HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-02-02, Page 2_est
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ON E rUSTOB.
CARPET
PERS
The dustfrom 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 takes up all
dust, lint and dirt, easier and
more effectively than t h e
broom, without the backache
or Justing.
Prices.....$3.25 to $3,75
V111114.
s at 13c a ib. too Valuable to Lose
Yet some get off their feed; others have worms, all for the
lack of sorne Charcoal. A
Buy -a bag now, only. It 40*04 Olf• e 0. * • • • eel. 4,11, 111.104114. • *0 • !OW* Oci 441-11.41 615c
CRENOM--Kills lice on cattle or chickens, also • disinfects
stableq, per can....itrottscrefr••sam***0 *** •c“cosf 1f***••••••IcOtt•ilt06040
CHLORIDE OF LIME 110 tc.******* **PO 41• Owe ••• * 10.0
itARNESS OIL, blue black, extra..........•...$1.00 pergal.
TOILET PAPER, per * * . * ....5c
FIAOR WAX RONUK, per .... 50c
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111.11.11
made forthe
Auto Paint
Some are considering fixing up the Automo-
bile for spiingr. We carry a stock of all the
necessary supplies, in the painting line and
can recommend none better than Chinamel jet
purpose, flows without streaks.Per qt.,$1.,35
iLLS Seat*
The ileKiloplifutuaii
Fire lizeurance Go.
Ifradoffice:Sectforth,Onit
DIRECTORY
Officers;
J. B. McLean, Seatorth, President
3. Connolly, Goderich,Vice-President
Thos. E. Bays, Seaforth, Sec-Treas.
Directors: D. F. McGregor, Searoitii;
J.. et. ;Grieve, Winthrop; Wm., Rinn,
Seakferth; John Benueweis, Dublin; j.
Evoke, Beechwood; A. IlitEwen.
Brumfield :3. B. McLean, Seaforth;
Connolly, Goderich ; Robert, Ferris,
itscleeki
eats; Ed, Hinebley, Seaforth W.
Jeaney, Egmondville; J. W eci,
Mohnesvillei Alex Leitch. limon;
Jermuth, Brodhagen.
iron Pumps fit pump
Ropairilg
a n prepared to tur els all afrad • of
Atom; and I. ft Pinnies A id a llsizes
P pe Fitting . e c. GaIvan-
S teal ranks t nd Water troughs
Sta ic le one. wad attle Basins,
,A. oa la indsof pump repairingdone
• On tor notice. For terms, etc.,
• sea iy at Pump Factory, Goderich
Sta East, or at residence, North
Vain Street
J. F. We1t4h Seaforth
TABLE
:GUELPH & jGODFX1CH BRANCIL
TM TORONTO.
• a.m. p.m.
ereederieh Leave 7.00 2.30
iflyth • 7.37 3.07
Walton • 7.50 3.19
poelph 9.35 5.06
FROM TORONTO
Toronto (Leave) 8.20 5.10
Guelph (arrive) 10.15 7.00
Walton. 12.58 8.42
Myth 12.10 9.07
Auburn 12.30 9,19
90derich 12.45 9.45
Connections at Guelph junction with
*Uhl Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon -
Detroit and, Chicago and all in -
Immediate points.
.•••
'G. T. R. TIME TAB -LE,
- resins Leave Seaforth as follows:
12.39 a.rn. - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
*la p. ni. ---- For Clinton, Winghism
and. Kineardine.
p.m. - For Clinton, Goderich
T-31 L rre - For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, °riffle, North Bay and
ints wait,Belleville and Peter -
and points east.
3.16jrc.aleser For Stratford, Toronto,
and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Beath Passenger..
a.m.
ham, &pert .. 6.35
Ve • • • • 0 • • • 6060
0.
•• • t • • • * 7.04
liondesboro., .. 7.13
aintati • 0 0 • • • • 41, 0 7.3111
Brucefield... .. 8.23
821
Orman 844
, 8.51
traits: , 9.03
tantion. Sirtrir. tr, 10.06
, quite clear his chest of the. phkgm, and fits but his own. This is a hart nHL
cOULD NOT' WORK'
. COULD NOT SLEEP.
