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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-05-16, Page 4i ctir
1114', rItiltOb aux Itbbalta
Proprietor
tie Suttee, Manager
TATE W1 NG1{AM ADVANCE
1918 .MA9. 19181
,
,ilii: Mo v :p.m'' Win 'Tao. Flit Snr.
-- ' -•
1 2 3. 4
r 6 • 7• 8 9 10 11
12 13 1.1 15 10 17 13
1(1 20 21 22 23 21 2:i
20 2,7 28 20 30 31
THURSDAY, MAY 16th,10J'i.
.Lloyd George's Vindication $
The old school of military thought dies
Malin Britain, for it is plain to be seen
that the men whom. Premier Lloyd George
' h'a;''been compelled to ruthlessly brush
aside in order to get action in winning the
levelled
char es
War were behind thegby
General Maurice, and propelled by ex -
Premier Asquith in the House on Thurs-
day.
• ...The result of the attempt to smash
, Llpyd George was an emphatic endorsation
of the Premier, His defence was such as
to completely vindicate the statements to
i Y
which objections were made, and the itn•
pression made is seen in the majority by
Which Asquith's motion of enquiry was
rejected. The Premier's statement swept
away the 'charges of untruthfulness levell-
ed .against Mr. Law and himself. Mr.
Law had asserted on April 23rd that the
question of extending the British front
had•not been discussed at the Versailles
Council. General Maurice replied that he
hiniself had 'been at Versailles and that
this • question.. had been considered. To
this Mr, Lloyd George retorts that Gen.
eral Matirice had been to Versailles, but
not in•the Council Chamber. The exten-
sion of the British line was an accomplish-
ed fact before the Council meeting, and
the decision had been takes, at the urgent
• entreaty, of the French. Statements by
the Prime Minister in the House on April
that the British. fighting strength was
greater on January est 1918, than on Jan -
nary 1st, 1917; and that only one British
infantry division •was #n Mesopotamia,
and otllyy three were in Egypt, had
been boldly contradicted by General
Maurice; but•the Prime -•Minister yester-
day .quoted documents. from. General
Maurice's own department which verified
the information hehad given the House.
Premier • • Lloyd George sustained his
honour in' splendid. manner, and we hope
he will now proceed to deal With . General
•: - eMaurice,•who ought to be court martiall-.
. ,•-. ed and punished,, for :lending himself to
what is:plainly a poii.ticai'cabal, egged on
by the aristocracy that •has been shaken
out of its 'reserve!. by the Lloyd George.
determination•'to win the war. Ex -Prem-
' ` ler 'Asquith's'murk is'pdal;lly ruin; that
• ;he• should have lent himself .toy such a
"."nieariAlert 'at this juncture should dis
credit hinffor life. This, is 'iry-time for
political jugglery.
CROPS ARE I C EAS
Quicklime for Heavy Soas,Ground
Limestone for Light Soils,
SEPTIC TANK FOR TU( FARti
THE
THE FIGHTING TRAIL
U EPISODE 10—THE SHERIFF
At the time Von Bieck and Rawls; were hire of what his plan would mean to his
holding a consultation. The new supply e emie
S
. It wasabi� idea, as
befitted
of ammunition which was on the engine one in high places, and he rubbed his
with the gatling gun had been captured. palms with satisfaction, He could not
There was still enough for emergencies, see the human side of it. The project
but no one could be expected to put up a was too big for that.
good fight when be had to be too careful M the firing approached Von Bleck
of his shots. And neither Rawls nor his climbed down frem his
perch and
started
d
brawling confederates were truly brave, the steep ascent to the gorge above.
for they could not summon courage to The posse was not a little chagrined at
stand up against odds. Knowing all this, this sudden termination of the fight, but
Von Bleck sought another way out. f• Ie Gwyn and Hogan were jubilant.
was still seeping when a fusilade of shots "We are bound to start work at dawvn
announced that the battle was again in in the morning." said Gwyn, when he had
progress • thanked his allies. "Washington and
As Ratvis grasped his rifle and rushed to New York are insistent. The demand is
join the fight Von Bleck climbed swiftly so urgent that not an hour can be spared.
up the scaffold of a drill. The situation And by the way Casey, I want you to
called -for generalship now, and Von Bleck double the guard and establish outposts
felt that a crisis was impending. To give at every approach. If we are attacked
up the mine meant the loss of all he had again we can meet them before they
come to achieve. To hold it meant al- reach the mine itself."
