HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-04-06, Page 34
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REASON N9
• WHY YOU SHOULD USE
Rose
Te a
Because it is Recommended by the Best Grocers.
You will generally find Red Rose 'rea in a store
which deals in standard brands of high-class goods.
These are the merchants who do not look for goods
which give them the largest profit, because it pays theta
best to sell goods which are the most reliable and give
their customers the greatest satisfaction.
Ask a grocer of this kind his opinion of Red Rose
Tea—his opinion will be honest, because nearly all other
teas pay him a larger profit than Red Rose. He
probably uses it in his own house, and will tell you in a
very few words why he recommends it.
T. II. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B.
BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
Empress of the Kitchen.
(Chicago Record -Herald.)
No more curling wreaths for papa—
Cook dislikes tobacco smoke;
We must have our den refurnished,
For she can't stand Flemish oak;
We have put away the dishes
That we had before she came,
For she doesn't like the roses
That are painted on the same.
We've decided to send Willie
Off to hoarding school somewhere,
For she claims it makes her nervous
To see boys with curly hair;
We have corn cakes every morning,
Though I've never liked that kind;
But she says that she prefers them,
So it's not for us to mind.
Wo are trying a new coffee—
She disliked the other brand ;
For her benefit we're taking
All our vegetables canned.
I have ceased to reach the office
Ere the middle of the day—
Anything if she will only
Promise not to go away.
A deputation of retail merchants will
ask Premier Whitney for legislation re-
ducing the Division Wirt fees charged
for the collection of small debts.
Mrs. Chadwick, the swindler, was sen-
tence d to ten years in the State peniten-
tiary. Her attorneys will ask for a re-
view before the United States Circuit
Court of Appeals.
An economical young lady who does
not live a thousand miles from Clifford,
wrote her own wedding invitations re-
cently and got it "your presents is re-
quired." She wasn't making.very much
of a mistake after all, but is is consider-
ed very bad form to put it just that way,
A quiet wedding took place on the
10th concession of Carrick, on Tuesday
afternccn of last week, when Mr. Ezra
Reuber was united in the holy bonds .,of
matrimony to Miss Martha Dipple,
daughterof
g the late D. Dippel, The
ceremony was performed by Rev. D.
Rieder, to the persence of only a few
intimate friends.
OIL OF P/': ES
The Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age.
As a • cure for Catarrh of the }read, Throat,
Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs,
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines stands unsurpassed by
any other known remedy.
Oil of Pines is the most speedy cure known to
medical science for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bron-
chitis, Grippe, and all Catarrhal Diseases.
BEWARE of that most dreaded disease heir to the
human system, CATARRH ! Allow your lungs to
becomeweak and diseased, your kidneys to become
diseased. and your back lame and sore, your liver
and bowels deranged. These conditions leadto the most
fatal of all diseases, CATARRH. The eyes begin to grow
dim, the pulse fails, the wholesome stream of our blood is
choked and troubled, the limbs begin to decay like sapless sea-
weed in a summer's sun ; our better views of existence are
past and gone ; what remains is the dream of lost happiness or
the fear of inevitable evil.
But remember, SUFFERER, that the wonderful and
never -failing curative powers of that sovereign remedy, OIL
OF PINES, has completely cured thousands of cases as above
described. Therefore, upon the first evident symptoms of this
dreaded disease, CATARRH, make haste and procure a bottle
of the sovereign' remedy called OIL OF PINES.
OIL OF PINES is not:only a never -failing cure, !but also a sure preventive.
Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. Do not delay or
trifle, where so much is at stake. It means yonr further health and happiness.
PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no
narcotics, no alcohol of any description.
OIL OF PINES is not taken by teaspoonfuls or tablespoonfuls, The dose is
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contains three times the number of closes
to that contained in any other dollar bottle of medicine offered for sale.
