The Huron Expositor, 1917-07-27, Page 22
Iriameneeneessonononnonammsl'isseszassageseseesseeseeiceien
vissffeisMumegmassomeimainsassaisigisieMensiammis
IPart of Plant of Frost Wire F. Hamilton. 22.000.4. ft. of Paroid on thee° buildings I
PAROID RO F1NG
THE above eut represents hundreds of
squares of Neponset Paroid Roofing,
used by the Frost Wire Co., of Hamilton. If the genuine
Paroid is approved by such a large company would not the
same roofing answer your purposes if properly applied
Don't forget the Material of Paroid is guaianteed for ten
years. We offer our roofing at $
per square ••• •••
2.50 and S3.50
EVE
R
Y
felt roof should be painted at lest
once every 5 years. Paint now and save the
00f. Per gal.....,.. ..... . •••• ••••••• •••••
Big 6 6 4 "
HANGERS
1111?
ritE HURON EXPOSITOR
rata, xpost r
Terms of Subseription.—To any ad-
dress in Catiad.a or Great Britain, one
year $1.50, six months 75c., three
months 40e. 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.
Subscribers who fail to receive The
Expositor regularly by mail will con-
fer a favor by acquainting us of the
fact at as early a date as possible.
When change of address as desired
both the old and new address should
be given.
ADVERTISING RATES.
Display Advertising Rates — Made
known on application.
Stray Animals.—One insertion 50c;
three insertions, $1.00.
Farms or Real Estate for sale 50c.
each insertion for one month of four
insertions; 25c for each subsequent in-
sertion. Miscellaneous Articles for
Sale, To Rent„ Wanted, Lost, Found,
etc., each insertion 25e. Local 'Read-
' ers, Notices, etc., 10e per line per in-
' sertion. No notice less than 25c. Card
of Thanks 56e. Legal Advertising 10c
and 6e per line. Auction Sales, $2 for
one insertion and $3 for two insertions
Professional Cards not exceeding one
inch—$6 per year.
have stood ,the wind, we ther
and test of time, bgides hey
are stow imitated, the sir3cer-
est flattery. Use them and
have a eatisfactory running
door, per pair S1.25.
HAYING TOOLS—Our Pitch Forks have all selected
handles, well fitting ferrules, that do not tear the hands,tines
specially tempered and the complete fork makes a well-bal-
anced tool with which to work. Ask for the Royalty Brand,
Hay Fork Rope, Pure Manilla, Long Fibre—the kind that
lasts. Buy Now—it will be higher. Full stock of putleys,
pulley hooks, rafter brackets and 'slings.
G A. SILLS, Seaforth
The McKitop _Mutual
Fire Insurance Co.
Heacionice: Seaforth, Ont.
DIRECTORY
OFFICERS.
J. Connolly, Goderich, President
Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
d , and be e n ous, , w over nature and besomes master of cannon of ranee, a plan). It as een earne ' continued throughout the season,
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. are kept in a state of morbid fear of able, and in the long run man wins destroying.
Hinchley, Seaforth; William Chesney,
and ' rable. - nature a-nd of nature's laws. Man pays for war. It is his crea- barrels containing twenty-five cart- the cars were constructed soithat they , i . .
1,1hea,lth ano._;wieather perinienig. eerms
Egmondville; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R.
To all such sufferers Milburn's Heart Thus we. may trace our progreSs. : to and as long as he keeps it up ridges and capable of discharging 150 might be fitted with Maxim guns.
he will have to. stand for the game. bullets a minute to a range of a mile It is probable that of ail the varioee '-‘9 insure, n -w -
DIRECTORS, 1 permanent relief. successes onward to the establishment subjects pay them. Kings and Con- -mentioned was automa.tic. All were 2578
1 t uff - 'n th ast with n e i • glin For instance, the cooling laeleet ef
NERVE TROUBLES
reservoirs.
War enickly destroys what man pro-
duces, but the cpst is paid for, not in
money, but by labor augmented many
times over as a price paid for the fol-
lies of men. Constructive labor yields
permanent results; war uproots them.
