HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-05-25, Page 2Tit
POSITOR
•
•
• ;
• a •
-Notwithstanding the scarcity
and higher prices of fencing
'we think the following will
interest the intending pur-
chaser=
8 wires, 42 incha high, 'even
spaced, in 30 and 14o rod rolls
0-0# 'As • ips•Ae A • • #4106,00•011148 per roll,cash
re, even spaced, stays t m. apart...47c per rd., cash
Full stock of coil spring barbed, brace and weavink wire, al
so staples and fence hooks, pulley blocks And pliers.
Iron Fenm Posts
113410
lishers,
To .any
in Caradz or Great Britain. one
1.00. six months 75c, threo
nionth 40e. To the 'United S
one yea, $2.00. These are the paid
in advance rates. When paid in ar-
rears the rate is 50c. higner.
Subscrihers who fail to receive The
Expositor re ely by mail will con-
fer a favor by acquainthig us of the
fact at as earira date as possible.
When change of address is desired
both the old and new address should
'be given.
ADVERTISING RATES.
• Display Advertising Rates -- Made
known on appliea.tion.
Stray Animals.-Oae insertion 50e;
three insertions, $1.00.
Farina or.Real Estate for sale 50c.
ereo insertion for one month ,of four
iresertions; 25c for each subsequent in-
1
Bastion. Miscellaneous Articles for
Lost, Found,
Sale, To Rent„ Wanted,
h insertion 25c. Local Read -
ems,. otices„ etc.,. 10c .per line per in-
sertion. No notice less than 25c. Card
nks 50c. Legal 'Advertising 10c }
of
and 5c per line, Auction Sales, $2 for
one insertion and $8 for two insertions
Easily driven in the ground, saves the price of digging, do Professional Cards not exceeding one
inch -$6 per year.
not heave with the frost. •
AnglePO4t.S.,•••••••••••••eseesee••••••••• o• **** •••••• •
Round t011f• .f• • ..40c each
45e each
418,amP-
A Bargain for Builders
We have had for some time 12 kegs ofcut spikes 4 and 4 1-2
inch, These we offer at the remarkable price of $3.00 per
keg, in keg only. Considering the high ptice of nails and
the well known holding powers of cut spikes this is a genu
ine bargain.
alala011•11121881;allaall.....01
A MAGNET WASHING MACHINE
Washes blankets easily......
• ** ** a a••;.00a ee 411000
a.•••••• • • SOO ••••54.50 up
* •..
Wringers.. •••....... ....••• 114111M•f**0•ee•ese*••
Curtain Stretchers.......... • 0 • ••• • • •SO• • •
•
Ike Meliimpilititual
Fire anee Co.
Bead office: Seaforth,Ont.
DI RECTORY
OFFICERS.
Goderich, President
ZhanoliYanmectoVice-President
Jas. Evans, Dee- ereasse,„.
T. Ee Hays, Seaforth, Secy.--
AGENTS
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; William Chesney,
W Ten- Goderich; B.
Vgmondvlite; 0- vv. - -,
G. Jarniuth, BrPaagelL -
DIRECTORS
William Rhin, No. 2, Seafortr, John
Biainewieg, Brodnap , tames
BeeehWeeKiiM.liliegwen, Clinton; Jas.
001130-3.1i, Goderich; D. F. McGrhgor,
veh. R. No. 8, Seaforth; J. G,, Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlaelt;
Gege McCartney, No. 8, Seaforth.
Iron ?umpsii pump
Repairing
a n prepated to tureis all c'nd of
arc and Git Pumps a td a 1 I sizes
le, P pe Fettingi e c. Galvan-
1 Steel ratites esd Water troughs
ita ic teens sod -Ade Basins.
. a • eindsof pump repairingdnat
an I- or • notice. For teems, etc.,
ni ty at Pump Factory, Goderich
St,, East, or at residence, North
Main Street:1
J. F. WelsbiSeaforth
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
41JELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TORONTO.
UNSIGArie,Y
PIMPLES
covERED\ HI* FACE.'
SEAFO TH, Friday, May 256, 1917.
FROM THE DOMINION. CAPITAL.
