HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-12-10, Page 5Those Tinkling
Tango Tunes
ere simply fascinating when repro...
ducted byThe EDISON Phonograph.
There's no tun trying to do the new
dentes — the Fox Trot, Maxixe,
One Step, H.csitetion, Boston;
Three Step—to the jerky drumming
of a. piano, There's no tempting
tempo.
But when the National Promenade
Viand swings into the seductive
"La Bella Argentina" or "Waltz
Hesitation", and
t•
•
MEDISON
PHONOGRAPH
(THE INSTRUMENT W1TII TUE DIAbtONP POINT
reproduces the full, rich
melody --the sway and swing
of it—the fascinating rhythm
of it—then you have some•
thing worth dancing to.
There arc other special Dance
Records available to owners of
Edison Phonographs --several
hundred other Band and Orchestra
records, many of which are suitable
for the new dances—and any number
of Tango songs like "Underneath
The Tango Moon. '
The new Edison Phonograph
has the diamond reproducing point.
unbreakable and long playing
records, superior motors and
construction, concealed horns, and
the Cabinets arc made in true Period
ktyles, in perfect harmony with the
finest furniture.
Come in and hear the EDISON play alt these tinkling tango tunes—play them
as they should be played—then you'll appreciate just how much pleasure you can
have with an EDISON PHONOGRAPH in your own home.
David Bell, - Winghasn, Ont. ,
Just 2 Weeks
Tell as
You will find our store well sup-
plied with good satisfaction goods
such as . people should give this year.
For 1'1en and Boys
We have Overcoats and Suits, Soxs
Braces, Shoes, Sweater Coats. Any
of these would make a good suitable
present for Xmas.
For Ladies and Girls
Silks for waists or dresses, Velvets
in several shades, Sweater Coats,Belts
Ribbon for belts, Handkerchiefs,Para-
soils, Hosiery,Guaranteed Kid Gloves,
Pte.
Then we have the very best All -
Wool Blankets, the very best makes,
Fleete. Sheets at all prices. Any of
t1}ese go to lj a e th'e prA suital)le
Smas present, espt;ciaily this year.
1~"
All kinds of Produce taken on
goods.
J. A. Mills
Phone $9 WiD balms
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THE CHANCELLOR OF
THE EXCHEQUER'S SPEECH
(Continued from last week),,
GERMAN "CIYILILATI(),N"
I Will not Rey g single word in dis•
paeageneent of the German people,
fifreyarb a great people, and have
eiriat qualities of head and hand and
heitrt. I believe, in spite of recent
events, that there ie as great a store of
leitxdliness in the German peasant as
en any peasant in the wotid ; but he
been dt 'led Tato a $alae idea of
p`infers. It is ef$aient It is cap.
lig
IC'i p
tibte but it is a hard civilie %tion ; it
r a seltiah eh'ilizttion ; it is a meter -
al civilization. They cannot compre-
hend the action of Btitain at the pre -
Went moment; theyhay so, They say,
'," rriinee we can underit%nd; bhe in
t for vengeance ; she lb out for ter-
-Alsace and Lorraine." (A.p
*ease.) They say they can widen tInd
'Ai the in fighting for mastery---
ee *ants Malicia, They can under
you fighting' for rrengeauce ..
men unti"eretandyou fighting fdt
—theecan unaletetend you.
tang far greed of territory ; but
asset untleteland a great Bm-
eyg its resoaroer, pl';ging
pledging the X* d `Fie
children, pledging its very existance,
to protect a little nation that Seeks to
defend herself, Applause, God made
tan in his own iw gg, high of pur-
pose, in the region o the spirit ; Ger-
man civiliz .tion would re-create him
in the hinge of a Diesel machine
precise, accurate, powerful, but with
no room for soul to ' operate. Hear,
hear.
), PIIILOSOPI.fY Or uLOOD AND IRON.
Rave
e goo read the Kaiser's s
e
ech-
?
