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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-03-15, Page 3.01111g1 I 111 The Red Rose Flavor and Strength NO Ceylon tea nor Indian tea alone can have the "rich fruity flavor" of Red Rose Tea,because neither variety in itself possesses all the qualities of strength, richness, delicacy, and fragrance. Each has its own peculiar qualities, but each has its weaknesses. ]3y cornbining the two in the Red Rose proportions, I produce a tea with the "rich fruity flavor" and strength of Red Rose Tea, a flavor and strength found in no brand of Ceylon alone. Red Rose Tea Reflections of a Bachelor, Prom the New York Press. Most of the fan iu life is the kind you aro look Lig for. If a young man dresses well it is a sign Ms father can't afford to. The way a girl makes love to a man is to pretend he is doing it. A boy wants to shave so as to • look older and a ishan so as not to look so old A man could send his wife a lot more flowers if he didn't have to support her. is good Tea T. H. EstabrooXs St. John, N.B., Toronto, • gi Winnipeg ) It is hard enough to admit the truth about yourself, mach less to tell it to another. It takes a good deal of courage to tell a girl how beautiful her sister is, and a sensible man never has it. It is absent-minded when you forget to do something for your wife; it is gross negligence when she forgets. Don't think you are fixed on there because you make a lot h +re THE WINGRAM TIMES, MARC. 15, 1906 ""Oulr late." There may be a world of pathos and even of rebuke in a very few - words, and so the rather thoughtless wife of a contributor of ours discovered recent- ly. She has two sweet little children, both girls, and, almost without know- ing it, she made a pet and favorite of the younger and prettier child. "Sweet," as she called her, had every care and attention lavished upon her, and good natured neglect 'Was more. or less the portion of the elder. The mother was sitting In her bed- room quletly reading recently when the soft patter of tiny feet sounded ou the stairs.. "Is that you, Sweet?" she called. "No, mamma," was the sad reply; "it isn't Sweet -It's only me!" That pathetic little "Only me!" haunt- ed the wife of our contributor for long- er than elle would have cared to admit, but a change has since marked her treatment of her eldest born. -London Tit -Bits. English Mimeo. Puzzling enough to an American is the English fashion of spelling a name one way and pronouncing it In quite another, but the cities are even worse than the individuals, since they deliber- ately adopt some alias. The town of Hull, for instance, is Kingston -on -Hull. It has no official recognition as any- thing else, yet as Hull It is known to nine out of ten, who would wonder if Kingston -on -Hull was near the Own of Hull should they hear it mentioned. Even supposedly respectable cathedral towns are not above hiding identity, and to call New Sarum "Salisbury" is to give it Its alias. The royal town of Windsor is really New Windsor, and the county of I'Iampshire, popularly shortened to Hants, is in reality the county of Southampton. Bradford -by - the -Sea is more correctly Morecambe, but rightly Poulton le Sande, while Bridlington, sometimes called Burling- ton, is more popularly Wakefield -by -the - feathers Sea. of fuss .Merchants 7744 r isMes 1/ l{ .17 I THE HARDY LUMBERMAN A man cannot work to tho best advantage in tho lumber woods or about the farm in the severe Canadian winters unless his feet aro warm and dry. His Rubber Shoes must be able to eye great snag mahatma* and provide sure footing. Merchants Moose Brand Shoes provide all these Qualities. They ere made from pure Para rubber gum, scientifi. 'ally and thoroughly impregnated into strong, twisted and olosely-woven cotton duck fibre. They aro hand mnde by skilled workman, under careful supervision and inspection and vulcanized with exacting care. If your Shoeman (Wean t sell them let us know. r Srp� OEQLIN �wa>a Branches at WINNIPEG, LONDON, TORONTO. OTTAWA, MONTREAL 709 ,1L n.aw r: V,•' MJ GEO. B. BOULTER. CHAS. A. DAVIES. Northern and Central Ontario Agents. Prompt attention given to Telegraph, Telephone and Mail Orders. BOULTER, DAVIES & COMPANY. Special johhere in all classes of High Grade Boots and Shoes. Telephone: Main 5103; Main 11?. 