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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-06-27, Page 4Page r our s t •c l C a G p ir. ni tl ei gr wx qu re au W an tol fo La th up to ye' bl ad by Oni Th Pro san dan refle _ the northern riding that they not only were unableAo follow Mr. Proudfoot, but feel impelled to criticize his action and to disown him as their representative. A touch of humor was added to the sit- uation when these partisans coupled with their resolutions condeming Mr. Proud - .foot a message of "warmest greetings to our soldiers overseas," We can imagine the reception which the resolution will re- ceive. The soldiers cannot fail to place a proper estimate upon good washes as dis- tinguished from reinforcements. Good wishes alone never helped a soldier "over the top," They never gave confidence and vim to his fighting. More than all good wishes never yet saved the day when the enemy was in superior numbers. The day will come when those who shared in the North Huron meeting will realize the mistake they are making. As for Mr. Proudfoot, his position is secure, His children and his children's children will rise up to call him blessed. li1 'itfur Ab.iYante T•T Jlo'eNT, Proprietor A. G, SMITIL Mower the hose a e ar and led. 19111: .0'4; 1 VSP19.119 SUN. Ia�ON. Tee nap Tue. 2 3 4 5 1 6 9 10 11 12 12 16 17 '18 10 20 30 24 25 2G 27 rat 7 14 21 28 NAT.. 1 .8 15 22 20 TI•.HURSDAY, JUNE 27th, 1918. The North Huron Liberals Eluron claim that The London s "the only liberal paper }. bone," Surely, can they have Ripley Express, * * * According to the London hat angelic and ""only" great ]aper, the Liberals of North net in convention at Wingham carcely knew whether they agether for Dominion or Provincial oses. It quotes Geo. Mooney ;ipley Express as saying, "We have got to stand by Liberal ipies and by the great leader, aui•ier, who led us through nother declared "I voted overnment and many of us 'e sorry for it now,' The overnment was more tallied -ovinciai governrrrent although g was called for provincial purposes, ed1ess to say the grumblers ase who supported Union Government ;her., * * * He Can't Wait of North Advertiser h any back- overlooked 1 Advertiser, liberal Huron who last week were met pur- of the t c prin- e Sir Wilfrid a the fight." for Union 0 did and we c Dominion e of than the s the meet- t and were net t a, t in too L to 0 Advertiser id at the p feet of a d Ni of intoler-su lessons in Proud- is p r Wilfrid th b oth on being tied pri being able purl until a Pr our va he des rig dis pri pal ' m have di of the um K. C. res Mr parti- was in R and it ass t ,. - John N. Mackenzie is evidently eat a hurry to get into Parliament lit until after the war. The otes him as saying these words :ens North Huron Convention, 'We do not intend to sit at the pporter of, the Borden Gevernment, whole campaign was one ce and bigotry, r t g and Y, talc , e erance. If he upholds William t he ' is putting down Sir urier. You o can't t u tie them m same platform, .1.object to Proudfoot and not send a mare to the Legislature after the war. We are shedding today to put such ideas down," * * * Preudfoot Disowned (London Free Press) 'he Laurierites of North Huron •esolution disowned the leader aria Liberals, Mr. Proudfoot, reason given is frank enough. rdfoot refused to be a political when the nation and empire ;er. This is the simple fact, Cts nn credit ,t„R,., .t.,. r -_- ., * * * Liberals and Liberalism (Toronto Globe.) Liberals of North Huron, at their annual meeting in Wingham, are reported to have expressed some very illiberal sentiments, Some of the speakers are alleged to have stated their desire to read out of the party Liberals whose convictions required GRANnTRtlr�. HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO Offers you And all the family the outing of your life. AtGO1 QUlN PARK MUSKOKA LAISRS GEORGIAN BAY LAI{E OP BAYS TIMAGAMI are all fatuous playgrounds. Modern hotels afford city comforts but many prefer to live in tent or log cabin. You choice at reasonable cost, Secure your Parlor and Sleeping Car accommodation In advance, ull Ticket Agent er C. on E, Horninm any g, d District Distr Trunk Passenger Agent, Toronto, W. P. Durg man. Agent, Phone 50, DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN CHIROPRACTIC Chiroprectie Drugiess Healing accur ately locates and removes the cause o. disease, allowing nature to restore health J. A. FOX D.C.. D o.. Osteopathy Electricity Member Drugiese Physicians Associa- tion of Canada. Phone 191.. - thein to differ from the position taker their Federal Leader on the war isst increasing Canada's man -flower effect Hess by conscription. These sneal hy t f PREVENT JI . �Pa+�l���4.