HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-08-08, Page 22 THE WINGIi;AR TIMES, AUGUST a, 1907
TO ADVERTISERS
Miotics O change, mast be left at this
melee net later than Study noon,
The copy for ohangee must be left
not Inter than Monday evening.
Ceesuel advertisement's aoeepted up
to noon Wednesday of each week.
ESTABL1Menn 1872
Tut TIMES.
N. n.1041407e, Prrax.mnitlsAnoPaera7tiorop
THURSDAY, AUGUST' 8, 8907.
ONTARIO THE BEST.
The Parkhill Review, in referring to
the influx of Oatario fanners going
West, says:
It a mart sells his farm, has a sale,
pulls up hie stakes and pee west, he is
gone and seldom returns. The west re-
ceives him and holds him. He may be
a willing captive, but he may long with
an intense longiig for the old Ontario
home and he cannot return for he has
burned his bridge behind him. Another
man is more cautions, He has a good
thing here and he knows it; stili if there
is anything better to be had for the tak-
ing he is going to take it. He will go
and see. He arranges his affairs a0 that
things can run along pretty much as
they are until his return, and he goes
West. Nine times out of ten he comes
back, slips into hie old place cured, eon -
contented, and the West can never
tempt that man again. He has Been the
golden wheat, acre upon acre,
square mile upon [quare mile, he has
seen the machinery, the innumerable
teams, the crowds of men, the hurry,
the rush, the waste, the big life of big
spaces. And be hu experienced all the
privations and discomforts and draw-
backs, and he has concluded that the
game is not worth the sacrifice.
coulee back to the comforts which he
inherited from the efforts of our pioneer
settlers, to the wheel's, to the ohnrches,
to the maple trees and variegated land-
ecape and finds it is good and 6atiefyiug.
He did not burn the bridge behtnd him,
and he is glad for Outario-the banner
Province is good enough for him.
Don't Wait for Funeral,
Too many people keep the flowers they
have plucked for eau, until the day of
your teemed, Their songs of praise
are not heard until your proow:sion 18
passing your door. The xnantel of
charity does not become public proper.
ty until pu in use by the preacher who
conducts the "last sad rites" If A man
has flowers for me I want them while
I am on earth and can smell their frag-
rance. They will do me no goad fitt-
ing on the head of my coffin. The
grilse that is kept green about my last
resting place will be of little avail to
me on the other sbore. Here is where
I need the flawera and the smiles and
the praise, not over there. If the fel-
low that Is going round to the house
after I am gone to see "if he can be of
tiny help" will come around to morrow
I can tell him how he can be a whole
lot of help. Garry your teeters to the
living and sing your souge of praise at
the dinner table. Don't wait for the
funeral.
An Honest Man.
John 8. Lucas, late of Churchill, Oat.,
now 121 Dann avenue, Toronto, com-
menced life as a public' school teacher,
Through temperate habits and exem-
plary economy by the year 1869, he had
saved $2,335, and decided to commence
a general store business in the village of
Churchill. In the general store business
he was successful until 1882, when be
went into the grain shipping business.
. At firet be was also successful in the
grain business', but in the year 1884 his
looses exceeded $40,000. In 1887 he ae-
signed and the assets were used in wind-
ing up his estate, his creditors not get-
ting one dollar. With borrowed money
: lent him by friends who had every con-
: bdence in his integrity he again cora-
' meaced business, in which he has been
very eucceeaful. He hue paid back every
dollar that was borrowed from his
friends and eleven thousand dollars
He . ($11,000,) the amount of his old debts.
He has lately retired and states that his
investments will bring him a compet-
ent income for the betimes' of his ]ife.
Men may make laws, and lawyers
argue and discuss the spirit and intent
of these laws, but the moral Iaw stays
"Thou shalt not steal." "An honest
man ie the noblest work of God." -To-
ronto Globe.
Canada and the United States.
