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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-11-05, Page 4their nr;rai fl avor— c ak,es, puddings, etc., baked in .a r•, 1'11,i. fatie t11Ni` ii if r ie•, n.n•A,,, L..Iil,[rb.til.11gaA WI= Tbero clefs Nr Pat¢gtlfeditiaeAct. filtaait1i rAse lheeVood4andRe�jeki ,till$ibe$ of andliorrers r riii7 TxS��CxI1<]iR> Promotes Digestion,CiteelM nessnnd test:ContatnsilleittKr Q t<ia.1orphine norMitter• NAnc OTIC. ,, Aperfect Remedy ferCenSliPa tion? SourSlomach,Diarfh Worms,Convuisions. everisa tees end LOSSOF LEEF. .' TacS�in�,pile'�S'�lgnaof. rurer t:/fit go TNe L NTAURCOMP»W.' MONTREAL I tNEW YORK' 'At 6, xnonlhs old y 35 DdsE5 3SCE1rrsl Exact Copy of Wrapper. For Infanta and tihihir 400,00,04 The Kind You Have Always Bouhi Bears .the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTOR! TN! CENTAN,. COMPANY. NRw Yolt,c c1TY. 411111111t11t11i11i11t11t11t mit11 1tlttltltt11111itli11t11tlTtl1t11i11 ttw .... EE ..„---- Wingham Apple _.-.--= :Th..------ .... E Butter FactoryE ' -.--:__-...._ 110, ...II M. ..,. .... -w Don't let your apples wiste ,vherl t ou •c in have w thein turned into good use at a small cosi.. E We also buy apples and manufacture them into apple butter whit we ,;(.. -.11 at 66 per pound. shipped in - 15, 3o 6o lb teteanypart..'` -y'• All orders promptly attended to 4 tt1M- E. Merkley & Son Machine Shop and Residence on North end of Josepbine ea next to Mill Dam. PHONE 84. P. O. BOX 62 LULULULl�it�iilitlll�1ULUiti l� illti��dit�iildf��ititf tt€i�t�lt�lli Fast Monteal— Toronto—Detroit— These solid de luxe trains, carrying 1 buffet -library - compartment - observa- tion cars. electric -lighted standand sleepers, together with standard din- ing car service between Montreal -To- ronto -Detroit. -Chicago, via Canadian Pacific and Michigan Central railroads are known as "The Canadian," and operated daily through the Michigan Central twin tubes between Windsor and Detroit, Westbound: Leaving Montreal 8.45 a.m., arriving Toronto 5 40 p.m; leay. ing Toronto 6.10 p.m , leaving Londe, 9.33 p.m., arriving Windsor 1210 a rn arriving Dstroit11.35 p.m. (cenrrel time); leaving •Detroit 11,55 p arriving Ohicagn 7 45 a m. Eastbauad : Leaving Chicago 6 10 p. in. (central time) ; arriving Detrol.t (3f. C. kir. Depot)12.35 a. m, ; leaving Detroit (M. C. R. Depot) 12.43 a.m. ; leaving Detroit (Fort street) 11 40 p.m leaving Windsor (0. P. R.) I.20 a ni (eastern time) leaving Windn.•r (M (' R. Depot) 2.10 a. m., leaning Lend - 5.15 a. m. ; arriving Toeinatt 8 31 n. m. ; leaving Toronto 9 00 a. rn. ; riving Montreal 6.10 p. ut. Full particulars from Canadian P".- efflo ticket, agents, or write M. G. Murphy, District Passenger, Toronto, Chicago Train Service, Cream Wanted Having an up-to-date CJreamery in full operation we solicit your cream patronage. Wears prepared to pay the highest market prices forgo' cream and ;sive you an honest businNsn; weighing. samplihg and testing each an Of cream received oar full and returning a fol e y t g statement of seine to each patron, We furnish two cans to eaoh ousto mer, pay all express charges and pay every two weeks. Write for full partionlars or send for cans and give ns a trial. SEAFORTH CREAMERY SEAPORTH, ONT. A DEMOCRATIC KiNG One of the Reasons Belgium's Biller is Honored and Loved "Whet' King Albert visited Paris in 1910 it was rioted that is his speech at the Elysee he referred to the Bel- gians as "my compariots," not "my subjects." This way of #peaking is tyliett1 of one who delights, above all things, in being democratic 1+10 lea g, t g g before his accession the King and bis wit* went for a prolonged ramble toned Belgium, studying provincial and local peculiarities, and maintain- eagethes etrintest ineegnito „1tlpugheut their journey. ' " aa -al i�zinz`ie- the life of the common people, and did not disdain the rough resorts of fishermen and sailors. The experience