The Wingham Advance, 1922-07-20, Page 3Thursday, July 2oth, 92
111 I3est Value'ip Town
Donainion. Stores Limitedi
The Chain Grocery Stores of Canada---Wingharn, Ont. N
r Try Our Special Blend Tea 49c lb..
Matches, 3 boxes
Palmolive, 3 cakes
34c
24c
Fell e Naptha Soap, so for 75c
Ineundry Starch, 2 lbs 19c
Seedlees Raisins, per lb.. e'ec
IShredded Cocoanut, per lb...,2oc
Cheice Figs, 2 lbs 29c t
I Old Arm Chair Corn, 2 tine25c =
D. S. L. Baking Powder, 1 lb. tin.. .. .... ..,...24c
Butter and Eggs Taken.,
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N 0
.4`
* VVINGHAM
1
•
\ 18i9 .. . •4*.
Voters' Lists, 1922 -Municipality of
• Wingharn of the County of Huron
• .
Notice is hereby given that I have
tratsmitted or delivered to the per-
sons mentioned in section 9, of the
Ontario Voters' Lists Act, the copies
required by said sections to be. so
ransmitted tee delivered •of the list,
made pursuant to said Act, of all per- egreat but manners bum, he eats it up
sons appearing by the last revised As-
sessment Roll of the said Municipal-
ity to be entitled to vote in the said
Municipality at Elections for Members
of the Legisletive Assembly and at over we must restram this gallant
rover, must shut himup in lonely
Municipal Elections; and that the said state and keep the layers celibate.
list wise first posted. up at my office, Their eggs will thus .repay our toil
at Weigh= on the loth day of jaiy, when fertile ones would quickly spoil.
e922, and remaies tlicre for inspection. The man who'd.be afresh egg booster
And I hereby oriel upon all' voters
oo�xx0000�oo
Rude Rural Rhyrries:
000000c00000poOlsootrocotioota
The Rooster
The rooster is a testy bird; in all
the. land his :Voice is heard, a priend
and haughty bird by heck who flaps
his Wings and curves 'hie neck. •Froni
east to west, from perch to pole, his
morning bugle echoes ars:melt*
men from snoring deep ad 'maidens
from their beauty sleep. Hehtints for
Worms with main and might, and find-
ing:one,. with huge delight, to whet
his harem's appetite, he calls his
wives with trill and hum, theit •herieher
before they come. Nov- •whethee•Red
or Plymouth Rock one half is he of
all the flock, and chickens mostly
favor dad in qualities both good and
bad. But when the hatching season's
to take imeriediate proceedings to have
any errors or omissions corrected ac-
cording to law.
Dated this loth day of July, A. D.,
I9,e2. •
W. A. Galbraith,
' Cleek of the Town of Witighem.
•
CH1ROPR ACtIC
DR. J. ALVIN FOX
FOR GOOD HEALTH CON-
SULT A CHIROPRACTOR
FIRST -NOT LAST
Chiropractic furnishes t h e
•most complete and scientific
method of health culture lcnown
to -day. It is the only method of
direct Spinal Adjustment
• —
Our greatest asset is a good
health. The greatest aid to good
health is Chiropractic. Chiro-
practic is based on sound scien-
tific understanding of the laws
of health. •
• Adjustmeat given for all dis-
easel where there 15 reaSellable
hope of recovery.
Office hours, so to 12 a. m„ 2
to 5 and 7 to 8 p. m. Phone 191
i.
etesne
i!or
thinsesasek•
Nausea
• Remedy for
AST MA2 CATARRH
and EA LUNGS
•-13 ALSAMBA,Iong known. to the med.
DIP ical profession, has recently been
'introduced into Canada, and rbis won-
derful reixtedy is now available for every.
body.- Already it has won phenomenal
success, and is effecting remarkable
recoveries in the treatment of Asthma,
Catarrh, Weak Lungs and other respirs
atory troubles.
Buy a bottle to -day
3. McKII3BON, Druggist
Wingharn, Ont.
mast segregate that old hTeT rooiter,
• How Ft
The place whit
ing in the dietat
growing irap.orte..