If you have not a copy I advise.
you to buy one; they will soon • be
out of print, and you will not hae
many more of the Name sort. Laugbt.
far and applaunp. They are full of the
glitter and blunter of German militate
item—" mailed fist," and "'shining ar-
mours" Poor old melted net 1 Ito
knuckles are getting a little bruised.
Poor bhining atmi'w ! The shine is be
itlg knocked out of it. Applause,
The N is 1hH'Fn,tne Nwage r ai~d Want.
fulness running through the whole
bf the speeches. The extract *Mob
Wart given in the eletririeb Wtekty"
this itr a very rev tteltable prodant it
ati thew v., fear !,f r hA ,,Orli we he
to Eight. ir'ia the ledger's speed
hie soldiers on the way to the front
"Remember that the german pen,
the Gerwan Emptbe eror,Othe 001Etmo1
God has decended. I ant His ewerd.,
His weapon and His viceregent..
Woe to the disobedient, end death
to coward,. and unblleverr."
Luaary ie always distressing, but
somel its e't it is dangerous"; and when
ynu get it manifested in the head of
1 e state, and it has become the pslicy
of a great Empire, it is about time
hat it should be ruthlessly put away,
Loud applause. I do not believe hi
meant allthese speeches; ; itw simply
peechs , as situp y
the martial straddle be had arquired
But there were men around him who
meant every word of them, This was.
their religion. Treaties? They tangle
the feet of Germany in her advance.
Cut them with the swore! Little
nations? They hinder the advance of
Germany. Trample them in t} s mire.
under the German heel! The Ru eian
Stave? He challenges the supremacy
of Germany and Europe. Hurl your
leg; one at him and massacre .bimi
Britait,l She ipa constant menace to
tbe predominancy of Germany in the
world. Wrest the trident out of her
band! Ohristianite? Sickly tienti-
mentalism about saerifi re for others!
Po Ir pap for German digestion! We
wet bavm a new diol. We will force it
upon the world. It will be made in
Germany—Laughter and appieuse—
a diet of blond and iron. Whar re-
"uain'.? Treaties have gone. The
honour of nations has gone. Liberty
has gone. What ie left? Germany!
Germany is lef !—'"Deutschland uber
A�Irtl'"
Teat is what we are fighting—Hear,
nea —'hat claim so predominancy of a
material, hard civilization, a civilizs-
ion which if it once rules and sways
the world, liberty goes, democracy
vanishes. And unless Britain and her
sons Come to the rescue it will be a
Jerk dayter humanity. Applause.
"TOE ROAD 1300 OF EUROPE."
Have you followed the Prussian
Jnnker and his doingr? We are not
righting the German people. The
;Jarman people are under the heel of
this military caste, and it wi:l be a day
of rejoicing for the German peasant,
artisan and trader when the military
-este is broken. You know Ite pre-
tensions, They give themselves the
ears of demi-Rods. They walk the
pavements,. and civilians and their'
waves ars swept into the gutter; they.
neve no right to stand in the way of
a great Prussian soldier. Men, women,
nations—they all have to go. He
thinks alt he has to say in, "We are
in a hurry;" That is the answer he
gave to Belgium—"Rapidity of action
is Germany's greatest asset,' which
means "'I am in a hurry; clear out of
my way." You know 'the type of
motorist, the terror of the roads, with
e 60 horse -power oar; who thinks the
road* are made for him, and knocks
demi anybody' 'wile impedes the
action of his cat by a single mile an
hour. The Prussian Dunker to the
road -hog of Europe. Applause: Small
nationalities in hie way are hurled to
the roadside,- blending and broken.
Women and chilIren area crushed
under the wheels of his cruel car, and
Britain is ordered out of his road, All
1 can say is this; if the old British
spirit is "alive in British hearts, that
bully will be torn from his seat. Lied
applause. Were he to win, it would
be the greatest catastrophe that has
befallen democracy since the day of
the Holy Alliance and it i ascendancy."
"TIIROUGH TERROR TO TRIUMPIL "
They think we cannot beat them.
