The Wingham Times, 1905-07-06, Page 3REASON No 22
WHY YOU SHOULD USE
Red R.ose
Tea
Because of the care in Selection and Blending.
My agents in the east are expert tea tasters, and
every lot of tea that is sent down from the Gardens has
to pass their inspection. They take samples from the
chests and carefully taste them, then if the tea is fully
up to the Red Rose standard, it is accepted and shipped;
if not it is rejected.
The most important test of all, however, is when the
tea arrives here, as during the passage through the Red
Sea, the very great heat often affects the Tea very seri-
ously. Immediately on arrival, samples are taken from
each lot and subjected to the most rigid tests, and only
those teas which have retained all their original flavor
and strength are used for Red Rose (the balance is
jobbed off in bulk).
When blended and ready to' be put into sealed pack-
ages, it is tested again just to make sure no mistake has
been made in the blending; nothing is left to chance.
Will you test us by ordering a package ?
T. 1`i. BSTABROOKS, St. John, N. B.'
BRANCHES: TORONTO WINNIPEG.
There have been 319 statues of the
,kaiser erected in Germany to date.
Professer Renssner of Berlin, a recog-
nized authority on Russian affairs, in a
recent interview said that 10,000,000 in-
habitants of the Russian empire aro
literally starving.
Liberian coffee is used in the markets
to strengthen and give flavor to the
weaker kinds.
The largest sale of cattle which has
taken place in Colorado within ten years
Has consummated reoently when 35,000
dead were purchased from a ranch near
Van Horn, Tex , for $450,000.
A motorist was charged with reckless-
ness in Glasgow streets and was said by
one witness to be travelling at twenty
miles an hour. When asked what ex-
perience of motors he possessed, the
witness replied, "None but seeing them
on the street and getting out of their
way."
MANAGER WANTED.
Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage
business in this county and adjoining territory
for well and favorably known house of solid
financial standing. $CCCO straight cash salary
and Expensees. paid each Monday by check
direct from headquarters. Expenses money
advanced. Position permanent. Address.
Manager. 810 Como Block. Chicago Illinois
OIL OF PINES
The Most Wonderful Medical
Discovery of the Age.
As a cure for Catarrh of the lead, Throat,
Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys and Female Organs,
Prof. Dykes' Oil of Pines stands unsurpassed by
any other known remedy.
Oil of Pines is the most speedy cure known to
medical science for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bron-
chitis, Grippe, and all Catarrhal Diseases.
BEWARE of that most dreaded disease heir to the
human system, CATARRH I 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 core, ibut also a sure preventive.
Remember, that an ounce of preventive is worth a pound of ogre. Do not delay or
trifle, where so much is at stake. It means your further health and happiness.
PROF. DYKES' OIL OF PINES is a natural medicine. It contains no
narcotics, no alcohol of any description.
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
1.0 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 wbich grow in foreign countries.
Some remarkable cures effected by the never -failing curative powers of
Prof. tykes' Oil of Pines :---
To Prof. 0.11. Dykes, Hensall, Ont., ; uanufaturer of Medicine called
Oil of Pines:
Dear Sir:—I feel it my duty to give you the following testimonial.
I have been a severe sufferer from Asthma and Bronchitis since my infancy
and have tried anythnig and everything 1 could bear tell of, but to no avail.
I purchased a tieatment of your remedy called Oil of Pines. I had not
taken the medicine over a week before the Fymptcros of my ailments were
speedily leaving me and I found myself in far better health. The Bron-
chitis has completely left me. My little girl who is now 9 years old has
suffer( d from Bronchitis since the was a baby in my- arms, she also took
the OiJ•and It ries given tbe desired results. I consider yolrr Oil of Pines
as tbe beet known remedy to day for the silmentementionetd. I would urge
anyone suffering with Bronchitis or Asthma 10 go at oleo to the dreg store
and purchase a treatment of Oil of Pines. Yours gratefully Mr. J. Mosorip
Township of Blansbard, County Perth, Rannoch, Ont.
Price $1.40 per bottle, or 6 forrt15.CO.
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES.
