Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-12-06, Page 3"is good tea" 3ust notice the color --a rich amber, which is always a token of duality. Sold by the bed grocers in Canada, T. H. ESTABROOKS. ST. JOHN. N. 8. WINNIPEG. TORONTO, 3 Wtu.,MGTON $r„ E. WHEN WINTER KNOCKS. [Baltimore Sun.] A sad farewell to Summertime, Goodbye to autumn, tool The breezes of g balray olime, Goodbye, good-bye, to you! But though the wailing winds sweep down And nipping grows the air; Why need we sigh when dreams be nigh— Ho I for tho rocking ehair. Hol for the corner by the blaze, The t ook. the song, the glee; The sweet delight of winter night, With Gold•looke at my kneel Knock, Mr. Winter, at the doors BIow, bugle of the storm! -Around me stream, the fireside dreams, The love -lights keep me warm! And while the blast beats loud without, Till summer we fo get, Through all we know that 'neath the snow Soft Bieepe the violet! A. Broad Statement. This announcement is made without rsny qualifications. Hem Roid is the one preparation in the world that guarantees It. - Dr. .Leonbard's Hem Reid will mire any ease of piles. Itis in the form of a tablet, It is the only pile remedy used inter - easily. It is impossible to cure an established ease of pi es with ointments, suppositor- ies, injections, or outward applianoes, A guarantee is issued with every paok- age of Dr Leonhardt'e Hem Reid, which contains a mouth's treatment. Go and talk to your druggist about it, the Wilson -Pyle Oo., Limited, Niag- ara Falls, Ont. When buying eggs at the market, sel- ect those whose sbells'"hre rough. A. amooth, glossy shell is a sign that it has been in the neat too long. •••.••••••••••••...•••••• • • • COAL CO s We are sole agents for the c • which has no equal. Also the • ,• Domestib Coal, and Wood of all kin • We carry a LuB ER, full stook cf • (Dressed or Undressed) • • Cedar Posts, • • i l<iglaest Price paid •• • TWENTY YEARS AGO. [Milwaukee Sentinel,] I've wandered to the village, Tom, and tried to find the tree On which we carved our names one day when we were happy free; But there was uothing doing, Tom; the tree'd been stricken low By the village lumbe4� company—since twenty years ago. The little old red schoolhouse, Tom, that stood upon the hill, Is gone, and in its place a sign reads: "Try a Purple Pill." Where once stood gnarled old apple trees, with fruit a -bending low They've built a modern brewery, Tom -- since twenty years ago. Do you rememberGeraldine—she of the sunny hair? None in all the village, Tom, was half so sweet or fair. I lost my heart completely, Tom, and tried to be het beau— She's fat,red-faced, six ohildren, Tom— since twenty years ago. I wandered to the village green, where we, when heedless boys. Played one -old -eat and pull-away, and knew so many joys; And, Tom, that green is on the bum; it really grieved me so To find potatoes growing there—since twenty years ago, 'Tis sweet to dream of all those things that we iu boyhood knew— • The school, the green, the meadows where the fragrant blossoms grew; And, Tom, I'm not a knocker, but don't pay out hard-earned dough For railway fare to vieit scenes of twenty years ago,- -c Ring of All Cough Medicines. Mr, E. G. Clare, a mail carrier of Oan•. ton Center, Conn., who has been in the U 5, Service for about sixteen years, says: "We have tried many cough medicines for croup, but Ohamberlain's Gough Remedy is king of all and one to be relied upon every time. We also find it the beet remedy for coughs and colds, giving certain results and leaving no bad after effects." For sale by all druggists. ••••••••••••••.•••••••••08 •• • elebrated SCRANTON COAL, i best grades of Smithing, Cannel and • ds, always on hand. • • • •• • • • Barrels, Etc. • • • for an kinds of Logs. "Oa AL COAL. • • • Residence Phone No. 55. Office, No. G4. MiIl, No. 44. ••.••••••••••••••••••••••fr ••••fir•••••••••••••••••••• SHINCLES, LATH J. A. McLean. SEP; EMBER •r.dnn n f 6re Shorthand Touch Typewriting aro two systems which you cannot afford to omit from Your business education. In these days,when everything must be done accurately and rapidly,,the system used must bo the best and quickest. tare$g Shorthand is easy to learn, easy to write, and oasy to rend after it is written. Our catalogue will tell you all about the system, and is free tar the asking. School term: September till June, inclusive. Forest Cit) College 1. ft. GaGG, Founder Gregg System. Y..M..