HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-09-28, Page 3TIIE, TIIf ES, SEETEMB
28r 1905
Suppose you do like the tea you
are fusing. How do you know it is
the best tea you can get for the money
ivj'A,.N,'' were satisfied with the tea they were using
before they tried Red Rose Tea,
*---"hen they tried Red Rose Tea they found it
had that "rich fruity flavor," found it was strong—
that it requires less to make a cup of good tea than
the brand of Ceylon alone they had been using.
Now, why not be a you are getting the best
tea to be had.
You cannot be sure till you try Red Rose Tea.
Te
Ro
How to Keep Well
First and very important: Keep your
bed and bedroom warns and dry during
the day, Au open window and a
scold room will make the bed damp and
cold and will give its unfortunate occu-
pant a severe cold at least, if not worse.
A damp bed is a veritable brooding place
of bacteria. Many housekeepers, having
beard of the necessity of fresh air, leave
the bedroom window open durieg the
day, filling it with cold air v, hen none is
aieeded, and then close the wiudow for
the night, when the room is occupied
and freak air is needed in abaudance.
Any one can see how contrary to com-
mon seuse such procednre is,
The custom of some housekeepers to
keep the "spare room" closed at all
times and then opening it only for war-
ming just before putting a guest into it
is. to pat it mildly, very thoughtless.
Cold objects, bedding included when ex-
posed to sudden heat, condense the mois-
ture in the air, and consequently such
beds are always damp and cold and are
the most unhealthy and should be avoid-
ed even by guests. Better go to an up•
to -date hotel or walk home any number
of miles than to sleep in such a bed.
Second. All your clothing worn in
the daytime, footwear included, open
out and hang on chairs, or on hooks near
the stove or register to dry and air dur-
ing the night. If you neglect this sim-
ple sanitary measure your clothing will
feel damp and cold in the morning, bo -
cause it still contaius the evaporations
from your body daring the previous day
and after awhile your clothing will have
an unpleasant odor from these evapor-
ations. Drying and airing your foot-
wear during the night will keep your
feet from sweating, coldness and bad
odors.
Third : Your bed and room warm and
and dry, have plenty of lightweight bed-
ding. Then just before retiring close
the door and open a window from the
bottom. Where more than one person
sleeps in a room the window slso.ild be
raised higher. This will Rive an abun-
dance of fresh air while you eldep
Place the bed so that the fresh air cur-
rent wont strike you directly. Protect-
ed in your dry, warm bed --as cosy as a
bug in a rug—the air, cold, pure and
fresh, freighted with oxygen, a very
is good, Tea
T, H. Estabraons
St. John, N.B„ Toronto, Winnipeg
elixir of life, will quiet your nerves,
will rest you, will soothe yon and give
health and strength. When arising in
the morning close the window quickly
and let heat come into the room. Then,
dressed in your aired and dried clothing
you will feel clean, fresh and vigorous.
Fourth: Seep your living rooms well
ventilated in daytime. If no other pro-
vieion is made for ventilation, get one
of those attaghments to a stove pipe or
fine which take the cold air from the
floor, Foul air being heavier than
warm air, naturally sinks to or near the
floor and by the above mentioned appar-
atus escapes to the flue. How many
sitting rooms of even well-to-do people
have a very offensive odor from lank of
ventilation.
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 paroxysma, the
sneezing, the emarting, and running of
the eyes and nose, and other acute symp-
toms of this disease.
Many persons have been cured of hay
fever by Hyomei, 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 Humin, of Westfield, Mass., writes
"Hyomei cured me of hay fever in one
week's time. I consider it a duty to tell
others who snffer 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
Hyotnei does not do all that is claimed
for it, is the strongest proof that can be
given as to the confidence he has in
Hyomei's power to cure hay fever. The
complete outfit costs but $1.00, while
extra bottles can be procured for 50
cents.
Owing to the climatic deterioration
and insect destruction of the wooden
poles the eighty miles of telephone line
in Abyssinia have to be constantly pat-
rolled by special police to insure contin-
uous operation.
