HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-09-30, Page 3THE WINGUAM TIME$, SEPTEM.DER 30, MO
3
THE FINEST LEAVES
From Ceylon Tea Plantations
ifs
1 It is packed in sealed lead pa s
to preserve its fine flavor nd
aroma. 3oc,, q.oc., 50c. and hoc
per pound. At all grocers.
are
contained
in
y�€ateven
heat Qwc*e-
SewejFreI
Make sure your new
range has a steel oven,
and " Pandora" name-
plate on the door. Go,
at once, to nearest
McClary Agency and
pick out size desired.
Pandora has a sheet steel
oven, because steel is more
sensitive to heat --absorbs it
faster -than cast iron does.
Pandora oven thus heats
quicker -less time required to
get oven ready for the baking
-which also means less fuel -
expense. ..
FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO., WINGHAM.
Made in Canad.
Is put up in rolls containing nails, tin caps and
Tcement. All you need in addition is a hammer.
his is only one of the many conveniences of
ttUBEROID ROOFING.
t la fire -resisting and weatherproof. i6 years
1� the roofs prove its durability.
$EROID is the original and standard
oth surfaced roofing.
to for samples and prices,
Call at office and see samples taken from a
roof, having been in use for the past•i8
years, and still in good condition.
1
J. As IVIcLean
SOLE AGENT FOR WINGHAM AND DISTRICT.
BLOOD DISEASES CURED'
Drs. K. & K. Established 20 Years.
IW"NO NAMES USED WITH-
OUT WRITTEN CONSENT
-He was surprised at how the
sores healed- "I took your Naw
METHOD TREATMENT fora serious blood
disease with which I had been inflicted
for twelve years. I had consulted ascore
of physicians, taken all kinds of blood
medicine, visited Not Springs and other
mineral water resorts, but only got tem-
porary relief. They would help Me for a
time, but after discontinuing the medi-
cines the symptoms would break out
again -running sores, blotches, rheum-
atic pains, looseness of the hair, swellings
of the glands, palms of the hands sealing,
itchiness of the skin dyspeptic stomach
N'1 ' p , AFTER TREATMENT
BEFORE TREATMS
etc. I had given up in despair when a
friend advised me to consult you, as you bad cured him of a similar disease 8 years ago.
I had no hope, but took his advice. In three weeks' time the sores commenced to heal up
and I became encouraged. I continued the Naw METHOD TREATMENT for our months and
at the end of that time every symptom had disappeared. 1 was cured 7 years ago and no
signs of any disease since. My boy,.three years old, is sound and healthy. 1 certainly
can recommend your treatment with all my heart, 'You can refer any person to me
privately, but you can use this testimonial as you wish:" W. 13, S.
We treat NERVOUS DEBILITY. VARiCOCEt STRICTURE, VITAL WEAKNESS,
BLOOD, SKiN and PRIVATE Diseases, URINARY, BLADDER and KIDNEY complaints
of Meir end Women
READEHEADER Are you a vletimr Have you lost hope? Are you lntending to marry? B'as
R fl Your blood been riiaeased? Have you any weakness? Our NEw METacn
TREATMENT will cure you. What It has dont, for others it Will do for you. Consultation
Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge.
Charges reasonable. Books Free -"The Golden Monitor," (Illustrated) on Diseases of Men.
NO NAMES .USED WITHOUT WRITTTEN.CONSENT. Everything canficle:1dd,
Question list and cost of Homs Treatment FREE.
DRs.KENNE[Y&KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave., and Griswold St„ Detroit, Mich.
THE SEEKER..
(Pall M811 Gazette 1
lost my love in the long ago.
Know ye, winds, where hia feet have
strayed?
O'er treatises wastes of the northern
snow,
Or south, where the fragrant breezes
blow,
By 11111 or valley, through mu or shade?
Say, hath he faltered endglenoed behind
Oh 1 y,e l,ay I find?
"Nay! bonds once broken no more shall bave
bind, followed, and n
Nor faith found wanting again be
weighed!"
I sought my love through the gates of
grief.
Watt, ye echoes, bis voice again!
Where the fading flower and the falling
leaf
Lament for summer too light and brief,
And earth is wet with the tears of .rain,
Shall 1 and him here when the grey day
dies?
"Not so!" a voice from the west low
sighs;
"A heart once freed to the sunlight flies;
Thy steps are weary ; thy search is
vain,"
I will wait my love on the bills afar -
Hide me, ye mists, should I faint or
fall! --
The hills of hope, where no shadows are;
I will guide my steps by the morning
star,
Though night still lingers and covers
all.
Ab 1 shall I greet him ere life be o'er,
Ur 'neath the portal of death's dim
door? -
Mine eyea shall watch, lest he Dome once
more;
My soul shall listen, and hear his call,
Subscribe for the Times
SOME UNDESIRABLE CITIZENS.
Often in humor and faoetiae there
are grains of truth, and the humor only
helps to make the truth palatable.
