The Wingham Times, 1909-10-14, Page 3SIE FINEST TEA
r r•i.
JHE WORLD �'RODUcS
`SALAD
Sold only in sealed lead packets.
At all grocers,
30c, 40c, 50c, and 6oc per pound.
A
/"
f4U
ooks on top of the
stove, bakes in
oven at same time
You can cook over every pot -hole
and bake in Pandora oven at same
time -and get perfect results. That's
because cooking draft is also baking
draft. Flues are so constructed that
heat passes directly under every
pot -hole and around oven twice
before passing up chimney. No
wasted heat -instead fuel does
double duty, saving Pandora owners
both time and money. 19
Would you not like to be a Pandora owner?
FOR SALE BY J. G. STEWART & CO., WINGHAM,
I
Made in Canada
to put up id rolls containing nails, tin caps and
cement. All you need in addition is a hammer.
his is only one of the many conveniences of
"BEROID ROOFING.
fire -resisting and weatherproof. 16 years
R7xhte roofs prole its durability.
BEkOjD ,. is the original and standard
oth surfaced roofing.
lite for samples and prices;
Call at office and see samples taken from a
roof, having,, been in use for the past 18
years, and still in good condition.
ars
J. A. (V1cL ean
SOLE AGENT FOR WINGHAM AND DISTRICT.
DRS.KENNECY&KENNEIY
CURE DISEASES OF MEN
PATIENTS TREATED THROUGHOUT CANADA FOR 20 YEARS
Dn. $EA'NEDY, MEDICAL DntElrroa
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HOME TREATMENTesonKIDNEY end BLADDER Diseases
and all Diseases Peculiar to Men.
DRs.KENNEDY&KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.
AmsommoommanomommemommoolionomomemovO
THk; WING/UM TIMES, OCTOBER 24, 1909.
RUSSIA RNA ROYAL1Y
A Shadow That Darkens the
Path of the Czars,
THE FEAR OF ASSASSINATION
Plots That Were Woven Around Ai
ander 11. and the Bomb That Sh
terod His Body -An Infernal Mach
That Failed,to Kill Alexander iII.
The shadow that falls across the p
of the czars may extend the wo
round. Wherever the ruler of a11.
Russias may happen to be, there
shadow of fear lies.
Once in Paris, once in the pal
gardens, Alexander IL was fired
Again lu the Winter Palace squ
one Solorieff, wearing the uniform
an official, passed the guards one d
and again the czar was fired up
Alexander ran for the palace. So
rieff followed him and fired th
times. The czar ran in zigzags, ho
ever, and so escaped, Not long aft
ward two mines were laid to blow,
the imperial train. One did not e
plode, but the second wrecked t
train. Once more the czar escape
Watching eyes had saved him, th
owners having persuaded the ruler
take another train,
Later Alexander 11, owed his life
the fact that he came late to a fun
tion at the palace. A bomb blew cle
out a large portion of the imperial re
dente, but the czar was not present.
But of all the attempts on the liv
of' Russia's rulers two stand out mo
clearly for their amazing ingenuit
One tells the story of a little unpr
tentious shop in Malaja Sadova
street. Iiobozeff, then unknown
the police, took the shop and set o
to impress the police, who were a
ways making sudden inspections
premises along the thorougbfar
through which Alexander I1. passe
that he was nothing but a provisio
dealer. Nearly every one in th
street was a paid spy, but Koboze
joked with his customers, pleased h
purveyors and was most affable an
apparently harmless.
The dealer inspired confidence, a
his custom increased gradually. N
wonder, for most of the parcels tha
his customers were carrying away b
day contained nothing but earth
earth that during the night hours ha
been scraped by the man and hi
wife from beneath the street! It wa
by such ingenious method that a tun
nel was hollowed and cleared unde
the thoroughfare and a mine laid be
neath the way the czar often passed
an innocent couch upon which th
housewife slept covering the entry t
the tunnel.
