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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1893-02-24, Page 3.,000000000000e90 ` ` a WINGIIA.11 TIMES, FEBRUARY 24, 1893, �t "vn, you are1 4 MOWSMOWS£chow but yQtl , � MRS. r1 WlS �r high expireiti Being you are fttill alive,. might z presuu e to inquire what your particular object was In sewing up my BOWSER GETS READY TQ GO TO coat and vest? Did on ant out to QI-ItiRQH, snake bagsof them? Were you going to nee those bags to hold catnip, smart» ]rut After a i'tuntrier or Preriinttrurles ;file Tweed asci r hers ? ;�:fra. Bowsotheer climbbed the stairs and Changes Tris !!rink ---says Ire went 30. walked in on him Again, Aebe squares. off and M11101104 up his shoulders she tt Tfypoerite Anyway—The 'Worst :ODA Baia: lions« in America. "Mr, Bowser, your suspenders are hanging about your knees! Vf you would The Sunday morning programme in remove your coat and slip thein over the Bowser mansion differs consider- your shoulders, you would feel more ably front, the week day morning pro- comfortable." When. She had gone Mr, Bowser care- fully dropped his Sunday goat on the floor, his vest at the foot of the bed, his naa;aloons at the corner, of the dresser. He tossed his cuffs into the closet, his necktie on the bed and got back into his everyday rig. Then he descended to the fancily room with great dignity. "No, ma'am, I ain no. hypocrite! If a hypocrite belonging to this household wants to go to church and pretend to be gramme. At breakfast twine Mr. Bow- ser says he isn't feeling very well and won't attend church, Half an hour later he guesses he will go, Fifteen minutes after that he has decided to remain at home, Mrs, 13owser replies that she has a headache, and also feels inclined to skip church service, but the worde have hardly been • uttered when Mr, Bowser remarks: "We'll go to. church, ,of course. 1 don't propose to allow ouu neighbors to' class us among,1 the heathen. It's an example w'e area to the world at large, even if wo are /not religiously inclined, I'll start about getting .£ready right away." Mrs, I owsec draws a tosigh. She likes to go to church, b elle dreads the preliminary exercises. The said ex- ercises begin about thirty econds after Mr. Bowseras disappear d up stairs. They invari• b 1y start off t ith: ' •0h, Mrs.f�owser 1" "Yes. 'Vat is it?" "Have I t a change of)shirts in this house, or have they beep sold to the rag buyers?" "Your shirts are in the ;second drawer of your dresser, of course:." There were five of them lying there, but be had opened the drawer without seeing them as usual. He 'returns and discovers them, and nothing is heard from him, for as much as two minutes. Then he suddenly yells: "Mrs. Bowser, are you dead?" " Well, what is it now?" " Is my Sunday suit in the ash bar- rel, or did you give it to a tramp? I've looked the whole house over more than forty times, and it is not to be found?" "It is hanging up in your closet, of course." Ile opens the door, and to his' .great surprise Isis best snit is hanging on the hooks before his eyes. He yanks .each separate garment down and flings it on the bod, and then returns and peers around and rushes out to call over the baluster: " Mrs. Bowser, will you ask the girl to look in the coal bin and hunt me out a collar? If you are going to keep 'em down there, why didn't you tell me and save me an hour's time?" • " Your collars are in the first drawer of your dresser. It is curious how blind a man is, even in daytime!" Tho collars are there, of course. They have aeon kept in that same drawer for seven years, but he never found them until after he had looked under the bed, in the closet and out in the hall. Mr.