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The Wingham Times, 1906-11-08, Page 3The price of half a pound of Red Rose Tea is shall --very small, but it will show you how much tea, value, tea quality and flavor is con- tained in this " Good Tea "is is good tea" Prices -25, 30, 35, 40, 50 and 60 ots. per lb. in lead packets T. H. E8TABROOKS. 8T, JOHN. N. B. WINNIPEG. TORONTO. a WCLLINOTON 8T.. E. A bowl of water placed in a freshly It you want a frosted window, dissolve painted or varnished room will absorb epsom salts in beer and apply with brush. When you bake pies or bread, stand a To mend large holes in stoekiogs, take pan of water in the oven and they will a pieoe of net, place over the rent and not burn. darn through it. When beating eggs use a silver fork A few drops of oil of lavender drop- instead of a steel one, for the pliosphorus ped on the shelves of a bookcase will o1 the yoke attacks the steel and forme prevent mould end book -worms. a disagreeable salt. the order, •••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 411. COAL COAL COAL. • • fl 410 • We Carry a • full stook of • We aro sole agents for the celebrated SCRANTON COAL, which has no equal. Also the best grades of Smithing, Cannel and Domestic Coal, and Wood of all kinds, always on hand. • 4 4 • 4 • 4 • ilk , SHINGLES, LATH• • • • • L Highest Price paid for all kinds of Logs. ' i • . oMcL'ant • -t : Residence Phone No. 55: Office, No. 64. Mill, No. 44. •.....,••••••••••**oreoet**. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Cedar Posts, Barrels, Etc. St ing Stones X1'0 SU1CCSS must of necessity be lasting in order to successfully weather the storms of business life. The FOREST CITY BUSINESS & SHORTHAND COLLEGE trains young men and young women to take minor positions which eventually lead to positions of responsibility and trust. The foundation is secure. Our students go up, not down. We are unable to supply the demand for our students. • Why? Be- cause business men recognize the superior training they receive. Write for our business and shorthand booklet; it's free. School term: September till June, inclusive. Forest City Business College J. W. WESTERVELT Y.M.C.A. Bldg., Principal. London. "Let tiv- GOLD DU T TWANS your ww'kslo 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 leave only brightness behind. Get acquainted with Gold Durst Washing Powder OTHER GENERAI. ` Scrubbing nous. Washing. -clothes and dishes, cleaning wood., USES FOR I work, oil cloth, silverware and tinware. polishing brass work; COLD DUST rletuiteng bath room, oleos, etc., and making the finest toti soap. Made by `1'He N. it, PAtREANK COMPANY, Montreal, P. .—Makers of FAIRY SOAP. GOLD DUST nukkos bard wager soft ...air.. THE WINGI{AM TIMES, NOVEMBER h P'116 NERVE. Onoe upon a time when 1 was young A vision came to me, And something spoke a sabtle tongue, "My child, what you would be? Now shall I give you wisdom, wealth, And power your tura to serve?" I anti wercd: "Lord, I've got good bealeh, And all I want is nerve!" "Give me lots of norve, 0 Lord! And 1'11 be rich and wise, And all the earth will me accord Acclaim—aud none despise, Oh, give me that, 0 Lord, and I Will never trip or fall, T3 'or any thing I'll never sigh, If I have lots of gall. "I'll ride unless I wish to walk; I'll fast because I will; And when I wish I'll stop the clock And make the world stand still, I'll send this earth a•whirling on My own particular Curve, And time is at the dark and dawn— Lord, give me lots of nerve i I'll pick the sweetest girl on earth And else will come to me; She'll lay her slippers on my hearth, Me fair white slave she'll be. The world will, with a gaping mouth, My every deed observe; Oh, make me poor and plain—uncouth — But give me lots of nerve!" —The Khan DANDERS FROM DYSPEPSIA Imperfect Digestion Most Prolific Cause of Serious Disease. Few people Sean to realize the ret• dangers in disturbed, deficient or dereo five digestion, While reports do not give indigestion as a Cause of death, yet it is in reality often fatal, as it eo weakens the stomach that one becomes readily susceptible' to an attaok of typhoid fever, kidney dis- ease, nervous prostration or other serious or fatal disease. At the first symptoms of indigestion, MI cane stomach tablets should be used. If there I e is a feeling