'like the apple an,
the grape, -have
served 1)opu1ar1t) others whech were
'once among the .1.1t/es-in-the United
States are now, , great sfavor.
• The ripening t fruits playa so ina-.
portant a part 1 their availability,
and some 'of tht preblenes of trans-
Poreation, that t. theatic information
on nig subject e much to be deetred.
Some fruits, lilt the apple, May be
allowed to ripen alraost fully on the
tree, and may b. kept in the ripened
condition for re, tively long periods,
if proper atteut. n be pant to. their
-
manipulation at. storege.
The physical c Seizes, like the vari-
ation in: color oi ripening fruits, are
familiar, since . fey are evideat to
the senses; bet t terse alterations are
merely indicativ, of changes in the
chemical make-ui of the fruits uader
the coaditions wa.ca determine ripen-
ing. Heat, mole tire, air and light
may all particip.te in deternsining.
the characteristic eienges that ensue.
Laboratory rePorts of statistmianst
investigations .in recent years have
given clearer indications of what
takee plaee. Ainohg the changes are
the traneformation of the starch into
sugari the coleyeestan ofteoluble tan-.
LIE COMP01/11d with their astringent
aroperetes into, insoluble forms, the
actual lessening of the quantity of
apid10 the elagisiag tie tele eeid fierpr
aeetteduratithe of sligali; the-
softetung of weedy tissue, and the
increase and 'Fitorage • of juice4 •
With the growing kneWledge of
what the ripening pf fruits really in-
volves, -we are certain to acquire bet-
ter ideas of what a properly ripened
product should really be. The feet
teat unripened. (winter) apples are
unfit for consumption in the eaely
fall, because instead of sugar they
contain a large' amountof raw starch,
which will disappear with the "reel -
lowing" process, will be understood
ID a moee iatelligent way than nas
usually been the case.
ts Ripen.
, fruits are'assum-
• of man es' one of
e. Certain species
• peer; the plena and
°lig enjoyed' a oe-
Shade Trees on Highways.
Our highways would be much ns.oee
attractive if lined with shade trees.
These trees could -be set 50 or more
feet apart and would do little damage
either to the adjoining property or
the roadway. They would make the
road pleasanter to travel over and
also te live by.
Go through the grain fields evith
the object or removing impurities and
noxious Weeds.
esellotasePtts"Noloessols.+-v ''lly1041~"041;"~~411011401440
A CAR OF WESTERN OATS
• Will arrive about the middle 91 this week Special prices on the ear
Vlie have a quantity oliteeleaned Screen.
lugs of good quality, heavy in wheat,
at $20.00 a ton, which will make
Good flog Feed.
Bran, Shorts and Low Grade Flour.
at Lowest Irlees,
JOHN E. HOMUTH
SUCCESSOR TO HOWSON & HoWsoN
eed, Seale, Poteteee, ete. Photeet Resielenee 175, Store sto
1
A
• rativtravu• GASPE.
Metier]) Movements leave Not Affect-
ed That Conenmnity,
Gaspe as a Persistiag illustration
of tee primitive life of Cariatlas-eneh
is the picture drawn by Dr. A. P.
Colemaa, the rioted Termite geolog-
ist, in i paPer before the Royal So-
ciety of Canada which has now been
iseued in printee form. Tbe Primi-
tive features of the northern Gas-
Pesian civilization have changed but
little witnin the past forty years;
between two visits by De. Coleman,
while all. around raodere commerce
and industrial Hee have been chang-
ing things enormously.
"How much longer will tits iso-
lated population 'keep aloof from the
nesorld. about it?" aelts Dr. Coleman.,
Will it ;still rethin its homely mode
of livieg and its mediaeval point of
view while the rest of the world
moves forward? Even the lure of
dancing has been curbed by the
Priest, and the drive: tells the visitor
that he can now play his violin only
to amuse himeelle
"The rising fined of mechanical
invention, end of restless travel and
excitement bid fair to pass on either
side, somewhat as the lobes of the
great ice sheet did, leaving the Gaspe
m.ounta,ins as a scarcely detaehed
island between them. It wiel be no
misfortune if Gaspe should remain
as a sample of What has been, as the
hbnie of En almost forgotten sim-
plicity of pioneer life °nee pervading
the whole of Canada. It may re-
main a restful and picturesque oasts
In the arid desert of megehisaical
progress. Perhaps it sbould be iso-
alted even a little more than uaturis
has arranged for, so as to preserve
one stage of the evolution of modern,
civilizatiou; somewhat as Roche
Perce and Bonaventure Island have
been made sanctuaries for the :tea
birds which otherwise might ;mon
have vanished." '
-Energy of Coal Mines.