� carry their hospitality into the Provin arena, end would place their ban ut the position taken on an issue of supre ti by national • a concern o n Past and pLiberal a L rat Leaders ill the Ontario Lel lature. clal Production of Pit-st.:litss Seed )oil lane Potatoes; 1ncre;lses pres c ent No political party which holds and p claims such circumscribed and illibe views can ever hope to win public c fidence. Parties attain power and creased usefulness by attracting to th support men of independent thought a meh who were former 'Opponents. Part go out of office when the have ceased enjoy the confidence and support of t influential and independent portion of t electorate, The purpose of real Liber ism. is to be an effective and progressi I • in shaping public affairs upon su ines as attract and hold the support the broad-minded and thinking electo whose only concern is public betterme • public well-being. Some of the professed Liberals of Nor Iduron seem to have lost this concepti of Liberalism, They would erect barrie o prevent men of Liberal thought an onviction coming together upon Liber conomic principles when the war is wo nd polities is no longer "adjourned iJntil that time comes patriots have litt oncern in politics. When that tim omes it will be the earnest desire of tru xponents of Liberalism to attract to th upport of their principles and policies a he disciples ,whom properly and legit mately they can muster. But then hings must wait for the present, Can dian citizens-. Liberals and Conserve ryes alike -have now bigger and mor Important business on hand, The propriety of impropriety of th cons nsent given yen by the Provincial Libera Bader to an extension of the life of th egislature is a .matter which is, an ught to be, wide open for discussion b s followers. But the suggestion that th rovincial Leader can no longer call him If a Liberal because he deemed it hi uty to the cause of liberty to support th ilitary Service Act is a most pre m t uou s one, e and for which there n o defence. Liberals ass whose deep and )fun o di Y patriotic convictions caused em to take this position did d notgive tv u g e up e name of Liberal or hand over the nciples of Liberalism to those who and themselves in the minority in every Pr( • of the Dominion save one. The vat body of Liberalism in Canada is not posed to delegate to this minority the ht to represent its sentiment,- nor is it posed to permit the prostitution of its nciples to the playing of war -time itics. Liberalism finds its supreme con • just now in war winning. It is mei • in the great purpose of all Can- anism. When that purpose is tri- phantly achieved it will be ready to rest its national and economic tasks. • e venture to enquire whom the Liber - f Huron, who are so ready to con- demn Wm. Proudfoot K. C:, will claim as their leader in the Ontario house? How We Exist Few business men have more to con- tend with than the editor. The only means the editor has of making a living is by selling space in the columns of his news 1. paper. His newspaper columns are the same to him as the shelves of dry goods i are to the merchant. No one thinks of asking the merchant to give him the dry goods from his shelves, but few they are who hesitate to ask the editor to give them space gratis. _ I 1 ro- ral on- in- eir rad les to lois a- ve ch of rs ent th on rs d al n le e e e 11 e e e 1 e y e s e Exercise !Bale Breeding Stocic -The Bull, Stallion, Ruta and Boar Must All lac' Given Exercise IY the Standard of the i.et'd Is to Be Maintained. (Contributed ey Ontario Deportment or Agriculture, Toronto.) T is cute of the anomalies of life that the sources of our greatest pleasures, and greatest means of boom, mty luso bo sources or life's greatest pains and most