HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-09-05, Page 6T11141 WINQItAM TIMES, Siai'TIaMlil;B 6, 1607
RED ROSE
TE "IS GOOD
TEA"
Girls are neater, more careful, and more cleanly than boys, so they are
employed in the Red Rose factory to do all the packing and labelling.
, It h a factory girls like to work in, and Red Rose Tea is
tea you will enjoy drinking. Everything is done to ensure it
'being absolutely pli4s and clean.
Will you try a package ? Ask your grocer for it,
Kernels frOm the Sailelum
Interesting Paragraphs from our Exhanges.
cute every 1,000 prison inmates in the
Fatted 65 are women.
A grasehopper oan jump 200 times its
own length.
l9Ba41. W. CHASE'S 0
5
CATARRH CURE ... Ca
is sent direct to the diseased
al parts by the Improved Blower,
}teals the ulcers, clears the air
passages,
ssaroat e . stops droppings in the
cures
Catarrh and Hly
ayFev rd tBtower.
free. All dealers, or Dr, A, W. Chase
a!e'd cine Co,. Toronto and Buffalo.
The worlds population is estimated at
1,480,000,000 pereone
Factories in. Japan do not stop work on
Sundays, but neually the first and fif-
teenth or the mouth are holidays.
Many people say they are "all nerves,'
easily startled or upset, easily worried
and irritated. Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills are just the remedy such
people require. They r° etore perfect
harmony of the nerve centras and give
new nerve force to shainered nervous
systems.
Great Britain is rich in mosses. There
:are 290 varieties found in the British
islands.
To see an object on the earth's surface
100 miles away the observer must be
41,667 feet above the level of the sea.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
1444
The capital represented by Great
Britain's cotton trade ie $2,000,000,000 a
year, and the profits $350,000,000 a year.
Blank opals of great beauty are found
lin Queensland, Australia, besides 66
ether kinds of precious stones.
For Over Sixty Hears.
An old end Weil•Tried-Remedy—Mrs
Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used
foe over sixty years by millions of moth -
lege for their children while teething,
'with perfeot success. It soothes the
child, softens the gums, allays all pain,
aures wind colic, and is the best remedy
for diarrhoea. It is pleasant to the taste,
Sold by druggists in every part of the
world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its
value isincalculable.
Bea mere u sek
a you
for Mrs Winalow's Soothing Syrup, and
take no other kind. Guaranteed under
the Food and Drug Act, June 30th, 1906.
'Serial Number 1098.
Me: P. Purvis, of Tecawater last week
shipped toBoston a consignment of wool
on which he paid $1,500 of duty. The
duty is 120. per lb.
XA. r
*Awl the %Ile iOsd You Harp Always Buell
Wptstars
.a[
i re
The Africanpoesessions of the Frenoh
Government amount to 3,805,030 square
zil1es, and those of Great Britain to
2,714,000, including Egypt.
MILBURN'S
HEART and NERVE
PILLS
SAVED HER LIFE
Mra. John C. Yensen, Little Bucher,
N.B., writes "I was troubled with a
tttteb.Iiko pain through my heart. I
tried many remedies, but they seemed
tar do me mote harm than good. I vow
then advised by a friend, to try Mil -
burn's hurn a citrt and N'
or
ve rills l and after
ming two boxes 1 was completely Cured.
X oennot praise there enough for the
World of good they did for me, ter
believe they raved my life."
Price 50 cents per bolt or a boxes, for
61„ t,5, at all dealer,, or nulled direct by
Tho T. Milburn Co.,• United, Toronto,
Warts may be entirely removed by
washing the bands two or three times a
day with the water in which potatoes
have been boiled or by bathing the wart
several times with potato water.
Been the Ms Kind You Have Always Bought
Si
or6 /'
`f (
A mother-of-pearl buckle should be
cleaned by covering the buckle with a
paste made of whiting and water, and
when quite dry brashitg it off and poi.
isbing with a dry cloth.
