HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-07-11, Page 44
WINGRAM TIMES, JULY 11, t907
, TQ ADVERTISERS
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• 11.111YLIOTT•. PURI I5SIR ,SNA PSOPBrg!i on
THURSDAY, JULY 11. ,907.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
If the troth were only known it
would probably be found that the demon
"ir'aft" which theOonservatives pretend
to, see in Federal; affairs has a greater in-
fluence on the administration of the
Provincial Department of Laude and
Mitres thea is for the public good. There
are "friends" of the. Ontario Govern-
ment, who could be named, who figure
altogether too prominently in the con -
corns of New Ontario, --Ottawa Free
Press.
;The returns of revenue and expendi•
tura for the, fiscal period of nine months,
which closed March 31, have been prat•
tically all received by the Finance De -
payment, and it is, now possible to dater•
mine the amount of the surplus for the
last fiscal period. It is almost sixteen
and a,half millions.IThe revenue amount-
ed to $67,969,328, and the expenditures
of revenue amount to $51,542,161, leaving
a difference on the right side of the
Government books of $16,427,167. The
expenditure on capital account daring
the period was $14,234,625, leaving $2,-
192,545 for the reduction of the Domin-
ion debt. The statement is by all odds
the most satisfactory in the history of
the Dominion,
The June estimatesof acreage made
by the Provincial Departments of Agri-
culture in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and
Alberta furnish an opportunity to make
a calculation of the probable grain area
in the west this '.fear. In Manitoba, it
ie announced, there are 2,789.658 acres
under wheat, as compared with 3,141,537
in 1006, a decrease of 351,984, in Basket
ohewan the official revision of the figures
published a few days ago makes the total
area, ander wheat 1,966,774 acres, as
compared with 1,730,586 in 1906, an in-,
s
raise of 236 1 There for Alberta
S8 fi a s o A herrn
have not yet been published, but the De-
putyMinister of Agriculture, Mr. George
Harcourt, expresses the opinion that
there will be an increase of 50 per cent,
in the acreage of winter wheat and 15
per cent. in that of spring wheat.
Notwithstanding the very decided
reverse sustained at the last general
election in the Pravinoe, the Liberal
party is rapidly recovering from the
blow, and today" from one end to the
other it is characterized by hope and
elithnsiasm. Liberals who for various
reasons satisfactory at the time to them-
selves refrained from supporting the
candidates of the party if even they did
not go the length of voting against them,
now realize the mistake they made, and
are saying so by hundreds. They have
discovered that, while Premier Whitney
in his gratitude for the victory ac-
knowledged that it was largely due to
Liberals, he very soon forgot all about
this phase of the campaign, apparently,
and has acted and is now acting as an
extreme partisan both in methods and
in legislation.—Brockville Recorder.
A, questionable judgment surely is
that in the Bmmerson case, apparently
countenancing (: o g newspaper attache upon_
She private character of p2blio men on
the ground that they are made in the
public interest, The public interest is
very apt to mean in reality the interest
or the animosity of a party and the cir-
culation of the paper. As a general rule
it is solely desirable that private charac-
ter should be spared in the political fray.
Something of course, depends on the
nature of the charge. Is it of a kind
directly affecting public integrity, as it
would be if for example, it involved
pecuniary fraud? Or is it simply a case
fm ra[[mHelplHelpl
Fallino
9
Thus cried the hair. And a
kind neighbor came to the res.
cue with a bottle of Ayers'
Hair Vigor. The hair was
saved! This was because
Ayer's Hair Vigor is a regular
hair medicine. Failing hair is
caused by a germ, and this
medicine completely destroys'
these germs. Then the healthy
_ scalp gives rich'; bealthy hair.
The best And el a testis restal•-
"So'ld for ever Wordy xie+►rs."
111f►,Ce 1ip�_... � _ I. I iWtwYi1.7L+ww
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010011111111101.111.1111111 ..I e I iiwaia
of private lioentiouanest? Private lioon-
tioneneas might have been charged
against pomeri, Walpole, Fox, Palmer-
ston and othere tubo are deemed •tp have
*erred. the -public honorably and well,
it unqueettonebly true that, as a reale,
private morality .is the foundation of
pablte #integrity, Thepeople Will always
do well in requiring a oerttfoete of pier.
ate oharaeter asthe condition of public
treat, Bat of .all liberties that which
least calla: for jadicial enlargement fu
our .state; of political war, apparently
ialiberty ofdefatnation,--GJldwin Staith
in Weekly San.
