HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-11-15, Page 3"is good tea"
Always exactly the same quality
Those who have used it for years
are the ones who give it the name
of " good tea."
T. H. E3TAs'OOKS. Sr. JOHN. N. B. WINNIPEG.
TORONTO,o Witur GTON S7., E.
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Gems of thoughts.
The beauty of nature ie simply that of
obedience,
Sin is an int:nder, and not a tenant in
the heart.
They do the best for; nen who see the
best in men. as
The cure for poverty must come at the
point of character.
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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.
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full stook of
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There is no such thing as a scientific
religion without service.
DR. A. W. CHASE'S 25
CATARRH CURE ... 0.
is sent direct to, the diseased
b
parts y the Improved Blower.
Heals the ulcers, clears the air
passages, stops droppings in th.R
throat and permanently ourea'
Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower
free. All dealers, or Dr. A, W. Chase
Medicine Co.. Toronto and Buffalo.
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COAL COAL COAL.
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(Dir.pealylig, SHINGLES, LATH
Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.• •
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Highest Price paid for all kinds of Logs. -ima
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Jo A. fV1cLean1 ••
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Residence Phone No. 55. Ofllce, No. 64. Mill, No. 44.
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All depends on the tuition you receive in a college
whether you will make a success of business life. If your
teacher allows you to depend on other students and
look in the back of the book for answers, your course
will be a failure. There are no answers given in OUR
books—we teach you to stand alone. You need no sup -
,port, so that when you start life in earnest
you have that confidence in yourself so
essential to a business man. We have the
reputation of giving a thorough and effi-
cient training in both our Business and
Shorthand departments.
Booklet free. School term': Sept. till June,
inclusive, Students may enter at any time.
Forest City Business College
J. W. WESTERVELT, Y. M. C. A. Bldg.,
Principal. LONDON.
,34011ort®met 1213gal:to IESSIgiS 01116:2994324itto
"Let the GOLD DUST T f ales a 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 -001 leave
only brightness behind. Oet acquainted with
Gold bus! Washing Pourde"
OWER GENERAL I Scrubbing Mears, washing clothes and dishes, chants* wood.
work;
USES FOR rass
COLD DUST aleansing bath room, pipes, oto,, and Makin/ polishing' bog the time 'sQIt soap.
Work, MI cloth, silverware and tinware
Made by THE N. ft, FAIitSXNIC COMPANY; Montreal, P. Q,. -Makers Of FAIRY SOAP,
001.13 OU$T makes bard Water soft a
iiimmorriormilloolgionse
THE W1NG-11AM. TIMES, NOVEMBER ,5 1”116
TO -PAY'S THEOPHANY.
J. LOVELL MURRAY
No more Shekinali sheds its radiant
sheen,
The fiery pillar,too,has ceased to blaze,
The Christ no longer walks our mortal
ways;
We see not thus Jehovah, the Ubaeen.
I ask no vision in the startled night,
I ask no awful portent. But I pray :
"Clive me to see Thee, Lord, frons.day
to day,
And find on plain events Thy aaored light.
"Oh give me es es,that lathe daily round
Of life's dull, weary toil I may disoern
Thy presence; and may gladly learn
That every place of work is holy ground.
"That seeing Thee in this, I may fulfil
My meed of labor, whatso'er it be,
With eager heart and ready hand—for
Thee,
And give the meanest task my ohiefest
Skill,
"And, may I see Thee in the humble guise
Of want,of tears,of sad eyed loneliness,
Of loveunloved, of bitter hopelessness,
Of darkened regions where the heathen
lies.
"So in these needs may I Thy presence
see;
And through my brethren, make my
life to touch •
Thy Life Divine, and know that inas-
muoh
As I do serve them I am serving Thee.
"Let no behold Thee in the lives of men
Self -mastered, poised and quiet in the
strife,
Alert to serve, equipped for death or
life,—
As though in these the Master walked
again.
"In joyous ways, 0 Lord, I would Thee
• see
In sorrow's sup would find Thy mirror-
ed face,
That flow'ring meadows and the desert
place
Alike may bring a true Theophany."
Gained ::n Pounds.
