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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-01-05, Page 7791 . . JANITAWY" :7 mugs,=CO STOMACH 4 ' wipe's Oiapepsl`n" makes Slott, Sour, Gassy $to nacha surely feel fine In five minutes. f Shock le the Vale ;collar nervous called "shell sheer" host of the most prolific soy or ter anent disahelltei , eaya The New` n ail of the =Idea • men hare had to be Or- sme because of this rectos ailment, arthotten physically hound. In fade ea who have studied_ Masse shell shock" assert t Led are itractically_immonaro y, says. Tone distaff a, st hews adidn of the peyekle shock."F started that "physio tame suiting from a shell e- an extremely rare and mars • .r The same is sant el Into woe by gasses' s Shell explosi rityof wswi in found that the syyebic ni their soationst sights are the moot Bitet! potent factor in the . wet . this shock,", says D d ure, ea l gush augaimonl ad the fright fit Walt ► also important n tat a ime naval psychic, fir; hued fear Is an limpoianst erne, Particularly in Amok attdc d]spositio'o.".- lk Rheumatism LG HOW T€i ACTIa' 4 Y RT. T IPAINFUL MALADY. isle is for the man or woman rs from rheumatism, who ;e cured. not merely relieved. may. cured. The most the sufferer can hope for 3mething on the tender Itch - ie a little .relief. No lotion it ever did or can make at rheumatic poison is rooted ted Therefore rheilnatism e cured when this poisonous iven out of the blood. Any 1 tell you this is true. If so*nething that will go right t. of the trouble in the blood Williams' Pink Pills. They rich blood which drives out ous acid and cures rheum.a- iy cured. The truth of these i has been proved in thou ;see throughout Canada, and ng cure is a striking in- s. F. M. Simpson, RR. No. n, Ont., says: "For a long n confined to my bed, and rippled with rheumatism e first located in my ankh much swollenit thought it L sprain but hte doctor said umatism and advised me to so that the trougie would gravated, l did as directed. ed me considerable pain. 1 then to nib' arms. The limbs r right knee, then to my left d of getthng beter itspread h swollen, azul if I moved get week i nether respects f ;n weight from 156 to 11fy had no apiettite and seemed tercet in everything . One reading ;a paper I came case of a rheumatic sufferer: sing Dr Williams Pink Pifis to try theta and sent for .s. By the time these were [ certainly begun to improve tele was able to get up. Con- e use of the pills I was fit about with the use of the a ich later I discarded for a then through the use of the able to throw the cane aside id go: about as briskly as Ione. 1 feel that Dr. Wile Pills have been ablessing ted strongly recommend them Firuiiar sufferers. a procure these pills through in medicineor get them h 1 cents a box for six boxe nzthe I. Williams Medi* Brockville, Ont. _., at you just ate ie souring on `fir stomach or , Res like a lump of ad, refusing to digest, or ,you belch Sas and eructate sour, ttddigested �, or have a' feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste 1 lin mouth and stomach headache; you e n get blessed relief in five minutes. -Put an end to stomach trouble forever IT y getting a large fifty -cent case of j rape's Diapepaln Trona any drug store. You realize in five minutes how need- s It is to suffer from .indigestion,, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. Ira the quickest, surest stomach doc- tor -a the w rid. It':• wonderful. R. 8, 139 mer, Solicitor, Conveyaneee a ad y Public. Solicitor for the Wim- idea Bank. Office in rear of the Dom - Idea Sauk, for- , Money to 'men. by ?Fork H. Spea ea an (Continued from. 