The Signal, 1916-9-7, Page 6•II
S TNOAati.t Tt, Pik 1 T. 7. 1616
THE SIGNAL GODERICH ONTARIO
FRUIT BULLETIN
PEACHES. The Popular Crawford Peach. Yellow
firestone. now at its hest.
NIAGARA M. Bartlett Pears and
PENINSULA Green Cage
at once, as the crop willbe
Plums also
ready,
i�ar: •
Housewives are ad-
vised to see their grocers
F lL VALUE
pM►CKAGE
$ �• WERS NO. 2 4
taken quickly this year.
look for the mail. It's your guarantee of
quality from top to bottom.
SEASONABLE RECIPES.
PKAR' RALAi1.
Once and pare any pear not ton rip*
rad ..lt. Melt'. ou lettuce leaves with
3T..ocll deeasutg. 1f dr,.ian►, dries
and ch.i.prJ out• nl.y he added.
PEAR ruITLIBRl.
' Yin and aft tae au.W.- bird cupfuls
of A •or, two teasfu.i,otul, billiog pow-
der and nate q isi 1teasp.s.tafui of
sat. Add gasdu.tlly twq-thirdreupful
et milk and tht•u add one egg. slightly
beaten. fare two large peat+. cut in
quarters. dip in hst:rr and fry iu deep
fat. :terve with a hi t satire.
(XIM1•UTE ()I•' PE.%HS
Stew twos in r.n 1i. J syrcp, flw:.r
with .taxis of len/ peri, sod -sea yrs
•
bait an otnnge. Mi: all well together b allowed am lbs platterrs% as all.
and dress on a dials with the pears. Birt teem railway directors have
BAKED PEARS. hearts. though there seem to ba semme
people who doubt it. and this arrange -
Wipe. quarter and core pearl. P..t went ....ruled altogether too cruel. I
la laking dish, sptrinkls with sugar, o1 Finally the idea of charging • penny
add a small quaLlily 01 mula..re. then for adwiasion to the platforms war hit
add ebougb water that pear. will 1.01 inulin and adopteal l.. Ieu.laiory par -
burn. Cover, and cook two or three hoer of ibis day, •'IL s r gi*t rm.
hours in a very ►Iow oven. Serve with c ..."
cream -- -
SWEET PICKLED PEARS.Old Stull
Pears. ►even pounds: sugar. four ••I wax reading that the German.
pound*: viurgar, one quart: wbclr hase di.cuvetrd a way 14 treating
clot,,, env tat le -r000 : ,bol. allep4ce, vasal so that it ran 1* eaten
one tablespoon. Peel fruit and buil "Nothing new in that. It has lung
with other innirdients until soft, but been knowoth
n that ,t you rewve e ':'
not broken. Shan Juice and put in from testable, it is then ...stank. -
111d. , "Alio, .awl est a vet y ilei• h wed."
GINGER PEAR.
Candied ginger roor,..ns and a half POTATOES GOOD IN THE WEST.
pounds : pear*. eight pounds ; gran- !1r* Farmers Do Not [;row Many There
slated sugar. right pounds; four tete-
ons. Pare faint and slice into small -What W.iI Next Winter s Price Be ?
piece.. Slice ginger, plater pear, gingerar cfrr. s, k. t tiw:•tm . •rows.
and sugar on flrr. and boil slowly for There it o doubt is Ibe minds of .N
one hour. Ike not put water with it bowrhulJrrr [bat this year'.. potato
unit.** pears are vet y dry. Put lemons
in ndJ water and buil yrs it tender ; crop.stnit:g factor of bt•usrbold rapes,„
wiU be. to a large ex trot. a goy -
then rut up tine. taking out the seeds.
this winter. People aro anxiously
After pears hose bulled one hour, add asking- '•N'bat is lbs p, ire of bread.
theta to the Lemons; and boil tugrtber wilt. beef. cheese. ,agar and potatoes
going to lie this winter i'"
That Virginirn,grouud fruit -if the
potato way be trimmed ..ueb, although
adopted by the Emerald Isle many
ter until browned. centuries ago -bas become Obs daily,
--- r, -- - for ar.uthet b•• t..
cold. Pe.Alt'.\UTE.
PEARSPEARSAND It'E ['REAM.