"I was muoh run down in health,
Gould not sleep, was very nervous, and
so weak that I Gould hardly get around.
Some mouths ago I began using Dr. I
Chase's Nerve Food, and to -day I am
pleased to have gained over twenty-five
pounds in weight, sleep well and feel
strong and healthy." -Miss Ani'ie Evan,
39 Gottingen St , Halifax, N. S. ..--
WHAT IS SUCCESIS?
r
What is success? To gain a share of
gold2
To have one's wealth in envious accents
told?
To see one's picture flaunted in the
press?
Ah, there be those who label these sue:
ces
What is snooess? To win a little fame?
To hear a fickle world applaud your
name?
To be accounted as a genius? Yes,
And there be those who label this sno.
0088,
Bat have we not another standard still
To judge a man of character and will?
Ara gold and fame the only measures
tried?
In all the world is there no test beside ?
Ah, yes. The man who meets, with
courage grim,
The daily duties that devolve on him,
The petty, mean, heart-breakicg cares
that tire
Tho patient soul that never may aspire
Howev'er su cramped the field wherein
he works,
He has not failed—the man who never
shirks,
The man who toils for years without a
break,
And treads the path of pain for others
sake.
There are a myritid of snoh men to day
Who, all unnoted, walk the dolorous
way—
Upon their shoulders still the cross'may
press.
But who will say they bava not won
success?
Denis A. McCarthy in N. Y. Sun.
HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE
Here are several uses for salt: Put a
Pinch in the eggs you are beating, and
they will be light in a much shorter
time.
Sprinkle it on the fire and you will
,gain the blue flame so mnoh desired for
broiling steaks or chops. t
Sprinkle it in the bottom of the oven
and your cakes will not burn.
Pour it quickly on spilled claret or ink,
and it will absorb most or all of the
liquid before it has time to stain.
Salt makes an excellent toothpowder,
but it is not advisable to use it daily,
as it will spoil the enamel if used too
frequently. Still an ocoaeional brushing
with it is recommended.
Sprinkle it on the ooal and shake your
damp, uncurled ostrich feathers over
the fumes, and the tendrils will curl up
smartly.
Bathe your tired eyes in salt and
water and yon will be astonished at the
strength it givep them.
Apinch of salt improves oaken, candies'
and almopt everything that is cooked.
Peevishness. - _
Peevishness may bo conald•red the
canker of life that destroys it3 vigor
and checks its improvement; that
creeps On with hourly depredations
and taint and vitiates what it cannot
consume. -✓Johnson.
Probably.
Probably a woman would be is bride
to her httablind longer it she ebonid.
continue malting company of bim. A&ost
women begin to save their fain for
visitorsy�*hen two bay b ma*lgd
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ABSOLUTE
SECLJRITYI
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver falls.
Must Sear Signature of
See Fac -Simile Wrapper Below.
Very smallaryl as easy
to take as sugar.,
CA1TERS FOR rEiiil,izss,
FOR ®IIF3:3::S%
ITTIY
Fi38, 1113.901:abESS,
FOR TORPID LIVER,
Pilo ' f'ORR OlIiISTIPATIOUi
FOR 3ALL®5'J i31tiW.
FOR III 1E Ctl_t1I'LEX113i!
p -ij 'Yia Mull NAVteIf,.ATl1„r,
2s cerrts uraty Fegrtab1e ,.(i//e+a� ✓rocfi
CURIE SICK HEADACHE.
There are still some things too big for
human ownership.
No church is organized until it bas
its sympathetic nerves.
Facts are stnb.lorn things, but faith
looks beyond them.
Many a man loses his reputation for
wisdom by trying to give expression 10
his looks.
'tab's.-V.421r2, 'T,�,...x ,...:
$5. --92- Brooch
D'oes it stri:_e you as "almost
too good to be true"? It is
only one insta>:ca of the price -
attractiveness cf Diamond Hall's
stock — bye' ed bj its half -
century repo:at,on for quality.
This Brooch (Catalocue No.
31663) consist; of a 1 3 inch
crescent .o solid 14k. gold,
supporting a lily -of -valley spray
set with 16 pearls.
