Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 5 Dec 1884, p. 7

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· ·XMW*AMPBi vau:1 HNBM .. m@IU!M'==" Flfl'«'P++ 'PM *M DRESSMAKING. FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKER. Rooms over M,!. Jl:?rsey's store, west of ouch, Joh!( fii·&. Oryderman's. DR. SCOTTrs llUMA..N HIBERNATION. The Case era Man Wlt11 w:is·in a Trance r..r Eight lllo:JS, MRS. E. DEWAR, P.repared Spice MANT:b"ES & ULSTERS .A. P E C!I .A. L T Y41-tf. PRICES MODERATE. Coughs, Colds, Inflammation of the Bladder, Swelling of the L EV I MORRIS. Qlands, Roughness of the Hair W I am fully prepared to attend Funer11ls on the shortest notice, at the lowest possible rates. . Botts, Scurvy, &c., &c. Caskets and Burial Oases ready on short notice. UNDERTAKINCI -::»3'Y- :E"'O~ Horses, Cattle, Sheep & Swine CUE.ES First-class hearse on very moderate terms. 'For Fattening and Fitting yonr Animal;; Shrouds and Cofllns constantly on hand. Fun for market, DR. SCOTT'S PREPARED eral cards supplied at onoe. Furniture Shop&. SPICE has no equal. · Show Rooms-Bounsall'sN ew Block. .All furniture sold by me is made by the U. C FOR SALE EVERYWHERE Furniture Co. of Bowmanville. I do not buy slop furniture and represent it to have been made by the U. C. F. Co. of this town. .Also agent for the LI-QUOR '£EA for this town ANTED, a. resident Agent in every ano vicinity. It is cheap and as good as can be Town cmd City of the Dominion· got in the market. A. valuable prize given arso, a Villa~e, few Travellers to sell our NEW Arn GAS w_it_~!"!:l_PO~n~---- MAC!lINEA, 'for making AIR GAS 50 per cent. , cheaper than coal gas, equally ·as GOOD. No QET YOUR LUMBER FIRE or power required. Made in all eizes from 15 BURNERS to 1,000, for PIUVA'l'E HOUSES, STORES, HOTELS, FACTORIES, STREETS, MINES, etc.. Address. THE t.,;A NA lHAN Alli GAS MACHINE MANUFACTURING C0., 115 St Francois Xavier Street, Montreal, P . Q. 43-ly W PlANf O, MATCH fD,MOUlO fO&c, .A.T- PLAKfitcJ Liberty Street, 0Mii. 8-tf. Pianos'.l'uned & Hepaired. ARTIES WISHING THEIR PIANOS Tuned or repaired can have thom attended to by leaving word at the DOMINION ORGAN Co's OFli'ICE, Bowmanville. A firat-clas man 'lOW neing in their rt:.plo ', P Where you can also obtain Doors, Sash, Blinds, Window and Door Frames, Plain an!! Ornamental Fence Pickets, Cisterns, &c. IMPORTED 'HORSES. E 'fAKE PLEASBRE IN INFORMING our numerous patrons and W others that we have jns returned and now have for sale a very superior lot of English Horses, twelve of which are carefully selected EnglishShire·bred heavy weights. We also have soma of England:s famous Coach Horses, fine and blood like, with weight, style and action seoond'to none. Please call and examine, we are prepared to sell at terms convenient and prices ri~ht. Write for catalogues: correspondence solicited A. F ANSON & SON ; Stables 137 Richmond St. West, Toronto, Ont. CARPENTRY IN ALL BRANCHES. Bowmanville. Februarv 21, 1881. ___""'___ HENRY'S New Photo Rooms ARE NOW OPEN. Stand for1nerly occupied by the t>ost Office. JUNG STltlH>T, ::BC>~l.'\l.r.4.JST'V:EX...X...E. The Gallery is first-class in all its appointments, and furnished in a comfortable manner. There will be no poor work allowed to leave the ruo1ns, and these who favor me with a call can rely on being pleased ]il@'"The i:t._ ;.~antcnous process only will be used for Pifut,ographa. FREEMAN'S wo:am: POWIDERSo Are pJoasnut to take. Contain their own l>urgnt i,·o. Io n s11f0, curo, ancl ctrcctual . destroy1:r- <>f worms in Cllil.i'·"n or Adalta. Come in and see me. · R.H. HENRY. I .>s::> ~-ENGLISH E!Tl\ACT O F """ ;~}.~~ ··" :a: :r .:z:, .,..- The relationship between · sleep, "the cousin of death," anddeathitself, is probably real as well as 11pparent. The distance which separates, them is great, but 1here are intermediate connections, tirades of dissolution as of development. Among these the similar states of trance .a nd · hibernation are worthy of special notice. For illeep ·and for trance, one cause, the exhaustion 'chil)fly of nervous matter, but more or less of every organ and tissue, is asaigm ble. The hysterical stupor is the sleep of nerve centres, worn oub with the assault and conflict of stormy relavation. Healthy sleep is the rest of physical clements wearied with the same strai.n appliedmore gradually. Cases have been recorded in which somnolence, continuing forda~s without cessation, has resembled trance in its duration, while preserving all the ordinary features of natural