HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1913-06-26, Page 2THE WINGHAM TIMES.
JUNE '?t►, 1913
TO ADVERTISERS
Notice of eh n,;i's must be loft at this
ofilee net late than saturday neon.
The eaaiav for changes must be left
not la..:r than Monday evening
Casual advertisements accepted up
to nom Wednesday of each week.
WINUM r IM iES,
A. 3. r,4ial() 'r, Puat,tdxt:a Also PattPLL1T01t
O.*+-+.wM!-rMM
THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1913.
THE GRA.T.N CROi'S.
faifa campaign is one of the first steps
in this movement. •
1 A few points emphasiaad about al-
falfa are:
It produces a large yield per acre,
more than double that of clever;
It is rich in protein, having almost as
hign a feeding value as bran.
It is the most enriching crop for the
ground known to man;
It can be fed as hay to all kinds of
animals, and has no superior as a hog
pasture.
Ottawa, Jane 13. -A bulletin of the
Census and elattistics Ofilceissued to -day
gives preliminary estimates of the areas
sown to th • principal grain crops and
reports on their condition at the end of
May, according' to the returns received
from crop-report:ng correspondents
throughout Canada. The reports bow
that the month of May proved cold and
dry with frequent night frosts and that
these conditions, whilst favourable to
seeding, retarded the growth of the
crops sown and caused them to be un-
seasonably backward.
The total area under wheat in Canada
is provisionally estimated at 9,816,30)
aeres,or57,900 acres more than in 1012,
the area in spring wheat being8,90t),500
acres, or 13,100 acres more. Oats occupy
9,603,500 acres compared with 9,216,-
000 aures in 1912, an increase of 391,-
600 acres, barley occupies 1,425,200 acres
an increase of 10,1103 acres and rye 126,-
500 acres, a decrease of 9,610 acres.
For wheat, barley and oats taken toget-
her the increase represents 459,500
acres. The estimated acreage under
hay and clover is 7,475,600 acres com-
pared with 7,633,600 acres last year.
For the three Northwest provinces of
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
the total wheat area is estimated at 9,
013,500 acres, as compared with 8,961,-
000 acres, that of oats at 5,207,700 acres
compared with 4,913,900 acres and that
of barley at 852.600 acres compared with
809,800 acses, These differences repre-
senting increases of 52,000 acres for
wheat, 208,800 acres for oats and 42,800
acres for barley, or 38S,600 acres for
the three crops.
On May 31st the condition of the
crops was reported as generally favour-
able throughout Canada. Expressed in
percentage of the usual standard of 100,
taken as representing the promise of a
full crop, the condition on May 31 for
the Dominion was as follows: Fall
wheat 80.62, spring wheat 01.55, oats
91.72, barley 91.I9, rye 87.70, peas 88.24,
mixed grains 90.15, hay and clover 821'2,
pastures 85.08 and alfalfa 77. At the
corresponding date last year the con-
dition of fall wheat was only 71.46. All
the other crops were then above 90, ex-
cepting rye 87.24, peas 83.85 and mixed
grains 87.72. The poor condition this
year of alfalfa is due to the effects of
the winter and cold spring.
Archibald Blue,
Chief Officer.
THE C?LD BATH.
[Milwaukee Journal.)
I do not take a cold bath
Each morning when I rise;
I do not praise the cold bath,
Nor tell the cold hath lies
I do not mind the Fla, Ha,
The curling lip of scorn -
1 will not take a cold bath
So early in the morn.
I had a portly neighbor,
A man of pomp and pride;
He took a thousand cold baths,
Then he took one more - and died.
I do net mind the Ha, Iia,
The curling lip of scorn;
1 will not take a cold bath,
So early in the morn.
L'LENVOI.
I do not praise the cold hath,
Nor blow the cold bath's horn -
I will not take a cold bath
So early in the morn.
Alfalfa on Every Farm.
The farmers of Kent County, Mich-
igan, have organized an Alfalfa Grow-
ers' Association. They have inaugu-
rated a great campaign, their object
being to induce every farmer to grow
alfalfa. The campaign is beingassisted
by the Grand Rapids Association of
Commerce, the Department of Agricul-
ture and the agricultural extension de-
partment of the International Harves-
ter Company.
