Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-01-04, Page 2a • 0 MILL[ TONS of COA is the least estimate of the fuel shortage in the United States for NEXT year. Economy cannot make this up, so that our own resc►vrCes, particularly wood, will be called up to SIR WILFRID WILL ENDEAVOR TO RBSTO E UNif tial.. rIR WILFRID LA R ER, ac - 'cording to states Outs made by those in, his j leonfldence, will continue to ',carry oil° as supply the want, and at the prevailing high prices, firewood " the leader of the Oppotttioti in the is a harvest worth looking after. anew Parliament, with two main mo- tives; First, to do Me utmost to If your old cross -cut saw does counteract the procesas i'of disunion not work satisfactorily, may. a ;between the two race.11 Canada, • possiblei, something .and restore, if new one --and 4o it now. It _ A special value is the df the amity and cu cord whichpays. QLD LOIN,- lance tooth and `prevailed prior to the uI►gro^w�th of wationalissm under I#ourassa in his beautifully ground, with thin ,own Province; and 'seemed, to re - back, improved teeth, strong, establish the broken iii est of Lib - but not too heavy, a saw that . eralism in Canada on the common basis of fundamental principles and appeals to everyone requiring loyalty to British traditions of ,re- ood article. f , • sponsible government. He has: no intention of giving up the Liberal leadership or or enter- Price, with File.... SICUU_ We have alq.o in.eta ek the Leiden, Buffalo Bill anci :Fit king, of the, famo►i s` RA, Smith: manufacture, any of which .eve can highly reconf nd. ,,,, IsIZi .. , Files, $3 and: 7•:,inches,- each •MOc. Saw Sets .,egitc, to *IMO Ax Es A keen well shaped axe is an a sogut ne�cessit -�to thenian n.th i h4 this in mind we=advance the 4'S -A' R" • the northern 1:us1iman's choice---theAIl-steel--an#are of Ilrle: balance and best quality. All -guaranteed. Each $1,i30 44,41, The " Bay State ' is a lightet axe of American , matinfic-; ture, complete with handle_ .Excellent value. Each $►1:25; :dor improving the axe- edge use :Cuborunduni Stones. ;.}VC+�.i..+IsifRFa+.•. ............•...e. r. to• r..• i.+r ..rrr�• 20e'to.43, V: Axe Handles, Rock Elm and Hickory ... 30c to 5Oc e or) feet . of Frost king Weather M -Acahli Strip saves fuel. (hilly..... c .SILLS; Seaftri ire. c, i t ,tti a Fire InSu r ort ee ,Co .eo 8h, DlRWFPRY OFFICERS* L SIM BUM President Zs& B' vans, BCRhwoo E. Bays, Seafoyth, - Souy.-Treats. AGS ,sex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Cimton;i Ed. Sitnehley. Seaf orth; - John. ' iMurray, itiucefield; J. W. Yceo, CoderichA R. • Jarrnuth, Brodhagen. Far 5 Ya INOU11, 4 11111Th} 'tilhareus •one ear .or :aber:a. }she i* r of the people' ire -troubled, more �wsth some disci of heart, teouble. attention is paid weakness w* :i to aeist, iirregulitigy, and they seadtdenly;feel faint fanddisaysand fettlesidthe wesserami- DIRECTORS On Abe fret aiga of -any'weekneeso iiliam Rinn, No. 2, Sesafarth; John (ate :heart MiLuanle Heart And Nerve Bums/vies, Brodha east James Evansr, mills should he 'tokenism' bus. eec� 3eee wood; M. ]chem, awes; s; Jim peompt;and;perma t:rehef, .Connelly, Goderich; D. F. - McGregor, 'Aire. W. H. Penne, Valbride, Ont., M. R. Noe $, Seaforth; J. 'G. Grieve, wsitea:-• -"1 was trod withsum heart PTa. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, lilarlock; for Ave yews, and .was ao bed at iaete l forge McCartney, No. 2, Seerfortth. mend me auto =fits Aid smo4hering. I coaisld :not ,do any work while 'was af- fected, !but .after taking three ibexes of Milbur-n'e Heart aoci,' Nerve Me, I havesegained may .heidth." 'Mr burn's _,Heart and Nerve Pills are 50e. petboxstatildesiemer mafledd rect on reempt .14 .p 'The T. Milburn Co., Limited, T t. 1. T. R. TIME TSE Trains Leave Se afortk as sfeRowe: .10.55 a.rin. --- For Clinton, GodesLek, Wing ham. and Kincardine. . Tan p• --- For Clilkttsss, Winghsimt and'ncardine . s 43.1.03 p. rxc. 4 For Clinton, & deriah. 141 a. m. -For Stratford., Guelph, Toronto, Orinia, North Say and CARRIAGE FOR SALK points west, Belleville and Peter- Two seated Gladstone, nannraCa wod, ss boro and points east. good as new and esay running, com- 21.16 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, ,a fortable family . A at Tba Montreal and points eaat. . Expositor Mice. gi'16-tt LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE -'-`' - Going South a.m. pass. NEVER NEGLECT Winghane depart 6.35 al°- Myys satve • .......... , . 