'rand and misrepresentation are
claimed in an action entered at Oerroode
Hell recently by the Toronto Rolltr
Bearing Company against Adam Linton,
11 D Henderson, Bernard Wood, D Cob•
le k
b oxo , Hugh. Lynn, Wm Bowman,
Milton Oavanagh and J Frank Adams,
comprising the Reorganization Comwit..
tee of the Henderson Rol18! Bearing
Manufacturing Company and Standard
Bearings, Limited. The plaintiffs' claim
15 to set aside an agreement dated Feb-
raary 1906, made between the plaintiff
company and the individual defendants
as the. Reorganization Qomtnittee of the
shareholders of the Henderson holler
Bearing Manufacturing company,
Limited, on the ground of fraud and
misrepresentation, 0 F Niehaus and
William Breese.have entered action to
set aside an allotment of 24 and60 shares
respeotively in the Standard Bearing
Company. AB Henderson enters snit
to restrain J F Adams voting on 882
shares of Standard Bearing Company,
The plaintiffs allege the new company is
manufacturing autos instead of roller
bearings,—Toronto Globe,
•
CONSERVATIVES HAVE SINNED,
To read the vavorings of the Opposi•
tion press, one would suppose all the
honor, integrity, morality and intelli-
gence were to ,be Pound only Upon the
Conservative side. This allusion meat
have been rudely dispelled after a re-
cent speech of the Minister of Justice
had Circulated throughout the country.
First it was that the government had
been false to public trust; and that
grafting and rakeeoff were the order of
the day in Liberal circles. . The Minis-
ter of Justice, when he ruthlessly Dorn•
wetted upon the findings of the Royal
Commission on Insurance, and held up
to public gaze. Hon. G. E. Foster, the
chief aide
of
g verment, as a man
who had profited by the use of trust
funds, which he had planed in jeopardy
by hazardous speculation, quickly turn•
ed the attack and matters were plaoed
in their true light before the people.
Then individual members of the Lib•
eral party were oalamniated and held
up to derision. In response to this at-
tack Mr. Aylesworth promptly respond-
ed with an al usion to matters of history
which were far from palatable to the
Conservatives.
The units of the Opposition have
charged against the government all the
sine in the calendar, of matey they have
themselves been guilty. No person,
however, has had the temerity to ghee•
tion that as a result of sound policy and
wise administration, Canada enjoys now,
and has for years a degree of prosperity
impossible tinder ,Conservative rale.
CHURCH NOTES.
-Rev. Dr. J. G. Shearer has accepted
the Secretaryehip of the new department
of moral and social reform of the Pres-
byterian Church.
The collection at the evening service.
in St. Andrew's- Presbyterian church
next Sabbath will be maid of the Lord's
Day Alliance, The pastor, Rev. D. Per
rie will preach a sermon bearing on the
work of the Alliance.
Mr. John Baohanan, of Toronto„Field
Secretary of the Dominion • Alliance,
was in town over Sunday and addressed
the bongregation of the Presbyterian
chutoh in the morning and that of the
Methodist church in the evening, deal-
ing With the work of the Alliance.
In the Baptist Church next Sunday,.
the Rev. E. Edgar Allen will conduct
the services both morning and evening.
Morning subject: "The Stewardship of
life,” iliatthet^ 25: 14.30, and Luke 19;
(r.faaist, Mies Sperling; oonveners if
comtaitteee-mmaber'ahip. W J 'Fftlav^
son; reception, Sop. Eve; ceentint'al,
IL Roaebogae; wet taintnens, Mrs,
McKie; vseitetion, S. W. hewer. :The
elate will pleuro on the prairie on Fsiday
afternoons ;hie week; tea willbe served
about 6.80,
FUTURE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA:!
Sir William Mulock k Draws Bright.
Picture at Vi1'toria..