These combined forces sent an auto
train of fity ears on a five days' tour
through the country. The cars were
filled with lecturers. governors, editors,
professors and business men, all boost-
ing alfalfa. As a result of this tour
five hundred farmers have promised to
grow ten acres of alfalfa each.
This campaign was started as a result
of the decreasing crop production in the
United States. For a great many years
they depended upon increased area to
make up for decreased yields, but that
source has now been almost exhausted.
I'o make it possible for the people of
the United States to raise, clothe and
feed future generations they must in-
areee production per acre, and the al-
E;E: riLKJ3k WAS
TURNED TO WATER.
She Doctored For Three Years Out
Was Finally Cured By Milburn's
Heart and Nerve Pills.
Mrs. Jost PH SMITfr, Box 25, Creel -
scan, Snsk., writes: -"I write you these
few lines hoping they will be a help to
someone suffering from heart and nerve
trouble. I doctored for three years but
teeth:tied to get anrse. I tried three
different deters :sad gut to -relief, and.
trier? :.11 11:n shift% 1 rt . Id find but all
failed. I btc;r.ee 'a try utak, and my
bleeel vete ti reed to xattt'.' I tried
Mtera ,<V s Iresarr Ave Nutevi; iSItL5,
and attar tal.ii:g f.ve Loxes, 1 got groat
reilcr. I was SO tail, 1 only- weiglItct
01) 1e,5., but after taking five bones I
was e,enptctcly cured, and I am w'11 end
?•0•0:11 t., day, told u ec h 11;0 lbs., and I
sail holt vel i. e11 4.t.,., girl (b)- riot Orel
tared er fiereed out. If anyone would
li'.e to Lear more of my eta*, I would
11.e;etel to :,n;uer any gtastions.'
p u:', t.0 vette per lax or 3 boxes for
:; I.13 et It Healers or trailed direct on
reee:l't c.f price by The T. Milburn Co.,
I,it:.ited, 'loronto, Ont.
hatpins.
Serious injuries caused by protruding
hatpins are compelling the attention of
lawmakers in various parts of the world.
In Austria, women have been convicted
and fined to wearing hatpins "in such a
manner as to be dangerous to the pub-
lic."
Perhaps the most tactful and effective
way of dealing with the perilous hatpin
has been adopted in Stockholm. The
city owns the street ears; each conduct-
or has been provided with a stock of
point -protectors, which he offers at cost
price -about a cent apiece -to women
passengers whose hatpins appear to him
menacing. The women of Stockholm
have amicably taken the hint; in one
day the conductors sold 6,000 protectors,
and now the street car authorities de-
clare that they have supplied the entire
female population of the city with them.
A physician writing in the London
Lancet has urged the abandonment of
the long hatpin, not only because it is a
source of danger to others, but also be-
cause when worn on windy days it is
likely to cause headache. Other physi-
cians advocate the return to the Georg-
ian or early Victorian bonnet, with rib-
bons that can be tied under the chin.
But it is improbable that fashion will
harken the voice of the doctor.
She Gamed 36 lbs.
Mrs. George Bradshaw, Harlowe. Ont,
writes: "I was troubled for many years
with weak, watery blood and dropsy. I
had nervous headaches, dizziness and
sinking spells, and was, in fact, a semi -
invalid. Doctors told me my heart and
kidneys were diseased and gave me up.
By using 10 boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food I have been cured of many of my
old complaints and gained 36 pounds in
weight."
HEALTH SPELLS WEALTH.
(Saturday Evening Post)
One of the most prosperous merch-
ants in the Southwest today -a man
with a turnover of one hundred thous-
and dollars a year in a small city -was
formerly a cementer in the shops of a
Boston railroad. He developed a cough
that would not let him go and a sagged
down feeling that would not let him
work. He reached the Southwest with
less than fifty dollars, got work for his
board in a sanitorium, and in six months
had a' few hundred dollars gathered.
With this he bought a little adobe house
and ten acres on the outskirts of an en-
tirely Mexican section of the city. He
noticed how the big department stores
of Chicago and Kansas City and Omaha
fairly deluged this foreign section with
their catalogues.