24 Front St. W., Toronto, Ont. •'•Leet time L Lid DUST 77f0E0 zpsosar work" " SIMPLY WONDERFUL is the work which GOLD DtJST accomplishes. All labors look alike to the Gold Dust Twins. They clean floors and doors, sinks and chinks -go from cellar to attic -and leave only brightness behind. Get acquainted with Gold Dust Washing Powder OTHER GENERAL I Scrubbing floors, washing clothes and dishes, cleaning wood - USES FOR work, ail cloth, silverware and tinware, polishing brass work, COLO DUST cleansing bath room, pipes, etc., and making the finest soft soap. Made by THE N. K. FAIRI3ANI4 COMPANY, Montreal, P. Q. -Makers of FAIRY SOAP. GOLD DUST makes hard wader sola,_ Deadly Trades. "Tobacco workers are prone to dead- ly nervous diseases. I have never yet seen a tobacco worker who is not a nervous crank, who Is not off in his head," complained the owner of a large cigar factory. "I don't know why it Is. I used to be a worker myself, and I have never recovered from the effects of the trade. half the time my men are away sick or dying, they are al- ways ill tempered and flighty, and a public agitation makes idiots of them. I don't know the reason, as I said." He was advised to consult a physician and find out. The foreman of a stonecutting yard, - when questioned, was better informed as to the evils of his trade. "See those dust clouds all over the yard?" he said.. "Consumption there! And quick, at that." The Wonderful Hairpin. [Chicago Tribune.) Whenever her switch would grow sud- denly loose,. She would fasten it up with aheirpin; And if her belt buckle grew too weak for use, She would fasten it np with a hairpin, 01 utorniug, when she wished to open her mail, Or if in a magazine elm read a tale, And wished to • cut pages, this maid young and frail, Reached up in her hair for a hairpin. A man might call for a whole box of tools - She simply remit up for a hairpin; d man might spend years in mechanical schools To learn what she did with a hairpin, A man might get flustered, and frown. and perspire, And ask who the dickens had taken his wire, When for some repairing such stuff he'd require - She always relied ou a hairpin. A scissors, a knife, or a tweezers or awl 1 -- She did very well with a hairpin; She found that the stairway that rose from her hall Was measured quite well with a hair- pin. An eggbeater broken? A laundry pipe plugged? A corkscrew not found? Then her shoulders she shrugged And reached, while her sense of content- ment she hugged, Right up to ber hair for a hairpin. A manicure set, and a button -hook, too, She always could find in a hairpin; In fact, there wan nothing a person could , do, That she couldn't do with a hairpin. One day she was wrecked in a passenger train; The crew cried: "We'll have to send back for a crane." She murmured, here, ber arm through a cracked window -pane, "Don't bother -I'll lend you a hair. - piu!" Bin Measurements. To measure corn find number of cu- bic feet in crib, then multiply by 9 and divide by 20, which gives the amount in bushels. To determine amount of shell- ed corn to be obtained from crib of corn iu ear find cubic feet of corn, di- vide by 2, and the product will be the number of bushels of shelled corn, as two cubic feet of corn if sound and dry will produce one bushel of shelled corn. To find the number of bushels of ap- ples, potatoes, etc., in a bin multiply the length, breadth and thickness to- gether and this product by 8 and point off one figure in the product for deci- mals. -Iowa State Register and Farmer. A Dilemma. .A. well known college professor offers the two horns of a dilemma to advo- cates of coeducation. "If you lecture to twenty boys and twenty girls in the same room," he asks, "will the boys attend to the lec- ture or to the girls?" Of course the coeducationist, to be consistent, must say that they will listen to the lecture. "Well, if they do," replies the dean, "they are not worth lecturing to."-- Harper's. PREVENTION OF SMUT AND APPLE SCAB Press bulletin from the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph by Prof. W. Lochhead. Spring is approaching and farmers will oon be planting the seed for the season's rop. With some crops clean seed means Rood crops. It is important, therefore, o take a few simple precautions, especi- ally when it is known that these precau- tions will save much money. Now, smut is very prevalent in many oat and wheat fields, and the loss to the province by this disease alone amounts every year to two or three million dollars Smutty oats and wheat are caused by planting sued oats and wheat that have smut spores attached to them. These spores are so small that it is impossible to see them on the seed with the naked eye. Perhaps the bitoplest and most effec- tive method that has been devised for killing these attached spores is to sprinkle the seed grain with a dilute so- lution of formalin, made by pouring half a pint of formalin into ten or twelve gallons of water. The formalin can be procured at almost any drug store for 25 cents. The seed grain should be spread out on a clean floor or wagon box, and the formalin solution sprinkled over it by means of a sprinkling can. The Bead should be thoroughly shovelled over and mixed while it ie being sprinkled so that every grain receives some of the so- lution. Ten gallons of solution will suf- fice for 20 or 25 bushels of grain. When the grain is dry, it should be put into clean bags to prevent the en- trauee of fresh spores of smut, which are always fioatiug in the air of barns. If thin method is carefully followed, 110 smut heads of grain will be found in the crop. Apple Scab is one of the most serious diseases of the apple. It can be prevent- ed by spraying the trees with Bordeaux