HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-08-30, Page 3"is good tea"
3ust notice the color --a rich amber, which
is always a token of quality.
Sold by the best grocers in Canada
T. H. ESTARROOK$, sr. JOHN, N. B. WINNIPZG..
TORONTO. ; Wat.unaton ST.. E.
A mean man usually rejoices because
of his meanness.
TEIORI111.1.1 DIS1BESSI1SG,
Nothing oan cause more pain and more
distress than Piles.
No wonder many Pile fingerers say
their lives are burdens to them.
Ointments and local treatments may
relieve but cannot ogre,
Dr, Leonhardt'a Hem•Roid is • guaran-
teed to cure any case of Piles.
If Hem-Roid doen't cure you, you get
your money back.
Hein -Reid is a tablet taken internally,
thus removing the cause.
$1,000.00 guarantee goes with every
bottle.
A month's treatment for $1,00 at all
druggists, or the Wilson -Pyle Co.,
Limited Niagara Falls, Ont.
•
To grease a griddle out a small white
turnip in half and rub the griddle with
it. It causes no smoke, smell, taste or
adhesion and will be found better than
butter or grease. •
Keep the cake griddle in good condi-
tion by the vigorous use of sandpaper
occasionally, Being very little grease for
frying the cakes.
Water should never be put on gilt
frames. They should be wiped with dry
cloth or chamois. This applies to all
metal and lacquered goods..
Kissing may be dangerous, but we are
not a race of cowards.
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COAL COAL COAL.
4'
We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL,
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Domeetio Coal, and Wood of all kinds, always On hand.
• Wll stook of
ecarrya LUMBER SHINGLES, LATH
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• Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
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!P,
pin
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• Residence Phone No. 55. Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44.
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1906
Age cannot wither,
Nor custom stale, its infinite variety.
1906
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
^06" TORONTO SFPCIO
ONTARIO'
larger, more instructive and more entertaining than ever
AN UNEQUALLED ART
THORSE ND a1T
ATTLE EXHIBIT
POULTRY AND PET STOOK EXHIBIT
Magnifieent Educational Exhibit of Processes of Manufacture
in new $100,000 Building.
The finest programme of amusements ever presented, including
"IVAN.HOE," with expert TILTERS
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
LIEUT,-COL. J. A. MCGILLIVRAY, K.0,,, J. O. ORR,
. President. Manager and Secretary,
City Hall, Toronto.
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estern
IAn ideal occasion for a family outing.
Daily ascensions of a navigable airship, always
'♦ control. The most Wonderful invention of the age.
The Exhibition That I'fade
Fall Pairs Famous.
air
r
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Z
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under perfeet I
;Z
Royal Venetian Band, the most celebrated European musical $
4 organization, ander the great leader, Victor, will give concerts daily.
t?ireworks on a more magnificent and imposing scale, picturing 3
Many splendid.edtteational features for the boys and girls.
W. ,T. REID President.
For information write 1 A. M. BUNTI,
, Secretary.
Z
the great Carnival of Venice.
L OND ON
S9/ftr 7 ar 15, 1900
THE WINGRAM • IMES, AUGUST
THE BEAUTIFUL WOMEN
(Chicago Tribune?
One woman went; out ea the way of
shame
And the wide ner1d marveled and read
her name
And praised her beauty, and gaped and
cheered,
When, light and fluttering, she appeared,
But one little woman, in hodden gray,
When Out to the Buffering night and day
And never for her tho trump of fame
And never a cheer as alta went or came.
One woman went out on the path of lies,
And the whole world praised her lnatr•
one eyes,
And paused and listened when she would
epeak,
Aud marked the roses that graced her
cheek.
But one little women, in dingy blank,
Went down where' the weary were on
the rack,
And carried the woes of the sad and Ione
And comforted many -and was unknown.
One woman Set foot on the road of
wrOnQ,
They blazoned her deeds in a joyous
song
That told of her daring, her charm and
wit,
And the world went humming and sing-
ing it.
But one littie woman, in homely gown,
Went Reeking for sorrow about the town,
And smiles name to gladden where she
found tears,
But never for her were the thrilling
cheers.
But somewhere the record is fairly kept,
Unless at Ws task the angel slept,
And doubtless there, when the warder
reads
The beautiful tale of the golden deeds,
In shining letters will stand eaoh
Of thee° little women who had no fame,
But who went patiently day by day
To do their work in the Master's way.
And further than all of the outmost suns
Will ring the names of the Beautiful
Oues.