N. B. --If your storekeeper or druggist does not handle Oil address orders to
Prof. O. M. Dykes, liensa►ll, Ont., Proprietor and Mannfacturer. All orders
promptly filled and forwarded to all parts of U.S. ,mad Canada tilos"receipt of
{{,rice. Ask for Prof. Dykes' •'Oil of Pines," and take NO SUBSTITUTE, Prof.
Dykes' id the ono original and genuine.
,
THE WINGHAM TIMES, JULY 6, 1905
CAPTIVES OF URUGUAY
TREATMENT ACCORDED IMPRIS-
ONED CANADIAN SEALERS.
Called Them Pirates—Captain May B.
Imprisoned for Five Years -- Thr.
Charge Is That the Veasel Wontin•
to the Waters of Uruguay to Pillage.
That Country's Seal Rookeries.
Mr. D. Steel has arrived in Victoria..
B. 0., having returned from Uruguay.
He is one of the ill-fated hunters from
the Schooner Agnes G. Donoghue, When
he left the other members of the crew
were held in Montevideo awaiting sen-
tence on what Steele says la only a.
trumped-up charge. Steele, seeing how
matters were shaping, thought It best
to quit the Uruguayan capital on the
first opportunity, and is well satisfied
to get bacic to his home in Victoria at -
ter months of a most 'trying experience
in Montevideo. When he left on April
3rd the prosecuting attorney in the
case had recommended to the courts
that Capt. Ryan, commanding the
schooner, should receive Sve years' im-
prisonment; that Wm. Ryan, chief
nate, should get two years; Wm. Por -
ler, second officer, one year; and the
members of the crew should be im-
prisoned for six months.
Put In For Water.
It was about November 11th that
Donoghue put in to within about four
and one-half miles of the shore of
Uruguay for water. The weather was
so rough that it was impossible to land
a boat, and after waiting all the next
day the captain decided to leave. A
cutter, described by the Uruguayans
as a man-of-war, approached, and after
firing three shots across the bow of
the schooner the vessel was boarded.
No attempt was made to investigate
affairs aboard the schooner, but after
taking ten of the crew of nineteen men
off a crew was put on the Agnes Dono-
ghue to 'bring the vessel to Monte-
video. This was accordingly done, and
upon their arrival the officers and men
were imprisoned for sixty-seven days.
Couldn't Get Redress.
Repeated attempts were made by
the officers and men to get redress. The
British Minister was appealed to, but
the authorities replied that $5,000 of a
bond would have to be put up: Fin-
allya
t the end of sixty-seven six seven da s the
Y Y
captain was taken back on board the
schooner with a guard of five men in
charge. Other members of the crew
were allowed to come and go on taking
an oath that they would appear when
called upon to do so. Steele describes
the treatment accorded the men inthe
Jail as none too good. The floor was
bare rock, and the rations meagre. The
imprisonment and worry incident up-
on it has told upon Capt. Ryan. He
is a young man of about thirty-flve
years, but is now only the wreck of
what he was before the trouble began.
If imprisonment is to be enforced Mr.
Steele has little hope that Capt. Ryan
I will Iive through it.
A Flimsy Case.
The case against Donoghue is of the
flimsiest character, Steele says. He de-
nies that there could be anything in
the charge recently made that the
schooner hunted off an island near the
coast of Uruguay. This island, he says,
is known as Castello Grando. It is
near here that the pilot boats await
the arrival of vessels. Lying there
they are paid a premium for every
schooned they report, and it Is suppos-
ed that this is the way in which the
cutter was made aware of the pres-
ence of the Donoghue. There was no-
thing done in the way of attempting
to prove that the schooner sealed on
this island. The skins were not even
counted on board the vessel. So far
as fresh blood marks were concerned,
it was quite likely that some marks
might have remained on some of the
boats of the schooner from the day
previous to her arrival off the coast.
The courts before which the unfortun-
ate sealers were brought were conduct-
ed in a way which did not inspire Mr.
Steele with any great respect for the
Judiciary or the laws of Uruguay.
Called Them Pirates.
