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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-06-29, Page 3REASON No21 WHY YOU SHOULD V$ Red Rose Te a R•S*use it is perfectly clams, Wouldn't you like to know that the tea you drink has not been touched by human hand since it was plucked on the plantation This Is what you get in Red Rose Tea. The old method of rolling and packing tea by hand has been entirely done away with on the tea estates where Red Rose Tea is produced. There, as well as in the blending and packing rooms, machinery — scrupulously clean machinery—is used exclusively. Red Rose Tea is never touched by hand after being plucked, This fact alone will help you enjoy drinking it. The Blue Label is recommended. T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B. BRANCHES : TORONTO, WINNIPEG. The Old Serf p Beck, (Telling cf a Mother's Love ) It is only a bot k of pictures, Ahcve ve hese reefs old hent ie 1 fad ogee often bent In (nrlea et runny gold, .Ai d a es' eat little ftlee oft. waited For itt tate to he begun. That. was reedy egtnn to hear the Before the last vi let done. It is only a het k of pictures He I(arl 1etide bet kelt('; But time 1 -ns borne lout frcm her To a world across the sea. Navy c11s Fit ce have met him, Many `erns (heir teles have told; But to her in it dreenling Ever He keels those cutis of gold. It is only a hook of pictures, She is there alone today, Witb her luny in ad roft)y Iying Where once bis gulden lay. And turnirg the rage s ov(r, Whatever the 3(ait n.ey rind, She prays 814 be lived her 3 dais ago, He may love her to the end. The quality of meroy is not strained; It droppeth as the gentle rain from Heaven Upon the place beneath: It is twice blessed: It blesseah him that gives, and him that takes; 'Tie mightiest in the mightiest; it be. ranee The throned monarch better than his crown; His sceptre shows the force of temporal power, The attribute to awe and majesty. 'Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings: But mercy is above bis soeptred sway; It is enthroned in the hearts of kings, It is an attribute to God himself; And earthly power doth than show likest God's When mercy seasons justice. —Shakespeare. MANAGER WANTED. Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage business in this county and adjoining territory tor well and favorably known house of solid tinrncial standing. 4e000 straight cash ca1arryy and Expenseea, paid each Monday by cheek direct. from headquarters. Expenses money advanced. Position permanent. Address. Manager. 810 (omo Block. Chl.;ago Illinois OIL OF PINE!S The Mos Wonderful Medical Discovery o f he 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 ! AIlow 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 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 FINES, has completely cured thousands of cases as above described. Therefore, upon the first evident symptoms of this dreaded disease, CATARRH, make haste and procure a bottle of the sovereign remedy called OIL OF PINES, OIL OF PINES is not;only a never -failing care, Ibut also a sure preventive. Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pouind of cure, Do not delay or trifle, where so much is at stake. It means your further health and happiness. PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no narcotics. no alcohol of any description. OIL OF PINES is not taken by teaspoonfuls er tablespoonfuls. The dose is by drops. A bottle of oil of Pines contains three times the number of doses bottle of medicine offered for al to that contained in any other dollarsale. The reason the name " Oil of Pines" was chosen for this sovereign remedy is because the oil from four different species of the pine make up the main body of the remedy. Compounded the Pine is the oils and juices taken from nine different plants and roots which grow in foreign countries. Some remarkable cures effected by the never -failing curative powers of Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines :— To Prof. C. M. Dykes, Hensen, Ont., manufacturer of Medicine called 011 of Pima:— Mts. Richard Ross, of Kirkton, Ont., says the following in praise of oil of Pines. "My eister.inaaw, she recommended me to ase 011. of Pines in our family, I got her to send to Mr. Dykes for six bottles of the Oil. We used the Oil in our family all last winter and found 11 to be a wonder- ful household remedy. I had a boy and a girl who went to school and they suffered a great deal with their throatti• stick as colds, eto. love them the 01l and I must efiy X found it Speedy and sure every time we resorted to it. My sister, Miss McCallum, also used it for her throat and found it just a grand remedy. rE highly praise your 011 of Pines." Price $1.40 per bottle, or 6 for $5.00.. FOR MLR AT ALL DRUG STORES. N. 13.