'last week.) They .laughed as they Marion Sinclair were gold but they dirt not hide th good nature in her eyes. 0 linger of her slendor. left wore too,: a gold band tha the gray in her hair at This was the wife of Clair, whom he had bro mountain's from her far-aw sin hone.Within a year h 1 en her heart so far as it la 3. M. ice. do it, but hecould not brea fir, Solicitor-, Conveyancer an or her spirit. She was too artery Public. Office up -stairs -over bask, when is furniture *tote, an greet, had set also iiintarth in the co'tun as a bride. mutilated h 1. BO1 . fir, Solicitor. Conveyancer wad Illotary Publir, licit for the Cavi- lank et Commerce. Money to loan. dire' fel sale. Office, �t wt's black, map stilet, SostoPih. OUD ' ', 1 LORA.' AND .re. Solicitors; fed -Wales Pubes. Vi' +y to iei'd In Eeafortib on M' c - Saito « or week, Office in Kind block. Moot, Sd;.,� 3. L. Kalman, 'ted'=- . V' ABT: 7. . BUBN, T. S. Storsor 'n ate of Ontario Veterin- • iteirr and Honorary` member of nit iiical Association of the Ontario 'y ieriaary College. Treats diseases =o€ • Dir Animals by the net .Trtd- p lies. Dentistry and Milk Fev-. ' • $ specialty. Office op+o41 e Dick's blain. street &,forth+. All or. left at the hotel will receive prompt ingot sails ,received set the a OBIE•. v. a Amor graduate of Ontario Veterin- College. Ail dieeases of Domestic mitis trued, Calla promptly attend site s charges moderate.`Yetertnari i specialty. Office and rest= hires os > erich Street. one door east 11 Dr &er s office.3ea!orf1, tee Ai IOAL W. 3. CLAN i' I LD, )LA., Mil,'. Pout, Etc. Ro for Graduate elftileiversity of Toronto, six years' pe[ience. Brucefield, Ontario. • C. 3. W. KAMM. M.D.E , M7 '1 r Richmond street, London,. Ont, i els s€, ; Surgery and Genito-lirtn .dre, of pn women. TYR. �t '+R GF, HHILF� . .tbie rysiriaTi s3f Goierle�tt • list in W nrEn's a' pd chilerei 'F l 'a, r usretlam. acute, eine*. werveco dime -tiers, eve ear uo€ e aid throat. Consultation free. (like in Csidy Block, over W. G. Willis'. Shoe More Seaforth. Tuesdays and Fridays et.;rn. fill 1 cam. E • PR. ALEXANDER MOIR Py*lan & Surgeon pjd Residence:, Main. Street. Mine 10, rieneeit. 411414.4. Dr. . W. spEC%.K Brad a of Paeuity of Medicine w- en University, Montreal; Member of Diglege of Physicians and ;3urgeorzll of. ;yttria; Licentiate . of Medical Ootxncl: St Canada; Post -Graduate member . of frosident Medical Staff of General.Hos mat, Montreal, 1914-15- Orrice - twr Morn east of Post Office, Phone 6t 1, Ontarts, • t . F I. Bt1RR©W& and residenc--Goderieit etre e tree at the Methodist church, Seatort.. ' N9. 41. Coroner for the Com) nOil Bettomi. it o in mcsalt, Ara , t, araduats of Victoria lit florless ori Physicians and Sue/tenet AAS, and member of the Ontari" for the County of Huron lCl likve a 3', Lo or graduate et Trinity University, and gold, meds llet of Trin- UV Medical College; member of tb- Col- liege Physicians and Surgeons, Oar 4 OIL H. SUGB ROSS. • graduate of Ilntverstty ` of Toronto braeulty of Medicine, member of Col- lette of Physicians and Surgeons of On- ; pass graduate courses in ChIcagir- Oliscal School of Chicago; Royal Opn. Mobile Hospital,- London, England, l ersity College Hospital, London, 1> d, Office—Back _ of Dominion BMX Eiaeforth. Phone No. f. Night illaa answered tram residence, Victoria SPA Seaforth., t f f AUCTIONEERS t TKOMA$ ,SROW1i1. Lioen,aed auctioneer tor the ovum .• A F the Rooky & nntain enairi t �$uron and Perth. Correspondence rivers have their begiinnixi atr geonter Air stelae gates eau b, white men crowded the Indi * by caning up "hone 97, Seiitorta,1 plains he retreated to the O, The Epiitor ofes, charges awe- i and in the valleys. made his l against the aggressor. Th g/dt* rid ,3afdsts�tl� ..guartwteed. this invasion of the mounta ;3; L U I the white roan has-been unr j and put away within a h l ued st eteto icu t timet. ° and of the agencies that ma *mss cies attain to �a c the swiftness of the story t lM of tee l,.+aia_. . vs seasais' e. tions overshadows all oth l its sue eche wet . first railroad put across th Stasis £e e Tont No. awe i j tains cost twenty-five thou .meter,, xr Pe 0, i ' of recoratoissances and fif MEN 1 Orn a >:i at Tat Rgra Z' J and miles of instrument su OI"atir, prempily ;'the day of that undertaking ' tion of men has passed and terve the wilderness that f. patz � penetrated has -•been transf Isksassad augtUaeor fog ea. oe� Indian no longer extorts t Rare keno. Beni a pr a.ic„, r•his foe: he is not. name/ sae tag rg : • Where the .tepee stood t t •e is t is drives his stakes. and the a ammo a , the great Indian rivers, sa'e Adis nags1 . piece: merge. aaoaera.w ` been opened for years to th ilkedialkak •suariasaimi or