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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1905-11-09, Page 34 1 f Good tea must be grown under proper conditions LOW, damp or swampy lands in a warm, humid climate produce tea of rank, rapid growth, coarse in texture, woody fibred, rudely flavored— makes a cup heavv, murky in color, rough -tasting —it is poor tea. But the Indian and Ceylon teas used to make the Red Rose brand are grown on the high lands of India and the mountain sides of Ceylon. These teas arc grown in clear dry sunshine, they mature slowly, the leaves of the Ceylon teas are tender, delicate, finely flavored, but not strong. . The Indian teas thus grown are full bodied, richly flavored, smooth in texture, strong. Such Indian and Ceylon teas combined in Red Rose Tea produce a cup of a rich rosy brown, strong and smooth—all the richnes's and strength of Indian, all the delicacy and fragrance of Ceylon teas—that " rich, fruity flavor " which belongs alone to Red Tea --snore qualities of tea excellence than any Indian or brand of Ceylon alone can possess. • 1 In 1860, the year before the war broke tint, the total value of manufactured products in the United States was only $800,000,000. In 1900 it was almost how we do it. Send postal for a copy. is good Tea T. H. Estei.brrooki.s St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg eight times the total or clow to $14,000,- 000,000. In 1866 1,200,000 hands wore enough to run the factories. In 1000 0,500,000 hands were necessary. Good School Good Students Good Positions Practically every office in the Twin City has in it a Berlin Business College Student. We have applications nearly every clay for office help. When a bright student takes a course with us he is ofd position. practically certain p We have a large school, splendidly equipped, with an unusually capable staff of instructors. Our large, illustrated catalogue tells what we do for our students and Enter at any time. One of the famous Federated Colleges. W. D. EgJLER, Principal. EI3ILITY CURE Excesses and indiscretions are the cause of more sorrow na,d suffering than all outer diseases combined. We see the victims of vicious habits on every hand; tine sallow, pimpled face, darlc circled eyes, stooping; form, stunted development, bashful, melancholic countenance and timid bear:ng proclaim to all tate world his folly- and tend to blight his existence. Our treatmentpositi:•ely cures all weak men byovercoming- and removing the effects of former indiscretions and. excesses. It stops all losses aud'drains and quickly restores the patient to .at nature rulet ed—a healthy and happy man with physical, mental and nerve pow- ers crmlple.i . For over 25 years Drs. X. &X. have treated witle the greatest success all diseases of men and worsen. if you have'any secret disease that is a worry and a menace to your health consult old established physic. inns who do not have to experiment on, you. We guarantee to cure Nervous Debility, Blood Diseases, Stricture. Varicocele, Kidney and Budder Diseases. Consultation Free. If unable to call, write for a Question Blank for Room Treatment. DHL KENNEDY & KERDAI% 14Dot o ,glebe t, THE WTING IAM TIMES, NOYEb1BEB 9, 1995 THE 01.0 DAY$ ON THE FARM. I made nineteen, hundred p^.unds of ' butter the first year after I was married, and I was only nineteen years old—made it in an old stone churn with a wooden dasher, and sold some of it for ae low as ten cents a pound," said. one of a com- pany of old ladies sitting around a quilt. "Dear, dear, those old stone churns!" said another lady, "What backache producers they were when one was all tired out! I'm thankful the creamery has driven them to the attics, where they keep company with the spinning wheel." "And with the candle molds," said an- other old lady. "I was almost grown before I ever saw a match. My father had been to town to sell a wagonload of produce, and he brought home about a dozen matches, and in the evening all the neighbors were invited in, to see him strike three or four of them. Some folks thought them too dangerous to have around the house. We didn't have a candle mold at our house; wo dipped all our candles. Some folks used to can it `dippin' taller,' The whole house would smell of it cu the day we 'dipped tal- ler.' " "Then there was the old rag -carpet loons," said the old lady who had first spoken. "I. made the first yard of car- pet I ever had. I cut and sewed the rage and wove the carpet with my own hands. Hard work it was sitting at the old loom beating the rage up in the warp with the bar. Do any of you remember old'Color- ing Ann,' as we used to call her? I re- member her very well. She used to go around from farm to form, coloring car- pet chain or linsey-woolsey or jeans or anything the farmer folk wanted colored. Had a tongue loose at both ends and fast- ened in the middle. We always expect- ed to hear, and did hear, the news for miles around whenever 'Coloring Ann' came around. Sometime