The Wingham Times, 1905-04-13, Page 3i
Tea
:4.11s as follows:—
Brown label • 25c per lb.
Crimson " 30c
Green ;" 35o `$
Blue c, • 40c "
Bronze " 50c "
Gold 60c "
Both Black and Green teas, also a mixed tea
(Black and Green) are put up in each grade.
The price and description are printed on each
label.
ci
The Black Teas•are a ruddy color in the cup
and have a rich, fruity flavor.
The Green Teas are a pale lemon color and have
a delicate, pungent flavor.
You are sure to use Red Rose Tea some day—
better try a sample package now; you can't begin
younger and I know you won't be sorry.
At all grocers.
T. H. ' ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B.
BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG.
Sentence Sermons.
A full head seldom swells.
Happiness is wholly of the heart.
Meekuess is the niark of a master.
A crooked walk shows a orippled will.
Lope covers sins, but it does not con-
ceal them,
Nothing lifts one higher than love for
the lowly.
Croakers always advertise their own
.swamps.
Every sorrow may be the seed of some
great joy.
Love that can be measured is never
worth measuring.
A little smile 'will break up some
mighty big clouds.
Innocence that is advertised usually
Irides some iniquity.
Worship with the heart results in
work with the hand.
Lies abide forever, though they are be-
lieved but for a moment.
It is the gold of love that makesthe
quartz of life worth while.
He who withholds his love from men
shuts off the love of God.
There is no service without a sense of
the sacredness of things.
Nothing but art on the menu is an ag-
gravation to the appetite.
Some men think they are saints be•
cause they have heavy laundry bills.
The man who buys , a bargain lot of
religion never bas any to give away.
The principal thing a bigot believes is
that all new ideas are born of the devil.
No man is meaner than he who tried
to keep "the golden mead' between
right and wrong.—Chicago Tribune. •
OIL OF PINE
t'IiE \VINUI1A
TIMES, APRIL 13,
1905
SHE WAS MISTAKEN.'Illgrlr11mu11n111(111p1uun.1n1bt1��
Ighe story of a Worn?* Whe Thoug,*
She 'gold the Wrath.
"If you ask me whether we lawyers
ever encoilrege, aid and abet untruth.
fulness," said an elderly attorney at a
diuner recently, "t can only ask as a
reply: 'Does any ono bnow what truth
is? Does any man really know when
he is telling It?' I bad a rather curiou9
ease once a few years ago. I won't say
whether It was a murder or a divorce,
hut the clearing of my client, the de-
fendant, depended entirely on his abil•
ity to prove that when he walked down
a certain corridor of a certain summer
hotel he was accompanied by two per.
sons. It happened that he was seen by
the bousekeeper of the hot1, a woman
of more than ordinary intelligence, and
she insisted that there were three in
the party and not simply two, as the
prosecution claimed. It was impossi-
ble to shako her testimony, and we
carried the day. The housekeeper died
a year or so later. I heard it through
her priest. Ile commented on the fact
that she had always taken great satis•
faction in the thought that her testi•
mony cleared my client. She was, he
said, and hp spoke from a confessor's
knowledge, one of the most truthful
persons he had ever met. I told my
client what the priest said the next
time we met. lie smiled,
"She was lying all the while,' be
Haid. 'She didn't see three of us, be-
cause there were only two.' "—Wash-
ington Post.
The Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age.
CHINESE TRADE GUILDS.
'key Pass on A11 Disputed questions
of Labor and lrood.
The laborers in China work long
hours, and their meals are supplied by
the employer. Their food consists of
rice, partaken of twice a day, with now
and then a few vegetables or pieces of
salt fish or pork as a relish. Tea is also
furnished to them in unlimited quanti-
ties. They begin work as soon as day-
light appears and continue until be-
tween 8 and 9 o'clock at night, the re-
cent introduction of kerosene ell length-
ening their hours of labor. The work-
man eats and sleeps in the shop where
Ile is employed.
Not only do the male workers have a
trades union or guild of their own, but
so also have the employers. To these
guilds are referred all disputed ques-
tions of labor and food, which, as a
rule, are amicably settled. The opera-
tives seem to take it for granted that
their employers can properly claim ev-
ery moment of their time from early
morning until night unless about thir-
ty minutes set apart for each meal of
rice and vegetables be excepted. When
the two guilds fall to arrive at a satis-
factory settlement of a dispute the em-
ployers simply close up the shops.
Canton boasts of over seventy trades
guilds. These guilds have fine halls
and spacious courtyards, where their
members meet daily and discuss the af-
fairs o respective f their res e
ctive trades and
other matters,
Why Is It?