Sir William 14Culack was greeted et
Victoria last week by a large gather-- •
ing of members of the Canadian Club.
to whom he spoke on the great future
of the West in general and Victoria
and Vancouver Island in particular,
Speaking of the great scarcity of lab-
or in all parts of Canada, Sir William •
declared it was a good sign. Reading
the press item regarding the vast re-
ceipts of Lucerne, Switzerland, . he'
pointed out that Switzerland with
5,000,000 people had no industries, no
seaboard, nothing but scenery, and •
prospered by nothing but the tourist
trade. Vancouver Island, he declar-
ed, was the Switzerland of America,
for Switzerland had no finer lakes to.
offer than those of Cowichan, Spoke,
etc.; teeming with fish, while besides
Vancouver Island and Victoria had
groat natural resources, great fruit and
agricultural possibilities, and had be-
sides the broad Pacific at its door, Vic-
toria's opportunities were greater than
those of Lucerne. '
Of the future trade of the Pacific
he spoke in glowing terms, and said'
all the east looked with hope to Brit.
ish Columbia, believing its future to
be big with promise, Moreover, tai
connection with Mexican trade, he
pointed out the great market that'
country provides. He had found Ox-,.
ford county apples on sale in Mexico,.
and they had netted the dealer one'
hundred per cent. The Gehamtefee
Railway, beside going from coast to
coast, provided' with its auxiliary
steamer, trades on the Atlantic and:.
Pacific alternatively and is a competi-
tive route to the 0. 1'. R., via the
Gulf of Mexico.
HIGH TRUCE OF GOO.
Thus Campbell -Bannerman Describes
Relations With U. S.
Sir Henry Campbell -Bannerman,
spetlking at Manchester, said they
should be -thankful that Mr. Balfour
has at last been brought into line on
the question of colonial preference,
but he might have refrained from col-
lapsing in penitent form until the
guests of the nation had returned
home, and the movement to create
dissensions between the Government
and the colonies had been defeated.
Sir Henry Campbell -Bannerman, quot-
ing Sir Wilfrid Laurier, said that Eur-
ope is Iiving in an armed. camp. He
described d the 3,000 00 mi les of frontier
between the United States and Can -
ads and. contin
ued•
"What could be
finer than this high truce of Goa--
(cheers)—under which the two free
sister nations • have resolved to live
within the security of. that defenceless
barrier, to banish these symbols of
strife, prejudice and suspicion, from
their highway frontier? (Cheers.) Is
the relationship so established less
noble than those which subsist be-
tween the nations of the old world,
nations which still hug the ancient
blasphemy that armed force is the
only title to respect, the only guaran-
tee of security? I think not. The new
world has shown us a more excellent
way. Heaven help these great confed-
erations of free people. May they con-
tinue to prosper, and to go on in all
that makes for real strength of State,
to maintain in all its radiance their
bright example." (Cheers.)
Average Wages in, Canada.
The Census and Statistics Bureau
has issued a bine book as to wage-
earners in Canada by occupation c -
cording to returns of the lastdecenllal
census. The average yearly earnings
at regular work of all classes of oc-
cupations is $387.16 for males and
$181.98 for females. Trade and trans-
portation pays an average wage of
$503.62 for every male employe. Pro-
fessional men, including clergy, Gov-
ernment employes, musicians, teach-
ers, engineers, etc, earn $676.88 per
year on the average. Average earnings
of males employed in manufacturing,
$403.14; in agriculture, $207.55 in'do-
mestic and personal service, 4272.46.
Of the whole number of wage-earners,
814,930, the males constitute 81.75 per
cent., and tlxe-females 18.83 per cent.,;
and, comparing the totals of all wage-
earners of beth sexes by classes with,
the -totals pf all classes, it is found
that the 'agricultural class gives em-
ployment to 8.93 pet cent., the do-
mestie and personal class to 25.01 per
cent., the fisheries class to 0.01, the
forestry and lumbering class to 2.02
per cent., the manufacturing class to
33.83 per cent., the mining class to
2.93 per cent,, the• professional class ,
to 6.34 per cent., and the trade and,
transportation class to 10.37 per cent.
Dealing AM; Strikes.