she would boil soap for us. "Nob many folks boil their owri soap nowadays, but when I was a girl me one ever thought of buying a bar of soap. We always had, an ash leach dripping, and every scrap of fat was saved for soap. "And now quiltmaking has gone out! When I was a girl it was thought to be something of a reflection on a girl if she didn't have about fifteen quilts she had pieced and quilted, I had sixteen, and I began to piece some of them when. I was six years olcl. I used to have gir`egu- lar stint of so many blocks a day of patchwork. I had one quilt with three thousand scraps in it, It took the blue ribbon three years in succession at our county fair. There was some beautiful quilting on that quilt. I had it quilted in a feathe.r•and•henna gbone pattern. Nobody could set neater, finer stitches than my mother, and she quilted all the feathers and herringbones herself. "Theo, one hardly ever hears of any one doing any pig work now. Why, when 1 was a child at home my father used to kill six great fat hogs just for our own use, and we had only six in the family! We used to butcher along in November, and it was such a great event that we children were allowed to stay at home from school that day. Then in the evening the neighbors used to come in and help make and stuff the 'sassing- ers' as some folks called them. We used to put np a thirty gallon oaken cask of lard for our own use, and now some folks never use lard or pork on their farms, unless it is a little smoked ham. Customs change. "I think that farmer folks used to be better prepared for entertaining company unexpectedly, than they are now. I know my mother always planned it so that she had pound cake and pies and ot- her things on hand in case we had cora- parry unexpectedly and we never thought anything of hitching up and driving three or four miles to spend the evening with our friends. "I know how we used to go that far and farther to attend a singing school or a spelling school. My, what good songs we used to have, and how folks would turn out to a spelling bee! One school would challenge another to a spelling match, and they would see which school could spell the other down. I can see the old schoolhouse now, lighted with tallow candles, and all the horses hitched to the trees outside and the schoolhouse full of people. I know that it was considered quite a privilege to choose sides for the spelling match, And how the boys and girls would study their old blue -covered spelling books! One hardly ever hears of a spelling school nowadays.' -Farm and Fireside. THE VIT4L GENT 0 No Man Stronger than his Stomach—Let Mi-o-na Strengthen your Digestive System. The stomach is your vital center. become well. This explains many cures No man is stronger than his stomach, of heart, liver or kidney diseases in the The average man measures his physis cases 'where Mi-n•na is used. It is the cal vitality by his heart, his kidneys or most wonderful health restorer known. his lunge, Yet it ie the stomach that Just one little tablet out of a 50 cent should be first considered when yea east box of Mi-o»na for a few days, and you up the account of health. will soon see a great improvement in Every organ of the body is sustained your health. and nourished by food which is convert- If you cannot obtain Ml-o•na of your ed into nutrition in the stomach and druggist, it will be sunt by mail, post - Conveyed to every part of the system in paid on receipt of price. Write us for the form of blood. For this reason, advice on your case from a leading sto, when the stomach is strengthened with mach specialist which vVi11 be sent free. bii-o-na and is able to convert the food The R. T. Booth Company, Ithaca, into nourishment, all other organs soon N.Y. • SPRING 11AI•:DICYNI.. As a spring medicine Burdock Blood Sitters has no equal. It tones up the system and removes all impnrities from the blood, and takes away that tired, weary feeling so prevalent in the spring. Robert Wallace, aged 85 years, died in the jail in Goderich last week and in accordance with the statute an inquest was held, conducted by Coroner W. J. R. Holmes at the jail on Tuesday, and the evidence supported the verdict of "died of old age." The home of the•de- ceased was unknown, and perhaps he had none except our jail, of which he had been an inmate on and off for 20 years. When asked a few years since why ho came back to Goderich each winter, he said because he liked the old jail and its keepers. Tia', R,.ayoxutilonizixag ' of the Cracker Mooney revolutionized the cracker, He made fclk admit that they never knew 1 how good crackers could be, by making such delicious crackers as they had nev.r 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 tilooney's Pei" ge cti oi"a Cream Sodas A 7 You'll see why when you try thern. Haven't you curt. ) osity enough to buy a box at your grocer's? is , In the churchyard of Grimston, Nor- folk, an anvil may be seen at the head of a local blacksmith. In, Icelaud horses are