The Wingham Times, 1905-08-03, Page 3 (2)0
.1101111111111.OL
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The Red Rose Flavor
and Stiength
NO Ceylon tea. nor !Awl tea alone can have the
"rich fruity flavor" of Red Rose Tea,because
neither variety in itself possesses all the qualities
of strength, richness, delicacy, and fragrance.
Each has its own peculiar qtialities, but each has its
weaknesses.
By combining the two in the Red Rose proportions,
I produce a tea with the "rich fruity flavor" and
strength of Red Rose Tea, a flavor and strength
found in no brand of Ceylon alone.
Red Rose
Tea.
Mexico's sugar crop for this year is
estimated at 115,000 tons.
Paupers and the insane poor cost
England and Wales V.3,000,000 a year.
Some industrial communities in Ger-
many have inaugurated a scheme of in-
surance against nonemployment.
Pains in clip chest.
Mr. John Clark, Port Hope, Ont.,
states :—"Last winter I was so bad with
a cold that I could not speak above a
whisper, and bad great pains in the
cbest. A -friend advised me to try Dr.
Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine
and one bottle cured my cold which I
believe would have proven very serious
if I had not used this medicine."
Life and Living It.
(Chicago Chronicle.)
That man bath lived his life in vain
Who never felt the pangs of pain,
Or ever knew the quiet balm
Of peace that cometh in its train.
That man hath never known great joy
'Who never knew the base alloy
Of agony and bitter shame
The ever -watchful fates employ.
That man bath never known sweet rest
'Who never toiled and in his breast
Rath felt hie heart like lead depend
And all bis limbs by weights oppressed.
That man bath never known deep bliss
Who never felt the lash's hiss.
Or ever known the sting that lies
Of anguish in a Judas kiss.
That man hath never lived at all
Who bath not drunk of dregs and gall,
And risen proudly from the dust
When he bath stumbled to a fall.
It is said that, the greatest delight the
son of the Rmeer of Afghanistan enjoyed
on his recent visit to India was an even-
ing at a circus in Calcutta.
.Pope Pius X recently gave audience to
a poor man living at Tivoli, near Rome,
who personally presented the pontiff
with a bunch ot asparagus of his own
growing. In exchange he received the
Pope's photograph.
1905
is good Tea
T. H. Estabrooks
St. John, N,B., Toronto, Winnipeg
Some of the German health insurance
companies have found it a paying in-
vestment to establish sanatoria for the
care of their consumptive policy holders.
The stormswept Sable Island, eighty
miles to the eastward of Nova Scotia is
inhabited by about 200 wild horses,
whose ancestors are believed to have
been landed from a Spanish wreck three
centuries ago. They resemble the wild
horses of Mexico and the horses of the
Parthenon frieze.
A search among the unpublished man-
uscript of Jules Verne has revealed the
existence of sixteen dramatic works—
nine being in verse and seven in prose—
nine novels, two histories and two works
entitled respectfully "Travelin Eng-
land and Scotland" and "Paris in the
Twentieth Century."
THE GREATEST ET
THE GRANDEST EVER
CURES
Dyspepsia, Boils,
Pimples, ,
Headaches,
Constipation,
Loss of Appetite,
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Scrofula,
and all troubles
arising from the
Stomach, Liver,
Rowels or Blood.
Mrs. A. Lethangue,
of Ballyduff,
writes: "I believe i
would have been in
my grave long ago
had it not been for
Burdock Blood Bit -
tors. Ivras rundown
to such an extent
that 1 could scarce-
ly move about the
house. I was subject
to severe headaches,
backaches and dizzi-
ness; my appetite
was gone and I was
unable to do my
housework. Atter
using two bottles of
B. 13. B. I found my
health fully restored.
I warmly recommend
it to all tired and
worn out women."
1905
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION
At TORONTO, 1 AUG. 26 to SEPT. 11
845,000 in Premiums - $38,300 in Attractions '
The Irish Guards Band
By permissicn of His Most Gracious Majes-
ty King Edward VII, the band of the Irish
Guards, His Majesty's favorite household
band and the finest military musical organ-
ization in the Empire, will give two con-
certs each and every day.