(fold On The Lungs
"We have seven children and have
used Dr Chase's Syrup of Linseed and
Turpentine for every one of them and
with good results. We get four bottles
at a time and find it a good remedy to
break up cold on the lungs."—Mrs R D
Turner, Broadview, N. W. T.
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
The frequency of shampooing must be
regulated to a certain extent by the
character of the hair and to the sort of
atmosphere to which it is exposed, Very
oily hair should be washed every fort.
night. The same thing may be said of
hair that is filled with dandruff, In
some oases a weekly cleaning is neces-
sary. When eggs are used there is no
possible chance of any harm being done.
Eggs 'themselves are a tonic to the
growth.
For scented bags take a quarter of a
pound of coriander seeds, a quarter of a
pound of orris root, a quarter of a pound
of domask rose leaves, two, ounces of
lavender blossoms, half an ounce of
mace, half an ounce of cinnamon, a
quarter of an ounce of cloves and two
drams of musk powder. Beat them all
separatly in a mortar, and then mix
them well together. Make small silk or
satin bags and fill each with a por-
tion of the mixture, sewing them up
tightly.
Mad A .Rad Leg.
"For twelve years I was a great enf-
ferer from ecaema on the inside of the
leg. There was a raw patoh of flesh
about three inches egnare, and the itch-
ing was something fearful. Dr Chase's
Ointment completely cured me, took
away the itching and healed up the sore."
Mr Alex McDougall, Postmaster, Broad
Cove Marsh, N. S.
Take Plenty of Sleep
The papers read in the physiological
section of the British Association for the
Advancement of Science discussing Bleep
and rest were all opposed to the old idea
that mankind should be content with
short slumber. The Duke of Welling-
ton's dictum of six hours for a man,
seven for a woman and eight for a fool
went by the board.
Francis Dyke Arland urged the neees-
bits for plenty of sleep for the young as
necessary to their bodily and mental de-
velopment. He said that most of a boy's
growth was done in bed. He quoted a
letter from the head master of a Iarge
school, where the breakfast hour had
been changed from 7 to 8 o'clock, as say
ing that the whole school wad brighter
and doing better work.
Dr. Gotoh said that the healthiest sleep
was dreamless. He mentioned Lord
Kitchener's faeulty of being able to go
into dreainlees sleep at any moment.
Prof. Lewis said the normal sleep Of a
laboring man during the first half hour
was very deep, and then grew shallower.
Prot. Meyers related hie own experis
enoe with a German doctor. He arrang-
ed t0 be awakened after a half hour to
see what hie mental condition was. He
set himself Several problems in arithme-
tic. The next day he was awakened
after tin hour's Bleep, and so on, inoreas.
ing his time for sleep by an hour a day
until be got six hours. Ile found his
ability in connection with arithmetic as
great after an hour's sleep as after mix
hours. When, however, he Dame to try
another test this one. completely broke
down. In trying to test h s memory he
found it grew In proportioti to the num-
bet of holm of sle.p he kolas
ABSOLUTE
:SECURiTY,
Qenuina
Carter's
Little Liver Pills..
Must Boar Signature of
See Pao -Simile Wrapper Below.
Year email A:'t4 A3 alt97
pptoBBtako as velem..
rnr"th
C1014TE Mil 0171.1111,t1
IT= FOR RILIOIIVIEtS.
1VER FORTORPID LIVER.
PILLS, FOR C0i1 'fli'M'I!f
FOR SItd.? °iw sitz#d.
FO TEb6.l?LEXIO!!
SS7.^1�u.RNdS MVV AV NATU�L.
dent,) ('grapy vereta co. ;..,sem -0o4,
CURE SICK HEADAGHEI
HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE
Soiled Hands—To clean much -soiled.
hands, do not go to work roughly with
brush and sodawater, but loosen the dirt
by rubbing the hands well with sweet
oil, or even lard or dripping. Then wipe,__
off the grease as muoh as possible with a
piece of soft paper or old rag, and wash
the bands with warm water and soap.
They will soon be Olean when treated
thus, and without damaging the skin.
To clean bottles or glass jars, cut a
small potato into dice and shake in the
bottle or jar half -Sited with cold water.
.pp::F
1�H��ne•t memom aataaiv i1■■
r..�-arriairom••r�rirrl ig,.
/�a Ila,L®i
a
INGE-STAY FENCE
POINT P. With onllnary mro the Dillon NINON.
