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The Wingham Advance, 1906-04-26, Page 5•0000.00000.00.0000.0.0440 04400.0••••••••ON•••OON• SOFT BOSOM SHIRTS * ALL NEW PATTERNS CROWDf R', New Spring �l�1�S. • • • • O••a • • • Asu' 0 18 is the largest and best stock of Men's Clu lin in Winghatn, it, of course, implies that the Suit you elect to wear, may be best bought here, Our Clothing is so per- fect fitting that in ten eai•ea out of twelve not the slightest alteration is necessary. This shows what skilful designing, cutting and tailoring amount to. But when buying your New Suit bear in mind that fabrics and fit are not all -it is the prime element of style, tone and individuality that gives to the garment that charm and character which dis- tinguishes Crowder's' Clothing. New Sack Suits. Such an aggregation of patterns and styles at $10 and $12 will not bo found in any outer store in Huron. All the now Tweed and Mixed Wor- sted effects, in stripes and overchcoks, sizes 32 to 40 chest, single and double breasted styles. 'These Suits aro well worth $12 and $15 ca., $IQ r_ & I2 Our Price $ loth Century Brand. wove just received several new Patterns in the 20th Century Brand Suits. Sizes 31 to 4.2 chest. Mixed Twed effects, ideondobreastecetre and single and Those Suits equal any and 23 Dollar Suits bot in other stores - Our $12 & $18 Price Men's and Youths' Hack Suits. We have a number of Odd Tweed Suits, sizes 33 to 40 chest, regular prices essofUso Suits brokenlig 'weedthose are repeat and are clearing thorn $6'00 out at Men's Fancy Vests. this Every t,e single andwn adouble breassted styles, neat stripes, etc., silk and linen mixtures. 4S chest Sizes $1.25 t0 $3.00 Children's Wash Suits. A]1 the latest styles in Buster Brown, the new long Blouse effect with Bloomer knickers, for ages 3 to 8 years -at prices from $1.00 t0 2.50 NEW HATS. -Hard and Soft, all the latest styles $1.00 to $3 30 BOOTS AND SHOES TRUNKS AND VALISES 40 Packing Boxes for Salo. 1 P£ 0 • 0 O •2 ♦ ♦ • i 1 The R. f e Crowder Co.• ••••••♦••••••••••••••♦••O• 44.44O040••••••••••••••40•4 --A number of Russian soldiers of- ficially reported as dead, but who were really prisoner:3 in the hands of the Japanese, have since the war re- turned in safety to their homes. In a number of cases these men have found their wives, who had accepted the of- ficial reports as true, remarried. In one case a child had been born. This case was carried to the courts, and it was decided the first husband should get his wife back, while the second took the child. The Worst Of Cold. Is how soddenly it comes. No time to hurry to the drug store, croup de- velops, the, lungs are effected with pneumonia of tuberculosis and it's too late. Keep Catarrhozono on hand, --- it kills cold instantly. Something magical about the way it cures Ca- tarrh and Bronchitis. Caatarrhozone is the best remedy because it cures in nature's way ; it heals, soothes and restoresP erman Y• Carry entl G • ' a (iatitr- rhozoneinhaler in your pocket, use it occasionally and you will never catch cold -that's worth remembering. OUR TURN NOW. 1 .AAAAAAAAI.MM In the last eight years, you've heard of great cut prices in Furniture, and clearing sales. Now, if you want to see and experience a real Clearing Sale, you cab find it our store. From now until May 31st, we intend offering our large stook at reduced' prices, and also keeping up the stock, so that none will be disarpointed. We have carried a large stock over winter, and have large orders coming in for the spring trade. All must go at the same price. You have done well to wait for this great chance. Parlor Suites, Bedroom Suites, Couches, Dining Chairs, Sideboards, Extension Tables, Buffets, Hall Racks, Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, in fact anything needed in a. house. Thanks for past favors; a continuance of your patronage solicited. Undertaking promptly and care- fully attended to. Walker Bros. & Button Furniture Dealers and Undertakers ,.601!kGauiAlArai'i 11.146J +�Wsy a!�iia. iMs.u:h Large Square Ovens. Even Bakers. TI E-• "Crown Huron" Cast Ranges -AND TUE--- " Huron" Steel Ranges Have very high ovens. Baking can be done on oven bottom and oven rack at same time. Our guarantee goes with every "Enron." -----ltrAfE BY - The WesternFoundry Co., Limited Wingharn, Ontario. 