proved so enjoyable that the King and Queen have repeated it more than once, and it may be safely asserted that the knowledge thus gained by them of their "compatriots" is with- out a parallel in the Iives of Euro- pean monarchs. Kaiser Copies Napoleon In 1815 the total forces, at the corn mend of Napoleon were inferior in numbers to the total forces that the allies could count upon. Then it was Napoleon's plan to meet the superior numbers of his enemy before they could combine, and so opposing In- ferior numbers in desperate engago- I menta in the end destroy the whole. I This is the Kaiser's plan to -day, He planned to rush through Belgium, and reach Paris, incidentally destroying the French army, before the'gigantle Russian war machine could become unlimbered, then to wheel back again and meet Russia. Napoieon hoped to destroy the British army before the Prussians arrived, and then to turn upon them. Napoleon's plan mis: calculated. So, apparently, has the "Business as Usual" Contracts aggregating in round figures half a reilliin of dollars have been given to manufacturers of Wind- sor, Waikerville and Sandwich by the Dominion Government for war sup- plies. The goods Comprise automo- biles, ammunition, clothing, and Me - tor or trucks blankets, etc An order for one and a half million shirts for the British forces has been allotted among the various shirt manu- facturers in Canada, The order will keep almost every shirt factory in Canada buffy diking the winter months. ASTHMA COUGHS BISCRObLS CROUP CATARRH COD 14 Est,1879 A simple, safe and effective treatment avoid- ing drugs. Used with success lot 35 years. The tir carryin; the antiacpcvhpot, inhaled with every breath, makes bteethtng easy, soothesthesarethroht, and amps the rough, esauringrest(ttlnights. Cresolene is invaluable to mothers witho y ung children and a boon to sufeterb from Asthma. Send la postal or dominate booklet eitrg..0 ire i'1t111gdtOTa VAPO-CRESOLENE CO. Leaaliniat kielieghntr'i ccitar MMS irp and•.f•r acome fresh and sweet ikar a from its ..erfe t e .perfectly. ventilated oven. See the, MY cy C1ary dealer in yourtown. ),IN p R. R. MOONE'Y, Ag::rrzt Wamghtn. A, recent note in the Cenadtt ]n Courier says :—"Among one hundred 1 TER CE AN CRUISERS ()median nurses who have been tin,►1 ; 1 j I�?J ly selected f •om the five hundred vel unteersfor field work is Miss Ueler- United rlaing d tine. Gran, of 13']leville, who tot,lc a Sca3 ofEffoE t neks,Iy'e fuMase VesselsetoClear it 1«1-gt'"d.ive et,nrr,tt ,tt the tI *'tx Tho Acinlfralty has issued a state- YI7lirrrrg 11 1<piral Kerne yer6rN tic• snort outitiling the steps thee aro be- elike Geen i t the g;randd t nuhter t,f fl ing taken to round• up the e, gl:t or de Forneri, Aum"'itne Peof..see• ,nine Germans cruisers at largo in tea. Mod ens at the University t,f Ter Atlantic Piealie anti Indian Oceans. These cl i. ea include the nltn , to, and ie the great grand•daugh er ' which has sunk or captured twenty an officers in Napoleon's guard." ; British vessels to date lie the Indian Miss Geen is the eldest sister cr' I Ocean, and the Karlsruhe, which has ?dr. R. G. Geen, organist of George's church, and is a Lieutehan• in the Army Medical Corps, having Taken post graduate work in Quebec NA well as in Helifex. Me, Geen be tongs to a military family, one bro. cher having been killed in th,A South African war, while two are offering heir servicee with the Ce,nadian con- tingents now formed. Miss Cern sail- ed on the Franconia, on which the Misses Sword and Hangbly of Owen Sound were also passengers. The Red Cross nurse on duty on the European battlefield has to be without the little comforts dear to the fe`ninine'heart, says Cornelia of the Toronto Telegram, She must face many of the hardships of a soldier sea trade has practically ceased to exist. Nearly all their fast ships, wllicli could have been used es aux- iliary cruisers, were promptly penned into neutral harbors or have taken refuge in their own. Among the com- paratively few German ships which have put to sea, 133 have been cap- tured, or nearly four times the num- ber c:f those lost by the very large British mercantile marine." taken tliriteeu Ilritish ships in the Atlantic. 