The Wingham Advance, 1923-07-12, Page 311
ThuretinY,Inly nth, e923.
71
TTHE'WIN,GHAM, ADVANCE •
Igleal•IMMENtatitt? 111111110110MNIINIVEIMININVONNENIUMNI, .Coaling -Smith Nuptials
�., A quiet but pretty wedding watt sole
snarl ed at the p.irsonak;e, Crediton,
e ; on July 41h, by the. Rev, I). Ia1aefav-
I isil, when Violet G. Smith was united
,:ie marriage to Mr, mi A
,iol �, , Dolling of
Ripley. After a dainty dinner the bri-
dal couple left for London and other
1 Points. On their return they will re-
side on the groom's farm in Huron
township,
Looks Like a Monster '12th
} j The town. of Wingham is taking on
quite a guady appearance for the 12th'
of July. Evergreens have been at-
tached to the posts along Main St, and
flags are being displayed.. in .several.
windows, Palmer's Merry go round,
1111' ferris wheel and shows are located hi
the. park, Everything points to it
�i'monster Crowd at Wingham on Thurs.
® July zeth. 'The nearest Orange cele-
bration is being held in Stratford. ...
111 County- Roads
,MILLS' WEEKLY STORE NEWS
V.VEEK NO:: SPECIALS'
1➢M
IN CREAM BOTANY SERGE
All Wool Superfine 13tsta'n Serge. A
m;>vonderful quality. for Skirts; Extl'a. width 58
in; regular 4,50 special .3.50 yd
WHITE VOIVES
�.n exceptional fine quality Swiss Voile, in
a drop 'stitch bat' pattern, ideal• for blouses and
dresses;- 40 in wide, special 1.50:ydk
11 ▪ GINGHAM DRESSES
•
• Ladies and Misses Gingham .0Dresses ' in
® neat styles of checks and plaids, about twenty
dresses in lot, regular 3.75 and 4.00, special at
im 3.19
DRESSES $2.19
Another lot of Gingham, Satin and Cre-
tonne Dresses, neat patterns and styles, sizes
84 -to 42, reg 2.75 to 3.25, special at 2.19
English Ginghans, 32'in wide at 32c yd
Fancy VoiI s 79c. yd
era
■ .:
■
® ▪ .
• OUR GOODS ARE THE BEST
11111111111111111111111111111111111111ENNIUMENEVEMEMINIBINESISIMEN1 VanAlstyne.
•
J. A
Much favorable comment is heard
® regarding the manner in which Chas.
®
James ham olooks after the road from Wing-
reat deal of
el abourisrbeing tdone on the road to
• Whitechurch under the able manage-
r'
anage® merit of G. Gillespie, A new culvert
® is being put in at Zetland, with a good
® road at the side for traffic in the mean-
! time. Nor. must we forget how Wm,
• Elliott smooths out the way to• Blue -
vale, A large gang of men are busy
• under David Scott"in Walsh's pit, just
ai south of Beigrave, and are placing a
IN great amount of crushed and screened
gravel on the road to Blyth. The cul-
® vert north of Belgrave is completed
® and looks like a permanent job,':
III
N BORN
' ® LEE"—In Wingham on Sunday July
o n ` 8th to Mr. and Mrs. Wee Lee, a son.
® Ludwig—On Monday, June 25t11, 1923,
® to Mr, and Mrs: Oliver Ludwig of
NWingham, a song
Haines—On Wednesday,. July 4th, to
® Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Haines, ist line
U . of Morris, a daughter.
VI DEAR—Tit London to Mr, and Mrs.