The Mexicans,used to get him to trans-
late their mail orders. Ordinarily it is
thought the little individual merchant
cannot compete with the big depart-
ment concern, This man reasoned just
the other way. These big fellows were
paying huge city rents. He was not.
They had to stand freight on long dis-
tances. He would not have that expense
They must lose enormously in misplac-
ed credits, in waste, in theft,
A small merchant should and could
avoid all that. He counted up the am
ount of money that was yearly going
out of that city to outside houses and
laid the case before a local wholesaler,
The wholesaler gave him generous cred-
it. He opened a little store orf the out-
skirts of the town in his own house. To
avoid lose, he never gave credit above
ten dollars. Meantiine be had mastered
a trading knowledge of the Spanish
langeage. He began to tuck' into the
parcels that went out of his store a
little home-made catalogue of bis own,
undercutting the prices of the big outs
side stores. Ten years ago that matt
was practically dying of consumption.
Today he is hale and well; and within
the meaning of that little town he is
ranked rich. He makele ae much its a
week today as he formerly Made in a
year.
WELL SHINED SHOES
ARE THE FC!)NDATiON.OF G000 APPEARANCE
I�I,,.nnall
,„ii, plllll III
iloif!IHhIHt Iloue
.SH POLIS
CIVE5 A QUICI aRIk«ART,POlISN1THATkL S
HAAT TO.USE, GOOD FOR T$E,SHOES
• 44•• ✓ob•Obo40v♦•0••••••P♦
0
4
a
O
O
s
O
0
•
+ 1 ' , givinu l tiorl to.
t) 'l1 t.? : S') n � t; t: Ul, ht)rlt.,t I7t any 4.r virtu; t •� n .
61') .ttvh t h the rag ! ti!1't1 it. re's -trail 114 .1'1 .d .g 1 1 West- •
ern U) tin -tit.' -.1 )t ,1 subdivision. Tale i- R gat'. r lema11'S
prr)a ,,ilio 1, .and vat Went nn'y rn'•n •i' gad i er t i •ilig who e
will n 't Ini;repres'-nt. Address •
e
Western Canada Real Estate Co.
• s
502 TEMPLE BUILDING1 TORONTO
AN (DPPOF TUI \ITS''
For a Live Man in Wingham
4r
• 1. .a ,�..,,'�: o -f,44.•000,66, S-1. x`006080•040 ..,.1 •.l l..L . ..).!. I�y.L ....1 ♦.A4,4/”a4t8••
(From the Times of June 23, 1893) Fortune, of Turnberry, for the sum of
$3,300 cash.
The fireman secared first seloney in
the hose reel race at Galt on TN rsday
last. The boys done well, considering
that there were six of the best com-
panies in the eeuntry running against
them.
A large number of people assembled
on the hanks of the river, near the salt
block on Monday evening last, to see
Mr. Jas. Long's boat launched. The
boat was launched and put up steam
three times, each time carrying a load
of people to the number of about forty.
BORN.
McCutcheon-InMort'is, on June
13th, the wife of Mr. John McOutcheon
a daughter.
LOCAL NEWS.
The Wingham lacrosse club played a
math with the Harriston club on Thurs-
day last, at Harriston and won by a
score of 3 to 2.
The managers of the Methodist church
have had a new shed built in connection
with their church, which will give more
accommodation tothe farmers going to
the said church.
Mr. T. Lesslie has had his residence
beautified by a fresh coat of paint.
The Salvation Army are having a re-
ception meeting on Wednesday, June
28th, for the purpose of welcomin g
Brigadier Holland the Provincial Sec-
retary.
Mr. Peter Deans disposed of Lot No.
1 concession 9, Turnberry, known as the
Samson farm, recently to Mr. John
TO IN D[RUTOa.Y,
BAPTIST CHURCH -Sabbath services
at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School
at 2:30 p. m. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. G. Vic-
tor Collins, pastor. B. Y. 1'. U. meets
Monday evenings 8 p. m. W. D.
Pringle, S, S. Superintendent.
