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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-09-14, Page 6THE ' WINGIIAM TIMES SEPTEMBER 14, 1905 Free. Gifts oietSoaps 11 , ,11 I I I _ I 1. 1I ..pap 1 . Y .III SII i .1 .,1 111.. 1. .I1 11.1 1111 X1.1 11 mil iln 1, Use ST.TNLIGIIT.$0AP and SAVE THE OOVP'ONS. The Coupons are the . same as cash because they can be exchanged .for Toilet Soaps for whidh you leave to pay out money every week. Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. Ask your grocer for •patticiulars 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 sornethi•ilg ,you •need and use every- day, :2000 LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. Kernels from the Sanctum Mill Interesting Paragraphs from our Exchanges. Mr. J. M. Schiubein has elosed a deal On August 30th at 6 a.m., at the manse in Auburn, Clara Lawson and Walter Moore, both of Auburn, were made hue. band and wife. They left immediately ror the Campbell block of three stores on on Alain street at Listowel recently dam- aged by fire and will at once commeuce the rebuilding of the block into a :modern for Blyth station en route for Toronto. 3llisinerei property. m Ee .r O The essential lung-healing,prinoipal of I 'Bearatho Tha Kind You Have Alwaya il20 t the pine tree has finally been successfully .Signature separated and refined into a perfect nt" cough medicine -Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a guarantee of satisfaction. Prioe •23 cents. The total numper of all known varie- ties of postage stamps used by all the governments of the world up to date is 19,242, Salvador, the smallest of the Central American republics. has issued d50 different kinds; more than any other country. r.ft7DDENlx ATTACKED, . Children are often attacked suddenly by painful and dangerons Cpiic, Cramps, Diarrhoea Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, {Cholera Infantutn,• etc. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt land sure•, cure, which should always be ''kept in the house. i The homestead enteries last. month in Western Canada totalled :1,059, an in- arease of Ge6 over August last year. Of the new homesteads 2,920 were re.corded an of e the new provinces o Alberta and Saskatehewan. To prove to you that Dr. an a o utoe refor h and ab,0iute curt for each and every form of itching, bleed inO and protruding piled, the rnznmF ;c+turerq have 1;uarunteed it. See tey- imoniyl:+in the daily pand alk yonrncigh- 1ors whit they think of it. Ion can u,e it and *et your money back if nbt cured. One a pox, at aildealers orEntuaNsov;t.v1E Sc. C--,J.,Torouio. Dr. ©has&stOAhtment The pro loss of the United States and Canada for August aggregates $11,435,- 600, Be corupared with $9,715,200 for the some month last year and $;51,428,350 'during August 1903. The total for the first eight months of thecurrentyear is $117,720,750. Many people say they a'e "all nerves," easily startled or upset, easily worried and irritated. • Milburn's Heart and Nerve Fills aro jest the remedy such •people require. They restore perfect liarmouy of the nerve centres and give new narve force to shattered nervous :'systems. The death occurred in Harpurhey, near Seaforth, on Sunday- Sept. 3rd, of n well-known, old and txeepected reef. - dent of this district, in the person of Mr. James Scott. Deceased who had reach- ed the great age of 88 years, was famil- iarly known as "Uncle Jimmy," and ryas well known by all. Teles LADIES' FAVORITE taxa -Liver Pills are the ladies' favorite inediicine. They cure Constipation, Sick ,headache, Billionsness, and Dyspepsia 'without griping, purging or sickening. At 0 o'clock on Thursday morning, Sept. 7th, the wedding of W. L. Horton, Goderich town treasurer and manager of the Standard Loan Co. branch and of the •Goderich Elevator Co., to Miss Kathleen Ball, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.:H. W.,Ball, was quietly celebrated at:St.•George's church in Goderich. Jan ea Towsley, an oil resident of the township of Colborne, died at the House of ilefing a few days ago. The re- mains vJer3 taken to Colborne for inter- ment. George Nichol, formerly of Sea• forth, dice1 on Saturday, Sept. 2nd. The remairlel were interred in the Honeo burial plot. leoks'ir YEAR'S sere\, sista or Clothes seem 1i1, i 'i,ard new when cleaned with 8APOREN-O ° • 1T EVAPORATES++ 'Ma. Nen-i;oieonous Non -inflammable *Mr:. I Wonderhbeyond holier on the a ,int+..tandfinestoffabrice,carpet:; ot,lr i.