HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-06-07, Page 7kiwi-.y+�pw„wiawvepjpw
ReIN
GRAIN t VADRS
COPE WITH DEAtIAND FOR
STORAGE SPACE.
Last Two Crop SeasOns Were
Difficult Oases for Canada's
Grain Terminals.
The year 1923 iswitnessing an sx
traordivary. amount of new gt'aei ele-
vator construction' in •Canada, > exten-
sions' undertaken in an endeavor to,
better cope with the unusual and un-
anticipated demands for storage space'
which have featured the last two crop
seasons. With, the completion of these
new buildings and extensions to exist-
Ing elevators, under way at the pre
sent time or projected for, the year,.
the total storage capacity of the 170
minion gratn elevators by the time. the
1923 'crop is ready for•market should
be something like 250,000,000 bushels,'
tie against 214,279,964 bushels when
the last census was taken in 1921.
By the passing recently .of an Order-
in-Counal by the Federal Legislature
eametjon was formally given to the
construction of a new elevator at
Tarte Pier by the .Montreal Harbor
Commissioners, The elevator will
havean ultimate capacity of ten mil-
lion bushels and will be built in
of half a million bushels ,capacity each,'
the first o2 w.blole to cos$2,347,000, is
being commenced immediately. The ele-
vator will be one of the most modern
.:'$reproof structuress of its kind in the
world, the entire plant being designed
in accordance with recently developed
principles for minimizing the hazard
oi; dust explosion. .There will be Your
travelling -marine towers for.nnload•
ing from lake boats and Your unloading;
points from railway oars. Five berths.
Will ` he provided for loading ocean
steamers, each berth having facilities
for loading 30,000 bushels of grain per
hour.
Twin Ports Extension. •
New ddItious to the storage accom-
modation of . the . Twin Ports of Fort
William wee -Port Arthur in 1922 added
nearly seven' million bushels, to their
capacity, and between the marketing
of the crops of 1921 and 1922 the.,stor-
age` capacity of the two 'cities.- rose
from 51,405,000 bushels to 58,293,000,
giving them a storage space exceeding
any. other port in the world, a position
held for years.- by 'either Minneapolis,
• -Chicago or St. Paul. This tremendous
space has;' nevertheless, proved entire-
dy inadequate to the vast volume of
traffic there, and 'other.. buildings in
process of erection or contemplated
for the summer will bring the grain
storage capacity of the. Twin Ports up
to 61,000,000 bushels', giving then? a
wide lead over all other grain -export -
ing
rain -exporting ports. •
The• most significant grain elevator
construction is taking place ;at Vane.
couver, and developments of this na-
ture there may be taken as indicative
of the established faith in the per-
manency of the grain trade from the
Pacific port: and the ever-increasing
volume of traffic from the Prairies to
find its outlet there for .the Orient and•
the British Isles. Fresh, elevator:
-de'
velopments at Vancouver are being so
frequently auounc,od,.'that it is a diffi-
cult matter to keep record of them or
apprise hi anythinglike an adequate
manner what additional storage will
be made this year •
m V n uver Development,
Phenomenala co p_
The Federal Government recently
-matte a loan et $5;000;000 to the Board•
of Harbor Commissioners :of the Port
of Vancouver to increase the capacity
of the local elevator by 500,000 bush-
els, :making a total capacity of 1,750;-
000
, 750;-
000 bushels, tI is',state,d that the
plans of the Barber Board involve the
construction; of two more elevators
each with greater ,capacity than the
present -Government elevator, whilst
several private companies : have an-
nounced their intentions . of erecting
structures this summer. In the early
days, of March the`Port of: Vancouver
achieved • its year's, objective by ex-
porting 15,000,000 bushels of grain,
the mark'sot for:the.1922crop, and, it
is ;expected that the Port's total .shdp
meats` will reach. 20,00'0,000 bushels be-
fore the claz.e of the season. Authcri-.
tie's state that withina•ehort time •Elana
coiiver will be shipping from 100,000,-
000 to 150,000,000 .b.ushels of grain per
year, as storage space alone has go fee
.hampered the traffic of the port. and
it barge orders from the Orient and other
places have been refused In cense
gluence.
