The Wingham Times, 1906-05-03, Page 3i
Why Red Rose Tea
is Economical
RED Rose Tea has all the good points of two
good teas and none -Of the weaknesses of any.
You never drank a cup of straight Ceylon or Indian
tea that could compare in strength, richness, delicacy
and frapance with the "rich fruity flavor" of Red
Rose 1 ea.
Yet Red Rose Tea goes further and costs no
more than either Indian or Ceylon teas alone.
Red Rose Tea is better than either Indian or
Cey,on tea and is moreeconomical because it goes
further.
Ro
What is Man?
[Cleveland Plalndealer.]
Swarming across the earthy crust,
Delving deep in the yellow dust,
Raising his anthills bare and there,
'Scoring the soil for his humble fare,
Braving tho seas in his tiny boat -
Tireless he struggles, this human mote.
Tempests scatter his anthills wide,
Vainly he braves the boiling tide,
Fire will ruin bis busy mart.
Famine stilleth his throbbing heart,
Trembles the earth, and prone he falls,
Crushed and tombed by his pigmy walls.
Heir of the kingdom 'neath the skies,
Often he falls, yet falls to rise.
Stumbling, bleeding, beaten back,
Holding still to the upward track;
Playing his part in creation's plan,
Godlike in image -this is mans
HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
Strong hot vinegar will remove paint
from window glass.
Place an apple in the cake box and
cake will keep moist mach longer.
If yon get too muoh bluing iu the rine-
big water put in a little household am-
monia.
A little milk added to the water in
which silver is washed will help to keep
it bright.
To revive the lustre of morocco or any
other leather apply the white of an egg
with a sponge.
A little flour spread over the top of
cakes before they are iced will prevent
the icing from -running off.
Use a little ammonia in the dish water
when washing glassware. It will make
it sparkle like cut glass.
Sausages should be served with apple
sauce or baked tomatoes. Either makes
them more easily digested.
When cleaning knives mix a tiny bit
of carbonate of soda with the bathbriok
and they will polish more easily.
Cereals are seldom overcooked but
rather under000ked. Thus always al-
low plenty of time in preparing cereals.
Wring ohamois out of the soapy water
without rinsing. When it dries it is soft
and serviceable, instead of stiff.
Shabby oak should be brushed over
with warm beer and when thoroughly
dry polished with beeswax and turpen-
tine.
An excellent furniture polish is made
by mixing together equal parts of boiled
linseed oil, vinegar and methylated
spirits.
If when making coffee a little salt is
added before pouring on the boiling
water it will be found to greatly im-
prove the flavor.
Enameled ware that has become burn-
ed or discolored may be cleaned by rub-
bing with a paste formed by coarse salt
and vinegar.
lemon dippedsaltwill
Half a e on d ape in do
all the work of oxalic acid in cleaning
Dopper boilers,brass teakettles, and other
such utensils.
The potato slicer is a oonvenience that
is greatly liked. It gives a fluffy pretti-
THE WINGI AM TIMES, NAY 3, 19O6
The Maple Sap Forever.
(' he Ifhanl
There is a medioine for spring,
To prattle it's my endeavor;
It hes not flusl here op earth -
It's Maple Sap forever!
The Maple Sap onr physio dear,
Take it now or never.
'Twill clear your blood though thick as
mud -
The Maple Sap forever!
A dose of sap will soon from thee
The spriug time fever sever,
And that is why you're Pure to praise
The Maple Sap forever!
The Maple Sap, our physio dear,
Take it now or never,
'Twill clear your blood, though thick as
=
mud -
The Maple Sap forever!
is good Tea
T. H. Estabrooks
St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg
nese to the dish of mashed potatoes im-
possible to achieve in any other way.
To bake potatoes gaiokly boil them in
salted water for ten minutes, then put
in the oven. The boiling water will
heat through so they cook in a short
t me. '
For a ons' ar 1 or gelatin preparation
eggs should be strained to remove the
tough white membrane which does not
brat up or dissolve, but cooks into a
Bard thread.
MRS. HUNTER'S STORY
Says she and her Husband Agree
Perfectly. Both Quite Well Again.