Trud Ca arrh treatments are being mail-
ed out free, on request, by Dr. Shoop.
Racine, Nis. These tests are proving
to the people—without a penny's cost—
the great vaine of this scientific) prescrip-
tion known to druggists everywhere as
Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Remedy. Sold by
all dealers.
Persians are fond of fine clothes, The
usual costume for men includes a collar-
less shirt of light, pretty materiai, cut
low at the neck, and with Iong, Ioose
sleeves, a vest that fits olosely to the
figure.
The Doctor's inrst Question
Almost the first question a doctor puts
to his patient is in reference to the tuit-
ion of the bowels. By keeping the bow-
els regular you fee cid the serious de.
rangements of the liver and kidneya and
oan defy colds and contagions diseases.
Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills ensure
prompt movement of the bowels and
by their action on the liver thoroughly
cure constipation.
To scald milk place the required
amount in the inner vessel of a double
boiler; partly fill the outer vessel with
hot water; cover and place on the fire.
By the time the water bile rapidly the
milk will be at the scalding paint and
should be used at once.
Pain anywhere, pain in the head, painf al
periods, Neuralgia, toothache, all pains
can be promptly stopped by a thorough-
ly safe little Pink Candy Tablet, known
by Druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's
Headache Tablets. Pain simply means
congestion—undue blood preesure at the
point where pain exists. Dr. Shoop's
Headache Tablets quickly equalize this
unnatural blood pressure, and pain im-
mediately departs. 'Write Dr. Shoop,
Ranine, Wis. and get a free trial package.
Large box 25 cents.—Druggists.
Manufacturing is increasing in New
South Wales. Figures for 1906 show
increases of 128 factories and 5,583
workers. The increase is most marked
in the trades, in metal works and in
establishments using raw materials.
CJ ./3. *X*C t 41..
Bears the JAThe Kitd You Have Always Bn t
Signature
of
Glassware goggles for drivers Of mo-
tor vehicles have thin steel plates in
place of the usual lenses. There is
nothing brittle to break endangering the
eyes, and three ingeniously arranged
slits enable the wearer to see everything
iii front of him.
Stomach troubles, Heart and Kidneyail-
ments, can be quickly corrected with a
preeoription known to druggists every
Where as Dr. Shoop'e Restorative. The
prompt and au'prising relief which this
remedy immediately?, brine is entirely
clue to its Restorative action ngtili the
controlling nerves of the Stomach, eto.
A weak Stomach, canting dyspepsia, A
Weak Heart with palpitation or intermit-
tent pulse, always means weak Stomach
nerves or weak Heart nerved. Strength-
en these inside -or controlling nerves with
Dr. Shoop'. Restorative and see hoot
quickly these ailments disappear. Dr.
Shoop of Raeine, ''psis. will Mail samples
free. Write for them. A. test will toll,
Your health is certainly worth this dims
pie trial. Sold by all dealer'.
1f yon h
teetnbmld r initittle
fn
the corner of fine linen, you will find it
to your advantage to sew the piece to a
;Kerma of linen so it can be etretohed
over the embroider rings. Where two
pieoee are to be eulbroldered, Whip the
Diodes end to end; or, if your odruers are
to be embroidered) bring the four to ,t
middle point, butch firmly and you Will
have les. di fienityr in keeping the ma.
taele1 on OA exnbtpl(es'y ti 1.
For an ordinary sore throat, with lost
of voice er heekinese, .tip a folded hated
kerchief in cold. water Encircle the
neck with glee wet handkershief and
cover it with several folds of old Hann I.
One night's application is usually suffi-
cient to relieve slight cases.