The last two crop seasons were died-
cult ones for Canada with grain,: flood
ing terminals, and ports to. an extent
it had beeii;;anticipated would not'b4'
reached for years. The most strenu-
ous efforts have 'been made to meet
the new regiiirenients of grain storage'
capacity at all pointe, end by the time
the •1923 crop ie ready for marketing.
a •con:siderable aneelloration 02 the 00n
diiio.ns prevailing in 1023 will be ap-
parent.
0 . speeial survey will undertake to
sound tate Deep •I4ie'er Peach of -the
ttd.vva River 'deal i In • several
0 ve 'aft, da
places. ,in the'epees of twenty-three
roller` five thousand feet of towboat
line' elan eitile'd'to find •bottom,, Lake
Su erior,;,the deepest of the great in -
lead seae,
n-land°seae, attains n depth of about a
n'Et yq+; .,Pis t•,.:'.:'..4rer mt�'
tit
K'
Make the
Rinso
liquid first
1po not rut' Rinso direct
from the package into tb
tub. Mix half a package of
Rinse in a; Mee coal
water until it is Iika
crea><'ar. Thera, add two
quarto of boiling water.
'acrd when the;; froth'
sub-
sides, you wili have a alear;;
amber -coloured liquid'.
Add this liquid to the wash
tub, until you get the big
lasting Rinso suds. -Then
soak the clothes clean.
Gifik141 A»V)LN(3
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YOUN GAINS
TiR "W'"UR LOS,
Declares Ta 4ac .R torod 1710
Whey Stcz l! tri Trsouble Had.
Almost retkec Health,
q
etenetteetrtne anyareltgeeeitti a„ .
R.tnso is as splendid for the
regular family washing a -s
Lux is for fine fabrics.
Lever Brothers Limited
Toronto
R305
Surnames an. Amer Ori j
GOWER
Racial Origin—Welsh.
Source—A'piace name. .
• Welsh family names are not alwe, s
y
borne by those of Welsh blood, though•
it is a fairly safe assumption that
where 'a Welsh family' name is found
there also you will find' at least a por-
tion of Welsh blood.'
It was quite possible; however, in
the period :of family name formation-
that.a Norman of a Saxon. Englishman,
having settled in some section of
Wales, would Most naturally find him-
self tagged with a surname' indicative
of a•:Welsh place name, inasmuch as
the place names all about him would
be Welsh. And it true that an ex-
ceptionally large, number cY English
have" settled in Wales.
The family name of Gower, there-
fore, is one of throne which might be
borne by Englishmen as .well as, those
of pure Welsh extraction.
It is simply the . name of a place in
Glamorganshire, and according to the
Welsh spelling it -is not Gower but
"Gwyr," "though the pronunciation is
about the same. • The meaning of -the
name is an -inclosed; a round or an en-
ciroled place. In this instance the
THAN4UL MOTHER
Thousands of mothers throughout
C4.la.da—many of them your neighbors
—speak with "thankfulness concerning
the use of Baby's Own Tablets. Once
they, have used the Tablets for their lit-
tle" ones they would use 'nothing else.
The Tablets are an ••absolutely safe
medicine for even the youngest baby,
being guaranteed by a goverhrent
analyst to contain neither .opiates nor
narcotics or other harmful drugs. Con-
cerning them Mrs, David Menobb,
Divide, Sask., says:—"I . have . used
Baby's ,Own Tablets and have found
them so sett -sea -eery I would not be
without thtem" The Tablets are sold
by medichle .dealers or by mail at 25
cents a boa from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, One.
A Dreadful Possihility.
Ills Mother—"'Gaand was'h your
heads and face, Bobby. I'm expecting
Mrs. Pokternose here any minute;"
• Bobbyw-"Bu't sepese she don't come
at all atter I've gene and washed my
hands' and, face?"
MONEY ORDERS.
