HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-08-02, Page 3TEE WINGUAN TIMES, AUGUST 2 WOO
The price of half a pound of Red Rose Tea is
small --very shall, but it will show you how
much tea value, tea quality and flavor is con-
tained in this " Good Tea "
"is good tea"
Prices --25, 30, 35, 40, 50 and 60 cts. per ib. in Lead packets!
T, H. ESTABROOK$. Sr. dQHN. N. B. WINNIPEG.
TORONTO. a WELLINGTON 8y,., E,
UTlt.LT STOIRYYTT8,
A certain ger:Neman on beilue
asked to subse. tthe toward mondiu,f
out a missionary to ono ad the can.
0 nibal 1iLutds of the Pacific, Is report-
ed to hays' answered, in the most din.
oouraging manner; "Certainly, not.
I am a vegetarian,"
A cartoonist in Manila was pre -
teemed to genial Secretary Tait. "And
eo you :ire the man," emelaimsd the
secretary; "that has been taking lib-
erties with my Swat" 'Guilty,"
pleaded the caricaturist; "bat re-
member that your Lase la my, for-
tune,"
A story le told of a dying rabbi,
who had been all his lifetime ex '
itreit:ely religious, but bd12 likewise al-
ways suffered meet want and misery.
"iDo You know," he Said to those Lia
the sick -room, "it, after KR the sad
experiences I have had in the peer,
there is no future lice, 1 shall be
greatly amused."
"I know a woman," says Beira A.
Lockwood, "who got a modern serv-
ant, a cook, from a noted cookeag
sohool. On the third day she an-
nounced that he was going to leave.
'You only keep two servants; she
said to her mistress, 'and I've been
aceuetomed to living where there are
tour, which suite me better on- ac-
count of my partiality for bridge.'"
A: red-headed man one night raked
up enough courage to propose to a
girl with whom he wan very deeply
and sincerely to love. She replied
to his suit in a tied voice: "1'm very
sorry, George, but I could never mar-
ry anyone with red hair," "Pm very
nothing," said her suitor, "'Ay barber
tells me that at the rate my hair is
falling out I'll be oompletely bald in
two •yea el."'
Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
No other remedy possesses suck
perfect cleansing, healing and puri.
Eying properties.
Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers,
Abscesses, and all Eruptions.
Internally, restores the Stomach,
Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy
action. If your appetite is poor,
your energy gone, your ambition
lost, B.B.B. will restore you to the
full enjoyment of happy vigorous
life.
MOTOR"CAR MECHANISM.
levoesulletire Power la Obtebtai
Throng*. the Prowls of t 1
7isplogt4=4
The working principle of the Motet
which has given the automobile this
wonderful new life is, roughly, tee
principle of the ride, says the Amer -
loan Illustrated Magazine, The charge
of gas is the equivalent of the gun-
noweor, and the piston to the bullet;
the gas is exieodod and the pieten Idea
forward, And the piston rod delivers Its
motion to the croak shaft of the steam
engine. In the steam engSie the
*team works against both aides of the
piston; in two revoluttons of the dy-
wheel the steam presaoa agAinst the
piston four times. In the explosion
engine, according to the prevailing
system, the gas operates against only
one side of the piston (the end of the
cylinder through which the piston rod
regi -a is completely open), and there
Is an explosion but once In two revo-
lutions ot the flywheel --that is, there
Is but a single explosion to four move,
molts of the piston. Those four move-
ments are the power stroke (caused
by the explosion in the cylinder),
which eupplies the energy to drive the
automobile and the force required to
complete the three non -power strokes;
second, a backward stroke which
pushes the exploded gases out of the
chamber through a valve which opens
for this purpose; third, a forward
stroke which suck* the charge of gas
into the chamber through an Inlet
valve, and, fourth, a backward stroke
which cornpresses the gas, for Com. -
pression is necessary to secure the best
energy of the gas. The fifth stroke is
the first stroke over again—the gas ex-
plodes and the piston shoots bulletlike
forward.
COFFIN NAILS FOR CHINA.
1906
Age cannot wither,
Nor custom stale, its infinite variety-.