Battleshins are not paid for by Gov-
ernments, but by subjects of the na-
tion. A thousand men on a warship
produce nothing; the same men in ac-
tion destroy both ship and enemy. The
payment of taxes comes out of hum-
an labor; the oayment of interest on
loans is a double burden, falling en
those who live now and labor, and
striking hard against those who are
later to become creators of the nation's
wealth. We are still paying pensions
on a war that ended 102 years ago.
Wars are paid for in human sacrifice --
human lives; but they are also paid for
sacrifice that eat e up the products of
man's labor; and when these visible
things are shot to pieces, an increase
of human energy alone can replace
them. Men who build battleships are
also paying for the battleships. If
the ships go to the bottom, no power
on earth can replace them, save hum-
an labor; and the more ships at the
bottom the greater the dramn. on the
living labor which creates them out
of earth's materia
Take an illustration from our na-
SEAFORTH, Friday, idly 27th,- 1917 tional snorts, baseball and college
football. Who pays the salaeies of
the twenty-two players on each side of
WHO PAYS FOR THE COST OF the sixteen teams of the major lea -
training the college men for their an-
- a WAR trues? Who accounts for the cost of
It mey be said in fair spirit that nual seasons on the gridiron? -Man-
the beliefs of the best men divide on ifeetly those who pay as witnesses .sf
the problem of the cost of the war. It the games. Suppose a quarter of all
has been shown by Ward in his itPure these men were killed and the same
Sociology" that war has been a leading proportion injured for life. Suppose
factor in the development of that hospitals and nurses were supplied to
which we call civilization. TJnques- meet these losses and that they were
tionablv this is true, if we tabulate kept up during the entire season. Sup -
the results; but smmd reasoning re- pose fresh players were drawn from
quires that it be shown that there is ranks and drafted into the daily
iron in times of peace. WOuld any held their hands up shouting "kam- differ from the popular Gennan ma -
no better wave There is a better way. slaughter on the diamond or the grid-
arad " chine gun. It has no water -jacket for
•100•004.014•11••••••••••111acast.0•••••.02rn•-•000,00,:••••
-
Ripe Cherries
and
"Pure and Uncolored"
make delicious and
economical preserves
In 10, 20 and 100.1b. sacks,
2 and 5 -pound cartons
PRF,SERVING LABELS FREE Send red
ball trade -mark for book of 84 printed
gummed labels to
Atlantic Sugar ftefincries Liznited
Power Bldg., Mounts'
145
•••••
THE PEOPLE ARE THE BEST
JUDGES OF MERIT IN THE
LONG RUN. THAT'S WHY
COMFORT SOAP EXCELS ITS
RI VA LS.
POSITIVELY THE LARGEST SAIL IN CANADA
JULY 27, 1917
Popular Stallions
The followng popular stallions wile
stand for the improvement of eteek
this season as follows;
The Standard Bred Trotting Stallion
RED McKIN'NEY
No. 42946 Vol XVII, A.T,In.
Enrolment No. 1151 Form
Will stand for the miprovement of
stock this season at his own stable,
Fgreondville. Terms $13 to insure
James Berry, Proprietor.
KING KAY 13029
Enrolment No. 529 Form 1.
The Canadian bred Clydesdale Stal-
lion, King Kay, will stand for the ime
provernent of stock this season as fol.
lore: Monday—Will leave his own
1 sts lt . at Peter McCann's, Concession
3, iiiibert, and go 2% miles south to
tilt lh concession, then east 2% Antes
tilt 'est on con. 4 to his own stable.
foi 3 OM Tuesday. — Down the
2,. a d 3rd concessions, 2% miles east
then west on the Huron Road, to hoe
own stable for noon.—Wednesday ....,
North 2% miles and east to Andrew
Krauskopfs, for noon; then north and
west to Beechwood, then to his own
1 stable for night, where he will remain
until the follovving Monday morning.