most certain defeat. But Von Bleck was not preparing to
From the vantage -point of the scaffold launch another battle He was too clever
he studied the location as a commander for that- so clever indeed that even his
studies a battlefield. Below the mine men could only guess what was in his
flowed the sluggish river at the base of mind. After hiding all night in the gorge
thelittle
todam
rocky,
beetling cliffs. Above was a ct Y, he had ordered them out
narrow gorge with a small stream fed stream at the water -worn crevice where it
from Crater Lake, a wide and deep body crossed the cinnabar vein. Von Bleck,
of water which nestled in a volcanic shell accompanied by Drant and "One Lung,"
at the top of the mountain. He knew had disappeared soon after the work was
this gorge•well-a shallow cut in the hard begun, and did not return until almost
metallic rock. Where the waters crossed nigthfall. The dam was complete by
the cinnabar vein it had made still less then -a high wail of heavy stones but -
headway, and at this point the walls were tressed with logs which effectually closed
only a feW yards apart. His meditations
were interrupted by a cry from Rawls.
"The men are giving way," he shouted.
"Shall we barricade ourselves in the
mine?"
ou
In
,
"Tell them to retreat a up them mountain,"
yelled Von Bleck in reply, and a solution
leaped full-grown .into his consciousness,
"Work around the main shaft, and con-
tinue up the incline to the gorge!" . Von
Blecic s pudgy lids were drawn close over
his cruel eyes as the realization caine to
Potatoes Should Be Treated Tide
Year to Control Settle; as the :Sur-
. cess of Thee Crop Is of the leern rst
Importance In tho *ratter rive
duction Campaign.
Y
i n.
Gari ig
(contributed by Ontario Department 01
Agriculture, :Toronto.)
TIIII/ sons In many teats of the
province aro so depleted o1
their lime that tbey are be.
coming sour or acid, 'Tot.
is an important feet as Lew, if any
of our farm crops •can mato Weil
best growth on a soil carrying ai
insufficient eupply of lime. Tie !r.
especially truce of leguminous pleat
and it is probable that tiro trequeir.
"killing out" of clover during tue
brat winter is duo to lack of sufficient
lithe,
Lime acts -in several ways, It ueu
tralizes the acids formed til the eoli
through the decay of organic ht 11t;•r;
it overcomes the tenacity or clay
soils, binds sands together and thus
improves the physical condition ui
bcth types of soil. Limo ie. not oate
•
an essential constituent of the roue
ot plants, but it also tends to lib-
erate plant food, especially potasi.,
from tho insoluble forms in the soil,
bringing tEern into an available state.
The micro-organisms that -live on the
roots of the nitrogen -gathering,
plants cauuot work in an acid soil,
no,• can•some other forms of organ-
ism, whose function it is to gather
nitrogen.
it requires about two toes of
ground limestone rock to be equal.
and to one tun of quick lime, ad tlie
prices charged fur them are in about
the sante proportion. 1e urthermore
two tons of the former to one ton
of the latter are about the right.
C
quantities to apply.
e
The ground limestone rocki
s s
af
un any land in almost any quantity,
and may be applied at any timo of the
year. On heavy clay soils quick lime,
slaked before applying, may give
quicker results; but it should not be
applied to light sandy soils. Few
materials or fertilizers can have so
many good things said about thein
as lime and none of there cost ea lit-
tle money. Try out a little yourseif
Jilts year,—Prof. It. Harcourt, On-
tario Agricultural College.
moi. , Y
.I.T SHOULD MAKE
. A MILLION FOR HIM
To Prevent Potato Scab.
For seed. select smooth, sound po-"
tatoes, as free as possible from scab,
and disinfect by soaking them before
they are cut for two hours in, a solu-
tion made by- adding half a pint of
commercial formalin to 15 gallons of
water. A couple of barrels with
,plugs in the sides near the bottom
'can be used to advantage in treating
the seed: The potatoes can be placed
directly in the solution or first put
In crates'or coarse sacks and thee, im-
merse'd, " .