7,'he statement eaye; "Searching for these vessels and working in concert under various Commandcrs•iu-chief are Upwards of seventy British, Australian, Japanese, French and P.ussian cruisers, not in- cluding auxiliary cruiser's: Among these are a number of the fastest cruisers. "Out of 4.000 British ships engaged in tiee foreign trade, only thirty-nine have peen sunk by the enemy, or less than one per cent. in all. Besides seven vessels aro now overdue in At- lantic waters. "Between 8,000 and . J,000 foreign voyages have been undertaken to and from United Xingdom ports less than five per thousand of which have' been interfered with. "Oa the other hand, German over - General Douglas Dead General Sir Charles Whittingham orsley Douglas, Chief of the Imperial General Staff and first military mem- her of the Army. Council, died in London. on. Sunday. The British Admiralty announced Sunday that the British destroyer Badger had rammed and sunk a Ger- 'man submarine off' the Dutch coast. The Badger suffered damage to her bow. RANK Captain Lieut. tt It Honor Roll NAME N. T. Sinclair H. McLean G. Shiells C G. Vanstone H. Campbell J Mann W. L Latton P Harris A. Chapman W. Van Wyck W. B Elliott R G. Freeborn H. Hinscliilc L Harding C. Shoebottom R. J. Little ....T. MacDonald H. west E Madigan G. Hayles W. Stapleton W. Austin •. V Taylor R Finlay Herbert Chisholm Harry Chisholm J. Nhisholitc G. E. head G IL Ross F S. Sturdy A Jones C 1Vood • . E Pitt . C Bleach Jas MCCalianl J. G Nethery R Jones C Liarfe R. Osborne R,,, Huffman A Scott E. Latton Guest W. H. Murch R Harrison M. White 0 Schaefer . F. hitter G. Jacques E. Sanderson H. Deer 17. Jobb A Aitclieson J. Holland .. H. Collar 13 1sard G. Day M. Rogers R Forsyth Srigiey A: M. Forbes 0 Crawford R. Berkett 0,E. Fender 1s ................•.1' . illespie W. C. Helps 1i Smith ........t...3. Iiolnies W. McLeod 1; E Denit Y ......................I2, Mann C. Broth 11. F. Willis .,•,,..........,,lir Drummond L. °re iment! Vance Sanderson 7. Binkley 1. Brock . .......A Malloy .,... 1z Stone A. Knechtcl 11. Huffman Col. Sergi. Sergt. tt Corpl. t. Bugler Private tf if Of tt Y. tt It It It It .4 CC fl tt tt It rt tt It tt tt it •..• INDIANS iN BATTLE Turbanned Warriors Gave Splendid Account of Themselves in Charge Describing the first participation of the troops from India fh the fighting around La Bassee, a despatch from London says: "The Germans carried the British trenches and the position looked dan- gerous. An avalanche . of the enemy poured through, evidently supposing that the way was open to the coast. They had a rude awakening. "The supports of the British line were the Indian troops, who had been thirsting to prove their quality. It was a bayonet affair and the Germans advance was beaten and broken. The Indians ran through them, using the steel in their own workmanlike Yash ion and thrusting the foe back to re- ceive the right and left fire of the British infantry, who awaited their combine "Not only did the Indians regain the lost trenches, but they pursued the enemy down the hill untll their officers thought it, prudent to recall them." RUSSIANS PURSUE ENEMY German and Austrian Forces Defeated and in Flight The Russians in Poland have pur- sued the Germans as far as the River Hawlca, nearly 50 miles from Warsaw, and within 150 miles of Posen, or 300 miles from Berlin. Fighting con- tinues in the region of Augustowo, in the north, about 400 miles from Berlin, and Przemysl, in the south, 450 to 500 miles from Berlin. Along the River San and south of Przemyal desperate fighting continues. An attenret by the Austrians to turn the Russian left wing