ha ren. Aii1k is a case in point, 14Ti]lc is the best source or lire's greatest need—,. proper and suflicient food. It may also be a cause of the destruction of life, because it may become the home of feeding ground of those death -dealing organisms which are now recognized as the cause of prac- tically all deaths, except those due to accident or old age. Fortunately we have discovered comparatively simple methods of combating the effects or what are called pathogenic (disease- produc-ing) bacteria, These may be stated in a few short rules as follows: 1. Milk which is consumed in a. raw condition must be drawn only from cows which .ire healthy, 2. As soon as the milk is drawn from the cow, it should be cooled to 50 degrees or lower, and be kept 'at that temperature until mistimed. 3. All pails, strainers, dippers milk bottles, pitchers, etc., which come in contact with the milk, must be thorougbly washed and preferably steamed, or be rinsed after washing in a chloride solution, which has been found ts, be one of the best germi- cides. 4. Milk should not be exposed to the air any longer than absolutely necessary, as this seeds the milk with a fresh lot of germs. This means the keeping of milk in a closed ves- sel and not In an open dish. 5. "Left over" milk from meals should not bo put into the general supply, as this causes the whole lot to spoil. 6. "Left over" milk train the sick room should bepasteurized . i uli.t 1 z d a r de- stroyed, as 'it may spread disease. 7. Milk i t 1 at allim t eS and in all Places should be kept "clean" n and "cool."—Prof, H. H. Dean, Ontario Agricultural College. Roguing Potatoes. The average yield of potatoes per acre in the Province of Ontario for the past thirty-six years has been about 115 bushels. The yields vary`' greatly. In 1917 there were vari- ations in Ontario from twenty-five or less up to seven hundred bushels per acre. People are realizing more and more that for high yields of po- tatoes conditions must be favorable. It is important to have good fertile soll well Cultivated and to plant a liberal supply of seed of the best varieties at the proper time. Seed potatoes somewhat immature which have been produced in a cool cli- mate, and which are comparatively free from disease, are apt to furnish seed of .high quality. Even under these conditions it is well to care- fully inspect the seed before plant- ing and to thoroughly rogue the growing crop. A potato field is rogued by remov- ing the undesirable plants. A thor- uogh roguing of the growing crop once or twice during the summer is one of the most effectual ways in ridding the field of a number of the potato diseases. This operation would also insure the immediate removal of - the weak and unthrifty plants w1 ich are sure to produce underaiz- able seed. Potato growers sometimes go through their fields and remove all plants which are not true to type. Thorough roguing is one of the best methods of securing pure, healthy seed of high quality.—Dr, C. A. Zav- tz, Ontario Agricultural College. TrTF WIN .t1A. 1 ADVANCE tlOWick Cauat ail Ylaltlni: to The West C ounc;l met in Cook's lintel pursuant to A letter from B. Merry, former well 1 known llrur elite, now of holt William adjournment. All members present ex- gays he and Mrs (ferry are going to the sept Cotmeitlor Armstrong, the Reeve 10 i West to visit A. V. Gcity and family at Xr.' the ct air. dD< 1 ori' tall for 1 race r, minutes ,• •,r r teS a month. t last 11.ID f k i .111, t war Fine b at01 showers, ing � }hR t It roc, and Court of Revision were read and ; ' is 1)ccded fol' blast and land, Every lndustt'y is in frill blast work for on inotiou Siloam) and Lynn were mit pt.; everybody with big pay. Business fairly • ed. Tho:; Browtl waited an the council ask• ing for his claim,. damages for his horse gootl but not much new huilding but numerous repairs to- properities. Several big buildings on the way, such as elevators which was injured on the high}va , Alintn also a large milling concern for manufac- )f Luring cattle foods, using up all grain and Ilowick boundary, Moved by Lyon screenings and waste from elevtltors that and .Spotton that Mr, Brown be paid $5 00 was either shipped ]o the 11. S. or dumped as Iiowick's share of the