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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1896-06-05, Page 7TIE W 11 (31 -IAM TIMES, JUNE 5, 1896. a t^r w • r{^• 'I) AY �✓t.-.met �f . A •'li A J !y, AN S 171.-0:;1DA WATER THE •1. `,'7' SWEETEST MOST FRAGRA MOST FR *' AND rNDU• IMG PErIFUMrS OR THE RCHIEF, TOILET OR ALL 1. IU Bills TS, PERFUMERS AND DELI ERAL DEALERS. Sheep Notes. The crop of lambs in Great Britain; this year is fully up to the average. * * * Shropshire ewes are in great • tures will, of course, be touch better than one, so that the sheep may be made to alternate on them.—Farm- ing. demand at Beunos Ayres, in the , Castration. Argentine Republie, at present, One y The castration of the lambs should local dealer has been getting $100 not be neglected if they are to be a bead for all he could supply, and 1 kept for winter feeding. They could not keep up with the demand. * * * It has been suggested that a pro- iltable business might be done by persons taking up some of the abandoned New England farms, and They are larger because they grow starting sheep -breeding on them. more quiekly in the absence of de - These farms can be bought very velopnhent of the generative system, cheaply, and on many of them there Thev grow better meat because should certainly be castrated. It is not a mere fancy' of the dealer whieh gives the preference to cas- trated lambs at the finishing season. Tney are really larger and better. are good houses and outbuildings. The experiment is worth trying. x * The lamb crop in Australia has been very short owing to the drought. One station reports that from 50,000 ewes only 10 per cent. of lambs have been reared, and they are poor ones. On the same station the output of wool is 800 bales less than it was the previous A HEAVY MORTGAGE. I year• 1 How a prominent farmer quickly What is known in Great Britain as tbere is less development of bone, head, neck, and other rough parts. I They are fatter, since they feed more quitely, and are much more contented. The difference is quite material, and it should be recogniz- ed. The grower should aim to flt his lambs for best filling the de- mands of the market, and this he cannot do without castrating them at the proper dine. The proper time is when they are young. The tails should also be .cut for reasons that will be manifest to all. Of course, lambs that are to be sold to the local dealer early in the season need not bo thus treated ; but in every instance in which they are to be carried over to the autumn or winter following, it is important that they should be both castrated and docked.—Farming. lifted It. pure lustre wool is the growth of A mortgage has been described as an Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, and incentive to industry, a heavy mortgage, 1 the East Riding of Yorkshire, and ,tits a sure sign of ruin. The last is partici'. there is no wool precisely like it any - rantrue, for if a mortgage is allowed to it will eat up the farm. In this con- . where else in the world. It moves siection Mr. Henry Fowler, of Huron 1 in price with alpaca and mohair. It writes : "From my boyhood scrofulahad I can be mixed with or used in place ,'narked me for a victim and it seemed as ,f it had a life mortgage on my blood. I ,suffered fearfully with sores, and know- ing my condition I have remained a single of the latter, or it can be made into beautiful bright goods without any admixture. The Demi-Lustre, a digs. Doctor after doctor prescribed or Straight, silky -haired wool, not so ime, ud that a Toronto specialist told i bright as Lincoln, but a little finer, me bluntly that my comriamt was a deep-seated, , ted incurable bleed disease. I and which is known as Leicester, is Sarsaparilla I knew was a good blood grown in the midland and in some medic•ine, and I sent for a bottle of the ` best. • t Mr. Todd'the druggist, sent me Sarsaparilla, Scott's arsapari a, an of the western counties. as as* The only native sheep of America Best ford" Wash Day makes clothes sweet, clean, white, with the least labor. put into the trough, and when the sheep come to lick the salt the nose gets smeared, more or less, with the tar. The smearing has a tendency to keep away the fly. The remedy has done some good, but it is not considered sufficiently