I
STAY Tonto will last a Iituthno. Thousands menus
ushu•lt. Stays do not ail, or bond when top wires
aro Iieraa °town. Illustrated Catalogue (mu —NY* s
agents wanted. .
WIRE PENCE CO., LIMITED.
s■ 1.1V1Plilli_11 SSA_ 1i
rhlrA 44110, der willo4 1
For Some Subscribers.
Once upon a time a man went down
to his front gate one morning and stop-
ped the milkman, "Say," he called, et
want you to leave milk here after this.
How much is it a quart?" "Five cents,"
responded the milk man. "Well, here
is thirty-five cents. That will pay for a
week." And that worthy citizen went
in to bis breakfast. For all that week
the milkman faithfully left the milk on
the door -step each morning, and after
the week was np he continued to leave it
and the citizen continued to take it in-
side every morning, and use it. Things
went on this way for a year, and finally
the milkman presented a bill for milk
for fifty-one weeks. "But, I only order.
ed milk of you for one weak. You
should have stopped when the time was
np," Bald the citizen. "Have you not
received theymilk each morning, and
used it?" asked the milkman. "Yes,
but I throught you was giving it to me,"
said the citizen: "You're blamed fool, or
else you are a terrible liar," replied the
quick tempered milkman. "And if you
don't pay for that milk I will have the
law on you. The man paid up. Should
yon ask us the name of this protesting
oitizen, we can only tell you that it is
the same man that took the local paper
for seven years, and then refused to pay
for it, because he had only paid for a
year when he subscribed, and olaimcd
he thought that the publisher was giving
it to him.
M 00
t41., SOti3
e„.. l?MOONEY 6ISCUIT ei CANDY CC
STRiTr3t0 CAN :9A
Food
Value
Mooney's Perfedion Cream
Sodas are wisp squares
of wholesome nourishment.
They are the food that
builds strength arld muscle.
They. are r, s clay digested
by the child and invalid
as by theworkman
They contaitll1.. tke food
pt'operties of incest C na.
than vv.hg4f Bowe in sk form
that deFeihte the appetite
Ai voirfra#1t And trio in
the nioi3it11'e; jll"bc( paekages.
.+,e ad 'trAars in 1 mad
30 1906
tin DESERT WEST.
TERM MEAT Na zonoiat AP1'141E$
WITH TRUTHFULNESS.
4 Mistaken Impression :liegarding
Fruitful Country Given by,.
Word on. Old French
Maps..
In these days when the St. Louis ex-
position has awakened and the Lewia
and Clark exposition has greatly slime
elated interest in the great west, and
when at the same time we are reading of
the vast crops that are being raised in
the west and of the work that is being
done in irrigation, it is interesting to
look back at the opinion of the west that
was held by a previous generation and
analyze that feeling, writes Charles
Woodward Lamb.
For a long time the west was known
as a desert and it was so described in
many books, both educational and fic-
tion. This was especially true of
books published in England, and it is to
be remembered that for many yeiirs
English works held the precedence in
this country, and official reports that
told more of the truth were neglected.
It is only 25 years ago that English
works describing the west as a desert
waste were popular and much read in
that part of the west east of the Missis-
sippi as well as in the east, As late as
when Minnesota was admitted into the
Union, in the fifties, a United States
senator opposed its admission, saying
It was a desert waste with an arctic cli-
mate and could never support an Amer-
ican population, and when he was told
that residents of the state and federal
officers reported differently he quoted
English books that in turn had quoted
French writers, and declared that Amer-
icans were prejudiced.
Now it is a strange thing that
the translation of a simple • word
should affect popular opinion re-
garding one of the earth's great-
est empires, but that is just what
caused this misunderstanding the lit-
tle word desert. On all of the old French
maps, and it was the French who first
explored this great west, the unknown
places were marked "Desert," gener-
ally with the picture of a griffin or other
fabulous beast beside the word. With-
out much of an understanding of the
meaning of the word the early English
publishers copied these old French maps
and the people used them and in-
terpreted the word according to the
English understanding, so that all the
English-speaking world came to believe
that the greater part of the American
continent was a hopeless waste instead
of merely a wilderness, new and unex-
plored, which is what the word, as used
by the French, really meant,
It is from the use of this word in the
(sense of an unexplored wilderness that
we have gathered the word desert as
1 used on many western towns, moun-
1 tains and lakes to -day, such as the beau-
tiful Lake of the View of the Desert, in
northern Wisconsin, a lake first ex-
plored by the French and given the name
because of its location between the wild
hIlis and pine forests, The two or
three mountains that bear the name also
have received it from this same source,
as well as several towns.
