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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-05-25, Page 3r 1 REASON N91 WHY YOU SHQULD USE Red Rose Tea Because it is composed of both Indian and Ceylon teas. The tea bush is indigenous to Assam in Northern India, and botanists are of the opinion that it is the parent species of all the cultivated varieties in India, Ceylon, China and elsewhere, In a wild state, it grows to a height of fifteen to twenty feet, but the cultivated shrub is only three to four feet high. Assam being the natural home of the tea bush, it is not surprising that this and other districts in Northern India produce the richest, most pungent teas grown in the world—teas that command higher prices than even the finest Ceylons ; but Ceylon teas are very flavory and fragrant, and seem to be specially made to blend with the richer, more syrupy tea of India. When combined, the Ceylons give point and piquancy to the liquor ; the Indians, richness and strength. The distinctive characteristic of Red Rose Tea, that rich, fruity flavor, is obtained by blending these fine Indians and Ceylons; and another very important feature of Red Rose Tea, viz., its uniformity of flavor all the year round, is secured the same way, something not possible to obtain where Ceylon or Indian teas are used alone. The Blue Label is recommended, and unless you like very strong tea, use only three-quarters as much for a drawing as you use of other teas. T. H. ESTABRObKS, St. John, N. B. BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG. If you would create something you must be something. One enemy is too many; fifty friends is not enough. A man most stand erect, not be kept erect by others. Reputation is what men and women think of us; character is what God knows of ns. Envy has no other quality than to de- tract from virtue. Conceit may puff a man up, but can never prop him up. Heaven will permit no man to secure happiness by crime. A fixed idea is like the iron rod which s cniptors put in their statues. It im- 1 pales and sustains. OIL OF PINES The Most Wonderful Medical Discovery of the Age. As a cure for Catarrh of the bead, Throat, Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs, Prot 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, CATAR,R$ ! 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 flim, th,; 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 PI ES is not,only a never -failing ours, tbnt also a eure preventive. Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of onre. Do not delay or trifle, where so much is at stake. It means your farther health and happiness. PROP. 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 inedioine offered for sale. The reason the name " O£1 of Pines'' was chosen for this sovereign remedy is becanse the oil Mtn four different speoies 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 eountries. Some remarkable Cares effected by the net'erfailing curative powers of Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines :— To Prof. C. M. Dykes, Hensel', Ont., manufacturer of Medidine called O£I el Pines Dear Sir:—I feel it my duty to he the following testimonial, I have been a severe sufferer from Asthnia and Bronchitis duce any intently, and have tried anything and everything I could hear tell of, but to no avail. I purohased a treatment of your remedy called Oil of Pines. I had not taken the medicine over a Week before the symptons of my ailments were speedily leaving me and I found myself in far better health. The Bronchitis has completely left me. My little girl wild is now 9 years old has auf- feted from Bronchitis since he was a baby in ray arms, he also took the ° Oil and, it has given the desired results. I mettles yon. Oil of Pines as the beet known remedy to -day for the ailments mentioned. I would urge intr- oits suffering With Brenobitle or Aethina to ghat once NAM drug entre and purchase a treatment of 01101 Pine. Tours gratefully Mrd. ,i.Moscrip, !Township of Blowhard, 0otwty Perth, Rannoch, Ont, Price $1.00 per bottle, or 8 for $5,00. FOR SALE Aria ALL DIUJG serous, t . B.