Many Women are kept in a state' of
• kar of death, become weak, worn and
/miserable and are unable to attend to
their household, social or business dirties,
• on account of the unnatural action of
the heart. 1
•
To all suCh wild-ittern Milburn's Heart
and Nerve, Pills, gibe. prompt and per-
manent relief,
Mrs. J. Day, 944 , John Street South,
• Rarnaton, Ont., irrites: "I was so run
down with a weak be I could not even
sweep the float, nor could I sleep at
• night. I was so awfully sick sotuetimes
I had to ta.y in bed all day as I was so
weak. I used three and a half boxes of
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and I
am a cured V101112/1 to -day, and, as strong
as anyone could he. I am doing my own
homework, 'even my own -Washing.
doctored for over two years but got
no help until used your pills. '
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are.
50c. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all
dealers or mailed direct on receipt of
Vet by Teat TeMnanntet Co., Leanne
ameba Ont.
CREAM WANTED.
nave our Creamery now in fti
ration, and we want your patrol
. We are prepared to pay you
hignest mixes for your cream, pay
von every wo weeks, weigh, sample
and test each can of creana carefully
and giv ye . statement of, the same
We al supply can free of charge,
and give you an honest business deal.
ri in and see us or drop Us a card for
particulars
I Seaforth Creaniery
Seafor th
Had Pneumonia
DM WOOD'S
NoRWAY PINE SYRUP
*CURED HIM.
liurratt Exile(
• Maier; Bros., Publiehera.
Terms of Subscrintioni-To any ad-
dress in Canada or -Great Britain, one
year $1.50, six iriontlis 75c., three
months 40c. To the United States,
one year, $2.00. These are the paid
in advance rates. When paid in ar-
rears the rate is 50c. higher,
Subscrilsers who fail to receive The:
Expositor regularly by mail will con-
fer a favor by acquainting us of the
f.act at as early a date as possible.
When change of address is desired
both the old and new address should
be given.
ADVEirTISING RATES.
Display Advertising Rates - Made I
known on application.
Stray Animals. -One insertion 50c;,
three msertions, $1,00.
•Farms or Real Estate for sale 50c.
each insertion for one month of four
sertion. Miscellaneous .Articles for I
imertions; 25c for each subsequent in7
Sale, To Rent, Wanted, Lost, Found, t
etc., each insertion 25c. • Local Read -
et', Notices, etc., 10e per line per in-
sertion. • No notice less than 25c. Card
of Thanks 50c. Legal Advertising '10c
and Sc per line. Auction Sales, $2 for
one insertion and $8 for two insertionsProfessimial Cards not exceeding one
inch -$6 per year.
Seaforth, Friday, February 2nd, 1917.
0•01,0 .410*••••••••••
•
FROM THE DOMINION CAPETAL.
Parliament will he just as busy as
it likes this session. There is plenty of
material for diseussion in Lieutenant
General. Sir Sam Hughes' correspond-
ence with Premier Borden, Dr: Bruce's
•-report, the returned lieutenant -colonels
who are now lieutenant -colonels in a
double sense, because they chose to
come home and be colonels rather than
go to the front and become lieutenants,
the super -swollen Canadian military
establishment in England, and many
other matters bearing on the Borden
Government's incapeity to manage its
end of the war.
Meanwhile the talk in the corridors.
is all of registration and national ser-
vice. Is the Government putting. it
over briskly? Are the cards being
filled in? Afthr the cards are filled
in. what next? How long will it take
to count, classify, tabulate and. cross
•indea the answers? Two months?
Three months perhaps? A census of
any kind is always slow work. When
the first count is indexed will the Gov-
ernment have another registration,
this time with fines and penalties for
the sulky fellows who tore their cards
up? And after this seeond count is
made how long will it take to tabulate
that?. Another two months? Three
months, eh -well perhaps? And that
brings us to July, 1917, about which
thne the allied- offensive and the Ger-
man counter thrust should be at their
height. • -
• Many • things can happen in six
months -if the registration takes that
long -and there is disposition in these
cynical precincts to believe tllitt the
Borden government is going to let
them happen, which is a wise course
to pursue, because how could the Bor-
den Government prevent things hap-
pening in, Europe anyway? It .would
be very much like Mrs. Partington's
attempt to sweep back the Atlantic
Ocean. The prudent course is to -wait
and see, meanwhile inaking use of
noble gestures, like national registra-
tion and such.