METHODIST CHURCH -Sabbath ser-
vices at 11 a. rn. and 7 p. m. Sunday
School at 2:30 p. m. Epworth League
every Monday evening. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev,
W. L. Rutledge, D. D.,astor. F.
Buchanan, S. S. Superintendent.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH -Sabbath ser-
vices at 11 a. m.. and 7 p. m. Sunday
School at 2:30 p. m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev,
D. Perrie, pastor, Dr. A. J. Irwin, S.
S. Superintendent.
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, EPISCOPAL -Sab-
bath services at 11 a, m. and 7. p. m.
Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Rev. E.
H. Croly, B. A., Rector. Alex. Al-
deron, S. S. Superintendent.
SALVATION ARMY CITADEL. -Service
at 11 a,m„ 3p,m, and? p.m. on Sunday.
At 8 o'clock on Thursday evening,
There will be special music provided in
the Sunday evening service from 7 to
7.15
POST OFFICE -Office hours from 8a.m.
to 6:30 p. m. Open to box holders from
7 a. m. to 9 p. in. P. Fisher, postmast-
er.
DIED.
Hislop -In Howiek. ottvthe 14th inst.
Adam Hislop, aged 77 years.
HURON COUNTY COUNCIL OF 1856.
At the June meeting of the county
council of 1866 of the united counties of
Huron and Bruce there was great ex-
citement, caused by the Fenian Raid of
that year. The battle of Ridgeway had
been fought on the second day of June
and a number of brave young Canadians
had been slain and wounded and excite-
ment ran high. and it was feared that
the Fenians were going to land at eith-
er Goderich or Bayfield. And during
the June session of the Council, Gener-
al Sherman, who was patrolling the
lakes with an American gun -boat, to
prevent another Fenian invasion,
landed at Goderich and made an address,
Col. A. M. Ross also spoke from a Can-
adian standpoint. This was the last
year that Bruce and Huron were united.
After that year the Bruce members met
at Walkerton. Of the members of the
County Council for that year, so far as
known only two are now alive, viz. John
Leckie, who was then Deputy Reeve of
Grey, and is now Reeve of Brussels, and
a member of the present County Coun-
cil, and James Hays, of McKillop. Rola
ert Gibbons, of Goderich, was warden.
The following are the names of the
members of the' Council from Huron
and the municipality each- represented.
Ashfield, W. Maliough, M. Dalton;
Clinton, J. Whitehead; Colborne, Thom-
as Hussy, Goderich,Robert Gibbons, H.
Horton; Goderich township, Henry Ford
D. Patton; Grey, A. McDonald, J. Leck-
ie; Hay, Robt. Brown,, James Smillie;
Hu!lett, T. McMichael, 11. Snell; How -
ick, Thomas Gibson, James Perkins;
McKillop, Joe Evans, James Hays; Mor-
ris, C. Whitehead. A. Brown; Stanley,
Thomas Simpson, Dr. Woods; Stephen,
Richard Sweet, J. Parsons; Tuckersmith
Geo. Sproat, John Doig; Turnberry, Jno.
Messer; Usborne, Archibald Bishop,
Robt. Creery; Wawanosh, Robt. Currie
H. Helps.
How to Tell Fresh Fish.
The freshness of fish is indicated by
first, still' flesh. In really prime con-
dition a fish is rigid when held in horiz-
ontal position. Any drooping of the
tail shows that it is not fresh, and the
extent of this drooping may not unfair-
ly be taken aa a measure of its condition.
As deterioration continues the fish be-
comes softened in parts, and the flesh
easily separates from the bone. If the
gilts are a ditty color and exude a ditty
bretvn fluid; if the eye is dull and the
skin over it not transpatent, or if the
Ash hat a d istinet, disagreeable ordor it
should not he eaten. Storage fish is
frozen solid while it is fresh and in this
condition. wilt keep fot .many months.
As soon as the fish is thawed deterior-
ation proceed' rallldly.
Lobsters and crabs should be sold alive.
After beingboiled deterioration can
only be detected when decomposition
has actually(eetin, but even before this
time the fish may Have becolne unfit for
food While it is not always possible
to get lobsters and Crabs alive, or -
chasers should make a special effort to
determine that their fish dealer does
his own boiling, and so knows definitely
the age of his wares. Oysters and
clams are held to be out of season dur-
ing the months that have no "r" in them;
that is, May, June, July and August.