There are in the United States
about 41., 0 0 0,0 0 0 wage-earners,
whose total energy output is reckon-
ed at a.little more ellen 4,000,0000
horsepower. The Government Bu-
reau of Mines says that, in terms of
coal, this Is approximately equal to
the energy productseof 900 miners.
This is explained by the statement
that the energy output of the aver-
• age workman is about one-tenth of
a horsepower, The energy expended
by a coal miner in an eight-hour day
is etLual to that obtainable from two
'Pound@ of coal. The average miner
'gets out 8,800 pounds of coal in a
day, and thus in effect multiplies hss
energy by 4,400.
• No other country possesses re-
sources of energy, comparable to
those of the United States; chief
among these resburceiabeing the de-
posits of coat For lack of energy
resources, particularly coal, many re-
gions of the world can never support
an induetrial civilization of magni-
tude. 0'
Its suriericirity in this respect is
strikingly shown by a comparison of
the available coal with that of other
countries, reckoned in terms of mil-
lions of "horsepower years." As set
forth by the Bureau of Mines, it
appears as follows:
• Millons of
horsepower
years.
United States . . . . . 500,000
China . 200,000
Germany . . : . .... . .. 48, 0 0 0
Canada • 40,90e
Great aeltain • e7,0e0
Australia . ... et:
Russia .. . .. . 17,000
Poland and Czecho•Slovalcia 14,000
India , • • • ; • ee • .4.. 1 1.1.°. CI 9
Canadian Movies.
' It is little more than ten years
since the first crude attempts to
make a movie drama in Canada weee
made.' Few 'Will renaember the rough
• portrayals of the Heroes of Long
Sault, as pictured with the 'aid of
Indiaus In the vicinity of Montreal.
Now there are nuffierauss successes
of the made -in -Canada screen drama
aeVekening interest and ernotion in
many countries of the world.
A serious effort is being made to
enlist the inteeest of the Canadian
People in the plan, for without .a
moral bacleing the idea-eannot make
the progress it should. There are
signs of an increasing intereat in
• home-made articles, from clothes-
pins to steel rails, from foreign
policies to books; so why not the
Canadian movie? Ernest Shipman,
the new Canadian movie king in the
making, with half a dozen ,film
drama e already to his credit, with
gross receipts in one case'of over
$600,000 already, le now about to
make "The Man From Glengarry,"
froAr' Ralph Connor's novel of that
statute. He declares he knows of
more than 30 Canadian 'stories that
would make good movies.
A healthy claim by Mr. Shipman
Is that the broad out-of-door life of
Canada makes screen dramas that
appeal to all countries in the World
from their contrast to the sickly,
Problem-ladea pictures that come
from America' studios, whicb now
suffer from the additional eloud of
tragedies in the new -rich circles of
California.
Rat Harvest Light One.
The lasteof the rat harvest, which
has been much lighter, than usual,
arrived April 30 from Inawartha and
Rice Lakes. The late movement of
• ice, and high water proved e coin-
bination against the trappers and
they lament 'a, poor eatch. The light
harvest reacted on the price, hoer -
ever, and the eealtion closed with
number °nese Winging $2.25, as cons -
pared antes, $2.05 'the firet of ethe
season.
s Jellied lelish.
The newest method of presereleg
fish is to eat it into pieees of suit-
able size, pack it in a rail, And fill
ehe latter With hotfluid., sea -moss
gelitia, The gelatin eoole
'Ilea Se a little above 100 degrees,
The'filled 'den is sealed aed Cooked.