The reason the name " Oil of Pines •' was chosen for this sovereign remedy
is because the oil from four different species of the pine make up the main body of
the remedy. Compounded the Pine is the oils and juices taken from nine different
plants and roots which grow in foreign countries.
Some remarkable cares effected by the never -failing Curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines
To Prof. 0, M. Dykes, HensalI, Ont., manufacturer of Medicine called
Oil of Pines: --
Dear Sir :—I feel it my duty to give you the following testimonial.
I have been a severe sufferer from Asthma and Bronchitis since my in-
fancy, and have tried anything and everything I could hear tell of, but
to no avail. I purchased a treatment of your remedy called 011 of
Pines. I had not taken the medicine over a week before the symptoms
of my ailments Were speedily leaving me and I found myself in far bet-
ter health, The Bronchitis has completely left me. My little girl, who
is now 9 years Gild bas suffered from Bronchitis since she was a baby in
my arms, she else took the Oil and it has given the desired results. 1
consider your Oil of Pines as the best known remedy today for the ail-
ments mentioned, I would urge anyone suffering with Eronchitis or
Asthma to go at once to the drug store and purchase a treatment of Oil
of Pines. Yours gratefully, Mrs. J. Moserip,
Town of 13lanshard, County Perth, Rannoch, Ont.
Price $1,00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.00.
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES.
•
N, B. --.If your storekeeper or druggist does not ha r die Oil address orders to
Prof, O. M. Dykes, Hendall, Ont., Proprietor and Manufacturer. .M1 orders
prontptly filled and forwarded to all parts of 'U. S. and Canada upon receipt of
pprice. Aak for Prof. Dykes' "Oil of Penes,"' and take NO :SUBSTITUTE. Prof.
Dykes' is the one original and genuine.
Retail Druggists can be sOpp11ed direct hem Prof. Dykes' Laboratory at
iiensall, or from Wholesale Druggists sat London, Canada.
ullii....11
111 14., W1NGIIAUi TIES,
The Low r Anin►aIa.
Animals have keen perceptions—.
keener in many ref/Kate than our owl
—but they form no conceptions, have
no powers of comparing one thing with
another. They live entirely in and
through their senses, To all that inner
r world of roilectiou, imagination, coni-
parison, reason, they are sti'angerg.
They never return upon themselves in
thought. They have sense memory,
sense intelligeuce, And they profit in
many ways by experience, but they
have trot soul memory or rational intel-
ligence. All the fundamental 'emotions
and appetites men and the lower ani-
mals sllare iu cotumon, such as fear,
anger, love, hunger, jealousy, cunning,
pride, curiosity, play, but the world oe
thought and thought experience and
the emotions that go with it belong to
man alone, It is as if the psychic world
were divided into two planes, one
above the other, the plane of sense and
the plane of spirit. In the plane of
sense lire the lower animals, only now'
and then just breaking for a moment
auto the higher plane. In the world Of
sense man is immersed also. This Ls
his start and foundation, but he rises
into the place of spirit, and here lives
his proper life. He is emancipated
from sense in a way that beasts are
not.
mite Evergladex.
The climate if the Everglades of
Florida is almost faultless. It is singu-
larly equable, showing no extremes of
beat and cold and not subject to sud-
den change, Even a "norther," coming
out of the region of ice and snow, is
soon softened to milder temperature,
and the heat of summer is made genial,
though the mercury may be well up in
the eighties, by the ozouized air which
Is everywhere in the glades. The year
is divided into the dry and rainy sea-
sons. The latter may be roughly spo-
ken of as including June and Septem-
ber, although well in the glades sud-
den light showers in limited areas are
likely at any season, and in the autumn
a high degree of humidity is constant.
A lifetime might be spent in the region
and no sign of malaria ever be discov-
ered. Pure air that moves in gentle
breezes over a vast expanse of pure
water is the perfect assurance of
health, as evinced in the fine physique,
splendid coloring and athletic vigor of
the Seminole, who has a monopoly of
as fine a climate as there is on earth.—
Century.
