Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1877-01-19, Page 1(.1A.RY 2, 1877' • 7777777 7177777 -Et 7 77 7 "Vet 7 -Cie 7 :V* 7 -eblis D CA§E CONTAINING 4. HIGHT PIECES )0 YARDS OF SS GOODS, ; All tbe New Makes in NY BLUE, PLUM, Ne Sb,ades Just Opened at (tcDOOCALL, & SIGN OF THE. ere" 777 77777 77777 77777 77777 77 7 7 7 7. 7 7 7 . 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 re waa detainedhere at the SEAFORTEL LION for the laat Seven Weeks by the 'OM HOUSE AUTHORITIES m of Invoice. We. axe now allowed to offer them for sale for the OF V OM IT MAY CONCERN HALF THEIR VALUE ALSO 20 PIECES OF WOOL TWEED, centa er yard, worth, $l 50 per yard— These Goods are a 'REAT.it RGAIN. GALL RESPEGtFULLY REQUSTED. G. cDOUGALL &Co. SEAFORTH. TENTH VEAR. WHOLE NO. 476. -^ lir Al. EP4TA'TE FOR SALE. : VO SALE.—A Stave and Shingle Factory at -at Syth. Apply to R. RUNCIMAN, Clinton. DAIRYMEN'S CONVENTION. - The twelfth anneal convention of American Dairymen's Association was VRAME COTTAGE FOR SALE.—Containing 4 held inIngersoll last week. Mr. tshadwic , Stewart's briek residence in Seat rth. Apply to . -of Ingersoll, one of the vice-presidents of -a- reoms and 2 kitchena, sltuled near Mr. A. W. N. WATSON, Seaforth. 488 the association, presided in the absence Of. Hon. Horatio Seymour, president. Among those present were Prof. Arnold; of Rochester, N.:Y.; Hon. Harris Lewis, of Frankfort, N. Y. • Prof. E. W. Stew- art, of Chicago: Mr. Thomas &Ulan,- tyne, M. P. P. for Stratford, and other leading dairymen. The president i referred to the good which was being accomplishecl by these conventions in the diasemination of knowledge upon; dairy interests, and in the consequent ildvantages from a mone- tary point of view. There had been la complete revolution in deiry matters in Canada within the past eight or ten years, though he believed that this i - terest was even yet in its infancy. -14-‘011. SALE—A new Frame Cottage and acre • -1: of land on Turnberry [Axed; Brussels, just • north of the Railway. Apply to C. R. COOPER, Brussels P. 0., with stamp for aaaswera 4744 • ITOUSE TO RENT OR SELL.—Will be sold or rented, a comfortable !tame house, with well and garden attached. Tine house is adjoin- ing the ExPosrrou Office. Apply to A. M. CAMPBELL, Seaforth. 466 ✓ ARMS FOB SALE.—East half Lot 11, Con. 12, - • MoRillop; Also South 50 sores of Lots 1 and 2 Con. 10, Morris, adjoining the village of Blyth. For particulars apply to MoCAITGHEy&,HOLME- STED, Barri:sters, &e., Seaforth. • 425 VARM FOR SALE.—North half of Lot 12, Con. -"a 13, Me.Killop, containing 7,5 acres, 40 cleared, balance well timbered, with good buildings; for sale cheap and on easy terms of payment. Apply to Mc,CACIG HEY & HOLMESTED, Seaforth. 449 TO SELL OR RENT.—To sell or rent, that -a- comfortable and pleasantly situated dwelling; house and grounds recently owinpied as the Pres- ' byterian Manse. Possession given on the 10th of ;fanuary. Apply at The Eipositor (Ace, Sea - forth. 474 -1.4`ARM FOR SALE.— For sale, that splendid farm now in the occupation of Michael Madigan, being Lot 11, in the 5th Concession, McKillop, containing 100 wares. Excellent build- ings, good fences and terms easy. J. S. POR- TER, Beaforth. 471 VA RM FOR S &T.-R.—East half of north half of Lot 16, Clon. 13, alcKillop. Price $2,000; $800 • each, balance in 12 years, with privilege to pay at any time and in any sums to suit the buyer. Also house arra lot for sale in Seaforth. Apply to Z. DERBYSHIRE, Seaforth. 476 pROPERTY FOR SALE.—That valuable prop- erty on GoderichaStreet occupied by the Goder- iela Manufacturing Company as a Machine Shop. Mao daallinghouse and lot adjoining. The above property willbe soldion easy terms. For particu- lars apply to GRA.Y & SCOTT. 439 AFFLICATION 01' MEAT IN THE DAIRy. In the absence of the writer, Prof. Arnold read a paper on the application of heat in the dairy, by Mr: A. L. Fish, of Cedarville, N. Y. In the application of heat• to milk in cheese -making , care should be taken not to bring it to. that point which caused the disintegration of the particles, or to apply it unequally. The action of the heat should. be made slow or fast„ according as that of the rennet was rapid or the reverse, A sud- den or partial exposure to high heat caused loose, sew. and musty cheese. With regard to the use of vats, he urged cheese makers to remember that the tendency of heat in fluids was Upwards, and that of curds under manipulation downwards. The thinner the sheet of water or steam' between tbe outer and inner vat the .harper would be the heat, and the hotter the inner surface of the heating vat. The wider the space be- tween the twblvats, the milder and more VARM FOR SALE—For Sale, Lot No. 34, Hu• even would be the heat secured. All -12 ron Road, AlcRillop, containing 100 acres, 85 of changes of temperature should be gradu- which are cleared and in a good state of =hive- al. The most perfect success the writer tion. Is within a mile and a half of the town of had achieved ii' • Ssaforth. It is one of the beet farms in the coun- n thrty yearspractical. ty and will be sold cheap. werx,rem FOWLER, experience* cheese -making, wl s wrought eaforth. 