1227. Evening Subject: "The Seventh The coal mines peril from which
Commandment, or The Social Sine"
Exodus 20(13, and Matthew 5: 27.28.
Everybody welcome.
The Bummer school of the Goderich
district of the Methodist church will be
held at the Hafbor park inGoderioh
from July 29th. to August 4th. Among
the speakeis will be Rev. C. E.
of Toronto, associate lnafesioliary from
Japan; Rev. R, Embereon, , B. A., re•
turned missionary from Japan; Rev. 8.
. Oeterhout, Ph. D., returned t'niesion.
cry frosty British Qoinmbis,' beiidei the
best talent froni Wingham, Cloderich
and Stratford distrlets.
The regular bnafuerie'meethsg Of the
Eureka Bible tilos of Ohl Methodist
Sendai' Oohed waw held en 'Thursday
e'(rening Inst. The rep(frts of tehp oftloers
Mews 2 -Piece
Made to order from beautiful light 11omespuns, Tweeds, etc.;
11
• at $10.00, $12.00 and $14.00. These are made in
any style you wish, and made to suit..
SHIRTS AND QOLLARSI
We handle the
brand. These
in ',the best
stores in every
the Dominion
famous W.G. &R.
goods are found
Men's Furnishing
eity and town in
Of Canada, And
.for Wingham you will. find an excellent .assortment atour store.
COLLARS ---15e each, or 2 for 25.
200 each, or 3 for 50e, Collars
in I sizes,
SHIRTS $100, $1.25, $1.50,
$1,75 and, $2,25 each,
We uan also give you cheaper
Shirts.
•
UNDERWEAR—We handle the
best Underwear made in America.
SUMMER HATS — In Straw,
Panama, Linen, etc., in' the latest
styles. -
MAXWELL L,L BSc HILL
• Merchant Tailors and Men's Furnishers.
Cigarettes a Fatal Handicap to
Students
In an address on cigarette smoking to
the sohotars of St James' Sandsy School
On Sunday, J E Dtokson, prin3ipal of
Orillia Oolle„ sate Institute, made some
striking statements .He said that in Ins
twenty-eight years' expsrienoe as a
teacher he had never known a boy ad-
dicted tooi
aretGa smoking to be a snc-
oessful student. He could n?t reoall an
O h
exception
t r 1
the rale, . It a bay did well
the first year, and then fell off in his
studies, he at once suspected that he had
begun to smoke cigarettes if he knew
of no other cause. V As a rule this turned
ons to be right, atia indications soon
began to show fa, the face and on the
hands, as well as in arrested mental ao- •
tivity, Cigarette smoking was absolute-
ly incompatible with mental develop-
ment. The charaoteristic of the cigar-
ette smoker was stolid stupidity, from
which no spur could arouse him. This
is strong testimony from one who has
had exceptional opportunities for obser-
vation.
adve Stools Markets
Toronto, July 9—The ran at the City
Cattle Market to -day was 60 loads, with
860 head of cattle, 1,275 sheep and lambs,
300 hogs, and 402 calves. •
Trade wee good, and altogether a fair '
'steady market 'to -day, with prioea
generally lirmall round. The run waea
light, and there was a good demand for
the Ideal butoher trade. Stocks in the
hands of the wholesale men are light,
and there were therefore plenty of buy-
ers for all good botcher cattle to be had.
While the market was steady to firm
there was no actual enmity, and every-
one seemed to be about supplied, but
there was very little left over, the mar-
ket being petty well cleaned up at a
comparatively early hoar.
The following are the quotations:
Exporters' cattle— Per 100 lbs.
Choice $5 50 . $6 00
Medium ....... ,^ ....... 6 00 6 25
Bulls 4 75 400
Light -- 8 75 400-
"Cents 4 ,25 4 25
Feeders—
best 1000 pomade and up -
. , 70
Mwards ockers choice I
44 26
.. bulls 3 00
Butchers'=-
the community has for the time, and•. l lcked,
be it remembered, for the time only, Choice .;.
escaped, was ended, not_ by legisla' a �um
tion, but by negotiation: That strikes dare • ; , ..
should be ended or averted by legis $e1!.
lation seems impossible. You cannot $off
4 85,
4 86
3 50
5 00 5 50
4 60
875
. '4 00
• 400
• d 60
6 75
force a free laborer In go on work- 3st
ing, much lese to go self working well, ,ighte... r r ..
