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The Wingham Times, 1906-11-08, Page 22 MILBURN'S LAXA-IIVER PILLS are iniad, sure and safe,snd are a perfeotr regulator of the system, They gently unlock the eeerotiono, clear away all effete and waste matter from the system, and give tone and vitality to the whole intestinal tract, oaring Constipa. tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyepep- sia, floated Tongue, Foul Breath, Jaun. dice, Heartburn, and Water Brash. Mrs, R. S. Ogden, Woodatoolt', N,B., writes; "My husband and myself have need Mil - burn's. Laxa-Liver Pills for a number of yearn. We think we cannot do without them. They are the only pills we ever take." 1.'rioe 25 dente or five bottles for $1,00, at all dealers or direct on receipt of price. The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. TO ADVERTISERS Notice of changes most be left at this office not later than. Saturday noon. The copy for changes mast be left not later than Ilion as evening. Casual advertisements necepted up to noon Wednesday of cash week. ESTABLISHED 1872 TlE WINiHADI TINES. H. B. ELLIOTT, POW/SUER urn 2aMPROPRIESCOo THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 8, 1.906. PULSE OF THE PRESS. If the Lendou investigation is to have any effect, in working a reformation in politicians and iii political methods, it must be complete. It mast net be con- fined to the evils of one party. Every- body kno s that, black as are some of the things that have been dragged into the light, there ate others just as blank awaiting aa honest investigation. Will these, too, be exposed? if not the effect of the work that has already been done will he largely destroyed. The sense of fair play of which the community is pos- sessed will reaent any attempt to make a soape•goat of anyone.- Woodstock Sentinel •Review. However, it may be sufiioieut to de- duce from the victory in North Bruce the fact that the Liberal party in On- tario ie still a factor to be reckoned with, especially where good candidates are ohosen and properly supported, It is quite possible that the Liberal party at Ottawa may be in the way of ber;efiting ma.e than a little by the eircnmstanco that the Conservatives are in power at Toronto. Sir. John Macdonald was al- ways credited with feeling quite easy about Onta io being Liberal in local politics, for the very good reason that there are a lot of people itr Ontario who prefer not to have the same party in both places, a rule which does not seem to arply, certainly not to the same ex- tent, in the other Provinces. --Montreal Herald. "If you are really anxious to ]earn how long a couple have been married all you have to do is cote whether his friends or hers fill the honse," said a woman who alwae s makes good use of her bright brown eyes. "At first a man invites all his bachelor friends to the house, under the impres• lion, which is invariably wrong, that they will like his wife and she will like them. Whatever the reason, most we - men find their hnsband's bachelor friends dreadfully dull. There may be a pre- tense of. liking them at the start, but that forced enthusiasm oozes out and the wives greet the ',visitors with cold handshakes. When a woman seems as bored as that, even a young husband re- alizes it Will be a kindness to his old ohnme not to ask them around any more. Perhaps in his heart he knows they are dull, too, and that's what drove him into matrimony."IS"ew Stork Press, Relieves Itchin Heals the Kia SHB difficulty of stopping the jj dreadful itching, burning sen- sations, and of healing the raw and irritated skin, is what has made :eczema, salt rheum and running sores seem impossible to cure. But there is a cure for everyonewho will persist in the use of Dr. Chase°a' Ointment. There is scarcely a lleigharhood in . this country where Dr. Chase's Oint. 'neat has not produced some remark.• able cures, and for this reason we request you to ask your neighbors about it. By' Its antiseptic influences Dr. Chas a' s Ointmentg thoroughly cleanses the sore to which it isap*; plied, then soothes the irritation and heals the skin,. It is useful ill) scores of ways.wherever there is itching stain or a sort that refuses to heed ; SO vitae a box, at all dealers, 1 Or Stitatitanteret, Bitters $t co., Torl $ENTi.NCE SERMONS, One does not become a saint by dill' covering the sine of ether$, Ton can run a bueiuesa without each, but not without character. Many a son's solid vices spring from hts father's veneer virtues. It's better to have a small 000key well done than a large cake all dough. The man who sneers at sincerity has taken a long