(PRONOUNCED SI- EEN)
The is nothing else in the
W A K E S w e le world that will bring
ck the color to the cheek,
restore the dormant energie revive drooping spirits, or
put new life into the tired, listless, weakened system, as
"Psvci-UNE" will do it. There is really only one great
, tonic, and that is "Psvcnllvr." Combining all the pro-
perties that make rich, pure blood, bringing back the lost
appetite, driving away melancholy, creating new strength.
THIS WILLLL PROVE *T
Arnprior, One, Sept. 16th, tele.
Or. Slocum, Limited :
"It's twenty years or more since I used PSYCI1IICE, and I Write these words
trot to gain publicity, but that suffering and ailing humanity may learn of its great
Y '
r` long thee d
merits. I had felt weals and miserable for o m ha no appetite, or
S
pP +
couldn't obtain proper sleep, Was unable to work or enjoy life. People said I
was so old my constitution was breaking up, but, fortunately, through using the
Dr. Slocum remedies I have proven this false, PSYCHINE is the only remedy I
ever took that agreed with my stomach, •svitich !vas exceedingly weak. Twenty
years have passed since my recovery, and I am now eighty-nine years old, and sei
strong and well that 1 work all summer in my garden.
"MRS. E. V. BLAISDELL."
GREATEST OF ALL TONICS
AT ALL DRU (liSTS-.-ONE DOLLAIR•--TRIAL FOBS
The Dr. I: A. Slocum, iimitddr -178 King Streetli st Tomb;
•
SYSTEMATICSAVING.
The old adage that "woof), wuute
brings woefulwant," is tis tree today
as it was when spoken iri days of yore.
There is no institution nor corporation
that can be eminently sueoesaful unless
partionler attention be paid to details.
It is usually in the natter of detail and
smaller items that the greatest waste
takes place. In dcmeetio affairs the
same principle holds good, for it has of.
ten been remarked that creme" families
could live on what others throw away.
Where the delusion Domes in is in the
little at the time value of that which is
thrown away.
Valuable lessons may be learned in
practical economy by observing the
methods employed in the managtnlseut
of .our railroads, Whatever else may
be said about our great teilroad systems,
good or bad, they have never been am-
used of lack of careful, systematic oper-
ation and close scrutiny of the smallest.
details of the great sume of money which
annually are spent for efficient mainten-
ance, Indeed it is admitted that there
is no stricter and better business school
from which a young man or woman can
graduate than one of the great trunk
railroad systems which crisscrosses our
Qontinent in all directions.
For instance on the Santa Fe system
last year, the "general housekeeper"
purchased and distributed 26,000 brooms
to keep the stations and offices of the road
clean. Twenty thousand boxes of soap,
25,000 scrubbing brushes and a similar
number of band mops, figured in the ex-
penditures. Upwards of 10,000 people
were employed in handling the brooms,
mops, etc., last year. The pin item was
no unconsiderable one. The total weight
of the pins bought by the general house-
keeper and distributed to the employes
was 3,000 pounds. Forty thousand pens
were also used and fifty barrels of ink,
There were enough lead pencils used to
reach from Chicago to New York, and
half way bank again, if they were placed,
end to end.
An interesting question that comes up.
in every household is the disposition of
the waste. The railroad housekeeper is
careful to study out any economy, and
the waste along the whole line is econ-
omically disposed of. Waste pins, pens,
paper, old brooms, mops, bottles, and
worn out machinery of locomotives, are
gathered up along the route and sold for
junk or "old scrap." A small item
one would say, but a large one when con-
sidered in its true light. From waste
alone last year the railroad above men-
tioned realized a profit of $5,000. The
total value of the "scrap heap" reached
the enormous sum of $1,250,000. Of
course the greater part of this waste came
from the worn-out locomotives and oars
which are sent to the eorap heap after
they hive ceased to be of any valve to the
company. But on the small household
items mentioned upward of $100,000 was
realized. The great lesson to be learned
is, that everything is saved, and every-
thing is economically disposed of.
Even the ashes are sold or utilized for
improving the road bed.
