HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1889-5-3, Page 6tiaua clttoweee ate 4iritir.s roma:m t. eumnter.fittifo on the sr ut ,ai
and t t
k mange
n:f:nt tee ib '. n• :.:, culture ; it i ,' ,
Therm. flaw,i'rofe4.ar of Agri.en on the lend.
etatt¢re. ABulletin will follow shine ly ou
the methods of taediug greet, foil
tiers.
The attention of the camera of
the Dem;nion hits never been euf Five Iva) s 44 cure tt conu,
ficieut'y drawn to the great edvaut ---
ages that flow from the growth of 1. Bathe the feet iu but motto,
an abundant supply of green food and drink a pint of hot lemonade.
for the stook of the farm. In tine Then sponge with stilt water ,tad
climate of short and offontimes dry remain iu a wnrm room.
summers and of etoru winters, 2. Bathe the face iu v re ho,
which forever forbid the succeestul water every tivr minutes for tan
growth of permanent pastures of the hour.
European order and on the Europ 8. Snuff up the nostti10 hot salt
eau plan, it will doubtless prove in water every three hours.
the future the great resource of the 4. Inhale ammonia or menthol.
farmer hho is bent upon bustaiuing 1 5. Tato four Inoue' active eser
the fertility of the land, through i cise in the open air.
-that best of all sources, stook -keep- 1 The Medical Nr •vs, x4'114011 re
iug. Sem of its advantages are : commends the above, say- .hat
1. 11 effects a saving in the Laud Summer colds tiro the w0r.,. of all
to the extent of enabling the farmer colds oftentimes, as it is ttiet, very
with but 50 acres to raise mono f difficult to proroct eus'0 self proper
beef, mutton, milk, butter or cheese ly. A. ten grain dove „f gniutno
than the one with 100 acres, who will usually break up a cold in the
pay:, no attention to the growth of j e blood ..e.nthnloirc1 tit ouwitset
s will
green foddees.actively
2. It effects a great saving in do it, whether it bo drugs or the neo
fences, one of the largest items of of it bucksaw.
outlay on nfarm. n NATURAL itieT0ItY-
8. It secures a marked saving iu
food, and of animal muscle, in
their not having to search for it.
,l. It increases the quantity and
SAGACITY oft BEES. —One evening
in June I found my bees, about
quality of the manure to the extent
thirty hives, in a furor—thou-ands
q y of them buzzing a flying iu one of
of at least one•hslf of all that is ( rection,eearclling the ground, feucee,
trees, buildiuge and everything in
their course. At the same time I
heard a dinner bell ringing persist.
ently at a dwelling some equaree
away, in the direction the bees went
Filled with curiosity, I started on a
run to find out where the bees wer,
going and solve the mystery. The
man ringing the bell told me there
was the etraugest swarm of bees
passing he had ever seen; that lo
been trying to settle them, but. could
not. They kept going. After 0330
ning near a quarter of a mile, I came
to a neighbor's ht,uee who had som,•
bees, and was out looking about
them. 'There the air was delimited
with bees circling forty or more feet
high and a hundred feet in diameter,
made during the pasturing season.
5. Its effeets upon the health and
noridition of the animals are bene.
iioial, since the supply of food is
uljiform and sufficient, and they
axe free from annoyance, worry and
exposure.
G. It gspiatly.inereases the quan
City and quality of the milk, butter
and beef product.
7. It very much enbanees, in the
aggregate, the lertility of the soil,
8 It largely obviates the necee•
siey of eummer fallowing, through
its antagonism to weed growth.
0. It would prove a boon to the
oottar, whose one cow must ueede
pasture on tits highway.
10. In conjunction with the silo
it provides green food for the stock
all the year, hence every farmer in
the province alive to his own hest
interests all grow 0 greater or
smaller proportion of green foddars
every year.
The only objections that eau be
urged agannet it are :
1. That Iack of exercise will im•
pair the health of the stools, an ob-
jjotion that will be answered in a
st-loeeeding bulletin.