® Harry Dear (nee Pearl Williamson)
Ire
® a son, on July 5th, 1923 at Rosewood
•
® Avcalter Edward. , WRADFORD—In Wingham General
Hospital on Wednesday, July 4th,
OUR PRICES RIGHT e to Mr. and Mrs,:W.J, Radford, Bel -
more, a daughter,—Mary Oneida
KEEPING THE TRAINS SPOTLESS
1. Packing away the rugs after haw
ig had their turn on :the 'va-
cuum. •
i, FM hours spent in the Winni-
peg, "Montreal and Vancouver
•
yards of the ,Canadian Pacific Rail-
way while the dining and . passenger,
-trains are being Cleaned gives .one the
assurance that there is Little need fol•
travellers to, worry as •far as germs
ere concerned,
The yards are equipped with the
very ',latest devices for the cleaning
aid equipping of its trains. The
same pattern of equipmentis iil•,use
in Wing: ":e '
Montreal real and . Van
deiue
ver, at these three tcrelBale the
'
eoaecs undergo a thorough cleaning.
„app xipiatety 110- Cars 'are cleaned
` v
M iper 'a d lt'-.cost::
V�etxtpeg day, . n
08.00 to. 'dean eaeh car.
rtly' at
When' a .paSsen�T er' is n, vee ,
( i run.
" Terming.,l ti
Bat Winnipeg it
tiw o to the d h yard and e'er -.•
oav c y v y
ataken out hem
thing move le e •T
e emcee the c a'niri` -and
�g germ,
oanfna � � 0
heav r t es
Ousting pccss.� The e
oust g h d�aapp
tried minimills, prilfows' and ed bleu-
ke b are laced Under a veonine
r
i� 90� un i assure.
,. gle�sr w . pounds p
is the first process of cleaning, then
� to+rra the dieinfeetini, The ear The
nee.seed on a wire nettin which
2. Cleaning the pillows on the va-
cuum cleaner invented by Cana-
dian Pacific employees.
looks not unlike a bedl spring only
that it moves on wheels, At one end
there, is a huge roller to which is at-
tached scores of leather straps, which
is referred to in the yards as the
"cat and 109 tails." This revolves at
a, terrific force and,:•,after the carpet
hasbeen twice, beaten there is a poor
chance of any dust remaining. Car-
pets usually. stand . this treatment
from 18 months to two years. While
all this portable stuff is being clean-
ed, workers are'.busy inside the ear.
They do not spare disinfectant or
soap and water.
• The kitchen tables' and ice boxes
art aluminum, and all the.sauce pans
are of copper, When one considers
that several hundred meals a` day
are prepared and, served from one of
these small kitchens, it is no won-
der the diner ,service is considered
one of the most remar 'silt features
Aonnienlion wita
p ti er traffic,
. a
nitrepresent
t" atthe entire
' i i
sstm 155dining ,�whicheh a
proxiinately 8,000 ntettts per. day an
served. ' Back in the Winnipeg coach
yards is the Dining Car supply
in
d g
buil sad linen department, .
bread, rolls, . r .r
is here e th at b Calms and
3. The train carpet beater in action.
Straps attached to the roller
quickly loosen :all` dust.
pastry are made each day to meet
the demand for the Buffet and Din.
ing cars, There is,a first-class•ar?,s-
ficial ice plant installed so that the
supi3ly'of food on hand is kept in per-
fect condition. Every room; is well
stocked, with the exception of the
wine cellar, which boasts of nothing
more than soft drinks. Several
seamstresses are busy in the linen
room, where the bed and table linen
are kept in repair, The linen depart-
ment of the railway is well stocked.
There are • in the entire rail service
alone 245,253 sheets; 2.04,867 slips;
68:925 cloths; 201,933 table napkins;
and 373,20 face towels, as *di as
,lataioy other pieces The laundry lists
when checked at the end of each year
show that approximately 33,000,000
000
piecesgo through the wsh 'at
P 8' tubs,
the three big terminals and other
di asdonel pointe along the line.ne. No
steward, fir,
'w
ait �, sleeping
eepi
ng cat
conductor F �r r' pint fa Cnn-
ai n Nellie
tr without
a!
huiin...
g
graduated fwdm the s�f$ of instr¢o-
itni. They
attend re e
tataas
every morning until fu qualified
attend to the want and ne ds' . of.
travellers oval. the Canadianatc1fic
4.
theMonster I.
all getGar
the ..
l
���nPo July 18the
. „.Wednesday„
SEVEN YEARS OF
TORTURE.