The Wrong Spirit.
The president t of the New York Nor-
mal college was addressing a band of
young women. "Young women," he
said, "generally make excellent teach-
ers. But if you dislike the work tura
to anything else but teaching. We
cannot succeed ever in wbat•e
n hate.
Bad teachers, when we find them, are
persons who dislike their work, They
are like the young girl in the country
town who said to oue of her friends:
"`Yes, I am going to take up teach-
ing'
"The friend looked amazed. 'You?'
she exclaimed. 'You a schoolteacher?
Why, I'd rather marry a widower with
nine children.'
" `So would I,' said the other. `But
where is tire widower?' "—New York
Tribune.
Origin of the 13anio.
In the early part of the nineteenth
century in the town of Banjoemas, on
the island of Tava, a negro native de-
termined to construct a musical instru-
ment for his own use. Taking a cheese
box and heading it with a goatskin, he
ran a brindle through it, and, adapting
violin strings tuned to the sant, third,
fifth and eighth notes of an octave, he
christened it a banjo, from the first
two syllables of his native town. Grad-
uaI improvements ou this rough and
ready instrument were made, and about
the middle of the century it crossed the
Atlantic and, though unpopular in Lon-
don at first, soon became web liked.—
London Chronicle.
"r=angh While You Can."
Hogg left Eton in 18G3, about which
time he met Ruskin for a memorable
moment. He bad run into a room
where lits sister was painting under
Ruskin's eye. Ise did not notice Rus-
kin, but went to his sister and made
some laughing remark to her. "You
had better laugh while you can," said
Ruskin, "for every year you live you
will become more and more miserable."
--From "Life of Quilptin Hogg."
intemperate Tea Drinking.
In this age of mental tension, high
pressure and overstrain tea is felt to
be doing much to overstock our luua-
tic asylums. There can be little doubt
that tea drinking is a Corm of intem-
perance in these days, anational and
female intoxication second only to that
of strong drink and in some respects
perhaps even more injurious. -Family
Doctor.
Conceited.
Lyles—Did you ever come across a
more conceited fellow than Bulger?
They say he is an atheist, and I be-
lieve he is. Bonter--I wouldn't like to
go so far as that, but I know that he
doesn't recognize the existence of a Su-
perior being.—Town and Country.
A Mean Suggestion.
"ton know," said bliss I(reeeh after
her solo, "1 intend to go abroad to lin.
Ish my musical education"
"Why not finish it right now," Sug-
gested Miss Cadley, "and save the ex-
pense?"—Philadelphia Ledget.
roe (instance.
"iucy " asked the teacher, "what is
the meaning of 'auccinct4'
"ft means short, ma'afnl"
"A, rabbit has a succinct tall."•-.Chl-
eago Tribune.
APRIL 6, 1905
Tlie King of Terrors
Is Consumption.
And Consumption el caused by neglect.
tag to cure the dangerous Coughs
end Colds.
The balsamic odor of the newly
cut pine heals and invigorates the
lungs, and even consumptives int -
prove and revive amid the perfume
of the pines, This fact has long
been lcnowb to physicians, but the
essential healing priuciple of the
pine has never before been separ.
ated and refined as it is in
DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP.
It combines the life-giving lung.
healing virtue of the Norway Pine
with other absorbent, expectorant
and soothing herbs and Balsams.
It cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarse-
ness, Brouchitis, and all affections
of the bronchial tubes and air pas-
sages. Mrs, M. B. Lisle, Eagle
Head, N.3., writes :—I have used
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup for
coughs and think itis a fine remedy,
the best we have ever used. A num-
ber of people here have great faith
in it as it cures every time.
Price 25 rents per bottle.
In the removal by death of Mr'.
AIexander Graham, on March 7th at the
advanced age of 82 years, another of the
pioneers of Kinloss has passed away from
earthly scenes. Mrs. Graham whose
maiden name was Ann Tolmie, was born
in Inverness, Scotland in 1822, and when
22 years of age was ,married to Mr.