2. The extra labor involved,
which, however, is abundantly com-
pensated by the increased returns.
The following are some of the
principal soiling crops best adapted
to Ontario conditions :
1. Winter rye, best sown early
in. September ; 2 buehele to the
acre ; cot before the blossom ap-
pears, and fad, if practicable, in
conjunction with red clover.
2. Bed clover, yielding two cut-
tings per year, and cot until the
time of blossoming.
8. Orchard grass, which may be
grown with clover and cut at same
periods.
4: Lucerne, yielding two or more
cuttings a year, and when brought
safely through the Bast winter yields
a bountiful crop for years. It is
well adapted to well -drained rich
teams inclining to a sandy texture.
If, is not reliehed by the stock so
highly as clover.
5. Timothy and Mammoth clover
make an excellent green food, the
eombination being complimentary
to each other in their constituents,
aria ripening at the same time.
0. Alsike clover and timothy
grown together answer equally well.
Ify commencing to cut when the
first blossoms appear, this crop
may be fed for three or four week.
7. Oats and pease, oats and
vetches or tares, or oats, pease and
vetches, oome next, sown mixed, at
the rate of say 14 bushel oats, v-
bughel pease and is bushel vetches
to the acre, and at successive inter-
vals of say 10 days apart. They
make the best ration when the grain
is in the milk, but feeding may tom •
mence when they flret howl out.
8. Common millet, Hungarian
grass and Italian millet aro all use•
ful as green fodders. They may bo
sown from Slily let to 1st Jnly, :1 to
1 buPhei of seed per acre, and
should 1,e cut before or in early
blossom for soiling. ing the game.
9. Corn is the tuost valuable of --
all gra, n crops for exiling purposes. Telegraph wire of galvanized iron
11 ehotiltl be planted in drilla for is much batter to hang clothe on
eumuter drills soiling at Mw rate of in winter than rope, tee the clothe
from ': to 1 bns11r1 of seed to the mil not freeze to it. Have it hung
acre, from 24th of May to 10th of by a lineman and it will nedor give,
Jura. It may be sown with the no matter what the weather may be.
grain drip, from S0 to 80 limbos Many housekeepers needwarniug
apart, and amiable harrowing after against the frequent use of feather
planting and thorough cultivating duvters. These dusters simply
arc of much importance. claw the partieles from rho furni-
1.0. Rape is valuable for fattening tura into the air, where they aro in.
sheep and cattle, and may be sown haled, A. soft cloth is good, and a
n drills profitably on land handled chamois ekin is sometimes better,
ti the first part of the season 44 a rot a cluster.
Fur
'1 Ml~: L3I111:SEL MUST
4 44
O.'AUiiwt111b To:•CI'ns Htni SitOpU tq tl, Li.,e11e;i FQ1'tilt Mc
by Retail of Spirituous and Fermented Liquors for the
License District of East Huron.
1'l!( 13(41111) OF L10 NSh) Oo1I311S8.10V1':t?
For the said i.oenoe1Jistric; of Last Huron, by vtr:.utd
the power vested in. them by the Liquor License
Act, enacts as follows
of
FIRST,—Every Applieatiou or Petition for a License must
show—(1) That he or she is the bona He owner of the business to
bo carried on in the premises sought to he Licensed ; that ho or she
is solvent at the time of application, (2) That his or her intention
is to carry on the business in his or bor name during the next
ensuing License Year, for which the License is to be granted.
(8) That ho or she is at present able to comply, and will com.l ly,
with the Law and Regulations at present and any time in force in
the district affecting the License and Licensed promises.
SECOND, `That in Shops where Liquors are sold under a
License from this Board, no sale or other disposal of Liquors shall
take place therein or therefrom, from and after the hour of Bight
o'clock at night and until Six o'clock the following morning, in all
days of the week other than Saturday night or Sabbath. All
Blinds, Screens or other device that world obstruct the view from
the outside by the Inspector or any other person, must be removed
during prohibited hours, under the penalties hereinafter prescribed.