�-•i>i your storekeeper of druggist does notband'e 011 Wrest orders to Prof. 0. M. Dykes, Hensnl', Ont., Proprietor olid Mtarafilena ;air. AU orders prompt] Wed fent. forwarded to all to bt "1S, 8. and Omani nppoontr� reoeipt 0f pprioe. promptly for Prof. I)ykeo' '4011 of Pikes," and taltd rd SVIISTITUTR. Pref. y'kei4' it th"e ono ayrigiihal and geneiae: • Retail 'kits/gists tin be ipplied direct trout Prof. Dyke!' tolboiatofry in Vermeil, or from Wholesale Druggists at Londoar, Oanrida. TilE %Y1NGRRAM TIMES, MAY 25, 19O THE BAND QF RONIN$. Jt, Gory 8torr to Proses tke Lorene oe daps}tape serventn, The other day I found amid a great, wealth of old theological material, now dead, a curious little book printed 314 Tokyo in 1892 called "The Story of the Forty-seven Ronlus" and purchased it at once for the We of the covers. The 'lentils seemed to have been the serv- ants of some noble of Japan who had been killed • at the hands •,ot another 3apauese lord, and it bad become their duty as faithful servants to kill their Waster's enemy, 'Tae way they went about it was the story, 01 course the party of the second Part was not anxious Vs be killed and took every precaution. The Iortysev- en, knowing what be would do, took to drink and dissipation, They apparent- ly gave up all purpose of revenge, They Were often seen drunk on the streets ot Tokyo or playing at blindaaan's buff with geisha girls. Some of them even quarreled with their Wives and divorc- ed thele. The noble lord, Learing through his Riles what the Robline were doing, settled down into fancied security and yeaved a sigh of relief. This was what the Ronin. wanted, When a spy reported to them this state of affairs, they immediately prepared for action, One night they broke into the noble lord's palace, killed his guards and servants and appeared be- fore him in his own apartments. Pros- trating themselves, they said: "Wo would beg your honorable lord- ship to commit harakiri," When the honorable one could not see bis way clear to this course, they kill- ed him, took his head to their former master's tomb and offered it to him, with their regards, But the shogun's officers of the law, bearing what bad been done,. now ap• peered on the scene and informed the forty-seven Ronins that, the law hav- ing been violated by the tumult, they were requested to commit harakiri. The forty-seven, seeing the justice of the request, immediately disemboweled themselves and so honorably died. The tombs of these noble and faithful men at once became renewed and were visit- ed by many pilgrims, One man who had insulted some of the Ronins while they were drunk and dissolute, seeing now the true state of the case, ap- peared at the tomb and disemboweled himself as a mark of his sorrow at his mistake and of his respect for their memories. The writer of the story tells of a visit to the graves of the Ronins. Incidental- ly he mentions that just before his ar- rival there another Japanese, as a testi- mony to the faithfulness of these dis- interested and noble servants, had been disemboweling himself at the graves, and the scene of his death struggles and the blood on the soil were pointed out by admiring natives. This story shows something of the •character of the loyal Japanese. Will they die for their country and die for their emperor? With pleasure.—Minneapolis Tribune. Dwellers by the Pole. According to the census of October, 1901, there were 11,893 inhabitants in Greenland, an Increase of 1,377 since 1890. This increase includes 441 Es- kimos discovered by Captain Holm in 1894. The actual increase was there- fore 936, or 8.9 per cent. The Euro- pean population of Greenland in 1901 was 272; in 1800 it was 309. The tar - gest villages are Sukkertoppen, with 382, and Julianshaab, with 393 inhab- itants. The east Greenlanders are of pure Eskimo blood. The remainder of the population Is greatly mixed. The birth and death rates vary greatly from year to year. Consumption claims 31 per cent in the north and 28 per cent in the south. About 13 per cent of the deaths are from accidental causes, chiefly drown- ing. In 1901 about 84 per cent of the population sustained themselves by seal catching, fishing and hunting, The remainder are connected with the administration, missions and trades. ?dente, the Eskimo. Menie, a Greenland Eskimo boy, le one of the most interesting of the pupils in the public schools of New York city. He was brought to New York by Lieu- tenant Peary and has been transformed from a blubber eater into a clever young American, bright in. his studied and captain of a baseball . team. The tribe•to which he belongs is 'very .small, comprising Iess tbar4.50 people. They are the northernmost known inhabits ants of the globe, dwelling in complete isolation on the barren shores of Smith sound, on the west coast of Greenland, a region of desolation and gloom. The Diamond Fields. For more than a hundred years it has been thought that extensive diamond deposits aro hidden