3it spread the
e
After treatme
pota-
toes out -on a 'clean floor or dal the
grass to dry, Wash all crates, bags,
etc., which are used in handling the
potatoes with the formalin solution,
The samis formalin solution can, be
used to treat successive lots of pota-
toes, Fifteen gallons is sufficient to
treat from 20 to 25 bushels if ordi-
nary
rdinary precautions. are • taken not t0
waste too much of the fluid as each
lot of tubers Is dipped. if the pota-
toes are not all treated the name
day it it advisable to make up fresh
.Cincinnati man discovers drug that formalin for each day's work.
,loosens corns so they lift out Corrosive sublimate (mercuric
chloride) can also be used to treat
Good news spreads rapidly and drug. potatoes to prevent scab. Soak the
.. gists here are kept busy dispensing Preez• uncut tubers for three hours in • a
one,therecenl discovery of a Cincivatti solution of 2 eunces of corrosive sub-
mau. which is said to loosen any corn so timate to 25 gallons of water. Cor -
it lifts outwith the fingers., rosive sublimate is a deadly poison,
A quarter of an ounce costs very little and potatoes.treated with it aro ren -
at eny drug store, but this is said to be tiered unlit for food for wan or beast,
sufficient to rid one's feet of every hard or Formalin is a clear liquid disinfec-
•soft corn or callus. taut. It le a :40 p.c. solution of for -
You apply just a few drops on the en- nealdohyde gas and water. 1t can bo
der, aching corn or toughened callus and purchased from almost any druggist,
instantly the soreness is relieved, and soon It is sold under the names of forma -
the corn or callus is so shrivelled that it lin and formaldehyde. It is import -
lifts out without pain, It is a sticky sub- ant that the purchaser, whatever
stance which dries when applied and nev. name lie buys it under, secured a
er inflames or even irritates the surround- guaranteed solution of 40 p.c. Lor-
ing skin. maidebyde,
This discovery will prevent thousands If possible plant the treated seed
of deaths annually from lockjaw and in- potatoes on clean .soil, that. is soil
eection heretofore resulting from file sui that has not produced a crop of scab-
cidal habit of cutting corns, by potatoes. Practice a rotation ot
crops. If scab is very bad it is not
advisable to plant potatoes on the
same land oftener than once in Live
years. Heavy applications of barn-
yard manure should not be made to
the potato erop, but if necessary giv-
en at Some other point in the rota-
tion. Plant potatoes after clover sod
if possible. Avoid alkali fertilizers
such as lime and wood ashes.—Prof.
J. E. Howitt, Ontario Agricultural
College.
THE PUBLISHER'S SOME
flow dear to my heart is the steady sub-
, settler,
Who pays in advance at the birth of
the year,
Who lays down his money and offers it
gladly,
• And casts round the office a halo of
. •
cheer!
Who riever says, "Stop it; I cannot afford
. • -itl" ..
Or, "I ani getting more papers than I
can read!
But always says, "Send it; the family all
like it --
In fact we think it a household need!"
How welcome is he when he seeps into the
sanctum)
How he snakes our hearts throb!
How he makes our eyes dance!
We outwardly thank hirci --we inwardly
bless him --
The cteady subscriber who pays hi ad-
vance.
f�� ♦�He..�f a�.1►�i.�1 t�..�t.�V.�11�t a�a,�. s��. +yt.�..�. ♦�N ��! ate.
Y
j COMMERCIAL .14
.PANTING Is.
,
Leave your order with us, when •J.
in need of
,t. LE rnit IIEAI)a
NOTE HEADS
' I3ILL HEADS
STATEMENTS
• ENVELOPES
_.. POSTERS
� - CATALOGUES
CALLING CARDS
NvEtnoiNG STATIONERY
CIRCULARS
Or anything you may require in
the printing tint.
i'P
THE ADVANCE
F1xrtAs 84. We rat 6 t yo tr service.
the channel,
"You will see in the morning," was his
answer to all inquiries.
Gwyn's spirits rose high at the prospect
that now he could continue his work hindrance. Casey reported that the
with-
out
hind nee. e
bandits had not been seen since the fight,
and a strong guard had been stationed at
regular intervals on all sides of the mine.
"Now, little girl, I suppose we can
really settle down and enjoy o
rselves
>
he told his wife, stepping up behind her
%intraday May tab tg>l8
and taking her hands She smiled
brightly.
"And 1 will have time to make our
cabin, look like a cozy home for you," she
said, a bit wistfully. "We have been so
busy with other things, you know, that
I've had no time to show you what a
good housekeeper I can be."