To cheek a cold quickly, get from your
druggist some Iittle Candy Cold Tablets
called Preventing. Druggists every.
where are now dispensing Prevailtics, for
they are not only safe, but decidedly ser•
tain and prompt Preventios (mntaia no
Quinine, no laxative, nothing harsh nor
sickening. Taken at the "sneeze stage"
Preventios wtli preveut Pneumonia,
Brouohitte, La Grippe, eto. Hence the
name, Preventics. Good for feverish
children. 48 Preventive 25 oents. Trial
Boxes 5 ots, Sold by all dealers
The stout woman eau make herself
look much thinner by wearing trim-
mings that run up and down her gown,
but never round and round. She can
look more slender still by wearing per-
fectly plain materials, with no strips or
figures at all. And the best color for
her is blaok or gray.
Lord Strathoona, High Commissioner
of Canada, who has just started for Eng.
land on the steamer Oceania, is complet-
ing lite 151st round trip across the Atlan-
tic. This means tbat when be has
finished bis present trip he will have
made 302 voyages across the ocean.
It is estimated by the Department of
Agriculture of the United States, that
Iasi year's crop was produced and gath-
ered at a saving of $685,000,000 over
what would have been the Dost of rais-
ing an equal crop 50 years ago, This
saving was accomplished by the use of
modern agricultural implements.
A simple way to shorten wasb linen
or (rash skirts that have a deep hem at
the bottom is to take 'up a tuck on the
inside of the hem. This need not be
stitched on a machine or very particular-
ly sewn, as the ataroh used in the laun-
dry will hold it in position, and it can
be more easily ripped if the washing
shrinks the material,
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few years
was supposed to be inonrable. For a
great many years doctors pronounced it
a local disease and presoribed local reme-
dies, and by constantly failing to ours
with local treatment, pronounced it in-
curable. Science has proven catarrh to
be a constitutional disease and therefore
requires constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Care, mannfaotnred by F. J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only
constitutional cure on the market. It is
taken internally in doses froth ten drops
to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
They Offer one hundred dollars for any
case it fails to ours. Send for circulars
and testimonials.
Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,
Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Take Hall's Family rills for consti-
pation.
Woven woollen garments which have
become too thin in places to support the
extra strain of an ordinary darn, can be
treated in the following manner ; Soak a
piece of net till quite soft, and when dry
took on to the thin place on the inside
of the garment. The needle should be
woven in and out over the net, and a
firm foundation being thus made for the
darn, the mending will be found to be
smite satisfactory.
Constipation,
Kidney Trouble
Mr. A. Buchner, Port Robinson.
Out., writes;— `For many years I weak
the unhappy victilzt of kidney trouble
Theumatistti and Constipation, which #O.
carne so bad as to make life a burden. L
watt' a Constant sufferer and at times cote
pletely unfit for anything. 'The appetite
was fickle, and I became thin, and ernto
elated. Y could not eleep and would
arise /sepia and enfeebled..
"A friend advised the we of Pr. Chase'.
Kidney Liver Pills, and I am thankful
that they fell into my hands. The fret
bat gave relief and hope and I continued
to use these pills until the time came
when 1 was enjoying my former good
health and vigor. It took about eight
boxes to melee the mere t uplete, and X
shall alwaye recent:need Dr. Chaee'd
Way -Liver Mils sett art ideal Medicine.
li eget giving this teatitnonyr for the bene-
fit of Others enff`nring totI did,'' ' s
19r. Chase's fi'fdney Lived Pile, oar
a doe*, 25 Write a box, at all &Weil
or` ! !IA4tr ,t0i*1 Afrotood
' The residence of lure. George Harris,
Illttin avenue, Goderiob, was the come
of a quiet but pretty wedding on Wed'
'twisty, Aug. 28th, et high noon, 'when
Barrie$ Lillian, daughter of the tate
I George Harrie and Mra ITarrie, waa
( quarried to Frank Wesley Stephens, son
ii of Rev. W. G. and Mra. Stephens, of
Northville, Mieh, The drawing•roont
was decorated with imbue, ferns and cat
Ore, and a large arch of greens and
white asters was arranged for the oe•
Oassion, under whioh the bridal party
stood, The ceremony was performed bo
Itev G. N. I3szAu, pastor oC earth at,
Methodist church, assisted by ROY. W.