Terme, to insure $15. The above route
will be continued regularly thretigheee
the season, health and weather per-
mitting. James Murray, Proprietor
and Manager. 2580-11
,Ward's deduction does not mean that
lie favored war as a means to an end:
he simply stated the fact from the
point of view of the sociologist. The
problem is at once ethical as well as
sociological. What has been should
rot necessarily be continued. The
basis of the sociological asnect is hu-
man achievement: that of the ethical
in the power of the mind; and in the
religious field we have the main-
springs of human conduct.
A few facts need aMsideration:
The object of nature is function. The
object of man is happiness. The 'ob-
ject of society in action. Severally and
jointly man is equinned with certain in her demands. We borrow from ria -
potential qualities, both of mind and ture as well as from bankers, and the fourteenth century, and was made
faculties he achieves whatever he sets have taken, her mandates are scrue- by the simple expedient of fastening when the gun becomes hot the water
several light guns together parallel begins to boil, steam escapes and the
body, and in the exercise of these when nature recalls the things we
his mind to do. The mind itself is ously carried out. War bastees the to each -however It was not until the of the gunner is obscured. The
this loss constituted no drain on the In La Revue des Deux Mondes Cap- cooling purposes, with the result that
man of ordinary judgment infer that
nation? tain Henri Carre, of the Freech army, the barrel gets exceedingly hot -when
You cannot pay for war out of had written an article upon German fired at a high rate. But since the
taxes. War is liquidated by the hu_ and French machine guns, which is barrel is made of speeial manganese
translated in Current History. He steel the ballistic properties of the
ired even when the
man cost, and by cost is meant that
continued outgo of human labor which
J the sole source of wealth. In ad -
points out that the mitrailleuse, which gun a
re not ampa
is the common eame of the machine barrel is glowing red. The gun is
11 a misnomer fixed on a tripod and can be fired with
is element and the accompanying blast because the word designates grape- the gunner either sitting on a saddle
dition to the destruction of the 'human gun m ran ,
ing of the materid element war makes shotbeinwhich was meant the scrape of i or lying on his back, The French gun
a steady drain.- on the future; that is iron from which cannon were former- is carried in parts and on the road is
conveyed on pack horses or in carts.
to say the cost is passed on for many le charged. The first weaponwithsev- c
ul At the front it is carried by soldiers.
clecades,through pensions and inter-
est, and in no sense will nature let up
eral barrels—an a
ti -barreled weapon that the machine The barrel of the German gun is
surrounded by a metal sleeve filled
inin was evolved—was thought of in
with water f c oli purposes, but
nineteenth century. however, that any steam also betrays the presence of the
agent that guides the nenamic quell- speeds up the processes by which marked progress was.made along this gun; and Cant. Carree says that on
AND PALPITATION' OF THE HEART
man tow
ards development and pro- tered they must be replaced by hu- the size of a rifle barrel, assembled f,:enerating steam by means of damp
not a force, but it is the directive destruction of all these elements,
ties of men. In these epochs of civ- wealth is torn to pieces. ann when line, and then a Belgian, who devised many occaslons the Germans have
ilization which mark the movements these things are shattered and . seat- a weapon of fifty barrels, each about sought to draw away enemy fire by
-parallel to each other in a prisrnatie grass to imitate the boiling machine
c. -i:
, SO HAND IN HAND. ' • among human qualities is the virtue fice. Taxes laid on interest augment bundle. This gun could fire one hun- puns. The German gun can fire 400
gress, that whicinhas proved sturdiest man toil and increased human sacri-
of the pioneer; and as obstacles have the national burden by increasing the deed . bullets a minute and its range shots a minute. It can be carried
When the heart begins to beat ir- achievement. the more serviceable and i of the national revenues. And in the 'Die next step was the invention of or moles.