It will not be easy. It will be a long
job; it will be a terrible war; but in
the end we shall march through terror
to triumph. Applause. We shall
need all our qualities—every c),tralit),
that Britain rind its people possess
prudence in counsel, daring iu action,
tenacity in purpose, courage in defeat,
moderation in victory; in all things
faith! Lend applause.•
It has pleased them to believe and
to preach the belief" dist we are a
degenerate people. They proclaim to
the world through their 'professore
that we are a non -heroic nation skulk.
ing behind 'our mahogany counters
while, we egg on more gallant races
to their destruction. This is a de-
ecription given of us in Germany—
"a timoroub, craven nation, trusting
to its Fleet." I think they ere begin-.
wing to find their tpietake out already
—applapee - and there are half 'a
million young 'nen of Britain who
have already registered a vow to
their King that they will cross the
seas and hart that insult to British
courage against its" perpetrator's on
the battle$ elds of F,,rance and Gier
many. We want half a million more;;
and we shall get, they, , J.oud ap-
plause.,
E WIN OSA M .ADS' A 1
throughout Europe to the llama nc,b1 •
end. Applause. It ie a. great war for
tbe emancipation of Europe from the
thraldom of a military caste which bas
thrown ire ehadows upon two getter -
agony of .men, and Is now plunging
the world Into a welter t f bloodshed
and death. Some have already given
their lives, There are some who have
given more than their own lives ;
they have given the lives of those dear
to theta, 1 honoue their courage, and
may God be their comfort and their
strength, But their reward is at
hand; those sho have fallen have
died consecrated deaths. They have
taken their part in the making of a
new Europe—a new world. I can see.
signs ef 1te coming in the glare of the
batttefi .id,
TILE.' NEW PATRIOTISM."
The people will gain more by this
struggle in all lends than they com-
prehend at the present moment.
Dear, hear. .it is true they will be.
free from the greatest menace to their
freedom. That is not all. There le
something infinitely greater and mot e
enduring which is emerging already
out of thio great conflict—a new pat-
riotism. richer, nobler, and more ex-
alted than the old. Applenee. I see
amongst all classes, high and low,
Shedding themselvesof selfiahneep, a
new recognition that the honour of
the country does not depend merely
oo the maintenance of its glory in th..
stricken field, but also in protecting its
homes from distress. Hear, hear. It
h, bringing a new outlook for all chas-
es. The great ti sod of luxury and
sloth which had submerged the land
is receding, and a mew Br taro is ap-
pearing. We can see f r the first
tune the fundamental things that
matter in life. and that have been ob-
sc tred from our vision by the tropical
growth of prosperity. Hear, hear,
' TUE VISION"
May I tell you in a simple parable
what I think this war is doing for ub ?
I know a vall,'yin North Wales, be.
t Teen the mountains and the sea. It i•
a beautiful, snug, comfortable, shel-
tered by the mour.teins from all the
bitter blaste. But it ie very enervat-
ing, and I remember how the boys
were in the habit of climbing the hill
above the village to have a glimpse of
the great mountains in the distance,
and to be stimulated and freshened by
the breezes which came from the hill-
tops. and by the great spectacle of
their grandeur. We have been living
in a sheltered valley for generations.
We have been too comfortable and too
indulgent; many, perhaps, too selfish,
and the stern hand of fate has scourag-
ed us to an elevation where we can see
the great everlasting things that mat-
ter for a nation—the great peaks we
had forgotten, of lionour, Duty, Pat-
riotism. and, clad in glittering white,
the great pinnacle of Sacrifice point..
Ing like a ragged finger to Heaven.
We shall descend into the valleys
auaio ; but as long as the men and
women ef this generation last, they
will carry in their hearts the image of
those great mountain peaks whose
foundations are not shaken, though
Europe rock and sway in the convul-
sions of a great war. Enthusiastic
and continued applause.