Nervous, Sick Headache
Mr. O. Barber, Simcoe Ont„ writes:
—"I was troubled for a long time with
headaches, which would come on about
once a week with such Violence that I
could not eat or do any work. I tried
headache powders and quick cures,
which did no good, About eight months
ago I took six boxes of Dr, Chase's
Nerve Food, and I have not been
troubled with headache since."
Bubbles.
Ocean liners—cablegrams.
More free than easy—park benches.
Even a safe combination may be un-
safe.
The prosperous saloon keeper gets rich
on bar -gains.
Some husbands and wives az- medicine
taken for better or for worse.
Some people have too much brass to
follow the golden rule.
The girl of the man with the hoe
doesn't think him a hoedbean.
What have the oysters done? Nettl-
ing; but, nevertheless. "Down with
them 1 Down with them!"
A woman may be fancy free, and still
not fancy her freedom.
A box party is empty of honors unless
he can beat some other, boxer.
The girl Whose admirers are all dudes,
says there's "nothing doing."
Almost any hat is handled enough tor
a horse race, but what about a handi-
cap?
A race for life is one thing, and a race
with life in it is another,
When the poet runs to metre, he does
it with his feet.
The Jape are so loyal, you Can't even
see them Ituseian the can.
The carpenter owea it to hie trade to be
a well built man.
A play may be full of good "business,"
but it's the boa office business that
Counts.
A fair exchange is a robbery when it's
a worthless old blonde wig for a - nice
tieve one.
111ANA(3ER WANtElit.
'1`ruetworthy lady et gentlemen to manage
businele in this 'sonar and adjoining ter'ritory
for Weil and favorabiv knoWri house of solid
flriahcial standin X000 straight rash " alar
g $' a yy
and Exprnsees, paid each Monday by cheek'
direct from headquarters, ]txperisee money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
]denager, 810 Como Sleek, Chicago Illinois
A Baker's Triumph
The Mooney Baker cannot
produce anything better than
MooneV's Perfection
Cream Sodas
The very best of .flour, butter
and cram — the most modern
plant, the very best baker in
Canada. A biscuit superior to
any other you have ever tasted.
Say "Mooney's" to your grocer.
One of the quaintest hobbies on record
is that of the King of Siam, who, during
his leisure moments makes a collection
of the labels on match boxes,
Viscount Hoyashi of Japan has infer -
ed the Scottish Antitobacco sooiety that
the Japanese police confiscate the smok-
ing instritnente" of any youth under
twenty years, as well as there supply of
the wend. Parents and guardians who
knowingly permit the offence are liable
to a fine of 80 cents, and dealers who
furnieh a minor with the wherewithal
may be fined $5. The law was passed in
1900.
CURES
Dyspepsia, Boils,
Pimples,
Headaches,
Constipation,
Loss of Appetite,
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Scrofula,
and all troubles
arising from the
Stomach, Liver,
' Bowels or Blood.
Mrs. A. Lethangue,
of Ballydufe Ont,
writes: "I believe I
mould have been in
my grave long ago
had it not been for
Burdock Blood Bit-
ters. I was run down
to such an extent
that I could scarce-
ly move about the
house. I was subject
to severe headaches,
backaches and dizzi-
nese; my appetite
was gone and 1 was
unable to do my
housework. After
using two bottles of
B. B. B. I found my
health fully restored.
I warmlyrecommend
It to all tired and
worn out women."
The Odessa papers tell the story of a
thief who stole a gentleman's watch and
chain, and his pocketbook containing
$950 Later the latter received all the
articles back with the following note:
Thanks to tho presence in the pocket-
book of your visiting card and your
monogram on the watch, I learned I had
to do with a relative of whom I had
heard much good. I don't wish to be-
eome rich at the expense of a good re-
lative of mine, therefore I return the
stolen articles.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills,
Must Bette Signature at
See PiaSit»lte Wrapper
Below.
Veer milli and as e
to take as sugar.
IOR 1LEAdACNE.
CA TtRS FDLt bftriTs .
R
Pf''at lot BILIOUSNESS.
1 VER FOR TWINS LIVER.
PI r. fog CONSTIPATION.
1
FOR SALLOW !KIM.