Zit the island of Borneo, and recent rumors have given the old suspicions new lite. A diamond of 307 carats, found on the west coast In 178T and named the Matsu, was, after a brilliant but brief career, de- nounced es a mere block of reek etyrtal. Should it now prove that 13ornao can yield diamonds in paying quantity the British empire will be in possession Of praetically every diamond Hold of any importance in the world—South Africa, Australia, India and Borneo, notions Money 'sestets. The andel money at Cuba is the [united States ourr.ney. The eommer- eial money le Spenleh coin, baba haV- tag no money ot her own coinage. tlain- e4 Staten currency is always at •a pre- taaltinl over Spanish gold, but this tire. !runt fluctuates, aceording to demand for Spanish told ifir Silver. Dude) the year- ended duan So, 1904, the dmeritaa dollar was on kp arer*te equtvidatit is *IAD Spanish told, et gilt Snail* al- ter, the flueteatlon Imo*' from *1.to'% to At.ga y in gold Rod tr4as $1,112 .iii 0.35 in silent. CATARRH *SOAKED A bAlICEROprl ll1IICICAL OPERATI0 t75 Braa.ttick 49., TOMO°, Cas. Tisa OKTO !tNLT0>i: CO„ Toronto, Canada. nentlamsn,—I Ras =ort pleased to c. lily to the curative properties of Oxygenator.' 1 Ant began Hare it tor. Catarrh in the bead. having suhdued this loathsome Masao, ]then turned soy attention to a targe Polypus that existed In wy right nostril, which was euceuefuity removed by the local application st "Oxygenator" thereby saving mach pain, danger and expense had it bon' removed by surgical process. I have sued your remedy ism family (of an for *Humber of yearn, and sat highly recommend it for f , 000lds and threat ttsnbles—aa a gargle. !luta !/Amid, it ie invaluable. I amain, yo • Q truly, MOSINSON. OXYGENATOR A GERM MUER eats by— OXYGENATOR 00. 22 Harbord St. Toronto Pointed Paragraphs. (From the Chicago News.) A small boy says that velocity is what a chap lets go of a bumblebee with; Tell a woman you admire her if you want her to think you are intelligent. Some tailors would make excellent cavalrymen; they are natural-born chargers. The most successful trained nurse is the one who succeeds in marrying her wealthiest patient. When a girl knows she is handsome she does not object to having her picture taken in a group. Nothing is more likely to arouse the ire of a spinster than the sight of an orange tree in full bloom. When a dumb man doesn't want to be interviewed all be has to do is to put his hands in his pockets. Lots of girls would marry for the sake of the new outfit required for the wed- ding if for no other. Its an easy matter to gauge a man's wisdom. Draw him into a discussion, and if he agrees with you he's sensible. WOMAN'S GREATEST ENEMY. Constipation the Cause of Most Women's Troubles—An lsasy Way to Permanently Cute this 1'nlnfnl Condition. There are few women indeed who do not suffer with chronic constipation. Nearly all are slaves of some kind of j medicine to correct this trouble, and yet they get nothing but temporary relief. One period of constipation is follcwecl by auother, and it's physic, physic, physio, year in and year out, till lite beomea a burden. There is now a sure onre for this con- dition and a oure that does not have to be repeated. It is Dr, Leonhardt's Anti - Pill. Dr. Leonhardt, of Lincoln, Neb., is the anther of this prescription. He used it for years with wonderful success in Ws own large practice as a remedy for dyspepsia, biliousness and constipation. Many ladies who have suffered for years are now enjoying good health and a perfect freedom from the old oonstipa• tion through the use of Antt-Pili. Mrs. Tabb, 387 Emerald St. North, Hamilton, Ont., says: I am no longer troubled with con- stipation. I cannot praise Anti -Pill too highly." A month's treatment for 50c. All druggists, or The WiIson•Fyle 00., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Sole agents for Canada. White kid gloves and shoes can be cleaned with dry pipeclay. Use a stiff brush for the purpose and rub till the spots vanish. The Tokio correspondent of the Lon- don Telegraph says that a new island was volcanically thrown up in Decembt r three miles south of Iwo island, southern Japan. S1RATfis0 CANADA Mooney's Pelfedlion Cream � Sodas are crisp squares of wholesome nourishment. They are the food that builds strength and muscle. They are as cassis, digested by the child and invalid as by the sturdy workman. They contain AL1. the food e ties of firma Cana- dian wheat ana.dian'wheett floor. in a form that tdahis the appetite. Aheiriyt fiat lire in the