—If year storekeeper or drnggiet does not handle Oil address orders to Prof. C. M. Dykes, Heusall, Ont., Proprietor and MannfSotearer. All orders promptly filled li►nd forwarded to all parte of 11'. S. and Otomft upon receipt of pprice. Ask for Prof, Dykes' "Oil of Pined," and take NO S'CUBSTITUT'E. Prof, Dykes' is the one original eudkelrolne. • Retail Druggists can he stzpplied direct from Prof. Dykes' T aborlstory at .ilteneali, or from Wholesale. Maggiate at Loudon, Canada. TRE WLNGUTAM TIES, JUNE 29, 005 `Ng PASS M:MR PiG1IQN, An interesting Description of Sint Qomman in Canada OCcadas Ago. ] have been thinking for some lime of sending you a deserts) ion of th = passenger pigeon. No doubt, many of your readers have never seen 0113 b Ird, and have no idea of the countless num- ber.. seen by the early settl.'ra. i write this sketch to re'ettll to th.' tr' mory of some of our early settlers, tend also to give to our young natural history students nen Idea of a bird :to very numerous forty y: ars ago. and which Is destined ere lona to beztome totally extinct, The passenger pigeon Is a handsome bird, belonging to the sante family as the dove, and has been noted for its vast migrations in North America. The finale bird Is much brighter plumaged! than the female, and noticeably larg- e]-. The breast and extending to the middle is of a distinctly light brick red; the back variegated slate and bluish, The head and part of the neck are beautifully iridescent; the beak soft and slightly curved; the eyes mild and bright, with red iris, and having a fold of skin which tho bird can put over the eye like a winker, whereby the danger of injury. is much lessened in its flight through the thick woods. Its length is about seventeen inches, and the wing about eight and a half inches, and it is capable of flying rapidly through a thick forest, turning and dodging past obstructions with great ease, and able to take very long flights, sustaining them for nearly a day at more than locomotive speed, or about sixty miles an hour. It lives entirely on vegetable natter, such as fruits, grain, nuts, seeds, bulbs and plants. I have taken from the crop of one more than a gond handful of beechnuts, which would be packed so tightly that It must have seriously incommoded its flight. When nuts and grain are scarce they will eat nearly anything in the vegetable line, such as buds, tender shoots, grasses and some kinds of fun- gi. Although I have taken .all I have named and more from their crops, I do not recollect seeing any animal re- mains, such as worms or insects, of which most birds are so fond. Mild and peaceable in a marked degree, it seldom ---I ]night safely say never— shows any sign of fight unless in de- fence of its young, and is an easy preY to all carnivore. The passenger pigeon is gregarious in its habits, Iiving in enormous com- munities, whose numbers would baffle the wildest calculation, and to tell only the bare truth it is likely the writer will be charged by your readers with extravagant exaggeration. In their migratory flights, as I have seen them here, they were usually fly- trig 1.ytng northward in spring, or in the breeding season, going and returning their feeding grounds. These migrations often extended some over v s e Seel s, and in such numbers at times that, speak- ing loosely, as people often do, the sky was literally covered, To see them when most numerous, as they flew angling across Lake Huron, the shadows of the great flocks were distinctly reflectetl on the clear waters, like passing clouds, and to say that one-third of the visible expanse was covered with pigeons would not be disputed by an onlooker. Could we not be mistaken? I answer no. Where they cams from or where they were going none of us could tell, but there were the great flocks, one after an- other, each one comprising up to ninny thousands. hor hours they would be no apparent abatement, and when evening came they would alight on the trees, and then go to the ground to nmalee a meal of what suited their tastes, and were ready to start next morning, shortly after good daylight, on their northward journey. Blue hawks often flew with them, and would pick a pigeon front amongst them, and retire to a convenient place to devour it. --Written