Headaches and Indigestion
Ended By "reit-a=tives"
The Marvellous Fruit Med Gina
Like thousands and thousands^of,
other sufferers, Mr. Albert Verner
of Buckingham, P.Q., tried many
remedies and went to doctors and
spelt ,lists ; but nothing did him any
good.
Finally a friend advised him to try
"Fruit-avtives"---now he is well, • As
he says in a letter: +b. .
"For semen years, I suffered terribly
from Headaches and Indigestion. I
had belching gas, bitter stuff would' •
come up in my month, often vomiting,
and was terribly constipated. I took
Fruit-a-tives and this grand fruit
,nnedicine made sale well".
50e. a box, .6for '$2.50, trial size 25c,
At dealers or sent by .fruit-a.tives
Limited, Ottawa, Ont.
REGULATION x' WILL NOT BE
REPEALED
• (Orange Sentinel)
The return to power of Hon. G.
Howard Ferguson is the best assur-
ance that the people of Ontario can
get that regulation • e7 will not be
repealed. Mr. Ferguson was the auth-
or of the '-Regulation. There is •no
mans in public life in Canada who can.
more- fully be trusted to enforce the
the .school • laws so as to give every
child an adequate •instruction of the
'English language than Mr, Ferguson
;Moth, parties that opposed him in the
election last week were pledged to
repeal Regulation 17. We have the
authority of La Presse, the leading
French newspaper of Canada on that
point.
In its issue ofJ 4ne u.x th last
La Presse said: "Two of the three
*parties who are fighting for power
have affirmed that they are favorable
to the revocation of thiserule XVII.
This is at least a ra of ohpe,
and if the Liberal party should . tri-
umph at the polls it is certain that
'we shall soon see the last of this
rule." It is undoubtly the case that
the large majority secured by. Mr.
Ferguson is to be attributed to the
unanimity with which the Orange-
men and women voted in the election
They knew from the articles in The
Sentinel what the two other parties
contemplated, and they were deter-
mined to protect the interests of the
English-speaking children who reside
in the French centres of ,the ps;o
wince. The: significance of this soli-
darity of the Orange Order on a
great educational issue will not be
lost upon the public men of the pro-
vince. It is to be noted that in every
county where the Orange order is
strong a supporter of Mr. Ferguson
was elected. The Liberals and the I7.
F. O. got their support where Orange
sentiment is not alive, Notwithstand-
ing the silence of the leaders of the
two parties on this question through-
out the• whole campaign, enough in-
formation was available to prove to
.the members of our Order what they
contemplated doing in the event of
their success. The Orangemen of
Ontario have proved that it is 'not a
mere ephemeral interest that they I
take in the school question, They
have given proof of their determina-
tion to defend the Public Schoolsys-
temp and to resist the Conversion of
the Primary Schools into centres of
exclusively French teaching. They
may be assured that for the next four
years, at least, the Unity League ag-
itators will not be able to''influence
the policy of the Government of On-
tario. It is a great victory for those
who believe in maintaining the Pub-
lic School system in its integrity,
and in •maintaining laws that will
secure for every child in Ontario ad-
equate -instruction in the ` English
language. La Presse said that the
Orange element had been advised by
The Sentinel, to give its support to
the Conservativecandidate but that
it was impossible to predict what
success such advice would have, La
Presse, and the whole group of
French agitators, 'are now able to
discern how loyally the Orangemen
and Orange women of Ontario have
accepted the advice tendered to them
by this - journal. It is a matter of
rejoicing to every Orangemen en in the
province that the result of the elec-
tion is the 'return by an overwhelm-
ing majority of Hon. G. Howard For
guson, arid that. Regulation 17 will
not be repealed. •
Auto Collided With Buggy
On Sunday night George Glotcher
while driving in . East W'awanosh,
about five miles from gingham, was
struck by an automobile, Mr. Glouch-
er states he gave the car more than
half of tate road, but it struck the bug-
gy hurling it over. Mr. Gloucher's
shoulder was badly smashed, but de-
spite his injuries he controlled his hor-
se, righted the buggy and reached his'•
home, when medical aid was at once
summoned. The driver of the auto
was not gentlemanly enough • to wait
to see if he could be of assistance:
SOCIAL SERVICE CONVENTION
The active erri agency of Terenee
g P.
