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The Wingham Advance, 1915-01-21, Page 6,U A M A. DYANCE Children Cry for Fletcher's. Tho Etna YOU Ilavo Always h cr:ght, and, whieili has been in use for- over CO ycaes, has borne the signature of and has been made under his perm 4717,- onal I rnpervision since itsinfancy„ Allow >~ no to deceive youi „!#. e n this. 11 it Coil . tcrfeits, Imitation and, cq Just -as -good" aro but Experiments that trifle 'with. and endanger the Lealtlu of infante and Children --Experience againNt E periment. What is AST' -"RIA Castorist is a harmless substitute for Castor 011, Pare*, Boric, Drops sand Soothing Seraips. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, Its age is its cuarantee. It destroys Worms Anel allays Feverishness, Ji'or more than thirty years it bus been in constant naso for the relief of Constipation, Flattrle/icy, Wind Colic, all Teething, Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural Bleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GE uINIE CATO R 1A ALWAYS Bears the Signature of 4.4z -de r• in Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, SAVE MONEY. You can save from $15 to $20 by having that suit CLEANED, PRESSED and REPAIRED, also a similar amount by having a New Velvet Collar etc, on your Oyereoat. We specialize on DRY CLEANING, PRESSING and REPAIR ING LADIES' WEAR. Johnson's Cleaning and Peening Works (Under New MANAGEMENT) Chas. G. Jehnsson. Manager eseeeseassmosamma D. BEL Carries a Complete Line of High tirade Musical Instruments; of Every Description Playor=Pianos and Organs of almost any make. Phonographs; • Edison and Victor Stringed instruments of all kinds, Violins a specialty • Sewing Machines, Canadian and American We wish to impress you with the fact that we sell everything that � spec - duces music, at prices to suit all. rmsrosmamomminsirammommoommEnmownew gamma TWO STORt.S OPPOSITE SKATING RINK Phone 222 1 a t (` i " Bank of i� ; �� +'t' {'` f y � a�l,!,i' ! Capital A,Lthor•ived - :Fu,t00,0') % 1 1 .iS i� Capital, Pa,dnp • 3:nO),00 i1lSurplus 1 '4,750,000 r 1 1 THE MEN BEHIND t, I , A. Banaingi ustftnrio aetc strength as mnoh iiip i(('!• from themen who ieeoi: ltd affairs as from I , .! 1 ,I1!!the actual capital invested. • I Mone deposited (II y in the Bank of'flamilten El ituai`t:ed ',: {i I, b men o well known. atm- , y or buil: e integrity, and cu is•ri to 9 1 I 1 i+T r t,l mob -.-mon who valor Pleourity more than high profits 1;t To this nolieyis Zino a surplus which is one quarte h j ;; larger than its Capital -•-the re,ult of over 40 years �: i !!;t ,cooaervattve manage;neut. i.E, t , ; ti 1 It;i SMITH l;li:�l�i fiG� lt.V v7i�Ij ci i �;�' q(�g+: )VAS i+I,a na e 1 {� ._... tr.!gito 1.„. , ! >5 r 'UVingl4amt l",.. _.l .,.,.k+ �i' e -7t' 1 . t. 1 • •• a. ADVERTISE�, y�, IN THE ADVANCE IT 14AS THF CIRCULATION i.eirt.as� "No more her,dache for you—take these" bon't Just "anther" the headache without removing the cause. Take Chamberlain's %Snatch and Liver Tablets, They not only earn the headache but give yaw a buoyant. healthful feeling because they tons the liver. sweeter, the stomach and cleanse the bowels. 'Trytheia. Jill i g'b►i, 31ie., or lit, .naeAMMOOre' CnAIitaltl tit Weld Co. Threat., oat.13 CHAMBEPLAI!. You can cook to the full capacity of the top and bake an oven full of good things with, a _Mc aarys at the same time. Many exclu - isive features you should know ir about. Let the McClary dealer show you, a "MADE IN CANADA" R. R. MOONEY, Agent Winghxne LIFE ON WARSHIP things alidve Wide? are the bridge alai the funnels; then one may see them IN BAD WEATHER poised on the crest of a wave with fifty feet or steel showing at each end. -.Navy and Army. Modern Fighting Craft Not Ideal. in Case of Storms—Too Low In Water and Lack Buoyancy "Battened Dawn" means much more to the modern sailor than to him of Netan's time. In weather of which the old ships, with their high Ere boards and protecting bulwarks, teak little notice, the modern ship is