for The Globe's Nature Notes, by William Welsh, ISincardine. West Indies For Canada. The Canadian Grocer says on this subject: If one Is to judge from fre- quent expressionss of opinion on the subject, sentiment in the West Indies is becoming more and'more favorable to Canada. Only a few months ago a representative of The Grocer visited the islands; he found the trade there kindly disposed as a. whole to their fellow -colonists away to the north, so much so that they prefered to trade with Canada, rather than with the Uniteeb States, other things being equal. Prominent citizens went so far as to propose confederation with the Dom- inion as the most satisfactory solution of the future of the islands. Such a move would hardly be look- ed at askance by the motherland. Only a week ago a speaker in the British Rouse of Commons made the remark that he would "like to see the West Indian Government enter into negotia- tions with Canada, to fink out whether at least some of the islands could• not be better administered by the Dom- inion. If they were attached to Can- ada they would form something like a southern zone for the Dominion. The reorganization and revitalizing of the West Indies Soul's result in an altera- tion which would add enormously to Great Britain's Imperial strength on the strategic highway of the world and M the commercial centre of the West ern Ontario." What is more,' the British treasury has just refused to continue the grant of $50,000 a yeah to the Agri- cultural Department of the West In- dies, and the islanders are beginning to fear that Great Britain Is losing in- terest in their welfare and progress. Canada recently extended a sub- stantial preference to all importations from the West ,Indies, with the result that a substantial and rapidly iucreas- Ing trado has grown up between the two countries. Prom a commercial standpoint, It is to the Interests of Canada to cultivate the islands, and It is to be hoped that the federal Govern-' ment will not be so forgetful of tits feet as to withdraw or even curtail the financial support to the direct steam- ship service between Canada and the West Indies, which it has extended for the past twelve yearn. The Archives Enriched. t.tr. L, W. borling, of Toronto, hats donated to the archiver of the Province a set of the t3aptlst Year Book from 1877 to 1800, copies et the Canadian Almanac for the,yeara 180 to 185t, a bound volume of The Globe for the years 1.3741.7-8.4, ofd maps of Hamilton and Ottawa, and Otte of the C. P. B., showing the original proposed routs be. t*tied Montreal rind W1li it»tg. .. . THAT'S THE SPOT! Richt in the small of the back, Do you ever got a pain there? 1114o, do you know what it means 7 It to a Backache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time. If you don't, serious Kidney Troubiea are sure to follow. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS cure Backache, Lame Back, Diabetes, Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder Troubles, Arlo• deo. a box or 3 for $1.33. all dealers. DOAN KIDNEY PILL GO.. 7i'oroitte, Ont. Wrong and Wright, From the St. Thomas Tithes. Our Aylmer correspondent says in yes- terday's issue tbat Mrs. Wright is visit- ing her brother, kir. Wrong. We pre- sume it is wrong to make acomment up- on the above personal, but still our in- t rutions are right. It is remarkable that wheu Mrs. Wright was Miss Wrong she topic advantage of the offer to become Mrs. Wright and refused to be called Wrong after she was once Wright. We say right here that this is right, but most women persist in believing them- selves right when they are wrong.—St. Thomas Journal. Wright went right in seeking the Wrong. Wrong was right in accepting Wright. So wrong was made Wright, and it's all right. We would also like to write that it was the marriage rite that made Wrong Wright. NOW IS THE TIME FOR MIME! Par Easier to Cure Catarrh Now Than at Any Other Season. Now is the time to use Hyomei, wheu the early sutumar days make it so easy to cure catarrhal troubles. The Hyomei treatment, breathed for a few minutes three or four times a day in May or June, will do good twice as quickly as it did in January, and nearly everyone knows that used faithfully then, it completely rids the system of catarrh. Hyomei is a purely vegetable prepara- tion whose active curative properties are given off when it is breathed by the aid of the pocket inhaler that cornea with every outfit. It destroys all germ life in i the air passages, purifies the blood by i supplying additional