• Bowser consumes about three minutes in getting into a collar, and then Mrs. Bowser is saluted with: " Mrs. Bowser, will you kindly con- descend to come up here? If so, you will put me under everlasting obliga- tions!" "Well, what is it?" she asks after toiling up stairs. Mr. Bowser stands in the centre of the room without coat, vest, socks or neck- tie, and with suspenders hanging off his shoulders. "Socks, Mr. Bowser; socks!" he whis- pers, with a wave of his hand, "I've been buying socks all my life ! I've bought over a billion. pairs 1 I ought to havo at least one old sock, with a hole in the heel, around here somewhere, but where is it? I've hunted upstairs and down--on•the roof and out in the back y zrd—but all in vain. Perhaps you will kindly*" "See here !" she interrupted, "Si she walked over to the dresser and '.,,tilled out a drawer. "Here are eight or ten pairs of socks! They have been kept in this drawer over since we lived in the house! .Why didn't you look in here 2" "H'in. I see!" he muttered. "Mrs. Bowser, don't play that trick on me again! I'm good nature itself, but I know when I'm imposed upon!" "And now I suppose you've looked into the furnace, and out in the barn, and all over the alley after a necktie, and been unable to find one?" she de. znanded. "Exactly, Mrs. Bowser! I've been hunting for two long .hours, but I can't find what you have given. the cook to kindle fires with!" She pulled out one of the small draw- ers of the dresser, and five different neckties vete revealed to Mr. Bowser's vision. Then she turned away and de- scended the stairs, and for four minutes not a sound was heard from Mr. Bow- ser. Then . calve an enquiry composed of N.O. molasses and cayenne pepper: "My dear Mrs, Bowser, I atn sorry indeedto trouble �r to you, but wilt you look under the kitchen sink and see if you can find a pair of puffs for me?" "Didn't you find a collar in one of the drawers?" she demanded in reply. "Yes, after two years of persistent search," "Weil, you have eight or ton pairs of cuffs in the same drawer?" "Exactly. I see the drift of this thing!" muttered Mr. Bowser as he scattered the whole collection over the dresser to select a pair. To his own great amazement lie happened to see his sleeve buttons as well, and to fit them into the clean tuffs without breaking down any doors or knocking off any plaster, To his further amazement he got into his coat and vest tvithont the bedstead falling down or the lavatory exploding. IYobegan totu+istand hunch and growl, and then strode to tho bolus. ter and shouted: "Is any living soul dt also several shells and soli.! shot, grapeowel stairs?" t t bells, �vhitTl 110 has found dear the wreck.- l�',Y. Tribune, DECLINE OF UNIONISIL HERE 18 QNr! WHO. SAYS TRADES UNIONS ARE LASING GROUND, Un*uceessful Strikes anti 1Viistalten Man- agement UUUesu;ting in a e eaetion-^To the Wecistence of Won-itlnion Men Nay 7te Weaved. 'Elsie ..,«spat, There are indications of something of a reaction against trades unionists among the workingmen in this country. There has never been a time when they were anywhere near so thoroughly Or- ganized as their fellows in England. A, comparatively small minority of Algeria can wage-earners have at any one time been what is called well organized. Such trachea as the cigarinalsers and the loco- motive engineers may include most of their members in their unions, and there may be other trades, like the iron and steelworkers, of which this is also true. It may be also true that the tradesmen, interested in religious matters, she can in certain localities aro well organized. go; but as for me, I will not dissemble. It has been the complaint of labor Comparatively few of us have perfect This is the worse conducted house in leaders and advocates of unionism, how- health, owing to the impute condition of Amer* and I have to glut up withever, that they could not get the men. to our blood. But we rub along from day to The Auditor-Gofloral's report shows the following eApeudituro:---],+or bye - elections, coal o; for census outlTner- ation, $269,039 ; revision of tho fran', c1Iise list, $100,945 ;' Tarte-lV.lol'ireevy seeastjeasion. 515,264; 1(.1;0 expolles,. pease is $15>OOD, in acdc'iitian .ta hie QXpense allowance of $2.000. Tho cab bills, of ministers aro as follows .--- Mr. Uostigan heads the list. with; $1199, tint ,'it .Adolph its a close second with $193 ; Mr. Deivdney, $97 ;. Mr, °hap - !eau, $29 ; Mr, idageart, $30; Mr, Curling, $44 ; and 14r. Topper $6$. Sir John Abbott, Sir John Thompson and Mr. Bowell apparently wont to their limes on toot, or paid their own expenses. Speaker White's rides cost the country $524.. 14$ G aG fir !!axles Tupper ez •his is Meant T'or VOA. It is truly said that one halt of the world does pot kbow how the other half lives. more than any other liusband on the 'face of the earth, but I will not play the hypocrite 1 You can go to church, and I will stay home and rip and cuss and teat• around and fret drunk and murder DICKENS' SHORTHAND. 