During those months oysters are either
shedding their spawn or recovering from
the efiects of having done so. Oysters
are too commonly taken from polluted
waters or waters into which sewage
enters, and many cases and epidemics
of typhoid fever are directly traceable
to their use. The only way the con-
sumer can get protection is to buy sheIl-
fish only from dealers who handle the
products of impolluted waters,
IL
Do not suffer
another day with
Itching Bleed.
ing, or )irotrud.
Ing Piles. No
eurgioal oper.
ation required.
Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once
and as certainly cure _you. 6)c. a Dox • all
dealers, or Edmaneon, Bates & Co., Limited,
Toronto, Sample box free if you mention this
paper and enclose 2e. stamp to pay postage.
The total population of the Hawaiin
Islands is less than 102,0)0. Of this
total only a Iittle over 26,000 are made
up of the original natives. Portugese
number 22,701, and other whites 16,440,
while Chinese residents number 21,666
and Japanese over 79,000. ,
LITTLE BOY
WAS SO SICK
Did Not Mink He
Could Live.
CHOLERA 1NFANTUM WAS
THE CAUSE.
This trouble is the most dangerous of
all the summer complaints of children.
It begins with a profuse diarrhoea, the
stomach becomes irritated, and the child
is soon reduced to great languor and
prostration.
Cholera Infantum can be speedily
cured by the use of DR. PowLER's 13x-
TRACT OF WILD STRAwnaltRY.
MRs. Jolts Poore, Hantsport, N.S.,
writes:- "IcanrecommendDR.PowLER't
EXTRACT OF WILD STRAwanRRY for
Cholera Infautuin. My little boy was
so sick, I did not think he could live, as
he was out of his mind, and did not know
any one, 1 gave him "Da. VOW/0 a's,'
and the first dose helped hurl, and one
bottle eured him. 1 recommended it to
a friend whose children were sick, arid it
curd them too."
DR. ' oWLER's ExTRAcT O1T WILD
STRAW1ER1tY is a remedy that 'has been
oft the market .for over sixty-five years
and has been aused in 'thousefldst df taut,
ilies during these years, so yeti are drat
making any experiment when you buy
4.t, but be sure'and get "DIF. PoWL>i1t's"
when you ask for it, as there ate snowy
.irritations of this famous remedy oei the
alarket.
The price is 35e., and it is manufactured
only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
N9'l;AULISED 1812.
THE WINfiHA' TIMES.
18 PII1t1Ik1H1RD
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
-q•T-,
The Times ()Mee Stone Bloel.
WING$AM, ONTARIO.
TaRM5 of BunscRIPTIOV--$1.U0 per annum In
advance, 51.50If not flo paid. No paper dtaooa-
tinned till all arrears are paid, except at the
option of the Npublisher.
ADp8dvertiQ Rnte10 - Leg41 and other
oaanaladvertteamente loo per Noappario1line for
first insertion, 8o per line for saoh subsequent
insertion.
Advertisements in local ooltlm(la are oharged
10 ate. per line for Bret insertion, sad 5 Dente
per line for eaoh subsequent inflection.
Advertisements of Strayed, Farms for Sale
or to Rent, and similar, !81,0U for first three
weeks, and 26 aents for each eabsequent in.
sertton.
OoNTRAOT R Tits -The following labra chows
onrrstcs for the insertion of advertisements
for epeof5ed periods:-
ePAp1• 1 Yn. 8 MO. 8 M0. 1150.
Onet)olumn 870.00 84.0.00 822.50 :68.00
HalfColamn 40.00 25.00 15.00 0.u)
QnarterCoimmn20.00 12.50 7.50 8.00
One Inch 6.00 8.00 2.00 1.00
Advertisements without specific direottons
will
gly. Tragi ient till sand ts must a paid
for in advanoe,
TH1 Jos AIPART)i1NT is utooked with an
extensive assortment of all requisites for print-
ing, affording facilities, not equalled In the
oountyfor turning out Stat plass work. Large
type and appropriate outs for all striae of Poet.
ere, Hand .Bills, etc., and the latest styles of
choice fancy type for $he,;finer classes of print
Ing,
PUBLIC LIBRARY -Library and free
reading room in the Town»Hall, will be
open every, afternoon fe an2 to 5:30
o clock, and every evening from 7 to
9:30 o'clock. Miss R. Brown, lib-
rarian.