"Hey. cut out that turtle -dove stuff,"
called Casey, jovially, glad of a chance to
pietend amusement where envy was hie
true emotion. "Are you going to inspect
the mine, or aren't you?"
Gwyn and Nan were just sliding down
the shaft a few minutes later as Von
Bieck at the Crater Lake entrance called
to his men. From a clump of bushes he
drew a small black box which they recog-
nized at once as an electric detonator.
He smiled as he pointed off in the direc-
tion of the lake.
'I ani now about to stage the greatest
spectacle you boys have ever seen," he
confided. "Crater Lake sits in a cup of
rock on the mountain top. I am going to
break the cup!" He watched the effect
of this announcement, which evidently
made little impression. "When it
breaks," he continued, "the water will
rush down the gorge, and the dam you
built will turn the flood into Shaft C of
the mine. Every gallery will be full of
water in ten minutes after the explosion
occurs. Now do you understand?"
Did they understand! Every eye turn-
. light.
dtoward Von Bleck w th a new l g t h•.
They had owned small respect for this
man beforeHis money had bought
them to do his bidding, But now -well,
he was a master, the sort of cunning
scoundrel that petty scoundrels admire.
Delicately, almost artistically, Von
Bleck's smooth fingers, attracted the end
end of the wire. When all was ready he
laid his forefinger gently on the button,
bowed with ironic mirth, and pressed it
home.
Outward and upward, the earth and
on thesidelakeflew
stone near ofthe
1
toward the heavens. A moment later a
wall of foaming water burst through the
cavity and boiled into the gorge below.
A sheer fluid wall it was, charging onward
with ever increasing speed. Rocks were
turned over in its Bead -long flight, huge
trees uprooted and thrown about like
broken windmills. Would it break the
dam- that was the unvoiced question in
each half -hypnotized brain. There was a
tense moment as the water crashed into
the obstacle, a great spurt of foam as it
broke into spray. But the dam held It
held! Von Bleck, who had been holding
his breath in suspense, breathed freely.
Diverted from its normal course, the
swollen stream turned down the mountain,
Shaft C, striking into the cinnabar vein a
hundred yards below, -was directly in its
path. The muddy torrent swept into the
hole and seemed swallowed up by it.
Nan and Gwyn were standing at the
intersection of two main galleries when
the first rush of water overtook then., It
was so unexpected, so violent, that .neither
could reach the other in time. Nau was
picked up by the current and borne away
before Gwynmakemove to save
e re could a m v
her, and it required all his strength, aided
by a crevice in the rock, to keep himself
from being torn from his hold.
They were terrible moments as he,
stood there alone in the dark, wondering,
fearing, trying to fathom what had oc-
curred. He did not fear for himself. If
he held on long enough he felt certain the
incoming flood would abate, and then he
could swim to the shaft at the gallery's
end. But Nan? There were miners in
that gallery, he knew, but they also would
be helpless in the rush of the llooci. She
could swim, but even that was small coin -
fort. As soon as thecurrent• grew steadier
he threw caution to the winds and struck
out for the shaft. Finally he caught a
glimpse of light, swam on, and at length
found himself on top of the submerged
cage, There was no Way to signal. The
apparatus was covered by the water. IIe
roust depend upon himself. In despera-
tion he grasped the cable and started up,
hand over hand, by sheer dumb determin-
ation forcing his grip to hold. When he
reached the top a hand reached down and
Septic Tank for Sewage Disposal.
This system consists ordinarily of
a two-ehamber concrete, water-p;rooi
tank equipped with au inlet, over-
tlow and vent pipe, and an automatic
siphon for emptying the tank of the
liquid sewage from time to tine.. and
a system of tile, called the "aL• ,...
tion bed," consisting of several pate
allei rows of 3 or 4 in. lame tile laid
with open joie', i sese. _l, and
shallow, ate. .. J oit it V+l1
main 1..,u of sewer pipe Mich con-
nects it to the tank. For the ordi-
nary -sized home each tank should he
about 3 ft. square and 3 ft. deed, and
.150 to 200 feet of land tile would se
required fel' the absorpt€on bed. The
vitrified sewer tile is best tor the
main and the number of them wit,
depend upon the distance of the rtb-
Sorption bed from the tank,
If this system be properly Metalled
it will dispose of sewage in a vel'.