When it is opened, the consumer
:ands the, conteets an attrstetiee ore -
0 1! 00oPsed fish in jellY,
7T,
in' II
THE WINGHAM ADVANC
WATER JN FARM HOMES
Compression System Will Give
General Satisiaction.
water Pumped Into a Metal Tank
Against Compreseed Air---leuriotts
Methods of 'Working the Pump-
• Air Valves Necessity --, eteven
Steps to .'Suceess, in Poultry
Culture. t
(Contributed fr ontario Department or
glee sture. Toronto.)
In my las article I described
briefly the attic tank system of water
supply for the rural home. This
system aas,given very good siatisfac-
tion in the pest, but I doubt if it
will be installed ie many homes in
the future, as there is now on the
market sornethiag very much super-
ior in many -'respects. I refer to the
compression water system, which I
will try to describe tit a few words.
Row the System Operates.
The chief feature of this system is
that water is pensped into a strong
air -tight cylindrical metal • tank ,
against the entrapped air which is .
compreseed lee the upper portion of
Elte. iank, and fTee ebrnpressed .air
anstitutes the power to drive the
water out of the tank when a, faucet
is opened on the discharge line. This
is very simple. Te metal tank will
vary in size according to the amount
of water used, but a common size is
6 feet by 21/4 or 3 feet. It should
be kept about full of water and at .
a pressure_yarying from 40 to 45 lbs.
Greeter pressure, if required, may
be secured by pumping the water to
a leighey level than named in the
tan" br by fnimping S'Oisie air into
thetank before any water is pumped
in. A water gauge is attached to
one side of the tank to indicate the
height of the water in the tank, and
on the discharge pipe close to the
tank is a pressure gauges The tank
must be kept in a frost -Proof place--
sa,y the cellar, or an underground pit.
The water keeps cool, clean and fresh
in this tight tabk.
Methods of Worlcing the Pump.
There are many different ways of
operating the pennp in order To file
the tank: By hand, by windmill, by
gasoline engine, or by electric motor.
A few minutes of punaping each day
by hand will keep the ardinary-rezed
house supplied with plenty of water.
When the pump can be operated by
windmill or electric motor, there is
the great advantage of automatic
starting and stopping of tne pump.
The antonaatic electric water systems
of the present day are very conven-
ient and also very efficient. In ease
of shallow wells and cisterns the
pump and motor can be located in-
side the house or barns. As farmers
get electric current these automatic
systems will become "fe-Fy omoi
berth for shallow and deep wells. The
automatic systems require very 'little
attention and are very noiseless.
There are several styles or designs,
but any of them of reputable firms
will give good satisfaction if the in-
stallation has • been done properly
and if the outfit be given good care.
If soft water as well as hard water
ie required under pressure, two tanks
are necessary, one for saft and one
for hard. Only one pump is required
intlais double tank outfit.
Air Valves as Necessity.
Pumps used in connection with
compression systems must be provid-
ed wite en eleey4lye fer reneyteg
Ns alr itt the tank ekla the air.
disaolves in the wager and eptapes
with it. If means for bulaping in
air were not provided forathe tank
*Mild eventually become water-
logged and the system would be ren-
dered absolutely useless• ,
The compression water system is
described and illustrated in Bulletin
267,-: entitled "Farm Water Supply
and Sewage Disposal." A copy may
be secured without cost by dropping
a line to the Department of Physics,
0. A.., Guelph, Out. Give us a chance
to help you to solve your water sup-
ply problein.-R. It. Graham, 0. A.
College, Guelph.
Seven Steps to Success In Poultry
Culture.
1. Keep aceurate records. Little
Progress canatte made without this
first step. •
2. Feed a properly balanced ra-
tion. Such a, ration furnishes nutri-
ents for growth, maintenance, fatten-
ing and eggs. The production of eggs
must be a constant aim.
3. Give Peeper care aed comfort
by good housing and management,
Discomforts are: Extremes of heat
and cold, hunger and thirst, four air
and dampness, and diseases and
Parasites.
4. Keep standard -bred, utility
stock. There are five good breeds for
the farm: Plymouth Rock, Rhode
Island Red, Leghorn, Wyandotte and
Orpington. Varieties of these have
been bred for heavy egg-productiou.
5. Breed from the best, both male
and female.