1906
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
°°s" TORONTO "Kw
ONTARIO
Larger, more instructive and more entertaining than ever
AN UNEQUALLED ART LOAN BIT
HORS ANDI BATTLE EXHIBIT
M11 POULTRY AND PET STOOK EXHIBIT
Magnificent Edueational Exhibit of Proeesses ot Manufacture
in new $100,000 Building.
The finest programme of amusements ever presented, including
"IVANHOE," with expert TIMERS
brought expressly from England. '
HIS MAJESTY'S (HOUSEHOLD BAND OF THE LIFE GUARDS
will play twice daily on the Grand Plaza (free) 11 a.m. and 4 p m.
No up-to-date Canadian will miss this exhibition.
To avoid the great crowd come first week.
For all information apply to
LinuT.-CoL. J. A. McGILLIVRAY, K.O., J. O. ORR,
President. Manager and Secretary,
City Hall, Toronto.
♦++++4♦++♦iii♦++++++++++++
+++++++++++++♦++++++++♦++++
t
+
RBID, President.
IItTNT, Secretary;
western fair
The Exhibition That rlade
Fall Fairs Famous.
An ideal occasion for a family opting.
. Daily ascensions of a navigable airstrip, niways under perfect
control. The moat wonderful invention of the age.
Royal Venetian Band, the most celebrated European musical
organization, 'under the great leader, Victor, will gine Concerts daily.
pireworks on a more magnificent and imposing scale, picturing
the great Carnival of Venice. '
Many splendid educational features for the boys and ,girls.
For information write
Sept -LONDON
7 � 15, rsos
H
6 nudes tent 722,000,000 Cigar-
ettes to the Celestial Empire I
Lout 'Year.
Nine per cent. more cigarettes were
manufactured in 1905 than in 1904
—2,500,000,000 in all—but not all of
them were smoked here.
Cigarettes are the only tobacco man-
ufacture whose exportation from this
country is important, and during the
last three years this foreign trade hes
been growing. In 1904 there were
1,568,608,000 cigarettes exported, and
last year, 1,800,000,000, an indicated
increase for the 12 months ot 1905 of
232,000,000.
About four-Afthe of the total exports
of cigarettes go to Asia. China, in-
cluding Hongkong, imported 722,000,-
000, and the British East Indies, 508,-
342,000. The next largest importing
cetfntry is Australia, which lest year
took 125,000,000 cigarettes.
The manufacture of cigarettes is
limited to four cities—New York,
Richmond, New Orleans and San
Francisco. New York, first among the
cigar -making cities, manufactures
nearly two-thirds of the cigarettes, or
about 2,000,000,000.
There are 225 cigarette 'factories
bare in a total of 485 for the whole
country. .In recent years the number
of small factories has been growing
rapidly on the East side, where new-
comers made by hand the variety of
cigarettes culled trurkish.
The total number of foreign made
clgaretes imported into the United
States last year amounted to 3,000,000
only—an insignificant quantity when
compared with the large number of
American made oigarettee exported
into other countries. i I -e• •
EARTH GETS BACK GOLD.
Dieaeures Hidden. Away In 19aried
La ieeeptaolas and Cities of 4c ,
.:a:+ -fait ! Ancient Times. 1,1.1.. " rg
Sold reverts to the earth in many
Ways. Treasure troves are being un-
earthed constantly, especially in foreign
countries and in romantic countries
much as Mexico, the Indies and South
America, where passions and riches run
like the tides, high and low. Isn't it
natural that a lovelorn Mexican should
bury his treasure rather than think his
rival might got it? Many treasures have
been buried in the desert, and a lone
rider at dead of night might be seen
in the old days digging up the gold he
needed from time to time. The secret
was his and his alone. If he should
' chance to meet death suddenly the se.
cret died with him. The excavations
that are being made in Greece and Egypt
show gold-trinuned ornaments, jewelry
and precious stones that have lain for
centuries beneath cities whose struggle
fot gold has contrasted strangely with
the calm wealth lying just below them.
These treasure troves which come to
the surface every year probably repre-
sent but a email part of that which has
been concealed, and every ship which
• foundere at tiea takes a certain amount
of gold with it, which may amount to
Lnywbere from a fete pounds to mit-
Hone.
dw�:insi
The Boys.