Nemesis is on the track of the Bor-
den Geo:rerun:kw:Ai :It postponed the
blessing a free wheat until a general
election was in sight and now it looks
as if the blessing .had taken its flight.
It seems that a time comes when the
sinner cannot return when the light
which has held out, fie brun for six
years fails for lack of oil and is ex-
tinguished. -
To desert metaplior, the action of
;he United States Government in plac-
ing a MilliThUM tariff of ten per cent.
on all articles now on the free list
leaves free Wheat, to say the least of
it, in a very precarious condition.
Do we take ten cents a bushel off
American wheat in order to have Un-
cle Sam put thirty dents a buishel on
Canadian wheat? ' That is the ques-
tion, If such is the- case, then Fate
has got gooci and even with an equiv-
ocating administration.
Free wheat has been having a hard
time of it ever since it bloomed timid..
ly a month ago. To begin with it was
one of those war babies which the gov-
ernment was half ashamed to father.
fliout explaining to the millers the,
it was only temporarily adopted. It
was not of the ,regular tariff family.
iFor the benefit of the Opposition, the
Northwest fanner and the public at
large, Sir Thomas White and Mr:
Arthur Meighen argued that an order -
in -council was as good a guaran e is
permanenty as a, clause in the Tariff
Act, at the same time -winking the
other eye to the milling iaterests,
who went told it was an emergency
30 WORK
••l••••••••••'••••'•'• -.--"'"'""--I'",
IN BED MOST OF TIME
Her HealthRestored byLydia
E. Pinkhanes Vegetable
Compound.
Indianapolis; Indiana. -- "My health
was so poor and my constitution so run
- down that I could
not work. I was
thin, pale and weak,
weighed but 109
winds and was in
hod most of the
time. I began tak-
ing Lydia E. Pink-
haxa's Vegetable
Comwund and five
months later I
weighed la pounds.
1 do all the house-
work and washing for eleven and I can
truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound hu been a godsend'
to me for would have been in my grave
today but for it. I would tell all wo-
men suffering as I was to try yourvalue
able remedy."- Mrs. Wit. GREEN, 282
S. irddison,Street, Indianapolis,Indiana.
There is hardly a neighborhood in this
country, wherein some woman has not
found health by using this good old-
fashioned root and herb remedy,
If there is anything about which you
would like special advice, write -to the
Lydia E- PinIcham Medicine Co., Lynn,
Mass.
vinamewriammereowsmosmii
MINS, •
somewhat ostenationsly consulting his
watch, I presently left that quiet hav-
en, with its soft -treading ministering
attendants.
So we had tea and cigarettes, and
when 1 eventually shook hands with
niy captain 1 felt that I was parting
with a friend.
'And what struck you inost particu
larly this afternoon?" inquired one of
my companions.
'Well," said I, "it was , either the
Lewis guns or Paterfamilias the grim.
Henceforth, the word "Clydebank"
will be associated in Inv mind with the
ceaseless ring and a din of riveting-
harninere, where, day by day, hour by
hour a new fleet is growing,destroy-
ers and torpedo -boats alongside mon-
strous submarines; yonder looms the
grim bulk of the super -dreadnaught
or battle -cruiser or the slenderer shape
of some huge liner.
been filed on the itubject, Mr. Croth-
ers did not take it seriously enough
to pat more than $1,000 in his estimate
forsthis purpoee. Mr. Liemieux press-
ed the matter with his usual insistency
with the presult that several members
of the Conservative party had a sud-
den change of -heart. One after the
other they got up and, figuratively
speaking, put the boots -to Mr. Croth-
ers' constitutional indifference to the
demands of labor. Sir George Foster,
whose role is that of altruist, promised
that the matter would be attended tb.
From this, it appears that some day -
not just now -after the election, per-
haps the Governinent may do some- "You should 'have seen the rat -rat -
thing for tethinal education. tat, We built her in exactly nineteen
The Public Accounts Committee has months, instead of two years and a
bad interesting time tracing the halo
Biggest battleship afloat -two
riresent whereabouts of an icebreaker, hundred feet longer than the rat -tat -
tat, -launched her last rat -tat -tate -
gone to ratta-tat-tat for her guns."
