HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-06-15, Page 3REASON N 9
WHY YOU $I-tOULD USE
Ros
Red
Te a
Because it is Comm -deal.
Red Rose Tea is composed of what are known in the
trade as "high -grown" Ceylon and Indian teas, These
teas are grown at high attitudes on the mountain slopes,
where the tea bushes grow more slowly and are morn
carefully cultivated than in the valleys, where the climate
is warm and humid.
High -grown tea is, not only a finer quality, but con-
tains much more tea juice or extract than valley -grown
tea.
This can be easily proved by comparing a draw,
ing of Red Rose with any other tea. By doing so yon
will find that a pound of Red Rose Tea will spend as far
as I / to i / lbs. of other teas,
The saving is most apparent in the Blue Label and
better grades—buy a pound and make the test.
T. 11. ISTABROOKS, St John, N. B.
BRANCHES ; TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
The Only Way.
[Loudon Tatler.]
"'Young woman," said I to the girl
Who worked for Mr. W.—y;
But hal l her lip began to cur],
Although I spoke politely.
"Young person," but she only frowned,
.And looked more vexed than ever.
Her lovely eyes in tears were drowned,
She murmured "Well, I never!"
'"Young female," but a rosy red
O'er all her face was rushing,
1 conldn't think what I had said
To set that damsel blushing.
-'Young lady, then!" At once I saw
I'd somethink to my credit,
And though I broke some social law,
' Since then I've always said it.
T he people of the United States an-
nually chew $20,000,000, worth of gum.
Joseph Chamberlain, the celebrated
E nglishman is not a graduate of ar y
university or of any of the large public
schools. He was a full-fledged business
man at the age of 16 years and his for-
tune grew so rapidly that at the age of
38 he was able to retire from commercial
life and devote himself to the study and
praotice of politics,
;MANAGED WAN9ED.
Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage
business in this county and adjoining territory
for well and favorably known house of solid
financial standing. $2000 straight cash salary
and Expensees, paid each Monday by check
direct from headquarters. Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
Manager, 810 Conlo Bloelc. Cbi'ago Illinois
OIL OF PINE
The Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age.
As a cure for Catarrh of the Head, 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, CATARRH ! Allow your lungs id
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 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 P ES 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 mach is at stake, It means your further health and happiness.
PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no.
mambos, no alcohol of any description.
OIL OF PINES is not taken by tetaspoonfnls or tablespoonfuls. The dose ie
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contaius three times the number of ttoSeS
to that contained in hny other dollar bottle of medicine offered for sale.
The reason the name " Oil of Pines " wee 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.
Solhe remarkable cures effected by the never -failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines 1—
To Prof. 0. M. Dykes, Hensel,, Ont., manufacturer of Medicine called Oil
of Pines—
I have anfered from Asthma and Bronchitic combined for fifteen
years and epent hundreds of dollars in patent mediolnes and docters with-Liirti
out getting mired. One of my neighbors told Me to ase some of your Oil.
I got a treatment and took it positively cured me of the disease and I would
not be wihout if if it coat five dollars a bottle.
bout's truly,
Mr. J. Glover, Mount Bridges.
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.40.
MR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES,
N. B. --If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle. Oil address orders to
Prof. O. M. Dykes, I•leiaball, Ont., Proprietor and Mainufaotarer. All orders
promptly filled and forwarded to all parts of V. S. and Canada neon teweipt of
rine. Ask for Prot Dykes' ';011 of nes," and €oke NO -SUBSTITUTE. Prof.
ykele Retail Draog ate tsl t be an lied + ireot from Prof. Dykes' Laboratory at
;tensa,,, or from Wholesale Druggists at London, Canada,
THE WINGfAM
STRENUOUS BALZAC,
He Lived stn ts. Frenal! of 'Too gull
Med Needling g I<or Nose Time.