6. Sell unprofitable Stock
7.' Market graded products. Maxt-
muna returns are secured from grad-
ed products. Markets demand a con-
stant suPPlY, and this calls for COM-
nannity co-operation.
Age of Cows,
It is more difficult to determine the
age of a Cow than of a hotse, say the
Itve stoek men at the State College
at Ithaca, Stew York, " They agree
that some estimate of a cow's age
may be made from her teeth and
horns. The number • of "annual
rings" ort the home, plus two, for
example, usually eyes the animal's
age, but remembering that the pairs
of permanent teeth. Cense nine months
apart and the first Pair eomea at
about 19 to 24 months of age, will
help to vertfy it.
inepect potato flelele f�r dteeariee
and impurttleil and temoVo 1,11 pleats
neeessare.
Woad.
oani
..tieertrerrIale
eke
It is estimated that a reduction of 1%
friction (and astie is easily possible with
the right grade of Imperial Polarine
Motor Oils) will increase the available
power of your motor 11%,
Get the most out of your car at the
least expense. Consult the Imperial
Chart of Recoriarrtendatioils, the guide
to proper lubrication.
IMPERIAL' OIL LIMITED
Manufacturers and esicirketers of Imperial
Polarine Motor Oils and Marketers in
Canada of Gargoyle Mobiloils
14.0
\UNMAN CHAUTAUQUA
sity. The guarantors who try to make
the week a success come in for -a lot
. of abuse from a certain class of people
A Success Morally But a Failure who are neirer through knocking. Mr.
• Financially ' Fells, president of the local committee
, The Chautauqua program is getting
nicely under way. It opened on Sat-
tieday with .a most interesting pro-
gram. Ferguson's Operatic Quintet
proved an excellent opening musical
treat.
Professor Duxbury gave a wonder-
ful recital from Les Miserables, Vic-
tor Hugo's masterpiece, in which the
meeting of Jean Val Jean and the -
Bishop was graphically detailed and
with wonderful elocutionary .grace.
His second number was the Shades'
Banquet, a whimsical representation
of a supopsed Meeting' bn the astral
plane' of •Dr. Sa.rauel. Johns'on, Christ -
cipher a Colurrileus;. -Charles Dickens,
George Washington, Boswell, Bacon,
Shakespeare, R.a 1 e i gh,Tennyson,
Pope; Longfellow, and sna.ny others,
involving some discussion of the Bac-
onian theory of the authorship of
Shakespeare's 'works and, merging in-
to representations of how most of the
authors named would have written the
aursery Chyme Jack Hornerand his
famous plum episode, The large. aud- The Embers Male Quartette
ience showed in no uncertain manner
An excellent sin ing quartette com-
its fine appreciation of these wonder -
in from Los An gl - tots
ge esChautauqua
ful memory feats and of the dramatic thfs sunnier. .
manner in which the pieces were pre- ,
sented to the audience. The reciter's
comma:lading platform presence aned
exceeding' geniality added much to filet deserves a great deal of praise for his
auntiring efforts. This is the fourth
attractiveness of his program also.
The tent was well filled on Sunday year that the writer has been on the
evening' at 8.30 when. a most interest- Chautauqua guarantee and we have
ing program was put on. • .
' not been made rich by it. The first
On Sunday afternoon ' Mr. Lack' year the committee hada $2ctoo sur -
Kennedy kindly entertained the vis- . Pins which was given to the Wingham
Hospital. The second year ea.eh guar-
itors to tan enjoyable motor drive' antor had to pay $1.25 and the third
around .the town and as a result they 1 year $7.25 each. This year each guar -
are loud in their praise of the beauti- .antor will have to pay $15.00 each or
ful and neat appearance of Wingberu!probably more. There have been 330•
On Monday the McFarren Quartet adult tickets sold and 83 childrense
proved a musical organization of veryi
high artistic excellence. . tickets. The 25 per cent which the
local committee receives on single ad -
On Tuesday the lecture "Music, the
. • - e elf' missions will not amount to anything
_ , , , ,. !. . ol l' e $soo.00.