course in the school of sin The bnrd:n you bear for another is the best badge you can wear as a Christian. When a man really has a treasure in heaven he does' objeot to paying taxes 00 it. • The path to heaven is paved. with good ietentiona crystallized into worthy acts The formation of a child's character is a greater work than the reformation of many men. It's possible to throw out your crumbs of comfort in swth a way as to make them seem like cinders is the eyes of others. Some who think they are showing the hardness of their hearts by their eine are revealing only the softness of their heads. Ecze,aw for CO rears. "I was troubled with eczema for twenty years and was treated by three doctors to no avail. Dr. Chase's Oint- meut has cured me completely and I have not had the eligheet return of this disease. -John Pratt, Blyth, Huron 0o., Ont. _i No Irish Halfbreeds. "I see" said the Proper Fool, "that one of the mounted police has had quite a trip through the artios. He came aoross a Sootch%an up there who had married an Esgnimaux." "I raise to remar.rk." put in Mister McGaherty,"that he found no Oirishmin up there married t' squaws. There's English half-breeds an' there be Scotch half-breeds, but, by oripes, ye never saW an Oirish half-breed! "The Oirish is moighty pertickler who they 'eooiate wad, so they are. Oirish- min that would marry a colored woman would be disowned be the whole nation, so he would. His mother wud dol uv a broken heart, so she wud, an' his sloth - ere wouldn't spake to him on the street so they wouldn't. ' •No matter where the poor Oirish goes they hunt up a white woman any ways, an' the chiider do be white an' mostly redheaded, so they are, and eom nv them hey freckles on thim. You never saw freckles on a half-breed, so ye didn't and a red-headed mnlatty would be a proper curiosity. "Oireland may be poor, but she's whoite, so she is. She may be down- trodden an' persecuted, but she's whoite -she's whoite! I haven't trot nothin, agin colored folks, whether they be red, or black or yellah, but ns Oirish won't marry thim, and that's and ind to it. The English, an' the Frinoh, an' the Scotch are welkim to thim, sd they are, but uothin' in ours, thank ye kindly. "The worst Oirishman in the wor.rld may be as black as the divil insoide, but he's got a whole pelt anyhow, an' that'll stand' him in a good stead whin Gabriel blows his bugle, and don't ye forget it, me heretic friend." -The Khan. TJeRI/IOLT DISTRESSING. Nothing can cause more pain and more distress than Piles. No wonder many Pile sufferers say their lives are burdens to them. Ointments and local treatments may relieve but cannot care. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem -Rod is guaran- teed to cure any case of Piles. If Hem -Reid doesn't cure you, you get your money back. Hem•Roid is a tablet taken,internaily, thus removing the cause. $1,000.00 guarantee goes with every bottle. A month's treatment for $1.00, at all drngaists, or the Wilson.Fyle 0o., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. A The Best Christmas Present For a Little Money. When your Christmas present is a year's subscription to The Youth's companion you give ak much in good reading as would fill twenty 400 -page novels or books of history or travel or biography ordinarily (meting $1.60 a volume. Nor do you give quantity. For more than half a century the wisest, WOO renowned, most entertaining of writers have been eontributoro to The Companion. You need never fear that The Cotnpanton will be inapproprivate or unwelcome. The boy, the girl -- every other member of the family, -- will insist upon a share in it. There is no other present costing so little that goes so far. Oa receipt of $1.75, the yearly enb, oeriptioii price, the publishers send to the new anbseriber The Companion's Font- Leaf Ranging Calendar for 1907, lithographed in twelve colors and gold, and eubecription certificate for the fifty two issues of the year's volnm*, Full illustrated Announcement of The Comp anion for 19071 Will be sent with temple copies of the4papelr to'thy ad• dtees free, Subseribss who get new fiubeot1ptiond will reoeire $16,100 00 in cath and tnally other special awards. Send for idiot. motion. TIM YOUTH'S COMPANION, 144 Berkley Street, Boston, WO. 1'H (; WINGHAM TIMES I NOVEMBER 8, )906 lr- TwU11 yEARs tun! Loeai hi8tory of t tzues"yyOs. j, Itelltg Yrolnt Tlla „Times"' f Ins. L Front Tun WINONA)/ TD1Es of Frulay, November 5 la, 1886.) IiEIOTIBORIIOOD NEWS A farmer near Benmiiler planted a half acro of potatoes tine year, and got a return of one pailful of '•Murpbies." J. R )3.tlfnur, who has taught