HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-02-22, Page 34
PROGRESS.
"The Old Iron Stove."
iNfritten For The Winhhani Times.)
Good.byo, old stove, gond.bye,
How stwittly time dots fly!
With sighs and teen! for forty Veers
nom worked around you. atove.
Good-bye old stove, good-bye,
Now ou my hearthstone smooth and
white
An electric range so neat and light
'Well fills the place dint once you graued.
Good.bye old stovo, good•bye.
Good bye old stove, you've had your
day,
Electricity has come to stay ;
A button neat I turn aud lo!
A bine time neath my kettles glow,
No heat nor dust nor smut I ePo,
You've taken alt away with thee.
Good-bye old stove, good.bye.
Good-bye old stove, yon took along
That old scrub brush,
Ah, mel the throng of thnughts
That crowd upon me now,
The many times with sweaty brow
I plied yon fervently, but now
Linoleum so bright mud gay
Has come in kitchen, hall, to stay.
Good-bye old atom, good-bye.
Gond-bye old stove, you took the tub,
The washboard too, with its rub -a -
dub -dub
And in their place has come to me
The washing. machine I was glad to
see,
slip on a belt and a button tarn
And lolthe maelithery turns and tnrns;
My clothes are washed as white as snow
No baokaphes, lame wrists, now I
know.
Good-bye old stove, good-bye.
The parlor stove, yon took that too,
All nickel -plated, fine and new,
No tear I shed, nor e'er a sigh
As the gaunt old wood box followed
nigh,
Good•bye old stove, goo'] -bye.
The old corn broom you've taken too,
A. carpet sweeper epan and new
Now licks the dust and crumbs from
view,
No cloud of dust is left behind
'The sunbeams clear through windows
shine.
Good-bye old stove, good-bye.
The coal oil lamps yon took them too,
May joy go all the way with you,
Time cannot e'er erase, alas!
The memory of your or:my glass
As ono by one I wasbea you o'er
And filled with oil yonr greasy bowl.
Goodbye old stove, good-bye.
When evening comes no fear I know
From lamps o'er turned or fire from
stove,
A button neat I tutu and ]o!
My rooms with electrio light do glow.
Good-bye old stove, good-bye.
--Mrs. as N. White (nee Annie Lamont)
blion S., Rhinelander, Wis.
ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL
COLLEGE
Press men visit this Popular Place.
On Saturday, February :)rd, on the in-
vitation of President Creeltnan, one
hundred and thirty-five members of the
Canadian Press Association visited the
Ontario Agricultural College and Ex-
periruental Farm at Guelph. Through
the kindness of the Grand Trunk Rail-
way, two addi lona! "oaches were added
to the regular mermen train from Tor.
and will be obliged for many years to do.
peed largely, if not exolusively, on her
raw produce for her national wealth.
,And amongst the varione forms of raw
Ineterial, none are so valuable as those
included under the head of Agricultural
Produce. To the observant statesmen,
it is plain that the readiest manner of in
oreaelng the national wealth is by in -
cremate; the quantity and quality of
that produce. But though plainly seen,
it is not so eaeily accomplished. Prece-
dent, prejudice, and general conserva-
tism stand in the way. Throughout the
Province there is a powerful minority of
intelligent, enterprising, and ouccessful
farmers pursuing the improved system
of cultivation; yet the great majority
are depending solely in increased acre-
age for increased returns."
That was thirty years ago, and the
College, facing these conditions. with
the opposition of the very class whioh it
was intended to help, has grown steadi-
ly in favor with the people, until now
farmers themselves visit the College in
June and December to the number Of
nearly 40,000; and we had last year in
attendance at the various College classes
1,C04 students. More than 1,200 teachers
visited the College and examined the
workings of the different departments
during the past two years.
In the beginning students were paid to
attend the Institution, and there was
practically no revenue from the College
or farm. In 1905, we turned into the
Provincial Treasury as revenue from the
College and Farm $61,367,20. The work
of the different departments is as fol-
lows:
(1) Field Agriculture. Teaching of
students and experimenting with field
crops is the work of this department.