m At eg from* 1 and 4,00 Mall. Is 1747. The change in postal arrangements in New York since 'the good ofd times" may be seen by the following adver- tisement, copied by tbe Troy Time from 13radtord's New York Gazette of Dee. 6, 1747: "Cornelius Van Denburgh as Albany Post designs to set out for the liret time this winter on Thursday next. All letters to go by him are desired to be pent to the postodice or to itis house near the Spring Garden." During Hudson river navigation the Albany mail was transmitted by sloops, but in the winter a messenger, as above mentioned, was required, and it is prob- able that he traveled on foot. The win- ter average of the eastern and southern malls is given in the same paper and name date us follows; "On Tuesday the Tenth Instant at 9 o'clock in the Forenoon the Boston and Philadelphia Posts set out from New York to perform their stages once a Port'nite during the Winter months and are to set out at 9 o'clock Tuesday morning. Gentlemen and merchants are desired to bring their letters in time. N. B.—This Gazette will also Come forth on Tuesday Mornings during that time." An Vnbr,ken Spell. When we have a "spell o' weather," and wet weather at that, we have only to recall the climatic conditions 01 Dartmoor, in England, In order to be thankful for a little. The moor bas, says a writer in Corn - hill, an eternal procession of clouds, infinitely varied in. form, lighted with a white radiance or lowering in gloom, rent, tattered or filmy, gathering, men- acing, creeping round to swath you in a mist of rain or dropping one of those silvery showers lighted with sunshine from behind. Of heavier rain there is no lack, and all one can say of the perennially beau- tiful moor is sumtned up in the verse invented by its enemies; The south wind always brings us rain. The north wind blows it back again. The west wind surely means wet weather, The east wind wet and cold together. Waiting Upon His Bride. Two hundred years ago it was a Cus- tom very general in England for the bridegroom to wait upon his bride on their wedding day. The following ex- tract from John Shebbeare's "Matri- mony,' a book published in the middle of the eighteenth century, testifies to this and refers to the popular super- stition about it: "The dinuer being served, Sir Oliver was the gayest man in the company. The bridegroom and bride sitting by the side of each other, the old gentleman observed: 'Ods -heart, ods -heart! What, dine with the bride the first day! A. fine bridegroom; a fine bridegroom! It was the fashion when I was married to stand behind the bride's chair with a napkin and serve her. Serve her today; she'll serve you always after.' " The Perspective of Light, Velasquez• recognized that light is elastic and illuminates the air; hence he was the first to discover a new kind of perspective. Iden long ago had learned to make lines vanish from tbe eye, to make the figures diminish in size and shape as they recede from the front and to explain the distance by contrasts of light and shade. But he discovered the perspective of light. By the most delicate rendering of the quantity of light reflected from each and every part of the room and the figures and objects in it he has given to the latter the reality of form and to the roam its hollowness and dis- tance,—St. Nicholas. New Caledonia. Until 1853 New Caledonia was a sort of no man's land. Then both England and France decided to annex it, and orders came to two warships to proceed thither at once. They started the same day. The English captain had heard of the reefs that surround the island, and he was cautious, The Frenchman went ahead without regard for the reefs. When the British captain ar- rived he saw the tricolor flying from a hill, and he was invited to come In and lunch on French soil. The Mexican Letter Writer. As many of the lower classes in the City of Mexico can neither read nor write, the, Mexican .letter;nvrite :does a thriving ".btlettt@Eai;. • He' wtlte3 ':letters of all kinds—lovesinttess, ,begging let- ters—it matters little to hila, so that he is paid for his work. These men are found in the Plaza of Santo Domingo, a sort of market place, where second- hand articles are for sale. His Diseovery. City Chap (back from a visit to the farm) -You know 1 thought 1 bad a cinch when the hired man told me to milk the cow that didn't have any horns. Friend—Wasn't it7 City Chap --No! It isn't the horns that create a disturbance when a greenhorn la milk- ing. It's the hind legs!