"'To be celebrated And to be loved,—
these were Mimeo two supreme and
passionate desires," writes Tighe Hop-
kins, the English author. "Ile gave the
Preference to fume and killed himself
with work if ever author did. Ilia
bool.s--each due of which, when he had
settled down to the 'Coiuetlfe lIu•
uiaiue,' tie proclaimed a masterpiece --
were a veritable' obsession; We know
now with what ceaseless and almost
insane toil he brought thein forth and
can see Inti wrapped In the monk's
robe of white flannel, the big throat
laid bare, veins swollen, the great
black eyes aflame, agonizing over plot
and scene, supplicating and cursing the
phrase that would not conte, sustaining
this through the days and nights of
three dreadful weeks at a stretch In
the sealed and curtained chamber
where the candles were never extin-
guished. Then, livid, unwashed and
half clothed, he would drag himself to
the printer's, Thus only in a nation
of stylists could the man that never
achieved a style make himself the first
novelist of his day and a classic.
"Wearing and wasting as this tat-.
veil was, Balzac's splendid strength of
body, the sure and ready return of his
inspired and seer -like periods, his
quenchless belief In liiluSelt and In-
trepid faith In the future enabled him
to continue it, with a taint:num of re-
pose, for thirty-one successive years.
And what a bulk of work! From 1821
to 1824 be wrote thirty volumes, and
in 1824 he was but twenty-five years
of age and had not even begun to think
of the 'Comedic Il:umaine.'
"Between 1830 and 1842 seventy-nine
novels of the 'Comedy' saw the •light,
and with all this the great work was
never completed. On his deathbed
he pleaded with his doctor for six
months, six weeks, six days in which
to consummate his task and sank into
coma while •pleading for six hours."
JAPANESE NEW YEAR'S.
A Day of Religions Bites and Spe-
claily Prepared Dishes.
To a devout Japanese breakfast on
New Year's day is a religious rite ratb-
'er than a vulgar satisfaction of the ap-
petite, says the London Chronicle. No
ordinary dishes are consumed at this
meal, The tea must be made with wa-
ter drawn from the well when the first
w
ray of sun strikes it, a potpourri of
materials specified by law forms the
staple dish, while at the finish a meas-
ure of special sake from a red lacquer
cup must be drained whosoever de-
sires happiness during the coming year.
In the room is placed an "elystan
stand," or red lacquer tray, covered
with evergreen leaves and bearing a
rich dumpling, a lobster, oranges, per-
simmons, chestnuts, dried sardines and
herring roe. All these dishes have a
special signification. The names of
some are homonoymus with words of
happy omen; the others have an alle-
goricaI meaning. The lobster's curved
back and long claws typify life pro-
longed till the frame is bent and the
beard is long; the sardines, which al-
ways swim in pairs, express conjugal
bliss; the herring is symbolical of a
fruitful progeny.
These dishes are not intended for con-
sumption, although in most cases the
appetite is fairly keen. The orthodox
Japanese not only sees the old year out;
he rises at 4 to welcome the newcomer
and performs many ceremonies before
he breaks his fast.
Prejudice.
The word "prejudice" comes from
two Latin words, "pro" or "pre," be-
forehand, and "judieo," I judge. There-
fore "prejudice" means the forming of
an opinion beforehand or before knowl-
edge. To form an opinion or declare a
judgment concerning any subject with-
out or ignoring knowledge is "preju-
dice." An opinion formed after a lite-
long acquaintance and experience and
after thorough investigation and study
may be erroneous, but cannot properly
be styled "prejudice." When the teach-
ing and experiences of the world are
disregarded, when the facts of history
and science are ignored or denied, the
conclusions or opinions thus arrived at
must not only be mistaken, but they
must be the result of prejudice.
Bary Your Troubles.
Train yourself to keep your troubles
to yourself. Don't pour them out upon
acquaintances or strangers. It isn't
their fault if you have troubles, and
they don't want to hear of yours, be-
cause they have so many of their own,
And besides -here is a point to con-
sider—if you insist on telling other
people.of your grievances they will at
length come to dislike and shun you,
becauae thereby you prevent them
from telling their troubles.
tt Saundra Sig.
"Bragley's a publisher, isn't' 1?"
"Not at all. What made you think
that?" .
"Ile told me he was a disseminator of
light literature."
"Ab, he's a bill clerk in the employ
Of the gas company."—Philadelphia
Press.
Misieading 'I'tt1e.
First Jerseyman--"Khat air ye readin'
there, d'abet? Second Jerseyman—A
book called "The Three 1llnsketeere."
1 thought it 'wax a Jersey story when 1
picked it up, but the plot appears to be
located in Franey some years back.