TOWN COUNCIL -C. G. VanStone,
Mayor; J. W. McKibbon, Reeve; J. A.
Mills, George Spotton, Wm. Isbister,
W. J. Boyce, A. Young and D. Bell,
Councillors; John F, Groves, Clerk and
Treasurer. Board meets first Monday
evening in each month at 8 o'clock.
HIGH SCHOOL BOARD -Frank Buchan-
an, (Chairman), R. Vanstone, Theo.
Hall, C. P. Smith, W. J. Howson,
John A. McLean, W. F. VanStone.
Dudley Holmes, Secretary. A. Cosens,
treasurer. Board meets second Mon-
day in each month.
PUBLIC SCHOOLBOARD.- A. Tipling,
(Chairman), Alex Ross, J. L.
Awde, Dr. A. J. Irwin, Robt. Allen,
Wm. Moore.H.E.Isard,Dudiey Holmes
Secretary-Treas.,John F. Groves;Meet-
ings second Tesday evening in each
month.
HIGHSCHOOL TEACHERS -J. C. Smith
B. A., Specialist in Classics, Principal;
H. A. Percy, S. P. S. Science Master;
G. R Smith, B. A.. Specialist in Mathe-
matics; Miss C. E. Brewster, B. A.,
Specialist in Moderns and History;
Miss B. E. Anderson.
PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS. -Joseph
Stalker, principal, Miss Brock, Miss
Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss An-
sley, Miss Barber seal bliss Bentley.
BOARD OF HEALTH.-C.G.VanStone,
(chairman), Wm.Fessant, Alex Porter,
John F. Groves,Secretary; Dr. R. C.
Redmond, Medical Health officer.
FARMERS
and anyone having uvr stook or other
artiolee they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale In the Tuttle, Our large
otrontation tells and it will be strange indeed if
tou do not get a onetomer. 'QP. can't guarantee
hatou will sell bec anee you may ask more
for the article or stook than it is worth. Bend
your advertisement to the Tilde and try this
plan 6f disposing of your stook and other
artiolee.
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the Insertion of advertisements
snoh ae teachers wanted, business ohanoes
mechanics wanted, articles for sale, or in to
any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto
other city papers, may be left ht the TThhEs
once. This work will receive prompt attention
and will save people the trouble of remitting
for and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates win be quoted on appl(eetion. Leave
or send. our next work of thte kind to the
TIMES OiFE[CE. Wingham
CASTOR I A
For Infanta and Children.
The Kind You tiara Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of K4
1444
H. B. B,LLIOTT
Proprlstor and Publisher
DRS, KENNEDY & CALDER
Orrrose-Oorner Patrick and Centre Ste.
PHONES;
Offices 48
Residence, Dr. Calderr 151
Dr. Kennedy specializes in Surgery.
Dr. Calder devotes epeeist, attention to Dis•
eases of the Bye, Bar, Nose and Throat.
Eyes thoroughltested. Glasses
properly fitted.
A steel frame, fabric covered hangar,
that can be taken down, moved to a
new site and erected again in two days,
has been invented in Italy.
While we don't believe in ghosts, ev-
ery wife can see through her husband.
Some men are born great, and then
they miss the pleasure of telling how
they did it.
So-called Chinese glue is made by dis-
solving shellac in ten times its weight
of ammonia.
OVER e15 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Inane Mahle*
Drsione
•
C4So r5OGSYY* &4.3;
Anyone eyyndtne a ,ketch and description *ay
tntr•dty aftedria;a nor (minks) free r.arther tut
tttrentlon la prehet4y toopotahle , oe' *nk'a.
ltonsstrictlycrr.8,:enft.I. !ANDsiuionratenn/
sent free. oldest ntency for aecurtnrCaatents
Patent's taken through Munn. It , regerre
natal notice, without cberae, to the
110
A
:lig
rdde7ierfl."rr�l><n' p�y� y
Branch r HEm ellen Weenie i
a prey 4.L 1►7
DR. ROBT.C.RHDIgOND, 51.35.0.8. (Slug)
iJ L. B. 0. P. London.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON,
OMoe, with Dr, Chisholm.
