HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-11-28, Page 2TEE WINGIIAM TD4ES, NOVEMBER 28,. 1907
It is not only
deliciously
delightful to
cat,, but
White
��'Y hite 1C.3VriI' a
jell ' Powdo?
with true fruit and
wine flavors is really
good fur you. ,'ask
your gro, er for a pack-
age. Any of t5 differ-
ent 13avors. Price, toe.
Tho 1:O7.2T CStr.17 CO., LS.1ted
Toronto•4
TO ADVERTISERS
gift
Notice .of changes must be left at thie.
office not later than Saturday noon.
The copy for changes must be left
not later than. Monday evening.
Casual advertisements accepted np
to noon Wednesday of each week.
sNSTABLISHED 1872
WINinAM TIMES,
$. It.'sLLIOTT, PtJBLIBHfER Arm PROPRIETOP
TI$URSDAIT. NOV. 28, X907.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
A long strip of territory hitherto re-
garded as Canadian has been transferred
to Alaska as a result of the survey work
by Canadian and American engineers.
This transferred territory is many times
greater in extent than the Canadian ter-
ritory which Lord Alverstone presented
to the Uaited States: bat this latest
treader will not. cause a ripple of indig-
nation. Canadians don't want to keep
territory which does not rightfully be-
long to Canada; but they don't want to
be tricked out of a single sore. That is
the difference.-Stmooe Reformer.
One of the dreams of the Conserve,
tive politician i$ that an immense
Oonservative majority in Ontario may
offset the Liberal majority in Quebec.
Bat the fact is that the Conservatives
are scarcely holding their own in the
Ontario bye•eleotions. No one regards
Landon ,as anything but an exeep.
tional case. London in a party con-
test would be what it always has
been, a close and doubtful constit-
uency. North Wellington and East
Northumberland remain as they were,
one Liberal with an increased ma-
jority and one Conservative. The
other bye -elections held since the gen-
eral election in 1904 have been favor-
able to the Government. There is not
the Slightest evidence of any desire
on the part of the people of Ontario
to offset the great Liberal majority
in Quebec with a great Conservative
majority 1n Ontario. -Toronto Star.
Mack, in last week's Toronto Satur-
day night: -"In Canada we can spread
doubt and distrust and topple tall things
down if we want to rummage in debris.
Nothing easier. There is, however, one
thing almcst as easy and infinitely pre.
ferable, andsthatis to keep everything
moving along, confident in the know-
ledge that no country ou earth has equal
reason with Canada to look forward to
uninterrupted prosperity. We have got
a country towards which the eyes of the
world are turned. The migration of
agriculturists from the Uaited eStates
into onr western prairies has begun and
'x}11 hasten the inrush from Europe.
The republic within the past month has
been brought face to face with the know-
ledge that its timber supply at the pre-
sent rate of going will be exhausted in
twenty years, a fact which at once pats
a new value on Canadian forests, As
regards pulp wood and therefore the
paper tuppiy of the continent, the con-
trol of the situation is now in Canada's
hands and may be asserted when we
choose. Asa country the Dominion bas
just crested a hill tip which she has beea
laboring until now, and before us spreads
Tolls of Cure
30 'ears of Plies
Mr. G. A. Swayze, Copenhagen, Elgin
Co., Ont., writes :-"I have been af'
Meted with piles for more than thirty
years and have tried various remedies.
in most cases with very unsatisfactory
results. None of them effected a
per-
manent cure.
er-
inc retre. Six months ago I decided
to give Dr. Chase's Ointment a trial,
and was surprised and delighted with the
result A few applications only were
necessary, when the trouble disappeared,
and there has been no return thus far.
I dartt much care: to have nY tame
e
aPPa
r in print in connection with any
patent medicine, still 1 would like to
tell everyone tvho is ad1ieted ne 1 was
to try 1)r. C'hase's Ointment, and if
they do and don't fend it to be all that
is claimed for it I miss me, guess. For
many years iad severe itching on
my -
arms and legs, especially during the
Winter months. The ointment drove it
away like magic"
Dr. ('hase'at Ointment seems to be the
witty treatment obtainable which actn-
allv turee eYery,"forni of itching, bleed-
ing end protruding piles; 00 cents a
bofr, et all dealers Or Ednaneon, Bates
lit Co.. Totonto.
a mighty flue view. Through the great
West new railways are crawling, etch
opening up wheat areas larger and more
fertile than a kiugdom, in Europe Tait -
lag it all in all, Canada need but get her
Piste aocpnnt straightened out, a little
fixing and mending done, and We shall
93e such an advancement as we have cos
yet known,
SACK TO THE LAND. '
The Minister of Agriculture in Sas.