Vitt two pear.. in bah."' +, rewove. Pare four wi'e. t! pro•, cut is
ttourths Irut;•hwi,r,
mand raatr'in hut -
corer and simmer for twenty toutes
in a little water with some sugar
and vanilla. Place .owe vanilla ice
cream in an ice timbale. annexe for
pinta iu the ice. pour a .poonful of
ragirrrsc syrup over each prat and
sea ve.
PEARS WITH RICE..
Peel and hder three cr fo.ir.Iarge
Iwats of a gaol nidi ng kind. awits-
mernd ,-
mer in water 1111 this -eluting cooked.
Ilraiu ott half tbe water; add two
tablespoonfuls of sugar and cook for
flee runn!(
tte, lunger. oil for six
minutes half a cupful of rice, draw f•tf
water, met linish c.'ukiog- with milk
and pogo! hint1.11 hinta and smooth'; add•
I. LLIe (rem. a suiail piece of Lotter.
wine Is.wJrr•.1 sugar and the juice ut '
j
RNEIRViATISM ARMED
Italy people suffer the tortures of lams
auarles and stiffened joints because of its.
parities in the blood. and each succeeding
attack seems. more acute Cantil rbleumatism
bas invaded the whole system.
To arrest rhtematism it is quits as im•
portant to improve your general health as
!to purify your blood, and the cod liver
al to Scott's Emulsion is nature's great
blood -maker, while its medicinal nourish-
ment
ourish-
ment strengthens tbeorgans to expel the
impurities acid upbuild your strength,
Scott's Emulsion is helping thottaands
everyday who could not find other rcli d.
Refuse the alcoholic substitutes.
I 11111 it
The foundation is not the
most important thing
True. you rant have a good barn without a good foundation.
but don't f+rrg•_t either that the roof has to stand most of the
puru.h:a ht. Upon it falls the burden of resisting the
destructive in9ueaces of weather and caaging seasons
Now. the question is "Where am I going to find a roof
which 'ill meet these conditions!** Certainly not in wooden
shinyleb which have rapidly deteriorated during the pat few
years. Not is anything so perishable as wood, nor yet iron,
which lets is driving rain, hut rather in a permanent mineral
. cornpositl.tn suelt as Brantford Roeng.
.
Now let us lout at a seetion of Brantford Rooting. First.
you Wive it has a ppotre, Ion-fbred felt base. T!..
thoroughly saturated feint a fitter coat of asphalt or r • -al
pitch. Then it is given another coat. Finally, the surf,t'e is
thickly covered with cnr.hed state. You can imagine what
ee job rain, snow. fire or heat would have penetrating a roof
like that. As for oom9aring
Brantford
Nature's
Water-
Roofing
proofing
with shuttles on the score of permanency. or protectien, or
appearance. or even ec000my. there is n1: comparison. You
put a Brantford Roof on atop, and it will last as l-ing as the
building it will always look w.e1I and it will never need
g.
rcpaiwe u. u. wool roe sa..pb. .11.,.+•.11114.40." kw8Iet va. •'p7•;-•
bees arastrsd aa.ao/ ■ .1..,. en tA. e..' - th, ' t... • .1 . ... t•••
d.nvwsir-,e ne nor, h,. ... Mews re.1 .s rW gladly wtvait es•aaat..
without dear,. w .,atl..toa
Brantford Roofing Company, Limited
Brantford, Canada
For sale by W. R. Pinder
WKO IS TO B..AME?
The follt wing is fp w The Coiling-
...
1 H••I:etin, but it applies so aptly
r:, in 047dt:it'll tbat we
i7..•- •.Oct la:iu.
l:Iair.r ' •
-
111.•• .1 :y this week- a t u,iuers mal.
•he-Irid:ng u;rtchaot, on our
n,ry -: asci. retreat kelt in diacussibg
t ter- 1 ti "idebtally the Totunto
1 .htl it, n timothy will get all the
. u try tit w. .. Tte rrferenee. to.
...-• t,: the t ilepaitniental
-t, re 11,1, r,•nt•
,� tr "t 1• ,.t 11 eta/ reu:aekrd the
.ud•i . n l••, is to Wanly?,
• ti- t., n .1' •11 tiniest -ion 14 nor
•11. . I{, di es his hest to
• tI, 1r. ito1.- a.t righttullcbel•.ng.