The following "hits," even if obvious
to all, may by repetition have some ef•
foot in calling the attention of unthink-
ing men to certain social and moral de-
fects in their daily conduct. There is
nothing more in it than a list of unde-
sirable oitizens:
The man who is always grunting and
growling and never says a pleasant
word about anything or anybody.
The man who sneaks off to his favor-
ite club or loafing place and only assoc•
iates with his wife and children when
he has to.
The man who thinks that rudeness is
a sign of independence.
The man who stirs up class hatred
among hie fellow citizens.
The man who pushes others aside in
order to get there first.
The man who is always running
down the churches and throwing sus-
picions upon their members.
The man who kioke every little dog
that crosses his path.
The man who never looks at the mor-
al side of a question.
The man who is always promising
never performing.
The mau who never has a bit of time
for anything except to make money.
The man who stands on the corner
and gawks at the women as they pass
by.
The man who doesaa piece of work
and does not do the best he can.
The man who is silent when a right.
eons cause is challenged.
The man who never pays a street oar
fare unlesa it is demanded of him.
The man who buys 10 -cent cigars for
himself and round steak for the family.
The man who puts all the blams on
the sohool teacher if his ohild is way-
ward or ignorant.
The Comfort of a Farm.
Writing recently to her papa who was
speaking during the hottest days in
August in far -away Missouri, little
Mary said: "Oh, daddy, you don't
know what a comfort the farm is," says
La Folette's Weekly. The comfort of
a farm, who that knows it would ex•
abango it :for Harriman's railroads or
Rookefeller's millions? How ranch less
comfort in stooks and bonds than in
a farm with fields of hay and corn and
oats ;and barley and potatoes; with a
garden which grows asparagus and let-
tuce and radishes and onions and peas
and beans and tomatoes and cabbages
and cucumbers and melons and straw-
berries and raspberries and currants and
gooseberries and blaokberriee and a few
grapevines„ with the prospeot of a few
bunches of grapes; with an orchard thea
has cherries and plums and apples and
pears; a farm with oowe and horses and
ponies that have little colts, and
with chickens and dacha? Oh, the
comfort of the farm in the spring
and in the summer and in the autumn
and in the winter. comfort when we
are here, comfort when We are away;
for there:is great comfort and peace in
just thinking about the farm. And
When the stress and strains are hardest,
though a thousand miles lie between, it
11 easy to stand on the porch and feel
the influence of the great old grape
Vine that covers it and Of the nearby
basswood arid the noble maple just far
enough away, and On the little grove on
the other side, and of the distant view
between. It it an Etnlnannei treat.
Ment; „the tension is loosened; body lend
Spirit relax. We know the comfort of
a fano.
The more *plata°
the last advice, the
Will be.
Magistrate F. Rasmussen, of 211)
Marquette Street, Montreal, writes
to the Zam-Buk Co. as follows:-
" Gentlernen,-For many years I was
troubled with a serious eruption of the
skin, which was not only unsightly, but
at times very painful. I first tried various
household remedies, but all these proved
altogether useless.
" I then took medical advice, -.t one,
but several doctors in turn were onsulted,
but I was unable to g an permanent
relief. Some time back I no ced a report
from a Justice of the Pc who had been
cured of a chronic skin -disease by
Zam-Buk, and I determined to give this
balm a trial.
"After a thoroughly fair test, I can say
I am delighted with it. I have the best
reasons for this conclusion ; because, while
everything else I tried-- salves, embroca-
tions, washes, soaps, and doctors' pre-
parations -failed absolutely to relieve my
pain and rid me of my trouble, three boxes
of Zam-Buk have worked a complete cure.
"In my opinion Zam-Buk should be
even more widely known than it is, and
I have no objection to you publishing this
letter,"
For eczema, eruptions, rashes, tetter,
itch, ringworm, and similar skin diseases,
Zam-Buis is without equal. It also cures
cuts, burns, scalds, piles, abscesses,
chronic sores, blood -poisoning, etc. All
druggists and stores at so cents a box, or
post free for price from the Zam-Buk Co.,
Toronto, '
PERT AND IMPERT.
And a flirt is usually her own re-
ward.
Your credit may be good but your
money is better.
A soft answer will not turn away the
man in love.
It's better to have a poor relation than
it is to be one,
A little learning is almost as danger -
one as a little widow.
A shiftless husband has developed
many a female financier.
Oar idea of a wise man is one who
doesn't dispense free advice.
A man's failure is always due to the
Mot that he didn't suoceed.
The long haired pianist is known by
his looks as well as by his keys.
If the average man doesn't get all
that's coming to him he is lucky.
The girl with sparkling eyes 18 apt
to poems a lot of blooming cheek.
People who set a good example never
know what it will hatch ont.
Love -making may not be as foolish
as it appears to disinterested persons.
It is easier for the average girl to
turn a young man's love than his pres-
ents.
The thing that others do not consider
worth going after comes to those who
Wait.
A word to the wise isn't always suf-
ficient. They usually want you to give
bond.
A chaperon is merely a fender for
keeping a girl from collisions with the
wrong man.
A man may be ambitions to enlighten
the world, but his real mission is to pay
his gas bills.