Satisfactory mangier and without en
.lan„ering the water supply. Cou,
;Arte plans in blue print furan for ID
•stail;ng it may be .:rimee for tb
.vrit.ng from the 1 p: rtmeet u
ehysite, Ontario Aericultur;.l College
:u:.flit, Ont.---il..' Graham, 13..; •l.
'tit- rlo E,i tealtui it Celiee,ep
.near io.
DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN
CHIROPRACTIC
ACTI
,~ 40,6044 rtr+41 Www est+wosrw
1
Chiropractic t)iuglese Healing aecur
ately locates and removes the cause o,
disease, allowing nature to restore health
J. A. FOX J.J.
Osteopathy Pl ctrieitj'
Member tlrwrgi.Si Physicians Associa-
tion of Ceneol1
1
46.
4
125••',1bs
GIUJIK.S 1
!tre--evai if
`No a
(Realists l9a1No fOLi
FeTtillinzerr.
,' Gtyarauteed An ij Is
II
' Phosphoric Acidi'-'i=` ;9`]f, r
, -Potaah‘ •- - i�,i +I
GUNNS LTD. 1
WEST TORONTO.
Do you
not pur-
pose en-
riching.
your soil
for next
seas o n's
crop.
Order
now and
you will
bcsui'cof
delive r y.
Cream, Butter, Eggs and Produce Wanted.
GUNNS LIMITED
E. R. Harrison Branch Manager
Phone 25
1
1
1
1
Wingham, Ont.
WKY WASTE
It Can be tl llizeJ for Fool for
the Hogs, .
MILK IN Ilk. WARM WEATHER
Proper Care of Dairy Products lin the
Summer Time..—Threshing Gangi
• Will Help to Relieve Earns Lagoa
Shortage—Work IS to Be Initlat.
ed 'rills Year. •
cog t
( tri ute
b b•U
d Ontario n a c 1 .a to o
11 a rtn nt
n i
Atxricul'ture, 'lorotttu.)
THE pen le mightier than tht
swore. --•- especially whoa fi
Lae a pig in it, Tben mut•
. tiply ttu t pig by 40,000
Diu tlply this again by 200 lbs„ and
an impoising total of 8,000,000 lbs.
is reached—more pounds of pork, in-
deed, than were exported by Canada
shortly before the war. Yet Ontario
could produces that hugo quantity by
utilizing a valuable food cgmmociity
that at prer,ent is almost entirely
wasted --- the garbago of our towns
and cities.
This is the evidence given by e
commission appointed by the Agri.
cultural Section cif the Ontario Or.
ganization of Resources Committee
to investigate tiro feeding of garbagr
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lerephona
$cohomg t
1990411
ilflliliilhllliiltlphilJl 111111lliilllllilllpf11111111111111111I1111i
Do,1ou
practice OP
Directory First!.
0 guess at telephone numbers, t r ly
on your memory, or to consult old
lists of telephone users means wrong
numbers, delays and general annoyance.
(j( Sometimes it takes a. little longer to .make
sure of the number; :more often it is clear gain,
even as regards time.
Why not adopt the motto Directory first
in telephoning?
The flea Telephone Coo
of Caxiadii
0r »fel, *$D1ell) t rpmM.IttI(i! lIWee
44.
4,
s
•a •)4G
pp
011404'4,111 riINi111I1t,;1111"011 11)111il1111
XXXX
"1:714NICYMMK XI4NI0II001
ISARD'S
aSale
to swine. The commission consIstec,
of .1, le.. llrethour, Burford; P. W
Johnson, W ailtervillo, and Juste
Miller, Toronto, `.these geetleniei.
flawe lately returned from a tour oa
American cities where garbage is tea
to hogs and aro of the opinion that
Ontario ought not to delay longer it
the matter,
The salient ,points r ori
7.1 s 1 eiit .p „ is of the rep
or;
has been prepared regarding
their endings arebriefly: (1)Tbatt
garbage has. a food value .of between
*8 and $9 a ton; (2) that it should
beie d entirely i.e. that
t Y i untreated
it should not be heated, washed of
sorted: (3) that residents of towns
and cities where garbage is to b
efed
must separate their garbage, placing
table refuse only in a separate con-
tainer; ( ) that for every
100,000
U
of pfipulation a minimum of 6,006
toes of garbage is produced carr•
year,wirarh will feed , U00
hogs;
s
,
(5) thatthe denude treatment (se-
vere
and virus) fur hog cholera runt,
be given to make 'he ,plan feasible.