It is sent post free in dainty
satin lined case.
We send gait requestfire of charge
our large illustrated catalogue.
E('
mow.
Oa &tea
1010TO, Ont.
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A Funny Eagle.
A Russian grand duke was once the
guest of a German prince. It was
early in the last century. In Russia
the imperial double headed eagle is to
be seen everywhlre and on everything
throughout the empire — stamped,
painted, embroidered or sculptured. At
that period the education of grand
dukes was somewhat limited. This
grand duke went out shooting in Ger-
many and, among other things, shot a
large bird. He asked an experienced
huntsman who accompanied him what
the bird was. "An eagle, your high-
ness," was the answer. The grand
duke turned on him in an irritated
:Way. "How can it be an eagle," he
asked, "when it has only one head?"
5 or 500
or
5,000,000
—they are all
alike.
Each biscuit
as light as if
made by fairy
hands.
Baked to a
golden russet
brown.
So fresh,
and crisp, and
tempting, that
just opening the
box is teasing
the appetite.
And you
find a new
delight in every
one you eat.
Yon get perfection
when you get
Mooney's
Perfection
Crean
Sodas
90
The Butler Sidle qt 'tsfi,
Experiments have been made wilt
flounders in order to determine whether
the whiteness of the under sides of
those fish is due to the exclusion of
light, and the presence of color on their .
tipper sides to exposure to light. The
fish experimented upon were kept liv-
ing in a glass tank, having a mirror
placed beneath, so as to reflect light
upon the under sides of the fish. One
of these prisoners survived for three
years under conditions so strangely dif-
ferent from its Winery habits of• life,
and all of them e.#1~ibited the develop.
went of spots of pigment on their lower
surfaces. The experimenters conclud-
ed that it is exposure to light that
causes the coloration of the upper
parts of the bodies, apt only o1 floun-
ders, but of other fish, and, conversely,
that it is to the comparative absence
of light that the whiteness of under
sides of fish is due. They extend the
same principle to explain the colorless
condition of the skins of many animals
that pass all their lives in caves.
Bird Song..
Naturalists have long been puzzled
as to how birds learn to sing. Does It
come natural to a bird of a certain
species to sing the song common to its
kind or does it learn to imitate what-
ever song it most -.fears during the
early days of its life? Experiments
made by a well known student of bird
life proved that most birds simply learn
by imitation. He placed young linnets
to be reared by skylarks, woodlarks,
titlarks and other breeds, and in every
Case the linnet learned the song of his
foster parents, Again, a number of lin-
nets were reared where they had no
chance of hearing the song of any
bird at all. In due course they began •
to sing, but their song was entirely
original. ' The cuckoo, however, seems
to be an exception, for although Wks
almost invariably reared by foster
parents of any species but its own,
it always sings to perfection its own
peculiar song, quite uninfluenced by
the vocal efforts of its guardians.
Origin of the Strike Fund.
The earliest mention of a strike fund
occurred in the strike of the Parisian
stocking weavers in 1724, when• a
crown a day was subscribed for every
striker and all blacklegs were merci-
lessly boycotted. But the biggest strike
under the "ancient regime" was that
of the silk factory hands at Lyons
in 1744, when 12,000 men went on
strike and so alarmed the mayor that
he conceded everything they asked and
wrote to his brother that he had "la
tete cassee par cette vile canaille."
The "vile canaille," however, •had had
their moment, and it was no longer
theirs. Two months later the king
sent down 20,000 soldiers "pour re-
. mettre l'ordre dans la bonneville de
Lyon," and we hear no more of strikes
- till the supreme strike of 1789.
A Snail's Sense of Smell.
Professor E. Yung of Geneva discov-
ered that the keen sense of smell attrib-
uted to the ordinary snail is distributed
over the entire body not covered by the
shell, the two pairs of tentacles, the
lips and the edges of the feet being
particularly sensitive. Tn the experi-
ments made a brush dipped in various
odorous substances in turn was brought
near the different parts of the body, and
responses were noted at distances of
one twenty-fifth of au inch to several
Inches. Only in exceptional cases was
odor perceived as much as fifteen or
twenty inches away,, showing that smell
cannot guide these creatures to food far
removed.