was about a -Mile and a quarter. either on a man's back, or by cart or
• given -way before the march of human • tax gatherers, who must be paid out automobile. It is not packed by horses
regularly, palpitate aud throb, beats fest permanent elements of life have been last analysis the receiver of interest tno Getling gun, with six or ten _bar- i the Capt .Carre says that in
for a time, then so slow as to seem almost successfully- set up. These are pa i is essentially a non -producer and as eels. a crank turned by- nand proven German Mercedes automobiles
to stop, it causes great anxiety and Edam. to be lost sight of in the glamor of such be has to be fed along with hie the motive riower. and another were certain nuts fixed in the chez*
manPfactured in time of pear," there
When the heart does this many people tvar. The human race is encomium-- ' those -who do tbe fighting and the de-velopment was the so-called "bullet
2 2 f 25 the -purpose of which nobody could exe
• ' that
Imported Clydesdale Stallion
RIO GRANDE (14442)
Canadian Stud Book No. 14940
Will stand for the improvement of
stock this season as follows: Monday
—Will leave his own stable, Lot 9,
el 2i ession 2, Hullette and proceed-
ve to Arthur Dale's for noon; then
so ti i to the Huron Road and east 3Vii
mi e, then north to his own stable
fo: night Tuesday—Will, leave his
ov n stabie and proceen north and east
by w sy of concession io Foster Fow-
ler's, for noon; then eroceed north to
concession 6 and east 8. miles, the
north to Frei! Eckert's for night. Weds
nesday—Will proceed west to William
Ross', for noon; then west and sautle
by way of Constance to hit own stable
where he will remain until the follow-
ing Monday morning. Terme to in-
sure $13. Inspected and enrolled.
Archie Theodore Dale, Proprietor and
Manager. 2579x8
The Standard Bred Trotting Stallion
. TODD WINTERS 2337
Inspected and Approved
Enrolment No. 4785 Form
Monday—Will'leave his own stable
d go south to the Red Tavern, to
111 : Moore's, for no; then west to
ni et Harvey's, Stanley, for night.
e, day—North along the 2nd eon-
ce ot to Mr Jackson's for noon;
th sn by way of the- 2nd concessioo,
Ti 1ersmith to his own stable for
night. Wednesday—At his own stable.
Thursday—West on the Huron Roan,
earth to B.Allen's, Harlock, for night.
Friday—East to Isaac Mc Gavin%
Leadbery, for noon; then by way of
the North Gravel Road to his own
stable, for night Saturday—At his
own stable. The above route will be
G. Jarmuth, Broclhagen.
, and Nerve Pills will give prompt and iron) its faint beginnings in triben Gorernments create war debts, but and a half. None of the weapons models of machipe gun row being used
s John Pink-ney SOII, Prom rn Man.
DinnewieS, Brodbagen; Ja
- Ines Eva11511 Brydges, 'tes: "I have. been a ()1.1 •
Mrs. Thomas Davidson, Mount th bstantial moral gains which
gresses may declare war, but that is eperated by hand power. The honor at the front one does not stand out.
WiIliani R,inn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
-(1.- McEwen, Clinton; Jas. One excels in one point; one in anothi.
c. onnote the value of the human SOU. i only bequeathing tti innocent succese- of inventing the modern machine •
MAKWIRA (15938)
Connolly 6oderich; D. F. MeGregor,
troubles and palpitation of the heart. ors the obligations that must be inet must be awarded to Sir Hiram Maxim, the German -gun, as said, discloses its (Approved and Enrollen.)
. in its strugc:les with nature. Whatev-
-
Beechwoo grea s ercr e p
R. P No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Gneve,. ‘
I tried several remedies, but without any er nature has eet up as a hindrahce tt cost Russia seeie000,000
t to fortify who produced his first practicable presence -wben the gun gets hot. One 3 i meseosie, Proprietor & Manageri
-
No. 4 Walton- Robert Ferris, Harlohc.k• '
, ; good results. • et. - . • . ,
he, which man himself makes con- ' nrthur. It cost Japan $400.1)0(1.- model in 1882 after having spent a fires faster than another, but after a A onday, May nth—Will leave his"
:II& iz: been largely ovei come but themie- i port ..