A. little intelligence leaveneth the
mass of ignorance and a little ignorance
does some funny things to a whole lot
of intelligence.
Risks in Australia.
An explorer in the back woods of Aus-
tralia tells how some timber cutters
took big risks. "1 had given Instructions
to the men in the bush that on no ac-
count were they to lay aside the fire-
arms," he says. "After having been ab-
sent for a short time I returned and
found that they had stung their revolv-
ers and carbines on a small tree and
were working at about 50 yards from
them. I can tell you they heard of it.
The natives have a playful habit of
dragging their spears through the grass
with their toes and all the while looking
as innocent as it is possible for them to
look. If the natives had only thought
of it they might have given tlie cutters a
warm time."—N. Y. Globe.
Great Revival of Buddhism.
"Der Buddhist," the German organ
of Buddhism, gives an interesting ac-
count of the revival of this ancient re-
ligion. The study of the Pali, it says
has revealed to educated men in the
western world the .hidden stores of
Buddhism, which soon began to exert
a constantly growing influence on
western thought, having found the
ground prepared by the philosophy of
Schopenhauer. This revivification .01
Buddhist ideas reacted powerfully on
the orient. and newly founded socie-
ties, schools and newspapers in Budd-
hist Asia are proving that fresh vigor
has found its way into the old tree.
The revival is especially noticeable in
Ceylon and India.
Swimming, in the Rain.
"Whoop! It's rainin'," This was the
cry that burst from nearly every boy at
the public bath one day lately, as the
rain poured down on the wet heads of
the swimmers. "There seems to be a
great charm in swimming In the rain,"
said William Long, life saver at the
bath. "One kid whose half-hour had
expired said: 'I hate like the dickens
to go out While its rainin'. It gives you
such a nice, smooth kind of prickly feel-
ing. It scams to be a shower bath and
a tub bath combined. When there are
boys in the pool while its raining you
seldom sew them swimming or diving.
They just float around lazily and let the
rain pound on their heads.—Itansas
,City Star. .
` His Regret.
l oaseketper—I regret to say, sir, that
your eon and the cook have eloped.
Rich Old Lady—'Thunderation! 'Then
we shan't Itaye anj dittttert—Ohicago
" worms a1
Bard a. t eial.a'ryto b t g,
Loni : i '
laxaxiant Bair. 'Dira't ext t ThOtlk
Lusa news Vsgetabie is3eiliast Ira,* -
p►newer. T'Ou. slate what hulls'
_your _air Forth a wh whiskers s arm( ei>, Hama O
Far the sd kirk ..i at titt,0i1R tri MOO
it
17IICIUNARAM' 11511. e.t.r, a r1s b y
wpm or . loft Wm*.il". r•. it ►1.L • CO.. ly sr Mali.: N.
inapt
•yids GOLD DUST maw do "furworn*
N
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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
OTBER GENERAL Scrubbing floors,vrashing clothes and dishes. cleaning wood.
USES FOR work, oil cloth. silverware and tinware. polishing brass work.
COLD DUST cleansing bath room, pipes, etc„ and making the finest soft soap.
Made by THE N. R. FR1REANK COMPANY, Montreal, P. O.—Makers of FAIRY SOAP.
GOLD DUST makes Bard water sari •
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AAA/OAA,AIAAf WAW A.wAAAAA VVVVVVVVVVWVVYvYvvvYWWW
Lehigh Valley Goal
Come with the crowd and leave your order
for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from }
dirt and clinkers It has no equal.
')T_ ID _ u S
••+N►MAAAMMMMnnnnnnnnnr► t/yyVVVVVVV VVVVVVVIVNIVVVVV,
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An!AdverIisBmeot in
11 THE TIMES
Brings[Caad Results
erg 'The Wingham Times reaches
the homes of most of the people of
Wingham and surrounding country. It
keeps its subscribers posted on all the
news of the day—local, political and
foreign.
If you have anything to sell, or
want anything, advertise in The Times.
Rates on aoplieation.
We. Think Printing
That's our business. We are
constantly on the lookout for new ideas,
and these are here awaiting your accept-
ance. It's no trouble for us to give you
information --to write or call—it will
place you under no obligation, and
perhaps we may suggest something you
can profit by. Prices right, Quality
ever the talisman.
The Winghaffl Times
WINGIIADI, ONTARIO.
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ris$4.0.101110011$4100$0144041,14 1110,11600011141$11011.11010.0.111000