"A \t'YCLSH ARMY xY TEiEt. FIELb:"
•
Wales must continue doing 'liar
duty. That was a great telegram,
that you, my Lord, read from Glatn
organ. Hear, hear. I should like to
see a Welsh Army in the field, Load
applause. I should lite r.o eee"the
race that faced the Norinahs for hund-
reds of years In a struggle for freedom,
the race that helped to win Crecy,
the race that fought for a generation
under Glendower against the greatest
captain in Euro a—I should like " to
see that race give a good taste of its
(polity in thts etruggle in Europe;
and they are going to do it,,
TT>t 84111vKR
t
7 envy yon young people your op
portunity. They have put up the ago
limit for the Army, but 1 ane con y
Lousy thieve marched a gpc.a many
years oven beyond that. It is It great
opportunity, an opportunity that nilly
comes once in many oen'turies to the
Children ef 'Men. For Mostgerieratione
r,tecr'ifich tomer* In drab of wrearineee of
!pith. It comee to yen to day, and It,
comes lie -defy to Us elle in the form oft
the aloe and the i11 of It great interit.
tit tete Weeny, that Impple u $'lotto'
LOYAL PRINCES
OF INDIAN EMPIRE
Ejtirring Patriotism of Men Whom
- Kaiser Thought Would Rise
Against England
The Kaiser, it is said, canted upon
an uprising of Indla's forces when 'he
4octared war against Great BritaIOi
nor had his spies not told him that
(he natives were seething with discon-
tent against British rule? Never was
a monarch more *e oefully. misled and
mistaken, for with Cao accord the
rulers of the native States in India,
who number 700 in all, rallied to the
.'.efence of the Empire and offered
their personal services and the re-
sources of their States for the war.
India sent over 70,000 men to the
front, and sccompa.nying these were
six Indian princes, who are worth a-
least $250,000,000. Even the veteran
bir Pertab Singh, the Regent of Jodh
par, would not be denied his right
to serve King George, and in spite
of his e,eve ty year;t he'went to the
front, accompanied by his sixteen -
year -old grr,niluon.
Fore+ali-ms Were Enemies
The Maharajah of Baroda, who plat•
ed his troops and 'resources at the
disposal of the British Government, is
one of the most powerful of Indian
rulers, as well as one of the wealthiest.
His fu:. :rthcrs fought against Britain
:n the Indiit••i 31utiny, but the Mahara-
;ah is proud a,nd eager to be on the
ear. Lien t,:t, r to.ay. He rules over a
oteta le geet •,an Wales, and has an
[no u hili e raid to be more than,
$.10,050.000 a year.
Another fr niiaar prince is the,
Aftharajah of Mysore, who placed
arty lac, of rupees (about $1,650,000)'
i:t the disposal of the. Indian (govern-.
trent for eependiture to connection
with an Expeditionary Force. Ilis
State conta.rs nearly 6,000,000 Hindus,
who enutr:buto the flower of the In;
uian army, and he is one of those
:ndlan rulers entitled to the Imperial'
an'i'se of twenty-one guns,
The &Ia bsrajnh of G t al:or, in ad.
'iteoa to ,.e r rig: g the cepenses of the
or=ilei ch p; the Elea of whirl, or;g:n-
'ASTHMA COUGHS
Nilool'ING COtlGE $pp. ri14tf grip
ERQN`H1711h"'' AfiA81Fi COLAS
14
ftt.1t79
A dimple, safe slid eSective treatment !void -
inertias. Used with success for 35 years.
The nit carrying she antisepdevapor,inhaled
with every breath, makes breathing 'easy,.
soothes thesorethroet,
and stops the eouCti
swateinttrestddlnlzhrs.
C resole ne is 'avis$ u able
to mothers with young
ch t drented' a beet to
tett erate Ambito,
'Sana' Poolrl for
11
pisco Lootttse
ted If Atmselr alio toe rregui:n oz
Bhopal, offered to place large sures
of money at the clieposat of the Gov-
ernment of India and to provide
horses as remounts. He accompanied
th'e British Expedition to China eleven
years ago, and presented on that oc-
caelee a hospital ship for the awn*.
inodation of the wounded,
Natives Eagerly Contributed
Another potent lnelan ruler is the
Maharajah of Kashmir. , He recently
presided at a meeting at Srinagar, his
Capital, and delivered a tittering
Meech to 20,000 people, which resulted
in the subscription of many thousands
of dollars, Kashmir is one of the
largest and most prosperous of the.