effective. to he let alone, So they, in their over zeal and ambition, either' snake tae pat 1 of eve so easy and inevit- able that all the zest is taken out of it for both, (for lovers never want somebody to go ahead and paste the_ problem for them; they want to bh d The following mixture has also I stitch it far themselves as they go been recommended : Take one along.) or else by critical nagging, pound of beeswax, one pint of lin- and balancing the eligibility of one seed oil, and two ounces of resin, suitor against another, these friends and melt the beeswax and resin in so jar and upset the poor girl that the oil. While yet hot add four she doesn't know which man she ounces of carbolic acid. At the wants, and so turns her back upon present stage in our experience it all. In point of fact, when a man is - would not be possible to determine • in love, and a girl is trying to return which of the. above remedies will `his love—when she is weighing out j prove the most effective. But for i their adaptability and balancing h s simplicity and effeetiveness, when j love for foot -ball against her passion i considered together, nothing will • for Browning—during the o?el'ea'e, probably excel the tar and. fish oil, tentative period,when the most affec- and, it may be added, that this tionate solicitude from friends is an i remedy is very cheap, so much so I irritation, there ought to - be a law that it is within the reach of all. , banishing the interested couple to an It may be practicable to deal with I island peopled with strangers who very large flocks of sheep, as with j would not discover the delicacy of those, for instance, kept on the the situation until it was too late to ranges. The labor would not pro- spoil it." bably be compensated by the in- creased returns. But even on the ranges the method of smearing a board placed in a salt trough, as described above, is eminently practi- cable, and it is, at least, measure - ably effective. But with -purebreds it would certainly pay well to give attention to the smearing of the animals, as indicated, during the period of danger.—Farming. d I have stuck to Grub in the Bead in Sheep. • This is one of the most serious. ailments of sheep, and it is one of the most fruithful causes of loss among flockmasters. It is not so g frequent, however, in Canada gen- it. It has lifted my mortga e, for to -day orally as in the Central and Wes - 1 am free sores, g k Mountain sheep, tern States. In the latter it fre- from those horriblemy are the Rocky eyesight is not blurred, my tongue is not which inhabit the highest mountain quently makes severe inroads in a furry, and I have no irritation. I look p n. upon tt s Sarsa arilla as a marvellous chains of the western part of Amari- I flocse in the winter seas o cies off the cl'eins ric when it will cure a life long ca from Alaska to Mexico. In the It is causedby p 31t disease in so short a time." l extreme north they ale no b Scrofula, pimples, running sores, rheu- 1 numerous, and have been found . at mutism and all diseases generated by poisonous humors in the blood are cured much lower altitudes. They were by Scott's Sarsaparilla. The kind that found in large numbers at the time cures. Sold only in concentrated form the Spanish first explored the at $t per bottle by your druggist. Dose western part of America. They from half to one teaspoonful. I were then of large size, and their flesh was saki to be very delicious. i Their breeding beds have often been � found at an elevation of 12,000 to 13,000 feet above the level of the sea. Domesticated sheep were first introduced into America in 1493.— Farming. EXPERT IU3V CE gadfly, which, at a certain ' season of the year, lays an egg in the nos- tril of the sheep. The season will, of course, vary with the different kind of sheep ; but it usually comes about harvest time.: When the flies infest the sheep, they may be seen moving quickly with the head down toward the ground, as though trying to keep the same so near the earth that the fly cannot disturb them. Because of this propensity some flockmasters have actually plowed two or three furrows in the pastures to enable the sheep to rub their noses against the ground, and they claim that the results have justified the means used. The egg soon hatches into a minute