In Mr. Zavits' report of last year the
following paragraph appears. under the
head of "Barley." "The results show
that the Mandsoheuri gave decidedly the
greatest yield per acre of the four varie-
ties for the whole period of fifteen years
and also for the last five years. The
Mendsoheuri gave an average of 9. 3
bushels per acre per annum over the
Common Six•rowed barley in the aver-
age results for fifteen years. The aver-
age area deyoted to barley in Ontario
from 1S82 to 1904 is given as 633,290
acres per annum. An inorease of nine
bushels of barely per acre throughtout
the Province, would therefore amount
to an increase of over five million bus-
hels of barley in Ontario annually. This
increase at fifty cents per bushel would
therefore amount to about two and a
half million dollars. Two and half mil-
lion dollars annually would pay the
running expenses of about thirty Agri-
cultural Colleges like the one located at
Guelph. Tho Mandscheuri barley was
imported front Russia by the Ont-
ario Agricultural College in the
spring of 1889. Not only has it made a
very excellent record at the College, but
it has given high results in the co-opera-
tive experiments throughout Ontario and
has been grown in general cultivation
very successfully during the past few
years. In looking up the records of the
Bureau of Industries, we find that the
average yield of barley throughout the
Province for the period of ten years from
1895 to 1904, inclusive, is 90 3 bushels
onto to Guelph, the Press Association per acre; while that for the period of
having held Its attuned tneetiug in Tor- ten years from 18S5 to 1884, inclusive,
onto on the previous Tbnrsday and Fri- was 24.85 bushels per acre. This shows
day, and member! were given free Iran- an annual average increase of about 4e
sportation to Guelph Mr. j. D MoDon- bushels per aore, for the latter as =l-
aid, the genial and efficient District Pas- pared with the former period of ten
senger Agent of the G. '1'. R, accompani- years. From these results does it not
ed the party to Guelph, and seen to the appear as though the introduction of the
comfort of bis friends of the press. At Mandsoheuri barley by the Ontario Agri -
the College, President Creelman escort- cultural College has bean worth to the
ed the party to the different places of in- Province of Ontario within the past ten
terest and done all in his power to make years an annual money value equal to
the visit a pleasant one. At one o'clock more than fifteen times the entire cost
luncheon was served in the Macdonald of the.Colleget" Similar work is being
Hall by the students of the institution. done with wheat, and oats, and peas,
The following particulars in connection and rye, and grasses, and clover, and
with the College and Farm should be roots.
read with much interest by every resi- (2) Animal Husbandry. Here stu-
dent of Ontario, dents are taught the cotnparative values
The College was established in 1874. of the different breeds of domestic ani -
Its objects were twofold First, to train mals, and as it is said that 80e„ of all the
young men in the science and art of crops grown on the farms of Ontario is
improved husbandry; and {second, to fed to live stock, it will be seen at a
conduct experiments and publish the re- glance how important it is to be able to
sults. In 1875, the President said in his tell a good feeder when ono sees it.
first report; "It is evident to the most (3) The making of better butter and
cursory observer that Canada depends, better cheese and the breeding and feed-
•
THE WINGHAM TIMES, FEBRUARY
upon the seed before it is sown, and thus
introduoe into the Boil these nitrate•
forming bacteria. orop of clover will
leave in the Boil in the mote alone about
fifty pound of nitrogen per acro. Thus
the plant food supplied to the eoil by a
crop of clover is $10 per acre in one year,
and the farmer hat; the clover orop, tops,
and leaves to the good. This, if practie•
ed on every farm, would mean millions
each year to this Province.
(6) Chemistry It was said a few
years ago that sugar beets could not
be grown profitably in this Province.
Our Department of Chemistry conduct-
ed experiments in the different parts of
Ontario and aualysed the different stages
of growth. It is now known that we
can grow as good beets as in any part of
the world, and men are puttiug their
money into the building of eugar beet
factories. Over 22,000,000 pounds of
sugar were made in Western Ontario
last year. Chemistry did it.
Our Chemistry Department last year
analysed fionr made from four different
grades of wheat grown in the Nortwest.