katohewan talks sensibly about the needs
of the land. He says:
Blessed with but a few years of sac'
useful wheat oultore, the Western far.
mer amasses a fortua.e very rapidly and
the temptation to retire to a life at ease
is very great and too often yielded to by
men in the prime of their life. To my
personal knowledge there is cue district
in which there is only one landowner
occupying and workipg his farm, all the
rest o: the early settlers having leased
their farms and retired to the pity, This
is a most undesirable condition and there
is springing np in this young country al-
ready a system of laadlordenn most de-
trimental to the educational and reli-
gions institutions of our rural sections
t man in the prime of life having eao-
ceasfully fought his way to a position of
independence owes a good deal to the
country and •the district that nourished
him, and for enoh a man to retire to a
lite of selfish ease, at the very time that
he could be of the greatest good to the
community is most unpatriotic indeed.
Instead of retiring from the farm our
people should retire to the farm.
These views refer to the west parti-
cnlarly,.but they can and should be
applied to all agricultural districts.
They are sound, common sense. As
the Manitoba Free Press, says the tillers
of the soil are the best estate of any
country. What the. Went, (and the
east) needs are robust, prosperous high-
ly•developed rural districts where the
earnest, actual ownership and present
interests is everywhere apparent. It
needs there even more than it needs big
cities.
SOME `HIND SHOULD BE DONE
What is Causing the Inerease of
Catarrh it: Wingham?
In spite of the best efforts of medical
men, catarrhal troubles are increasing
not only in Wingham, but all over the
country.
Catarrh is a germ $isease, and to cure
it germ life in the breathing organs
should be destroyed, and to do this no
other treatment has such positive and
beneficial action as Hyomei.
When the mucous membrane is irritat-
ed and raw and the tissues weakened,
there iseaan ideal lodghnir place for ca-
tarrhal germs. Breathe Hyomei and see
how quickie, it soothes the membranes,
vitalizes the tiesues,and destroys all the
disease germs, rendering catarrh no long-
er possible.
There 10 no dangerous stomach drug-
ging when Hyomei is used; no tablets
or liquid mixtures destroying digestion.
Breathed through the neat pocket in-
haler that comes with every Hyomei out-
fit, the healing balsams penetrate to the
most remote air cells of the throat, nose
and lunge, destroying the catarrhal germs
so that quick recovery follows.
Walton MoEibbon agrees to refund
the money to any purchaser of Hyomei
who does not find that it does all that is
claimed tor it. The complete outfit
coats but $1.00.
More Revenue, Lighter Taxation.
(London Advertiser )
There were some good points in Hon.
Wm. Paterson's speech to South Brant
Liberals the other night. He dealt
effectively with the charge that the bur-
dens of the people had increased under
Liberal rule because the, Federal re-
venue and expenditure bad advanced.
In 1896, an average of $18.28 in duties
was paid on every $100 of goods enter-
ing the country, dutiable and free.
Las year only $15 73 was paid on an
average on every $100 worth of geode
entering the country, dutiable and free.
The reduction in practical duties on
$100 was $9 55, or as compared with the
old rate of $18 28, a reduotion of 14 per
cent.
This lowering of onatome taxation has
been accompanied by an increased re-
venue because of the country's prosper-
ity and growing purchasing power.
In 1896 the postal revenues were
$3,000,000, and last year, $6,000,000, As
well say that the $3,000,000 increase has
been extorted from the people, as to con-
tend thaat a growth in customs revenue
under a lower rate of duty 18 a heavier
weight upon theta. The domestic post-
age rate has been lowered from three to
two cents and the imperial rate from
five to two cents. The postal revenue
has doubled, while the cost of postage
has been almost cut In half.
Mr, Paterson able topointto
Mwas the
feat that the budget of the last session,
embodying an entirely new schedule of
duties. was adopted after a brief debate,
virtually without Opposition. The Latin -
.sr Governmeut a
finan Taly
and
ad-
innietrati e record cannot be euccesetul
challenged.
"Great SOW" raid the doctor to
hie servant. "Iles nobody called days' dur-
two w o absence? I left this
y a
elate here, for -depart to 'write their
names on, and it is perfeotly glean,"
,
, ,,
Oh yes, air r e
e ndid theset
vent.
, , po
ee rant
,
cheerfully. "A lot of !dike hat oaine.
An' the elate got so full o' names that
Only thio marnin' I had to tub 'em alt
.out to mike- rodni for MOW"
THE VALUE OF A TRADE.