, t , 7' rix .41 11,1••• ;ti t' J11u,gwo.al
H 1,t4-7 Al ref t'.i1l
• , tr,.,;,.... . f il:.• Licit its* of-
t i y h,• i,'•u r >• f -: !n sprat t.;
,. 1 r ••.` , lid tr.-
It• 1.4 s -t in -
,:.-t.• .r itar•itin:;
• t• :t• rbc• t.tc.ng put leo.- .
is theirt'•t-• ..1•11• t nor friend.;
?l r e 1 .-.1c••. h..t11. *h, -i• to i
.. 114•
t,,! the 1IJ.•nr . gg• . int•'he. City
ter[•ai • ti ,•-t talc. 1(. iii ,. r •
1.4: tie I t ori Its J gC.d see if'tt 6131 l
11g.•r• tl oat.
yes., tri -daily atticle of dirt of millions.
When Sir Walter Raleigh, in or about
the year 1510. that presented the
"spuds'. to Her Majesty Querns Elisa
lie, h. no one bad any conception of
the wo►Id-feeding qualities of theruoL
But today one can hardly And a
(nosily in this country or in the United
btates where putatows are not eaten
every day. !tread b.te been referred
to as "the staff of Fife.- but froM state-
ments of man botisrbold.reoue 1. led
to ielieve that potato** ate used as
eateuaivr lye or nearly so. as tread.
Winter Prices. • _
The question then arises : "What
price will potatoes command this win-
ter Some lorplitie, in Ontario suf-
fered very heavy rains in the spring
'and drought later. when a little mots -
tut t w(,ltld have bets brneticiat"- Cob-
tequently, farmers and gardeners ex-
perienced not a little d tri=ul:e iu get-
ting enough land planted.
• %vbt:i- gloomy reports of a poor.
yield come • from Eastern Onto'io. ,1
roan run -t ttutbfully spay that between
Totontt. and Vancouver 1 salt, along
4 the Iiurs of the t'auoutian Nctlheir'
'"Railway, everywhere Indication, of a
rplet.did potato crop 11:th the - ex
'.cepti,ut • f the Fairy Soutad and. Mur
lick .'disttiote, the vines were very
pro l.tie. Even in. wild and tugged
Not tlernOntario. where 'Lathan •plots:
1 .-t wren, the, hilts and stulups are cul-
t,cat.•.1, 1 saw splendid potato •patebee
that would even -chasm Pal•r Matt.
Wayside Gardens.
In.. ew. Ontario 1 noticed.. that .
7,er.l sect 011 earn had utiliz-d the prop-
erty of the t'. N. R. and were growing
their a intsa s supply by the railwisv
tracks. . A very goof ilea it serutrat
to toe. and quite uitagtttoinsou. of -titre
railway :,nit way.
Roe ut tin the praitiee. 1 SAW •vine.
.
t:,. t I . ' tit t:. (Promo, rel .h•
trot .list.. e.7. {:.-\Iwuitoha, 'a -kat•
ehr.wat. .t..i .' lett ..rue might j•idge
that thole will be tt god crop' it tbs-
(lost dors riot Conte ti.o early. -
.1f you have ever ever seen the °matin
fainter worrying hi -merit to death try -
tug -to catcu, kill in poison his "mil-
lions -.
•roil -lions-. of points) boss, then you can
filly realize what it weans to lace in a
-country whet,- • the potato ;tug bite
never r:een, ata 1 cab tell you the
i\'ti it their ,.r.. mart like the bu.i-
ne-• 11.-11.tvr•trd. trete Ate. it ..10 to 1.
te{;ret ted. .•ora• who• do nothing. They
is...le' 110 I1Rti : • Is.. g, at h, lir tb.-
Irt..le Mitt I. got!tg ".icward, They dr•
11••1 it.-1uie. ,11 publicity.•tt..'v do not
If vile the uc•t fth.•ria•nandcoul.-
:• v t.• collie + . thrift They J,, not tell
fixer, they have w 4t0ek .d g•ocerie.,
r hatilware. clothing, or 'dry
g ,..is. ie- :be carr 111147 1.e. Instead.
t hey .are c• stent to 1r: -Ober.. he the
push in the matter of giving publicity
to the town They err eon'rnt with
; the i'rumli. ILa1 tall -froth the tilde c1
their ur.re p ,,zressir•• nrighl•..r.. Ar.
not these to Nam. if tU.'ley goes to
Thede{•wruuruth!, %
If there i, not unity amongst this
people of v t8wn, wherein' lies the
'bireme? t there -not 'ieuch ' reeponai-
1 tlity resting with the people who live
upon their neighbor. who are content
to let the other fellow give the town
the publicity in which be should shtue.
