, ai.d Walton Mc Ribbon is still selling it under a guaran- te¢, that it will cure catarrh or the money will be refunded. Hyomei is a scientific treatment that is recommend- ed by the beet physicians. It cures catarrh without stomach dosing, through inhaling medications that go right to the affected spots. By breathing Hyomei three or four times daily through the neat pocket in - leder that comes with every outfit, its medicated, healing air penetrates to the most remote parts of the nose, throat and lungs, searches ont and kills all catarrhal germs, and soothes and heals any irritation in the mucous membrane. The complete Hyomei outfit costs $1, -extra bottles if needed, 50c, and is sold by Walton McKibben under the guaran- tee that it will cure or oost nothing. Accepting the challenge of Premier Whitney, and acting along the line pos. eible to them under the Law, as pointed out by the Government Last year and again this year, the temperance people of Collingwood have taken up the matt- er of getting the license fee raised to a prohibitive fianre. They will ask the Council to pass a by-law making the fee $25,000. The organization that worked in the recent local option cam- paign is still in existence, and will re. main intact to carry on the agita,ion for this measure. the vote in the local op- tion contest was 734 for, to 556 against, giving a majority of 238 for the by-law, a change over of ID votes being neoes- •nary to eeoure the three•fiftbs, • DR. WOOD'S - NORWAY PINE SYRUP • Stops the irritating cough, loos- ens the phlegm, soothes the in- flamed tissues of the lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces s: quick and permanent cure in all eases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- , ehitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore sl Throat and the first stages of tr Consumption. Mrs, Norma Swtnston, Coggin, Ont, ''rites : "I take great pleasure in recoin spending Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Soap. I had a very bad cold, could not ales" at: night for th•3 coughing and bad pains in sty chest and lungs, I only used half e, bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup fwd was perfectly well again," Pilot/ 26 Meth fit bottle. MERELY A MASTERPIECE, Not 3} ""message'' Iu X,oveiy Pletlol► i'er the Junior Atanager, .1. lean who wilted to lecture called at a bureau presided over by two man- agers, He aroused their Interest with a lec- turer's net, says the Lyceumlto, but unfortunately the eeuior member was just starting; on a trip and would not return for at least a mouth, The senior partner called the young m:ui to one side and exacted a solemn promise that Le would not visit an- other bureau or read his lecture to anybody until after he had given this particular manager a reading and a chance to make him an offer a mouth Renee. The interest of the junior member, however, was at white beat, and he kept Sending t'or the young lecturer, In- sisting that he conte down to the office and read his lecture. The young man refused with as much tact as possible, but thl.; only increased the anxiety of the junior, At last the young man told of the promise made the senior partner, In- stead of quieting the junior manager, the aunouncemeut made him the more ;noxious, and finally the young man e01 leak(], The reading: ended, the junior part- ner said: "Now, your reading this has saved us all much valuable time, 111 tell you frankly, my boy, it won't do. There's no message in it; it Is Loosely construct- ed; the diction is poor. It won't do. Burn It and try again." When the senior partner roto red he coiled up the young lecturer and sound-' ly berated him for breaking faith. "IIow do i know you have not been to every bureau in town? You promis- ed me on your honor you would read the lecture to nobody -not even to my partner." The young man protested that he had not done so. "Why," exclaimed the senior man- ager, "of course you have! Iie tells me that you cause down here to the office two weeks ago and read him the entire lecture and that to told it o a t t odyouwas no good." "Yes," replied the young man; "after much persuasion 1 did read Iilm a lec- ture which he told me was no good, but it was not my lecture -it was Wen- dell Phillips' 'Lost Arts!'" THE ANIMAL KiNGDOM. Wild dogs never bark and so always bite. A. gray