111011111111111110isisiiiiiiiINIMIN 4110 THE WINGFIAM ADVANCE -- TIIURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1906. llews 'items Winnipeg will spend a million and a half in local improvements. Exeter, April 20. --One of the grain warehouses owned by Lovett and Rol- lins was burned to the ground, Loss, $1,000. ---Tire population of EIderslie has dropped to 2,018, which is very little more than half 1 what it was in 1871. The figures in that year were 3,989. -Me. 1+'. W. Morse, general man- ager of the Grand Trunk Pacific, an- nounces that 200 miles of the G. T. P. west of Edmonton is under contract. ---A white Shorthorn cow, belong- ing to Mr. Arrnstrong, B1itterlcss, Cumberland, England, has had six calves in a year and ten months. They are all doing well. -Geo. Riley, who used to live in Carrick, went west this spring taking with hint three span of horses. One team lie sold for $000, although they only cost hint $320. He was offered $500 for each of the other teams. --The Tomisi:aming and Northern Ontario Railway Company will ex- tend their line from North Bay to Nipissing Junction, a distance of four miles. This will make a direct con- nection with the Grand Trunk Rail- way. A round house will be built at Nipissing .junction and another 135 miles north. -Stratford had a great boom last snarler in the building line. This yearpromises. 3 to be c 1 just as good, many building permits are being is- sued each day, and they are principal- ly for the better class of residences, aggregating in cost over $75,000. Per- mits have been issued for other build- ings, bringing the total amount up to $100,000. Tilbury, April l9 When an extra t eastbound M.C.R.R. freight train, in charge of Conductor McCaffray, was pulling through the south side switch, about a F rile east of the station to -night, the rails spread under the engine, which up -turned on the edge of a ditch. The engineer and fireman jumped, and escaped injury. A car of sheep in the train was telescoped, and seventy-two sheep were killed. -How the West is drawing on On- tario or sections of it for settlers is shown by the statement of a grocery traveller' to the Canadian Grocer. This traveller stated that between Palmerston and. Southampton, a dis- tance of 53 utiles, 50 cars of settlers and settlers' effects had gone West in one week, and from Grand Valley '25 cars of settler's and their effects had gone to the great wheat country. A merchant had told hire that he believ- ed there were 25 per cent. fewer con- sumers in Huron and Brace than there were ten years ago. Messrs. Gutteridge & Edge, contrac- tors of Seaforth, have secured the con- tract for all the stations and other buildings on the nei'v Toronto -Sudbury branch of the C. P. R., between Bol- ton and Parry Sound. This includes some 12 station houses, etc. The con- tract will total in the neighborhood of $100,000. Work will be commenced on it right away. This, together with the contract on the Guelph-Goderich line, will keep them busy all season. Mr. Gutteridge left on Wednesday afternoon with a gang of 20 men to work on the Guelph-Goderich con- tract. -It is proposed to hand over to the Lieutenant -Governor -in -Council to de- vote to charity the $2,000 which Mr. R. R. Gamey deposited in the hands of the Court during the investigation of his charges against certain mem- bers of the late Liberal Government in 1903. Mr. Gainey himself will have the final voice as to the particular charity to which it shall be given. and he has decided that it will be better expended on the I•Iospital for Sick Children than on any other institu- tion. As soon as the Premier's bill becomes law, and the transfer of the money is made, it will be paid over to that hospital. Lucknow. A cow belonging to Mr. Jas. Suth- erland, of the 0th con. of Kinloss, last week gave birth to a calf that weighed 110 pounds. The home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Portice of Kinloss was the scene of a very happy event on Wednesday, April llth, when their danghter, Miss Nellie was married to Mr. Robt. Norman of the north line. On Monday afternoon the amn181 vestry ]Heeling of Christ Church was 1101(1 in the church and the regular business of the church was transact- ed. The church is in a flourishing condition and everything in a satis- factory state. The following persons installed long distance phones last week, viz -E, S. McLean, W. J. Taylor, John Joynt, 1+`. McCaughey, John McGarry, W. Mnrdie. D. C. Taylor is having his phone removed from the stole to his house, P. II. Tansley is doing the work. Another of the pioneer settlers of Ash has been removed by the death of lifts. Win, Lane, sr., whose death oc- curred on Monday of last week, She had reached the ripe'old age of almost ninety-one