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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-06-13, Page 34 IM LUTE SECURITY. Cenuine Carter's Little Liver 1rl�s Must Dear Signature of See INICi.S m1IQ Wrapper Bolow. i Very emelte 4 as caw to take ati sugar., • aRTE s FOR IZINESRDINS 1TTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. 1 VER FOR TORPID LIVER. Pi LLS FOR CONSTIPATION FOR /SALLOW SKIN. FOR TlECOMPLEXION ��f�OIII'QCIINIE NUIITNAVt ANATUN[. -A: % I rarely vegeiame ecaa. Obi CURE SICK HEADACH. • r` No Insult Intended. •. London exquisite had gone into a treat end restaurant and was far from "pleased with the way in which •his or - trier was failed. "Do you call that a veal cutlet?" he 4iletnanded of the waiter. "Why... such let ;cutlet as that is an. insult to. every; =respecting calf in the British,.em- ' The: waiter hung his• bead'for ac .mo- ment,, but recevOred himself ..end said 1!n a: tone of respectful .apology: really .didn't intend todnsult yon, -airr-London. Answers. Origin of the Cross Bunk • The exact significance or origin . of idle+cross bun is not too ,certain. 'A Zterstitlon regarding baked bread.; on {f�gpd Friday appears to have existed Arrant an early period. Bread so baked twigs kept by a family all through the suing year under the belief that's a few• grams of it in water would prove IN•apecffle for any ailment. -Leeds and rdorkshire Mercury. --•--- . DON'T PUT IT OFF LONGER. GetRid of That Indigestion at Once by Using illi-o-na. Many people in Wingham are slowly poisoning themselves by chronic indiges- tion; Their neglect to cure sluggishness of the important organs of indigestion fills.the system with fermenting and de- caying food that results in sink headaone, heartburn, bad taste hi the mbrith; aid many other symptoms• Mi•o•na stomach tablets are for the 'special relief of such sufferers. They quickly onre the worst cases of indiges- tion and when used a few days the pain and distress often felt after meals will ditiappear. Ii2%.o•na stomaoh tablets Dost but 50 cents a box and do more good than a dozen boxes of the ordinary digestive tablets. Walton McKibben gives an absolute, unqualified guarantee to re- fund the money if Mi•o•na fails to cure. ap Suspiciously Cheap.'; ' els• . 'Scboppen -The price seems 110W,,; but I'm .afraid ,.of antique rugs. Yon know 'the old saying, "Sang as Balesriian-"As a beg in a rug." 'lal fiat But there are no bugs about !this rug. Mrs. Schoppen (shrewdly) - 114o? Ihaif suspect the presence or a little humbug. Her Troubles. :Teacher -Who was the most patient person that ever lived? Student -Mrs. job. Teacher -How do you make• that .Out? Student -Why, Job endured a 'whole lot, but she had to endure Jdb.- Jndge. .He who seeks a brother without a fault 'will have to remain ;without ca lluather,-Talmud_ _- ._.. CURE ALL KIDNEY TROUBLES. Mrs. Hiram Itevoy, Marmora, Ont., writes : "1 was troubled for five years With my . back. I tried ae great many remedies, but all failed until 'I was ad- +i'ised by a friend 'to use' DoAtt's Iiturii Y rms. I. did so, and two boxes made a complete cure. I can heartily recom- inend them to all troubled with their back. You may gpublish this tf ydu wish?' - Priae l0 'cents . per box or 3 for $1.25, at all.'ttesleni, of hashed direct on receipt Of price by'Tlte Doan Kidney LPill Co.,, xontttr Ont • P INE EK GQUR T ',INCIDENTS. DEN T Free and Easy Manners In Early Illi- nois Trials. *Post of the early I111Ao1s''court- houses ourt- h e s ops were 14� r n t b I u scram dis- tricts, but � in gill says the atit1 or ,of '<Laaecap, the Lawyer," the sessions were held in the barrooms of taverns, and the absence of all formality in the prot'eedlegs.;ia beet illustrated by the fact;thet in, the circuit court of Washington county, .e ld by 4'sldge ,Iclhn. Fiexueids.. the Sher•. if! usually heralded his honor by sing- ing out, "Come in, boys! Our John is a-go11i',to kola. court!" to which cordial invitation those having business with ,:the law responded. Anther. sberiff in Union county