in S S. No 4, H.iwick, for two years, hue been enhakvd to teach the Lekelet school next year ate asters- of $450 While R,bt. Sturdy, of the 9th con- oc•s.i.iit of 'Pest Wawanosh, was busy relative for the threshing machme a 1 w days ago, he fell about fifteen feet tarns a sea Mild, which he was erecting, breaking his leg a little above the ankle. The Luoknow seheol board are so pleased with their principal, D, D Yule, that they have engaged him for next year with an immense of salary of $50, making hie salary $650. PERsoNAL9. Nelson Butcher, offioial court steno- grapher, of Toronto, was in town over Sunday and was the guest of S YonhiIl. Miss Jane Robinson, of Harriston, ie in town visiting her many friends, and is the guest of Mrs Robt Orr, Caleb Griffin and his daughter, Mtss Tillie Griffin arrived in Wingham laat Friday night from their farm near Bran- don, Mau , and tbey will remain in town all winter visiting their many friends. Rev, J bn Towler and wife, with tbeir daughter, Miss Martha Towler, arrived here ou Wednesday afternoon from Brantford and will matte Wing - ham their future home. They will re- side in the handsome cottage, on the Binevale road, whioh Dr. Towler re- cently erected for hie parents, and which has just been finished. When cutting hot bread, first dip the knife in hot water. Many people say they are "all nerves," amity startled or upset, easily worried and irritrited. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are just the remedy suoh people require. They restore perfect harmony of the nerve centres and give new nerve force to slaattared nervous systems. L004L NEWS. The gold watch belonging to Mrs. K take, which was stolen from her house e short time ago, was recovered in Bel - grave ori Monday, a party there 'laving paid a tramp $8 for it. The tramp has not been found yet. Some sneak -thief entered tie residence of nelson Grifiia daring the absence of Mrs, Griffin last Saturday afternoon, but ho was interrupted in his work by the entrance of the servant girl and he made off without securing any booty. At a meeting of the Wingham Reform Association, held la J. A. Morton's office on Tuesday evening, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Wm. Robertson, president; J. J. Andetson, lst vice-pres.; Wm, Ridd, end vioe•pres.; J• A. Morton, secretary; Walter Soott, treasurer; chairman of ward committees -let ward, Wm. Gan- nett; 2nd ward, Halsey Park; 3rd ward, S, Graney; 4th ward, Jas. W. Inglis. T. Seli db Oo., of aarriston, havetpur- chased the stook of E. W. Hendershot amountiug to about $11,000, and will oommeuce, ou Saturday morning, a great slaughter sale of the entire stock. Andrew Murray, long and favorably known as a horseshoer in this town, has given up the busidess.he has .parried on for many years, on the Diagonal road, and has entered the employment of Wm. Gannett, on-Viotoria street. About 10 30 o'clock on Wednesday morning a flee broke out in a barn be- longing to Richard Walters, sr., near Lowet Wingham, and in a short time the building, together with its contents consisting of the yearss crop of grain and roots, and veined at about $100, and all the agrionitaral implements, were rednped to ashes. Bilious Colic Quick relief is afforded by Chamberlain's colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It never faits and is pleasant and safe to take. • The attack may be warded off by taking a double dose of this remedy as soon as the first indication of the disease appears, i'or solo by druggists everywhere. w eeieTas Managed Like an Engine. One-third of a housekeeper's life is spent in her kitchen. One-half the labor of housekeeping is at the cool: stove. Your range can double or halve the cooking slavery of housekeeping. A poor range adds worry as well as work, and worry multiplies the housekeeper's care. Gel a range that reduces the work and eliminates the worry, The Pandora Range is as easily and accurately managed as an engine -it responds.to the touch as quickly and certainly as the huge engine obeys the hand of the engineer. The Pandora Range saves worry, and because worry kills, it prolongs life. Sold by enterprising dealers everywhere. Write for booklet. 9S McCLr F`} London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St, John, N.B. eezetareifeale YOUNG & 141cBTJENEY SOLE AGENTS. !