HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-04-28, Page 5LARK OF THE WOODS YULDIG CO.. LTIJ:, MOIITaE*L
THURSDAY, APRII, 28, 1910.
B I N°U',.M D U A N O'
Clothing dor
The Boys
.._,..11,,.,41
``few
Ikuskalk Itto&as `Sa
3i�t the SAkle elno
Sailors in the Newest Models are Smart
Suits for Boys, ages 5 to to.
The College Suits, with Bloomer IKnick-
ers, a correct Suit for Canadian Boys.
Boys, like men, want the latest thing in
Cloths. We sell the best to be had,
quality, choice of materials and tailoring
considered,
Boys' E5urnislikugs
A choice assortment of Caps, Hats,
Shirts,' Collars, .Gloves, Ties, etc., in the
latest Spring' Styles in stock here.
McGee Sc, Campbell
Clothiers and Men's Furnishers
An old pioneer who has a weakness
for statisties, says that this is about
the 40th anniversary of the death of
Haig, the only man that was ever
hanged in Walkerton for murder.
Haig, it seems, boarded 'the sieigh, of
a rich fernier named Neighbecker,
while the latter was driving home,
and murdered him with a club. The
execution of Haig has had such a de-
terrent effect on the people' of Bruce
that it has never been necessary to
sail in the hangman since.—[Bruce
Times.
FOR CHUB( INC RESULTS,
Careful Heating of Ohurnine Room and
Cleaniinese Necessary.
There can be uo definite rule talo
down as to the temperature at which
the creetn should be cburaed, as dif-
ferent creams require different tern..
peralures. .The fat is to the form of
microscopic globules,- and they Must
have a, certain degree of softnessit
they are to unite. When the cream
enters the churn that Is properly rip,
Med and contains 20 to 80 per cent
fat the temperature should be such
that the Bream will eburu in thirty to
forty -Ave minutes, This wpi give an
exhaustive• chureing and leave the
Gutter in a condition Iu which It can,
Ge sadly handled without injuring the
texture.
Before putting' the cream 1n the
churn the churn should be thoroughly
scalded and as thoroughly chilled With'
eold water. The advantage of this is
that it will freshen the churn and fill
the pores in the wood so that the
cream and butter wilt not stick to it.
The outside temperature of the churn -
!USING READY TO osuttx, .
Ing room should be as'nearly as possi
ble the same as the churning tempera-
ture. It it is warm the cream will
warm up rapidly, and the butter wilt
likely he soft and wl;l require more
washing to remove the buttermilk. It
is useless to lower the cream repldly
to the churning point just before
churning. It should be there at least
two hours before churning. The rea-
ron for this Is that fat is a &ow con.
ductor of heat, and, although the se-
rum has cooled and the thermometer
rends the right temperature, the fat
has not actually reached it, and the
results would be the same as if churn-
ed at an actually higher degree.
"the finish that endures"
Use it to make floors bright and smooth as s• :ass,
easy to keep clean, (soap and water won'!- hurt
M L Floorglaze). Doesn't get cracky ; doesn't
show -scratches ; lasts amazingly and holds its,
beauty. Surpasses paint or varnish or stain.
Renovate your wholFF house with M L Floorglaze
at small °cost —a gallon coats 53) square feet.
Apply it yourself to -day and it will ba dr/ to -
Morrow morning. Get M L Floorglaza now.
M L. FLOORGLAZE comes in
tins cf handy size, little • nI
big. Choose among 17 endur-
ing colors in solid enamel —
sevtn shades in Lacs that imi-
tats hardwoods exactly—and
Transparent for natural fin-
ish. M L Floorglcze won't fade
and is weather-proof— so use it
on outdoor work as well as for
indoors. Has a hundred uses
about your home—ark your
dealer or get new from us
direct. Imp:>rial Varnish C&
Color Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont.
Recommended and Sold by all Reliable Dealers, including J. G. STEWART & CO.
ELDER HENYQUNIAN
Recommends
`
After taking two bottles l regained my strength, and am
now feeling unusually well,,' HENRY CUNNINGHAM,
Bider Baptist Church, Kinston, N.C.
Vinol contains the two most world -famed tonics -<--the medicinal,
strengthening, body -buil ing elements of God Liver Oil and Tonic
Iron, Vinol contains no oil, and is by far the Best Strengthening
Tonic obtainable. We return your money without question
I Vr 0l does not accomplish all we claim for it.
