HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-03-24, Page 5Ns
THURSDAY, IVIARCII 2 4, 1910
We Announce The
Arrival Of The first
Shipment Of Our
e
prim
lothes
from the moat famous Tailor Shop is .Canada, and we
illustrate No, 83 of the New Spring Styles above. These
garments are unq'iestionably the finest made in Canada,
and are of such High Quality that they are generally re-
garded as the standards and models of style, fit and tailor-
ing. We know that every man who appreciates good
clothes will er,j'>y an inspection of these new models.
McGee & Campbell'
Clothiers and Men's Furnishers
To Be Hange
Before July 1st, 1910.
20 Thousand Rolls o
Wall Paper'
JUST RECEIVED
The largest stock of Wall Paper
ever 'shown in Wingham, from
5c to $1.00 per roll.
KNOXI
OPP. BRUNSWICK HOTEL
WINGIIAM
oVEN
Wira=$),t J
THE GIFT OF TONGUES.
ED front, the underworld,
the sun
Vino ail the land with
light.
Ills filtered teams are
dancing -halls
rot. winged thingte 4e-
lia;ht.
Then change—the skies
fling thunder -bolts
,And winds in awful.
fray;
And lightning's flame—the
gift 4f tongues
That first taught mon
to pray,
a ,,, Oh, tlmetai iloh ial morning-
rnotes we dance
and play,
Unheeding, 1n the sunshine
„4,;e;'.,-"' an
Of life's short summer day,
Theo, after years bring storm and stress;
Care -clouds obscure the day, •
And through thein dart the lights of fatth
That teach us how to pray.
With Roast Chicken,
There is nothing original and
startling about roast ohicl:en, but in,
asmuch ae there is nothing nicer, anti
we cannot very well do without it oft-
en, let us serve it with as much va>
riety as possible.
For instance, surround it with fried
balls made after thie recipe; Mix to-
gether finely chopped cold ham (fat
and lean) and bread crumbs in the
proportion of four ounces of meat to
two of bread. Add the grated rind of
one-quarter lemon to this amount;
season well, and add one egg to make
the paste right consistency. Fry in
hot, deep fat and arrange on the plat-
ter around the chicken. r
In chicken pies—remember to have
the oven hot when it is first put in so
that the pastry will rise and set, para.
doxioally. Afterwards the oven can
be cooled, or the meat pot into a cool-
er spgt, but the pastry will be soggy
if the oven be cool at first. A slice or,
two of eggs will help support the top
crust, and the meat should, be well
piled up in the middle.
Hint for Decoration.
For
a luncheon or party where
there is an attempt at table color dec-
oration it is a good idea to hang from
the chandelier a large, wet sponge.
Cover, the sponge with violets, car-
nations, rotes, or any appropriate
flower. Or even ferns wiil do if the
green effect is desired. The round
ball of bloom is attractive, and is bet-
ter than the targe central bouquet
which hides the view. Indeed, in
most of the restaurants and hotels
where table decoration is a study, the
high centerpiece is entirely done away
with.
HOMES
For Settlers
IN
'MANITOBA
SASKATCHEWAN
ALBERTA
How Pelade and How Reached
LOW SETTLERS' RATES
Settlers with Live
Stock and Effects
Special Trains
leave. Toronto
I0.10p,m.Tueadgre
during
MARCH and APRIL
Settlers and Families
without Live Stook
should use
Regular Trains
10.10 p.m, daily
WINNIPEG FLYER
38 hours to Winnipeg
Through;Tourist Cars
COLONIST CARS ON ALL TRAINS
in which Berths are Free
Apply nearest Agent for Lopy. of "Settlers'
Outdo,"western Canada," "Tourist cars,"
or write
R. L. Thompson, D.P.A., G.P.R., Toronto.
J. i3. Beeiner, Agent, Wiughaur.
T
E WINGITAM ADVANCE
ELDER HENYUiINAM
Recommends
r,
1
For Weak, R,un-Down People.
1 was rim down and weak from
Indigestion and general debility, also
suffered from vertigo. I saw a. cod
liver preparation called Vino' adver.
tiled suad decided to give it a trial,
andthe results were most gratifying,
Mter taking two bottles I regained my strength, and am
now feeling unusually well," -- U L NRY CUNNINGHAM,
Eider Baptist Church, Kinston, N.C.
Vinol contains the two most world -famed tonics --the medicinal,
strengthening, body-building elements o C q , T, ver Oil and. Tonic
Iron. Vinol contains no Oil, and is by far the Best Strengthening
Tonic obtainable. We return your money wit ltho t qui eMio
i V nil oI does not accomplish all claim for it.