worm or grub, which crawls up into the nasal passages, and from these into the divisions of the same, contiguous to the brain. Sometimes it remains in the larger passages, and it is only in these instances that it can be reached. When any sub- stances is injected into the nostril that causes violent sneezing, it is possible that the grub may be dis- lodged. But these instances are ex- ceptional. Generally speaking, it works its way up into the more complex part of the air passages in close proximy to the brain. It can- not do any hares' there directly to the brain. By inducing a diseased condition of the parts adjacent to this separating part, the brain is also affected ; hence the peculiar symptoms of the disease. The sheep will sometimes hold its head up- ward or stretched out. It becomes very dull, or stupid, and is much inclined to mope around. It refuses to eat as time goes on ; and finally dips after having hungered for several days. It is evident, therefore, that in dealing with this trouble the reme- dies to be used must be chiefly pre- ventive in character if they -sire to be efficacious. They must W .,ap- plied to prevent the fly which lays the egg which produces the grub from doing the work. Several remedies have been recommended and practiced with more or less success. But it is evident that before any of thern can be effective we must be able to determine with no little precision the season of the year when the fly does its work in l our locality. American shepherds have fre- quently adopted the following reme- Summer Food For Sheep. Don't forget to provide some. It will pay well to do it if the pastures are not ample. The food should be sown. It will be a great help to the sheep. And when of the right sort j it will furnish them with a nice bite I daring much of the summer. Vari- i ons kinds of food may be sown, but there is propably no single plant that 1 will furnish more summer food than rape. Rape may be sown early. If eaten down, it will come up again, more especially if not eaten too close- . ly. If it harrowed after the first Is always worth considering. and even after the second, time of We are not afraid of any ex- pasturing, so much the better: The pert judgment upon our j harrowing will be good for the rape. It will help to retain the moisture. It will break the crust formed by the treading of the sheep, and it will I start weeds which the sheep will mow down subsequently when they WALL j- �- j are eating off the rape. Two pas The better the judge the 1 ----9 T— En ri°,� zl higher the appreciation of its „wI '�di tifs'n e u F' y:.«� V g'�' LY merits. For quality and new- j t SHOULD KTlCi1J T1-1 AT ness we cannot be beaten. j at a ° WINDOW SIIADES We are bound to please 'in every particular of our business and es -1 pecially in the matter of high quality •of Window Shades. We sell the' best. Don't buy cheap track. A Good Roller and Spring is the cheap- est in the end. HAMMOCKS. •. � �1 a t. At 1 Y •+'0 , 1, rltj l.;•ttl fez, ix. c. { ,i 1 ti +, tries Won. ,�t 1 t, �'.rt til,PSrzetas. We have a large stock of Ilalnmoeks ,_ a,. •_tits, which aro selling fast. Try 'one � • before they are all gone, ; . •r CROQUET SETS We sell more Croquet Sets than other firms and consequently we can afford to run thein off at smaller n advance on cost. ' Call and Fre ' •lock. ' t... ROSS WINGITAM. VERY LARGE BOTTLES, 50 *,frits te, 'sons .'. a 1110 The Time for Building Viten Baby was sick, we gave her Cestorfa. When hen she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castor's.. When she had Children, she gave them Castor's. Its remark- able lasting = and cleansing properties make SORPRISEmost _ ^ economical and Best for—...0 Every Day ONE (JIVES RELIEF. R.•I.P`A•N•S The modern stand- ard Family Medi- cine: Cures the common every -day ills of humanity. TRADE l CONCLUSIVE PROOF. From a Wen Known Citizen. •"Mfy daughter Polly, has for moro than a year boon troubled with severe symptoms of kidney 1 disease. She had constant and acute paius in 1 her back. The pain iii her head „as fearful 1 rind almost unendurable. It 1 cquuutly pre- entedher from attending sohuul,a,•d 0141• fuuud i study athomepractica ly lu1p. ssiblo. Slit had no appetite, and slid nut sleep well. Thi -pain was very severe around Ler heart and rite was j much troubled with flu'Whig and palpitutien. She was completely worn out in I.0,, y at,do as jtired and drowsy all t:.e 01110 I{er isomer and myself became serionaly planned as she , was coot tntly getting Ivo. se. "Last Tuty my dan;h ter Sarah, a. teacher in. l the L'a 1 o School at itugsrilte, Out„ carne ho no t" sp •nd liar ve.