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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-01-26, Page 2• The duSt troin the stoves constant sitting around dur- the winter months has a tending to- litter the _floors, much to the discomfort of the tidy - housewife. The Bissell sweeper ta.kes up all dust, 'lint and dirt, easier and moreeffectivethan the broom without the backache or USti ng, ,t -ss Prices....$325 Lo $3 75 s .at 13c a th..too Valuable to 'Lose 'get some get off their feed Others have WOrMS, all for the lack of some Charcoal. 33-ity a bag now,. only. . CRENOID-Kills lice on Cattle or chickens, also disinfects stables, per awe* 1100 • • Wee e '0•• •ese • • it.• '• • 4"1". 6010‘i CHLORIDE OF LIME. ..... ....... . ...10c rt. • S. a••*•*• .**s. so Aoki' Bros., Publisher& erme of Subscription. -To any ad- jg in or Great Britain, one year $1.50, six months 75c., three month 40e. To the !United States, one yBar, $2.00. Thee are the paid in advance rates. When paid in ar- rears the rate is 50c.I higher. Subscribers who fail to •receive The Expositor regularly by mail will con- fer a favor by acquainting us of the act at esearly a dateais Weep, change 0± address is desired both the old and new address should be given. • ADVERTISING RATES. • Display Advertising Rates Made known on application. , Stray Ananale.-One insertion 50c; three ensertionsi $1.00. • Farina or Real Estate for sale 50e. each:insertionfor one month of four insertions; 25c for each subsequent in- sertion. Miscellaneous! Article* for Sale, To Rent„ Wanted, Lost, Found, etc.; eaeh insertion 25c. Uwe], Read- ers, Notices, etc.0.0c per line per in- sertion. No notice less than 25c. Card of Thanks 50c. Legal Advertising 10c and 5c per line. Auction Sake, $2 for one insertion and. $3 for two insertions Professional Cards not exceeding one • mcb--$6 per year. SEAFORTR, Friday, Jan. 266. 1917 • GERMANY'S FAILURE. The Gerinans the Eight the -British Were a decadent' -race which was wholly the prey ef materialism, and which wouldenever submit is to the sactifiees netessar in order 'to resig NESS OIL, blue black, extra............ .$1 00 pc r g al, the onslaught a the German mailed fist. The reply VMS that, in an blared- , TOILETPA R, per roll.... . ........................... ••, •...5 C ibly short space of time . the whole PE • 7-L1OR WAX RONUIC, per ...Ile 0 • • •44611,••••• le• **a •stetwars 50c eellessuiasnolemeosioshisollogooloomiesfeseamilwaieg • Auto Paint Some are considering fixing up the Automo- bile for spring. We stock all the necessary necessary supplies, in the painting line and can recommend none better than Chemiel Jet purpose,5ows without streaks.Per qt $1.35 *SILL .,. llatammimungene SOOK:t 111: .0111 nation abac. doned those 61A -honored traditions, which had been cherished , for eenturi s and sprang to arms. The ; Germans ielied on the oceurence of___;......... civil war in Ireland. The result was that the Ulsterman gave his hand to his southern- opponentT1iey antici- pated that the overseas domipione would Shake off their lo se eonnec- tionswith the Mother Country. The reply was that Canadians, Australians and New Zealanders shed their blood like water in order to preserve that -connection which German politicians erroneously held to be irksome, They thought that South Africa was yearn- ing for revenge and for complete in- dependence. To their amazement th DNEYS ARE RESPQNSIBLE FOR The fruretion of the kidneys to porify-the blood. Every three reinutes, the entire- blood stream. passes through the kidneys and is •relieved. of as impurities by these busy organs. "Mon the, kidneys fan in their -work, poison Accumit- lates in the, bloed--pains are felt in the back, the, head. aches, the 'urinary system is deranged, the Joints 'and ankles are apt to men and there is grave clangor. of „rhemnatisat, seiatipes and lumiiago. Gin. Pins restore the drerf to their normal activity, end should be taken as soon hs .any - the 'symptoms tadicated above ere felt. Gii Pifla tooth and heat the kidneys. Don't neglect tededy • trouble -yen win only leafier need- less pain. All druggists' sell Gin Pills--; 60. a box, or 6 boxes for se.so. A sample will be sent fro -3 upon request to • o ItiteroerAn Dams 8s CHEMICAL 00. Or CAITADA, LIMITED Toronto, Cit. k32 • U. 0. Addrese-Na-Dru-Co. Ina .