sleep. Various facts support us in assuciating the hibernation 0 £ animals with the same train of organic or funct ional changes as the other unconscious states which we have been considering. It comes like a habit,~t has, one may say, annual return, its apparent cause is the oppress,ion of externa.l cold, and the a.nimals it affects are mostly those which, from their bodily structure and habits, are subject to great ueriodic variations of temperature. Vital issue is exha.usfled, and function is in part suspended, prob· ably beca.use the numbness of cold hae taken hold up0n the radicles of the outer circulation, and of that of the brain anrface which is connected with it by numerous anastemoses. In such a case a.nromia would seem to be the cause of the winter sleep, as there is evidence to show that it is also the cause of that temporary starvation of the brain which lulls without arresting its action, in the natural repose of ache night. We may even regard the lethargy. ended by dee.th, into which man falls when exposed to great cold,as a short and mortal hibernation. The same influence acts upon him as upon the bear or · fish, but the power of the shock is greater om his finer and less accustomed benses than 011 their comparatively coarse organization. So likewise in other regions and forms cf life, in the weariness, paralysis, atrophy, and gangrene of limbs, in the leafless hi· bernation of trees, and in their decay, b~gjnning in the terminal twigs, the same teaching is evident-that vascular nutrition, in its periodic variations, is the parent of activity, and of rest, as its absence is of death. It is not, therefore, altogether surprieing to meet with occasiona.l instances in which death is simu· lated by some deep degrees of stupor. The case of George Childet, a laborer living at Bridgewater, which was lately recorded in the daily papers, appears to have been one of this kind. The trancelike state developed quite suddenly, and was mistaken by the relatives for death. Some alight degree of warmth in the apparent corpse induced the clergyman in attendance to refuse burial ill spite of the decided wish of the relati;es that it should take place. After eight days the signs of animation were re-.established, and the subject of this singular experience slowly recovered. Jn all such cases there is an element of mystery ; 11nd one can not always decide how much of this is due to physiological or pathological conditions, or to some external agency. We are not informed of the antecedents in the pre· sent instance, and can not say how much hard work, under-feeding, anxiety, or other causes may have had to do with the result. The state described, if really one of trance, affords a striking· example of the difficulty which sometimes, though very rarely, arises in proving the final point in diagnosis,and a warning that the most trivial sign of vitality should not be overlooked in determining the fact of death.- fBritish Medical Journal. to amuso myself by pulling at the brass butto~e on my coat. "One of them came off one Sunday, and I occupied myself for a time with putting .it in my ear and shaking it out again. Suddenly I felb it· sink away in the1·e, and I could not get it out. "I was afraid to tell my grandmother · · d £ d · at the time, an soon a terwar forgot it. At ten years of age 1 began to grow deaf, and have been getting worse ever since but ,I never once thought of that butto~ until you removed it." STANDARD BANK 0 F C A N A D A· ()Al'lTAJ,, s1,ooo,ooo. RJlST, $Ho,ooo PUMPS __ __ ...,.. A GOOD t'VORD FOR THE TURK, Bis Well·Kncwn Fidelity a:tid Courage. This Bank 1 -~-- d t 0 d L . t .. . . s pr~pare o eg1 I· mate Bankmg tn all ~ts ,branches. . HO'WMA.NVILLE, Farmers notes discounted ; Deposits Manufacturer and Dealer in Pumps of received and Interest "d t f . . pal on amoun s o -all kinds,$5 upwards m Savmgs Bank Department. RUBBER BUCKETS, DR A.ET S WIND MlLLS, Issued and Collections made in Europ~, WINDOW SHADES" United Stat.es and Canada. and General Jobber in OFFl()E-!tlm·tlocll B··os. Block, lnte Bank· tug omce of Jones & Bobble. 27 W.C.TYLER, ' · CA.RPE!"' .lil.'ER Agent. Bowmanvllle March WOR)L 13·6111 W.J. JONES, Shop oppostte'.Treleven·s Shoe Store. 