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The Wingham Times, 1894-12-14, Page 2Ti IE N r• I N (i 11AM TIMES, DECEMBER 14, 1894. TWO O BONNETS, tions, each. to that of the other. May • iaeueiits. of Spraying Orchards. „.Arxd be particular, Miss Finney, , Leggeett opened. her box at once, and A correspondent of the Rochester well she might, collected data on the extent and re - Nothing ever became her so well sults of spraying orchards in Western before, pretty as she was. Monroe, Orleans- and a part of Nia- "And where did Miss Finney get gars counties. The past season the silk ?" she asked herself. nearly all orchards bloomed tura se Iy 'The sill: was a rare bit of Indian full, but heavy rains carne on, wash - stuff, brought especially by Miss ing the spraying from the trees, Aslilaury. It could not be duplicat-' Some sprayed orchards therefore pro - ed. 0 (laced little fruit,while some unspray- All the material was the finest. ed ones had fair crops, but the gene - Miss Finney had been obliged to to Jet alts one else have that le before the lawn party." • 1lee Floreyoto;k .ed s irprised, y reputation depends a good torr having the new styles early, 11r• Asbury," she said, • "Only two days," said Miss Ash- y. "And I don't ask you to favor for nothing. Put it in the bill." "It will be ten dollars, extra in the hill," said. Miss Finney. "And really I don't theme it would be worth it to yon." "I' am willing to pay for a whim," Id. Miss Ashbury. "Don't you see high bonnet makes all the low es look dowdy ? I'm not a'beauty, tit I can be stylish, and I will. 'F'hw if this were seen, . that little iss Leggatt would be etting you to trim over her old one,' or doing it herself, 6lr the matter of that, and 1.oak a f wall, without ,.,pr.nclm„ any- thing. Thirty dollars 'for the bonnet and um for the favor, makes forty, ,' i. . - w didn't Who f to .no I d 1 1 t t? lA t degas_ i � get tit's from Paris ?" "I'll do it for you, Miss Ashbury," said the milliner. "You spend a • great deal wwritii me. \') All your family do.. I should say 'o' to anybody else." • •;"Very well," said tte young lady. "I depend. upon yo4' And away she tripped. "Buidue,s is busisi lntllllier ; "but I'd. a g have helped May Leg p Leg • Out than have helped out. However she's hurt by an old style, best -.I eau for her, sh My. promise, if she do May Leggett was every girl was sure e t gx11 been asked to the 1wu party. It - WAS new -bonnet time, anyhow, and things show so out of doors in the broad day -light. ti May carne in about twilight. Her - mother was an old ,friend of Mrs. Ashbury's —a sehoo mate long be fore.. "I want a .bonnet party," he said, "an . ( s to have it cost more 1 Can you make it for pretty?" "Yes, I ean, niy ddar," said the milliner. "Leave it t me." .After a little chat gay went away to do some household errand for her ss," said the od deal rather ett to cut you ;ort to cut her ro pretty to be ncl I'll do the rt of breaking $ Conte to me." Ire to come ; , had who come went into ecstasies over the hat, as (N. Y.) Democrat and Chronicle has for the lawn I can't afford tan five dollars, hat price to be mother, and another 1 "I want a new bons Miss Finney," site sai . "Everybody want by Tuesday," said th� you're going to the 1 Mrs. Wallace ?" "I am," replied Mr, Then there was tag and ribbons, the frail the lady went away,a sent the little saleswo;tian home, and shut up her store at went to her tea, Later she went to lid, and dream- ed that she made onnet which turned into a little a id with a bow and arrow. The next day she .trade the hon. 'nets and sent them home. The sales- : • woman, Patty, took them, and cn the way stopped to s "I've got a bond 'worth thirty dollars' Stopped in to show it "That's a good sister, who had just sleep, "I don't after see -the fashions." "This is a stunne' dy entered. t by Tuesday, a new bonnet milliner. "So wn party, too, . Wallace. of feathers was tried on, d Miss Finney take a great Ileal of trouble about the feathers, and tate lace was real and the pin a perfect little thing of value. Then the new style,. It was really like an imported hati "her for this," said t kiss I tuns , illay, and exhibited' it to the house- hold. Meanwhile Miss',i Ashbury hacl answer the test 'tv{itltaferro-eyanicla opened her box, and had. cried out in of potassiam, her sister. t here that's she said. "1 to you." irl," said her of the baby to get a chance to " said Patty, opening the box. 