It is always safe to send a ,Dominion
Express Money Order, Five dollars
costs three cents.
Snappy.
Tactless 1-fostese (on seeing her
ltaphewv's iiaace8 tor the first tirne:—
`should neuter have 1tnowd you frond
I A told me .
your Photograph. len you
Wore eo'pretty!"
Quest (coldly)---"1V'o, I'm not pretty,
l o t have to try to. Ve nice,:. and it's
sues, a bore. But perhaps you haven't
Water;
thousand Beet,
About 800,000 Amen ans'Were Mes-
eacred in Anatolia in 191(1 end 1917
by the Turks
Goadnossis the: only iiivestmelIt that
never fails. ---Thoreau.
l ipiai'tl'A t»3i'gllmeut ted by Phys./Plant
place is virtually encircled by the sea
and certain rivers. and streams.
ARGYLE.:
Racial Origin=Scottlsh.
Source—A locaIity.
You will have no difficulty whatever
in guessing the source of this family-
name if you are at all familiar with
tire geography, of the British Isles-, for:
you willerecognize it as an extensdve
shire on the west coast of Scotland.
Ie. you 'bear the family name, the
chances are in favor of your ancestry
on the paternal side tracing back
through the hale line of Gaelic origin,
for the name of Argyle is'shilply the
modern form of- "Barra 'Ghaidheal,"
which means the land of the Western
Gael, an -which is referred to by
Grant as "the breeding place of the
Gael."
The family name, hoviever,. while
Scottish in the sense that it .is the
name of an ancient Scottish shire, is
English in its method of formation.
For the Gaels of Scotland, like those
of Ireland, nearlyalways formed tbeir
family names from, :given names or
from 'elan names, and such namesas
this, when found among then, indicate
the presence of -English influence.
Warned d �'
I'IIB i2 '
Their Dreams.
The late Lord Dufferin _dreamed one
night that%he was in :a hearse on its
way to the cemetery. Thefeatures of
the. driver wdpe impressed on his mem-
ory when he awoke. .4. day or two
later he was on the point of entering
a lift at an hotel, when he recognized
the lift attendant as the driver of the
hearse he had seen in this dresan.
He stepped" back and the lift as-
cended without him. As it neared. the
top something broke. It crashed to
the bottom, killing everyone in it.
Lord Roberts recorded a remarkable
dream warning. In October, 1553, this
father, to whom he was acting as A,D.:-
C., at Peshawwar,had issued invitations
far a fiance.
Two ,days before. it was to take place
he was1silent and despondent during
bl'eakfast, and eventually told Itis son
he bad had tin unpleasant dream,.
wlf.ch has visited him several times
before, and had always been followed
by the death of a near relative.
All the, day were on his depression
grew and he wanted to put off the
dance. • leis soh' dissuaded him, but.
that night tee dream returned and the
dance was postponed. "The next morn-
ing." wrote
orn-ing.",wrote Lord Roberts, "the post
brought news, of the sudden death at
Lahore of the half-sister with whom 1
had stayed on my` way to Peshawar,"
One night in November, 1850; Tenny-
son . dreamt that Prince :Albert, the,
Prince Consort, .came to his bedside
and kiseed-him, whereupon he remark-
ed to hints -elf In his sleep: "Very kind,
but very German!'
Next morning carne Queen Victoria's
letter bfferfng him the position of Poet i
Laureate, en offer prompted, as he die I
covered, by Prince Albert's bigh opinl-
on of "In Memoriem.
For' more than a hundred years the
Chinese people have drunk no milk
because a Chi,nese. empress who was'
tenclea;-hearted and thotight it a.:mean'
trick to deprive calves of their noun
ishmentissued an:edict .against drink-,
lug :milk. The Chinese have now be-
gun to use it again, but it'vvill be a'
long time before there are cows
entiuglr hi China to supply milk for all
the people.
Better realty be than seem to be
tetter for the feet te slip and not
the tongtte.
THE GERMAN REPARATIONS
Mademoiselle France (to Germany)—"In you go!"