horse lives the longest, a black one the shortest. A coons fur Is so thick that it can rob bees without being stung. A blue eyed cat is always deaf, but all deaf cats are not blue eyed. An Asiatic squirrel climbs a tree like a telegraph pole climber. It has large horny scales on its tail for the purpose. The flying fox or tropical bat will pass the night drinking from the ves- sels in which cocoa is distilled and go home intoxicated in the early morning or sleep it off at the foot of the trees. The big snowshoe rabbit or northern bare is something of a drosses'. It wears a white coat in winter and a gray one in summer, the better to con- ceal itself from its enemies by looking as the ground looks in the two seasons. Bard on Beggars. The pbilanthropist, handing the beg- gar a dime, snkl: "The world is in n bad enough way, dear knows, but I am not one of those men who say that it goes back instead of forward. Take your ease, for in- stance. You are practically unmolest- ed, aren't you? A' few months is the most you ever get for begging. And do you know what would have been done to you in the fifteenth century? The first time they caught you begging they'd have whipped you at the cart's tail. The second time they'd have slit your right ear and bored a hole In your Ieft ear with a liot Iron. Catching, you a third time, they'd have put you to death as a felon." "Gee," said the beggar, "who'd 'a' thunk It?" It Is *Woman's \Val'. When a woman undertakes to decap- itate a fowl or anything with au ax she grasps the tool close to the head, raises her chin, squints both eyes, clinches two rows of teeth and hacks straight down, missing her alit by about two inches. That was sufficient for a Batavia lady to sever her left thumb. She was not a fainter and, re- placing the thumb, which had been chopped at the first joint, bound the parts together and has excellent prom- ise of its complete restoration. The game Is not always lost when "thumbs are down." Timely Precaution. "Marla," said Mr. Quigley, entering his home in some excitement, "1 want you to promise me not to Iook at the papers for the next three months!" "What for?" wonderingly asked. Mrs. Quigley. "X have just been nominated for a public office," ho faltered, "and I don't want you to find out what kind of man I really am," shrewd thaw "'E.vtryl" yelled the bright newsboy. "All ilbout the ter'ble wumpty-er-- tatnmp!" "Eh?" asked the Inquisitive old man. "What did ye say, sonny?" "X didn't soy it," replied the boy. "Tiny a paper an' sea" Always' Groiiltilg. "131nks is always growling that he doesn't have justice done him." "Yes. When he gets a intlo he'll #itob- Abty say it isn't a square thing~" --•flew logit; Tinlesi... .'. ABSOLUTE SECLJRITYI Canu6ne Carte res Little Liver Pills Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Slmlle Wrapper Below, Very small and us ease - *G *elm tis sugar., GARTEKS FOB DDIZZINESS.INESS. ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. VERR FOR Tomo ONSIPATN FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TRECOMPLEXION V71CC ! i1G1 Vr*1Z1 uuarnnve�53�NAUS , 2d czu i Ptnaly'Vegetabio.,iU%r os , OURS SICK HEADACHE:. Cure for Scours. In raising calves upon skim milk the greatest scarce of loss is indigestion and other stomach troubles which result in white scours. Clare in feeding and clean- liness will, to a very great extent. prevent this, but at times the animals will be af- fected even when all reasonable care ap• pear» to be exercised. In such cases cer- tain remedies are resorted to, all of which, however, are more or less ineffec- tive. The formalin treatment, recently discovered, appears to be more success- ful in coring this complaint than any- thing heretofore tried and as it is very simple sbou]d be generally known. A correspondent of the Breeders' Ga- zette, in giving his experience with this treatment, says: "I bought a young calf of dairy breeding and upon getting it house found 1 had a bad case of white immure to oontsnd with. I tried some of the old remedies, but the calf became very weak and lifeless, I then (thinking I had an excellent subject to try it on) resorted to the formalin treatment and procured one-half ounce, forty per cent. formaldehyde solution and dilated it with fifteen and one-half ounces of wa- ter. By this time the calf would not drink from a pail, so 