The Wingham Times, 1906-09-06, Page 3"is good tea"
Use a package and you will not be satisfied
with any other .tea.
Prices --25, 30l 35, 4o, 5o and 6o cts. per lb. in lead packets
T. 14. ESTAUROOKS. Sr. JOHN. N. B. WINNIPEG.
TORONTO. 3 W.LUN.TON ST„ E.
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
The only way to eradicate wrinkles is
by feeding the skin, which means a skin
food and daily massage across the lines
of conformation.
A jellow jaundiced oomplezion yields
to the olive oil treatment, a tablespoon-
ful of olive oil being taken every morn-
ing before breakfast.
When the skin is dry and Powder
scales upon it, apply a little gyicerine
and rose water before powdering, rub-
bing the lotion thoroughly into the skin;
powder before the skin is dry.
To keep the hair fluffy and free from
oil give it an egg shampoo every two
Weeks. The egg shampoo cannot pos-
sibly hart the hair; the eggs contain
sulphur and iron and ant as a tonic and
hair grower.
Either orange Sower water or rose-
water vs ill take the plane of elder flower
water n hen it la impossible to obtain the
latter.
1111311:111111ZIT'
Aram sm.
Vsli#iiiifii�saie;tua 1,1i11111/F11:.,J L1L�A�1AY FENCE'
•POINT a. Thu »Minh nI l -STAY nem to built
to 1aat. Svory ,,Ire h heavily g(ta�lvaulzed and tin
Wands are all 1116111 UA1tUUN. bard atcet. It ghee
no annoyaneo. illuetratod. Catalogue iron—siva
agents wanted.
r:Arla'staut �+r/\rftiW
WIRE r NCE IMITED.
E • • paras Ma co,,ir VS, a
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COAL COAL. COAL. •
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1 We are sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL, •
which has no equal. Also the best grades of Smithing, Cannel and
✓ Domestic Coal, and Wood of all kinds, always on hand. a
=
itaf LUMBER,SHINGLES LATH••
O (Dressed or Undressed) ';
40,
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Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
•
I CIF• Highest Price paid for all kinds of Logs. -In
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• J. A. McLean.
• Residence Phone No. 56. Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44.
4
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1906
Age cannot wither,
Icor custom stale, its infinite variety.
1906
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
11 TORONTO SEPT.I°
ONTARIO
Larger, more instructive and mare entertaining than ever
UNEQUALLEDAN ARTHOBIT
RSE AND CATTLE EXHIBIT
POULTRY AND PET STOOK EXHIBIT
Magnificent Educational Exhibit Of Processes of Manufacture
in new $100,000 Building.
The finest programme of amusements ever presented, including
"IVANHOE," with expert TILTERS
brought expressly from England.
HIS MAJESTY'S HOUSEHOLD BAND OF THE LIFE GUARDS
will play twine 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 webk.
For all information apply to
LIEuT.•COL. J. A. MOGILLIVRAY, B.O., J, O. ORR,
President. Manager and Secretary,
City Hall, Toronto.
++++4++++++++++++++++++++
astern
The Exhibition That Made
Fail Fairs Famous.
An ideal occasion for '1 t'
a fame outing.
.
3' b"
Daily ascensions of a navigable airship, always
control. The most wonderful invention of the age.
Royal Venetian Band, the most celebrated lruropean 'musical
I organization, under the great leader, Victor, will give concerts daily.
Fireworks on a more magnificent and imposing scale, picturing
the great Carnival of Venice,
i•
air
under perfect
Many splendid educational features for the boys and girls.
For information write W. J. B'LID, President.
A. M. IXUNT, Secretary,
L II 0 N
Sept, 7 -16, 1906
THE WINGEAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER 6 ii 6
THE CAPITAL METALS
ZION A,1XD corns nZPoSns
m..z laE ZVSTEo,
The World's Store of (told Is Xalcreer•
Lug So Rapidly That It May;
IL- Lose Zta Pace as Stand.,
and of Value.