Art and Treasures
In en especially built. extensive, ilre-proof
art gallery will be presented the grandest
collettion of art and art treasures ever got
together on this continent, including loans
from the King, the Corporation of the City
of London, the great English TJniversities,
the Republic of Feanee, South Kensington
Museum, Lord Strathcona, the Lieut. -Gov-
ernor of Ontario and other distinguished
bodies and gentlemen.
Coronation Picture
By special command of His Majesty the
Kin t3, Abbey's noted and historic painting
will be on exhibition during the entire Pair
Fall of Port Arthur
The greatest pyro military display ever pro-
duced before the Canadian people. Scenes
• in this most recent of the world's most ap-
palling event will be vividly portrayed with
real Japanese and Russian soldiery taking
part. The fireworks display will be on a
brilliant scale, introducing new features of
an Oriental character,.
Other Things to See
• The Process Building, wimples of all the in-
duStries and resources of the country, thou-
sands of horses, cattle, Sheep, swine, poul-
try, and dogs, all Canadian cereals and
minerals, good trotting. and pacing, a sup-
erb variety show, the world's latest inven-
tions.
Special Excursions
Special cheap railway and steamboat ex-
cursions hive been arranged. Enquire of
your nearest station or ticket agent for
rates.
W. K. IdeNaught, Pres. r(t)trn8rinzfeoggtiteiZildbdirel:s J. 0. Orr, Mgr & Secty.
Entries Close : Live Stock, ete., Atig. 7th. Poultry and Dogs, Aug. 10th.
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BLOOD DISEASE OUFIED.
If yos ever redirected any Wood or Private Disease, you are tever leash until the
virus or poison has been eradicated front tke systent. Don't be satisfied with a
"patch up" by acne family doctor. Our New Method is Guaranteed to •
Curs or Ho Pay. aaatio Names Used without Written consent.
Cured When all•Elso railed
"Could I live my early life ever. this testimonial would not tis
neeessary, though 1 was no more sinful then thouelludi of other
young med. Early indiscretions, later ,excessee, exposure to
contagioue diseases all helped to break down my system. When
I commenced to realize my condition 1 was aluMat fraatieetlector
after doctor treated me but only gave ft* relief. -not cute. Hot
Sptinge help_ed me, but did not cure me. T
The symptoms always
returned. Mercury and Potash drove the -pewee tato my_system
inM
stead et driving it 'out. / blest the.day yoUr New ethod r
\ Treatment Wee recommended to me.. I investigatedWile yon
\were first, and finding yon had Over 25 yeare experience anti re.
spOnsible financially. I gave you my case Under a guarantee.
Tett cared inc permanently, end in six years there has not been a
bore pain. Meet or any other symptem of the blood disease."
ti Niers Is Bebe% 150,000 Cored. M. A. CONIcET.
We treat and CureBlood Pelisse, *Mini Debility. Stricture, .
impotency, _Secret Drains, Kidney nod Bladdite
Cionsettotiri Frac (loutish lisek tor Noe vreelmoit a.d Poke frii.
DRS. KENNEDY a, KERGAN,
148 OMBLIBIr orriamirt. DaTROIT. 1111C10.
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TILE WINGIIAM TIMES, AUGUST 3, 1905
POOLE'S FAMOUS FEAT,
lite Splitting Paper lie Went One net.
ter Titan sta Esswilek Expert.
Lucius Poole, a brother of Wililam
Poole, the librarian whose name is per-
petuated in "Poole's Index," was
known throughout the country for his
rare skill lu restoring and repairing old
documents and reprints. He lived for
thirty years lit a house at the south
end, Boston, with three Congenial
spirits,. one a collector of INckensallit,
the second of Napoleonana and the
third a collector of first editions.
Poole was a collector, too, of books,
letters and programmes relating to the
stage, He had a remarkable faculty
for matching old paper and could put
a corner or a patch on a letter or a
playbill eo neatly that it could be no-
ticed only under a magnifying glass.
aft Petite's famous feat of splitting a
magazine page into relic leaves or lay-
ers was brought about by an English
inlayer, who showed Mr, Poole a page
split in three leaves with the printing
on it unmarred. The American said
that he could do all that the Englishman
had done, and more, and after some
experiment's produced a page of the
Century Magazine split in four leaves.