"What size guns ?" I shouted above
the hammers.
MAY 211.
•
A WALL Oh' soAp
One year s sa!,es Co;nfort
Soap rinein ti cugh soap to
build a wail le- feet 1141-1 and
29 miles long. 1 link of i
) )
) L 1 1 1/ r ,.
And with these vast thapes about res-t-
IT
TH
CA
ine,what wonder thaa I stood awed and portions were eloquent of the colossal
silent at the stupevduous sightBu
to my companion, a shortish, thickset
man with a masterful air and sebowler
ha- veryernuch over one eye,. these
marvels were an every -day affair; and
row, ducking under a steel hawser, -he
Jed • me on, dodging moving trucks,
-stepping unconcernedly .across the
buffers of puffing engines, past titanic
cranes that swung. giant arms high
in the air; on we went, stepping
over chain cables, Wire ropes, pulley -
blocks, and a thousand and oue other
obstructions, on which I ;stumbled oc-
casionally, since my awed gaze was
turned upwards. ..
I beheld great ships well-nigh' ready
for launcing; I stared up at hugh
Structures towering aloft, a wild com-
plexity ofsteeljoists and girders, yet
in whose seeming confusion the eye
could detect something of the mighty
shape of the leviathan that was to be,
Even as I looked six feet or -so of
steel plating swung through the air,
sank into place, and immediately I
was deafened by the frightful racket
of the riveting -hammers.
"....nothing like a good book and
ea, pipe to go with it," said. mycom-
pmaeninng.between two bursts of ham -
"This is a huge ship," said I, star-
ing upward still.
"M'rn-fairish," nodded my com-
panion, scratching his square jaw and
letting his knowledgeful eyes rove to
and.fro over the vast bulk thateloomed
above us. .
"Have you built them much big-
ger, then? I inquired.
My compitnion nodded and proceed-
ed to tell me certain amazing facts
which the riotous riveting -hammers
promptly censored in the following re-
markable fashion.
which the Canadian Vickers were
building for the Canadian Government.
The Canadian Vickers were allowed to
sell it to the Russian Government in-
111easure. stead, thus clearing a net profit of qiwt,44t4e444. inc h
Mr. Meighen whose knife -edged in • $500,000. tihue Canada cloes_ her bit! smiling grimly.
r ow muc tielled.
hairs, made a speech in which he pro - but for the Russians, too. Needless, ,
"She hes four rat -tat -tat -tat nch
B
ved that he loved free wheat and that to say the exra profit accrued to the and twelve rattle -tattle inch besides
i
e
4 B ii B ig . Casrd Him. I then egainthe loved it not. He loved Canadian Vickers, not to the Canadian
I i as an .
tellect is paAiciilarly keen at splitting not only for herself, and the Empire, lite
T1C
he said,
ships that are to be. But here, indeed
all things were on gigantic scale;
ponderous lathes we turning t mighty
playing machines • g unceasingly
back and forth, while other monsters
bored and cut through teel plate as
if it had been so much cardboard.
"Good machines, these,"
" said my
companion, patting one ofthee mon-
sters with, familiar hand; "all made
in Britain.'
"Like the men," I suggested.
"The nieni" said he; 'humph! They
haven't been giving much trouble late-
ly -touch wood."
"Perhaps they know Britain jut
now needs every man that is a Yin n"
I suggested, "and some one has said
that a man an fight as hard at home
here with a hammer as in France with
a rifle."
"Weir there's a lot of hard lighting
going on here," nodded my companion;
"we're fighting night and , day, and
we're fightirg damned hard. And now
we'd better hurry; yourpartywill b0 1
cursing in chorus."
you
"Pm afraid it has been before now,"
said I.
So we hurried on past shops whence
came the roar of machinery,past great
basins, wherein floated destroyers,
and torpedo -boats, past craft of many
kinds and fashions, ships built and
building; on 1 hastened, tripping over
more cables, dodging from the buffers
of snorting engines, and deafened
gain by the fearsome din of the rivet-
ing hammers, until I found any tray-
elling companions assembled and rea.
dy to depart. Scrambling hastily into
the nearest motor car. -I shook hands
with this shortish, broad,shouldered,
square -jawed man and bared my head,
for, so far as these great works were
toneerned, he was in very truth -
superman, Thus I left him to over
see the building of these mighty ships
which have been and will ever be the
might of these small islands.