'join the unions. To the existence of this larger number of non-union work- men they trace the failure of strikes, and declare it to be the reason why many of the workingman's dreams of •. higher wages and shorter hours fail to i be realized. I Now comes the added complaint that i the membership in existing organize - 'rite Illustrious Author Was a Staunch tions is diminishing, and there are oer- Devotee of tis* Winged Art. I tain good reasons whys this should be In a paper on `vCliarles Dickens and • the case. Unsuccessful strikes, like the p p recent railroad one at Buffalo, building Shorthand," by W. E. Axon, there are trades in New York and iron and steel some intereseing facts. It was Gurney's workers at Homestead, inevitably tend system that Dickens used—a system still to weaken the confidence of working - we believe, written by a number of re- men in their union. If it fails in the porters in the galley* of the house of one pureose of its existence, to raise commons. Gurney, who was born at wages or prevent their reduction, they Woburn, in 1705, calve to London early have no further use for it. If in a gro- in life, and was appointed shorthand longed and to the men expensive contest writer at the Old Bailey_ For a time he with their employers they are beaten combined clock -making, reporting. designing for and forced to come to their employer's calico printing androtatGurneys terms, they argue that they can do as system was a modification of that a well without the union as with it. In Mason's, and one of his earliest pupils many cases, too, the preference employ - was Erasmus Darwin ers give non-union men induces with - Dickens' experience, Mr. Axon says, drawals. It has, the Springfield Re - led him to set a high value on short- publican believes, always been the case, hand, and he taught it to his son, 1VI . both in England and in this country, H. F. Dickens, Q. C., the pzesentrecord- that times of business prosperity, when er of Deal. A scrap of shorthandnotes, labor is in fair to :good demand at good fount', among the novelist's papers, and wages, have been bad times for trades which, it was hoped, mighthave thrown utuornsm. Men flock to the unions some light on the M stet . of Edwin Drood,"turned out on examination to anwhen work is scarce and wages falling be the heads of a speech suggested by dark.h Ie ndustrial t ddistl r future eniepis3probl- the novelist to his son for .a ineeting of ably as often the cause as the result of a cricket club, then in a -drooping con trades unionism, clition and inneed of regeneration. More specific reasons for this] reaction Of the thousands of sheets which. Dickens must have covered with Gur- against labor organizations may un ney's characters there remain only two clolabtedly be found in the blundering letters, of a page each, which deal with management of the heads of these some private spatters and which are now bodies. It is a sad record, the story of in the South Kensington museum.—Pall what American workingmen have been Mall Gazette. made to suffer from the incompetency and worse of these blind and in some 8e Was Blameless.:. cases dishonest guides. Their tyranny The peripatetic had been roasted out over subordinates in the unions, their of his hogehead in the alley back of a arrogance in dealing with employers, business house, and . he was slinking and their cool appropriation from she along the street irresolute and unhappy hard-earned money of the members of when the officer suet him. "Hold up," and the guardian of the peace put ins hand on him. "I'm held up," he responded quite re- parteetly under the circumstances. ' "Come off," said the policeman, giv- ing iv ing him the bluff. "Thanks," he responded, cheerfully ; "I thought you were going to say come on." "Aw, what are you giving me ?" cons tinned the officer, for he was not as witty as the night owl. "Nothing, for I am dead broke," re- sponded the tramp, shaking out his pockets, "Don't got gay," warned the copper. " What are you doing here at this hour `t" "Ask the private watchman in' the alley' who rolled my hn•_tdoir off the cel- lar door," sighed the c'li•sturbed one. "This is no time for respectable people to be on the street," said the officer, severely. "I know it isn't," admitted the tramp; "and if that private watchinan