6.04 8.48sRaNCIITIS Londesboro ........... 7.13 3.56 Clinton, ...... , ., ... 7.33 4.15. Brucefield . , 8.08 4.33 Kippen - .. .. 8.16 4.41 Hensel', .. , ........ 8.25 4.48 Exeter ............. 8.40 5.01 Centralia 8.57 5.13 Broach tis comes from a neg1eeted coidr London. ars lee 10.05 6.15 and starts with a short, ;painful, dry' Wier- Going North a.m.. p.m. cough, monied With rapid wheezing, London, depart 8.30 4.40 and a feeling of oppression or tightness Centralia ..............9.35 5.45 through the amt. ' IT MAY TURN TO PNEUMONIA. .4.004 Exeter .............. 9.47 5.57 Yoas have, no doubt, wakened up in 1ensali ....; ......... 9.59 6.09 the morning a have had to cough Kippen .............. 10.14 6,246 ssorerel times to raise the phlegm from �ef°teld � .. .. 10.14 6,24 Minton .............. 10:30 6.40 I the bronchial tubes, and have found it Londesboro 11.28 6.57 of a yellowish or gray, greenish color 11.37 7.05 1,1.50 '7.18 12.05. 7.40 Blyth Belgravia Winghani, arrive C. P. & TIME TABLE GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TORONTO a.m. pm. Hoderich, leave ........6.40 1.35 'Myth ......... , ..........7.18 2.14 Walton 7.82 2.20 reuelph 9 38 4.30 FROM TORONTO Toronto Leave 7.40 5.10 Guelph, arrive . 9 38 7.00 Walton 11.43 9.04 Blyth 12.03 9.18 'Auburn ..............12.5 5 .._, 9.30 s and you' .lave re eived relief right away. This is a. form of bronchitis, which if not cured immediately may turn into pneumonia or some more seriousi trouble. Cane the cold with Dr. Wood's Norway 'e Syrup and thereby prevent Bien- b.bitis and pneumonia taking hold on roar system. Bir. E. Jarvi, New Find, writes: ---"l was troubled, for years, with br nchinn and could not find any relief. I was especially bad on a damp day. I went to a cieuggist, and asked him for sozoe rg to stop the cough and con - Bina tickling in my throat. Ile gave - me a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine which I found gave me insta `relic . I think it is the best medic:inc for broneleitis I know of. Now I take viral always have a,bottle of.it on Mend." Goderich .............12.40 9.55 Do not accept a substitute for "Dr. Wood's." It IS put up in a yellow Connections at Guelph Junction with wrapper; 3 pine trees the trade mark; "fain Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon -ice 25c, and 50c.• manufactured only on, Detroit,' and Chicago and • all in- Lon-price The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, tennediate points., Ing :the Union 'Cabinet. There is in the Opposition ranks n successor to the -"Old Chief" at , pre eat .in sight: Norr. so. far as can learned„ is there any ,prospect •of Sir ,.Wilfrid'_ either being offered or •aslecepting .,a. . place in Sir Robert Borden's Cab . tact. ;- I The problem,. of Qu bee's, _ repre- . septation In the .Cabinet is a .big and a serious; one. it is o e Of the , most uafortuuste ,aftermath • of ,theelec-° tion.• What.wial.be d by the .Gov eminent to deal: with ; an isolated Quebec no one knows. The Covent- meat oversmeat! realises,. however that .the ,,$it-. �•ualden cannot eery we be left as it Ess• at present.. Sir Wilfrid. Himself :will .endeavor -to asst the aeachfng of a ,solution that will tend. tto bring is into line behind ce itinued land more en- thusiiastic war effort (land national conegrd. will a" vise with his friends thhire as to w at .ie the best . and ' moderate course to pursue in achieving the ends he as always had iity view. i1 As to the National! tattitude Sir . Wilfrid believes that espite the de- feat ,of every "National ist candidate in Quebec, and the re urn ,of an al- most solid Liberal halon from the Province, Bou, , a , will still head a fsirmidabie , anti-Brttieh party, a:nd may make'headway again. There is no love lost betwejen Sir 'Wilfrid and Bourasaar notwithstanding the latter'sa .attitude toward. the Laurier' candidates in the election icampaign. ,It is -interesting to note is this con- nection that Armand Lavergne sought Sir Wilfrid': endorsation as a• candidate, but wad turned down. Lavergne's f piii icy in I regard tQ the war, was practically ,t at. Canada had Fo done enough. .r t 'is Sir Wilfrid. woul,4not stand. In, regard to the enforcement of conscription 'in,(Quo , the Liberal leader sees a danger of passive re- sistance, •posssIbly leading to serious disturbances, unless ;the situation is dealt with wisely ad • diplematically ',by the GovernmentThe Gewern- meat will .considerl phages of the question eery- caretu ly before re - sorthig to .any drastic coerr�ive meas- ures, and it is probable that the ad- vice - d -vice: and assistance of Sir W lfrid wilEbe sought. and freely given,. 