Dr. Gilmour, warden of the Central
Prison, Toronto, told a recent Ontario
Sunday School Convention that not one
in fifty of the young then who (sante to
his prisou lied spent his youth in learning
a trade. It is to be feared thst we hay t
rather outgrown the wholesome oustom
reg trdiug it a matter of honor to teach
all children a trade. We hear =racoon.
ally that the eons of royalty hi some QId
World capitals all learn a trade in their
youth, though it is obvious that they will
never have to depend upon it fora livelt•
hood, and we settle complacently at the
quaint and conservative conceit. It is
the mediaeval way they have of doing
things yet in Europe.
Yet the boy who has a handicraft has
something more than a secondary way
of earning his living. lee has an art.
He knows the joy of doing some piece of
aotual work superlatively well -that is,
it lie has taken hie handicraft in the
right way, He feels in himself aoapaoity
whioh the lad who has educe, ed nothing
Out bis mind never can nnderatand.
There is a pleasure in the educated hand
quite as truly as in`the eduoated mind
and the lad who kn�ws how to make a
cabinet or to carve n ornamental chair
leg or to build a dog house or to do any
bit of work well, has something of the
experience of the artist who can paint a
pioture or mould a statue.
Many of our trades have been torn to
pieces by the sub -divisive methods of
modern industry. It would never pay
to teach a lad how ro make a pair of
shoes, for shoes are made wholesale 1 y
immense factories in which each work-
man does one particular part only. This
gives ns more shoes but fewer handi-
craftsmen. So is it in many another
field. This has greatly reduced the
number of young fellows who formerly
learned a trade because that was the
only way in whioh they could get em-
ployment in the making of things. But
there are enough opportunities left for
those who valve the art for the art's
sake.
At all events, every boy should be
taught how to make a living at some
calling whioh he likes and which awakens
in him the spirit of ambition, If he is
left with nothing to which he oan turn
hie hand but some disliked task whioh
he regards as drudgery and which gives
no play to skilled work, he may very
possibly throw it up in some moment
of impatience and declare war upon a
social system whioh affords him so little
opportunity. And war upon a soolety
leads direct to such penal institutions
as that over which Dr. Gilmour presides.
No young man can be regarded as.having
his feet firmly set upon the high -road of
Iife until he shows an interest in the
scenery which can be enjoyed from
where be stands.
A Good Citizen.
Oar idea of a good oitizan, and we
are glad there,are many in this com-
munity, is one always wilting to give,
according to his means, to community
enterprises. He takes stook in them all,
and doesn't lose his faith if an occasion-
al venture proves bad. Ha is not afraid
to buy real estate and to pay whet it is
worth. He talks np his town as home
and abroad, thinks it the healthiest place
on earth, believing it tq be destined to
be the biggest town in its swam, and
wants to be buried here when he dies,
And he's worth a whole regiment of the
luke warm kind. If the publisher of
THE Turns did not think and know
Wingham was a good town to live in,
so much would not be gratutitionaly
said from week to week in its favor, and
all at the sole expense of the publisher,
MAKE THIS ACCORDING
TO THE DIRECTIONS.
WATCH YOUR TONGUE
If Furred and Cd, it is a warn -
log of TrOuble to Come,
When it is the moraine after the night
before, you do not have to lock at your
tongue to know that the stomach i9 up-
set, the head is aobiegwith a dell rhythm
and that ali the world Tooke blank at4
dreary.
It may have been lobster Ntwbargb,
Weigh rarebit pr some other tasty dish
that looped much better at night than
the morning after. There is no neei to
look et the tongue therzzfonseter then, for
(symptoms of trouble. Yon naturally go
to your box of Ail -(sena stomach tablets,
and with one of the little relievers bring
jay and gladness, to the phystcal system.
The real time to watch the tongue lean
of the time. If it is coated with a white
fur, or possibly with dark trimmings,
even though the stomach door not tell
you by the acute pains of indigestion
that it needs help, yet the coating shows
that you are g •,ting into a bad way. and
that there is neell of Mi.o.na.
Mi,o na is so positive, so sure, so reli-
able .in its emotive action upon the stom-
ach that Walton Molltbban, the local
agent, gives an absolute guarantee with
every 50.cent box he sells to refund the
money unless the remedy gives absolate
and complete satisfaction.
Bobby's father had given him a penny
and a shining, telling him he might put
one or the other in the ohuroh plate.
"whioh did you give, Bobbie," his
father asked, when the boy came home
from church. "Well, father, I thought
at first 1 ought to put in the shilling,"
said Bebby, "but then jut In time I
remembered 'The L ird loveth n cheerful
giver,' and I knew I could give the
penny a great deal more cheerfully, so I
put that in."