(From the Philadelphia Ledger )
It it were possible to express within
a eingle phrase the thought of the
average citizsn of the United States
concerning our great Canadian neigh.
bor, it wouldimply a certain amount
of ignorance and indifference. There
bas not bean any one in this country
within more than a generation who
seriously retained the notion that used
to be prevalent that Canada's "manifest
destiny" was absorption into the United
Staten. The feeling that, at any rate,
Canada was economically dependant
upon as has been less easy to dispel,
and it is only within comparatively re-
cant times that the consciousness has
been absorbed by the mass of the Awed -
atm people that a great community
was growing up beside no, not wholly
indifferent, yet fully able to get along
without help from no.
Perhaps the one fact that has helped
to drive this fact home ie the realiza-
tion that Canada is no longer looking
to Washington for reciprocity, and the
next stage in the process will be the fur-
ther education of the American people.
They will have to learn to appreciate the
magnitude of the opportunity tbat was
lost in the past when the door for
closer commercial relations was deliber-
ately closed by their representatives,
and they will also come to realize that
if there are to be any more intimate ex-
ohanges in the future the overtures are
just as likely to come from tbis side of
the border as from the other, Wise
Canad,an statesmen realize just as per -
featly as do our own that the destinies
of the two Engiish-speaking people who
occupy the greater part of the North
American continent are e0 closely re
kited that it is of the utmost consequence
that misunderstandings and Motion
shall not arise,
Eczema Is
Baby's Enemy
The first indication of eczema is a red
pimple, or blister-like eruption. The
pointe run together, making u, moist,
cited patch, which "weeps" at first, and
then dries into a crust.
The intense itehing of eczema of the
face and scalp is very hard for the lit-
tle one to bear, and the result is
scratching until free bleeding taken
place and recovery is further retarded.
.Betides the suffering front the distress-
ing itehing, the child is restless and
sleepless.
When left to itself tezema, farts on
indefinitely, eovering the body with
totes, but fortunately there is positive
mire in the use of Dr. Chase's Ointment,
a preparation which, by its marvellous
ateetbing and healing powers, brings quick
relief Prem itching and beats up the
nares.
Dr. Chase's Ointment hie proven es-
pecially eueceaafu1 hi the cure of baby
eczema, as well as in the prevention of
tk$s torturing disease, when used for
reeling and akin irritation, in which ee.
,rata finds its beginnings; 60 cents a
lete., an all dealers, or Rin, Betel
k ., Tomato,
Kidney Disease on the increase
Recent reports from the New York
Board of Health show that kidney dis-
ease is greatly on the increase. Bright's
disease se well as the otker dreadfully
painful forms of kidney disease can al-
ways be prevented and usually cured by
the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney Liver
Pills which have a direct and combined
influence on the liver and kidneys,
Lord Strathcona's Modal Diet.
(Montreal Witness,)
Canada's grand old man, Donald
Alexander Smith, Lord Strathcona, wto
is now on his way to Canada emu more
and for the second time this year, has
reaohed his eighty-seventh birthday.
He is still in harness as Oanada'e high
commissioner in England, a position
which he has noW beta for eleven years,
and as chairman of the Hudson's Bay
Company, besides keeping active control
over his own vast private interests and
beneficences. May he long be able to
matinee to serve his country as he has
done so long and well. The Kiug's
physician, we are told, declares that his
lordehip'a splendid bealth and eoudition
are owing to Ma model diet, which is
said to be; For breakfast, porridge,
bread and butter and marmalade, and
wesk tea; for dinner, soup, fish, joint t r
fowl; no lunch, uo whiskey, no tobacco.
There ie fro common rule of diet that can
be said to be a sure formula for the at-
tainment of a buoyant old age, but it is
au old rule that moderation in all things
and tool abstinence from those things
which are deloterisible, however, for
people of detective nutrition to diseanr-
age their appetites to an injurious, if
not dangerous.
Should Doctors Tei! ?