G Stephens, father of the ;;rootn,
Womanly Troubles
SEOGLD NOT BE ALLOWED TO UN
DERMI11E BIEALTH.
It is just itnposeible to go into details
on this suhjeut but the experience of
many a poor woman wbo is crippled for
life, just because she didn't use a good
remedy in time, should be a warning to
others.
When the fleet stages of womanhood
appear in a young girl, a great deal de.
ponds in getting her over this critical
stage, so that in years to come she will
not develop green sickness or consump-
tion.
When she complains of flushed face,
headache, bearing down feelings, give
her a course of Ferrozone which will
carry her past the crisis
In the adult woman if any irregulari-
ties occur, Ferrozone will be found a
remedy of remarkable potency and
power.
]Ferrozone is the ideal regulator and
causes all organs of the body to perform.
their work properly.
It purifies the blood, tones up the
nerves and vital energies. The stomach
is strengthened, and digestive and as-
simeative processes are unproved by the
good work of Ferrozone, It regulates
the bowele, notes oonstipation and piles,
and replaces disease and decay by health
and strength.
There is nothing better for the com-
plexion than Ferrozone. It removes the
dark circles from under the eyes, re-
moves and cures all manner of skin
eruptions, gives brightness and brilliancy
to the eyee, a rosy tint to the cheeks,
whitens the teeth and develops a well
rounded, plump and handsome form.
Ferrczone is the ladies' favorite, and
should find a place in every household.
It is prepared in the form of a chocolate
coated tablet, oonvenient and pleasant
to take. Price per box, 60c or three
boxes for $1.25. Sold by all druggists.
There died on Thursday, 22nd. Ang.
at the residence of Mr. Jno. Torrance,
Inspector of the House of Refuge, Huron
road, near Clinton, Mr. Jas. MoDonald
aged 79 years and 10 months. Mr, Mc.
Donald has had poor health for some
months and has been at the house of his
daughter, Mrs. Torrance since the winter.
He was an early settler in Bayfield, hav-
ing gone there in 3855, and has since
made it his home. A member of the
Presbyterian church and a Liberal in
politics, he was well known and very
highly respected. He was a tailor by
trade and for many years carried on
business.
Hem is a good paragraph from a eeleot
source;—Take life earnestly. Take it
as an earnest, vital, essential matter.
Take it just as though you personally
were born to the task of performing a
noble task in it—as though the world
waited for your coming. Take it se
though it was a grand opportunity to do
and achieve, to carry forward great and
good schemes, to help and olittera suffer-
ing weary, it may be heart -broken, bro-
ther. The foot is, life is undervalued
by a great majority of mankind. It is
not made half as much cf as should be
the case. Now and then a man stands
aside from the crowns, labors earnestly,
steadfastly, confidently, and straightway
becomes famous.
The True Sportsman.
A trite sportsman plays a game as his
recreation. It is, consequently, absurd
for him ever to be anxious or ill-temper-
ed. Re has the instinctive love of mous•
meat to which ie,,,added the pieaaure
derived from the exercise of skill, whe,
ther it be already acquired. Winning
or lotting is to him rather an amusing
detail than a serious consideration. HO
does all he can to win, beoause that le
part of the game; But the fact that some.
one else has a better eye, or has had
more practice, or ie more favored by
fortune, does not annoy hips. Ile plays
the game for his health and pleaanre,
and therefore he does not care whether
,pny4130 i!! 4fatQTting bit prowess, nor
t3b0A
be need a band of „ rooters,,
i0 urge
him to etert himself or to worry his
opponents. To the true sporteinan such
tt spectacle as that of a team crying be-
cause they barn lost, or Of a men told off
to "Worry' hie pitcher," or of a man being
"induced" ter bribed to amuse himself;
of a playeet depending upon artifloial
stimulusfrom spectators, s, oro! any Seri.
i.
a 1 r • xm eta astime is
OiY'tl acre o aft sty" or pastime,
eleaply unintelligible. What stela ants -
mallet exist in apart is due, primarily,
ter the prefesttloraf. The proration&
though he nifty 1* a good fellow and a
good epoxtetnan at hart, cannot poakiblr
be a true epottemen, or he tlrould never
aoaept moneys for ayntasing himself.