Yet all the work was useless. 0
the day .the scheme was to be carrie
out the czar -upset all the arrange
ments by going oil' to lunch with th
Grand Duchess Catherine Miehaelovna
Among those who were watching o
behalf of the terrorists was a beauti
fat girl -a countess, too -named P
rovskaya. It was she who, seeing th
altered arrangements, gave warning
The czar would return to the palace
another way. Along this route four
men carrying bombs were stationed.
One threw his. Men and horses were
killed all around, but the czar stepped
from his coach unscathed. A second
man holding a bomb came forward
and threw it. "This time the effect
was awful," says Waclaw Gasiorow-
ski, who describes the incident in his
book, "Tragic Russia." "The czar fell
as if cut by a scythe. His legs were
shattered to pieces." So died the czar
who had escaped as by a miracle
many times.
Alexander III. followed, and there
were attempts upon his life. The
fourth was one of the most sensa-
tional in the entire list of nihilist plots.
On a bright autumn day the impe-
rial train traveled at full speed on the
track well guarded by soldiers. It was
toward noon. The imperial family
were in the dining ear, where lunch
was about to be served. The cook and
his help were making the last prepara-
tions for it when an assistant was
taken ill.
The court physician attended the
man and, having stated that he had
fever, with symptoms of some inex=
plicabie ailment, decided that the man
could not remain in the imperial train,
and be was left at the next station.
The train moved forward toward
Borki, traveling at the speed of eighty
kilometers an hour. Then the elec..triadtrlbell notified the cook that the
Imperial family were ready for lunch-
eon, A few seconds after the bell
sounded a terrine noise was heard.
and a violent explosion `changed in the
twinkling of an eye the luxurious im-
perial train into a heap of broken
iron, of wrecked cars, of mutilated
corpses, enveloped in smoke aid made
all the more hawing by the moan -
Ing and cries for help of the Wounded.
Yet the czar escaped, The dining
room car that the nihilists had in-
tended should he a grave for the czar,
his family and his suit etreed him, for
although its roof and door were
wrecked LIM sides were preserved.
They inclined toward the center, prop-
ped each other like two cards and re-
inained in thet position, protecting
those who were there froth being
craatted.
The cook who had been put off the
train had wo'tked the what. Ing. tie
had plated in infernal mttfchine in ;st
time of anger and hed faked his Ill-
ness, ess, thud getting clear away.--1'hila-
,elphia Ledger,
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Nervy tarns ,ler beet to the tageerei.
'�1et--,Wnar�e,
4
CARTER'S
ITYLE
IVER
Flux.
_CIYRE
dent tok a bilho l ate of thosystembeuch 8
Dizziness, Nausea, Drees/eerie, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &e. While their most
remarkable success has been shelve la curing
SICK
8eadaehe, yet Carter a Little Liver Idle are
equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preo,
venting this annoying complaint, while they also
correct all disorders of the stomach, stimu.atethe
Aver and regulate the bowels. •Even if they only
cared
E
Acbothey would be almeset priceless to those who
suffer from this distressiug complaint; butfortu.
tholoncetryth mwillfindtLesolittlepillsYalu
able in so many ways that they v, Ill not bo wit.
ling to do without them, Butatterallelckhead
Ts the banACHE many
we make our great bost v Ourpills cureit where
others do net,
vCarter'sratooitae. tle Oneorlltwopillsmakee small dose
They aro strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please all who
UN them.
CIABTX3 IISDICIlln DD.■ i111W tosz.
Small El, Small Doul Small Prig
THINKING AND KICKING.
