The Wingham Times, 1905-08-24, Page 3.at "Rich Fruity Flavor"
Fp.SULT of expert blending of strong, rich
Indian Tea with delicate, fragrant Ceylon
T -a. 1 hat t' rich fruity flavor" has made Red
R• +s Tea the table beverage of thousands of
homes.
It distinguishes Red Rose Tea from all other
teas.
It makes it different from and better than
,'ny other tea—it's a flavor you won't forget. It
?hakes
BLIND 70 HIMSELF.
�Milaavkee Sentmel.l
Me was constantly looking about for
the flaws,
But be never had ary himself;
Ile would dig for the dtfects in a man
without cause,
But he never had any himself,
Be was ever suspicious, he'd always
suspect
Beery person be met had some awful de-
fect—
In saints or in sinners 'twas the same,
every sleet—
But he he never had any himself.
lie found them in men who were up-
right and true,
But he never had any himself;
Be found them in women as pure as the
dew,
1905
ose
good Tea
T. H. Estabroolis
St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg
But he never had any himself.
High and low, far and wide, he would
always appear
With a curl of the lip, and a taunt and
sneer;
No person was honest and upright, that's
elear—
Except that it might be myself.
It's the ay of the world; you have all
met the man
Who never finds flaws in himself;
Avoid him, sidetrack him, try any old
plan—
The man abo is blind to himself.
Every soul bas its flaws, as a rose has
its thorn,
And out from the flaws are the pure and
good born;
To the top they will rise, in spite of the
scorn
Of the man a ho is blind to himself.
THE. GB EA TEST 1ET
sum GBAhDLST EVER
1905
CAAADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
$45,000 in Premiums -
The Trish Guards Band
Ey permission of His Most Graciors Majes-
- ty King Edward V11, the band of the 11iFli
Guards, His Majesty's fo orite household
band and the finest mthtaiy musical organ-
- izaticn in the Empire, a iii give two con-
certs each and every day.
Art and Treasures
- In an especially built, extensive, fire -proof
art gallery will be presented the grandest
collettion of art and art treasures ever got
together on this continent, including loans
from the Sing, the Corporation of the City
of London, the gi eat English Univer sides,
the 1, (public of lirenee, Fent]) Kensington
Museum. 1 ofd Stiathcor a. the Lieut -Gov-
ernor
OHom
nta an other distinguished
bodies
Coronation Picture
By special command of His Majesty the
King, .Abbey's noted and historic painting
will be on exhibition during the entire Fair
$38,300 in Attractions
Fall of Port Arthur
The greatest pyro milita ry display ever pro-
duced before the Canadian people. Scenes
in this =est recent of the a orld's most ap-
palling event will be vividly portrayed with
real Japanese and Russian soldiery taking
bart. Ube fireworks display will be on a
rilliant scale, introducing new features of
an Oriental character.
Other Th'ngs to See
The Process Building, samples of all the in-
dustries and resources of the country, thou-
sands of horses, cattle, sheep, swine,poul-
try, and dogs, all Canadian cereas and
minerals, good trotting and pacing, a sup-
erb variety show, the world's latest inven-
tions.
Special Excursions
Special cheap railway end steamboat ex-
cursions have been arranged. Enquire of
your nearest station or ticket agent for
rates.
W. K. McNaught, Pres.
For
andipprizenforinatlist, enion atryddress blanks J. 0. Orr, Mgr & See'y.
Entries Close : Live Stock, etc., Aug. 7th. Poultry and Dogs, Aug. 19th.
Western Fair
TM, IXH10ITIOH THAT MA.c FALL
A.MtCULTUMAL 'AMM. ,POPULAR
When Governor Simcoe laid the foundation of
London, Ontario, one hundred yeas ago he knew it
would grow to ben great city, but ha no thought of the
Western Fair.
The Western Fair gives the people of this country
an excellent opportunity for a pleasant outing at a
minimun of cost, and at the same time developes their
store of practical and useful knowledge.
Its educational features have always been carefully
fostered by the Directors. This year several important
improvements of an instructive nature have been added.
The celebrated gist Highland Regiment Bald will give
three concerts daily during the exhibition. The entertain-
ment department will he better than ever, and will include
leaping the gap in mid air on a steam automobile.
FON IMFOMMATIOtt WR,Tc W. J. SCID, Mw csuo[NT. es
J A. NELLES, etc.crAAA
LONDON
Sept. 8 = 16, 1905
RESTORED Tn MANHOOD
ii
The New Method Treatment of Drs.
K. & K. has restored thousands of weak,
diseased men to robust manhood. No
matter how many doctors have failed to
cure you, give our treatment a fair trial
and you will never regret it. We guar•
antee all cases we accept for treatment.
Not a dollar need be paid unless cured
for you can pay after you are cured.
i Drs. K. & K. established 25 years.
