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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-10-17, Page 8re, • • 44141,ijr t eta , • , vwxtroruwitm." xxxxxxx""' USE A HYDRAULIC RAM - • — • -. -- j•,....'.1...r.l'ateee le!!'. I.- , 1 . ,T1.2 .N1(f.,1 ECONOMY • • nok A .40 Years of e\- 6.$)'• ° rericnee in sell. ci jag c.lotlies a VT - 4:Z port our convi, n tion the best cheapest in the " —fond and ,t,w1•1‘ •Anore s:nisfac- 60•tion throughout 1 • 'v periou i me entait. di"' of its 11S0, Vgi., St )C1,t,-t-N,' Bralld X . • Clothes are made to a fixed standard, a n d '• , quality is never IkA ...sacrificed f o r price. :14 , ' ° • X : i e reco'they always give -Wmmend X , them beca us c vs .: genuine satifac- sit tion, f o r the ,,,V,,'•••'':° X - X ' . • . .. X • - 7-71:.• X ...,, i':'" '• .' ../ ,i.,`. \• ''.. ! *C,,.• ; 1; • ; A '; ',‘' . ..4".,..,' ; .. • ' ;',..•;;;;;,e, .....s.:......7. 11•"..:',..1‘ '', '11, -: F. 17 ..:.:r ,'''' " • - •• e ! S, e • • r / : r , - .: e• '..)t- • re r• :.• I I; a•!.... •.• .:••.i. •• •,;,1 • els' ,...:e le, ••- ••; .irree, e•Trase tef •'-` r ...:, ( . i • 4 A47.4Vr.. '' -•-i- '' 1 .1 : r',1 '';.‘•.''• ' qle • .„,,,, • I ,e, , -- •, e • • . . 'e. ... - a . 1• li - 1 :. i -ii :: ;_. • 14 .,,,,,: . . . . ; I, .,, 1 1:„.,•1- 1.1 ion' style is TAILORED into them and . the Avorlann nship is of the very best. They wear and the style is there as long as the garment lasts. The makers pledge of satis- faction is on the inside coat pocket of every Society Brand garment and We take pleasure in adding our own endorse- . merit, . If you have never tried on a Society 13rand suit or over- coatcome in to -day. •• eerrell ease e seraese• ••• -tea/ 'asset. • ...•• V• ao, i'.•••••..a••••re "•ek "-erne aase, • tee e•'I.' ••••: 'eee.e ler c.-•••••.;,4"— Now models for Fall and Winter are here 113 a xratmemmannzzall Aria reg r giVial Now Recognized As the Cheapest Power for Pumping. When and now It 18 lised--Complete wormation (Ryan -- Tubercular Cows a Menace to Health—flew )1;11 Tubercular Test Is Made — Why 79 It Faye Farmer to Test Cattle and to Discard Reactors. X (C4)ntrthiggiebuTtfgtavg:armfgat ot HERD conditions are suit- able for an hydraulle ram it is without question the cheapest and meet Batts - r44.0 factory method of pumping water. It has one drawback—it wastes far M. more water than it pumps to the rol. buildings, and hence can only be pp; stalled where the supply is from five to twenty times as great as required at the buildings. The efficiencY of the rani is from 65 to 90 per cent., i.e., it uses 46 to 90 per cent. of the energy of, the falling water. Suppose the spring supplies 10 gallona per minute and the fall from the spring to the ram is five feet. Multiply these together and then take 65 per cent. of the product, and we have the energy available for driving water to the buildings. Energy in this ease 65-100 x 10, e 5 foot -gallons -32.6 foot -gallons, Now divide this by the height of the buildings above the ram and we have the number of gallons the ram will deliver per minute at the buildings. U, for example, the height is 32.5 feet then Number of gallons per minute -32.5 divided by 32.5-1 gallon, which is 1-10 of the water supplied by the supposed spring. Number of gallons per day -60 x 24 —1,400 gallons (about 29 barrels). Consequently with five feet of head and 32,5 feet of lift the ram will deliver at. the buildings 1-10 of the water in the spring. The quantity that will be delivered with other heads, lifts and spring -flows may be calculated in a similar way. Generally speaking it is found that for eaeli 10 feet of lift there should bo one foot of head, but there is a iimit-4t is seldom advisable to in- stall mins where the head is less than say two feet, although they have been known. to work with as little as 18 inches. The length of drive pipe should not be less than three-quar- ters of the vertical lift to the build- ings, nor less than five times the fall from the spring to the ram. It may however, be longer, but seldom ex- ceeds 50 feet. and 75 feet might be taken as an extreme length for sizes of ram suitable for farm