shod with sheep's horn, in the Soudan a kind of sock made of earners skin is used for the purpose. A Liverpool 'gentleman spends some hnudreds of pounds every year in having Scriptural texts printed on business en- velopes, USED MEN AT THE OFFICE UP WOMEN IN THE HOME CHILDREN AT SCHOOL, AND r Every clay in the week and TiREDevery in hmon, women and cltlldterenyear feel all OUT used up and tired out, Tho strain of business, the cares of home and social life and the task of study cause terrible suffer- ing from heart and nerve troubles. The efforts put forth to keep up to the modern "high pressure" niocle of life in this ago soon wears out the strongest system, shatters the nerves and weakens the heart, Thousands find life a burden and others an early grave. The strain on the system causes nervousness, palpitation of the heart, nervous prostration, sleeplessness, faint and dizzy spells, skip beats, weak and irregular pulse, smothering and sinking spells, etc. 'the blocxl becomes weak and watery and eventually causes decline. Milburn's rn's He; rt and {.; erne are indicated for all diseases arising from a weak and debilitated condition of the heart or of tho nerve centres. Mrs. Thos. Hall, Keldon, Ont., writes : "For the pest two or three years I have been troubled with nervousness and heart failure, and the doctors failed to give me any relief. I decided at last to give Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills a trial, and I would not now be without them if they cost twice as much. I have recommended them to my neighbors and friends. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills 50 cts. Ter box or 3 for 51.25, all dealers, or Tho . Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. ,,,.•,i Germany is able to feed about nine - tenths of her nearly 60,000,000 inhabit- ants on the products of her own soil. Shepherds believe the wool on a sheep's back is an unfailing barometer. The curlier the wool the finer will be the weather, A carrot 3 fret, 6 inches in length has been grown at Ninfield, Sussex. It is perfectly straight and about three inches in circumference. e UTE Genuine Cat&s Little liver Pills, duet Bear Signature of X;e:ep2.1- See Pee -Simile Wrapper Belo*. 'Vevey mall and as easy' 10 take tis sugar., CAR 'ERS oS DIZZINESS: iT7"LlE FOR BILIOUSNESS 1 VE f �O 1 TOMB LIVED. PILLFOR CONSTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. FOS THE COMPLEXION y .��� II�i7M11RNAVL �pNAtVPI. ,E_ijnG tTYEtItA /yz.'��..*s�i.r.*� Crier SICK NEAOACtit. We'd Setter Bide a Wee. (A.uonymous. ) The ppir auld folk at flame, ye mind, Are frail and tailing sair, And weel I ken they'd miss me, lad, Gin I came home no nlair; The grist Is out, the times are hard, The Mine are only three. I canna leave the acid folk now, We'd better bide a wee; Canna leave the auld folk now, We'd better bide a wee. When first we told our story, lad, Their blessings fell sae free, They gave nae thought to self at all, They did but thiuk of me. Put, laddie, that's a time away', And mither's like to dee, I canna leave the auld fells now, We'd better bide a wee; Canna leave the auld folk now, We'd better bide a wee. 4 I fear me sair, they're failing baith, For when I sit (Mart, They'll talk o' heaven sae earnestly, It Well nigh breaks my heart ! So, laddie, din;ua urge me mair, It surely Willi ill• l e. I canna leave the Etltld folk now, We'd better bide.'a wee; Cranna leave the auld folk now, We'd better bide a wee. The Blighted Boyhood of Pa. IS. B. Kiser) I wish I knew what my pa knew When he was just as old as me; He'd read the Bible through and through And when it comes to work'—gee 1 Why, be says that when he was ten He hardly ever thought of play, But took his place beside the men And did what they did every day. He drove his father's teazel to town, And hauled the grist home from the mill, And in the evening he'd set down And learn his lessons and keep still. It makes me sorry for poor pa To thick that he was treated so; Sometimes it ahnost seems that ma Don't mare than half believe him, though; But once when he was telliug me About the fun he never had, And how he worked, I thought that she Would cry, because she looked so sad. And then she said she wished that they'd Of let hint sow his oats before He got growed up, and pa he stayed Upstairs that night and kicked the door. Last summer. down at grandpa's, where They used to make pa work so hard, They told me how he'd rip and tear Around the place, and in, the yard There was a tree, where grandma said He used to practice circus tricks— All day till it was time for bed. It seemed as though they'd six Old Nicks Around there, always raisin' Ned— But grandpa come and put his hand Down kind of softly on my head, And said that I would understand— He winked at grandma as he smiled— Some day when I would have a child. Tho mayor of Kingsville has been try- ing a new system of laying cement side- walks. The municipality has paid from 11 to 14 cents per equaro foot for laying the walks, but the mayor thought that he could get better work done by the day, and ofl•erc d to pay the difference out of his own pocket, if the work cost more than eight cents a square foot. The council agreed to the mayor's proposi- tion, and a local roan was engaged to build the walk bytheday. A strip was built and when completed was so satis- factory in, appearance and price to the ratepayers, as well as the council, that other walks will be put down on tho same basis. This sample walk cost just six and four-fifths cents per foot, and is four -inch thick and is made of first-class material. Other towns might profit by following the example of Kingsville. ...._.