J. , f ALTON I5 'e lfii'ali$ON, ID 'I; g st, WhIssaira,
For Weak, R.utt,Down People.
t{ f was run down and weak from
(indigestion and general debility, also
/suffered from vertigo, 1 saw a cod
liver preparation called Vinol .advero
tised and decided to give it a trial,
and the results were roost gratifying.
See that Your Fl�ifr?f
� 'ound and Dry
Then, Madam, the cookbook says : Sift Your Flour.
Do YOU know the, story the Sifter tells ?
To beware of flour that's soft and sticky, coming out of the sack
With difficulty ; flour that's lumpy, musty, woolly, soft ; flour that
sifts quite sluggishly,
To guard against the stuff you can press into a ball near solid
falling into several pieces when broken, not into that fine granular
dust which FIVE ROSES is.
Because, Mistress Housewife, all this means "stogy" quality
plus Excessive Moisture.
Very nasty thing is excess wonderfully light and silky.
moisture, Madam. *
Expensive too, you know,Of course, Madam, flour
Since the bread yielding and CANADA 4 (like all good foodstuffs)
eater absorbing properties ., must contain some mots -
decline, and YOU are robb ;
go• of mdiesany. loaves per barrel,
many rolls, and pies and
i
And you pay for water
Instead of good flour.
Since Strength and Thirst=
iness go together, don't
you see ?
* * *
But when your flour is driest—and
FIVE ROSES is driest of all—lust Yet FIVE ROSES, Madam, has *-
see
see what happens. clean bill of health.
k's granular, free, heavy, nothing Ground from the plump, well filled
remains in your sifter, no waste. Red Fife kertens sun ripened obi
FIVE ROSES being lively, even, the sun kissed western prairies.
and free, each particle absorbs a Made from soundest wheat in the
maximum amount of water, etc, best way, packed right, fully dried
Safer, easier to work, you see; fer- stored in well ventilated sunny
menting unlformly,working soundly warehouses, shipped right,
in the dough. And It's guaranteed wtbleachad
And when the dough 4s, done, it's Why don't;YOU use FIVE ROSES.
fvE RO$ts
ture.
But there's Mfeimwn and
Maximum, you know.
And when the moisturedan-
* ger mark Is crossed say
l8% then look out for molds
and bacteria, for bad odors,
musty, unwholesome, un-
sound flour that wont keep,
flour that makes "runny" dough
and bad tempers.
(R)
A Freak Pig.
A farmer near Kingston has a freak
of nature in the shape of a young pig
with one head and three ears, two
bodies joined at the shoulders, with
the usual number of legs and a tail on
'each body. The pig is alive.
Aigh Price Farm.
The Exeter Tinges reports the fol-
lowing:—Mr. Paul Madge of Thames
Road has sold his farm of 100• acres to
his neighbor, Mr. Geo. Williams for
the sum of $10,000. This farm was
one of the best in Usborne and
brought the highest price ever paid
for 100 acres in that Township. Mr.
Madge and son, Martin, left on Tues-
day foa Southern Alberta, to close a
purchase on a 4000 -acre sheep and
farming ranch, where they will con-
tinue the raising of Lincoln sheep, for
'whim Mr. Madge has a wide repu-
tation.
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Whatever the Goal in Life, Thrift
. .
is Essential to Success.
Thrift can best be cultivated The BANK or HAMILTON ill-
b opening a Savings Account. vites Savings Accounts • and b
• y p V ,� g g' � i y
the elimination of all unneces-
Once started, it will astonish
sary"red tape" affords a con-
you to find. how rapidlythe p
venient as well as safe,method
moneyaccumulates. 'ail
of 'encouraging thrift.
The dollars pile up ----slowly
at first—then more and more 1111,, ,
at hihest� current '
interest is
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quickly` as added to rate -y> credited on deposits of
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principal. $t:coo and upwards.
C. P. SMITH AGENT Office. 'I HAMILTON
• Ctrpitsl gild -up - - $2.500,000
�'i` 1i ' hi Ontario.
f . Rtscr-v sad Uadiiided Profile - 2.000,000
total Assts 0 - - over 35,000,000
__.1111__..
BUTTER PAPER !--The Advance
Office bas a supply of vegetable parch-
ment Butter Paper on hand—the real
genuine article. You can get it any
size you wish.
Milo Maize For Horses.