This was taken to London by a book,
collector, who had gone abroad to add
to his library, and after the page had
been the rounds of the clubs there it
was sent to Paris and caused the
Frenchmen to wonder.—Portland Ad-
vertiser.
THE SUN AND MOON.
quaint Folklore Stories Concerning
These Luminaries.
The most touching of all folklore sto-
ries may be found in Charles F. Lum-
mis' "Pueblo Folklore." It is one of
the many myths of the moon and beau-
tifully conceived. The sun is the All -
father, the moon the Ailmother, and
both shine with equal light in tbe 'heav-
ens. But the Trues, the superior divin-
ities, find that man, the animals, the
dowers, weary of a constant day. They
agree to put out the Allfather's, or
sun's, eyes. The Allmother, the moon,
offers herself as a sacrifice. "Blind
me," she says, "and leave my hus-
band's eyes." The Trues say, "It is
good, woman."
They accept the :sacrifice and take
away one of the Allmother's eyes;
hence the moon is less brilliant than
the sun. The man finds rest at night,
and the flowers sleep.
In Mrs. Leiber Cohen's translation of
Sacher Masoch's "Jewish Tales" there
is a variant of the sun and moon story
derived from the Talmud. Briefly told,
the sun and moon are equally lumi-
nous. It is the moon who wants to be
more brilliant than the sun. Deity is
angered at her demands. Her light is
lessened. "The moon grew pale. Then
God pitied her and gave her the stars
for companions."
THE OCEAN DERELICT.
It Is the Moat Patent of All Danger's
That Threaten Seafarers.
Of all the spectacles of the seas none
is so tragic as the derelict, the errant
of the trackless deep. Weird beyond
description is the picture presented by -
some broken and battered hulk assbe
swings into view against the sky line,
with the turgid green seas sweeping
over her moss grown decks and a
splintered fragment of mast pointing
upward, as if in protest against her
undoing. It is n sight also to arouse
fear.
For the derelict is the most potent of
all the dangers that threaten the sea-
farer. Silent, stealthy, invisible, it is
the terror of the mariner. It is the
arch hypocrite of the deep. Against it
skill of seamanship, vigilance in watch -
Ing, avail not. Lights and whistles,
beams and buoys proclaim the proxim-
ity of lund; the throbbing of engines,
the noises of shipboard lite tell of an
approaching vessel; icebergs and floes
betray themselves by their ghostly ra-
diance and surrounding frigidity of
air, but the,derelict gives no warning,
makes no signal. The first sign of its
existence is the crash, the sickening
tremble and quaver of the ship sudden-
ly wounded to death.—P. T. McGrath
in McClure's.
Rase Cuttingei.
Country Life advises taking cuttings
of roses in the fall and says: They
should be about eight inches long and
covered with sand about a foot deep
through the wiuter. In the spring set
in rows in good garden soil, upright
Trim to six inches in setting out, They
will take root and can then be trans-
planted into nursery beds. This is for
outdoor culture. The cuttings should
be taken just before frost arrived and
from nearly matured wood.
idleness.
It is an undoubted truth that the less
one has to do the less one finds time
to do it in. One yawns, one procrasti-
nates, one can do it when one will, and
therefore one seldom does it at all,
whereas those who have a great deal
of business must buckle to It, and then
they always find time enough to do it
in.
A Judicial iteoroot.
A justice once reproved a would be
suicide thus: "YoUng man, you have
been found guilty of attempting to
drown yourself in the river. Only con-
sider what your feelings would have
been had you succeeded."
' A HO Serape.
"Yon seemed pretty familiar With
that last chap," remarked the soap.
"Not at all," replied the Turkish tow-
el. "I was merely trying to scrape an
acquaintance."
Defer not charities till death. Tire
that does CC is rather liberal or an-
other inateil itibiltike 4E1 Of kW WI
44.4011; Akete-1161401140NOORRI
How
Do
You
lanow?
