HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-04-20, Page 3REASON N2 1
WHY YOU SHOULD USE
Because no premiums, prizes or coupons are ever given
with Red Rose Tea, either to the merchant,
clerk or consumer.
You don't get a premium with a pound of butter.
Why ? Because the butter is worth what you pay for
it, Just so with Red Rose Tea; the tea itself is worth
the full price.
A pound of tea is not worth the price when a
premium is thrown in free. A premium costs some-
thing. You must pay for it.
If you are doubtful, use a pound of premium tea.
then try a pound of Red Rose. You will soon discover
why premiums cannot be given with Red Rose Tea, and
if you like a rieli, tiavory, pure tea, you will use Red
Rose in future.
T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N. B.
BRANCHES : TORONTO WINNIPEG.
Sentence Sermons.
a t. hien go Tribune.)
Triflers miss the truth.
To -day is the root of forever.
The firm in faith never stand still.
Saints are more than pickled sermons.
The pure in heart never stop to think
about it.
Dwarflike sins often have gigantic
children.
Starve the soul and the conscience is
sure to stutter.
Prayer turns the heart toward the sun
of happiness.
The keen eye for blemishes often
misses the blessings.
Proving another a hypocrite does not
Trove your holiness.
No man is ready for heaven who is
wishing to enjoy it alone.
The hungry for righteousuess aro not
to be satisfied with rhetoric.
0
The world is a dark place to the man
whose eyes are in his pocket.
No sin was over buried deep enough to
escape the resurrection of shame.
Many are willing God should guide
them if they are allowed to guide him.
To do the things we know to -day will
mean to know the thiugs to do tomor-
row.
Nothing occurs tae our credit with
God until our debts to man have been
deducted.
The man who tries to hide his religion
will soon have none that any one could
find.
When a man knows that his religion
is all moonshine the world is not likely
to get mucn sunshine out of it.
The man who says he can drink or he
eau let is alone is so busy demonstrating
the first proposition that ho never gets
around to the second.
THE WINGFIAM TIMES, APRIL 20, 1905
Our Mother.
(S. G. Whittier.)
I call the old time back, I bring these
lays
To thee, in memory of the summer days
When by our native streams and forest
ways,
We dreamed them over; while the rivu-
lets made
Songs of their own, and the great pine
trees lnid
On warm noonlights the masses of their
shade.
d.nd she was with us, living o'er again
Her life in ours, despite of years and
pain --
The autumn's brightness after latter
rain.
Beautiful in her holy peace as one
Who stands, at evening, when the work
is done,
Glorified in the setting of the sun!
Her memory makes our common land-
scape seem
:Fairer than any of which paiuters dream.
Lights the brown hills and sings in every
stream:
For sho whoee speech was always truth's
pure gold
Heard, not unpleased, its simple legend's
told,
And loved with us the beautiful and old.
CURIOUS FACTS
The growth of Paris has almost been
stopped by military boundaries.
An anticocaine crusade has been be-
gun by the authorities of India.
Every person in the German empire,
the number now being estimated at 58,-
500,000, takes, on the average, sixteen
railroads rides a year.
The use of horsewhips in Moscow is
vigorously prohibited by a Russian
law.
As high as one hundred dollars per
ton for hay has been paid by the owner
of Lou Dillon, the famous trotting mare,
Jules Verne declared that he has done
the most of the work by writing for
three hours before breakfast each day.
A celebrated
Gabriel Levan,
Vous disorder,
dyspepsia.
A process of liquifying illuminating
gas has been invent*. by a German
chemist named Blau. It rives a goad
light in that form and is powerful and
useful in country houses, railtgay trains,
etc.
In Germany the raising of asparagus
for export as domestic service is quite
an industry. It is confined chiefly to
pertain localities of North Germany and
parts of Baden.
The modern bullet will pierce the
carcasses of three horses iu succession at
500 yards, of four at half the distance,
Paris physician, Dr.
says obesity is a ner•
caused by a form of
The Most Wonderful Medical trunk of a thick tree.
or kill a man after passing through
the
Discovery of the Age.
