Ontario Community Newspapers

Newmarket Era , January 20, 1905, p. 8

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Vv thecal WIDE- AWAKE AND RELIABLE COR- TO SNOWBALL A very pretty wedding was held at ihe residence Mr John Brown near on Monday Jan when his eldest daughter Miss Clara was married to Mr Arthur Storey one of our most popular young men by the Rev of After partaking of a sumptuous wed ding breakfast the happy couple left amid showers of rice and old boots to spend their honeymoon at ton and places The wedding presents were useful and costly -oo- A joint meeting of ihe electors of East York North York North and South Ontario will be in the Auditorium pm on Tuesday January Hon John Mr Mr Scott and others are expected to de liver addresses on provincial matters Mr Joseph Hoover met with a very severe accident on Tuesday at Mr planing mill He was tie machine his coal caught and bis arm was drawn down upon the sticker cutting a gash the I wrist severing the first finger and lacerating between the second and third fingers The finger had to A RAOE FOR LIFE Spurting hit jadti horse to renewed efforts the should be refreshed proper food rest ten- s prescribing tonics compounds coca mixtures end cocktails only spar on the already weakened nervous system Keitberdoes it do to put tee nerve Co sleep with narcotics When feel wornout broken down jaded and eel the effects of brain tire as veil as nerre weakness and fattgue take Pierces Golden Medical Discovery a tonic which win do you lasting good build you up increase your appetite and strength and improve the condition of blood When the blood is impoverished the feel the Nervousness in nine cases Oct of ten is the cry of the starved nerves for food Feed the nerves rich blood and all nervous manifestations will cease II has teen months iae tiling Dr Medical and I only three the it raade like a nun mites AMiller care I alt an la for two cart tut charge for the better when I Goicn Medical To gain knowledge of your own in sickness and healthssend for the pic- Common Sense Medical Adviser A book of page Send cents in sumps for papercovered or stamps for cloth bound copy Address Dr V- Main Buffalo The Sovereign Bank of Canada be amputated above the third joint Begin the year in an account Savings Bank of TWENTY CENTS and upwards received and Interest Allowed Daily Balance AND Compounded Times a without presentation of viz January April Year Hook July ani October of each year 45 Branches id Canada AND Agents in all Parts of the World AURORA The locomotive on the Railway has refuse to work and the passengers and mail destined for that place and intermediate poinds are taken from here by bus It must be a pretty costly piece of to deliver the mails twice a day between here Mr Charles Norman received a let ter from his brother Rev Norman who is located at Nagano Japan as a missionary He says they have had about or inches snow there but about miles further north the snow is two deep Rev Mr Norman has built a new house at Na gano and moved into it just before Christmas He and his family in cluding his lister Miss Lucy Norman expect to return to Canada a year from next They are ling good health HOLLAND LANDING COUNCIL Courteous Unexcelled Iflodern Treatment Facilities Methods ACCOUNT IS INVITED Wallace Bruce BRANCH WANTED energetic agent for New- and surrounding districts to small fruits orni- Varieties of Potatoes Good salary or paid weekly Oyer Acres Cultivation Choicest guaranteed la good condition and accompanied Certificate of feco Our are the beat In fetafoitet party should now to CO Toronto paper To Farmers The PureBred Prince Victor Pledge Kol is bow for service on the farm of Edgar Dennis one mile couth of This bulls dam has an official re cord of butter In 1 week and hie in week both from to milk a day for an period Eire Imp Victor Kol is at the of Matt Sons herd Caledonia Ont of the largest herds in Canada BrickClad House For tale the property of the late Prattle on Prorpcct Ave the School House roomy good cellar and furnace for hale Ap ply to J Robertson or to OSCAR 4 rid trouncil met Jan at ilQr an and all present and took their declarations of office viz- Foster John fthieldn and Wot the Kick Child- this Council for Grant wlm The following bills were no he paid Martin Taylor inpairing iioote re Sheppard holding election The bill of Lane on 1U00 laid un til next of Hick Toron to wixJi granted fly Law appointing J and I J Auditor paid Jrd adopted Law to appoint Health ho1 Jrd adopted J the offieern appointed Vs J Jiheppard John Salter 5 J year- JriHjiectoi Rowland appoint certain for year third reading kind adopted the appointed liiHiKetor Rowland Viewers Jo Cooper Daley Arthur Morning and Daniel Pound Rowland And that they follows fntpfcctor three dollars per annum Pound Keeper and Fence Viewers the law Foster That IhlsCoun oil on the fA each month at p tftft Ringer fio not dyngj Bell At a until March next and that the Clerk put tap notices risking for lender for cedar long wound and straight 10 inches at ho delivered of next the Cleric put up notices nklng tot Tender for timber Moore Bridge to be deliver March carried on motion THE NEW AGRICULTURE We are out of thc con- iditlone said Prof James DeputyMinister of the Winter When our first came to they faced the primeval and during AH the clearing period the old held n new generation conditions Vegan to change live came in large barns were built and cheese began to be made gradual ly changed all our methods This building and the exhibits it contains are proof that we are trying to keep Up with the demands of the rues ft to compete with other coun tries by following the new Agricul ture The Agriculture must be con ducted upon business pr old times It did not seem fin necessary to pursue these business methods In with the urrouDdlns then existent there wo no chance to do so In our towns nod ciOesthe chant the has had to change his methods of bus Peas farmer Is a- iueh a manufacturer us the