HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-08-17, Page 3f
The Difference Between. Expert and
Unskilful Tea Blending
THE qualities of different teas prove that there is a
distinct difference between expert Red Rose blend-
ing methods and the usual methods.
Several kinds of teas may be blended, but if unskil-
fully selected they will not combine to make a perfect
blend ; they will retain their original individual character-
istics with their roughness and harshness emphasized.
Such tea is bitter, poorly flavored in the cup (and
there is much of it in bulk and package form on the
market). It emphasizes the result of inexperience, lack of
knowledge of combining qualities of different teas, imper-
fect blending, poor selection, and the. hundred and one
other causes of poor tea.
But my expert Red Rose blenders select the right
grades of strong, rich Indian teas and delicate fragrant
Ceylon teas, and produce R6d Rose Tea with entir`irly
new characteristics -a tea with that " rich fruity flavor"
-a tea so exquisitely different and better than any brand
of Ceylon alone, that no one who once tries it ever goes
back to Ceylon again.
Dairy Dots.
Cows are like folks, they appreciate
kind treatment and show their apprecias
tion in the milk pail.
The quantity of milk may be changed
by intelligent feed, but the quality is
born with the cow.
The price of butter durirg the past
winter should convince the most skep-
tical farmer that winter dairying pays
best.
It is worth a good deal to be able to
tell a good cow when we see one. Many
rules have been laid down for the guid-
ance of the man who sets out to buy,
but after all the best and safest guide is
the word of an honest man, the man
who wants to sell.
Suet -dent fcod 114 prcduetive of the
largest quantity of fat in the milk and
bas the effect to cause the cream to
separate more readily from the milk and
the batter biobules frcm the cream,
leaving less fat in butter.
At the low cbnrnirg temperature in a
cool room butter usually comes in a
Tarn condition. In such a condition
butter takes salt with difficulty. It is
essential to work it more in order to get
the salt evenly distributed and dissolved.
Such an excessive amount of working
while butter is in a hard condition
causes an undue amount of water to be
expressed, thus making the condition for
dissolving sufficient salt more unfavor-
able, besides lessening the overrun with-
out improving the commercial value.
MANAGER WANTED.
Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage
business in this county and adjoining territory
for well and favorably known house .of solid
financial standing., $4G0 straight cash salary
and Expensees. paid each Monday by check
direct firm headquarters. Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
Manager. b10 Coma Block. Chinago Illinois
1905
is good Tea
T. 1r: -T. Estabroobts
St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg
A
What They Mean.
(Chicago News.]
The little glances that I get,
So timid and appealing,
The pressures.wben ourhandshave met,
The sighs so full of feeling,
The "snuggling" -there's no better
name -
When on my arm you lean,
I'm conscious of, but just the same,
I wonder what they mean.
Your sympathetic interest
Whenever I am talking,
The sudden and quite recent zest
Yon have for moonlight walking -
When you accord my little joke
Appreciation keen,
And say you love the smell of smoke -
What may those tokens mean?
Though on anticipations's alp,
I have no heart affection,
I think yon merely want my scalp
To add to your collection,
I've played. the game, too, more 'or less,
I'm not so very green,
And so I think that I can guess
Exactly what you mean.
Following the lead of the. American
Bankers' Association, the Canadian
Bankers' Association will try to recover
the money order business of Canada,
which is now almost entirely done by
different express companies and the
Government Postcffice Department.
This action will end the practice of
banks of charging 15 cents on a cheque
whether it was for $3 or $50, and any
timonnt under $5 will, according to the
new rates agreed on, be put through for
a charge of 3 cents; from $5 to $10 for a
charge of 6 cents; from $10 to $20 for 10
cents, and from $20 to $50 for 15 cents,
THE GREATEST YET
THE GRANDEST EVER
1905
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
At TORONTO, 1 AUG. 26 to SEPT. 11
$45,000 in Premiums - $.38,300 In Attractions
The Irish Guards Band
By permission of His Most Gracious Majes-
tyy King Edward Vil, the band of the Irish
Guards, His Majesty's. favorite household
band and the finest military musical organ-
ization in -the mpu e, will give two con-
certs each and every day.
Art and Treasures
In an especially built, extensive, fire -proof
art gallery will be presented the grandest
collettion of art and art treasures ever got
together on this continent, including loans
from the King, the Corporation of the City
of London the great English Universities,
the Republic of France, South Kensington
Museum,
i
LordSt
r
athcona.th e Lieut. -Gov-
ernor
eut. Gov-
ernor of Ontario and other distinguished
bodies and gentlemen.