DR. H. J. ADAMS
Late Member House Staff Toronto
General Hospital.
Post Graduate London and Dublin.
Successor to Dr. T. H. Agnew.
Office Macdonald Block.
4
W. R. Hambly, B.Sc., M.D., C.M.
Wingham, Ontario.
Special attention paid to diseases of women
and children, having taken post graduate
work in Surgery, Bartariology and tioientiflc
Medicine.
Office in the Kerr residence, between the
Queen's hotel and the Baptist Church.
All business given careful attention. ti
Phone 54. P. 0. Box 118.
Dr. J. R. Macdonald
Wingham, Ont,
Office -Stone Block, over the TIMES
office.
EXAMINE THE UDDER
WHEN BUYING A COW
It is not only important to recognize
tbe good and bad polets oa a dairy
cow's udder by the eye, but it is even
more important to be able properly to
examine the udder with the bands,
writes Dr. A. S. Alexander in the Farm
Journal. When buying a cow the eye
tells one whether the four quarters are
of like size, development and appear-
ance, If one quarter looks to be larger
than another one may suspect tbat dis-
ease is present or that the cow bas X�
bud an attack of garget (mammitisa
but the hand must be used to corrobo-
rate what the eye suspects.
On handling the udder it will be
found that a sound gland bas a spongy,
elastic, resilient feel. Tee glands
sbould be absolutely free from harden-
ed, indurated, abngrmal lumps, masses,
tumors or growth~. Tuberculosis of
the udder is commonly indicated by
the preseuce of a large, hard mass high
up in tbe rear portion of tbe udder_
No trace of this may be apparent to
the eye, but Is readily detected. by the
hand. On no account should a cow be
used if such tubercular gland exists.
Testing with tuberculin will tell
whether or not a cow is tuberculous;
but, unfoe'tuuatety, trickery is some-
times practiced, and the tuberculin
test sheet supplied by the seller never
should take the place of a physical and
manna examination.
If even a small, bard mass is found
In nay part of one quarter it indicates
that the cow has at some time or an -
R VANBTONB,
BABRIBTBR, SOLIOITOR, BTO
Private and Company fnnda to Ioan at lowest
rate of interest. Mortgages, town and farm
properly bought and sold,
Offioe, Beaver Block. Wingham
JA. MORTON,
•
BARRISTBH, stn.
Wingham, Ont.
DUDLEY HOLLIES
Barrister, Solicitor, Etc.
Office : Meyer Block, Wingham.
ARTHUR .1. IB WIN, D. 0.13., L. 0 13.
Dob}or of Dental Surgery of the Pennsylvania
06 enti and Licentiate t the Royalman
e of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. moo
i onald Blook, Wingham
ce closed every Wednesday afternoon
frown Nett let to Oot. 1st.
a H. DOSS, D. D. S., L. D.S.
Ifunoraduate of the Royal College of
Dental S epns of Ontario and Honor gradu-
ateoftheT Itversity of Toronto, Faculty of
Dentistry.
Office over H. B. hard k Oo's., store, Wing -
ham, Ont.
Otos closed every Wednesday afternoon
front May let to Oct. 1st.
Wingham General Hospital
(Under Government /inspection)
4
Pleasantly situated.:' Beautifully fur-
nished. Open to all(regularly licensed
physicians. Ramos FOR,I'ATIENTS--Which
1
include board a tLnursing), $4.90 to $15.
per week aecolling to location .1f
room. For further information, ad-
dress
Miss L. Matthews.
Superintendent
Box 223, Wingham Ont.
IIAJI WAY TIMS'TABLES.
lierRANI rtRUNK RAILWAY HY8TBibl
TRAiNit multi rpa
. 6:05 e.m1... 11.80p.M.
JO Bast 11,00a.m.. 0,46 r.m.,. 2.80p.th.
Kincardine -11.59 a.m... 2.0) p -m.. - 2.15 p.ln.
ARRtV 18011
Ktdotlyditia ..4.A,00 a.1n,.11,00 cat 4... 2.30 p.m.