man In town who makes boots Cloths hard ware manufacturer town finds it necessary to make the kind of goods that the demands It is one of the conditions to day that the farmer should produce what his customers want We must what our strict is best capable of producing and work along that line lirnw the crops and keep the live stock that thrive best where We live The manufacturer must produce economically Our best mills for instance are now run ticnlly no waste of material even the dust is used One of the UC6t ex amples of economical muuufactnr seen in the great stock yards of Chicago where absolutely every port of no animal Turned into marketable product So the farmer must endeavor to convert to a pro fitable use of all hid product should to it that there lb no watte land under weeds under fences in cureless cultivation The farmer has Perhaps in his greAter problems to meet than other If he would avoid unneces sary waste The New Agriculture must b con ducted upon scientific principles There should not today be any ob jection to farming for it he in telligent man from pap ers and books gets valuable ex perience of other who have done the work be trying to do Our people are wisely beginning to lay aside their prejudice against books and to try to get the best Informa tion from every available source Scientific men Have been and are studying finding out truths about plant growth the constituents of our the breeding and feed ing of animals the growing of fruit etc and it will pay use to what these men have found out The farm work of the future will be a great deal enjoyable In Ontario the farmers re very referred to as oil hayseeds The Intelligent man- who watches closely the result of his is Interes ted and takes a pleasure In it The world has lately found out that far mer flit benefitted by an educa tion applicable to his business A few yearn ago in Ontario first found out that the farmer had a wlfernd we are doing what we can for the relief find bet terment of the women on the farm In the past she had hard life her work has been practically unending and she has not hud the benefit of labor saving devices to the tame ex trnt her We arc trying to relieve the farmers wife of all the drudgery possible by our system of womens instituted and domestic science teaching We have also found out there are children on the farm and we are inaugurating a move meat to try to provide the right kind of education for these The home where our agriculture and is nurtured The reform ation of the agricultural home is the start after all of our New Agricul ture Establish farmer an inclination to knowledge wife who knows now the most her opportunities and children gel- ting a rational education and I care not how poor that Sana in it will succeed With these conditions We shall bear no about the old hayseed bat we shall nee the farmer walking the streets of our towns as well dressed anyone and respected tut off citizens of Canada Dr oiflerence is fed by the s the jojIIk His Second Commission A story told of a once young officer who had been compelled dveree to throw up the he held In a crack regiment as a soldier He found it difficult however to forget his former rank and one day being to duty with the which he objecUd he rernonstrat he drawled er forget Ive held His Majestys AJaZ KM The cut him Headache generally comes because of troubles peculiar to these troubles come from a cause simple in itself but which Pills will quickly re move These arc many in which women suffer and ftWomansBackaohe is another most serious and painful experience of many Thousands of women are taking Pills periodically and find them wonderful in relieving the Every woman should acquaint herself vith the good these Pills can do as A Womans Suffering can be avoided by using 9 special instructions to vItli each box cot Thoms t toW In ContdJ Aark la 25 at THE ROSS GOVERNMENT OPENING UP NEW ONTARIO RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION IN ONTARIO v J The Ross Government has always been in favor of the development of Ontario by railway construc tion- The Opposition tried in way to thwart this feature of the Government policy but happily without avail Almost every propo sition for railway aid and construc tion before the Legislature by the Government has met with either open opposition on the part of Mr Whitney and his follow ers or practical opposition by plac ing obstacles in Ihe way There can bo no- true development or permanent of our new districts corresponding rail way construction and this progres sive Policy on the of the Gov ernment has been amply justified Mtriiia ltai1r The Central Railway has been constructed for a distance through a rich timber min ing country with intervening agri cultural areas while miles have been graded Vow that the In dustries have been reestablished on a permanent basis and the various works are in operation the Central Railway will in- all proba bility be pushed to completion to a point on the main line of the as originally planned Already settlement has accompan ied construction of the railway as far as it has completed and the pioneer conditions of settlement are being fulfilled at many points along the line When completed this line is bound to be a most important factor in opening up the undoubtedly rich re sources of that part of the District through which it passes When the Ross Government brought down the original Railway Bill of which included aid to the AI- goma Central Line Mr Whitney vio lently opposed the measure as a whole The Leader of the Opposition used his choicest expletives in de nouncing the Rill calling the propo sition to aid the railway in The most phenomenal steal the greatest attempt at public rob bery the most heinous public crime that was ever attempted by men in authority in the Dominion of Cana da do hot think I would he exaggerating io say on the Contin ent of North America This extra ordinary statement was greeted with prolonged Opposition cheers The Central