Members of Parliament who are in
touch with labor say' that there are
several reasons why the 'working/nail
doesn't sign the registration cards
quite as eheerfuily as he evould a peti-
tion to hang the Kaiser. One reason
ieithat he doesn't consider it a square
deal to make an inventory of the man
power of Canada and to neglect xnak-
mg an inventory of the money power.
If the one is mobilized or conscripted,
the other ought to bel too. 'I here may
be something in the Objection. If the
national service registration has any
other. object than ,finding otit who's
•mai-tied and Wtbe's not --who's Two in
Canada, so to speak -it must be the
war, and if men can fight, money, as
Shakespeare says, is a good soldier,
loo and will march.
This naturally brings up the ques-
tion of the excess profits of munition
manufacturers and others who have
got rich out of army contracts. Is
•the Goverement going to do anything
more with these gentry, and if it is,
why doesnit it let the workingman
know before hand, so that when' hey
ask to tell all he knows about him-
self, he may do it with a glad heart.
How silly, by the way, some of the
questions must appear to the profit-
eer? Of course he would be willing, if'
his fare was paid, to go anywhere else
in Canada and make the same money
as he is making now. You bet your life
he would,
• As for the workingmad, he doesn't
look at it quite that way. Why, be asks,
should he tear up his home 'by the
roots and go elsewhere in Can al to
make some rich munition maker rich-
er? If the manufacturers of munitio
were nationalized -ah, that would be
another story! One does for one's coun-
try what one hsitates to do for the
bloated caPitalist They have got the
right idea in England. Over there the
Government asks the workingman to
make sacrifices for his country, not
for the profiteerg.
• is
an eadY sYniPt"' PUell-J Incidentally they have squeezed the
amnia. It is at first frequent and profiteer out of the munition business,
,Iltacking1 , and is accompanied with a little 1 and wherever else they leave him they
tough, colorless espocrorarios, whick bleed him good and .plenty -they take
moo, however, becomes more (coo_ Sixty per cent. away from him. Since
sacrifice is the word, England sees to
end at
come congested and the a rusty red color I bronchial tubes
firmed trith phlegm making it hard for the
sufferer to breathe. Males are more corn-
mordy attacked than females, and a
previous attack seems to give a special
liability to another.
the lungs be- it that everybody does it. In this con-
nection word comes that there is a lit -
tie group of median companies, with
administrative offices in London, who
are fighting this tax to the last gasp.
One Canadian capitalist who had a big
contract from the British war office is
said to be organizing the Opposition to
this levy on the ground that it is Can -
should get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Nor- giinshrmGooney and not English that the
rnmp'nt,
' On the fuse sipaof a cold or cough you
gto tax.
wv Pine Syrup and thus prevent the This same capitalist, over here in Can -
cold from developing into some serious ada ,sings quite a different song. He
lung trouble. tells the Canadian profiteers, that is
to say, those who make their profits
Mrs. E. Charlet, North Toronto, Ont., out of the Canadian Government, and,
, writes: f"Two years ago my husband had not like him, out of the British War
a very bad attack of pneumonia, and the Office, that they ought to be ashained
doctors said he was getting con.semption. of making so much money and that the!
A friend came in to see me and told me ; time has come for them to make great
, to get Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. eaerifices ft. their c 4 .
, .
I got three bottlea, and they seemed to -r..s prepared, to sacrifice anybody's pro -
North P. M. .
tondo depart e • e• 4.40
•••0806...ock
'a" .**. .• ,0..* 5.57
rt
• 0 • 0 00•4 erS_ 8.99 i 1
riippen .• •...... 6.18
...
Bracefieji. v 0 40,.• 0. 0 *, V ' 424 !
Clinton_ - . ......a...,.....e. R,,-7,
liondssberisie tee ee ' OM '
aolgrave....- ea re -11 Tg_Z,_. •-• la :
10/ean20 lintrif 1111 . t €2. FAO i
now he is fine and well.