But even as I went speeding tbrougb
dark streets, in my ears, rising 1u'
above the hum of our engine, was
ring and clash,of the riveting-hana
mers,-
rat -tat -tat -tat," he answered, nodding.
insghat:lees_
and blemishes of the ;Line
are caltesed by the mond being in au im-
pure condition
bie cleansing medicine on
1144M irnaiat7.7.4.eiat nas been ill USA
aur aver 40 years, so you do not e.xperi-
,
111011111; when you buy it. •
Mr. Lennox D. Cooke, Indian Path,.
NIL, writes; am writing you a few
Dna to tell you what Burdock Blood
-11iterielms,done for me. My face was
covered with pimples. I tried different
Wads of medicine, and all seemed to fail.
1 was one day to a friend's house, and
there they advised me to use B. B. B.
No I purchased two bottles, and before
I Isielethem taken I found I was getting
better.* X !got two more, and when they
were finished I was completely cured.
Aid it is a great blood purifier, and 1
recommend it to all." &
B. B. B. is manufactured only by
Tna T. IVotrvissa linFrMa, atatiina,
Oat •
Wirdoc,t Maw
aln. pan.
floderich Leave 7.00 2.30
Myth 7.87 8,07
Walton 7.50 3.19
Guelph 9.35 6.05
FROM TORONTO
Toronto (Leave) 8.20 5.10
Guelph (arrive) 10.15 7.00
Welton 12.58 8.42
PlYth 12.10 .9.07
Auburn 12.80 9.19
Goderich 12.45 9.45
Connections at Guelph Junction with
Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
don, Detroit and Chicago and all in-
ermediate points.
G. T. Fe TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
35.80 a.m. - For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
6.16 p. - For Clinton, Wingham
and Kin' -Jardine.
ii,os p.m. - For Clinton, Goderich
631 a. h- Poi Eitrtierd, Guelph,
Toronto, Or 'Ok North Baz and
points vreetule and Peter-
hof* and ta New
3.14 p.m. - Stratford, Tweet%
Montreal aid pante east
LONDON, MUItON AND 11111301
Heath esassiger
Wilarhanta &put
ii*Plive.. • . • . 4-41
.. 6.0 7.94
Lonissaore.. .. • • 3.13
7.44
&Ill
M.44
341
Ceattali,-.. • . „ 3.14
boadoe. arri-re , 1$.33
North
Aarairi
(Iiiphaa.t .",
ainseilleki... • • •.:
ry,
P. M.
t election dodge, but as a breach people
1 eeine betwen -love and duty that for the lst eouple of weeks Ottet-
short tie-
' - fli 1 sant ne tet lb r• • cr
"Really?" I roared. "If those guns
-- the tariff wall he loved it not. In Talking of ships re:tails the fact are half as big as I thing, the Ger-
• one tmp ea , wa was t on& eiana ian con- a
--a
d into shipbuilditie for
was to take off the duty* which ihrfeits g
g I asten to este as e ammers
no-
cainiien Tfie *or gots* :2: traet!trs who were anxiene to put up bi The Germans-" said he and blew
A th d tit/telt
d cordin 1 Being the neatest the ataserditeat all tile Paeifie atiast
• edig did you say she was ?"
oae ac
h ed' th h
tittle prover and special pleader in th:s new industry comes under thedied down 9, little.
1 • -
:hat:diction of the Munitions Beare, "Well, over all she 3-neasured exactly
Parliament Mr. Meighep proved that
free whas eat wa good thing and then which has handed the contract over to rat -rat feet. She was so big that we
he turned around and proved that it the Foundation Comp/nee of Newhad to pull down a corner of the build -
was no good at all. In fact he proved 1 ork. ing there, as you see".
so much that he proved nothing alai, An item in the public accounts which eAnd what's her name?"
in that delightful state of dubiety`, is arousing some comment is $4009 for e
able on the subject it looks as if free to the faithfot. 'file Round Table is
rat -
he left the question. ,
wheat was like the famous Finnegan a group of 'English Imperialists litho
whose unhappy condition was to be aim to bind the Ernpife tog.0er by tr
Until further information is avail- which hail k eefl circulated as
printing a Round Table phamplet
gospel "Are these hammers always quite
tle-tattle of her class
so nolv, do you suppose?"