1 — We treat Varicocele, Nervous Habil.
Ity, Stricture, Blood Diseases, Kidney
Bladder and Urinary Dies. If un.
able to call, Write for nestion Blank for
Home Treatment.orisul 'ti4n
Free.
NOT A DOLLAR Naito BE
PAID UNLESS CURED.
DioN.KENNEDY & KEfUAl " ► * M, a '".
THE WINGIIAM TIMES, AUGUST 24, 1905
MEMQRIES QF 40 YEARS AGO.
O cottage 'peath the maples, have you seen
those, girls and boys
That but fora little while ago wade, oh I. sueb
pleasant noise?
O trees and hills, and brooks and lanes, and
Where I shallfldndy my little friends of forty
years ago?
You see I'm old and weary, and I've travelled
long and far,
I am looking for my playmates; I wonder
where they are?
—Eugene Field.
(Written for the Wingham Times.)
As I sit here in the twilight,
Reading the Wingham Thins;
A surge of memories come o'er me
Of the days of "Auld Lang Syne."
The sweet home of my childhood
With its sunny nooks and rills,
And the little old, log sohool-house
At the foot of Taylor's hill.
I see Mr. Young as be sits at his desk;
To me, then, so portly and tall
I see the expanse of his white shirt front
As he reads the old "Roll Call,"
There was Johnnie and Bobby Currie,
And their little brother Will,
Gavin and Willie Wilson
And Johnnie and Andrew and Jim
Mary and Susanna Holmes '
And their little brother Tom,
Through mud and rain and sunshine
They had so far to come.
Angus and Duncan and Johnnie McLeod,
And also Murdock and Dan,
A nicer family of boys
Was not found in all the land.
And also Willie Kennedy
So generous and no kind;
Maggie and Effie and Malcolm Lamont
Angus and Sarah, too.
There were Lizzie and Katy and John
That came; as time on its swift wings
flew.
Malcolm and Rachel and also myself,
And my brother John, he came
To freshen up his memory
After he was lame.
George and Ellen Allen
And their little sister Jane,
Fannie and Maggie Baird
And with them Martha and Jim.
Fannie and Maggie Taylor
And Johnnie and Mary Jane;
Annie and Mary Tervit
George and little Kate;
Lyda and Bennie Fraliok
And the Holly children, too.
Mary and Elias and Msgdeline
Come plainly back to view;
Sam and Alice Burohill,
Mary and Susan and Jane,
Johnnie and Lizzie and—Francis Adele
I had almost forgotten her name.
Jimmie and Willie Gordon,
And Bobby with hair so red—
How well that I remember
How he cried, when we called him
"Red Head."
Johnnie and Maud and Emma Brace,
And their uncle Bob, he came;
Jimmie and Bobby Lockridge,
And also Sarah Jane.
Johnnie and Alex. and Charley McCool,
And little Annie and Jim;
Joe and Maggie Shearer;
And also Susanna and Liz;
Jimmy and Joseph Godkin,
Tommy and their sister Jane;
Amanda and Alonzo Glover
And little Liza, too;
And a whole lot of the Meizener's
Whose names are lost to view.
There was also Johnnie Armstrong
My bean, they palled him then,
Tho' he had no time or thought to spare
For the little maid of ten.
There is another one, Tony Sheak,
Comes dimly back to view,
He did not sojourn with us long—
Perhaps a year or two.
Noise and Eddie Griffin,
And the Copeland girls and boys,
Who carne to school from Wingham,
Through sunshine, rain and storm;
I yet can see each little face
As I could see it then,
Tho' I have reached the mile post
Of two score years and ten.
In my home in fair Wisconsin
I dream I see then still—
Brace's Mill and Taylor's Hill,
And dear old Zetland bridge.
And as I sit in the gloaming,
With these names I've just recalled,
I wonder how many can answer, "Here"
To this Zetland School Roll Call. -
Mrs, J. N. White (nee Annie Lamont )
The Old Man Citctns,
Nature indulges in am occasional
Joke. There is found growing in the
desert region of North America a spe-
cies of cactus known to botanists as
Pilocereus mills, or the "old man cac-
tus." There is in this plant a wonder-
ful resemblance to a human bead cov-
ered
overed with gray hairs. The plant is
slow of growth, and small specimens
are more frequent than large ones. The
plant is covered with long white hairs,
which completely hide the body or
stem of the plant. These hair" are fre-
quently gathered into locks, adding to
the resemblance of the frowsy head of
an old man. Plants known to be twen-
ty-five years old aro but a tela' inches
in height, yet specimens are found
which are twenty-five feet tall and a
foot In diameter, representing, jt is be-
lieved, the growth of 'several hundred
years. In these gigantic sppcinlens of
"oId Ulan Cactu"" the tertp "old" is
quite the moat appropriate part et the
title.