The breakdown of the compulsory ter- Sheep- • -
titration system in. Nevi. Zealand is Export ewes
apparently complete. It seems pole Backe,...
Bible that something might be clone
by engagement for longer terms, the
payment being deferred, partly at Calved. snobs . 249 10 00
least. to . the end of `the term. But
it'seifiiiart; that lir(•' evil spirit has for
a time possessed the body of industry,
and it is' toe likely only by rueful
experience to be cast out. To abase
new-born :power We Are all of Ms
prone, and the power of the unions
le new -horst. Many of their members,
Moreover, are fired, not only with
industrial, but with social and nolitd
-
NOTICE OF CLOSING.
.
We, the undersigned Lawyers agree to olose
our offices during the mouths of July and Aug-
ust as follows: -On Saturdays at 2 P.M., and
on other days at 4 P.M,
DIoans Os & H'1ratzs, R. VANsTONa,
j. A. Monzaa%. •
Notice To prat
Tenders will be reeeiv
Couneil ofh
t e Township
Clerk's calm, Bhievate, u
of the 15th day of July n
of material and vonstru
tile, partly open on lots
concession and lots 7 an
cession of the T
ownshi
The lowest or any to
I;ontractors.
d by the Municipal
t Turnberry at the
to 12 o'clock, noon
xt,fort he supplying
on of a dr
sin mostly
8 and 9 in the eighth
'8 in the ninth con -
of Tarnberry.
er not necessarily ac-
cepted. Letterao tntai int tenders to be plain-
ly marked on outside "Tender for drain."
Plans and speoifieatt s cad be seen at the
Clerk's office, Blueval
i,luevale,-June 251h, 957.
JO N BURGESS, Clerk.
EXECUTOR'S SALE
Estate of John Cuming, sr., Lot 22,
Con. 13, Township of Hullett.
This excellent 150 -acro farm will be offered
at auction on .
Wednesday, August 7th, '1907',
at 2 o'clock p. m., at Brown's Hotel, Lanide s
borough.
This is a first-class farm, has good buildings,
including commodious house,large bank barns
with stone stabling and other outbuildings ;
all modern farm improvements and conven-
iences, good water and a good hardwood bush;
near to school and market. Information will -
be promptly given upon request.
W. BRYDONE, EDMUND LEAR,
Clinton, Ont., Blyth, Ont., Executor.
Solicitor for the Estate.
VOTERS'
IST, 1907.
Municipality of . e Township of
T_urnberry, i , the County
of It rola.
''otice is hereby gi
matted or delivered to
in sections Sand 9 of
List Act," the copies r
to be so delivered or
mage pursuant to sal
peering by the last re
the said Municipality.,
the said Municipality;
of the Legitlative As
Elections;and that th
up in my office, at Bl
and remains there fo
Electors are called
and if any omission
found therein, to tak
to have the sad erro
law. •
Dated, Clerk's O1H
Clerk
en that 1: have trap
he persons mentioned
'The Ontario Voters'
gnired by said sections
ransmitted of the list
Act, of all persons ap-
:: ed Assessment Roll of
o be entitled to vote in
t Elections for Members
mbly and at Municipal
satinet was first posted
evale, on July 2nd, 1907,
inspection.
pon to examine said list,
or•any other errors are
immediate proceedings
corrected according to
Blnevele July 2, 1907.
HN BURGESS,
Township of Turnberry,
¢ Synopsis of Canadian. Nort . est
26
04 ae Homestead Regular s.
ANY even numbered otio. of Dominion
se
Lands in Matiteba B. . tchewan and
Alberta, homeste ded by char er' . n reserved, tmay
head of a family, or any . le 'over 10 yeerss of
4 65 4 75 age, to the extent of on: upfter Section of 160
8 50400' acres, more or less
OnIiA, . • .. - . , Entry must be mS
eonally at the local
26 360' land ofce for the distr .tin which Oho land is
!Spring Lambs estop.. 800 0 00., situate.
showedattetisfaoforyecinditlitin 01 airafre; . oak revolution. 'l `ixere is even an wi-
sh
the membership is now over one hundred. ` ar dertl s vi lentrane of he inter west ith
Following are the alone for the ensiling cleats. The competition of eastern in -
six months:—President, Wm. Feeeastt; duairy, which is free from these trot.