545 I shall never be , without it in the I generous with other people's money.
house as it is a very valuable medicine', It is facts like these which give the
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is put woricingima.n pause when he goes to
up in a Y eittw wrappa.; thrm pine trees fid mhis ticket. As a loyal citizen he
•,the trade mark; price 25c. and 50a, does it, but as a friend of fair play
GAG ,
I anthropists frequently develoe--being
11
•
all round, he doesn't half like it, But
The gentle' le is reenufactured only by being a good man and true, he &es
TnieT. Mammas; Co., letureap, Torento, , his duty, even if others shirk it. It is
Ont. not unreasonable to suppose that
,
';4*, •
,
For three years the little son
of G. Romanak. of Edenbridge;
suffered with a bad attack of
eczema, which everything
failed to cure until they used
Zam-Bula. The father, writing
to the ZatraBuk Co,. says
"For three years my little
son suffered with a severe at-
tack of eeZelna, which many
doctors prouounced incurable.
For two year the sores on his
eyes and forehead were so bad
that he was unable to see. We
tried everything, but without
any benefit aid he was in a
shocking conaition when Rabbi
Shelia recommended Zant-Buk.
This wonderful ointment itas
entirely -cured my boy-, and I
cannot express met gratitude
for his marvellous recovery."
Zani-Buk is also unequalled
for ringworm,- scalp sores, salt
theta, old wounds, blood -poi-
soning, piles, burns, cuts, scalds,
and all skin injuries. 50c. box,
3 for $1.25. Ail druggists and
stores,Or Zam-BukCo.,Toronto.
Send lc, stamp for postage on
FREE trial box.'
upon a broader and firmer basis than
ever before. Establis merits that pro -
try leeks in raw material or essentials
army' must not only continue their
work, but enter into it upon lines of
increased energy thrilling thus the
kernel of economic Germany in pre-
paring in the economic sense for the
next war. We meet' carefully calcu-
late in advance, in view of the lessons
learned in this war, what our coun-
try lacks in raw =feria lor essentials
of raw material, and secure immense
reserves to remain unused until a day
in the future. We must organize as
genuine an industrial mobolization as
we bad a military mobolization, Ev-
ery technician or semitechnieiant en-
rolled or not in the list of mobolized,
mist he empowered through official
credentials to take charge and didec-
tion of a given establishment upon
the second day following a new de-
claration of war. Every establishment
manufacturing for commercial purpos-
es must be mobolized also and under-
stand officially that upon the third
day after declaration of war, their en-
tire abilities are to be devoted to ser-
ving the army upon demand
'It must also be determined in ad-
vance justwwhat quantities and sort
of essenials such establishments can
furnish the army in a given time
Bich establishment should be requised
to furnish a detailed list of workmen
who can be dispensed with, these
alone to be mobolized in the railitary
se
finn,i,tewse.ecommumsterfienaianY
iunderetanding with
establish some de -
rations outide Europe thet will offer
them advantages to be duly specified
in detail whereby these nations, as
ineutrals will find it to their direit
' disadvantage, commercially, to trade
or sell munitions during the war m
either ourselves or our enemies. We
can afford to offer such conditions our -
war, comes, it must not be a year, too
our-
selves, finallw, when the next
And ,
Here int a outsell, or "kernel," to
quote frank Mr. Rhateneu, is what
Allied Europe has long understood in
Ailed Europe has long understood and
the United States save by a relative
few.
It is the reason Why the war would
be contiued for ten years if necessary
by France, England and their allies. It
is the reason why nothing short of the.
"knockout" will serve. It is the reason 1
why any talk or effort for peace
would be ill-reeeived, even if backed
by the best` of motives and official,
e lectively.
I sanction from the greatest of neptrals
or the smallest, or all the neutrals col-
•
I
1 The war cloud, that hung over Eu-
rope hi years prior 10 aigu ,
1914; must be dispersed finally andi
forever. The intolerable conditions
prevailing must be finally made im-
possible of repetition. The horrors,
and misery, the suffering and priva-
tion, the whole gamut of evil that no
single individual can understand,
through reading the writing of another
that must be seen, felt experienced,
through the senses to be grasped even
in outer eircles, must never again be a
worldly portion. .
• This will only be possible through
making war against war until a
liu.mane peace is the reward. It would'
be as impossible under a German
peace as would a railway journey to
Mars.