•.itO diens goods, tT5 r.a atI garret in , car els ete. 11 1eutlraatatl dust p ,tome all like new i autews'the siting .1,11 in ,t few mouton is fora few Cents u:a1 a child can do it, with w -_ .. A!? ! RENr +O 111,e -u,1,1 things new and retmove:1 gt. r i,Ind:•tato from new thinf:s. at,.e,,ur grocer for clap -o -ren -a. Than 'Huffman & Teeter CO. Toronto Ror•OPar Sixty Years. An Old and Well -Tried Remedy -Mrs Winelaw'•s ScothiugSyrup has been used Cured of Lame Back after SL•L Teems for over sixty years bymillionsof mothers Sult'ering, for their children while teething, with "I had been troubled with lame back perfect success. It soothes the child. for fifteen years and I found a 'complete softens the gums, allays all pain, cares recovery in the use of Chamberlain's wind colic, and is the best remedy for Pain Balm," says John G. Bieber, •Gill- diarrheea. It is.pleasant to the taste. am, Ind. This liniment is also without Sold by .druggists in every part of the an equal for sprains and bruises. It is world. Twenty-five cents abottle. Its for sale by A. 1 McCall & Co. value is incalculable. Besure yon ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. ..1 On Saturday, 2nd inst., Mr. Soott Alfred Barton passed away at the home of his mother, Dodd street, Listowel, after an illness of several months. His constitution failed while in the west, and he reached home about the let of June, sincewhichtime•he had been in a low state, his principal trouble being heart weakness. The deceased was in his thirty-second year, •and was a young man of excellent'business ability. Use Lever's Dry Soap (a powder) to wash woolens and flanuels,--you'll like it. 32 In the West Indies there is a tree, the inside bark of which is used without any special treatment for making mantillas, cravats, window curtains, eto. Australia and New Zealand also have trees that yield a laceiike substance, which is used to make articles of apparel. Bears the cif Tha Kind Von Have AlwaYi Bought Signature of An exchange says that Mee. Wright is visiting her, 'brother, -Mr. 'Wrong It 1s worng to make a comment upon the above personal, but still our inten- tions are eight. at is remarkable that when Mrs. `Wright was Miss Wrong she took advantage•of the offer to become Mrs. Wright and refused to be called Wrong alter she was once Wright. We might say right here that this is right, but most women persist in believing themselves right when they are wrong. There are ninny causes of which a red nose is the result -poor circulation, a too stimulating diet, tight collars and a host of other troubles. Avoid strong tea and coffee, also to highly spiced or greasy foods. August was another big month in the total net tonnage traffic. The Soo canalt a cg for the month was 6,32'7,135, an increase of about 700,000 tous over last August. The total for the season to date is 26,- 16.4,799 tons, nearly double the tonnage for the same period last year. Doan's Sidney Pills act on the kid neys, bladder and urinary organs only. They cure backaches, weak back, rheum- atism, diabetes, congestion, inliamation, gravel, Bright's disease and all other diseases arising from wrong action of the mg farms at Roxboro, hear Seaforth. kidneys and bladder. That country was then a wooded wilder. nese, but thanks to the thrift and indns- Mr. James Cornish, of the base line, is try of the pioneer settlers, such as Mr. one of the progressive farmers of Hallett. Scott, it is now one of the finest and He completed the sowing of his fall 1 most productive sectious in Canada. wheat last week, which is exceptionally • ALL THIN, PALE WOMEN Can Learn the Cause of Their Ner- vous, Used -up Condition. With women, ill -health is usual trace- able to nerve exhaustion. Feeling run- down and tired most of the time is nature's warning that more nerve -force is required. You must build up, nourish the body, vitalize the nerves, get more flesh and blood. It's the abundant nutriment and build- ing material in Ferrozone that enables it to cure so many sick women. It in- creases the appetite, adds weight and strength, restores lost color and devel- ops a surplus of energy and nerve force that defies sickness of any kind. There is living proof in Mrs. Daniel Ferguson, jr , of Prescott, Ont. Read her state - mem: "A year ago my health failed. I grew thin and exceedingly pale. At