Pisekeld set the
Ovsu'e Mouth
We do things right at
the Mooney bakery.
Crackers are packed piping
hot from the ovens, The
moisture -proof paper and
air -tight tins retain all the
freshness and crispness, no
PERFECTION'
$
,Clitilh !1 S0d
(KitMOONEY t .l. �� . DY. CG
srsnrrORD CANADA
matter where or when
you buy them.
They come to your ta-
ble just as inviting and de-
licious as though you ate
them at the ovens in the
bakery. At all grocers in
1 and 3 Ib. packages.
CURIOUS FACTS
A poor woman at Herrnstadt, in Sile-
sia was condemned to three months in
prison because she had stolen three cents
worth of kindling wood on a bitterly
cold day.
The new Paravano radiotelegraph
which permits of transmitting several
messages simultaneously without con-
fusion or chance of interception, is to be
used in the Italian navy.
HAY FEVER FOR 27 YEARS.
Well Known New England Woman
Cured of Hay Fever—Cure was
Lasting.
The thousands of discouraged people
who dread the approach of summer be-
cause they have hay fever and cannot
find any relief from it, will read with
interest and gratitude the following
statement from Helen S. Williams of
Mansfield, Mass.
"For 27 years,; from the month of
August until heavy frost, I have been
afflicted with hay fever, growing worse
; and worse each year, until of late years
I was unable to attend to my work dur-
ing that period.
"Last summer I fortunately gave
Hyomei a trial, and I am happy to say
that it entirely cured me, and
. I have had no recurrence of the disease
since."
This letter is only one of many that
• have come to the proprietors of Hyomei,
and the results following this treatment
have been so remarkable that it is pro-
posed at the annual convention of hay
fever sufferers to recommend Hyomei.
By breathing the germ -killing and
healing balsams of Hyomei, anyone can
have at any moment of the day, either
in their home or office, a climate like
that of the White Mountains.
The complete outfit costs but $1, extra
bottles 60 cents. Walton McKibben
agrees to refund the money to any hay
fever sufferer who uses Hyomei without
benefit.
A darning machine, one which will
in ten minutes cover a hole that an in-
dustrious woman could hardly fill in an
hour, is a recently invented piece of
labor saving apparatus.
A remarkable incident is reported
from Penang, A horse put his tongue
out at his stable companion through a
hole in the side of the stall. The other
animal bit the tongue, and so seriously
that the stricken horse had to be shot.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
See Pae-Slmtts Wrapper Beim.
Vary small and as our
Pi take as mean.
IIEAOACIIG
CARTER'S FOR bliilitE$si
'I,E ForIItlbUsk
1/D ii I L�
FCR1RP1
i0rCI11S A
TA,
P_
FOR1TN '
mat ,. :
�✓- '
The TIMES to January, 1000, for 25c. ,'CURE SICK H NRAOHer
LIFE IN .JAVA,
The Natives Are Grave and 11Ia1.1y
ldve nag Rat Ia Public.
The afavans live much in public, and
the poorer classes, instead of eating
their meals at home, as is the man-
ner oe the unsociable Iiindoo, seem
usually to breakfast and dine at one
of the itinerant cookshops to be found
at every street corner. More exclusive
people may be seen buying the small
packets of curry and rice wrapped in.
fresh plantain leaves and pinned with
bamboo splinters, which are intended.
for home Consumption.
To stroll down a village street and
watch the culinary operations In prog-
ress at wayside eating shops was an
unfailing source of amusement, and
very clean and appetizing they looked,
though the smell was occasionally
somewhat trying to the European nose.
The Javans, like all rice eating peo-
ple, are fond of pungent and evil smell-
ing sauces, and equivalents of the Bur-
man gnapee and Japanese bean soy
are in constant requisition.
The natives, and especially the chil-
dren, look fat and healthy and appear
to enjoy life under easy conditions,
though they are, generally speaking, of
grave demeanor and are not endowed
with the unfailing vivacity which dis-
tinguishes the Burmans and Japanese.
During the six weeks that we spent in
the island we did not see half a dozen
beggars and, except In cities, certainly
not that number o1 policemen,
THE VEILED PROPHET.
Ile Was the Most Noted Impostor el
the Middle Ages.
The celebrated "veiled prophet" of
history was a Moslem fanatic whose
real name was Haken Ibn Hasbem.
He was born about the middle of the
eighth century and became the most
noted impostor of the middle ages. He
pretended that he was an embodiment
of the spirit of the "living God" and,
being very proficient fly jugglery (which
the ignorant mistook for the power to
work miracles), soon drew an immense
number of followers around him. He
always wore a gold mask, claiming
that he did so to protect the mortals of
this earth, who, he said, could not look
upon his face and live.