Indian States, and noted for its shawl
weaving and lacquer work, while its
silver and copper work is rapidly
rising in importance among alto
Oriente' atts,
Mention should also be made of the
Maharajah of Palate, who also went
to the front. Patiala has a splendid
record of loyalty behind it, for in 1857,
when practically the whole of Hindu -
titan, revolted against the British, and
the Sikhs were wavering, the Rajah
of that day, with only ono attendant,
rode into the nearest British station.
And placed at the disposal of the
Government not only his fighting men,
but the whole of his treasury,
KAISER'S BROTHER
TRAINED HIS NAVY
Prince Henry of Prussia Had Control
During Period of Evolution—
Popular In Germany
To 811 the role of a monarch's
brother is frequently a thankless
part. It bas been known to be nebu-
lous and decorative besides, and few
have played it worthily. Prince
$eery of Prussia, brother of ilia
Kaiser, is a striking exception to the
general rule.
No man of the reign has rendered
his country more effective service
than the Sailor Prince, who, as I11-
spector-General of the German navy,
PRINCE HENRY OF PRUSSIA
is the ranking officer of the fleet
which flies the Hohenzollern slag.
If Grand Admiral von Tirpitz may be
described as the creator of the Kait3-
er's fleet, Grand Admiral . Prince
Henry may be called its trainer, .
Commander -in -Chief of ~eke .Aetive
Battle Fleet, as the High Seas Fleet
hie formerly known, at the moment
when it was undergoing conversion
into a navy of dreadnoughts, Prince
Henry was in supreme charge of Ger-
many's sea forces at the most critical
moment el their existence.
The arrival of the all -big -gun and
dreadnought displacement , era had
effected a complete revolution in the
naval practices of the world, strategy
and gunnery required to be overhauled
and remade. It was under the per,.
tonal supervision of the leaiser.' .
brother that the German navx ros e,
to the emergency with proinpt1tuij+e
rad thoroughness and made itself
eady, as if overnight, to hold its owe
;p the new conditions of sea warfare.
That is why the Admiral Royal,
whose pictures so often make him
leek like a twin of Ring George or
the Czar, hold's a place in the affec-
tions of his Fatherland almost second
o none. Germans have hail few
llatibnal ido:s since Bismarck. Pr:nce
Henry is one Q,f- them.
All the members of the Burton -on -
Trent Rugby . Club volunteered for
service, sixty-nine being in the now
army and four in the Legion of Pron.
ftersmen.
TAKING NEW NAMES
Gertnana in Engtani( Getting Rid of
Unpopular Cognomens
Nearly 300 Germans in England
have changed teen names for British
ones by legal process since the be -
?alining of the war. All who have
doge, this are either' British -born or
naturalized British subjects. No
alien i3 granted legal authority to
change his name. The following aro
a few of. the German navies and the
Britislte names which lime Olgit3oed
them, as. they ap,Pear, be the togtster
kept at the law'egtlrtii
Klussman--:hiaetaren,
Rosentleal—ltoeney.
Kelsch—Bathurst:
Howitz---Howard.
Schnaack—Mayman.
Schwerzi—Vincent,
Stobwasser—Stowe.
Gruntwag—Grantway.
Keenig—Kingsley.
Dunklesbuhler—Duncan,
Welschank—Wynne.
EIehelz---Eccles.
Kush—Cuss.
Brueggenteyer1r(
dgc�A few peoplecontente
th
emegi
vcs
with simply transtatine their Gentian
names. Thus, 'SOhosa,"
became
i'i gctle,tt and "Von Schwarz" became
unlock," The most egective expres•
,ston of change of name, nationality,
and. loyalty is, perhaps, that of the
matt who substituted "King" for
•.trniees.tt
Or* al'eand 4: Stlttble'd
Lettere Arrlv'r g in Canada last
week contained the announcenient
{that Hon. Dr. Boland, M.P. for Ile.tude,
swag eerlously wounded by a shrapnel
411elt during the bontbardmetlt of
A,,ntwerp, Ile is now in a Belgian
„hospital.