11 CATS. CONSCRIPTBEi FOR THE TRENC}IES. "In war time, my' man,' sa s a Curate in wiltunch to a rough -lo king parishioner who is mingle -t ter, I think you might eep a usef ani - anal, like a pig, for i 'stance .° us," •answered the . other, "and. a nic fool ,'I'd look, going jra n' with a pig." ,The curate did not ' ee howl pit dogs :might come in in time of war. .He would be even • 're greatly aston- ished to learn that he British Gov- ernment has sent to he United States to buy up a cargo -o , murderous cats. It expects to 'buy ut ten thousand cats:from the chief ericanrseaports, New York,'New•O'l ns, Philadelphia, Galveston and tB mare, ;and ship them to France -to eiikpetiment onthe huge :rats that infest the trenches. If they -make good their reputation more will i•be bought an it is estimated 'has a' cat pop- Workmea's and Sailors' De- motes, As a remarkable man, both a °Slacker at as RA 'orator and an organizer, ac- t worst, to show cording to Ralph J. Brodsky, of t for his country. paitadeira nes, a boyhood cempanion •you relief. *wive a reps tablet is ✓ Yourbreath carries the .. : asd rin. vapor, which is released„ to .reh psrhi' of the throat, nasal and air passages, where a liquid medicinb could not possibly reach. This . vapor . dem stroys an germs; with which it comes its. contact, soothes and heals the inftamed, membranes and fortifies yon against coughs, colds, sore throats bronchitis aad:grippe. Peps WOW'S absolutely no harm- ful drugs and are therefore the safest remedy for children. 51c. box, 3 Ur $L25. All dealers, or Peps Co., Toronto. Send lc. stamp for postage on free trial Package - thorities; - nae do .they consequences .of bavaing,,kiilled trenehesi, thens 1ve i . . worse nuisance, not tib tam 04 th ts. • an the fc, fa .the Men. :It fig matter of re :ord'$ 'certain rlseoy . R►ere 'Aad brought into+ a ca iunits"'to kill of the :baick. rats, k rdid; so, >ut, be. larger., and more .savage, . tha :. c turned out to be wore then disease. , The reason that cats have to be i ported; from the United States iss<;b cause in the past few .years they hay become extremely= rce ia>N Europe This is .primarily because there f ha been a great demand for their{ fur Germany was the first • of the belli gerents• nations to practically eater minute; the cats. The German troops suffered from cold, . and it occurred to the authorities that in every fam lire almost, there was a cat f auntie itself in furs that might' be needed by a soldier. So a, nation-wide cam paign to separate the cat - from i hide was begun mi was Participated in in by hien too old .rifld boys too yo ` - to go to . the front` The retail was that probably miliione of ca were caught and killed, their skins moved and turned into comforts fo soldiers. As to what became the. carcasses of the cats it doesino who wore their hair cut short. He also refused financial aid of wealthy relatives who offered to give him money, .often contenting himself with a meal of bread and sausage when he could have had the best of food for the asking. a • "In 1899, when the great strike broke out in Nikolaiew, he increased his activities in behalf' of the Social- ists, and as a result of 'hie work lu that direction was arrested as one of the ring -leaders of the trouble. .Left to linger in a Russian prison for a year, he was finally taken out, sen- tenced, and sent= to Siberia for six years. It was while spending the year in the local jail that he met a yorng woman who was being . held on charges similar to those against hien. He married , her while on the way to Siberia, with the inteftlon of thus preventing their separation, but after reaching the far-off mines his in- domitable spirit and love of his cause prompted hfm to accept an op- portunity to escape, whh,b be did, Making his way first to Japan and later to Switzerland. It was in the latter country that he :first imbibed the principles of international so- cialism, broadening his already ace quired views, "Following the revolution of 1985, Trotsky made hie way back to Rus- sia, where,• through sheer force of his perseadity, he' became pree1deoit of.,the-Werknrei's