HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-09-07, Page 3Neith r Indian nor Ceylon tea alone
produces the Red Rose flavor
TC produce a tea with the " rich fruity flavor's
of Red Rose Tea from either Ceylon or
Indian alone is impossible.
Neither Indian nor Ceylon in itself possesses
the Red Rose flavor, but combined in proper
proportions they produce the "rich fruity flavor "
that has made Red Rose Tea famous—that makes
Red Rose Tea the only tea used in, any home
where it is once tried.
Rid Rose
ais good Tea
T. II. Eate►broolis
St, John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg
Jr
DISGRACEFUL DEFICIENCIES.
It is a disgrace --
To half do things.
To be lax, indolent, indifferent.
Not to develcp your possibilities,
To do poor, slipshod, blotched work.
To give bad example to young people.
To have crude, brntieh, repulsive
manners.
To live a half-life es hen a whole life
is possible.
Not to be scrupuyously clean in per-
son and surrounding.
To acknowledge a fault and make no
effort to overecme it.
To be ungrateful to friends and to
those who have helped us.
To go through life a pygmy when
Nature intended you for a giant.
To kik over the ladder upon which
we have climbed to our position,
To be grossly ignorant of the customs
and usages of good society.
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. 1000 straight cash salary
and Expensees, paid each Monday by check
direct from headquarters. Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
Manager, 810 Como Block, Chicago Illinois
BEWARE OF SUMMER GERMS
Will Cause Sickness Unless Stomach is Strengthened
With Mi-o-na
One tablet of Mi-o-na taken before
each meal daring the summer months,
whenever the stomach is out of order,
or the digestion weak, will do more
than any other treatment to prevent
the diseases caused by germs at this
season.
If the stomach is weak so that food
does not readily digest in it, the food
will become a sour, slimy, fermenting
mass in the digestive organs, the ideal
condition for germs to cause bowel
trouble, diarrhoea, or other summer
illness.
Mi-o•na will Booth and heal the ir-
ritated =cons membrane of the
stomach and digestive tract, stimu-
late the solar plexus, and strength -
en the whole nervous Fyatem. This
remarkable remedy will make the
whole digestive system so healthy
clean and sweet that food cannot
ferment, and any disease germs which
may enter the stomach will be de-
stroyed.
Just one small tablet out of a 50 cent
box of Mi•o•na before eating, and
you will have no headaches, back-
ache, poor appetite, distress after eat-
ing, heartburn, furred tongue, sleepless-
ness, or general debility. It will tone
up the digestive system and give perfect
health and strength.
Take Mi-o-na now, and Walton Me.
Ribbon will guarantee to refund the
mcney if it does not cure. The risk is
all his.
Western fair
Tee .MM,.ITION THAT MIME ,ALL
A,Ya1OYLTONAL .ALPO M•OWUN
when Governor S nicoe laid the foundation of
London, Ontario, one hundred years ago he knew it
would grow to be a great city, but had no thought of the
Western Fair.
The Western Pair given the people of this country
an excellent opportunity for a pleasant outing at a
minimun of cost, and at the same time developes their
store of practical and useful knowledge.
Its educational features have always been carefully
.fostered by the Directors. This year several important
improvements o! an instructive nature have been added.
The celebrated gist Highland Regiment Band will give
three concerts daily during the exhibition. me entertain-
mentdepartinent will be better than ever, and Will include
leaping the gap in mid air on a steant automobile.
.am IN.OANAr1os w,. re W. J. NCID, Tact Oasr. •s
J A. IMAM", AEA ******
LONDON
Sept. 8 = 16,1905
Y
e,
K K & K K."& K. K K K. cc
SINFUL HABITS IN YOUTH
MAKE NERVOUS, WEAK, DISEASED MEN.