A recent issue of the "Creamery
Journal" states that the farmers of
Iowa are taking a epeotal interest in cow
testing. To quote a vigorous editorial,
"An intellectual bomb has exploded,
farmers are thinking. Hundreds are
kinking themselves for having so long
fooled away their time and effort and
money chasing the dual-purpose non-
sense phantom. Breeders of dairy
cattle are simply swamped with busi-
ness. Dealers in dairy utensils report
whirlwind sales of scales and Bab000k
teeters,'.' 1
Farmers of Canada, are you going to
let farmers of adjoining states beat you
in advanced dairy thought given to cow
testing, and in resultant business -like
notion? One main objeot of testing in-
dtvfdnal cows is to ascertain what differ.
ence there is between the product or
profit of a good now and a poor one.
If our poorest cows were known they
would gniokly be discarded because
there ban be no objeot in retaining them.
The trouble is that they are not known.
Often the poor ones are believed to be
good. They will be deteoted only when
records are kept. A more oarefnl study
of feeding, and some associated plan of
breeding from good pure bred sires will
work wonders in improving cows on
Canadian farms. Cow testing associa-
tions sheet exist by the hundred, every
county needs several, they were never
more needed than at present. Who owns
the best oow in your county?
Ottawa, September, 1909. 0 F. W.
Free Mustard.
James Russell Lowell said, "All dea-
cons are good, but there are odds in
deacons," and it may be added that
there are odds in other varieties of
men.
Squire Blank was not only the rich-
est man in his village, but the stingi-
est as well. Nothing gave him such
keen delight as to get something for
nothing, One day he and several of
his neighbors had been in conference
with a manufacturer who contem-
plated establishing a mill in the town.
The conference was held in the one
store of the village, and at its close
the manufacturer stepped up to a
showcase containing cigars and said:
"Have a cigar, gentlemen."
All the men selected a cigar except
.Squire Blank. He did not smoke.
Therefore he said:
"Thank you, sir, but I don't smoke.
But as the cigars are a dime apiece
I'll take a dime's worth o' mustard If
you say so."
Of course the astonished gentleman
"said so," and the Squire went home
jubilant over "a hull half pound d'
mustard that never cost me a red
cent"
C onstpatton
Constipation is caused by the eating
of indigestible food, irregular habits,
the use of stimulants, spices and as-
tringent food, and strong drastic pur-
gatives, which destroy the tone of the
stomach and the contractile of the lower
bowel; therefore, when the liver is in-
active, and failing to secrete bile in
sufficient quantity, constipation is sure
to follow, and after constipation cone
piles, one of the most annoying troubles
one can have.
MILBURN'S LAXA•LIYER PILLS
cure all troubles arising from the liver.
Miss Mary Burgoyne, Kiegselear,
w•tites:--"I have used 1dilburn'e Laxa-
Liver Pills for constipation and have
found them to be an excellent remedy for
the complaint,"
Miss Annie Mingo Onslow, N.B,,
writes: -"A friend advised me to use
Milbern's Laxa-Liver fills for eonstipa-
tion, I used three and a half vialb and
am egmpletely cured."
Price 25 cents per visit or 5 for $1.00,
at till dealers or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont,
PURVEYORS TO ROYALTY.
Their Signs Constitute One of the
Sights of London,
The American in London, on his Arse
visit to tbat ,Marvelous city, is struck
by the number of signs over shops
With the royal arms painted thereon
and announcing that the tradesman
is a purveyor to their majesties. Yet,
when the matter is sifted, the number
is not so large,
Officially, according to the London
News, there are about 200 tradesmen
In London who hold the royal warrant
and are entitled to use the royal ,arms
as a shop sign, with the accompanying
words, "By royal appointment." The
royal warrant has to be received,
signed and sealed in _due form; other-
wise, if a tradesman styles himself a
purveyor to a member of the royal
family without this formai permission,
he is guilty of an offense which le
punishable by a fine not exceeding'
120. Moreover, be is liable to a elm!,
Jar fine if he uses arms so pearly re-
sembling the royal arms as to4,1ead
people to believe that he is carrying on
his business under the authority of
royalty, Several instances have occur-
red of the enforcement of these penal,
ties.