475 by keeping the space between the two a' vats at blood heat and no More. By this means the heating surface of the in - der vat was not in contact with a particle df.tni1I or curd at a higher temperature than that of the space mentioned. A set at 80 to 84 degrees until coagulation was perfectlylformecl, and then not ex. PPROPERTY F011 SA.LE.—Two iota, with 2 posed. to more than blood heat after - story -a- frame house and barn, situated on the wards, would retard acidulation ' and Market Square, Seaforth. The premises have been used as an egg packing establishment, and ravor the efficient action of the mullet.• are well adapted for any public business. For To improve the present system, he would • particulars apply to the proprietress, Mrs. MAL- recommend the widening of the heatina COM, Seatorth, Or to D. GORDON, Goderich, gEAFORTH FRIDAY, JANUARY 19 1877. of cows fed some on hay and. others on grass, demonstrating that it was possible even under w fiat were usually considered adverke circumstances, to produce goods of a high quality. The great bulk of what was called hay cheese weal not, however, particularly fine. The itheesse exhibits from both countries in the Oc- tober display were, generally fine, and than some of them he had never seen finer anywhere. They were absolutely faultless. The very best had one pe- culiar feature in their manufacture, and that was that those in which the flavor was the Moat pure and nutty, and which appeared the richest and most meaty. had the whey removed from the curd at .the earliest period. This was the essen- tial Plaint in what was called the Cheddar process. The cheese shown ° by the United States was not very uniform in quality, and the prime was true of the Cenadian exhibit. Canada's average, however, was higher than that of the United States. This superiority he at- tributed to the fact that the Cheddar 1..),ITILDING LOTS IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE -L.' —Dr. COLEMAN, having laid out the grounds recently occupied as a Driving Park into Bind- ing Lots, is prepared to dispose lots on reason-) able terms, to any 'who may desire them. Parties desiring to purchase should make immediate ap- plication. 864 ee— ; for cheese at the late Centennial Exhibi- tion, spoke on "The manufacture of cheese and handling of milk." The first thing to be considered was the con- dition in which the milk r was delivered at the factory. The arrangements should be such as to ensure the complete clean- liness of the utensils. Cheese should be manufactured so as to be ripe at as early °a Beason as possible, but :much will de- pend on the condition of the milk. The modes pursued by the well-known cheese makers, Messrs. Chalmers and Mac- kenzie, were here referred to. In the early part of the season they used about 11,- lbs of salt to the 1,000 lbs., never ex- ceeding 2 lbs. Later on, when they were not hurrying their cheese' to mar- ket, they used 23/4 lbs. to the 1,000 lbs. A proper temperature was also »neces- sary. A temperature 4f 65 deg. was quite sufficient in the fall; whilst 75 deg. would be required in the spring. He had been very much struck with the fact that a great deal of eur worst cheese was never the effect of rennet nor bad system was practised more in Canada , milk, but resulted from tiering the curd 10 { IIIcLEAN SMOTHERS, Publipitherm. $2. 50 a Year, in advance. . ., than!in the United States. • The cheese presented in October by Thomas Ballan- tyne, M. P. P., of Stratford, in which this peculiarity of make was most 'suc- cessfully carried , out, was the finest shoWn during the exhibition, and waa graded at 100 plus. To it was awarded the weepstake prize for best Canadiau chee e. (Applause.) The October ex - i hibi s of Mr. D. Chalmers and Mr. Ale . Mackenzie differed but little from temperature as the curd. And it is also the est. The percentege of perfection necessary, particularly in the spring, to in the October exhibits of cheese from ha.ve the curd put to press before it is the individual States, and the United too cold. Cheese makers should avail States collectively and Canada collective- themselves of visiting and inspecting ly Were as follows: Connecticut, 50 per . other factories. In cheese manufacture cent; Ohio, 60; Wisconsin, 76 ;' United we have four agents to do the whole States, 76.82 - New York, 79.05 ; Penn. work, viz.: Heat, remiet, salt and acid. , The latter is perhaps he most import- ant. By the Cheddar process we are enabled to correct the bad effect of taint- ed milk. He had» prepared no paper, but would be glad to give further infore °nation, if asked. A discussion ensued, which Mr. Ballantyne Ontario. 