damages—ear. in the river. The war has taught men rigid, ltloved by Spotton and Lynn that ]3y. law number 5 changing the rate of com- mutation in the Pollee village of Gorrle be read the third time and passed. •• Carried, Movecl by Williamson and SOo"ton that By law number 0 changing rate of com- mutation in the Police village of l%ordwich was read the third time and passed, ---Car- ried, Moved by Lynn and Williamson that SBALAIT) TENI)ERs, addressed to the Post - the following accounts be paid:•' --'Glad master General, will bo received at Ottawa store Edgar, shovelling gravel $'100; 1918, noon, on conveyance twelfth 11t1 a�tMajestys Isaac Wade, balance of salary as Atalis, cn a proposed t OntracG rot lout• years 1 a • assessorsnc tunes per weak on tt,o Brussels No, 4 itural $100.00; John King shovelling gravel to Route from the Postmaster Gerieral'a Pleasure. T crusher $12 50; Robert F. Edgar, tr Printed notices containing further inPorma- bR , gravel tion art to conditions of proposed Contract may $12 25; David A, Armstrong, filling hole be at the I'oetfollcisesoor Tender sets, aY Oran - in in road $1.25; John Lambkin use of Scrap brook and Ethel and at the oifaoo of tho Post We; Office Inspector, London. Su er, r; Louis Green shovelling gravel to Cuts as FI. Ir'Istine, crusher, $5,00; George .Hubbard, putting .Post ORlce impactor, in culvert lot 13 con, 14 $0 80; Albert E. Putt Oilica Depart Slst of May, 1918 iii Sar vice Branch, Ottawar Cooper, gravel $4.80; John Hynclman, tile $48.20; William Wright plank for bridge, $10,70; W. E. Patterson, shovelling gravel $9,00; John A. Patterson, gravel and , shovelling $17.60; Wm. H. Lynn, shovel- l ling gravel $1.00; Frederick Beiman, cul- vert lot 32 con, 12 $7,00; Henry Deitz, i I for use of scraper, 75c; Municipal World, ; Drainage and Ass.ssor's Supplies $6 50; l Henry Kreoller, compensation for wire fence $8,40; Benjamin Maguire, shovel -1 ling gravel $L70; W, H. Lynn. gravel i, $4 80; R. Holt shovelling gravel to crush- i er, $10,00; Wn1, Jamieson, culverts and shovelling gravel $22.75; Charles Murray' shovelling gavel $4.25; Albert E. Cooper, f gravelling and shovelling- n g5,John � Holt, plank for bridge e 70.8 o)r td cke, plank for bridges $17�.8u; Garnet Wright culvert rt and road dragging$25.00; Earl Patterson, cleaning out ditch $2,00; Thos. Brown, damage, to hetse $5 00; William Demmerling, operating Stone Crusher $100.00; Wm, I•I, Lynn, gravel I $2.00; Francis Douglas, gravel $4 00: John Drummond, gravel $1.00; Anthony Pike, raking stones oli'road $1.50; H. W. Cook, rent for room $2,00. Moved by Spotton and Williamson tbat this council now adjourn to meet again in I the Tp. Hall, (Gori ie) on the third Wed-! nesday in July.—Carried, C. E. Walker, Clerk economy. Intend calling on the Babb family at Sydney. Mrs W. II. Willis, Wingham, will meet us at Indian Head, —Brussels Post. MAIL CONTRACT Property Investments Your dollar is worth just as much as it ever was in buying real estate. Everything else has gone up in price and real estate is sure to follow. Buy now and own your own home before the advance which is bound to come before long. g Two excellent nt fat•m sue r W a !n h listed this week. gam Valuable properties in every -part of Wingham and also in Whitechurch and Bluevale. Wind storm Insurance. Victory -onds bought and sold, Canadian Northern Tickets. Ritchie & Cosens Insurance and Real Estate Wingham, - Ontario 3 MAGNIFICENT STEAMERS 3 The Great Ship "sEEANDBEE" — "CITY OF ERIE" — "CITY OF BUFFALO" BUFFALO — Duly, May lei to Nov. 15th —CLEVELAND Leave 5:n8At0 9:C0 P.M. V.S. Eastern Time Leave Ctrvntnxn 8,00 P.M. U.S. Central Time Arrive CU:VI:LAND 7:f0 A.M. U.S. Central Time Arrive O ao,v7:39 A.M. V.S. Easton Time Connections at Cleveland for Cater Point, Put -in -Day, Detroit and other points, Railroad tickets reading between tu:.alo and Cleveland are good for transportation on o•.r steamers. Ask your ticket ,•rant er American 0apress Agentfor tickets via C. & 13, Line. Ne•v Tourist Automobile ]tate—$7.69 Round Trip, with 2 days return limit, for cats not exceeding 127 in. wheelbase. Bcautiful.y colored aectiooal puzzle chart of The Great Ship "SEEANDBEE" sent on receipt of five cents. N: o n^]c for our 2: -page pictorial and descriptive booklet free. The Cleveland & ruffalo Transit Company Cl""e,nr.l, L•]ti� The Great Strip rr "S38EANDDLE" I —rho 'arrest and most costly passet:Ger Stl•amer on inland we? ere of the world. Sleeping cap^.rity, 1500 passengers. asesmenS aG- °hy4��r� Ari M CrawfaPtl, halal Wingham A IthILOYED CITY. 1)unklrk Ilas Ileo of Dear to I[ettrt of 1."'ranee, Dunkirk, "the City of Dreadital Night," i g tis pointed �oil t> out b a f�a •za 'e- y 8 a o pna nt of tltfl Daily y M 1 mentioned perhaps more e often o has leen tin French coxnnluniquee during this war than any other city, There are weeks when it is rare for a emu, rrLtln[glle not to enuelude with the words, "Enemy airplanes dropped bombs on Dunkirk during the night," or "A long -ridge gun has firesi into Dunkirk," That seaport, the nearest of all to the faring line, is now scarcely less dear to the hearts of the Prouch peo- pitle ltashan beets dee ratedtlfori]e Verdun, 1ts courage under life. Recently France's biggest ship was launched there, The amazing Mug about Dunkirk, the writer continues, is that it is still a city. Its .inhabitants, refusing to leave, have carried on its lomat life with indomitable courage. Tramway streetsun;auds well -stocked rshopsbbare open every day. Weekly in the mein square, market is held and the count- less stalls are well patronized by shrewd housewives. The frequent bombardments from sea, land and air are not laughed at, although they are taken as a matter of course. Bedrooms, instead of be- ing on the upper floors of the houses, are now in the collars, and public dugouts dot the town as do the air raid shelters of London, Scarcely a house or wall in the town remains without its record of the enemy's continual efforts to de - stray Dunkirk. Capturing \t'ild Monkeys Monkeys are frequently ca• ptured In nooses and iu traps built in the shape of houses. The only entrance Is a trap-door in the roof, which communicates with st trigger set upon the ground. Food is spread about inside the monkeys enter, and, sk]r- mishirig""arouncl, disturb the trigger, and the trap shuts them .in. Another method of catching •then] is a most ludicrous one. An old hard cocoanut is taken and a small hole made In the shell. burnished etStll this and a pocketful of boiled rice, the sports. man sallies Into the forest and stops beneath a tree tenanted by monkeys. Within full sight of these inquisitive spectators, he first eats a little rice and then puts s a quantity tttb D n o the roc Hanot. will r11 h a the eaten to i to n possible, The nut is then laid upon the ground, and the hunterI retires i sto aonveieut ambush, No sooner is tfr ratan out of sight than the monkeys race helter-skelter for the cocoanuk. The first arrival peeps into it and, seeing the plentiful store or rich rice inside, squeezes his hand in through the small ]tole and clutches a handful. So paramount -is greed over every other feeling con- nected with tnOnicey-nature that nothing will induce the creature to relinquish his hold. With his hand thus clasped he cannot possibly ex- tract it, but the thought that if he leaves go one of his brethren will ob- tain the.feast is overpowering. The sportsman soon 'appears upon the scene. The unencumbered monkeys fly in all directions, but the unfor- tunate brute who still will not let the rice go is thereby handicappers beyond hope by the possession of a cocoanut ---a state of affairs quite 'fatal to rapid locomotion. The sequel is that he falls an easy capture to the hunter, a victim to his OWn greed.—Family Herald. Ezpi riuteats on 'Plants. ' The earliest experiments in inject - .ng various solutions into plants were those of Erhart and Reicha,r•d, who published their results in 1873. A few years ago F. Weber succeeded in influencing the unfolding of winter buds by means of a water injection, A few others have carried out si>ni- tar experiments, A further contribu- tion to the subject has been reported by Yasutaro Yendo, whose experi- ments were made at the University of Tokio. His object was to deter- mine the mode and extent of trans- port of the injected substance 111 plant body, rather than the ultimate effects. Solutions of Iithium nitrate, copper sulphate, rosin, and aniline violet