T11 1111),—In Taverns the Bars shall be closed and no sale or
other disposal of Liquors shall take place therein or therefrom or
upon the premises from the hour of Eleven o'clock at night until
Six o'clock the following Morning on all days of the week other
than Saturday incl Sabbath, under the penalties attached to those
Regulations.
FOUI4TH,—That no Bagatelle Table, Roulette Table, Missis-
sippi Board, Rouge et Noir, Faro Bank, Dice, Domin,les, Wheel of
Fortune, Billiard Tables, Draughts, Cards, Raffle or Lottery or any
other device whatever for gambling be allowed in any Licensed
premises, either for gain or pastime, nor selling or auction of pools
for any purpose, under the penalties hereinafter mentioned.
FIFTH,—The Bar -room in every Tavern must be in the most
public part of such premises, facing the main thoroughfare or street
passing such Tavern, and, during all hours and days in which the
sale or other disposal of Liquors is prohibited, the view through the
windows into such room must not be hidden by any Curtain,. Blind,
Screen or other contrivance that would prevent the Inspector or
any other person seeing from without that all lights are out and
that the said Bar -room is properly closed. The doors leading into
such liar -room, either from outside or inside, must bo closed and
if at any time when such sale as aforesaid is prohibited, if such
door or doors be open or unlocked, the same shall be and constitute
an offence against these Resolutions and be subject to the penalties
prescribed.
aul settling down in large buuche SIYTII,—Nor shall any Licensed Tavorn-ke +;ler allow any
on a scaffold. There appeared :m Lo person tinder the age of 21 years to stct it's Lar -tender, Clerk or
as Much an •00 largo sutorsos ti' hN, • Agent for the purpose of selling Liquor.
nl1VENTH, - No Licensed 'Tavern -steeper within this License
District shall suffer or permit any person or persons to Wrestle,
Fight, Quarrel or Wrangle, se as to disturb any guest or traveller
itt his or her tavern. whereby the -person or property may be en-
dangered. Nor shall any such Tavern -keeper suffer or permit im-
proper disturbances or singing of improper songs or swearing or
profane or obscene ,jesting iu his or her Tavern.
EIGHTH,—that every holder of a Tavern License within thi,
District, shall, at all times during the continuance of said Licenses
keep on till. premises a sufficient supply of hay and oats and other
provender, water and water buckets as may or shall be required for
the use of the travelling public, anis that proper separate water
closets he provided for ladies and gentlemen and labeled as such.
NINTH,—Any License Holder in the said License District of
East Huron, who shall permit or suffer to be clone any act or viola-
tion of any of the above Rules and Regulations shall forfeit, on
conviction thereof, pay a penalty of not less than Ten Dollars for
the first offence and for the second or any subsequent offence not
less than fifteen Dollars, besides costs iu each case, which shall bo
recovered before any Mitglstr'ate or Justice of the Peace having
jurisdiction in the District, and iu default of payment thereof at the
time stated by such Justice or IMIagistrate, the same shall be levied
and collected by distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the
person convicted, an 1 in default of sufficient distress, such penalty
and costs may be recovered by enforcement of the Bond executed
by the holder of the License Mild his or her sureties to Her Majesty
the Queen.
TENTH,—These Resolutions shall be printed and a copy
thereof delivered by "the Iuspeetor to each person to whom a License
is issued, and the said copy must be preserved by the holder of the
License and kept exposed in the moat public place of his or her
Shop or Tavern, where the same may be conveniently road by all
persons who resort to spell Shop or Tavern.
flying arc -anal t t.er Tee sight
aye ,tonderful. We brood b cit
astonishment tool fear. Came. —My
neighbor bad foolishly cut all rte
comb and honey froth hie tour hives,
and thrown the refnee eolith with
young bees and come honey out ou
t:+e ecaffoid, where my bees had
found it and gone in great force to
secure and bring away the wasted
honey. My neighbor lost all itis
bees by hie well meant but cruel
treatment.—C. W. Hicks, Madison-
ville, Tenn.