How do you judge
crackers? By their crackling
crispness—their snowy light-
ness—their appetising delici-
ousness ? That's the way to
▪ judge
Mooney's
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 cracker&
't •
Ilis Seidlits PowiLer Cartridge.
now a man's life was saved by a
common seidlitz powder is described
by a German physician, Dr. Franck,
who was called to treat a man who
had swallowed a large piece of tough
meat which stuck in his gullet. As it
was impossible to dislodge the meat
by natural means and as the patient's
condition was critical, the doctor tried
the efficacy of the gas which is gener-
ated when the constituents of a seid-
litz powder are mixed. He directed the
man to swallow the two halves of one
of the powders separately, and the re-
sulting pneumatic pressure, aided by
the man, who shut his mouth and
closed the nasal passages, was suffi-
cient to drive the piece of meat out of
the gullet into the stomach.
Making Wives; Happy.
"It seems to me that the way to
make a woman happy is to give her all
your sympathy and affection," says
Dr. Edward Brooks in Rochester Her-
ald. "As for overlooking any faults, a
man ought not to see any faults in his
wife. If it does happen that there are
a few very patent ones—and I suppose
there are some women who are not ex-
actly angels—a man ought not to see
them any more than he sees the spots
on the sun when Itis shining brilliant-
ly in the heavens, 'told he ought to re-
member that no matter what disillu-
sions he may experience after mar-
riage it was he himself who undertook
the responsibility of taking to himself
a young woman that he promised to
love and honor."
Hidden Trenahre In England.
In England when hidden treasure is
found the law requires the coroner to
hold an inquest over it. Formerly it
was a coroner's duty to hold an in-
quest in case of a burglary. A statute
of Edward I. decrees that "when cor-
oners are commanded by the king's
bailiffs or by the honest men of the
county they shall go to the places
where any be slain or suddenly dead
or wounded or where houses are bro-
ken or where treasure is said to be
found and shall forthwith command
four of the next towns, or five, or six,
to appear before him in such a place."
The Abashed Shark.
In a recent article on Americans an
English writer gives the following as
a characteristic American after dinner
story, its subject being a politician in
bathing: "All at once a shark, a man
eater, was coming the other way and
swam up squarely in front of him.
They eyed each. other for a moment,
and then the shark—blushed and sped
away."1
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY'
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Boar Signature of
.See Pao -Simile Wrapper Below.
Wiry 8041 and AM easy
Oa take as sugar,
ICARTEKS FOR
FOR D172111E1,1
FILE FOR,RILIOUSIIEtt
ER FOR TORPID tiVERI.
6: ILILSOTWITKir
FOR THECOMPLUION
✓ reziwar leierowerstax
ust:WRIC SIOK HEADA6HE
NOW IS THE TIME.
Pat Grown Strawberry Plante For
Summer Setting.
Strange to relate,
few people realize
the advantage of planting at this gear
• son of the year. The ordinary person
has not the patience to wait for ground
layer planta tp develop and bear fruit,
which necessarily requirestwo years.
• This fact is very easily explained: In
removing a layer plant from the prop-
agating bed it is impossible to remove
any soil with It; therefore it is neces-
sary for the young plant to begin life
anew in its new home. ' Not so with
pot grown plants. They, being removed
from the pot with the ball of earth in-
tact, do not suffer any setback what-
ever. In fact, we have observed pot
grown plants growing in boxes after
they have .been prepared for shipment
in the packing sheds. One can readily
understand the financial saving in
these plants when we consider the use
of our land and labor required for two
years In developing ground layer p'ants
before we realize any benefit from
them. Pot grown plants set during the
months of July and August will bear
a full crop of fruit the following June.
How to Plant.
Maay people are under the impres-
sion that they cannot grow the straw-
berry unless they have some specially
favored land location and situation.
• This is a great mistake. The straw-
berry may be grown to perfection on
any ground that will produce a crop of
potatoes, corn, peas or other vegeta-
bles. Ground that has been used for
fruit or vegetables is the best for the
strawberry. Almost any soil will an-
swer, but we must remember that the
land should be well enriched with some
good. stable manure or fertilizer. The
ground should be thoroughly plowed
and harowed until it is in, first-class
condit1on. Strawberries should never
be planted on new'y plowed sod ground
(to prevent the ravages of grubs).