IFVtt INECOMPUXLDII
e i'SVrt m Muftieaee MMV•
lute r : ' rk1Al
i' ZZs , ,, al��'kJ.lri�+: r
CURL SICK HEADACHE.
P'SVCHLCAL. RESL;AACH,
British and French Scientists Discuaaln
Wonderful Cases of Automatic Writ-
inSi--Remarksbls Phenomenon%
llutomatic writing Was the subject
which Prof. Richet came all the Way
from Farts to elscuss before the So-
ciety of Psychical Iteseereb, gays The
London Standard. Pref. Rlehet is the
president of the society, but, as he was
reading the paper, the chair was taken
by Sir Oliver Lodge. The professor, ad,
dressing his audimnee in French, de.
scribed In d9tall a remarkable pht'nom•
enort which came under lits personal
observation,
Mine. X., a friend of Prof, Richet,
knows no Greek, yet on various oeca,-
elonseehe has written, while in a trance,
Greek sentences with a definite meats-
ing Once she sent him by mail three
pieces of Greek which he was finally
able to trace to an exceedingly rare
dictionary of French and Greek, of
which Mme. X bad no knowledge what-
soever. On another occasion, when he
went to call upon her tosvardt even-
ing, when the rays of the setting surf
were deepening the shadows in the
room, she wrote a sentence in Greeic
which meant, "At sunrise and sunset
the shadows lengthen." She wrote in a
current hand, but she made mistakes
in placing the accents, and occasionally
made such slips as could only be made
by a person having no knowledge of
the language. For example, she would
write the Greek letter "s" by mistake
for the letter "o," with an accent over
it—a very natural mistake for a copy
ist, who is completely ignorant of the
language he is writing, and is simply
copying by eye, but one which, as 1!
renders a word quite unpronounceable,
could not be made, even through carer
lessness, by anyone knowing the lan-
guage.
These, then, are the facts: Prof.
Richet, in clearing the ground for dis-
cussion, took it as axiomat-le that Mme.
X acted throughout In good faith. He
could not bring proofs of this, but he
could vouch for her good faith as he
could for his own. The lady certainly
did not know Greek. "You cannot eon-
ceal from all your friends and relatives
your knowledge of a language like
Greek, and, in any case, we have her
word for it that she did not ]snow the
language. Moreover, she had never seen
the book from which she quoted three
passages,"
How could such a phenomenon be
accounted for? It could not be an ef-
fort of memory, for Mme. X had never
to her knowledge seen the book from
which she quoted. Equally, it could
hardly be unconscious memory of a
book she had seen and forgotten, for
that would be to explain a strange phe-
nomenon by another phenomenon
equally strange and inexplicable. Prof.
leichet suggested comparisons with
mathematical and musical prodigies,
but found them unconvinicng, A won-
derful child can remember the whole
of a musical score which is contained
in a large book, but then he is dealing
with a language he knows thoroughly.
So it is with the lightning calculator;
he is thoroughly versed in figures. Here,
on the contrary, is a lady who writes
pages of Greek, more or less correctly,
without any knowledge whatsoever of
Greek. Prof. Richet then suggested
spiritualistic explanations, but found
them unsatisfactory. In the end he had
to admit that there was no explana-
tion. In the discussion which follow-
ed, Sir Oliver Lodge summed up the
position as set before the audience in
the president's address, but he could
not quite accept without reserve the
question of the genuineness of Mme. X.
The society had perfect faith in Prof.
Richet and Prof. Richet had perfect
faith in Mine. X; but the conclusion
did not follow that the society must
have perfect faith in Mme. X. Then
the comparison of the infant prodigy
could not be altogether rejected. There
was the wonderful Spanish child at
two years old, who had appeared before
the King of Spain and before Prof. Ri-
Chet himself. The mother of this child
once played over an intricate piece of
music, and, on going afterwards into
the next room, site heard some one re,
peating the performance. Returning,
she saw to ,her consternation her inn
fant child playing the music quite cor-
rectly. obviously, the child could have
no previous knowledge at all. Here,
then, was a sort of parallel.