Alexander Graham. They lived in
Rossshire for a few years, then immi
grated to Canada, residing In Lobo town-
ship about four years, after which they
• removed to Kinloss township, con. 1, lot
47, where they spent the rest of their
days. After the death of her husband,
in 1802 Mrs. Graham was not able to go
much from home.
rte read.. i5 too long to the man Oho ,
sdvaneee deliberated. and, WithOut Un-
dne httete.Airuyerq ;10,0iostiorod
SOURCE OF SUPPLY POISONED.
An Alarming Condition Present in Many
Places in Canada. How Best to Correct it.
Many people all over the Dominion
are being poisoned slowly but surely,
and that by their own carelessness.
The food may be pure, but digestion
is not complete, and all that is not di-
gested rots and ferments, giving off the
nioet violent poisons. What was intend-
ed to sustain life really turns into that
which destroys life.
The temperature of the body is a Iittie
over 08 degrees. Every particle of un-
digested food Iles in the stomach and
bowele, subject' to this temperature,
which is as high as in the sun on a hot
summer day. It is not necessary to ex-
plaiu how quickly such heat will decom-
pose dead matter, either animal or ve, e -
table.
The stomach and bowels mast be set
right—Anti-Pill will do it. Dr. Leon-
hardt made his Anti -Pill specially to fit
these conditions, and it has never failed
when given a fair trial.
50 cents. All druggists, or The Wil-
son-Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls,
Ont. Sole agents for Canada.
An advertisement in a daily paper
states that 800 teachers will be required
in the Northwest. This gives some idea
of the demand there is for teachers, and
shows why so many Ontario teachers
are going west. At present Ontario lst
and 2nd class teachers are rocoguized
anywhere in the west, and as the west
will not be able to supply its own teach-
ers for some time, these certificates will
likely be recognized for a good while
before the prairie provinces feel disposed
to "protect" its native industry. With
the rapid developement of the west, will
follow a continuous demand for teachers,
so thrli the day of extremely low salary
is over. Every Modelite who attended
Clinton sebool at its last model term,
and is old enough to teach has a school.
How
Do
You
Know?
Now do you judge
crackers ? By their crackling
crispness --their snowy light-
ness --their appetising delici-
ousness ? 'That's the way to
judge
7'
Measure them by quality's
g standard and they cote 100
per cent. If you haven't tried
MOONEY'S, you've illissed
I a. ttYAt in crackers.
Moorkey's
Perfection
Cream Sodas
I,awlnl Aeht 11,egu11y Colleeteli.
When Mike left the employ of Broth
er Rubbles, who keeps a eouatry stor
and also "farms it" 1n Washington
county, Me., be owed a considerable
balance to l3rotber Rubbles. Mike
seemed quite willing to forget about it
but more intimate acquaintances o
Brother Rubbles never lost faith that
the account would be squared in due
time.
After Brother Rubbles had ceased
even to drop gentle hints about the
little bill Mike became the owner of a
sinfile lurty hog, of which he was it
ordinately proud. Ile bragged abou
it unceasingly, and Brother Rubbles
made a friendly call one day to see it
and praised the hog in a way that de
lighted the heart of the lucky owner.
"Can't see how ye got him so fat,
Mike," said Brother Rubbles. "Mine
don't fill out that way. I guess it
takes an Irishman to bring up a pig."
Then after a pause Brother Rubbles
added: "I've got a shote I'll give ye if
you want it. I should like to see what
ye can do with my stock."
There is an old saying that sets
forth the danger of trusting the Greeks
even when they offer gifts, but Mike
bad never heard it At the first op.
portunity he went over to Brother
Rubbles' barn and brought away the
sorriest looking slu.:o that ever lived.