times I was prostrated with nervous and sick headache. All day I was tired. At night it was difficult to obtain restful sleep. My appetite was variable and in- digestion bothered me considerably. I became morose and suffered from heart palpitation. You could scarcely believe the benefit I derived in one week from Fetrozone. Color came back to my cheeks. My vitality and appetite in- creased, renewed nerve force and better spirits came also. Ferrozone did a world of good and made me well." Remember this: No alcoholic stimu- lant can nourish and build up like Fer- rozone. Fifty cents per box or six boxes for $2.50. At all dealers, or N. 0. Pol- son & Co., Kingston, Ont., and Hart- ford, Conn., U.S.A. Another of the worthy pioneers of Seaforth district has departed this life. Mr. James Scott, formerly of Roxboro, McKillop, died at his residence in Har- purhey on Sunday last. Mr. Scott had reached the good age of 88 years. He had been an invalid and confined to the house for about five years. He was a native of Roxboroughshiro, Scotland, and came to this country when quite a The Farmer's Life. The farmer's life is the life for me, get up in the morniug at half -past three, And out and at work before I can see, yes, that is the life of glee; With milking, chores at noon and night, And other things full of suoh keen de- light, Of course I enjoy it with all my might, the life of the farmer's wight, Sing ho for the farmer's life! At morn when I go to the fields I hear the song of the thrush both loud and clear, And it fills my heart brimful of cheer, the song of the thrush so dear ;. At flight when I'm tired and like a log, • I hark to the song of that blatant frog As he thunders away to the sedgy bog, and the drowsy grunt of the hog, Sing ho for the farmer's life! The calves are to feed and the pigs to slop, the garden to hoe and the wood to chop, From morning till night it is keep on the hop, until I am ready to drop; It is late to bed and early to rise, and to see the fields with sleepiest eyes, And what do they get for their enter- prise but a paltry little prize? Siug ho for the farmer's life. .The farmer's life is a life of toil and spent in tilling the fertile soil, And there's nothing in it but hustle and broil, But a farmer he has an appetite and he eats a good square meal all right, And sleeps when he goes to bed at night, and I guess the farmer's life's all right. Sing ho for the farmer's life! -Chicago Chronicle. A loafer on the street, whose wife was probably at home getting out a neigh- bors washirg to make money to buy the children's shoes, asked a busy man the other day if he ever saw a bald-headed woman. "No, I never did," replied the busy man. "And I never saw a woman waltzing around town in her shirt sleeves with a cigar in her teeth and running into every saloon she saw. Neither did 1 ever see a woman sitting all day on the street corner on a dry goods box telling people how the secretary of the treasury 1 should run the national finances. Ihave Lever seen a woman go fishiug with a bottle in her pocket, sit on the bank all day and go home drunk at night. Nor have I ever seen a woman yank off her coat and say she could lick any man in young man, with the other members of town, Kansas City Journal. a large family. Himself and his brother, the late Robert Scott, settled ou adjoin - early. He has four sows from the pro- duct of which he expects to get over $800 this year. Dnriug the past six mouths the pigs he sold therefrom, to- gether with a few he still has, will bring him 8450. 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. Joseph Mason, of Grand Bend, who was convicted by Judge Doyle, at God- erich, on two separate charges of incest, received his sentence on Tuesday morn- ing of last week. Tho sentence is a heavy one, twelve years in Kingston penitentiary, at hard labor, and thirty- five lashes, fifteen to be given the last week of the present month, five next April and fifteen next October. 8100 leeward, 5100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least One dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a consti- tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do• ing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they osier One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. It 18 our pleasant duty this weekto extend hearty congratulations to Rev. H. W. Wright, pastor of the Goderich Baptist church, on his marriage, which took place at Wiarton, on 'Tuesday of last week. The lady of his choice id Miss x? ate Sinclair, daughter of ex -Mayor Sinclair, of Wiarton, and the ceremony took place at the residence of the bride's parents, only the immediate families of the bride and groom being present, Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Aids Na- ture. Medicines that aid nature are always most effectual. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It allays the Dough, relieves the lungs, aids expector- ation, opens the secretions, and aids na- ture in restoring the system to a healthy condition. Sold by A. I. McCall & Co. It is comparatively easy to save a man from drinking too much. There is his family; respect for his wife and children have a tendency to keep him from drink- ing intoxicants to excess. His neighbors influence him in the right direction; but when it comes to eating too much every- body verybody encourages him to make a little pig of himself. 'When lie goes visiting the woman of the house provides ex- cellent meals, and encourages dissipa- tion. When he visits a city, a friend invites him to a club, possibly, and they - eat a ten dollar meal; enough to kill both of them. His wife worries when his appetite is not as good as it was when she married hint, when he was young and vigorous and required a good deal of food. And when his daughters marry and move away, they like to tempt their father to eat as heartily of their cooking as he ate of their mother's, and so it goes; the poor man is murdered by his friends. Women aro frailer than men, but they live longer, because their ex- perience around kitchens causes them to, eat less. As a man advances in age, he should eat less, a great deal less. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of is Four hours is the longest interval during which children should go with- out food in the daytime, and something if it is only a drink of milk and a bis- cuit, should always be given the last thing before going to bed. G13 rai'X'0Xrd.= E9.. Bears the , The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature tf you, your friends or relatives stiffer with Fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus' Dance, or Falling Sicl:ness, write for a trial bottle and valuable treatise on such diseases to Tim Leung Co., rlq Hing Street, W., Toronto, Canada. All druggists sell or can obtain llot you ` r LIEIB'GeS FITOURE of When the eyes have a burning sensa- tion, bathe them with hot water to which a little witch hazel has been added. If the whites of the eyes are yellow and the pupils dull, it shows that the general health needs attention. THREE .7V ROBS CURED 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, and running of the eves and nose, and other acute symp- toms of this disease. Many persons have been cured of hay fever by Ilyomei, and the discoverer of the remedy professes to be able to pre- vent both the oceurrenoe of the annual attack and to stop the progress of the disease, even in the most chronic forms. A Herein, of Westfield, Mass., writes "Hyomei cured 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- Kibbon's offer to refund the money if Hyomei does not do all that is claimed for it, is the strongest proof that can be given as to the confidence he has in Hy omei's power to cure hay fever. The complete outfit costs but $1.00, while extra bottles can be procured for 50 cents. 01' Cholera Morbus with One small /Bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Mr. G. H. Fowler of Hightower, Ala., relates an experience he had while serv- ing on a petit jury in a murder case at Edwardsville, county seat of Clebourne county, Alabama. He says: "While there I ate some fresh meat and some souse meat and it gave me cholera mor- bus in a very severe form. I was never more sick in my life and sent to the drug store for a certain cholera mixture, but the druggist sent me a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy instead, saying that he had what I sent for, but that this was so much better he would rather send it to me in the fix I was in. I took one dose of it and was better in five minutes. The second dose cured me entirely. Two fellow jurors were afflicted in the same manner and one small bottle cured the three of us." For sale by A. I. McCall & Co. An extensive camphor forest is said to exist on the borders