�.c-rte.—•--.— When Yon Hare A End Cold You want a remedy that will not only give quick relief but effect a permanent cure. You want a remedy that will relieve the lungs and keep expectoration easy. You want a remedy that will counteract any tendency toward pneumonia. You want a remedy that is pleasant and safe to takese. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy meets all of these requirements and far the a4 speedy and pernament euro of bad colds stands without a peer. For sale by A. I. gs McCall & Co. r• Amoco' akesseesse oma, vie 1114 Uzi over nava year rano grates burn out? If you did you will know what that means in conn - mon ranges --- it means plumbers, delay, muss and big bills —because common ranges are built that way. As range grates must some time burn out you are certain to have that kind of trouble if yours is a common range. If you have the Pandora you won't have any trouble, because you can take out the old grates and put in the new ones in ten minutes, and a ten cent piece for a screw -driver does it easier in the Pandora than a whole kit of plumbers' tools will do it in common ranges. d t n cent piece for a scretedlrir„r ,i alt you nem to lace out n!d and psi in. new Pandora gates. �� 2.r•e hcsu.nes aaued racSoximst Este: melon , w orcnrnte•, .771:1ripeTf, Irar;•.e:ovarrer, Stir. •..,hit, a7.v., Z:? 7is&2 cors SOLD IN W AN BY Aa YOUNG. ;i�t7i"8►�a;ty6 -ffi .. X „�,.,�:..e,,,� 1 .N �-= :P.S,yac,..as .�..............- ..d. . - : 6a. , - � �ti,..' n_. .. �..t. t fi if 13; but the instructors behind them that make a school. While the Forest City Business and Shorthand Celle t• publishes a text on bookkeeping that is used in the best college,: from Ilalifax to the Great West and has a standing reputatie i 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. Catalogue free for the asking. School term—Sept. till June inclusive. m. sti a J• W.WSTERVEL'.i , PrLlcif al Pill Want yoin r►;oustache or.beard a beautiful br'owiu orrichblaclause • P3 co ea Q3 f1 Care of the Hands. For well -kept hands the nails are of prime importance. In the first place they must be properly cut, following the outline of the finger tips. When the hand is held up before the face with the palm inward, a tiny rim of nail should show around the end of each finger. The corners should be cut round but not too closely, or they will become sore. When the hands are washed the skin at the base should be gently pushed back with a towel or orange tick, so as to dis- close the little white half-moon. Sharp instruments should be kept from the nails, and cutting away the loose skin should be avoided, as it is apt to produce soreness. Lemon juice is useful in taking off stains. Should they look dull or rough, a little vaseline or beeswax may be rubbed on and then polished with a soft cloth. Cleaning the nails with a brush keeps them and the skin under them smooth, BO that they do not so readily retain dirt. Of course, itis only by following these instructions every day that the nails can be kept in good order. Energetic caro for one week, followed by neglect for three or four, will give very unsatisfactory results, and is a waste of time and energy. ers 0 1) Q • to • 0 ki • 0 d9 ON 0 • 0 0 0 • a • 0 • ve THE TIMES Ili • is the best local paper in the County w• of Huron. Subscription: $r.00 per n•+ year in advance—sent to any address • in Canada or the United States. R to vn advertisement ;in the Times brings good results •• • Address all communications to-- THE WINCH AM `TIMES • •• Office Phone, No. 4. • Residence Phone, No. "4, SIN GIi A ori ONT.• Y. M. C. A. Bi iq., LONDON, CN, O:NT. Vegetable, liver pills. That - is what they are. They cure constipation, biliousness, , s. C.B ergo., siva-headache. Lovreti4,rs¢m.F ENO MPS DYE i7PIY CTn1. os DelCaists MID. 0. FL11.4 e Co., ascan,. aE :;t ryIWZS i'F:. tS.,v,at::°.ii::G..t 4 _ R1. �!1 . ..::iS ..wf L'- tam .i1.. Our Job Department is up-to-date in i s ; andourr work particular o every e Y guaranteed to give satisfaction. Estimates cheerfully given, ,rat,.,_ Our ylerialftaes. COLORED WORK LETTER HEADS LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS CIRCULARS BOOK WORK VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES MAIL �°�.. a����� ������Y ATTENDED Th .... __ _..., • • 0 • 0 • O • • • • • • • • 0 •' • •