456 space between the 'vas, especially at the • sides, to ten or twelve inches,- so that Teaem FOR SA.LE.—L0e5, Conceasion 4, Town- the heat might be equalized before reach - ship of Stanley, containing eel acres, about ina the bottom of the inner vat. Instead 50 acres clear and in a etate of good cultivation,the '" - of forcing currents of steam from pipes . balance well titubered with maple, elm, hemlock, and cedar. There is a good frame barn on the premises. lit is cenvenient to school and claurch, towards the -inner vat, he would point them outward and ` downward near the and within Val-gab:Liles of Bruccheld station. onter vat at various points. In cheesing particulars apply- to ALEXANDER MOE WEN , on the cerd after it was pressed there should the premises. -a •470tf ----a-a-- be a due restraint of heat, and the con- spLANISiG FACTORY FOR SALE.—For Sale, a first -lass - oid established Plauing Factory. Machinery of the latest and most improved kinds, nearly all new and in first-elass running order, and sonveuient to the junction of the Grand Trunk- and Great Western,Railwaya, in the flourishing own ad Clinton, in the County of Huron. For Rather particulars apply to the undersigned by letter. iTEVENS & MIIILER, Clinton. 476x4 during the heating proce s. In the -early ' stages, such cheese smelt as if it a •been toasted. Whilst heating the milk it is of the utmost importance the heat should be gradually applied -84 deg. was about the temperature for the sum - spring and fall. mer, and 86 or 87 th The milk should be allo about an hour and a hal the whey niust be kept ed to heat for . In the spring p to the same midevinter, barefooted. He emigrated to Canada iu 1E30, settling in. Puslinch, where he has since resided. —The Welland Vale Works, at St. Catherines, were destroyed by fire on Friday last. The,lbss to the company is estimated at $100,000. Over 90 work- mmeenni.have been thrown out of employ- -While a man named Arch. Cameron was driving and parading a horse »at Brechin, Ontariopea, which he desired to sell, and for which he had been offered $150, the animal fell and broke one of its legs, and had to be shot. —All the tavern keepers in Prince Edward have closed up their yards, stables and houses to the public—in fact, gone out of the business of hotel -keeping. They are also circulating a petition for the repeal of the Dunkin Act. —A youug man named Cook absconded on the 7th of January with $52 from the Treasury of the Sons of Temperance, Dorking, and a horse and» cutter belong- ing to ,Mr. Wm. Mack. No trace of him has as yet been found. —Two apcidents happened recently at Wallaceburg, two parties while rolling sawlogs off sleighs ; the first to Mr. P. Hookwith, who had a leg broken; the other a day or two afterwards, to Mr: T, Lyons, who bad both legs broken be low the knees. =Some idea of the excellence of the road -bed of the International Railway tinuous action of heat and rennet should be kept steadily on. • The suppression of the heat after »the cooking of the curd, so called, should also be gradual. Cheese, when suited, to a special de- mand, shouild be placed in a tempera- ture too low to admit of a continued A CHANCE FOR MECHANICS. — For, sale -1-1. cheap a lot with a house, wagon shop and lumber shed thereon, situated in the village of Walton. The buildings are all new, and this is, an excellent opening for a good wagonmaker. There are three blacksmith shops in the village and only wagon shop. A stock of all kinds of seaeoned lumber will be sol 1 with the property or separately. Apply to JOHN COWAN, Walton Ont. 470a8 • TIESIRABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For Sale on reasonable terras, the residence and ,• grounds in Egniondville at present occupied by J. S. Porter. There is a comfortable dwelling house with all necessary out -buildings and con- venieuces, also a large driving house and stable. Taere are four acres of land, well fenced, and a g od bearing archard of fruit trees' This wonld a meet desirableproperty for a market gardener „ tnere were strewn a total .of 292 pack - a retired farmer; Apply to S. S. PORTER. 