had been in bed T wouldn't have been disturbed, and if you were at home I wouldn't be dallying here now as sleepy and tired as I am," After which the officer found a bed for him at the station house. The Tulip. The tulip was first made known to botanists by descriptions and figures made by the Swiss naturalist, Conrad Gessner, in the year 1559. The plant from which Gessner made his drawings was growing in the garden of one .iohn Henry Harwart, at Augsburg, the seed or bulb having originally been brought from the Levant. The date of its intro- duction into England is somewhat un- certain, but horticulturists usually set it clown as 1580, probably on account of a passage in the works of llakluyt (15582), a "Now within these four which says, y into Eng- land ht li' ' h been a s hese as y ext g rind land froiu Vienna, Austria, divers hinds s of flowers called Tulipas," Linnteus tells us that the tulip is a native of Cap. tadocia; also that he believed it. to be he "lily of the field" spoken of by the the anions of large salaries for these services have disgusted many' and made 1 day, with scarcely a thought, unless forced to our attention, of the thousaude all about us wbo are suffering from scrofula, salt rheum dud other serious blood disorders, and whose agonies can only be imagined. The marked success of flood's Sarsaparilla for these troubles, as shown in aur adver- tising columus frequently, certainly seems to•justiiy urging the use of this excellent medicine by all who know that their blood ill disordered. Every claim in behalf of ldoorl'e Sarsaparilla is fully backed up by what the medieiue has done and is still doing, and wheu eta proprietors urge its merits and its use upon all wbo suffer from impure blood, in groat or srnalt de. ;;reel, they certainly mean to include you, ,A, Blessing to very i ouseboid.- HOL�.O�IA�I'S PILLS AND WNTIVI Thea remedies have *toad the test of fifty 'Tars experience, and are pronon:med the best Met k'atnily use. Mr, Gladstone has just made a very bold announcement of his views on the terrible drink question, In a speech at Liverpool he said: "Let us all carry with us, deeply stamped upon our hearts and mind, a seuse of shame for the great plague of drunken- ness which goes through the land, sapping and undermining character, breaking up the peace of families, oftentimes choosing for its victims, not the men or the women originally the worst, but persons of strong aoeittl :susceptibility and open, in special respects, to temptation. This great plague and cure, gentlemen, let us all remember, is a national curse, calamity and scandal.'* T PIE£$ Purify the blood; correct ail disorders: of the LIVER, S7'OhiACII, KIDNEYS AND Rei n Invaleabte in alt eoNLphaints incidental to females of all ages. Is the only reliable remedy for bad lee's, same, uicors, and old wounds. FOR 13ItO1+Clit TuUOATS, COURMS, t10LL?8, GOUT, ItY.ELfirATIS'3I, GLA3ULAIt SWELLINGS AND A AISL,t3 S IT I1AS NO EQUAL, Aianufectered only at 78, riowvxford. Late 333, Oxford Stt'O A* and sold by all Medicine. Vendors throughout the world, If 'Purhasers should look to the Label On the Boxes and I'ots. If the a not 588 Oxford Street, I,oudou, they axe spurious. The following is the statement of the business done by Orosshill creamery last year: Number of inches of Bream received —June 8,854, July 0,6681, August 10,447, Sept., ,Oct, and Nov. 19,594, making a total of 48,564 inches. Pounds of butter made —Juno 8,60'2, July 10,211, Aug. 10,088, Sept., Oct. and Nov. 18,588 ; total, 47,412. Bate per lb. received by patrons—June, 15 e.; July, 173:e. ; Aug., Sept., Oct, and Nov., 18c. Average price per lb. for sea- son, 17c. Inches of areas! per lb. of butter 1.23. 