Coronation Picture
B special command of Elis Majesty the
Ring, Abbey's noted and historic painting
will be on exhibition during the entireFair
.:'all of Port Arthur
The greatest pyre) militnry 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 taking
part. 'lhe fireworka display will be on a
brilliant scale, introducing new features of
an Oriental character,
Other Things to See
The Process Building, samples 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 chow, the world's latest inven-
tions.
Special Excursions
Special cheap railway and steamboat ex-
cursions have been arranged. Enquire of
your nearest station or ticket agent for
rates.
W. K. MeNaught, Pres. For prise list, entry blanks J. 0. Orr, Mgr & See'y.
g and information address
Entries Qlose : Live Stock, etc., Aug.7th: Poultry and Dogs, Aug. lath.
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THE OLD FOGY DOCTOR
FAMILY Doctors are alt right as general practitioners,
but they are not specialists. The sexual organs cont
pries the most Intricate and important system in the•
human body and •tegnire eke• most skillful treatment.
You might as well expect a blacksmith to repair hour'
watch. as a fancily physician to cure Sexual complaints.
We have made a specialty of these diseases for over 30+
years, have invested tens of thousands of dollars and have
every facility known to ntedtcat setedce to cure tirein.l
Every case is taken with a positive guarantee of r
Nouri-ilio Pay.
8II10OD •0111091 Whether Inherited of acquired,
h positively cured forever. The virus Is eliminated from
the aJitem to no daaget of return. Hundreds of cases
cured by u9 2S years ago add ao teturn; best evidence of a
cure. ..
whits M'oUts DIIIIIIIIIWIteatta ether coanplicatiens
meet as enrissioSI, drains in the urine, variceal4.` sexual
weakness, eta., are cured by Mit NOW lgiatlrrTSilitee
masse under a plain,.giatantee�-11 MIt11E..NI" PM,
WI Cues At.t. mimed* or Yeti AN Me11a1Ne
rittema�tquestion
a1de14itiai tastier
tot
Trt�nt. *eh tor
DRS. KENNEDY AL KERGAN,
ilio sttt'ifsaV $1113111113111% DTiT:MUIT, alflhClll. ., ..
�`..K Ker. K K : ;'( KNK K S. K
THE WINGHAM TIMES, AUGUST 17, 1905
NATIVE WEALTH.
Sources of Revenue and Also Play.
grounds for the People,
Canada has the largest peepwood
areas in the world.
Canada has set apart 12 million acres
In forest reserves.
Ontaa•io and Quebec derive half their
revenue from their forest wealth,
Canada has 107,978 Indians. They
decreased by 255 In 1904 over 1903.
Canada spends $300,000 a year on
her Indians,
29,000 of the Indians are Protestants,
34,915 Roman Catholics, 11,269 pagans
--outside of the far north.
The Indians own 37,830 horned stock
and 32,635 horses.
Ranching and Irrigation.
Canada has 100 million acres of
grazing land in the west.
Twenty five years eke 'the cattle
trade of the west totalled 25 head,
800,000 animals are now being pas-
tured in the Canadian west.
One-half of this number is cattle,
and the rest sheep and horses.
622,000 head of cattle were sent to
Great Britain in 1903, an increase
103,000 over 1902.
Canada exported 11 milieus' worth
of cattle and sheep in 1904.
Canada has, all told, 51.2 million
cattle; 11.2 million horses.
The first carload of cattle was' ship-
ped from the west in 1885..:
Canada has 500 miles of irrigation
canals in Alberta.
These .are made up of 160 different
canals and ditches.
The C. P. R. are building a 400 -mile
irrigation canal between Calgary and
Medicine Hat.
This will cost $5,000,000.
It will reclaim 1 1-2 million acres of
land and make available another 11-3
million acres for ranching.
This area when reclaimed will sup-
port a population of 500,000.
In adidtion, one million acres are be-
ing reclaimed around Lethbridge,
Education In Canada.
Canada has 20,081 public schools.
Canada's public schools are attended
by 1,128,532 pupils.
Canada has 30,970 public school
teachers.
Canada spends over 12 millions an-
nually on public schools,
Canada has 17 universities and' 68
colleges.
These 70 educational institutions are
attended by 16,000 pupils.
Eighty percent. bf all adults. in Can-
ada can write; 70 per cent. of all the
people can read, or 85 per cent. of all
over 5.
Seventy-six schools in Northwest
Territories in 1886, 640 in 1902.
Illiterates in Canada, 1891, 1,750 per
1,000; 1901, 1,266.
Canada's Railways.
Canada has 20,378 miles of railway,
steam and electric,
Canada's railways have cost over a
billion dollars.
