HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-07-27, Page 3ssuw Red RoseTea is Grown
TEA is a native plant of Northern India. Trans-
planted t Ceylon it lost much of its strength
and riclltlrs t, but gained in fragrance and delicacy.
!,'Mat is why Ceylon tea is not a strong tea.
That: is why I blend Indian anCeylon teas
together—that is how the strength and richness,
fra,rance and delicacy of Red Rose Tea are
st:curt d --that is why Red Rose Tea has that "rich
fruity flavor."
cl
is good Tea _
T. H. EttabrooI'cs
St. John. N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg
Among the queer Lorries of towns
:inEirgland are t htnglntao Hill, Dirtoar,
31eat1man'a Green, 1P1ieudp Fell and.
Hungry BnHLluy.
More than half of the export pro.
ince of Russia comes from the sale
of grain . The value of exported but-
ter is over $116,000,000 per year, and of
eggs over $20,000.
The initials "31.0.B," seen on so many
freight cars stand for Master Car Build-
ers, sod refer to standard meilsurewents
of the oar turd standard appliances, such
as couplers, eto.
Alfred de Rothsohild, a member of the
famons Nanking family, has a private
-circus at his country seat. The ring is
about 100 yards in diameter and is sur-
rounded by trees,
1905
i
The city of Reading, Eng., bas enacted
a law requiring that baths shall be planed
In all dwelling houses constructed within
the bcrongh in future.
In the United States there are 44,000
hotels, representing an invested capi-
tal of $6,000,000 and giving employ-
ment to 3,500,000.
In a canal north of London there is a
boat which is entirely "manned" by
women. The last English census re-
ported several hundred women doing
the work of Seamen.
In some of the pities of Spain beggars
are licensed t o carry on their trade.
Recent figures place the number of beg-
gars in that country at 190,227, of
whom 51,943 are women.
TITh GU EA TEST INV
THE GRANDEST EVER
1905
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
At TORONTO, AUG. 26 to SEPT. 11
$451,000 in I'reniin>,as -
The Irish Otterds Band
By vtermissitn of His Most Gracious afujes-
t•i 1k'.r,gLd'o.tiVil, the basal of the itish
Guttrds.Bis Majesty's fa, ori te household
bald and the fut. .t military musical orgen-
iiatie n in the Empire, t, ill Live two con-
certs each and every day.
Art and Tr.-asnreg
arin agailety will be presented the grandest
roit•glion of art end art tre"unr, s ever got
tugrthet. on this continent, ii.eludiva loans
= ' ft tin• the ging, the Carport, ti, it of the City
et London, the great English Universities,
Lim bel'uhlic of France, Eonth Kensington
Museum.I todSt1silicone ,the Lieut: Cov-
et not t f Outwit) and .other distinguished
bodies and gentlemen.
('oeonetioa Ptt•rtir.
By special c un mond of [lis bit,lesty the
Rirlg. Abbeys noted and historic painting
will be on exhibition durieg the entire pair
$38,300 In Attractions
Fall of Port Arthur
The greatest pvro military display ever pro-
duced. before the Canadian people. Scenes
in this most recent of the world's most ap-
palling event will be vividly portrayed with
real Japanese and Russian soldiery tatting
part. The fireworks display will be on a
brilliant scale, introducing new features of
aih Oriental character.
Other Th'ugs to See
The Process Building, sanmles of all the in-
dustries and resources of the country, thou-
sands of horses, cattle, sheep, swine, poul-
try, and dogs, all Canadian cereals and
minerals, good trotting and pacing, a sup-
erb variety show, the world's latest inven-
tions.
Special Exeurstone
pedal cheap railway and steamboat ex-
cursions have been arranged. Enquire of
your nearest station or ticket agent for
rates.
W. K. IdeNau ht, Pres. k'ur prize list, entry blanks J. 0. Orr, Mgr & See'y.
g and information addl•ess
Entries, Close : Live Block. etc., Aug.7th. Poultry and Hulks. Aug. 19th.
Reflections of a Bachelor.
From the Now York Press.