1 .. them non-union seen. They could not Itch on human :tnd hurtcee and tell ani - help seeing that the .only one to profit mals cured in 8u minutes by Woolford's by such trades unionism was the walk-, Sanitary Larson. Tars never fails. War- ing delegate or the officers of the union, ( ranted at Ghisho]nt's drug store. and the ones to suffer were themselves. It will be a credit to the common sense of the American workingmen if they shall repudiate such leaders and such trades unionism. At best a union is an expensive luxury to a workingman with a family and moderate wages. A pen- dent man wants to be sure he is getting his money's worth from the union, and when he is in doubt about it withdraws, The Feminine School of Fiction. [Instruction in the art of novel writ- ingis to be given to ladies in each num- ber of Atalanta for the ensuing year, and a "school of fiction" is thus to be established.] Here is a scheme of undoubted utility, Which with unanimous praise we should greet;, Ladies will turn with the greatest facility, Feminine novelists. furnished complete . Damsels of fashion feel no hesitation in Learning by practice gto bake and to fry ; Lot them a novel as well as a education in They will bo taught whether notices flattering Can by appeals to the critics bo got ; How, too, a knowledge of tongues, though a smattering, Serves to provide alt "original" plot. Methods for heroes to gain the enjoyment of Riches and fame will be studied in full ; • Lecturers teach the judicious employment of Runaway steeds and the Airfoils bull, How to describe with minuteness the scenery, Though you have neve sot eyes on the spot Whether, when villains pay punishment plen- ary, They should be finished by poison or shot; Bow the detective will cleverly hit.upon Pieces of evidence nobod • saw: Flow, too, her Majesty's judges will sit upon Oases lin novels) regardless of law, This, and more also. each staid of ability I nt bah; this oNcol o , leant b t will l . Quicklyetty h tranquillity tvit dI editors look And nut the t cavi if theyf Into IL future like this —St.James's Gazette, ar V nl`S 1'ot` tie 1.'ainIer.�-� A negro who was arrested at Albany, Ga., recently for cow stealing gave sit different aliases, Saviour --St. Louis Republic. • one orlsenetnet Arnold's shuts. after it leas been laid by will help kill Tttrnin+g'the sheep into the corn field Cant. C. W. Adams, of West Addison, out the late weeds. Vt., has raised quite a large portion of Mrs. George, W. &tell, of Meriden, the timbers of the flagship Congress, oil Conn„ has made a bed quilt which con - General Benedict Arnold's fleet, 'which tains 1,116 pieces of silk. WAS sunk in Lake Chaniplainin October, Even a variety should be tett with an 17'''d. The timbers, of whish there are eye to a proper balance between the ,,heat 90 feet of the after part of the nitrogenous and carbonaceous elements! keel and keelson` with .a number of the All fruit for market has to be picked fibs attached, are of oak, and lierfectlyripe—even et oven the n klo sound, The aeon, when polished, is a little !Before itis 1 apple, verydark and takes a beautiful ilnish. which ripons all through the fall incl will b e either worked into canes and winter. It b. other articles, as relics, or kept intact On the farm, of George EIf'ter, neat for the World's lair: Mr. Adams has 'Yuba City, Cat, thorn is a mule that panic across the plains in 1894, and still is able to do considerable Work and ii fat ai1d. liealtlly. "I tun Imo, of course, eepliea Mrs, and musk o a , Bowser. • • • The Doaiittiou Cotton Company last year tnade 144 per cent. profit on their capital. What de you think about that dog question 2 x think it is a question that gives us paws. Spurgeon's Temperance, - . Rev. Theodore L. Cuyler, D. D., in his pen jottings in the, N. N. Advocate, writes: Spurgeon's death was the severest loss whish the canes lies Eufiered on the of her side of the water in many a day. EU was late in:joining the army of Teetetatism; but wheu ict'did put on his armor, the weight of a spear was "like a weaver's beam," Accord.itif to tilt' test and most recent calculations 100,000,000 tons of water peer over the Niagara every hour. This represents 10,000,000 horse power. Til Id annnal coal pro- duetion of the world would not furn- ish steam power sufficient to hump it back amts. BANK OF HAMILTON, WINGHAM. Capital, $1,250,000. Rest, $650,000. Prestdeut—Joni 8•rttnwr. Viet/President—A. G. RnitsAY. -'• DIV.10TOii,S T011tr Pao:iron, Cons. Gua$et, Gke Boned, A. Woob, A. 13. Leu (Toronto). Cashier• -•J: TU1SNBULT., Savings Oatk—ITours,14) to 3 ; Saturdays, to 1. Deposits of 81 and upwards received and interest allowed, Deposits also received at current rates of interest. £draft*, on vrcnt 1ritain and the United States bought and sold b`. WILLSQI't, Aesur' 11zIlyEll & I)IC1lTINSON, Solicitors. HOLSTEIN BULLS FOR SALE The undersigned has for talo on Lot Io, Con. 1. 