•• -Detroit Free Press. latlt the 01.1 Mats There. "Can you support my daughter in the style to which she had been aceus- tomed?" "Perhaps not, but I can support her In the style to which her mother was aceustomed during her early married tile," --Lite. . He Still Wonder*. i1innegan--0h, yrs, 01 can Under- lthand bow thlm astronomers can cal- kilate th' distance av a sbtatt, Its rreigitt and dinsity end color and all that, but th' thing thot gets the is rise they know its name. ---puck. The 5vreet Telltale. Aunt Ilannalflave you tolls any Me of your engagetnebit'to Mr. Sweet• brt l dith--fa; I haven't told a soul--, bxcept t3easie >tilllct. erbe ttlel'tglht lily kits PO_ bg,tsr ask 1Nii , ,}yy,, 3 Water pan Dry air is light -•-- it lifts and carries dust. Dry air cracks your furniture, gives you a headache, shrivels your skin, parches your lungs. The water -pan in most furnaces is a pleasantry. It has no serious business in the work of the furnace—it is merely placed there for effect, because a water -pan is a good thing. And a water -pan is an absolute necessity to your health and comfort, but it must be properly placed to radiate moisture evenly and uniformly throughout the house. The water -pan of the Sunshine Furnace is the most scientifically arranged water -pan in any furnace in the world. It does the work a water -pan should, and does it well. M'tlary's LONDON, TORONTO MONTREAL, WINN1pEO, VANCOUVER, ST.JONN. N,0, SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG. • We are slow to believe anything that would bort onr feelings. Unless we put our religion and our t •easure in the same thing, religion will a' ways be sacrificed. • The books that help yna moat are those that make you think the most. Wbat makes a Christian is not the theology we have in our heads, but the Ione we have in our hearts Ssiisiiikiiiii,ii',i'ensie'lle'i'C's41,4Sio+31.-ellosiall`fileilaiiiiiciliveinisy. ;V: 1s U FROST" :3 • Ornamental Gates • •) • Light in weight Artistic in design Reasonable in price Also a large line of Standard Farm Oates : always on hand. Every progressive and •3 up-to•date farmer insists on having FROST G4TES. Catalog and prices on request. • FOR SALE BY se J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church 4. lis r _ie ► I 4 . •lin LLi1AiLlali :tares BLOOD DISEASE CURED. If you ever contracted any Blood or Private Disease, you are never safe until the virus or poison has been eradicated from the systems. Don't be satisfied with a "patch up" by some fatuity doctor. Our New Method is Guaraatsed to Curti or No Pay. 1a.No Names Used without Written consent. Cured When all Else Failed "Could I live my early life over. this testimonial would sot be necessary, thouch I was no more sinful than thousands •1 other youncontagious diseases all helped tobreak down my slater ystem. Whosure eon 1 commenced to realize my condition I was almost frantic. Doctor after doctor treated me but only gave me relief—not a eure, Sot Springa helped me, bat did not cure me. The symptoms always returned. Mercury and Potash drove the poison into my system Instead of driving it out, 1 bless the day your New Method \ Treatment was recommended to me. 1 investigated who yon were first, and finding you had over 75 years' experience and re- sponaible financially. I gave you my cass ander a guarantee. You cared me permanently, and in six years there has not been a sore, palm ulcer or any other symptom of the blood disease." 25 Y.sre In Oetraft. 150,000 Cured. M. A. CONLEY. • We treat and cure Varicocele, Blood Polson, Nervous Debility, Stricture. a Impotency, Secret Drains, Kidney and Bladder DI . Csnsultsttea fru. Quoiten eisek for Home Trsstmost sad Books Fro. DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN 148 SHELBY STREET. DETROIT. 111CB. 00410111111111111110001111111•1110111••••••• ••••••••••s•••••••••s••••• • • • • • • • • • • • i • • oe • • • s • • J• • • Our Job Department is up-to-date in• • every particular ; and our work is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Estimates cheerfully given. 1 • 1 fie Times Jo:1 De jartmen:- 5 •• • t w • I Our peclalit les. COLORED WORK LETTER BEADS LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS CIRCULARS BOOK WORK VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO THE TIMES is the best local paper in the County of Huron. Subscription: $r.00 per year in advance—sent to any address in Canada or the United States, An advertisement In the Times brings good results Addreas alt communioationeto to— TUE WINGfAM TIMES Office Phone. No.4. 11biGtlANi ON'1'. liesidened Pholte, 14.14.r 1