I let the other fellow dc the right thing
i by the patriotic moseu.rots in which
(every citizen should take part, Irl the
other fellow eontril.ute bis money to
. thee or that'tu .keep the town no the
l lima) nlThere . is surely ulying at the
(door of tb( Moines, wen who are 'not
aggressive end progressive. Trade th it
rightly belongs t . Collingwood could
he brought back were every business
man in Collingswood to dos tit. The
cost would be trifling in respe-t to the
returns. The departmental. know
bow to oto t act the people of the towns.
Look over the invitations of the de.
pat [mentals. all the year around rad.
particularly at this lima of the year(
then oak thew. titivation@ : Who is to
blame' Am 1 doing my part?
Is,uIIlIffttIffIJIHIffHuJIIJH,,111,19i6 4
(FaII Opening
11011% 1917
arercwrNrs
rmiwartzftu‘ssi 6A -van
1
Fall Fashions and Fabrics are in. Dur-
ing the next two weeks this depart-
rnent will be busy fitting out the early
buyers ---men who have learned the
wisdom of getting the " firsrpick."
It dpes not cost any more to.buy early. Even
if you do not want the garments until rater on
it it advisable to order now and have them
dt Iii Bred when you want them.
Thi,- is particularly true this se.ason when
materials- are so scarce area deliveries are
months late in coming from -the mills.
You will be su:'pi isecd at the splendid range of
patterns and e:.celler,t \ aides in our -showing.
016:101r LTH ES
tnrwrca1202lE.- 10.\ LLttN LtMITCR
WALTER C. PRIDHAM
. The Ever -ready Gude. *ad arrow used 'toy the It•..k , wag.
{a+tato
wooers there have no ironic.. Dear Mrs. Oink,. it read -•'1 won- 'And now. iadie, and gentlemen.".
Jiatr d'.trr to haye Chi- kind of visi- der if you w, nil test kind as to that dr*, said the guide of the local 1111,110111111.1111,110111111.tors. They Jou'. exist m the 11'r -tern '•we'ecw« to aha Arro.urv. lin the
Me.," p small f .v. r . You kkit,*. right we 'Ave the nlenripal knit
Pyoc. r+F h
%%hei••cer 1 e Ilia ,ii -ern a potato
p,.teh iniu British ('nlumbis, 1 could see
, that it was hist -..lase.
)CISSiNG TICKETS.
They Are Ssldat Large Hallway Stations
in England.
The guard waved hi- t1 ,g ; the Inver
kissed his gi, I. she jumped aboard.
,hut the d.•.•r. put her laughing Ince
out of the window, and jest ss •he
train w,.• starting l,- kissed her again.
And the cost of this osculation was
one ',pont-
That
,pontThat was over in k:nglan I, wh•r.
Iev h.vi what are ,ilial "kissing
It ketr.- These mat 1.p `obtained at
. of th. larger railway stations from
regular ,lot machines at a penny a
piece, giving the purchaser the prig.
liege i f going on the platform and
tieing with hie friend. or -as in the
rase outlined -friend up to the lot
.bnmer.t
The custom of issuing platform
liekul• came ah ret by the big railway
eompanics realizing that the delay
caused by people rr•nwdingR around all
the carriage doors raying goodly
when the train ought to he under way
was coating them mmie7 amounting
10 any tbou.anda of ponds in the
WbW1001 the enure
e of fhb loss relowes
rwuosynewavered
It time at Arai
wRte•tsd that no parson who was not
est ray havttyag by .be train ahold
..tray row. Ana -white Liven i tool a rs
with which this rnbly.ts looKhl when
in last •rt...r: h. 1 could tort Hing it *try to ok the Raiws in the 11'o.nd. 1►,)
t wear, .0 o•iJ he h u►d+g•d it , ur left we ibe axe with winch •+ r
youith wouht kinbdle1pint .. lit•Ie lu•d out \\'a;L.r Raleigh was he'ewd d. Neat
in the garden every day- for it. It will .1 • it we see true of Di -..k Turp,n's ',n-
eat alntoet anything. end i stntild he t le ; andagain. beat to that, we'ay.
so glad if. pi, i would du tie. H..1 the .hield the Black P, inc(urea tile. i
please don't pia yourself out.;" ' • t'r Imran wsr. 'Err we 'ave that rain
Dost Grow Enough.