bat- tened down. The open, unprotected upper deck is swept fore and aft b high seas, and the smaller the clave of ship the more is she affected. Everything that science can contrive has been done to alleviate the dis- comforts of "battening down," which is closing :di upper deck hatches to keep the seas which sweep over the deck from penetrating to the interior of the ship, but even then the mess decks are often awash. However, It is the lack of exercise and fresh air that tell most heavily on the. health -if the crew. The difficulties with which old-time Admirals had to contend, as far as the health of their men was concerned were not bad weather but lack of fresh provisions and fresh water. These do not affect the modern sea men at all, as plenty of fresh water sag be distilled and fresh provisions Zan always be replenished at the same time as the coal bunkers are refilled. An old-time sailing ship would ride out the heaviest of gales without tak- ing much water on board, and even alien forced to batten down the dis- comforts of between decks were in- anitesimal compared with those of • to -day. It may not he generally known :that with nearly every new type of ship the living space affgrded to the men has grown less and lose, This is duo to a multitude of causes ---in• creased speed, increase in the size of 'suns, and the multitude of auxiliary engine's iyith which a warship is fitted —so we no %tiger find the great, airy mess decks of even ttiitt.3r years ago,. but a multitude of iron boxes ssiggll, at the best of times, brave to be ar- tiflcially ventilated. When all natural ventilation is stopped the iron beams and sides begin to sweat paid the at- mosphere becomes foul and rank, Yet it is doubtful if in a gcrerei way the men trouble much eljout these con- ditions; cards and other gamest are tilayed or sleep is wooed; the sailor now leas a little motto of Iiis own: "More wind less work," andeit really works opt like that when the upper deck is Merely a mass of tumbling waters. As a spectacle a modeles fleet in a gale of wind is an imposing 131giit, and one hardly knows whether to give the pacni to tl,a c.tately leviathan or the perky torpedo craft, A. battleship can hardly to called an idol eea-go:ng craft; the is *nucia too massive if) 1v buoyant nisi tt.e oumberocl with top hamper to newer herself easily. So she staggers aloin' butting at the seas ':ut never trying to rifle diem; down will go her nose right. u9 tO tine fore tri ets, then, as she rases, hundreds of tons of aster aro lifted to be flung aft h great torrents. And yet for seine reacoa i Hewn cnly to itself the ''vy prays 'hat simian it gess into '.eta:' it ..''y be at u We pf wind. sue Wren believe. rightly or w€W1gly, "at 1.• other navy 'Ars had go much 'a traiii.'o' as itself, and that,•thcre- re, the woiee the weather conditions e r -tter It will a^ for tttem in action. The .:ail cruiso... And torpedo graft eve nothing to do with weath, of f • '1r job at sea is to get from One eaflr,, tion to another as quickly as asaiel , How they live through it is e reeeter;' or,^ very afton the only COULD NOTE S . y ! COULD NOT EAT Woman So Weak and Nervous Could Not Stand Her Chit- dren Near Her — Vinol Changed Everything for Her Plant City Fla.—" I wish I could tell et*erybody about Vinol. For nine years I was in bad health. I got so I could not sleep, and I could not stand it to have my children come near me. I could not even sew or do any heavy housework. I was simply tired all the time. I tried so Many d a n fine pes I co uld riot real 1 them he' alt bet b troth' ing did me any a good. ' One day a friendasked nw totrg Vinol and said it was the best tonic she ever caw. I did ea, and soon got the first good night's sleep I bad had for a long time. Now I sleep well, my appetite is good, my nervousness is all gone and I am so strong and well I do all my house- work and work in my flower garden without feeling tired or nervous. Vino; has made me a well and happy woman." ._.Mrs. C, II, MILLI;n, Plant