Frannie 11, TOOT, President of the Vis'
Olnb Of 1611W 'rack, id xtlrtltal'N ''eekly`.
THE THOUGHTS OF YOUTH.
•0...084.,.-....
Often I think of the beautiful town
That is seated by the sea;
Often in thought go up and down
The pleasant streets of that dear old
town,
And my youth comes bank to me,
And a verse of a Lapland song
Ie haunting my utewory atilt;
"A boy's will ie the wind's will,
And the thoughts of youth are long,
long thoughts.,, -
I oan see the shadowy lines of its treee,
And oatob, in euddeo'gleame,
The sheen of the far•surrounding seas,
And islands that were the Uesperidee
Of all my boyish dreams,
And the burdeu of that old song.
It n urmnre and whiepere still;
"A boy's will is the wind's will,
And the thoughts of youth are long
long thoughts."
1 remember the gleams and gtooms that
dart
Across the sohoolboy'n brain;
The song and the silence in the heart,
That in part are prophecies, and in part
Are longings wild and vain,
And the voice of that fitful song
Singe on, and is never stili;
"A boy's will is the wind's will,
And the thoughts of youth are long,
long thonghte."
Strange to men now are the forme I meet
When I visit the dear old town;
But the native air is pure and sweet,
And the trees that o'ershadow each well-
known street,
As they balance up and down.
Are singing the beautiful song,
Are sighing and whispering still;
"A boy's will is the wind's will,
And the thoughts of youth are long,
long thoughts."
GEMS OF EDUCATION,
Pr, James W. Robertson, formerly
dairy commissioner for Canada, in a
recent address on rural educative at
Hillsboro, Prince Edward Island, utter-
ed a few gems, of whioh these are some:
The greatest htnderenoe a man oan
leave to his child is sufficient money to
live without working.
The sohool garden is a means of train-
ing, inspiring and nourishing the power
of children into ability.
The sohool should teach the children
that there is no more satisfying and
honorable palling than agriculture. I
A little knowledge is not a dangereue
thing, otherwise it would be better to
remain ignorant and be in bliss,
Youth has those nue qualities that be.
Iong to unsullied life, and all those
handicaps that accompany inexperience.
The sohool has been so busy impart-
ing knowledge that it has had little time
or place or power to train ability for the
affairs of commou, every day life.
If the people will starve the schools,
the schools may retaliate by letting the
people starve, mentally, then morally,
and in a measure materially also.
I have seen teachers so intent upon
having the children pass examinations
on formal subjects that they did not
know anything of the 'minty or the
people in it.
By teaching and training, I would let
the youth learn that the real, satisfying
joys of life Dome from doing work with
the bunds and the mind and the spirit
for the uplifting of the locality.
Any parent or any boy who seeks
education as a means to be delivered
from the need of working hard, will find
it a disappointment, a delusion and a
enare, both as a means and an end.
No greater misfortune could befall a
people than a general belief that labor—
I mean manual as much as intellectual
toil—is to be shunned, is to be evaded,
or to be looked down upon as disgrace.
The individual who, having no chin
d*en, contende that he has no sight to
pay taxes to educate other peoples chil-
dren, should take himself and his be•
longings where there are no children and
then see what his money and his land
are worth to him.
I am inolined to agree that one quarter
of the time of the school should bo de•
voted to training mind and body by
means of the hands with tang.ble things;
one-quarter to the mother toagne, lan-
guage, literature and history; one -guar.
ter to mathematics, the eoienae of num.
berm; and one-quarter to the natural
sciences.