- 202 Main St,, Buffalo, N.Y„ • ey round that the polie of y darin g conciliation" as sit had been rightly termed, adopted by the British de - memo,after the Boer war, Jed i to the expulsion of Germany from her South African poseessions. They pin- ned their faith on the Indian discon- tent and disloyalty, and 'again they found the light fetters, gorged by a ., betting democratie imperialism, consti- . 1.1C.Kii01311/14tUat SickHeadache1 a a lutism. The Sikh and Gurkhas stood tuted a tar stronger bond of inii3ion than the heavy yoke impos d b and Biliousness comrades in a supreme effort to dispel side by side with their British born ileaclo ce: Sectforth,00. _ . , the absolutist nightmare,. They DIRECTORY Officers: e y a so- - • Etre histurance Co. CURED BY ' MILBURN'S 1• 3. Mel.eate Seatorth, President - 2. Connolly, Goderich, Vice -President LAxik Thos. E. Rays, Sealorth, Sec-Treas. ea -LIVER pILLs -tors: D. F. McGregor, Seaforth ; 3.(L.Grieve, Winthrop Writ. Rnn, sodirorth; John ennew • J D hi . Fre. Willard Tower, Hillsboro, NiB lelcEwen, suffered something s, Event, Beecliwood; A. eti ld • J R. McLean tseaferth-wzth slkee .neanacuei„. At tmies I would en.ces failed to produce any effpet, t benne thought that Egypt and the Soudan must assuredly turn against those whom _they erroneously designated as their oppressors But even the religious tie between the Egyptians and Ger- many's bewildered friend, the retro- grade Turk, of whose methods of gov- erment, the inhabitants of the Nile valley have had some bitter experi- 6 bilious. and would haye severe' whilst the perfect tranquility of the • 7„ Connolly', Gioderich; Robert Perm, Palus m my stomach after eating, and, Soudan, garrisoned by , a snare hand- liarleck. • . . w . have 'a bad taste in my mouth every ful of British troops, rendered the Agents: Ed. Iiinchley, Seaton morning. I told some of my friends most emphatic testi/noisy as yet re- Chestiei, Egmondville; J V•,. 80 ....1 about it and I w advised to use Mil. ' corded in history to the soundness of r liolifit4Villor-, Alex Leitch, iintoe , burn's liaxa-Liver 'lls. This I did and the foudnations on which the British Ito S. Jarrouth, Brodhagefl. and they cured me. . * • Empire rests. When the liver becomes sluggish and , inactive, the bowels become constipated, THE ANSWER OF TEE ALLIES TO iiiin11)1111. 1401* 4:09p - foul and sick and bilious headaches occur The answer of Great Britain and • . • the tongue becomes osated, the *stomach • THE PRESIDENT'S NOTE. Ilapairlyg Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pilis Jen tee her allies to the peace propcsalof foul coated tongue and stomach- an4i President, Wilson is the most remark - banish the disagreeable headaches. able document that the war has pro - t. it st peepai sst to tus' at lid 0f Arilhurn's Laea-Idver Pills are 25e, duced. Fore , and itt pumps a 4 sizes , s per vial, 5 vials for S1.00, at all dealers, When One considers that eve oy etate- tee 1•1 F‘tting Ccalva•n- or mailed direct on receipt of price by'tient, every word had to expresthe Tna Pr. MILBVRN Co.,14:111TE)N, Toronto; composite view of some eleven nations, '1 e t-sel FaltKs t Da Water treugns-- Ont. . each having its own lanenage, am- bitions and peychology, its clarity is in striking contrast to the original pro - peal fthe central powers and the ration, find we went 3. elle peteen The indictinent cif Prussian militar- . at Pump Factory, ech . Wo are pier ared itay you , ism for having started the war to in - ▪ East* or at residence'. ° higneet pr.c.e.q•for c•retim, Enty sure Teutonic hegemony (headship or i Street von evety wo aeeks, Weigh, sample control) over Europe and its economic ail test each. can of creehl carefully denomination -oven the_ world, is unans- -'r h geafvrth ie.' )113 a.ttle Basues7 A a iC indsot pump rep airiagdone notice. For term ee etc. , G ed erich nave oor Creamery now io fug notes of neutrals. CREAM WANTED. Fv els , an gtv c