1 took a pint bottle with nipple and fed one pint new milk three or four times per day, adding one table. spoonful of the solution to cash pint, The effect was very gratifying, for on the third day after beginning the treat. moat the bowels were working in a nor• mai condition and the calf continues to th,ive. 1 had previously had consider- able trouble with white scours, and al- most every case had proved fatal." Insure Against Serious Colds Of the many forms of insurance prob- ably that which protects you against the serious results of colds is the most valu- able at this time of year, when so many are becoming victims of la grippe and pneumonia. By the prompt use of Dr. Ohaso's Syrup of linseed and Turpentine you can keep the cough loose, prevent further development of the cold and euro it in a few da} s. Three hundred thousand emigrants will arrive in Canada this year, accord- ing to the estimate of the Immigration Department. This means an increase of SO per cent. over last year. The Gov- ernment is taking precautions this year to guard against landing any, undesir- able immigrants. Most of them will be from Great Britain. It was not until the decade ending with 1870, when the population of the United States had gone beyond 35,000,000, that immigra- tion to the United States passed the 800,000 mark. Cracker Charm There is all the diff- erence in the world between eating bis - cults a n d biscuit eat, ing. b p e may eat a biscuit and not taste it, but when you think of bis• cuit eating you think instantly of Moone 's Perfection Cream Sodtis Crisp, delicious and tasty. Absolutely and distindly Supetide to any Other make. Say "Mooney's' to your' grocer. 1 n +4M+ au TIDE WINGUA. TIMES, MARCH 28 1907 • -LAND QF "THE KICKERS." Strange Sights Seen Ry Mrs. Leot'idas Hubbard, Jr„ In Her Remarkable Journey Through Labrador, In her remarkable journey through Labrador last year, Mrs. Leonidas Hubbard, jr., saw many strange sights. Perhaps the meet interesting of these was the caribou migration, "On August 8," site writes in the bulletin of the American Geograph- ical Society, "we came upon the mi.; gration and saw one herd in which there were thousands, We did not find thein again in sues numbers, yet for flay niiiee of our journey they were seen in smaller herd.] every day, and sometimes many times a day. "They were in summer dress of pret- ty brown, shading to gray and white on the under parts. The antlers wero in velvet and of immense size, and males and females wero already herd- ing together. Apparently they had been, in occupation of the country for some time. "From Ptarmigan Point, on Lake Michikamats, to the head of Long Lake, on the George River, the coun- try was a network of their trails, in the woodlands and bogs, cut deep into the soil, on the barren hill -sides - broad, dark bands converging to the crossing place at the river. North of, the Height of Land we passed at in- tervals long piles of whitened antlers;. and along the shore opposite our camp of August 15, a broad band of. white caribou hair, four feet above the river, told of their crossing and recrossing while shedding their win- ter coats. "Only onee in passing this part of the country did we find trace of their enemy, the wolf. Throughout the journey we did not see any, but once, while running down the lower George River, a lonely cry carie down to us' from one high up on the mountain side. "Through the caribou belt other game was more abundant also. Every' day mother ducks with their flocks of little ones were seen, and a number. of geese were taken. Gulls and lcons were there in numbers, and ptarmig an were very plentiful m jar as the; head of the Barren Ground Water; but beyond none were taken till we reached the post, "Along the lower part of each of the rivers signs of foxes in large num-: bers wero found, and the lemming& on which they feed made us not a. little trouble. They were about in thousands and the ground was so per forated with their holes as to remind one of a porous plaster. "In the lakes fish seem abundant,' though we traveled too fast to do' much fishing, and the nets were not, once in the water. There are brook; trout, ounaniche and namavoush, some whitefish, in the lakes; and in the lower George the sea trout and. salmon. "The flowers are ben.utiful, though. not so varied as its the home