Pittsburg Post.
I»anitlotl.
Smart—Why do you Refer to lire. Toe -
!tern as a hay widely? Tart—Because
bay Is grass with all the greenness
dried out.—New 'York Times.
.11
A perverse temper and a disoona,
tented, fretful dtspoaition renter elf
'tate at lift utaliapp$.-'Cicero,
TI
ES, JUNE 15, 1905
8APON REN 4J
"IT EVAPQilATIOno
Odorless Non-polsououg
Scania iatn,n$bl•
The Wonderful Cloanor
Will save the thrifty housewife
many useful dollars. Cleans coars-
est or finest of fabrics, carpets or
sills waists beyond belief.
OMIT entirely removed
oesara absolutely destroyed
COLORO restored like new
OWING renewed In carpets
ALL IN A FEW MO:VENTS FOR
A FEW CENTS
And a child ecu do It with
SAP-O1-RMVe0
Get it at your grocer's.
ih• Hulf!'meri 1. Teeter Co,
Toronto
CURIOUS FACTS
The gold production of the entire
Alaskan district for last year was esti-
mated at twenty-six millions,
There were only about six hundred
novels Muer.; the ten theussnd books
published in France last year.
One of the recent fads in Paris was the
paying of visits by airship and many
successful "calls have been made in this
way.
Porto Rica is the most highly taxed
country on earth, although it pays for
neither army nor navy and has no na-
tional debt.
In China there is a tree which produc-
es oil. Recently about 1,000 were trans
planted from China to California and at
last reports were doing well.
Silesian glassmakers are turning out
glass bricks for all kinds of building
purposes and glass houses .of a very sub.
stantial kind can now be built.
RIGHT TIME TO CURE CATARRH.
Walton McKibben Guarantees Hyo,noi
Wi 1 Cure it Used Now.
The early summer when the weather
becomes warm and settled, is the best
time of the whole year to treat catarrhal
troubles with the expectation of
c
m.
plere
and lasting relief.
Everyone who has catarrh of the head,
and throat should know how fool-
ish it is to try and ewe it by drugging
the stomach.
Until recently your physician would
have said that the only way to cure ca-
tarrh would be by a change of climate,
but now with Hyomei you can carry a
health -giving climate itt your purse or
vest pocket, and by breathing it a few
minutes four or five times a day soon
cure yourself.
Everyone who has catarrh, or even a
tendency to catarrh, should use Hyomei
now, for the benefit will be gained twice
as quickly and the disease thoroughly
eradicated from the system.
The complete Hyomei outfit costs but
one dollar, and includes a neat pocket
inhaler, a medicine drnpper, and said -
cent Hyomei for several weeks' treat-
ment. The inhaler lasts a lifetime, and
if more Hyomei is needed, extra bottles
can be obtained for 50 cents,
In Wingham there are scores of well
known people who bave been cured ot
catarrh by Hyomei. If it does not cure
you, Walton McKibbon will return your
money. This is the strongest evidence
he can offer as to his faith in the remedy.
In fixing the course of study for two
of his sons Emperor William of Germany
has perscribed a study of railway pro
grecs and problems in the United States.
The whole of the German quick -firing
field artillery, which was adopted about
eight years ago, hat been condemned as
"obsolete" and is to be replaced by the
type of field guns used by the .Taranest.
The Vienna police use a phonograph
in recording a prisoner's answers to
questions asked in the preliminary ex•
amination, so that when the actual trial
takes place there may be no dispute as
to what was said.
The'
Revolutionizing'
of the
Cracker •
Mooney revolutionized the
cracker. He made folk
admit that they never knew
how good crackers could be,
by making such delicious
crackers as they had • nev..r
tasted before. Then he set
folk to eating Mooney's
crackers who'd never eaten
ir trackers before. In a. year
he had all Canada eating
Moone ►s s.
Perfection
Crennt Sodas
You'll see why when yott
try them. Haven't you Buri•
osity enough to buy a box at
your grocer's 2
THE PART .HEFTEf ,
An Actor's Success May Not Tlriprex4
ren the Number us ills LtNes.