etatonent ot he same I werable because it is based upon his - JXBLE GODERICR BRANCA. TO TORONTO. p.ra. er• ich Leave '7.00 2.30 BlYfire 7.87 8.07 le= 7.50 8.19 h 9.86 5.05 P FROM TORONTO Merced° (Leave) 820 5.10 Guelph (arrive) 10.15 7.00 Walton • 12.58 8.42 WSt5th 12.10 9.07 Auburn 12.30 9.19 eGodricb 12.45 • 9.46 . • Coanectioes at Guelph 3tmctsth on Sete Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon - Detroit and Chicago and all In- ter: tediate points. •it -- G. T. R. TIME TABLE freeing Leave Seafortb as follews: 32:39 a.m. -- For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Kincardine. ergia in. - For Clinton, Wingham end limeardine. 31.03 p.ra. - For Clinton, Gotierich tax m. - For Stratford, Guelph, ieronto, Orillik North Bay and 'obitswest,Belleville and Peter - bore and points east. .1.6 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, eiontreal and points east, LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Passenger.. m. riugithin, dsPart . 6.35 retie. • .. • • 6.50 7.04 Lexedesbors.. ?,13 Clittt -e• • • • • • • . 7.63 • 8.28 821 21:31111 • • c .04KIVile 8.84 ever .. a s 4,11... 8.61 sralia.. • • .1.• 9.02 loomed.; ante, es. -.Math London, depart • 'CrilLtrala•sr it a le -Mk ter o e Reneali *SOS ate. at.* Per* eitii Snifteteld * ta*. 1'V ct-,7 g.11 10.0 Londasheeee. eie lisagraee.. • • E..ej • • ink* mi P, M. • 4.40 5.46 5.57 6.09 6.16 6.24 , tk7 1.18 ' ffA9, We al supply can free of charge, torical fact and give you an honest business- deal.. The indictment of Prussian militare fir in and see us or drop us a card for , ism fOr the ravishment of Belgium, in cynically brutal violation of sacred 1 ie Seaforth Creamery cause the bleeding body of Belgium is . Se afor th • living proof of its truth. The indictment of Prussian inilitar- . ism for all the many and varied • brutalities and violations of interne - particulars neutral rights, is unanswerable b. -- in n eft 1 , tiotial and Moral law, since the begin - nae ae, ere COi fling of the war, is unanswerable be- - i cause they are known of all men. The indictment of the Turk for his . ON HEtn LIJ :GS. unepeakable crimes against the Ar- menians and other conquered Christain i peoples,. both before and since the war - gegen, is unanswerable' because of the RAISED Fiii.V.,11;`4 AND ELOCO. facts are so well established that neither Turkey nor Germany has even i -- attempted to deny them , We have no doubht that these in - 1 .Never ueglect ea,..ez. at firt seeins to be dietments will appeal to the sense of but a slight -cold. You feink perhaps justice and the conscience Of the neu- you are s+rong ?..1!. -1..t -ti to fitin it off, but tral world no less than will the ex - colds. are not so c...v.i.ily fon; et off instills pressed determination of the allies to northern climate., .ad if iney are not continue the war with all energy they can command at whatever .6a,',: - attended to at on..,,e• will son, er or later , rifite is necesary to free Europe and develop into some rerione 'erg trouble 'the world frein the menace of future such as broncLithe prieurnoriiv., lied pert i Prussian 'military aggression and to haps that flotrodiu.. Itease, 0. frsegaptiote compel restitution and reparation to . heroic Belgium and the, other ravished Miss Kigye Melatseld, f- • r.lie), Milies, nations N -S., writn: "Lath ithisaf t t"otraeted , The determination of the allies to , a severe etnu- ari3 '' '''ettle( '4:. I." Inn -8'9' drive the Turk from Europe, "where 1 would crugh a -A raise !hlon and he has proved hinisdf so radical./ blood. l had tei - eouel. ' , a month, alien to western civilization," should, and had teedeane .tott. the ..).