south of Prze- mysl fai'.ee, the Austrians suffering great lceee An Austrian column which descend- ed the Carpathians near the town of Dalin (22 miles from Stry) has been defeated and dispersed. Yo:tng Woman's Sad Plight Mrs. Iiawryluk alio last June strangled her newly -born twin child- ren and buried them near her home, was found guilty of murder at Sud- bury. Counsel for the young woman, who is but 18 years of age, admitted the crime and set up the plea of in- sanity., A verdict of guilty was also rendered in the case of V. Metiero, charged with manslaughter, iii which a countryman was stabbed to death in a drunken brawl at Gerson Mine. The charge was reduced from murder. Moil Von Moitke Reported Dying ft .A. private letter received In Amster- dam from a high official in Berlin says Lleut: General Count Von Maltke, 'chief of the German General Staff, is dying. Major-General Erich Von Faiken• hayn, the German Minister of War, has been appointed Chief of the General Staff, succeeding General Von Moltke. Submarine Probably Lost The Secretary of the Admiralty an- aoufices that the submarine 33, conn inanded by Lieut. -Commander George Chomlee, is now considerably overdue, tend that it le feared she has been hunk in the North Sea. A wireless despatch from Berlin on T esl ay Said the E3 had been sunk by Ger- Man warships. Hor complement con. Mated of 16 men. Cruiser Karlsruhe in Fight? . A naval battle was reported to be I in progress off the const at Virginia (early Tuesday morning. It is thought likely that the German cruiser Karls- uho had been located tend forced to i Birmingham Artisan Watt First to Perfect Deadly -email Firearm INVENTOR OF REVOLVERmost 414,1* one of the interesting figures in the industrial life of Birnairtghtimt passed away recently in the person of Iter, henry Jones, who had attained the remarl;ablo ago of 102, and bad vainest all las.. life been connected with the gun trade. Indeed, he was de- seribed as ' the father of the Binning - ham gun trade," and for many years h'ewas regarded among the most skilful craftsmen in the city. \Vlaon his school days wore over Mr. henry Jones was put to the gun tt'ade, and for 85 years worked at the bench. Ile produced a number of epoch-making improvements in the cunstruction of firearms and in 1835 invented the first self-acting revolver. Iris father conceived the happy idea of bringing the Invention pefore the naval and military authorities of the day, and lie arranged to give a lec- ture on "Some Recent Improvements in Gun Mechanism" at the Polytocla- ale, in London. That was in 1836. The room was - filled with represen- tative officers from both arms of the the service, and at the close of the lecture the revolver itself was hand- ed round, and so great was the in- terest created that orders for $3,500 worth, of pistols were booked in the room. Formerly the nearest approach to this weapon was the "four -shot" pistol, made chiefly in West Bromwich --a Crude contrivance in which the barrel containing the tour shots had to be rotated by hand. In 1858 Mr. Jones laid the gun trade under a lasting obligation by his improvements in the mechanism of the breech-loader—im- provements on the introduction of which the breechloader became the simple, safe, and reliable type of weapon we now know it to be. That the inventor- himself made little out of the idea is due to a rather singular mischahce; he entered into an ar- rangement with a firm of gunmakers who undertook to patent the invention and share the profits. They applied for and obtained protection, but un- fortunately omitted to complete the patent, with the result that after a few months the improvement .became public property, Hence the inventor remained comparatively poor and lost almost in obscurity. PIANO EVOLUTION It Took Centuries to Produce the Instruments We Know Today A step forward in the evolution of the stringed instrument was made in the Middle