� . ' rA,'uubN hale aB3ON, Druggisf, Wingham.
arv- laiir
Five Roses, Madam, Gives You
Better Pastries Cheaper
Who started that moth-eaten, bewhiskered fallacy, Madam, that the
best all-round farm/* flour should be made from soft winter wheat?
Then, again, what really good cook would risk his' reputation on
such a delusion? Once again we ask, who was it?
For, corning from the heart of the hard, sun -ripened Manitoba „Spring
Wheat, for bread unbeatable, for pastry peerless—behold FIVE
RO;',F$, Madam, ready to prove them wrong, woefully
Soft wheat, means mooe
feGt.
slash and less glutinous pro -
1f it's starch you want,
Madam, and not gluten—
starch is cheaper and more
plentAl On potatoes.
Wheaten flour is valued
for its protein content, which
is the real breadstuff,
And Manitoba wheat is ever
so much richerin gluten and
protein than the soft winter
article,
,001141404b.
v.v CANADA -0H
FIVE ROSES
'IF * * 5
Of course, Madam, you already
know the wonderful breadstuffs in
the FIVE ROSES barrel,
But think of the pastries and the
goodies you 'could make from it.
Take any standard recipe,—same
quantities of shortening, water, salt
and other ingredients.
Then, owing to its higher absorbing
power, you require ONE FiFTH
LESS OF RVE ROSES than of so. -
called "pastry" flour.
Just mix your dough and set aside
awhile before rolling, and roll thin-
ner than usual.
Wrong.
Think of the saving, Madam,
both in health and dollars.
***..
And for the same reason
your cookies and cakes,
etc.,willkee longer, p ng r, fresher,
more melting, because FIVE
ROSES holds the moisture,
Your FIVE ROSES pies,
your cakes, biscuits, griddle
cakes. all ,contain that ex•
optional nutritive value lacking
c. ttireiy in soft wheat flours.
And they invariably raise higher,
with a clearer, richer, more delicate
appearance,
The baking aroma gives you an Idea
of the flavor; is there any perfume to
compare with tha teaming from a hot
oven full of FIVE ROSES goodies 7
You sniff blissfully and think not.
* * * *
If you want more pastries with less
labor—more nutritious, more appe-
tizing dainties—to save temper, time
and trouble, and money.— Then,
Madam, you :Anse FIVE ROSES.
sescssearasseswiassensmtuatzusaminsamem
LAKE OF TIIE WOODS MILLING CO., LTD., MONTREAL
(M)
American Farm Tools.
American plows and cultivator$ are
turning up the soil in more than sev-
enty countries and colonies of the
world—in Japan in 1908 $12,000 worth,
in Asiatic Turkey $14,000, in New Zea-
land $50,000, id British South Africa
$222,000, in Portuguese Africa $31,000,
in Cuba $85,000 worth, while Argen-
tina took $780,000 worth, Canada $474,-
000, Russia 3n Europe $259,000 and
Asiatic Russia $760,000 worth.
Trend Toward the Farm.
It begins to look as though the farm-
er bas got to pay the prices that other
people pay for labor. The panic made
the situation a little easier, but it has
not relieved it permanently. it will be
easier for a few years, but manufac-
turing and other enterprises will again
absorb the supply of labor and Imre
the farmer just as be was. -
•
Many Notably Successful Men Owe
Their First Start in Business To
a Small Savings Account
The habit of laying aside
regularly a small amount from
the weekly wage, is one of the
most valuable habits a marl or
woman cart acquire.
The amount is not missed,
the sutra rapidly increases, in-
terest accumulates steadily; and
soon you have enough to start
a small business of your own,
The BANE OF ITAMILTON
welcomes and encourages the
account of the small depositor,
All formality has been disw
pensee with.
Inquire for the manager, at
any one of the Bank's hundred
branches. Beyond your own
signature for further idcntifica-
tion when withdrawing money,
routine is eliminated,
C. P. .51V11111 AGENT
Win whaln, Ontario.
Head Office, HAMILTON
Capital Peld.up
Reserve. and OaidPr1dtd Profits
'total Assets - •-
$2,500,000
1400,000
over OP,000,0tto
•
Fat In Milk.
It cannot be that the butter fat In
milk is obtained from the fat stored in
the tissues of the cow, otherwise the
animal would soon become emaciated.
Cows obtain the butter fat in milk
from the food they eat and digest and
not from the reserve or aecumulation
of fat in their bodies. Reason as well
as observation teaches that cows ex-
tract butter fat from the food they
consume and digest, and to produce a
large percentage of cream the rations
of the cow should be rich in the ele-
ments of nitrogen and carbohydrates,
which are found in linseed meal, mid-
dlings, bran, cornmeal and ground oats.