City, Fla. Vivol contains the curative, healing principles of fresh cod livers (without i) and tonic iron. We ask every weak run-down ver- n thisVi THE SUBMARINE'S EYE f�eriscope Has Been Greatly Improved Since First Reflecting Prisrn The submarine's two great assets in warfare are her invisibility and the possession of those terrible organs of destruction—torpedoes, Yet her invisibility to others would be useless if she herself could not see, and this faculty is made practicable by the periscope. Immense strides have been made in the improvement of this medium of sight. The first one was a short tuba capped by a reflecting prism, which threw horizontal rays downwards used v s turough the tube on to a focus. This focus, was opposite an eyepiece, on which an observer was obliged to keep his eye concentrated. On the telescopic principle, the periscope's length was increased, and then the introduction of the well known camera-obsoura idea enabled a picture of the sea's surface to be re- flected on a piece of paper laid flat near the steering wheel. The King's Roll of Honor It is characteristic of the keen in- terest that King George takes in. the men who are fighting for Britain that lie ordered a record to be kept at Buckingham Palace of the navies of all those serving in any capacity who are killed during the war. When the proper time arrives, It is His Majesty's intention to place a suitable tablet 'to their memory, either in the private chapel at his London residence or in the Chapel Royal, St. James,' When the sad list is completed, it will be handsomely bound and p'ace•1 :n the royal arc11Ives at Windsor castle, close to where a similar list If the African War is kept. SECOND COURAGE COMES TO SOLDIER. Impossible to F?e Indifferent to Dangt., But Manhood Rises S•..perior to . instinct of Self•Preservation The Tuan who has not been uncle fire always desires eagerly to kno what were the feelings of the man wt: has been during this ordeal, says L. medical correspondent of The Lendn Times, in an article dealing with ti. psychology of :courage. It is probabl 1 says the writer, that lie does not fie 1 quently find the information given b, 1 veterans either satisfying or enligeten• ' ing. Being under fire for the fir, t time exists, as a psychological prob- lem, only in the most shadowy for:.• Until the idiosyneraelee of the hide vidual man have been taken into ae count. it hap been my good fortune to e joy many copgrtpgitle§ of talking wit soldiers who have been woanded i action. I have visited 1lelglan, Franc.. and British hospitals at arious periods, and, as a medical man, have beees a' ferded epyeeial facilities for study Time opport4upitfeg Have conv'nsed me that ilA two rnim f e@, qtr to th a same sensations whim. fin4 -i= tiro for the first time, and also that a mail la „capable of experienciess quite diff.rent gaaatiene at different perio.:s of the game flay, thoeah his circa _:stances have not clieligcd• For examples, frciil tad eta,teinrnt of a man who eeperieneed il'.:e11 lire for the first time in his life is the neigh- iioritee4 of Arras, I get'h,red that his t feelin h b cn otic of g eat in. flys g lifl tercet and curiesiiy, A "B'ack Maria' Dell some lit:n?r�ds of yy.rds away and sent up a gr:at column of stook^, and at the same time shrapnel was burs`ing at no lone distance. But mica denly thei,, ^aloe home t' a realiz:it'o that these she•. - wee` intonlel t work havoc, and t.,ti in fact, th > r f _ dealer • , •1 u1I o position ont.tlpied v,.. "Then I felt exaetiy &Ii p a :'nu won d cr, , 1 Jr�.4 feel the moment . tc i' G n ire b fi that he we^ in a field a 'f11 an angry butt. Every- instinct of Mind sled bsdy prompted fi,,,hi" , tat Tcrrcr of �i.nticira..�n A Accord esan torsi r.'e t'•nt r'm ti )noment 11 t' rt r ,•r"•--11 ._ trench—he Pape b:,i;.