Ages when strings were placed across a box, thus producing the idea of a sounding board. This invention, called the psaltery, was followed by the dulcimer, which was somewhat larger. The keyboard was invented in the eleventh. century. The first stringed instrument to use the keyboard was the keyed citbara, a box with a cover, ' having catgut strings arranged in the form of a triangle. A quill plectrum attached in a crude way to the end of each key marked the progress the piano of to- day had made in the thirteenth cen- tury. Next came the Clavichord. In shape it much resembled a small square piano without frame or legs. The strings were of brass, struck by a wedge made of the same metal which was called a tangent. The virginal, spinet and harpsichord followed the clavichord in rapid succession. They had strings of brass with quill plectra attached to pieces of wood. Tho vir- ginal and spinet were almost identi- cal, but the harpischord was larger, and was, at times, built with two key- boards. There are several explan- ations as to why the virginal was so called, but the generally accepted oneis that it was in honor of Eliza- beth of England, the Virgin Queen. In Shakespeare's time ft was cus- tomary to have a virginal in all the barber shpps for the entertainment of the customers. The spinet received its name from its Venetian inventor, Sebastian Spinetti. The harpischord was very much like our present grand piano, only much smaller. It seems almost incredible that the manufacturers of Queen Elizabeth's time did not discover the hammer action. This great invention was left to the Italian, Angelo Christofori, who, in 1709, brought out a piano, which forever did away with the scratching sound of the quill, thorn, brass or ivory plectra. The piano did not receive a hearty, welcome at first. It was looked ons as a novelty. A playbill of Covent Garden Theatre, London, as late as 1767 announced: "Miss Anna Anna Brickler will sing a song from 'Judith,' accompanied by Charles Dibdin on a new instrument called the piano- forte." 1 THE PRiCE OF BEEF Theprice of Canadian beef for home consumption is determined by the price obtainable for the beef that is exported. For all practical purposes the price of Canadian beet cattle is determined in the Chicago market, and the price of beef in Chicago is determined by Competition in the markets or Europe. The United States, Canada, and Argentina pro- duce, or can produce, far more than their own people are able to consume, and the surplus must find consumers on the other side of the Atlantic; especially. in Great Britain. If the price of beef falis low in Europe the farmers Of America 'will i oda ion un carts 1 pr et til the prices goes up again; if it rises high the far. mers will increase their outpit until It begins to fall. In other words, the amount Of beef produced in Canada depends on the relation between de. tliand and supply in Europe.—Toronto Globe, One tablespoonful of ordinary honey Will go as far as six of sugar. 0H., 5.UCH A � m.... . HEADACHE, • rte``.; llir Nearly bveryattie, crab lrippi ng, tearing headaeheb et times. Disordered atom• aeh--aluggiahliver does It, Cheer up 1 here's the real relief-•-Chamberirain'b ;Stomach and Liver Tablets. They put the 6tomttch and bowels right. All druggists, 260„ or by mail from SY Chamberlain Medicine Co., Tetanal CHAMBERLAIN'S TAB LETS ALLIES BAR THE WAY TOWARDS DUNKIRK rerrlfic Fighting in Progress But Ger- man Effort Untirely Without Ras suite—Unable to Reach Channel The smashing tactics at the Ger• Mans along the North Sea coastline continued incessantly on Monday whoa the big guns were turned on Nieuport, and the ales had to withstand con* etant attacks of masses of troops. Very little progress, however, `was made by the Germans, who were faced with the strongest resistance. Sunday's crossing of the Yser ap- parently had only a moral effect, as the Germans were confronted by