A point of very great interest to the
general public concerning the advisabili-
ty or the non -advisability of medical
men telling their patients their true con-
dition if they are suffering from mortal
sickness was raised by the London Daily
Mail,
"A chemist's assistant, living at Al.
trinoham, Cheshire, was informed by
hie doctor that he was suffering from
consumption. Shortly afterwards he
committed suicide, and at the inquest
his wife said he bad been depressed in
consequence of this knowledge. The
jury expressed the opinion that 'the doc-
tor should have kept the information to
himself, because it had worried the de-
ceased.'
"What is the duty of the physician or
surgeon in such oases ?
A leading anthority at one of the
principal London hospitals says that
there was one rule which was invariably
followed, both in hospital and in private
practice, We take jest that course
which is beet for the patient. We do
not tell a patient that he is Buffering
from a disease which will probably
prove fatal, but we aiwaye tell his wife,
or his parents, or his near relations.
They eau impart the information gently
later. In other cases, where the disease
is not likely to be fatal, we tell the
patient and ria one else.
"Here is a Iiet of diseases where £t is
not advisable to tell the patient what he
is suffering from:--Uanoer, consumption,
diabetes, general paralysle of the insane,
cerebral tumors.
"Nor would a patient be toil that be
wee suffering from heart disease, al-
though he would be told that he had a
weak heart, and that he mast take this
and that precaution. Of eonrse, there
ate exeeptions to every rale. A bnalness
man, who know that something is the
matter, May tell his doctor that if his
days are numbered it is vitally impor-
tant, in the interests of his family, that
he should know the truth. In such a
tittle it may be well to tell him the real
facts."
Ontario Wheat and Flour.
Only by wisely adopting new diecov.
cries can the farmers of thin Province
compete on even terms with the Weet,
whose specialty is wheat. Western
hour has invaded Ontario, and the de-
cline in the demand for Ontario wheat
is to -day a fact only too evident so far-
mers Ontario agriculturists, in many
instances, buy Western flour, raise little
or no wheat, and for what they do raise,
are not receiving a price commensurate
with their labor --all, largeiy' because
they will not use the flour made from
wheat they grow themselves, owing to a
mistaken belief that the Western flour
is better. In addition to this loss of
msrket, the cost of feed is too high to
enable stockmen and dairymen to realize
the profit which, under proper conditions
ought to be assured.
It will be somewhat of a surprise for
mast farmers, to learn that Ontario flour
is a favorite is the E'stern provinces;
and that in the face of strong competi-
tion, it bas for several years been prefer-
red in the Maritime Provinces, to the
best Western brands. The discovery of
fiour-blending bide fair to re -open the
demand for Ontario wheat; and this
ought to attract the attention of Ontario
farmers to et question of vital importance
to the agricultural interests of the
Province.
Blended flour is simply the best of
Ontario's finely flavored product to
which a small proportion of Western
wheat is added to bring up the percent-
age of gluten, or "strength." Freed
from technicalities of chemistry and
milling, it means both strength and flav-
or in the daily loaf. Viewed econom-
ically, it means an increased market for
an Ontario -grown product wbioh has
won the unprejudiced favor of the East.
Whether this will prove true of Ont-
ario, and whether each a demand will
be created that the price of wheat will
improve, and the cost of bran and shorts
become lower, depends upon the individ-
nal. farmer. Baying Westera flour
means a negative answer to the query;
i, however, the farmer is alive to the
situation, he cannot financially afford to
neglest the latest diacovery in praotical
economics, and will insist on buying
only the flour milled in Ontario.
THE PRINTER.
I wish I was a printer
I really do indeed;
It seems to ins that printers
Have everything they nee3.
(Except money)
They get the largest and the best
Of everything that grows
And get free into oironsses
And ogler kinds of Showa.
(Begtviug an equivalent,)
The biggest bug will speak to thew.
No matter how they dress;
A shabby ooat is nothing
1f you own a printing press,
(Policy.)
At ladies' fairs they're almost hugged
By pretty girls who know,
That they will crack up everything
The ladies have to show.
(Lucky fellows.)
And thus they get a 'blow oat' free
At every party feed -
The reason 18 because they write,
While other people read.
(That's so! --Geod-by.)
An Advance Payment.