At the Cornell university cows that
yielded 200 pounds of butter fat annu-
ally under ordinary feeding yielded
310 pounds when given liberal ratious
of feed rich in nitrogen and carbohy-
drates. Creast will not make butter
unless it contains fat, and profitable
fats will not be produced unless cows
are fed on rations rich in the elements
that produde cream.
Plowing has begun in some parts of
southern Manitoba and Alberta, and a
largely increased acreage will, it is ex-
pected, be sown in the whole West
this year.
MINISTER AND ZAM.BUK.
Cured Bim Of A Bad Sore Which
Defied Alt Other Remedies
For Two Years.
Rev. Chas. E. Stafford, of Bridge-
burg, Ont., says :—"I had been much
troubled for over two years with a
sore: on my left cheek. I tried a'1
kinds of salves and lotions, but noth-
ing I procured seemed to have the
least bit of effect towards healing the
sore. Hearing of Zuni -Bak, I decided
to give a trial, and see if it would
bring about a cure, as so many other
things had failed. 7 purchased a sup-
ply, and commenced with the treat-
ment. After several applications, to
my great joy, Zana -Bak has effected
what for two years I tried in vain to
bring about—a complete cure,"
Case after case could be quoted, in
which, as in the above instance, '/ im-
Buk has worked cures when every-
thing else tried had failed. '.There is a
reason for this. Away brick in the
days of IU,otnatl gladiators, secret
balms were used for the healing of
cuts and injuries sustained in the
arena and in battle. Then carne a
period during which external balms
were neglected, followed by a period
in which alt the salves and etnliroe,t,•
tions had as their base animal fats and
Dile. /win-Buk marks a new epoof
It is absolutely devoid of all animal
fate, all mineral coloring matters, and
is composed entirely of rich medicinal
herbal extracts.
Lakin diseases, finch as nezema, ring-
worm, saltilheura and prairie itch, are
speedily overcome by it, For piles it
is fine ---easing the pain and infl triitna•
tion, and hastening a cure. It also
cures burns, scalds, cots, ulcera, 01111-
�dron's sores and ernptions, blood -poi -
mooing, scratches, old hounds, varl-
core ulcers, etc. All druggists and
attires tell itt MOa box. or pet free,
for prrioe from Zan -Bak 00.► Toronto,
arm erns
Geadien
TAKE CARE OF THE ROADS.
Government and y States. Inter-
asted In Hlghwey improvements.
The United lytales has entered upon
It great era of road improvement.
Large appropriations from state funds
have been made for sueb work. M
least twenty states, pave lade such
Rppropriations, in some states hall-
viduai counties are obtaining satisrac,
tory results by large bond Issues.
The demand for men specially quail
fled is highway engineering is increas-
ing at a rapid rate, and for this rea-
son the department of agriculture to
Washington bas cooperated with edu
cational institutions and urged the es-
taplishment of courses in highway en-
glneering or a modification of civil ee-
glneering courses, so as to provide the
necessary instruction. Many colleges
and universities are making definite
progress along these lines. In conuoc•
tion with this movement the depart,
NO INSECTS ON TRIS ROAD.
mentbas forseveral years appointed
annually a small number of graduates
in civil engineering .and given to them
thorough and practical training in
highway work for one year. A num-
ber of these young engineers have
passed from the department's service
to important situations in state and
county road work.
In many parts of the country almost
devoid Of road building rocks the cost
of macadam roads is prohibitive. Ex-
periments have demoustrated that the.
sand -clay method of road construc•rior.
Is a fairly good substitute for macad-
am road, and roads so built are giv
ing satisfaction in various southern
states.
Burnt clay is another material wilt
which experiments have been trade m
road construction, and it is found to
be desirable to use this material where
macadam roads cannot be oracle at a
cost of not more than one-third of'tht
usual cost of the tatter.
Dust prevention on public roads Iiar
received investigation in this country
as well as in Europe. The tnnteriele
used in the experiments of the govern
went department have included, among
others, tar preparations. asphalt, oils,
such temporary expedients as calcium
chloride and several special prepara•
.tions originating iu the department
Tile testing of road materials to deter-
mine their suitability for road bolls.
ing has reached a high state of effi-
ciency in the department.