In such beanritul t,iack, fertile land
Lillion, of t.u.h.•Is of potatoes could
►ie grown on the prairies ; but the
great :roup. loo ni the fact that too
SHADY of the fat mete grow only enough"
for themselves owl families.
A gentleman who lived in Edison-
tan told we tbal while the crop of
"-pods' around that city was invari-.
ally good the 'plevaiiitg Flee*wait!
g r.•nnd SI.
Olt course, one cannot judge from
the present prices what the tall prices
will he. and last winter's bold up way
n ot be regarded u a criterion either.
The Toronto (,lobe. quotes new r.
tattier et 111. id 1"r bushel. The Cal-
g ary Herald reported recently new
potatoes it $1.511 per bushel. and a
tecenl issu• of The New York World
contained an ad. -d Ib, for 12,'. Otta-
wa growerr bare been asking A1.8J
per bushel. Cheaper in New York
than in Canada, eb :'
Mr. J. H. liriedale. director ret the
Dominion Experimental Farm at Ot-
tawa, was recently asked for his opin-
ion upon the prospects for the cooling
crop He stated that in the vicinity
of Ottawa the ctt p would he :tither
�
aadgiag eters observations).
Tbs Fat' bad abut four acre.
under, cultivation. From reports
availa1,le, ht understood there would
be an average crop in this 1Ve.t
Toronto
London
FALL FAIRS, 1916.
Aga 20 -Sept. 11
Sept. R -1a
Walkerton.. Sept. 12, 13
Palmerston Sept. IC 15
Exeter Sept. 1R, 19
Atwood . .. Sept. 19, ;o
Sept. 21►. 21
Sept 21. 22
Spa 21. 22
Zurich
S.aforth
Kincardine._....
Ripley
Mitchl SeptL9e, r,
WIDE I(H .. ..Sept. 27--210
WIngham . ,,Sept. Ili, 411
Milverton . Sept 411. 29
I,ncknnw Sept. 2R. St
K i r k t o n .Sept. .. IP
re.ewat.r. .... .......... .Oct 2. t;
111 y' h . ...... .. ...... net. 3, s
Brasses. ... , ........... Uel. S.
..
ihingarnon......... .........Oct. fi A
Fordwicb ... Oct %
Would Eat Almost Asayttnng.
gild Tsd{sde hied been Galled up in
his gnato, an Mrs Tadpole wen. to
lire with her parent. Garel smelt time
as peace...huuld he declared. firs arriv
ing. she milt a thoughtful request 10
her nett -door neighs la the old
lingtcn at' the Batik i f Ammo", art
and. pws.inw along a Elite fat the,. we
M•• the actual sword. limb Hsieh
}lateens slew ill• 11111.
"Jost a nr,rhent.' said nae of tbs.
party. "I did..'; know, Balaaas, tion. a
sword. I thought be ,. Py wished •felt
ore.'
"t+hite aro, sir -quit• o.n • An.f.
vn.. 11 glv.. air t1tM to Ilene Mdsant
interrupt 1 was re.t gems t..' add
• that thewI tete on. a weighed for
CLOSE YOUR EYES
AND CHOOS
YOU'RE SAFE
WITH EITHER
IRE
..SPACIAL"
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"I Want to Tell you Tire Buyers
That if 1 Didn't Believe in Dunlap
Superiority I'd 'swap jobs_'"
-f andy lady.
O
DUNL0 TIR
A.. ES
'1410 tt4
*woo
Dunlop Tires have no
friends other than those
quality has made and the re-
petition of that quality has retained.
When you see that countless number of
cars, large and small, equipped with either
" Tractions " or "Specials" remember theme
motorists, --every one of them - bought thc»e tires on
merit -nix because they did not have a measure of satis-
faction with their original equipment. but because some-
thing told them they would not settle the tire question definitely
Dutalop Traction Tread" or " Dunlop Special"
tr
:ire & Rubber Goods Co. Limited
Branches in Lesdin, Cities
•
"
PaA
ADA
•
"TRACTION
TREAD"
Head Office Factories : Toronto.
•
A