and Mo •al ReformworkinHuron
3 ,,
County is now known as the "1 ur-
on County Social Service. Council",
and as will be seen by an advcr
tisement in another column of this
issue, the cotumcil., .is holding it's an-
nual ' convention ort Wednesday after-
noon and evening, July 186, .in Ex-
eter.
The church people are urged to
take a greater interest in this organ-
ization itt order that our laws may
receive the respect of the people and
an impartial cnforeetnent.
Reports :from the officers, will be
received and .plans made for the com-
ing year.
Ali interested citizens are invited.
PLEASED WJTH ELECTION
Mr, j. j. Morrision appears to be
highly pleased at the defeat of the
Drury Government, which, be .says,
is "the salvation of the U,FO.. move-
ment." if Mr. Morrison had revealed.
hiTus.lf a year ago as the enemy of
the Farmers' Government, it .is pos
sibe that his position in the United
Farmers' , organization might have
been less secure. Like Hicks of
South Huron, he took advantage of•
his position in the U.F,O, to help to
bring about the down fall of the
Government. Elis organ, The Farm-
ers' Sun,: has pursued a course ex
phcable only on the .assumption that
to those who conducted it during the
eceent eafnpaign . it was a matter of
indifference whether the Government
survived the election or not. Mr.
Morrison mag be quite sincere in his
ideas about tie proper sphere of the
U.F.O. in connection with politics,.
but his methods' are a little Lob de-
vious to appeal tothe ordinary mind,
what the rank and file of the United
and it will be interesting to discover
Farmers think of them now that they
have been revealed by recent events.
It Has Done
Wonders °.,r Me
Mee. W. J. Armstrong... of 8g- Horton
Street, London, Ont. finds Dreco
the Ideal Medicine for Regulating
Her Digestive Organs. •
Once the stomach gets out of or-
der, all • the other organs of the di-
gestive system . become impaired.
Gastric pains in the back, dizziness
and other d'istresse's follow one upon
another. 13y - toning 'and regulating
the stomach, Dreco the famous herbal
remedy, brings quick and lasting re-
lief to all who suffer these ailments,
That is what Mrs. Armstrong dis-
covered and tells you in the following
statement.:
"No medicine I'have ever taken
gave me such quick relief as Dreco.
I have been troubled with gas in the
stomach after meals, heartburn and
nausea. • I often felt dizzy and spots
floated before my eyes. I was con-
stipated and had pains in my back
, over my kidneys. Two bottles of
Dreco have done wonders for me. I
neverfeel dizy, am free from back
aches, have a good , appetite and ev-
erything agrees with me. My con-
stipation has also been relieved. De -
go gets my hearty approval."