made laudable efforts to meet the require - menta ,ofthe ,:occasion. .by shouting out this singular announcement: "Oh, yes! Oh, yes! Oh, yes! The honorable judge 10cjwyr opened!", In one -Cade a judge .who. -desired to 'AWAY y his learning instructed the jury. very fuilfy, layixlg down the law with• authority, hut the furore, lifter delib; 'crating somb'hours, found themselves unable to agree. Finally the foreman rose and asked for additional ipstrttc- tions. "Judge, this 'ere is the difmculty,i' he explained, . "The jury want to know if that thar what you told us was r'ai'y the law, or on'y jist your notion." EMBROIDERED -TRUTH. Mark Twain on His Own Reputation For Veracity.:' ' I am used to baying my statements discounted. My mother began it before I was seven years old. Yet all through my life my facts have had a substra- tum of truth, and therefore they were not without preciousness. Any person who is familiar with me 1Fnows how to strike my average and therefore knows how to get at the jewel of any fact of. mine and. dig .it out of its blue clay matrix. My mother knew that art. When I was seven or eight or ten or twelve years old -along there -a neigh- bor said to her: "Do you ever believe anything that that bey says? My mother said: "He is the wellspring of truth, but you can't bring up the whole well with one bucket." And she .added: "I know his average, therefore he never de- ceives me. Idiscount.him 30 per cent fol embroidery, and what is left le perfect and pricelesh.,tru.thwithout a flaw in it anywhere." -Bark Twain's Autobiography in North American Be - view. The Fighting Lemming. - If the lemming's powers were pro- portioned to his pluck, the lemming would make thiags lively for the. hunter. It attacks with reckless fury the ilarnaiess: passerby. Oneof these creatures, smaller than a rat, will as- sail without a second thought a couple of human beings weighing 150 pounds apiece. It will spring to one's knees, barking and biting, and, in purblind fury fall back "all ends up" to . the earth, only to renew the attack again' and again. One day while one lem- ming was 'flying at' me'another `from beyond a small stream joined in the demonstration and preseutly swam across to got :t0 close quarters.. I was' not quite sure that the first fall into the water was not accidental, but hardly think so, since once there it came straight to the charge. -"wild Norway." Most Nearly Perfect Vacuum. It was Professor t7ewar's achieve-, ment In liquefying hydrogen that led to the discovery of an easy method of obtaining an almost perfect vacuum, and that in a single minute. When a glass tube filled:: with air apd closed at otie end liar its' open end clipped into • a cup of liquid hydrogen, the intense cbld condenses the nir into'a kind of snow that -settles,. to..the • bottom, If, then, the upper part of the tube, from: which the solidified air has• fallen, is removed by heating and cooling it off it becomes a vacuum chamber so free- from air that it is difficult to "force an • electric current through:it. His Old i.»tters. A Wall street business roan showed a visitor a bundle of old letters; that he was taking home front his office to. burn in his furnace: "I wasn't always' so particular about these useless busi- ness letters," he said, "until I learned that the women cleaners were sorting' thein out of the wastebaskets and seIl- ing them to certain firms which make a business of furnishing lists of names for various purposes, mostly to specu- lative concerns.. Then I concluded that I owed it to my clients to protect them from the nuisance that follows getting one's name on a mailing list." • The Aye -ayes A 'Very Strange animal, related to the lenlni's and pt` cnliurto;idallagtisear, is the aye -aye. It feeds on wood bor= ing^ gritty that tunnel into the bark of trees. The beast, cots away the outer bark *ith its chis¢! -like teeth, and as the worth retreats to the end of its hole. ;hakes after it with 4 finger. Ms fiat- ger Is ti' remarkable organ, - evidently pmvidec'l by nature' "for -this' being abnormally long and armed with a !took -8haped eta's for dragging out • the V** . , p THE .. Ono Question 'lop h lfl wMu . - The eervitat probletis, index 41p.. cussion, and "experiences" were being related, Several women stopped' talk- ing at the sumo tngintent,: and thq sig 1 nce e , which had lasted nearly two deco onds, was brgken by a young matron, who said; "But, ladies, that's all noth- ing to what happened to me last week. lyiy • ceok left me, you know, for no earthly reason except that she told the chambermaid we starved the help, h •Tae 1 ..4 # a I Wellt I even; ..