-t-t, but it and we think -will, impresstthe neutr I did not S111 to c.o tee ar r good. 1 really thought 1 teal ccuisereetion. My fraetth: ad:a ed use Dr. Wood's i. -way iteet Syrup aoneli I did, and 11 go t goe.. teal 1 an very elad I mad 'Dr. T,Tood's,' and would • =complete! it to try one." Year can procure Dr. Wootea Norway Pine Syrup from ata- druggea or dealer, but be sie.? aatd get 't1;1r. Veeers," when you ask fur it ae tlaxe‘arlr aumber of insitaticav i thK. market, eihieb some dealers nee/ try to palm ot on.you as the genuhin. , wars, cannot be attained at a confer - See theit it is put up in a essuow ence held at a time that Prussian mil- , per; tittee pine trees is the wade "iifaritm is still dominant and the Prus- price 25e. end 5(e.. ""bi sian mind full to overbowing with the Arrogance of victory, must he obvious manufactured caly ey gra* T. um. to the central nations as it is to the BURN CO.. IdratreXD, Tteonto, Ont. allies The allies' statement is a frank, dig- worideas one of the vitality necessary objects to- be accomplished before there can be a permanent peace • In its entirety and in its specific parts the allies' statement furnishes a complete justification for their be- ing at war and of their refusal to ac- cept the Pruesiaif propesal that they enter a peace conference untial the objects for which they went to war end for which they have already made such appalling sacrifices have been ac- complished That these objects, the greatest of which is world security from future Dzter de'bate 0 rigolision Bill, the bill whit aimed at Wring Jame, Duke York* from the throne, was at 1 height atr Titus Oates Was earnestly liettaring himself to establish the, actuality of the famous plot which .has come to be called by his name, and the Bari of Shaftesbury Was gathering in a- host or petitioas from all over the tountrY Urging • that the papist, Sams, Duke of York, the King's brother, sliould be excluded from succeesion to the - throne, and the Duke of Monmouth procialnied heir in his place. Shafes- bury's petitions- were answered by thousands of tounterepetitions ex- pressing "abhorrence" of any sueh action. And so the country carne to be divided lato two great factions - the "petitioners" and the "abhor- rere." Later, scene wag on. the other .side, recalling the- march of the Whiggamores and their loud outcry against the "Xing and court," dub- bed_ the "petitioners" "Whigs," The Pltitioners, on their part, remember - e the Well brigand of the Elizabeth - aa *ars, the man vtlio was professed- , ly a loyalist, but really Preyed on all parties, and they retorted by dub- bing the "abhorrers" "Tories." Of eourse the party system had its be- ginning Jar anterior to this. Whig and Tarsi were, an fact, but the lineal descendants of Rouudhead and Ca,v- aljer. BY the time, however, that William and Mary were eecured on the throne, Whig and Tory, as party . names, had become veell-establiehed facts. Both parties we- in favor of governielent by King an,. rliament; but the Tories though,. nmeh of the divine right of the Ring; whilst the Whigs were much more inclined to look upon him as an official. The Tories, ;moreover, were stout sup- porters of the established church; 'while the Whigs, though theraselges ehurchmen, were ever inclined to - Ward the Nonconformists, and, from the Tory point of view, had Many dangerous leanings in that direction. Members of both parties were to be found In all ranks of society, • Whig and. Tory weire never deem distinc- tions, 4. The divisido persisted long after the cause of :it had been forgotten, and in many,! if not most of their original aims and objects, the two parties have exchanged plates. In the days of William. and Mary the Tories reckoned themselvee the true represehtatives of popular rights and of natural and. national interests; whist the Whigs were the great for- eign eipansionlets, the party, in fact, of adventure. It Is curious to note, to -day, that whilst the word "Tory" Is as frequently used as ever, the, term "Whig" fa seldom heard. The nified and sincere appeal for the pathy of the neutral world based upon proven facts of history prior to and • during the war It cliseipates whatever ocean the friends of the allies' carse may have had, that. the German peace xnove would fix upontbe al1ie, the reponsi- bility for the eoutinuation of the war. If it is granted that Prussian mili- tary ambition caused the war and that it is guilty of the horors that the allies - charge then the Prussians cannot shift the responsibility for the continuation of the war to the allies, One cannot read the allies' note and