/VVVW'VVVVWWWWVVVWVVV AAAAAAMAAWMAAAAMAAAAAAA OUR BEST COMBINATION THE TWO PAPERS YOU WANT THE WINDHAM TIMES Your Paper and that Rest of alt Weeklies THE FAMILY HERALD AND WEEKLY STAR, MONTREAL, i BOT$ $1.75 And with the Family Herald and Weekly Star will be included the moat beautiful picture ever given to newspaper readers. It is a gravure 22x29 inohes entitled "A TUG OF WAR." It is easily worth a two dollar bill. TheWu, -`G i,eni TIMES willsupplyall local a ewtl markets, social happen. ingot, eta , etc, and the Family Herald and Weekly Star will give you a nom- bination of the gr;ateet weekly newspaper cover.ng every portion of the globe, a great family magazine, far durpasefng any of the. English or American magazines in interesting family reading, and without doubt the best farmer's paper on the continent. No paper printed in the English iangnage gives its readers such big wane as the Family herald and Weakly Star. Sample copies Of the beautiful piotura May be seen at thin *Moe. Call or tend your subscription to THE TIMES, Winngham, TIMES TOWN DIRECTORY, BAPmsT Onomon-Sabbath 5ervloee at U a m and 7 p m. Sunday School at 2:80 p m. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. E. R. h'itoh, B,A„ pastor, B.Y P.U. meets Monday evenings 8 p.m. Abner Cosens S.S. Superintendent. MurnomST OHtmo$-Sabbath services at 11 a m and 7 p m, Sunday School at 2:30 p m. Epworth League every Mon- day evening. General prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W. G. Howson, pastor. W. B. Towler, DMD., S. S. Superintendent. PRESBYTERIAN O$UROR--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. Perris, pastor, I,. Harold, 8 S. Su- perintendent, ' ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, SPIsooPSL-Sab- bath services at 11 a m and 7 p m, Sun- meetiing on WednesdayGeneral Soltool at 2:30p m. evveniprayer Rev. T. S. Boyle, M, A., B. D., Rector and S. S. Superintendent. John Taylor and Ed Nash, assistant Superintendents, SALVATION A 5 -Service at 7 and 11 a m and 3 and 8 p m on Sunday, and every evening during the week at 8 o'olook at the barracks, POST 0n'xon-Irl Macdonald Block. Office hours from 8 a m to 6:30 p m. Peter Fisher, postmaster. PtmLId Linna.w '-Library and free reading room in the Town Hall, will be open every afternoon from 2 to 5:30 o'clock, and eve*, evening from 7 to 9:80 o'clock. Mise Mand Robertson, librarian. Tows Oovxou-Thos, Bell, Mayor; S. Bennett, David Bell, Thos. Forbes, Geo. 0. Hanna, D. E. McDonald and Wm. Nicholson, Ooanoillors; J. B. Fer- guson, Olerk and Treasurer; Anson Dalmage, Assessor. Board meets first Monday evening in each month at 8 o'clock. PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD. -A. E. Lloyd (ohair'man), J.D. Long, J. 3, Homuth, T. Hall, H. Kerr, Win. Moore, Alex. Ross, 0. N. Griffin. Secretary, John F. Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson. Meetings second Tuesday eveningin each month. HIGH SCHOOLBOARD.-Dr.A, J. Irwin, (chairman) Dr. J. P. Kennedy, Dr. P. Macdonald, John Wilsoa, V.S., J. A. Morton, C. P. Smith, W. F. VanStone. Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Cosens, treasurer. Board meets second Monday evening in eaoh month. Jima SCHOOL TEACHERS -J. A.Tay- lor, B,A., principal ; J. G. Workman, B. A.., mahematical master ; Miss F. B. Ketcheson, B.A., teaoher of English and Moderns. Pomo SOHOOL Ao Musgrove, Principal, Miss Brook, Miss Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Miss Wilson, Miss Cummings, and Miss Matheson. BOARD OF HEALTH -Thos. Bell, (chairman), R. Porter, Thomas Greg- ory, John Wilson, V.S., J. B. Ferguson, Secretary; Dr. J. R. Macdonald, Medical Health Officer, OUTSIDE ADVERTISING Orders for the insertion of advertisements such teachers business sme mechanics wanted, articles forale ornfact any kind of an advt. in any of the Toronto or other city papers, may be left at the Truss office. This work will receive promptattention and will save people the trouble of remitting, for and forwarding advertisements, Lowest rates will be quoted on application. Leave or send your next work of this kind to the ESTABLISHED 1872 THE WINUiI4i Tins. I8 I'UBLISUED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING -1T- The Times Ofilee, Beaver Block WINGt$AM, ONTARIO, Menus or SzrasoaIPTIon-$1.00 per annum in advance 81,601f not so paid, No paper disoon• tinned till all arrears are paid, except at the option of the publisher. ADVERTrsns0 seem. - Legal and other mama! advertisements l00 per Nonpariet line for Bret insertion, 80 per line for earth subsequent insertion, Advertisements in local oolumns are charged 10 ets. per line for Bret insertion, and 5 cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements of Strayed, Farms for Sale or to Rent and similar, 51.00 for first three weeks, and 26 cents for each subsequent in- sertion. Ootrrneoc RAT18-The following table ahox s our ratee for the insertion of advertisements for specified periods :- • - sPAo8. 