The Wingham Times, 1906-01-25, Page 3/'d(�l�fli((_U,
1111111 -
sal
THE WINGIIAM TIMES, JANUARY 25, 1906
To give zest to
winter sports, relieve
fatigue and ward off
cold, take a cup of
steaming hot
Many physical ills and blurs and blem.
ashes on the countenance are due to over-
eating, to eating damaging food, or eat-
ing irregularly.
Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps,
but is bust when used in the Sunlight way.
Bay Sunlight Soap and follow directions.
Deranged Liver and f311fousnesa
"For a long time I suffered from liver
complaint and biliousness and could find
nothing to help me until I need Dr.
Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. I have re-
commended these pills to many of my
friends and they have been all well sat-
isfied with the results." -Miss Julie
Langlois, Manor, Assa.
Tho Seeding Specialists of Amcr'ca 25 Years in Detroit. Rank References.
n.7,'No Names Used Without Written Consent.
YARICOCEi.E If von have transgressed against the laws of
NERVOUS
urtura,youmust suffer. Self abuse, later excesses
Lt�Dl1 .RTY - and privato diseases have syr deed thousands of
CURED. FEI prorsr,in;; lives. 1 reat with ::denies physicians
and to cured. Avoid quacks. E. A. Sidney, of
it
Toledo, says; "At the age of 14, I learned bad
habit and at 19 contracted aserious disc se. I treated with a dozen doctor;, who all
promised to cure mo. They got my money and I still had the disease. I had given
up hops when a fri,od advised MO to consult Drs. K. Sc K., who had cured him.
With ut any conti.h•ac:e I crated on them, and Dr. Kennedy agreed to cure me or
no pay. Ait:'r t.t im• the .e, ..• h Treatment of New .t
pay. ori Tr .t s tent for six weeks I felt like a new
man. tra, . '1'fre drai:i:..c,.t ts•
.l, wormy veins disappeared, nerves grew stronger, hair
stopped urr
, urine became clear and my sexual organo vitalized. I was
entirely
cured by Dr. Kennedy and recommend him from the bottom of my heart."
'We 'Trout camel C/ro `5)•plaiily, Glect, Varicocetc, Emissions,
Stricture, re, Qnnsitu l Di^
as ca.
Seminal
4eakn23st Kidney
and ti.ta.ieler1) .u` .s^s.
CONSULTATION : RI"G. imams FREE. Call or write for Question Blank '
for Dome Treatment. No CURE, NO PAY..
DRS, KENNEDY trl, KERGAN,
Cor. Niel -Sig -an Ave. and Chctby Street. Detroit, Mich.
V.,22kattagalakarlipaateistlf4 ", .“
rWif.iii i.ihil5it; l I,t6lLlti1.CIL.dduaslG7,4CiYd;I4el .i6 diCLIALl0 h.11 uthlt.I+.i&.41 1. I, ,4A "I.i;1,diLla
WAITING FOR DEATH, BUT
NOT WITHOUT HOPE
"There is a poor woman in this
parish apparently just waiting for
death to comp through consumption.
She has not the tnean5 to go to a
Sanatorium, or ,ire would probably
be at one before this. She is still
• 3 comparatively strong, walk, about
,_;1 quite a lot --drives sometimes, too-
but every day, of course, is growing
worse. Would there be aey posi-
"-4 bility of her being taken into your
Homo for Consumptives? It would
be a mercy if shn• rout•1 be permitted
-a to enter it,. I wuu lit lunch appreciate
an early reply, as every ,lav means
1
14
so much."-Rnv. Renese SUTTON,
Incumbent, 13ehnont, Out.
LOST TWO DAUGHTERS
•
"I am advised by Dr. J. D. Wilson
to write you concerning, how soon I
could get my wife admitted to Con-
sumptive Hospital at Uravenhurst,
also please seed ole pamphlet re
terms while there. I have been told
that it is free, so please let me hear
from you soon as possible. I have
lost two daughters, and my wife con-
tracted the disease froth our eldest
one, who died ten months ago. I
am a working man and not able to
pay a high rate, but :till anxious to
(10 what I call." -A. CA)I1'BELL,
London, Ont.