Two SMART HENS.—•Ocr Aunt Dora
hes two bens, we think very smart
hens. One is an old yellow hen at
Ieast twelve yeara old—so old, lir
fact, that she has ceased to lay. She
tome on her nest every day and comes
off cackling like any other sten. She
will continue this until she thinks
she ba„ laid a dozeu or fifteen eggs,
theft elle sits and always hatt)lies a
niee brood of ebiokens, of which she
is very oarelul. Of course nuntte
sets her. Tae other hen goes up
into the top of a big beech tree to
make her nest. The tree has been
topped about twenty five feet from
the grouted, and has a hollow in
which she lays and hatches. The
little fellows sometimes fall out to
the ground and it doesn't hurt them ;
then again ithutie has them taker,
out. She hoe laid and hatched three
tltnee successively in the old .tree.
Now, don't you think they are real
smart hens ?—Josie Price and Nera
Seep, Rome, Tenn. /]�
WREN YOU lirhr,'roue MST 'CiATon.
—When one kills his first alligator
he is all enthusiasm. Nothing will
do but that he must secure the body
of bin game, and hack out, with in.
finite labor, some of the tenth as
trophies. Tho nasty wet form of the
saurian 1s dragged aboard, to the
amazement of the timers, who watch
the gloating ecstasy with which the
slayer examines his prize with mush
the same feelings an old hound must
have when regarding the first efforts
of a promising pup. When, after
slaying a dozen or so, the novice
finite out what melees things alliga.
tors are, he pots the beasts with
unooncorn, and does not deem it
necessary to interrupt the pleasure
of shooting with the labor of wear -
The foregoing Resolutions were severally passed at the Village
of Brussels, in the County of Huron, this 20111 day of April, 1889.
J. R. MILLER, Inspector.
THOMAS GIBSON,
GEORGE MURDIE, Commissioners.
GEORGE FORTUNE,
THE FOLLOWINGS ARE SONE OF TIIE PROHIBI-
TIONS IN THE LIQTJ'OII LICENSES' ACT :
Section 54 provides that in all places where intoxicating liquors
are or may be sold by wholesale or retail, no sale or other disposal
of liquors shall take place to any person or persons after the hour of
seven o'clock. on Saturday night until six o'clock on Monday morn-
ing under a penalty of „f::0 for f.'ir'st offence and>eatS loss than 440
for second offence.
Section 78 provides that no Tavern orA1op-keeper shall dolly-
er•any intoxicating liquor to any clrnnlsol4'person under the penalty
prescribed in said section.
Section 72: nvery Taxan: •,;.c"epfailing' or refusing, either
personally or • through any ;:ire acting on leis behalf, except fot souse
valid reason to amity' lir; Iuclr'ing:4 meals or :tcconllnodation to travel-
, 11. ., r.
lers, shall for each, offence, on conviction, pay a p111414y not cxiteed-
ing $20.
Section 7'i : Every person 1w•110 makes or tallows to be hada 1r
used any in'fcrnal cola inui ieatiou between any Licensed premise,.
and ulllicrnseil premises which etre used for public outertaiunlonts
or resmrt its It refreshment: house shall be Keble tela penalty of not
less than x+10 for ovary day during which such communication re-
mains open.
Section 70 provides that any Remised person who allows to be
supplied in his licensed premises any description whatever aliquot' 1
to any person apparently under the age of sixteen years, not being!
resident on the premises or a bona lade truest or lodger, shall, as
MAY .3, 1889.
...'..^u4,'.sT.. ;Mr3• �'4::'^o-nnre .4 ' 4•io4 i,.. f',A'.7: mfr.!r:"""^
tvcll es the portion who actually given or supplies the Liquor, be
liable to pay a penalty of not less than 1810 for every such offence.
tt•Iectlon 07 : leo cettlt+ or other di:meni t1 1,1 liquor 8111111 take inner
iu any Licensed premises within the linlitn of a Polling lint -division
during a l.'al'haauolltary Election or a Municipal bileetion or for it
vote 011 the Canada Temperance Act from six o'clock in the morning
until six o'eloek the following morning.