The solicitor who represented the
captain and crew of the schooner in-
formed them that there was no case
against them. Yet when the first judge
gave his decision he said the sealing
company was formed for the sole pur-
pose of robbery and that the crew of
the Agnes Donoghue were pirates.
Slowly the case was carried from one
court to another and when Steele left
was to come up for what was regard-
ed as the final decision. The prosecut-
ing attorney was given six days to
prepare his report for the court. He
took forty-seven days to do it. As be-
fore mentioned, he recommended five
years, imprisonment for the captain,
two years for the mato, one year for
the second mate and six months for the
crew, with the confiscation of the
schooner and cargo. All the members
of the crew were from Nova Scotia,
with the exception of Steele and Wm.
Porter, the second osier, who belongs
to Sooko, near VietorIa, B, C.
Luxury In Travel.
"Lord Hawke is a judge of comfort
in travel if any man is," says The Lon-
don, England, Canadian Gazette, which
adds.—"Last week he returned from In-
dia and rapan by way of the Pacific and
Canada, and we can welJ believe how
every Canadian Pacific Railway official
will blush as he reads what the famous
cricketer has to say in The Sheffield
Daily Telegraph:—'I have never known
such a company as the Canadian Pa-
cific Railway,' says he. "The travel-
ing is luxury. Everyone on the whole
line is civil, kind and willing to do
everything to add to one's comfort. As
to the journey across the Rockies, it
was superb. Once we had a rare ex•
perience of one engine at the front of
a second, with a third pushing its hard-
est at the rear. We shouldn't have
got rip otherwise. I was with Lord and
Lady Castlereagh on that part of the
trip, and we couldn't have had a finer
thno of it. The scenery is wonderful,
and the weather was grand. I was
riding on the engine part et the way
across: Writing to a friend, Lord
Hawke says:--•'Everyene (in Canada)
was goodness itself. and I should like
to add how much I admired the Won-
derful management of the Canadian
Pacific hallway. "
Retail Droggiats can be supplied direct frcm Prof. Dykes Laboratory at -
Hensall, or irom'Wliolesalo Dtugglets at London, Canada.*
Sick. Headache, Biliousness, Dys-
pepsia, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath,
Heart Burn, Water Brash, or any
Disease of the Stomach, Liver or Bowels.
Laxa-Liver Pills are purely vegetable ;
neither gripe, weaken nor sicken, are easy
to take and prompt to act.
Ambition Which Failed.
From the Albany Journal.
A young man who was anxious to se-
cure a job as a railroad brakeman wan-
dered into one of the local yards the
other day and came across a bunch of
railroad men who were sitting in a
shanty. He made known his ambition,
and one of the men who is quite a jok-
er, asked him a few foolish questions.
The youth answered them and then ask-
ed:
"How long before I'll be likely to get
a job?"
"Sit down and wait," said the joker.
"There's ten or fifteen brakemen killed
every day, and yon can't tell how soon
we will need you."
The young man's ambition seemed to
fade, and he remembered that he had an
eggagement elsewhere.
Wingbam Citizen's Band now open
for engagements for garden parties.
Anyone desirous of securingcuriag
their ser-
vices communicate with Chas. H. Green,
secretary.
It is stated that extensive loads of tin
ore have been discovered in the Trans-
vaal, thus foreshadowing a tin industry
in South Africa. Rich cassiterite de-
posits has been located at Vlaltlaagte
and elsewhere, and, although at present
their extent and precise metallurgical
value have not been established, great
expectations are entertained of the re-
sult of the operations now in progress.
British thieves steal $40,000,000 worth
of property every year.
Eighty per cent. of Portugese peasants
onn neither read nor write.
On June 5th, Jno. W. Burgess, eldest
son of the late Samuel Burgess and
brother to James Burgess, of Brussels,
p used away from earth, aged 30 years.
He died at Santo Rosa, New Mexico.
where he had been living for the past 4
years, from a stomac•ll trouble that de-
fied medical science. He leaves a wife
(who was Miss Myra Holland, formerly
of Brussels) and two children to mourn
his demise. The subject of this notice
was engaged in the railway service
and was an industrious straightforward
man.