�C../A.. /Building, LONDON T1 i1 \MOAK TIMESTIMESt DECEMBER 6 DM FteD OR GREEN. Color TroubleM of Cha Color Blind Poet, 'Whittler. It is well known that the poet Whit- tier hittier was color blind and unable to dts- tingulsh red from green. He onee bouglit for himself a necktie which he supposed to be of a modegt and suit- able olive tint and wore It once. Ile never wore It again, for his friends soon made bin). aware that It offended against the traditional quietness of costume enjoined alike by the habits of the Friends and by bis own taste. The do was of flaming scarlet. On another occasion, when he found a little girl in distress on account of a new gown, made over from her elder sister's, which was not becoming to her coloring and complexion, bo tried to console her. "I wouldn't mind what a rude boy says about it, Mary," he said kindly. "'Theo looks very well indeed in It, like an oread, Mary, dressed all in green." Unfortunately, Mary was not dressed In green,,, She was red haired, and lien dress was red. That was the trouble. Once, on a day in mid-March, when out walking with a Friend and deeply engaged in conversation, Mr. Whittier approached too near for safety to a place where blasting was going on. The danger signal was shown, but neither Friend noticed it until a work- men, violently waving his arms and shouting, leaped before them and warned them back. "I didn't see the flag at all," said Mr. Whittier's compauion. "I saw it," rejoined the poet, with a twinkle In his eye, "but I thought it was in honor of St. Patrick. Thee knows my detect. I can't tell Erin from explosions except by the harp!" —Youth's Companion, . ROMAN ROSES. They Are Beautiful and Abundant Ilecanse They Eat Meat. "I have yet to see a rose equal to those grown in Rome," said the ama- teur horticulturist. "They bloom in the greatest abundance all through the wiuter, and they are as large and rich and velvety as American Beauties, liv- ing out of doors, Climbing like ivy or honeysuckle over the crumbling marble walls of ruined temples, gleaming in crimson and green masses upon an- cient columns, giving to the grimmest and saddest of mediaeval palazzos an air of gayety and youth. "Ope day on the Via Sistine, as I passed the garden that had once been the garden of Lacunas, I saw an old man tending the superb roots that grow there. He was pouring on their roots a dark, rich looking fluid. "'Why are the Roman roses so beau- tiful and abundant?' I said to the old man. "'Because they eat meat,' he an swered. " `Eat meat? Nonsense,' said I. " `Well, they drink meat—meat ex- tract, which is the same thing,' said the old man. 'We Roman gardeners have for centuries watered our roses thrice a week with a strong decoction of fresh beef—a rich grade of beef tea, They are meat eaters. That is wily the roses of Borne are as hardy and prolific as weeds and at the same time as richly, delicately beautiful and as sweetly per- fumed as flowers grown under glass.' n. Water Cure For Constipation. Half a pint of hot water taken half an hour before breakfast will usually keep the bowels regular. Harsh cathartics should bo avoided. -when a purgative is needed. take Ol.tambertain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. The are mild and gentle in their action. For rale by all druggists. To Neutralize Nicotine. Professor Gerold of Yale has discov- ered liow to neutralize the action of nicotine in cigars, During the process of manufacture the tobacco leaves are steeped In a decoction, the principal element of which is wild marjoram. The deleterious effects of the tobacco are thereby avoided and yerthe qual- ity and aroma are not t'ered. To have beautiful, perfeot, pink, vel- vet-like lips, apply at bedtime a Iight coating of Dr. Shoop's Green Salve. Then next morning, notice carefully the effect. Dry, cracked, or colorless lips means feverishness, and as well as ill ap peering. Dr. Shoop's Green Salve is a soft, creamy, healing ointment, that will quickly correct any skin blemish or ail- ment. Get a free tri,; box at our store and be convinced. Large, glass jars, 25 cents at ;!"alley's Drug Store. Stained Glass By New Process. Oloisonne glass is a pet of modern glassmakers. It is not a wall decora- tion, but a kind of substitute for stain- ed glass, different in effect and in qual- ity from any of the paper imitations. It is genuine glass. A sheet of plain glass is put over the drawing to be ex- ecuted, and on this the outlines of the design are traced in wire, black, silver or gilt, as the case may be. These wire outlines, which are semicircular in sec- tion, are fixed finely to the background sheet, and into the cells formed by the cloisonnes are shoveled countless little glass beads, which are eementod en the ground, and the entire panel is then covered with a second sheet of glass. The groat point of the invention fa that, along witb, a pleasant variety of surface, it 18 possible and easy to- get oget an ablest tinitttees variety of color as welt as the Moat delicate and gra- dual shading, in which one color melts almost imperceptibly lilts another. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Cenuthe Carter's Little Liver Pill& Must Bear Signature of See Par.Sitclie Rirapzer lielow. 'Very small and as o+,f to tarso as sugar, A .l Fad FiII�EI:iE53, ITTLE • Fan BILIOUSNESS. I vER FOR'I1RPIR LIVER. PI LLs, FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TRECOFIIPLEXIO1i r1 4iZ-N[XUTIEl1 /MISTIME NATURE, •anufPurely Vegetenle. Derr v"'odct CURE SICK HEADACHE* HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Varnish the linoleum three times a year and it will last three times as long as it without the coof would coot the varnish, Mice are very fond of pumpkin seeds, which may therefore be used as bait in mouse traps with satisfactory results. Fly -specked mirrors should be washed first with cold water and polished with a chamois which b.as been dipped in alcohol A cranked egg may be boiled by plac- ing a teaspoon of salt in the water, This prevents any of the white from boiling out of the oraok. '$ 1 2 Brooches r1 At $12.00 Diamond Hall is show, ing art especially attractive line of Brooches. An odd price perhaps, but you will scarcely object to their not being marked $15.00. The one illustrated (Catalogue No. 31685) is of solid 14k. Gold set with 46 Pearls. It has a pendant attach- ment for wearing on necklet. A Sunburst Brooch (No. 31679) made up of 65 lustrous Pearls is an- other at the same price. IYe spud ufio„ request free cf charge our large illustrated catalogue. f u AO.�:rrt1 11 -r` ii Flies may be kept away from gilt frames by going over the Satter with a s •ft brush which bas been dipped in a ' pint of water in which three or four on- ions have been boiled, It is possible to freshen stale cake by steaming it for about an hour, and then leaving in a hot oven for a few minutes. Yrsterday'a rolls may be made palatable by heating in the oven until they become het When eaten warm they are de- licious, Vis': illi a -o ry 1`�7'�3 li 5 or 500f 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 oney on eat. Yon get perfection when you get ooney's Perfection Cream Sodas so THE GOQD OLP PAYS.. Try Now the 'Wave or Tore mud See Sow 'Y On L1ke Them. Good old times, says the San Antonio Light, are a delusion and a snare, and the man who sighs for thein has little conception of what they were, Return, to them, would you? Then rise on a cold morning and wash at the pump, pull on a pair of rawbide boots that rival a tin can In stiffness, pull on a woalen shirt over your hack and sit down to a bare meal with your three Legged stool dancing. around on a split slab floor, eat corn pone and bacon for a steady diet and labor fourteen hours out of twenty-four. Go without a daily paper, a fly screen, a mosquito bar, a spring mattress, a kerosene lamp, geebaw your oxen to market and sit on the floor of an ox cart as you wend your way to church or a frolic. Parch corn and peas for celfee and sassafras for tea and see bow you like it. The old days are looked backward to affectionately, says the Galveston News, because they were the days of our youth, of bounding blood and sup, plo joints, the days of hope and the days of love and laughter and song, The days of the pjeseut will be the good old days of the coming generation and will be regarded by our successors. as rather crude in customs and harsh in many ways, yet withal not to be de- spised. The progressives of our age are the mossbacks of later eras. Fifty year.; hence we will be accounted as slow and immature as we now regard those of half a century ago. 0 CHIRSCHMUS. A Swiss Dainty That Is ?!lade of Pre- served Cherries. Last summer I ate genuine Swiss chirschmus twenty years old, It tasted like a concentration of all the richness and sweetness of the most perfect cherries. In appearance it was a pur- plish black mass. Age had not impair- ed it in the least, Upon iuquir'y I learned how this cherry concoction, with its wonderful preserving quality, is made. -The cher- ries used must be perfect—very large, ripe, juicy black ones and, above all, very sweet. The juice of them pressed out and strained through a bag is put in a large preserving kettle, at the bottom of which is placed a piece of smoked pork fastened to a block of wood. The wood serves as a weight to keep the fat down and prevent the juice from burning as it thickens. The cherry juice is boiled for about twenty-four hours without sugar, but - stirred from time to time until it becomes a mass of sweetness so firm and thick that it would not fall If the kettle were inverted. That Is all, a simple process, but the result is delicious. This chirschmus is in general use in Switzerland With the "susse anise" (sweet butter) and bread. —London Ladies' World. Sornething Superior TO TIIE FINEST JAPAN TEA GROW'. CEXLON 6WIREN TEA Sold only in sealed lead packets at 25o, 80o, 40o, 50•. and Mc per lb. At All Grocers', AP.AMMAAANWSAA ►AAAAAAAAA NOVIVViPeM'wVz/VVVdVMVNM'a0.4VvfVyW Lehigh Valley Goal Come with the crowd and Ieave your order }, for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from . dirt and clinkers It has no equal } -,e+nmsAMAAAAAAAAAAAAw.wAnne, kasseen+vvvvwire v+rvvie anrvWvun./, ri GAN The Lending Speciatists of America. 