468 anea 'having a total weight of- 9,150 sylv,ama, 83.22 ; Canada, 87.36. (Loud ; . applause.) Prof. Arnold said that in a comparison between the exhibits of dif- ferent States or countries much depend- ed en whether the samples were care- fully selected or eent at random. Mr. Caswell said the latter was the case with Canadian cheese. Prof. Ar- nold said that then he had to admit that thel Canadians had beaten the Americans in a fair and square competition. (Loud applause.) Hon. Harris Lewis congratu• lated the Canadians on their successeand said though he Was pretty well pleased temperature in the upper story. He that they had. come off so well, he Would held it was impossible- to make good have felt considerably better if they had cheese from too new Milk. He heated just allowed Herkimer county cheese to the milk before he pUt the rennet in. get ahead of them. (Laughter.) He did not approve of! using sour whey la reply t(5 a question, Prof. Arnold in the milk • such a proceeding always •said that butter packages should fret be gave the cheese a buttermilk sort of_ sneked with cold brine. They should taste. The milk would be in much bet - then have boiling hot brine poured into ter condition, if the fairmers brought the in milkinas to the in the course of said he avas in favor of coal stoves for heating the pre- paring robm, because they did not re- . , quire so niuch attention. He was not in favor of a second story over the cur- ing house, owing to the difference of them, and this should be allowed to re- evening main until cold. Some good samples of factory separately. butter at the Centennial had been spoiled Mr. H. W. Hate by neglect to cleanse the packages in spoke of the relative this way. A good quality of salt was colored cheese. He also an important item. white cheese at Mont LEAKS IN THE DAIRY. hail great difficulty in selling it at a cent On WedneSday, Mr. C. L. Sheldon, of less a pound than co Lowville, N. Y. read a paper on "Leaks of Hastings, said tha in the Dairy." 'He spoke of the neces- hood of Belleville last sity for economy in the dairy, owing to more for white tha Ti the keen competition now existing in they went into it bec y, of Brantford, alue of white and had bought fine eal last year, and red. Mr. Ashley, in the neighbor - year, they had got for colored, and use it saved color - Ingersoll, knew of maybe gain train which nesday mor: Mails reache miles, in 62 —Sonae e d from the fact that the left Halifax on Wed- ing with the, Peruvian's Truro, a distance of 61 minutes. • • il disposed persons entered graph, even to the minutest detail. The box of teke wood, in which the painting was sent from the other side of the world, is in itself a curiosity. The painting ia ,encesed in a massive gold frame. - —A meeting that appears to have originated with the German editors was held lately ia Berlin, Ont., to discuss German education in the Public Schools. It was resolved to ask the Government to appoint a German examiner for teach- ers and a German inspector. —The traffic receipts on the Toronto, Grey and Bruce Railway, for the week ending 30th of December, were as fol- lows : Passengers, 52,274.20; freight, $4,644.97 ; mails and sundries, $501.74 ; total, » $7,420.91. Against passengers, 52,486.35; freight, 52,958.25; mails and sundries, $313.25 ; total 55,757.85 for the same week last year. This is an in- crease of $1,663.06. —At the -late meeting of the Council of the Agricultinal and following Arts Association the resolution was 'unanimously carried: That the Government of Ontario be re- quested by the Council to grant the On- tario Veterinary College $600 annually, in order to make the institution more ef- ficient for improving veterinary skill throughout Ontario. —Mr. Ferdinand Yost, an extensive farmer and stock -breeder, living near Hanover, lately departed, leaving some of his most confidential friends in the lurch. A sale of valuable thorough -bred. stock a day or two before his sudden de- parture, and other recent transactions, show pretty conclusively that the step was not taken without being prepared. Several parties in Walkerton are among tire greatest sufferers. e —A few months since Mr. Wm. Reid, who held a chattel mortgage flour T. R. Rhoder, formerly paper bag Manufactu- rer, London, seized a horse under the same to seaure the payment of a -debt. Rhoder disputed the right of Reid tie do this, and entered an action against iiim for the price, on the ground that it was a mare he seized, and that a mare is not a horse. Judge Elliot decided thet a mate is a hoase, and found for the defendant the premisee of M. Louis Young, Tilson- burg, and, with• a knife, proceeded to destroy the contents of the clothes line. The line was well filled with ladies' cloth- ing, which was cut and torn in such a manner as to be completely destroyed. —The death of Mr. Hugh C. Thomson, for many years Secretary of the Agricul- tural and Arts» Association of Ontario, at his residence in Toronto, on the llth inst., will be learned with regret by many persons who were accustomed to do business with him at the Provincial. Fairs, He was a good officer. —At Ottawa last week ate attempt to warm a house in the course of