then, read the note of the Teutonic powers, made public at the same time, without recogpizing how pitifu]iy1 and futile is the letters' attempt to jusify themselves. One need read no further than th etransparently • ineincere attempt to show that Belgium had brought her tragie fate upon herself by co %en ing with Great Britain and France against Germany, to appreciate the character of the whole document. This, 29 months after the German i Chancellor stood up in the Reichstag and personally and publicly declared!, to the world- that Germany's vi if ation of Belgian neutrality was a violation of international law and treaties and was only justified because Gee -Many ;had to do it to strike a deadly blow at ,France. * Whatever emeleiidea may have been, as to the wietiont,;.of President Wil- son's peace proposal, it mutbe ad - 'mated that the answers it has drawn : from the belligerents loav-e done tauch. to clarify the whole sitttation. . We know now of the deadly earnest 1 n,ess of the allies and of the grim de- I determination of the Central Powers. , Those of us who iwere so ignorant ° o the facts that we thought peace could,be had for the mere asking have I had our illusions shattered. - The Cleveland Press. a-oat:Am., JL4 AuArty FM:Xi X 1Vingatee Ititctieners eaceeeete ae Sirdar of the Sudan. 41When Sir Ref- ginaId explained to the sheiks who I was and what 1 had come for," writes Mr. Gibbons, "they nodded their heads with satiSfaction and laughed. "'Tell him to witite when he sees,' they declared. 'We are glad that he, came to our feast, for he ean give London a good report of us.' ''The last tent we visited» was the neoet, important, and around it were gathered all the people of Omdur- man and of the tribes who had come into the city for the festivitiee. Thou- sands of white -robed howling der- vishes were dancing and bient nee. and had reacheil. the point of frenzy, We 'sat sipping coffee in the miCsi of a crowd of sixty thousand Molf,rns who had been followers of the hlabdi and believers in the Khalifa. The sirdar's guard of honor , was four mounted Sudanese lancers. There were lib temps, ;Egyptian or a i. 7;.;:'. None of our party was armed. The people of Omdurman, at the feionnint of the greatest religious exaltation of the year, had .in their power the governor-general and the ihsasf eepre- Eientatives of British t military and civil authority in the Sudan. "I know the feeling of 'Moslem Ifanaticism in an Oriental crowd. I have experienced it more than. mice , when I knew that I was faclng eh mill, I That feeling was not here. a here 1 was real Jove for the sirdar i and no 1 hostility to the rest of ns, "As we were leaving the tent, one of the turbaned dervish chieftains 1 who had followed the sirdar to the i eatranee, put his lett hand on my ; shoulder as he shook hand, and 1 said: f "'1 hope you have enjoyed the ; feast at Omdurman and will come ' again.' word "Tory," it is true, is generanyl 'Who is that sheik?' I asked Sir utied by the Liberal when speaking Reginald. of a Conservative, and it carries with. 1 "'One of the Malulits sons.' it a "note of fine contempt." The i Conseevative, to -day, however, does To Aid the Soldiers. not retort with. "Whig,"- but with 4 be 'war and the operation of the "Radical" , Ontario Temperance Aet has had the _effect of reducing the prison. papa - 1 •lation of Ontario to such small num- BREADWHATINCRmAESANE PsRIINCE OF ' bere that men are not available to BRIT.AINcarry on the industries at Guelph. . . The plant is thoroughly. up-to-date and consiets of a. maehine ettoP, plan- ing mill, woolen mit, wood working plant, quarry and dairy. The farm adjoining consists of over 800 acres, and is text to the Ontario Agricul- tural College. tnder such conditions a great work can be 'done for the re- . According to a Board of Trade cal- culatien an increase of one penny in the price of the four pound loaf in - yang purchasers of bread in this country, in an additional outlay On that article alone of Z1,250,000 a month. Now the total increase in the prices of bread since the war began is per four pound loaf. Therefore the additional cost to