25 Years in Detroit. Bank References. F..-- earNo Names Used Without Written Consent, i VARICOCELE It you have transgressed agatust the laws of I NERVOUS DEBILITY natdure,yo= �ust su;ierh. 0,..0 abl ,d' ilteas x dsseS i CURED. au Preva a eseasey ave wr•'c ce o an s promising lives. '1reat with sclentilic physicians and bo cured. Avoid quacks. 11. A. Sidney, or Toledo, says: "At the age of 74, I learned a bad habit and at 19 contracted aserious disease. I trmated with a d..zea doctors, who all promised to cure me. They got my money and I still had the disease. I had given up hope when a friend advised me to consult Drs. K. & K., who had clued him. Without any confidence I called on them, and Dr. limned, agreed to cure me or no pay. After taking the New Method Treatment for six weeks I felt like a new man. The drains ceased, wormy veins disappeared, nerves grew stronger, hair stopped falling out, urine became clear and my sexual organs vitalized. I was entirely cured by Dr. Kennedy and recommend him front the bot Om of my heart." We Treat and Case Syp:ihlia, Gleet, Vnricocei-, 7Pnatissions, Stricture. Unnatural Diocbarges, Seminal Wecaltace,s, 8idaaey and Bladder Diseases. CONSULTATION FRi;C. I.1003S FRET:. Call or write for Question Blank for Dome Treatment. NO CUIRS, NO PAY DRS, KENNEDY & K ERGAN, { ,1C�orr,,f,,Miiccahigan Ave. and Shelby Street. Detroit, Mich. L1 re ettkifp�`?! iy^ ti:�4 ! A � ds' Feeding Silkcwornis. The quality and quantity of silk pro- duced by your silkworms will all de- pend on how you feed them. Too �•�ltit iE••t#0•••11E!!eM•! •Q1tal•w9S much food should not be given at once, but they should never be left entirely ; without at any time during the day 'or night. You must, therefore, watch . carefully to get an idea of their appe- , Cite and provide accordingly, says 2 Home Chat. Fresh mulberry leaves • 0 are the proper food for silkworms, but 1: if nt any time these are not procurable 0 young lettuce leaves are the best sub- I ; stiinte, but they are only a stop gap. 1 r3 Silkworms Cannot live for a long pe- a9 riod without their natural food. i I A Rielt Mian. I i? Standards of prosperity vary in dif- ' a ferent parts of the country, but that ' of Captain Jack is purely Iocal—to him- ; ; self. The old man came out of his , a cottage ttoor one morning and discov- ered some ne'er-do-well neighbors dig- 1 • ging clams in the flat in front of his 1 shore. I • "Dear me, boys," he quavered in a tb weak, old voice, "don't dig my clams! t 0 There's Abel Wyman over there across s the cove; he has ham for breakfast ev- 3 cry morning in the year. Go over 3 there and dig his clams, boys." Ws Awful -llital;e. "Young man," said her father, "do 0 • you smoke cigarettes?" "I should say not," declared the youth hastily. "I would consider it • disgraceful to be seen with one of the • vile things in my mouth. I think all cigarette smokers should be jailed.. Why do you ask, sir?i r "Thought perhaps you could let me tf have one," said the old man pointedly. • "I smoke 'em myself."—London Tele- to graph. • • No Siren. • Mr. City Boarder was being enter- w tained by his rural sweetheart. • "Do you play and sing 'When the O Cows Are In the Corn,' 'Miss Milky- - 2 weigh?" lA "Lord. bless you, no!" she ejaculated; "I get the dogs and chase -'em out" -• • tlnntatnral IciniNin • Mrs, Itieeds-Ind did your husband R die a natural death? airs. Weeds—No, he tiled suddenly, 2 Mrs, Meeds—What Was there unnat- • ural about that? w Mrs. Weeds—Why, poor, dear John • was the slowest man that ever lived. The Society Duty called. The man looked at the card lazily, "Just say that I'In not at home," he • ordered the mail;. If thon knowest how to use money will become thy handmaid. If not, It • will Weenie thy mrister.- } ;odontic. •*41141.4.111.u 1 An Advertisomenl in THE TIMES aims Good R6sIIs :..._0. The Wirgham Times reaches the hcmes of most of the people of ' Wingham and surrounding country. It keeps its subscribers posted cn 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 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 Yiillgham Times WINGIIAM, ONTARIO. ...4114•01 011.; 041.0 PitSOil • 0 • O N i 1 • • • to • • • 1