(Canadian Cloutier.)
Principal Grant the late much -loved
head of Queen's Univeraity, was a mas-
terly solicitor for the heeds of his college
in the early days, One afternoon, Sir
John Macdonald dropped in to see Sir
David Macpherson, and fonnd him in
conversation with Principal Grant.
"What do you think ? " said Sir
David, in assumed despair, "Grant
thinks I should give more money to
Queen's ; and the last time I gave him a
check he said it would do for all time."
"That may be," said Sir John, quiet-
ly ; "bat hadn't you better give a little
for eternity ? "
The extra check was forthcoming, and
Principal Grant was furnished with
an excellent text for other occasions
when he presented the, claims of higher
education.
The Fussy Man.
Everybody knows one or more of
those oonsuientions egotists who can-
not rid thew:Mies of the idea that no
one can be ttneted to carry out the
simplest details of routine work with-
out their personal supervision,
It was one of these isiert who bailed
A MEMORY SYSTEM.
Forget eaoh kindness that you do
As roan as you have done it ;
Forget the praise' that falls to you
As 6001 as yon have won it
Forget the slander them you hear
Before you can repeat it ;
Forget each alight, eaoh spits, each sneer
Whenever you may meet it.
Remember every kindness done
To yon, wTbatc'er its weaenre ;
Remember praise by others won
And pass it on with pleasure :
Remember every promise made
And keep it to the letter ;
Remember those who lend yon aid
And be a grateful debtor.
Remember all the happiness
That comes your way in living ;
Forget each worry and distress,
Be hopeful and forgiving ;
Remember good, remember troth,
Remember heaven's above you,
And you will find, throned age and youth,
True joys and hearts to love you.
--Priscilla Leonard.
"+%--�--� for England, leering in his brother's
Redeipts of tbe']"etnirkaming dG North- tare a parrot of which he was very fond,
All the way aeresk the Atlantic he .wor-
ern Ontarlo Railway for May Were $77,- 'led ebont the bird, and no sooner had
041; diabersenlents, $51,498; net reren• het lauded at Sonthainpton than he rash -
$25,545. The disbursements include ed over thii cablegram to his brother :
$8,512 paid for tnenranoe, which might r,Be sere and teed parrot."
Mire beed spread ower the whole year, - ,And the brother cabled back :
Pasrenger traffic aoocunted for $40,027,
and freight, $30,842 of the total receipts.
Dating May i543.9 miles were in operation
si oornplurtill with Ila miles itt May, 1006, -
The tottsenger traffic( shows a large in. A lagan wdth °tidy ]lair has tut many
*two over the corresponding month of eXdnses for keeping his hat off as a bald
IaNt year. "Intim bar for keeping his on,
"Have fed hint, but he's hungry
again. What shall 1 do next ?
HAVE YOU CATARRH?
Breate Hyomei and Relief and Cure
Will Be Guaranteed.
It you have catarrh, with offensive
breath, burning pains in the throat,
difficulty in breathing, raising of mu.
ocas, discharge from the nose, tickling
or dropping from the back of the throat,
coughing spasms, etc., begin the use of
I3y-o-mei at once,.
Hy :o mei is made from nature's sooth-
ing oils and balsams and contains the
germ -killing propert-ee of the pine woods.
Its medioation is taken in with the air
you breathe, so that it reaches the most
remote part of the respiratory organs,
killing all catarrhal germs and soothing
any irritation there may be in the ran -
cons membraue.
The complete Hy temei outfit costs
but $1.00; and Walton McKibben gives
bis personal gnerantee wan eaoh peak -
age that money will be refunded unless
the treatment dose all that is claimed
for it.
TOWN DIRECTORY.
•
)3A.PTIST Ont)a0H--Sabbath services at
11 a in and 7 p m. Sunday School at
2:30 p m. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. H.
Edg it Allen, pastor. 13.Y.P.U. meets
SMo.S. ndSauypeevenings 8tnt,np. . Abner Omens
rintende
Mxruoniete Onlleon--Sabbath services
at 11 a m,and 7 p m. Sunday School at
2:80 p ru. Epworth League every More
day evening. General prayer meeting
an Wednesday evenings. Rev. W.