'Its a style not yet out in this place, Miss Ashbury paid to have it 0.rst. Though I ought not to mentio# it, for I listened 'when they didn't Try it on, Sarah." Sarah tried it en. " You ean da int she said. "That is, the same. There's But, dear me, I sh hat like that, as life. Some folks some for children,'' the baby in its er the other, th, Ptttt y,, s 'we're about it." "It's only Miss liking," site said. 1 strings. " Icrt n have and said. Sarni; 's pretty." she put boxes and tied them up, While itts� tftll`ed pont' pie and took acup And in doing so, alae ening• ro that Mitt Aehbury's 411., . Myodhi, the t rias in Mils Leggett's bnx, the Supreme Court Tom Pi4dtvey, ignorant of the acct- • deacon in rx Congre them to their dlerseina K. D. C. ams; ral results are in favor of spraying. William F. Menne Niagara, sprayed three tinges and hate a heavy crop of superior fruit, bending ;branehes to the ground, One orchard of 1•Gacres yielded 200 barrels of fruit. He used Bordeaux mixture and Paris 1 —iIthe f lrn r 101b. Teen cot. btne 1 c le g combined —in of copper to 1,00 gallons of water, with enough milk of lune to astonishment;. John Collamer, of Aronroe, (who "There's a mistake somewhere," too: first prize for Twenty-Unnce she said to her maid. "Run to Miss apples at the world's fit`I'r last year) Finney's, Jane, and tell her that the did not spray, lint plowid his orchard girl has brought a wiong box." , late last fall, and thinks most of the Jane went. She d took a slow, deliberate milliner's; but that 1 not run, but fcuigons spores were killed by frcez- Walk to the ing. Ile had a fine ;crop. Others, good woman, however, who plowed and did not having finished her work for the lawn spray, have no apples During the party, had closed early, given Patty Codling Broth season Ir. C. hung a holiday for the next,, two days, and kerosene lanterns through his or - gone away to pay a 1,ong intended chard. Over "ell light was an 18 visit; and the next clay was the day inch tin reflector, AO ,underneath a of the lawn party. it pan of water with k itsene oil on Whatever lead lt4ppened, Miss top. Myriads of moth's H4were found Ashburycould not ,alter it now. each horning in tle pans. His Fuming with rage, sig first decided it not to go at all; then:+t changed her mind, and wore a iratlthat had once pleased her very mucl , but which had lost her favor; he only one, however, i that matched( c( her suit. She arived late, an the first ob- ject that attracted. het May Leggett walkin Devere and wearing li It occurred to Mis this might all be a ba she seated herself on i1 garden seat one of them for sevei and tried to wake up, lout the night- yielded little and pe mare would not be dislelled. orchard in Monroe w They came down the cath together. part, when the leaf -b Neither saw her. "You really have .bonnet to -day," said sisters say I am a jud r. apples were free fron not as free as those o Delos Yinny, who had fruit free from 'storm or blemish. Ile used the lights and also sprayed. Neighbors \' who did nolChc.f have little fruit, and that of inferior'iluality. attention was Three Orleans grigwel•s sprayed • with Harry with Bordeaux mixtu e before blos- er bonnet. soming, and with the mixture and Ashbury that . Paris green after blossiming. Their dream, and orchards bore large rops, though 1 years has r fruit. An sprayed, in is were start - mit hacl form - w apples. The d just before ming, yielded n fruit. The ice was that Orleans. His es 30 years Pars produced every other o apparent frayed twice three times the fruit and also The crop worms, but a neighbor, 00 barrels of I think it pretty May. "But, oh,.if you knew how charm- ing you are in it," said Devere. They went on and sat down beneath a tree. Evidently=,, he Was saying little. Two years ag something important.. Iw.lay blushed, tree was cut out, with but she also smiled. "Miss Ashbury benefit. Last year he arose and betook herself home again, before blossoming and