Condon _ ., .......,11.84 a.m.,... 7.85
Pal tftiersibel.... lt.2t sail,
Toronto. Wtst ......, 1.80 it.rio»... 9.16 P.m.
W. IN BURGMAN' .&gent, WIttham.
am.ammo mow.
CANALsi.&N PACIFIC RAILWAY.
TRAINS XMAYT *Olt
TOrentit Mttd Mit 6.43.a.fa.... Ltd p.m,
Te Iwat$r 1$0
Alliltlt ram
TMewaterr.'gY
.rtl ,.X10311 p,ht.
2.00 p.m.
Terento wad last -......12 40 ham 10 22 p.m.
J. H. B11113t$II. ASeat.W)r*sits,
Colantha IV: s Johanna is ono of
the most famous of holstein cows.
In one year she produced 27,432
pounds of milk, containing 998.26
pounds of butterfat, equivalent to
124.82 pounds of 10 per cent butter.
The test was conducted by the
Wisconsin experiment station. Co-
lantha IV.'s Johanna Is owned by
the Springvale stock farm, Rosen -
dale, Wis. For several years she
held the championship for milk and
butter production.
other suffered a slight attack of garget,
and in our experience one attack, how-
ever slight, will almost invariably be
followed by another more severe at-
tack, and eventually the cow may be-
come useless by reason of repeated at-
tacks of garget. The hard mass con-
sists of scar tissue or tumor tissue,
which is taking the place of true gland
tissue which normally secretes milli.
Scar tissue performs no such function,
and such a portion of the udder is use-
less. Wben one quarter of the udder
is entirely taken up by tumor tissues
it wholly loses its function of milk
production. Few men would buy a
cow for dairy purposes on finding one
quarter spoiled, but most men forget
to look for the small tumor masses
which indicate with certainty the prob-
ability of subsequent attacks of garget
which may render the animal useless.
Manual examination of the udder
also discovers difficult milkers. wart
covered teats or ulcerated sores -which
cause the cow to rebel when milked -
and indications of cowpox, tsttila or
false openings of the milk duct, cracks.
chaps and other troublesome abnor-
malities of the skin. Without manual
examination one also will be unlikely
to notice.. if it exists, the presence of
n chronic sore high up between tbe
ndder and the flank or between the
'-elves of the udder, yet such sores are
common and practically incurable and
give rise to a fetid color which is most
objectionable in a cow that is to pro-
duce sanitary milk. It always pays 'to
sit down and handle most carefully the
udder of the heifer or freshening cow.
The Work Horse In Spring.
The good teamster keeps the harness
properly adjusted in every particular
at all times. If the animals shrink in
flesh the collars and harness are re-
adjusted. This Is very essential for
good work. Should the harness be too
loose on top the collar will move back
and forth and thus make a sore neck.
and if too tight it will pinch and cause
the same trouble. And if the harness
is ton ;ong it will bring the draft too
low down. thus causing the points of
the shoulders to become sore.
Early in the seasott it is a good plan
to remove the collars at noon. dean
thrum and wash the shoulders with
Mean water if the skin is broken a
little ear(tnlllted vnseline is a MHO
henling retnedand prevents Nears, A
little nlunt in the nater used (4.t wash--
lee
ash•lee the shoulders will holo toughen
theta while they 1516• being prepared fur'
hard work. t
the Silo For Beef Production.
'Cho uonerai ndolttioli of the 'ullo by
:he eatttenten of 'i'exus :old other
ranee countries will probably •1)111'e 11
big; intluenre 011 the .•rattle hnattess in
the. corn (telt stat i» When Teen. and'
Arizou:t are eidileientiy egni;tinsel with
141106 411 lh:lt then• rtul iarry t111',I I.nttle
throngh the teiull.:'. and 111'ott_h the'
dry, hot monomer,' 111,11 nett th..'» 0't the
market lit gond eord(tiott' 11 gilt int
Immo bo neeesuaty or oven'tlesintliie
fot thorn to sli1p their 11,11te 1'n t1a•
vrhent holds ttnd i,:lvntre la 11(6 Ot is:111
81114 4)1',.e11.11 tit time feed int (It other
corn welt tiiliten.-1)0t11ta2 1'srwek. -
10-