Everybody knows how the wheels of
a railroad car are fastened to the axle,
They are shrunk on—that is, put on
trot and allowed to shrink in cooling so
that they are practically a solid piece
with the axle. These cars go around
Curves, and it will be observed that the
outer rail covers a great deal more
As a cure for Catarrh of the Head Throat ground than the inner one, so that to
> , turn the curves and finish even the out -
Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs, • side wheel must of necessity travel
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines stands unsurpassed by considerably faster than the inner one.
any other known remedy.
Oil of Pines is the most
medical science for Coughs,
chits, Grippe, and all Catarr
BEWARE of that most d
human system, CATARRH !
become weak and diseased
let it is fixed solidly to the axle and
'cannot make a fraction of a revolution
more than the other one, yet the axle
speedy cure known to ,remains intact, and the curves are pass -
Colds, Asthma, Bron- ed with untiring regularity. Why is it?
hal Diseases. Secret of Longevity.
readed disease herr to the a
eget of theirs long life. The replies are
your eys to become of the sort commonly heard. One lives
• A London newspaper has been asking
Allow your lungs to number of very old men for the se-
kidn
diseased, and your back lame and sorelong because he has taken wine every
, your liver day in moderation, another because he
and bowels deranged. These conditions lead to the most has never tasted wine. 011e finds saver -
fatal of all diseases, CATARRH. ' The eyes begin to grow reign virtue in moderato physical exer-
dim, the pulse fails, the wholesome stream of our blood is loelse; another because ts convinced that he lives
he keeps his s body quiet
choked and troubled, the limbs begin to decay like sapless sea- 'anhis mind active, an of which
weed in a summer's{sun ; our better views of existence are means that each man has followed his
past and gone ; what remains is the dream of Lost happiness or aatural inclination, never exceeded the.
PPO
lw
w
.-
:d
Littte Boy .Had Eczema
For Six Months.
Salves and Ointments re
No Good,
w
M
w
sa
H
w
--
W
PP▪ S
S
PPSPS 1Ow▪ l
,r
-.
P PS
OPP
sys
--
-`+
CI Eczema is one of the most torturing
• of the many itching skin diseases, yand
child• lso ren. The cause is ba
blood,ooaided
+: by inactive skin, inflammation, eto. It
• tnanifestsitself in small, round pimples
▪ or blisters, which later on break, and
form crusts or scales. The skin has an
itching, burning and stinging sensation,
ro. haveet the ridlood. pure, and
this par
pose nothing can equal
Burdock Blood Bitters,
• Mrs. Moreno° Bonn, Marlbank, Ont.,
"• writes:—" My little boy had eczema for
six months. I tried ointments and
..: salves, but they healed for only a short
▪ time, when it would break out worse
= than ever. I the decided to give
✓ Burdock Blood Bitters a trial. I only
-'"„ months�since and there! iit no sin of
a return. I feel sure that as a blood
%- regulator, nothing eon equal it. I can•
• not say too much for what it has done
for us.'
Tey T. bluan iter Co., LnMITID,
■ + Toronto, Ont.
71iiiiiiIiIi111111111I1I11111111111111I11115
CURIOUS FACTS
There are three thousand, lepers in the
Transvaal.
The surface of the ocean is never
struck by lightniug.
Shoes of straw are worn by the pack
horses of Nagasaki, Japan.
In Korea all girls over seven years of
age are taught at home by tutors.
A faith -healing sent in Hawaii bas
just celebrated its semi -centenary.
A score of people in Paris fish in the
river for corks as a means of livelihood
David R. Francis, president of the re-
oent Word's Fair, began life as a news-
boy.
Balloonists say that bird's flight is
limited to 1.316 feet above the surface of
the earth.
A Parisian called "Father Cockroach"
makes his living by ridding houses of
cockroaches.
Mummies are advertised for by a firm
in London which used them in the man-
ufacture of paints.
One-third of the savings banks depos-
its of the world are owned by people of
the United States.
In Germany, electrioity among other
curious results, has rehabilitated the
discarded windmills.
The city of New York was the first
one lucorporated in the United States,
its charter being dated 1664.
Horseshoe? to the number of one hun-
dred and sixty million, or two million
kegs, are used annually in the United
States and Canada.
Icelanders never think of "locking up
at night," and yet only two oases of
thieving have occurred in many years.
Scientists estimate that there is energy
enough in fifty acres of sunshine to run
the machinery of the world could it be
concentrated.