after, the last time wlr was the size of walnut hung lanterns in the tre was 2400 barrels of fine ruit. Some trees not sprayed, other half spray- ed, showed results in inferior fruit. A neighbor, from 150 sprayed. trees, picked dearly 1,000 barrels. Anoth- er, who did spray, and had promise- early rofniseearly in the season ,of 5,000 to 8,000 barrels from 15', acres, could only cull out 200 barr 700 bushels to the cid, house. One failure spraying is noted—tha near the lake, wherq retarded blossoming fi than in orchards a mil a week's rain followe bably washed the pol blossoms, as the Twenty -Ounce, an early variety,. bore moderately, Greenings very little, and Baldwins not at all. ing, and again after the sweetest ed. This part bore f every. "My other portion, spray? and just after bloc yself," said 150 barrels of premi • most remarkable Inst: of Albert Wood, of orchard of 25 acres, t old, had for several y without speaking oto her hostess. Afterward she explatped that she felt ill. Assuredly slie suffered. "My goodness !" crud Miss Finney, a few days afterward? "How could it have happened ?" "Only to think ! It's like witch- craft !" "Miss Ashbury hos been kind about it, as far as moriiy goes," said the milliner ; "but I've; lost her cus- tom. However, I don't care. I be- lieve my dream eame t ue, and the bonnet turned into a 1itle Cupid, for niy dear May Leggett as going to marry young Dever,, aid they be- came engaged at the lawn party. And I, for one, stn glad the mistake happened. Do you knw, two or three times I wished thatbonnet was May's, I actually believe I put it in her box myself." ' "Ycs'm," said Patty. Everywhere Well Splrken Of. Are Stark's Powders for Sick and Nervous Headache, Biliousness and Liver. ,A. Great Mistake. Lome Dairy Bourse. If every' one who is in straitened i circumstances should be told, on good authority, that he should be well supplied with cash the year round if he would. wear a boot on one foot and a shoe on the other, liow soon most people would want to try it ! And yet here are thousands of us, dairymen, who do not know our right hand from our left in relation to the cows we keep— whether each one is, with butter, paying its own board and a profit or not, while the process for finding out is as simple as A13 We talk and laugh, eat anddrip , and take our chances, whet1,,,ee o ght to be look- ing ook ing into the business., Even the cowl that is known to give a large pro -1 portion of cream is often a delusion, a unless you sell her cream by tile' quart, A quart of cream from one cow may not make Its: much butter as apint ftcun another. ':,end milk -- Olt, what a diversity 'there is in it ! "I know that is gooc milk," says rich." , •'nclic istesita. 1, "the b 1 i ouc,t c ; But put it in thee:, . Babcock tester— that will tell the story, , '"Oh, these new-fangled notions !": "1 have al- ways clone well enough without them." But if you that give, 300 lb. of 1 Is, and hauled mill and dry - ter thorough of an orchard cool - breezes re days later south ; then , which pro - en from the HOLLOWAY'S OINTMIiNT AND PILLS —Never at fault.•—In; all irritations Mr. Wood, manager Imperial Bank, for the skin, sores, ul era, burns, and now I heard. Port Colborne, says :—"They do their scrofulous enlargeme s of the glands )ne like that," the shape can be much in shape. I never have a o cost, in all fny or money and and she rocked i Lets see l e. "white w .tic e ;Aid, I ggett's—a eheap ut she untied the thatlsp- ltke sup - "It p "It isn't much', Ile bonnets into work admirably." ; Hollaway's Ointine t presents a Mr. Alex. Rumsey, Impbrial Bank, ready and easy mean of cure which Welland, says :—",They are excellent " Mr. George II. Williams, a extensive fruit basket nianufaotnr r, Thorold, says :--"Por over 12 yearS suffered severely from Sick and Nehvous Head- aches and Liver. r tried 41 the adver- tised remedies without effOct. Stark's Powders cured me." Price 2.5c a box ; sold bytlall medicine dealers. 