As a cure for Catarrh of the Head, 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
become weak and diseased, your kidneys to become
diseased, and your back lame and sore, your liver
and bowels deranged. These conditions lead to 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 t"oubled, 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, ibut 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 your 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 doses
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 cures effected by the never -failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines :—
This is to certify that I was a severe sufferer for years fibro Lumbago
and kidney disease and was so bad that often I could not raise myself up
with the pains through my back, just above my hips, and also in my hip
joints. I tried all kinds of medicines and doctors without getting cured.
In 1899 I tried a treatment of Oil of Pines and received immediate relief.
I continued the treatment and I have never suffered the least of pain since
I finished my course of treatment. I can highly recommend this medicine
to any sufferer for I have waited long enough before giving this testimonial
to satisify myself that Oil of Pines is an honest, reliable and never falling
euro for lame back and all kidney trouble. Yours faithfully,
Joseph Dann, Bryanston, London Tp., 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 handle Oil address orders to
prof. C. M. Dykes, Bengali, Ont., Proprietor and Manufacturer. All orders
i t of
n Canada upon redo
1 partsofU
.S
and P
promptly filled and forwarded to all'
price. Ask fox Prof. Dykes' "Oil of Pines," and take NO ESUBST TUTS. Prof,
Dykes' is the one original and genuine.
Retail Druggists can be supplied direct from Prof. Dykes' Laboratory tpt
Idensali, or from Wholesale Druggists at London, Canada.
. Last year there were 9,500,000 hec-
tares of cultivated land in Argentine,
which represents only 3 per cents. of
the total area of the republic.
It is not so very long ago that copper
was used in Sweden as the chief medium
of exchange, and at times merchants had
to take wheel -barrows with them when
they went to receive payments of large
sums.
A Welsh magistrate has decided that
in a liquor transaction or any other pur-
chase and sale, a dale takes place when
the money is paid for an article. So
one may pay for his drinks during law-
ful hours and legally call and take them
iu the hours during which liquor must
not be sold.
Reflections of a Bachelor.
From the Now York Press.
The best way to be popular is not to
bo successful.
A woman would rather be wrong and
win the argument than right and lose it.
Nothing is easier than for a woman to
fool a clever man, specially if ho isn't.
There is a great deal of money in it
for the man who doesn't go into public
life.
Either a'man finds fault because he
is taxed or because he has nothing to be
taxed.
A woman can admire her baby's head
when it is bald.
A girl seems to have an idea that if
she mentions the word garter some one
will see it.•
The funniest thing is how a widow
kisses a man as if she had never heard
of each a thing before.
The prize idiot is the man who imag-
ines he is interested in a woman's mind.
A WARNING NOTE
FRO1Yi THB BACK.
People often say," How are we
to know when the kidneys are out
of order f" The location of the
kidneys, close to the small of the
back, renders the detection of
kidney trouble a simple matter,
The note of warning comes from
the back, in the shape of backache.
Don't neglect to cure it imme-
diately.Serious kidney trouble will
follow if you ..do. A few doses of
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS,
taken in time, often save years of
suffering. Mr. Horatio Till, Geary,
N.B., writes :. -" I suffered for
about two years with kidney dis-
ease. I-iad pains in my back, hips
and legs ; could not sleep well,
and had no appetite. I took one
box of Doan's Kidney Pills, and
they cured me. The pains have all
left, and I now sleep well.
Price 50 cents per boa, or 8 for
$1.25. All dealers, or
Tan DOAK KIDNEY PIl;r, CO.,
Toronto, Ont.
A woman could like geography better
if all the boundary lines were hemstitch.
ed.
Every girl would like to elope only it
would seem so awful not to be home be •
fore dark. •
It's fanny how evening clothes stay
on a woman when they seem to be
specially built to slip off.
When a ratan isin a room with a lot of
women talking he can shut his eyes and
almost feel as if he ware scorching in an
automobile, --Now York Press.
ar
Be Free.
[Lowell.]