The warrants are exhibited in the
shop windows, headed by the royal
arras and bearing the signature of
the lord chamberlain, the comptroller
of the royal household, the treasurer
of the latter, or of the master of the
horse, etc., according to the circum-
stances.
SMOKING A PiPE. -
It Is Said to Give the Face a $quare
Jawed Effect.
"There is one question i always ask
a man who wants a job," remarked
the business man who bas to hire sev-
eral hundred men for different posi-
tions eaeh year.
"Tbe question 1 always ask them is,
`Do you smoke a pipe much?' Of
course the answers are various. Some
of them smoke a pipe a great deal and
others not at all.
"Why do 1 ask about the pipe? Well,
not that 1 bare the least interest in
their habits or that I have any preju-
dice one way or another in the mat-
ter.
atter. The reason is that I want to
know whether the formation of their
lower jaws is natural or acquired.
"A. man with a firm lower jaw is al-
ways a man of parts and of will. I
say 'always' -anyway, most always. If
he does not smoke a pipe his square
jaw, back near where it hinges on to
the upper one, is natural. 1f be is a
pipe smoker the looks are deceiving,
and I have to judge his caliber some
other way.
"Pipe smokers always have strong
muscles back on the face about the
place a man stops when he makes the
first stroke downward in shaving.
These are the muscles that hold the
jaws together. They often give a
square jawed effect to a . man who
hasn't any square jaw characteristics,
My men think I ask funny questions,
but there's a reason." -New Yorll
Times.
British and German Physique.
Ten millions of our people inhabit
dwellings inferior to the kennels pro
vided for the hounds in a well man
aged hunt. The results of 'living in
dwellings unfit for human habitation
and the prevalence of a dietary scall
from which English meat, bread and
milk are excluded are fatal to success
ful rivalry with a virile and healthy
race where agriculture is fostered fol
strategical reasons.
Having spent hours in watching th4
arrival of the early morning trains in
Berlin and Hamburg, I am appalled
with the contrast between the vigor
ous and well set up, broad chested and
healthy looking clerks, brawny shop -
men and stalwart laborers on the oth-
er side of the North sea and the chem•
pagne shouldered, cow hocked. pigeon
chested, lack luster trainfuls of men
of the same classes landed at Liver-
pool street. Victoria and Charing Cross,
-Arnold White in London World.
He Studied it.
H. Rider Haggard in. "A Winter Pil-
grimage" tells this anecdote:
"When I was a 'soaring human boy'
my father took me up the Rhine by
boat with the hope and expectation
that my mind would be improved by
contemplating its lovely and historic
banks. Wearying of this feast very
soon, I slipped down to the cabin to
enjoy one more congenial, that of 'Rob-
inson Crusoe.' But some family trai-
tor betrayed me, and, protesting even
with tears that I hated views, I was
dragged to the deck again. '1 have
paid 6 thalers,' shouted mi justly in-
dignant parent as be hauled me up
the steamer stairs, 'for you to study
the Rhine scenery, and, whether you
like it or not, young man, study it you
shall; "
Much Married.
The following, taken from "Evelyn';
Diary," refers to a Dutchwoman Who
lived in the seventeenth century: "To•
wards the end of August 1 returned to
Heerlen* They showed us a cottage
where, they told no, dwelt a woman
who had been married to her twenty-
fifth husband and, being now a widow.
was prohibited to marry in the future,
yet it valid not be proved that she
had ever made away with any of her
hatbands, though the suspicion had
brought her divers times into trouble."
Spiteful.
Deer Creature (speaking tnetaphotie•
ally)--Tbat' absurd MMId Forsyth Can't
see an inch beyond her nose.
The Other near Creature ispenklug
spitefully). -Perhaps she is dazzled by
its brilliance.
The publle Man needs but one patron
-namely, the lueky mom'ent.--Sulwer. ii
iiimM�A•Mlil•iM 411Rt1AM
itimillentionmeremanallegralostaleiseromilleMP
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