HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-06-01, Page 30,4
1
••••.••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••10.11.11.1111•11111•11•1•Tt
REASON N9
WHY YOU SHOULD USE 111111".
Red Rose
Tea
Because it is tested by skilled tea tasters.
Tea tasting can well be called one of the fine arts.
A man who can taste several hundred cups of tea a day,
and, by his keen senses, detect the slightest difference
between them, and wlao. blindfolded, can tell where
each and every tea was grown, not only the country,
but the particular district, and often the very plantation
—such a man is the professional tea taster.
The head man in my tea room, Mr. W. R, Miles,
is a master in his profession. He learned the business
in London, Eng., and is a tea taster by right of birth, as
both his Father and Grandfather were tea tasters. It
came natural to him and he is recognized as one of the
best judges of tea in America.
He and his assistants do nothing but taste the teas,
and superintend the blending.
RED ROSE TEA is the result.
T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B.
BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
Earthly pride is like the passing flower
that springs to fall, and blossoms but to
die,
Moderation is the silken string run-
ning through the pearl Main of all
-virtues.
Mind, of ordinary calibre ordinarily
condemn everything which is boyond
their range.
We promise according to our hopes,
bat perform according to our selfishness
and our fears.
There is no fate so terrible ae to be in
the world with no part in either its joys
or sorrows.
'When a person is flown in the world
an ounce of help is better than a pound
of preaching.
Next to God we are indebted to woman
-first for life itself, and then for making
it worth living.
OIL
The past is for us, but the only way
we can make use of is if to take its les-
son's for the present.
Religion is as necessary to reason as
reason is to religion, The one cannot
exist without the other.
Friendship improves happiness by the
doubling of our joys; and it relieves
my sery by dividing our grief.
He who tries to injure another injures
himself more,
The University of California operates
a dairy school in connection with the
regular course.
In its prime the elephaut sleeps only
five hours at night and the older it grows
the less sleep it needs.
Bricks will absorb about a pint of
water each, consequently the captain ot
a ship that carries a cargo of bricks must
be careful that a leak does not go uncletected, as the water is sucked up nearly
as fast as it goes in,
PINES
The Most Wonderful Medical
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 weakd
an_ 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 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 OP PINES is eot;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
teifle, 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 tablespoonfille. 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 "011 of Pines" was chosen for this sovereign remedy
is because the oil from four different species of the pine make tm the main body of
the remedy. Compounded the Pine is the oils and juices taken from nine different
plantand roots which grow in foreign conntries.
Some remarkable cures effected by the never -failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines :—
To Prof. C. M. Dykes, Hensell, Ont., manufacturer of Medicine called Oil
of Pines: —
To Prof. 0. M. Dykes:—I feel it my duty to send yoti the following testi-
monial. I MO your medicine called Oil of Pines for throat trouble. I had
finfferedlor a long time with a large lump on the Outside of nay 'leek and I
felt All the time a choking feeling in my thoat and Mild hardly swallow
My food. I had dectored but could never get the lump removed from nay
throat, but your Oil of Pines gave me imniediaterelief and I can now swal-
low nay food without the least effort and IStiffer to More with the Malady.
I used the Oil both internally and externally according to directions. X
feel that I eannot sav enough in praise of your Oil of Pima
Yours sincerely, Mrs, Robt, Ward, Perth county, MOtherWell, Ont.
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.C�
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES,
N. B.—If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle Oil address Orders to
Prof. 0, M. Dykes, Iletsall, Ont., Proprietor and Mantra-0011'er. .M1 Orden(
promptly filled and forwarded to all parts of U. S. and Canada upon reeeipt of
price. Ask for Prof. Dykes' "Oil of Pines," and tithe NO SUBSTITUTE. Prof.
313ykas' is the one original and zenith*.
Retail Druggists can be supplied direct from Prof. Dykes' laboratory at
Iflensall, or tram Vitholeside Drtaggista at London, Canada. •
THE MGM TIMES, JUNE 1, 1905
ENGLAND'S GREAT FOG.
Er Oliver Lode's $uceetanted Attack
Coon Part oi
There was one man in Birmingham
who was profoundly grateful for the
recent heavy fog in llilglaad. t was
Sir Oliver Lodge, to whom the visita-
tion presented a fresh opportunity to
renew the steady war which he com-
tnenced twenty years ago against the
tog fiend,.