mixture. Four applications shonld be given, the first just as the leaves are un- folding, the second just before blossom- ing, the third after blossoming and the e c t Museler. Many muscles are located at a con- siderable distance from the point where their force is to be exerted and are connected with the point of operation by slender strings or tendons. This is a provision of nature solely for conven- ience. If all the muscles whose power Is concentrated in the hand and foot were located in the hands or feet these members would assume an inordinate size and weight and become more trou- blesome than useftl. Mirabean'r Trumpet Voice. Mirabeau bad a voice like a trumpet, and when he raised it in threat or de- nunciation the effect was awe inspir- ing. The impression he created was greatly heightened by his manner, his personal appearance being exceedingly imposing. IIe had a way of lifting his head and shaking it to give emphasis to his periods that made the beholders involuntarily draw back with fear. Tentporarily Silenced. "Why did you insist 0n sending that young man to congress?" "Got tired of his speechmakin'," an- swered Farmer Corntossel. "We thought we'd put him where the speak- er would keep hien quiet for a few years." Choice of a Vocation. Aunt Rosa -- Well, Juanito, what would you like to be when you are grown up? Tuanito (whose parents are Very strict) --I'd like to be an or'phan.- Dia. noubtina Scienee. She (from a book) ---A vroman'I brain declines in *eight after the to thirty. Star --Sour do they kno*? Y th6Us % Liroassiit NOTAI AO SA he tlsIft. A Steaming Cup of N\NI BOYR1 L, gives the player . strength to play, and keeps the watcher from catching cold. 10 fourth two or three weeks later. if the season is a wet oue, it is advisable to give another application in Tnly or An - gust. The formula for Bordeaux Mix- ture is as followe:- Copper sulphate (blue stone) 4 lbs Fref•h stone lime 4 " Water .... 40 gallons Make a stock solution of bluestoiie by dissolving 25 pounds in warm water iu a barrel and add water to snake up to 25 gallons. Every gallon of this solution in this barrel contains one pound of blue stone. Into a second barrel put 25 lbs of fresh stone lime, and add with stirring small ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Cenulne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Boar Signature of 41-2"e Soo Par. -Simile Wrapper Below. Tare mall and as easy to take as sugar. FOR CARTERS FOR D1 ZINESS.. ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. M VER FOR TORPID LIVER. ON.CONSTIPATION. Ply$` FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR `h1ECOMPLEXION f_atO# . ail warp"' iu+u T ai CURE SICK HEADACHE - quantities of water to slake it, When fully slaked make np to 25 gallons by adding water. Every gallon of milk of lime in this second barrel contains one pound of lime. To prepare the Bordeaux, empty four gallons of binestone solution iuto the spray tank or barrel, which already should have 25 or 30 gallons of water in it, stir the milk of lime thoroughly and empty four gallons of it through the strainer into spray barrel with constant stirring; then add water to make np to 40 gallons. The Codling Worm may be controlled at the same time if 6 oz. of Paris Green are added to every barrel of the Bor. deaux Mixture used iu the application made after blossoming. The following is the formula of a very excellent tooth powder: Mix well to- gether two ounces each of powdered or- ris root and camphorated chalk. Add twelve drops of eucalyptus oil and again mix. Keep in airtight bottle or tin if possible. MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED Maga-ton Mau tells how be, Suffered and How he 11•01 Released. CHAS H. POWELL. 'For years amartyr,' is how Chas. H. Powell of 105 Raglan street, Kingston, be- gins his story. "A martyr to chronic, constipation, but now I am free from it and all through the use of Dr Leonhardt's Anti. Pill." 1111)111!11(1,11 !fl ijjllhI/ll/!'P 1,: ,, /li jjjr� q i'l 1 3 1 , l e ice` ✓,�^�` of -� Heaven leaves the heart when hatred enters. Money makes the mare go, but it can- not say where. The tight fisted preacher gets a poor grip ou the church, The damning doubts are those that deter ns from good deeds. You cannot tell much about your crown by the size of your hat. The way to heavenly mansions may lie through mean tenements. Man, in the making, can only be meas- ured by the Master Workman. Nothing you can do pleases the devil more than your attempt to do nothing. Some men think that they are weary in welldoing because their jaws ache. Many who are now suffering from this complaint will be glad to learn from Mr. ' Powell's story that their is hope for the most stubborn case. He continues: "I was induced to try Anti -Pill by reading the testimony of some one who had been cured of constipation by it. I had suf- fered for eighteen years and had taken tons of stuff recommended as cures but whioh made me worse rather than bet- ter. Doctors told me there was no cure for