Germany realizes all I have here
written in a sincerity beyond mere
fords for the telling. She feels the
setting sun. She is reaching out at
the two extreme extremes of the com-
pass in vain effort to remedy that
"beginning the War a year too soon."
One is her present huge peace pro-
paganda in the United States. The
elder is her last supreme effort in the
levee en masse, the deportation of the
Belgian populace, the "kingdom" of
Poland, and all the rest of it.
Welter scheme, neither plan, will
avail. She feels it, and senses but
a desperate postponement of the in-
evitable. The mills of the gods are
grinding.
IThe article from the 'Berliner Lokal
. Anzeiger," is but reiterative proof of
: open stupendous fact patent to indivicl-
• ual or nation who will juidically ex -1
1amine the evidence at this '850th day
lof hostilities.
1 The faet is, the issue is no longer
1 between the Allied and Central Powers
They but represent two ideas, ' One
champions Justice, humanity, civiliza-
tion, the rights of peoples, respect for
moral law, and understanding as th
definition of the word honor. The
t
J. W. novelle, Chairman of the Imper-
ial Munitions.: Board, is in the working-
man's mind when he fills in his regis-
tration card. He reflects that Mr. ,Fla-
velle has been posted by the Govern-
ment in a strategic spot and that he
would do Well th keep an eye on • Mr.
Flavelle, who is Cold Storage Czar,
Egg Emperor, Pork Prince, poultry
Potenate, Sausage Sultan, Sirloin Sir-
dar Beef Bashaw, and other titles toc
umerous to- mention in this fair Can-
ada of ours. Like Monte Christ°, Mr.
Flavelle has the world by the hair. He
is monarch of all he surveyse-his right
there is none th dispute.
Mr.Flavelle hag given it out that
everybody should make sacrifices, and
he pretty nearly has his wish. We are
all sacrificing to Mr. Flavelle and his
fellpw food monopolizers. The sol-
dier marchee bravely away to the war
and leaves his wife and children be-
hind to spend the separation allow -
'me and what they get from the pa -
*talc fund and what else they may
ern besides on buying something to
eat. For example, bacon costs forty
cents a pound. At that scale of prices
it is not long before Canada's patri-
ode givings slip back to a few men who
are getting very, Very rich out of the
necessaries of life.
Chairman Frivelle's latest message
is th the effeititliat Canada is &mak
with prosperi.ty. - If Canada is drunk
with what Mi. novelle says she is„she
doesn't know it. A few lucky fellows
have made good money in the remi-
t& factories, but the .ayerage min
as not had his wages raised in any
proportion to the cost of living. The
workingman'sdollar is only two-thirds
the value itevas before the war. (den-
erally speaking food has gone up 35
per cent. and wages two per cent If
this is being drank with proseerity,
it is a pretty sober kind of drunken-
ness. All most of us do nowadays
is to see our money then kiss it good-
bye.
It is true that the customs receipts
shove large increases and that Canada
has had a riot of epending. But tlus
extravagance is not so much the ex-
uberance of prosperity as the reck-
lessness of despair. Eat, drink tied be
dad gaily, say the people, for tomor-
row the beneficiaries of ,a forty per
cent. tariff. will take it all out of us
anyway. Prices are high because the
ehopkeephrs eria.ke 'em high while the
Making is good. Besides everygody's
doirfg it. But the ultimate consumer
is no bother ahead. On the contrary
he gets set back harder every minute.
H, F. G.
to.
-On Wednesday, of last week, at
Melville Churelt Manse, Brussels,
Rev. A. J. Mann B.A., tied the matri-
monial knot between James Gilmour
of Moose Jaw, Sask, and formerly of
Turnberry, and, Mrs. Dorothy J. Mc-
Fadzean, of Brussels. They will short-
ly !flake their home in the west.
THE NEXT WAR
(Letter in New York Tribune.)
Sir, -The most highly significant
evidence of the German mind, and, by
the same token, never intended for
publicity outside Germany, is to be
found in a recent article m the "Ber-
liner Lokal Anzeiger" over the signa-
ture of Waltezt Rathenau, the individ-
ual who, for a number of years be-
fore the war, had complete charge of
official organization among war need
industrial establishments in the Ger-
man Empire, and who has been depu-
tized to confide this particular work
in the supreme effort the Teutonic
nation is about tc put forth,
This aricle, which is before my eyes
as I write, says in full, cepied ver-
batim: •
"VYe beganwar a year th soon.