,rio,ys^'prbgwti'eekt$ . "CoY►d : e. bias, may before I . n t be felt.
moire; yy�,,1�' ppe�o�na.. ...a,i. —Gold. win Smlih.. ibegin
uml.
�. A. ^^4^•'i *tourer, i. yWa�t l'Ya,; +....... ._
The homesteader is required to perform th
tie connected therewith tinder one o
tHefoilowing plans;
(11 At !teat six months' residence upon and
enitivation of the land itt each year for three
year,.
-(2) If the tether (oranother, if the father is
deceased) of the homeeteader resides open a
farm in the 'vicinity of the land entered for, the
regniremente mita resident* may be..itStiefled
by each person residing with the father or
mother•
upon ffrnming hid &flihas ed permanent
iitthtresidence
eiri in
reesside/n his Maye est erred by resident* as
the
atdd Isnd.
$ htl pnthisnotioeinTitic ti houldbegtven
Co over :pat
roP gI Carols at
Ottawh of In entlon to apply for patent
71. W. 'DET,
Deputy *Lithe 1ldiaieter of the interior;
11.11.-thasthorixed publication of this ad-
Vertiubinbct Will not be paid for.
conditia e
• f
. • Wim, /oh" 10th, 1907 •
�irlbur per 100 ibe. • .y2. 26 to 02 80
,re�aay1y4j., 1, ..^r�......r. r' ,VY 42: . to x 866
Date, • �.....+. .l to 048
ttarley ,.:+ ...tr•r....r.. 0 45 to 0 to
Peas . .^s......... 0-75 to 0 75-
Butter..............c.... 00 18 to 0 19
Ewper ...... . 6'16 to 0 16
ood per ' , '4 60'to 8 00
perm. 11 4o
ton
.1
..... is 12
..
i per brothel hewI 50 to 0 �,
Per 11:t +..r....+ �
Lard. , . . 0 18 to 0 16
DriedAppies per lb .. • 06i t0 0 07
Tawe Boo, Ver orris Y ...... 6 60 40 6 60
11
!`
fy
i
talllSlilfi8i
The Big Store, - WiligilailL
JNO. KERR
Bread• and Pastry
• Flour.
We're doing a big business in Flour ! Bigger every
month ! But our Flour trade must keep on
growing ! There possibly .may be a
few people who are not aware
of the fact that we •sell
FIRST-CLASS BREAD FLOUR
the very best that this country produces !
Wingham Five Lilies," Manitoba Hard Wheat.
Wingham, " Star " Family Flour,
Wingham " Golden Star;" Pastry Flour,
Exeter " Star," Choice Family Flour.
Exeter " Welcome," Pastry FIour.
Ogilvie's " Royal Household," made from Manitoba
Hard Wheat No. 1,
All Flour pat np in 25•lb., 501b, and 100111, sacks.
We sell first-class Rolled Wheat,, Rolled Oats, Corn
Meal, Oatmeal, Graham Flour, Wheatine.
All the Popular Breakfasl Foods w
Have"
you tried the new Breakfast Food, Wheat `
Berries ?" • Whole wheat puffed and 'roasted. The
best yet. 10 cents a package. Try a package. • 1eii
1.5satneouretesinseigincetmesinUireerns-
1
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S)".11elIALS
For the next few weeks we intend making a
special effort to reduce our stock, and will
give customers the benefit of substantial
price reductions. A visit to the store will
convince you of the genuineness of the
bargains we are offering. Come and see !
tr
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1.2a" Ana
Sideboards.
6f 'handsome, up-to-date de -sigh. These
were bought right, and we�are going to sell
them at astonishingly Ilow prices.
• 17
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Extension Tables'.
It will be to your interest to see these_ oods.
We have them. in a range of style and
' prices that cannot fail ,to please.
•
, K
Wa1kers' Furniture Store,
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•••••••••V••••4N•i4•••••• 144.44144.114417.444•-•••••