construc- tion by the aid of a charcoal fire was at- tended with unpleasant circumstances. The werkmen, 12 in number, were seiz- ed with violent vomiting, and only avoid- ed fatal results by escaping to the open air. --George Wright, of Watford, who went to England in the fall with a num- ber of horses, has returned. The trip was successful, although he lost three horses immediately on landing. One of the lot,. "Bay Charlotte," sold for $735. tie intends to visit England again next spring; taking with him another lot ;of horses. , —At Ottawas:, a gang of juvenile thieves, many of whom are the sons of respec- • teble citizens, was brok-en up by the p0 - lice last Friday night, and three of their nneaber were arrested. They had made arrangements for extensive operations the produce market. If there is but a mg. , r. asl.ve , duriug the winter. The chief of the fair protit withtbe hest dairy, it would. one gentleman whose cheese he would gang is a tifteen-year old boy named, need a microscope to discover the profits have bought if it had been colored • but James Johnston from the worst. One of the leaks is the who had to keep it, o sell it at a 'loss. —A younglad. named Robert Farrell, action of the decomposing agents, heat lack of good milk -producing food, given In white cheese imp fections Weremore five years of age, was -found lying dead and rennet. All factories should have a i at regular periods, whether fodder, corn, easily discernable. Ie suggested that drunk in a by -street in Montreal a few room in which cheese could be held at a rye or other produce. By this means, • they should have a m del dairy in con- 'evenings ago. The police visited his low. temperature and thus preserved in one is enabled to get the largest supply nection with the mo el farm, and that home and found his father, • mother, and of milk when dairy produce brings the the practical dairymen of ithb Province six inmates all drunk. The little fellow order. a i best price. Cows must also be well should, in rotation, give instructions. had been dosed by his mother to stop his Tile DAIRY AT THE CENTENNIAL. housed or good food will be of little They had great need Of such an institu- cries for bread, and it was not until three the subject of "The Dair Prof. Arnold delivered an address on avail. Be kind to the cows; every blow time Mr. Ballantype coincided. with o'clock in the morning he was out of Cen- tennial." The dairy department had on you strike makes' a leak in the dairy. Mr. Caswell ; and edded, as an addi- 'danger. k ell made cheese is often damaged by tional improvementY that one man- —The opinion given by .Mr. Guthrie, y at the the whole proved to be a creditable and iNmperfect curing, and this is a leak lager might be appointed to take the Q. C., county solicitor for Wellington, successful exhibition of dairy products. which: gives a great deal of trouble, charge of some eig t or ten factories, was that any Merchant or trader eould, the dairy comprised butter, cheese, con- especially in late made cheese. Every and thereby eusure a equally good arti- 've gallons The dis.play of products connected with densed and preserved milk, and butter- careless slovealy _dairyman becomes a cle in each. public 'curse ; and, on the contrary, colorinc cheese -coloring, preserved ren- . 0, every cateful one a public blessing. ` . »—The salt interest in Kincardine gives »practical signs of livening up. Mr. Rightmyer, not satisfied with the pro- ducing facilities with which he has done such geed work in the past, is now enlarging the bore of the well one inch, in order to secure a larger flow of brine. Mr. Scott has contracted for a large sup- ply of cordwood, and is engaged in leaking preparations for starting busi- ness again in the old block at an early date. —There are 308 pumping wells in .the Canadian oil region, with a daily pro- duction of 1,179 barrels; daily average, 382 barrels. In addition there are 43 drilling and preparing to drill, and. 17 preparing to start up. The total con- sunaption of crude in Canadais fully 70,- 000 barreli3 a month; at present the yield does not equal the consumption. The stock on hand at Petrolia is about 175,000 barrels. The cost of drilling a well averages $175 • with the machinery arid other fixings, $1,300. —A few days since one of tli-e family of Mr. Gilbert Calhoun, of Carlisle, was married, and a number of evil -disposed youths in the neighborhood. having got ' wind. of the affair, resolved upon getting up a chavivari, which they did» in the most approved mariner aid custom. They disturbed the quietude., of the party, and when ordered. to leave re- fused. Subsequently Mr. Calhoun had. five of the boys summoned before a magistrate at Ailsa Craig, who fined them $1 and. costs for trespassing on Mr. Calhonn's property. —Ai