There was a differences of many cents
per bushel in the market value of these
wheats, and yet, after analysing the
flour and having bread made from each
of the different lots, it was found that
the fourth grade made bread just as
good, just as palatable, just as much
bread per bushel of flour, and jast as
nutritious as the higher grade, bus it
was not so bright in color. The result
of this analysis will enable poor people,
or people iu moderate circumstances, to
get the best bread for their families at
very much less than they have beau
paying.
(7) Physics. In this department aro
taught the principles of soil cultivation
and soil drainage. All farm crops take
their food from the soil in a watery solu-
tion. When the land dries up, no more
food can be taken; hence the necessity
for a knowledge of how to conserve soil
moisture, This is one of the most im-
portant questions that a farmer has to
deal with, and experiments are being
conducted in the Department of Phy.
Mee all the time along those lines.
(8) Botany. In this department the
subject of weeds and how to destroy
them, the question of fungeous growth,
and when and how to spray to exter-
iniunte them, the importance of growing
grasses and clover, and sucb. things are
taken up and discussed.
(9) Entomology. Again, millions of
dollars are lost every year by insect de.
predation. Only by studying the life
history and habits of an insect can it be
properly combatted. These are taught
to the farmers from our Entomological
Department.
(10) Poultry. Chickens used to sell
anywhere on the market from 20 to 30
cents a piece. To -day they bring three
times that amount, where they have
been properly ted, killed and dressed.
We have no trouble in disposing of our
poultry here at from 12 to 15 cents a lb
dressed, and our students are taught
how to breed and feed so as to obtain
these results. We have four different
styles of poultry houses, to test the ef-
fects of heat and cold on the egg•laying
proclivities; hence we find that the cold-
est, and therefore the cheapest house, is
the best, and that fresh air, not warm
air, is essential to good egg production.
(11) Macdonald Inaitute. Three
things are taught; Domestic Science,
Manual Training, and Nature Study. In
Domestic Science there were 360 girls in
attendance last year, each one being ob-
liged to learn cooking, sewing and lann-
dry work. In a Province where over
90% of the women do their oven house-
work, what a blessing it would be if they
were all properly trained for their daily
duties. Manual Training makes boys
and girls handy iu the use of simple tools
and. Nature Study, which is reality ele-
mentary agriculture, helps teachers to
the extent that they may return and
give to their pupils an education that
will more nearly fit them for the earn-
ing of their daily bread.
The College is then doing three things
First, fitting boys and girls for their
life work on the farm; Second, by ex-
perimenting along different lines it is
saving the farmers millions of dollars
each year by securing for them exact
data in reference to the value of differ-
ent farm crops, farm animals, and so
forth; and Third, by the writirig and
publication of bulletins and reports, the
farmer is supplied in his °ern home with
reliable information in reference to his
business.
DYSPEPSIA
AND
ing of better dairy animals. The aver -
I age cow in Ontario gives less than 3,000
pounds of milk per year. The College,
by careful aeleotion and proper feeding,
has built up a grade herd which, in 1904,
contained sixteen cows v, hich gave more
than 6,000 pounds each,
(4) Horticulture. Here we are some-
what handicapped by severe climatic
conditions. Being 900 feet above Lake
Ontario, we cannot grow the more deli-
oate fruits. Students are given instruc-
tion in the growing of all kinds of fruit,
vegetables, and flowers, and experiments
are conducted with the small fruits and
with cover crops for the orchard.
(5) Bacteriology. Nitrogen is one of
the principal needs of a plant, It is
Werth, commercially, about 20 cents a
pound. The air is 800„ Nitrogen, and
yet plants cannot Ube it in the form in
which it appears in the atraosphere. Cer-
tain bacteria, if introduced into the soil,
Will work on the roots of clover and
Other leguminous plants, take the nitro-
gen from the atmosphere, and convert it
into plant food, On: Bacteriologist pro -
STOMACH DISORDERS
t •
MAY BE QUICKLY AND
PERMANENTLY CURED
BURDOCK
BLOOD
BITTERS.
Iffr. P. A. Labelle, Maniwaki, Que., writes us
is follows: "i desire to thank you for your won-
derful cure, Burdock Blood Bitters.
Three years ags I had a very severe attack of
Dyspepsia. I tried five of the beat doctors I
scold find but they could do me no good.