Men whose boast it is that ye
Come of fathers brave and free,
If there breathe on earth a slave—
Are ye truly free and brave?
If yon do not feel the chaiu
When it works a brother's pain,
Are ye not base slaves indeed—
Slaves unworthy to be freed?
Is true freedom but to break
Fetters for your owu dear sake,
And with leathernhearts forgot
That we owe mankind a debt?
No, true freedom is to share
All the chains our brothers wear,
And with heart and hand to be
Earnest to make others free.
They are slaves who fear to speak
For the fallen and the weak;
They are slaves who will not choose
Hatred, scoffing and abuse
Rather than in silence shrink
From the truth they needs must think ;
They are slaves who dare not be
In the right with two or three.
Be Fair—Deal at Home.
Every mail that comes to this town
brings numerous catalogues, and many
of them beautifully and artistically il-
lustrated, from the large wholesale and
retail stores of the cities. They are re-
ceived by the townspeople and the farm-
ers. Did you ever stop to think of the
real purport of these catalogues? They
are merely advertisements of firms that
have goods to sell. Iu these catalogues
you will find advertisement calling your
attention to thiugs our home merchants
have to sell. Do not let outsiders draw
your trade away from home as long as
you can find what you want at home
Remember your home merchant helps to
build your schoolhouses, your churches,
helps to maintain your ministers, his
business helps to beautify the town; he
is preseut when your town wants water-
works,^lights, sidewalks, etc., he is pres-
ent with a donation if you are sick ; gives
you credit if you are in need; and in
numerous other ways is indispensah'e
to your town. Look at the question
fairly and you will give him the first
chance at east to supply you. The rare e
city stores may be all right—if you thiuk
so—but what do they do to merit a por-
tion of your trade? Do they pay any
county taxes; do they pay any city taxes;
do they even contribute one cent to the
building of your town in any way? Do
they come to your assistance. if sick or
offer you credit if in need? Stick to
-your home merchant. Heed his adver-
tising for your trade. Yon will be far
ahead. Au when a representative of au
outside print shop asks the morcbant or
business man for work he remembers
the home printer, and that he is entitled
to patronage as that you are to that of
other residents of the town and tributary
country.—Ex.
Baby's
Supper
Mooney's Crackers are as
easy to digest as pure milk,
and as nutritious as home-
made bread. Let the little
'folk's supper be
Mooney's
Perfection,
Cream Sodas
and see how sound they sleep
and how plump and rosy
they grow.
Airtight
pages b
them to your
table as crisp
and inviting
as if fresh
from the
awns.
At your
goose.
A FAMILY CREST.
Procure One at Once it 'ou 'Want to
Oe In tits Swlat.
Any man or woman who pretends to
be anything In society now sports a
family crest. One may or may not have
had forbears, but the crest is no lon-
ger an Insignia of blue blood, It can
be secured for a price, and as the
American usually carries any fad to
excess he now outcrests the titled
families of the old world.
He has it stamped on his cigarette
Paper as well as his stationery. Itis
wife has it woven into her table linen.
The head of bis stable orders it in
metal on the harness as well as in the
lacquer on the carriage door. It stares
at the general public from his lap robe.
His son has it stamped on his seal
ring, and his daughter, if she takes up
the craze for tattooing, has it indelibly
marked on her anatomy. But the
crowning inconsistency of the modern
use of a crest is the distribution of
dinner favors bearing the crest not of
the recipient, but of the hostess.
A man of millions who recently re-
furnished his library had the crest
hammered into the brass frieze of the
fireplace, and a wholly improbable pair
of animals copied from this same crest
furnished the 'supports for the and-
irons. Little plaster Millions is sent
forth for his daily walk with the fam-
ily crest embroidered. on his sleeve,
where the child of the common people
has some small navy or army design
on his $4.98 reefer. Crests on hand-
kerchiefs are by uo menus uncommon,
and here the work is done in the most
exquisite of convent embroidery. My
lady's writing desk is equipped with
brass or copper furnishings hammered
iu the pattern of her crest.