conditions. lete If too long a drive pipe be used, the w•ht extra. friction in it prevents the water trona striking as heavily or as tre- , quently as with a drive pipe just 4• , the right length. The cost of installing a ram is not W great. For the smallest. size of ram = it will run in the neighborhood of a. ra $25 to $35 and about $15 extra for each hundred feet between the 'real spring and the ram. Thus if they A were 100 feet apart the total cost would be from $40 to $60, but if 200 feet then from $55 to $65, and other distances in proportion. The largest size of standard ram can be installed at about $100 if the ram and pump are 100 feet apart, and $126 if 200 feet apart.—R. R.. Gra- lam, B.S.A., 0. A. College, Guelph. Belmore Mrs. Hilliard of Wingham will conduct a sa le of millinery at 3 3. Marshall's Bel - more, on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 17th and 18th. •When in need of Letterheads, Note Heath, EnveRopes or Statements .remernben. that The Ad.vanceis well to do a.mat job. • •.. 53HEEP • N. THE 1,1.a. • I :Ail 1 1.e de*. 4141..1. ,‘‘‘‘‘' • • , FAR.1%.41 eell 611,4,414i* dee Me:4 II 1 9e e,111.441.s?.•11414111. -W•VgaAs kes • • -a , ••.7-.4,t`e"%;"" • 4.^ ' .• , • t. N °Octal of the Dominion Gov- r' •ierninent, who is at present at le e•seeer-- e2•Lethbridge, Alberta. saperlas rikearsar. 'tending the grading of the wool dolt district, computes that the clip ••• of the ,Southern Alberta "Prool row- re: era will he about a million and a half e;et pounde. This is an increase for this e.sapriation of twenty-five per cent.• -, -. overaiast year. 'Although 11 13 yet Inc 1; r•''r` earl to make an estimate of the In tee es r,e einsese expected throughout 'the whole : of .thisenadi Car, Prairie West, -it is • not. execeted tha,t the average in le crease will he lees than that of t4'air P.,oarhern Alberta Weel Grewera 444. reaeeVe s • .0•4"f4 `174""`:'7.`,• ;nee statietton. otb.er worde, an in • a.•••• crane • of epproxianately twenty4ive eie••••••• r -,•.Safer p'tr sent. le looked for in the wool.iiti-e-)"•-•1-•4•'-t•-•7•?.."..e.s......•••:•vw ell)). Western Canada over that of • ..t. I 1 lasti year. Sharing brie nota begun pure water, make the country exeel- tnidngill be in full swing before the lently adapted for this useful lame tibial. of Sone. Tho iherea%e in the try. The comparativeiy low prieeefthe eatiailfer of Jambe this year has been land here also greet the farm sheep. a vary satisfactory one, being be- man in Western -Canada an advan. ttreOn. One hundred and one hundred tago over his brother farther south. and fifty per cent. of thil size of the It is only during the lag three or fierles. four years, hoteevet, that the sheep The . Cafraditin Ceeperative Wool Industry has begins to make any Crewels Aseoeiatien, ninth was merited headway on the fa.ritts in Xorined lean Year, is all ready to Western Canada. The high quality beadle this yearn clip. Two were- of the wool, to,entlier with the Stela louses have heoyi secured in Toronto. demand and the good prieee, bits 'Oritario, to the,, wcoll of this . opened the eyes of the farmers to the Aseoriation ril1 bo fora'ardcd and Decsibilities of the industry, and It etoriet for solline. A large majority mowing as fest as the diftleulty in Of .the CarnaliCat sheep relc,na are scouring breixiine stock will allow. " reenthets of the te.:se=iation. but it is it is to the farms that wo are to e esereted. Met enuelt weed will. bra leek for the further development handi,e1, for menettoraibers, so that the sheep reptilian?. The enisortuna ravernt million rem will be told ties for sheep raising bh the range ttronfjh this channel during the SC3,• ere beroroing scarcer every year. That this cireunettence is an advan- trete . The Meath of the re rap industry. tare to the Indnittry In the mere in. among the fartneve ter leSeeeve ran- teeriee ferning distriets there can be r.tin, dreier .,':!zn few yeses hae • re doubt.' te to a i'ew years ago it ,e1 a anneSeelee ene. At lenett •ss difficult for farmers In sueli di- e ,4k•-fark-t CaCf2'. first ernes. minnially trlete to make Itenaway 111 cermet!. tet thee.; rsto do net Item tho ..ean. tion with the saeeemen, iehoee flecks fy. !lee it is not so surioiss4,,l. to tranigul over streteh .of coma tie ee alto !'ow the ratera! cienealfry. The high Ingo* of wool and tee: eir cotietr!Ail y. see erenee genatinutt.Mon have 00 Owen a great lin. it• (4, cs.rult..;Ti::•.,ItS to S faita tAron buelnellte said T.."14, a lamer k typtsge,intha continued lIew'enmett cif the ftt ivith graven teareeele dnetry tent:Alpe e to the 1,0611,8 f!!