years, being born in De- vonshire, England, on the 5th of ,Thee, 1815. Mrs, Lleaves behind her five children, thirty-six grandchildren and twenty-flve great-gratndehildren to mourn her loss. She was .a mem- ber of long-standing in the Methodist Church, CI1nton. During the first three months of 1900 thele have been 11 interments in Clinton cemetery ; during the same time in 1905 there were 21. The Easter offering in St. Paul's church was a generous one, amount- ing to nearly $900. Of this amount $300 was given by one staunch mem- her of the congregation. A shipment of registered Shropshire sheep was made from Clinton station last Friday to Mr. Dunham of Michi- gan. rc t-gan. 00 were bought from John Mac- farlane, 10 from Edward Glenn, both of Stanley, and 4 from Geo. Elliott of Goderich township. The local Orange lodge has taken a newlease of life, for during the past few weeks it has made greater pro- gress than in as many years before. So marked is the growth that special meetings are being held to initiate candidates and for the conferring of degrees. Mr. C. J. Wallis returned on Mon- day from a six weeks' business trip to the Northwest. He says the rush is extraordinary and that 40,000 Ameri- cans alone have located there this sea- son. At every railway station car- loads of settlers' effects are arriving daily, at several small towns the num- ber being already over 200. Mr. J. H. Ruddell, M. P. P., of Mor- den, Manitoba, dropped dead in his dining -room while reading on Tuesday evening. The sudden taking off of Mr. Ruddell has greatly shocked the community. His political supporters were making great preparations to banquet him on Thursday evening next as evidence of their confidence and esteem, but instead will follow him to the grave. Heart failure was the cause of death. Mr. Ruddell was a native of Hullett, a son of lIr. Geo. Ruddell of near Londesboro. Bonus For Creamery Cold Storage. Paarliarnen t will be asked to extend the bonus of $100 on cold storage at creameries to the year 1900. Pay- ment ment of the full amount of the bonus will he made at the close of the butter - making season, upon fulfilment of the following conditions, viz. : (1) An efficient cold storage must be built, according to plans and specifica- tions supplied, or approved, by the Dairy Commissioner, Ottawa. (2) A sufficiently low temperature must be maintained in the cold stor- age to protect the batter against in- jury for a reasonable length of time. Creamery owners desiring to take advantage of this bonus will be re- quired. (1) To make application before July 1st, 1900, on forms provided for the purpose; (2) To send in a daily record of tem- perature maintained in the cold stor- age, once a month during the sea- son. The construction of the cold stor- age will have to pass inspection by an officer of the Department, or some person designated to make a report on it. Revised plans and specifications for creamery cold storages, on the "Air Circulation" system and the "Cylind- er" system, will be furnished on ap- plication. Some experiments in insulation were conducted by the Cold Storage Division last summer, and, as a result of the information thus obtained, we are able to recommend a rather cheap- er form of construction than has hitherto been considered advisable. The plans have been revised accord- ingly. J. A. RUDDICK Dairy Commissioner. GROWING GOOD GRAIN. This year• of grace, 1000, ought to realize a marked advance in the quantity and quality of grain produc- ed upon Canadian farms. The value of this year's crop can be increased enanyfold if farriers everywhere will but focus their attention now upon securing the best seed grain available suited to their locality, and cleaning it with scrupulous care with an ef- ficient fanning mill. Not only should the seed grain be free from seeds of foul weeds, but it should be so screen- ed that all shrunken or imperfect grains will be eliminated, and the little plaint which springs from the encased germ receive a fair start in life. The first nourishment comes from what is enclosed in the little lull. Then the plantlet throws out its rootlets, and through the agency of moisture drinks in plant food from the surrounding soil, which should be in such a fine )neehanicai.l condition that the plant food contained will be at once available. Farmers should be securing all oxtail supplies cif seed grain, in order to be ready for early seeding. From the Seed Branch of the Department of Agriculture, in charge of Mr. G. It Clark, Seed Com- missioner, just now is