of heaviness in the stomach, distress after eating, nervous - nese, dizziness, nausea, headaches, sleep- lessness, pains in the aide and limbs, specks before the eyes, or a peevish, ir- ritable oouditiou, with debility aud weakness, begin the use of Mi-o•na at once, It will build up the stomach and di- gestive' organs so that you eau eat any• thing at auy time without fear of dis- tress or indigestion. A 50 cent box of MI•o•na tablets will, in most oases, give pramot relief and pure, although in chronic and long stand- ing weakness of the stomach, two boxes or more are eometimes needed, but Wo guarantee, Mi-o-na will cure, in all oas- es, no matter how chronic or serious, or money will be refunded. Yon run no risk whatever in buying Mi o-na. We absolutely agree that your money will be refunded should you buy a 50 Dent box of Mi o na stomach tablets and not be satisfied w th the reeulte. MI -0 - pm is sold by druggists everywhere, or will be sent by mail on rec ipt of price, 60 Dents Write to day for a free sample pack• age, and also give ne your symptoms, and one of the bast known stomach a eoialiets will give your Case his oarre- ful and personal attention without &tares. The R T. Booth Company, Baffelo, N. Y. When you take your oaks pans from the oven, sterol thein for a few minutes on n damp cloth; the cakes then will (Mite outt without sticking. Whooping Cough. -My three youngest bo; a had whoop - it g tough this winter and we could get nothing to help then: until I seat for Dr. Chow,'.' Syrup or Linseed nod Turpen. tine. I; an': steel the cou the at ouoc and they kepi right on improving until they were cured ut the er•st of one t'o11ar. Thar was nor a lerue bill ter so danger• ons and dirtrr•ssiote an ailment."—Mrs. Wm. Ball, Brxnehrici e, 0„t. They Scorned Doctors. The learned ladies in olden times took great comfort and pride in their skill in medicine. With true professional scorn they looked down upon the regu- lar doctors as upon quacks. "For God's sake beware what medicines ye take of any fyssissyaus of London. I shall never trust to them because of your father and my uncle, whose souls God assoil.” So wrote a lady in conscious pride. She knew she could have saved the lives of her unfortunate relatives if she had `only had a chance to dose them with some of her wonderful con- coctions or to have put upon them some such plasters as those for which Dame 1llargery Pesten was famous. Her husband sent for one of her plas- ters for the king's attorney, James Ho- barst, who was suffering with an ache in his knee, and to whom Sir John Pas - ton felt himself sentimentally indebted. "He is the man who brought you and me together," he wrote to Margery, "and I had leaver than £40 that ye, could with your plaster part him and his pain." urease In Wool rabries. Ieew persons realize when they put on woolen garments what a large amount of animal fats wool contains, for to the touch Woolens are not greasy. In the big clothing shops where men's garments are cut, however, the floors around the tables where electric knives clip out the odd shaped pieces soon be- come as slippery as though they were waxed for a dance. "Why do you wax the floors—to keep the fabrics clean?" is a common query from visitors. Bat the clothing Cutters explain that this accumulation of grease comes from the friction of wool cloth over the :wood. The wood's pores soon become use charged with it that they feel greasy to the touch, and even the harder woods in the Cutting tables absorb from the :Woolen fibers so much of the animal fat that4to all appearances they might be in steady use In the rendering de- partment of mi abattolr. ARSOLUTE $ECURITYI Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Slmllo Wrapper Below. - Ver Dana/ oa4 as envy 'SR lake as tss w ,,.CARTERS F17 fllaitl:A3� ill"nt FIJI 1311.131SaaI SS. v � Ft�it �'a Fli'lO LIVER, ft31a Cii ` lPA'i�iiii .;(30iL scA e:T PT..iO. Fi)€l THE CO PPE/ ICI j)S:Prst.1,4 ,.;..usrx�lvc r. *TuRc, gePIiCCxta tl sfueea S wetness./ re esses:vcG ftiUR E SIC!; i-IIn.AO,aCHi . HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE To prevent lamp Chimneys from Crack- ing, place them in a pot filled with cold water; add a little cooking salt; boil well over fire and nook slowly. To mend Cracks in stoves good wood ashes are to be sifted through