"Harp's to the boys; the destroyers)
of dignity; the demolishers of Conceit;
the anhihllatore of 'self-esteem; the
letectors of sham; the champions of
merit; the scoffers of the false; the
boomers of the true; the bete -noire of
policemen; the proteebers of sisters;
he sweethearts of inothere; the chant•
Mons and chtime of godtathera; the
euliders of cities; the kings and
daces of Atones; my boys, your
ooyn, everybody's bola. God bless
sham, one and alL "-� Addru bf'' Hon.
11. X. Heath.
Iver Objection. : t' '
Mils Qraago Y?o you abjict io his
Oat obtain V1,4113011 --NO: to hill lOti t�lr t
14001 £smelbt ilffliAidw
Rto(
1t00NEY $!SUIT & CANDY, Circ,
STRAiEDge CANADA;
To His No;
Pleased Customers
The wise grocer Studies
his customers—knows their
likes and dislikes—knows
that his best trade want
Mooney's Perfection
Cream Sodas
He lets them know that
he has their favorite biscuits
—and sees that they are not
asked to buy something "just
s good," which is NOT
as good.
Grocers who want to please their
patronsalways have Mooney's Per..
fetxion Cream Sodas. In their
hygienic packages --air tight
and moisture -proof.
/0 IT I8 SAID. •'
A shoemaker Is the whole-4olear men
and generally well heeled.
A baker can always raise the dough.
A butcher can usually contrive to
make both ends meet.
A hatter is sun to be a block ahead
of all other men.
A huckster has no trouble with the
police In makin , a good living out of
green goods.
A baby carriage manufa.Wrer never
fails to push his business.
A, hairdresser, as a rule, does a
thriving business In combination locks.
A newspaper man rarely falls toget
his paper on the street.
An eleotriclan fs always posted oa
current toptcg„
A .;.. v ��
r..�rir!!!
rr�i1%f .::..� •��Italala�A ,,,sfoasssm;,e,sa
,/ •'�wneu.'t 01.11111111:111:N11" lir®
j H II�H G E—STAY FENCE`
II 'olWr 4. Thu Dlilon IIINU3 -ST.AY Pruni le
Lalli un the oonnuon•eouso phis. Fath No. 0 ,input
tri o In,e a tolIslle stro,,gtl, of twnntythren hundred
pound,,—ml Dlrrt• c.utros. golfed vitro. nm.
ti 0110,hdoW,' fru,—live a c •nln wautnd.
iJtl.�ia awe rt
WIRE FENCE CO.. LIMITED.
• • ,a..a r *saw Apr vtY ■ w
TOLD 0! TM TITURD.
'WONDERFUL ONDERFU FACTORY
COMPLICATED PI.toCESSES CAE -
DIED ON IN MA N'$ BO] Z
Fourteen Elements Coinatantly Occu-
pied in the Intricate Work
of the Physical Sys-
tem.
Lord Roberts doesn't smoke, towhee
wine but seldom, and risme at 1 )0
every morning, summer and legatee --
no matter how late he may have re-
tired.
Lord Sheffield is the proud posaeeaor
of a photograph of the Billington crick-
et club of Oxford, and among the team
1a King Edward, then an Oxford un-
dergraduate.
Princess Louise of Coburg is said to
have sold the manuscript of her "Mem•
oirs" to a Brussels editor for 4200,000,
and Leopold has ordered the police to
flna the editor and seize the book.
Baron de Forest is said to be con-
tbmplating the establiabment of an em-
pire in the Sahara desert, and carping
critics declare that the British govern-
ment will obtain a political advantage
by the process.
Lord Braasey offered to erect, se his
own expense, a large number of wood-
en cottages on the English model for
the sufferers by the recent Italian
earthquake. The offer wag accepted by
the government.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
tittle Liver Pills.
Must Seer Signature of
See pao•Siddter'Wrapper Beio*.
Talky .men. sad as easy
i&take as *ague
• FOR IltADACiIE.
RS FOR DIZZINESS.
fd $lUOu$MEt$.
