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The Wingham Advance, 1923-07-05, Page 3Thursday, July 3th., x923, ® WHINE VOILES ■ MILLS' WEEKLY ST RE NEWS CREAM BOTANY SERGE All Wool Superfine Botan Serge, A. 'wonderful, quality for'Skirts. Extra width 58 in. regular 4.50, 5® . special 3yd P An exceptional fine quality` -:Swiss' Voile, in ' drop ® ® a stitch bale pattern, ideal for 'blouses and ® dresses, 40" nvide,special 1.50 'yd ■ ■ M GINGUAM DRESSES Ladids,and'; .Misses Gingham Dresses in. ® neat styles of checks and plaids,' about twenty rn. MPO.SSIBLE TO GET RELIEF Unti! She Started To lake= ': Frult-a-dues" Tae Maafclne Mala From Frutf li.1.. No. 1, Everett, Ont. I "I had been troubled for years with' Dyspepsia,'f iv erandEldneyTroubl e and. mould not get retie until l started taking "Fruit-a-tives "1 hal s 't6'. w their beneficial•action,Iani in normal re y health again", iir11. ° Ira. THOMAS EVANS ® "Fa'pit-a•tives"alone can give such. dresses in lot, regular 3.75 and 4.00, special at ®. a3,19am ®� DRESSES $2.119 ' ®. ia am'. ■ ■ 111 ■. ■ El 111 $ OUR GOODS ARE THE BEST . . OUR PRICES RIGHT Lloyd Taylor. Pr. A to Pr. B Inez i�®®tn�ii®®®®®®NI®®®®®®NI® Ma! MadeleineFinlayBob Ferguson, chBeMac Metcalfe, • ®�®®®�®®®®�®®®®®IIS . French, Berth . Detzler. F. McEwen, teacher. Bertha Another lot of Gingham, Satin, and Cre- tonne Dresses, neat patterns and styles, sizes 34 to 42, reg 2.75 to 3.25; special at 2.19 En lish Ginghalns, 32 in wide at 32c;yd Fancy Voiles 79c yd. ''happy and sueseeaful results because "Fruit-a.tiaes" is theftfamous meal - eine made) from fruit jtiicesand tonics. "Fruit-a-tivea" is pleasant to take and will always restoi+e the health when taken regularly as directed. 50e. a box, 6 iaoEr°o:50, trial size 25e. At dealers or from Fruit- a -ti ves Limited, Ottawa, Ort.. • .$CHOOL REPORT The following Ts the report of the final June exams' for S. S. No. x Ho - wick. . Names art•aitged in order of merit except. Primer Classes. Figures denotes the percentage. Sr. III '.to Jr.. IV -jack Taylor 82, honors, Mar- garet Edwards 76, honors, Willie Bar- ton 7r, Edwin, Detzler 70, Beatrice El 'Ferguson Tor' Tr. III to Sr. III -Ethel i Detzler n Edwards,. ® Taylor 74; Wesley Dodds.; 69, Edith El .Metcalf 6o Sr. II to Jr III -Maude $ Dodds 8o, honors, Lily Edwards 62. ® Jr. II to Sr. II -Edna Finlay 83, Mel- lo r- $ old' Wrrightlor 66o. Clara Sr, I to r. II --Jack $ Ferguson and Elva: Dane, equal,. Pr. C 'to Jr. I -Lorne Edwards and Gor- ®• don Wright, equal. Pr. to Pr. C- ®I Hartley Barton, Harry and Carelessness with cigarette butts, cigar. ends, , matches, .pipe ashes, camp fires, fly smudges, railway locomotives, slash -burning • operations --human carelessness of some kind accounts for over 95% of the forest fires in Ontario. It is impossible to say how many fires along railway lines are not due to engine sparks, but to the thoughtless smoker tossing away his cigarette or cigar butt. However, there is rio doubt a fair num- ber of forest fires originate inythis way, and such are , preventable. Each in- dividual shouldrealize his personal responsibility to be careful with fire in any form in northern Ontario. The Ontario fire ranger is at the mercy of all types of carelessness, and:. cannot prevent fires starting, as. a rule. • i'•ie can only alt to attempt limit the p consequences. He is entitled a -a to your help and co-oper- ation by being careful with fire. Ontario Porestry EraBneli Parliament Buildings Toronto, Ontario g ad.°«aPan ap:4aot•_10,.tl°.0 {. o•,m;ii�"""mRw 7�yn°'ciD� �Paa6a'd last; t.- a"!i G�'i "41u." 'n.