The rat-tat-tatfi and she's the itailiot,114eie'isoslaye.d. „Kick
off-again-on-egain-gone-again-Finne- sellieg Canada o oaa, fifty r inp"40ithU
birlideof a racket, don't they But
gan to the end of the chapter. Free.year t.o. Enaaan,1 ',onions al vve
get used to it ini time. 1 could
.,.; nor pa -rt of the
hear a pin drop. Look! Since we've
stood here they-ve got four more
plates fixed; there goes the fifth_ This
way."
Past the „towering bows of future
battleships he led me, over and under
more steel calbes, until he paused to
point towards an empty slip near by.
"That's where we built the Lusi-
tania," said he. "We thought she
was pretty big then, but nowt---" he
settled his hat a little farther over one
eye with a knock on the crown.
"Poor old Lusitania!" said I; "she'll
never be forgotten."
"Not while ships sail," he answered,
squaring his jaw. "No, she'll never
be forgotten, nor the -murderers who
ended
ended her."
1
'wheat is said to scome under a, special 111
reeerito Walden. Lionel Courtice is
schedule which is not •incled-
- gegeninelle As prophet. What a Round Table
iinitM -stittei-&4 list but there is 1a -templet hat, la do with our polities
enough uncertainty aboat its place is hard to tell. At all events $4,000
h f tiff t fot one little
in Uncle . Sam s tiew war sc eme o is I) s pine o pay
things to evatraitt considerable anxi- ehae,plet.
CREAM WANTED. sty as to its ultimate treatment. Mean-
H .1'. G.
We have oar Creamery now in full
operation, and we want your patron-
age. We are prepared to pay you
the highest prices for youhcream, pay
while it has mo particular friends in
ihe Governor , mos w ON THE BRITISH
openly expressed a wish that the Re-
publicans would get in and remove the
t t of horn had -BATTLE LINE
OF INDUSTRY.
weekscigh, sample adieu farmer. Even if free wheat (By Jeffrey Farnol.)
you every two , n
sticks its benefits will be perceptibly
free wheat temptation from the Can -
(Concluded from Last Week
Hereupon I pressed the trigger, the
gun stirred gently in its, clamps, the -
air throbbed and a stream. of ten bul-
lets (the testing number) plunged into
the bull's-eye and all in the space of a
moment.
. "There ain't a un'oly 'Un of 'em
could say, 'Hoch the Kaiser!' with
them in his stomach,' said Paterfamil-
messengers fared sumptuously every ias, thoughtfully, laying a hand upon
day, riding in parlor cars and eat.ng the respectable stomach beneath his
three dollar dinners with that free- apron. "It's a gun that is:" And a
dom of mind which arises from the gun it most assuredly is.
reflecion that the people of Canada
I would have tarried longer with
pay ifor it ale tips alone araount- Paterfamilias, for in his own way he
ed l_ Th
$170. The commission cost
• 16,O00$for one year and is jogging on -or nearly so -but the captain,
was as arresting as this terrible weap-
along yet. Captain Thompson, wile
gentle -voiced and serene as ever, g
sig -
patriotically gave his services free as
an investigator travelled for nothing to
tedthat catch,my companions had a train
wherefore I reluctantly
and got a living allowance of ten dal-
lars a day so that his patriotism would turned away. But -as 1 went 1 glanced
back to Paterfamilias, as comfortable
not hurt too much. Mr O'Connor,
K. C., who was hired to rlo some real as ever where he sat, but with. podgy
a -
work for the commission was faid five fingers on trigger grimly at work dollars a day which goes to show that gain, and from him to the long, or-
theorder-
patriotism of a Conservative ex- ly row of guns mustered in their premier's son is tame as valuable as derly ranks, awaiting the:n hour.
the hard work of an ordinary lawyer We walked through shops where
belts and pulleys and wheels and cogs
who has no special political pun.