FOR ;RAND LIVE! .
jl'DItwcONSTtPAtION
' ECA $ALLOW $KIN:
FOR THE COMPLEXION
fl i,. oma
00
CIUR& SICK HEADACHNo
You will probably he surprised, said
a well-known professor of chemistry,
when I tell you that the most beauti-
ful woman or the most intellectual
man that ever lived is really nothing
more than animated white of egg; and
yet it is perfectly true that, if you
only knew how to doit, you could take
a few hundreds of eggs—you would
want, well, over 1,000, by the way—
and manufacture a second Shakespeare
Or a Helen of Troy from them.
Unfortunately --or fortunately, rath-
er—although the materials of which
man is composed are common enough,
the blending of them to form a living
being is far beyond any human pow-
ers. But let us just run through the
constituents we are made of and see
of what very ordinary materials the
best and cleverest of us are composed.
If we take a 188 -pound man and de-
prlve him of gas and carbon there will
be only Ave pounds of him left; while
even the least oratorical man that ever
lived is live -sixths gas and hothjng
else. Well may it be said: "We are
sucb stuff as dreams are made of," for
truly we are just as.insubstantial.
In our subject we shall find no less
than 118 pounds of oxygen; he con-
tains as much, 1n fact, of this "vital
gas" as would All a room 13 feet long,
ten feet wide and a. shade over ten feet
high. If we proceed next to deprive
him of his hydrogen be will only lose
a little over 15 pounds of his weight
by the process, but the gas we procure
will fill a room more than twice the
size of our oxygen reservoir; for it
will be 15 feet square and as nearly
as possible 12 feet.bigh, and will have
such buoyancy that it could carry our
patient up to the clouds.
Another essential gas is nitrogen, of
which our man has 64 cubic feet
stowed away in his body --sufficient to
fill a nice little box four feet long, wide
and bigh. We have now deprived our
man of three of his'14 constituents;
have liberated gases sufficient to fill a
room, roughly, 20 feet square and ten
feet high—in which, by the way, you
could pack 500 good-sized men—and
have reduced his weight by 139 pounds.
There is not much left of him to ac-
count tor, you see, now that the three
rases are eliminated --only 29 pounds,
in_ fact, the weight of an infant—and
of this a single other constituent takes
the lion's share of 24 pounds. This
iconstituent is carbon, that curious ele-
i went which takes such widely diverse
forms as common coal and the Koh•i-
noor, and is not to be despised in the
lead pencil, Just as coal. keeps our
houses warm and gives motive power
to the steam engine, so it supplies
energy and fuel to the human body.
We have now only five pounds of
our man to account for, and this is
distributed over nine most useful con-
stituents. Two and a quarter pounds,
nearly half of it, consist of calcium,
which will be more commonly recog-
nized as lime, and which plays a very
important part in the human mechan-
ism; and to this we must add one
pound 14 ounces of phosphorus. The
remaining constituents of our man
only weigh one pound one ounce, and
consist of sodium, sulphur, fluorine,
chlorine, magnesium, potassium and
silicon; while in weight they range
from two to three grains to four and
one-half ounces.
Naturally, these 14. elements form
Combinations in the body in order to
discharge their duties properly. Thus
oxygen and hydrogen combine to form
in our subject 107.5 pounds of water,
which serves an infinite number of
most necessary and useful offices, The
chlorine and sodium unite to form
salt, of which we shall find about seven
ounces; and the sodium combines with
carbon and oxygen to form the "wash-
ing soda" which has been called the
scavenger of the body, and which fills
in its time by playing a useful part in
building up our bones.
The body is indeed a most wonder-
ful factory, carrying on a number of
useful and complicated processes at the
same time. Thus it makes really first-
class soap by the hundredweight for
its own use, and glycerin, too, as a by-
product; it manufactures sugar from
starch, and it makes gum, pepsin, al-
cohol and other products more wonder-
ful still.
The Shah's Attendants.
No European potentate has, when he
travels, so many attendants, officers and
adjutants with him as the shah of Per-
sia, who has recently been visiting Vi-
enna again. He is also accompanied by
two of his little Sons, to whom he pays'
a great deal of attention, listening Ir,
the parlor ear to their prattle with evi-
dent
vbdent delight. A Viennese journalist
says that were it not for the huge jewels
in his attire he would look more like a
Wallaehian shepherd than a shah. He is
short and rather stout, has sloping
shoulders and a body that looks as if it
might be made of tallow or cheese. Nis
countenance is thin, his features re-
Iaxed, his expression blase. Though he
seems almost like a caricature, there Is
something apathetic about hie appear-
ance,
Voracious Pike.