Railway is vitally essential to the great enter prises at the and the aid giv en to the former would be warranted on that basis alone but if it will assist in the development of the un settled lands of the Crown of that district then the Government will bo doubly justified Northern The Ross Government again show ed its in undertaking the construction rtf the TeuiisVnming North Ontario Railway The passed through the Legislature provided for the construction operation of the railway as a Government enterprise A Com mission of five able men now com posed of Robert affray chairman and Gurney of To ronto W of Kingston of London and M J of Renfrew was appointed who were charged with the construc tion and operation of the railway In the relatively short time of two years the line has been completed for a distance of miles to a point miles north of New and regular train service la in operation the value of which now to the seniors in that thriving part of New Ontario can hardly be over- The Commission has Its work well The line has been con structed according to modern stand ards and ranks among railway ex perts a first class road in Us road lied and structural equipment and the Commission will in a few weeks take over the line from the contrac tors By the Act constituting the Commission which by the way was well described as one of tho most Important progressive ever introduced In the legisla ture of Ontario the Commission Is empowered to make reciprocal run ning arrangements with other com panies The cost of the railway Is being borne by the setting apart of adja cent Crown Lands In tiers of town ships not to twenty thousand I acres per mile on which th deben tures be a charge The railway has been constructed and equipped with Canadian material as far as possible No person has been employed In contravention of the Alien Labor Act and the current rate of wages In the district for similar work has been paid to those employed In its construction Another new commendable fea ture has introduced the Ross Government In connection with this road namely the appointment of on additional Commission charged with th duty of belting aside town This Commission Is composed of Mr Aubrey White Assistant Commissioner of Crown Lands chairman Mr Thomas Gibson Director of Mines Mr Thomas Director of Coloniza tion A Campbell Assistant Commissioner of Public Works and Mr Russell Chief Engineer in charge of the construction of the The value and Importance of this move will be readily appreciated when comparison Is made with the methods heretofore adopted on our Canadian railways whereby private railway corporations have disregard ed public Interests In selection and treatment of their ftud A system was another of Im portant lines encouraged and aided by the Province In thV Gov ernment subsidized the Rue- then known us the Ontario and Rainy River Railway Its speedy comple tion whs regarded as a necessity in view of the needs of the District Owing to the of construc tion the usual subsidy was deemed Insufficient and provision made therefor but when the Bill was be fore the Legislature Mr Whitney true to his policy of placing ob stacles in tho way of railway con struction moved an amendment to reduce the proposed subsidy from to If his view had prevailed in all probability there would be no line built yet from Arthur to the Northwest through the River District No one will dispute the advan tages of this line to the district touched or to the entire Province It not only made accessible large areas of mining lands west of Fort Arthur hut brought railway facili ties to the large population that had already settled upon the arable Of the Rainy River Valley where it is estimated there are a million acres of fertile lands In addition to these reasons yet another through competing line to the Northwest was thus given the public Already the Rainy River District has felt the impulse of growth af forded by the incoming of the way and the towns and centres In the District are expanding on every hand All was brought to pass how ever it should be remembered in spite of the opposition of Mr Whit ney and his Conservative followers I THE RICH RESOURCES Of ONTARIO AS DEVELOPED BY ROSS GOVERNMENT a port Canadian bo Ontario Is rich in many natural sources but in none more so than in her vast forests of The ten exploratory survey parties of 1900 found great stretches of tim ber of this class which they estimat ed at million and this Is only part of the extensive area of the Province The prophecy has been frequently made that Canada is destined to bo- come leading pulp and paper source of supply for the world and in the fulfillment of this prophecy Ontario will have a large share The On Sprnea While we have considerable sprues large enough to make sawn lumber great forests of this tree stand so thick on the ground as to prevent large growth and much of it is mainly valuable for wood pulp These forests if thinned out would of course to a size suitable for saw log purposes but growing demand for spruce for the manufac ture of paper renders the tree very valuable even when of small size Because of this may be cut in from to years from the seed and therefore two crops of sprues can be harvested to one of pine By reason of this natural law of repro duction our pulp Wood forests can not be exhausted by gradual utiliza tion It Is therefore a wise economy to realize on this of wealth Growth of The wood pulp industry is of com paratively recent growth but is in creasing rapidly Owing to the na ture of the industry the large capi tal required in its development and the fact that pulp wood grows In more scattered form than pine It was early seen that the method of disposing of the pine timber would not be applicable In this case pine timber is sold to the highest bidder at public auction and li cense issued for one year only re newable till such time as the timber has been removed from the land Very little capital was required ex cept In the pur huso of the