Standing in a secluded courtyard of
Birmingham university, his deerstalker
Cap and long brown overcoat beaded
yelth moisture, Sir Oliver was to be
seen absorbed in the contemplation or
mysterious strands of barbed wire
(which vanished a few feet above in im-
penetrable vapors.
From his research laboratory came
the vicious crackle of a powerful elec-
tric discharge, and great jagged sparks
Vibrated, between the spherical termi-
bale of the apparatus with which his
aesistants were preparing to launch the
tentative thunderbolts of science
(against the British climate.
Men pulled the terminals apart, and
Ma the discharge was transferred to the
Outside wires there proceeded from the
'hundreds of Invisible barbs overhead a
zzling noise, like the sound of rain -
&Oita on a hot plate,
When a wonderful thing happened.
1
Through the opaque fog bank the
Outlines of the tall university buildings
Were gradually developed with the
Clow certainty of a photographic plate.
(The fog became a cloud and the cloud
a mist, depositing itself in dank drops
about the walls, writhing and squirm-
ing as though racked by the violence of
the discharge.
Away up at the eaves, eighty feet
1210, there were 'visible the elaborate
insulators in which the barbed wires
terminated.
Then the current was shut off, the
tsetse ceased, and the acrid white fog
crept back and enveloped the courtyard
once more.
When it was suggested that a score
of installations similar to this would
afford practical relief to the fog bound
city Sir Oliver said, "All that I can do
Is to erect this model apparatus for the
benefit of engineers who are interested
In such a project."—London Mail.
• One of the Old Guard.
When the Empress Eugenie arrived
the other night from the Hotel Conti -
Mental and stepped from the electric
loupe which had been sent to the sta-
tion to meet her a tall and soldierly
old man of some seventy years 'stood
With bared head and saluted in mili-
tary fashion.
In the brilliant days of the second
empire the old soldier formed part of
the empress' bodyguard, and it is said
that he conceived a strong platonic
love for his sovereign, which made
B im the butt of his comrades.
The empress frequently visits the
City over which she once reigned so
brilliantly, but even the newspapers
hardly notice her comings and goings.
Who old soldier, however, never fails
in his fidelity and stands in one of the
Corridors through which the empress
is bound to pass, so that he may sa-
lute his former sovereign as she passes
at the Hotel Continental. He invaria-
bly brings a magnificent bouquet of
yiolets or roses, -which are placed in
the empress' droving room.—Paris Let-
ter.
To the Point.
For many yelirs a traveling peddler
named Luce has been a well known
Character in the country towns of New
England. Ills route lies mostly within
Maine and New Hampshire, where be
sells needles, pins, softie extracts, etc.,
and is always a welcome guest at the
isolated farmhouses where he calls.
Unlike most itinerant peddlers, he is a
man of few words.
Last winter while driving down one
of the long hills of North Conway his
borse, becoming frightened, ran, final-
ly bringing ua at the foot of the hill
With an overturned cart, beneath which
by the unfortunate owner, unable to
extricate himself from the wreck. A
Mountaineer, approaching, asked, with
typical brevity, "Tight'?" "No," re-
turned the Yankee; "Luce."—Rarper's
(Weekly.
The Fresh Air Cure and the Cold,
Do you feel a "cold coming en?"
When don't try to ward it off, but wel-
tome it warmly. Treat it well; don't
let it alone or attempt to be "brave" or
tunny with it, for then it will turn and
tend you. A cold is as treacherous as
le—well, as anything. It marks its vie-
tim and then goes ahead. "Brealdng
a determined cold delays the tn.
heitable, and then, when all's done ten
to one it starts off into bronebids. or
pneumonia, while staying' indoors with
It and giving it full swing would have
Illearrned its fury at each new stage.
Whe fresh air cure is capital for every
malady save this familiar cOld,-13os-
ton Herald.
Vhe White Chir ot Dover.