•`1 I r sueea i',•,;' terror, "Bet tee 'alp r weed a r::y after a wh'k+ lee -lee n+e nt1•+i Ursa and dilly a Title ns:lr ." L titled de - elated that ih ! a'1 ale .11 ; sons, b - fore going i , , a'.1,100 t' `lt t'1+' 'vert put the ant c.r�ati: r: o i t 1 ;Manna �. r," •e i 1 , Iie ]rad. r � 1•' 1 dead C' t t 1 m n d i n t' , I • ert.re. a 5u ,.3. realie:utior t ' l ,.i ,'q .n r'oalin •; ,' through ' 1 •_ +,• r r,1 • v: ,'v C � 1. I' ash of • 1 , ..t, is t•t,,.-. �. brav+y:y, t Clearly, ',v1'.. • , Ie s•,n.7•n,'t ' 1: r• the coward (1 rrr,' t:'P word In no ee :• sorious rens,) ra. hr^l reef r1114 of f' t'!1 victory. 'Lila :' trine a sceo :d 'e', tr r'e a cour< . r i=s•v. d hal of ole r vision :viii 1' . alai: not it 1,'tl• t L' =l.`.sr, vin'; rI t.t lineon't fire tilts, , . '. d a self'i't''e" to ere ln1iS11.",(•i` '. • :4 tll':l..:ty width for a,�.a .t • _.;1•d "lilt; tier - vans �arson i til{ ,d it tot 1 our t3elicious cod liver and iron tonic bora without oil, on our guarantee to return their money if it falls to benefit. age" 1;, eta" •,atismi , .l. Wiet,vta Alvi�•vwa, n a„w- i ileu.stt ., to illustrate: lens:;is of it very ea`i- vincingly—and the story is worth tell• ing for its own sake. At a cer,':afn period of the present war some now troops were sent to hold a particular trench. They suffered" a really terrible bombardment with shells and shrap- nel, and at last about 100 of them evacuated the poaition and retired,. Presently they met a senior officer, who stopped them and inquired what had happened. Courage by Suggestion On being informed the oMeer looked grave and told the mon he would be very sorry to have to use any coercive measures with men whom he knew to be brave fellows. lie spoke to them for a short time and steadied them, Then he pointed out that the way of duty lay backwards towards the posi- tion they had left. 'I'11 walk back a part of tbo way with you." He did so. The mets returned to their posts and gave a good account of themselves. In the words of my informant, they "were all right after that." An officer who had himself seen Touch service told me before the be- ginning of the present war that the ;soldier who said ho was indifferent to lire was merely a braggart. *That i.s generally true, though -1 personally know of a few exceptions, But equally trueeit is that a man develops a cer- tain callousness, or rather indifference, He learns first to control, ther to measure, his fear. He learns to dis- count possibilities just as the ordinary IT way traveler does. And the work M hand gradually engages and holds more and more of his attention. There comes a time when, in the words of an army doctor who was wounded near Ypres, "You want to go hack not be- cause it is pleasant there, but because staying away is just impossible." While therefore the man who has not been under fire cannot safely count upon experiencing this or that particu- lar feeling when his hour comes—this depending so much u on y em er m ent and circumstance—he can, I believe, count upon achieving the second cour- age which is the priceless possession of the veteran. He can count upon "making good" in a moral and spiritual sense;; upon reaching courage even through the deepest valleys of mis- trust and fear. Under fire he may lose every preconceived notion he ever cherished or shunned, but it is at least in the highest degree probable that he will find imself. And it is also probable that that sell will be wortb the finding. A CANDID EDITOR Max Harden, Germany's Most Promin. ant Journaliat_t no Apologist Maximilien Harden is about the only German editor who is well known out- side of his native land.. Before the war broke out be was the steadfast critic of many German institutions. Trow he says boldly that Germany brought on the war because she wish- ed to do so. She denies the right of the world to judge her. So long as Germany approves of Germany's ae tins no more is to be said. tie sweets in a recent article that, however terrible fa the scourge of war, It is less terrible than other scourges that threatened Germany, though what these are he fails to men - gee. War was a Divine necessity for psilent•ermany. Therefore he bids those yrtid, I,tttempt to argue