Cough Caution
Never, positively never poison your lungs, Mit*
cough-reven from a simple cold oily--yogtbould
&wars heal, soothe. and ease the irritated bron-
cliial tubes. Don't blindly suppress ,it with a
stupefying poison- It'sstrangu how some things
finally come about. For twenty years Dr. Shoop
has constantly warned people not to take cough
mixtures or nresct•ititions containing Opium,
Chloroform, or shinier poisots..1m1 now -a littlo
late though --Congress says 'Put it of the label,
if poisons ,use hi your Cough Mixture." Good!
Very good ! ! Hm'cai terfor tidsvery reason mothers,
and others, should insist on having Dr. Shoop's
Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Shoop's
labels -and none inrthe medicine. else it must by
law bo on the label. And it's not only safe, but it
is said to bo by those that knoll it best. a truly re-
marl:able Cough remedy. Take no chance then,'
Particularly with your children. Insist on having
Dr: Shoop's Cough Cure. Compare carefully the
Dr. Shoop package with others and note the
difference. No poison mnnlw there! You can
always be on the safe side by demanding
Prepare This Simple Mixture at
Home By Shaking Ingredients
Well in a Bottle.
What will appear very interesting to
many people here is the article taken
from a New York daily paper, giving
a simple prescription, as formulated
by a noted authority, who claims that
he has found a positive remedy to
cote almost any ease of backaohe. or
kidney or bladder derangement, in
the following simple prescription, if
taken before the stage of Bright's ifs -
ease:
Fluid Extract Dandelion, one'half
ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce;.
Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces. Shake well in a bottle and
take in. teaepoonfnl doses after each
meal and again at bedtime,
A well•known drnggist here 'at
home, when asked regarding this pre-
scription, stated that the ingredients
r t1 harmless, are d 0 and an
, be obtained
ed
at a email cost from
any good preaorip•
Hen pharmacy, or the lnnixtiare would be
pat up if asked 16 do so. He further
stated thathila h'
w tisre rf fon
e0 t
p ri
,ill
often presoribed in rheumatic milts
tions with splendid respite, he could
se no rea8oii h i
e w t tvonld not o be a
F
splendid remedy for kidney
and uri.
Miry troubles and backache, as it sae
a peculiar action upon, the kidney
structure, cleansing these most impote
tent organs and helping then to lift
and filter from the blood the font as-
ids
side ,anal waste water whioh aanie
tloknese and entering. Those of d
readers who suffer can S
ake fro tniatdke
in giving ft a trial.
OA. fllrt'r Na Xi. I.21. *
Rewe tite "tile Kind Y%e Um Aiwa
aitnatme,
of
r. Shoo 's
Ci u Care
. r +
"ALL DEALERS"
Learn Dress -Making by Mali
in your spare time at home, or
Tape a Personal Course at SehOol
To enable alt to learn we teach on cash or
instalment plan. We also teach a personal
Claes at school once a month. Class eonimenc-
ing last Tuesday of escn month, These lessons
teaches how to cut, fit and put together any
garment from the plainest shirt waist suit. to
the most elaborate dress. The whole family
can learn from one Course. We have taught
over seven th' nsand dressmaking, and guar-
antee to give five hundred dollars to anyone
that cannot Iearn between the age of 14 and
90 You cannot learn dress -making as thorough
as this course teaches if you work in shops.for
years. Beware of imitations Ps we employ no
person outside the school. This is'the only
experienced Dress Cutting School in',Canada
and excelled by none in any other country.
Write at once for particulars, as we have
cut our rate one-third for a short time.
Address:
Sanders' Dress -Cutting ,School, .
81 Erie St„ Stratford, oat., tianada.
W ANTED AT ONCE -We have decided to
instruct and employ a number of smart young
ladies tb teach our,course in Dressmaking,
haying one teacher for the six nearest towns
where they live -age 20 to 31 Those who have
worked at dressmaking, or likes drawing pre.
!erred. Please do not apply unless you can
devote your whole time. Address-
TsswOcH00L
Synopsis of Canadian Northwest
Homestead Regulations:
ANY even numbered section of Dominion
Lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and
Alberta excepting 8 and 20, not reserved, may
be homesteaded by any person who is the sole
head of a family, or any mate over 18 years of
age, to the extent of one-quarter section of 160
acres, more or less
Application for entry must be made in per -
Son bythe
applicant at a Dominion Luride
Agency or Sub -agent y-- for the district in which
the Iand is situate. Lrntry by proxy may, how-
ever,
bo made et at.•AAgenoy on certain condi-
tions by his father, mother, son, daughter,
brother or sister of an intending homesteader.