The SAM Of $111,X50.000 has beets ap-
ipropriated be the 'O+f.:,lltllon Govern•
anent to inoet the sit.uatinn created
lay the von tail^utOs its the Wdt*t.
0
ISARD'S
Every Day
argains
These CUT PRICES on SEASONABLE GOODS be t
at a time when von are likely to want them should wake
BUYING EASY. Only room to slants a few of the
MANY BARGAINS awaiting ynu
LADIES' WINTER COATSJnst in; many snappy styles,
Fanny- Tweed effects, Regular $,12 to $12 57 ()outs, Bete
Price 0.75
10 WOMEN'S COATS mala of fanoy'vurl cloth and Dlagnual
weaves, fanoy collars, $15 coats Seel.. $11.19
A clearing lire of Gide Coats up to five dollars value ..:.$2,95
WOMEN'S TOP SKIRTS to clear, mad'e of pain cloth end
tweed effects, regular $ 5, Sale , .. , .. *3 30
BARGAINS IN IIO'IE 10 doz'n heavy"ribbed, Hose, all ids et.
35s value, Sale... , . . - • i- . . , .. .... 250
WOMEN'S UNDERWEAR, white or grey underwear, vests
and (hewers; regular 35o line, Sale... ..'- ... ... .. , . 25i
PRESS PLAID3 and O1IE 1 o' good.cloality and weight.
13 l-'3ovr,lae for.,, .,.'. 1 , 10o
SNAP IN FLANNELETTE 1e pieces, yard wide cloth,
cheap at 12 1-2o, Sale. . .. i 10s
FLANELETTE BLANKETS, large h'ze,
flee quality English Blankets, grey or white.'
special for Sale..... , ..... . $1:50
COMFORTERS made of Fancy Chine?,
good size, Sale .... price $1.25
LACE COLLARS, new collars jut t received,
dream or white, vane up to 50o, un ease ..-.25a
RIBBONS—wide hair ribbcu, all colors,
regular price 15c, Sale... , 100
W OOL BLANKETS, 1 i; bargains in Blan-
kets. See our special for Sa'c , 43 00
MEN'S .. STORE
MEN'S '111'3 a' OUT PRTOES BAR-
GAINS Sale .. , rt 1G 98,$7.95. $0.75 and $tl
MEN'S Heavy Barreled Shirts and Drawers,
all tiz-s, Spiral Sate, 75o
BOYS' FLEECE LINED UNDERWEAR
Shirts and Drawer:i. Sale 25o
MEN'S and BOY.' OAPS with inside
beetle, speotal. oat; Brine Sale ' 50c
SWE e.TER CUA "8, specie! line of "heavy
Swett -r ('nate, tog c al out prioeh Sale.::. $3,
$3.50. n(0, $1.50, t5 00
HIGH COST OF LIVING
Reduced by Buying Your
DRY GOQES, GROCERIES, B001 S and SHOES, MEN'S and BOYS' CLOTiINQ,
-, LADIES' COATS, SUiTS, FURS, ETC.
AT TI -HIS STORE. READ THE LIST, . then come
and see how we carry out our plan of REDUCING
LIVING EXPENSES.
BARGAINS IN GROCERIES
14:be best Orannlated Sugar for $1.00 Tin pail Best Soda Biscuits 250
3 cans Peas, Corn, Tomatoes for 25o Pure Castile Soap 25o bares for . 2Ao
Best Oatmeal, 6 pounds for 25o Oboice Salmon 2 saes for .... 25o
Corn Srvr.•h 5er package So Good Sardines 6,1 can or G for ...25o
7 bars Soap for . - 250 Best Sy -up in pails for 25c
Fancy Oakes per lb 100 Choice bend of Ten per pound.... .......350
6 IUs Fresh Rice 260 Canada Foundry Starch So
2 cans Maple Leaf Paking Powder for....25e New Seed -d Raisins per package 10c
3 packages Corn Flakes for 25c
H. E. ISARD
pleateis
CO.. Wingham
• T;"---
/
Try the
"ADVANCE"
for your suit
Catalogue
THE ,SHATTERING SHELL,
• It has been proved that the coin
paratively harmless bombarding, se..