THE RESULT of ignorance and folly in youth, overexertion of mind and body«
induced by lust and expoeurs ar. conatantty wrecking• she lines ,
tee fntnrebappin'essntthotisandeofpromising'yoaoremen. Soule ladeand Whiter ,
at *nearly age, at the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag out a r
weary fruittessand melancholy existence, Others reach niatri-
laony batfied no salami Or cora ort there. Tit. vietinte are Anted
halt station% of life -the farm the office, the workshop, the
Pulpit, the trades and tiie professions. • Nsrvssi debility and Sentinel
Waikato) aro guaraliteed Cared by our flew Meths Treatment se Na
Pay. YOU ran tto ilex %5 yeatd it Detroit. Bank security.
Cusco WO ALL IL$E PALED. No semis Vies whis%tsrittsi sensed.
"i ttm fo treats of itg%` and Married, When young I led a fay
life. Early Iddieco:taneand later excesses made trouble for me.
T becarnriweak and nervous. My kidney* becatutt effected and I
feared Bright's Disease. Married Life Was unsatisfactory and
my home. unhappy. I tried .vetyrthing--all lolled 1711 I took.
treatment front Drs. Kennedy lhi Kergart. 'Their Nets 7tlethed
balit eke up mentalis, physically and jsexsally. 1 feel and ,act •
tike a roan In every respect. 'Tey "treated Me fix Years age. hey, Are honest,
acaiabeearedbyretiable ctorl."-W. t- ettee leailuaeks acrd Saklt%trltenyou
CORES 11t1IMTtE1CR RC PSC. Co S Ilan lass >fnok9 see-- st ort Mita r iris »l, -r
. l4E Shlby
$fttti,
Drs. cnnedy Kagan, niSheIia aka. _
•
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far K IK&K K&} K 1 rib K
TRE GUNMAN TOES, SEPTEMBER 7, 1905
P1TIAB .g IMPROVIDENCE.
1'T►* mow l,Ieatlr h Rratatee aThruiuw>ri
Istuernxse of serf's YlNrses,
Examples of staring Ignorance of
food values may well be culled from
the notes of those experts' who have
visited the poor of the different rates.
In the slums of Chicago it Was found
that A women whose husband was out
of work and whose family was living
on a few cents a day bought lettuce, a
food so innutritioue that, at least when
out of season and high In price, it is a
luxury even for the rich, This woman
eaeriiieed the inexpensive but nutri-
tious etasses of foods for leaves eon -
tabling over 80 per cent of water an4
10 per cent of recuse, It has been.
truthfully said that a man would
starve to death on a diet of lettuce
slope.
Pitiable improvidence was found in
the New York slums, A watchman
rugs feeding his family at the rate of
14 cents per person a day -all that be
could afford -yet his wife bought ex-
pensive cuts of beef instead of the
equally nutritious cuts of lower price;
also large quantities of butter whose
Value might have bee* invested in
dried beans and more bread. She also
wasted money on ,:oda crackers and
jumbles costing two or three times as
much as bread and containing no more
nutrition. It was estimated that his
wife might have obtained about eight
times as much nutrition for her mon-
ey had she substituted dried peas for
green peas. Another Large saving
would have been the substitution of
fresh for condensed milk. -John E.
Watkins in Reader 'Magazine.
THEY WERE GLUTTONS.
The Gormands of the Eighteenth
Century In Enstlnn.%
Plenty was the watchword of the
eighteenth century gormand in Eng-
land. His tables groaned under an ar-
ray of food warranted to take away
the appetite of all save the Gargan-
tuas of the day. One blessing was
evolved from the old sops and the later
bisques and olios-soup, which now
was ever the prelude to the dinner. It
was removed for meat or fish -a chine
of mutton and three ducks in the case
of Squire Hill at Teddington, who, for
entrees to support them, offered pul-
lets with eggs, fillet of beef and scol-
lops, turkey en daube, stewed carp,
veal a la royale, fricasseed chicken,
evith ham and pigeons for center dish.
This was but the first course or relay.
Next came the roasts -two pheasants
and four partridges and six teal, and
now, for side dishes, sweetbreads and
marrow, four woodcock and ten snipe,
salmon and smelts, marrow pudding,
fore quartdr of lamb and oyster loaves.
For center dish, mince pies. And men
ate and survived, and still had heart
within them to wait the removal of the
cloth, and, greeting the dessert, sat
over the mahogany until indeed they
fell beneath it. After all, gormand is
not the name for such as these. They
were gluttons.
