The Wingham Times, 1905-02-23, Page 3A O N 9
WHY YOU. SHOULD USE
Because it is nut up in sealed plicknees.
These packages protect the flavor of the tea and
protect you in weight and guarantee of quality.
No article of food is so easily tairt33$�,,ed as tea—it,
absorbs the flavor of everything it comes iiTcontact ' ith.
Place an orange beside some tea for an hour, and then
taste or smell the tea --orange. too,
Very few tea bins are tight enough to prevent tea
from absorbing the odors of fruit, vegetables, cheese,
etc., etc., usually mixed together in a grocery. --and the
ordinary teat chest is very little protection.
The Red Rose Tea sealed lead package preserves
all the origioai flavor and freshness of the tea—open a
package and smell its fresh fragrant aroma.
Packages of Red Rose Tea are .always full weight
and uniform in quality.
T. f. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N. B,
I318ANCt1ES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
INSECT MORAL QUALITIES.
Writs and Dees flaplas an ICatraor-
dinary Sense of Duty.
There are insects, mostly parasitic,
;which, like some teen, only desire to
eat and drink, but among the social
Insects, such as ants and bees, there
Is a high development of moral quali-
ties, to which Haeckel goes the length
rof applying the term "soul life," to dis-
tinguish them from mere instinct.
Thus patriotism is obviously a virtue
among ants, for if an ant hill is dis-
.turbed the inmates never attempt to
}escape from danger, but apply them-
selves immediately to rescue the lives
Lund property of the community as a
itvhole. Respect for law and order is
!so very strongly marked in some
icommunities of ants, which include
poldiers and workers, peasants and atm
times, governors and staves.
Bees have an extraordinary sense of
eleity. Huber noted relays of them sup -
'taming a fragment of comb which
threa en
tr ed to fall without one single
bee flinching or leaving its post until
relieved by another. Loyalty to the
queen is another distinct moral qual-
ity.
The Alonutatin Monarch. •
Unlike the Jungfrau, the Righi or
other European mountains, including
Vesuvius, which have been conquered
'by the modern engineers and now wear
the harness of a railway to or near
their summits, Mout Blanc is an abso-
lute monarch, and no mortal may set
the limit of its reign. The Goths and
Vandals of old, the armies, the tourists
of today or tomorrow may pour down
through the Alpine defiles, but Mout
Blanc through all such changes is mon-
arch still, its snow capped peaks rising
far above all else and the avalauches
down its sides, more to be feared than
any of its other dangers, defying the
skill and courage of many a climber.—
S. E. Hilles in Harper's Weekly.
The Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age.
•
As a cure. for Catarrh of the Head, Throat,
Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs,
Prot. Dykes' Cxii. of Pines stands unsurpassed b,'
any other known remedy.
Oil of Fines is the most speedy cure known to
medical science for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bron-
chitis, Grippe, and all Oatarrha,l Diseases.
BEWARE of that ' most dreaded disease heir to the
human system, CATARRH ! Allow your lungs to
become weak and diseased, your kidneys to become
diseased. and your back lame and sore, your liver
and bowels deranged. These conditions lead to the most
fatal of all diseases, CATARRH. The eyes begin to grow
dim, the pulse fails, the wholesome stream of our blood is
choked and troubled, the limbs begin to decay like sapless sea-
weed in a summer's sun ; our better views of existence are
past and gone ; what remains is the dream of lost happiness or
the fear of inevitable evil.
But remember, SUFFERER, that the wonderful and
never -failing curative powers of that sovereign remedy, OIL
OF PINES, has completely cured thousands of cases as above
described, Therefore, upon the first evident symptoms of this
dreaded disease, CATARRH, make haste and procure a bottle
of the sovereign remedy called OIL OF PINES.
OIL OF PINES is not only a never -failing cure, but also a sure preventive.
Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. Do not delay or
trifle, where so much is at stare. It means your further health and happiness,
PROF.' DYNES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no
narcotios, no alcohol of any description.
OIL OF PINES is riot taken by teaspoonfuls or tablespoonfnls. The dose is
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contains thr'ee times the number of doses
to that contained in any other dollar bottle of medicine offered for •sale.
The reason the name " Oil of Pines' was chosen for this sovereign remedy
is because the oil from four different species of the pine make up the main body of
the remedy. Compounded the Pine is the oils and juices taken from nine different
plantS and roots which grow in foreign eonntries.