Pae. as. wounds are concerned, of a bee:
sieged, town is terribly demoralizing,
tee the bravest seen..
When a shell bursts near a group
qf• twenty men, it may kill one nntg
wound two, while the eemainin g
e<eventeen escape without t> sgr tcli:
IR, will be found, hovNivt p>i, their, nail�,.
t ,loess are never tttt't 554113 men
a arts:' No matt .• 1v,gt • ieOneiervedi
Y were ',fovea; they aro now ir•.
itQ}1'ie 2nd timchaidn,ge. and But alt tissue
efiGll_tie0 are weakened. Very ofte
•
they are jf this eered at by their this _ 1
because ot toil
utterly unjust—in fact, their braii:
and spinal cord have beers injured by
being violently shaken against the
walls of their bony cavities.
The, seine thing occurs in railway
collisions. People who were vo,i ust='i
become quite feeble eine ecevoes
though they nee?, wee nave received
,� hcrr'4telC1•
l� Ntirious states its ttto care el'
weld}Ca s; is well secognlzed by do; tor:.+:
ttnt3jer tjte name;, of the mental, in•
furies of nxplosirs. The infer cs- an
juries of•explosives The injuricn,are
really quite,as: physical• as a sltatterc t
seg, for they consist of a: k:nti ul°
bruising of the very delicate tissue
of the spinal cord and brain,.
SCULPTORS WENT TO WAR
Consequently Statues ee Memory of:
Montreal Vi,,2r41 .Must Wait
t' asp Of tile, ar in Europe and;
�'f=.1!
ieefu te@ sculptors have to don their
gplttltry'e Uniform and shoulder a rifle
like other people, the statue which;
was � lanned to commemorate the
ie
et.ergic work of Adam Dollard des
Ormeaux, the young I''renchman who
'saved Montreal in the pioneer days
from the Iroquois with 16 French and
40 Algonquin assistants, will have to
wait. The committee having tllc
Memorial in charge had eeceived our
or five models of the statues beforie
t'he outbreak of hostilities, elft
others were expected, But Ceti egide,
Ors Went to the nee I41;jlflip won
ib delayed. Tee -secretary of the
elollarit committee e;tty" that the whole
IA setter will have to be postponed.
if the inodeis in the c re of the corn.
;nittec are ncctpted la er, and it is
fount' that the srulpto lute Aerial} ;I
in the rtt 'mile, the ptI t-,-iew WIil
te,I4 to Mit 1,c".to.
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Strongly Entrenched
In our stock, Styles that are in
vogue. Two important consider-
ations we never loose sight or:
That of Style and Workmanship.
These are s,ciientiliciall:y combined
in all o► it garments, our Facilities
enable us to serve you promptly
unci satisfa>~torily.
The place to buy your matle•-
to-measure Clothing its a#
TAYLO ;`. 8'
where you are sure of' a perfect
lit. Workmanship Guaranteed.
RVAL TAYLOR..
The Ladies' and Gent's
Wilson Bloc', opposite Nationalotel
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SIBISMOCIOCIIIIIIMINIS 611111111111110
PHoToR;&PHs.
AS XMAS PRESENTS
N.ttt ice sill be heart. ntln••, niik',-,i , , rima fr; en,ia *Ives a tZ+tend
p,.r•et air
5,' ec,urr.wlf. 14 11 V "+ ()ltRY A flOLItisl PHOTO-.
e.RAP1I1'nkwH vier.• esf .k 1 O/N.Ne lett iteNtti -•cher 'much off
Fee, • tni'•ti SIT T iNi,uS tTN I'l t. j't 41 ltl': S.I.TISP I1 I) 14t.ke
artnnintlti"err spec/ Are attnt•Wet, ti.,t. ,r,ts.•d attd printed siert
enlarlrpnrentH, 141.414,ratt. wines Tit, 3'1 • t I'}i+ttragrtiphtrt Gallery,
The Mann
Art Studio
Wit*ghf.m, �" i Jfat.
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