Mrs. I. Hunter, of 111
Raglan Road, Kingston,
Oat , has written for
publication a statement
of her case as follows:
• "1 have suffered with
kidney and liver trouble
and chronic constipation
for some time. I was
subject to dizziness, bil-
Mas. 1. Bi n'J EH ions headache, nervous-
ness, drowsiness, pains in the back and
side, and a tired, weary feeling nearly
all the time.
"I tried almost every remedy, was
treated by doctors and ,druggists with
little or no benefit.
"finally, a friend advised me to try
Dr. Leonhardt's Anti -Pill, and the re-
sults have been truly wonderful
"My husband has used Anti Pill for
rheumatism and was benefitted greatly.
We agree that Anti -Pill is a most won-
derful medicine and heartily recommend
it."
This is a very strong recommendation.
Anti -Pill is undoubtedly the greatest of
family remedies. Al] druggists, or the
Wilson-Fyle Co., Limited,Niagara Falls,
Ont.
Cause and Cure of Anaemia
Both anaemia and other troublesome
symptoms are the result of snbnntrition.
People are under -nourished because the
organs which convert the food into
muscle, bone, blood, and nervous energy
either do not perform their duty or do
not get proper material to work with -
probably both. The first point in the
treatment is to cleanse the system of ac-
cumulations of waste and useless matter,
This oan be done by a few days of strict
diet, say four or five glasses of milk
daily -or, better still, a fast of obe, two
or three days -with free water drinking,
daily enemas, daily baths, with abund-
ant exercise in the open air. The second
phase 9f the treatment is to see that the
digestive and assimilative organs are
provided with proper material from
which to form blood and tissue. These
materials are found toperfection e Section in the
e
foods provided by nature -fruits, nuts,
salads, cereals, eggs and milk -taken in
their natural state. Directly after the
period od of milk diet or fasting begin by
adding a little raw wheat, soaked over
night, to the milk. Then, gradually,.
eggs, and then the other articles of the
dietary given above may be added until
you are fully nourished, rosy and com-
fortable.
NERVOUS DEBILITY CURED
Excesses and indiscretions ars the cause of more
sorrow and suffering than all other diseases combined.
We see the victims of vicious habits ou every hand;
the sallow, itu lc is
, p p d face, dark circled eyes, stooping
form, stunted development bashful, melancholic
countenance and timid bearing proclaim to all the
world itis folly and teud 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 to What nature intended -a healthy
and happy man with physical, mental add nerve pow-
ers compfe'e.
For over 25 years Drs. K. & I , have treated with
the greatestsuceess all diseases of men and women.
1f you have any secret disease that is !worry and
a menace to your ltealtlt consult old established physic-
ians who do not have to experiment on you.
lie guarant::o to cure Nervous Debility, Blood
Diseases. Stricture. Varicocele. Kidney and Bladder
Diseases. Consultation rive, If unable to calf, write
fora Question ]]tante for Ilona Treatment.
Das . KENNEDY 86 It RGAN, 1
48 Lit cit Mioii."'
GOOD REASONS
Why every respectable thinking man
should swear just as often and as hard
as be oan:
1. Because it is such an elegant way
of expressing one's thoughts.
2. Because it is such a conclusive
proof of taste and good breeding.
3. Because it is a positive evidence of
acquaintance with good literature.
4. Because it furnishes suoh a good
example and training for boys.
5. Because it is just what a man's
mother enjoys heariug her son do.
6. Because it would look so nice in
print.
7. Because it is such a good way of
increasing one's self respect.
8. Because it is such a help to man-
hood and virtue in mauy ways.
9 Because it is such an infallible
way of improving one's chances in the
hereafter.
If you .perfer to take medicine in tablet
form you oan now obtain Dr. Shoop's
Restorative Tablets. Absolutely no
change has been made in the medicinal
ingredients. Sold at Walley's Drug
Store.
General Rules for Dyspeptics.
The following general rales, as set
forth in Thompson's Dietetics, are ap-
plicable to all cases of dyspepsia and in-
oigestion.. Most doctors know all these
things, but few doctors remember to tell
their dyspeptic patients about them :
1. Eat slowly and masticate thorough -
4.
2 Drink fluid an hour before or two
or three hours after meals, rather than
with food..
3. Eat at regular hours.
4. If greatly fatigued, lie down and
rest quietly before and after luncheon
and dinner or supper.