Some remarkable cures effected by the uever•failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines
To Prof, C. M. Dykes, Hensall, Ont., manufacturer of Medicine called 011 of Pines:
Deal' Sir.—I feel it my" duty to send you the following testimonial: I
used your medicine called Oil of Pines for throat trotible. I bad suffered
for a tong time With a large lump on the outside of my neck and I felt all
the time a choking feeling in my throat and 1 could hardly Swallow my
food, I had doetorod but could never get the lump removed from my
throat, but your Oil of Pines gave lee immediate relief and I can now
swallow my food without the least effect and I suffer no more with the
malady. I used the Oil both internally and externally aoeordibg to direc-
tiOns. I feel that 1: cannot say enough in praise of nett' Oil of Pines'
Yours sincerely, is Tr. Robt. Ward, 1otherveell, Perth County, Ont,
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.00.
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES,
N. 13.—If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle Oil address orders to
Prof. 0. M. Dykes, Henanii, Ont., 'Proprietor and Maniifactnror. All ordors
promptly filled and forwarded to all parts of U. S. and Canada upon receipt of
priest. Ask for Prof. Dykes' "Oil of Pines," and tako NO 'SUBSTITUTE. Prof,
Dykes' is the ant+ original and genuine.
Retail Druggists can be supplied direct from Prof, Dykes' Laborator
Somali, or from Wholesale Druggists at London, Canada, r.. rr:wWawrWeir
! N(HAM TIMES, FEBRUARY 23, 19o5,
THE AMATEUR IN SPORTS,
Ke In One Who flays tette Poe the
pleasure of i'layiu{r.
An amateur is one who plays for
pleasure only. Ile can piny with whole
he pleases, so long as be ploys for
pleasure alone. Ile may play with or
against a team which is being paid or
playhtg for gate money, Ile espy play
with profes$iouuls or ;against them.
There IS no reason why an amateur
should not play in any company be
pleases so long as he enjoys it, pro-
vided he plays ouly for that reason.
The professfouai is one who outrages
in athletics for a livelihood. This,
bowevor, would not Make a profession -
el baseball player a profesional tennis
playgr. Experience has taught that, as
a rule, men who aro playing for a live-
lihood—that is, for money—place a
small value on pleasure and are ready
to mar the game by quarreling, trick-
ery or unfair dealing. It is only when
the profoselomti hurts the pleasure of
the game that be is objectionable.
This is not the distinction perceived by
our makers of rules, who have been so
absorbed in the money, summer base-
ball and summer board question that
they failed to notice bow rapidly they
were creating In the amateur world
all the unpleasant characteristics of the
professional, tate most notable of which
is quarrelsomeness and making a busi-
uess of it ail.
The colleges for their athletic inter-
course need only the common rule that
an amateur is one wbq bps received no
compensation for his athletic skill, that
those who have received such compen-
sation are professionals and that pro-
fessionals are barred. With all sub-
scribing to this simple rule and liviug
up to it only an agreement to meet an-
nually each year for a certain period
would be further needed.
THE MEALS FOR POETS.
English Breakfast Parties Early In
the Last Century.
The breakfast party oecame fashion-
able in the early decades of the last
century, Samuel Rogers being one of
the principal. bests. Routed bis table
gathered all the wits and celebrities of
the day. At his house in St. James
place Byron and Moore first came to-
gether "over a mess of potatoes and
vinegar." It was in his dining room
that Erskine told the story of his first
brief and Grattan that of bis last duel,
while the iron Duke described Water-
loo as a "battle of giants." Rogers
asked people, it was currently report-
ed, by way of probation for dinner, but
his breakfast parties were more social
than his dinners, which, comparatively
speaking, were affairs of necessity or
form, His invitation notes were mod-
els of penmanship and conciseness.
"Will you breakfast with me tomor-
rowe—S. R.." was the pithy invitation
to a celebrated wit. "Won't re' was
the congenial response. IIe was fond
of quoting Rousseau's profession of tin
gout fin pour les dejeuners, the time of
the day when we are quietest and talk
most at our ease. Greville in his "Mem-
oirs" notes one of these breakfasts
in 183t. "Sydney Smith, Luttrell, John
Russell and Moore excessively agreea-
ble. I never heard anything more en-
tertaining than Sydney Smith—such
bursts of merriment and so dramatic:
Breakfasts are the meals for poets. I
met Wordsworth and Southey at break-
fast. Rogers' are always agreeable."
Cotlel's Curious Defenses.