being distribut- ed a fund of useful information, con- tained in, first, a ropy of the Seed Control Act, with explanations and instrnetions ; second, the evidence of M.1'. Clark before the i1.gril'ulturol eerumittee of the last session of Par- liament ; and, third, the complete re- port of the second 1111110111 meeting of the Canadian Seed -growers' Associa- tion, held last year it% Ottawa, where a series of valuable papers Were read and discussed, covering nearly all phases of this practical and important subject. `Vo presume that copies of these may be obtained by our readers by sending a past -card request to Mr, G. I#, Clark, .Seed Comutr., Dept. of sigi1ettlttti'e" Ottawa, Goderich. The heavy r(i15 for this end of the 0.1'. R. track are being delivered at the dock ; they are made by the Cana- dian mills, ,Sault Ste. Marie. The tugs Evelyn and Two Macs and the gasoline fishing boat Bruce are lifting neatly every day, so that there is no scarcity of fish for local con- sumption. On Tuesday last a citizen received from New v York City a rbagof t lac a fertilizing phosphate which he had ordered, about three pounds, and had to pay one dollar express charges thereon. The elevator is rising steadily and the large number of hands and teams now employed by the contractor makes it look as if the building will be ready for the reception of wheat on Dominion Day. The evangelistic services in North Street Methodist Church are being held every night this week except Sat- u'da i Sat- urday. A x McHartlyi a able, y s an aL )le, faithful and fearless preacher of the Gospel and has haat a wide and suc- cessful experience. It is now understood that there will be three boats running between this port and ports east and west during the summer. Two of thein will take the lake Erie and Georgian Bay route, calling at Goderich on up and down trips weekly, while the 11111(1 will run from Windsor to Kincardine, making three round trips, calling at this port six times, three up and three down weekly. At the meeting of the Royal Arch Chapter of the Masonic order on Tues- day evening Grand District Deputy E. L. Dickinson was presented with a grand superintendent's regalia, the presentation being laude on behalf of the chapter by Right Ex -Comp. R, Radcliffe. The affair was entirely of anim impromptu i• al to natn e an1V • 1 Tr. Dickin- son was quite taken 1)37 surprise, but expressed his appreciation of the gift in appropriate language. The trestle work fa • 1 ca n the top of the southern abntment along Squaw Is- land is being built southward, and when completed P 1 letecl i t will be used to place the superstructure of the Mait- land River R. R. bridge in position. The G.T.R. ti•ackrnen are patting in a switch to connect with the C. P. R., by which the cars of the G. T. R. will carry the iron work for the bridge to a position from which it can be raised by crane on to the piers and abut- ments. It is expected that by the middle of May the work of placing the bridge in position will 1)0 in fall opera- tion. Yon feel the life giving current the minute you take it. A gentle sooth- ing warmth, fills the nerves and blood with life. Its a real pleasure to take Hol i lister , RockyMountain Tea. 35c, Tea or Tablets. 1lsk your druggist. DAIRY POINTERS 1 Much stress Is being placed by cer- tain farm and dairy speakers this year on the importance of a home supply of cows, farmer raised milkers, whose history and bringing up the farmer knows all about and which, one by oue, take their place in the milking line without the requirement of a large sum of spot cash on the part of the farmer. The advice is good. On many farms the cost and care of the young stock are scarcely noted, and the cows so raised may be better than can be bought at any price within reach of the owner. Then, too, there is small chance of building up a choice, handsome, heavy milking herd unless the members are carefully bred and selected on the farm year by year. -,American Cultivator. Vaseline In the Cow Barn. We use considerable vaseline in the cow stable, says II. G. ,Manchester in Rural New Yorker. Whenever a cow has a sore or scratched teat a little rubbed on just before milking softens the teat, so that she does not object to gentle pressure and helps much to quiet milking. After milking a little more rubbed over the sore spot helps to heal the trouble. The cost is small, 15 to 20 cents a pound, and its use pays. Do not put on so much that the' teats are slimy, as a little goes a great way. We bore an Inch hole Into the side of the milking