1 vs. 8 Mo. 8 Tdo, tarn OneColumxi x..,,..,..$70.06 140.00 822.50 88 00 Half Column 40.00 25.00 15.00 0.00 QaarterOolmmn....., 20.00 12.50 7.50 8.00 One Inch 6.00 8.00 2,00 1.25 Advertisements without a eoifio directions will be inserted till forbid and charged a000rd- ingl . Transient advertisements mast be paid for invadvanoe. Tire Jon DEPARTMENT is .stocked with an extensive assortment of all regateitesfer Print' ing, affording facilities not equalled in the county for turning out first class work, Lora, - type and appropriate oats for all styles of Post- ers, Hand Bills, etc., and the latest styles of choice fancy type for the finer classes of print li. B. ELLIOTT, Proprietor and Publisher el• Membe�D the ritiie MedicalAssocia- tion. Gold Medallist in Medicine. Special attention paid to diseases of Women and Child, ren. Office hours -1 to 4 p. m.; 7 to 9 p. m DR. MACDONALD, Centre Street Wingham, Ontario. DR. AGNEW, Physician, Surgeon, eto. OftlDrug Store. Night calls answeer d.aatt the office T R ROBT.O, REDMOND, M. R.O.S. (Eng) L L. R. O. P. (Load.) PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. Office, with Dr. Chisholm. Il, VANSTONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, RTC. rPrivate te of interestd t.. No ocmimhisssiioncharged I Mort gages, lld e'Ofoe Beaved r Block. Winghabought and JA. MORTON, • BARRISTER, &o. • Wingham, Ont E. L. DIognesoN DIIDr. rr Howes DICKINSON & HOMES BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, Etc. Money To LOAN. Osriota: Meyer BIook, Wingham.. JOHN RITCHIE, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, Wingham, Ont ARTHUR J. IRWIN, D. D. 8., L, D. Si Dentalo collf ege Dental Surgery Lloeutof atee of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario, Office over Post Office, Winghatn. v V • J. PRIDE, B. 8. A., L. D. S.;D. D. S. DENTIST (Successor to Dr. Holloway) Will continue the practice in the office lately occupied by Dr. Holloway, in the Beaver Block, Wingham. • ALEX, KELLY, Wingham, Ont. LICENSED AUCTIONEER For the County of Huron. dales of all kinds oondueted at reasonable rates. Orders left at the Trues office will receive prompt attention. FARMERS articles theanyone wisheto having of should advert TINES OFFICE, Whitehall". ties the same for Bale in the Trigs. Our large circulation tells and it will bestrangge indeed if you do not get a customer. We can'tgnarantee thatou will sell because lou may ask more for the article or stook than it is worth. Send your advertisement to the Tzacas and try this articles. plan of disposing of your stook and other IT PAYS TO AuvERrrSE IN THE i RAILWAY TIME TABLES. GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM. =AIRS LEAVE rola London 8.40 a.m.... 8.80p.m. Toronto &East 10.40 S.M6.48 a.m.... 2.40p.m. Kincardine -11.15 a.m.., 2.08 p.m .... 9.I6p.m, ARRIVE Bole Kincardine ....8.40 a.m»10.40 a.m.... 2.40 p.m. London,......,.. 11.10a.m..w 7.86p.m. Palmerston 9,85 $,m, Toronto & East2.08 p.fn.... 9.16 p.m. L. HAROLD, Agent, Wingham. • CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAlt, t'RAtNS weave MOR TorontoaudBast 8.58 rt.m.,.. 8.54 p.m. Teeewater 1,25 p,in....10.81 p.m. Yearn Miele Teeswater..... 8,46 a.m.... 8.20 p.m. Toronto and Fleet ' 1,17 m ...10.48 p.m. , H. 1311)119113.R, Agenf,Wingham. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE Manse Destatre; COPYRIGHTS SGC Anyone tending a eketrh and description rosy rrniekl ascertain our opinion free Whether ar Invention is pronnbly DntantabTe, Communier Mesta -Idly confidential. handbook on Patent. sent frea oldest n eney for securing patents. Patents taken tdrengh Munn h Go. ttittplv,1 round notice, Without ehasgs, in she Sdentitic Bnteriran. A hattdsentete ilfnitrated weekly: rnrkett tile. Calatlon of any suele ti pp.t��nrna1 7`erma, er tj» : fear 6me�ntba, eol•t by an e 1 IR� o64oUi. N a" +t4. etsh't t. r LABOR SAVING .1 Machinery Now Duce Much Wont; otr the hairy Barna. The success of the milking macbine completes the cycle of labor saving an. paratus on the dairy farm. One may now plow the land with a riding sulky plow drawn by horses or a traction motor, rework it with a riding harrow, put In the corn seed with a riding planter, do much of the cultivating with a macbine upon which he ride4, drawn by horses, and cut the silage porn with a horse harvester. Tho bun- dies or stalks must be lifted by hand upon the low down wagon, baUled to the silo and fed into a cutter operated by a gasoline engine. This cuts stalks and ears .into pieced, say, a quarter of aninch long, which are conveyed up in- to the silo by an automatic