An interesting book migbt be writ-
ten on the subject of "Curious De-
fenses:'
One excellent instance is supplied
here in what was lcuown as "Codd's
Puzzle." Cod(. was defending a client
accused of steaIIng a duck. Ile set up
seven defenses: (1) The accused bought
the duck and paid for it; (2) he found
it; (3) it was given to him; (4) it flew
into his garden; (5) it was put itt his
pocket while he slept. Six 'and seven
are not recorded, but an amicus curiae
suggested that there. never was any
duck at all. The accused was acquit-
ted, not "because they chose any par-
ticular defense, but because they did
not know which to choose, and they
gave the prisoner the benefit of the
doubt."
The hygienic Value of Sunday.
Sunday is not only a religious but a
hygienic institution. It is beneficent in
its uses, tuoraily and physically. How
workers should best spend the Sunday
is still a moot question, but that it
should be a time of soul refreshment
and recreation, a moment, as Miss Co -
relit expresses it, "for standing and
taking breath on the threshold ot an-
other week," a season for thought, for
intellectual enjoyment, for the solace
of nature and the admiration of its
wanders and beauty, 'no sensible per-
son will be likely to deny. Whether
motoring or card playing is the best
way to attain these ends must be left
to each individual's judgment.—Lady
Violet Greville in London Graphic.
Dieconteat.
The peacock heard the nightingale
singing.
"That seems easy to do," said the big
bird. "I'll see if I can't sing as well
as that."
At the dismal squawk that followed
* moment later every living thing with-
in hearing distance fled in terror.
"Curses on my fatal gift of beauty!"
exclaimed the peacoek. "Why wasn't
I made plain, like all the great Must -
dans!"
The Valet of the WVoilety.
"Poverty is no disgrace," saki the ro-
mantic young woman.
"No," answered 'hiss 'Cayenne, "and
It is no great recommendation either."
)1e who gives up the smallest part
of a secret has the rest no louget in his.
pOwet'.
A WARNING INN DOTE
iFROM THL SACK.
People often say, "Bow arc we 1,
,Y eo know who; the 1 u neys are out
of order 7" The location of the
kidneys, close to the small of the
back, renders the detection of
kidney troehle a simple neater.
The note of warning comes trout
the back, itt the shape of backache,
Don't neglect to cure it imme-
diately. Serieus kidney trouble will
follow if you 'lo. .A few doses of
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS,
taken in time, often save years of
suffering, Mr. Horatio 1111, Geary,
t y N.B., writes :—" I suffered for
about two years with kidney dis-
ease. tial pains in my back, hips ii,
1 and, legs; could not sleep well,
and had no appetite. I took one IP
• box of Doan's Kidney Pills, and
they cured nee. The pains have all ip
left, and I now sleep well,
Price 50 cents per box, or 3 for 'e
$1.25. All dealers, or
Tau DOAK $IDNXv PILL Co.,
Toronto, Ont.
a
Trace Tour Tamely l3ree,
A pleasant pastime — literally — for
those who have no more pressing dir-
ties and wish to get outside their en-
vironment at least in thought will open
up before her who begins to mount a
family tree. Tracing one's genealogy
may become—probably will become—
a matter of absorbing amusement and
attention, for it entails a thread gath-
ered up here, dropped there, a letter
to write, a book to read, a register to
consult. To the self absorbed, the de-
spondent, a listless,e
the one may p , t ay recom-
mend this diversion as certain to suit
even rather morbid conditions of tem-
perament and yet as certain to gently
force the hind away from itself to oth-
er persons and things ht opening up a
wider and wider field of reflection.
PAINE'S
CELERY
COMPOUND
MAKES YOUR
FRIENDS IENDS AND
HE ICUDORS WELL.
Mrs Geo. 13 Griswold, N anaimo, B C.,
writing specially for women says:-
-The grt,tid success of Paine's Celery
C ,tueouttd in my Massa, leads me to be-
, 11; vt, that it has no equal in the world
tor miring the ills of wonteu. Fur three
year,, female trembles, dyspepsia and
uervousot,.s made me a shadow of my
'ureter self. I was treated by competent
d, Airs, and took a sea trip that lastFd
six weeks, bot gut home, again feeling
uo better. After reading one of your
books nn Paint's Celery Cotnnound
I tonight a supply and used it faithfully.
l hree bottles were sufficient to con-
viuce me that I had found a friend
and helper. Six bottles, thank God,
were sufficient to banish my complaints
and made ere a new woman. i acu
flexions that every suffering woman
should know what Paine's Celery Com•
pound has done for me."
THE MEDICINE
THAT OPERATES
DIRECTLY ON THE
NERVES AND BLOOD.
2 -
Mr.