An actor, known variously as "expe.
rlenced," "reliable" and "good all
round," one wbo has been said to "play
with authority," and whose "scholarly
reading of his lines" has been the sub-
lect of frequent eulogy, walked out ot
his manager's office with it roll of type -
'written rnanuseript clutcherl tightly in
Ids hand and a look sof blended joy and
elation irradiating his' well seamed
face.
"I've got my new part," be cried joy-
ously to a friend whom he met on the
sidewalk, "and it's great"
"Indeed," said lits friend, "What's
the character?"
"Dunne," replied the Theeplan cheer-
fully, "but it's simply great, If you
don't lsolieve me just heft this." And
his friend proceeded to "heft" the type-
written roll, remarking as he handed
it back that it must weigh at least half
a pound,
If this good alt round actor had pos-
sessed any real knowledge of his craft
he would have known that the failure
be scored was due to the fact that his
half pound part was one of those
worthless ones which read well and
"heft" well, but which afford the play-
er no opportunity to do anything pleas-
ing to,the public.
When Mr. Palmer gave out the parts
for the first production of "The Two
Orphans" there was one roll of menu -
script that was the lightest of all and
weighed so little that the pelt hefters
in the company tinted up their asg'4
in scorn and turned pitying glances on
the young actress to whom it was as-
signed. Yet that was the part of Lou-
ise, the blind girl, and Miss Kate Clax-
ton's performance of it will remain In
the popular memory long after every
other character in the piece shall have
been forgotten.—James L. Ford in Har -
per's Weekly.
MODERN CiTY LIFE.
Its Saddest Aspect Is the Passing of
the Horne.
The passing of the home Is the sad-
dest phenomenon of modern city life.
The tenement house, which we seek to
disguise under the name of "fiat," is a
most wretched, substitute for the hum-
blest of homes. That our people endure
them is an indication of degeueracy, as
- it will unquestionably be the cause of
a more rapid descent. It is morally
certain that the vigor of the race can
be maintained only by personal con-
tact with the mother earth from which
we sprung, which nourishes us to her
bosom when we die. Why this is, per -
baps no one knows, but it is within the
knowledge of all that the vigor of the
city Is constantly recruited from coun-
try life. To deprive children of daily
contact with the soil is a sin.
The evil of the tenement house was
not realized until it passed from the
slums, because few of us know how the
other half lives. It is perhaps not so
desperate a misfortune to those who
live by manual labor, for they get their
contact with earth in other ways, and
their children, less vexed by the con-
ventions of society, find access to the
soil by some means and pass, while
still young, to the occupations of their
parents. The most terrible effect of the
tenement house is in the families of the
"salaried" class as distinguished from
the "wage earners" and who flit from
fiat to fiat, seldom remaining long
enough anywhere for home associa-
tions to be formed. There can perhaps
be no home associations worthy of the
name which are not connected with a
piece of open ground in the sole pos-
session of the family. It would seem
that in our larger cities this privilege
can no longer be enjoyed except by the
rich. -San Francisco Chronicle.
Music as a Procession.
1•lnlese a man is rieh he ought to be
regarded as a criminal if he permits
his sons or daughters to become musi-
cians. In the musical profession there
are a few prizes not of the Largest, but
for the largest number of interpreta-
tive artists the life is one of drudgery—
the drudgery of learning, the drudgery
of pushing oneself into notice and
after alt the continual drudgery of play-
ing or singing just the music the public
wants. I recommend no one to enter
such a profession unless he or she le
music to such a degree that the dru
cry is a pleasure.—John I+. Runciman
in Saturday Review.
A Disappointed Cannibal,
A pathetic story of a disappointed
Cannibal Is told in an English religious
paper. "One day," says a missionary,
"I was eating some canned sheep's
tongues that had been sent from borne.
One of my natives, seeing me, jumped.
with delight. He thought they were
men's tongues. His gloom on discov-
ering that it was not a religious re-
vival, alter all, and that the missionary
remained unconverted would have
touched the hardest heart.'
Not Caught.
Belle ---What did yon tell hint when
he suddenly' asked how old you were?
Estelle --I refused to tell him anything.
You see, 1 couldn't for the life of me
think of the number I had given him
when he asked me before!
l'amolotey.
Teacher—What is tautology? Boy
Repetition. Teacher --Give me :en ex.
ample. Hoy—We are going to have
sheep's head for dinner, and my sitter
Elsie's young man IS coming to dinner
also. q.'eachcr--Go up top.