•?a a rab m ttlrig 1�'„nn'�aea4 41 r i�4-µit, THE WINGH4M AIDVANC,lu PUISLIC. SCHOOL REPORT. Friiniu'y to First T3ook, Toni! 20Q. M. !tele! tee, M Fry 190, Carl Sticialay.r89, G. King 188, J, Weir 185, M Field 185, F, Gregg .rx8o, R. .Fluttoe 473,. :Ni, Aldington 173, 11 Reeve 172, R. McInnes 17x, G. arack- enbitry 167, 'L, 'Ludwig 163, A. Chit- tick 163, A. Stone 162, S. Scott ido, R, Fitt r59, R. Broome .156, D. Forsyth 153, V. Cantelon 1A.4, L. Halter 144, M. Elliott 143, M. Mitchell 126, N, Mc Evers 125,' M. Mason 123, P. Deyell 120. Rude Rural "Rhynes sen,,• jai Mother Earth I'd rather wander. downtlte byways' than breathe the dust along the high- ways. 111. take my time and ambulate the rough dirt roads that autos bate. The fewer cars go- honking by, the bet ter for such gents as I, who'd rather tread on rutty drives whichoffer safety for,our lives, than good macad- am, ' rolled .and pressed, where fliv,• ers knock us galley west: 0 I like Honoure -Alberta MacLean 287,. folks and like to meet thein, I like to Vivian Tiffin 280, Anna McGillivray grfn at trent and greet them, yet some 277, John Pattison 273, Fred Millar times feel in every bone the call to 27x, Dorothy Deans a05, ;Betty Taylor walk a while alone, where: all the road 264, Vera Fry 259 Jack Bnrgmiau: 247, is free before me, where fragrant way - Lillian Sneath .247, Leah Robertson side trees ; hang o'er me, but no one 242, Ray McIntyre 240, Jim Thoni.pson bangs around to bore .me. You've 237, Mary Hirst 234, Elaine Small a32, heard the story --of the Titan who had Mai garet Mahood 231, Arthur -AId- with Hercules a fight on. Though ingtan 225. fiercely, Hercules would pound !lint, Pass. Herb Fuller 214, Margaret 'though ,oft he grabbed and shook and Taylor 213, Audrey Reid211, •Rosa-, downed hint, he nz right up again, con bele Pitt 208, Hilda' Fitt 196, Sterling found :!him; for when touched Itis Williams 195, Welthea Henderson 190, Mother Earth the poured new strengh Wilhelmenia Stewart 189, Jack Ben- through height and girth. So, as I inger x8x, Mary Agnew 18x. walla ,n pleasant weather, the soil and I draw close together. The old elni dreaming by the meadow drops fellow- ship as ellow-ship-as well as shadow. - .I am a of all I see, Dame Nature bares her heart to me, reveals alike- her worst and best, and, when I stop a while to rest, gives me a bit of earth to light on, with windfall apples for to bite, on till I'm renewed like that old Titan. Recommend, 'Reta. Forsyth.` jr.• Sr.I. t6. x Pass, Laura Groves 213, Jack Mc- Call`zxo; Velma Carter 208, Mae Gib- son 201, Gordon Lediet i9s1' Constance Colgate 186. Sr. I to Jr, II Total 275, 'Honours 18r, Pass x65. Geo. Beattie 244, Beverley Srhall 231, Harry 'Fry 220, Robt, Chettleburgh 207, Dell Walker 206; Fred Howson 204, Percy Clarke 195, Edna Stoakley 194, Donelda Fixter 184, ,Norman Shropshall 180. Jr. II to Sr. IT. Pre -War Postal Rates Pre-war postal rates in Canada may come into effect after the introduction of the budget in the House of Com mons_on Friday, according to inform - Total '450, Honours 337, Pass 27o, 1 postal committee presented at the an - Ruby Reeve 372,. Violet Mellor 315,1 ation contained' in the report of the Rae Thompson 299, Murray Rae 296, i annual meeting of Montreal Public - Kenneth Lott 289, Merrill Cantelon ity Association recently. 287, LaVerne. Williams 282, Mary D0-1 Inart the report said: bie 278, Gordon Smith 277, Shirley Mc "In �Novemberlast' I (the chairman), Cracken 275, Leila Wild 275, Albert, obtained from the postmaster -general, Rintoul' 272, Harvey Groves 271, Geo. of Great Britain a letter to the effedt- Roberson 270. that, since the war tax on letter post-. Sr. I'to Jr. 11I age had been abolished in Great Brit - Total -S5o, Honours 41o, Pass 33o. ain, the postai revenue had consider Jean Copeland 517, Evelyn Reid 514, ably increased. The letter, together Elnora Mclnnes 513, Wilma Dow with the observation that postal tax- 501, Agnes Louttit 494, Forbes Col- ation was defeating its own .ends, was gate 485. jack Brackenbury 483, Iso- sent to Ottawa. bel Nortrop 479, Nettie Dow 473, El- "On April 16th., your committee was la Rae 47o, Olive Tiffin 464, Betty informed that the postmaster -general! Walker 458, Ross Harrison 457, Par- (was recommending to the Minister of' ker Campbell 452, Mildred Bisbee 449, France that the pre-war rates be re- stored. Official announcement to this effect will probably be made when the j budget comes before the House of Alvin Hammond 440, Catherine Fry 430, Stanley Campbell. 