When we have secured a German peace
. '
we must begin at once a reorganization
EEB_RUARY 21..1
A WALL ii0A1'
One year s bales of Comfits
Soap means er,ough soap t
build a wail ie feet high and
29 miles long. Th'nk of it!
Enough to completely sure
round tb City �tTrJOfllfl.
POSITIVELY THE EARGEST SAIL IN CANADA
other has deliberately as aim the ulti-
mate domination of the globe by a
Prussianized Germany.
HENRI BAZIN.
• Paris, France, Not 27, 1916.
Tete HUMOROUS MUM
Proverbially Stubborn Animal Has
Other Qualities.
Probably the mule would not be
such a good animal for war pur-
poses, would not do so much hard
work on poor food, or last so long, if
it were not for his sense of humor.,
"A merry heart goes all the day.
your sad tires In a mile -a," sang. Au-
tolycus, who probatl,y used a mute
occasionally ,to transport his wares
along the "desert country near the
sea in Bohemia." What is it, but
lightheartedness 'which leads a mule
so frequently to burst his bonds and
go off for a wild run round upon
his own account, hurrahing with hie
heels In the air and trying apparent-
ly to jump out of his thick skin?
What he wants you to do on these
occasions is to run after him with a
head -collar -he has, of course, taken
the precaution to break his own be-
fore he started --and a noiielwag. If
you do this, it will add greatly to
his part of the amusement, for Ile
will wait till you get quite near, and
then scoot off incontinently,- and you
will be lucky if you escape a kick
from his flying heels. Your proper
course is to take ne notice of him,
but wait awhile till he has had his
iling, and then get the trumpeter to
sound the "Feed," This will nearly
always bring the rover to his lines
again. I have known mules show
their sense of humor in many ways.
1 had read that a, good way of swim-
ming your mules across a river was
to put the drivers into boats, holding
the mules by leading reins and thus
tow them over. But, in practice, I
found that the mules, after following
the boat for some time, would turn
round and tow the boat back to the
• shore whence we had started. A bet-
ter plan was to get one or two of
the steadier mules across, put them
in a conspicuous place on the far
• bank, and then sound the "Peed."
Another a ay for the mule to show
his sense of huraor was this. . A
gun or carriage mule would fail
down the hillside With his load and
lie for a while as if dead. Then,
just when you- were convinced that
life was extinct, he would shake
himself clear of kis load, rise to
his feet, bray lotiellY, and begin tee
graze. Mules were ,of course, oo-
easionaliy killed on bad momntain
climbs but, as a rule, they we
saved by the very strong saddles
required for battery leads and tite
thickly stuffed pads which - are
needed to prevent gelling from
these heavy and unyielding loads,
The mule undoubtedly Passesees
more character than either the don,
key or the horse. Vicious. males'
are by no means uncommon, but in
nine cases out of ten they hare
been made vicious by ill-treatment.
the viciousness is a reaction against
the evil ways 'of thetr attendants..
On the other hand, if well treated
as they invariably are in a battery,.
they are the most docile of imanals..
What greater teat of docility ean
there be thaa the oneato which _Use_
•
• Children Ory an dealers in niedicine or may ba but
FOR FLETCHER'S
gun mule submits ie ea.
He is hustled: up at a fail, ;set to the
gur,. brought to a dead stop, and
then the gun -two hundred pounds
dead weight of steel -comes hurtl-
ing over his hind-quartere, to come-
down with a trash on the saddle,
just over his opine. Yet, with
everything to exeite and Irritate him,
-
-
and to upset his nervous zystera, the
mule stands steady as a roek to take -
his load, and he will carry it till hie
drops -only, he doesn't drop.
Captious,
"Is this beef too rare for you, Mr.
•Simpkins ?"
"Well, since you ask me, Mrs..
Skinneree
, I would like it a littl
often er."- Christian. Regieter.
sommommocramormeav
How to Cure
4
Stomach i rouh
THE COMMON CAUSE IS LA K
BLOOD -THEREFORE YOU
MUST BUILD UP THE
BLOOD.