1 Of the metals two are eariiinal in im-
portance, iron and copper. The rest may
be of great utility, but they are not ab-
solutely necessary to civilization and
do not materially affect its course,
writes Prof, N, S. Shaler, of Harvard
university, In the International Quar-
terly. The "mainstays of our existing
civilization among the metals are iron
and coppefi"
Now, how about the supply? In Eu-
rope the deposits of minable iron ores,
"long in service, are beginning to be ex-
hausted," "Great Britain has practical•
17 consumed its store," and now prae•
tically all the supply for its furnaces is
Imported. The Mediterranean supply,
Prof. Shaler computes, cannot last for
many decades to come. The ore beds of
Central Europe are "not likely to meet
the demands of a hundred yeara.':,.Ex-
tensive deposits of rich ores in Scandi-
navia and in Belgium and France have
hardly begun to be drawn on yet at any-
thing like the present rate of increase
in the consumption of metallic iron.
Prof. Shaler estimates that even with
these the European sources of supply
will not hold out for a century,
in this country the conditions for a
long continuance of iron production are
more promising, and the "best placed
field" for it in North America or in the
world, save northern China, is "the cen•
tral section of the Mississippi valley,
mainly between the great river and the
Appalachian system of mountains and
northward beyond the great lakes to tlit
keadwaters of the streams flowing intc
Hudson bay;" yet "it is a question;" it
even this store will supply the demands
of the future, and "it is in a high meas•
ure improbable that within the United
States any new fields of notable value re.
Main to he discovered," in addition to
those which have been known for 34
years and more.
The only other known field in the oth•
er continents than Europe and America
is in China, "under conditions of climate
and of labor which promise a cheaper
product than has' been obtained in an/
other district;" and it is this condition
which to Prof. Shaler's mind gives to the
2apanese-Russian war its greatest im-
portance to the world, for on the control
of these resources "depends in large
measure the economic mastery of the
Pacific ocean." He computes that the
deposits other than those of China
which can produce iron at the present
low labor cost "will almost certainly be
exhausted within 100 years."
What will become of civilization
without iron and popper? There may
succeed an `'aluminum age," which-w+j•,
NATURAL CALIFORNIA DIKE.
Strange Volcanic Formation Along
the Course of the Fail
River.
Nature is full of strange freaks,
and her agents—rains, storms, winds
and even dust—produce results that
might often bo mistaken for the works
of human hands, tbough frequently
on a colossal scale.
Volcanic activities are mighty fac-
tors, and through them some wonder -
phenomena are wrought. One of
these may be seen along the course
of Fall river, in northern California,
says the American Inventor. This
stream is of considerable size, and
the work of nature's gigantic forces
may be seen between the upper and
lower cascades of the river.
It is what might properly be called
a "volcanic dike." This dike extends
for some distance along the river,
near its banks and nearly parallel
to the course. It bears close resemb-
lance to a roughly constructed wall.
The top of this dike is very rugged
and the height of carrying altitudes,
In some places it is twenty feet high
and several feet in thickness, and
again may be easily clambered over.
The rock of which this wall of na-
ture is Composed is of a very porous
character, bearing some resemblance
to pumicestone, though much more
solid and of greater specific gravity.
The entire region is of volcanic
origin and evidently was once the
scene of great eruptive activity.
Scoria and lava abound, though the
face of the country is now thickly clad
with timber and brush, The dike
begins and ends abruptly.
The wall of the dike Is evidently
the result of volcanic forces, and has
not doubt stood for many centuries.
It stands clear from clinging rocks,
has a narrow foundation, with verti-
cal walls, and is very straight. The
mystery is what forces of nature could
have piled up or left standing this
rock formation
sanitortn,
u This dike
has puzzled not a few geologists who
have visited and examined it.
Dandelion Butter.
Constimers of butter at Springfield,
Mass„ who have recently noticed the
unwonted golden hue of the article,
are puzzled over one dealer's state-
ment that ati unusual crop of dande-
lions in Vermont and western Massa,
ebusetts Is responsible for it, and the
explanation of a less poetic 'dealer that
it is probably due to d greater; use of
coloring matter by the dairyman, •
Nothing But Board.
Police Magietrt.te--'The Rddreal 'yos
gave is a lumber yard.
The ldobo'•Yes, yes Motto!. bat's
where I beards, et- 'Chiesgo OM,
wt4...4,4.. ...,,. sa
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
lien u no
Carte is
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of ,
See Fac-Slglne Wrapper Below.