Stevenson's Love Toast.
A beautiful testimony to one's home
loves was paid by Robert Louis Ste-
venson at a thanksgiving dinner in Sa-
moa.
"There, on my right," said Steven-
son, replying to an unexpected propos-
al of "The Host," "sits she who has
but lately from our own loved native
land come back to me -she whom,
with no lessening of affection to those
others to whom I cling, I love better
than all the world besides -my mother.
From the opposite end of the table,
ray wife, who has been all In all to me,
when the days were very dark, looks
tonight into my eyes -while we have
both grown a bit older -with undimin-
ished and undiminishable affection."
Which Won the Prize?
Three students of the Ecole des
Beaux Arts, Marseilles, were talking in
a cafe. "My dear fellow," said one, "I
painted the other day a little piece of
pine wood in imitation of marble so
perfectly that it sank to the bottom of
the water."
"Pooh," said another. "Yesterday I
suspended my thermometer ou the
easel that holds my 'View of the Polar
Regions.' It fell at once to 20 below
zero."
"That's nothing," said the last. "My
portrait of the marquis is so lifelike
that it has to be shaved twice a week."
How Flies Walk on Window Panes.
The microscope reveals the neat con-
trivance which enables a fly to walk up
a window pane or defy the laws of
gravity by gliding along, back down-.
ward, on the ceiling. The magnifier
shows the foot to be made up of two
pads covered with fine, short hair, each
pad having a hook above it. Behind
each pad is a bag filled with a sticky
liquld which oozes out whenever the
fly puts his foot down. The amount
which is pressed out of each foot is
very small indeed, but, taken all to-
gether, it is amply sufficient to hold
the insect in any position he chooses.
His Otrtk Great Peoltshness.
Nerdy -Your wife seems to think
you'll get bunk0ed if she lets you out
of her sight., You must have once
done something very foolish to have a
woman looking after you like that.
Butts -I illd. I married her.
itnrd Week Ahead.
Miss Gadd --There goes Jack root-
Iey. My, he looks as solemn as an tin-
clertaker these days; Mr. Batehellnr---
No wonder. IIe's going to undertake a
wife next week.•--Bxebange.
moo'
1 ovoIutiontzhn4 i
of the
Crocker
Mooney revolutionized the
cracker. He made font
admit that they never knew
how good crackers could be,
by making such delicious
crackers as they had nevi
tasted before, Then he set
folk to eating Mooney's
crackers who'd never eaten
crackers before. In a year
he had all Canada. eating
1400r/tee 5
ri Perfection
Cream Sodas
You'll see why when you
try them. Haven't you curi.
osity enough to buy a boot at
your grocers?
The biggest rope ever used for haul-
age purposes has just been made for a
district subway in Glasgow. It is seven
miles long, four and five -eighth inches
in circumference, and weighs nearly 60
tons. It has been made in one unjointed
and unspliced Iength of patent crucible
steel. When in place it will form a
complete cirole around Glasgow, cross-
ing the Clyde in its coarse, and will run
at a speed of fifteen miles an hour,
Iter 1 'nilrna.
Bank Casliler---"lou have overdravr•'li
your dce0unt, madam. Lovely Lear-
ners Just like 0:e1 Ily husband say
1 ntn always etnggerattttg everything.
SOinerville JOurriat, r,•
WAY TO TREAT HAY FEVER
No Stomach Dosing. Just Breathe
Hyomei-Stops Sneezing and
Smarting.
Walton McKibben is recommending
to his customers as a cure for hay fever,
Hyomei.
It is claimed for this remedy that it
stops the spasmodic paroxysms, the
sneezing, the smarting, the smarting
and running of the eyes and nose, and
other acute symptoms of this disease.
Many persons have been cared of hay
fever by Hyomei, and the discoverer of
the remedy professes to be able to pre-
vent both the occurrence of the anneal
attack and to stop the progress of the dis-
ease, even in the most chronic forms.