Brantford grocer named Scott eloped the ()they day with his deceased. son's betrothed wife, and left his law- ful partner to whom he had been married 32 years. They were arrested. at De- troit. The man was liberated, and the woman taken back to her father's home. Scott is nearly 60 years old, and not at all good looking, while his misguided victim is rather, handsome, and about 22 years of age.. This is the third time that Scott has left his lawful wife and gone off wit la another woman. —A -tavern at Walkerville teak fire about 31 o'clock Sunday afternoon, but by a prOmpt application of Walkerville water from the new waterworks, the fire was extinguished. At 5 o'clock the fire again broke out, but this time was over- come b7 a hand brigade, who did some lively bucket handling. The tavern, profittibg by experience, waited till it got the .Walkerville people all at church, and at 8 P. M. the tire broke out in a fresh place. The waterworks were not immediately available, MI account of some repairs going on, and the fire took LU time burning patiently and persevere Canda. nets and rennet extracts. Of butter Cooling rooms are necessary in the hot Catherine Cullen, a female lunatic season; and great care must be taken to in jail in Belleville, has not eaten • any have the temperature regulating the cur- food for 24 days. • • d t the season —Crowds of unemployed besiege the TT OUSE AND FOUR LoTS FOR SALE. ---that pounds. Of this number 226 packages, ese degent two-sten/ brick dwelling haus° on the weiahing 7J)51 pounds, Iwere fdom the Huron Road, Seaforth, with four jots adjoining ; P • - United States ; 23 packages, weighing there -are 8 bedrooms, parlor, thawing room, m- ing room and kitchen, with soft and hardawater ruost convenient ; there is an excellent garden attached, also Stables and outbuildings this is a handsome hotnestead, and a rare chance is offered to linen:ling purchasers.; it will be sold on favorable terms. For further particulars apply to 1,749 pounds, were from Canada ; and 42 packages, weighing about's 350 pounds, • were from other cot -retries. This amount was presented ie 149 exhibits, of which 123 were from the United iStates, THOMAS SfEPHENS, Seaforth. 462 16 from Canada,, and 10 from other na- tions, including -Portugal, the Argentine Republic, Brazil, the Netherlands,- Ger- many, Italy, and Denmark. There were 31 awards for exhibitions of butte r re- commended by the Committee with which he (Prof. Arneld) was -connected, 23 of which were for exhibits feem the United. States, five for Canada end one each for Portugal, the Netherlands Ger- many and. Denmerk., The display of , cheese was Much larger than that of but- ter. In all 2,086 packages were exhibit- ed,. weighing 551.1 tons, which were pre- sented in.41.1 exhibit's. There were from the United. States 1,012 packages, weigh- ed,and frame *able, good log`house and otherbuild- 0 build ' Ina` over 21) tons.; from Canada, 1,0 balanca is well timbered.; a largo ra e . ings; good bearing orchard; a never -failing packages, weighing over 29 tons; from stream running through the farm, also a good other countries, 65 peckages, eetimated . well ; about 8 acres of fall wheat sewn:. Is situ- These were from» portugal, ated about 11 miles from Clinton and 12 miles at 500 11)5.- 1 rota Seaforth. For further Particulars apply to the Argentine Republic, the : Nether - the proprietor on the premises or to Harlock lends. Brazil, Victoria, Italy, Norway, r. o. AINGUS CAMPBELL; - .- 464) - Turk,iy, France and. England. The fi'ARM FOR -SALE —For sale the West half of -1- Lot 20, Con. 8, McKillop, containing 50 acres, 25 of which are cleared and in a good state oi cultivation, the balance is well timbered with hardwood. There is a good frame house and frame stable on the premises, also a young orchard. It is one mile from the gravel road at• the village of Winthrop, where there is a saw 'Mill, flour naill, stores, school, ehurches, and all other ;zillage- conveniences; also within BiX miles of Sesfortla. Apply to the Proprietor on the prem- ise', or address Winthrop P. 0. JAMES Mo- n ONALDI 0 470» FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, north half of Lot 11 and east half of Lot 12, Con.- 12, Hullett, containing 100 acres, 85 of which are cleared and in a good State of cultivation and wellunderdrain- USINF.SS.—For Sale in aue of the best locali- cheese from thh United States and Cana- ) ties in Ontario, Lot 'No. 5, 'Village of Belmore, da was mostly the product of factories. Township of Howick, County of Huron, on the Over 100 awar s were recommended.. for gravel road, 7 ranee north of Gallia and Wroxeter exhibits- of cheese. Of these -45 were etations- Deettene, Hotta° and Shop, built for a. atore - L'ot contains about three-fourths of an acre for the Unit d States, 49 for Canada, especially a harness maker, as there is none nearer and the remai of good land; splendid opening for any busureas, Limn 7 miles. The above property will e so lti One very usef Cheap. If required only part of the purdhase money Nvas presente dewn. Apply to S. PEEBIARS, Hopeville, Ont., or mark. .It contained . only the active der for other countries. 