HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-06-22, Page 3*Red
Te aosRe
"IS GOOD TEA"
It is good tea because it is made of the
young, tender, juicy leaves of the tea plants of
Northern India and Ceylon.
These leaves contain a large percentage of
Theine, which is a mild stimulant and an aid
to digestion.
This is why Red Rose Tea is good, not only
while you are drinking it, but is good after
you drink it.
Quick and Slow.
Be quick to do a kindly deed
To st me one in distress;
Some hungry orphan child to feed,
Who will your service bless;
But, if 3 on think to do a wrong
To anyone you know,
Tho' they be either weak or strong,
Then be not quick- but slow,
Be quick to speak a cheering word,
Whatever else you do.
In order that some heart he stirred
The right course to pursue;
But, if you think a word unkind
On some one to bestow,
Before you quite make up your mind,
Be not too quick -but slow.
Be quick the door to open wide
That enters to your heart,
That noble thought with you may 'bide
And nevermore depart;
But, if you think to ope the door
To tbiugs debased and low,
'Twere best to thiuk the matter o'er
And not be quick -but slow.
-Boston Globe.
Twelve hitherto unknown minuets by
Beethoven bave been discovered in the
Vienna court library. They are to be
played in Paris shortly.
The latest penny in the slot machines
in Londou represent a sort of savings
bank. For each penny pushed in a re-
ceipt is returned, and sixty of these re-
present a five shilling deposit in a bank.
Probably the youngest general 1n the
world is a neighbor of the late Shah of
Persia, a boy not yet fourteen years old.
He bolds the rank of full general in the
' Persian army.
MANAGER WANTED.
Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage
business in this county and adjoining territory
tor well and favorably known house of solid financial standing.$20C0 stent ht cash salary
and Expensecs. pard
each Monday by check
direct from headquart( rs Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
Manager. 810 Como Bioek. Chinago Illinois
OIL OF PINES
f 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 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 Iike 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'oniy a never -failing cure, !but also a sure preventive.
Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. Do not delay or
trifle, where so much is at stake. It means your further health and happiness.
PROF. MIMS' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no
narcotics, no alcohol of any description.
rtablespoonfuls.is
nfttle b The dose
OIL OF PINES is not taken by teaspoonfuls
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contains three times the number of closes
to that contained in any other dollar bottle of medicine offered for sale.
The reason the name " Oil of Pines'' was chosen for this sovereign remedy
is because the oil from four different species of the pine make lap 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 :-
To Prof. 0. M. Dykes, Hensall, Ont., manufacturer Of Medicine called Oil
Df
Fines:. ---
Prof. C. M. Dykes -Sir: -1 takb pleasure in recommending your Oil
Of Pines as a positive cure for stomach trouble and throat trouble. 1 wits a
sufferer for over twenty years with catarrh of my throat and stomach. I
tried dootots in New York and Detroit, but could get no relief or cure. I
was completely discouraged and bad given up trying any mote medicine,
when one day I was called on by one of your agents; I was busy at the
tinge and shook him off short; but he persisted so that I took a
treatment. The result ie that I am today as well as ever I Was in my life
and completely free from the disease. I can neyer thank that agent too
much for his persistence, for had he not urged me to hard I would not have
teen enjoying the health I have, which 1 never valued till I lost it.
Yours respectfully,
M. C. Wells 6t Co., St. Thotoas.
Price $LOO per bottle, or 8 for $5.00.
'OI1 SAM AT ALL I' TTG STORKS.
N. B. --If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle Oil address orders to
Prof. C. M. Dykes, Howell, Ont., Proprietor iusd M nnf*otttrer. All Orders
promptly filled and forwarded to all parts of 'J. S. and Canada Upon receipt of
price. Ask for Prof. Dykes' ,'Oil of Pines," and take NO St7BS'r1 UTE. Prof,
dykes" is the one orlgftial and genuine.
Retail Druggists can be supplied direct front Prof. Dykes" Laboratort at
$elisa% or from Wholesale DrUggiets at,Irondon, Canada,
IRE W1NGHA? TIMES, JUNE 22, 1945
NOW Is THE TIME FOR WOMB P= THE (*AY sra,uniRet.,
A RIDE UP PiKE'S PEAK.