twit('. lines of allied troops, and were pre- vented from advancing, without over- whelming efforts, further toward the Channel ports, The character of the country proleibite a rapid movement, as the land is cut up by canals, and two strong series Of defensive works separate them from Dunkirk, The official communication from the French War Office at midnight on Monday, said: "In Belgium, Nieuport has been violently bombarded, and the effort of the Germans has .continued on the front between Nieuport and Dixn1ude without, according to the` latest ad- vices, any result whatever having been reached. . o d "Ail the front comprised between La Basses and the Somme has been. equally the object . of violent attack at night, all of which have been re- pulsed." Allied Forces Well Fed All the transport arrangements of the allied troops are working splen- didly, and the men at the front are kept well fed and supplied with am- munition. The ambulance services are admire i b e,. the wounded are not left long on the field, but are transported to nearby hospitals. The Government authorities have been making special efforts to attend the wounded; all the railroads have joined in the organization and have placed sufficient ambulance cars at the disposal of the authorities to carry 70,000 men, while many can be trans- ported by the river canal' barges, which• are fitted with beds and sup- pllee With surgeons and nurses. The ' battle right along the Belgian frontier is of the most violent charac- ter, and; aceordeng to latest advices brought in by officers from the front, the allies are holding their own well and thegeneral position is regarded as completely satisfactory. Near the coast the valley of the Yser ban .been inundated by the allies in order to offset the offensive of the Germans, who are not able to advance through the boggy land, which at one time formed an arm of the sea. 1,700 German Dead' The Belgians, in their encounter with the Germans, have thrust the in- vaders back, and at the conclusion of this fighting 1,700 German dead were found on the field, .In the Argonne and the Vosges the fighting is also very severe, and up to the present has resulted to the ad- vantage of the French, who are con- stantly advancing. A German advance in Belgium was counterbalanced Sunday by French successes in the region of Verdun. The Kaiser's forces had slightly the bettor of the hard' fighting at the extreme west of the line, but Gen. Joffre's troops dealt destructive blows toward the extreme east. The general situation, as indicated fly the official reports, remains the same—incessant, violent fighting with no decisive out- come. MONTREAL IS THREATENED Germans and Austrians Said to Con- template Use of Bombs • Acting Mayor Vandelac of Montreal has received a letter which states, and it is written by a person who apparently knows the °facts of the case, that there is an organized band of Germans and Austrians in the city who are possessed of several wireless outfits, bombs, explosives and fire- arms. This band of men, it is said by the writer of the letter , is ready at a moment's notice to wreak an appal- ling amount of damage in the city of Montreal. The writer of the Ietter signs, his fall name and address, and gives facts to show that his connection with the German organization is a bona fide one. • Two German reservists were ate rested en a train"last Friday night for using threatening language as they approached Montreal. BOER UPRISING QUELLED Col. Maritz, Leader of the Rebels, Wounded and in Flight It is officially announced from Cape Town that the rebel, Lieut. -Col. Maritz, and his forces have been com- pletely defeated 'at Kakamas, in the Gordonia district of Bechuanaland; by Union of South Africa troops. Lieut.