The homesteader is required to perform the
homestead d.>:ties under one ofthe fdllowing
plans:
(11 At least six months' residence upon and
Cultivation of'thelaud ln'eaCh year for three
roarer
(2)homesteader A de May, if � h i
y,
0 e o dee roe.
perform the required residen oedutiesb living.
s .
oh farming land owned solely by him, not less
than eighty (80) aeroa in extent, In the vicinity
of bis homestead. Jeint ownership in land.
will not Meet thisrequirement. .
(8) If the father (or Mother, if
the father i,
deceased) of the homesteader has permanent
residence on farming land owned solely by
him not less than .
h eighty (80) In acres o8tent,.
in the vicinity t h
h oftehom d
yeaten Cr Upon. a
P
h me,toad enter
a ed for by hfm.in the .vicinity,
each homesteader may perform his own rest -
derive duties by living with the father (or
mother.)
(4) The term "vicinity" in the tWO preeed•
ing paragraphs is defined all meaning not more
than nine miles in Inc direct line, a clutive of
the width of road aliowandea °roea'ed in the
noaeurement,
(6) A homesteader td rarf
iim his
rtcldence duties in aocordance with the above
whilediving wifjt parents or, do farming land
owned by ot ltimfrselt mutt notify the Agent
the dietr3of such intention,
Six months' ' no
m s lice in rrritin t
mtixt b(1 " en
+dav
to the 'X;ommlbsicnar of ttotnittion Lands at
Ottawa Of intention to apply for patent
W, W. CORY,*
Deputy of the 3fluieter of the Interior
et.r iReenie0tnwililttdotbe elda for. of thin elder
TOWN DIRECTORY.
BAPTIST ()Buccif--Sabbath services at
11• a m and 7 P m. Sunday School at
2:80ni., General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev, 11.
Edg tr Allen, pastor. B.Y.P.U, meets
Monday eveniugs 8 p,nt. Abner Oosens
S.S. Superintendent,
Mnxlio»IST CIHUROn--Sabbath services
at 11 a m and 7 p In. Sunday School at
2:30 p m. Epworth League every Mon-
day evening. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W.
)wson, pastor. F. Baohaaan, S.S.
Superintendent,
PRESBYTERIAN Qattara -Sabbath ser-
vices at 11 a ]n1 and 7 p m. Sunday
Sohool at 2:80 p m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev.
D. Perrie, pastor. L. Harold, S S. Su-
perintendent.
ST. PAUL'S OnuROE, EPrsaOPAL•-,Sab-
bpth services at 11 a m and 7 p m, Sun-
day School at 2:80 p m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evening. Rev,
T. S. Boyle, M.A., B.D., Rector ; Ed.
Nash, S. S. Superiutandent ; Thos. E,
Robinson, assistant Superintendent.
SALVATION ARM -Service at.7 and 11
a m and 8 and B p m on Sunday,- and
every evening during the week at ti
o'clock at the barracks.
POST Osman -Office hours from 8a m
to 6:80 p m, Open to box holders from
7 a m. to 9 p m. P. Fisher, postmaster.
Punr.io LIBRARY -Library and free
reading room inhe Town Hall, will
be open every afternoon from 2 to
5:80 o'clock, and every evening from 7
to 9:80 o'olook. Miss Maud Robertson,
librarian.
TOWN COUNCIL --W. Holmes, Mayor;
Dr. A, J. Icwfn, Reeve; David, Bell,
D. DZ. Gordon, Thos. Gregory, John,
Kerr, D. E. McDonald Wm. Nicholson.
Ooanoillors; J. B. Ferguson, Clerk and
Treasurer; Ansou Dalmage, Assessor,
Board meets first Monday evening in
each month at 8 o'olook.
HIGn Sonoon BOARD.- John Wiieon,
(ohairman) Dr. J. P. Kennedy, Dr. P.
Macdonald, Dr. R. 0, Redmond, J. A.
Morton, C. P. Smith, W. F. VanStone,
Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. Cosens,
treasurer. Board meets second Monday
evening in each month.
PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD. -A. E. Lloyd
?chairman), B Jenkins, H. E. Isard, T.
Hall, H. Kerr, Wm. Moore, Alex. Ross,
C. N. Griffin. Secretary, John F.
Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson.
Meetings second Tuesday eveningin eaoh
month.•
;
HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS -J. A. Tay.
lor, 13.A,, principal; J. C. Sgiith, B.A.;
classical master; J. G. Workman, B.A.;
matitematioal master; t Miss J. MacVan-
nel, B. A., teaohpr of E, n g li ell and
Moderns. ,t •
•
PunLlo Saimoon Ta&a1iaRs.--A. H.