It Ilk Liable to Alta•at I,.lterall7 Attrr•t
Teter Blond Omer,
To take a pleasure ride that simost
literally burst4 your bead open le a
novelty thrilling enough, It Is to be pre-
sumed, for the west eager thrill seeker.
But that is what often happens to
him who essays the dizzy helgbts of
Pike's peak, 14,000 feet above see level.
"X went up on the cog road from
Maultou," sold a Baltimore mein, "in
company with a party of tourist* 'and
before we reached the Halfway House
there were two who exhibited such
positive rymptores of distress that at
the first stop they had to leave and
take the next train down. The reat of
ue continued, In a seat a little in front
of us was a youug girl who bad been
growing gradually hysterical and whom
we bad been watching curiously to
see what would happen next. It hap-
pened. Suddenly she threw up her
hands and fell backward, with blood
gushing from her mouth, ears, eyes and
nose, The couductor, who was evi-
dently accustomed to such scenes, told
her escort to lay her fiat on her back,
as the pressure was less there than at
the head beight in a sitting posture.
Then, at the next station, she was tak-
en off and sent back to Manitou by the
wagon road, They didn't dare to take
her down by train, as the quick change
to the denser air might have proved
*serious.
"Well, we kept going and reached
the top. I thought I'd take a short ruts
in the fine, rarefied air, and I did
rook a desert steps, when my heart be-
gan to beat 1110 a frig fiaibhler, an$ I
concluded that running at that height
was not for nae, They told me you
couldn't boll eggs or beans up there. I
don't knowbecause I didn't try. We
bad our pictures taken sitting on a
rock up in tbat barren spot, where
nothing will grow but the edelweiss,
and bought some souvenirs. Then we
came down, and, so far as I am eon-
eerned, they can level the mountain
tomorrow. I'll never have any more
use for it: Manitou, Garden of the
Gods and North Cheyenne canyon for
mine, but no more of that sky busi.
ness,"-Baltimore News.
LEND A HAND.
Lend a hand to the tempted.
Lend a hand to souls in the shadow.
Lend a hand to those who are often
misjudged.
Lend a hand to the soul Brushed with
unspeakable loss.
Lend a hand to the poor fighting the
wolf from the door.
Lend a hand to those whose lives are
narrow and cramped.
Lend a hand' to the boy struggling
bravely to culture his mind.
Lend a hand to the young people
whose homes are cold and repelling.
Lend a hand to those whose sur-
roundings are steadily pulling them
down.
Lend a band to the prodigal sister.
Her life is as precious as that of the
prodigal brother.
Lend a hand to the girl who works,
works, works and knows nothing of
recreation and rest.
Lend a hand -an open hand, a warm
hand, a strong hand, an uplifting hand,
a hand filled with mercy and help. -
Silver Cross.
Won Each Time.
About thirty years ago a remarkable
bet was made between Captain M., a
racing celebrity, and another officer
who was noted for his activity. Cap-
tain M. bet £50 that his fellow officer
would not hop up a certain flight of
stairs "two at a time.." The offer was
taken; but, as there were forty-one
steps in the flight, be found after tak-
fug twenty hops that he was Left only
one step to negotiate and had lost. lie
accused Captain M. of sharp practice,
but the latter replied:
"Well, I'll wager you another £50 I
do it,"
The officer, thinking to get back his
money, again accepted. Captain M.
then hopped up forty steps in twenty
hops and, hopping back one, finished
by going up the last two steps and
won. -London Standard.
Ancestry.
Napoleon never pointed to his ances-
try as the source of his unparalleled
ambition and achievements, but said,
"I. ern my own ancestry." A patrician
once said to,Cicero, "You are a plebe-
ian." "I am," said Cicero. "The BO -
Witty of my family begins with me;
that of yours ends with you." Better
be the foundation of a new pyramid
than the apex of an old one. Better
make your family proud of you than be
foolishly proud of your family, with
nothing in you to enable them to re-
turn the eompliment.
The Wodehnek Is Lamy-.