The next day Brother Rubbles "lev-
ied" on the big hog. The law would
not have permitted him to do that so
long as Mike was the owner of only
one pig.
a
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• • FOR •
IAMOND
' " ". PERFECT •
c•
HOME
• • DYE •..
DYEING.
•s
EASY TO USE, BRIGHTEST AND BEST.
#
# ASK FOR THE "D1A111OND." #
i• : AU Druggists and Dealers. TAKE NO OTHERS. t
t •i•iiiii•••iii•••i•••••••••i+iii•••iiii•ii•iii••••
Ocean Streams.
The fresh inflow of salt water from
the Arctic seas which mingles with the
inflow of the rivers produces in the
regions of the north and east of the
New Siberian archipelago a vast cold,
clearing out current, wbich carries be-
fore It all the fragments of the central
ice field, forming thus a mighty drift
toward the easteiln coast of Green-
land. This cold current bears along on
its surface floes, ice fields, icebergs,
hummocks, etc., and washes up along
the Greenland coast an almost insuper-
able barrier. When this current
reaches Cape Farewell it divides, 'one
portion descending straight toward
Newfoundland, while the other goes
to increase the current in Baffin's bay
and Hudson strait. It is this last
mentioned current which carries ice-
bergs even down to the latitude of
Vigo, and its power plays an important
and capricious part in the meteorology
of Europe.
Timely Advice.
When a certain financial panic broke
out the senior editor of a trade journal
published in the interests of business
men and financiers was on a visit to
a mining tow
u, Fearful lest his junior
in the office at home might give edi-
torial utterance to pessimistic views
and weaken public confidence still fur-
ther, he hastened to a telegraph office
and dispatched a brief message of ad-
vice.
It happened that, the junior partner
on this particular day had just become
the father of a pair of fine twin boys.
While his friends in the office were
congratulating him upon this event a
messenger entered with a telegram.
He opened it and read the following
message from the senior partner:
Dear George—Things look blue, but they
will brighten up soon. Take a cheerful
view of the situation. IIIRAM.
The Great American Novel.
The great American novel, of which
so much was once heard, does not
come, but the work is gradually being
written in departments. The country
is too vast, as the novelists have per-
haps seen, for one novel to cover the
ground as they used to hope. They are,
therefore, specializing, and some of
them are writing so conscientiously
and observing so web that those of our
own practitioners whose tendency is to
repeat a convention rather than return
afresh to life with each book ought to
be feeling uncomfortable. -- London
Times.
An Apology.
An excited military man entered the
editorial sanctum of the Odessa (Mo.)
Democrat, exclaiming: "That notice of
my death is false, sir( I will horse-
whip you within an inch of your life,
sir, if you don't apologize in your nest
issue." The editor inserted the follow-
ing the next day: "We regret extreme.
ly to announce that the paragraph,
which stated that Major Blazer was
dead is without foundation."
A Polite Necessity.
"Your daughter is highly accom-
plished."
"Well," answered Mrs. Cumrox, "she
knows a great deal about English liter•
ature and can speak several languages,
but I wish I could hire somebody ti
teach her lust what slang it is proper
to use in fashionable society,"—Wash-
ington Stat.
Freaks et Fate.
"There goes Tuffnut, the pugilist
Under' other circumstances he might
have trade a success of a very diftereal
kind."
"No doubt With a fair tenor voice
and his peculiar system of fighting he
would have made a tremendous sucees9
on the opera stage."—New York Press.
Tilt Trost en t)ectors,
Y• awle---When you come to think of it
it's really remarkable how many people
trust a doctor. Crosby—Yes, But
don't you think it's even more Wonder•
ful how many people a doctor trusts?
Not Gi.ttty.
"One of you boys has been stealing
raisins again. t have found the seed
on the floor, Which one of you wall
It?' Tommy ---It Wasn't inc. I swat•
lowed the seeds in mine.
It would be a much More progressive
world if pre economized the time 'etre
give to other people's bueinesfl.041 .
