Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-08-03, Page 6h ‘'s 6 THE WINGIAM TIMES AUGUST 3, 1905 Free Gifts of Toilet Soaps Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and SAVE THE COUPONS. The Coupons are the same as cash because they can be exchanged for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pay out money every week. Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. Ask your grocer for particulars or write us for Premium List. A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have no use for, In exchange for Sunlight Soap Coupons you can get something you need and use every day. 2000 LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. Kernels from the Sanctum Mill Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges. The Michigan Central Railway has up • ;lropriated $100,000 for improvements to its St. Thomas shops and equipment. Mrs. Kyle was committed for trial at Ingersoll on the charge of murdering David McGee, The essential lung -healing principal of the pine tree has finally been successfully separated and refined into a perfeot cough medicine -Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25 cents. Mrs. Mowers of Port Brace, Ont., re- ports that her fourteen -year-old daugh- ter has eloped with Walter Weir, of the ,same village, a married man. The engine on a freight train exploded eaear Princeton, killing R. Hutchinson, brakeman. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children.' The Kind You Hae Always Bought Dears the ' Signature of 14444. Ex -Premier Parent of Quebec baa ac- cepted the Chairmanship of the.National Transcontinental Railway Commission. Jacob Seip, 4th con. Carrick has dis- posed of his one hundred acre farm, crop and stock to John Wagner of Deemerton at ag'0,000. THE LADIES' FAVORITE. Laxa-Liver Pills are the ladies' favorite medicine. They core Constipation, Sick Headache, Billionsness, and Dyspepsia without griping, purging or sickening. The area under fruit in British Colum- bia now totals 14,000 acres, and by next spring 20,000 acres of orchard will be bearing. The quality of the fruit is not equalled anywhere else on the coast, and with the aid of the C. P. R. the growers are making a great effort to capture the market of Western Canada. Files To prove to you that Dr. Chase's Ointment is a certain and absolute cure for each and every form of itching, bleedingand protruding piles, the manufacturers have guaranteed it. See tes- timonials in the daily press and ask your neigh- bors what they think of it. You can use it and get your money back if not cured. 60c a box, at all dealers or EDMANSON,BATES & Co.,Toronto, Dr. Chase's Ointment Mr. John Winney, an old and highly esteemed resident of Lucknow village, died on Wednesday, July 20th in the Stith year of his age. He had suffered for a year or more past with cancer. Doan's Kidney Pills act on the kid neva, bladder and urinary organs only. They cure backaches, weak back, rheum- atism, diabetes, congestion, inflamation, gravel, Bright's disease and all other diseases arising from wrong action of the kidneys and bladder. The wonderful growth of (treater New York is indicated by a conserve* tive estimate that the census of this year will show that the city has 4,000,- 000 persons living within its borders. This is one-half of the total population of the State. 7'M!E O@tEATEST BLOOD PURIFIER IM THU WORLD x. Good brain food. s. Excites the functions of the liver. 3. Promotes a sound and quiet sleep. 4. Disinfects the mouth. S. Neutralizes the earths acids of the stomach. 4. Paralyzes hemorrhoidal disturbances. . Helps the secretion of the kidneys. . Prevents calculus concretions. y. Obviate* indigestion. . las. A preventative against diaesees of the throat. it. Esset res all nervous energy and re. vives the nateral forces. THE OXYGENATOR 00. ' i*ir Newsom it. Tor ant•, Ont The G.T.R. receives $100 a mile for carrying the mails along the main line. C7A'SiR'OMIL XA.. The Kind You Have Always Bough! Bears the Signature of Not for fourteen years have there been so many commitments for drunkedness in the Proviuce of Ontario as during the year 1904. As compared with the year 1903 the increase in convictions amounts to about 20 per cent. while as compared with 1902, the increase is 40 per cent. SPRING MEDICINE. As a spring medicince Burdock Blood Bitters has no equal. It tones up the system and removes all impurities from the blood, and takes away that tired, weary feeling so prevalent in the spring. It is estimated that to collect one pound of honey from clover,62,000 heads of clover most be deprived of nectar and 3,750,000 visits from the bees must be made. SUDDEN1Y ATTACKED. Children are often attacked suddenly byPail.ful and dangerousCo1l Colic, Cramps, Diarrhoea Dysentery, Cholera Mortars, Cholera Infantnm, etc. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and sure cure which should always be kept in the house. -r A little girl recently handed in the following essay on man: Man belongs to the animal kingdom and is divided into the sheep and goat. He has three parts: The head, which sometimes contains the brains; the chest, which contains the wind, and the abdominal parts, which contains the vowels, five in number, a, e, 1, o, u, and sometimes w and y. Af5Ill C21=1.=A. Bears the ,The Kind You Have Always Bough Signature of Wm. Krug of Chesley, after much see -sawing, succeeded in securing the appointment of Postmaster at Chesley. He kept the office two weeks and then resigned. This illustrates the truth of the contention that there is more pleas- ure in anticipation than realization. D. Lillico now has the office. A little forethought may save you no end of trouble. Anyone who makes it a rule to keep Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at hand knows this to be a fact. For sale by A. I McCall & Co. No less than 6,000 students wrote at the recent non-professional examina- tions in Ontario. Each student on an average wrote on 12 subjects and the number of answer papers forwarded to the department at Toronto is 72,000. No leas than 175 examiners have been employed to read these papers and they expect to conclude their labors on the 12th of August. The results will be for - Warded to the local centres about the lath of August. • A Warning to Mothers. Too mach care cannot be used 'with small children during the hot weather of the summer months to guard against bowel troubles. As a rule it is only ne- cessary to give the child a dose of caster oil to correct any disorder of the bowels. Do not use any substitute, bat give the Old-fashioned castor oil, and see that itis fresh as rancid oil nauseates and has a tendency to gripe, If this does not check the bowels give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and then a dose of castor oil, and the disease may be checked in its incipiency and all danger avoided. The caster oil and this remedy should be procured at mace and kept ready for instant use as soon as the first indication of any bowel trouble appears. This is the most successful treatnlentknown and may be relied upon with implicit confidence even in cases of cholera infantnm. For sale by A. McCall & Co. r *- The volcano of Stromboli, north of Sicily, has so many eruptions that it has received the name of "the lighthouse of the Mediterranean." The death of Mrs. Williams, wife of Raby Williams, Dunlop, which occurred suddenly at her home on Tuesday even - lug, July 25th, removes an old resident of the district and one who was very highly esteemed by those who knew her, Her death was quite unexpected and re- sulted from heart failure. The deceased was a daughter of the late Henry Hynd- man, first sheriff of Huron county, sad was seventy-six years of age. For Over Sixty Years. An Old and Well -Tried Remedy -Mrs Winslow's SoothingSyrup has been used for over sixty years byeeillionsof mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child. softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. It is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents abottle. Rs valve is incalculable. Besure you ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. A shooting affray took place in Tees - water last week. Wm. Cousins pinked a racket with his neighbor, Alex. Colvin. Cousins went home and got a gun and shot at Colvin three times, one bullet grazing the latter's leg and the other two missing him. Cousins was arrested and taken to jail. He was under the influence of liquor when the shooting took place. Cousins has since been sentenced to four months at hard labor in Walkerton jail. tTse Lever's Dry Soap (a powder) to washole a w o ns and flannels, -you'll 11 like it. 32 After an illness of a couple of years from consumption Mrs. Geo. Glover of Goderich answered the final summons on Sunday evening, July 23rd. Mrs. Glover had been at St. Joseph's hospital, London, for five months, having return- ed about five weeks ago. She was mar- ried four years ago to her now sorrowing mate but leaves no children. Her maid- en name was Maria Dourbecker, the family living at Erbsville, Waterloo county. Nothing on the Market Equal to Chamber- lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, This fact is well known to druggists everywhere, and nine out of ten will give their customers this preparation when the best is asked for. Mr. Obe Witmer, a prominent druggist of Joplin, Mo., in a circular to his customers, says: "There is nothing on the market in the way of patent medicine which equals Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarr- hoea Remedy for bowel complaints. We sell and recommend this preparation." For sale by A. I. McCall & Co. Call a girl a chick and she smiles; call a woman a hen and she howls. Call a young woman a witch and she is pleas. ed; call an old woman a witch and she, is indignant. Calla girl a kitten and she likes it; call a woman a cat and she' hates you. Women are queer. If you call a man a gay dog it will flatter him; Call him a pup, a hound or a car, and he will try to alter the map of your faee. He doesn't micd being called a bnlI or a bear, yet he will object to being men- tioned as a calf or a cab. Men are queer, too. -London Tit -Bits. G A 1D'1 Its. X Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought $ignatnre �Z /41-, ,Q. of ;�!