Avoid planting on a windy day. Ten
minutes' wind is worse on the roots of
plants than an hour's sun. Only drop
a few plants in advance of the plant-
er. For field culture set the plarits
four feet apart between the row i and
twelve to fifteen inches apart in the
rows.
Garden Culture.
For garden culture they may be,
planted two and a half feet apart be-
tween rows and one foot apart in the
rows. Set the plant so that the crown
shows above the surface. Plant the
pistillate varieties between the perfect
flowering kinds, having a row of the
perfect varieties to every third row of
the imperfect varieties. 11 you are
planting in a large way make a furrow
six inches deep and set the roots
straight down. Draw the soil around
the plants with the bands and so firm
the soil around them that the leaf of
the plants will break in two before
the plants will allow themselves to
leave their places. Should the ground
be dry or the sun very warm use any
mulching material at hand (that will
admit of light and air) to shade the
plants for a few days or until you
have rain.—T. J, Dwyer.
Breeding Beneficial Insects.
The California experiment station is
giving a large amount of time and
mohey to the investigation of various
beneficial insects, such as may be
raised to exterminate injurious insect
pests that are now without enemies in
this country. Much of the work which
has been done has been successful and
a number of very important discover-
•
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Atf--4
11",
i-r)V
11110111 •
‘itruce.
Don't
Shovel
Ashes
—.4111111Vorefah
•
•
'-'011111111
Not one make of furnace in twenty is supplied with an
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.
McClarys
London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, R.B.
SOLD IN WINCHAM BY A. YOUNG.
Gregg Shorthand
.is eaev to ?earn, easy to write and easy to read after
it is written.
The students of the Forest City Business and
Shorthand College are subjected to the test of the
Business Educators' Association of Canada for diplomas.
95% pass and 65% take honors.
Catalogue will give you some pointers about our
system and is free for the asking.
School tertn—Sept. till June inclusive.
J. W. WESTERVELT,
Principal.
Y. M. C. A. Bldg.,
LONDON, ONT.
•
INSECT BREEDING CAGE.
ies have been made, says The Orange
Judd Farmer.
The first extensive colonies of lady
bugs were here grown, which" subse-
quently were found to be of consider.
able value in exterminating the San
Jose scale. The work now going on
promises even more important results,
if indications are to be depended upon.
This work requires much patience and
the expenditure of a large amount of
energy and time by investigators. A
number of men have been kept in
foreign lands searching for new
insects, hoping that some may be
found to exterminate injurious pests,
after they are introduced and bred in
extensive numbers in this country.
Heaves In Horses.
In view of the fact that heaves Is so
associated with functional derange-
ment of the digestive organs, strict at-
tention to dieting is an important fea-
ture in the treatment of the malady.
A good way to feed horses affected
with the heaves is ad follows: Good,
sound oats, sifted and sprinkled with
salt and water may be fed morning,
noon and night. Upland prairie hay,
well shaken and sprinkled with salt
and wa.ter, in limited quantities at
night only. Bran mash, with a hand-
ful of flaxseed, to be fed twice a week.
Water should never be given immed-
iately before or after meals. The bet-
ter way is to give water a little at a
time during working hours. '
Tests of Dairy Cows.
During his field investigations, A. S.
Glover, of the Illinois experiment sta-
tion, carefully tested ten herds, con-
sisting of 145 cows. The average pro-
duction was 4,944 pounds milk, 201
pounds butter fat the first year. The
second year this increased 13 per cent.,
owing tp better care of cows, feeding
or better rations and elimination of
several poor cows. The best individual
record was 7,190 pounds milk tnd 367
pounds butter fat; the poorest 4,560
pounds milk and 135 pounds butter fat.
Advantages of Keeping Sheep.
Besides the .many other advantages
in keeping sheep there is one that
ought to have much weight with every
family. That is the ease With which
the household may be supplied With
nice fat ninth or mutton whenever
wanted, providing fresh meat for the
family is a thing not properly appre-
elated on the average farm, .
VEGETABLE SICILIAN
Hair Renewer
A high-class preparation for the hair. Keeps the hair soft and
glossy and prevents splitting at the ends. Cures dandruff and
always color to gray hair. "'strIAT:0071kr.erstu'''
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