- .. s e. . . Iv". ik
es, nelett eompotet and pianist rovedp.
a rare tieat as did his piano recital in '
the evening. Hon. le W. Wilsoret Celebrated9 6th Birthday
former inernber of the British Parlia-e '
On Wednesday, July
ment, editor and author of leading arts' 5th., Mr. Days
id Ross, Brussels, celebrated his 96th
icles in British and American period -birthday. Several old friends called
ieals and student of World affairs
on him to express congratulations
gave a very interesting lecture "Some
and good Wishes. During the day he
Problems of the Einpire." • enjoyed a drive in ars auto and was
Th Wedisseday program will .be a able to be about the hoine, verandah
grand' orchestral concert by Lietiran-and lawn.
ces Cremona Orchestra and a lecture .
Mr. Ross was born at Arrow Tews,
by Mr. Tom Skeyhill, noted Austral-
Selkirleshire, Scotland, and came to
ian orator, soldier -poet and world
Canada in young manhood. For
traveller, "The Babylonian Finger years he lived at Seaforth, or more
Writes Again." properly Humphrey, where he was
The following from the Niagara
married to Miss Annie Torrance, who
Falls Review of June 25th, gives one
passed away te years ago. The fam-
an idea of what to expect on Thurs- ily came to Brussels 55 years ago and
day. evening: - for, years the subject of this sketch
'f'ke Percival Vivian Players are well carried ona tailoring and outfitting
known in Niagara Falls, having come
businesee passing it over later to his
there the past four years with the
Chautauqua and last night they gave s°Tnhel-rle (..w. ere lour sons and four
the best yet. "Her Own Money' is
good aetes„, daughters in the family, but one of
full of opportunities • for "ssethe latter, Mrs. Geo.' Haycroft, is de -
and every member of the caste last
ceased, 20 grandchildren are in the
night excellently played his and hercount Mr. Ross is evoederfully smart
par:'tffor an old gentleman of hisyearsAl-
ie play has a distinct Message to though a little dull in hearing hearng he etas
,
imany husbands and played up the feet i
good eyesight and shows the, good
that the average 'wife must ask for sell
j care he receives
the money she gets from her husband. Mr. Ross is a grandfather of Dr.
G. H. -Ross .of Winghani.
,
A Western Booster Now
The following from. the July issue
of the Western Poultrymen ' goes to
show that our good friend, A. H. Wil-
ford is still in the game.
"At a ineeting of the Saskatoon and
Mayfair Poultry Breeders' Associa-
tions held in the Exhibition Board
offices recently, it was decided to co-
operate with A. H. Wilford, produce
manager of the MacDonald -Crawford
Company, in his "Swat' the Rooster"
campaign. Mr. Wilford, who outlined
the poultry industrypossibilities to
the breeders' also agreed to extend
the campaign for a further period,
until june soth.
A.nnouncement was made that the
Saskatoon 'Breeders' Associatioa have,
donated a silver cup, the trophy to be
competed for yearly by coaritry mer-
chants in Northern Saskatchewan, and
to be awarded to the merchant who
sends in a record of the 'largest num-
ber of "roosters" heads received by
him during the campaign . period,
These records will take the forrn of
citorrtdi,ficat,ce from the merchants, cer-
tified to by the postmescr of their
i:0*11 Arid will be teceivestby Mr. Wil-•
"13dtter eggs in Northern Sasket-
chewateis the keyeote of the "Swat the
R.00ster", campaign, Mr, "Wilford told
the poultry breeders declarieg that
Many touches of humor and laugh-
able situations made the audience rock
many times with laughter. The tent
was packed to capacity with a very
appreciative audience.
Arthur Barry, who was here last
year, and Miss Roberta 'Bellinger as
the -quarreling husband and wife made
many comical scenes and added to
the gaiety of the play. Content Pal-
eologtte, as Mary Alden, had a diffi-
cult part and made the most of it.
Virginia Odiorne and Buford Armi-
tage made a very fine team and light-
ened the sometime pathetic scenee. J.
Harry Irvine, as the husband had a
rather 'thankless part, but played it
naturally and well. Will Riesfsall as
Toby, played the faithful servant to
perfection.