I was advised by a friend to try Burdock
Blood Bitters and to my great surprise, after
taking two bottles, 1 was ao perfectly cured
that I have not had a sign of Dyspepsia since.
1 cannot praise it too highly to ail sufferer*. In
say experience it is the beat I elver used, Retit-
le' for me like B.U.S. • pagatekin his laboratory and stippliee in
oxilvii:moopo.it destitute for ner___,‘Ieek,,31"11 draall bOttles,:milliOns of these nitrogen
• 41400; tigthialt "141144 "Pus.' -*"- 1 forming bacteria, which slay be spread
Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps,
but is boat when used in the Sunlight way.
Bay Sunlight Boap and follow directions,
-t
Municipal Statistics.
WEAKHow Many women
there are that get no re -
TIREDfreshment from sleep.
They wake in the morn -
WOMEN ing and feel tireder than
when they went to bed.
They have a dizzy sensation in the head,
the heart palpitates; they are irritable
and nervous, weak and worn out, and
the lightest household duties during the
day seem to be a drag and a burdeu.
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
are the very remedy that weak, nervous,
tired out, sickly women need to restore
them the blessings of good health.
They give sound, restful sleep, tone up
the nerves, strengthen the heart, and
make rich blood. Mrs. 0, McDonald,
Portage la Pmirie, Man., writes: " I was
troubled with shortness of breath, palpi-
tation of the heart and weak spells. I
got four boxes of Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills, and after taking them I was
completely cured.
Price 50 cents per box or three boxes
for 31.25, all dealers or the The T. Mil-
burn Co„ Limited, Toronto, Ont.
purposes. $15 553 950, a rate per head of
37.40 and in mills 17 2 on the dollar,
compared to $11,992,821, $6.45 and 15 8
respectively, in 1900. The statistics for
1904 are not given, the information o
that point being incomplete. In 1903
the debentnre debt was 363,927,539, a
rate per head of 331 09, and the floating
debt was 38,526,493. In 1900 the figures
were 357.172 802, 328 39 and $7,708,033
The total receipts of the municipalities
for 19C3, the latest year for which stat
istios in this respect are given, were
338,082 051,the diebursements$36,345,300
assets, $73,434,848, liabilities $72,454,032.
Part 3 of the Provincial Bureau of 113.
dnstries report, containing the municipal
statistics for 1904, has just been issued.
This section of the report, which is pub.
Halted only Once in every five years, con-
tains a mass of interesting and valuable
statistics, from which the following ex-
tracts are taken t -Total assessed acreage
in 1904 Of Ontario municipalities, 24,435,-
174, compared to «3,860,640 in 1000, na
township municipalities numbered 520,
tons 114, villages 133, cities 15, countks
38. The total population in 19041s given
as 2,016,970, against 2,013,800 In 1900;
Ws' asSetuallent $906,105,659, compared
to $2,48,670; taxes impoied for all
/fru, your friends or relatives stiffer with
Fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus' Dance, or Falling
Sickness, write for a trial bottle and valuable
treatise on such diseases to Tun Leemo Co.,
179 King Street, W., Toronto, Canada. All
druggists sell or can obtain far you
LEIBIGSFITOURE
• BEDTIME.
Last year my bedtime was at eight,
And every single night
I used to wish the clock would wait,
Or else stay out of sight,
It always seemed to me
The next half hour'd be
The nicest of all the day
If mother wonld agree.
Bat she always shook her 'need,
And she sort of jumped, and said,
Why, it's late -after eight -
And it's time yen were iu bedl
That clock would always do its best
To sit all gates there,
Until I was my cortifyest
In some big easy chair.
Then its striking would hegira,
Aud I'd tell my motherkiu
How It just begun a chapter, aud
It was so int'restin' -
And eud was just ahead -
But she usually said,
No, it's late -after eight -
And it's time to go to bed.
And now my bedtime is ha' -past,
And yet that old clock does
The same mean trioks-it's just as fest,
Or faster than it was,
Last night it seemed to me
The next half•hour'd be
The nicest, time of all the day
If mother would agree. •
But she smiled. and shook her head,
And she kissed me while she said,
Why, it's late - hanpast eight -
And it's time you went to bed!