1 Twenty million us services not eountin the Sunda 1 S tool e s are g � , held every year in the ignited States. Phlasutit as S dP Mr. Douglas Ford ?Pl.'oronto. Ont., states that Miltmrn'si d . Liver iii. Emulsion with Wild Ch ry Bark is free from objectionable tae being almost as pleasant ne syrup, Ile for eau ha and eolds it given co(nplite eatisfaotion, Eire. 1 bstinate ca acting promptly y even in „ acs. ief justice of f Japan, is a onaal church. IlEtr never disappoints the expectations. It ma Pests a peculiar power in restainin„ inflammation, removing stagnation cooling the heated blood and the king all acri- monious or unhealtl ' discharges. Whilst thus acting lo Ily, the Pills are n0es remark 1 s 1e for their th Dryer in improving. pgeneral con- dition and habit of th body, which renders the cures corn etes and per- manent. Under the ge eral innuendo the puny in- t e1111d, the egain colour the dyspeptic ostfavourable As winter is the time when farmers have most leisure so it should be the time when they should accumulate most knowledge to be used when it may be needed. The grain farmer should acquire knowledge in winter that may serve frim in summer, but. the dairy and stock farmer needs practical knowledge all the year round, No branch of farm work needs more intelligence and skill than the dairy, and no braneh of the dairy needs these more than the Homme or Farm Dairy. "No demand for low grade dairy batter" is what we see quoted nearly every day in the market reports, jvhy is this so ? Can not as good butter bd made in the private dairy as in the creamery? Yes, certainly thea can. Why then this poor;, repot, tion for • dairy chic*,e se 1 milk,. butter, be the mi , cream and butte?,, are not properly handled. Better butter may be rad ina private dairy than in creameries there need beessen- tial s e - 1 tl 1 no s n tial difference betweot dairy butter and creamery • buttia.� p exec t in the . quality made) tllaugli many city people think that thereinust be some special way of making creamery good and dairy butter perpetually. bac.. Our factory -course Per dairymen is full to overflowing . but we still have room for about 15"'4. the Horne Dairy Course which will be in opera- tion at the same time as the factory —from Jan. 14th to March 15th, 1895, and longer if ncessary, Stu- dents the take mayI�tures given in the factory course, take part in the discussions, and receive all their privileges except that they will work with utensils suitable ,for the farm dairy. We have e t,eaners, deep cans, 4 cream sepay ators, churns, workers, printers, milk testers and everything completeeto give a tho- rough course in farts dairying. Our Instructor is most painstaking and obliging. ' Let there be an awakening to the importance of , good butter in districts where there 4,re no factories —there are plenty of these in the Province and Crown dairying Must always precede facto]. oi' co-opooi'a- tive dairying—and le us see if we cannot,remove the stigma from dairy butter. tin keep cows utter per year each on the.. average,.'s it not better to do so, even if you do patronize some new notions, • than to get on , such as some conversant urn is what I with 2001b. or 125 cows yield that with? The money r call attention to. I agree with you in not caring a fig for sentiment. But let us bury our prejudice, test our cows and get hold of some good in place of any poor ries we may be supporting. It is th solution of the hard -times problem. The Babcock c k machines are.not Ina e and sold by a single concern•, . but by dozens of manufacturers alliNover the United States, and sold at 'all , prices, from $5 upwards. "Where is there a ierd averaging 300 ib. per cow --a he d of ten cows?" There are a dozen of 10 to 20 to 25 cow herds that do t ' is, and even better. "How did they ge They got them by the false idea that "' Notice, please, that such coWa?'r rat giving up COW is a Cow." [ alp not ad - w ertising some spec . Students may enter at.ariy time good cow is a good cow, whatever during the two Eno hs and stay as her family. But Naney is not posi- long as they wish, bt t I would re- . tively a good cow because her moth- commend a two week's stay. The er was, any • more than Midge is a, cost will be $2.00 for 'ce, board $3.00 great butter cow bee use her grand- to 3.50 per week ; and your railway 1 breed. A Seven Steps to fleaitll. A noted physician says if you want to be healthy and to live