1?xereiee -le good for everything except
wnman'R tongue.
Thor • lire nn more chips of the old
block ; they a,e epliuters.
There iR a int of fun to be had trying
to watch ether people have it and fail.
A woman wears a veil either to save a
Complexion which she is prnnd of or to
hide one she isn't.—New York Press.
Widows wouldn't be nearly so dan-
gerous if they weren't so awful inno-
cent.
When a man has a geed appetite bis
wife think it is because he liao such a
happy family life.
A cynio is a man who does not insist
on believing his cantaloupes are sweet
just because he rgis•id them.
A woman says her hueba.td is Rood -
natured when he fnreerg to declare •his
shaving water was 4t t hot enough. --
New York Press
THAT'S THE SPOT!
*Ight in the email of thi.i►ack.
ba you ever get a pain there?
if eo. tie you know what It Ineene l
Si le M Backache.
E J♦ sure sigh of Kidney Trouble.
Don't neglect ft. Stop it in time.
If you don't, serious Kidney 'Troubles
WO sure to filler/.
UOA'S KIDNEY PILLS
`cora 'batkaeb. , Larne flack, Diabetes,
Dropay milt all ltidliey emit Madder
E"side Stith a bee er S ger ;i.lf. Ill Odors
tftliAll Yuri brit t 1!'111"1. Ctii..
'!'rl:int., Oat.
THE W!NGFRAM TIMES,
HAVE BEADY CMH,
11 To the Gre(ste•t slorlusc Ii'oree >Cs,
the nuettwesa World.
Otte of the greatest millionaires of
our cotltatry lived before• be. made hie
1)Iilllone on VI u week nod at a time
'schen his ineotlle was $10,000 It year.
He saved all the rest of his sitlitry for
judicious inveetuients, IIe had been a
poor boy, aceustouhed to a frugal mode
of life. Ile began his career in tate city
sweeping out a• store for 4450,a week,
Biter be was advaucetl to $7.50, The
mode of living; wlilcli he WOO obliged to
adopt as a boy he considered quite
geed enough for later years, especially
when be saw that by denying himself
ter awhile longer he might make the
experiences and hard knocks be had
gained count for more than is mere liv-
ing, IIe might have argued that he
wits; doing pretty well to earn $10,000 a
yen; and that he. deserved to enjoy It.
But he preferred to use bis earnings to
make more money that some day he
plight be able to dispense with a sala-
ried position altogether, And this man
had a wife, too, who was farsighted
enough to be willing to live ou a small
LAM lvingll it meant an easier road for
both by tied by.
lteady Cush is the greatest moving
force in the business world, It speaks
with the loudest voice, and Its posses-
sion represents business acumen, Of
course there aro exceptions In cases of
Inheritance, etc„ but the exception on -
1y proves the rule.
Cornelius Vanderbilt worked day and
night, saving every penny, until he hail
$3,000, the uest egg about which gath-
ered one of the largest fortunes ever
amassed in America. The principle of
thrift inculcated by those hard, self de-
nying years made him a great finan-
cier.
GULLIBILITY QF SHEEP.
A Conical Study of the Extreme .t
Animal Stupidity,
The utter stupidity of sheep is per-
haps nowhere more strongly evidenced
than in the perfect satisfaction with
which a ewe that has lost her lamb
will take to a strange lamb around
which has been fastened the skin of
her dead offspring.
Considering that the skin of the dead
Iamb is often merely thrown loosely
• over the back of the living lamb, some-
times banging almost to tbe ground on
one side or the other and making the
Iamb appear the quaintest kind of ani-
mal imaginable, the ewe's gullibility in 1
this respect is remarkable. There can
be no other explanation of her satisfac-
tion than that she really thinks the
muffled little stranger is her own prog-
eny; otherwise she would give it no at-
tention whatever.
.Its appearance does not seem to count,
nor even its voice. Its smell is every-
thing, which may be seen in .any flock
of ewes and lambs, for awhile the moth-
ers certainly appear to know the bleat -
Ing of their own children, the identifiea-
tion is always completed by the ewe
sniffing the coat of .her lamb.