the breadwinners is £5,000,000 per month, or 200,000,000a year. In effect this is as much a war tax as the extra duty OD tea dr ineonies The same may he said of the increased prices of reoSt necessaries. If the aggregate burden of them were cal- culated as has been done in the case of bread, it would run to hundreds of mil- lions, probably even. to ri00,000,000; and aa $500,000,000 is also the amount being raised by pariteneenteietr taxa., _ THE GROWTH OF FARISY. i 1 tion, it must follow that on acitonnt of teh extra cost of living and i 1 ra Lien . , and living coMbined the wition in •Story of !Origin of Terms "Tory" 1 • and "Whig." When Mr, Austen • Chamberlain, writing to the presideut of the West Birtninghara 'Unionist Aseociation, reiterated the view that party poll - tics must for the present be suspend- ed,' be touched' upon a question which, in the United Icingdora, as in other countries, is Steadily growing n moment day by day.. Many men n many countries are inclined to re- onsider the whole question of party overument; to examine into its rigin, and to try to discover how uch or how little of it has any Just lace in the economy of nations. England is, of course, the home of arty. government When the little and of horse drovers » from Gallo- ' ay, styled in- Scotland "Whigga- is ores," marched to Edinburgh after the defeat of the Duke of Ila,milton 1648, filled full of opposition to • e King and the court party, they ttle, thought they were helping so uch to make history. Neither had the Irish brigands of the Elizabethan ars, knowii to the men of Hugh Wellies Tories, any Such ideas. Yet ey gave their names to the two eat parties Which to -day, though hanged past all recognition, still ominate the political 1ife of the nited Kingdom'. It was during the last quarter of the Seventeenth Century that the two names were firet heard as politi- cal aitlege The country was Reethinz ; Would you like to end that ter- rible itching, that burning pain; te heal those horrid sores? You have tried all sorts of fatty ointments, lotions and powders. Put them aside now Enid give Nature a chance as represented by Zam-Buk. Zam-Buk is made from herbal es- sences; is a natural healer. Is not something you have to send to the end of the world for, and pay a heavy price! Every druggist will sell you Zata-Buk and for 50e. only. Just give it a, fair trial and inci- dently 'give 'yourself ease ,by the quickest route. ,fiep name on bo:t:- spending Li 000,000,000, or ab int fi%1- thilv.0 as meeh ae wae deinaeiitel by way of taxation before the war. 0.Z.,4 11.".",T SeiVat ;.oi '112.` ".-.11A • s fe en ro tele `.= lese" ;,=1 t.' ena the setthet e eine geoi whe e" the Itteneo • "La the• otak. to et. t• t Meow tic Leve binnall eT.I,F"Prtteni, ii W;.;(1). 12,171,i ti hundred thoasend m-.1.1ri-a Agit) sleep durieg niee ketYe, In addition Juade feeeet rearrne; and fought env r! Llisl gr. -tel. .a.s in history. • "How, than, did tee men turvive nine days eepereetla witleal; ==ppor- tunity for sleep? They d d a extra- ordinary thing - they elept while they marcbed! Sheer fatigue slowed down their dace to a rate that. a weld perrait them to sleep while walking. When the halted they fell asleep. Theyislept la water, and 'on rough ground, when suffering the pangs of hunger and thirst, and even -when siererely. wounded. They cared not for capture, hot even for death, it only they could sleep. "The unvaried testimony of the soldiers was that every one at times slept on the march. They passed through villages asleep. When sleep deepened. and they began to reel, they were awak. teed by comrades. They slept in wattr, on stones, in brush, or lit the eliddle. of the road as if they had ruddenly ; fallen in death. With the eyer on -coming lines of the *mealy no man was safe who dropped out of the ranks, for no matter on valet . Lex t he fell out, sleep conquered h Asleep many were captured. That the artillery men slept on horseback was evi- denced by the fat that every man lost his cap." . a .