„..• r!:1,11 ''''!f•••s tyl q'Atefillit. food ithd clotiOng el.:mates aimatiarms of foot eat 1200.00411•001. .• r.:.•••••• • k rise illustratiteris iteetate sheep faring of Weetern Catiad*, , 1 TTIE A.DVANCB What School During the month ot August many parents Must face the grave responsibility of choosing the best school for a son of daughter. The whole future life of that child de- pends upon the training which you are choosing, consequently you should get full particulars of ail schools, compare them carefully, and, make your choice. Some have listened to the 'fairy tales' of travel. ling agents and 'signed up' without investigating and have regretted it 'too late'. If interested in a bush ness education, send postal card to the Spotton Business College, Winghatn, and receive the 'Message of our Graduates', which tells ot our records for the past fifteen yea's. Owing to our Home Study Department many aro graduating with only one month at college. Positions guaranteed. Gt egg or Pitman Shorthand, 0SPOTTON= BUSINESS COLLEGE Affiliated with 'Canada Business College, Toronto. Lieut. Foster Ferguson, (Somewhere in France) Principal. GEO. SPOTTON, Presiden Britain's Morat Reserves, Described by Enurson, HAve Value in Great War NEUTRAL traveller, recently returned from Germany, comments upon British character as displayed in the bearing of British prisoners in German hands. These boys of ours, he says, are ill-treated, starved, hu- miliated in every possible way by their unchivalrous captors, but noth- ing can brealt their spirit or impair their cheerfulness; they will not give in, they refuse to back down before bullying and threats; their power of enduring is amazing, and so is the serene confidence they display In their country's ability to pull through all right. Their attitude in this re- spect chagrins the Germans inex- pressibly, and he does everything he cen to make it hard for his victims to maintain it, but in vain. The friendly neutral is so impressed by what he has thus seen that it sets him moralizing upon British charac- ter, and he gives it as his firm con- viction that, whatever the outcome of the present war, British character will prove itself in tee long run un- conquerable and will manage some- how to break the German yoke. Is this so? It would bee comfort to think so, for we have come to what is THOUSANDS ON FARO Over 7,500 Persons Were Placed on Farms This Year, ilxpeerro iteiwicineklebtsw Shows Courldidie:igoolitewsLoss„*. -Left In Fielde. (Contributed by Ontario Departmeet et Agriculture, Toronto.) INCE Oct. Slat, 1917, the On-, tario Government Public ployment Bureau have secured employment for 19,000 per- sons, of which 7,016 were men and 11,984 women. This work has been accomplished for the most part througli the efforts of the officelf at • Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton and . London. Since April, however, new bureaus have been opened at King- ston, Port Arthur and Fort Williant. • In order that the best results might be gained through the campaigns for farm laborers the efforts of the Trades and Labor Branch, the Organ- ization of Resources Committee and . the Agricultural Representatives were co-ordinated. The province 'was di- vided into t3ix districts, each center- ing around one of the bureaus. The organization is now such that each county, through the Agricultural Re- presentative, is kept in touch with one of the Employment Bureaus. Thus the surplus labor in one part of the province may be Shifted to a part where a scarcity Is felt. Any farmer in Ontario, by eommueleating with the Agricultural Representative for his county, may learn how farm . help can be obtained. To date 7,800 