I have been Iooking at two such
quaint families in the lambing pens re-
cently, and the picture of a sedate ewe
placidly attending to two weird little
creatures which look as if they have
been half flayed (one of them was ac-
tually dragging its second skin in the
straw) was the most comical study of
animal stupidity which could be Imag-
ined:—London Express.
i
Pointed Paragraphs.
(From the Chicago News.)
A fool and his money are easy marks.
Nearly ev.ry big man does a lot of
mighty little things.
The wise girl catches a husband by
running the other way.
A bad man is naturally suspicious of
every good man he meets.
Silence is one of the golden things we
men have no earthly nee for.
You may have observed that it is only
the fools who disagree with you.
Some second thoughts occur several
minutes later,
Many a man who don't take water has
to be bailed out.
Playing the fool is said to be a nniver-
sal accomplishment.
The longer yon keep whisky the better
it is—and the better yoti are.'
It's pretty tough when a man can't
even get credit for bis good intentions.
One kind of charity is the finding of
excuses for the faults of people we dis-
like.
The truthfulness of what a mate says
doesn't always depend on the amount of
noise he makes in saying it.
One might as well look forward hope-
fully to the future. There's always a
ohance for an improvement in the wea-
ther.
Some people who pretend to tell the
truth for the troth's sake merely tell it
because it shows their neighbors in a bad
light.
Andrew- Thomson of 13th con. Snllt•
van, delivered at Chesley station to buy-
er Aleic. White of Guelph, 40 head of
cattle weighing 43,1801bW,, an average
of 1437 which is a big average for such a
large bunch. Several of these cattle
were only 2 years old, The soma day
John Thompson delivered to the same
buyer 28 head weighing 36,7801bs.
A eopple of weeks ago a branch• of the
Sovereign Bank watt established in Por.
moms, and now comes word that the
Merchants Bank has also opened up a
branch there. The Spteteign is located
in the north end, and the literohentd in
the South end of the tilllllte•
Beauty and the Benet.
"How do you do, Mrs. Venus?" ex-
claimed a gentleman of that lady's ac-
quaintance.
squaintance. "fray, what brings you
out so early In the day?"
"Oh, I've just been to the photogra.
pier with my pet pug Pongo" (which
she carried in her arms), "and we have
hap, our portraits taken together,
haven't we, Pougo? Beauty and the
beast, you know, Mr. Johnson," with a
saucy little laugh.
"And what .a little beauty he is, to be
sure," replied Johnson inadvertently
as he teuderly stroked poor Pougo's
cranium.
And then he suddenly remembered
and became hot and cold in turn, and
they parted strangers forevermore.
JULY 27,
1 _, RV 4Y; 'Aforict,.
1 }Pt}# tI $Iul*4Q 'Dila 3g Wi. l
• Ro ti l 8noigi'. se sno.Oq
fop puli &wog se ;uni
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1905
a
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ou 'ssauds,!P pus ssauysar j'
asp ile UrelO.1 surf 3tl8r1', re
Arne .faded joaid-ainasiow
aq,Y, 'guano at•l1 w0.13 304
Sordid Maud On saaslp'e.
' lam Aauoow aril
3e 3t{8ra s2uryl op am
1111114:PN $4ux.A0
ORS }al p0310'aa
.4
The Iced Jacket Medal,
Before the North American colonies
revolted it was the British custom to
present medals to Indlau chiefs with
whom treaties were made. These med-
als bore a figure of the reiguing Brit-
ish sovereign on the obverse and em-
blems of peace on the reverse and
were called Indian medals. After the
Declaration. of Independence Washing-
ton presented a United States medal
to the Seneca chief, Se -go -ye -wet -iia
(He Ii,eeps Them Awake), who was
known popularly as Bed Jacket. This
Red Jacket meant is Interesting as one
of the earliest of the medals issued by
the first president of the great repute,
tic across the sea.
Pier Idea. of Neeennitlea.
The young man was interviewing the
stern parent of the only girl in the
world. "Of course, sir," he said, "my
salary Is not colossal, but I can give
her all the necessities of Iife and some
of its luxuries."