The white chalk cliffs of DoVer,
liowned in poetry and history, are Said
to be Slipping sloWly Into the sea that
ter so many thousands of years has
dashed at their base. A portion of the
antra ell soma time ago, and recently,
It further portion at St, Margaret's bay,
Dover, has glen indications that it Is
also slipping eeateard. eracke in the
land have opened, and some portions of
the ellen have *Weedy fallen into the
sea, Where they form at loar -Water it
long causeway seaward. It line been
Suggested that the blesting Operation
et the admiralty harbor, leotee, May
Steve loosened the outer pOrtioris Of the
ellefeeAtitetletteLetter.
reuMS311.1mn.nen,.LA.......6a6.1CIEEM
Spring Catarrh. THE OCEAN STEAMERS
imungenhie weather Cataleff Bleettlie
Breathe ilyinuei ;Ma Bare Dlsen00,
The changeable weather of Spring,
with Ug warm days and cold eights, is
respousible for a great increase in the
number of coma of catarrh. It is now
that Hyomei, the only guaranteed treat-
meut for catarrh that cures weithout
steentioh dosing, should be used in every
For more than a century phyeloians
have been sending persons suffering
from catarrh to Egypt, Colorado, or
Australia, where the pure, healing air
would cure the disease. For one person
who could take this trip, thousands have
been compelled to stay at home and ma-
tinee their oaily toil, To these sufferers
who could not Mange their climatic cm-
ditions, we offer Hyomei, a method by
which pure air impregnated with Na-
ture's own remedies fax the cure of ca.
tarrh, can be inhaled by every sufferer
in his or her home. Breathed through
the neat potaket inhaler that comes with
every outfit, its healing, volatile, antis-
eptio fragrance reaches the lungs and sir
passages as no stomach dosing possibly
eau do, It gives immediate relief aud
makes lasting Cures.
The complete outfit, consisting of the
iiihater, medicine dropper, and bottle of
Hymen costs only one dollar, and ex-
tra bottles of Hyonuai, if needed, oau be
procured for fifty cents.
Proof that the Hyomei treatment will
do alt that it is claimed for it is found in
the guarantee under which Walton Mo.
Kihbon sells it, an agreement to pa3
back the price, if tbe purchaser can say
that Hyomei has not given satisfaction.
How 01d Are Fan,,?
The Chinese claim to have invented
the fan so far back as 2700 B. C. A
mandarin's daughter, the story says,
improvised the very first from her
mask. In the Museum of 13oulak, near
Cairo, is still preserved a wooden fan
handle of a feather fan of the seven-
teenth century B. C. The first folding
fan is said to have been invented by
the Japanese about 750 A. D.
AZ Misnomer.
Sir Isaac Newton was not a smoker,
although he had the reputation of the
"smoking philosopher." He did not use
tobacco in any form.
The Modern Bullet.
The modern bullet will pierce the
carcasses of three horses in succession.
at 530 yards, of four at half the dis-
tance or hill a man after passing
through the trunk of a thick tree.
Duck Surgery.
A hunter who lives at Kustrin, Ger-
many, shot and wounded a wild duck.
When he came across it, after a long
search, he found that it had tried to
stay the flow of blood under the wing
by stuffing in a number of grass blades.
The Onion.
The onion is the most nourishing of
all vegetables,
London,,, Cabs.
A statistician has arrived at the con-
clusion that e5,000,000 is spent yearly
by the public of London on cabs. He
also estimates that of that great sum
perhaps a million and a half represents
overcharges.
French Church Custom.
Every Catholic church in France has
—usually just within its doorway—a
candle seller, who sells candles for
worshipers to place upon the altars.
Plano Leather.
It is said that the most costly leather
in the world is known to the trade as
piano leather. The secret of tanning
this leather is known only to a family
of tanners in Germany, though the
skins Prom which it is tanned come al-
most entirely from America.
Belated Funeral.
Not long ago there was held a funeral
service at Goeschenen, in Switzerland,
over the fragmentary remains of a man
who had been engulfed eighteen years
earlier in a glacier.
Packed at the
Oven's Mouth
We do things right at
the Mooney bakery.
Crackers are packed piping
hot from the ovens. 'The
moisture -proof paper and
air -tight tins retain all the
freshness and crispness, no
MOO 14 [Pt
•1* '411'
04004*
AN ttl.,,C;tc
4( 01,1of
•
' • • ' sTRATOtisb CANADA 4
matter where or when
you buy that'll.