persons have been placed on Ontario farms.' Of these some 3,300 were men, 2,140 boya and 1,260 women. Several campaigne have been launched including, "Sol- diers of the Soil" (boys between 14 and 19 years), "Haying and Har- vest," "Sugar Beet lioeinge' "Thresh- ing and Fall Ploughing," and "Flax Pulling." Over 250 boys were sent to the sugar beet fields of the Chat- . ham district, and 125 are now pull- ing flax. Of the 1,260 women sent the ma- jority are on lentil farms. An effort was made at the Toronto office 1.0 send women to assist In the farm kitchens with the result that 70 wo- men have gone to this work. Duringr the winter a class was organized- fo the purpose of giving girls a train- ing in chore work on the farm. In April a course was opened, at the On- tario Agricultural College, where about 150 women and girls have gone out to assist on mixed farms through- out the province. The results achiev- ed by these women have been satis- factory from the standpoint of the farmer. is itthe desire of the Department that every farmer in need of help is supplied with suitable and satisfac- tory assistance, and it is toward this end that our offices are organized and into the fulfilling of Which practically ail the energy of our staff is put. On account of the supreme Import- ance of food production the greatest amount of etfort, in all offices, has been put forth toward recruiting and pplacing men on farms, yet a, large erhaps the most dangerous hour in number of people have secured posi- all our thousand years of existence as a nation. Before the war many of us were fearing that British character had changed for the worse, that the old soberness, simplicity and indus- try, the old piety and self-restraint of our fathers were gone forever; but the moment a great test was ap- plied to our latent resources we rose to it and behaved in a manner not unworthy of the victors of Trafalgar and Waterloo, not to speak of the sea dogs of Elizabeth and the grim Iron- sides of the :great Oliver. And it may well be questioned whether the changes in British char- acter ever went very deep. It is al- most startlipg to read what Emer- son had to say about us in early Vic- torian days. He might be writing for the present, and he was a clever - 31 ;lilted observer. "As coin pared with the Americans, I think them cheerful and contented. Young peo- ela. in our country are much more prone to melancholy." What! Then the solemn Victoriau was not so very solemn after all, and the bighly- etzeing American ran have his fits of the tlues. This was exactly what the present writer himself thought on visiting the United States. A people which lives so much on Ito nerves (ions in other lines of work. Eight hundred and seventy-one men have been placed at factory and munition work, 3,200 general laborers, 3,000 builders and 1,624 at miscellaneous occupations. Women heve been plac- ed PS follows: 1,690 domestics; 1,273 munition and factory v' 1. ees, an.' 1,700 at clerical and miscellaneous occupations.—Dr. W. A. Riddell, Superintendent, Ontario Trades and Labor Branch. • A'S'ENOEI) 1l3 1170311111.8. C141•Mr t4equel to ?%ki: •t" ti (L'IMan 13;.titit ilty. The ta-rge: el' the ranalliatie whose reported. erneitixion after the second battle of ). limn in 1915 arous- ed such intereg, lets been amply avenged. ilia brother joined the' Newfoundlamt rettinunt where he la now sergeant -major. lia received what he considers ample continua. 'Lion of the crucifixion, width actually took place, having seen the man who took the baymiets front the body Whitt Was nuttened against a door. This brother has shown - the most extraordinary daring in winning de- corations and promotion by bis pas- sionate offensives at every opportun- ity against the Gerinans. During a period of trench war he went out night after night, crawling up to the German lines, bombing and sniping During the Somme tighting he re- ceived the D.C.M. and Croix de Guerre for his conspicuous gallantry and resource, On October, 1916, near Guedecourt, whea reaching the enemy's parapet, he saw a 'testae machine gun coming into action and threw h bomb which killed three