Friday evening will conclude Chaut-
auqua in Wingham kr this year and
we believe for all time, a fact which
we are sorry to admit. The junior
Chautauqua Pageant, "Conquests of
Peace" by the children will be put on
in the afternoon as well as a program
of song and story by the Embers
Male Quartette of California. In the
evening Dr, Geo, Kerby, president of
Mount Royal College, Calgary, will
give his lecture "The Task of a,Nat-
ion," •
Why any right thinking people take
a delight in ,knocking Chautauqua is
more than we can find out. it has
beeu rightly called -a travellieg trniver-
A, • 1!,.;•
non-fertile eggs were much better for
marketing purposes, as a fertile egg
during the hot weather would auto--
matically commence incubation if left
in the heat of the sun. His plea to,
the country merchant was fox- more
frequent shipment of eggs, rather thani
having the eggs a.hcurnulate e.nd,,bre
shipped in large quantities.
"I had one bill of lading last
for 65 cases of eggs from one mer-
chant. He thought doubtless .that it
was a big thing for him to make such,
a large shipment, 'but my opinion of
that storekeeper did not amount to -
much. I simply threw up my heads
and said, "God help the quality a
those eggs." All of the eggs receive&
during the peai few weeks have been
graded No. 2 quality. Do away with
the rooster, note, that the hatching
season is past, and daily shipments
will mean an almost immediate diff-
erence of five cents a dozen in the
price of eggs for the producer,"
• City cafes and restaurants, hotels
in all parts of Northern Saskatchewan
district have been requested to feaeerre
chicken dinners during the time the
campaign is under way. Butchers
will be advertising for roosters ancl
grocers will commence to advertise
for non -fertile eggs.,"
MARRIED
• a
Armst rong:-Arrnsfrong-On Tuns -
day, July /ith., 1922, at "Restholat• ee
Brussels, by Rev. A. McKils-
bin, B. A., uncle of the brideartemate
youngest daughter of Mr. am& Um_
Wm. Armstrong to Mr. John Wes-
• ley Armstrong, son of Mr. and Moe.,
Jas. Armstrong, Brussels.
Have You Noticed It?
Have any of our readers taken not-
ice of the bright star which makes its
appearance each evening in the south-
ern skies, and makes its -way rapidly
westward, as the night advances? At
midnight it is almost straight wesa
follows a rather course as it can Ise
noticed shooting up and down in its
westward journey.
-Among those present at the es•.'
ding these days is the bridegroom -
DR. F. A. A
j: OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICAN
Electridty
Osteopathy
Ale diseases treated. •
Office adjoining residence, Centre
Street, next Anglican Church,- (form-
erly. Dr. lelsteDonald's.) Phone 272.
Correctly Fitted
Eyegloosses
R.IIAMiLTON °P—
tostetrig
WINGHAM ONT.
"Saved My Little Girir
Mother tens how her little Mere
hie was saved,.
That is what one woman wrote us sra--
cently, and theu she goes on to say e -
":Ethel, vsho is just past eight, =Odes
bad cold. last August The child is of
highly strung, nervous teniperturient
and could tot be kept quiet us bede
We tried everything we could think elf
to cure her cough. Bat, -the, cough
became worse and from a rosy, healthys,
sturdy girl she because pale and•thia.,
Nothing we did seemed to stop that
cough and by this time regalar spasms
of toughing had developed. Theset
eoughing spells left the child weak a.titit
completely tired rest I believe. that ite
a short time the movie mallet Jima&
reached the child's lungs. After eying,
everything I could thank of, I saw ase
advertisement for Carnot, saying *14
thiepreparatioe mend build one tip:. Tia,
got it bottle irons the dr asgeeirsetaiesle,
efore it was half Aultehea ity Iittlegfrtt
had alino.st Completely shalten o0 her.
eang,h, Her theeks began to get backe,
their old coleus.. She started to put coat,
flesh again and would run and play
day without being tired. Todity,oftair
having taken two bottles elf Cattoletskree
is looking ena s'iist bellr thazi It
has ever felt in her lift."
Camel la sold by yorr druggist' and ,
you can conseientionsty say, after yoSa
niT1Y7egtoroil cel‘,141tittirsiljinotillaliet el?tx8plYt bcialtire rh
be will refund gesur
„ Walton M
I bt.1 111,