Canada has a greater railway mile-
age than Australia and New Zealand.
Canada's railway mileage per head
of population is greater than that of
any other country.
In actual railway mileage,
ranks eighth in the world.
Canada has nearly as much railway
mileage as Great Britain.
Canada had only 3,000 mule% of rail-
ways in 1867, at Confederation.
Canada is building 5,000 miles of
railways.
Railway passengers carried, 1904, 23,-
100,000.
Freight carried, 1904, 48 12 million
tons.
Railway gross earnings, 1904, 100
millions.
Working expenses, 1904, 74 millions;
net earnings, 26 millions.
Seven thousand miles of railway
north of Lake. Superior; not a mile in
1867.
One-third of Canada's railway mile-
age is in the west.
Canadian Government railwayi}t aro
1,519 miles long.
Five hundred and thirty-four miles
of new railways built in Canada in
1904.
Canada has 767 miles of electric rail-
ways.
Canada's electric, railways have cost
80 millions.
They carried in 1904, 181 million
passengers -30 times the population of
Canada.
Canada has spent over 80 millions on
72 miles of canals -over a million a
mile.
Canada's canals are now free of tolls.
Canada ranks seventh in the list of
maritime nations.
Canada has 7,000 vessel registered,
with tonnage of 8 1-2 million tons.
Canada has nearly a thousand light-
houses, lightships, etc.
Canada has 1,033 steamboats under
inspection.
Canada has 28 life-saving stations.
Three hundred and twenty-eight new
vessels were built in Canada in 1901.
Facts About Banks.
Canada has 35 chartered banks, with
1,100 branches.
Canada's banks have 79 millions of
paid-up capital.
Canada's banks had 72 millions of
notes in circula'tion.October 31, 1904.
Sixty years ago there were only 17
banks, with 6 millions in circulation.
Canada's banks have assets of 691
millions; liabilities 664 millions.
Canada's banks have increased their
assets by over 600 millions since Con-
federation.
omfederation.
Canada has 1,000 postoflce and Gov-
ernment savings banks.
They have 216,000 depositors, with
62 millions on deposit.
Grand total savings of 548 millions,
or 2100 per head.
Montreal is the largest banking On*
tre in Canada; Toronto second, Winni-
peg third, Ottawa fourth.
Bank clearings, 1904, in eleven Cana,
dian cities, 32,795,440,800.
Deposits in Canadian banks have in-
creased 164 per cent, in 1e years.
Fisheries Are Rich.
Canada's fishery industry produced
in 1904 23 millions.
Canada exported be 1904 over 10 mil-
lions' worth of fishery products.
Cod comes first in value, salmon
next.
Canada has 100,000 Hien employed in
the fishing industry,
Nova Scotia comes first in fishing in-
dustry, British Columbia second, New
Brunswick third.
13,905 seals wore caught in 1904 by
Canadian sealers.
Pditoffiicea, Telegraphs and Telephones.
Canada,has 10,40 postoftices, as
Against 3,3$ at Confederation, over
1,000 are in' the Canadian west.
of
Canada
PERFECTION
CRSSoda
i"'1tC�wEY boculrnc.NDY C:
Stnlrrwd'J ::,heDS era
Food
Value
Mooney's Perfection Cream
Sodasare crisp squares
Uf whokssfie nourishment.
They are tlye food that
builds strength and muscle.
They *re as easy 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 ddights the appetite.
Always fresh and crispin
the moisture -proof pages.
At di rimers in 1 and
pound packages.
There died at her reoidence in Har-
purhey, on Wednesday. Aug 9th Char-
lotte Ann Jewett, relict of the lata
Francis Fowler, in her 88th year, The
cause of death was an affection of the
heart coupled with infirmities of old age,
and Dame after about ten days' illness,
Mrs. Fowler was a native of London,
England, and when quite young cameto
this country with her parents and settled
at Bayfield, After ger marriage to Mr.
Fowler, who died about 18 years.
ago, they made their home on the
Huron road, Tnckersmith, and she has
been a resident of that vicinity ever
since.
HAY FEVER FOR 27 YEARS.
Well Known New England Woman
Cured of Flay Fever -Cure was
Lasting.
The thousands of discouraged people
who dread fhe approach of summer be-
cause they have hay fever and cannot
find any relief from it, will read with
interest and gratitude the following
statement from Helen S. Williams of
Mansfield, Mass.
"For 27 years, from the month of
August until leeavyafrost, I have been
afflicted with hey lever, growing worse
and worse each year, until of ]ate years
I was unable to attend to my work dur-
ing that period.