/l/. The latest estimate of the fall wheat yield in Alberta is placed at 800,000 bushels. So overwhelming has grown the interest of fall wheat culture that an organization is now forming in Alberta similarh tot a Western Immigration As- sociation to place in the United States an office to secure publicity for Canadian fall wheat lands. Fall wheat harvest has commenced. The yield is running 32 bnshele to the acre. Ifyes,`yout Mends or relatives suferi►ith fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus' Dance, or railing Sickness, write for a trial battle and valuable treatise on such diseases to Tun Lorna Co., druggists mists sell or can Street, .obta nfo Toronto, All LEIBIGSFITCURE Prof. Atwater, one of the greatest liv- ing authorities ou foods believes that one pound of full cream cheese has as great nutritive value as 114 pounds of steak, and if the cheese is properly prepared it is certainly fully digestible. Cheese, he added, is next to milk the most perfect food, and. iu connection with bread a perfect one. In Canada the consump- tion of cheese amounts to about five pounds per head. It is a pity the Cana- dian people do not sbow greater appro. oiatiou of a food product in the mann- facture of which they hold the first plane is the world. It would add both to the health and prosperity of this couutry it we used more cheese at home. Many people say they are "all nerves," easily startled or upset, easily worried and irritated. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are just the remedy such people require. They restore perfect harmony of the nerve centres and give new nerve force to shattered nervous systems. The people of Teeswater were startled somewhat to learn, on Saturday' even- ing. July 22ud, that Mr. Wan. 0. Altche- son, an old resident, had died suddenly at the home of Mr. Geo. Cooney, whore he had of late been making his home. Deceased had been enjoying excellent health, for an old man, and shortly be- fore his death had walked to McLeod's barber shop and back home, where he was seated on a chair ou the lawn when the end came without warning. William Chapman Aitcheson was born in Rox- boroughshire, Scotland, on Jane 25. 182.4-81 years ago. He came to Cana- da at the age of twenty, and for a num- ber of years lived near Rice Lake, Ont., moving to Teeswater twenty-seven years ago, In 1848 he was married to Janet Sidey, who still survives him at the age of eighty. WHY SO WEARY? Always Restless and Weak Isn't Natural -But It's Dangerous. Yon have to work hard. This uses up lots of nerve force and tears down the body faster than it can build up. The result is half-dead feeling you can't shake off. Somehow you must get more vitality. The water in your blood must be turned into nutriment and building material. This is just what happens in using Ferrozone, which renews the blood and nerves, and makes each organ do the work that nature expects of it. Ferrozone quickly increases your weight, brings appetite and healty col- or, instills a reserve of vigor into the system that defies weariness, exhaustiou, debility, or sickness of any kind. The enormous strengtheuing power of Ferrozone is proved in the case of Mrs. Edward Hiss of Orr Lake, Ont., who says: "Two years ago I had a nervous breakdown. At night I tossed restless- ly in bed, unable to get any rest from sleep. In the morning, I suffered from over -powering weakness. My appetite was poor. I grew pale, thin and despond- ent. A slight hacking cough also added to my burden. "My doctor said to try Ferrozone, and it did good in a few days, I increased in strength, the nervous sensations disap- peared, and with my appetite came back my color and good spirits. I have gain- ed over ten pounds in weight, and as my age is 55, I consider Ferrozone is a marvel." (Signed) Mrs. Edward Hill. REMEMBER THIS: Ferrozone is a true tonic -not an alcoholic stimulant. Fifty chocolate -coated tablets in a box for fifty cents, or six boxes for $2.50, at all dealers, or N. C. Polson & Co., Hartford, Conn., U.S.A., and Kingston, Ont. a Oa Thursday, July 27th, Miss Annie, third daughter of Mr. Alexander Young, of Ashfield, met a most pitiable death about 11 a.m. The young lady resided at home with her parents between Shep- pardton and Port Albert, and was on her way to the port, and in approaching the bridge down the hill she lost control of the bicycle which she was riding and dashed over