—From London Opinion.
l "ANY
SYMPT M$7
If You Have, You Are in Need of
a Tonic Medicine.
Are you paleand weak, easily tired
and out of breath on slight exertion?
Are you nervous? Is your sleep dis-
turbed? Do you wake up in "the .morn
ing feeling as tired as when you went
to ;bed.? Is your appetite pedr, your
digestion -Weak, and do you have pains.
after eating? -
If you have any of these symptoms
you need a tonic, and in the realm of:
medicine there: is no better tonic than
Dr- Williams' Pink Pale, which enrich
the. blood, restore shatterednervee and
bring the glow of health to pale
cheeks. The value of Drt, Williams'
Pink Pills' is shown by the case of Mr.
Horace' Cuphill, Woodward's Cove,
N.B., who says.:—"The first indication
that my, general health was not good
was a shortness of breath after the
least exertion. Then: my appetite be-
gan to fail, and after eating it seemed
as lathers was a lump in my, stomach:
1 grew so weak that I could_ not waIk
a hundred yards without resting. Then'
Iwas taken with a numbuess. all over
my body and was in a• sad plight. I
was under a doctor's care, but as I was
not getting better, • 1 decided to try
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills•. The first
boxesdid not seem to. help . me but
few h •p
my wife asked me to continue their
use and I got four boxes. more. Before
these were gone I could est a fair.
meal, the numbness, was leaving me
and:I was feeling much batter in every
way. I: leek the pills fora while long-
er, and felt that .I was again a well
man, I still take the pills occasionally,
but shave had no return of the old
trouble;"
You can get these pills from any
medicine dealer or ley mail at 60 cents
.`a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Saving Migrating Birds.
A Dutch ornithologist has bit upon
the simple plan of . having perches
placed ander the shutters' to eave
migrating birds: from being killed by
rlaslhdng'themselve- against the lenses
of, the great lanterns of lighthouses,
when . attracted and confused bythe
glare. Perches for thirty thousand
birds have been: Set ilp, and at 13ran-
daris• Light ,on the island of Tereehel
ling twexity thousand birds have been
seen perching on them.'
There is no more inconceivable folly
than this contixlued riot of expenditure
oil battleships at a time when • great
masses of humanity are dying of star-
vation.—Herbert hoover.
Look to Your Eyes
Beau.tif l eyes, like fine
teeth, are the resule of tonstenk
tare. The daily use of Mrarirae
flakes eyes 'dear and radiant,
Euioyable. Narratess. Sold and
teeommendcd by all daiiggiis+ta_
.'
tem yowv AYS ji cr
eitinainesetribitoneoitnerteettnetratiettel
Keep. toumch:and Dowels Right
By giving'baby the harmless, parelY
vo6totable,inanta'andeldIdren'srbeulb tor,
hrla2s g6tonislriaia, [2tat1fyina ro5e1ts
in Malting altin baliq'o stomach digest
food sled bowels move as
they shoOid at teething
tithe. Guaranteed frets
ftotfl narcotics, slam
Ates, aloobolaiitiltll
saunter(itigtrodt,
dYtte Safe anis
attiofaetory.
'At ;.A d
',mocha
A Child Asks.
"Where has yesterday gone?"
(Hark to tgbe prattler!) Yesterday, my
child, '
Has gone into -our- memories --or
Sometimes we would forget . ...but
it lives still
And we are made of joys and griefs
and hopes
Of yesterdays.
"Why is. to -morrow?"
(Listen to the child!) To -morrow,
Like a clean sheet of paper, is ours to.
vitiate on, •
Anil we record, when it is given us,
What yesterday has 'taught. If we
make mistakes,—
And we all make mistakes -or if we
.waste
Our paper with our silly blots or
scribbles,
Another sheet is given usi to write on:'
The day -after -to -morrow.; -
Yesterday was today, my child; to -day
We make the memories, which will be
• yestex'd.ay's;
And soon to -morrow will be to -day,
And we obeli have—and everyone will
have=
One more clean sheet to writes record
on. -
Robert Withington.