The above are typical of scores, indeed hundreds,
of appeals conaantly coming before the trustees of the
fluskoka Free Hospital
• ,IUY..1.M1YIV,Ii.Y. n . .S1,11.1:W.u. • 11 .11 ...11.11 I. A ul . Nle 1. 1, .,. IN 11 1.11 1.1,111 Y
for Consumptives
4,11J I.i.I.LN1.1,IA,J14S..,!W.111I414.41. 6,1 1 .14 1..1 . Y a1.m.iL'.++ 1. I.L.
IJ No effort is being spared to meet every call. . . .
Not a single applicant has ever been refused admission
to the Free Hospital because of his or her poverty,
•e'er'
NEW PATIENTS ON WAY TO ILOSPITAT,
and the anxiety of the trustees to keep none waiting
is shown in the decision reached a few weeks ago
to increase the accommodation by twenty-five beds.
--This increase, in patients will add
heavily to tete burden of maintenance
and Call stilly be covered by increased
generosity on the part of friends in all
part, of Canada. Patients have been
admitted from every Province in the
11onaiattoii, and it is with confidence:
in the response to alit' 11•Peal,, that
the trustees beIiede will colIs y fr ltl
Canadians everywhere. that these ad-
ditional l bul•de us have been aa,snmeil.
Where a cause more urgent? Where a greater
call to help suffering Canadians ? Where will your
money do more good?
--Colltributiens a:.t.,c let ;,ens to Stn Wm. l idl It1;ulmtr, ht., Chief
Justice, O.sess ie Mill, Toronto, or 'W. J. (Lea., 1.,;1., 54 front St. W.
rs
1
41 .1 1J h Aim litatt.11 &Ltd Li
9
I Jild.11Cia lie.LCL I Lc.
a
A
Franklin', Frugality. '
Mr. Fisher, in his biographical sketch,
"The True Benjamin Franklin," tells
a story to illustrate Franklin's frugality
and method of acquiring property.
On the eastern shore of Maryland a
young man called one evening on an
old farmer to ask him how it was that
be had become rich. "It is a long
story," said the old man, "and while I
am telling it wo might as well save the
candle," and he blew it out.
"Yon need not tell the story," said
the youth. "I see."
Franklin's method of gaining wealth,
as seen in his narrative of bow he and
his wife lived together, was the one her
ancestors practiced. "We kept no idle
servants, " he says. "Our table was plain
and simple, our furniture of the cheap-
est. For instance, my breakfast was for
a long time bread and milk -no tea -
and I ate out of a twopenny earthen P
pewter a por-
ringer withspoon. But mark
g
bow luxury will enter families and
make a progress in spite of principle.
Being calleone morning n
to break-
fast,
I found it in a china bowl with a
spoon of silver 1 They had been bought
for me without niy knowledge by my
wife and had cost her the enormous
sum of three and twenty shillings, for
which she bad no other excuse or apolo-
gy to make but that she thought her
husband deserved a silver spoon and
china bowl as well as any of his neigh -
bore."
A Day's Talk.
Few of us probably ever think seri-
ously about the amount of talking we
do in a day and how large a factor
mere taut is in the life of the world for
both good and evil. It has been esti-
mated that a public speaker titters in
one hour, on an average, what, if print-
ed, would occupy 15 octavo pages. Or-
dinary conversation is even more pro-
lific.
Let us suppose, says The Winoniam,
that all the talk of one day bo estimated
as equivalent to four hours' consecutive
speaking. In a single week the amount
would make what, if printed, would be
an octavo of 820 pages. In a year a man
would complete 52 such volumes, and
in 30 years he would have accumulated
a library of 1,560 volumes of his own
talk. What value would most of ns
place on such a library? How many
of us could endure to read it? How many
would feel satisfied to have such books
go on the market?
It is related of Dean Swift that at an
evening party, on one occasion, he re-
tired to a corner of the room and com-
menced noting down the talk of the
company. Being asked what he was
doing, ho produced a verbatim report of
the conversation which had just taken
place. Most of the speakers, it is added,
felt no small humiliation over the su-
perficial and trifling character of their
utterances when confronted with thele.
The Trick In Omelet Making.
The omelet is the supposed "impossi-
ble" in the average kitchen, when in
reality it is but a moments' work which
any ordinary cook can accomplish. And
once a simple omelet is achieved there
is no end to the pretty and toothsome
'variations easily within one's skill. In
the first place, omelets need not be
"tossed," but just handled calmly and
practically, and, in the second place,
the puffy omelet is the "sonilie," by
far inferior to what might be called
the "true omelet," which is not puffy
at all nor subject to falling.