There is no animal that exerts less
energy in the course of a year than the
woodchuck. Ile feeda upon the best in
the meadow and occasionally in the gar-
den, being very fond of the juicy peat
and beans and tender lettuce. Then as
winter comes on he forgets all care and
worry, trawls into his burrow and,
like the bear, falls asleep, (tot to
awaken till spring. -bit. Nicholas.
Ws Favorite Instrument.
"The tout ensemble of that orcheetea
is remarkably good," remarked IStr,
Newrleh's host at the box party,
"Dn't you think so?"
"You bet it le!" responded Mr. New-
tleh. enthusiasttealiy. "I like to watch
the feller that's playhl' it slide it back
and forth -looks as it he was swatter -
he til'" -•Cleveland Leader.
Wardell mase.
"It'iony til WOO," said 'Miele itben,
"castes titne is dis life trylh' to .push
homebody to d• rear when lid ought to
be Wile to Kit ahead an lite own se.
scant,"- ,'IVa#biugto>a Star. ,
Far Easier to Vero catarrh Now Than at
Any Other seamen.
Now is the time to use Hyomei, when
the early summer days make it AO easy
to cure catarrhal troubles. The Hyomei
treatment, breathed for a few minutes
three or four tunes a day in May or June,
will do -good twice as quickly es it did iu
January, and nearly everyone knows
thaw -used feitbfullythen, it completely
rids the system of catarrh,
Hyomei is a. purely vegetable prepare.
tion whose active curative properties are
given off when it is breathed by the aid
of the pocket inhaler that comes with
every outfit. It destroys all germ life in
the air passages, purifies the blood by
supplying additional ozone, end its heal.
fug, volatile, antiseptic fragrance reaches
every corner of the respiratory traot as
no medicine taken through the stomach
can possibly do.
The complete Hyomei outfit costs but
One dollar, and consists of a neat inhaler
that can be carried in the purse or vest-
pocket and will Last a lifetime, a medi-
cine dropper, and a bottle of Hyomei,
Extra bottles of Hyomei can be procured,
if desired, for fifty mute.
At this season of the year when ca-
tarrhal troubles can be so quickly and
readily cured, the merits of the Hyomei
treatment should be carefully investigat-
ed by every( ne and a complete outfit
should be in every borne. Walton Mo-
Kibbon gives bis personal guarantee
with every Hyomei outfit he sells to re-
fund the money if it does not given sat-
isfaction. There is no risk whatever to
the purchaser of Hyomei,
A Psalm of Farm Life.
Tell me not in broken measures
Modern farming does not pay,
For a farm produces chickens,
And the hens -do they not lay?
Eggs are high and going higher.
And the price is soaring fast;
Every time we get to market
It is higher than the last.
Not a coop but it produces
Every day an egg or two,
So eaoh farmer gains his millions,
Even though the hens be few.
Every egg is very precious
And the hens are held in awe.
When a hen begins to cackle,.
Then the farmer goes "Haw, baw 1"
In the broad and busy farmyard
Struts a rooster now and then,
But the shrewd, bewhiskered farmer
Only notices the hen.
Trust no rooster, howe'er showy
Be the feathers in his tail;
Pay attention to the biddies,
And your wealth will never fail.
Lives of farmers all remind ns
We may roll in wealth some day
If we hustle to the market
With the eggs our pullets lay.
-Chicago Chronicle.
Swearing and affirming.
Judge David B. Shelby of the Alabama
Circuit Court was talkiug about the dif-
i ference between swearing and affirming.
"Whatever the difference is," he said,
"it is assurdly not what a certain old
colored man understood it to be last
week.
"This colored man, entering the wit-
ness box, said he though he wouldn't
swear. He thought he would just af-
firm.
"Erastus,' I said, 'how is this? A
month ago, when you appeared before
me, you consented readily enough to
swear, Why is it that you will only af-
firm now?'
"Well, yo' Honah,' said Erastus, 'de
reason am dat I specks I ain't quite so
sure about de Packs o' dis Cas as I wax o'
de odder."
The estimated average annual wheat
yield of the United States is 540,000,000
bushels. The per capita consumption
by the American people, the largest
wheat eaters of the world is 6 7 bushels,
making the total estimated consumption
approximately 530,000,000 bushels
The Lord Mayor of London recently
stated at a banquet that his wife, his
three daughters, his eldest son and his
daughter-in-law, his chaplain, his butler'
and his stewart were all total. abstainers.