• "My dear Mr. Softly," replied the
stern parent, "you have scarcely im-
proved your time iu her society if you
do not knosv that she considers all the
luxuries of Iit'e far more necessary
than the necessities."
Scholarly Version.
On the Campus of Emory college, in
Oxford, Ga., there is a table to the
memory of Iglinting Pew. the first
president. One day a freshman was
crossing the campy( with his cousin, •
who asked him to explain the Mscrip=
tion on the stone.
"'Vivit — non — mortutis — est,'" she
read slowly. "What does that mean,
Will?"
"That," said the freshman easily,
"ob, that means, 'Ile lives—no, he
don't, he's dead,'"
An Odd Epitaph.
The following epitaph Is to be read
on a tombstone at Saragossa, Spain:
"Here lies John Qnebecen, precentor to
lny lord the king. When lie is admit-
ted to the choir of angels, whose so-
elety he will embellish and where he.
Vrill distinguish himself by his powers
of song, God sIttill say to his angels.
"Cease, ye calves, and let Me hear
John Quebecea, the precentor to my
lord the king."
She Made good.
"I don't see what sense there Is in
yott women dressing so expeeslvely."
"That's just the way papa used to
talk:'
"Talks that way, yet. doesn't ho?"
"No. indeed, When T caught you be
admitted that there was method in my
madness."
Propbetie.
l'at--'Did ye hear that old Hogan
was dead, Stirs. ltyan? Dias. E. --Is he,
thin, poor man? Stire, I always knew
that would be the end of him.
The more erroneous a fool's judo•
meat the more firmly he holds it,- 13Y11•
thasar Grecian. _ .., ....... t. ....c_ t
The Vice of .Idleness.
Of all vices to which young men be-
come slaves idleness is by no means tbe
least. It is a vice easily contracted in
youth and bard to throw off In man-
hood or old age. Unfortunately it is
not generally looked upon as an evil in
the sense that drinking, gambling and
debauchery are evils, yet its influence
is no less certain In breaking down
character and sapping physical and in-
tellectual strength.
It Wann't help That Was Wanted.
Mrs. Hiram Offen—Insert this adver-
tisement for a girl, but for goodness'
sake don't put "Help Wanted" over it.
Cleric—No? Mrs. Hiram Offen—No.
That implies that I expect to do most
of the work myself. The last girl I got
this way held mete that.
Identifying the Speakers.
"The lady In the purple waist is out
of order," announced the presiding, of-
' ficer at a recent womau's convention.
I "The lady in the gray foulard has the
floor."
Who says women are not parliamen-
tarians?
Tho man who sums women up in a
sentence is the man whom women can
fool with a phrase.—Molleutrave.
E00.1 P1tYINQ CONTEST.
11e5ul4 Apparent From Australia's
Third Novel Competition.
The winning pullets in the recently
eloserj Austratlan egg -laying contest
averaged 204 eggs each for the year.
They are Silver Wyandottes. The next
three highest pens were White Leg -
burns, with averages of 109, 196 and
195 eggs respectively. Bieck Orping'
tons came next with 191. Other good
records•'are White Leghorns, 186
by
two pens, and 183 by another; White
Wyandottes, 133 and 182; 'White Leg-
home,
eghorns, 181 by two pens; Brown Leg-
horn,, 179 and 178; Black Orpingtons,
177; Rhode Island Reds, 176; Black
Orphngtone, 176• These 114 Eris aver-
aged 186 eggs each during the year.
Among these 19 pens, four were own-
ed by American breeders. When the dif-
ferences in climate and the exigencies
of transportation are considered, their
performances are remarkable. Three
other pens of American birds were
nearer the bottom of the list of 100
competitors, but even the poorest of
these latd an average of 125 eggs durina'
the year. When this lowest record is
compared with the general average of
66 eggs per farm leen, as given in the
last United States census, even grant-
ed this may be somewhat under the
facts, the opportunities for improve-
ment are seen to be very great, and the
possibilities well 'worth working for,
says the American Agriculturist. Every-
thing ices in careful planning and rea-
sunable adherence to common sense
methods, Farm hens should average
at least 125 eggs yearly. This number
Is easily within reach of every farmer.