BROS . ELS
—aye EMP.
U
IIE Undersigned desire to intimate to the Public
generally that they have Removed to the
Brick Block Op, W. Nightingale 86 Cot's store,
—and are prepared to Pay tile---,-•-
Elighest MaT1et P ice, in Cash,
for any Quantity of Fresh EOgs.
G-IVL-+US A OA]Ct:LI-
Mrs, Ballantyne & Son.
Ijr'zossels Egg Eniporiu712.
TO HOSE[V!Efl
THE `POST' P UT3LTS HING ROUSE
---Is PREPARED TO ar';T aur—
t
iii ,tom 4-b.
Neatly, Ebvpditiously and. at
Reasonable Bates.
ORDER BILLS EARLY
SO as to give yourselves Plenty of Time.
The Route Published for Two Weeks
In THE `POST'
Without Extra Charge.
'Post" Publishing F ouse,
BRUSSELS, ONT.
A Positive Cure. k`
Painless Cvmtre,.
47.
I'ACTh tt 1ti,1 .k W u5;,t4,l9iJN OF .Li LL ,1', GESS.
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,,,,��+•,�� 1 t +. " t -n , ,td ItotilhocralrexemnarartA,+,alolnaa,
'4•ha¢r�'"t4'! t.':'''• e i„ :.,•+ i wt1lthr eto¢4,teri,tnurrn trglri00330501100,
,.„,,.,,4,nu.... l0'o4sa4ttro �,ttl 54'Oo tatoris,
.Who aro broken e•".:‘,1, 4 4 4'1 11,011 14, t. t , Iicul cum for nurvouc
ivnmxveia of t a want (f jn)rpe 0,
dtmu(a1 of nl 1n 1 �, tt. o: a , v :r.nco of r•,nvorontion,
eetradoatrc for aoiik a
I. O.
1
inaterd! 0 lett, ,b , , 2 1 r.(t ti - i c1n,l,itity of temper, alcor.
tnatarl.9ux n, t t l i.'.! , , 14,1,j , , t • r t ,nal ital b 1080u—tmin)(-
(0u0Y, imltttreteen. t , 0,01.1 i 1444,11,4444444..4,, `11 ,4411,4:.1,, Ityrtrmic ieoHugo
females, uontbhu,•, , , , .,,..rd , i' , ,.:, I t , 7, •omra of thin terrible
11al,1t,014en010401u,on4n•1v swill 1 L„ 1 44) r 4vitalforc(having bont14,
tanslote, every funeteo•t 4741,144444 441ont0 n ,encs r.( , i,t and the sutierintenitonts
of Jimmie asylum,, tow n ,,«.I., ., ..410 r+ :a of , 1 3,11 1 the groat majority of
400•40,1 ltveo r+hiret r a n, i r clr nottoo. you s . t, nlnt+etelit (00 the arduone
dm11aa of Lean =r+, e u tt .n 1 1. , a vt nt, a c ti 04(ms stn oncane (volt
Gro effects of early 01: tr curd. No. 6will give yet loll 01410100i
atrongth. If you oro 14,41(00 d,nt , r .,eln,etly nut utorallyy from earl, indtootatton, 01,,
moult of it�.norai,io :..01 ue1y, arm : ;wilt' t' Mateoand 10 o(ntn In (tatnpn for At. V. 14013051'
Troatiso 1'i pools Terni c:a l,toti.10 of arae Sanlcd nod 5000re (roll obyorvation.
4,ldroaa all eeintuanteaaitua t,n 0114. '1', 11X111,1111,, -t"! dt'0al1tn con t;t. ,5., Toronto.A "Mtn without wiad.,e tives Ina tooi'4 (Olit1isi, 1131115 fEt 01AIITEEll, 0004 tuE rtes.
1OZ
7.91' c:.
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