A. Hamlin, of Westfield, Mass.,
writes "Hyomei oared me of hay fever
in one week's time. I consider it a
duty to tell others who suffer from
this disease,"
This endorsement is only one of hun-
dreds that have been received by the
proprietors of Hyomei, and Walton Mc -
gibbon's offer to refund the money if
Hyomei does not do all that is claimed
fon it, is the strongest proof that can be
given as to the confidence he has 1n
Hyomei's power to cure hay fever. The
complete ontfit costs but $1.00, while
extra bottles can be procured for 50
cents.
By breeding and feeding his fowls in a
special way, a Wikebaden chemist bas
been able to increase the natural quan-
tity of iron in eggs so that they are
medicinal and useful for the cure of
various diseases.
A little English girl wrote the follow-
ing essay on a cat: "The cat is a square
quadruped, and as is customary, with
square gnadrupeds, has its legs at the
four corners. If yon want to please this
animal you tenet stroke it on the back.
If it is very ranch pleased it sets its tail
quite stiff, like a ruler, so that your hand
cannot get any further. The cat is said
to have nine lives, but in this country it
seldom needs them all because of
Christianity,"
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Cenuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
Must Bear Signature of
,,•4:72' 0
See Pao -Simile Wrapper Delo*.
....,., ate,
'Vierra Email rind Se easy
(0 takb ks r Cor.
sMRULroit HEADACHE*
IOO FOR DIXIINE=t'.
,girt FOR IHUOUtNEltr
pi 11,6: F R,OONStlrr►ATloN
t1.t13i
��>! SALLOW SKIN.,
FOR ThECOM?LEXIO..0
selsrrL*tiet Nuwic vl y+ 7IAwsi,'
jogioslOnlratf' %gte.-MN, •.*01�rG
•P. CURE $iOK HEADACHK. -,-
Ffshli,q; I+'er ettitutow.
-Salmon tishiitg differs so much from,
trout fishing that it has been said an
Absolute beginner at ily Bailing will
learn to gree sating salar more readily
than will a trout fisherman who triea
the nobler fish Atter years of practice
with the smaller one, '.ibis I doubt,
but I know tlint a very different style
of fishing is needed. 'There is really
no such thing as."striking" in salmon
fishing, and if you keep a tight line
and raise your rod as soon as you feel
the "pluck" of the fish you will be do-
ing your whole duty, and it will be up
to the Ash to do the 1•est. There is no
occasion for the swift strike by which
one llpeks si shy trout Inclined to rise
a trifle fihort. The saitnon is such a
weighty fellow that when he turns to
go down after taking the Sy his mo-
mentum drives the hook above the
barb with very little assistance on the
part of the augler, provided the line be
fairly taut, -Charles A. Bramble in
Recreation.
Lost Me Decoy,
A western man was describing a ban-
quet that he had once attended in New
York.
"I found this banquet interesting,"
he said, "and I was one of the last to
leave. In the cloakroom, as I was put-
ting on my bat and coat, I couldn't
help uoticing the woebegone loolc on
the attendant's face, The poor fellow
appeared worried and sad, and every
little while he sighed and muttered to
himself. .
"You seem disconsolate, friend,' I
said.
"'I am disconsolate, sir,' said the at-
tendant
"'What is the trouble, sir,' said I.
'Haven't the guests tipped you well to-
. night?'
"The attendant answered in an ex-
cited voice:
"'It's not only, sir, that they haven't
tipped me, but they've taken the quar-
ter that I put in the tray for a decoy,' "
How Inventions Are Made.
The great majority of practical in-
ventions are made by a group of men
of whom the public never hears. These
men are members of one of the most
complicated and highly organized of
the modern professions. Every great
manufacturing concern maintains, un-
der one head or another, an "Inven-
tions department," employing men who
are paid various salaries simply to de-
velop inventions. They are supplied
with every mechanical appliance to fa-
cilitate their work. The bills are paid
by the company, and every invention
they make is assigned to the company
"in eonslderatlon of salary and one dol-
lar." And it is these unknown men,
grappling with the everyday, practical
problems of great manufactories, who
make most of the inventions of im-
mediate commercial value. - World's
Work.
The Making of a “Corot.”