418, Joseph Moir 415, Maurice `McIntyre 409, Reta Hastie 404, Eva Homuth 404, Essel- ford Henderson 402, Jean Mitchell 388, Edith Zurbrigg 387, Doris Hart. 386, Sarah Roberson 380, Margaret Clarke 377, Roy Agnew 355, Harvey Burgess 353, Charlie Finlay 353, Mar- guerite Ludwig 344, Gordon Davidson 343, Mary Hingston 337, Scott Mit- chell 33o. Jr..III to Sr. III Total 55o, Honours 410, Pass 33o. Norma Coutts 4.69,' Irving" Smith 449, Joe Tiffin 444, Margaret Currie 443, Joe EIlacott 413, George Young 408, Mary King 404, Mary McBlain 397, Alex: Coutts -3g3, Wilmore Angus 392, ack IVIcKibbon 391, Ada Hancock 389, Kathleen Smith 378, -Evelyn Shrop- shall 375, Perrin McCracken 371, Char- lie Blatchford 366,: Cora Phah• 364, $ruse Fox 36o, Jean Lepard 357, Ruby Hancock 355, Vivian Pilon 346, Lillian Broome 346, Helton Dixon 345, Grace Welwood 345, Muriel Campbell 342, Jack Carr 341, Harry Browne 340, James Angus 339,.DeWitt Miller 331, Mervyn Templeman 330, Norman Rin- toul 33o, Lloyd Hayden. 33o, jack Bea- ttie 330. Arthur Snell'and Jack Din- sley recommended on account of sick- ness, Sr. III to Jr. IV. Total 65o, Honours" 488, Pass 390- K. King 6x6, V. Lennox 591, B. Mc- Gee 5.87, E. McKay 582, N. Taylor 577 E. Lepard' 948, M. Mitchell 546, M. Redmond 542,•L. Smith 540. K. Som- ers 538, L. Hopper 538, O.'T-Iornuth 1526, C. Carr 523, E. Ross 523, K. Pilon 512, M. Mitchell 511, C. Deans 499, F. Carter 495, G. Allen 486, L. Hutton 480, R. Copeland 479, W. Gurney 472, T. Gibson 456, S. Reeves 437, R. Sttt- ton' 430, J. Clarke 395. . G. Snell,. pass (on years work.) • Jr. IV to Sr. IV. Total 775,. Honours 58r, Pass 465. L. Cragg' 718, M. Robertson 664, L. -Thompson 657, E. Dolan 643, S. Ben- nett 628, V, Fox 616, M. Weir 614, L. Bennett 613, 13..Edgar 6io, E. Lott 606, N. Carr 595, IC. Williams 59a, W. Seddon 57a, R. Rae '576, H, Mitchell 5i31 H, Fieltl.'564, B. 13rawi:ey 562, M. Cloakey 556, G. McDonald. 553, F. Fells'S4.7, L. 1:'eterman 546, 5.McLean 539, J. Sturdy 539, K. Reid 538, W. Colgate 533, M. Carr 506, A. Brawley: 472. R. Armstrong,' pass on year's work. Cartwright -Ward Wedding, Hope Methodist` Church Toronto, was the scene of a quiet but pretty wedding Saturday aftertpon, June 23r6, at three o'clock, when , Edna Pearl, daughter of Mr. and'Mrs: George.' Cartwright, Preston, Ont,, was united in marriage to Mr, .Harry E. Ward, of "Toronto, son , of Mrs•. Priscilla, and the late .Henry. Ward .of Peter'boi{e, Ont, The ceremony was performcd'by the Rev Dr. -Ferguson. • The bride was'given away by her father anti was wearing her travelling• suit of sand tricolette wall hat. and shoes to snatch, also a mink scarf and carried. a silver mesh bag.The bride attendants .were Miss N. 13. Buchanan, of Toronto, also Miss L. J. Dalrymple Toronto, wearing stilts, fox furs and large leghorn hats. Master Harry. Scott of Toronto, 'made a .cute ring bearer. The. groom was escorted by his cousin Mr, Herb, Martin, Toma- to. ,After the ceremony the happy couple.' left immediately amid showers of c0'nfetti for Preston, Ont., where a reception was held at the home of the bride's: parents, ''Iiia out of town guest's were, Mr, and Mrs. "[Taos. Cartwright and daughter Margaret, 01 Cltesley ,itztd Mr. And Mrs. Rimer Cartwright and daughter, Olive of Straticd ci f4 The .Nappy Thought :llkast Pipel.ess Fur- nace keeps the air in every room in motion- alive. It