#g, the Jntellt,. gence office and after a long search found the girl I wanted to take Mug- gie's place. She answered every ques- tion.tR my satisfaction until I asked her, ' 'Why did you leave your last place?' Then she got red in the fore, threw ber head back and Bald in an angry tone: 'l4ecause. - I wanted a change. Why did your last caok leave?' And before I could answer Elbe tureed away, saying, 'You'll not silk' Now, isn't that dreadful?" And then oil; the other women 'told "dreadful" stories. • An ,Ancient Irish Custom. In the district known as "the barony of Forth," In County Wexford, Ireland, Is to be found a race of hardworking, industrious peasants living in thatched cottages with clean, whitewashed walls wbich by their perfect whiteness at once arrest the attention of the visitor. '!hese people differ in many respects from the inhabitants of the other parts of the: same • county . and have habits and customs peculiar to themselves. When n funeral takes place two wdpd- en crosses are provided. On tbe way to the cemetery a halt is made at. a certain spot by the side of the road. Here prayers are said for the deceased, after which one cross is deposited IP a hawthorn bush or under it. The pro- cession then goes on its way, and after the interment the other cross is fixed it the head of the grave. This strange custom dates from time immemorial, as the great pile of crosses by the road - 'Side indicates: How to Stop Runaways. The policeman had stopped the run- awey very neatly. Now, though pntF- We. a little, he was quite calm. "It's w•.tlilng to stop a runaway,"..he ort let g,9'• wiped his foam covered lands. 9t is like jumping on or'oft a moving ter -dead easy when you know how. What you want to do when you see a .runaway tearing toward yon is ' not to' stand still, but to run all your might in the same way the nag's a-go- 'ing. 'Then, when It Catches -up to yon. you grab the bridle and keep a -run- ning. Then you are not thrown, Sou are not trampled on; and_ in a minute or two the horse slows down. I've stopped a dozen runaways without .an accident. It's part of our training, and the policeman who would ,refuse ;to take a chance would be disgraced the same as a soldier who would refuse•to 'fight." Waked Him Up. • "Titre!" The passenger gave no heed. "Fare, please!" ' ' Still was the passenger oblivious. "By the ejaculatory term 'fare'" .said the Conductbr, "I haply' no refer- ence to the state of the weather, the complexion of the admirable blond youobserve in the contiguous seat, nor even to the quality of service vouch- safed by this philanthropic corpora- tion. I merely allude in a mannerper- haps lacking in delicacy, but not: Yu: conciseness, to the monetary obligatiop set up by your presence in this car and suggest that, without contempering your celerity with cunctation, you liquidate." At this point the passenger emerged from his trance. Tree Fountain.' • An extraordinary curiosity la to be seen in the Swiss village of Gnnten, ori Lake Then. It takes the form of a nat- ural tree fountain, the water flowing continuousia from a spout high up in the tree. About twenty years' ago the water from a spring was conducted through a shaft, and the supply pipe was directed through the cut trunk of a young poplar tree which was rammed In the ground. After a short time the trunk rooted, branches followed, and now there Is a splendid top growth. Friendship. Friendship is a vase which when ft is flawed by