�0tiou, nue( fanoilg hex sister in such a distres,ntg and dat,gerona 1 condition, said, I am •nttu.^ Iloau', I0'duey Pills and they are rlonuz too much rood, I have I a box wit t uie mud will di.t,ie �• n.h Polly vtbieh 1 etre ilii. 17 the tit•:•+ 1•-1:y had ;iii-.hru the hail box her intp•u,.•u •ru'i• itt stet til nail • sn marked, tlt.t1 1 It:••cur.:l rl/o e ,0,111 air. r +lei•III'a drug s,o :1 • • toll rt•,tura i tt to he,1'111 end spiiitswaa r • •,irl and cm!.;n'•ntm. E' t, has now scale of 1 h •r f senior ,,a.1 ,;w "n.;, t 111),1 ,1 1 u 1 Mit easing 1.,fluty troa',1••a. ;;h fats:l.•11:.cepsi'r)l,aud f .r ,nn 9 tit ill a 1ll,n•ta1 Lilo et jo)• d ,L.e most r.' :u!ts Il•:, th. : 5,., lots lice wst au,* lar, st Life is the last habit Oat we wish .;un ..11 slice she r;ono„• tired t:ltiug thu ping, Up the sybtem is at this season. The to lose, because it is the first one cold weather has made unusual drains i that we form. 1 f The blood 11dB become impoverished all the functions of the body Stiffer in ,•.1 ha •1 a0, unmh tuh i» titin 6.110.,'.1197 . r,” r•,rs,i her to full bran that rho v, ante nue to ,coop six ho'ct s itt the h •u o all the tine. in upon the vital ogees. e a ;e t ley shod a he no tial t id not >• y,iin � le. and impure add I{•.ourahasbeen so1,•ud,1•fulshe th,nl,at.,ay A boil in the pot is wot'th two on v: i 1 tura ,sty aoulp ai,tt. Ii t r pill, Hurt east ¢ t 1al a h,x, I u uid not have betroth!. 11 flip consequence. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the j the neck. Widowers do not have half so much fun as they are supposed to ap rro ,silos 0,T uty w•ft nod daughter slave, great builder, because it is the Oue True Blood Purifier and nerve tonic. HOOD'S PILLS become a favorite ca thartic with all who use them. All druggists. 25c. The Girls Are to Blame. The girls are to be blamed for most of this—tbe country girls especially. They won't marry a farmer, and the young sons of the soil see the prettiest girl picked up by Pee -wee lawyers, cock robin tooders 1•l', r'i The restore, 1 't „Trimy ti.util,ttt to.t.1 1m' lob a d st•oug rir.h• ed. f, em hit to'nler aerloue P11111ess, etc„ has !rune bar mother, nit ;Of and daughto,• a happy family. • 1 orale, this 5.00 at st,.t.moot with the full t .1oltltt- • t.a.• ly and without any m-:dne or iuducont, lit „9, never, t•'show the gratmtu le my dnmilt t. -r, A girl cannot expect a man to be w 01 and ,nys,•1f fool for tato wouthtiful cure wr•,n Ili by the Dorn K -duty Pi:ls. We hove made always on purpose for her. „1t t1•, least doubt that her tr>ing the pills ju,t at the time alto Fid saved us a large If you would always be healthy, keep .1 ,est mo hill, s she Wagnall ebut ars sick bed cart your blood pure with Hood's Sarsaparilla ,,,.,iter l.- trade, Ii.,ve bolts 1, resident of St. the One True Blood --urlll.er. 1{,r 'e for forty years, and county constable f,1r thirty yecrs and sin won known, and I matte Many people are incapable of lov- th x�"lell•1 d •••1 , arir„1 bla,evbng the same to h,+ trio, n.un le,•iwiue the sante to have rho ing, and there are many others who , etyma effect as a,t oath, rises nrrorrling to th. A.cc respecting extra Jndteel Oaths 1653. ought to be. Ned WILLIAM IIIIOWN. 'Pike, and d.rinr•'l helot me at the 'roam IIe 4110 always prefaces his tale rf Nt. LTn,•y's, 10, the County of Porth, this Sth and Bob -'o -link preachers. As long with laughter is poised between im-aa.yof.ti"ren•" D.,1sJs. S cl, WM N. FOND. pertinence and folly. • ; A Cotnmissiouer in Hi;b Court •of Justice, 1 Ontario as the girls prefer that kind of cattle to the boaney-handed sons of toil they never be allowed to vote if- i can help it - Dont Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away. The Breath of the Pines. Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis,' • Sore Throat and Lung Troubles are cured by Norway Pine Syrup. Pi ice 25 and 50 cents. It breathes out the beal- the truthful, startling title of book about Na -Tri I ing virtues of the pine forests. Bao, the harmless, guaranteed ohacco habit entre that braces up nicotinized ne res, eliminates the nicotine poison, makes weak men gain rtrongth, vigor and manhood. You run no physical or li,.an oinl risk, as NoTo•B'o is sold under guarantee to• cure or moncy•tunded. Book free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co„ 3 47 St. Paul St., Montreal. Sold by, C. E. 1Viniams Winehaua, When Making up her Mind. THE WOMAN IN LOVE HAS A RIGHT TO 1318 LET ALONE. The advertisement that makes a few people buy is better than one that makes many people laugh. When a man and woman are married their romance ceases and their history commences. PAST YOUR PRIME. "The first right of, a woman in perhaps not iu years, but in energy. love is to be protected from her your health is not good, yet you Itard- friends while she considers the man ly kno,v what is the mutter with you. „ 1Olal• bus:nOss, too, iy 011 the decline. Whom she contemplates loving,” writes Lilian Bell in an article on People n11ns the old elastic spirit you showed in former years. The secret of "Women's Rights in Love," in June allthis ist that tyour kind titntioti het Ladies' Rome Journal. "The well- worn had. both right yourthe use of Chase's IXid- meant blundering of vitally -interest- uey-laver Pby ills. One box will cure you ed friends has spoiled many a prods- Dysl.opeia. isingtlove affair which might have Rheumatism resul d in a marriage so much Catarrh. arrive 'the ordinary that it could ea ;� is Yioouliar to women. ; almost a termed satisfactory. At no time in a girl's life has she a i;ervation. greater right to work out her own Sciatica salvation in fear and trembling than Poor blood. during the period known among 1 Indigestion. girls as `leaking up her mind." If 'Jiver eomp]a1 t. „ ;re,,a e of appetite. she is the right kind of a girl, honest Severe kidney diseases and delicate minded, it is nerve -gal:- Thousands of sufferqrs Have publ:sly ing to be talked about, and sacrilege testified to the efficacy of Chase's Iiid- to be talked to. The bloom is on nev- Ly vebP'itlis. One They tare the best, 01 o ;, `ut nrr cRi 1 -rim, IC1 l. t 1.4C',0 dy : They slake a trough, V-shaped the grape then which a rude touch eq a Hese,_: 2,> cents a box. +. with a board resting on one edge on mars fdrever. Yet these kind friends z ouf 191 s x litn i Ran,ai3ate::or 1y the .� Co `°1 }} ' l of theclelicate truth -me- n n b t',;; the bottom of the trough, and livid never flln z Toronto. _ ing it longitudinally into two divi- not dluenco at work it the girl's t Use t use's I; „tsercl and 'Turpentine fits • , ,. t•_,.•.'••^rat':=..+;1' Willi i cions. This board, which stands soul, 'r that the instinct I r I upright on its edge; is smeared real merest fn the inns prrclucles rill throat mid lung troubles, 25e. visibility of her Mewing to ask bottle, small dose, small p1 01', ue. CENTS. 1 occasionally with tar. Salt is then the p OUR MAIL. Our mai/ 1 brings us every day dozens of I Letters about Burdock Blood Bitters. Some from merchants who want to buy i it, some from people who want to know about it, and more from people who do know about it be- 1 cause they have tried it and been cured. One of ti,em w is frenl Mr. J. Gilman, B. A., 9 Gould Street, Toronto. Read how hc'Writes: GLNTLa0MEN,--During; the winter of 3892 toy blood became immure on account of the hearty food I ale in the cold 1 weather. Ambition, energy and r•u4t1CSs forsook toe, and all my rimers WU1e ]n , vain. My skin became yt'l.ow, my bowels became inactive,. my live: was lumpy veal hard, toy eyes became inflamed, my tr lit0 w1S gone, and the days and n '•ts passed in unhappiness and restlessness For some months I tried doctors' 1 I and patent medicines of every description, but received no benefit. Being advised by a friend to try B.B.B., I ant glad to have the opportunity of testifying to the marvellous result. After using three bottles I felt notch better, and when the fifth bottle was fanisned I enjoyed health in the greatest degree, and have done so from that day up to date. Therefore I , have much pleasure in recommending B. B.B. to all poor suffering humanity who 1 suffer from impure blood, whieb is tele beginning and seat of all diseawy, G1i.I.A'), B.A., 39 Gou ei :qty Tarontw,