-Bnrges Johnson, iu Harper's Maga•
zine for August.
BSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
Les Pac..Sindle Wrapper Below.
Tarr mall sad as eas7
to take &sensor.
"R HEADA"r
FOR DIZZINESS:
CARTERS
FOR
ITTLE BILIOUSNESS.
vEg FOR.TORPID LIVER:
FOR:CONSTIPATION.
FOR- SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEX'S*
wurtzliu
Too...„0.0
SICK HCADACHIE:Th,.
22, 1906
Joke That Failed INTIM
Alias Adelbert bad just returned from
a vacation spent at a tiny village on
the Maine coast, In recounting her
experience); ape talked somewhat for
the benefit of a cousin, it quiet ;semen,
who was visiting Iter city relatives for
the then time in many years.
"There was just one store in the
place," said Miss Adelbert, "and they
kept everything -that Is, everything
they lean to keep, Oue day I went iu
to buy some soap, and just on a TOW.
ture I :wired the clerk if they had.
Browning. Ile stared at me a second,
then went off and looked under the
counters and ou the shelves. Presently
he came back and said: 'No, miss, we
ain't got none. We got blacking, an'
we got bluing., an' we got whiting, but
wo abet got a bit o' browning in the
store.' "
Miss Adelbert had to make several
protege to assure her audience that
this really happened. Filially the cous-
in asked gravely, "But, Cousin Bert,
why didn't you say varnish ia the first
placer -Youth's Companion.
The First Fiction,
The "Talo of Two Brothers," written
3,200 years ago by the Theban scribe,
Drumm, librarian of the palace to
King Mertestah, the supposed Pha-
raoh of the Exodus, is the oldest work
of fiction extant. The tale was writ-
ten apparently for the eutettaimuent
of the crown prince, who subsequently
reigned as Seti II. His name appears
in two places on the manuscript -prob-
ably the only surviving autograph sign
nit tures of an Egyptian king. This
piece of antique tietion, written on
nineteen sheets of papyrus in a bold
hieratic hand, W a S purchased in Italy
by Mme. d'Orbiney, who sold it is
1.857 to the authorities ot the British
utuseutu, where it is now known as
the D'Orbiney papyrus. Other speci-
mens of aneit'zit Egyptian fiction have
since come to light which appear to
Prove that the Nile valley was not only
the birtliphtee of the arts and sciences,
but was also the (Tattle ot romance.
Japan's Floe Bell.
There is 0 bell in Tokyo, Japan,
which is made from tobacco pipes.
So says the legend inscribed around
the outside in four languages, English,
French, German and Japanese.
The English version runs as follows:
"This bell, cast in the city of Tokyo,
,Tapan, Dee. 10, 1892, by Tsuda Sen, is
made from the metal of tobacco pipes
of more than a thousand men, once
slaves, now free men."
The story is that. in 1892 a woman
missionary from America waged war
on tobacco smoking and persuaded.
over a thousand men to forswear the
habit. They therefore had no further
use for their metal pipes, which were
melted down and cast in the form of
a bell. The metal resembles bronze,
anti the bell has a pleasant musical
ring.
Curious Welsh superatition.
Small glasslike, Irregular circlets of
some crystallized mineral Inc occasion-
ally found in the mountains of Wales,
and concerning these the Welsh people
have some curious superstitions. Some
believe that they are formed in the
body of a suake as soon as he reaches
the age el 100 years, while others de-
clare that they are formed "of froth
and venom" when two large male
snakes meet. Camden, the great Eng-
lish historian and antiquarian, says:
-it is usual for snakes to approach on
Si. John's eve nud by joining heads to-
gether and hissing to form o. kind of
bubble, which passes through the snake
and immediately hardens till it resem-
bles a glass ring. Whoever finds one
of these rings will ever after prosper."
Rode Baron Stenben.
Baron Stetthen was known as the
rudest, roughest, most uncivil and dis-
courteous officer in the Revolutionary
army. Ile spoke English to some ex-
tent -that is, he knew most of the
oaths and terpletives and had other
words enough to string them together
-but when a little excited he would
burst forth into 0 most extraordinary
mixture of German, Frontal and Eng -
Holt and in this polyglot composition
would abuse everybody iu hearing.