Entire sets of tableware, including
gold and silver plate and the most
beautiful of glazed china, are done to
order that their owner may exploit the
family crest. Just at present there
seems absolutely uo limit to the meth-
ods for flashing one's crests on less for-
tunate fellow igen.
One well known bachelor who is ex-
tremely proud of his crest has a novel
pipe rack. The background is a whole
calfskin, in the center of which is
burned his crest, and this is surround-
ed by pipe racks holding smoking
equipment from eveely corner of the
globe.
IIe who has not a family crest or the
price thereof may employ a substitute
if he happens to be in college. Here an
insignia of his chosen fraternity takes
the place of his family crest, adorning
the furnishings of his room, his sta-
tionery and his cigarette paper, to say
nothing of his jeivelry.
Iiia Troublesome Tool Cheat.
When the journeyman plumber went
to a Harlem apartment house to fix a
broken steam pipe his tool chest at-'
traded attention. It was an army
knapsack that had seen service in the
Philippines.
"Yes," said the plumber in response
to a question by the woman who lived
in the apartment, "that is an army
knapsack. My son brought it home
with him from the Philippines. When
I asked him to give it to me to im-
provise into a tool chest he did so. I
did not wait it :,imply because it was
an army knapsack or because it had
been with my son in the Philippines. I
wanted it because it was light, strong
and useful. After I had fixed it up it
exactly filled the idea of a tool chest I
had carried in my mind for a long, long
time. But," with a sigh, "I shall have
to give it up."
"Why?" inquired the woman of the
house.
"Because," replied the plumber, "it
takes half my time answering ques-
tions about the blamed thing."
A Ncwv Roosevelt Anecdote.
A personal sketch of Governor La
Follette contributed to Harper's Week-
ly by Earle Hooker Eaton contains a
new and entertaining anecdote of Pres-
ident Roosevelt which Mr. Eaton
quotes in the president's own words.
Mr. Roosevelt, it seems, was present
at a reception attended by Governor
and Mrs. La Follette. The president
and Mrs. La Follette were standing in
cue corner engaged in conversation
and eating ice cream. Ile was doing
the bulk of the talking, and she was
an attentive and unwavering listener.
"Suddenly I discovered," says the
president, "that for at least five min-
utes I had been pouring ice cream
down the front of her handsome even-
ing gown. She had known it all the
time, but had not indicated it by even
the quiver of an eyelash or by the
slightest change in the smiling, inter-
ested expression upon her face. She
had simply beeu too polite to inter
rupt me by word or look or move, no
matter what happened to the gown."
A Record Saw.
What is declared by the Philadelphia
Record to be the largest and heaviest
cold rolled steel band saw ever made
bas just been turned out at the Disston
works, Taeony. It is 20 feet long, 15
inches wide, .134 of an inch thick and
weighs 1,474 pounds, By repeated roll-
ing the thickness of the band was re-
duced from .270 to .134 of an inch.
The saw is perfectly straight and is a
marvel for uniformity of thickness.
50long
Bands up to feet and 14 inches
wide are regularly made at the Tacony
plant, but it is said that never before
has a band of such length and weight
been cold rolled at any. shop in the
world.
Paries I+'ront feat,
The latest novelty in stationery Is
p
pvttl eards made from
peat.
They
are
mad:. in the mins of ('.elbridge, County
Kildare, Ireland, where an American
rias established paper making from the
neat of the famous bog of Allen. . -„.-
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PERFECT v
HOME
DYEING.
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DYES
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• EASY TO USE, BRIGHTEST AND BEST. g
• ASK FOR THE "DIAMOND."
• AH Druggists and Dealers. TAKE IPO OTHl IRS.
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SEED TF°AiTEN
Steers are bought, raised, and fattened to make money ; so just a few
words as to how this profit can be made and, in many instances, increased.
The increase in weight in steers, is due to the amount of food that is
digested and assimilated, and the greater the amount digested and assimi-
lated, the. greater the increase in weight. In close confinement the feed-
ing ration lacks the variety of the open field, therefore, the food must
have the " salt, pepper and gravy " added ; this is Clydesdale Stock
Food. It stands to reason, that, like a human being, if the food is made
more palatable by the addition of the "salt,pepper and gravy" it will
eat more of the thing it likes because " it makes the mouth water."