a sieve; add the same quantity of Olay finely pulverized together with a little salt; moisten with water to make a paste and fill up the orack, ARTISTIC T$"vii° TOILET WARE in artistic abundance is pictured in the pages of our Catalogue. Whether your taste turns to Silver. Ebcny or Ivory, it will find ample variety from which to choose. From our own factory comes the richly chased Pompadour Pattern in heavy Sterling Silver. A six -piece set—consisting of Cloth, Velvet and Hair Brushes, r,vith Mirror and Comb —is unprecedented value at $30. Picces are sold singly if desired, so that a set moa be added to, year by year. Dro/, its a liastal earn and :,e Will sendymafrcc of ck,rr,;r oar large alas, !rated eitr':•z,rr'•fi•aaclry, Silverware, Lratl.er Goods, eta. Ry eV, rte,,.. ��}•�•�• io3dua v,O9it. To Olean spots off carpets, mix to- gether 30c woith of Bound soap tree bark: five'cents worth of ammonia; one Cup of vinegar and one and oue-half p•!il� water; boil for oue hour, aud use it or tee carpet with a sponge. When polishing mirrors, windows, of picture glass with whiting, the best wee to use it is to have it in muslin baps. Dampen the glass lightly, then rub with the bag, and polish off with Crumbled newspaper. Packed at the Oven's 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 PERrEt M41„:1:., INIKY(13ti1) O ty r , • f _ r fl00MEY ¢ ' DY, co STRATFORD CANADA ' matter where or when youbuythem. They hey 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 l and 3 lb. packages. !low flats Gloms Is Made. The cast plate glass of which mirrors; shop windows and such things are made is prepared from the whltest Saud, broken plate glass, soda, a small amount of manganese and cobalt oxides. The glass when perfectly melted. is poured upon an Iron table of the slze required, and the thlc1cnest is regulated by a strip of Iron placed down each of the four sides of the table, Immediately after it is poured out the molten substance Is flattened down by an iron roller, which lowers the glass to the thickness of the strips at the sides. It is then annealed or tempered for several days, after which it is ground perfectly level and polished to transparent brilliancy. The first plate glass was made in 1688 at St. Picardy, France, where the process was found out by an accident, as sq many other important methods in manufacture have been discovered. where there were eyes to see the acci- dents and minds to apply them or the lessons they taught to the advance of art or industry. The Irish Dull In Journalism. Of a well known reporter of a past generation many curiosities of style are still repeated with zest by Dublin journalists. It was this man who ex- plained, describing a case of drown- ing off Dalkey, "The body was washed ashore by a receding wave.” Of a fu- gitive from justice he wrote: "The burglar was surrouuded on all sides by the police. Escape was impossible. Suddenly he made his way down a cul-de-sac and disappeared through a side street." The most popular story of this impressiouist writer, however, relates to Mr. Gladstone. On the Grand Old Man's one and only visit to Dublin he was interviewed by the ec- centric press man. Mr. Gladstoue, at the conclusion of a somewhat amusing array of questions, -very courteously expressed his pleasure at meeting the interviewer. The latter, in a high state of delight, said with enthusiasm, "The pleasure is mutual, Mr. Gladstone, but is all on my side."—London Tribune. The Oldest Sense of Humor. The oldest idea of humor is surprise. This the child exhibits (for that which is oldest we shall find in the youngest) when it bides and cries "Boo!" both surprising and frightening ifs senior, be this senior father, mother, brother, sis- ter or friend. One may lind this primal sense of humor distributed through the modern short story. Frequently the turn in the plot, if not in its develop- ment, hinges upon this child humor of surprise. Even some grownup folk will pull a chair from under one, thus showing themselves still children in their sense of fun. The verbal conceit found in much of the verse in the pages of modern comic papers is of this same classf humor an 0 o d furnishes conclusive evidence that a number of men and women are at child's play in literature. Poems which end contrary to their foreshadowings are of this