au ow std That one la the Crawling _St Oft* Melt is awnie try valley of Crawling Stone rive ire • for more than a decade thq "orced to leav t earning her T to which shy he put on,ane r heavy brow. to escape notice and secure he obscur- ity that she craved, her n me, Mar- ion, became, over the door of her mil- linery shop nd in her business, only °`M. Sinclair.' Cold Spri first brought quarters the ges, had pr end�ali 's 8 ::e.vin Cure has now re nett for human araC. 7E.s �r;ne1 tingpo'u`tercjulel.Jyre- hevesa ell' ss,s:tnfns,brkri- s, • all fora of I inip- is just what vol. nnc the house.. r my It ttrrs ;re toprovteits nes5, au � oaf f maWAY bantered, spectacles,', 'delightful n, the third hand she • explained nty-six. urray Bin; ght to the y Wiscon had brok- in him to her charm rouri to go him, and own living I had come tacles, she hair , end tgs, he- a :lair 'lard her when he d head- e as foreman ` f the brid- ved a hopeles place forr the millinery business—at 1 ast, in the way that Marion ran it, The wo- men that hadhusbands had no money' to buy .hat . ith and the w :nen with out husbands wore gaudy headgear, and were of the kind that Made Mar- ion's heart creep when th the shop door. What was ,V were inclined to joke -with there must be a continuity between a deserted woman who had deserted her wool this, ° business Marion would and in consequence her in' fairs sometimes approached She could, however, cook. arily well, and, with the si vane -raid, could always po boarder or ' o --perhaps man or a minsuperintend she could se a meals, and all mountain . en, were inEr erous in the: accounting wi Among thea standbys of McCloud. M Cloud. had al her friend, and, when sh Springs andmoved to Me to set up her itle shop in B • ney street near Fort, she had lost h m. Yet, somehow, to compensate rion- for other cruel :things in the «otmtains, Providnece seemed to raise up a new friend for her wherever sh went:- In Medicine Bend she- : did n t • know a soul, but almost her first e • mer that walked into her. shop -and he:was a customer worth whale—wa. Dicksie Dunning of the Crawling S ne. y opened orse, they her, as if f interest nd women nhood. To not cater. inery af- a collapse. traordin- of a ser - de for a railroad to whom who, like than gen- women. ers was ays been left Cold cine Bend 43 (Al`'TER ' The Crawling -Ston Where the mountain eha America have been flung up tinental divide, the coutry i its aspects is still. terrible., alone this mountain empire lose.. The swiftest transc trains approaching its boini night find night falling a they have fairly penetrated ically severe, this region store Is the richest• of the physically forbidding beyo ehes of North• America, Land alone excepted, in thi its gentlest valleys. Here t most grotesque, and here.a retreats the most secluded,. home of the Archean gran basins are of fathomless d its sagebrush wastes the s earth's hugest mammals li henioth and the monsters The eternal snow, the gram. sandstone butte; the lava -b desert; the- far horizon a here With the sunniest a skies, this is the range of t storms, and its • delight! contrast' with the dreadest Here the desert of death a field of cooling' snow, gre black in the dazzling sight” ip waters run green over air and sunset betricks the fan with column and- capital Clouds burst here above a and where due is precious are most prodigal in their If the torrent bed is dry, This vast mountain shed whose waters find two ocea valleys are the natural: hig which railways wind to t the continent. To the moa neer the waterway is'the s h `olds in its silence' the ri success; with hint lies the providing a railway aero which often. defy. the hoofs The construction .engine the course o3 the mountain water is both his ally and h ally because it alone: has in his tutdertakings;_ enemy fights to destroy his 'puny. as it fights to level the ba oppose him. Like ab$d spr perplate, water etch s th 1. in the mountain slop s a • i wide the valleys through i Among these scarcely know of North nto a con - many of In extent is grand- ntinental ries at in before dholog- eologicel ontinent; all strbt- e Barren egion lie desert is pastoral It is the , and its . Under letorts .of. side be - the deep. peak, the the gray familiar bluest of deadliest sunnners Id. timulates hills lie day, Em- ilie stone stie rock d dome. wastes, he skies T.J.Smith, Spencedale, Ont., says - "gave used Kendalls for maniyye Ardlsi my stable and honsc and it never bas fail- ed us yet: For rses Befined ler 13 been 'Used by honk- lnenv veterinarians, and farm . rs ior over 85 years. p j ,Its w rth has been proved, bone and the many other hurts that come to horses. April anad,1015. 