26, 188~. · This brings me now to a subject on which I must appeal to the public sense of justice and fair play, I must protest against the indiscriminate employment of the word "Turk" whenever there occassion to mention any case of misgovernment, oppression, or cruelty in E<>ypb, 0 It will probably surprise the reader very much to hear that, speaking generally, there are few, if any Turks in that country. If proper inquiries were made a.bout these so styled Turkish mudirs and Turkish soldiers, who are so often referred to in terms of indignation ·and" opprobrium it would be found that" they are mostl; Egyptian natives, and although some few may have a dash of Turkish blood ·from a. former generation as parb of their inheritance, they have nothing 1n common with the Turk, as he is understood in England except their Mohammedan faith. Very different are these men to thone who serve the sultan in the European or Asia.tic provinces, and it is but just to both that they _should be indiscriminately confounded in names. Turks there were in Egypt in the time of Mehemit Ali. Their presence and service was the essence of hie strength, and it was with their aeaistance · that he built up his p~wer and was able to bequeath a principality to his desc_endantl!. In was the policy, however, ?f his successors to get rid of this Turkish element or reduce it to a minimum in the government of the province seeing in it one of the strongest ties by which Egypt was bound to Turkey, and consequently a great ob.s tacle to the achieve. rilent of that independence which the heart of Said, e.s well as that of Ismail, so strongly longed for. It was a mi.etaken policy. The Turk, with his well-known :fidelity and courage, was set aside and the fellah, with his subtlety, unsc~upul ousnees, and cowardneas came in, leading to the advance of Arabi Pasha,"tlie born. bardment of Alexandria, the " battle or' Tel-el-Kebir, and all the other evils with which the land of the Pharaohs is no.t a~ain afili?ted, and for which England in history will be ma.de to beal\ the ones and the disgrace, unless by following the spirit of the national proclivities a11d tastes she stops in time and retrieves her fair name by generously admitting the errors so far committed and by ab once adopting the remedy which will boar out her professions of friendly intentions while consistently acting with due regard to her acknowledged just interests.-[Blackwood' 11 Magazine. ..._...._ ls A BIG SALE AT CHAS. M. CAWKER'S, AND A CONTINUOUS SALE. C. M. C. best goods. will continue to sell the CHRISTMAS MEATS C. M. C. will contiI'l.ue to sell the cheapest goods. C. M. C's stock is composed of the purest and best Teas, Sugars, Coffees, Soap, Vinegar, Syrup, Salt, Flour and C. M. Cawker has bought an ex Feed, Empire Horse and Cattle Food,. .traordinary steer from w. WERRY, Es~ :i Glasswarn and Crockery, Fresh and Cured Solina, breeder of ·pure Durham cattle. Meats, and everything that is kept in a first-class Grocery and Provision store. C. M. C. has bought from :&. C. M. C. will continve Cash for Farm Produce. to pay OSBORNE EsQ. , Clarke, four choice heifers which will be unsurpassed for quality. x C. M. C. returns his sincere thanks for past patronage and hopes to still merit the same. STAND :-:-Town Hall B'ld's, next to Ont. Bank. THIS SPA.CE BELONGS TO J. HIGGINBOTHAM. &SON, -PROPRI ETORS OF THE- Old Established and Reliable Drug Store. Polite Attention to all, Fair Dealing and our best endevors to please Are some of the methods by whfoh we hope to retain ____ ....... ____ LOWERING A BOAT AT SEA.. lnsures.,Safety for the Crew. all our old Inventive Gentu Makes a. Tackle that patrons and gain new ones. ~BUCHU~ ONE Of THE BEST Qneer Things in Fars. A boy not yet twelve years old is almost a weekly visitor at the New York eye and ear infirmary. "Well," said the aurist, as he saw him come in as usual one afternoon "what have you got in there this timaf' "Nawthin' but a bean," he drawled. The boy had fallen into the bad habit of putting such things into hie ears as shoe buttons, pieces of slate pencils and wads of paper. The aurist re· cently met with a remarkable illustration of this pernicious practice, which he related to a reporter of the New York Times: A young woman of twenty-three came to me so deaf that I could hardly mak4') her hear by shouting through a trumpet. After removing a great quantity of wax from her ear I found something metallic. "What's this1" I said. "Have you been putting something in your eari" "Oh dea·r, no,", she said. "I am not so foolish as that." Imagineher surprise when I pulled out a smooth, round brass button, with quite a large shank to it. "This seems to_ have been in there a good many years," l said. To my surprise the young woman crouch· ed. in the corner in undisguised