Other speakers produced strange
cases of automatic writing, but none
were of quite such a definite and ex-
traordinary nature as the case present-
ed by Prof. Richet. Mrs, 'Verral, for
example, sold the society how her
daughter and a friend of hers produced
by table rapping- a Greek story which
the table erroneously attributed to
Pausanias, but afterwards gave the
correct chapter and verse in Heliodor-
us. The story was nor quoted word
for word, but the substance was core
rectly given, In this case, however,
both the mediums were Greek, and pro-
bably had chapters of Heliodorus stor-
ed away in the subliminal conscious-
ness. Then came Mr. Harris with a
story told by Huxley 30 years ago, of
a soldier wours ed in a battle who
wrote in unknown languages from dic-
tation while in a state of trance; and
lastly Prof. Barrett produced an au'
theistic story of a lady who was hyp-
notized by a clergyman. On one occa-
sion the clergyman asked her to write
down the contents of a letter which ha•1
Just arrived by post and was unopened,
She wrote most of the contents cor-
rectly,.
Tit the discussion it, was generally
taken for granted that Mme. X had
exhibited only the powers of a copy -
bit, for, as Prof. Richet explained. she
had made mistakes in spelling which
could only be made by a person ;cite
pletely ignorant of the language. Arid
so Mrs, Verrat believed that Mtne. X
must have been under some sort of
hypnotic control, but was influenced
through her eye only and not through
her intelligence. But there wore other
instances, overlooked in the discussion,
Where Mine. X had written sentences
with a meaning appileable to thehn
•
Mediate
circumstances; fen example,
when she Nvrote her sentence about the
7
shadow., In such a Cabe she must have
been eontrolled through her intelli-
gence. In fact, the discussion did not
carry the meager any further than the .
president brought it in hit; address.
A lady writes Greek who does riot
know ureter. acrd quotes sent;'aces irons
sa tlreek blank .which she hal neves
seen. How can it be explained? As _
tin- flumes master of Balliol on said,
"'Mete are questions whieh can never
be enewes'ed, but are :4t111 wor,h the
asking;' and this appears 10 bi. Qne of
there. . .
3
Cooks and Bakes
perfectly et
the same time
There is not an-
other range built
in which the heat
may be regulated
so that you can bake in the oven and cook on the
top at the same time without spoiling one or the
other.
But you can do both equally well at the same
time on the Pandora, because its heat is not wasted
and is at all times under the simplest, most positive
control.
If you. do the cooking of your household you
can appreciate exactly what this means.
`M`CIw:A Pandora
ant,
Warehouses and factories:
London, Toronto, Montreal,
Winnipeg, Vancouver,
St. John, N.B., Hamilton
n:N. Lei.,,, K In 1!alai i. II ui
SOLD IN WiNOUAM BY A. YOUNG.
I. ,I ,iiIIVi k r !LLI'�i Ii t U2. it Alio.' 1iloileC4116415kai;,Ji41 iiJ ,lCflt-i j,at 11
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 the 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.
Cata:ogue free four the asking. School term—Sept. till June
inclusive.
J."07. WESTERVELT,
Principal
uakid! iii 11
Y. M. C. A. Bldg..'
LONDON, ONT.
Le we •eesaseasesseteeareeaseSeweattgetteeee eileaseenhiMiesitsiesteeetleteeessieseteeeeweee4
aiVEG ETABLE SYC3,LIAN'Lys il r
Why -not stop this falling of your hair? At this rate you will soon
be without any hair! Just remember that Hall's Hair Renewer -
stops falling hair, and makes hair grow. n'""itrs'°�`a"w o V.M Celan
The Times, 25o to Jan. lst, 1906
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Tie Times
Joy Deartm ent
Our Job Department.is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Our peellu.litiesr.
COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
PAMPHLETS BIL%"HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOK WORK
VISITING, CARDS ENVELOPES
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
THE TIMES
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $I.00 per
year in advance ---sent to any address
in Canada or the United States.
vn advertisement 'in the Times brings good results
Address all cotnniunioations ta--
THE WINGttA TIMES
()Mee l'hoee.
, Ito. 4.
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Rosidce onPhone. Na. ,w �%IN4, GI b , ONT
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