11Ir. Plane (who is fond of dogs, •-Miss
Waite, don't you think you ought to
have an intelligent animal around the
house that would protect you and—.Miss
Waite—Oh, Mr, Plane! This is so snd-
deu.—Philadelphia Press.
Mrs. Simple Newleywed—I want you
to send around a gallon of midnight oil.
Grocer—Midnight oil? Never heard cf
it. Mrs. Simple Newieywetl--Why, I'm
sure that's the kind my ku-baud's
=tl'er said he always burned. -
Brook -1)n Life.
Baby's
Supper
Mooney`s Crackers are as
easy to digest as pure milk,
and as nutritious as home-
made bread. Let the little
'l`olk's supper be
Mooney's
Perfection
Cream Sodas
and see how sound they sleep
and how plump and rosy
they grow.
Air -tight
packages bfir'
them to your lerr�
table as crisp
and inviting
at
if'fresh
From the
At Slut
•...zu.-
P111.4STS FOR WINTER LAYING,
'hese Rotobed he May or here' June: tuf
Meet PrWitable.
•As a general z-ule pellets hatches}
• during May or early .lune will prove
west profitable for muter laying,
writes 1". t`, Marc, recently of the,
poultry division, Ottawa. The coc'k-
erels should be old la the early fall
, Unless they are housed in the fields
I and require little attention or extra
feed, ttte most profitable age fon
marketing is four months. After that
ago the cost of feed per pound of
I gain in live weight rapidly increases.
'I'lte pullets should be comfortably
and permanently Moused in the fall;
transferring mature pullets to a
strange pen defers egg production.
Early winner laying demands libera:
feeding, which included in addition
to the grain, waste meat or anima:
food, and vegetable food. Froin two
hocks of Barred Plymouth Bock put•
lets that were liberally fed front
birth for early maturity eggs were
gathered daily after the pullets wer.'
four months and one week old. Utah
experiments showed that the profit
from young hens or pullets wa•l
about rave times greater than that
from hens three to four years old.
Not only did the old hens lay con-
siderably fewer eggs, but the egge
were worth less per dozen. This is
accounted for by the fact that tint
pullets laid a largo' proportion ot
their eggs itt winter, when the price
was good.
When the pullets are forced for win,
tet' egg production, there should be
kept itt addition another breeding
pen of sechick5, A hen or pullet that
commences to lav in the spring will
at that tithe produce stronger egg.:
for hatching than will another that
has had her vitality impaired by
wittier layin'.
The farmersgshould select, from -tin�
flock of pullets ten or twelve of th,'
best winter layer's, placing a band oe
a piece of wire around the leg of
each. The next winter these pullets,
then yearling hens, should be sepa-
rated from the laying hens and kept
in good health and medium "leslt but*.
not fed for winter laying. In Febru-
ary or ,March they should be mated
with a suitable cockerel, and their
rations increased so as to bring theist
into laying at the time when their
eggs are required for hatching. Suck
a process of selection would soon
produce a particularly lino strain of
winter layers.
A HANDY WAGON.
Al I.ow Down General Purpose Wazon,
Adapted to Stoer:. Hay or (:rain.
The sketch is of my low down gen-
eral purpose wagon, which is a com-
bination stock. hay and grain rack,
says a correspondent or '1'lh' Orange',
Judd Farmer. The rack has only -
two side., made with. three stakes i
and somi' narrow boards. When in t
use I take off the seat, and the scat
A HANDY LOW DOWN WAGON.
standards make the front part of the
rack. The wagon is only fourteen feet
long, but I can easily load on a ton
of hay, and it will not make a larg-
er load than half thatmuch somens
rigs I have seen pictured itt the
farm papers.
It is low down, so that it is very
easy to load, and tis I use a horse
fork there is no trouble in unload-
ing.
1 have sides t tt' feet. high for haul-
ing manure, hut. another set fourteen
inches wide for other work, hauling
stones and such like. I have alone
loaded stones in this wagon so heavy
LOW ASLO OF HANDY WAGON.
and awkward that two men could
barely lift them. I did this by driv-
ing over the stone and getting it
just at the rear end of the wagon. I
tipped the rock on end anti up -envied
it into the wagon.
Wintering Cattle.
For wintering cattle I am a fire.
believer in the silo, says a New York
fanner in American Agriculturist. I
don't think there is anything else
that yields as much good feed as
corn silage. In the morning we feed
each cow the silage site will eat up
clean, with about two quarts each of
bran and corn or oats ground, and a
good feed of hay at noon. At night
the feed is the sante as in the morn-
ing. Our cows carne out en the
spring in fine condition. We com-
mence feeding in the fall as soon as
the pastures are short and keep it
up until the grass is large enough in
the spring so that the cattle are
satisfied with what they get.