A srualt percentage ot our garuae,
Lias ben..fed to noga already but the
regulations of tue i eaerttt Y'eter•ma,y
Ulrector-Geuerar t,ouipeztc.a feeders
to sterilize garuage by tee boiling cir
steaming process and prohrb,ted the
uir;nunizing of hogs by tee double
trealeeent against eho1era. Singe re-
turning to Canada the investigating
eommittao hoz; taken the matter et;
with Dr, Torrance, however, and bas
sr. ut u
rcIcrtbsioito allow
un-
treated
treated garbage to be fed and hogs
to L•.: given tee double treatment,
subject to very reasonable conditions.
'Detailed iniormation may bo secur-
ed by consulting the Waco of the
ue Agriculture, Portia -
went Buildines, 'J'oront'0.
drew him to safety.
"Where is Nan?" he gasped, as soon as
he could speak.
"Someone is trapped in the store room:
We hear them, but they do not answer,
when we call. Thank heaven the air
chamber is still open."
At the surface of the little tunnel that
served to ventilate this wing of the mine
Hogan and Casey stood with a group of
Workmen.
"I am going down," 'announced Gwyn
briefly, "Give me a pick to clear the
way, and lower a drill and some dynamite
when I signal. I'll try to blow out the
wall of the mine!"
With a rope about his waist Gwyn slid
into the tunnel and worked his way down.
It was narrow in places, so narrow that
he had to use his pick many 'times, but
eventually he, felt a hand grasp his ankle
and place his foot firmly on a !edge, In
the square, high walled store roots, now
two-thirds submerged, were Nan and
about a dozen workmen, battered, dis-
heveled, half -drowned and totally unable
to help themselves save by retaining a
feeble grip on the jutting rocks to keep
their heads afloat,
"I have come, Nan," said Gwyn simply.
"Yes dear," was the reply. "I knew
you would "
"But we could never get out the way I
catne"'down," he explained,
aincoat
. . N
p ectal Week EnBai ix
�.�� ra�as
N Ladies Water ..roof Looms
r This is a good chance to buygood quality
in � a
Raincoat at a elft price.
rs
Take a look, We have a good selection.
supplying g :idler for City Trade.
"Safety first' is a good slogan in
tine mak business. '1•o make milk
bate it must he drawn from healthy
euvs — preferably those wh'
cn hat°e:
pa;:sed tue tuberculin test; the stable,
1asture and,ail surroundings must. tie
dean; the utensils which come in
contact with the milk roust bo clean;
Inc pereons handling the milk -should
ue a living aavertieernent of excmpli-
ned cieanunoss; the delivery wag-
gons, cans, measures, etc., should be
clean. In order that assurance of
safety may be doubly sure, it is ad-
visable to pasteurize the milk,—that
is, heat it to 140 degrees to 150 de-
grees 1"., hold at tills temperature
tor twezity to thirty minutes, then
coral to f.0 degrees b`, or below and
hold at tins temperature until deliv-
ered to the consumer. Pasteurized
milk is the safest kind of milk for
uumans,to drink.
The person buying milk has certain
duties in order to ensure .a safe pro-
duct, especially for children, Among
inose may be mentioned: Placing the
.milk at once on delivery in a refrig-
erator or cool cellar protected from
dust and odors, and by keeping it in
a tightly -closed vessel-l-preterably in
the milk bottle covered with an in,
verted glass tumbler, or" -special cov-
er; the top of the milk -cap should he
wiped to remove dust before taking
it from the milk bottle; no more milk
should be taken from the supply bot-
tle than is required for a meal; any
"left over" milk, should not VG- put
into the supply vessel after the meal,
as this will likely spoil the whole of
the milk on hand; milk taken to a
sick -room should not be used for any
other purpose, except it be boiled and
then only for cooking; milk bottles
shouId bo waebed as soon as empty
and be promptly returnedeeto .tho
milkman -1u no case should milk
oottles be used fur any other purpose
in the house than for holding milk.—
Prof. 11. Il, ..lean, Ontario Agricul-
tural College, Guelph, Ont.