7•ure,orry, four thoroughbred Ilnlstefn bulla. tang• intr froth 0 to 16 mnntba.old. The Above mentioned ,.nasals era all well marked ami registered ie the Canadian Ifcrd Ronk. They will ho sole ahaap and on easy terms- to shit pltehasers. JAS ELLIO'i', Breeder etlielstoinnICattle,, C11tt, REGULATE THE 0 .. STOMACH,LIVE:* Grp BOWELS, - AND PURIFY THE BLOOD. A RELIABLE REMEDY FOR - Indigestion, Biliousness, Headache, Constipation,. Dyspepsia, Chronic Liver Troubles, Dizziness,' Bad Complexion, Dysentery, Offensive Breath, and all disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Ripane Tabules contain nothing injurious to the most delicate constitu- tion. Pleasant to take,eafe, effectual. Give immediate relief. Sold by druggists. A trial bottle sent by mail on receipt of is cents. Address THE RIPANS CI-IEMICAi. CO., eo Spruce Street•, a a New York City W1 N G I A M ARBLE WOR MESSRS. VANSTONE BROS of lfincardine have bought the Barbie Business of Mr T T Watson, formerly carried on by w Si Parties requiring work in their line will do well by calling on them or seeing Inc of their eso purchasing. You will find our prices are away down, bur workmanship is unsurpassed. WA tits but the very best stock and by square dealing hope to secure a linersl share of the public patron T Watson, who has been running the bnsiness for the past year, will represent us en theroad. Call alt i see our stook and prices. ALLAN LI..1. ROYAL MAIL STs, Baits. REDUCTION IN RATES. Stcamors sail regularh from PORTLAND AND HALIFAX ro LIVER POOL via Londonderry. numno TIIU WINTS0 31ONTtIS. Ctbfn, 340 and upwards. Second Cabin, Steerage et low rates. No Cattle Carried. STATE SERVICE or A! -LAIN LINE STEAMSHIPS. 425 NEW YORE: & GLASGOW via tong nderry, every Fortnight. Cabin, 410 and upwards. Second Cabin, $25. Steol•age at low rates. Apply to Ii. & A, ALLAN, 3tontreal, or HENRY DAVIS. Wninsamu. Boom! Boom ! Hoorn! Cheap Holiday Literature for all the year round. o•operation is the order of the day. It pays to group your newspapers and subsribe for +hem in clubs. leek over the following lot of popular pubes. cations and select wbat you would like to read . 1 Wives and slaughters, London, is a monthly published by women for women on superior toned paper, hound; $1 per year. 2 The Amot•icatt Farmer, Springfield, 0,100p;ages ntonthly, has u national oircnlation of 1,0,00 ^.1 P°31. year, 3 Tho Western Advertiser, .London, a popular weekly, recently eniat ged,02,000 given to su'iscribers in premium awards, a newsv paper for the home ; ^a1 per Year. 4 ['11115)', Boston, 40 sparkling pages every month for Sunday and week day reading; 31 peryenr. of the ta.t Patrons of noestey iOntario fanada Farmer's Run, London, taanu dlfl.,euiael >oen columns weei.ly; 31 per year, I and Women, Boston for young/ Our Sen n o OOu Little , y 4 est readers at home and in school, 31 per year. 7 Arthur's Botno Bad/zinc, lThilatleiphia, ono o the best magazines publisher for the )coney; 31 per year. 8 Two Standard .looks bound in. flee elem..,in , era. bossed in geld anti printed in large cleat tyre, action and classics, 1. OUR GRAINO OILUBBINC OFFER Tha Tains and env two of the above for only $2 26, worth et; save 25 per emit. The Tress and any three for only 8e 00, worth e4 ; save 36 per cent. The Toms and any foto" for only $3, worth 30; Savo 40 per rent The Tiers and any 510 for only 43 00, worth 06; sane 42 per cant. The Toms and any sic for only 4"4, worth 37; save 43 portent, The Toms and any Soren fol' only $4 80, Worth 38; save 44 tier cent. The Toms and all the above for mile $0, worth 35; 'an o 40 per cent!. No choicer holiday presents can be selected than mute m the above, order mptiy by number 10)51 n thee. Address ate orders to Laure than in n x'zalns opricwg, "Masham, Ont, r ANS T ONE 13 ZE .R. LAN :8.,d SAW1 GEORGE 8 HO SON, Prop. Lumber of all kind First-class Slat. and Cedar Oar Load Orders a See FOOD delivered to any Wingham. fTtrordersby'mail promptly attoudol t o ' GEORGE Tile. %%Ingham TOSEPn cows1, CLARK 9TH DTV. Cotmr, Co. If AUCTIONEER, ISSUER OF 1\IABRIAG'rd3 LI Conrissssoxen is B. C. ,7,, B Waexursia, 2,O00,000 Feet of Lugs Highest Cash paid for any quantity of HARD AND SIFT WOO delivered at our yard in Witt for Heading and Shingle by the cord. Call and get brie to cut, Dressed and 'Undressed Shingles, Lath, kept dontinuallp an ha bfaiirt 4Vingliam, Tsnuary 4111,18I