country. All along the Nascaupee blossoms of the Labrador tea filled the air with; their fragrance and' pale laurel grew in abundance. Now and then we crossed great beds of blossoming cloud berries and everywhere the. star flower and bunchberry showed their white blossoms. "One day while ascending the Wa-. pustan River Gilbert handed me a dandelion awl during the day I saw several of them, but did not again find them throughout the journey. On the : upper Nascaupee the pink bells of the low cranberry showed in the carpet of glossy green and near tine water the blossoms of the dewberry. "Violets grew along both rivers, but most beautiful of all was the twin flower. Its delightful fragrance first attracted my attention and looking down I saw the long trailing vines. "At Ungava masses of this beanti-, ful flower creep along the foot of the mountain, while indoors in a pat on the window Fill Mrs. Ford, the agent's wife, treasures two tiny clover plants, almost afraid in her eagerness to believe that they really were clover. "During the journey, which occu- pied two months, from June 37 to August 27, the weather was wonder- fully fine, We were in camp only eleven days on account of rain and, the highest temperature reached was 77 degrees F. in the shade. The low- est recorded temperature was 30 de- grees, though it was not the mini- mum reached. "On the morning of August 10, there was ice an eighth of an inchi thich on a basin of water. On the; 13th, 11th and frith of the same month we had snow flurries. "Thunderstorms were rare, and, compared with those in the United States very mild. On many beautiful days we, had passing showers. Labra- dor is a land of rainbows. Nowhere have I seen their colors so brilliant or so variedly manifested. They did not always appear in the form of a ,bow, and once I saw them lie like a beautiful veil along the whole length of Rainbow Hill on the upper Nascau- pee. "There was a wonderful clearness in the atmosphere, which made land- marks miles away seem very near and clothed the far distant hills with color indescribably beautiful. In tho blue of the ]sills and the waters and :the sky there was a peculiar silver- iness, which, with the white of the reindeer moss and the dark green of the spruce forests, touched in places with tender green of the white birch and poplar, made a combination of color which, I think, can scarcely be surpassed in beauty anywhere in the world. Itn a way which I could neither describe nor understand, it was com- forting, "The flies and mosquitoes, for which the country -is famed, did not wholly fail of accomplishing, their dire designs upon us; but their ra- vages are easily forgotten in the re- membrance of the beauties of that lone land which can smile with so much grace, even though its mood has sometimes been one of such persistent cruelty." ;. "Turks In Byroh's flare. Europe has completely deserted Philhellenistn. There is no longer a Byron to sing the Hellenic virtues, :to fight for Greek independence and to die miserably at Missolonghi. Phil• lselleoistst Inas found a last refuge among the military .and political chide of tho Sultan.--s;outrier ,,obi .Bopliia, y ; �w1rl~. f �ea+eu+! wOrstsa441 They kick when it's dry, they kick whets it'3 wet, They kiek when they shy at a good winuing bet. They kids when it's warm, they kiok when it's cold, They kick at a storm or a summertime fold; They hick at the rain, they kick at the MOW; They kiok at the pain of the xbeimaatio woe; They kiok at the fun and the laughter Woad, They kick at the sun and kick at the cloud, They trick et the drink, they kick at the dust, They kick when they ehriuk, they kick when they bust; They kick if they fall, they kiok if they rise, They kiok good and tall at the stars in the skies; They kick if they're sick, they kick if they're well, f, They trick till the kick kicks them out of -this earth. WHEN PAW WAS A 130Y 1 wisht 'at I'd been here when My paw he was a soy; They must have been exciting then - When my paw was a boy; In school he always took the prize, He used to lick boys twice his size 1 bet folks all had Insight' eyes Wheu my paw was a boy. They was a lot of wonders done Wheu my paw was a boy; How grandpa must have loved his son When my paw was a boy; He'd get the coal and chop the wood, And think up ev'ry way he could t o always just be eweet and good. When my paw was a boy. Then everything was in it's plane When my paw was a boy. How he could resale, jump and race When my paw was a boy. He never, never disobeyed He beat in every game ho played Gee ! what a record that was made 'When my paw was a boy. I wisht'at I'd been here when My paw he was a boy; They'll never be his like agen- Paw was the model boy. Fut still last night I heard my maw Raise up her voice and call my paw The worst fool shat she ever saw - He ought to of stayed a boy. 