Council,"the fore-. rig nner _ef the- present Soldiers and Workme;s'si • Council. When this te- a ° by the Goya a ammonia, TWo y "�spprehende#d' :anatt aib''eeo the•f3#berian,an#nceas ;bat,sib o , _ • n eseape,, to, ret irni W geiltsetiti .Pretethae, time 'bn be all imself with the Sermsn Soelaltsst party, contributing o its omotal •organ, the Nene Zeit; • to at the same ` time keeping in done touch with• ssubasequent •renolu ' tions iq bit own ; count "He 3,11. an extremist, believing. in the, complete overthrow et exIs tong forms of government, isubs>stttni;1Ing inch #, a dictatorship of the :prole. twist He,has a host}of intends and even his enemies are *treed to ad - nitre hist,. "The charge that he is in league - with' German spies, or is trying to get money from German agents is ridicu- lous and is not borne out by the tes- timony of his life. He is simply a lyplcal Russian patriot -a dreamer who would give his life gladly for his waive land and the cause he believes -to be a just one.'"' xh>srt assag urs- the oast bel-, owe ed Its tet re- moved or of behoove , us to enquire too curiously, since the scarcity of food in German cities might lead to one making .un- pleasant un -pleasant deductions. At any event the cat in Germany and in the neigh- boring neutral countries that could ship furs to Germany was consider- able abated. • or . kindred reasons the cat bas become scarce in France a and =Italy, and the Englishcat, as reported, does not like to stay in the _ trenches.. There is, however, see wealth .of cat in Canada, and . no good reason -is Or parent urhy the United: States :=should. be favored over . thig-oeuntstly when the ,British Goe rnment demands ;at re- inforcements. • •tis`= luiss sacrificed much in this -war but as the recent el- ection l ection showed that she is still reso- hate, and is : prepared to go to great lengths ' in supplying the' allied armies `with cats. Our population of slacker cats has been hardly drawn upon as yet. The American only., will probably need all the American cats to .attend to its own trenches; it ought to be a patriotic duty for Can- ada to see thatour fighting men at least are properly equipped With Can- adian cats, which, from the point of ferocity; uselessness and numbers, do not fear-comPerisson with any vtater- front cat that Uncle Sam can pro- duce. Our cats are dear to some of - their owners, but .if they will. help win the wer, the nation wilt steel its heart, bite 04 the bullet and make _ a final oblation of its cats while cherishing its rats. BELIEVES TROTSKY IS SINCERE. named Foreign Minister uf Russia by the Congress of he the trenches or the new Minister. of ffie slightest Brodsky; who :was prominen,tly tive in work oonneicted with the 'Russian Sage Foundation. from 1908 le 1911, is a native 41 Russia, having lived there until 1900„ when he left trecolme to America. He Is aow a citizen of the United States, but still takes an active intereet in the affairs of :his uative land, watching closelY the•meeements of the various parties that bate sprung up in Russia le late years. He is of the opinion that his regime will be sbort-lived, be- cause lie lacks executive ability suf- ficient• to carry him/through the pre - pent crisis. Trotsky, he says, th well xead, highly Capable, and a deep thinker, but his life unfortunately has been, against his atquiring a knowledge of handling a situation after he has greeted it Brodsky's story is as follows: "Leon Trotsky, vthoee real name Is Lew Bronstein, was ° born in small Russian village ie 1878 of rib- bieical parentage. When seventeen years ola he left his native village to . attend high school at Kerson, which is the capital of the provinoe of Kar - son. After a short term at that school he was traneferred to a school at Nikaloiew, where he soon attracted attention by his astounding fund of knowledge and ability both as a writer and orator. Upon grad- uating from the ,school at Nikolaiew he entered the labor- inovement, or- 'ranizing the Circle of Working men, a body devoted to the advancement of trade unionism and having as ate uitimate purpose the overthrow of the Czar. During this. pe4od, as now, he lived very simple, Wearing the btue :shirt of the peasant class and letting his hair grow 'long in distinc- tien from the style of the aristocrats. • THE R VIAL A.TriOCITIVa . Why they Germans 13.0g -heti are Ostracized, , The Germans entered BeIg:urn in August