stool about two' inches, and we keep the vaseline in this. It is always at hand, yet out of the way. "Vaseline" is a trade name, and often one can buy "petrolatum" or "petroleum jelly," which Is the same thing, for less than is asked for vase - line. Frozen Cream. If the cream is permitted to freeze it is apt to impair the flavor of the but- ter, for we believe that when cream is' kept where it is so cold that it freezes it is impossible to ripen it properly, says Hoard's Dairyman. Moreover, butter made from cream that has been frozen is apt to have au oily appearance and taste sinless great care is exercised in thawing it out. Fishy Butter. E. II. Webster, chief of the dairy di- vision at Washington, stated that the experiments of the divisiou show quite conclusively that the fishy flavor in butter comes from the cows drinking stagnant water. Day adds unto day convincing proof that the fain end of this butter business has a great deal to do with the final quality and the final price reserved for the butter, Watering Cows. Cows should have all the water they will drink. Ilow often to offer thein water will depend somewhat upon their habits. Many tows will not drink but once a day, bnt we think it better to train them to divide the nineuut. A good praetice is to give thele oppor- tunity to drink just before the usual time for letting them out for the daily airing and again shortly. before the i'f 41141.t ..... .. , r A. cow must be kept comfortable. That means that she must be kept warm, said N. P. Hull In an address to Michigan dairymen. You will excuse me for referring to my own business; but, just to illustrate, it comes in nice- ly, for I know more about my own business than ally other man's anyway. I was buying cows, and a man who was selliug his product at the salve place I sold mice offered me a cow. I looked at ber, and she looked like a good cow, so I bought her. After I had bought her I asked, "What is the mat- ter with this cow, that you wanted to sell her?" There Is no use in asking before you buy a cow, brit If you ask afterward you may find out, I asked this man, and he said, "Well, she does not give mills enough," Ile bad five other cows, and he said this was the poorest one. I took her home and put her In the barn. The temperature in my barn never gets down to freezing. I have a covered barnyard, and the cows never get out from the time they go in in the fall until they get out in the spring. She freshened Oct. 8, and a year from that day I had 14,000 pounds of milk, $140, from that one poor cow. ,That was the best cow that man own- ed, What was the reason he did not know it? He turned her out in the morning,and, instead of covering her ribs with fat to keep out the cold, she stood there and shivered, and when she was put under the right conditions she was one of the best cows ever in the state of Michigan and yielded a profit like that. Just these three things let me say again: What will make forty cows give milk will make one cow give milk: This applies to the one cow dairyman as much as to the forty cow dairyman. When you want a cow, get a good cow and feed her all she can eat. There is no use in keeping ju st a cow. It takes $18 or $20 to keep her just a cow, and after you pay $20 to run that machin- ery you must make that machinery run to its maximum capacity. Value of a Pure Bred Sire. The Nebraska farmer in a very fu thoug h article, / P thoughtful ht ale telling us as farm- ers where we are losing money every day and year, names the scrub sire as one of the greatest of these evils and losses. Farmers who are accustomed to figure close know this is true, says Hoard's Dairyman. A dairy farmer not long since was telling us some of his experiences in this line. In the last twelve years he had purchased pure bred Holstein bulls to head his herd to the amount of $300. He has sold grade Holstein cows and heifers in that time to the Dumber of seventy-five, besides having the benefit of the increasing production of his ]herd In milk, which, he calculated, was $1,- 500. He calculated that his grade ani- mals sold for at least $25 more because of the pure bred blood that was in them. His total cattle sales amounted to $3,750. 