Musgrove, Prinoipal, 'Mies . Break,
Miss Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Mies'
Wilson, Miss Cummings,. and Miss
Matheson.
Bolan or HEALTH --Thos. . Bell,
(chairman), R. Porter, Thontas Greg-
ory, John Wilson, V.S.J. B. I41eaguson,
Secretary; . Dr. X. ''It, litatfaxtaid,
Medical Health Officer,; "
FARMERS
•
•
and anyone having live' stook orother
artioles they wish to dispose of, should adver-
tise the same for sale 1n the Trims. Our large
oircutation tells and it will be strange indeed if,
yon do not seta customer. We can't guarantee
that yon will sell became you may ask more
for the article or stock than it Is worth, Send
your advertisement .to the Trans attd try this
plan of disposing of Sear Adak and: oilier'
articles, -
CHRISTMAS:
JEWELRY
It is not too early to think about a
Christmas Gift ; and Jewelry is ap-
preciated by everybody.
eSome„folke' think Jewelry' fel too
xpensive - it is, it yon do not buy-
from
uyfrom a firm like ours that buys in
such large quantities we get the very;
closest pride, and sell' to Yon so cheap
it will surprise you. We can easily
save your railroad fare. u '
Call at our store and gee the ex-
oeptional values in:
t,. Bracelets, Watches;
Out Glass, Neokle e,
Rings, Stiokins,
- •-a4.Hand•painted (thine
UntbreIlae,
Ebony Hair Brushes,
Fine Eogiagement Rings,
Watking Stioke,
Opera Glasses etc., eto.
C1HWard &Co
DIAMOND SrE61AL1sT8
874 ,Richmond $t.
LONDON, ONT;
CANADA'S OLDEST
NURSpil4S
I TENDINPLANTERS• .
N G
of Nur.
'dery Stock and Seed - Potatoes should
either write direoted to kte, or See our
nearest agent, before Wooing theirorder`e.
We guarantee eatib action; primed right;
Wiz' year* experiment; extra heavy.tooi�'
of the best a plea.
AGENTS WANTED.
ole or r.
Wh e t time `cal orliberal
I oomtniesidn milt frau; fiend fOr tbrlui
'T*E TJ9[08. BOWMAN Ilk
-
SON, CO., LL.tt1.
itroa;s'vYLun p1lieltlo.
$3T,QB7013 D 1187
THE WIN611 n TIMES.
I8 PUBLISHED
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
-Ax-
The. Times Office. Beat'er Sleek
WINGHAM, 01gT4t1I0,
TERM or 8naOO8lerlotf-$1.U0 per annum, In
advance 11.50 if not so paid. o paper discon-
tinued tiHo all arreera ars paid, except at the
option of the pubfieher,
ADVSRTIeiNG RA s. -. Legal and other
oasnol advertisements loo per NonparIel lino for
first insertion, 8o per line for eco subsequent
insertion,
Advertisements in local columns are charged
10 eta. per line for first insertion, and 5 cents
per line for each anbsequent insertion.
Advertisements of Strayed, Farms for Sale
or to Rent and similar,. 81.00 for first three
weeks, and 25 cents for each subsequent in-
sertien,
OosTaACT RAxna-Tbe following table shows,
for
opr ratesepeolnfored theperiods:--
insertion of advertisements
srao>s. 1 YR. oxo. 8 xo, 1110OneColumn «,.$70.00 840.00 828,60 $8.00
Half Column .... 40,00 25.00 15.00 0.00
Qdm
arterOolun '.,.- 20,00 12,60 7.60 8.00
One Inch 6.00 8.00 2,00 1.26
Advertisements without s eolfio direottons
will be inserted till forbid and charged accord.
ugly. Transient advertisements must be paid
for in advance.
Tun Joie DSPARTMexT 10 stookod with an
extensive assortment of an regnisiteefor print.
ing, affording facilities not equalled in the
countyfor turning out first class work. Large
type and appropriate outs for all styles of Post•
ers, Hand Bilia, etc., and 'the latest styles et
choice fanny type for the finer classes of print
ing.
H. B.'I,LIOTT
Proprietor and Publisher
JPbeD., 74.0.P. of hee BtishhMesllsegoia-
tion, Gold Medallist; in Medicine. Special
attention paidato diseagea of Women and Child,
ren, Office hours -1 to 4 p. in.: 7 to 0 p. m.
DR. 3MA CDONALD.
Centre Street
Wingham,
Ontario.
DR. AGNEW,
Physician, Surgeon, etc.
Office-Macdonaldasaved'attho8aDrug Store. Night callsanswered e 1e
R, ROBT. C. REDMOND, M. R. O. S. (Eng)'
L.R.0.P.Load.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
Office, with Dr. Chisholm.