The one point in omelet making
which must be imperatively observed
regards the pan. It is not at all neces-
sary to buy a regular omelet pan, as a
smooth, rather heavy, medium sized
spider answers the purpose equally well.
But it const be kept sacred to omelets
-absolutely never appropriated to oth-
er uses. It mast never be washed, but
cleaned by salt and brisk rubbing. 13e -
fore using melt a little lard in it, drain
it off and rub otit well with a dry doth
until thoroughly clean and shining
smooth. It is not too much to say that
a proper pan is two-thirds of the battle
in snccessful omelet making.
Never mdse an omelet for several
persons at once, individual ones being
both more satisfactory and •more easily
managed. -Elia Morris Kr,)tsehmar in
Woman's Home Companion.
Very At',:ravatinir.
Three-year-old Elizabeth was exceed-
ingly busy the other horning when
ter father interrupted her play, and she
piped up: "It is tee aggravating to
Lave a man come and kiss you when
you aro trying to fold a shawl. Really,
it ie too aggravating,"
Rushing the Business.
The following story is told of a one
time Pennsylvania legislature;
The session was about to expire. In
accordance with the usual custom, the
chair was occupied by a rapid worker,
who was deaf to objections and blind
to objectors. Ilia name was Alexander
McClure. Under Ills able management
the bills were going through at a
lightning express rate when one meas-
ure was reached that was particularly
obnoxious to a noisy minority. Utter-
ly oblivious to the demonstration, Mr.
McClure declared that the bill had
passed. Over in one corner of the leg-
islative chamber one member was espe-
cially vociferous, Re would not be
quieted, and Mr. McClure was finally
compelled to notlee him for the sake
of peace,
"For what purpose does the gentle-
man rise?" asked the chair.
"I want to offer an amendment to
the bill," was the reply.
"Too late," said Mr. McClure, with-
out a smile. "Offer it to the next bill.
The clerk will read."
Candlelight.
In domestic lighting for nearly the
first half of the last century candles
held undisputed sway. The bell is
rung, and Mary brings in candles, a
pair of molds in tali brass candlesticks
brightly polished, with snuffers on a
tray -a sharp beaked snuffers of steel,
with jaws that opened and shut with a
snap and something sinister in their
appearance.
There were plated candlesticks and
snuffers, too, for occasions of state,
with silver branches that suggested the
spoils of Jerusalem, but there was also
a lamp, a stately edifice of bronze that
towered over the family circle at times
and shed a generous and genial light
when so inclined. But what a demon
it was to smoke and to smell! And it
would burn, when it condescended to
burn at all, nothing but the very finest
sperm oil at a fabulous price per gal
los.-London Chronicle.
LIVER COMPLAINT.
The liver is the largest gland in the body; its
office is to take from the blood thero erties
P P
which form bile. When the liver is torpid and
inflamed it cannot furnish bile to the bowels,
oausing them to become bound and costive. The
eymptons are a feeling of fulness or weight in
the right side, and shooting pains in the same
region, pains between the shoulders, yellowness
of the skin and eyes, bowels irregular, coated
tongue, bad taste in the morning, etc.
MILBURN'S
LAXA-LIVER
PILLS
are pleasant and easy to take, do not gripe,
weaken or sicken, never fail in their effects, and
are by far the safest and quickest remedy for
all diseases or disorders of the liver.
Price 25 cents, or 5 bottles for $1.00,
all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
A Decided Opinion.
"I was in a railroad accident once,"
said a. bishop, and I was helping an
elderly lady from our wrecked ear. Be-
hind us came a noble looking English
lady with her husband by her side.
"She was scolding him well for start-
ing on their journey on Friday. 'I
told you, Tames,' she said, 'something
would happen if we should start on
Friday.'
"'Madam,' said I, 'do you know that
Columbus set sail to discover America
on Friday?'
I "She looked at me with indignation
and said, 'Sir, in my opinion it is a
great pity America was ever discovered
at all: "
6OLUTE
SECURITY,
Cenuine
Carter's
Little Liver PMS.
Must Bear Signature of
Seo Fac-Sinfite Wrapper Below.