They come to your ta..
ble just as inviting and de.
licious as though you ate
them at the ovens in the
bakery. At all grocers in
1 And .3 lb. packages.
FLOATING CITIES WITH .A VARIETY
OF* OCCUPATIONS.
The Divession of Industrr, and the
Trades and Profesemions That Are
Represeated In the Grew of a Great
Atlantic liner.
The great Atlantic liners have often
been described aa floating cities, and
in atleast one particular the compari-
son is entirely aceurate—that is to say,
in the variety of occupations represent-
ed on shipboard. A, big steamship will
In her flight from land to land carry a
population of perhaps 2,000, of whom
the majority, of course, are passengers
—people of all professions and lines
of business, Leaving passengers out
of account, however, and considering
only the 500 or thereabouts who go to
make up the liner's crew, one will eas-
ily find representatives of nearly all
the trades of a thriving community
ashore.
This diversity of industry represents
au evolution—or, rather, a revolution—
that has come along with the develop-
ment of the gigantle modern steam-
ship. In the old days of sailing ships
all the members of the vessel's crew
were sailors and performed one part or
another of a sailor's work. Even the
redoubtable cook was usually much
better versed in matters relating to
spars and ratlines than he was in the
secrets of the culinary art. But today
the status is different. Navigation of
tbe big Atlantic fliers is a complicated
task, and the number of men required
to carry it on is ten times greater than
on even the biggest ships of a century
ago. The variety of their vocations
has of course been multiplied to corre-
spond with the increased complexity.
The sailors are in a small minority
nowadays. True, you will see a num-
ber of seamen on the big ships, and
these still have their duties to perform,
duties which, however, have nothing
to do with the Muffling of sails, for
not in a number of years has canvas
been spread on any of the big liners.
But common sailors seem few in com-
parison with the men of other trades
whose usefulness on shipboard the sea
captain of a generation or two ago
would have found hard to explain or
even understand.
Some of the greatest changes in the
conditions of service have come about,
naturally enough, througlt the intro-
duction of steam machinery. The pres-
ence of machinery means that the llner
must carry not only a number of engi-
neers, but also several machinists to
keep in order the complicated mechan-
ism of pumps and blowers and deck en-
gines which a big vessel carries. Then,
since every great passenger ship is pro-
vided throughout with a modern plumb-
ing system, she must have in readiness
a qualified plumber. An expert electri-
cian is also needed to look after the
electric lighting plant, a refrigerating
engineer for the cold storage plant and
a number of other representatives of
different branches of the engineering
profession.
Instead of the ancient cook with his
very limited accomplishments the up to
date liner has an expert chef, besides
bakers, confectioners and also the other
gastronomic specialists to be found in
the big fashionable hotels ashore. A
ship's butcher cuts the roasts and
joints and takes general charge of the
meat supply, and there are several
storekeepers, who, it is true, do not sell
goods, but who keep as exact account
of all the groceries and other supplies
Issued for the use of passengers and
erewit
as though their livelihood depend-
eduponBesides these, every liner carries a
barber, for passengers long ago gave
up the habit of going unshaven from
beginning to end of the voyage, The
barber has a comfortable little shop,
and next door to him perhaps is in-
stalled the barkeeper, who from the
nature of his clientele is required to be
adept in mixing the drinks of all na-
tions. Still more surprising to the inex-
perienced traveler it will perhaps be to
learn that the big steamships carry
four or five bootblacks to keep the pas-
sengers in shines.
Of the learned professions the only
one regularly represented is that of
medicine. Every liner carries a sur-
geon, who not only attends to pas-
sengers or members of the crew who
may, fall 111, but who is also charged
with the general supervision of the
health and sanitation of the vessel.
There are usually plenty of "sea laW-
yers" on board—not that there is any
demand for legal services—and if clergy-
men are not among the passengers the
captain or purser is qualified to read
the service on Sundays.
The issuing of a paper containing tele-
graphic tows involves of course an edi-
tor and a wireless telegrapher. The
editorial duties are assumed by the
purser, and the wireless operator not
only receives the news for the ship's
Paper, but takes and transmits mes-
sages for the passengers as well. The
Ship's printer prints not only the ship's
newspaper, but the daily menus and
concert programmes as well.