heat or violence or steel- dent may as well be broken at once. It never can be trusted after. The more graceful and ornamental it, was the more clearly do we discern the hopelessness of restoring it to- it9 former state, 'Coarse stones; if they are fractured, may be cemented again; precious ones, never. -Lander. Great Laughers. The giant laughers have been men - Shakespeare , and. Rabelais. I. do not regard Cervantes and Sterne as laugh- ' ers. They aro smilers. They are not jolly roarers and guffawers. They are not fat, rotund, jovial hilarities. They - ere thief, lean, Ironic smiles. - A smile Is a dileted Taugb. Sterne le it Minted Rabelais. -James Douglas 1n Di. A. F. • Like Talking Shop. • • A stockbroker *hose mind is always' ',tall of business Was asked a few days ago; hose old, his father,wus. • "Well," said he abstractedly, "he's .rtiuotcd at eighty, hat. there is every rcpt that he will- reach par. and - ably be at •a, pxemipm ,1 A Fte uff. 1 I "Miffs' • Mayaa, .began -hirl Boamldfi. 'world you-er .:he toad if I were to kiss oar "Not'•ltily,M replied>.the bright girl, "but I Would -Certainly be, mad to Caller,-i'd "think that yotir father's duties es bolting .inspector would be buipdint,;"#: Sinal!`Home-- ,' Son of the`Home-- thisThis Inspector's Life. awfully dan8erous going round unsafe Oh, tio; he doesn't .lttrbailee/AIM sifter' they fail down. . , ._ -. The other fellow's advice may be all ilea" ,wilts i4 , Are we to.; ns do ltbter. dart *dr �l trait torts 1'reekOst alit l =?e : INGIC M r TIMES JUNE 13' 1907 U F15 GHT ' A IN' , N FOG. A Del In Which Neither Principal Could See the Other. The most laughable duel ever"fought" In France was that a which took place Iq November, 1878, at Plessis-Piquet between Messrs. Gajubetta and De t3 ourtou. . Some heated words had passed be- tween the two distinguished gentlemen in the chamber of deputies, for which, according to their Ideas of honor, troth, frig could atone except a duel. The men met therefore en the field at; tended by their seconds and the sur- geons. A look over the field was enough to convince any one present that there would be no occasion or the 'doctors' services. A thick November fag hung o'er the scene -so thick, indeed, that one could hardly see his hand before his face. Tho arrangements for the duel required that it should be fought at thirty-five paces. Nor was the fog the only circum- stance that tended to placethe com,, llatants out of sight of each other. On the way to the field M. de Fourtqu is reported to have said: "M. Gambetta bas but one eye, and I am shortsighted, so the game will lie about even." It was, of course, rendered still moro "even" by the fog. Neither man could see the other, and the sole danger was tit the seconds and the doctors. Almost miraculously the two bullets that were: exchanged missed the per- sons in attendance. t Everybody's hon- or was satisfied and the whole party went home. Gambetta said that the affair was as: near to being a skirmish in the dark as anything he ever saw. • THE NEGRITOS. Odd Marriage Ceremony of These Barbarous Little People. Belonging as': they do to the lowest type of 'civilization as yet discovered, the Negritos of Malaysia and their ways are well worth studying. Simple, primitive, barberops` little people,, their cutt4ma are those of prehistoric man. They ;hhYe, ,no fixed home ma settle- ments, but' are wanderers over their mountainous island's, sleeping under a banana leaf,• living on herbs, and. ber ries and game. Their marriage ceremony is a unique survival of early life. The Suitor apd a few companions dance'' about, the shelter of the desired girl••, There .is. a curious resemblance.