terror. "0 doctor1" she said; "what is that aw· fol noiee1" It was nothing but a waggon rumbling by, but I instantly saw what the trouble was. Her hearing had, become normal when I removed that button, and· she was frightened and bewildered at the jumbleof confusing sound11. The ticking of the clock, chirping of the canary, or dripping of water distress· ed her, and the rustle of her own eilk dress made her start with fear. I sent one of the assistants home with her in a carriage, and he said that the clatter in the streets so distracted her that he was compelled to hold her in her seat. About a week afterward she came in again- "A..nd wanted that button put back again; I suppose¥" interrupted the report· er. · Oh no; she was brimming over with happiness, though for a day or two she was afraid to leave the house. But she told me about that button. "When I was about eight years old," she said, "I was sent to a villaae church in New England with my graii°dmother. The sermon was alwa,y s long, and I use<l ;:'::~'/ " ]8;.'. JCJD ~E Y" of the Ktdneys, Bladder, Prostatic Portion of the Urinary Organs, Irritation of the Neck of the Bladder, Burning Urine, Gleet, Gonorrhea in all its stages.i..1!fucous Discharges, Congestion of the .a;.idneys, Brick Dust Deposit, Diabetes, Inflammation of the Kidneys and Bladder, Dropsy of Kidneys, Acid Urine, Bloody Ur~~~J Pain in tlie Region of the Bladder, P A.Ll:'l IN THE BAOK, Urinary Calculus, Renal Calculus, Ho,nal Colic, Retention " Of Urine, FreQIJ<r~t Urination, Gravel In all its forms, -~~Qility to retain the Water particuJ.1?' ,J;1 persons advanced in life, IT IS A~ NEY INVESTIGATOR that restores tfte Urine to its natural ·color, removes the acid and burning and the effect of the excessive u.se of intoxicating ~ It is a specific in the cure of all diseases INVESTIGATORS IN USE. · .THE WAY IT WILL AFFECT YOU. ,,A' It e'<cites expectoration and causes the Jun gs to throw off the phlegm or mucous ; cl:ang-ct t lze secrd i"ons and p urifies tlr.e blood; heals the irri. ta ted parts; g ives strength to the dige3tive organs ; brings the liver to its proper action . and imparts ~trength to the whole system. - Suen IS T HE JMMEDIATE AND SATIS FACTOR Y EFFECT that it is warranted to break up tl.e 11:ost distrcssi11.g- cougft in a f ew flours time, i f not of too long st anding. GIV E l!:NTIRE i t is 'loar ran ted EVE N IN S A T ISFACTION, TO THR drink. ·. :r0 ~~~1~ar~1: ~i~~i1f~~lr!.end ~one Send to~ Circular. Sold b7 all J)rugglsts, ., Those who Price $1, or Six Bottles for $S." ~«1> obtain e. bottle of this AlllBHB'l'BV!ttl, Ont· ·~( Agents fl>r . W. JOHNSTON & ()0.tl ) I tho U; 8. and Canada. ., _ , DE'l'BOI'r, li!lch; It is ·u1arran.ted not to produce costiveness(most reme dies cause this trouble) or affect the head, a s it contains no opium in ~my form. I t is 'luar ranted to be p erfect ly learmlcsJ· to the mos t d elicate child, although it is a n active and powerful r emedy for restoring the system. T liere i s no ' 'eal n ecessit.Y'lo,,. so 11i any d eaths by Con su11tftion, when ALLEN'S L UNG EALSAr.·t will pn::veul iL if only taken in t~mc. T O Physician5' having consumptive patients, and who, having failed to cure them with their own medicine, we would r ecommend to give ALLJI N ' s.. LuN G B AL· SAM " trial S old b)' alt Dn1ggisls. 1mJ.st con.finned ca.scs of Cot1su111/Jt icm / A recent English invention seems to supply the demand for an apparatus which will lower boat at sea and reWe know our goods are the best lease it from the tackles automatically with perfect safety to the crew. A vertiin the market, and we are detercal hook is decured at the stem and another at the stern, the points of the two being inbcard. When the rings in the mined not to be undersold. We bottom of the tackle block are put iu the hooks they are locked there by pins that invite comparison and are noti: stick into the shanks or the hooks. A.. strong line runs from a small hook on the afraid to abide by the result. ring of the bow tackle to a similar hook on the ring of the stern mt'kle, and this line is kept taut by mea.ns of two eyes and a lanyard over the centre thwart, and thus, when the boat swings at the davits, the block rings have a slant toward the centre of t he boat. In case of need the boat's crew climb into the boat, steadying themselves by the fore and aft line. As the boat is lowered a stnin is brought on small lines running from the pins in the hooks to the davit guys, and the pins are drawn out, or they may be drawn out by hand. -NEW STOCK OFThe boat is lowered still further and ev· entually takes the water. If the wave lifts either end without taking the strain off of the opposite tackle the blocks will not be disengaged because the weight of the boat keeps a strain on the fore and aft line, but the moment the boat is lifted at both ends simultaneously the block ringc drop out, and the boat is clear, even though the wave is standing her almost on end.