and September; 1914; we be- gan to come in November, Hence we 1 saw ` none of the •"atroci tie;" of the invasion -we saw only results of. thee Among these results, as seen by dr were, I hasten to say, 110 wo- men without breasts or children without hands. But there ,vers wo- men . without huslrinds and sons and daughters, and children without mo- thers and fathers. There were fam- ilies without homes, fame without cattle or horses, or houses, - towns without town halls and churches and most of the other buildings, and even some without any buildings at all, and a, few without many citizens; !Atilt there were . cemeteries with ' scores: and hundreds of new graves -not of soldiers; and little toddling, children who came up eagerly to you, saying, 'Mon Pere est mart; ma Imere est mart. They were distin- guished froth some of their play- mates by this, you see! And wehad to hear -and endure -the stories, the myriad stories, of the relics of Dinant, Vise, Tamines, Andenn•�es, and all the 'rest. Of course there were stories exagger- ated wilfully, and others exaggerat- ed unintentionally, simply by the in- evitable inaccuracies that come from excitement and omental stress. But there were stories that were true, all true. And so the Germans in` Belgium have been air ostracized people. The Belgians on the streets look another way as they pass the spurred, field - gray officers. The German soldiers have learned to ride an the platforms of the tram -cars; it is. less chilling there than inside. The few open hotels and shops have become differ- entiated into places for Germans and places for Belgians. It is, an odd vic- tory that these conquered people win over their conquerors every day. For the Germans feel it. They have wanted friendly civil treatment from the Belgians; they have tried in their uncomprehending, unsympathetic, stiffly patronizing, semi -contempt- uous way to get it, and they have expected it. Indeed, it Waal more than civility, it was deference that they $ret expected -in parts of oc- cupied France the people have to salute the German officers, or get shot -but' when the deference was seen to be 'hopeless, they expected civility. Well, they have not -got It; they have not had it. And this complete withholding of Belgian approval of the German administration and the complete lack of any personal. rap- procheinent between German officers and (officials and Belgians during the long period of enforced relationship acid companionship is, to me, vivid. evidence of two tllingi;: Belgian `spirit, and German mal -administra- tion, and utter lack of 'Inman con- sideration of the people and persons they are ruling end professing to be trying to placate, befriend, and ele- vate, --Vernon Kellogg, in Atlantic Monthly. The King's Ring. One sure means of ending the war outside of the imagivation of the writers of roniances) exists, and a French contemporary doee late for- bear to urge the use of it In Mad- rnI, in a' pertain public square, stends a Statue of Our Lady of Al - neck of the statue hangs a ring rich- ly set with diamonds. Nobody med- dles with it. Even thieves let it se- verely alone. Alid the reason is plain. For the ring is endowed with . a terrible power, ae its history proves. Al - tone° XII. made a present of it to his wife, Queen Mercedes. Queen Mercedes died a month later. Then he King -gave the bauble to his Me- er, the infanta Maria. A few days fterwards the Infapta died, The ing, reverting to the royal giver was next presented to his late queen's a THE PEOPLE ARE THE ST JUDGES OF MIST IN THE LONG RUN. TB{Ars WHY COMFORT SOAP EXCELS ITS RIVALS. giandroother, Queen Chr'etinae who died within three monfns. After that the monarch kept the ring in his own Jewel. casket. Within the year tie was dead. Ever since thee the ring h.as hung about the neck of .Our LadY of Almudena. The French suggeetion is tato: Why shouldn't the present King of Spain offer the ring to the Kaiser? -Nevi York Evening Post. .Greetings in Foreign Lands. The Arabians shake hangs siF or eight:times,. Once is not enough. Should, however, they be persons of distinction, they embrace .and kiss one, another seVeral times and *also' kiss thedr own hands. In Turkey the greeting la to place the hand upon the, breast, which is boils gracefal and appropriate- Barineharaiteatt' le -man meeth a woman, he nose and Mouth- dose to her c and paws a long breath, as if inhal- ing a delitnous