, flapped and whirled and ground in
Another little straw which gives an
insight into the Governments profess- ceaseless concert, shops where files
ed anxiety to ease the food problem ! rasped and hammers rang, shops a-
, • gam where all seemed riot and confu-
and test each can of cream carefully
diminished by the fifteen per cent. in -
and give you statement of the same.
Ways are asking.
Anoher matter for comment Fs the
expense bill of the Davidson Commis-
sion, which is duly set out in the Aud-
ior-General's renort. It was indeed a
Royal Cominisscone Everybody trav-
elled and spent royally Even th
We also supply cans free of cherge.
and give you an honest business deal.
Call in and see us or drop us a card for
particulars.
1 41e Seaforth Creamery
Seaforth Ontario
crease in freight rates which the rail -
Had Pneumonia
DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP
CURED HIM.
.,••••••••••••
A:cough is an early symptom of pneu-
monia. It is M first frequent and
hacking, sued 1. sown" *Ili a little
tough, colorless expectoration, which
oon, ixisrever, becomes more copicits
and of a rusty red ooloriethe lungs be -
mime congested and the bronchial tubes
Med with phlegm making it hard for the
tufferer to breathe. Males are more com-
malty attacked Than females, and a was e e ea orr. mmanae ev- • b t d
previous attack seems to give a special
liability to another.
On the first sign of a cold or cough you popl. 1p reply to this, Sir George
Foster, that distinguished -temperance
should get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Nor -
advocate, made one of his most beauti-
way Pine Syrup and thus prevent the ful speeches to the effect that so long
cold from .developing into some serious as the war lasted the distilleries would
have to remain open to make slat-
ilns trouble.
1121 dilecterious to. the Hun in the
Mrs. E. Charles, North Toronto, Chit.,enters
,inofosctreethingulike
mites: reeve° years ago my husband had- shape.thact)rhi igiergi a
a very bad attack of pneumonia, and the tire of shells. When Sir George had-
Acloctfrioenrsdsaicamd hee inwasthg. lettiningeemsuinand me nt- ns geto sshootatte Germans there
011. h d defenceof alcohol
as some -
to A.
Dr. 'Wood's Norway Pine SYraP- was n_
I got three bottles, and they seestued to ,a "dry" eye in _House.
quite clear his chest of the phlegm, and flirn.eroutstanaing =Went was
tne ost Mr. Crothers got from his
now he 'es fine and wall. ! colleagues on the subject of techinal
I shall never be without- it in the education. Although this is an in-
house as it is a very valuable medicine." creasing important matter and very
complete and expensive reports have
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is eat
up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees
the trade mark: price 26c. and 50e,
sion a e _s g ,
lin's motion to divert the grains now -
showed itself ordered confusion, as it
consumed in the manufacture of whis-
were. And as we went my captain
key and beer to the food needs of the
spoke of the hospital bay, of wards
and dispensary (lately enlarged), of
Sister and, nurses and the grand work
they were/doing among the employees
"And they've struck a medal in com-
memdyation," said I'
"111&lal!" said he, and he blew his
d th b f it' f
nose ou er an Detore. ancy
they'll wish they could swallow that
dainn medal one day. Poor old Lusi-
tania! You lost anyone aboard?"
"I had some American friends a-
boatd, but they escaped, thank God!
Others weren't seefortunate."
"No," he anrwered turning away.
"Over there's one of the latest sub-
marines. Germany can't touch her for
speed and size, and, better than that,
she got rat -tat.
"I beg pardon," I w- ailed, for the
hammers were riotous again; "what
has she?"
"She's got rat -tat forward and rat -
rat aft, surface speed rat -rat -rat knots
and sugmerged rat -rat -rat, and then,
best of all, she's rattle -tattle -tattle.
Yes, hammers are a bit noisy. This
way a destroyer yonder -new class -
rat -rat feet longer than ordinary. We
expect her to do rat-rat-ta knots, and
he'll mount rat -tat guns. There are
two of them in the basin yonder hav-
ing their engines fitted, turbines to
give rat -tat -tat horsepower. But
come on; we'd better be going, or we
shall lose the others of your party."