The farmer who plants a good acre-
age of mike has practically insured for
himself a good supply of grain for his
wort; teams. Horses and mules have
stood hard work well all summer, such
as breaking prairie, with no grain but
mile. Horses doing heavy farm work
should be given three good feeds of
mile grain a day. Milo in the head Is
usually fed, one-half more heads being
given at a feed than would be given
ears of corn. Most teamsters prefer
to feed mile in the head to horses, cut-
ting the main stem off close to the
head. The man stem of the head and
the many little stems that hold the
seeds force the horses to do a large
amount of chewing before the feed can
be swallowed, and this mastication
grinds the grain and mixes it with
the saliva, greatly increasing the pro-
portion digested.
The seeds of nolo are small, and
where the thrashed seed is fed to
horses it is chewed very little, and
much of the seed passes througb un-
digested. Feeding mito in the head
saves all expense of preparation, and
the small stems of the head eaten with
the grain seem to aid in diluting the
grain in the stomach, making it more
digestible.
THE SHEPHERD
Grade the flock just as carefully as
you grade the dairy herd. Weed out
the poor ant:ewes and keep the best.
Judicious Feeding. Necessary.
A flock will go through a winter
sheltered by an open Oiled, hut no
Hock ever came out of a winter in
thrifty condition without judielotzs
feeding.
Shearing Machines' Worth.
Shearing machines beat hand shear-
ing every time. They are not expeu-
sive, and they cause fewer wounds
.and do the work more evenly than the
average farmer can do with the old
fashioned ellears.
Easy to 13uitd a Feed Back.
A good rack for feeding sheep tau
be made by almost tiny sensible farm-
er. About ail that is needed is ti sup-
port for the bay so that It shall not
fall to the ground and be toasted and
also be handy for the sheep to get at.
Gains in Lambs.
tames which are welt cared for in
tihe Owing mud which have a run ou
good grass alone when six months old
should overage frain 80 to 100 pounds
and at eighteen menthe, with good
rare, should average 130 to 100
lusnude.
Attend to the Wounds.
Sheep beeonl' lac ernted on Wire
fences; nr other &dot s. \Yeteli the
tootttatls carefully and it maggots tip.
pear wash the wounds with a weak
ttauticn of eerbolh' nehl rind evaier.
If the emitele are deep find ditli»nit
to reach helm rhe sotution WtIIl tt
fttnhi- gln*e ss ring;*.
Grow Flax,
At G. P. R. headquarters in ,ton -
treat a atatment has been .given out
that a new discovery has been made
In connection with the treatment of
the Waste straw -in flax, The straw
fibre can be Made tato rope, toad that
the flair OSA be grown with the great•
est results in Vaneda, It will also be
more profitable than wheat. An' offi-
cial of the 0, 1', R. has gone to Settit
Ste. Marie to induce the farmers in
that district to take up the growing of
flax,
License Statistics.
The amount paid for expenses of
License Commissioners, salary of In-
spector, stationery, printing and legal
expenses in South Bruce from May 1,
1008 to May 1, 1900 was $755,11, In
Centre Bruce the amount was $709.81
and in North Bruce $1102.83, Luck -
now received during the same license
year $328.13 as their proportion of
the license money, Teeswater $328.13,
Walkerten $1077,13, Culross $52 50,
Carrick $307.50, Brant $210 and Kin-
cardine $52.50, Five licenses will
cease this year in Bruce --three in
Ohesley, one in Bervie, and one
other.
Develop Canada.
The Toronto World says t—The
political and the financial situation in
the United States looks none too
good. Wall Street is not much of a
place for Canadian money—unless as
a place to get lost in. But Canada's
prospects, and Canada's politics are
more encouraging. Our great busi-
neis is to develop our own country
and our own resources, Cobalt is
batter than. American coppers; our
electric and light propositions better
than American ones ; our banks and
our investments safer than Wall
Street; C.P,R. stock is better than
New York Central or Pennsylvania.
FELL ON THE STOVE.
Baby Is Badly Burned,
The young daughter of Mrs. T. S.
Dougall, 623 Flora Ave,, Winnipeg,
was arranging someof her doll's
washing on a clothes rack, beside
the stove, when she fell, and her band,
being thrown out to try and save"her-
self, came in contact with the side of
the hot stove. She sustained a serious
burn, and her screams brought her
mother quickly to the spot.
_"I sent to .the druggist for the best
remedy he had for burns," she says,
"and he sent back a box of Zam-l3uk.