01CendaWs paviii Cure is about tbe beat all-round liniment for both inert and beast that I know.' , COldi•Ali X. Get Kendall's Eiptviln Core at any dr,liggist's. For horses $1. Relined forraan *Treatise on the Horetaf roe front druggist or write to RONMX P SuOR indinl: had wheil left it. a first house. in the via was th Stone tory' citizens a emeetacie • which in- Ranch, built by Rig rd Dunning, and spires a widespread and just resent - t still stands overlooking the town of anent. ilnn ng at the.'unction of the French- Mr. Dewart and Mr. Lindsey them. roan reek wit the Crawlin Stone. selves disagree in their testimony. TheFrenchman is fed 'by failing Mr. Linsey, in a series of "ex - springs, and when by summer sun and planations," manages to fall foul of wind every staler stream in he mid- his own eorrespondence with the la- dle basin has-been licked dry,- the ternational Nickel Company, as well Frenchman rens cool and tween its russetthills, Riche ning being on the border, of th _ emerge _ country, built for his rano house G. G. S. finds y wanted fact secure a` rambling stone fortress. e had from the International Nickel Corn - chosen, it afterward proved. t e choice pany, ,tor .sale on a commission basis, spot in the valley, and he stoked it very large 'quanwi ties of nickel. Mr. with cattle when they could b picked Dewart saes thathis nickel was to up in' Me icine Bend at ten oilers a be sold to the Russian Government. head. H got together a great body Mr. Lindse , for some reason or ofValley :land when it could be had for other, is in a hurry to deny this, and the asking, and became the rich risen of to say that the stuff was to go to the Long Range. d Dun- Out of t extraordinary mixup Indian there private consignees In Ruesia. The The Dunnings were Kentuckians. main issue is not affected by this in - Richard was a bridge hngin er and teresting discrepancy. Messrs. De - builder, and wider Brodie bu it SOrle wart and Lindsey manage to prove, of the first bridges on the ountam however, that when Mr. lAndser division, notably the great wooden wanted to Secure large quantities of , bridge at Smoky Creek. ' meat to customers brought out his nephew. Lan eems shrouded in ning. ' He taught Lance brid tery, he went up ing, and Murray. &eclair, wh of prevention built as a cewboy on the Stone Rene by the Bri sh a d Canadian Govern- ed bridge -building from Riche raents and couldn't get one single though at different tunes, s yin ' Mr. Lindeey was informed that he and unmarried, and, as darht$ would have to go to the firm of women, were concerned, mign Henry Merton d Co., in London, through wiitom li nickel orders for European count es were passed. It does not appear that Mr. Liudsey ever went to the Merton Company, but a. year and a half later his ne- gotiations with the internetional Nickel Company appear as a basis of Merton fir Richard 6 Dun- nickel for whose iclen began- against the d Dun- e west, g men estern always have emarned so, But a Kentucky cousineBetty, one of the Pahl" nings,1 related to Richard wi sixth or eighth degree, came mountains for her health. mother had brought up Rich boy, aed Betty, when he Mt was al baby. But Dick—as th him at home— and the moth back and forth; and he pursuaded her to send Betty out for a trip, prlomising he wOuld send her back in a year a well Woman. - Betty came with only her colored maid old Puss Dinning, whe had 'taken her from the nurse's arms w en she was born and taken care of her ever between the Overland Route of the since. The two—the tall Ketituchy white an and the lest country of the girl and the bent tnamirly, arrived ioux. was long after the beilding at the Stone Ranch one day