"Last summer I fortunately gave
Hyomei a trial, and I am happy to say
that it entirely cured me, and
I have had no recurrence of the disease
since."
This letter is only one of many that
have come to the proprietors of Hyomei,
and the results following this treatment
have been so remarkable that it is pro-
posed at the annual convention of hay
fever sufferers to recommend Hyomei.
By breathing the germ•killing and
healing balsams of Hyomei, anyone can
have at any moment of the day, either
in their home or office, a climate like
that of the White Mountains.
The complete outfit costs but $1, extra
bottles 50 Dents. Walton McKibbon
agrees to refund the money to any hay
fever tnfferer who uses Hyomei without
benefit.
• London Free Press: -While tramps
keep clear of Ontario this year, they are
as numerous as ever in Michigan. They
� rob the fields and gardens, milk the
cows for their own use, and defy the
farmers to shoot. About fifty passed
through one place in a day. The rail-
way companies are greatly annoyed by
their breaking into cars. Those tramps
are of an intelligent class to keep out of
Ontario. They know Ontario's chalk
mark on the front gate when they see
it.
ABSO LUTE
SECURITY,
ce���ne
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
See FaaSImiN Wrapper Below.
Vary small awe as easy
se•taac N+a
A A wile leoFelt NERD CIl►
i
A I«
FOR DIIZ111E
nikieuautittst
FoneTompi''1 1ne.
el CONSTIPATION"+�., �,
• FONSALLOW SKIN",
fOfl THECOMktq.#
1 7.7.. ri w,sviuvs trans r
Tiiartaile.J ,...r.wr
CURB OICKC HNADAoHO. ., ..
Lettere mailed, 1868, 18 millions;
1904, 259 millions.
Post card% mailed, 1904, 27 millions,
Money orderer issued, 1904, nearly
39,662,000.
Newspapers, books and parcels malt-
ed, 1904, 27 millions.
Canada's postai revenue. 1904, 36,-
306,420;
6;306,420; expenditure, 36,001,636.
Canada has 36,000 miles of telegraph
wires, overland and cable,
They wou.d cross Canada 8 times, if
in line.
Canada has 130,000 miles of tele-
graph
and telephone wires.
Canada contributed five -seventeenths
of the all•British Pacific cable,
Canada's initiative made possible the
great enterprise.
Canada was the first colony of the
Empire to have a penny post.
Telephone Instruments in use in
Canada, 1904, 81,500,
253,970,000 telephone messages were
sent in 1904. •
There is 1 telephone to every 65 of
population.
Canada has a militia force of 46,000.
This force can be expanded to a war
strength of 100,000 as a first line of de -
Canada has 300 rifle associations,
with 22,000 members.
Canada's Militia Department costs
21-2 millions a year.
Canada has 600 Mounted Policemen,
costing half a million.
They patrol an area as large as Eu-
rope.
Canada will hereafter maintain the
defences at Halifax and Esquimalt.
This will cent Canada an additional
2 millions a year.
Canada will spend in 1905 nearly 31
per head for military purposes, as
against $8.30 in England.
Some First Things.
First census taken in Canada in
1665.
First colonization enterprise, 1605,
when de Poutrincourt settled Port
Royal with European settlers.
Manitoba first settled in 1811 by 125
Scotch settlers, under Lord Selkirk.
The beaver first appeared as Can-
ada's emblem on coat•of•arms granted
by Charles I. to Sir William Alexan-
der.
First newspaper published in Brit-
ish North America was The Halifax
Gazette, March 23, 1752.
First settlement in Quebec, 1618.
First Roman Catholic Bishop of Can-
ada was M. de Laval, 1659.
First Catholic church built in Can-
ada at Port Royal, 1608.
First steam railway built in Canada,
1836.
First steamship to cross the Atlantic
was the Royal William, from Quebec,
in 1833.
First canals begun in Canada in
1779, along the St. Lawrence.
First railway bridge across the 5t.
Lawrence, the Victoria, 1859.
Atlantic cable first laid to Canada,
August 5, 1868.
First copy of Toronto Daily Globe
issued, March 5, 1844.
Northwest Territory acquired by
purchase, 1870.
British Columbia admitted to Dom-
inion, 1871; Prince Edward Island, 1873.
King's College (Toronto UnlversitY)
opened in 1843.
Some General Facts.
Canada is 88 years old, dating from
Confederation.
Canada is 146 years old, dating from
British Conquest of 1759.
Canada is 372 years old, dating from
Cartier's first visit of 1535.