In the fourth 4,nnval contest recently
started at Hawkesbury, Australia,
G00 birds are entered in. 100 compet-
ing pens, 20 of which are White Logs
horns, 20 Silver Wyandottes, 19 Black
Orpingtons, seven Brown Leghorns,
five Bluff Orpingtons. Evidently the
'White Wyandotte is not as favorite a
breed -in-=':a',::'alfa as in America, for
only two pens are entered, Buff Wyan-
dottes, Andalusians, Langshans and
Imperials have two pens each, Other
breeds represented are Faverolles, An-
cones, Homburgs, Campines, Lid Eng-
lish Games and Buff Leghorns. The
contest, like its predecessors, is to last
a year.
•
i&OLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver ]ills.
Must Bear Signature of
Se• itac-Sltntb Wrenper tielnw.
Teri rw•tt not es ewer
to take as meows
s.
ICARTEKS FOR riga.
.
u FOR SILUOUSNESS.
VE • FON 'TORPID LIVER.
PI Lr FORCONSTIPATION.
ran ULLOW SKIN
FDICTILECOMPLENiON
, 1etee,itgawrtww,tt�Y+t.w.4, ;
A alit i loane7 YSfUtabib..6at
CUR SICK HEADACHE.
THE USEFUL LANGSHAN.
Points of Excellence Which Distinguish
This Popular. Fowl.
The Langshans are fine, useful and
r justly fowls and are iu y ver Y
popular, as they bring their own certi-
ficates and speak fur themselves in
every yard where they appear and can
stand wholly on their merits wherever
they are known, writes a New Yok
fanner in American Cultivator. They
are active, agile surd impetuous, are
very prolific and grow quickly, mature
early and lay well. Although not giv-
en to being broody, they are good sit -
") ,•tin
L.xasgus r'ur.ter LAnv querns%
ters and good mothers. Their flesh Is
white, and they have a very thin, white
skin, and as a table fowl they are equal
to small turk y.t and not inferior to
them in delicacy and flavor.
Their plumage is of a uniform glossy
black and full of lustre; comb single
and a bright red color. The beak le
dark, with flesh colored variations
along the line of the mouth; eyes dark,
with but little difference in shape of
pupil and iris; neck long, fall and pro-
fusely feathered; back short and fairly
broad. rump high; tall very full and
flowing, carried rather high and for-
ward and furnished with good sized
sickles; legs and toes dark, with a vivid
pink color showing between the scales:
shanks scantily feathered to the end
of ,the outer toes (there should be no
feathers on the middle toes); bottom.3
Of the feet are pink,
Their eggs are (.fir sized and are
beautiful in color, varying from the
Palest salhnon to the darkest chestnut
brown. On some there is a bloom like
that on freshly gathered fruit, while
others are spotted, often literally
Splashed all over with dart: spots. and
the same hen will tint her eggs differ-
ently one day from what she does on
another.
The Langshan pullet pic:ured scored
96 1-4.
ns me
Furnas
—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 wocd grate is always supplied.
So'.d by all enterprising dealers. Write for booklet.
McCIarys
i London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg. Vancouver, St, John, N. B.
8010 IN WINGHAM BY A. YOUNG:
Morgan County, Colorado, has eleven
irrigating canals, 200 mites in length
altogether, gad with a capacity of
3,200,000,000 cubic feet of water.
,((;
SeC.
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It is claimed tnat an Austrian railway
mechanic bas discovered a process by
which the smoke of warships can be
entirely ccnrealed from view.