to a good old age you must climb upstairs and live at the top. The stairs consist of but seven steps, and you must make a pause on each step and follow Itis direetions : First Step—Eat wheat, oats, corn, fruits, beef and mutton,plainly cooks ed, in moderate quantity, Second Step --Breathe good air day and night. Third Step—Exercise freely in the tl open air. Fourth Step ---Retire early and rise early. Fifth Step—Wear flannel next your skin every day in the year, and so dispose your dress that your limbs shall be kept warm. Bathe fr. eqllent.y Sixth Step --Live in the sunshine, Let your bedroom be one which receives a flood Of light, and spend 1csunlight 1 your clays either out in t ll ted. 1 • o which is welli or inalo mg Seventh Step—Cultivate a cheerful jolly Seel: the society of' ]oll Y folks, Don't be afraid to laugh. Goe up this flight of stairs. Live above. Catarrh can't climb up tilers, of the potent rcinedies,,: fant becomes the rob pale and emaciated and rotundity it , ttnd and V' eats freely wit lout feat From 1880 to 189' there were 3,064 Lutheran church 'i built in the tl'ntted States. This is at the rata of 6 a week. .lis Z. D. 0. ills r chronic, osoii• sire was imported. ,tested a cow fare. r Ladies mayexpect-to receive cour- recentl, that .yields b'tt 2.35 lb. to p 100 ib. of milk. W1i would buy cour- teous' and kind treatilient, They are such a cow for a butte herd if he specially invited to this course. Why knew the exact qualit of her milk ?. not widen the circle of your acquaint - Yet many aman wou wittingly if she were a beast and the price Another cow gave over 100, and this in the fins Supposing that both thele COWS gave 5,000 Ib. of milk in a year, and their butter brought an average of 23e per lb; the one would return her owner $32.77—s arcely enough to pay for the feed, kith nothing for care and labor. Thea other, at the salve price per lb. for' butter would pay in $71.30 ! And'vhat man will snake good price from a scrub ? m, there are are not aware is for meas- utter fat in a Ew cloys ago a b test a cow. e his object. st. Well, he do so • un- ince and acquire a fine looking useful and practical reasonable. circular giving part ilb. to the of her milk. 0. A. C., Guelph. not struggle harder butter at a superior grand cow than from As odd as it may se still many persons wh that the Babcock tests uring the quantity of COLA's milk. Only a neighbor asked me He did not intim Later T told him his remarked, what ails her, anyway'? IIe had found that she was giving ropy milk, and expected the tester to tell what was the matter, and a remedy ! Smile, do we ? This was not half as foolish as 'o keep or buy cows without knowin that they re- turn more than a d lar for every dollar that they use t . This is " a great inistake.'•---•Hol ISTE1 SAGE in Country Gentleman. Mental Ate mess depends 'very largely lion the phy- sisal condition. Slug islt blood drills the brain. A Ripan tabule after meals will clear awva the frogs in short order. ti A cheerful dispositi is not only a. personal blessing, but public philan- thropy in the good e et it has on others. To judge human ch 'serer rightly a !Ilan may sometimes have very small experience, provided he has a very large heart. the same time nowledge. For sulars apply to H. H. DEAN. • Heed the .Warping. The common and ever present warn- ing of kidney trouble, back -ache and weakness in back, are quickly relieved by Dr. Chase's Pills. Tue original and only 25 cent Kidney -Liver Pills. When all other remedies fail, they cure. Brief and BrightProverbs. Big words won't spr' Sweat is the champi Where fathers flee The blackguard 1 slime. Most fences. Ache corns do not trees. Scalding tears will s cheek. Band books contain fashion. Short sermons make wideawake Christians. farms pastu t rails. rn fertilizer. others fight. the thief of a too many row on boot ar the fairest zany tales of • Art loses nothing modesty a fig leaf. A man's sign may his b ustness. Guns without f es 1 t shoot wide of the mark. A toothbrush shoal dirty story, It takes many It w drunkard's laugh, Don't put your advertising column. Beware the strength born of cam y- ing all the burdens, Temptation itfttion leligs Are on su es- t