draws air ofthe lowest temperature -and all odors too -slowly back into the furnace and 'returns it heated, moistened and ster- ilized. It gives you atmosphere in which plants flourish -that keeps your furniture from falling to pieces -Natures Atmosphere. It is especially adapted to soft coal, but burns anthra- cite, wood or. other fuel equally well. Easily in- stalled-simple n- sta and imple to operate, paysfor itself in the fuel saved. Our, sew book, "Live Air you pay fuel bills. Send free copy. ti 15 E7 - Made ~ Made in Pipe and Pipeless Heating," will interest you if direct to the factory .for yyout HAPPY ;THOUGHT PR1 DUCTS ARE SOLD i,Y R ral[0 NE'Y Phone 76 MADE EAT a1 NT`P67p' i! • CANA®"1! lgett liilra3l' CQ19NPA6' Y' LIMITED 2 Commons."Advertisein `The Adva ;ice" It P I 4 3 Vic,. 40 ANADA is endeavor - midst of - depression and academic path on that eased debt. decry in look for,. e miraculous better c agentf that road now no or regain Canada any" remedies the faithfully performed, accom- panied takes every that l right. to regain her after-the-warstride in the many ' difficulties,debt, deflation and being some of them, Quack remedies theories beset her every side, Some suggest our debt worries can best be by go- ing .further into' Others preach blue ruin, their own country . and indulgemis- chievous propagandagenerally, while still others a' new social order or som culous sign to indicate a corning day -all this in app , orget- fulness of the fact just as there was no royal to win the war, there is royal road to pay for it our former buoyancy, and confidence. Some.. are leaving hop- ing to escape taxation,only to find there is no escapehere. In seeking -for easy r es too many of us overlookfact that the greatest re 'medy is hon- est, hard work fai and intelligently ccom- panied by old-fashioned thrift. It takes time, it patience, it.takes:grit. But Canadian knows in his heart Canada is corning through al Proves it. Our Experience Look back over the path Canada has trod, The French Colonists, cut off from civilization by 3,006 miles of sea, faced a continent -- a wilderness without the aid of rt va ere m-! even a blazed trail. They had to fight savages, frosts, scurvy, loneliness and starvation. The United -Empire Loyalists subdued an unbroken forest one generation, growing their .. first wheat amid the stumps and snags of the new clearing. • The Selkirk settlers, came to Manitoba when the prairie was a buffalo pasture, and grew wheat where none " had grown before and where those who knew the country best at that time said wheat would never grow. "To day the Canadian prairies grow the finest wheat in the world. In proportion to population Canada stands to -day among the wealthiest nations in the world, with average savings on deposit per family of $800. Canada's foreign trade per head of population stands amongst the highest of the commercial nations, being $192 per capita in 1922-23, as compared with $135 in 191344, the "peak" year before the war. New Opportunities for Canada In Canada, although prices in the. world markets fell below war level, our farmers reaped last autumn the largest grain crop in Canadian his- tory, and Canada became the world's largest exporter of wheat, thus in large measure making am far lower prices. Last year, Great Britain, after an agitation :extending over thirty years, removed the embargo on Canadian cattle, and a profitable and practically unlimited trade is opening up for Canadian stockers and feeders. "The .20th Century belongs to Canada" -it Canadians keep. faith: The next article will suggest prac- tical opportunities for profit making on our 'Canadian farms. . !In Slft7oEtzcd Sor 'publicatioi, by the Dominion Department. of Agriculture w. n, ALOTInigW1i1LL, rxinittes. br 1.11. 91i181)A n, Poeta lFxipistCt. G,l � phi 10,4 0,41 ,e. Ll