My son came in one day and advised 1 ..' -s , • - emenduous suns in ee-periments. All . ri •
thiei ex ert eave noth- 1 e ;TT steine. Staffa, and go west to Jan
— - - ------ - - -- - : me to take Milburn's Heart and Nerve • - - • - . OH to batter it to pieces. Rut the -tr h. . have
takenthe is gained by extreme speed, since ! 1... it s for noon; then south to the
George McCartney, No. 3, Seafort
stetefe a deag on his, rotress Thee
check what is othewrioPe .--hi (:,"or'isiirii.n cost is not in money; it is in human modern Mae me gunsh . in
ann. p.m Pills. After using one and a half boxes ' lives and human wealth, and such des_ Maxim as a model. The French arm:y there is earely justification for firing =
, Geer eiature which mac afres to secure, 1 C ro earty line, east to Cromarny to
7.00 2=3° 1 am fully recovered, and am in a perfect truction ultimately rolls up what Ile has three types of machine gun, and it Trt(7.., iiian a ri• at
' rs' 4i'li'fi't iliS OW11 stable for night. Tuesday
• 7.37 SAY1 state of health, thanks to your valuable • end they do it by 411. 11 Ping lin thV com- gene -ration van rely . Seventy cents is that called the Saint Etienne that Theoretically a weapon on a fixed sup -I NO011—South to the Hibbert and Us-
Goderich Leave
Myth
Walton .
Guelph
7.5 O 3-19 medicine." poend interest- assei,seil against sue- out of every dollar received by cur Cant. Caree deecribes. The power to port should send all its shots alone borne boundary to j 33
. James a an ynes.
5 6 06 " ' - - rt d N my Pillo e reedine generations, And in this cal-
, -
Federal Government was paid nth fie explode the bullets and move the
. . . . the same path. In practise this is
. ,
f(e- night. Wednesday—South to Win -
not so, because of the coneussionq cheisea, to John Delbridge's, for noon;
south to William Brock's . Usborne,
(013-1 rvlbee. agnudn the ensemble
Each bu l 1 et mtaakke: iato..hoewanf 1
for night —Thursday—East by Bar
closely packed but very narrow, which 1 Line to Geo . C. Allan's, Blanshard, for
is -properly compared to the stream i noon; then north to tbe Kirktcoo Line,
of water discharged from a hose. Ill I then west to- Taylor's Helen Kirkton,
-the mowing fire, which is the normal ' for night. Friday—North to Thames
fire, a certain number of sheaves is I Road at Thomas McCurdie's, for noon;
juxtaposed .alozr,. the whole front of then north to the Cromarty line, to
the objective. From this it results John Hamilton's for night. Saturday
that at the point at which they
strike the earth the density of bul-
lets is terrible, and an extraordinary
effect of destruction of unsheltered
men is produced:
FROM TORONTO 50c. per box, at all dealers With the nation cartridge belt is obtaining y ra g
or mailed ' (=tory war io the great ( ffender. It is = military purposes,
Toronto (Leave) -
Guelph (arrive) 10.16 7.00
Walton 12.68 8.42
ilyth 1210 9.07 ....---...,
Auburn 12.30 9.191
Goderich 12.45 9.45 CREAM WANTED.
Kahl Line for Galt, Woodstock, Len- We have our Creamery now in full tation of the lives of men. And it i ' .economic bearing and show the
sir& involved in human loss. tete_ back by a spring. It is a. tottand-fro
movement. which brings about the
Connections at Guelph Junction with which nature provides for the susten- • '
/0114 Detroit and Chicago and all In- operation, and we want your patron-' on this basis that man successful]; i°
The problem of the cost of war is complete action of the weanon. It can
the highest prices for your cream, pay individual with the other the co -opera-' sociological and must be examined in be fired at any rate, either at rapid
larmediate points. age. We are prepared to pay you ' builds, for in the partnership of the
The light of the forces and resultants fire or at a Kneed regulated by a spe-
you every two weeks, a. c'gh, sample tion of the many rewards the unit with .
and test each can of cream carefully increased fruitage.
0 510 direct on receipt of price by Tbe T. nue in the lav,is of bioloev that the .
at peace.. If the baseball players gas from the barrel through a hole
„ • .as
• th
Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto. Ont. forces of. an abolism and katabolism
it . ed in the supposititious warfare above_ . nu ime res m , .