Teal email wail es easy
��ff Sin take as sasses
V111ITE. iv FOR Di i tat
ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS,
IVER FOR TORPID LIVER.
P I �LS
► . FON CONSTIPATION
FOS SALLOW SKIN.
FOR TilECOMPLEXIbt!
' ear., V.riVPe Num? NAVC. NAT,.
212,716 I g'urel7'vegetatie. G.. ..,06
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
A Modern Father.
(Pack.)
A worm will turn, Though not a warm,
I've turned, and turned I'll stay.
No clothes to wear! It's always so—
November, March or May.
I never thought that I was meek,
In fact, I hear them say
Down at the office: "Look out sharp,
The boas is hot to -day."
Bat here at home it matters not
If I wax hot or cold,
When coata and shirts and ties are gone
It does no good to scold.
It's nice to have a healthy wife
And girls so tall and strong,
But this athletic fad's the worst;
It's lasted much too long.
My neglige shirts Ethel wears
To school and to the "gym";
And Helen has my soft felt hat,
The one with slouching brim.
Virginia's worn my raincoat off,
01 Caps I am bereft;
I need a walk for exeroiss—
My sweater's all that's left!
The time has come to call a halt,
They've worked me long enough;
I'll treat them like I do my clerks—
With language strong and rough.
Who's there? Yes, yes, wife! Come
right in.
You'd like to golf, you say?
You'll want this sweater and my shoes—
I'lI change them right away!
MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED
Kingston Man tells how he Suffered
and How he was Released.
"For years a mar-
tyr," is how Chas.
H, Powell, of 105
Raglan Street, King-
ston, begins his story.
"A martyr to chronic
constipation, b u t
now I am free from it
and all through the
use of Dr. Leon-
Ontas. H. POWELL hardt's Anti -Pill."
Many who are now suffering from
this complaint will be glad to learn from
Mr. Powell's story that there is hope for
the most stubborn case, He continues:
"I was induced to try Anti -Pill by read-
ing the testimony of some one who had
been oared of constipation by it. I had
suffered for eighteen years and had
taken tons of stuff recommended as
cures but which made me worse rather
than better. Dootore told me there was
no care for me."
Dr. Leonhardt's Anti -Pill is for sale
by all druggists or by The Wilson Pyle
Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont.
Mr. Powell will verity every word of
these sta ements.
Fort William was visited by a terrific
hail and wind storm. The new high
school building was torn down and
much other damage done,
3 ..
A Baker's Triumph
`rhe Mooney cannot
-produce anythin }, better than • -
ioone ,'s Perfection
Creat Sodas
The very best at' flour, butter
and cream — the most tnodern
plant, the very best baker in
Canada. A biscuit superior to:-
any other you have ever tasted.
Say "Mobney's" to your gamer.
Tiling g CRAVE$ O L01/WON
Most ;interesting Tomb. o no around
111 " utast Wei*" of moisters at
Weetzuinster Abby.
In the "eat walk•' Df the doh",
tern at Weutminater Abbey there
are three moat interesting graves,
thou of Thomas I3etterton and
his wife, better known as 'yeah
$aunderson, and the ever -fascin-
ating Mi•a, Braeegirdki. Of all the
people who lie withf those hal-
lowed sails, it may eetfely be said
that Betterton has the best claim
of all to this privilege. No small
measure of praise most be accord-
ed to this gifted actor for the fact
that he almost more than anyone
else was responsible for the resup•
citation of the linglish drama
attar the a tern regime of the Puri-
tans. Mrs. Bre girdle was
either adopted by Betterton or
placed under hi., cae'fi,ltnd she very
aeon took all liearis in London by
storm. She achieved her greatest
successin acting its Oona-reve's
plays. Her artistic tamer, how-
ever, was a comparatively short
ono, for Mrs. Braoegifrdle retired
from the stage in dudgeon when
Anne Oldfield first became per
dangerous rival. Me lived on in
honorable retirement, and be-
loved by all, high and low, far and
near, until the year 1748, when she
was buried here beside her old
friends the Bettertons.
C'BVILIZATIQN NEEDS BOTH.
Dreamers and Practical lien 11;s at -
•gasi tree in the World Ts-Dgy
—good That They Do.