Out of 47 counties in the Province of
Ontario, there are at least eleven that
do not contribute one cent through their
county council boards to the support and
maintenances of either a district or
township agricultural Society. Middle-
sex is among the number. The grants
in other cases range all the way from $25
to 5300. Carleton makes the very dona-
tion of $000 and Lambton gives as much
as $400 to their district and a stated sum
per member to the township societies.—
Milverton Sun.
ii
.•1
How
Do
You
Know?
How do you judge
crackers? By their crackling
crispness—their snowy light-
ness—their appetising delici-
ousness ? That's the way to
judge
Mooney',
Perfection
Cream Sodas
Measure them by quality's
standard and they score 100
per cent. If you haven't tried
MOONEY'S, you've missed
a treat in Clackers.
A TRUSTING SOUL.
There Were Several Things to Settle,
but All Were Adivated,
"Na, a'ack," the young woman said,
eluding lila arm; "not yet!"
"What's the matter, Lulu?" he
asked.
"I haven't said I'd marry you.
There's something else to be settled
first."
"What is it, sweetheart?"
"Several things. You have habits I
cannot tolerate In the man I marry.
Jack, do you smoke?"
"Yes. I burn a cigar once in awhile."
"You will have to give that up."
"All right, clear. What else?"
"Do you chew tobacco?"
"Not habitually. Once in a great
while I take a chew."
"I can't marry a tobacco chewer."
"Well, I'll promise to quit it. Any-
thing else?"
"Yes. Do you drink?"
"Occasionally I take a glass of beer—
nothing stronger, upon my word."
"Will you promise to give that up
too?"
"Sure. I don't care anything about it,
anyhow."
"Do you play cards?"
"Occasionally, just for fun."
"I can't marry a card player."
"Then I'll cut out the card playing."
"Do you bet on horse races?"
"Sometimes."
"That's just as bad as any other kind
of gambling, Jack. You'll have to prom-
ise to drop it."
"Well, I'll quit that too. And now"—
"Hold on, Jack. lire you In debt?"
"Don't owe a cent to anybody on
earth. Does that"—
"Not quite. Walt a minute, Jack.
Will you agree to spend your evenings
at home?"
"Bless your heart, Lulu, I'll tire you
to death staying at home of evenings!
So, now"—
"No! Not yet, Jack! One thing more.
Will you promise to go to church with
me every time I ask you to go?"
"Er—yes, I'll promise eveu that."
With a contented little sigh she laid
her head on his broad shoulder.
"How much nicer it is, Jack," she
said, "to reform a man before marry-
ing him than to try to do it afterward,
as so many foolish girls do!"—Chicago
Tribune.
W1•y He Was Caught. •
"I notice," said the tired citizen, "that
a man was arrested yesterday in New
York for stealing a 110 pound clock in
broad daylight. He was carrying the
clock under his coat when a police-
man's attention was attracted to
him"—
"Probably thought he was taking too
much time to get away"— began the
cheerful idiot.
But everybody left the room.—BaItI-
more American.
Foresight.
Mrs. Nexdore—Of course my daugh-
ter plays the piano very well by ear,
but she wants to take lessons from a
regular professor.
Mrs. I'epprey—That's natural enough.
Mrs. N exdore—Ob, yes!
Airs. Peppre3'—Yes, I suppose she's
wise to want somebody else to blame
besides herself.—Catholic Standard and
Times.
A Simple Matter.
"Does a dentist have much trouble
in collecting his bilis?"
"No," answered the expert in teeth.
"A man usually sees that his last ac-
count is paid before lie has more work
done. ile takes no chances on au
unfriendly disposition." — Washington
Star.
A Fit.
Howes—Deacon Slims prides himself
upon being in the strait and narrow
way.
Barnes—IIe certainly is to be con-
gratulated upon having a soul admira-
bly adapted for a narrow path.—Bos-
ton Transcript.
Ms For Pay-.
"Do you—er—ever tell fibs?" asked
the lady who had advertised for a
maid.
"Not for myself, nia'anl," answered
the applicant, "only for the missus."—
Chicago Journal.