This is the time of year when the
whole body needs a thorough house-
cleaning, and thousands who have dis-
covered , the value of Dreco as a
spring tonic and renovater will avail
themselves ' of its health giving pro-
perties. Dreco is a new and scientific
combinbatiinn of herbal remedies, de-
signed to correct such stomach dis-
orders as gastritis, acid risings, sour-
ness. It tones up torpid livers and
acts gently but firmly on the bowels
Dreco contains no mercury, potash
or habit forming drugs.-
Dreco
rugs.Dreco is being specially ustroduced
in Wingham by J. Walton McKibbon,
and is ;sold by good druggists every-
where.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
:.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
pursuant to Section 56, Chap. 121 of
the Revised Statutes of Ontario, that
all have claims against the .Estate of
Joseph Murray, deceased, whodi ed on
or about the first day of May, A.D.,
1923, at the Town of. Wingham in the
Province of Ontario, are required to 1
send by post, prepaid, or to deliver to
R. yanstone, Wingham, Ontario, So-
licitor for the Executor, on or before
the sixth day of August, A.D., 1923,.
their names and addresses, with full
particulars of their claims in writing,
and the nature of the security (if any)
held by them duly verified by a stat-
utory declaration.
AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE
that after the said sixth'day of August
5923, the assets of the said estate will
be distributed by the Executor among
the parties entitled thereof, having re-
gard. only to the claims of which they
shall then have notice, and the estate
will not be liable •for any claims not
filed at the time of the saiti distribu-
tion'
DATED at Wingham this tenth day
of July, A,D., 1923.
R. VANSTONE,
Wingham .P.O.
Solicitor. Executor,
c .
MARQUIS WHEAT
Man has learned to do some remark-
able things with organic life, both an-
imal and vegetable. He must do
the work experimentally, for although
he has found out much about the
laws that govern heredity, he cannot
account for some of the things that
happen or fail to happen when living
stocks are blended. But still he us-
ually finds a way to get what lie
wants from. his Mother Nature. Let
us consider, for •an example,, Marquis
wheat.
Northwestern Canada is a land of
widespread prairies well adapted, so
far as soil is concerned, to wheat
fanning and too far north for any
other crop that is nearly' so profit-
able as wheat. But you cannot grow
winter wheat in . Canada or even in
the northern tier of states in our own
country. The Severe winters are sure
to kill any plants that have sprouted
and begun to grow in the fall. Can-
ada must have a spring -sown wheat,
and, if its people are to take advant-
age of the fields that spread up to
the Peace River Valley within a few
degrees of the Attic Circle, et must
be a rapidly growing variety, one
that
matures within tenweeks of
planting,
There are other qualities that a
useful variety must have.' It must
be able to resist drough no less than
cold, for western Canada is often
both Cold and dry. if it is to sell at
a good price, it must mill • well and
a good price, it must mill well, bake
well and produce a high yield to the
acre. There have always been varie-
ties of wheat that have one or two of
iia Anlira lhAti
The Euro can Corn orer leaves
no question of doubt as to its presence
in a field of corn. Guard carefully
against the infestation of your crop.
Z�"Beware of Th • e Sign
The first easily observed
sign :of the infestation
�'is
the breaking over of the
corn tassels,
Later the feeding of the
}
"worms" begins to show
on the stalks, which, being
greatly weakened, break
over.
Finally the cobs and
shanks become infested
and the entirestab col-
lapses to the ground.
The borer then seals it-
self for the winter in corn
stubble or corn stalks,
which must either be
burnt up or ploughed un-
der before June 1st of the
year following.
Write for Pamphlet on the
control of this insect
Dominion Department of Agricultur •,-,
Arthur Gibson—Dominion Entomologist
(Note: Address enquiries to the Dominion Entomologist, Entomo-
logical Branch, Ottawa. Send specimens for identification to Dominion
mEntoniolological LaogicaIbEie1doratoryL,aboratoryPortStanle,. strathroy,Ont,T r, Ontario, or Provincial Ento-
•
Division of Field Crop and Garden Insects,
Entomological . Branch, Ottawa, Ont.
eet
Use it with:
Strawberries
Raspberries
Rhubarb
Gooseberries
Cherries
Currants
Blackberries
and other
fruits in
season
your
.
The delicious, superior quality of the jams
and jellies you can make so easily with Certo ''
would alone make a trial well worth while.