Most of the liners carry one or more
Inesicians. Some have fully equipped
bands that furnish &i1 music, and
those liners which do not include a
complete musical outfit have at least
one or more buglers to Sound the calls
tor Meals and Or inspection.
Every liner has on board a carpenter
who nukes necessary interior repairs
and leaks after the boat's tanks and
wells, and there are to be found among
the stewards and seamen handy men of
other trades. All of which goes to
slum that the modern "floating city"
Is a very cosmopolitan and, if need be,
a very Self reliant community,
That Which is called. liberality li fre-
quently nothing more than the vanity
of giving, of which we aro Mote fond
than Of the thing given. --..- itocheton.
canal
3
4kte. °1`
rel'olis44404r ' et"0
leredealeeseetta &Lai
116 tiflirki..741110‘
CO SAO 44Ken
fiA Ai
4,0esrye, epslo
W10000'fi,
010 se4413140) 411P1ee
„0" oitiefiP,P)V4,9
- ) 111110) 'AN .frilk 4
ns e
Furnace
—burns coal, coke or wood with equal facility.
Flues, grates, fire -pot and feed -doors, are
specially constructed to burn any kind of fuel, and
a special wood grate is always supplied,
Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write fax booklet.
McClary's
London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N. B.
SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNC.
Inward religion, without the outward
show of it, is like a tree without fruit,
useless; and the outward show of reli-
gion without inward. sincerity is like a
tree without heart, lifeless.
"V" \
c.
10
The first trust of a truly great man is
1 humanity.
1 Politeness is not always the sign of
1 wisdom, but the want of it leaves room
for the suspicion of folly.
• •
A Coiled Spring Wire Fence .4
With large, stiff stay wires, makes a perfect fence
Not one pound of sof 1 wire enters into the con•struction of •
THE FROST. The uprights are immovably locked to the •
running wires with THE FROST WEDGE -LOCK, snaking an
absolutely Stock -proof Fence. The Locks bind without kinking •
or crimping either the stays or lateral Wires. Will not slip, and our :3
• new method of enamelling and baking prevents rust, which adds greatly :
r•
: to the appearance of the fettee. Make no mistake. THE
Buy FROST. :5
It is the heaviest and the best, For sale by
J. J W. NOWBRAY White Church:
eee tee,seeeeetteAtic
ARE
Y
rIVIATMEN.1*7.MWAMIS
li A NUS NEU
•THOUSANDM of men are prisoners of disease as securely
a as though they were confined behind the bars. Many
have forged their own chains by the vices of early youth,
exposure to contagious disease, or the excesses of manhood.
They feel they are not the men they ought to be or used to be.
The vim, vigor, and vitality of manhood are lacking'. Are
you nervous and despondent? tired in the morning? have you'
to force yourself through the day's work? have you little am-
bition and energy? are you irritable and excitable? eyes
sunken, depressed and haggard looking? memory poor and -
brain fagged? have you weak back with dreams and losses at c'
'light? deposit in urine? weak sexually ?—you have
Nervous Debility an Seminal Weakness.
Our NEW METEIOD TREATMENT Is guaranteed to
,.. Cure or No Pay. 25 years 10 Detroit. Bank
Security. Beware of quacks—Consult old established,
• reliable _physicians. Consultation Free. Booko
Free. Write for Question Blank for Borne Treatment.
Kennedy I& Kergan,
eIIELBY STREET. DETROIT. Viten.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••8811•0•9011100•811041••••••
.•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Tie Times
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• Jo ) Deiartment
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1
1
•
1
Our peciaI it i e s.
•
COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS
• LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
•
• PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOK WORK
•
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
•
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
•
•
• •
THE TIMES
•
1
000001.0111111•041MMINIM011 1114000414000101111101111011.111111,00.1.4
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $Loo per
year in advance—sent to any address
in Canada or the United States.
An advertisement In the Miles brings good results
Address all communications to—
TEE WINGUAIVI TIMES
Residence Phone, NO. 74 "
OMNI Phone, Vo. 4.
W/NOHAMy ON T.
•
•
0
00
•
•
0
•
•
0
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
••
•
•
0
0
•
•
•
,,,,arectuara....1111.1amrstnesezarttaralau, • ....241111iier• . • •.