R.,
VANSTONE,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. ETC
Private and Company funds to loan at lowest
rate of inter/set. No commission charged. Mort-
gagee, town and farm property bought and
,old. Office. Beaver Block, Wingham
ar
J,
y
A. 211ORTON,
BARRISTEER, &e,•-
Wingham, Ont.
t... DIOnnesox DIIDTArHor.Maa
DICKINSON' '& HOMES- p
BARRISTERS, SOLIOITORS, Eto.
• Monster To Lout.
Orrloa: Meyer BIook, Winghisln.
RTHUR J. Itt,WIN, D. le. S., L. D, as to
ocbor or Dental$urlter,,of the Pennsylvania
Dental College and Licentiate of the•Royyal
College of Dental Surireons of Ontario. Oaico
in Macdonald Block, WInghain • ^'.
Office closed every Wednesday afternoo"n
during Juno, Julyand August,
J. PRIG$,XS. A., L. D. S., D. D. S,
W
Lic,entiate .C.5 'the Royal Collegeof Dental
Sturgeons of Ontario,' and Graduate of Uni-
versity of 'roroito.
• Office ; Boaver'D)bift, r'
Office closed.. every.Wednesdimy afternoon
during .nn,,July and; August:
LEX. HRLLY, Wingham, Ont. ,
p•'
ALIOEIQSED AUCTION/E8 •
For''the County of Huron, males of all kinds
conducted atregspnable rtes:; Orders left' at
the TIMES office will receive •prompt, attention:
Wingham General 'Hospitaf
(Ub$er Government inspection)
Plegsantly site$ted. Beautiful, fur-
nished.. Open to all: regularly licenced
physibialie, RATES Foil P4TIENTS-
(which include hoard and nursing), $8X$0;
to $15.00 per week according td location
of room. For.further information,
address#, •
• .•' Mee KATHRIan Srinast$ON,
• Superi"ntendent,
• ..Sok 223, Wingham Ont.
RAILWAY TIME TABLES.
get,RAND TRtTNS RAit WAY .ST$M.
" • + THAXNs L .& t'Z ron
London. .. 0.40 a m.... 8.8Op.m.
Toronto &East11.08a m., 8.48a m..., 2.40p.m.
Ilincardine..11,57eRan.mr.I'vn.. rH 5.08 ,x p rid..., 9.16p.m.
0
3noardine 6 40 a.in�1I.00a.in--. 2.40
LLoondon...... ,. 21.54 a m.,..4 85 p.m.
Palmerston 10.80 a.m.
Toronto&East.., 2.08 p.m.. - 9.I6 p.m.
L ELA:IIOLD, Agent, Wingham..
(ry'1 ANADI'iAN ?AOIE20 RAILWAY.
lli TRAMS Ware rag
Toronto and Haat,.,..-:. 7.08 A.M.... 8.24
Teeswater 1.07 p tn....i3O,27apait.
**my* non
Toree rater..., b,.7,08 a.m.....nB.24 p.tn.
Toronto d t,
,.,1, 07.m...10..
irb .7 ,tn.
A.A.S3NIS e
P P
�t. tit iti ha
.$ Air ,W k lir
�o
YEARS*
EXPERIENCE
PAT E N
TRADE MalUti
DItaintia
CePvtnat4Ta At,
aeste ab rt J
os(thea
y
Conttauntoe
M.
y;;y •. entht�
,1Kd[ tirGldq lo... .isiinnseewbo retest
,
nrt o, receive
till iitt tat
doing
Wtitrttkon t. a
Anyone eenehl
ttlofc1y' asoertii
tgnvontton a
ttoneetrt
0001
Feeding Sheep
Economically.
1
lIandling sheep and lambs the last
two or three years has been easy money
to almost every ono that has touched
them, and the profit In the business
has been sufilelent temptation to get
sine teen back into the business who
do not hitve a stroug personal pre-
dilection for the animals,
Any such who do go into raising or
feeding sheep or lambs are apt to not
take ninth note of the ways of animals
about their eating 1111(1 may conse-
quently allow thein to waste a good
deal of grain, All who are familiar ;
with sheep know that though they eat
utmost anything that Is green and
clean, they will not eat dirty things;
especially grain or forego that has
been contaminated with their (stall
filth, Consequently it is n matter of
importance to provide troughs for
grain and racks for roughage, into •
which they cannot climb and stand or
clap pet their feet at all.
Probably the best way to make
troughs for grain is to build them
alongside ,and close up to a board
fence or wall of a building, says a
writer in Perm Progress. If this is
done and the trough, even though flat
bottomed, is not very wide the sheet,
will not be able to julep up into it and
stand in it. 'this would be the plan.
for a single trough, and the sheep could
stand only ou one side.