June, of the rst him before even an engi- neer's r connoissance was made in the and Richard, done then with bridges Crawlin Stone coentry. The n, with_ end looking after his ranch terests, I' had alreedy fallen violeetly in love ears three surveys we -re made ivith Betty, She ;was delicat, o, but if thoee in Medicine Bend, who reme Remaining in the mountaine vas the last thing Betty had ever tho ght of, t quite she set eyes on him in Medicine Bend for he wag' very handsome in the sad e, and unconvinced,and befere Me- Be was fairly wild about horses. as put into the operating So Dick Denning wooed a fo d mis- t me the Short Line he was tress and married her and bu 'ed her, mover to run a preliminary land all within hardly more the] a year ling Stone valley. Before Coe But in that year they w re very his eeport the conclusions happy, never. two happier, d when by other engineers has steod she slept aWar her suffering he left hinalas a legacy, a tiny baby rl. Puss brought the mite of • creature in its Rey- was not known to Me - which, fitted as thormighly. moun- I swaddling clothes to the sick ether, --very, vent?: sick them—and or Bet - is first year in the ht himself for his profession. ome West and found himself get work, had beeii. spent, shing, and wandering, often often .hungry, in the Upper Steve country. The ' Hey in ship ity my wai hin the to the Betty's d as a y knew. wrote two on he north ;side of the river and one on the south side, by interests made this way /gave varying esti- mates f the experse of putting a line UP 'lie valley, but the three coin- cided in graihtibitt who loo reinamie ClOucl partme asked b up Cra date of reached unehalle The Cloud. tains, in he could he had cold whit presented in the canyon where the rivier bursts through the Elbow Moan - tains. South of -this canyon McCloud, self with two Indians pockted in the rough country, and was planning bow to escape passing a night away from camp when his companions led him past .a vertical wall of rock a thous- and feet high, split into a 'narrow de- file, down which they rode, as it broad- ened out, for miles. They emerged up- on' an open country that led Without a break into the valley of the Crawl- ing Stone below the cenyon. After-, weed, when he had become a rail "clad with Glover and Morris Blood, heard them discussing the coveted and poSsible line up the valley. Ile had been taken into the circle of construc- tionists and was teld of the earlier re- ports against the lin., He thought he knew something about the Elbow Mountains, and disputed the findings, offering. in tWo days' ride to take the sneesbefore him to the pass called by the Indians the Bo4 and to taketthem through in Glover called it a .fmd, attit a big one, and though more im- mediate matters in the strategY of ter- riterial 'control then cense before him, the preliminary was ordered and Me - CI its this, that the cost would be etand Dick --Dunning. She fe ve. Engineers of reputation is respect agreed, but Glover, ed after such work for Bucks In love with him the first time ud's findings were approved. Me - d himself was soon afterwards en- ssed in the problems of operating mountain division but the dream of his life was to build the Crewing Stene Line 'with a maximum grade of eight teeths through the Box. ' The prettiest stretch of crawling, Stone Valley lies within twenty miles of Medicine Bend. There it lies wid- est, • and has the pick of water and strust it r grass between illediemelrend and Mis- s rivers 1 -sion Mountains. Cattlemen went into and their ", the Crawling Stone country before the crest of 111.11•MIIMMONIMMINIMON. hix that oblem of ranges a horse. ter. The enemy— possible ause it ;ark; just iers tnat spread s e plains, anges of Western from the ountains, al :tend scroll of west by ed, read, possible nsporta- s. The /id miles ys. Since genera- ose men. ed. The $ from rodman untry of onee has railroad , ne. The marhed ead line If ylrou were told of trea.t cut of coughs, colds and bronchitis, as certain in its motion on all chest troubles as anti- texin is on diphtheria, or vaec•mation on sniali-pox, wouldn't you feel like giving • Peps is the discovere! Peps are