. left widows and , orphans re- eetering a cylinder called the gas
are -pitted aeainst each other, bus .
this conflict of unlike elements the '• eitedn f-hamber and later escaping to the air
cruiring pensions, who would stand f OT
forms of life. are born and come to. the increaeed expense of our national lini appropriate apertures. The piston
maturity. • That fniition is the gint. . , 1 The cases are parallel in their at the end of its movement ie driven
41•■•••••••••••••••••=1404.
Iron Pumps & pump
Repairi
a a pre.pat ed to WI Its all eepd ot
(nal apnaratus which permits all rates
of human action. Fire insurance corn -
from ten to 500 shots a minute.
and give you statement of the same. Evert- explosion or powder is costly. panies pay for losses, but not until af-
In one notable respect does this gun
We also supply cans free of charge. if at the end .of the range we have ter they have collected an edequated
and give you an honest business deal. a human being, and the cost must be f-und from the community. Life in I
Call in and see us Or drop us a card for Paid for both bi- the living and the surance premiums provide the source;
out of which clairris are met, else what i
other source could pay for them? If ' •
1
the companies get interest on loans, '.
that only brings other factors into the
problem. The circle is thus widened,
but the principle remains the same;
namely, that from human labor is
drawn the fund that compensates for
?arc - and ift Pumps a id a llsizes
.8- born . Every explosion of powder
perticulars. •
, pe Etting- e c. Galvan-
teel fames s rid Water troughs 1 Le Seaforth Creamery
is costly in any case, for the price
of the marksman is the nrice which he
ta Seaforth Onte!no nays for the securing of the game.
ie ens d attle Basins.
Bows and arrows and repeating rifles
At oa indsof pump repairingdone
on- or notice. For terms, etc, Thought She Would Lose
cost human labor, and when men
shoot arrows and bullets into the air,
a plk ly at Pump Factory, Ooderich •ihev must go and -pick them up or else
St„ East, or at residence, North
shells, they 111 U1. rnake nelelr shells in. loeses sustained. War raises those
losses to the "nth" degree and leaves
T Children With make other eines. When they exnlode
Main Street
J. F. Welsh,Seaferth
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
AUBLPH & GODERICH BRANCH. ,
TO TORONTO.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth u follows:
10.55 a.m. — For Clinton, Goderich,}
Winghain and Kincandino.
5.88 p .ra For Clinto, Wingham
and Kinsardine.
11.0$ p.m. — For Clinton, Goderich
47.51 ft. no•—For Stratford., Guelph,1
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west,.Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east. .
5.16 p.m. — For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal ansi points east .
LONDON, BUION AND BSUCII
ass* Paseenrer..
ffiairka2a, israTt g•S• S
tie
$176. , 744
Losidaaheze• . '113
Clintoa.. • 13A
KiliNlm• • . • • •
Vassal 3.114
itutear , 4.41
471 .l
. 16.4,4
P M
Ifertit
I.0dove* isset
0 0 *A Ei-er, • 0
0-00 20 • ta
0 0 0,0 01* e.../ ,•0•44
• •••,0 :Oa 0 e. aks.
...tf
440
Nice 35c. einge
R: Manufactured ew4--- by The T. MD- siomi.of
0,01 0.1,011..T.00MM
.t.cfl B
4 1 the
IMOM4. bunt Co., Limited, Toporto,
their niece. If they keep cm firing to posterity the burden of paying for
some one else must make the ammuni- other pedple's quarrels. The interest
ood D senter t
Y Y Y
Ion and furnish new guns. for guns claims piles up faster than they. can
wear out as well as shells. When be discharged, and drain away from
• men consume more than they produce, constructive labor the hig er ru s o
they must soon step either the produc_ human toil. —
Dysentery manifests itself nitth varying tion or the destruction. Fireworks
Were half the power that fills the
degrees of Intensity, but in weal marked once a year cost labor; fi krewor s for world with
terror,
cases the attack is common!y -
three courts,
diarrhoea, which gradually increases in for in the only element that can pro-
preceded nearly ree years that batter forts Were the half the wealth bestowed on
by loss of appetite, and some amount of and dismember bodies incamps and urtsest be paid
A nation at war is -keeping a ledger, Given to redeem the human mind
from
severm
ity, and ia accompanied with grip- duce the, namely. human labor. error,
ing pains in the abdomen. The dis!-
and as the balance is on .Tie debit side, There were mo need of arsenals or
forte,
charges from the bowels succeed each redoubled efforts are necessary to re -
other with great frequency, and rist store the equilibrium. No juggling
resemble those of ()refinery diarrimea with fignres can offset this inexorable
soon change their character, becoming jaw of eaeure. No human reasoning
scanty, mucous or slimy, and subse- cnn compensate nature for the con-
quently mixed with, or consisting wbolby sumption of her resources; nothing
of bloodbut human labor can compensate her.