'When grinding bread through the food
chopper tie a paper bag on the mouth of
the chopper and the crumbs will not be
eoattered about. It a quantity of stale
bread happens to be on hand at one
time it may be all ground up and kept
till needed if the otombe are put into a
covered .tin pail, which hes a few air
holes punched just below the top.
OIYIEI�TOR
(Generated Oxygen)
Curbs
CONSUMPTION, CATARRH.
COLDS and LA GRIPPE.
Also
RHEUMATISM, as it alkrws the Kidneys
to freely dkchrrse the Uric: Acid
from the flood.
Cures Oki
Sores.
Good Fen iIy Medkine to tat for Cutk
Scaids and Bruises.
THE BEST BLOOD PURIFmER
KNOWN.
Por Sale by all Bruggiets.
THE OXYGENATOR CO,,
42 slatbord Soto, Toronto, Cannel
Wo teach the " Gregg " System of
Shorthand because we know it is the
best.
It is written in one straight lino
and based on the movement required
to write ordinary longhand.. It re-
quires no shadings, back slants or
vertical strokes which are " hard to
remember" and require "slackening
up " to make correctly.
The 'Gregg is thus easier to learn,
write and read. .tt speedy, accurate
stenographer is the result, '
The Principal of our Shorthand
School graduated under the author
of the " Gregg " system, and her two
assistants are graduates of the Busi-
ness Educators' Association. You
are assured of the very best tuition
here.
More information in our large
illustrated catalogue, which we would
like to mail you free. First lesson.
on Gregg sent free on application.
A greater demand for our gradu-
ates than we can supply,
FOREST CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE
Member; of Doziness Educator? J, W. WESTERVS LT.
Association. Principal, London,
A Japaneee shipping company, with e
capital of $1,000,000, has been formed to
establish a line of vessels between East-
ern Asia and America.
TUE LADIES' letovoItITE.
Lasa -Liver Pills are the ladies' favorite
medicine. They cure Constipation, Siok
Headache, Billiousnees, and Dyepepaia
without griping, purging or sickening.
Probably no man iu Maine has held a
town office longer than J. Q. A, Butts,
of Canaan, who died recently after 52
years' oontinuoua service as town clerk,
SPRING MEDICINE.
As a spring medfoince Burdock Blood
Bi;,tera has no equal. It tones up the
s,7stehr and ;:on-oves all impurities from
the blood, and takes away that tired,
weary feeling so prevalent in the spring,
A producing oil well was struck in Har-
wich township, near the Tilbury field.
Doan's Kidney Pills act on the kid•
net's, bladder and urinary organs only.
They pure backaohee, weak back, rheum --
edam, diabetes, congestion, inflamation,
gravel, Bz ght's disease and all other'
diseases
ther-
diseases aris)ng front wrong notion of the
kidneys and bladder.
One end of the bridge under eonatruo-
tion acmes the St. Lawrence collapsed
Thursday afternoon, and 84 workmen
were killed. The money lass will amount
to $1,500,000.
The essential lung -healing principal of
the pine tree has finally been successfully
separated and refined into a perfect
oongh medioeue—Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a
guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25
Dente.
COAL COAL COAL.
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.
t Weofa LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH
~ full 17°7
(Dressed. or Undressed)
*♦
Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc.
i or Highest Price paid for all kinds of Lugs. '#0 '
I J. A. McLeanat 'a
:Resideaoe Phone No. 55. Offioe, No. 04. Mi11, No. 44.
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An Advertisement in
THE TIMES
Brings Oood Results
The Wingham Tidies 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
information—to write or call—it will
place you under no obligation, and
perhaps we may suggest something you
can profit by. Pricers right. Quality
ever the talisman.
The gingham Times
WING/TAM,WING/TAM, ONT'Altlo.
1
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