00
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1
PER `E_,(1r1QIii
Ct hSod5
,.a.',
r' 1�1110+)NEy 6istint i CANDY, CC
tiIATreRD CANADA
Food
Value
Mooriey's Perfedtion Cream
Sodas are crisp squares
of wholesome nourishment
They are the food that
builds strength and muscle,
They are as easly digested
by the child and invalid
as by the sturdy workman.
They contain ALL the food
properties of finest Cana.
dian wheat flour, in a form
that delights the appetite.
Always fresh and crisp in
the rookitwre'ptdof packager.
At all Iowa* it 1 and
i passed pocksitt.
$A E• is stetti1M nt: nitons Than ORR
Fiattrir Tl.em. %filo.
"One of the moat retainer sounds of
tite Rummer woods is the rattling bark
of the red squirrel," writes an °beerv-
er, "The tones of his voice are verled,
and there is a great difference between
his angry bark, hie cry of fear, the
chattering monologue wlth which he
addresses an intruder on bis domain,
the running Are of repartee which le
the constant accompilhimcut et toe's n.
ties of a pair at play and the long rat.
tling roll call which he utters super+
Batty from sheer enjoyment of the
sound or as rt challenge to some ma.
*seen enemy of his own tribe and which
reverberates through the woods often
with sufficient force to carry the sound
for as much as half to three-quarters
of a mile. If we listen for an instant
when we hear one of these challenges -
sent forth we may bear it answered
from *some distant point so faintly that
we cannot be certain that it is not an
eeho. Some other male bas heard the
challenge and, detecting the self satis-
Sed note in it, has answered, and we
may be fairly certain that they are
hastening toward each other, each with
the intention of annihilating his foe or
at least teaching him a lesson.
"Gray squirrels, unlike most of the
rodents, do not hfbernate in the winter
time, but are abroad and very active
du�ring most of the season. Their nests
are then in hollow trees, but they usu-
ally leave these retreats in March and
build aider and Less vermin infested
abodes in the tree tops of leaves and
twigs. If you can watch a gray squir-
rel gathering nuts in the fall you wilt
see him take a nut in his cheek poueb
and bop along the ground, testing it
every few yards with Ids front feet.
When he bas found a spot entirely to
his liking he will scoop out a shallow
hole and, placing the nut in it, will
cover it up with the Loose earth. This
he will stamp down and restore to its
former condition by scraping the loose
leaves and small stones over It.
"This performance lie repeats again
and again in that and other localities
until he has hidden away in this man-
ner a large quantity of nuts, one squir-
rel often burying several hundred. In
the winter, as he needs them, he un-
earths these nuts, and it is wonderful
how unerringly he can go to his vari-
ous caches, even though, as frequently
happens, they may all be covered with
a foot or more of snow."
BITS FROM THE AUTHORS.
The three qualities I admire in wo-
man are beauty, unselfishness, gentle-
ness. --T. P. O'Connor.
Why do so many women spoil men,
even as they spoil horses, by too lavish
use of spur and whip and bearing
rein? -Rita.
Our minds find in books what our
bodies find in our surroundings -health
or disease, according to our constitu-
tion. -Sarah Grand.
Instinct is the name that we give to
motives which cause actions not to be
accounted for by common sense. Pow-
er and foresight are things that keep
a nation alive. -Bart Kennedy.
So long as men and women marry
with inferior motives or with no mo-
tive except the novelty of being mar-
ried they are going to reap results
which they do not want. ---Lavinia,
Hart.
An Elastic statement.
The new reporter in his story of the
wedding, says the Baltimore Ameri-
can, wrote, "The floral display stretch-
ed from the chancel rail to the doors of
the church."
The city editor in a mild manner, as
is the custom of city editors with new
reporters, said:
"Couldn't you bave used a better
word titan `stretched?' Say the floral
display 'nodded' or `twined' or some-
thing like that -some word more sug-
gestive
nggestive of flowers."