G. Rowson, pastor. F. Baohenan, S.S.
Snperinten dent.
PanssY'rsauAt Osuuoxt-Sabbath sere
vices at 11 a en and 7 p m. Sunday
School at 2:30 p m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings, Rev,
D. Perrie, pastor. L. Harold, 8 S. Su-
perintendent.
ST, PAI1L'S Onvaola, ErxsaoPAn--Sab-
bath services at 11 a m and 7 p m, Sun-
day Sohool at 2:30 pm. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evening. Rev.
T. S. Boyle, M.A., B,D., Rector ; Ed.
Nash, S. S. Superintendent ; Thos. E.
Robinson, assistant Superintendent.
SALVATION Anetr--Servioe at 7 and 11
a m and 3 and 8 p m on Sunday, and
every evening daring the week at 8
o'clock at the barracks.
Pose Orrloa-Office hours from 8a m
to 6:30 p ea. Open to box holders from
7 a in. to 9 p m, P. Fisher, postmaster.
PiyrLIo LxsrrsSY--Library and free
reading room in the Town Hall, will
be open every afternoon from 2 to
5:30 o'clock, and every evening from 7
to 9:80 o'clock. Miss Mand Robertson,
librarian.
A grasshopper can jump 200 times its
own length.
Nearly half of the railroad mileage of
the world is is the United States.
The average Englishwoman is two
inches taller than the American.
If death loved only a shining mark
very few men would have canoe to, fear
it.
Great Britain is rich in mosses. There
are 290 varieties found on the Britieh
islands.
Who doesn't keep tab on time will
some -morning discover that time has
him all right.
The county of London covers 75,442
acres, but the Landon police area is
443,421 acres.
It you donit believe that men are jest
as carious as women tie up one of your
fingers and pour liniment over it.
Improvements made in surgery have
been the means of reducing the mor-
tality of amputation operations to 6 per
cent.
New York City's surface, elevated and
anbway railroad eystem receives a daily
average of 114 cents from each inhabit-
ant of the city.
The average rent paid for New York
City tenements and apartment houses
built within five years amounts to $146
annually for each person living in them.
There are now, within 80 miles of
New York City about 8,540 new dwell=
inge under construction, in which rest -
dente of the city will live ontheir com-
pletion.
CURE ALL KIDNEY TROUBLES.
Mrs. iiiram levoy, Marmara, Ont.,
writes : "1 wee troubled for five years
with my back. I tried a, great many
remedies, but all failed until I was ad-
vised by a friend to use DOAN'S Minna
I'1Lt,s. 1 did so, and two boxer made a
complete cure. I can heartily recotn-
mend them to all troubled with their
back. You may • publish this, it ice
wish."
Price 50 tents per, box or 3 foal.*
at all dealers or mailed area on receipt
of Pries
by Ths Doan kidney rill Co.r J M E SToronto
Tows Oouseurr--W, Holmes, Mayor;
Dr. A. J. Irwin, R9eve; David Bell,
D. M. Garden, Thos. Gregory, John
Kerr, D. E. McDonald Wm. Nicholson,
Ooanoillors; J. B. Ferguson, Olerk and
Treasurer; Anson Dulmage, Assessor.
Board meets first Monday evening in
eaoh month at 8 o'olook.
HIGH Smoot. 3oARn.- John Wilson,
(chairman) Dr. J. P. Kennedy, Dr. P.
Macdonald, Dr. R. O. Redmond, J. A.
Morton, 0. P. Smith, W. F. VanS.itone.
Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Cosens,
treasurer. Board meets second Monday
evening in each month.
Panto Soaoor, BoAan.-A. E. Lloyd
(chairman), B Jenkhae, E. E. Lard, T.
Hall, H. Kerr, Wm. Moore, Alex. Roes,
0. N. Griffin. Secretary, John F.
Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson.
Meetings seoond Tuesday eveningia eaoh
month.