At last, after thousands had quitted
.the city and even left the employ of
the Caliph al Mohdi to join the fanat-
ical movement, an army was sent
against the "veiled prophet," forcing
him to flee for safety to the castle at
Keh, north of the Oxus. Finally, when
ultimate defeat was certain, the
prophet killed and burned his whole
family and then threw himself into the
flames, being entirely consumed except
his hair, which was kept in a museum
at Bagdad until the time of the cru-
sades. He promised his faithful fol-
lowers that he would reappear to them
In the future dressed in white and rid-
ing a white horse.
FABLE OF THE PANSY.
The Fancily of Six That Is Contained
In the Flower.
A pretty fable about the pansy is
current among French and German
children. The flower has five petals
and five sepals. In most pansies, espe-
cially of the earlier and less highly de-
veloped varieties, two of the petals are
plain in color and three are gay. The
two plain petals have a single sepal,
two of the gay petals have a sepal
each, and the third, which is the lar-
gest of all, has two sepals.
The fable is that the pansy represents
a family consisting of husband and
wife and four daughters, two of the
latter being stepchildren of the wife.
The plain petals are the stepchildren,
with only one chair; the two small,
gay petals are the daughters, with a
chair each, and the large, gay petal
is the wife, with two chairs.
To find the father one must strip
away the petals until the stamens and
pistils are bare. They have a fanciful
resemblance to an old man, with a
flannel wrap about his neck, his shoul-
ders upraised and his feet in a bath
tub. The story is probably of French
origin, because the French call the
pansy the stepmother.
Sunlight and Eyesight.
Sunlight as distinct from sun heat Is
of benefit to human eyes. Unless re-
fracted from white cliffs or stretches
of sand or by other means, it does not
cause any impairment of vision. It is
the natural provision of the sense of
sight and is in harmony with the nat-
ural period for work and pleasure—
that is, the day. So soon as we intro-
duce artificial light we deal with that
which needs caution. A dim light in-
jures vision because the eye alters its
shape to receive the feeble rays. On
the other hand, a strong artificial light
will produce inflammation of the eye
surface and worse.
Here's Appearance.
In his youth Nero was remarkably
handsome, but early in manhood his
habits of dissipation made him exceed-
ingly corpulent. To judge from Ms
medals and the descriptions left of him
he must have weighed over 200 pounds.
His features were regular, but his eyes
were so protuberant as to be almost a
deformity, and he was nearsighted, so
much' so that he could not recognize
bis acquaintances across the street,
His Mistake.
Mr. Slimsky—I don't believe the city
water is safe. 1 notice it has a clouded
appearance this morning and tastes
sort of—milky—and--- Mrs.
S
ta
rvem-
7batslass contains milk, ]tr. slimskyy.
.
The water is at your left. And, by the
way, your board bill war duo yester-
day.
•
It has done me good to be somewhat
pnrehed by the heat and drenched by
the rain of Itfe.—Longfellow. �„ ,.-....
-t
Cooks and Bakes
perfectly at
the same time
' There is not an.
other range built
in ,which the heat
may be regulated
so that you can bake in the oven and cook on the
top at the same time without spoiling one or the
other,
But you can do both equally well at the same
time on the Pandora, because its heat is not wasted
and is at all times under the simplest, most positive
control.
If you do the cooking of your household you
can appreciate exactly what this means.
McCIarys Pandora
Range
Warehouses and Factories r
London, Toronto, Montreal,
Winnipeg, Vancouver,
St. John, K.B.. Hamilton
SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG.
Short cut to MTH
There is none—if you would succeed you must work.
Some colleges claim to give a complete course in Less
time than the
The Forest. City Business and Shorthand College teaches
the different courses in the time found by long experience by
the best colleges, to be necessary—no more and no less.
If the work is done in less time it cannot be done thoroughly.
After you leave the F. C. B. C. you waste no time in learning
what you should have been taught in the College.
Our free booklet tells all about plans, systems, charges,
positions after graduating, etc. Write for it.
School term—September till June inclusive.
J. W. WESTERVELT, Y. M. C. A. Bldg.,
Principal LONDON, ONT.
P111
AS
Want your moustache or beard
abeautiful brown or rich black? Use
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Take one when you feel bil-
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rectly on the liver.r..w.l'�T,1K.a..
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE
rurr Cis. 0r nu..ins mi. ir.'<, r, a cchousAUi. 8. L
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Tie Times
Joi Duartment
_or
Our Job Department is up-to-date in
every particular ; and our work is
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Estimates cheerfully given.
Our pecialit i e s.
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advertisement ;in the Times brings good results
Address all communications to—
TUE WINGECAM TXMES
1
Mee Phone, No. 4. ,t rsN GRAM, ONT.
I.esideneo 'Phone. No. 74.
0.A!, .#!Mlf 141004!! R 04/11.0.0.00.6.16.6010141.041.4