The first turnpike road was made in
1794 between Lancaster and Philadel-
phia, Pa., was sixty-two miles long and
was so called because it was required to
be so hard that a pike could not be dri-
ven through it.
measure fixed by good sense and really
the fear of inevitable evil. !thought little or nothing about it.—St.
But remember, SUFFERER, that the wonderful and Louis Post -Dispatch.
never -failing curative powers of that sovereign remedy, 0 •Iliad Aceotnplirhraeiate.
OF PINES, has completely 'cured thousands. of cases as above a Power to do is largely.? result of self
described. Therefore, upon the first evident symptoms of this f•aith or self confidence. No matter
dreaded disease, CATARRH, make haste andprocure a bottle what you undertake, you will not do it
until you think you can. You will not
of the sovereign remedy called OIL OF PINES. master. it until you first feel the Inas-
OIL OF PINES is not;only a never -failing otlre, [but also a sure preventive. tery and do gm deed in your mind. It
itemomber, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. Do not delay or must first be thought out or it can nee -
trifle , where so much is at stake. It means your further health and happiness. er be wrought out. It must be a wind
PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no alcconiplishment before it can be a ma -
narcotics, no alcohol of any description. [facial ane. Success.
OIL OF PINES is not taken by teaspoonfuls or tablespoonfuls. The dose is
by drops. A bottle of Oil of Pines contains three 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 ohbsen 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 countries.
Some remarkable cures effected by' the never -failing curative powers of
Prof. Dykes' 011 of Pines :—
To Prof. C. M, Dykes, Dear Sir: I feel it my duty to Bond you the
following testimonial. I used your medicine called Oil of Pines for throat
trouble. I had suffered for a long time with a large lump on the otttside
of my neck and I felt all the time a choking feeling in my throat and I
could hardly swallow my food. I had doctored but could never get the
lump removed from My throat,but your Oil of Pines gave me
immediate
relief and I can now swallow my food without the least effort and I suffer
no more with the malady. I used the Oil both internally and externally
according to directions. I feel that I cannot say enough in praise of your
Oil Of Pines. Tours sincerely,
l�xs. Robt. Ward,Motherwell, Perth County, Ont.
Price $1..00 per bottle, or 6 for $5.04.
roIt SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES,
Don't Be Too "Nationale.
One's nationality is to otbere a bare
Med a nuisance ,which cannot be got
out of the way too soon. A man's na-
Ronality is something he is justly
proud of, but not till it is put aside clot
the man ot another nation hare joy of
him, humanly, spiritually. W. D.
Uolveils.
•
Keeps 'Thetis Aire$.
"Mrs. Chatterbox is an incessant talk-
er, isn't she?"
"Yes; she says that a pereon'a spin.
Ions get musty it they aren't titres
lftert."—Detroit Free 1'resd.
It Sotnettires
"There's nothing like perseverance.
It wins out in the bag run."
"Not always. Did you ever sec a hen
sa a porcelain egg?"—llirookly wife.
N. B.—If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle Oil address orders to
Prof. 0, M. Dykes, Sewall, Ont., Proprietor and Manufabturer. All orders ' A tint •t (ias>d,410iasi
prompt filled and forwarded to all parts of U. S. and Canada npan receipt of oee of the best thing* to di bet re
IirioO. Ask for Pref. Dykes' „Oil of Pines," and tie NO ;Si7BSTITitTN. Prof. ; fie Crittetee ethers muds is to b • b
Dykes' ill the one original and genuine. , ° i,g tii"lti$l11t rristty,
Saud Druggists 'bel be supplied direct from Prof. Dykes Laboratory at t•
Ilenenll, or from Wholesale Druggists at London, Cazsada. . calls rnoroat.. • + • * '
II .1 �aiYYlnu iia 11111u i
•
YOUR AMBITION.
Keep It Stimulated and 00 Not res.
suit It to Wane.
The idea seems to be pretty general
-
that ambition is born in us, that we
have little or nothing to do with its ac-
quisition or cultivation and that we
cannot modify, enlarge, stimulate or
improve it to any great extent, A. study
of life does not confirm this idea. That
tate ambition is a cultivable quality,
capable of being molded or destroyed -
according as we will, is demonstrated
every -day in the lives of those about
us. We see people in whom the spark
of ambition is kindled suddenly by the
reading of a book, the hearing of a lec-
ture or the speaking of a kindly word
by a friend or teacher, and, on the oth-
er band, we see those who allow their
ambition slowly to die out for want of
fuel.
The death of ambition is one of the
tragedies of life. When a young man
feels his ambition begin to fade there is
trouble somewbere. Either he is in the
wrong environment and his faculties
protest against what he is trying to do,
or his health is poor, or be is being led
into dissipation by bad companions. A
youth whose ambition begins to wane
is not in a normal condition. When he
is not stimulated by a noble purpose
and filled with a desire to become a
strong man among men there is some-
thing wrong somewhere.—Success.