Huns Sonooa Te crxtxs-J. A. Tay-
lor, B.A., principal; J. 0. Smith, B.A.,
classical master; J. G. Workmen, B.A.,
mathematical master; Miss F. B. Ketch-
eson, B.A., teacher of English and
Moderne.
Punta° Sonoor. T*AoftaRs,--A. H.
Musgrove, Prinoilial, Mise Brook,
MiseReynolds, Mies Farquharson, Miss
Wilson, Miss Cummings, and Mies
Matheson.
BOARD Oe "Rs. LTS--Thos. 13e11,
(ohairman), R. Porter, Thomas Greg-
ory, John Wilson, V.S., J. B. Ferguson,
Secretary; Dr. J. R. Macdonald,
Medical Health Officer.
Wingham General Hospital
(Under Government inspection)
Pleasantly situated. Beautiful tar-
nished. Open to all regularly lioensed
physicians. RAIMS rot PATIZNT8--
(whioh include board and nursing), $3.50
to115.00 per week according to location
of room, For further information,
address
Miss KArnan a STEVENSON,
Lady Superintendent,
Box 223, Wingham Ont.
Farm Labourers and
Domestics.
I have been appointed by the Dominion Gov-
ernment to place emigrants from the United
Kingdom in positions an farm lablrere or do-
mestie eervante in this vicinity. Any person
requiring such help should notify me by letter
stating fully the kind of help required, when
wanted and wages offered. The number ar-
riving may not be sufficient to supply all re.
(meets but every effort wilt be made to pro.
vide each applicant with help required.
PETER CAMPBELL,
Canadian Government limployment Agent
!Wingham, Oat,
FARMERS
eh ioapooaarttoi tthanyone
}i dispose stook
nM other
adver-
tise
the dame for side is the Tons. Our Dirge
ciroulation tells and It will be strange Indeed it
you do not get a customer. We can't guarantee
that yonwill eels because you may ask more
for the artiole or stook than it is worth. Sand
your advertisement to the Tlat,s and try Ude
plan of disposing of your stook and other
articles.
IT PAYS
TO ADVERTISE
IN THE
*lydliedeUZD I872
THE WIN610 TIMES.
18 1?UBrLISHED
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
^-ATS
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tinned till all arrears are paid, exoept at the
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AnvaRi'istao Barns. -- Legal and other
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inaertton.
ddverM*ementa la local columns are charged
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per line for each subsequent insertion.
Advortlesu>ents of Strayed, Farms for Bale
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weeks, and 25 cents for eaoh subsequent in-
sertion.
Ooe ra&0T $ants-Tbelollowing table shows
our rates for the insertion of advertisements
forBpecined periods:-
arAoa. 1 yrs, a ren. 0 Yo. tato.
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QuarterQolamn 20.00 12.50 7.50 8.00
Ono I ...., 5.00 0.00 2.00 1,25
Advertieenchmen.ta without s eolfio directions
will be inserted till forbid and charged e000rd-
begly. Transient advertises ente must be paid
for in advance,
Tido Jos Da0Anvlciiar is atooked with an
extensive assortment of all requisites for print-
ing, affording faoilitlee net equalled in the
county for turning out first class work. Large
type and aypropriate outs for ail styles of Post-
ers, Hand Bills, etc., and the latest etylos,of
choioe fanny type for the finer classes of print
ing,
H. B. ELLIOTT,
Proprietor and Publisher
T P MKENNEDY,ember of ee Bri17. tish Medical Cr.
re
Gold Medallist in Medioine. Special
attention paid to diseases of Women and 01411d;
ren. Office hours -1 to 4 p. m.: 7 to 9 p. m.
DR, MACDONALD,
Centre Street
Wingham,
Ontario.
DR. AGNEW,
Physician, Surgeon, etc.
Oince-isfacdonel
Block, over
Drug Store. Night calla anewered at the office.
DR. ROBT.O.REDMOND, M. 8.0.8, (ling)
L• R. 0. P. (Load,)
PHYBICL,N and SURGEON.