ozone, and its heal - tug, volatile, antiseptic fragrance reaches { every corner of the respiratory tract as no medicine taken through the stomach eau possibly do. The complete Hyomei outfit costs but one dollar, and consists of a neat inhaler that can be carried its 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 cents. At this season of the year when ca- tarrhal troubles can be so quickly and readily cured, the merits of she Hyomei treatment should be carefully investigat• ed by everyone and a complete outfit should be in every home. Walton Mo - Ribbon gives his personal guarantee with every Hyomei outfit lie sells to re- fund the money if it does not given sat- isfaction, There is no risk whatever to the purchaser of Hyomei. The city of Lembery won the first prize of $$60,000 in the lottery of the city of Vienna this year, The Lembery cor- poration decided to sell the tickets it had but an official forgot to do so. Probably the youngest general in the world is a nephew of the late Shah of Persia, a boy not yet fourteen years old. He holds the ranks of full general in the Persian army. 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 airtight tuffs retain all the freshness and crispness, no 1 111'hiUt/EY &iSCUIT8CANDY 'CO STRAtr4RD COMM matter where or when you buy them. They come to your ta- We just as inviting and de, Wats as though you ate them at the ovens in the At 01 grocers itt t and 3 ib, packages. EP 1 CQui,D HAVE MY WAY. 1 wisht 'at I could have my way. Timewould always bo to May hr June; The tear would never leave the tree, Tito birds could alwaya sing for me, An' everything wouui always be In tune. 'rime would always be In May, Tit 1 could only have my way. In May Er June, when men an' boys, awake With new emotions, could. forsake The duller ways for stream an' lake An' play. Ff I could only have my way, sden an' boys could always play; The swish An' swirl o' the restless stream, The quiet late, Its liquid gleam; Cozy nooks where flowers harm, Are places where we'd loaf an' dream An' fish-- Ef I could only have my way! —New Orleans Times -Democrat. flamenco pend science, "How lovely the moon is tonight" "'-Chat Is nothing unusual. The moon is always the same. It merely happens that the atmospheric condi- tions are such as to cause our satel- lite to appear to the best advantage." —Pittsburg Post. Thrifty Wonsan. "I've met the meanest woman ever," said the young woman who acts as waitress in an tee cream parlor. "She ordered a dish of lee cream, and when she had eaten of it either she was taken ill or she happened to remember an engagement, for she stopped eating very suddenly ati'st asked me to give her one of the little paper boxes to carry the rest of the ice cream home. And the hardest part of It was that the boss told me to give her one."—New York Press. Itanilet's Sanity. "A great many students of the dra- ma seem to think that Hamlet was ac- tually Insane," said Miss Tampa. "Do you think so, doctor?" "Why, I suppose so in a sort of a way. At least nowadays any one who so frankly discusses his own shortcom- ings is considered a fool. But eccen- tricity is more of a fad now than it was then." — Cincinnati Commercial - Tribune. Carried Away. Jack—Yes, I had a little balance In the bank, but I became engaged two mouths ago, and now— Tom—Ab, love makes the world go round. Jack—Yes, but I didn't think it would go round so fast as to cause me to lose my balance.—Philadelphia Ledger. Servant Giris, rerbaps. Oidun—Well, how do you and your wife like housekeeping? Newman—Well—er—we don't think we like is as a whole. Olden—Not as a whole, eb? Newman—No, we think we'll enjoy It better broken up.—Catholic Standard and Times. Stubborn Variety, "Have you heard the latest?" "No. Witat is It?" "Why, an employment office in New York is going to auction off its best cooks." "I am glad to hear It, Some cooks de- serve to be knocked down, "—Chleago News. Too Good to Waste. "But," aslcecl the charitable woman, "do you never cast your bread upon the waters?" "Not now," replied the young house- keeper proudly. "I might have done that with my first baking, but I'm quite expert now."—Philadelphia Ledg- er. Proved Not Mug - "Do you believe In betting on race horses?" "Sure." "But you lost?" "That's nothin'. That skate I bet en's no race hdise."—Houston ?est. An Iia;,ossible Suggestion. "What a pity real detectives are not as brilliant as story book detectives:" "It wouldn't work," answered the pollee °steer. "They'd all resign from ,. the force and sv-:te novels."