1 sample of rennet extract from Copenhagen, Den - • rug root 'Prof. Stewart,, of the Live Stock Jour- Montrea,i Road. and N -eat, Chicago, spoke of the necessity for begging for work. great kindness to cattle. A cold barn —On Friday last, was a most unprofitable method of dairy- grandfather of Mr. ine It required 50 per cent. more food pleted the 111th ye to keep a good cow in a bad »barn than —Barber, the Tor in a good one; and for the money -lost in has been senteaced to- five years in the two years' time, through a bad barn, a Penitentiary, with hard labor. farmer would be enabled to build a new . —Mr. Jacob Courtney shot a large concrete barn, air tight, with double cinnamon bear somewhere in or near glass- windows, &c. They should al- Dreaden last week. It is the largest ways give their .animals plenty. of light ; ever killed in these parts. • he had no doebt one of the leaks in the —Henry Granlin, lately. -convicted. of dairy was want of light. The chairman said. the true theoryeef farming was to make the farm produce nearly everything they needed. Fitzg, raid. .• , 472x12 agenev of the rennet, so concentrated that one pound would coagulate 10,000 tu WM. ASHDOWN, Merchant, Belmore, Ontario. The above Lot is the property of the late William lbs. of milk: Its preparation was »kept ., -VALUABLE MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.— a secret, but he (Professor Arnold) was Orey, about 3 miles from Ethel dation, on the erxiiierimenting in connection with Prof. T The property is siteated on the Town Plot of Southern Extension of the Wellington, Grey and a. a» , 11. of 'Cornell University, and Brute Railway. The machinery consists of 35- would in the spring present to American e.dging and butting se.ws, shingle and heading ma- and Canadian dairymen the result in the horse engine, 40 -horse 5 -flue boiler, large circuity chino and. shingle jointer. The machinery is all shape of an extract equal to the Danish and eight months. This is a rare chance for man. - general display of Canadian butter, end: Vater Departmehts, Mr. James Dickson, J. D. Caswell, com- of his age. nto bank defaulter, murder, cut his throat with a piece o glass last week in Wood.stock. There- is a chance of his recOvery. ; —Mr. John 0 raham, member of the At the afternoon session Mr. George Provincial Legislatere for the County of 'Hamilton, of Cromarty, occupied the i Frontenac, died at Kingston last Friday chair. f. E. W . Stewart, of the National morning, of congestion of the lungs. —The gross earnings of the Grand 'Trunk Railway fee the week ending Dec. 30th were : passengers and malls, 546,912; freight, 593,096; total, $140,- 008. !Live Stock, Journal, spoke on DAIRING AND FERTILITY. He began by stating that his subject was one which dairymen had very little considered. • He meant to show the dif- ference between feeding a cow for milk and feeding a steer for beef. Ageipul, tare is the basis of all human prosperity, and there is nothing to hinder us meet- ing in cordial co-operation on this occa- sion. The dairy interest is the greatest individual portion of the agricultural system of the If we deduct t purposes and f calves, there w tries about , 10 au annual pro worth in the m tirst-class, and has only been running about a year Article. The Professor referred to the of capital, as there is a good looal trade, and any Said that it did not display that care in factory reasons given for selling. Full particulars manufacture which was essential to the on -application to GARROW BROTHERS, GM' production of a good. article. In the eepeeso. 475 some fine samples, made from the milk Arne display of cheese there 'appeared Post Office. N. 13.—All notes and accounts over- I clne must be aettled at once, and save trouble sad quantity of Timber of all kinds to be had. Satis- nited States and Canada. ,ecows used for breeding rnishing food for their 11 remain in both coun- 000,000 cows, prodncing uct, at $40 per head, rket $400,000,000. This, although a moclerate estimate, is greater than the value of the cotton crop, wheat crop, or any single crop, save that of grass, which is consumed by every class of stock. But the dairy interestis des- tined to assume still more vast propor- tions. He contended that .butter - making was more profitable and bet- ter for the farms than cheese -making, as the soil did. not become so impover- ished. • CANADIAN cioncsx-mAioNo. Mr. Thomas