One way to find out how nice a girl
isn't is to marry her.
The way to get a girl to marry you is
to make love to her best friend.
The,devil's job is so easy he would
rather work overtime than get a day
off.
There is a great deal of difference be-
tween loving a woman and being =t-
ried to her.
Gossip is what onq,woman tries to say
about another before the other gets a
chance to say it about her,
The'
Ri erolutionizingf
of the
Cracker
Mooney revolutionized the
, cracker. He made folk
admit that they never knew
how good crackers could be,
by making such delicious
crackers as they had nevi
tasted before. Then he set
folk to eating Mooney`s
4 crackers who'd never eaten
crackers before. k a year
he had all Canada eating
Mooney's
Perfection
Cream Sodas
You'll sets why when you
try them. Haven't you curl.
osky enough to buy a box at
your greatest
VICTOR HUGO. •
Everything About Iiia? Was Extraor.
dinars, Even His Digestion.
Never to be forgotten were those
evenings when we were lucky enough
to find neither minister, senator nor
deputy—for in the presence of polf)tical
men Victor Hugo always seemed to me
somewhat stiff—when he warmed to
his subject, let himself go, as it were,
and his conversation took a natural
turn full of charm.
How he would then have astonished
those who had repre.muted him as be-
ing exceedingly solemn—in fact, a po-
seur! If they had seen him so it 'was
doubtless due to themselves. Perhaps
to the bumptious and self opinionated
he gave himself the air of an oracle,
but with poets, I repeat, he was ease
and simplicity—I might even say fa-
miliarity—itself.
At these dinners we could not help
admiring his formidable appetite( He
ate enormous pieces of roast meat and
drank large glasses of undiluted wine.
A typical detail struck me particularly.
At the end of his meal he dipped or-
ange quarters into his wine and ate
them with marked satisfaction. Ev-
erything about Victor Hugo was ex-
traordinary, even his digestion.—Fran-
cols Coppee in Critic.
EPAU LETS.
Originally Intended as a Protection
From Sword Cuts.
It is probable that the epaulet was
originally ,ias arotection tontendedp
the shoulder from sweed cuts rather
than as an ornament. Ever since 1795
they have been worn by commissioned
officers of the British navy. According
to the officer's rank they vary in de-
sign. A sublieutenant wears only one
composed of gold lace; other ranks two.
The degree of rank is shown by crowns,
anchors and stars worked in silver up-
on the epaulets and also by the thick-
ness of the cord. of which they are com-
posed. Previous to the Crimean war
epaulets were worn by both officers
and men of the army. Here, as in the
navy, distinction was shown both in
their texture and design. Those of the
officer were made of gold braid, while
with the rank and file they were mere-
ly of worsted.—London Telegraph.
The King of 3lolluslts.
The king of mollusks lives in the In-
dian and south Pacific oceans. He at-
tains to a weight of 1100 pounds, and
the shell is of the bivalve kiiid, and the
shape is about the same as that of our
common fresh water mussel. The gi-
gantic tridacna is the largest mollusk
known to have Iived on the earth since
the silurian age. It is found on the
bottom of the shallow parts of the
ocean, and the large individuals have
no longer the power to move about.
They lie on one side, and all about
them the corals build up until King
Tridacna is sometimes found in a well -
like hole in the coral formation. --St.
Nicholas.
The Ruby.
Rubies are most suited for young ler.
ers. They are also most expensive. The
people of the Burmese empire believe
that a ruby is a huipan soul just about
to enter the sacred precincts of Buddha
and consequently in the last stages of
transmigration. A ruby is an emblem
of the most passionate and absorbing
love. A ruby itt the old days of chiral+
ry was supposed to lead a knight td
conquest, to cause obstacles to melt
away and to inspire one with bravery
and zeal. It else kept bis honer ult•
stained and his character without 0
blemish.
The Three Monte* 'Wan.
A well known racing man recently
lost £100 to a comparative stranger,
who offered to bet him that he coup
produce three horses which could g1
ninety miles in three hours. The layei
ot the wager easily accomplished the
feat by starting all three horses at once,
by which artifice thirty miles only war
the distance they bad to traverse in tht
tilne speelded.—London Standard.
3
•••••••".•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••::
1.0 JAM oND:JN D
41
PERFECT
HONE
DYEING. -
1
••
• DYE.
•
• .,
r
• EASY TO USE, BRIGHTEST AND BEST.