Many a frivolous woman twines her-
self about a man's heart for the purpose
of stringing him.
THE CiTY OF HE AIIT'S RELIGHT.
(5, F. moor.)
I found the City of Heart's Delight..
It's graceful towers were high and fair;
It's streets were white and its walls were
white,
No mobs were foolishly fighting there;
No useless noises of any kind
Disturbed nay nerves or my peace of
mind,
No noxions odors spread on the air.
Tbere wasn't a aidewalk in all the town
That was clogged with box or bucket
or orate;
No pipes and lie tracks were being put
down,
The streets were all in a passable state;
No stroke was tolling from any stank.
No public building was streaked with
black,
And every offloial was strictly
"straight."
No reokless drivers ignored the law,
No demagogues could be seen or heard;
Not one of the citizens whom I saw
Showed me lack of respect by look or
word,
I sat in a oar in the afternoon --
And awoke from my dreams, alas! too
soon,
When the fat man sitting beside me
attired.
SAD CASE OF DESTITUTION.
A pitiable ogee of destitution and
neglect came to the attention of the
people of Exeter last week.
Ed. Willis, while hunting in a lonely
part of Hay Swamp on Wednesday, aooi-
dentalIy came across a family, consisting
of husband, wife and one child, living
in a temporary wood -cutter's shack. The
surroundings were of the most depress-
ing nature, the interior being practically
void of the simplest necessities of life,
while the mother and child were almost
naked.
The circumstances were reported to
some charitably disposed persons in Ex-
eter, who immediately undertook steps
to bave them removed to more comfort-
able quarters, where they could be pro-
vided for and mother and child, who are
in a most delicate state of health, espe-
cially the child, who though 16 months
old, bas scarcely developed any, may re-
ceive medical attention.
The poor little creature is a most beau-
tiful child, and it is sad to oontraat its
present condition with well developed
and healthy children of the same age.
The authorities of Hay Township were
communicated with, and they immedi-
diately investigated the case, with the
result that provisions were made to have
them taken to Exeter, where, thanks to
Mrs. Saxon Fitton and other ladies, they
are comfortably settled in Exeter North.
Fortunate is the man who is finance,
ially short when some one comes along
with a gold brink for sale.
Quite frequently a Snenoier finds him -
telt in the sub cellar after trying to get
in on the ground floor.
According to anoient mythology, Or-
pheus went to hades to find a wife, but
some married men can't understand
why 1t was neoessary,
TOOK HER AT HER WORD.
There is a great deal of needless
trouble in the world on account of
squeamish sentiment.
A woman came into the general store
with a jar of britter, In ohurning her
butter she had dlsoovered a mouse in
the churn.
"I1 didn't injure the butter," she said
to the storekeeper "and to any one who
did not kilo* the circumstance it would
tote all right."
Taking the woman at her word, the
merohant marled her jar into the baok
room, transferred her butter to another
it roan gives and jar, and the gratified customer tot*
more popular he book the mouse batter with lA thousand
thanks for the a 000minod$tioil.
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles Inc!.
dent to a billow) state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nnuoua, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &c. While their most
remarkable success has 'been shown In curing
SICK
Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are
equally valuable In Constipation, curingaud pre-
venting this annoying complaint, while theyalso
correct alt disorders, orthestomach, stimn.atethe
liver and regulate the bowels. Even if theyonly
cured
EAD
Ache they would be almost prleelcs..to those who
suffer from this distresst gcomplaint; but fortu-
nately their goodness does not end here,andthose
who once try them will findthose little pills valu-
able in so many ways that they v:ill not bo wil-
ling to do without them. But after all sick head
ACHE
is the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
very easy to take. Oneer two pillsmake a dose.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
use them.
Wan IIEICIN1a CO -s 1tZW TC8t
Sma� rS1t :Miall Dom Small Irk
Erwell McNeill, a young bank clerk,
employed in the Traders' Bank at Em-
bro, was taken to Woodatook Hospital
Friday suffering from what may prove
a fatal revolver shot wound in the sto-
mach. He was examining a revolver in
his room over the bank when it was
accidently disehared.
eremersilWasseassairessisareseeseentararmessere
BE SURE AND SEE
TUB TRADE NARK'
. it The s.
LONDON, ONTARIO
Business & Shorthand
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-4- Black Point, N.13.
+ WEAK BACIt ♦ writes:"For years
FOR YEARS. I was troubled
with sneak back.
Oftentimes I have
laid in bed for
days, being scarcely able to turn myself
and I have also been a great sufferer
while trying to perform Iny household
duties. I had doctors attending me with-
out avail and tried liniments and plaster's,
but nothing seemed to do Inc any good.
I was about to give up is despair when
my husband induced me to try Doan'.
Kidney Pills, and after using two boxes
I am now well and able to do my work.
I am positive Doan's Kidney Ms are all
that you claim for them and I would
advise all kidney sufferers to give them A
fair trial."
Price, 5b cents per box, 3 boxes for
$1.25. At ell dcalerst orwill lie mailed
direct on receipt ofrice, by The T. Mil--
burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
In ordering specify "Doan's."
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a