perfume, but, Orange to say, he does not kisi3 her elfeekelit man ie greeted. in exactly the same way. The natives of Nevi Zealand rub noses when, they, greet each ,other. -Sabbath Gazette. The Oldest Botanical Work. The oldest botanical work . the world is saalptured on, the -wails of a room in !the great -temple of. Kar- nak at Thebes, Egkit. It repre-' seats foreign plants brought home by an Egyptian sovereign, Thothmes the Third, on his return from a cam- paign in Arabia. The sculptures show not Only the plant ox tree, but the leaves, ,fruit, and seed -pods sep- hrately, after the fashion. of. modern botanical treatises. • Tricks in Lee Air. , "Some of the tricks which the ily- lng men have had to learn for „them- selites went contrary to the theories of the flying men, themselves " *rites William G. Shepherd. in 'Tit -Bits. The things which it seemed a flying man ought to do were discovered to be the very things that he ought not to do. "Under shrapnel fire, for exampIe, It seemed to be the proper thing to climb out of range. And yet ,the fly - lag men learned by deadly expert- ences that the best 'way to avoid shrapnel was to drop ipstead of climb, because climbing leisened the speed and afforded a slower target, while dropping increased the !need and spoiled the enemy's range: , "To get above au, ersmy 'Oyer and in -front of him watt the early afar idea -of plane-to-plaae fighting the air, but experience. proved that the best way to bring down the foe •was to get below and behind lane "Air fighters who tried to fiy out goggles, fin, the theory that they interfered with sight, discovere& that in fast movements they could not always keep their faces behind their screent. "And the biggest discovery of air, was that if you get into trouble kit the sky by an enemy's hit, the best thing to do is do nothing. 'If you're - hit, just leave your controls alorte,a is the extreme motto of men who, haye had the experience. Bridal Wreaths. - The Roman bridal vitreath wais off verbena, plucked by the bride here - self; Holy -wreaths were sent am tokens of congratu lations, end Wreaths of parsley and rue were given under belief that they were effectual preservatives against evil spirits. The hawthorn was the tioweee' which formed the wreaths of Atiterot law !widest, At the- present Rar thee bridal wreath is almost entirely- com- here and there of stephanotis tend- ing its exquisite fragrance. Customaig using orange-blossonis at bridals frato been traced -to the Saracens, shalom whom the orauge-blossoln Ana. -nme partly to be accounted foriby the feat that insthe East the orange -trio - bears' 'ripe fruit and bossonis at thee same time. . Sues Canal Openitag. "It etnnot be made, it shall not be made, it will not be made; but if it were made, there woulkt be a war boa tween England and' Frame Air - possession of Egret*" So said Use- • Palmerston. in 1851 with rogarit the then,proposed Sues Canal. Nevertheless, this is the 4801e:safe vereary of the inaugurtaion of OW forbidden waterway, The first Seek consisting of forty Vosnels,, Pow. through next day, on. _November rfe 1869. The greatest draught wan only 16 feet How many of theft who participated in the inaugurationt survive. The • Empress Eugenic la one, The Glow Worms The glow-worm is not a worm alk all, but a species of beetle ase which the common firetly 'or Ile* ning bug is ctheely related. The tree, glow-worm le the temaie,_ without wings. Its short legs aaigi long body give, it much the apposite. &nee- of a worm: and it elut jell triangular head Into its The light - Oven Out by the. gIsnikr Ztrttee,comItufgrri.t4'411g7leilgirtrisli‘. itze= tent, tensioning fiaskes In Ember euccessione about one hundred talkie minute, • No Seh emialtab the chi lig of time sP Xay spent; C Dece alit eye Vietines tome altyrtles Roy bride, trimmed lace, tiit. arange <just of ,also vela arch of Ward, the si -to th the tut El and when appetite lagS tTo as we el the give er gitonne pupile good, e dialogue tr 110Y was pre its pres receiyin After t was se they ha teacher, ly train eonnecti Mission the ho turned eras brings to the hot, dry mouth a freshness and a &Wiling balm that coaxes back the enthusiasm of health. Thousands of soldiers in Europe have .cau e to thank .Wr!gley's f its tonic effect. The Flavour Lastsi Tit Keep Your fighter suPplied MADE (N CANADA son Officia tenden in an and his me subjee for ap went last er the ing fully