about it to be "Therefore cease the pitiful attempts til excuse Germany's actin; No lon• ger wail to strangers, wile de not ,care to hear you, telling them sow dear to us were the. smiles of paarvcg we had smeared like rouge upon our lips; and how. deeply "'e regret in oer hearts that the treachery of conspirators dragged ua, unwillingly, into a forced war. "Cease also, you popular writers, the degraded scolding of enemies that does not emanate from passion, but out of greedy hankering for the ap- Qieuii@ et the masses, and which con- tinually nauseates pe amid the piety of this hour•' Because our statesmen failed to discover and foil shrewd plans pf deception is no reason why we may iaelet the flag of most pious morally Not as weal>:willea i?13n3dcrere have we undertaken the tearful risk of this war. We wanted it. Because we had to wish it and could wish it. May the Teuton Devil throttle those whiners whose pleas for excuses make us ludiereue in these hemof lofty ex. iieriente• LW de net stan(1, and shall not place ourselves, fleforda th court of Europe. Our power shall create new law in Europ• Germany strikes. it eeeemiers new realms for its genius, the pilestl}trpd of all the gods will sllltf ggl}ge pt ppil,ige to the bop 1 Weis" Germany wage* Wide, he sera, tie. ceuse she believes that as a Malt et her achievements and in proportion $v them she is entitled to a wider field fez' the exerelee of her genius. There was ae room there ftar k3ert►i&iii'. '7() hoist the t o strmfi ft a e o e ii:e o g Il 1# .p >1 the narrow channel that opens and locks- the road into the ocean"—this. says Harden,i why Germany is at Y war. With the Belgian coast in her possession, and with German mortars canting atEngland, g d, rile lirltish >Jm- n ul liav to d e come into a fr r ie d- n r tpower en a ao s f equal k�@ � a .. i'? rnt Offet?gtii, entitlealtrviNI rigghts. ts Let Hini cise in Two little groups, one German and rentrenched within one French, were tin P. few yards of each other in the Ar• g}}p,e forest. The wounded were ievery rti,w., ,Tho Frenchmen ran up a whlto 'flak, - '�Vili ypu ieease Axing tok' kg. j) urt flow asked. "Our lieutenan,t is Mot n o an It ., !s 1 to o a >a t 13 P•nfl i3 � ... Bp tlhe fielrme>}ai ',01Li eatilt 14 f. 11ttiA more taint an hour a y ung �a wedged forward from pie il*`rtbitalt. owe k e o ul'tfet' c c s o L t cu It alYd it _(i i a .a 1 q the interne', .• t It Is over now." ffaifl IIs: lWlr thank you, for we loved hind," And ae the French soldier returned to his men the German captain 1'oso b las »long, 14 hand at the salute. German export* of rails to 'Ifotatit Africa last year were valued at $200,000, and that of rolling stock at $191,000, acsrllln; to e report of the Depairttaent of q roue a in+1 +'olnme'ce• of Cauda sho 1d * ':n r r • -r' -s in 1:o:b i�teMe itaazas it. tilt ,r'• ..., se4.Is iia', « — 1 Past Wawa—Toronto —Detroit— Chicago Train Service, These &,olid alta luxe trains, carrying bullet Library - oouaptw•rrrlc*xtt • obsarvll,• tion oars, eloctricdightr'd stond+and sleeptars, Iwgetber with standard ing Oar Service between biontrttal-To- ranto Detroir-Chicago, via Canadian Pacific and Michig•'n Central flatmate are known as "The Ceusdian," farad operated daily tahrnugh the Miele -gee Central twin tubes between Wiudbor and Detroit. Westbound; Leaving Montreal 8.45 a.m., arriving 'Toronto 5 40 pan; leave Ing Toronto 6.1Q p.m„ h.iiving London 9,33 p•0,,, arriving Windsor 1210 a tn., arriving Detroit11.35 arra. (antral time); leaving i)+"roit 11.55 p.m., arriving Chicago 7 45 a.m. Eastb.rund : Leaving Chicago 830 p. m. (central time) ; ale lving Detroit (M, C. R. Depot) 12.85 a. m.; leaving Detroit (M. 0,. R. Depot) 12.43 a.m. ; leaving Detroit (Port arr. et) 11 40 p.m. leaving Windsor (C. P. R) 1.20 a re,. (eastern time) leaving Winds rr (M. t). R. Depot) 2.10 a. m , leaving London 5,15 a, m. I arriving Tl ro..to 8 39 a. m. ; leaving Toronto 9,00 a, m. ; ar• riviug Montreal 0.10 p, m, Full particulars from Canadian Pa- cific