Besides, you get 50% MORE from the
same fruit—only one minute's boiling re-
quired—full flavor and color of fruit retained
—perfect texture -certainty of success with
any fruit. Complete booklet of recipes with
every bottle,
If your grocer does not have: Certo, send
his name and 40c and we will mail you a
bottle. -Write today for revised Certo Book-
let of 73 recipes (free).
hid a;
ii�R,tIC���U�k
Douglas Packing
Company-, Limited,
Cobourg 55
How to Make Delicious Cherry Jam
Sour cherries give finest flavor.
Pit and .'crush well about 2% lbs.
Cherries. Measure 4 level cups (2
lbs.) crushed cherries into large ket-
tle and add 14 cup water. Tie three
tablespoons pits in cloth and crush
with hammer,: Place with cherries to
increase flavor, stir ',until boiling,
cover kettle, simmer 10 minutes,
then remove pits. Add 714 level
cups (314 lbs.) ; sugar and mix well.
Use hottest fire, and stir constantly
before and while boiling. Boil hard.
for one minute, remove from ire anti
stir in 1 bottle (scant Cup) Certo„
From time jam is taken off fire allow
to stand, with occasional stirring, 5
minutes only, by the clock, skim, then
pour into glasses.
SYLF-OI ,ING -- SELF-REGULATING
With the Strongest Tower* Built
It's the, "Toronto" Self -Oiling Windmill—requiring "oil only once
a year . All gears operate in a bath of special oil affected by
neither heat nor cold—every
bearing and
working part thoroughly and automatically
lubricated.
If you have a "Toronto" Windmill now, you can obtain
this self -oiling feature by interchanging the had and
using your present wheel, Most Toronto Wmdnaills,,
too, can be made absolutely self-regulating in operation.
The "Toronto" Tower will stand for a lifetime because it
is the heaviest, strongest and best -braced one built for any
windmill. See this new Mill now --or get my booklet.
W. it DAVIDSON, Will ham
reo+1°mdrs
those five essential qualities, but un-
til recently there was none that com-
bined all of them, That there is
one now is owing to the long >and
patient labor of Dr. William Saunders I
of Ottawa and his two sons.
Beginninggwith a Russian wheat
x
that will ripen in, a latitude of more
than sixty degrees north, they cross -1
ed it with the well-known Red Fife ;
wheat, which has superior milling
,rfuttlities. When they had got a by -1
brid variety that would ripen within 1
seventy days and make excellent
flour they bred into it a Calcutta
wheat t at is notable for productive-
ness
du ti a-
ness .
and for its power to resist;
drough, And so year after year they
worked away, trying one combination;
after another, selecting this and re-
jecting that, finding that one hopeful
kind of crossbreeding would not an-
swar mid that another, tried on the;
off-ehanee would answer very well,
until at last they had produced a
stable seed that would produce
wheat with every desirable (milli -
than those whom Dean Swift praised
ty for subarctic etilture, That wheat
they call Marquis.
Incidentally theSaunderses estab-
lished another variety that they can-
ed ' Prelude.; It 'will ripen in eight
weeks and has been taised at Dawson
within three degrees of the Attic
Circle. It may perhaps be grown
even in the. lower Yukon Valley. It
does not produce: heavily, however,
and for that reason is not worth
planting where any other variety will
grow.
Theer i e the
s v c o£ family
not only to their native country but
to mankind as well is worthy of more
recognition than it has , received.
Tiley are mien who have done better
thanthoso1 oln Dean
w l Swift praised
so highly—Use men who make two.
blades of grass or two ears of corn
grow where only one grew before.
They have caused whole acres of
waving grain to spring.ttp where be-
fore none would grow. • They have,
pushed forward the domain of eiviliz-•
ed 'ten in the faee of raid and
drough and given to • C'soatla ttew
homes for its people and new sources
of inexhaustible wealth.
':i