F liG sows
There is probably no greater loss in the management of hogs than
at farrowing time. Many a breeder complains of sows eating their litter
and don't know that this is due to bad feeding. Lots of pig -eating sows
o would never have developed this bad habit if they had been rightly
feed before farrowing. By the time the sow farrows she is in a much
fevered and constipated condition, which ^reates a litter eating
appetite. This can, ut ,almost every instance, be gotten over if the
digestive organs are kept free and open by feeding Clydesdale Stock
Food accordi.tg to directions. The flow of milk of the sow is increased
by the help it gives digestion. Milk is the direct product of the digest-
ed food. The greater the flow of Milk the greater the growth and profit
of the litter. If you want to farrow the most and best pigs ; pigs that
have a chance to live, and become money makers, use Clydesdale Stock
Food before and after farrowing. Mr. A. Newell Kilbride, Ont., says :
Pigs have never done better with me than those I fed Clydesdale
Stock Food to." -Runts" can be made moneymakers by using it. Mr.
Donald McDougal, Harriston, Out., says : **I had six ' runt' pigs to
which I fed your food, and now they are as good as any pigs I have."
Carboline Antiseptic will keep your pigs and pens clean of vermin,
making them do better, If you find Clydesdale Stock Food, and other
preparations, do not give satisfaction, your money will be cheerfully
refunded by our dealer, Sold in your district by the following :
L
Wm. Gannett, Wingham.
Andrew & Webster, Lucknow.
M. S. Haldenby, Teeswater, •
Wilton & Turnbull, Brussels.
J. G. Moser, Blyth.
1
^1�"�nY•Oi�a��0t�i•�Oi riv4+10O d,9DYi1 J'v tY�Y �.�''i. 9'Y 1� O{�)
A Coiled Spring Wire Fence El
With large, stiff stay wires, slakes a perfect fence o)
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•
•
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Not one pound of soft wire enters into the construction of
THE FROST. The uprights are immovably locked to the
running wires with THE FROST WEDGE -LOCK, making an
absolutely Stock -proof Fence. The Locks biud without kinking
or crimping either the stays or lateral Wires. Will not slip, and our
new method of enamelling and baking prevents rust, which adds greatly
to the appearance of the fence. Make no mistake. Buy THE FROST.
It is the heaviest and the best. For sale by
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`: J. W. MOWERAY, White Church;
ra,ayieratase ea..eateleweraemear?{S:rfll;'n jferaBEM rz? ^ .si g
REST'
RED EVANH
The New Method Treatment of Drs.
K. & ia. has restored thousands of weak,
diseased sten to robust nianliocel. No
matter how many doctors have failed to
cure you, give our ttcatmeut a fair trial
and 3 ou wi:l never regret it. We guar.
nntee a:1 cares we a'cept for treatment,
Not a dollar need be paid =less cured
for you can pay niter you are cured.
Drs. K. & i. estah,6l1. d 25 veare.
We treat Varicoceie, Nervous Debit.
ity, Stricture, Blood Diseases, Kidney
l4:adder and Urinary Diseases. If un-
able t., call, write for Question Blank for
Home Treatment. Consultation Free.
' NOT A lOOLLAR NEED BE
PAID UNLESS CURED.
DRcll KENNEDY mai I% 11U 1 148 ShelbYDetroit,M MiStrch.
►�1ld•I11,1.11,iJiJI111.]II14WIoil kin,d1!,a,.i.,iooad!f�s aY .�(Iltlii
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MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
e
Tie Times
Jo Deartment
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Oar perialit nes.
COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOB WORK
VISITING LARDS ENVELOPES
THE TIMES
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $I.00 per
year in advance—sent to any address
in Canada or the United States.
An advertisement In the Time9 brings good results
Address all communications to—
Tilt
(Mike phone, No. 4. WI'V(:illi'if Obi T.
xiestaenee Phone, No.74, y