Offioe, with Dr, Chisholm.
PANBTONB,
BARRISTER, 80LIC,ron, ETC.
Private sad company funds io loan at lowest
rate of interest. No oommiauuss�ion charged. mort-
gagee,
sold. Ooffice and
Block.. Wingbamu¢hi and
JA, MORTON,
•
BARRISTER, &o.
Wingham, Ont.
B. L. DroxraaoN Donner /locates
DICKINSON & HOMES
BARRISTER$, SOLICITOUS, Eto.
BIONOT TO LOAN,
Ornort: Meyer Block, Windham.
ARTHUR J. IRWWN, 0.0.8...L. 0.8.
ntlooee�ontiteeafhnlDeaCllgandLitiatothe Pennsylvania
College of Dental StirLsothe of Ontario. Office
in Macdonald Stook, Winghent.
Office closed every Wednesday afternoon
during Jane, Jutyand August.
W, J, PRIDE, B. S. A., L. D. S., D. D. S.
Licentiate c'5 the Royal College of Dents I
Surgeons of Ontario, and Gradnate of Un i-
versity of Toronto.
Office ; Beaver Block.
Office closed every Wednesday :Memo 0n
during June, July and August.
ALES. KELLY, Wingham, Ont.
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
For the County of Huron. ,sates of all kinds
the Tatra omoe at reasonable
ill z lebesetae.
de p prompt attention
OUTSIDE
ADVERTISING
Orders for the insertion of advertisements
such as teachers wanted, business ohannpees,
mechanics any kind of an edvt articles
noany of tor he Toronto or
other city papers, may be left at the Tuns
office. This work will receive prompt attention
and will save people the trouble or remitting
for and forwarding advertisements. Lowest
rates will be quoted on application. Leave
or send your next work of this kind to the
TIMES OFFICE. Wlnlghant.
RAILWAY TIME TABLES.
GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM.
GRAND
%MAINS rEAvs rot
; London e.4e a.m..- 8.00p.'nl.
Toronto &Easti1.00a.m., 6.48a.m..., 2.40p.ni.
Bincardine..11.57 6.m.., 2,08 p m 9.15p.m.
Aaurva rROM
Kinoardine-.0.40s.m�I1.00a.m,._ 2.40 p.m.
London 11.54 a.m..... 7.85 p.m.
Palmerston... 10.80 a.m,
Toronto & Eaet 2.08 p.m..„ 9.15 p.m,
L. HAROLD, Agent, Wingham.
CAIN/AMAX AAN 10,&011'10 RAILWAY.
v
TRAINS mays ren
Worento and Haat.,,_.... 6.ee cm.... 8.84 p.m.
Teeswater - 1.25 pati., -10.25 p.m.
'1'eeswater.. Anniw ri 0 46 a.m..... 8.80 p.m.
Toront pnd8ep.m.
J.BMgiAsnt,Winghev.
CO 'lfEAns'''
EXPERIENCE
ATENTS
TUX MARK*
DtitifiNS
Copy I14Htf At.
Anyone sending *sketch and drarrIptien mld
Qataul, ascertain our opinion free w ether as
tnwentlon is probably 87,ataptable, Cowgannles
VOW. strictly cenedentlal. Handbook on Patents
gent Irs .awtClas,wkho!at h aseaoy tereeecfat
rin,Dstente.
Patents taken tIkkroa h Mum renew.
weal Ids siylr
Scientific °Rmerkan.
A headee,peey lunar»tad }l,.yeeklly.. Waest nYrr.
00
rf slants., 82.�8o14 by so iiTn1164ysea
N & �y(�r3tttlktfrdresr,New ii t1
&tick moa, alt! 2• tit„ Waahiomtoa. D.
Experiments at the Oltlahoma Agrt-
cultural college illustrate what can be
done In the dairy business in any see -
tion where a sufficient number of eowir
are kept to warrant starting n factory
and when the farmers will stand by
the factory and have confidence in its
management and see to it that it 1*
managed successfully.