ticket agents or write M. Gl. Murphy, District Pasenger, Toronto. ALLIES TAKE LILLE FOE'S LOSSES HEAVY Desperate Fighting Continues in Spltc of Bad Weather—Guns Boom Night and Day A despatch from Boulogne asserts that confirmation has been obtained of the rumors that the Germans have evacuated Lille and that the city is now virtually in the possession of the British. The struggle in Alsace eontines in spite of the heavy rains. There is more than a foot of water in the trenches. The Germans have already lost in killed and wounded 6,000 men, according to reliable reports, and Bel - 1 fort, the great Freneh fortress, is filled with prisoners, men mostly forty years of age or more, At Basil and Pelle, 11 miles south- •east ,of Belfort, the firing of heavy guns is heard night and day. The fighting around Cernay is becoming more desperate daily, the Germans having constructed miles of trenches in the meadows and forest. Steinbach has been taken and re- taken six times by conflicting armies. Steinbach is now in the hands of the French. The Echo de Paris states that General Von Heeringen, commanding the German centre, lost 2,000 in killed, wounded and prisoners in the battle of Perthes-les-Hurlus on Friday alone. Since then the German counter- attacks have been equally furious, and it is believed their losses by this time may have reached double that num- ben The fighting described in the official communiques • issued by the French War office Monday centres mostly in the neighborhood of Soissons and at Perthes. The allies have gained ground at both places recently, and 1t is apparent that their purpose is to strike northward and capture the rail. road lines which now parallel the German front to the rear. At some points the advance has been sufficient to bring the French troops within long artillery range of the goal,. MOVE AGAINST WARSAW germane . Preparing t o Make Great Drive But Russians Ready While Russia has hcen crushing the Turks in Caucasia and punishing the ,Austrians in Bukowina, Galicia and Hungary the German forces•in Central Poland, prevented from continuing their offensive by bad weather and worse roads, have been quietly but busily assembling a great mass of man for a new drive on Warsaw as soon as conditions should permit. That moment has now arrived, and reports from the fighting zone say that the Kaiser's men are again o_i the move, marching against the Polish capital from the north; This This much is known in Petrograii where it al. o is known that the Grand Dul:e Nicholas, the Russian comman• do a a -chief, has been cognifa,nt o` the new plan evolve,; by Mars;:al vo H\'idenburg, and has, equally quir,. y and fully as efHcieiitiy, made ever: preparation to interfe'r`e with its suc- cess. The result of this maneeuvrin on bath sides is expected to be a new battle that wil as each successive great engagement seems to have done, eclipse those before it. ' The Germans have been greatly reinforced duri::g the last week o1 more of rest. More than 200,000 trained troops from Belgium have re, witty joined then;, heavy artillery has been brought up and the most complete arrangements have been made for the atVempt; X110 MORE POCT13ALft TRUCES German Authorities Object tg Friend- ly Games onBattlefield The German army authorities have issued a general order prohibiting future troops in the field from frater- nizing with forces of the enemy,my, as theydid: at several points in the wets - tern P tern theatre o>= the war at Christmas. To such an extent was this frater- nizing earned out that at one place, where the Germans and British play j¢d football Christmas DO, they agreed to suspend hostilities for two -days more. CHECK CHRONIC . . HEMTJS4 NOW RHEpMA T40114104 iJ v rives out rteep.:Soted Uric P,oisosi:'. Thorn is pply tine ;tray to he free tram heern atiep eeilb ae r ►. rulate d lin Deitiespanned by an eateeias of /tic Acid poisopmust heeatcelled from the body." bat is what I HEPM4 will do and do it t oro t bi yy. l f bou suffer from any f0/111 ofbeNnim —Sciatics, T, f111iatoaly, Arthritis, Muscular, Lurn'tia,irn or Gout -4.144 ,. trot a bottle of 1 i I )IUM A front .i. W. Mcgibhoi'for 40 sent -•-it tar gon,ran- reecl. ,.Por years T suffered with iht'um'1:• '1.m in silo s,r•mw and ,.h.ntid.'i. \fir kidneys and t,t:,drlr•r tvrrt* off.'