little tablets, containing certain medicinal ingredients, which, when placed upon the tongue, immedi- ately turn into vapour, and are at once bteathed down the air passages to the lungs. On their jo ey, they soothe of the bronchial tubes, the delicate walls thr inflamed and irritated membranes oe the air 'passages, and finally enter and carry relief and healing to the lungs. a word, while no liquid or solid can get to the lungs and air passages, these Peps fumes get there direct, and FREE TWA,. Cut out this anross it the name and elate of this paper, and mail it (with le. stemp to pay return postage) to` PePs Toronto. A free trial. packet will then he sent you. drugists.pxta stores sell Peps, 50c. box, it, looked at her husband and ed -'1.licksie" and 'died. Dick been Betty's pet name for h tain lover, so the father said th name should be ,Dielisie and elser ana his heart broke and died. Nothing else, SUMP o death or disaster, had ever mo thousend acres, all in Mee body der fence, up and down both the big river, in part ireigasted, and with little Dieksie in his de t away his suffering. o Dicksie was left, as her ha been, to Puss, while Lane after the ranch, swore at the cattle, and played cards at Bend. At ten, Dicksie, as tho spoiled as - a pet baby could laxy of devoted cowboys, was spite of crying and flinging, t aWay convent—her father had everything—where in many learned that there twere, othe in the world besides cattle an tains and sunshine, and tail, hatted horsemen to swine' fro stirrups and pick her ha f ground—just to see lit le picksie laugh—when they swoop0 p house to the corrals. When s hack from Kentucky, her gran dead and her schooldays finis the land she could see in th was hers and all the livinglerea the fields. It seemed perfeetly because since childhood mten tant mountains and theirl MO ' (Continued Next Week. I. hisper- ie had moun- othing oon he ed Diek ed him. e remit twenty all un - ides of swarm- ed Dick rms he mother looked rice of edicine toughly e by a d a ga- cut, in a far- lanned rs she things moun- broad- a their m the et the e came mother ed, all vallhy es 111 natural he dis- s had iii Forth °Truth sr se OMETHING has en accom- II plished by Mess e. artley Dewart and G. G. p. indsey of Toronto which t ey ldid not set out to do. They havin been the means of reassuring the , pu)lic on the nickel question. T rou h the efforts of these two gen le en the public are, now quite contin the Dominion Governmeint, with the liritish Admiral d that acting h kept Y. Lind - is the They Canadian nickel out of G rm Neither Mr. Dewart no M sey hoped -for this result opposite of what they soulght. are suffering the coeseeu ees of having presented a bed cas badly prepared. :When so much d pended upon the performance of themselves as their own two chief star, wi-nesses, it might reasonably have been ex-, . pected that these emineat King's counsel would have exex*ised, ordin- a.ry care, that in offering Itheinseives as witnesses before the bar of publie epinion, they would, have ttld the same story. FortunatelY 1, r the truth, this was not done. i sow mistrust, to work on the! nerves of the public, and to attack wtth such weapons a Government which is working steadily,. conseienttibusly, and efficiently in the nationr high- ' up They play a role -which, might proper- , ly be given a very ugly Mame. When t such men go- before the public in such ; a cause and make. statem, which, , tormediately afterwards are pannezi ., with the e Canadians many Is List remenalOwiesure Is suspected of trading emyl and that therefore Cenadian nickel to kill • AFTER ANY SICKNESS your nervous system is shattered; your strength ts w your digestion weakened; your blood rnpoverished. is the rich tonic -food to nourish your rierv&centers, repair the wasted tissue, improve your bio-..te-power, sharpen your appetite and gradually re-establish your strength. Get SCOTT'S for yourself, or remind some friend that SCOTT'S has proven these virerth for thousands of others. Look. for this Tr 7 Scott Bowne, Toronto, On% canaenan stamen,. Both the British and Canadian Governments have answered this 'charge, The Merton firm was cen- sured in the British