• t• Great Britoil, In the Sudan. In spite of ire -ottani reliorts that the native population of Egypt and th,e Sudan are on the point of rising adainst their Bi inlet' rulers, they have proved theeizeives more loyal than ever, says ;Herbert Adams Gib- bous, author of "The New Map of Europe," who recemly spent some time In the various North African countries gathering raaterial for his new book, -The N7 -w Map of Africa," and who contributes an article on "Great Britain in the Sudan" to the ' January Century. Mr. Gibbonside- t scribes,. in eoniirreaVon of thief °pin- t ion, a visit wheh ae paid to Omdur- man on the occasion ot the prophet's IfteehOEt War &1;* Besgtuald turned soldiers, especially those who require re-iduce.tion„ and. Iia th.oir, tention to make tuie of these splendid • faeilities for that purpose. In North- ern Ontario there are also two indus- trial farras where the men can be taken care of, and at Whitby Asylum, which will be used as a home for the soldiers, other branches of re-educa- tibnal work can be . effectively caief rind on. • Coupled with this is the announce- ment by Hon. G. Howard Ferguson that the Ontario Government will set aeSde an initial grant of $1,000,,000 eaelet returned soldiers to go on the land. Tiv's money wilf be need to. teain the men in agriculture, provide i*een ;th a cleared farm, and make • o for live stock and equip- te.eat. alan RailwaYt Ceetan aer llrett at LaGuayra peao -at the geverneuent of Vene- teelt loained to undertake , on of a hirth.Way front *..n CriStObal in the ex- , .1r,, A -stern part of the republic, e -e, feed ell be the largest public v »,k ver andertaken oy, the Gov - ;.1 Venezuela; it will be 683 oileo 11).O,S will run from Caracas rent., an Carlos, Guanare, Lai as, and 4,ntonio de Caper°. Suspense. "In the strange, and nightraare country of the trenches where the men of Frence live, the real lives of the women of France are passed. "There is not a single little fawns' on the remoteborder of France *Whose eyes are not fixed on that long, narrow strip of blood-stained Coun- try, that tormented and . tortured country of barb -wire, 0±. mitrailletts- es, of shells, of great guns and trenches. The etate of soul of a natioxi whith has 'subordinated the fruitful industries of life to the sub- ject of iglling and being killed is a strange thing. The spirit of a nation which sees its young manhood, and Its youth surge up to the country Of death and then ebb back Wounded mud. e., od is stn.:age and grave; so sir; oen aad SO f save that, if you had • ,yr,1 -*.ere the unfamiliarity el' I r.lp.31.1 le a terrifying 1***12M1*-emillaelmesesisesuasseligeele I frieele, I 1: powerine ete was almoet gliet; a 1 comfort overwhel Ithoueli 1we -; iia(...17. • ed itsf.lf into enseeeet eae what brooded owe, all -WOrricii wheel 1 root. ere waiting; they gave the c•..- ef whole nation Ifetening to ,ire voices; and while the eurfeee rimr- Yersation was as litifiLlai h. if:;•leR, be, since ft dealt thfeeth things as .V.-4.42.' n.ei the iannea.etile by-products of war, they vine: el: of them waiting, wailing, ier skoae fronk the front, Wait.nia to leak.; If eons: and busbands..,,y.1..-re • ing for the, end oi. Lae wee."---thsey . Heaton Vose in The Janeae) - • tury. ny °ea . Wolfram in isini'l;edes. Eight squere ;elite et bearing area baveh. ri fee -se at 177 Hatch's Creek, Noa i" ern T.;' _says a corresponth_lnt f 11,1i) i Times from Sydn y, 1, relia. This discovery le of eeeet ' ance as tungsan ore. Tungge el L. u. i•1 a.; :se-v.1°y for hardening 1I?:.t 1iii., anti aiso for heavy guns and atneor ol,atee "by 1014 Tavoy, in Sotith• rn itn aa, was producing 2,32,5 lees ore 'annually out of a- Ural • ,.orld, gonsumption of 0,000 tons, bee it .; was all goillg to Gcr'2.1any, ar..4 on: the outbreak of aer the Ben. a in- dustry almost toilapeed, a tja• pro-. cesses by while' ieteeee n use ex- tracted from wolfra.11 orr: im , Germany, but iwt, 'In our itiapir Tbe- Palmy industry has, however, 2:OW been revived. Les: Mr. McKenna an; et - British Commons, tele The I% te tote Chroaiele, that Sae th ;smut given for the, sale la, aa Ito,- • . London preraivei of the le Bank, and similar stere weuld aetert- ly he taken with regard to th' Le, don premises of the Di '.i In