The petrous have always been wilt-
ing to deliver sweet cream to the
creamery, and to this one fact is at-
trilruted lunch of the success. The but-
ter
utter bas been placed on nearly every
market in the south and west, and it
has never beeu wanting a buyer. It
sells at the top of the market, which
enables the creamery to pay a premi-
um for tate cream received. herein
Ile the hopes of the successful devel-
opment of dairying in Oklahoma. Tho
price that the farmers receive for their
cream depends upon the quality of the .
product of the factory, and It should
be the highest aim of the cream pro-
ducers whether they patronize all In-
dependent creamery, a centralizers
creamery or are shareholders in a co-
operative creamery to deliver to the:
creamery the best cream that they can
possibly produce.
Milk and cream take up odors and
taints from unclean -vessels in which
they may be placed or from any -sub-,
stance emitting tan odor. They are
easily spoiled and made unwholesome,
for food if any dirt or filth gets into
them, or if they are covered up tight`
so that fresh air does not get into}
them to remove the odors and gases
which may be forming in them.
A Guernsey's Great Record.
The third test recently concluded of
the Guernsey cow Dolly Bioom shows
DOLLY Moon.
the remarkable total of 17,297.51
pounds of milk, with en average test
of 4.84 per cent of butter fat, an
equivalent of 836.21 pounds of butter
fat. In the three years in which she
has been tested, in two of which she
was but a heifer, she gave 38,813.0
pounds of milk and 1,914.1 pounds of
butter fat, or an average of 12,927.97
pounds of milk and 638 pounds of but-
ter fat for each of the three years, and
considerably mare than 0,000 quarts of,
very rich milk for the three years, in-
cluding the two years' heifer record.
The feed of the past year's test may
be inferred from the ration for Febru-
ary, which was for each day: Three
pounds mixed wheat feed, three and
three-quarter pounds gluten, three and
three-quarter pounds oilmeal, three
pounds middlings, three and three-
quarter pounds oats, with about
twenty-five pounds of silage and a
varying amount of mixed hay, carrots
and turnips. The quantity of feed was
about the same from mouth to month,
but the kinds of grain were varied.
In the summer she bad access to good
pasturage in addition to the grain
ration.
This cow is a member of the well
known herd at Lanbsvater farms,
North Easton, Mass. Dolly Bloom's
wonderful record, says ,American Cul-
tivator, places her at the head of the
Guernsey breed.
Jottings by a Dairywoman.
The butterrnaker who takes enough
pride in her product to stamp it neatly,
wrapping each print in paper prepared
for the purpose, usually bas an article
worthy of the care.
A tin pall is a very poor receptacle
for taking butter to market in hot
weather. A wooden pail or basket
does not draw the heat.
lIow about the reputation of the best
buttermaker if her goods go to the
grocery and are placed in contact with
the odor of fish, flesh and fowl? If she
can sell direct to regular patrons, un-
just reflections on her product from
this cause are avoided.
If one has too little cream for churn-
ing, it may be converted into butter of
excellept quality by beating in a bowl
or crock. Use a fork, spoon or stirring
stick and keep It very cold. If there
Is milk in It, the process is too slow to
be profitable, but with pure cream it is
comparatively little work, and there Is
no washing of churn afterward.
It near a trolley line, cream can be
sent to the city market and realize
more .profit than butter la the old way
and with less work.---Tssie L. Putnam
!n American Cultivator,
Hems Churnting.
A barrel or box churn is the beat for
the home dairy. When the eream ie
ripe, scald the churn and cool to the
tetnperature of the cream, which should
be froth 5e degtelee to 04 degrees, btr
cording to conditions, If color ie used,
it should be put in the eream when It
is put in the Churn. Turn the churn
ec ea to get the greatest concussion
Possible. The buttershould come In
from thirty to fifty minutes. Mter tho
butter comet draw the buttermilk,
tieing a strainer to catch the particles
of butter that may escape with the
buttermilk, then wash with cold we-
b*, ninon about tiro) taima quenttty
M rye ems it cree & •