•
• ASK FOR THE "DIAMOND."
All Druggists and Dealers. TAKE NO OTHERS. -
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••• ••••••••
Accommodating'.
Doctor--I•las your cough troubled not
as much as usual today, Mrs. Grand;
Patient—Oh, no, not nearly as much';
I got Hortense, My Maid, to cough fat
Me. She is a very aeeommodatint
young woman. ---Boston 'Transcript:
A Blatt of business may talk of philos
ophy; a man who Moa aoue May prac
E
ILK
The cow for the dairymen is the one that can make the most profit
in milk, butter, or cheese for the food consumed, A large number of
cows are kept for dairy purposes that don't yield sufficient xuilk to pay
for their keep. They consume as much as profitable ones and require
as much time and care itt their milking. Alsc many a good " Milker"
has gone to the butchers block owing to improper care and feeding.
Many of the milk producing qualities of the feed are lost owing to im-
proper digestion and assimilation. This can be overcome by the addition
of Clydesdale Stock Food to the ordinary feed as it puts the stomach
in such shape as to help her to digest and assimilate her food, besides en-
abling her to eat more of it, as it is made more appetising, This makes
her capable of secreting more milk, and, in many instances, richer milk.
If it could be demonstrated that more bushels of wheat could be
grown on a piece of ground than ordinarily, and without injury to the
land, in fact improving it, and at an extra profit, wouldn't you take up
the proposition. Clydesdale Stock Food will add to the milk pro-
duction, and with extra profit, and without injury to the " Milker," be-
cause it gives a tone,and sleekness to the animal that cannot otherwise
be had. The use of Clydesdale Carboline Antiseptic will keep the
stables in a healthy condition ensuring healthier milk. If after using
the above, you find you are not satisfied, your money will be c heerfully
refunded by our dealer. Clydesdale Stock Food is sold in your district by :
Wm. Gannett, Wingham. Wilton & Turnbull, Brussels.
Andrew & Webster, Lucknow.
M. S. Haidenby, Teeswater. J. G. Moser, Blyth.
1
a.e.000•e••• oWerie^reegmToa�VeVems ie^^ s.seee•o•
• •
gg.,� "FROST
9? GALVANIZED :}
• The �R4�.31 LOCK •.1
r
is one of the new features of the Frost Wire n3
«�Fence for this year. The locks are coated with •a zinc by an electrical process which absolutely•
prevents rust.
The Frost Wire Fence is made of fcoiled spring wire tested to 2000 lbs. tensile •�
• strength—over twice that of ordinary fence wire.
• The Frost Fence is guaranteed. We will repair at any time free of •e
C• charge,anydefects due to material or workmanship. heaviest and best. t)
•�
CP Write for free booklet. For sale by— te
m
J. W. MOWBRAY, White Church:
•
•
NERVOUS D .- IUB` ' ' OU E
Excesses a.,d indiscr:tious a -e the ca'>'n• of more
sorrow a. d suturing than all other disease combined.
\t e see the victims of vicious habits oa every hand;
the sallow, pimpled face, dao: elected c; as, s'ooping
form, sturtcd development, bashful, melancholic
countenance and timid bearing proclaim to all the
world his fo1l,• : rd 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 towhat nature intended—a healthy
and happy n:an with physical, mental and nerve pow-
ers comple' c.
For over 25 years Drs. R. & X. have treated with
the greatest success alt diseases of men and women.
if you have any secret disease that is a worry and
a menace to your health consult old established physic-
ians Qho do not have to experiment on you.
We guarantee to cure Nervous Debility, Blood
Diseases, Stricture, Varicocele, Kidney and Bladder
Diseases. Consultation Free. If unable to call, writ•
for a Question Blank for Dome Treatment.
DRS' KENNEDY 86 KEDGAN
145 Shelby &tracts
Detroit, Mich*
iy1,Sl.Loa'656i+ni �eira1, �Jil . u1,1
•0000000.000000.000000000• .•0•••0•••••000x0•.•0.0.0•
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• Our pecia lit ices.
•
OOLOItED WORK LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS NOTE HEADS
0 PAMPHLETS BILL HEADS
• OIROULARS BOOK WORK
• VISITING CARDS ENVELOPES
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
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Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Estimates cheerfully given.
•
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1
THE TIMES
is the best local paper in the County
of Huron. Subscription: $i.00 per
year in advance—sent to any address
in Canada or the United States,
An advertisement in the Times brings good results
Address ad1 oommunications to•-
� E WINGHA1VI TIMES
Milos Phone, No. 4. WD' C.IIAM, ONT.
Residence Phone, N6, 74,
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