end: :-Disconto-Gesellechaft, The adanae ' tisements recently published in Am- - erican papers were ina.ccuratc ean& misleading, as they implied th et abet London branches of these banl . eteret: still doing bUsiness. The advertitte- /netts were presumably 1nsertt..1 an mill for bxr tht leesin 8E11.111.. Nervous' so Are Promptly Cured Use of Dr. Wiiiiams1 If your hand trembies eteady, it is eure peel e • that your nerve -us systru. is The troub e if WA, taken in t develap elowly ; kat ee we • there is no ; (wenn no re 1 o be titan Stiffen' fl tqa- 1,14. voA, trouble. Von feel ettee eta, ably weak after exel 1 ik • 6 flet1. turn ..g. inn food ;red .uff eh qations, and nldiges i n aft ie Si iXtre times sharp elfish, a:--eot dean veur Spine and legs: -oral often It je robs you of- 4 ur i 'Ter at -raga Th /ire Some 1 the timhe th indicate the en eeen e of net v Met (tree s. tt they aen1 ct.t.they result comp:ete neiyous sometimes b paralysis. Dr. Hams' Pink Pille hey& 1' tet e.at epuiation n miring 4i1 cOrittS of nervous d. sea es The DPI 'VOUS eys. tem eepen s entirely upon the blood supply for nen ishmept"r. Ari!iamet nk f'ill actually there/tee tho supply of rich, red hood ced strengthen �d - tone the caws, en- abling them to pen form their times tions and diapel ail signs of a bemire doe n, Mrs B. •I's vinlott, Beaver Baak, N Ss, says :-" I was siel , tin down and awfully nervous, -1110 slightest noise Weuld stele e and an net* me. .1 suftei ed pains ai wand the heart and every pa tulle of cokr left my lace and betels. I a wyoo felt tired, and slept poorly at night. I W4 so poorly • hat nry fierde thought twoula not recover. I tied many medicin a but they did nos he'T, me. Then I reod of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilia aed •decided to drop at ether medicine, and threna at was •xortunate did ior th courell. r *. i'ew weeks longer end they eompleteiy cured me. I earnestly adVisi every weak woman and girl to give De Wiat Hams' Pink Pills a t heal, and 1 ana sure the f wid yet be disapponnedi You can get theme eills ihr. ugh vailriye,Looecintio.ine dealer or by [IMO 50e The Da. Williame' Medicine Co , f ;rook. ; bete or six lifIxes for $2.50 (tin the i••••••01.10•1111•0111..• " . rt;V* 10•0840 eirlaine in the harn,"eaUngtheirbeadsdfl"? Guemun.. profit -the other means loss. When* hone goesleme -dovelops a Sleavin, Curb, Splint, Ringbone-sdon't risk losing him through neglects -don't nm initaagreAd a risk by experimenting with unknown feetneeen Get the eel reliable standby-- 1 tr, Dereii VItteet auk, '''M . I'M* . e; kir efts, a years, fad kraal Ste cc bott1,. of Tx -a -dere fa tke kava. T. i a Urns renir ily ois hand to we **trot_ kit epaleitlyi is. or -Ay- your &star for fret sopy it'16-- -'d[1116. OF. Tlbs J. KEPUNULZO. ZPOSSUft FALL% vow*" u Deing Ti Institute the foilee. aave. reeee Connell ST( ole tea at Moffatt, ber please,t to 450 from the nresee: which gave a wit year. Th . - past men shirts alai wO p lowing _gess, - Harold ters; Pifeoe Winch, arti Mose, -Jack liods7e Took rob-. Leslie alle •Notes. - ed a amber oc nce at C. Inv last a) It is rumor atarting a to is hoped the vesss-LThe fath 15. The eve aonsly.e-Mr. tiger of the ' turned home hospital for "kriee.--4`he Vkinity ha =eke anotht terial poxt such will cai ferent lines, to kindly he enageginesi 3 which theY since the IA'si „Pahriotie itiot tit y of sewin gladly given ing to lend a 4a,as taken tic p0103 receive a; -The D & trionthly Mee laYrtle Your a good atten meeting wee served as. girls have ocks: eived word Pte. Cl trenches in forward to s before /nen: front. Whil 1ey had the telatvies omerallv. ' Burns' ehui Church. Loz and ahows flourishing *ions during most gratift :aging to the annual con held on 15)A . In Knox Chu Wilfo Weveinddgictinagril'on Edna Estell bride of Mr. 3T'afh;e:111:froringititilli retin 41:11Air and 1i sei :011: Ineee:Y:f :enWST e throned?. g Ab .deeia.tedoft'orat :I 01 TY yiCh 31e: shbW; euts41 feet e1°01110 PamneYn. w by reeeivin Tier cent. time been Iri.0thbeatnsii in • 3:511.eabs:Pleuhu:sdnuerniertibeiztiofliess:eicettr:akfrult: irr. the,- ne :tood:wairirt, that