But troughs may be made flat bot-
totned and wide enough to divide by a
board partition running along the Mid-
peen
id
PEED RUNIC Pon iuUDDY LOTS.
die lengthwise, tilt:18.111g it, foto two
troughs of the length required- If this
partition of beards or slats is high
enough the sheep eaunot well get into
and stand..iu the troughs and foul .,the
feed. s
.
As sheep dislike Mud very uhueh find
hate to get wet feet, provision ought
by all moans to be made for feeding
them in the dry. A well made shed
facing south is the bent way ,to secure:
this' protection, bi: 11 for' any reason
the sbed yannot be provided for feed
ing themzt is,-tery idesirable that tiles
ground: 'around thq•.•feed nicks .and'
troughs, shgisld he 'dry.. ,Where gettre1 '• °.
]s ttbsi-niiantritlsiug the Found arotnt'
the rnCIIs and putting- oil ,four 'to ,'tXir.
inct)eO.ef grew). will Icegp the iminecie]-• ^;
ate suriouudings:.firm and tree from
Wind. }•,•
• If ,gravel Is .not obtainable and there
fs no other way to provide for solid
standing room around the feed reeks • "
and troughs the ,best t tog is to build it
board platform on ge'sulstitnttnl sills
of sem° wood that does not rot edsily.
`This,iden is shown in 'the tecalttpany-
ing.i11ustratioln,. Xthich•shows lo`v, fiat
racks. The racks luighii heT better If
made, V• shaped, `;pith up' and 'down
.slatted sides, wide enough epArt'ter per-
aiit the slf'Fep;s.noses to -pass through
renally. I have 'used them •h)1a(ie 'in
Hiatt way•as Wi 1 as )li;e the illustration
and' found"; that ' i't, eavbOE 'much of the
hayOui;'nips•atndtotl er tli1ng that fed ,
tfleni?.'
," Sheep .ori' Legumes. a •
Coro. should bit exerciletl',in' pastur-
ing'sheep ou i )over:Or, an Tact, on any
member of tbe'legune family, fdr un-
• less judgment is used thet'e .nifty be
considerable loss from bloating. There
is a right and a wrong.way of pastur-
ing these props. The tight way tg to
allow 'the Clover or alfalfa almost to
come Into bloom before turning in, the
shop. "Then there should- be sown
'i'itl ' iese crops some timothy, redtop ,
n
r .any other nonlegtimingiis plant, for
where there is a mixture this way .the
sheep will'4alternately eat `one and the;
other and so reduce the chance $f bloat,.
•'Chen tuining in the flock for the; r^
fits# timte ey should be already filled-
*lth food. - )~or example, the day they. -
are to be turned into tile clover pas-,
afire feed them eerie, }it the morning'
a little grain stud hay, and when the'
'sun is well up and hot turn them out.'
Their instead of filling themselves* at;
once they will eat a little and then'
look for n edot spot fttrest In. Joseph,
D.' Wing has, he says, tried this , plan,
with great success. Ile also advises'
keeping )sefore them constantly a re-,
eeptacle containing salt and, alt stack-
ed lime mixed.
Once in the pasture they should nev-
er be moved Until It Cot)5ffs tittle to'
change to fresh pastuteaeptat is,they„;�
should not be •brought idle the .yardai
at night or they will 'be In clanger at"
bloating trlien let out again bit rho
morning.
:S1vingtlle Lambe.
.A. young iamb -trout high priced reg-
letered stock is' too vnluablo to lase,
but not every one is. Success -ul in rais-
ing them by hand; If 3t mut be done •
that way I always turn diem oven t 0
tny wife, writes ft breeder in Farni and
I)wireslde. When the .lambs, begin toy
s
matte their t a titanseshe hunts up
the bottles, nipples :and menstzring
Ithioe, also the dairy therntometet. She
Is very careful not to overfeed and
never gives over •tin odtfee every two •
flours, day' and night, nntil.tbe tautly I*
week old. '-1-41 thilve.deg'tees l+s tiro, •
telaPtrai
re We tee. We
Meilen
be
t-
ter to tiro- �f
ato b
cin a little
8t
the vorder"han
tea *lime, 13o not
h w that has been
coin
f intik f
caedm
a
long in lact:tirn If yen tan help It. e
try to have a 'ptiteettitt cow when the
Lambe begin to come, db If there Meat
17e otttellst lamps on taken tsit .1114vei >w
Wilk ire iutit i"e'abut A *tett,
f
ti
7.M
eti