Ele said that there was nothing to
equal it. I applied this, and it sooth-
ed the pain so quickly that the child
laughed through her tears, I bound
up the hand in Za,m-Bak, and each
day applied Zam-Buk frequently and
liberally, until the burn Was quite
cured.
"The little one was soon able to go
on with her play, and we had no trou-
ble with her during the time the burn
was being healed. I would recom-
mend all mothers to keep Zam-Bak
handy for emergencies of this kind."
All druggists and stores sell Zam-
Buk at fifty cents box. Post free from
Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price, and
you are warned against harmful imi-
tations.
Stones In A Tree.
Wm. Lounds, of Shrigley, has a
real curiosity. It is a section from
the trunk of a tree he had been saw-
ing on his been, lot 21, con. 9, Mel-
ancthon, in March. About five feet
from ther ound thesaw met with an
gr ,
obstruction. Investigation disclosed
a couple of fair sized stones imbedded
in the centre of the trunk. The trunk
had a hollow -in it below the stones,
but was closed in above, although
there were signs that there had at one
time been an opening above. The
section Mr, Lounds showed the local
paper still contained one of the stones,
The question is :—"How did the
stones get there ?"
—Nearly all the land in Aldborough
township and a quantity ,in. Orford
and Dunwich has been leased during
the past six months by various 'oil
and gas speculating companies, and
several test wells are to be put down
this spring.
Sinking Spells
Every Few Days
"At the time I began taking
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy I was
having sinking spells every few
days. My hands and feet would
get cold; I could scarcely
breathe, and could feel myself
gradually sinking away until I
would be unconscious. Those
about me could not tell there
was life in ale. After these
spells I would be very weak and'
nervous, sleepless and without li
appetite; had neuralgia in my
head 'and heart. After taking
the remedy a short time all this
disappeared and ill' ,a few weeks
all the heart trouble was gone."
MRS. LIZZIE PAINTER
803;4 3d Ave. Evansville, Ind.
For twenty years we have
been constantly receiving just
such letters as these. There is
scarcely a locality in the 'United
States where there is not some
one who cart testify to the
merits of this remarkably suc-
cessful Heart Remedy.
Price 41.00 at your druptrlst. He should
supply you. if he oras not, stood prlos
tti, us, wi forward prepaid.
bilk MltOleek1. OO•, tomato,
House -Cleaning Time Is Here.:
TO BRIGHTEN UP THE HOUSE
YOU WILL NEED
New Blinds, New Curtains, New
Carpets, New Rugs, New Oilcloths,
New Mattings, New Linoleutns, New
Draperies,. Etc,
We are after all the trade there is this season in Car-
pets and Rugs. Our stock is much larger tet begin with
Cala season than ever before. If you want to tone things
up at little expense, come and see what we call value in
all kinds of Floor Coverings and Housefurnishings.,
Carpet Department on Second Floor
aslirmmrimmimminswff
BLINDS
Special Value in Window Blinds
and Cartain Poles. City prices
are not in it. See our opaque
Linen Blinds complete,• for 25o,
Cottage Poles, 10 eta.
LACE CURTAINS
A great variety of Curtains and
Curtain material. See our new
patterns in Madras—a special line
at 25e a yd. Lace Curtains from
25c up to $0.00 per Pair.
•
MATTING
Japan Matting in all the new pat-
terns—Special value at 15, 20 and
25 ets, Japan Matting Squares,
fine for 'bedrooms, good patterns,
seamless—Bargain at $1.60.
RUGS
Lots of new patterns in all
sizes of Rugs to choose from,
in Brussels, Tapestry, Velvet,
Wiltons and Wool. Prices be-
, gin at $5.05.
H. E. Isard Co.
Vaase &Walt%
`riCeans
7tU'ase �l�'r11kik11ongs
Warm spring days suggest house cleaning
and house cleaning means a new CARPET
for a certain room, a certain room needs
new CURTAINS and a certain room needs
a new LINOLEUM or OIL CLOTH,
Japanese Matting Floor Oilcloths
Scotch Linoleum Rugs
Carpet Squares In Tapestry,
Brussels and Velvet
You will realize substantial savings if you buy your
Spring House Furnishings from us.
Carpet Squares Number of Small
$6A0 to X30,00 finds Carpet Cheap
See our line of Ladies' Suitings in latest colors. Also
our Ladies' Ready -to -Wear Waists.
No. 1 Sugar, $5,35 per cwt, cash.
ALL KINDS PROEVCE TAKEN.
A. Mills
WINGHAM