of the crew, Then he Jumped upon the machine gun crew, bayoneting the remaining six despite .serious wounds, and Mildly bayonet - Ing one giant German before he him- self, blinded and almost helpless from loss of blood, fell to the ground: Be received thirteen wounds before 'the fighting finished. "Whenever he sees Germans he sees red. The vision of his crucified brother is ever in his mind,". said one .of his officers. No More Rye. Hiram Walker & Sons, of Walker - vine, have definitely decided to aban- don business as distillers, converting their plant into chemical. works to be operated by the $1,000,000 Hiram Walker & Sons Chemical 0o. Ready, for Emergency. "An optimist looks on the bright aide of things!" • "Yes, and if he is a real optimist he tries to carry a little mental poi- igdtiien, tands.h,noir ine up the dark side noa • • • • A Cultured Maid. • The following advertisement ap- pears In the "Help Wanted" column of the Sheffield •(England) Daily Telegraph recently: "Mistress will give maid lessons In two foreign laza gin"4deisfielaeondtimalasetearieuwiiiiils inasntrdoectohut se th nEt " Cornered. "And you claim exemption on the ground that yon are the breadwinner for your family?" sir." itfact that your wife con- ducts a prosperous boarding house yaenadrs?,yo,uhaven't had a steady job in "Er -yes, sir. Breadwinner Is my official title. Confound the luck. I didn't say I was living up to it!" Tile Bich Man of the U. S. The richest man in the United States is John le itockleiler, who is said to have a tortune• of 31,200,000,- 000 and an annual Weenie of $60,- 000,000. The setend riceeet mon Ts It C. Frick, with a fertuir- of 000,000 and an meal a :Defame et 811.000,000. Wingham Marble and Dranite Works Having sold the Wingham marble busi .14•4411.1=1.111. Tilursclay Oct. 17th, 1W Farmers, Mechanics and Laborers. We have just placed into stock a line of working shoes made on ' • The American Army Last Nx,hich we believe to the best fitting shoe that it has been our pleasure to offer for sale. 'We have this particular shoe in both tan and black kip —splendid stock that will wear well and not get hard good heavy soles and no pieces, solid leather insoles— in fact just about as good a shoe as you ever cast your eye upon and the price according to present values is reasonable, viz. 6.00 per pair• . Ask to see them. W. H. WILLIS SOLE AGENT FOR THE . 1 • Co, FOR Areeeli . • . , -7: ee LADIES • eerenene .1 1 • _ • . - • .1 .5woe. iiiviiiiihketerseatenreeiainalirattesaiStalieetakttillliatiliti, stilteleeeitaisietaiiiil sill& a 6141,11 "Central" Training Means Sucees Insurance The one who holds our diploma knows that he is qualified to fill the very best office positions, and, what is more, the business men of Ontario know it too. • THIS EXPLAINS WHY WE CAN SO READILY PLACE OUR GRADU- ATES 1 ssesIN DESIRABLE POSITIONS. Day and Evening Cla . Telephone 106. 1 D. A. McLachlan, Pres. A. Haviland, frin , nes's I have a number of fine Old Country I granite monuments to dispose of before. giving possession. These monuments were purchased before the high increase in prices and tell be sold at reasonable prices. Intending purchasers should see I this stock and make a selection as this will be the last chance for some time of j securing Old Country granite. On account! of difficulty in transportation from Nor- way and Swed.n to Aberdeen, Scotland, and scarcity of labor in Aberdeen it is almost impossible to purchase granite monuments. Purchasers should not de- lay as the time is short for erecting monu- ments this season. Granite monuments not sold will be moved away shortly. Trios. JOIINsToy, Prop, XXXX :47,4,LWAIIVA NIX ,INI7.4 XX XV. :1474 14 11.4 XXX .$..MILVAltett 11! 