of Szechuen, Kweichau and Hunan provinces, of China. It is said to extend a hundred miles+ but it is only recently that the natives have begun to produce camphor for the market in that locality. Little known of the region, as it is off the regular lined of travel and not visited by foreigners. I Our Beautiful Language A boy who swims may say he's swum, but milk is skimmed and seldom skum, and nails you trim, they are not trum. When words you speak, these words are spoken, but a nose is tweaked and can't be twoken, and what you seek is never soken. If we forget then we've forgotten, but things we wet are never wotten, and houses let cannot be lotten. The goods one sells are always sold, but fears dispelled are not dispoled, nor what you smell is never smoled. When young a top you oft saw spun, but did yon see a grin e'er grun, or a potato neatly skun ? SAVE MONEY BY HOME DYEING Easy Way to Make New Aut- umn Dresses Out of Old and Faded Costumes and Suits. Diamond Dyes Are the Popular Package Dyes for Reliable Home Work. Don't wear a faded gown or skirt. Don't look shabby simply because you cannot afford to buy a new dress. It is not necessary to wear clothing that is faded and shabby because you With to buy one have no money more. or two packages of Diamond Dyes, that cost ten cents per package, the old dress or skirt can be dyed a fashionable and beautiful color in keeping with the aut. tuna season. Thousands of women will have autumn dresses, suits and skirts, that cannot be told from new, but which have cost them only a trifle, the result of with coloringover their old materials w tt f Diamond Dyes. Never risk your' materials and gar- ments with the weak, adulterated and imitation dyes sold by some dealers. When you buy the Diamond Dyes, you have the best produced in the world. Send to Wells & Richardson Co., Lim. Red, Montreal, P. Q., for now book, "Diamond Dyes and How to Use Them," and card of 48 dyed cloth samples; sunt free to any address. - FOR GOOD HEALTH To preserve or restore it, there is no better prescription for men, women and children than Ripans Tabules. Theyare 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 faml: i►remedy,. They are a dependable, hon- est rim"dy with a long and successful record, to c'-rc; 'n;ligestlon, dyspepsia, habitual and stubborn _or ..A.ipation, defensive breath, heartburn, dizziness, oi'•ation of the heart, sleeplessness, muscular if 'iatism, sour stomach, bowel and liver com- tj .'.'ts. They stregthen weak stomachs, build. up t a 'hwn systems, restore pure blood, good appe•' i . ' .id sound, natural sleep. Everybody derives con .tant benefit from a regular use of Ripans 1'.abules. Your druggist sells them, The five- (e. nt packet is en m igh for an ordinary occasion. rhe Family Bottle, 6o cents, contains a supply fora year. • For 25 Cents You may have The Wingham Timds visit your house weekly from now until Janu- ary lst, 1905. ••00••es•••••••0•••0•••••• 066000w0.0.40•00060•00•••• • • ICLUBBING1 • • • • • • S - • • • • • • • • • • 11e114YI141i, 1 {GIS.ppW1dIG.0@il 111,>.e14151.didVI,.58I ,,.1:1100, &l4 tlDr BARCAINS IN NEWSPAPERS ! 44 The The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the following- rates ollowingrates : Times to January 1st, 1906.. $0,25 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 e Times and London Advertiser (weekly) 1.60 • Times and Toronto Weekly Sun 1,80 w • • Times and World Wide 1.85 i Times and Northern Messenger. - 1.25 • Times and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 s We specially recommend our readers to subscribe a1. to the Farmers' Advocate and Home Magazine 0, Times and Farming World 1.60 Times and Presbyterian 2.25 Times and Westminster - 2.25 Times and Presbyterian and Westminster 3,35 Times and Youths' Companion 1 2,75 80 Times and Impressions (a business montnly) , 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 es we can make them, and mean A. • a considerable saving to our readers. If you do not see w. 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- • lications in the above list will be sent to new subscribers • from now to xst of January, 1906, for the price quoted-- • the remainder of this year is thrown in free. These rates are strictly cash in advance. Send re - c or express mons office mi to byposta note, post t aces A p order, add ressin g i rMftl•4N••••111••••0•N*/► rrxivi s OFFICE, WXt G1iAI, ONTARIO,