Said a shrewd observer of leen
and things : "The practical, bus-
tling man of to -day is very apt to
think that all the progress of the
world is due to him and his kind.
"Yet if there had been none but
practical men among the earliest
savages, civilization would have
made very slow progress. The
merely practical savages would
have gone on catching fish and
hunting wild animals in the old
way. It was the dreamers among
thein who thought out the canoe
and the bow and arrow, and so by
degrees the sailing ship and
the gun.
"All the inventions came from
the dreamer, the practical men
merely carrying out and utilizing
bis ideas.
/OThe dreamers among men gave
us the arts and the sciences. But
too often they are misjudged, for
im is hard for a man of action to re-
alise that his reflective brother
Gan be at work in as real a sense as
he himself is, and that the study
and the laboratory are at least as
important as the workshop and
the factory."
An Extremist. -
"Mrs. Brown is so philanthrop-
ic! She loves to give things array."
"But she goes too far. She givea
peopia swag' -- Detroit Free
Pres&
reinter sr a Shtourelihg Towwrg.ter
akY.w. Plus t■ fonsetIsswell of
is D$Plwtnat.
"What shall we do for the baby?"
was often asked in a certain West
side household recently. And cer-
tainly the baby needed something. It
was pale and puny and seemed half-
starved. The child was at the inter-
mediary age when its natural food
Was insufficient, and still it was too
young for beefsteak and potatoes,
says the Chicago Inter Ocean.
"Thechild must have somo baby
food," said the mother.
"Yes," sand the father, "he could
have it if I were rieh. It would cost
$a a week at least to supply him With
baby food, and I get only $10 a
week."
"But you are not going to let him
starve?" she returned.
"No, I will manage to get it," ha
said, "I1 you will press my suit,
dear, I will try to get some food to.
morrow,"
"What has the suit to do with it?"
she asked.
"You will see," he said,.
So next day the father of the starv-
ing young one went down town. Ire
wore his Sunday suit that had done
service for two yearn. When he en-
tered one of the big drug store•a he
looked to be worth at least $5,000 a
year. To a Clerk he said:
"I ealled to sec about baby foods.
Our child is in treed of some auxiliary
but I not know what
nourishment,u dow
to get for him. My wife says our
cook told the second girl that you
might probably furnish us with soma
s;tinples of the various kinds of
foods you earry in stock. If you can
do that we will try them and then I
can order a supply of the kind that
best agrees with the a'hild,"
"Certainly," said the clerk, and a
package containing samples of seven
kinds of baby food was forthcoming.
The quantity was *sufficient to heft a
Month. When the supply Is exhaust-
ed he will go to another drug 'store
end telt the clerk wliat•tbe cook 'tdttf
the sechltid B"iri, y
"Arm your aoitols tottul r .tile
Th e c
'wows that A ly *ego els tbs
�%�% bow•ltt is itaitalittfsiy +astlaaesttlil;l 40
btrsitb. T ea keep your i'YCZ'*ndYC
+ ► s i s aWe your i1alt�pls zerular a ><a �
small laxative dares.Of Ayres Pitts.
ws`.t..> surest .Wo r.•. o..,
o.
r.r
W'ILllt Om SOLD DUST TWINS e your work°
•
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.
COLD DUST tioeheing bath ronin, pipes, etc., and making the finest soft soap.
Made by THE N. IG FAIRBANK COMPANY, Montreal, P. 0.—Makars of FAIRY SOAP. `f
COLD DUST makes bard water set
ii
AAAMMAAMMAAAAMMAAAAA VVVWIVVVVVWrVyMVW/MVWIW
Lehigh Valley Goal
Come with the crowd and leave your order
,,„:4-'"" for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from
dirt and clinkers It has no equal.
�i
,T. u pirS 1
ww/,MI1e/41AAI V1/eANM/1.vr4le
se/•gg•••••e•01100S+it,yasrr119sas
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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 application.
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
intormation—to ca
o write r call—it �
it win
1
place you under no obligation, and
perhaps we may suggest something you
can profit by. Prices right. Quality
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ever the talisman.
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TheW!nghaniTimes
W TNG?I Ani, ONT:utit).
114,460,046.0114.0.1.4140•1106$14.4144 1041.4010.11.4***0141,644101
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