No Point to Them.
Editor (to office boy)—Mr. Witt has
railed for the jokes he left the other
day. Have you seen them?
Ofilee Boy --No, sir. I rend them, but
1 couldn't see 'eat ---Judge.
impslrtd by Torture.
"Isn't your memory good??" thunder-
ed the lawyer.
"W -well," stammered the witness,
"not when I'm on the witness stand.";-•
NOW tori: Press.
3
unshin
jrnac e
Don't
Shovel
Ashes
Not one make of furnace in twenty is supplied
ash -pan,
Without an ash -pan the ashes must be shovelled into
a pail or some other receptacle for removal—means dust
in the eyes, ruined clothes, extra work ; a dirty disagreeable
job—the meanest part of furnace 'tending.
The Sunshine Furnace has an ash -pan which catches
all the ashes, and slides in and out easily. Has two handles
for carrying. No shovelling, sweeping or dirt.
This is only one of a dozen good features possessed
by the Sunshine Furnace, none of which are found on
any other furnace.
with an
MCCIary's
London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B.
SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG.
A little over 12 per cent. of milk is
solid matter.
An asphalt lake of considerable ex-
tent has been discovered in Asia Minor.
An English company is being organized
in London for its exploitation.
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The badge worn by the Lord Mayor of
London is studded with diamonds to the
value of $000,000.
The only school for lady gardeners in
London is at the Royal Botanic Gardens
oRegent park.
The "FROST" GALLOCK BD
•
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is one of the new features • oft Wire
he Frost Wi e
Fence for this year. The locks are coated with)
zinc by an electrical process which absolutely 1)
prevents rust. �)
The Frost Wire Fence is made of t
coiled spring wire tested to 2000 lbs. tensile •)
strength—over twice that of ordinary fence wire.
C• The Frost Fence is guaranteed. We will repair at any time free of
C• charge, any defects due to material or workmanship. Heaviest and best. •)
C� Write for free booklet. For sale by—
`; J. W. MOW AY White Church $
QV
RS.
Tho Leading Specialists of Amer:ca. 25 Years in Detroit. flank References.
Cs No Names Used Without Written Consent. I
Vitiif.ULEi.E If .ou have transgressed against the laws of-
31~1ERV®USDEBILInY„ n - tare, youmust suffer. St Ifautu;e,later eye, sses!
and private diseases have wr eked thousands of,
CUREDprose nag lives. Treat with scientific pleyolcians
• i and 1e cured. Avoid q•encks. E. S. Sidney, or
Toledo, says: "At the age of It, I lwrnc.t abad
habit and at 19 contracted a serious (Liao se. I tr wated with a dozen doctor ,, who alt
promised t euro inc. They gut my money and 50,t1el ]tad the dise•a e. I had given
up hop, when a friend advae•d me to consult Drs. K. ez Ii., vr::•, had cured ban.
it'a tit a :v coufilence I called on them, and D:. F:.:nneti r a•rre:d to cure me or
no pay. Ait-r tatting the sew Method Treatment for s:x weds I telt 111m a new
man. The drains eea,e.i, wormy veins disnpp ared, n•rv.s rrcw s•rnu•rer, hair
sto,•prd falling out, urine became clear and nee sexual organs vitalized. I was
entirely cured by Dr. Kennedy and recommend him fro.0 the bott eat of my heart."
We 'Treat and Curo Syphilis, Gleet. Varic.acea•-, r mi..si.ans,
Stricture. Unnatural Discharges, Seminal Vircaltneis, I:idne:y
and Htadder X)'se,t,tem.
CONSULTATION P 1LI'3. POOiF.S PI•:EE. Call or write for Question Blanit
for Home Treatment. NO CU1tt5 NO PAY.
DRS, KENNEDY KER2AN5
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby Street. Detroit, illicit.
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• every particular ; and our work is •
s guaranteed t o g i v e satisfaction.
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wEstimates cheerfully given.
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Joy Deiartment
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i THE TIMES
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Address all communications to—
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Office Phone, No. 4.VINGIiAbt div Y'.
Residence Phone, NOM,
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