`gory small and as easy
to take as sugar.
',CARTER'S FOR �°NES.DS
1TTL+ FOR idlLiOUStIESS.
SER FOR TORPID LIVER.
P'FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THECOMPLEXION
O16DfV Sita YVltt a.4. YATuII ,
es °p p (surer v' am J ��be.�.avG.01
A POOR FILTER.
Why One Central Ameriean Tena
Had ;salt Drinking Water,
Here is an Incident that illustrates
the unexpected difficulties which en-
terprise has sometimes to face in cer-
tain regions of Central America: From
a certain large lake an important town
drew its supply of water. By means
of powerful steam driven pumps the
water was drawn from the lake
through a strong iron pipe, which, aft-
er running some eighty or ninety yards
Into the lake from the shore, ended in
au upward turn, a short arm bent at
right angles to the pipe and rising to
within a few feet of the surface. Sud-
denly an epidemic visited the town In
question. The company's reputation
being threatened, it was decided to
straightway pull up the streets and ex-
pose the main pipes and conduits. •
The entire system was laid bare,
from the'outskirts of the town to the
very shores of the lake, but the minut-
est examination failed to reveal any
suspicious feature. Then, almost at
their wits' end, for the epidemic was
raging as badly as ever, the officiate
entered upon the last lap and turned
their attention to the submerged por-
tions of the conduct, and here it was
they found the cause. A huge alli-
gator had been drawn toward the
mouth of the main by the very strong
Influx, and, being unable to release
Itself from the suction, had remained
there until It died, and thus, for good-
ness knows ]low long, all the water
consumed in the town had first filtered
through the decomposed carcass of the
alligator.
HUMANITY'S HUNGERS.
What They Are and the Ages at
Which They First Appear.
Professor Earl Barnes is authority
for the following list of "human hun-
gers" and the ages at which they can
first be noticed:
Hunger for food and drink -infancy.
Hunger for action -infancy.
Hunger for knowledge -infancy.
Hunger for companionship - six
weeks.
Hunger for property -two years.
Hunger for self aggrandizement -live
years.
Hunger for beauty -two years.
Hunger for reasoning -seven
g g years.
Iluuger for worship -thirteen years.
Hunger for righteousness - fifteen
years.
The naturaldesire for food and drink
is strongest, said the professor, at
birth. :after twenty the appetite
should, if not misused, become less and
less till at seventy a man or woman
ought to require only one small meal
a day.
The "hunger" far property is very
strong at about fifteen -the "collect-
ing" age, when boys will amass any-
thing, from stamps to beetles. Whet;
all other "hungers" fail the "property
hunger" still exists, and a man is most
likely to be a miser when he is nearest
Lis grave.
The "hunger" for beauty -that is, the
real "beauty hunger," which means the
admiration of art for art's sake -is the
most uncommon of all. -London Ex-
press.
tepping
Stones to -- 15,, �.
Health �- y�
- PI,o NAUN cap
see r -KEEN
•
s.""---Ssete
1'11t'
3►,J9b'7Fry erg -s[. '"' _ 1
- 4 a AeteC- 'pr
Nothing
I Ate Agreed
with Me
Mr, Arthur Tennison, To -
onto, writes enthusiastically
of the merits of rSYCUINf;
for all stomach troubles.
For Glx or seven years I
have been troubled with indi-
gestion and dyspepsia. Too
witch acidity of tlio stomach,
the doctors meld, originated
the trouble. I tried seers of
remedies. My roots at home
re -enabled moro a drug store,
with many glibly adver-
tise.,) nostrums which I had
b',n(rht. Eventually r used
P sYCHINE, although. it was
three times the mcg of any
other medicine 1 had ever
bought, yet every dose
brought permanent relief.
It is so easy to cruss this stream if only you exer-
cise care and attention.
Be careful where you step, as a false step will land
you in the dirty and foul waters.
You are surely weary of remaining in sickness and
misery ; why nut cross over to health and
Happiness?
These stones were carefully laid ; each is perfectly
sure and safe.
PSYCHINE was produced by shill and science
and is the outcome of the highest Medical
Knowledge.
Use it as a stepping stone and you can thus cross
over the stream of disease in safety and land on
the further side where Health and Brightness
Will grecs you,
PSYCHIN
(Pronounced Si -keen)
The Greatest of Tonics
Is a permanent cure for Pneumonia, Pleurisy, Consumption,
La Grippe, Bronchitis, Lassitude, Wastyng Diseases
and all Throat and Lung Troubles.