the abutment and into the river, causing death from drowning. She was a most estimable young lady, and in the best of health. Her age was fifteen on the 7th of August next. s A Vacation. (Washington Star.) They -told him that he needed rest; He hurried far away, Where o'er the ocean's foamy crest The wholesome breezes play. He shot the chutes, he Iooped the loop; He joined the mazy dance; He saw the sideshow minstrel troupe, And watched the ponies prance. He ate hot sausages and things, He ne'er had seen before; He won a cane by throwing rings Until his•arms were sore. He walked the boardwalk all day long, And heard the music play, Where rival organs, big and strong, In discord grind away. He drank longmixtures filled with ice, Ate lobsters and sardines; He dallied with the cards and dice And played the slot machines. He tried to keep the pace in vain, He did his level hest. He had to hurry home.again, Because he needed rest. MANAGER WANTED. Trustworthylady or gentlethan to manage business in ths comity and adjoining territory for well and faverahlyy known house of solid financial standing. woo straight cash salary end Espensees paid each Monday' by cheek direct from 'headgnerters. Expenses money advsneed. Position permanent. Address. Manager, 810 Como Meek, ('Hauge linnet ENGLISH SERVANTS. They Don't Want ,tespeot, last IwI1I* Upon Their ".Rights." To the American st'Ctling -in London nothing Is mare confusing than the at- titude of English servants, their con- tempt for the slightest contsltleratlon of their feelings and their fury' at the least Infringement of -their rights. At first sight it seems thut ill spite of their dignity they accept extraordinari- ly small wages, but the American finds housekeeping in London quite expen- sive, for not only is the work so spe- cialized that an immense number of servants is required to do it, but they consume a great deal of time and food in five meals a day, which is consider- ed their right. Class clistinetions below stairs are regarded much more scrupulously than above, and the unfortunate mistress of a house has to understand the grade of every one she employs, from tine house- keeper to the scullery maid. Woe be - tido her if sbe confuses an tapper and a lower servant or gives an order to the wrong one. An American woman married to an Englishman and settled in London told me that she installed a dumbwaiter in the hope of saving trouble to both her cools and her butler, At the end of a month she found It unused and on in- quiring 'teamed that as It was not the traditional duty of either a cools or a butler to send such a thing as a dumb- waiter -up and down both refused to touch it, and her food continued to be carried by hand from her remote•kitch- en. Trouble was nothing to them in comparison to the clanger of compro- mising their position.-Ainslee's Mag- azine. TAINTED ATMOSPHERES.' How Fumes of Aleohol and Poidon.n May Endanger IIealth. Burton -on -Trent, the center of the English brewing industries, has the pe- culiar faculty of mildly intoxicating g the stranger within its gates. The res- ident has become accustomed to the mildly alcoholic fumes which arise from the innumerable brewing vats, but the susceptible stranger finds ex- hilaration and finally a mild form of intoxication in the atmosphere -an ef- fect which does not wear off for sev- eral hours after his arrival. On every hand the big brewing houses are throwing ori fumes from the vats of malted liquors, and, while these are Im- perceptible to the resident, more than a thousand authentic instances are said to have been recorded of persons to whom the air has proved to possess properties that both cheer and inebri- ate. Just as in certain parts of the west the arseniousin from the smelters fumes destroy vegetation and imperil health, the vapors of the English brewing cap- ital destroy the sobriety of the abstain- er and fill his head with vagrant fan- cies. As many v isitors to the place are actuated by a desire to see for them- selves the great industry which they are doing their modest best to suppress and as they are the most sensitive to the atmosphere of the town, those who gain their living from the brew houses take great delight in observing these involuutary lapses from principles. ' Italian Brigands. A German gentleman was one even- ing riding along the public . highway near Imola when his horse threw him and bolted. He picked himself up and lighted a match to see what time it was, but found that his watch had stopped. Just at that moment two bicyclists hove in sight, and he went forward, making signs for them to stop, but the men pedaled furiously of sight. About two months after the gentleman was reading an account of travel in Italy when be came across the following passage: "One evening we had an adventure with a brigand. We were bicycling near Imola, when an individual in a long dusty cloak suddenly