5. Avoid as far as possible taking
business worries or professional cares to
the table.
(i. Taking systematic exercise in the
open air. Bicycle and horseback riding
are the best forms.
7. On rising, cold sponging and vig-
orous friction of the body is advisable.
8. The bowels should be kept open by
laxative foods and fluids rather than by
medicines.
9. Avoid too much variety at any one
meal. Take meats and vegetables at
separate meals.
Nervous and Worried.
Mr. Archibald Sutherland, Principal
South Bar School, Sydney, N.S., writes:
"I was greatly troubled with nervone
dyspepsia and after meals I often felt.
like vomiting and my stomach was sore.
I was nervous and worried, frequently
had headaches and shortness of breath
When several doctors failed I decided to
try Dr. Chase's Nerve Fond and it has
entirely cured me. I shall be glad to be
the weans of bringing this medicine to
the notice of any one who is suffering as
I did."
Pointed Paragraphs.
From the Chicago News.
Contentment is never begotten by re-
gret.
Ability is 'measured by deeds rather
than by -intentions.
No man accomplishes much who is af-
flioted with the hurry habit.
A women's "no" never means "yes"
when she is couversing with her hue -
band.
Only ado
doctor of long experience encs can
look doleful when an epidemic is brew-
ing.
Perhaps the snake got the beat of his
encounter with Mother Eve because she
didn't have a hatpin with which to de-
fend herself.
A true man is always a truthful man.
Also the bunko man loves a shining
mark.
He who has no sense of humor has
but few friends.
What this World needs is fewer creeds
and more true charity.
A man in trouble always appreciates
a favor -until he gets out.
Many a girl who has money to burn
doesn't seem to care for a match.
Many a man would be glad of an op-
portunity to decorate the grave of an
enemy.
It snakes a Woman feel awful blue to
think how gloomy it would be to have
it rain On the day of her funeral.
A. is pr c gat. _ �►.
Bears the - TM Kind You Have Always Rlightknitterslef.
MILBURN'S
L-AXAILIVER
PILLS.'
are mild, sure and safe, and are a perfect
regulator of the system..
They gently unlock the secretions, clear
away all effete and waste matter from the
system, and give tone and vitality to the
whole intestinal tract, curing Constipa-
tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyepep-
sia, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, .Tann•.
dice, Heartburn, and Water Brash, Mrs.
R. S. Ogden, Woodstock, N,B., writes:
"My husband and myself have used Mil -
burn's Laxa-Liver Pills for a number of
years. We think we cannot do without
them. They are the only pilia we ever
take."
Price 25 cents or five bottles for $1.00,
at all dealers or direct on receipt of price.
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Ont.
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
Don't sleep in too cold a room. Fr,m
55 to 60 degrees Fehreuheit is about the
right temperature,
Don't go to bee with a sensation of
hunger. Take any light, simple food
you wish and that agrees with you.
Don't forget your beauty hath every
morning with cold salt water. It will
have a hardening effect on the skin and
tissues.
After the totlet of the face has been
completed, it is well to rah it with a silk
handerohief; this gives a polish. not a
shine, to the face which is very pies sing
Those who have taken other laxatives
without satisfaction -and those wh,
have takeu such quantities of other laxa-
tives that they have lost their off. ct -
will finda, pleasant surprise in LAX lee CS
There is usually no pain. gripi'lg, uau-ea
or discomfort even in severe cases. 1hl.H
candy bowel laxative -LAX Et'S is cnly
53 and is sold at Walley'e Drug Stare.
The necessity for soap depends upon
the quality of akin and upon its expoe-
nre. If the skin is oily a daily bath cf
soap and water is absolutely necessary.
Avoid highly colored and perfumed
Heaps.
ICtdney Disease-Or..val.
"I was afflicted with kidney disease
and gravel in its most severe form, hav-
ing often a stoppage of wateraocompan-
• led by the most dreadful agony. By
using Dr. Chase's Kidney•Liver Pills the
disease was eradicated trete my system
in less than six mouths I have gained
in weight, sleep well, and feel better
than I have for twenty years."-YIr. W.
Smith, Pott Dalhousie, Oat.
Does an Education Pay?