"I should like to stay, a week," said
I, tripping over a steel hawser.
"Say a month," he added, steadying
other than attending to their body ills; me deftly. "You might begin to see
and talking thus he brought me to the all we've been doing in a raonth.
place, a place of exquisite order and We have built' twenty-nine ships of
tidiness, yet where nurses, bule-uni- different classes since the war began
formed, in their white caps, cuffs, in this one yard and we're going on
and aprons seemed to me the neatest building till the war's over -and after
of all. And here 1 was introduced to' that too. And this place is only one
a sister, capable, strong, gentle -eyed, of the many. Which reminds me you
who told me something of her work-. are to go to another yard this after -
how many came to her with wounds of noon; we'd better hurre after the rest
soul as well as body; of grief endured of your 'party or they'll be waitina
and wrongs suffered by reason of piti- I for you.
ful lack of knowledge; of how she "I'm afraid they generally are," I
was teaching them care and cleanli- i sighed, as I turned and followed my
nes of minds as well as bodies; which conductor through yawniti? doorways
is surely the most blessed heritage punt to admit a giant it seemed),
children Cry' the unborn generations Ims,y inherit. Into vast workshops whose lofty roofs
She told me of th patient bravery j were, lost in haze. Here saw huge
The genuine is manniacttwed only by the women, the eravalry of grimy men Iturhmes and engines of monstrous
Tnz T. un.seram Lamm, Toronto, - IlitTelilen whose Mots may wait tint Alen mai shape in course of construction..
Ont.
"a.
f*..
re,
A Way, to Soften the Hard
Water of the Bath
Get out th.e LUX package -pour in 3 or 4 able -
spoonfuls into the water and stir a little. The
water immediately becomes creamy eoft, most
refreshing and very beneficial to the skin. Try it
to -night. You'll be pleased,well pleased. People
where the water is unusually hard juet revel
tor the bath. Especially where babies are carx-
.. • •
These silky -smooth little flakes of the
essence of soap exercise a soothing and
cleansing effect on the skin that is very
stimulating after a trying day.
LUX -at all grocers, • -British made
Lever Brothers Limited
Toronto
purest
23
est -
oh -a=
•
6916101101111111111111051111EINEW
-4.21°21‘W
C A S17_ 0 R 1 A be treated there So she talked and beheld mighty propellers, with boilers, 1
listened until, perceiving the eaptail VA furnaces big an houses, whose pro.
Appreciate
Real
Enjoyment
HYSLOP
BICYCLES
Rave been made in Canada for 28 years.
High Quality Easy Riding
- Strong Construction
Beautiful Finish
MDR A HYSLOP
Allainfaettred by HYSLOP 3ROTHERS.
FOR $M.E 111.
J. F. DALY, swam
4:4
the • sbyt
Res- . D
• purposidg
bee provmee
no charge
-One of
the person
at the -how
had reache,
25 days. 1
Ji ranee, an
iston, aiirl
leis! wife t: --
and for th
been living
is survived
aughtere.
Tuesday to
-On Fr
incEinen,f
attack of pi
year, after
ceased was
Quebec; bu
nearly all
he took np
he rematae
Yeats ago
and came
his son! Ja.
iness filer
are three
dr,
PO
• The av
acre in
The net
ter -five y
average
period Was
aidering
enteen di
which h
acre in
lows: Pota
field roo
coria$39;
be seen
obtaind,
Accordil
value o
is equa
two done
vegetable
Seed pot
and peep
are eatin
retained f
though
bringing
suggest
toes for
adverite
papera.
In no
cut goo
big fro
Iii the
at Guelp.
average
obtained
into pie'd
indicated.
ounce, 13
bushels;
one-eigh
sixteenth
potatoes
scrubs
Woea
nowever
rot and
to the r,
favorabi
toes did
autumn
ferior f
seed.
-fore, p
er eve
seed. to
be cut L
guar
ed. in
with th
apart i
planted
eat.
whole
quart*
be et
ceiving
be an
potato
two en.
spr.out
The
dier
the 2
sod la
land
the so
about
plante
which