This is "wise feeding." Yhurthermore, it will do them more good
because it not only helps to digest the food, but after it is digested, it
helps the blood to take up or assimilate a large proportion of it. This
is where the profit comes in by putting on extra weight, giving them a
nice, fat, smooth finish that brings top market price. The feeding period
can be shortened thirty days at least ; this is money saved. The increase
over and above the ordinary feeding increase is, easily ; f. of a ib and over
per day. You can stop feeding Clydesdale Stock Food at any time with-
out injurious effects. If you find you cannot feed Clydesdale Stock
Food at a profit your money will be cheerfully refunded by the dealer
from whom you buy it. It is sold in your district by :
Wm. Gannett, Wingham.
Andrew & Webster, Lucknow.
M. S. Haldeuby, Teeswater.
Wilton & Turnbull, Brussels.
J. G. Moser, Blyth.
C4447s o^oiiu6i'mirarieCieeIria anint 3 Vile le ere Veer, aeine:'dnline Zear^aeiciee6 see
0 Frost Wire Fence .
4.
(p to a I1 - 0 l rias no equal as General 40
II Purpose Farm Fence :
(0) I. r a
� J it It will turn Stock without :
s III
f1 injury-- beautify the Farm — ,
( does not need constant patching e)
Co i�tt� l I li.---,___, and with reasonable usage will S')
ee i last a life -time. Booklet and :
eg
Co ,. If }� full particularsgivenonrequest. e)
(..3o.:,lt.wnww,...m.n...t.......u...mw.w uwl..,..d....... FOR SALE BY of
J. AW.Church:),BRAY, White Church:),
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2aStat osItofetsesetueeiww°vuwSS.�iu�eSI.�oreaesawn9ID..o*?:J
SINFUL C ABITS IN YOUTH
a� I11AK NERVOUS, WEA&(, DISEASED fal±iU.
THE L'BEonA� of lgnorauce and folly in youth, overexertion of mind and body
induced by lust and exposure are constantly wrecli.t, t:to lives
and future happiness of thousands of promising young men. Soave faire and wither
at an early age, at the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag cut a
weary, ft witless and melancholy existence. Otho.s rca.:n matri-
mony but find no solace or comfort there. The victims are found
in alt stations of life—the farm, the office, the wor:rshvo, the
pulpit, the trades and the professions. Nervous Debility and Sentinel
Weakness are guaranteed cured by oitr New Method Treat:ten9 or hie
Pay. You run no risk 25 years iu Detroit. Bank se,;uriEy.
CURED WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED. No names used without tvsittoe consent.
"I am 33 years of ago and married. When young I led e. gay
life. Early indiscretions and tater excesses made trouble for me.
Ibecame weakand nervous. My kidneys became affected and I
feared Bright's Disease. Married Life was unsatisfactory and
my home unhappy. I tried everythin„—all failed till I took
treatment frons Drs. Kennedy & Iiergan. Their New Method
built me up mentally, physically and sexually. I feel and net
like a man In every respect. They treated me six years ago. They are honest,
skilful and responsible financially, so why patronize Quacks and Fakirs when you
can be cured by reliable doctors."--rF, A. Belton.
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Address all communicatiolis to ---
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CURES C0f 1! TEED OR RO PAY. =Inn Frei--Ooa;r Free -Oran Blunt Free PT lliu i irea(EI.
Dbra,y ��;; I4E Shelby Street,
r�e Kennedy f63 erg n, Detroit, Nisch.
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Tie Times
Joi Deiartment
Maitewr..
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to . give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
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••••!•••INHHH1ll•.••••lil+•••i• 1106001110••••••••••11011100041•11
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $ i,00 per
year in advance—sent to any address
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THE WINGHAM TIMES
°Oleo Phone, No. 4.
WINGIHAM, ONT.
Residence Phone, No. i4.