timber In the pulp industry the conditions are entirely different It was in tho first place important to the industry and general welfare of the that the should not be sold and exported from the country in its raw condition In order to manu facture it into pulp large buildings expensive equipment are needed requiring enormous power and In order to warrant so in vestment the capitalists would na turally require for a long term of years a reasonable guarantee of a supply of wood for the con tinuance of the Industry The policy of the Government therefore was to grant over a limited ter ritory containing and kindred woods for a term of years usually twentyone on condition that capitalists expend a certain amount of money in erecting mills and manu facture Into pulp all the wood cut upon this territory with a guaran teed number of hands to be employ- ad the Government also collecting from the concessionaire dues repre senting the value of when cut Formerly the dues on sprues were cents per cord but with its valuo the dues were on March increased io cents per cord of Prohibited The export of In a non- manufactured condition has also been prohibited by a bill introduced by Commissioner of Crown Lands on March so that the law now provides that nil cut on Crown Lands In Province must be manufactured In Canada tho same as pine saw logs thereby giv ing employment to home Industry and In a practical way aiding In development of New Ontario and building up of Old On tario In tho various granted the different pulp companies the Government reserves right to In- the dues at any time and no doubt will do so proportionately with the advancing value of the The Bought which has been iu for oyer years lias home the signature of and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its Infancy All Imitations and are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment is a harmless substitute for Castor OH Pare goric Drops and Soothing Syrups It is Pleasant It contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic substance Its age is its guarantee It destroys Worms and allays Fever ess It cures Diarrhoea and Colic It relieves Teething Trouble cures Constipation and Flatulency It assimilates the Food regulates tho Stomach and Bowels giving healthy and natural sleep The Childrens Panacea The Mothers Friend- CASTOR I A Bears the Sigriatriie of Kind You Have Always teat Use For Over Yeans In CUT 77- ESTABLISHED YEARS Consultation FREE for Worrit Treatment FREE Prices Low No Cure No Pay A NERVOUS WRECK ROBUST MANHOOD to Guro Stricture Varicocefa nervous Debility Blood Vital Woatmosaos KMnoy Bladder Dis eases and fill Diseases Peculiar to men and Women lim and money on cheap increase at jour own your edits which they claim just discovered They I if i come to us In confidence We will treat yoo tv I and restore you to health In the shortest i Each cam a ii comfort and Our New Method 148 Shelby Street jest liv Jtar DETROIT MICH J I The Who Drinks There is one man who is having a hard time it the new condi tion of ami that is the drink ing man He cannot look to a cor poration lor sympathy The employ er wants a steady workman always ready to do his best and the result is drinking man is being forced more and more to the wall man is a problem for labor unions He can seldom hold a steady job He is always ap pealing to the union to help him se cure a situation- Each the union places him It damages Its repu tation as the drinking man is not up to the standard required What shall the labor unions do the drinking man must not expel him and pre vent him from working as for the discussion of but at such meetings there is one phase of the economic question upon which silence is maintained and thai is the liquor question This ought to be the foremost in discus sion as to how to solve it rightly will do the labor unions little good it they fight to increase the working- mans wage if the turns over to tin liquor traffic the increas ed wage he receives It is a pleasure to me as a trades- union man to sec the great leaders of organized labor ardent in their espousal of sobriety for the working- man A few years ago at a great labor convention a resolution was pre sented to indorse a certain brand liquor but It was overwhelmed al most unanimously It was well said that should think of doing anything of the kind as long as they remembered Frances lard and way she used her vole and pen in behalf of the downtrod den wageworker unions ought to set selres strongly against the liquid evil- he little short of a crime and they surely would not lower the standard sUioriS intoxicating of the workingman to the level of the drinking man who is Incapacitated from doing his best because of his diseased appetite for liquor The employer doesnt want him and wont official positions liquors should be dispensed at or entertainments given under their auspices The liquor question ought to be discussed as a problem Ti that stands in the way of the better H Advancement of the a problem for the J in Connecticut Git- unions to solve As long as labor unions him they will have a heavy burden to bear One of the fundamental principles of labor unions is to help their mem bers who arc in sickness and distress The man with a diseased appetite for liquor is in the most wretched pain tress that can befall a man because if not cured he is not only doom Juys a bottle to death of the body but also Jails to relieve a rev death of the soul The burden of carrying him in labor union Ms diseased aj-pe- Is not on WHY DO WOMEN SUFFER drops ii In cures nervous or sick Mi I a burden but alio a I you t i line be beaten for cur stomach and bowel troubles should be kept in every home menace to the progress of the union The cost or curing ttie inebriate mem ber would be compared i with the grand be ilned j ood to rub on for external pain and Labor union halls excellent or Inward use Sold In literature goto ex- large bottles

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