- between. the dances • of the prospective bridegrooin and those of many of the game birds of our woodland: Finally the girl, ac- companied by her mother, starts to-, ward the dwelling of the young men. They frequently stop, squatting in the trail while the ardent suitor and his companions continuo their entreating and bewitching dances, :winding round and round the girl Presents are gen erally demanded and must be given before the reluctant bride will pros teed. Finally:the women arrive near :[ steep bamboo platform. A. wild shout pierces the air, and the bride- groom, like a frenzied animal, tears through the Negritos: assembled at the base of the platforms snatches the bride in his arms and flies up tbe in- cline with his mate, where they sit. during the wedding feast. , The Smell of the Dawn. :Of all hours of. the day there is none like the early morning for downright good odors -the morning before eat. Dag. Fresh from sleep and unclogged with food a man's senses cut like knives. The whole world comes in upon him. A still morning is best, for the mists and the moisture seem to re- tain the odors which they have dis- tilled through the night. Upon a breezy morning one is likely to get a single predominant odor, as of clover when the windblows across a hayfield or of apple blossoms when the wind comes through the orchard, but upon a perfectly still morning it Is wonderful how tate odors .arrange themselves In upright strata, se that one walking passes through them as from room to room in a marvelous temple of fra- grance. A Powerful Indorsement. 11fany years ago there was consider= able illness in Harrisburg, which was attributed to the waters of the Susque- hanna river, then the source of the City supply. One of the members of the legislature for that year, upon his re- turn to his constituents, was inter- viewed concerning - the plague. He soon settled the question. "Upon my soul, gentlemen," he declared, "the re- port of the foulness of the water was a slander on the city of Harrisburg. I absolutely know the water to be per- fectly healthful, for during the session I drank the water bn two. different Oc- casions, and I never experienced any i11 effect whatever." Musicsand Method:.. The sane, healthy way to study the plate) is to apply one's thought direct- ly to the work laid out methodically by the teacher for a. certain length of thud every day. That length of time 'de- pends entirely upon the future that the student . may decide upon. If he or she hike up music as a 'profession:' four hours daily should be given to study; if as an aiiiateur, two bouts are enough; In both cases the division of time devoted to iiractiee Should bd ne't less than ono hour. -I. f. Paderewski tit Stthttttll Magazine. ' Fates of Habit. -I mast not listen to you,14fr. lien- iyaline" Protested tie lilttshiiig' git'T,• with bytta downcast.' "You aro only,. trifling,, and -and, besides, it is getting late." "Please bear tin$ but, Miss ':Helen." pleaded the intttuated,young reporter. "I'll cut it down' to 25 0 finatde.'1 : - The 1Rr>>l4sln ekee�a pip1.04ma4 - Many New York women who patirQu, ize a new dressmaker for the Brat time propound an embarrassing ques- tion. "Have aY you ou , a diplopia?" they ask. "I didn't know what answer to make to the first customer ttlat pitt that 'question to me,' Baia, one dressmaker. "I certainly dld roti have a diploma. I knew how to sew, but I had no cer- tificate to that effect. Finally I found, that many women have suffered so grievously at the bands of incompe- tents that they were unwilling to trust their wick to a person who could not show some guarantee of experience. and efficiency, so, although I knew`' more about sewing than half the Pasha ionablo dressmakers in town, I actual. ly worked in one . stitch establishment. for four months so that I could point to a printed diploma which says, 'For- merly with Mme. A. of Fifth avenue.'