There is the rn,ost intimate relatioft -
between the condition of the blood,.
and the activity 01 tbe ztnmach. flie
blood depends upon the stomach for .
a large part o nouns ri
• every act of digestion, from the tinto
the food enters the stomach and is as-
similated by the blood needs plenty of
pure well-oxidixed blood. he muse
cies, glands and nerves of the stomach
work only according th the quality of
e
The most common cause for indiges-
tion is lack of rich, red blood. Not
only does impure blood weaken the
muscles of the stomach but it leasens
the product of the glands of the in-
testines and stomach, whieh furnish
the digestive fluids. Nothing tent
more promptly cure indigestion than
plenty of pure blood. . Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills are the safest and most mitre
tam blood -builder. A thorough trial
of these -pills gives a hearty appetite*
perfect indigestion,strength and health
Here is proof of the value of these philia
in cases of indigestion. Mr. Dani
Dexter, Liverpool, N.S saysi-"For
several years I was a great sufferer
from indigestion. 1 WAS greatly Lambe
tied with gas on the stomach 'width
caused disagreeable seneation.s.
; was also frequently troubled with new
sea and Venliting.whieh were vereediga
tressing. As a result of my troubei
my appetite almost completely fella
land what I did eat embed Ine constant
i pain. I was continually doctoring, but
• did not get any benefit, and had about
made up my mind that I would suffer,
for life, One day a friend asked esa
why 1 did not try 13r. Williams' Pint
Pills, and while 1 had not mimh hope&
of a cure I decided to do so. 1 hut
only taken a few boxes, however when ,
I found they were helping me. Very,
gladly then 1 eolith:Med the use of the
pills and in less than three months 1 •
was as well as ever I had been, able to
eat a hearty ineal and th feel that Mei
was age= worth living. I had also
been troubled from time to time *Odd
attacks of rheumatism, and the use of
the pills cured this as well as the ine
digestion. It is now over a year shim*
took the pills end in that time 1 bayed
had no return of the trouble."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold blt
by mail at 50 cents a box or siz
boxes. for $2,50 from The Dr. vizi
CAS1rORIA Inmost Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
1_
THE - MINISTER OF FINANCE
REQUESTS
THE PEOPLE OF CANADA TO
BEGIN NOW
TO SAVE MONEY FOR THE
• NEXT WAR LOAN
JAti. 1, 1117
Darkiirilltwirfov liribLiAter
armee&
itiehognOMIIIIRREVXMIELM16110211/446045u0gem00110,
Atte
41111.**A111110110111110110411111141,
•
.t47
z•• , ;sew", ,
3 j
-One 01
teemed res
the person
whose dea
of her da
Peterboro
deceas
aatrie to C1
with her
about 55 e
-earlier sew
farm mit?
where th-
house-
was kniottr
M1 which
Lout fort5
Brickenden
second to.
they contin
tirement h
Clinton, �i
reside' unti
elen, near
Brickendeu
apd later
remainder
est delight
-The d
morning t.
13a.bbi ene
respected c
forty yea
hotel the
was in his
tive of En
Navy as
After con
and secitri
gunner, h
ber of yea
and in 1%
the gurib
by Lieut.
Fisher, of
en 1860 th
on the G
:gunner,
patrol the
igainst the
He contin
the time 0
the Cheru
in the W
- turned to
-serum and
•
lo Canada
with Rob
lthn not so
seamen se
Prince Alb
• a gunbon
end atm
was assi
structor.
Goderic
and for
the life-sa
aharge o
was awa
iernment
aisting itt
of an Am
• adrifted ,as
SUrvived
'and two
.on Sun
Odiife
eves 2 ni
The Flavor Lasts
-Engd
engine
ald, of
-there oil
-man, a
St. Mare
the Gran
this was
-The
nesday
•ananse,
Reriveri
ter of
Staffa
ed by
greern
B. Arch
Miss M.
will res'
Ceti ity
opened i
on Tu
busin
Harri
aedarria
re-appo
the co
Downi
-gland%
Callum
43.eputy
South
hand;
Martyn
toweii
Colquie
lace;
/erten
al 806
termer
eti
riaiata.
award
etei
both t
aV
ASc---(AC
this r
!asset
Mr.
destr
will b
Plans
et ati
ed wi
sent
the p
letted
51.•