The Mulberry Tree.
Silk is the great industry of northern
Italy, and the plains of the quadrilater-
al are dark with mulberry trees. The
mulberry tree is the hardest worked
piece of timber in the world. First its
leaves are skinned off for the worms
to feed on. then the little branches are
clipped for the worms to nest in, then
the large Iimbs are cropped for char-
coal, and the trunk has not only to
produce a new crop of leaves and
limbs for next year, but must act as
trellis for a grapevine.
His Bucolic Business.
"That was a perfectly lovely gentle-
man I met last night," declared the
pretty milliner. "Ile has a good, reli-
able business too."
"What is it?" asked her friend.
"Why, he sells farm implements,"
continued the pretty girl.
"What kind of farm implements?"
"Buckets—nothing but buckets. Ile
told me he kept a bucket shop."
Ptomaines.
Ptomaines, according to Quain, are
alkaloids produced by the decomposi-
tion of animal substances. The word
ptomaine was at first restricted to al-
kaloids produced by cadaveric decom-
position, but it is now also employed
to designate alkaloids of animal origin
formed during life as a result of chem-
ical changes induced by some agency
or other acting within the organism.
Youth and i'leatiure.
Youth Is not the age of pleasure.
We then expect too much, and we are,
therefore, exposed to daily disappoint-
ments and mortifleations. When we
are a little older and have brought
down our wishes to our experience,
then we become eaim and begin to en-
joy ourselves.
Fortuna.
Fortune is like the market, `where
many tines if you can stay a little the
price will fall, and again it is some-
times like :t sibyl's offer, which at first
offeretli the commodity at full, then
eonsumeth Bart and part and still hold•
eth up the Brice.- -]aeon.
A proper secrecy Is the Only mystery
of able men. Mystery Is the only
tteereeJr of weak and Gunning ones.
The Housewife's Delight
is a Cup of Delicious and refreshing
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CEYLON TEA
Packed in Sealed Lead Packages only,
to preserve its many excellent qualities..
25o, 80o, 40o, 50c aid 60e per lb, AT ALL GRo0ERS1.
Highest Award, St. Louis, 1904.
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AAAA sesoaNsivvsivVVVVVYVVVVVVVVVVV.
Lehigh Valley Coal
Come with the crowd and leave your order
for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from
dirt and clinkers It has no equal.
ID.
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.nnMAAAAAAAAAAAAAnASMV+esM VVVWVVVVVWVVVVVWWWVW,
NERVOUS DEBILITY CURED
Excesses and indiscretions are the cause of more
sorrow a, d suffering than all other diseases combined.
We see the victims of vicious habits on every hand;
the sallow, pimpled face, dark circled eyes, stooping
form. stunted development, bashful, melancholic
countenance and timidbearingproclaim to alt the
wbrld his folly and tend to blight his existence.. Our
treatment positively cures all weak men by overcoming
and removing the effects of former indiscretions and
excesses. It stops all losses and drains and quickly
restores the patient to what nature intended—a healthy
and happy man with physical, mental and nerve pow-
ers comple• e.
For over 25 yearn Drs. K. At IC. have treated with
the greatest success all diseases of men and women.
If yokt have any secret disease that is a worry and
a menace to your health consult old established physic-
ians i, ho do not•have to experiment on you.
We ,guarantee to cure Nervous Debility, Blood
Blames, Strl:ture, Varicocele, hiency and Bladder
Diseases. Consultation Tree. If unable to call, write
for a Question Blank fur home Treatment.
DRS. KENNEDY fib KEDDAN
148 Shelby Street,
Detroit, Mich.
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e The Wirgham Times reaches . a
ee the hcmes of melt of the people of •
V,lingham and surrounding country. It•
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o keeps its subscribers 1.c-sted cn all the •
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news of the day—local, political and •
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a foreign. 9
If jou have anything to sell, or at
i want anything, advertise in The Times.
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a Rates on application,
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An Adverlisemenf in
THS TIMES
Brings p Good Results
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Wea 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 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 gingham Times
WINGIIAM, ONTARIO.
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