. It pays any dressmaker to arm herself With credentials of that kind, She ought to have her diploma framed and bung en the wall like a doctor's diplo ma, so as to give confidence to doubt- ing customers." ---New York Sun. Great Schemers. "These traveling men are great schemers when it comes to getting rooms assigned to them ahead of other guests who registered first" said a. hotel clerk. "There were several guests on the waiting fist for rooms yester- day. One traveling, man game up to the desk holding, his band to his stoma i h C saying a was sick b h, n so e x g sC must bare a room at once. Ele. was. accommodated. In a few minsites an- other traveling :nap who wag among the list of guests waiting for rooms, came up and said he had boarded a sleeper at 2 o'clock in tbe morning and, tried to get some sleep, but that it ran into nn:openswitch and gave hindsuch a shaking up be couldn't sleep. He said tie was almost dead with exhaus- tion and loss of sleep and must have a. room at once. Ilardly had he gone to his room} when a third oneam c cup. and said be, too, must have a room im- snediateiy. What t10 you suppose bis reason was? He said a horse felt on him the day before, and he thought he wag' injured internally." Pepper and Onions and Garlic and -- At a restaurant downtown, redolent of pepper and garlic, where swarthy representatives of Spain and all the Spanish-American countries gather ev- ery day at tbe lunch hour a lone Amer- ican, merican, accustomed to strictly unseason- ed food, was glancing apprehensively at the bill` of fare. "What is chile con carne?" he asked the waiter. "A1, senor, zat is pepper and a lee - tie meat and pepper again and once more pepper and" - "No matter. What is bacalao a la vizeaina?" It is delicious -codfish and red pep- per and gar"- Forget it! What is olla a la Espa- nola?" "Ah! Zat is onions and pepper and garbanzos and chorizos and" - "Bring me roast beef!" Barrymore's Dilemma. Maurice Barrymore, the once famous actor, was once in London with a new piece which he Was anxious to have produced. He had read it to a man- ager, and it had been decided that be was to play the leading role. About a week after it was supposed to have been definitely settled Barrymore re- ceived a mote from the manager ask- ing him to call. Barrymore called, and the manager said: "I like the piece, old fellow, but I don't see how I can use you in tate cast. Your beastly American dialect won't do at all, you know. They won't have it." "Well, that's strange," said Barry - more. "They told me on the other side that they wouldn't have me on account of my beastly English dialect What am I to do, give recitations on the transatlantic steamers?" . _ am Vayenne Pa, per. In cayenne pepper we have a pure, energetic, permanent stimulant. Why not use It instead of whisky and bran- dy. which are not more energetic and are not permanent in their actions? says 'Therapeutics and Dietetics. Like Father, Like Sana The L ivit,g Skeleton -Why Is the In- dia rubber man so happy? The Fat Lady -Why, haven't you heard? Ile's the father of a bouncing b0yi-PrIncn- ton Tiger. f?{STV" =r ;rrr. listi5`:3.'�ilg#• :t;S,f NHIN Dll civic Di4AN7' r u NA CE QA;MP� s 1110 dust nuisance in connection withThethe rSeunishine. ,•,,;: Because the Sunshine is fitted with a dust flue (see illustration.) When you rock down the ashes. (no back -breaking shaking with the Sun - :;'shine) whd arises is dratawnust from the ash - pan up the dust -flue, then • • ;,f_` across vim.': •.:e: the fire -pot to • the smoke -pipe, %' as shown in illustra- tion, where it immediately ascends to the outer air. Only two things to• remember in connection with this operation ;,-- open both the dust and direct draft Sunshine is just the cleanest, sim- ;., plest, easiest managed, greatest labor saving furnace that you can buy •. If your local dealer does not NMI- handle the " Sunshine" write direct to us for tr•..;R•;;'� Free Booklet •':.'.ry,4 •4,}i -•SCA-.•,•, .. 1.,. cClarys London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, Hamilton, Calgary. ALEX. YOUNG - AGENT - WIN GHAM •••1•••••i•••••••••••••••• •ii••••••i••••••i•o•••••••• • • • • • ICU.)•• • • •• •RATES •' • • • • • • • • FOR 1906 - 07 • ••e • f•,l. .1 NYULut YY.,k �,• e The TIMES will receive subscriptions at the rates below + for any or all of the following publications : + + Times to January 1st, 1908 $1.00 ++, Times and Daily Globe 4.50 + + Times and Daily Mail and Empire , , 4.60 + + Times and Daily World 3.10 ++, . 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