''' -v.,..,..,-,.,,,,...rwVj
A Coiled Spring Wire Fence
With lsrve. Miff stay wires, makes a pert'ct fence
Not one pound of soft wire enters into the construction of
THE FROST. The uprights are immovably locked to the 4
running wires with THE FROST WEDGE-LO..K, making an :3
absolutely Stock -proof Fence. rhe hocks bind without kinking
0 or crimping either the stays or lateral 'Wires. Will not slip, and -our 4
new method of enamelling and baking prevents rust. which adds greatly ,
• to the appearance of the fence. Make uo mistake. Buy T1IE FROST. 41
!e It is the heaviest and the best. For sale by :)
J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church
DRs.KENNEWY & =Mt
Specialists le the Treatment of Nervous, Blond, P*dvete and Sexual Diseases at
ilen and Women. 15 Years In D••troit.
M;rt'No Nimes used without written Consent. Cues O•,er�n! e•.
Thousands of young' ,•.•r; middte.aged r e , ; , : ;ally swept
t 1 a • te•n-,'nr, lrr,r•t i'•ru0'h e.trly buss nr later • c. •sses. ChaS.
Anderson watt: o el f t'•e • • ;,, h t ;• •• ,1 1 ,t i _
sass: ' I1:arrt.d a 'til 1 A cin ••e sou,, can.,; over toe.
I could feel it; my tf.s„! 1 •• i*. 1 b .•.. - •e r...voas, d.•.pnn-
deut, 1rl or, >, 13114 ro sent`.itic,t, e^^l'r t•r ;1, aril tor, howntrx,
imnr clreul •1' in^ o:t..c-,I,. ci^, drums.,i.t3ra,tS
at nigat, tit ea and w.:.': rvn•-•,'n••'. 1 ;-•tInq tv"aatior.. To snake
ntatt••rs w•.r.: I b •c ale.
d e,mtractrd a blood disease.
I trird many d'trtn a and e, -dint 11 ••-rte—',1l f ii4 t'ii 1)re. Iron-
;` ped:.;; Berg,ta t 0 c my c •+.e. In ono weds 1 telt better, and in a
r 1 to v w r!f , w is en rel • cur,' 1. are else only reliable and
b•,•' •c' S,.^. i.•''; • i ; the coo ,ttry,”
:? 13.3Abtie. -1 n;;" trvtte'; t cure v.n or Ifo par. Tort ran no
rale. We. b''ve a r.'l•nr^ti n and hu'ine', art +take. Beware of
frau 1 and intpos o:.. 'R': n 1 } ay s1$,a) for any case we take tont our NEW
t1,. C,"ul) 'riui t'!'; ii l r r• 1 r 1 r••*••.
W .trait amt c,, Ner.ous Uebidty. Vericncel?, Stricture. Weak Parts, Kidney
t _
mei iii 1 ler nlsea..-s. n.,uul .uo.1 1 re •. Boo.cs free. Call or write for Question
a, 1
t•,r ti:mte Tt'eattr •nt. .
r' 5 N' Car. Michigan Ave Shelby St
's '. 1 . . WF l (i 5 i. ll Tt iB Detroit, Mfch.
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Selecting a Green Manure Crop. •
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Wherever clover will succeed it is
by. far the best green follow plant,
writes a Massachusetts farmer in Am-
erican Agriculturist. A crop of hay
may be taken off and yet leave the
land more fertile than at first. The
stubble and roots contuitn a large
amount of nitrogen, and som, mineral
matter is brought to the surface by
the roots. All green plants, such as
clover, rye or other seeds, may be
sown and the plants plowed under
when coming into h,'ad the following
spring. The cost of the seed, the ell.
mate, the land and the f.'rtiliiy should
all be considered in selecting a green
manure crop to be plowed surds.
Protecting Young Treat,
Young trees of a delicate nature are
benefited by having their trunks pro-
tected from the hot sun for a. few
years by matting bound around them
and a mulch over the roots.
To Keep Ahead of Cureutie.
Jar piens and eherry trees in the ear-
ly morning when the eureulioa are tor-
pid acid le, the chiekens eat tin ni or
you will have wormy fruit.
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• E WING1 AM TIMES
(liltne'pltane, 13n.4. �{%T;'rGTT:l1tt ON'T,
Rer,,ulouee Picone, 14o.74.
Tie Times
J01 Deadment
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Our pecia.lit
COLORED WORK LETTER BEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOB WORK
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
THE TIMES
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