sprang from the ground and with a small lighted torch, which he flourfshed with furious gostures, demanded our watches. We with great agility, but by the skin of our teeth, avoided the i11 intentioned fellow and, shouting that we had no watches, made off as fast as we could. V9hether followed or not we did not wait to see." -Rome Letter! to Pall Mall Gazette. FOR 600-0 HEALTH To preserve or restore it, there is no better prescription for men, women and children than Ripans Tabules. They are easy totake, 'they are made of a combination of medicines approved and used by every physician. Ripans Tabules are widely used by all sorts of people -but to the plain, every -day folks they are a veritable friend in need. Ripans Tabules have become their stan- dard fame- v remedy. They are a dependable, hon- est r im'idy 'vith a long and successful record, to c:-rr; =n:ligest!on, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn _or .,i,ipation, t•'ensive breath, heartburn, dizziness, - ni''ation of the heart, sleeplessness, muscular •.ratism, sour stomach, bowel and liver com- . - r _ .'ts, They stregthen weak stomachs, build up 1 .1- .hwn systems, restore pure blood, good appe•• -r i ^ .1d sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives con .tant benefit from a regular use of Ripans Tabules. Your dri•ggist sells them. The five - cont packet is en., ,gh for an ordinary occasion. The Family Bottlt. 6o cents, contains a supply for a year. • RIPitS • • • • • • --.arra • 9;h• C• coiled spring wire tested to 2000 lbs. tensile •) • strength -over twice that of ordinary fence wire. 11 The Frost Fence is guaranteed. We will repair at ariy time free of •). c• charge, any defects due to material orworkmanship. Heaviest and best. • Write for free booklet. For sale by- aa- The "FROST,' GALLOCKZ$D •) : - • - is one of' the new features of the Frost Wire • Fence for this year. The locks are coated with zinc by an electrical process which absolutely prevents rust. • The Frost Wire Fence is made of • J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church: \ -v •e••••••o••••••••••••e•••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••t$ • • ICLUBBING ••• •• RAT • • - • • • • • • • • • 4- 4. 4• 4• 4• 4. 4• 4• 4• 4• 4. 4• 4- 4• 4- 4. 4• 4• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • .�1. STRONG AND VIGOROUS. 4• 4• • Every Organ of,thi Body Toned up and Invigorated by Mr. its. W. Meyers, Bin B. E., Rano, Oat., says : " I suffered for Ors years with palpitation, shortness of breath, sleeplessness and pain in Iii} berm. bat eco box of Mllbnrn's Heatt find Notre lAis oompletsly rano-red all these 'die. tossing symptoms. I have not suffered Sian* taking them, and now sloop well and fool_ /trong and vigotoa$." iiilbnnrn'e Heart sad stem raw oars all diseases arising from weeklrosrt, worn sal nerve tissues, of watery blood: • • • a 1 1 BARGAINS IN NEWSPAPERS !1111 The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the following -i•.• rates : Times to January 1st, 1906.. $0.50 Times and Daily Globe 4.50 Times and Daily Mail and Empire 4.50 Times and Daily World 3.10 Times and Toronto Daily News.. , 1.90 Times and Toronto Daily Star 1.85 Times and Daily Advertiser.. 2.35 Times and Toronto Saturday Night 2.35 Times and Weekly Globe . 1.65 Times and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.75 Times and .Family Herald and Weekly Star 1.80 Times and Weekly Witness 1.65 Times and Montreal Weekly Herald . 1.50 Times and London Free Press (weekly) 1.80 Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1.60 Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1.80 Times and World Wide 1.85 Times and Northern 'Messenger. 1.25 Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 We specially recommend our readers to subscribe to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine. Times and Farming World ... 1.60 Times and Presbyterian 2.25 Times and Westminster 2.25 Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3.35 u, Times and Youths''Companion 2.75 Times and Impressions (a business montnly) • 1.80 '14 4• 4-• 4- 4. •t. • ete • •'� •. • •r ®l-. en •r',• .: - .i.', . 4• When premiums are given with any of the above papers, subscribers will secure such premiums when order- . ing through us, same as if ordered direct from publishers. : The rates are as low as we can make them, and mean a considerableasaving to our readers. If you do not see ,- what you want in the list, enquire at the Office ; we can give a low rate on any newspaper or magazine. NOTE CAREFULLY. -Any of the weekly pub - I lications in the above list will be sent to new subscribers .from now to rst of January, 1906, for the price quoted -L- the remainder of this year is thrown in free. These rates are strictly cash in advance. Se• nd re- mittances by posta note, post office or express money order, addressing- ' • O./: FILE WINGA OI4TAItIO. bN! a ,.