0. T ent9 dollars apiecei ece on the seventy -flue animals would amount to $1,500. Add this sum to the in- creased milk value, and we have $3,000 as the direct result of buying pure bred bulls instead of grades. Typical Dutch Belted Cow. The Dutch belted cow Echo II. has a milk record of 12,52S pounds and 42-1 pounds of butter in one year, says American Agriculturist, from which the picture herewith shown is reproduced. She won the championship breeds as the best dairycow in the DUTCH BELTED COW ECHO II. show at Batavia, N. Y., in 1902 and at Iiamburg, N. Y., in 1904. She is re- garded by the best judges as a cow of remarkable dairy quality, and one has but to look at her to see that she is wonderfully perfect in belt. She has for four years beaten all females of her own breed. • Bedding For Cows. The merits of different bedding mate- rials were tested quite thoroughly at the Maryland station last winter. It was found that the cheapest marteriaai was sawdust at 25 cents per load, allowing also 50 cents for hauling. About twelve pounds of sawdust per cow were needed when the cows were kept in the stable all the time, The best absorbing material was wood shavings, which, however, cost $0 per ton, making the cost per year $4,81 per cow. Good stover as bedding cost $3.05 per cow, requiring four pounds a day, and uncut wheat straw required five pounds a day and cost $4.15 per year at $5 per ton, The conelusion is that wherever sawdust can be obtained within a reasonable distance it will be the cheapest material. It kept the cows cleaner than anything else and stayed In place better. The only objection was that It carried so much moisture as to make it a little damp. The Cow That Pays. The cow that pays her owner $5 per month for her board and lodging is a star boarder and deserves the best. '.here are many such cows and many which are even more profitable to their 'owners �� _.. _ ;# I11©1/Wain aTt11141 ,.r *"n ► I LLO N . I N E 'STAY FENCE... 1.01\r I. 'I ;In mann )li:l.DSTdw rt tun et twos 1110'1 t'.5011) 1 1,041 n:rr1 leirn, and rail l 1' te.l to farm las eli'Mq sr ronlractbn ('int PX• , 1 lulu:. lllnrar.)? d 1 1111 1 r title--, lawn ng'nte .v nnr,L. CAUGHT COLD ON THE C.P.R. A. E. Mumford m and icily how Psyching cured him after the Doctors gave him up "" It is twelve e rssince Psychine ne curedred me ofailo ingg consumption." The speaker was Mr, A. E. Mumford, six feet tall, and looking just what ho is a husky healthy farmer, lie works his own farce near Magnetawan, Ont. " I caught my cold working as a fireman. on the C.P.R." he continued. "I had night sweats,chills and fever and frequent-, lycoughed upieces of my lungs, wa sinking fast and the doctors said there was no hope for me. Two months treat- ment of Psychine put me right on my feet and I have had no return of lung trouble since." If Mr. Mumford had started to take Psychine when he first caught cold he would have saved himself a lot of anxiety and suffering. Psyehine cures all lung troubles by killing the germs -the roots of the disease. PSYCHINE (Pronounced Si -keen) 50c. Per Battle Larger elute $1 and $2 -all druggists. DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited, Toronto. LIFE INSURANCE FIRE Lowest rates consistent with absolute security. All claims promptly settled Abner Cosens ACCIDENT PLATE CLASS WANTED. --By Chicago wholesale house, special representative (man or woman) for each province in Canada. Salary $20.00 and expenses Paid weekly. Expense money advanced. Business successful; position permanent. No in- vestment required. Previous experience not essential to engaging. Address - General Manager, 134 Lake street, Chicago, Ill., U, S. A. ••••♦♦••♦♦•••••••••••••••o • • 1 ••••••••••••••••••••N40•0 Mlske Smvorkum. The best place to buy a Piano or Organ, is right here; we have the best makes, and prices are right. SEWING MACHINES. Iu these we handle thehit W e Canadian, and New Williams; these are among the best on the market. David Bell Stand -Opp. Skating Rink s 0- • •0 •♦ • •♦ • •i t 2 Tinsmithing In all its branches done neatly, promptly and at reasonable rates. Good stock of TINWARE on hand. Try us for your Jobbing and Eavetroughing STOVES and RANGES of the best makes on hand. Our prices are very reasonable. When in need of anything in our line, give ns a call. We'll treat you right. Robt. Mooney $ 1.00 ROUND THIP GODERICH TO ET1OIT TUESDAY, JUNE 19 RETURNING JUNE 21 St'r GREYHOUND 2 Days in Detroit • n WRITE E. H. AYER, ART., DETROIT FOR PARTICULARS. RAVE YOU A BOSS? or are you in,l :". pendent? If you aro making money for some and else, quit and snake money for yourself, Get out of slavery and be free, Write G. 11IA1csnAt.r, .fit 00., l;oudou. They will show you the way. They have started thousand9 on the toad to freedom, Seven dollars a day, every day iu the year, is he. Int made handling their goods. Write aorta `alga 311 Monty*