Her bounties contain to values until
they are carved out seecific and
productive human energy-, and when
theee values are once created in the
form of wealth, they fail under the
law of katabolism . If man hastens the
breaking -up process ny recklessness
"I have used Dr. Fowler's Extract of or by war. he must pay for it in con -
Wild Strawberry in my family for bloody
tinued expenditure of effert. he must
dysentery with perfect It -s. I theik. par the rest. When a man norrews
without a do.abt had I nut cen .ble to
env -thine. from natnre he rnay rse it or
procure a bottle just When i L I would
n0.1% he Wills; but in any -case what
have lost two of niy childan
borrws must he returned to her
" Dr. Fowler's " has bee.n on the market
for the past 72 years, and its reputaiien —
is such that there are many prep:irations
A.
ever neglectat irst appears to
be a shght attack of dierreoea or dysen-
tery may set in. ' Care the first syrup-.
toms by the use of Dr. Fowler's Extract
of Wild Strawberry.
Mrs. J. Purdy, Leask, _Sask., writes:
on the motket claiming to make the F..tne
cures as Dr. Fowler's."
The se ne cAsToR
name, no reputatioe strawberry com-
pounds may be dangerous to your health, For Infanta and cloilth-en.
sk
fumed and insist on fpcig given
"Dr. Fordern" when you afor it. The layj yoU Faye WyS B4110
SO
THE WONDERFUL MACHINE GUN
One of the things which Germany
knew before the war and which the
Allies d:d mit know was the part that
machine guns. would -piny in the strug-
one. Therefore the Germans had twen-
ty times as -many machine guns tn the
front as -their enemies, -and the ma-
chine guns did mere for their early
s-s"than the famous hownizors
etered down the Belgien -forts
in the early days of their advance.
Fortimately :machine goers were easily
made; -the .Allies learned the lesson,
eaci now arc warreesed to have as many
r. anhine g1.111 -z, if not more. than Ger -
mante Perhare -the bravest men in the
German anise are the machine gun-
ners. Innienher leadincr• an advance or
&fending e retreat they are a verit-
able fel-if-9..7. hope. *and 'time and time
instaimes has e been reported of
Cam: en med.-line gunners refusing to
-surrender even although they saw
- = 11 a wai t infr them. They
are as sava.g. as they are desperate,
8 have been known again and a ea in
to turn their fire on their own wound-
ed. and also to sweep with murder-
ous bla.sts those of their comrades who
40, •.
•
At '7
<-
i•
•
t r
.•
t•
:1111:
,!
*„„/ •
/
;
ek-
,
ir1.•
•
goEr es- Clea;
'r, CleacT, 'Fresher.
I
" when 'washed with Sunlight Soap.
cleans the clothes more thoroughly and with le ,s
work than ordinarysoaps. it docsr't hurt
clothes and I must sy my hmnes ):?fi 1: -
worse for it either. I -really do n flan:
to look after the wash myself,.
Soap .does so much of the work for
• r"
i
nil
Madam—there's nothing blit truth in this lady's remark.
Sunlight Soap is made so well and so h -m that our
guarantee of $5,000 that it contains no impurity :la: \
never been challenged.
All grocers sell Sunlight Soap.
LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TCRON' 14)
—West to Cromarty, then north 'to
Staffa, at noon; where he will remain
until the following Monday mining.