Dees it pay for an acorn to become an
oak?
Does it pay to
ignoramus?
Dees it pay to fit oneself for a superior
positiou?
escape being a rich
Does it pay to get a glimpse of the joy
of liviug?
Does it pay for a chrysalis to unfold
into -a butterfly?
Does it pay to learn to make life a glory
instead of a grind?
Does it pay to open a little wider the
door of a narrow life?
Does it pay to add power to the lens
of a misroscope or telesctpe?
Does it pay to know how to take the
dry, weary drudgery out of life?
Does it pay to taste the exhilaration of
feeling one's powers unfold?
Does it pay for a rosebud to open its
petals and fling out its beauty to the
world?
Does it pay to push one's horizon
farther out, in order to get a wider out-
look, a clearer visor?
Does it pay to learn how to centre
thought with power, how to marshal'
one's mental force effectively?
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills,
Must Bear Signature of
Ses Pae -Simla) Wrapper Below.
Terry mall and as easy
to take as sager.
FOR CARTER'S FOR DI ZIINESS.
hitt FOR BILIOUSNESS.
I VERFOR TORPID LIVER.
plus. FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
:trotOan1L1lNls .n1.rIUv. WANG
CUTIS SICK HEADACHE.
A THIMBLE OF GOLD
IT IS MADE OF METAL. ALLOYED DOWN
TO FOURTEEN CARATS.
The Process of Manufacture, From
the Ingot■ of Pure Gold Fresh From
the Subtreasnry to the Finished
Shining Product.
Out of whatever part of the earth It
may originally have been dug, the gold
from which thimbles are made in Phil-
adelphia was bought at the United
States subtreasury iu the city !n the
forst of snug little ingots, brick shaped
anti about two anti a half !Lichee loug,
an inch and a quarter wide and about
au Web thick,
These little ingots would be of a con-
veuleut size for paperweights. But
they would be rather heavy for such
use and probably too expensive for
most people, for each one contains, of
pure gold, 24 curate fine, metal of the
value of about $600.
• Gold of this fineness would be much
too soft for thimbles, and it is alloyed
down to 14 carats, in which condi-
tion it is rolled lute sheets of suitable
thickness. In the first process of man-
ufacture a sheet of this gold is run
into a machine which cuts out of it a
disk in size sufficient to form a thim-
ble, the same machine stamping this
disk also into the form of a straight
sided capsule with irregular edges.
Theu the thimble black goes luto an-
other machine, in which u die stamps it
into its conical shape. Out of this ma-
chine it goes into an annealing fur-
nace for tempering and from that into
an acid bath for cleaning and the re-
moval of the fire coating.
Then the thimble is put into a lathe
to be turned down to its final shape
and dimensions. It is dull colored
when it goes into the lathe, but at the
first touch of the keen edged cutting
tool it shows a glistening narrow band
of bright gold surface, which is widen-
ed in a moment to cover the whole
length of the thimble as the skillful
worker shifts the tool along.
With repeated application of the tool
the operator brings the crown of the
thimble into its perfect form and cuts
down along the thimble's sides to bring
the walls of the thimble to the requi-
site thickness, and he defines and fin-
ishes the smooth band that runs around
the lower part of the thimble and
brings into relief the rounded rim that
encircles the thimble at its opening at
once to give it a finishing ornainental
grace there and to stiffen it. The glis-
tening little gold shavings thatihe cuts
off in these various operations all fall
into a canvas trough suspended be-
tween him and the bench upon which
stands the lathe.
With that last touch to its rim in this
stage of leaking the former has grown
marvelously more thimble -like in ap-
pearance, but somehow it still lacks the
breath, so to speak, of thimble life; it
lacks yet the familiar indentations in
its surface that serve to support the
needle and to hold it in place. These
the thimble maker now proceeds to
make. and the making of these is nice
work indeed.
It is done with a tool called a knurle.
There is an end knurle and a side
knurle. An end knurle Is simply a han-
dle having set in it a tiny, thin revolv-
ing wheel of steel, upon whose periph-
ery is a continuous encircling row of
little bosses or knobs corresponding In
size to the indentations to be made.