Dtfriou'lt, Indeed.
Old Friend --Ta your part very dila-
cult to play? Barnstormer—Weil,
rather, I'm living on one meal a day
and playing the role of a man with
the gout!—Detroit Free Press.
The habit of a whole life is tt stron-
ger thing that, all the reason in the
world, --,'opo.
�unshi;
urna
DOUBLE
FEED -DOORS
Just about the meanest
thing A furnace can have
is a dinky little door.
Ever have one? Hit the edge
as often as the hole? One has
to be an expert stoker to shovel
coal into some furnaces. Ii'
you're not an expert you'll get
as much on the floor as in the
furnace,
The Sunshine furnace is
equipped with a good, big door,
You can put your shovel in and drop
wanted—no trouble, no taking aim, no
annoyance.
Everything aboyt the Sunshine. furnace is
of thoughtfulness.
Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write for
'1
the coal just where it is
missing, no scattering, or
on the same
booklet,
McCIary's
scale
LONDON. TORONTO, MONTRF,AL, WINNii'EG, VANCOUVER, $T.1017, N. 4.
SOLD IN WiNCHAM BY A. YDUNOI
The bankers wbo bought large blocks
of Cuban warrants are said to have
&eared about 0,000,000 by the Govern-
ment paying off its war liabilities. The
claims were purchased at less than Me
ou the dollar.
Close to Blsokfriar's bridge, London,
is an eel market where eelsare sold by
the handful, the price being "fourpenoe
a grab."
over half a million people are em-
p'oyed ir Italy in rfatlug silkworms. •
Ca It lea •^Mille••oiS,icili7;vu^ Tr‘ as•yinr.tatio^oli^•wTat ri.nrCa^o ii.iri•o
•
•
"•
--- ' 7c-FrostWire Fence•• S. siltfi ( t•
rt.r`1 !) li 1i li•is no equal as General •
•
1l j (I Purpose Farm 1 ence eIt will turn Stock without '
1/I lI•
Jt l) 11 ' It
beautify the Farm — to
flues not Head eonstttut patching •)
0 !lU i -'t
11 suit with reasonable usage wi11 o
•last a life -time. Booklet and
i
•
* { rr i full particulars given on request. •
(• '1 l 1' 4 •)
N . i wrG-.:6..K...,.. u v r , ,.'-....a..,..+..-Rat: SAL" BY •l
1J. W. MOWBRAY White Churcht
CJ✓✓.�v...r✓,.n.�..�w..'...vw.�..iv..�..�.. v �Awwvww...w.A....V..,.r.AvJ • •
C.
•
Or
Llu. u�i,-6LYd2L::A..mi ti ,d ���Ei.IkRS6Y
RESTORED T 1. MANHOOD
The New Method Treatment of Drs.
K, & K. has restored thousands of weak,
diseased "ten to robust manhood. No
matter ,tow many doctors have failed to
cure you, give our treatment a fair trial
and you will never regret it. We guars
antee all cases we accept for treatment.
Not a dollar need be paid unless cured
for you can pay after you are cured.
Drs. K. & K. established 2S years.
We treat Varicocele, Nervous Debit.
ity, Stricture, Blood Diseases, Kidney
Bladder and Urinary Diseases. If un-
able to can, write for Question Blank far
Home Treatment. Consultation Free.
NOTA DOLLAR NEED BE
PAID UNLESS CURED.
RSA KENNEDY & KERGAN
48000008000040008098088004
•
i
•
•
•
•
•
•
s
•
•
•
w
•
•
•
•
•
i
••
•
i
••
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
0
w
•
•
148 Shelby Street.
Detroit. Mich.
0000000400000004000000000*
•
0
i
i
i
•
0
•
w
i
M'
i
i
0
0
•
•
ror
•
Tie Times
Jo Deamen
MIN
Our Job )Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed t o give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Our peeiialft1es.
COLORED WORD LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE 1TTAD$
• PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOR WORK
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
MAiL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
0
w
•
•
1
1
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 "limes brinfts good results
Address all cormttnications to—
TEE WING IAM TIN. ]iS
esice neINOIIAf, CVT.ResdennPhone, No.'t4,