Fixed.
"Why don't you go to work?" de -
Jimmied the housekeeper.
-Well, yen see." began the gray hair-
ed old loafer, "1 got tt wife and. three
children to support"-
-But if you don't work how can you
support"-
-As I wuz a-saybf, lady, I got a wife
and three children to support um" -
Cause For Fear.
Second (to duelist, who on confront-
ing his adversary has suddenly grown
pale and is only just prevented from
falling) -Take courage, main 1 know
your opponent is going to lire in the
air. Duelitt -Thane just what Drakes
me afraid. He's suck a notoriously bad
shot.
Always Broke.
Shadbolt-Yonr finances are at a low
ebb again, are they? Dinguss---thb?
No; that would indicate that they're
sometimes at the flow, which they nev-
er are. tety finances are at their nor -
mat and unvarying level.
Young Wife -What's the trouble.
Why do yon sit on the edge of the
chair? Husband -Well, dear, you know
we are buying it on the installment
plan and that's all 1 feel entitled to.*
9
THE SUNLIGHT
RUB ON SUNLIGHT SOAP
1
LEAVE 30 T060
MINUTES
RINSE WELL
Sunlight Soap is better than
other soaps, but is best when
used in the Sunlight way (follow
directions).
Hard rubbing and boiling are
things of the past in homes
where Sunlight Soap is used as
directed.
Sunlight Soap will not injure
even the daintiest fabric or the
hands, and the clothes will be
perfectly white, woolens soft
and fluffy.
The reason for this is because
Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure,
contains no injurious chemicals
- indeed, nothing but the active,
cleansing, dirt -removing proper-
ties of soap that is nothing but
soap,
5c. 6';)'tdiraencl.f3"/tis 5c.
YOUR MONEY REFUNDED
by the dealer from whom yon
bayord1ght Soap i? 3 oa tiud
any O4use for complaint. 16;
LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO
THE GETTINO OF WEALTH.
Any vitality \V hiell the crusade agai est
wealth possesses lies in whatever truth
there may be in the charge 60 often made
that many of our Minimise fortunes are
the result not of the discovery of some
new idea or process, not of honest indust-
ry and economy in organization and ad.
minittration, but the result of extensive
privileges, of dishonest methods and of
that unearned increment which absorbs
frout the public more than it gives out
to the public. If there is ever a succoss-
ful attack made in this country upon
wealth, it will be due entirely to the
bleeders and dishonesty of those who
are in enjoyment of the largest share of
the nation's wealth. Wealth that is the
result of diehouesty, wealth that has
been accumulated by unfair privileges,
Woo tate.
Rhe --I hear of have just got mar-
ried. IS it too late to congratulate you?
Ilia -Oil, *nth to* hitt. 1 Imo martial
tta_r_wlyeti5a soa. . .
rioss
ills
nee
Pillf
s or crossness? Certainly. They remove the cause
-the crossness vanishes. A sluggish liver poisons
the blood, spoils the temper. Keep your liver active
and your bowels regular. Have a clear brain, a brave
heart, a hopeful outlook. One of Ayer's Pills at bedtime. E.
All vegetable. Sugar-coated. Sold for 60 years. -
We have no secrets! We publish 3.0. Ayer Co.,
the formulas of all our =Wm& Lowell. Mass.
that is the result of secret rebates and
discriminations. wealth tbat has been
accumulated by manipulation of the
markets, and by ruthless crushing out of
weaker competitors, wealth which has
been achieved by the power of monopoly
in cutting down the ,profits of producers
on 0136 side and advancing the cost to
consumers on the other, wealth that
represents mere greed, wealth that is
based on disobedience to statute and
economic law, wealth in short, which
has not boon administered upon the
baneficient prmciplo of giving to society
a larger share of the returns of enter -
pries and industry than cue keeps for
hitnself, such wealth especially when it
is enjoyed in vulgar display and with
subh disgusting frivolty as "monkey -
dinners," invites hatred and is built
upon the shifting sands of disaster. -
Wall Street Journal.
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willre-
ceive
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with,qasnogevdae .tn phr ei cr
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