Ballantyne, M. P. P. for South Perth, inner of the gold medal ' —Last week notice was given that a &iced into the Onta- the incorporation of ord as a city. A sim- ilar Bill is to be i troduced for the in- corporationiof Belleville. -T—It is said that the destitution in Ot- tawa is terrible. All public works are stopped. and the wbrking classes are on the verge of starvation. St. Vincent de Paul Society alone have over 150 families receiving relief. , . —Some idea of the state of the atmos- phere in Manitoba during a cold spell may be gained from the fact that one day last week the thermometer was 40° below zero at Winnipeg, 470 below at Swan River, and, 57* below at Battle - ford, the capital of Mr. Laird's new ter- ritory. —Mr. Paul Willard, one of the pioneers of Puslinch, died at his residence ingeat township on the 8th inst., at the age of 95. The deceased gentleman was at .one time in the French regular army, and served under Napoleon L at Waterloo, and in the memorable and calamitous Moscow expedition, from which he re- treated with his comrades in arras in Bill would. be intro rio Legislature for the town of Brantf under the Dunkin Act, sell of liquer or a dozen bottles 'porter without any license of ale or hatever. Mr. John A. McKenzie, solr itor for the County of Bruce, has ,instructed the Huron township council in a similar manner. —The following incident of the vote on the Dunkin Act in Kingston is from one of the local papers : In a late issue we referred to an invalid voter who had. been carried from the sleigh up the'stairs of the City Hall to say nay to the passage of the Dunkin- Act. That was his last vote; the next day he died, and his death was brought about by the very thing he voted -in favor of—whiskey. —The shipments of oil in barrels from Petrolia station, for the year ending Dec. 31, were 318,020, being a larger quanti- ty than for any previous year in the histery of the oil region. During 1875, 194,628 barrels were shipped ;land in 1874, the quantity was 224,886 barrels. The largest quantity sent off in any one week was that for the week ending Dec. 7, when 14,239 barrels were shipped. —At the annual meeting of the mem- until the roof fell in, when the bees' of the Presbyterian Church, Galt, ingly Windsor Fire Company came and saved. the -shell of the building. Loss, com- plete ; insura• nce, $1,000. The building to raise the general funds of the wegeraThred by Mr. Jacques, of Windsor, by • means of the "envelope syetem"' andeoccupied by Mrs. fratt. . -- which, it is believed will prove fully as satisfactory. - It was also decided to en- -' The subject of the following sketch, gage no precentor for the present, but to taken from a Galt paper of the 10th inst. shay not be unknown to many of our held on New Year's day, it was to abolish the system of pew re eculed ts, and hurch leave the leading of the singing in the hands of a large choir. —A Waterloo paper says that there is some of the finest timber in that section that can be found. in Canada. It men- tions the fact that a stick of dressed pine which grew on the farm of Mr. Jacob B. Erb, Measured 68 feet long, squared 31 inches at the top by 36 at the butt end, and was perfectly sound, with- out knot, flaw or crack throughout. By the time it gets to Quebec this stick will probably fetch $200 or more in the market. —Mr. II. McAfee, of Walkerville, has lately -received from China a very large and striking portrait of himself, painted by a native artist. The painting is nearly four by five feet, and represents Mr. McAfee* the regalia of Grand Mas- ter of the Grand Lodge of the Independ- ent Order of Oddfellows of Ontario. A photograph was taken in Windsor, sent to China, and with a few instructions as to color, &c., the celestial artist has pro- duced every line and shade of the photo- readektiz: "We have to record this week the death of Mr. Alex. Fisher;' a gentle- man well known throughout .aie neigh- borhood and in the County of Brant. Mr. Fisher became ill three weeks ago from congestion of the lungs, and his illiaesi3 increasing, he came to Galt two days ago to remain with his mother' where he died on Tuesday morning. Mr. Fisher was a native of Scotland, where he spent his earlier years. He edited for .some time with marked. ability the Bordsr Advertiser, a paper .published: in the town of Galashiels. Emigrating to Canada,he engaged in the profession of teaching, which be followed till a few years ago, when he assuMectethe editorial management of the Paris Star. Be was a man possessed of many good qualities of mind and heart, and his death will be learned with regret by a large circle of akuaintances, His ability as a writer, particularly en scientific and agriculture/ topics, was generally acknowledged end! appreciated." - '111111111•11