Some states are rapidly giving more
permanent construction to the princi-
pal highways. The state of New York
in a recent year expended for ibis
purpose more thou $1,000,0(i0; Massa-
chusetts, about $575.000; Connecticut,
about $220,000; New Jersey, about
$250,000; Pennsylvania and Vermont,
1,00BLT BKPT itOAD-RAIL mons OTEi•
i GROWN.
about $130,000 each. Among the states
that have pushed this work the more
rapidly are Massachusetts and Rhode
Island, wbere about one-half of the
mileage of the public roads 18 improv-
ed; Indiana mid Ohio, with more titan
one-third improved; Californ14 with
about one-fifth; Connecticut, Ken-
tucky, New Jersey and Wisconsin,
with more than one-sixth, and Illinois,
Maine, Maryland, Michigan. New
Hampshire, New York, 'Tennessee and
'Utah, with about one-tenth.
A, very good idea of the well kept
road and the one that fit neglected can
be obtained by a study of the illustra-
tions here given.
A Good Garden.
'A good home garden la a great insti-
tution, It nteans more on many farms
than the Crop Of wheat, Core dr oats.
It furnishes food for the family
throughout the summer and, if proper•
ly bandied, a liberal supply for 'winter.
Some gardens are handled So skillfully
that there Is a surplus of Vegetables
for tate almost every week. 1t means
much to the farmer Etta his family and
should bo planned with the utmost
care And givers tate very best attention.
—A. bill introduced in the Ontario
Legislature by Ron. Mr. Duff, Minis-
ter of Agriculture, snakes it an offence
to import any plant affeoted by defi-
ling moth, yellows, little peach, Week
knot, pear pyella, or pear blight. It
further provides that en petition of
25 fruit growers, who are ratepayers,
the Council of a, municipality may ap-
point an inspector whose duty it will
be to tee that orchards itt which these.
clitteatet et pectic exist, are either pro-
perly *arta for or destroyed.
Women's and Girls' Stylish
Spring Coats and Shirts
We have just passed into stock a large shipment
of New Spring Coats and Separate Shirts, Every
Garment well made by the best tailors. We got
at the rock -bottom pride when buying these sty-
lish Garments, and we're going to pass them on
to our customers at Close, Cut Prices,
Exceptional Values
Ladies' Fawn Covert Cloth Coat, very pretty style,
nice length, would be good value at $6.00—our
price only , $5.00
Ladies' two-tone Fancy Stripe Coats, a very stylish
garment. Prices are $6,00, $7.50 and $10.00
Wornen's Tailored Skirts
You don't run any chances of mis-ft;ts when buying your
Skirts. here. Yon can try them on in our Skirt and
Coat department on second floor before deciding to buy.
We guarantee that the garment we sell you will be
satisfactory in style, fit and finish.
All Wool Panama Cloth Skirts in the leading shades
—Special at ,,..,,.$4.00
All Wool Voile Skirt, very pretty style, in Black,
Blue, Brown and Taupe—our special price $5,00
Colored Pongee or Shantung Silks
Every thread guaranteed
bright, rich finish, good
for Summer Suits. Colors
and Copenhagen, all the
per yd.
pure silk, fast colors, and
weight, very serviceable silk
are tan, navy, grey, amethyst,
new shades—our price 69c
Natural Pongee Silks
Pure Silk ; comes in Linen shades only ; splendid wash-
ing silk ; good wearing quality—our price, 27 inch 39c ;
36 inch, 50c per yd.
H. E. Isard_& Co. i
00
S
We take a back seat to no one. We feel
confident we can. interest ' you, greatly to
your benefit, in the following lines:
We have now on hand—ready for the spring trade—
s large stock of Carpets, Rugs, Linoleulns and Oil Cloths.
We have good values in imported Rugs in Velvets and
Tapestry. New imported .(Nairn's) Scotch Linoletin'ts in
Block and Floral patterns—two and four yards wide.
We have just received front the Old Country a well
selected shipment of Spring Dress Goods and Battings—
Swell goods at low prices.
See our imported Silks in 40 inch width, of guaranted
quality. Our prices --85c for 20 inch goods, $1.70 for 40
inch goods.
A large assortment of New Prints, Gingham, Ander-
son's Zephyrs, Muslin and Linen Suitings, in new Shades
and Fancy stripes.
•
Just arrived, a well assorted stock of Ladies' White
Lawn Waists. Call and see ours when looking for them.
Men's, Boys, and .children's ready-to-wear Spring Suits.
All new, up-to-date stylee, and prices right.
See our • Counterpano--special at $2.00. -
headquarters for pure No. 1 Sugar. As we purchase
by the carload we can offer better prices than those that
buy in smaller lots. Pelee for this wbok—$5.30 for 100 lbs.
We keep ill stock the best Ilour on the market–^
Listowel and Ssafol'th makes. Also Royal household (pure
Manitoba.)
Goods delivered all over town.
ALL KINDS PRODUCE TAKEN.