M card's Liniment for sale everywhere
i ene a , although
Old Capta n H ss y, h g
quite feeble, is proud of his age. lee
always induces strangers to guess how
old he is, and when, out of courtesy,
they misjudge him tenor fifteen years
to the sunny side, he will titter tri
umphantly, "Stung again! Pll be
eighty-six my next birthday."
A Parliament,I'rY candidate in the
midst of a stiyring address was struck
by an ancient egg full in the face,
Pausing to wipe away the ciin'tente of
the missile, he continued, "1 have al-
ways , contended that my opponents'
arguments were very unsound."
When an employee ceases thinking
of the business as "outs," he is greas-
ing the skids.
Lift Off, with. Fingers
Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little
'Treasons" on an aching corn, Instant -
that, corn stops hurting, then shortly
1'ou lift it right ore with teepees. Truly!
Your; druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Treesono" for a few cents, st2:dteiene
to remove every' hard :corn, soft corn,
or corn between the ,toes, and tale eat.
holes,"wl:hnotrt sureness or irritation,
ISSUE No• e2--'22,
"I weighed only a her tied and foilr-
teen pounds, nay' Pace was sallow and
sunken and 1 wree thin .as a rail. But
since taking Tap.lac I weigh one ewe
died and forty' -eight, have the rosy
cheeks of a scltoalgfrl, ndd epjoy good
health for the, fire( time in fifteen
years " This rema.rlcahje statement
was made 'recently • by Mrs, Bella
eating, 98 Cathcart St., Hamilton, Ont.
"The last year of 'my lick:wee I was
wear a nervous breakdown, and my ap-
petite was so poor even the odor of
food soxtletinles nauseated ine. Head-
achee., .pains in zey Ot e:each and back
'nearly set me wild and I would walk
the floor for hours,. I got ao weak 1
could hardly stoop oxen to lace my
shoos, and my housework was a bur-
den.
"The lesen ro treatment ,gave me a
wonderful appetite, built mo up till.
friend- wondered at my great change,
and I always feed strong and well. I
will never cease to praise Tanlae."
Tanlac ie for saleby all -good drug-
gist's. Accept no substitute. Over 37
million bottles sold.
•Tanlad Vegetable Pine are Nature's
own remedy for •eonetipatione For
sale everywhere. •
Sins. of the. Fathers.
Tammy—•"How far i, the earth from
the sun?"
Father—"I'm sure 1 don't know."
Tommy—"Well, I hope you will feel
sorry to -morrow' when I am being
punished teryour ignorance."
71a
Ys
�t a ,&' 6a1gA,11 f3.i 1 14.1 ren xxv 'l:"
4nutrie tl o xtihl4le a5 taasdi.Oen.* to
e as:stun enQ p r epaalII t 4 trey Wtct i4 fr Ml a
retotA tioe:: ese i11W b1g anaiu cietele tip,,'
toms, a ai Lwow,ox„ ir' addition to golip Ai is9rx&
terreine lease two itesta, .n n at n. oet, '
I7us;zy'rr Galati/.
Four-yklar-old Bobby was stroking'
;hie eatbefore the fireplace. in lii.lfeet
content. The cat, also happy, began
to pur loudly. Bobby gazed at her
askance for e while, alien suddenly
seized her by the taus 'and dragged her
roughly ; away ,froth the hearth. elle
)other.interposed:
• "You must not hurt your kitty, Bob -
bee," '
"I'm .not," said'Bobby, protestieely
"hu't I've got, to get her away from thy%
fire. She's beginning to boil,"
It you would please, allow yourself'
to be instructed in much that you
know by men who are ignorant of (lira-
subject, ,
,aneezaes,1>) a ioaaeor'Dog 1 epia lixs
Boot: on
DOG DISEASES
and Bow t0 Feed
Mailed Free to any &d-
dtese by the Author,
Is. Clay Glover Co.,
.123 West 24th Street
New York,
Attractive Proposition
For man with all :roiuncl weekly
newspaper experience and ,$400
or $500, 'Apply Box . 24, Wilson •
Publishing Co., Ltd„ 73 Adelaide
Street West. ,
FOR
SPRAINS, CUTS,
BRUISES, SWELLING
Use the Old Reliable.