The side knurle has in place of such a
wheel a little steel cylinder of a length
sufficient, to cover that sectiou of the
thimble that is to be indented on its
sides, this cylinder having knobs all
over its surface, as the end knurle
wheel has around its edges, and turn-
ing, like the wheel, on its axis.
The thimble in the lathe Is turning
with 2,500 revolutions a minute, and it
seems as though the application to its
surface of any sort of tool with pro-
tuberances on it must leave there only
a jangled and mixed up lot of irregular
marks. But now with the end knurle
the thimble maker makes an indenta-
tion iu the center of the top of the thim-
ble, and then he proceeds 'rapidly and
with perfect certainty with the end
knurle to describe around that center
concentric rings of indentations, with
the indentations all perfectly made and
the rings all perfectly spaced, from the
center to the circumference of the top.
You may see him do this, but you
can't tell how he is able to do it. And
then with the side knurle he makes the
Indentations in the sides of the thim-
ble, making there as well, as he deftly
presses the tool against it, indentations
that run absolutely uniform and true
and that end at their lower edge in a
perfectly true encircling flue.
It is astonishing and a pleasant thing
to see how It develops and comes to
itself with the making of these fa-
miliar indentations, and now there re-
mains to be done to It only the polish-
ing inside and out and you have the
finished gold thimble.
. How Exclamations Originate.
"Halloo" and "hurrah," which are
among the exclamations in common
use, can be traced to curious origins.
The author of "The Queen's English"
tells tis that the people of t'aruwood
forest, Leicestershire, when tbey wish
to hail any one at a distance call out
not "halloo," but "italloup." This, he
takes it, is a survival of the times
When one cried to another "A Loup! A
loupe" or, as we should say, "A wolf!
A wolf!" "Hurrah," according to high
authority, is derived from the Slavonic
"lluraj," "to paradise," a battle cry
which voiced the prevailing belief that
all soldiers who fell in the fight went
straight up to paradise.
In Bohemia courtships are tthmermal-
17 long. In that Country engagements
frequently last from fifteen to twenty,
fwlrr. _
The children carmen `
' paasibly !lave good "health'
a unless the bowels are is proper conditlom. A
e. is to slsggtsii liver civ; s t coatod tongue, bad breath.,
constipated bowels. ;correct all dee* by giving,C Z '
small doses of Ayer's Pills. Genuine liver pills,
hi ren gently laxative, all stable, augur -coated.
+�✓ii t»Nle. ilu..1s Imre au i1errreSlet Ws kiiii ' w FRs .,
( NavyPori
e
�•- Ha/ ties
�i' Frost Fences
Are Strong All Around
The laterals of a t'rost Pence are High Carbon No. 9 IIard Steel Coiled Wire,
thoroughly galvanized -that can't be broken until the strain reaches front ryoo to
5200 pottttde
`y1'11e st.tys are N'.. y or this same No q wire.
4ud tite two wires are lue.:t,.1 with the hro:.t hocks.
That hraecs tate Note in all directions -up clown and diagonally.
We are FO sure Ca -It t rest ren --', ace the str'nige‘t and best that we guarantee
'-e
to repair, f"f ch i:ge, any fen a that goes wrong. Titat's fair, isn't ttf
Nr'.t Wire !'ante + are for ...i'- '.v
J. W. MOWBRAY, Whitechurch
fats JOHN R. WEBSTER, St. Helens
lenge
t..�w
"Le( the DDLL3 CCITT MAC liwsearsrk"
'•-'- ^�� r- 'cru, n
/
"t
SIMPLY WONDERFUL
is the work which GOLD DUST accomplishes. All labors
look alike to the Gold Dust Twins. They clean floors and
doors, sinks and chinks -go from cellar to attic -and ?cave
only brightness behind. Get acquainted with
Gold Dust Washing Powder
OTHER GENERAL I
USES FOR
COLD DUST
Scrubbing floors. washing clothes and dishes, cleaning wood-
work, oil cloth, silverware and tinware. polishing brass work,
cleansing bath room, pipes. etc.. and making the finest soft soap.
Made by THE N. K. FAIRBiINK COMPANY, Montreal, P. Q. -Makers of FAIRY SOAP.
GOLD DUST makes hard water soft
4.
6
541/e•1t••••••ei•a•!•19•••ses
3
f1
1
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