· CUSTOM WORK. got up , with best material and in first-class style a -CALL AND SEE- J. H " E LLYAR'S - FOR FALL WEAR.- THE BESJ THAT CAREFUL SELECTING. AND CASH CAN PROCURE. Good assortment of Trunks and Valises always on hand. After the Henroo~ts. HAINES' CARRIAGE -WORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, MANUFACTURER OF- OARRIACES, SLEICHS, CUTTERS, WAGONS, &C.~ KING STJtiEET, BOWMANVILLE, Bas now on hand a number of vehicles (and is manufacturing a great many morel of the newes.t patterns and beat finish, which I am offering for sale ~.t the lowest. prices consistent with due regard to workmanship and quality, Tho following is a list of the principal vehicles manufactured by me: Double Covered Carriages .................................................. .. $200 Upwards. Single Phretons ................................................................. 100 11 Open Buggy.................................. ................................... 70 11 Top Buggy ............................................................. .-.......... 90 11 Democrat Wagon...................................................... , .. .. . ·. .. 65 11 11 Lumber Wagons ................................... ; ..... .....................{.. 55 Light '\Vagon.............................................................. ....... 40 11 Express Wagon.................................................................. 75 11 Skeleton........................................................................... 50 11 As thieves the negroes in Barba.does are most expert, and burglaries are fre.- All quent, especially in the smaller houses. A kenroost it is almost impossible to preserve from them, and if they get into orte they will sweep it clean. Their mode of proceeding on such occasions is, I am told as follows: Having obtained an entry, they seize each bird from the perch, put its head under its wing, andwhirl the unfortunate fowl round and round in the air five or six times. The result of this (as I can testify) is that the bird remains torpid, and apparently lifeless, and is thus easily stowed away in a bag without danger of inconvenient cackling. Nor is it against their betters only that such e.b· iacksare directed, for they prey equally upon each other. Every night In Barba.does is ma.de hideous by the discharge of curious old firearms out of the windows of the shanties ae a warning that the inmates are on their guard.-[Macmillan's Maga· zine. ----~-·-------- will be sold as low as possible. Consistant with square dealing all around. Grocers' Due Bills taken as cash·for goods. We shall carry out fully what we advertise and strive to please our patrons. KING STREET, - Buckwheat Flour His Groceries _ar~ and Graham Flour. Fresh and Good. I .. BOWMANVILLE. Po~~~~!:; ~J~~;;~~· ;~~;!;;~;~·;~~·:~~~;~~~~;~~~ ~~;;;~~~~: ·~ ·;~;~~~·~~-~~;; ·;o:~heap ;or cash or credit, and by so doing I hope to greatly.increase my number of s&les. Would approv~ ~ sell the wood parts only, or the gearmgs of buggies ironed. All Kinds of Vehicles Repaired 1 At the Shortest Notice, Painted'fand Trimmed if Desired. .At the Factory I also do Planing, Matching, 1'urning and Sawing with Circle, Band or Sorol &wa, and prepare all kinds of lumber for carpenters and others for building purposes. Ornamen ta! and Plain Pickets for fences in every style required, made to order. 2!8 A new reporter was sent to investigate a rumor tha.t a. well known citizen had become insane. The nex t morning the fol· lowing paragraph appeared ~ the paper : "There was a roport yesterday that something was the matter mth JY,Er. Sander's' head. It is as sound asdt has always been. There is nothing in it." That reporter's career ended there and then. Who wae i;ne mosi; successful financier mentioned in the old testament? Noah because he successfully floated a limited company when all the rest of the world was in liquidation. ~M-~~ELLIO TT Try Elliott's 30c. TEA. Farmers' PRODUCE Choice Maple Syrup taken in exchange. and Sugar. Due Bills given. I

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