A Greater Goderich
The Goderich Board of Trade are in-
augurating a "Greater Goderich" cant,.
paigil. Mr. D. I1. McFarland of the
Town Development Co., of New York i3
the leading spirit and will enthuse court
community building blood into the Gode-
rich Board of Trade and the citizens gen-
erally to put Goderich and district on the
map. A daily paper will be published for
ten days itt the interests of the campaign.
'the paper which contains a daily to
vievit and Many other interesting items is
001IiIIfl iq'ili'l 11 aublit:Md jointly by The Starand The
• Signa;,
• Range No.1
price
• Range No. 2
Threshing (,fangs tdr Ontario.
Farmers are shorter of labor this
year .than they have ever bean before.
in many cases there may be but one
man on n farm, assisted, perhaps, by
a boy, It will bo necessary, there-
fore, to economize labor in every way
possible in order that this year's har-
vest 'may be taken off and the tall
work -completed in preparation for
the ,
4Vhiie1911) therecloparo objections to the
threshing bang in Ontario it is hoped
to initiate the work on a reasonably
targe scale bile. year. The Ontario
impartment of At;i•ieulture is snaking
study of the proposition as it affects
the farmer, while the Ontario Labor
nerved -hes agreed to provide 5,000
men for threshing gangs if there as
t demand for these. With Suitable
.co-operation between tate farm public
of the proviue.e and the Provincial
Department of Agriculture there
should be no difficulty in organizing
a Imo number of gangs thia fall.
Turirberry Council
Poplins and fancy tweed effects. in Pe
.a
ii��
V98
Stand cloths in Fawn, Grey and'
good styles, Special cut
• astesonisounmisorom Black. All sizes. Your -$7.98
� 7.98
pick
% Range i Ni•��s � Big choice of better quality, coats'
11
ri
g� ITi"National Brand" values
• up to' 13.00price,sale
9.98
ri
cut
9 1 with lxoocl.
Sale
2Sal
Children's ��atu�praaf Cants
_ price •:$.'7`5
n $3.00, $3.50, $4.50 Special lines, to. cleata
:4 Ladies,Toshirts ' .•t g k
rid
:fri and $5.00. ,.
to Ladies' Tip"� Xz e Spying and Summnv Coats . .•:. If
,d - leading N
3
Astyles. Made of fancy tweeds, serges and silk see
m-
6
Nout' big values at $8.00, °510, $12 and $15.
N
X
x
X Es
a
r Co.
m
i
The regular meeting of the Turnberry
Council was held in Bluevale err May
6th. 1918. All the mernbere were in at -
dance.
On motion of Messrs Moffatt and Scott
''he minutes of last regular meeting Wert
adopted,
Moven by James Scott seconded by
James Moffatt that a ivy -law bs paiieed
Cot the commutation of Statute Z,,atbet at
•fir'
ter,,
F©w
theu with
Casio 9 fora moment, those far off Ports
beyond the traciticss seas —
F om Arctic ice. to the torrid lands
beneath the Southern Cross—
From downs maed in the mountains, to
the busy river's mouth --
WE -Main is there!
There. beCIRISc men find
comfon and refreshment
in its continued me.
Because of its benefits
aid because
The Flavour
assts !'
"Atter Evers?
Meal"
MADE EN CANADA
SEALED TIGHT—
KEPT RIGHT
1
81.25 per day when paid to the path -
master end Rel 50 per clay when placed on
the Collector's Roll and that Py -Law
•c
No, 81944 be rescinded.
'rite following Recounts were paid.—
I, T. Lennox. repairing culvert !12 00;
Btliott, the 1 40; P. \MIMS. work 0n
1';oundsry S.13; J. 13reckentidge, work on
I1'oundary 2 50; Mie. A, Johnston, iced
Cross s0 00; Miss if, McKie, Red 'Cr n
25.00; John Monition, sheep worried by
dogs SS.00; J, A. telly, dlteep worried by
dege 60 00; W. 3. Adair Inspector, elheep
worried 00
ie 3 a
Moved by Wheeler and Adele thet `lb td
1
next council meetingmeetinglit held In Matta*
ve
on McAuley MAp 2/th,191*, At 10. rl, tri.
and as a Coutt'dt ikavigten itcusit
nntut MU lit g It It. •• a "
,;... _ ifs. Poveit `,'Or tioira