tag' by conceding c bigger than go with every 11 to make a, cr ets in the tion than exposure. Tetke Notice. ---The• Tints and Weekly Globe will be sent to any address in Canada or the United Statue, from now till January let, 1868, for,one dollar, pay. able in adrenal. How to Cure Dyspepsia. Dyspepsia arises from wrong action of the stomach, liver, and bowels. Bar- dock ierdock Blood Bitters cures Dyspepsia and all diseases arising from it, 99 times in. 100. Burdock Blood Bitters cures Dyspep- sia. Burdock Blood Bitters cures Consti- pation. Burdock Blood Bitters cures Bilious- ness.. Burdock Blood l3itters cures Head- ache. ' e Burdock Blood Bitters unlocks all the rr Bowels, thus secretions of the Bot 1 clo„g(,d snore e , curing Headaches and similar com- plaints. On Tuesday afternoon a young English lad living at the home of the Widow .Cassaday, at Auburn, Huron county, through fear of re- eeiving a whipping ran away to the barer and hid himself. He was found next morning with both legs frozen above the knees, and. has since been lying in a precarious condition. The young lad is an English orphan, and. much sympathy is extended to him, Belief in six hours. --Distressing Kid - bey and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by Oa "creat South American Kid- ney Cure." This great remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians on ac- count vecount of its exceeding promptness in reliev- ing pain iu the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male and female. It relieves retention of water and pain iu passing it almost immediately.. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold at Chisholm's drug store. Reciprocity is a law of life. We cannot expect much happiness or strength from. our fellow men unless we give something in return. The comfort of ease without toil is an illusion, and leads neither to the health of, the body, the vigor of the mind, nor the welfare of the soul. °t roken in tlealth That Tired Feeling, Constipation and Pain in t e Back Appetite and Health, Restored by 6•locu' y.! 11Ir. Chas. Steers St. Catherine', Ont. " have ears 0. X. !toed Ss Co., Lowell, lflass.: "For a number o is 1 • � Y neon tr0 ublela a •withgeneral tired feeling, i ee ing, tiortness of breath, pain In the back, and consti ation. I could get 0nly little rest at night one ount of rho pant and had no appetite whatever. 1 was that tired ( in my limbs that I gave out before half the slay .vas gone.I tried a great unmber of medicines but' did not get any permanent relief front any llood'scures 5arai�ll source until, upon recent= dation of 1 purchased a bottle of I ad's Saraparilla, tvhloh made me feel better a once. I have eon- tinned Reuse, having taker. three' bottles, and 1 Peel Like a. N w Man. shave a good appetite, feel strong es ever 1 did, and enjoy petted rest at night. I haws sueg pleasure in recommending flood's Bares,. pnritbl" OHAlltte STEM, With Erie 1°r.- servIng Co., 8t. cathorine41(hitario. Hood's ielils are prompt and einolent,:q easy in sago%, field by all druggists. ass. W ■ 0 (coai,r ff..? (X',fl ween cell th to the feet, t ante Union le at three o'cie maiden e, ten° mem As the iS1(t '8 ('0, for our 8(.'11(1 Kann et day to any of The The W. anee Unic has reach eight yea Christian been plies the preset deavor Sc It orf e Crusade a started D( Niro, O., s its Wont , c in 11 < ss< ac I1 nf.,, were the the refort, and the W. 0. T. liquor tra: hundred ; In An; National in Chaeta a convent 11-19, to Eighteen 1, the eonve dt has been •t Kgs organi The unio. nlized, l: 't'4'orld's , anco Uni active in •nati1ols. Tondo The co Union wi ,, how mu( -world alv n,ttainme. whether be a part organizal omission pledge I -way,itii bat it WE 'ollowvs : God hell distilled, 1ncludire to emplo courage same." pledge, obligator pledge 1; factory s Tho - ribbon,, the sock the C.' F the Lad: Waltllat over til 15101. 18` Union into Tie of thetsi pei'ali9e rfornietl, has is'su young, _ of all k. 3ltutdre flan of placed depart] big, • a1 There ed as r Iistic, "For land," are, "i evoryti Wit€ r1 this ill' out of ten thl States ° yeal'3 sough men , peptic twcnt; on the Not more tvotne Separ: oil all fomal CxcaU andi '1'Kr'illr