Quebec is 297 years old; Montreal,
263. Halifax, 157; Toronto, 112.
Victoria is 61 years old; Vancouver,
25; Winnipeg, 36.
Of the 48 colonies of the Empire,
Canada takes the lead.
Canada was the first colony to ask
for and receive self-governing powers.
Canada was the first colony to form
a Confederation.
The British North America Act is
Canada's Magna Charta.
Canada has over 700 legislators, Fed-
eral and Provincial
Canada has 45 different religious de-
nominations.
Protestant number 69 per cent.;
Catholics, 41 per cent.
There are 293 flour mills in the
Northwest, with a daily capacity of
18,500 barrels of flour
There are ;1,026 elevators in, ;the
Northwest, with a daily capacity of
18,500 barrels of flour.
There are 1,025 elevators in the
Northwest; storage capacity of 45 mil-
lion bushels.
Canada has the largest elevator in
the world -at Port Arthur -capacity, 6
million bushels.
Two thousand threshing outfits wexle
in use in Manitoba in 1904.
Fire insurance in force in Canada,
1 billion 140 millions.
Life insurance in force in Canada,
648 millions.
Loan company and building society
assets, 167 millions.
FortpNelson, on Hudson Bay, is as
near Liverpool as Montreal.
Th 'Bf`itish flag was raised at ElIes-
meafe. Land, 1904, 1,200 miles north of
the United States boundary.
Over 1 million ballots were cast in
the Dominion elections of 1904.
Thera have been ten general elec-
tions since Confederation.
Canada is hereafter to mint her own
gold.
Dominion subsidies to Provinces, $4,-
402,502.
Laugh and Be Well
The cheerful boomers of "Don't Wor-
ry" clubs and kindred societies have a
new champion for their arguments in
an English physician, who places
laughter in the very front rank of
health promoters. It is a matter of
everyday experience, this authority ob-
serves, that one feels better for an out-
burst of laughter, which is a "nerve
storm, comparable in its effect to a
thunderstorm on a very small scale,
doing good by dissipating those op•
liressive clouds of care which some-
times darken the mental horizon."
Persons 'who laugh with a will are on
the high road to a perfect phYsleal and
Mental condition. Heart action is pro-
lnoted by laughter, and inasmuch as
the eachinnatory process is subject to
contagion the best time to laugh is
when one is in company. According
to this authority, portly people do not
laugh because they tire tat; they are
kat because they "laugh "Fat is a nec-
essary constituent of the healthy
brain and nervous system." The gospel
of cheerfulness Gannet be preached too
often, and it is good to be told that the
fun maker is a b•neftt tter of mankind.
A woman who is in good health at
the age of 45 is likely to outlive tt
malt er tna sante age.
Common rsnges rnak k iM efal man anile,
Is your Coal
Wasted or Used ? °
It is comparatively
easy to build a range
that will make a lot of heat, but it requires the
exact science of Pandora range building to produce
a range that will use all the heat in the coal without
waste.
A common range may burn twice the coal that
a Pandora will, and yet do only half the work.
If you use a Pandora range you can be certain
that your coal money is not wasted, but used.
The Pandora Range maker th. thrifty
1m:t lle.smite.
MCIary§ Pandora
angeWarehouses and Factories s
London, Toronto, Montreal,
Winnipeg, Vancouver,
St. John, N.B., Hamilton
SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG.
It Is Not Text Books
but the instructors behind them that make a school.
While the Forest City Business and Shorthand College
publishes a text on bookkeeping that is used in the best colleges
from Halifax to the Great West and has a standing reputation
for publishing practical text books, only the best and highest
salaried teachers in Canada are on tl,e staff.
Without a good teaching staff good text books would be
wasted. Our courses include Bookkeeping, Gregg Shorthand,
Accounting, etc., as well as Touch -typewriting.
Catalogue free for the asking. School term -Sept. till June
inclusive.
J. W. WESTERVELT,
Principal
Y. M. C. A. Bldg.,
LONDON, ONT.
Perhaps you like your y h
then remember -Hall's Hair
gray hair. Stops falling hair,
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COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
w PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOK WORK
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
• MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
VEGETABLE SICILIAN
Hair Renewer
dr; thea keep ft. Perhaps not ;
Renewer always restores color to
also. s, r. •es., as
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Tie Times
Jo ) Dearnent
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
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THE TIMES
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $2.00 per
year in advance -sent to any address
in Canada or the United States.
advertisement in the Times brings good results
• Address all communications to --
TEE WING11A1Vi TIMES
Office Phone, No, 4.VV w TNGIISalt ONT.
Residenee Phone, No, 74.
•,111ti00'O 1 S fit#