carrier, Haying and Silage AD»Aratue, Hay is Iikewise cut, harvested and baled by machinery. Then for feeding the silage is shoveled Into a tank that runs upon an overhead track in front of the cows, and. a suitable feed bl deposited in front of each cow. Hay is brought from the bay to the cow stable by an adaptation of the horse fork. The milking machine has done away with the drudgery of that operation. The machlue is washed by power, and milk cans and pails art sterilized with a steam jet after being perfectly cleaned by the improved washing powder in the water. Handling Bedding and Manure. The bedding used for Cows is run through a power cutter so that It Is fine and absorbs all the urine. The cow's droppings and soaked° bedding are shoveled into a tank or carrier that is lowered to the floor while being fillet!, then rises to its track above and runs da rect to the manure spreader, into whi the contc::ts are automatically dumped. Horses 1, ,u1 the spreader to the held, and the manure is at once applied.--, American Agriculturist. Stack Ties. If it is necessary to stack the hay is the field it should be protected in some way from the rain and snow. A. good method is suggested by Kimball's Dairy Farmer, as follows: Take three small wires and weave into them slat$ about eight inches wide and Sour feet long. These are placed about two feet • apart. The length of the frame will depend entirely upon the Height of the stack. It should be large enough to cover the top of the stack well an keep the hay from being blown off. It you wish to improve on this tack tarred felt roofing paper to the slats. This gives you a practically tight roof over the stack. Dairy Talk of Today I A successful Ohio dairywoman says; "I think there Is no other branch of farming where brains count for Se much as in dairying. There are great possibilities for the dairyman of tib- day If he will only apply the right principles in breeding, feeding and care of the dairy cow." Get the Beet. After raising 200 calves In twenty- six years I find myself learning some new things every year, also Iearning some old Iessons over and over. (Me lesson I do not forget is that the mother and the sire must both be the best we can get, either by raising or buying, of the same breed and notet for their constitutional vigor, which 1 the chief cornerstone of success. -Mas- sachusetts Dairyman. At the Front. The unprogressive dairyman fails to realize that the dairy world not on "do move," but is rapidly advanclnr. Perhaps he is one of the best of the old school, yet is at the tag end of the procession of modern improvement, whereas if he would get out ardong the alert dairymen of the present and imbibe the newer ideas he might be easily a leader in the front of modern dairy progress. -B. Benjamin, Jr. Uniform Quality In Cheese. The question of how to obtain a clean, mild flavored cheese all the time is one of the very important consid- erations to solving the problem of gets ting the people to eat more cheese. The Milking Machine. Now that the milking machine ap- pears to be an assured success it puts a new face upon the whole business. Any man familiar with live stock grow- ing Is free to admit that in no line of stock handling is there so good an op- portunity for money making as that of dairying, the serious objections to It being its everlasting 305 days a year job. There is no let up, we may say, night or day, Sabbaths. or holidays. All means hard and persistent work in the dairy. But when you come to think of it, what kind of work can you engage in and make money at it that Is not an everlasting job Without lot up, year and year out? As we said 'before, now that the milking machine fs proving a success the great bugbear of keeping milkers on the farm is be - Ing removed, and the farm itself can take heart again. -Home and Varna. ldtlildtng 'Up n 10hiry. Tierd. At present there are two distinct phases of building up a dairy herd. First, there Is the building up of the dairy herd of &pedigreed animals . of Some distinct breed, and, second, there is the building up of a herd of useful milk producers by a system of upgrad- ing which ought to be so conducted as to lead up to the former. We are of necessity forced to build up dairy herds,tint, st, been is few e dalrp men at the beginning of these operations Irate , enincfent eapitel to purchase dairy herds out and out; second, as little more than 1 per Cent of our cattle are pedigreed, such entrants could not be secured, and, thirtl, dalrytnen W110 know their butttneets will not dispose of their best cows unless at fancy krk''re,..., y{ 0. Shaw, Michigan,