.:,•d• and r ri,phily lo t 31••*1•, Af'CI liv.. *sok,' *vont RHEUd A I Ivat, it will tu*v,,"—WfQNeas Fry, Port Etie, Ot.t. THE DOMINION BANK Mil EDMUND S. 'MILER M,P,, PRESIDENT. W. D. MATrKEWY, Vi*E'PRtIIDVNT, C. A, BOGERT, General Manager.,, Trust Funds Should Be Deposited in a Savings Account in The Dominion Bank. Such funds ars safely protected, and earn interest at highest current rates, When payments are trade, particulars of each transaction may be noted on the cheque issued, which In turn ke co ea areceipt or voucher wilco cancelled by the bank. WiNGHAM CBRANCH: A. M. SCULLY, Manager. asalarrealleallemeamaa a' JOB WORK Neatly and Pomptly Done at the Advance Office and at Prices to Suit RHEUMATISM 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 trot}b1es, or the word of more than ten thousand people SoLActp has restored to health, or the word of eighty-one doptors using SgLApp exclusively in their practice. Just write us for a FREE BOX and testimonials from Doctors, Druggists and In- dividuals. Also So:FAp remedy for 4NSTIPATION (A LAXATIVE AND TONIC CONBINED) `Does the work surely but pleasantly—Nature's way. No distress —no gripeing—no sick stomach—no weakening. The TWO rem- edies are all we make, but they are the greatest known to the medical world and guaranteed to be Free of opiates or harmful drugs. Neither affects the heart or stomach—but helps them. To prove the wonderful curative power of SOLACE remedies write for FREE ROES, State if one or both are wanted. SOLACE CO., Battle Creek, Mich., U S, Ae Honor Roll RANI . N4M1? Captain . -: • N. T. Sinclair Lieut. t• , . McLean " 0, Tilui;lls .ee .e•r••, it ..... . v . . C. G. Vnnstone ti . H Campbell Col. Serge. J I11auu ..•.,• \V L Lutton P Ilarris .. AChapman \V v , Van •cl< W. 13 ElliotJt R. G, Freeborn 1IL. lliHardiscling'e C. Shoebottom .,R J Little. .. , ...• . . • T. 1lfacTDona ..... 13 Guesldt ........ Is Madigan G Hayles Sergt. ft It i Corel. It If Buglar Private .... • It II 4' tf ft tt ft fl tt it dt 2< Y+ t•� 4' Ii ft ff f! ti ft 0 ff ft it bf if if rf u tt {i 44' „. ..••.i\'. .Stapleton .. • . • • W. Austin ✓ Taylor ,.It l inlay .... He, beet Chisholm rom I , i, 1 ,.. .. .•.,. Harry Chisholm , +t. 1 trim ,,..1• t ,,J \hili( x . , , G. t?, Brad z v ... ! suing art tip to ante Greatiery Aas:'Siurcly m #cull ' opet'xtioti we solicit Mil:. Hr,a1t a a �'ra ff ft a t ,t It If. f -f ff tf t, rf ft If t, u if u ,c tf It If CI ft it It tt if t, n., ,,,.., , JaCclale8 E, Sanderson • .H Deer N• Jpbh tt Aitcheson J Holland r••.••••..r. H Collar B Isard ...... ...,, G.D47 M Rogers R Forsyth S i W.r gley • • A. T1I Forbes .•••• .,•....••• •.f3. Crawford ...•.,.•,,,,, .......R.Berkett •,„•..,•._...••.., 1] render ..,.,... .... tiitlfis its .. • . . •a� .w limps p •, r• .,•., . .,. Tie Snitth .... J. Holmes UVJ McLeod E E D envy ......• ..........•....12. Mann • C Brooks H, F. Willis ..Il. Drummond *v."6,154 L. Drummond ▪ •..•... .Vance Sanderson L Binkley „•..,,11...•,...,... L. Brock • A Honey 4•1111 . •11. 1, 'Sfono • .6,10, Knechtel .•. •....,11....r.. 11. Huffman w.. rpa�n Wanted t% \” o,! \ve'Iare ; p pared to pay the bighoet ' • • . . ; 1•.. 'Fitt market prices for good cream sae;} -.give .::•. •13icscil you an how honst business wef tpg �saLoiht dud t'sttn each e40 otp h.Je1enFt"thn erEn! fame toeach pdtlo, , , '*rip fnrni h two pptpeaphcp$ Qt Osborne leer, pay all xpress cherpi d Till........• *.IVterY ri oivt.dcnretplty rid. reinrifpg 4 f1l l ,:... ...s;.,.;..•. , llgfftgl4illovrxrytwt tch,�.�l 4. $efytt1 Writs; . fg.l1 04tti'lala f r .... , ., • • T.ulIe11 cans slrrl give us t nisiSEAF.. . ,rr••e,aaa • t. yt7lrt"!it O . • R. Harrison�� M. hits SEA `OR`1'", -, ONT. ...•...... .,,. Q S<hneftri AiL ti