were injected into various ,,ranches of the vegetable kingdom, 11.s results show that the rate of transport of alt, injection varies ac- sor'ding to the nature of the injected substance; that the injection is most- ly carried to that part where trans- p.ratiolt is going on most rapidly; that there is a relatively slight but perceptible transport of injected lith- ium in deciduous trees treated dur- ing the winter; that upward 'trans- port is always conspicuous, ,down- ward transport generally less so, and transverse transport veriefeeble. The speed of transport of an injected se- lution varies according to its concen- tration. The solutions are carried mainly through the phloem parts; other tissues, conduct phiaem parts; other tissues Conduct them 10 some extant.—East. Suffolk Gazette. Here Are Some War Breads. Owing to the shortage 'of wheat the powers that be have been experi- menting to see whether satisfactory bread cannot be made from other cereals. They have come to the con- clusion that they can --very much so, The chief grains which the re- searches have added to our food- stuffs, are cotton -seeds areal, kaffrr corn, feterita, grain sorghums, anti milts So far all these have been weal to tce,l to stork, but it is found that they call all be milled and made into bread. Nat only ilea, but the bread is more palatable and much more nu. trltious than wheat 'breed over thought of being, Ful• instance, cot- tonseed meal contains about forty five per cent. of proteins, whereas wheat Only contains about Trine per cent, Of these new gra.itls,` Kansas, Texas, and Oklahoma can supply enoug''+ to make up this year's wheat shortage, while next year with more planted, the Supply will be abundant. Texas is capable of supplying the whsle country alone if necessary, so that there [:t no danger of a bread shortage. —Popular science Monthly, fitnartr, Young Willie Wl]teeswerlt had not been to school for a whole week, hence the visitfrom the school oiti- cer, wife demanded of Willie's moth- er the cause, "Well, if yer must know,' she an- swered, "he's past his 'thirteenth year, an' he an' his father reckons he's had schooling enough, sir." "Schooling enotrgh,t, eehm,tl tlae 01. 1]002', "iso you know, madonna 1 did not 1 nidi my education until 1: watt twentysthreo7" "Yet don't say!" said the mother in astonishment. "lint then, yer see," she added, c0nadentially, "that boy of our* it*. bra,tns," .11 't itut.t3,L y ullta : til 1918 How We Can Afford Tp Do It. The secret of our success with the Bachelor Suit is found in the turnover. We are con tent with a very small margin of profit in order to be able to sell the SPIT $20.00 AT "The Suit with the Guarantee." The profit on each suit is small, but we can, afford to do it because we sell such a big quantity.• If you want a suit that will wear as well as it looks, don't lose any time abort corning in here. ir- x. C e I- J s,a't es tu 4 E 284 ti' ,1 N. .a• �C h � t d .ra DORE1V V•]��t�%END'S or Toronto ' invite you to their display of i the newest creations in artistic J hair -goods If your own hair is thin, dull and unbecoming, let us demon- st rate just what can be done to supply your lack of hair, and how perfectly it is accomplished. 5 FOR LADIES—Switches, Transformations, Waves, Pompadours, Chignons, Etc. FOR' BALD MEN—DORENWEND'S TOUPEE will make you look years younger and improve your health. Light as a feather and indeteetab]e on our sanitary patent structure. This display is for 1 day only Appointments can be arranged at residence if desired. There is no Charge for -:-r" Demonstration::"`: ti THE DORENWEND I COMPANY MPANY OF TORONTO 1 LIMITED Head Office: —103-105 YONGE ST. t t is 4 Vim, " W V 41-Acie% cm -A, RIGLEYS Keep WRIGLEY'S in mind as the longest- lastine confection you can buy. Send it to the boys at the front. NMI NUM mom IAMB 11I� 1111•1 MIN IMMO NMI Mai min lir War Time Economy in Sweetmeats a 5 -cent package of WRIGLEY'S will give YOU several dais' enioyment; it's an ihveStment in benefit as watt as Measure, for it hlefAs teeth. breath, aPPetite. digestion. CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL The Flavour Lasts Sealed tight—Kept right MAD4 tN CANthiaA 111111 tM�is a irid▪ is moso 1111 MO• O 11� litIMM