4 R Farewell, dear father, rest in peace, In Memory of tbe Late David dallowaV Thy cares and sufferings o'er; ‘1:41 And thou are free from troubles now, Thy care on earth's no more, hard to lay thy dear, dear form Va) Within the cold, cold clay,• 464 Individuality is noted on all our Our hearts are sad and sore with pain Since father passed away. It does not seem like home to us There is an empty chair, And it seems so very lonely now — For father is not there. We did not dream that Death so soon Would bear thee from our side, must pay a price for the constant It took from us a loving friend. A true and faithful guide. At .ktr51; high grade furs. Never before have , . y we displayed such a collection of X . r X really cnoice turs, incivaing Beaver, s strain to which it subjects itself: it is not for nothing that the gospel of health -mindedness is so vigorously But ohl how sad and lonely now, preached in America. We miss thy counsel dear But let us continue with Emerson; Oh! There was none more dear to us he does not pile on the admiration Than father was when here. its and instincts cleave to nature. Our hearts are sa sore pia n, Fox, W , oil Hudson Seal, Taupe t4 Coon, Australian Oppossum and to excess by any means. "Their hab- d and withi They are of the earth, earthy; and We often sit and weep, of the sea, as the sea -kinds, attached 0 could we press but one more kiss to it for what it yields them, and Uporinhy loving cheek. not from any sentiment. They are full of coarse strength, rude exer- We children and friends are sad present fur values can not be duplicated. eise, butcher's Meat, and sound sleep; Our hearts with grief are riven, Domestic Furs. I HUDSON SEAL COATS Natural Muskrat Coats. and suspect any poetic insinuation, But oh, we think it's wrong to weep or any hint for the conduct of life which reflects on this animal exist- ence, as if somebody were fumbling at the umbilical cord and might stop• their supplies." And In a passage full of 'Manny prescience, "Half their strength they put not forth. They are eapable of a sublime resolu- tion, and if hereafter the war of races Often predicted, and making Itself a war of opinions also (a questiot of despotism and liberty coming from Eastern Europe) should menace British civilization, these sea kings may take onee again to their Seating castles, and find a new home and a Second millennium of power in their colonies." "The stabiliy of Britain," he roundly declares, "Is the security of the modern world, because the British stand for liberty. The con- servative, money -loving, lord-heving British are yet liberty -loving, and so freedom is safe; for they have more periOnal force theet other people." God grant Emerson may prove to be right in his estimate of the great - bees of our Moral reserves, desplte our insistent materiality and lack of imagination. Por 411 our best is wanted how, and the whole future of mankind waits upon it: if 'we fall the World is undone. And, oh, sons Of America, hasten! The boats em- battled against our little island are overwhelming. Kinsmen, we are holding till you tome. ----Rev. R. J. Carepb611 In The Ohurehistan. 116* Xeseland Cows Produce More. It is reported that the milk coers of New Zealand, because of improv- ed breeding and feeding, produced an average of 19 pound! more butter fat litt 1917 than in 1911, netting the femora ati increased revenue Of $4,$61,61.4, When thou are safe in Heaven. But when we meet in that blest land With joy our hearts shall swell To meet dear father gone before, . No more to say farewell. McLaughlin Sales and Service at Crawford's:Garage STOP! in and see the New wiiiiams sewing Machin es Special prices just now. We also handle needles for alt the leading sewing machines. Plechine 011, Belts and Etc i3est piano and furniture polish in in Canada. The New Fall Records are Arriving Almost Daily Get some of these and cheer the family. F. i Hill's Musk Store • NORTHWAY COATS --we Iv ours, Broadcloths, Plushes and Heather mixtures. etc., in anticipation of cold weather, Our show exclusive design in Vel - Prices to $65.00. UNDERWEAR—Now is the time to purchase your needs of Underwear. Combinations, separate pieces, hosiery, sweater coats, knitted sets, MEN'S APPAREL The fall and winter overcoats we are show- ing are the very latest designs and come in a variety of styles suitable for men and young men. A complete stock of general haberdashery always at your commands. We are paying 50c a dozen for large fresh eggs. KING BROS. ixxxxxxx .z.z.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.