"'Stretched' is all right in this case,"
replied the new reporter, with the
stubborn courage of a realist. "The
decorations consisted of six rubber
plants, and they had to stretch to cover
the distance."
•
Real Value of College Education.
We are apt to overestimate the value
of an education received from books
alone. A large part of the value of a
college education cornea from:tho social;;
intercourse of 'the students; the re -en- - •
•
forcement, the buttressing of character, •
by association. Their faculties are
sharpened and polished by the attri- •
tion of mind with mind and the pitting •
of brain against brain, which stimulate
ambition, brighten the ideals and open •
up new hopes and possibilities. Book •
knowledge is valuable, but the know]• e
edge which comes from mind inter- •
course is invaluable. -O. S. Marden in •
Success Magazine. •
•
One Way.
Hicks -He'll never succeed in life--•
never made a living, in fact. Wicks-- •
Why do you think that? hicks -Oh, •
every time be opens bis mouth he puts •
his foot in it. Wicks -Well, that's one •
Way at least of making both ends meet. •
-Catholic Standard and Times.
Wateropan
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 inerely
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.
McCIar$
LONDON, TORONTO MONTREAL, giNMipEO, VANCOUVER, •t,JONN. N.B.
SOLD IN WINOHANI BY A. YOUNG.
Cologne has perhaps the best electric
cab system in Europe. The operating
cost per kilometer, everything included,
is 5 cents. It is expected that electric
automobiles will soon be an economic
possibility.
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As a result of the discovery of a fresh
gold reef in Madagascar the shares of
the French mining companies interested
in the island have made an extraordinary
jump, and one shareholder is said to
have made a fortune.
....v.,,N--..-�
FROST"
Ornamental Gates
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•)
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Light in weight Artistic in design •)
Reasonable in price •.
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Also a large line of Standard Farm Gates :
always on hand. Every progressive and •
up-to-date farmer insists on baying FROST
GATES. Catalog and prices on request. 1:
FOR SALE BY
•J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church
a. „„,,A
NERVOUS DEiBIL/TY CURED
Excesses and indiscretions are the cause of more
sorrow and suffering than all other diseases combined,
We see the victims of vicious habits on every hand;
the sallow, pimpled -face, dark circled eyes, stooping
form, stunted development, bashful, melancholic
countenance and timid bearing proclaim to all the
world his folly and tend to blight his existence. Our
treatment positively cures all weak men by overcoming
and removing the effects of former indiscretions and
excesses. It stops all losses and drains and quickly
restores the patient to what nature intended—a healthy
and happy man with physical, mental and nerve pow-
ers Complete.
For eves ?S years Drs. E. & R, have treated with
the greatest success all diseases of men and women.
if yon have any secret disease that is a worry and
a menace to your health consult old established physic-
ians who do not have to experiment on you..
We guarantee to cure Nervous Debility. Bleed
Diseases, Stricture, Varicocele, Kidney and Bladder
Diseases. Consultation Free. If unable to call, writs
for a Question Blank for Home Treatment.
DRS' KENNEDY & KERGAN
14S Shelby Street„
Detroit, Mich.,
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Tie Times I
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I JOI .081811 In w
t
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yawed Trouble.
Daisy --Wily, hose, dear, what have 1
you done to your poodle? The last time
I saw him his hair was. white. Ilose-•
Yes, but it was suck a nuisance to keep
him washed, you know, so I just bad
hint dyed brewni-Detroit Pree Press.
Can Alt rays
"There goes a total failure."
"How do you know he is?"
"Ile's always sneering at other men's i
auccese. "--Cleveland tender.
Ho Keen
Meekly -Yes, we're going to mete t+1
Swamphnrst. Doctor -But the climate
there may dlsagree With your Wifek
teekiy-*It'wouldret dire!
lttl�r
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
per pedal it 1 e s.
COLORED WORE LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIROULARS BOOK WORK
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
MAiL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
THE TIMES
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscript`loon: $I.00 per
year in advance—sent to any address
in Canada or the United States.
An advertisement in the Times brinks good results
Address all obminunieetions to -
1 SE WINGEAM TIMES
Glace Phone, No, 4.
Residence Phone, xre. t4. It' GRAM, ONT.
' 114110•110,411060.111004110111114.111,411110