There are two kinds of inferior Co -
rots -the "Corot de commerce," which
the dealers almost compelled the mas-
ter to sell them, whereas he thought
them hardly worthy of a frame, minor
works such as a painter has about him
and generally paints over, and the pic-
tures of imitators which "le Pere Co-
rot" was too good natured to condemn.
When the anxious owner brought him
a beautiful landscape for authori-
zation the old man was very reluctant'
to deny the work. "It is certainly not
a Corot," he would say, "but it is so
nearly one! It wants so little! Only
that!" And he very often put "that" in
on the spot and made a Corot of it. -
London Chronicle.
Shades of Hinck Cloth.
A man who took his dress coat to
his tailor and asked him to make a
dinner coat to match learned some-
thing new.
"1 have the same kind of clotb," said
the tailor, "but it is not the piece from
which your suit was made. No one
will notice the difference, although I
might as well tell you that no two
pieces of black cloth, especially wool-
ens, are exactly alike in color. There's
no use hunting around town to find a
better match than this one." -
A Little Absentminded.
Rufus Choate once tried to get •
Boston witness to give his idea of ab-
sentmindedness. "'Well," said the wit-
ness, who was a typical New England
Yankee, "I should say that a man who
thought he'd left his watch to hum and
took it out'n his pocket to see if he'd
time to go hum and get it was a leetle
absentminded."
About All rot nig.
Landlady -Mr. Starboarder is no lon-
ger one of the guests at my table.
Frion(i-Why did he leave? Landlady -
At my request. I asked him to say
grace the other day, and he said, "0
Lord, we need thy help to make us
thankful for what we are about to re-
ceive!"
True to tate.
"Gracious, Elsie!" exclaimed the lit -
tie girl's mother. "Why are you shout-
ing in that horrible fashion? Why
can't you be quiet like Willie?"
"He's got to be quiet, the way we're
playing," replied Elsie. "He'S papa
coating home Iate acct I'na you."
Plenty of Seavnnt..
"Does your wile have a great deal of
trouble getting servants?'
"Weil, that depends upon what you
mean by 'trouble: She always has
three servants --one at the Douse, one
going and one eoming."
X Patient toyer.
Bhe-I ant surprised at Efile. She
was in love with that fellow iottg
enough to know better than marry
him 11e -Yzs, but too bong to do any
' better.
3
The Pandora Thermorneter
The thermometer on
the Pandora range oven
means precisely in ac-
curacy to the Doak what
the square and compass.
mean to the draftsman.
Without the square, and
compass the draftsman
would have to work en.
tirely by guess, just as
you do withoutan ac-
curate and reliable thermometer on your oven.
The Pandora thermometer reduces cooking to
an exact science. You know precisely how much
heat you have and what it will do in a given time.
It is one of the small things which makes the
Pandora so much different and better than common
ranges.
cCIaryl Pandora
OM n I l I r II
War1ieus�.
and ractoriteaa la
London, Toronto, Montreal,
"Winnipeg, Vancouver, _
St. John, N,B,. Hamilton
owl row
SOLD IN WiNOHAM BY A. YOUNG.
Touch Typewriting
The students of the Forest City Business and
Shorthand College are taught Typewriting on Machines
with blank keys -blindfold the students and they will
operate at a high speed.
A touch operator can do more work and gets more
honey than a sight operator.
"Can you write by touch," is the first question
now usually asked the applicant for a position,
School term -Sept. till June inclusive. Booklet
free for the asking.
J. W. WESTERVELT,
Principal.
Y. M. C. A. ?ler.,
LONDON, O:d"i .
The great rule of health_
S Keep the bowels regular.
Ayers And the great medicine--
,'? Ayer's Pills. � oirigt:
Want your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM'S DYE
a beautiful brava arta black? Use rias ars., or imam oat a r. Kars a co, fawns. ec s
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Trtg VVI GELA1VI 'TIM +'S
OfaeoPhanr, No. 4.
ii(�t1�GIlAl�ty ONT.
Phone, No.74,
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.'
vn. advertisement ;ill the Times briters good Pdstitts
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