SEE SAFETY IN PSYCHINE
All Druggists One Dollar
Free Trial
D. T. A. SLOCUM. Ltd..179 KING ST. W., TORONTO. CANADA
0 , Keep saying it, over and over again.
Ayer's Pills. Ayer's Pills. A er's
r p Y Y Y
1
Q/ � Pi e 'v
G s � S lis. The best liver ills ever made.
P
The cure constipation indigestion,
table, sugar-coated, mildly laxative.
er v
biliousness sick -headache All vege-s Pilis•1, 7 We ar a ne secreta! We ivies. X, 'mer ass.
the foramina of sit oar medicines. Lowell. Kass.
Renew Your Subscription
ante•••••••••••••••,•••••••
The Defects of Memory. ti
t)
With the mass of men it is unques-
tionable that one fact drives out an -1
other, and it is doubtful if the most
learned person carries in his mind more
details of knowledge when fifty years
old than he carried at twenty. It is
only that he carries different things.
The great lawyer, for instance, obliged
to retain in his memory all the minus
tiae of the most complex case, with
the liability of hopeless defeat should
one fact drop out of place in the chart I
of his mental voyage, may very likely •
have to enter ou another case by whol-
ly forgetting the first one. He can no
more carry it all with him than he can
carry the knowledge by which he per-
haps graduated summa cum laude from
eoilege ten years before -as, for in-
stance, chemistry or the' differential
calculus.
The Umbrella.
An umbrella is a "little shade." Cots
grave In 1611 detined an "umbreilo" as
"a (fashion off round and broad fanne,
wher�vith the Indians (and from them
our great ones) preserve themselves
froin the beat of a scorching sunne."
To Ben Jonson and Beaumont and
Fletcher likewise the "umbrella" was
a sunshade. According to Florio (1508)
an umbrella was "a little round thing
that women bare in their hands to
shadow them; also, a broadbrimd hat
to keep off heat and rayne; also, a kind
of round thing like a round skreene
that gentlemen use in Italy in time of
summer."
Alcoholic Drink Front Rice.
The alcoholic drink used in the prov-
ince of Chekiang, in ('hiva, is made
from fermented rice. Fermentation is
induced by the addition of cakes made
of wheat meal. An examination of
these cakes shows that the particles of
wheat aro penetrated through and
through by the mycelia of various
fuugi, Some seven or More different
species were found. These fungi grow
ou the moistened Mee, fermentation
follows, and a yellow liquid with an
agreeable odor is produced.
A Tenant 1Y•or Life.
"Have you hoarded long at this
house?" inquired the new boarder of
the sour, dejeeted man Sitting next to
hint.
"About tete years."
"I don't see hew you eau stand it.
Wlty haven't you left long ago?"
"No other place to go," said the
°sees dismally. "The landlady's my
;vlfe,'
Those who slip on a banana peel
never fail to See a penny lying on the
sidewalk in time to keep from falling
"Tel'
e
•
a
1F
9
8
tD
11t
19
8
to
9
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•••tlt•••••••••••tp••000019!••
MATTEPL
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1 00 ` 2 • Ad
119
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FOR 1906.
Times ...
Presbyterian
Westminster
Times
Weekly Globe ..................
Weekly Wituess
Times
Weekly Sun
Weekly Globe
Farmer's Advocate
Times
Weekly Globe....
Family Herald R Weekly Star..
Farming World
Times ..
Ladies' Home .Tournal
Evening Post
Times
World's Work
Review Of Reviews
Times .. .
Review of Reviews
Cosmopolitan
Woman's Home Companion..
Success
Times
Country Life in America •. .
(After Feb. 1st, 1!106, $4 00)
World's Work
Review of Reviews ..
Times.... .. .... ........
American Boy .
Outing
Harper's Bazar
Times
Harper's Mnaazine or Weekly.
Review of Reviews
World's Work ................
Times.
Weekly Globe
Canadian Magazine
Times
Lippincott's
Ainslie's ........
Cosmopolitan or Success
Times .. , .
St. Nicholas
Review of Reviews
Woman's Home Companion..
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CURE SICK1HEADACH
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