Don't wait for someone to
be iri pain to get Kendall's
,Spavin Treatment inthe
house.
Forail external hurts and pains
for all muscular' troubles.
Kendall's Spavin Treatment makes good.
Kio ASTON, Sask., Dooeatber8th, 1s21"
" Prenee mend ms ono copy of your TREATISE ON TES
HORSE, - I have mud ydar Kendall% Spnvin Oure for over
cloven r eats arra foundit one of ete beet ]Iniraents r hive
ova vacdforalltkIsdsofleres, ...(Signed) 3G SEXAlr." -:
Gel a bottle at your druggist's today. Regular
forrHorse.Treatment—Refined forHriman use.
D.R. B. J. KENDALL. COMPANY,
Enosburgg Fans, Vt., ilLE.A.
9
tee a 81 dell it% At
SPAWN
i' E
vanished After Using Lydia,
E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
"Branchton, Ont.—"When I wrote
to you for help any action was mostly
prompted by curios-
ity. I wondered';
1, too, wouldbeneu
by your medicine. Oat,
was the most profit-
able action I have
ever taken, I heart-
ily assure you, for
through its results I
am relieved of meet
of my sufferings. I
have takensix boxes
of Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
Compound Tablets and abottle of Lydia.
E. Pinkham's Blood Medicine, and 3 can
honestly .say'I have never been so well,
before. I had suffered from pains and
other troubles since I was fifteen'years
old, and during the `Great War' period
I worked on munitions for two years,
and, in the heavy lifting which my work
called for,,1 strained myself, causing
pelvic inflammation from which I have
suffered` untold agony, and `'often had
to give up midge to bed. I had doctored
for several years without getting per-
rnanent relief, when I started to take
your medicines."—Mrs, GoLnwlb7
em, Branchton, Ont.
Write to the Lydia E. Pinliham Medi-.
cine Co., Cobourg Ontario'Prfor'aere ecopy
of Lydia E. Pin�ll
am's Private Text.
Book upon "?alments of Women.' a: C
"My face broke out with pimples s
that were hard. large and red They
festered and scaled over, and itched
andburned causing me to scratch
them; 1 tried several different rem-
edies but they did not help any. I
read an advertisement for Cuticuta
Soap and Ointment and purchased
some and after using them, about a
month I' was completely healed -
(Signed) Miss Catherine I. Carter
Aberdeen Hospital, New Glasgow,
'Nova Gtoula. -..:.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal-
cum promote and maintain skin pu-
rity, skin comfort and skin health
often when ell else fails.
8ampleEnoh.Praobp tlLAddress: 'I.Ymans,I;gm-
ttod, 044 St. rzel St., W x9oatroal. Sold every-
where, Saap26c. ointment28 andbac, Taleum Sac.
i F"Cuticura Soap shabos walkout mug.
UNLESS you see tile. name "Bayer" on tablets, you
are not getting Aspirin at all
Accept only an "unbroken pickage" of "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains directions and dose worked out by .
physicians Buring 22 years and proved safe by millions ns for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
T0 t 1010Neuralgia
Nelriti
Pain, ain
Earache , �;,l,lrl'Ib'1g+D : c Il, �
Handy 1.3 er'r boxed of 12 tablets -Also b ttios of 24 aild 100-••�:Dr u gleta.
di' ""tyY
Aspirin in tli, trade mark (registered In. dsthada) of iDayer'axanefeet ro et Monti-
neetlanotde4tor of Salloviloaals, 'While It Is well mtown that iiittis xln.,Means 110,er
YbaCufeefttre, tv ndotat the'3ioblie against Imitations,tbe'T»11,f i 09 12O 'bt Oolylpfrl
hill!. be ntanlSod with their ti'a4x rnark, tiro."llpS'Si' GIN.4iNw'""