EARL O'CLAY [13458) 02035
Inspected Enrolled, and Approved.
R. D. Murdock, Prop. and Manager
Monday—Will leave his -own tabl�,-
in
Brucefield, and go west to the see-
ond cencession of Stanley, then north,
to John Butchard's for noon; thecoona
north and west to William Glenn's, for
night. Tuesday—By way of Bannock-
burn, to Varna, at the Temperance ho-
tel, for noon; then- by way of Bay-
field road to the Goshen line to Al-
bert McClinchey's for night. i'Vedneo-
daora BY McClymont's side road to the
Pa rr line, then south to William Fos-
tei 's for noon; then to Wm. McKen-
zie 's second concession of Stanley ,for
th 1 ght. Thursday—North to the
Br -1 ?ld rbad, to his own stable, for
no. remaining until the following
Friday morning. Friday—To Geo. Me-
, Cartney's, Mill road, for noon; then to
MacAdam's side road, then north to
the second concession, H.R.S, Tuck°
ersmith, then west to James Carrio-
chan's for night. Saturday—West Ill
Broadfootts bridge, then imuth to the
Mill road. to his own stable, where he
will remain until the following Mendai.
morning. 0 2680
Atr,
LORD MANSFIELD.
James Evans, Proprietor & Manager,
Monday—Will leave his own stable,
Beechwood, and go to Pat Woods',
Logan, for noon; thence to. his own
stable, for the eight. Tuesday — To
John Murray'i minceseion 11, nicKii-
lop. for noon; then wet,/ te . Ross',
con eion 1O, -McKillop, for one hour;
the es to his own stab' for night.
We la sday—To Frank Mahar's con-
ces 'o. 3, Logan, for noon; then to
WE et s Hotel, Dublin, for the night
Th rq ay—To Joseph .Nagle's, for
noon; then to Joseph Atkinson's, fer
night. Friday—To Martin Curtin's
miles eaet of ileaforte, fer mon;
thee to Cecil One's, McKilitop, for the
night. Saturday—Will proceed to hy;
,own stable where he will remain until
the folio „sling Mond. is /3.3;mi-dries. Teems
and conditions same as former year
Lord Mansfield has been enrolled, ins
spetted and approved. Terms to in-
sure, $13. James Evans, Mane=rer.
1,0E2211
ta
a
at
se
*WU:re-Aar
gIgNOW311004,0•07021_•!!!rel
D.,••••••••••••••
Notes. —n
Bru.ssels die;
person of
illiiess of ss
of the stern
year. Rey.
field. Ont..=
made in Brl.
Hunter, of i
p. tated tin
months agi':
broken and
since. Ree
in the foot
to remove i
years of 4g
Notes.
—
purchased 1
perty end i
it to Mr. I
high •scixool
the W .C.T
oa 1VIrs (R
• Armor gan
the conver
July 4 an(
won the 'Pei
following -a
eomin veal'
per. Exeter
of Brussen
Mrs. R. 1
urer, Mrs.
Next to j
economy 0
reason for
MUS1
The foll4
examinatit
rich, 1-rm
London iC
School of
-wired for
first classsible 100.
GODER
—Grade 3
Reta Web
Irene Yet
73, Grad
861/2; Kati
ton 72.
HENSA
Brintnell.
Itvison 85,
78, Louise
tory--Lel
IVIITCB
tha Dieg
igaret Sm
na McVe
Rebecca J
70, Gra
861/2; G
Lilite Ti
71, Muri
70. Sup
Si Muril
ments—
rudiment
Kerslake
McVey 6
UN
Aithi)10
3. battles
monstee
protean
material
nuts.
tions be
hot Fe
the res4
powder
A. d
in a
from 11
etruetio
but it iS
Union
nbrous
water
made se
thie eon
)pereini
water .
to tua.k
Mine-
:he Uktil
•
inowy
men W
wear ir
nartiell
,-en) ?tell
nd
ittid
the see
The
Ireedel
so) ;nen
tfieoe
mow
6
:•:1
-.it at
itykr,t1
0.)r f*;
troi
intim
eine
new
ATC4;,s;