courts for at- tempting to secure from the British Admiralty compensa.tion for the seiz- ure of nickel shipped to Belgium, apparently for Germaa use. The im- portant point is, as now shown, that this nickel was shipped before the war. The Merton firm has since been reorganized, it is now all British. The all -British Merton firm acts as an agency for the Adm,iralty handling shipments of nickel. It as the -Admiralty that decides where the nickel Is to go, when, and how _REWARD For infolleation that will lead ne the discovery or whereabouts of the person or persons suffering frora Nervous Debility, Diseases of the Mouth and Throat, Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles* Special Ailraents, and Chronic or Complicated Complaints wko else not be Leered. at The Onwie Meal. cal Institute, 268-265 ,,Yonge 41.11444114 From "Ye Olde Sugar Loafe" of grandmother's day, to the sparkling "Extra Granulated" in your own cut -glass Redpath Sugar has appeared three thnes daily, for over half a century, on thousands of Canadian tables. "Let ,Redptith Sweeten it." Made in one grade only the highest /5 THE CANADIAN PA FOE REQUIRE 60 MUCH MO EY 7 - This q giving to They and it is th No The Cause. provides all eith estion is often asked, by persons and by municipal councils, when the matter Fund is brought ebefore them. e entitgd to the most complete answer, for the Fund is the people's. They eated its y who must -maintain it. fob the reasons. There are 149,230 of them. Fu6.d asks for so much money because Canada has given her suer' so lavishly the Between 300,000 and 400,000 have volunteered. If their femilies need help, this Fund it. ; In October 53,693 families did need it. These families cOmprised 149,230 persons, near moithers, wives or children. Is it any wonder that so Great a Need requires so Great a Fund? OW .GREAT IS THE NEED OF MONEY ? The sum expended in October, 1916, The average payment to each family was... e e cost of administration was 15,4654:0703 e average payment to each person was....„ .......... ' (In above averages, sums paid for broken periods not included.) Pay spedal attention to the figures concerning cost of administration--includin esepense campaigns for raising money. It is the ambition of the managers of the Fund to keep the cost a raising and disbursing it below that of any voluntary fund ever created in. Canada. Their air' n to ; hand to the Soldiers' families as nearly as possible one hundred cents for every' dollar subscribed. They ' succeed in 'sending 991 cents. The sum received in October as interest on moneys in banks was about , $11,500.1 Take this from the cost of adininistration. The remainder is $4,000. And that, thereforei is all tlilt had to be deducted from sums paid in. Thait 114 to say, of every $100 paid by generous givers, $99AG reached the f_arailiess Is not that economy which should give confidence to every subsaTher? Does the magnitude of the Fund, as well as its importance, begin to impress you, Mr. Citizen-WI104 is -being -asked -to -subscribe -$100, or you, Gentlemen of the Municipal council, who are being wged to vote $100,000 for 1917? Does the REQUEST look as large as it did now that you know some's more of the:NEED? Since the war began the people of Canada have subscribed or 1917 they will be asked to give—and will give.. 12,500,000 Of this sum Ontario is being asked to guarantee and will ..Thici is pne million more than in 1916, but every dollar will b6 required for Ontario's families. much chance for indi-viduals or counties to economize by cutting (Iowa their contributions, On the contrary, the giving must be on a scale more generous than ever. And why not? 'If we can'. FIGHT, isn't it a Privilege rather than an Obligation to PAY? No pan should ignore his personal responsibility towards the families of tb.ose who are for him, sirnply because his Municipal Council is taxing hina slightly for the same object. these people far nsore. Perhaps he is too poor to pay more. If not, it is up to Isles to give a generous • cheque A- b4s local Patriofic Fund Committee, or mail it to T CANADIAN PATRIOTIC FUND, VITTORIA STREIT OT AWA ONE WORD MORE : E OF 0 REASON, wine\ HE ?MD