me." Dr. Leonhardt's Anti•Pill is for sale. by all Drnggists or by The Wilson -tyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Mr. Powell will verify every word of these statements. Many authorities advise the drinking of hot water half an hour before meals, upon rising in the mornings and going to bed at night. Cold water, however, offers a greater annulus to the organs of digestion. Sentence Sermons Serenity comes in when selfishness goes out. Realizing the right is all there is of religion. He takes heaven everywhere who has the happy heart. They find the gate of heaven who seek the good of humanity. Much of our sorrow is stuff we have stolen thinking it was joy. Thunders of applause gives no promise of showers of blessing. He who shuts the door of heaven on another shuts himself out. The most heavenly virtues come out of the most homely occasions, The only thing that makes any work sacred is the way it is done. Civilization will be synonymous with salvation when it has cared sin. The devil has no more effective wea- pon than the Christian's rusty sword. People who cannot stand up in the fight must not look to sit down in the feast. Only heaven's scales eau weigh the heart. You do not make life sacred by look- ing sad. The ideal is the mold in which the real is cast, A veru pardonable but ludicrous mis- take is sometimes made by persons on reading a medical prescription. The prunes sols] by grocers are merely dried' plume. The sirup and tincture of Vir- ling t.. our ginia prune ordered by medical men are prepared from the bark of a tree, the crude drug being called "Virginian prune bark", Many Women Suffer UNTOLD AGONY FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE. Very often they think it is from so-called "Female Disease." There is less female trouble than they think. Women suffer from backache, sleeplessness, nervousness. irritability, and • dragging -down feeling in the loins. So do men. and they do not have "female trouble." Why. then, blame all your trouble to Female Disease t With healthy kidneys, few women will ever have "female disorders." The kidneys are so closely connected with all the internal organs, that when the kidneys go wrong, everything goes wrong. Much distress would be saved U women would only take DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS at stated intervals. Price 50 cents per box or three boxes for $1.2.1' . all dealers or sent direct on receipt of price. The Doan Kidney Pill Co., Toronto, Ont, Hold fast to all you have. There's not a single hair too many. Then =_ fasten it tightly in place. Hell's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer _ stops falling hair, makes the hair grow, keeps the scalp healthy. For the whiskers and moustache we make - BUCKINGIHAM'S DYE. It colors a rich brown ora soft black. R.Y. HALL & CO.. Washita,N. H. ••41••••••••ei••••11••••••••ia sl••*•s••••••••••••••••ei••S • • 1 • 1 • • • • • • • • • • BEADING 0 • • 0 • ▪ �HE TIMES • will re- • e • • c subserip- tions itt elnbs • as given here- with, at prices • quoted. • • Newspapers • and magazines • sent to differ- • ent address if • desired. - • •• Whether a - •Tmn:S sub- • scriber or not, • leave your or- - ▪ der at this • office and it •w ill receive • prompt atten- ' tion. We give low rates on any paper or • magazine. • • Any $1.00 • magazine will 2 be given in • place of those • named, if so •• desired. I f • you do n o t • like the groups • given here, • make selee- • tions to snit • yourself, and • we will give • them at a re- duced price. r See large • list of clubbing • offers in an- •• other column. A 11 orders • receive prompt = attention. • • • • • Call at, or addmss, • • • TIMES i 901110s111••+rsrslr111ss111••s99. - ATT:41-i • FOR 1906. Reg. Price. Times Presbyterian Westminster Times Weekly Globe Weekly Witness Times Weekly Sun Weekly Globe Farmer's Advocate ......... .. . Times Weekly Globe......... . Family Herald & Weekly Star. Farming World Times Ladies' Houle Journal Saturday Evening Post ....... . Times World's Work Review of Reviews Tim Revieesw of Reviews Cosmopolitan .. •. .... Woman's Home Companion.... Success Times........ Country Life in America (After Feb. lst, 1906, $4A0) World's Work... Review of Reviews Times.... American Boy Outing Herpes's Bazar Times Harper's Magazine or Weekly Review of Reviews World's Work..,, Times. Weekly Globe............ Canadian Magazine Times Lippincott's Ainslie's Cosmopolitan er Success Times .... ... . St. Nicholas Review of Reviews ..... ...... Woman's home Companion.... $1 00 1.50 1.50 1 00 1 00 1 00 1 1.00 1.00 f 100 1 1 50 1.00 1.00 / 1.00 .60 1.00 1.25 2.00 1.00 3.00 3.00 1.00 3.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1 00 3.00 3 00 3 00 1.00 1.00 3.00 1.00 1.00 4.00 3.00 8.00 1.00 1.00 2.50 1 Our s Price $3.25 1.00 2.50 1 1.80 1.00 1.00 3.00 3.00 1.00 • • • • • • 0 • 2.25 • • 3.801 1'�5•• 2.11 o • 3.00•, 4e35s w 4.15 • • 0.00 •M • si 4.10. • 7.751 3.55,•, 5.10 • 5.75 OFFICE, WINGI•iAM, CN'T. 0011401141191iOMNatiiiaN•iN1/ii0'