—Wash- ington o y• is — h- e iFas ington Star. A Special 1t'i vorite, "Iiere's a story of a man who died while eating watermelons." "My, myl" exclaimed the old colored brother. "How de Lewd does favor some peoplel"--Atlanta Constitution. High Tentperntnre. ""Pour temperature is pretty high this morning." said the doctor, "I hope It's no higher than I ears sit - ford to have It, doctor," said the eau- tione patient. --Yonkers Statesman. Data had. Gunner—I just met Stogie dowel the street. He fairly took my breath away. Guyer—That Bo? Did he tell you a story or give you one of his cigars?— Detroit Tribune. The idryniti KIxd. lJedtum--Do you believe in spiritb? Busyznan (cuff guard) --When taken int Moderation, yes,—Detroit I''ree PM*, ns Furnac —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 for booklet. McCIary's London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver. St. John, fin B. SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG. No one need die of thirst in Australia if eucalyptus trees are near. By cutting a sapling into sections of about ten feet and standing them perpendicularly,with the small ends down, as much as half a pint of water may be obtained. D In Italy the value of lands is oonat- dered to be thirty-four tinges the annual rental. A bit of camphor put in the reservoir of a kerosene lamp will make it give a better light. n-,,.rY,-Y,r,-V,-,-,r,-,nn�-,�•,.,.,,.P.,�VY•,,,,,r.,-.-YY•n..f V-..,r„-•,,nnnr.r,/�•� A Coiled Spring Wire Fence With large, stiff stay wires, makes a perfect fence j • Not one pound of soft wire enters into the construction of • THE FROST. The uprights are immovably locked to the j 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 y new method of enamelling and baking prevents rust, which adds greatly 3 to the appearance of the fence. Make no mistake. Buy THE FROST. •t It is the heaviest and the best, Por sale by j J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church;, v t�.✓. w.i �. �v✓v n w� vw .v0 • (. (• 1. • • • C. C. (. (CC. C. • • • • (4 SINFUL HABITS IN YOUTH MAKE iiNERVOUS, WEAK, DISEASED MEN. 'A THE ;RESULT of ignorance and folly in youth, overexertion of mind and body induced by lust and exposure are constantly wrecking tlreltvcs`,' and future happiness of thousands of promising young men. Some fade and wither at an early age, at the blossom of manhood, while others aro' forced to drag out a weary, fruitless and melancholy existence. Othe:d reacts metre-' away but find no solace or comfort there. The victims aro found in all atttions of life—the farm' the office, the workshop, the pulpit, the trades and the professions. NervossDebility sad Ursine Wosknase are guaranteed cured by our New Method Treatment sr No Pey. You run no risk 25 years in Detroit. Bank eecur-i.y. CURED WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED. Ne games used without written consent. "'I ant 33 years of age and married. When young I led a gay life. Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble for ate. I became weals and nervous. My kidneys became affected and I feared Bright's Disease. Married Life was unsatisfactory and my home unhappy. I tried everything—a11 failed till I took treatment from Dra. /Kennedy & ii-ergan. Their New Method built me up mentally, physically and sexttally. I feel and act Illceaman Inevery respect. They treated the six years ago. They ars honest, skilful and responsible fivanotally, eo why patronize Quacks and 1 akirs when you ': • can be cured by reliable doctors."—W. A. Belton. CURES GUARANTEED OR HD PAY. goesallaUOi Free--lloolis Free-011esllol Meek Free tar Home iroolmeal, ! t3 Drs. Kennedy Kergan, 14Detroit,Shelby Mich5fre.ta,j e•, ••••d•-•-•M••••••••••••S-- • • • • • i • • • • • • 0 • • • O • • • Y • • • w • • • • • • ••1 • •(M•!•••••(i•••••••-••••-••• • 0 • w • • •. • 0 • • r • • r 0 • • • • 1 Our pedal ities. COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS PAMPHLETS BILL MEADS CIRCULARSBOOK WORK VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO Tie Times Jo ) Deiarlrnenl Our Job Department is up-to-date in every particular ; and our work is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Estimates cheerfully given. THE TIMES is the best local paper in the County of Huron, Subscription: $1.00 per year in advance—sent to any address in Canada or the United States. Art advertisement itt the Mmes bring% good results Address all communications to— (litlee Phone, No. 4. WINGEAM TIMES Residence Phonon 140.74.IEGIIAlli, ONT. 110041.41.11,1140.0401110111411.00.040.