The Horse's Teeth.
Sotnetintes horses seem to be slow
eaters and give very little satisfac-
tion when put to hard work. Some
of then cat enough, but they fail to
properly nrasticato their feed and are
in consequence liable to indigestion,
colic and poorness of condition, In
many cases this is due to a bad State
of teeth. A Little observation as to
the way in Which a horse masticates
food, together with an Investi-
gation of the teeth themselves,
should soon tell any farther whether
or not his horse's molars require at-
tention,
Geed Carr 1444,
Itr changing from milk to grain
feeds, crushed linseed is recoremend-
ed. Begin with A, small quantity.
Stir into the skim •talk gives the
calves, gradually iaereseing until j1
full ratio* is being extent
fYYYTYVIVIFITYYTITYVYVVVIrTY
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Taken
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IIPITIMVITTVYYTTVITYrtrfirrIM
SPECIAL- PRICE -SALE
OF NUMEROUS LINES OF
Seasofla e Goons
TO CLEAR OUT QUICKLY.
A few only of the many lines can be mentioned here, such as:
4
4
4
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Ladies' .Astrachan Coats and Capes, Collar-
cites, Gaperines, Ruffs, Boas, Muffs, etc.
A large assortment of LADIES' CLOTH JACKETS must be
cleared our at YOUR PRICE to make room for other goods,
4
4
Ladies' heavy fleece -lined Hosiery, Puritan brand.
A special line of Dark and Light Flannellottes,
Lace and Damask Curtains.
Dark Prints, Tweeds, Cottonades, .Etc,
Readyto•Wear Suits, odd sizes. 4
Men's and Boys' high collar double-breasted Reefers.
Men's Tweed Overcoats, usual priees from $1.0.00 to $12.00,
now from $5.00 to $6,00. 4
Boys' Suits. Men's Odd Pants.
COLORED DRESS GOODS, regular 25c, for 22e,
A nice line heavy 6lelton, always sold for 30e, now 25e.
4
4
CARPET! CARP T !;
A special line Heavy Jute Carpet, to be sold at i ,c, usually 20c.
Hit-and-miss Tapestry Carpet Weaves, splendid value, 25a.
A better line, nice colors and patterns, for 35e ; and mans other
lines equaIIy good value. 4
4
444
OILCLOTH AND LINOLEUM
Linoleums from 1 to 4 yards wide are goods you can save from
10 to 35 per cent, on. 4
It is to your pocket we appeal. Money well scent is a pleasure to all.
Call and see these goods. ,s
4
Tr AO r' -'-z .. ILLS.1
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^^oom^in iriay os^us^sm;la TOu`aVal .aW..Wu'Zi ovu^oe^^orlon^a,ar•aa,•m•ai+i
-
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c• 11 111 _v`. ®� •)
;s � e)
cti
iCs h } 1 II ~ lias no equal as General 4?)
C. it l (i Purpose FarmPence I'l
will turn Stock without V<
• 1 It a •I
-
t1Jq l) lI " injury— beautify the Farm — e)
f III r does not need con'tant patching e)
elCif li l 11 and with reasonable usage will •3
(•
(( i( II . last a life -time. Booklet and o:
• - fl ' is • full particulars given on request. s)
(s a, • .,iT..L-,.,,ly-,.,.ao....s..a..v....,.....m,,,.+4 w<...,.,.....w FOR SALT. IW e
Frost Wire Fence
L. W. I°IOWBRAY9 White Church
`a,estitigs riod' .•.S.a .10
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ais the best local paper in the County
s of Huron, Subscription: $ I.oa per
a• year `in advance—sent to any address
• in Canada or the United States.
t Au advertisement it the Times brings good results
•
w Address all communications to--- •
ISE W'INGEAM TIMES I
i
a••••6••24)4nh••st0s11a®•ra•••s•
Tie Times if:
Jo) Delartment A
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Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to g i v e satisfaction,
Estimates cheerfully given.
Our Specialities.
COLORED WORE LETTER BEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE .HEADS
PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
CIRCULARS BOOB. W()11 x3
VISITING CARDS ENVELOPE-
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED Ta
THE TIMES
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0.110000060.411116111140441106111M
.41111N14044t••111M
oilier, Phone, No. 4. t'*-t:IiAM., O N `i.
liesidenee Phone. No. .1.