sort. ai Curious Custom. In certain parts of India in families where there are several slaughters the youngest sisters may only marry after the elder sister is married. Of course it frequently happens that no suitor appears for the elder, in which case she is got out of the way by a very neat expedient. She is wedded to a tree or a large flower, and then the younger sister inay marry. The elder sister must be careful, however, to choose a plum, apple or apricot tree, from which she can get a divorce, for if she married an elm, pine or poplar these are sacred trees and must not be trifled with. His 'twig In His Pocket. Benjamin Franklin once wore his wig in his pocket at the court of Ver- sailles. When he was about to present himself at the court for the first time he was informed that a wig was essen- tial. Franklin's head was ko large that no ordinary wig would begin to fit it. However, one was found sufficiently large to pass him through the ante- chambers, after which he was permit- ted to remove the ridiculous conven- tional appendage and place it in his ample pocket. Hard to Please. Mr. Snaggs was accosted on the street the other day by a beggar who was covered with a very remarkable mass of patched and ragged garments and who said: "Mister, Haven't you some old clothes you could give a fellow?" Suaggs surveyed the beggar from head to foot and then asked: "Are not the clothes you have on old enough for you?" Discriminating. A. thoughtful hostess gave a chil- dren's party and decided it would be healthier to serve only mineral waters. One little girl tasted of her carbonic and laid the glass down, "What's the matter, dear? Don't you like charged water?" "No, ma'am. Please may I have some water that you've paid for?" -- Life. , Worry Makes Disease. A man who keeps worrying about the state of his liver will almost bo sure to have trouble with it eventually. Indigestion eau be brought on in the same way and a long list of other ail- ments.—A. Physician in World's Work. Shoe superstitions. Never place a pair of new shoes higher than your head, says an old superstition, or you'll have bad luck wearing them, and never black one before putting the other an for a simi- lar reason. The secret of being tiresome is in telling everything.• --Voltaire. . HEALTHFUL, ^'AL!THFUL, DELICIOUS and Cleanly Prepared. 11 S CEYLON GREEN TEA. Is all PURE Tea, and is rapidly taking the place of Japan Teas. LEAD PACKETS ONLY. 25o, 80o, 40e, 50o and GQo per lb. Ay ALL GRooERS'. AAAAAMAAAAAA/1NIAAAAMAAAA VVVWPWVVVVIIVWVNWI'WWVW 3 } Lehigh Valley Goal Come with the crowd and leave your order for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from )' dirt and clinkers It has no equal. eaeoesseesetAAAAA0Anaueurseseeefesperteos VVWVVVVVVWWVVVVVVVWVVSse RESTORED Te RiZie: t apt D The New Method Treatment of Dr., 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 p-tid unless cured for you can pay after you are cured. Drs. K. & K. established 25 years. We treat Varicocele, Nervous Debil• ity, Stricture, Blood Diseases, Kidney Bladder and Urinary Diseases. If un- able to call, write for Question Black for Home Treatntet.t. Consultation Free. NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNLESS CURED. DRS, KENNEDY & KERGAN 148 Shelby Street, Detroit, Mich. ••••••e••••••o••eseasseasa •o•••••s4•••e•••aa•••••®s• • .• • • • • • • • • • S 4 • • • • • •4 • • 3 • • 4 The Wh'gham Times reaches •the hcmes of most of the people of e a• and surrounding country. It 0 4• keeps its subscribers pc -sled cn all the s 4 news •of the day—local, political and • : foreign. t4 • • o a 4 a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • • • • • • B An Adverlisemoul in THE TIMES Brings Good Results If you have anything to sell, or want anything, advertise in The Times. Rates on application. • • • • • a e • • • • • • 4 • • • 4 • • • 4 • • 4 • Weil, Think Printing That's our business. We are constantly on the lookout for new ideas, and these are here awaiting your accept- ance. It's no trouble for us to give you information --to write or call—it will place you under no obligation, and perhaps we may suggest something you can profit by. Prices right. Quality ever the talisman. • The Winghalll Times • WINGTTAM, ON'r.ikIo. • e•.0•.••••gt•••m•••aw•••••+1 ••••••••011,014140 .0 0 • • • •• • • 4 M • • 1