- Col. ieut:Col. Maritz was wounded in the en- gagement and fled to German terri- tory, according to the statement. Murder at Brantford A murder was discovered in Brant- ford on Sunday at 1451/2 Dalhousie Street in a Chinese store, where the two proprietors, Lee Yuen and Lee Duck, were found with their heads smashed in with a hatchet. Both were alive when discovered, but Yuen died on the way to the hospital and Duck has no chance of recovery. It is believed that the murder took place early -Sunday morning and that robbery was the motive. An order•in-Council has been passed creating CoI. Sam Hughes, Minister of Militia, major -general. Col. Gwat• kin, chief of general staff, has been elevated to the same rank. Major. General Hughes' appointment is ante dated to May, 1312, and he thus be. comes senior major -general in Canada, German Station Destroyed British war vessels discovered, raid• ed and destroyed a German submarine base in one of the uninhabited rocks of the Shetland Islands, in the North Sea, according eC g to a report from Scot- land. It is said that there was It largo Stock of ell, battery plates and extra torpedoes stored there for the use of submarines ' striking at the Northe S a fleet. Rivard-Bulkelby K111et1 A cablegram received at Ottawa dn. nouneee the death in action till Major Sir Charles Rivers Bulkeley, C. .G M,V•O,, formerly +comlitrollet' '• I „otOunaiwithVel u THE DOMINION BANK OMR %PMO P 0. Q51.en MMP., PnE$IDi1NT. W. A, .MATTKEWL VVQE'1Rt'F$iWi'r, C. A, SQQERT, General Managers, 'Frusrt Funds Should Be Deposited Mode € re iq • Savings Account In The Dominion Bank. Such u safely protected, and earn interest at highest current rates. When payments are made, particulars of each transaction may be noted on the Cheque !sued, wh►oh in turn beeernee regelpI er voucher when cancelled by the bauk. WINGHAM BRANCH: A. M. SCULLY, Manager, relieleisatein�t: - - lee's°-_ 'se. eiellealleelameesaleasisaasireme Subscrihe Lor e trJ�h Advance Largest Circulation in HURON Go. We also club ' with all the leading papers in Ontario. RH We don't ask you to take our word for the remarkable curative power of SOLACE in cases of rheumatism, neural- gia, headaches or other Uric Acid &ambles, or the word of more than ten thousand people SOLACE/has restored to health, or the word of eighty-one- doctor's using SOLACE exclusively in their practice: Just write us for a FREE BOX and testimonials from Doctors, Druggists and In- dividuals. Also SoLA.CE remedy: for sT :it It ION (A LAXATIVE AND TONIC CONBINED) Does the work surely but pleasautly—Nature's way. No distress —no gripeing—no sick stomach—no w,'a,kruing. The TWO rem- edies are all we make, but they a -e the gr"ate4 known to the medical world and guaranteed to be Free of opiatias or harmful drugs. Neither affects the halt or stomach—but helps them. To prove the wonderful curative power of SOLACE remedies write for FREE BOXES. State if one or both are wanted. SOLACE CO., Battle Creek, Milch., U. S. A= Foreign Suspects -Arrested i Over 3,000 Germans and Austrians (resident in England were arrested by 'the police or military authorities, anct are confined in concentration. camps. Tl}ese include Germans ani Austrians liable to military service alien enemies who have failed to regia, ter, and others who are regarded as dangerous. ITII IIIiiUCi11111111111f111(Ill1 , 0011 if c(T I /lidl.,ua:ll14 gg:eJad ki{ G ' r eae -b. eft' 4. Z. . �� n• k ( til Which we are here to make To please our many patrons With the Bakery Goods We Bake Our Bread Is of First Importance,•• We know you'll find it right, But all the other minor thing's VYll give ve The Same Delight a ri` �s s Bakery PI ONE 132 NEPN SI H JLfiIii DISUSES !real 1 COUNTER CHECK BOOKS Tease le no need of sending veer tsrdere for counter ebeck beelre out of towr, 'We rant fill orders t5rotnpf•- ly at mires that Will defy competition. A, k 'its t;Pa, trot eamntat'. TI...,..1.,,,1i * vorvinfpat thine, te thnbete.nptioar/ ie.bed it1 toe., lel r. merit w re , nr d inti k,n N c f " r t , otter in t he'1lr ice 1 Wt Advance �,�� al� Wingtani, Ont.