A female pike, 32 inches 15 length,
which was eaught en Barton Broad,
Norfolk, England, some time ago, when
opened was found to contain two roach,
measuring seven inches and four inch-
es long, respectively; two pieces ..of
Wire, each eight triches long; two steel
spanners, two keys, which were tied
together; a portion of a saw, a trag•
Went iron, and a /doe et I MOW Ir. B.
3
risitiStivi irittR yoi4 ikon, rtubl
fon gglr eb.z,R Qhr would tttt like l
iq rr l richer, tat yea► mit �m'i # all's 'V'igetable llieilieaat r
w.r. Times solid cowed frit
Hair ro Y l It „..,,,,, hair. Get it 1 ail . 1:
��rrnr . . * r,hLYei a4 titt,1 ai enprry1
iiII 601110.44k.
01 10.4 .k. X. P. N L sates.. a rl•rt . awi.
•r a wit irtaek. E. T.1LLLif, a o0,.2taYes,1 N m1
ti .
RESTORED 712454LAVY5ftweeer,
•//
i J MT A POL LAR Ni FD 132
PAID UNLESS CURED.
The New Method Treatment of 1)1,..
K, & K. has restored thousands of weak,
diseased men to robust manhood. No ,
spatter how miry doctors have failed to
cure you, give our treatment a fair trial
and. you will never regret it. We guar.
antee all cases we accept for treatment.
Not a doll; r ire<:•3 be paid finless cured
tor you can pay aft r you are cured.
Drs, X. & K. established 25 years.
We treat Varicocele, Nervous Debil-
ity, Stricture, Blood Diseases, Kidney.
Bladder and .Urinary Diseases. If un.
able. to call, write for Question Blank for
Hosie Treattnent. Consultation Free,
08S1 KENNEDY 8 KERDAN 141=
??' lch.iot„
•
Mat the GOLD DUST MBA, U .oar work/4w
SIMPLY
WONDERFUL
is the work which GOLD DUST 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, oil cloth, silverware and tinware, polishing brass work,
GOLD DUST cleansing bath room, pipes, etc., and making the finest soft soon.
blade by THE N. R. FA1RBANK COMPANY, Montreal, P. O,—Makers of FAIRY SOAP.
GOLD DUST makes hard water soft
BIG I. O. O. F.
EXCURSION
Saturday, August 11
Minerva Encampment, No, 47, I, 0. O. F., Wingham, have
arrangements with the Grand Trunk Railway System
to run a big Excursion to
completed
SA RNIA
Via HYDE !PARK
Froin the following pieces, on Saturday, .August llth, 1006, returning Monday
Angust 13th, at the following tow fares :
PLACE TI11IE FARE PLACE TIME PARE
Kincardine.. 5.40 A.M. 82.30 Belgrave ............ 6.,52 A.m. 81.85
Ripley ....... 5.55 2.10 Blyth ......... .... 7.06 1.75
Lncknow 0.10 2,05 Londesboro 7.14 1.65
Whitechurch..,..... 0.23 2,03 Clinton 7.47 L60
Wingham .... .... 6.40 2.05 BrucefieId 8.05 1.45
Winghani Junction., 6.43 JCippen 8.15 1.35
Children over 5 and under 12 years, Ralf Fare.
Returning, special train will leave Sarnia on Monday, August 13, at 10 pan.
Arrangements have also been made with the White Star
Line to convey passengers from Sarnia to
-DETROIT-
per magnificent Steamer rf Tashmoo," on Saturday, leaving
Sarnia 4.5o p.m., at the low return fare of 50 cents.
Tickets good returning on any White Star Line boat up to and
including 2.30 p.m. on Monday, August 13. This will afford
an excellent outing and an opportunity for excursionists to
spend Sunday in Detroit.
Everyone corse and enjoy a pleasant outing.
.011
ELLIOTT.
C 0iiltfl'PTBE
X. A, MO TON, J. DODTh