'TWIXT LOVE AND DUTY. Old Airchie was a clergyman, A first-class Presbyterian, And, though as Scotch a8 oatmeal cake, His sermons kept the flock°awake. A man of intell_ct was he, Note his Philosophy degree, For thirty years he'd been at work At his beloved St. Andrew's Kirk. No single service had ho missed. Some brides whom long alto he'd kissed Had married ohildreu of their own, But still old Airchie lived alone, He had not cared to take a wife. The only passions of his life Were soopin' up the granite stanes And playing golf across the plains. Though mild and gracious was his port, He was a genuine old sport. 'Twas winter, hut for fifteen days The air was mild. Tho country ways Were dsep with mad, and of the rain Gave Reverend Airtchie such a pain 1•Iis inmost soul was in a whirl, Because, slack, he "conldna curl." Then came the frost. The miller's pond Was fettered in an icy bond, Tho curlers came a match to play, Alas! it was a Wednesday. Prey'r meeting would be held that night, And Airoh was mad enough to fight. He was a skip. He pondered long If a postponement would be wrong, Then at the church at half -past four He put this notice on the door: "AU cause for earnest prayer is past, The awful weather's changed at Net; The Ice is hard, the stars are bright, No meeting will be held to night," Three thonsand steel crossties have, says the N. Y. Tribune, been installed on the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad between Pittsburg and Altoona These are I -shaped, four inches across at the top, eight inches across at the bot- tom, and five inches high. The rails are fastened to them by steel clips. A different kind of metal track is being tried on the Philadelphia division, near Pomeroy, Pa. For a stretch of one mile there the rails are laid on longitudinal steel girders, set deeply in rock ballast, and bound together across the track, by caet iron "chairs." N L BioURITS i kcartt and Nerve Pills. Are a spoesflo tor all diseases and dis- orders arising from a run-down condi- tion of tho heart or nerve system, such M4 Palpitation or tho Heart, Nervous Prostration, Nervousness, Sleepless- no's, Paint and l'gray Spells, Drain Fag. etc,. • They aro especially beneficial to wonnen troubled with irregular ]men- sturation. Price 5J cents par box, er 3 for 31.25, All dealers, or eats T. Mtwara* Ce„ Ln nTrn. Toronto, One, s.t.rrr.trar.. TEA. Pleases the Most Exacting 'Why? Because no tea on the market can equa1i1 for flavor, deliciousness and strength. It is: the finest tea grown and worthy of your attention. Lead Paokets Only. 2.5o, 30e, 40c, Sec and 000 per pound. A.t all Grocers. ..... , .A On common fences the continuous wire stays aro sure to bend and the locks to lose their grip udder continual pres- sure of your harses or cattle. Ate, once they do, the top wiro, soon followed by those below, will sag and destroy the efficiency of your (once. Nothing like that can happen to our Dillon lingo -Stay Fence. Tho short, stiff hard steel wird in our binge. tags cannot bend. when the lateral wires aro weighted down, owing to their being so short and jointed at ea•;;i strand wire. Press Gro of n horse on the top wire brings the "hinges" in the hie) e, into action and prevents then from betid,rg, and when pressure is relieved the fence sp,tngs back into place again. Tho 11h•rn1 wires are Iligh•Carbon Hard Steel and rolled to provide for expansion and runtime. ion. by Bear end cold, and aro also crimped at the inter -eel inn of the stays a id strand, to prevent the stays front slipping sideways-thus:acre no ionise are Heeded Buy t ,n Millen Hinge -Stay Fence. It's "twice as strong." Twice as good an invesimcnt, Catalogue tree. , The Owen Sound Wire Fence Co., limited, Owen Sound, Ont. - 3 otsr r - .ff-2521itirm W. J. GOULD. 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