The Huron Expositor, 1918-01-25, Page 250 MILL[
TONS of C
is the least estimate of the fuel shortage in the United -Stilt -es
_for NEXT year. ow resources, particularly � Economy P cannot make this , u , so that
our• wood, will :be caned . up to
�
Supply the *Ara, and at the prevailing high prices, firewood
harvest' lookingafter.
is a
If your old cross -cut saw does
not work satisfactorily, buy a
new one --and, do it now. It 1
pays, A special value is the
'GOLD .COIN, lance tooth arid
beautifully ground, with i thin
back improved teeth, strong,
but not too heavy, a saw that
appeals to everyone requiring
a goodLarticle•
$6.00IrIce With�lle
We have alio in stock the Leader, Buffalo Bill and Forest
King, of the famous R.H. Smith manufacture, any of which
'we can highly recommend..
Eiles, 6 and 7 inches, each 20c
Saw Sets...1 ..1..00c to $1,00
A' k sen, well shaped aiabsal�ate
necessity t6 the man inxe thes buansh. With
this in mind we advance the "SAGER"
the northern busliman's choice -the all -steel --an axe of fine
_balance and best quality. All guaranteed. Each $1.50
The " Bay State ' is a lig htei axe of American manufac-
ture, cotnplete.with handle.' Excellent value. Each $1.25
For improving the axe edge. use Carborundum Stones.
„Prices .......... 20c to 30c
Axe Handles, Rock Elm and Hickory 30c to 5Oc
00 feet of Frost King Weather
Strip saves fu e1e
,HEV ON EXI6SITOR
pr arm Expoottor
. ,..
SEAORTH, Friday, January :25, 1918.'
i IffAIIII
............._
BRIKGS
A MYST RIOUS CAREER.
N the day before the war, when , i
all Europe was greatly concern- f t r,'Iyes" Builds Up The
THE TOENI.0 THAT
lag itself` with the fate of Al -
haute, hen the Moret to
quoslopree
icd P i of Wied and' Tst�ta%1"
While System
• . , }Thole Rho take "Prue =a --sive "for
Keppel Bey, Prenk Bib Doda, E and an' firsts time,are often astonished at
t ofamazia coterie were the
the res that S � �and-maks
way "il builds .they uji
ilding they beet to live up to parts thfeet belles- all over', They may
assigned to them, or usurped by '4 „ he 1'
taking Fruit -a -tires for some specific
them, Essad'asha was one of the `disease, as Constipation, Indigestion,
Chronio Headaches or Neuralgia,
Kidney, or BIadder Trouble, . Rheu-
matism or Pain in the Back. And they,
.fi.nd vi'hen "Fruit eetives" has cured the
disease, that they feel better and
stronger in every way. This is due to
theitwonderful tonic properties of these
famous tablets, made from fruit juices.
We. 9, box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by Feats
most -talked -oft; men in all Europe.
Most people -have a penchant for the
picturesque. .gtn,d Essad Pasha,: with'
the most supaseme unconsciousness,
was always picturesque. ' He was,
moreover, ac ording to all the_
canons of dilomacy and , interma
tonal law ands political morality, also.:
eolutely impossible. Dignities, meant-
as little to him as did the most
sacred chnventions when they
gx-
sued bythe police
"In connection with the recent
mysterious fires, it is important that
the following should be made
known.
"A month ago a conversation took
place in a railway station here be-
tween
three German: speaking people, 1
in which. it was stated among other
things that various persons, -who
were vamed only by letters of alpha•
bet, had completed, a magnificent
pieceof work, and that they had
visited' eeverati towns, whose names
were also mentioned only by letter.
All the fires which have occurred re-
cently were discussed with great in-
terest, and the German speaking peo-
ple reckoned up how much merchan-
dise in transit had been = destroyed,
`without,' they said, 'our having any
further trouble . over it' One of the
men remark -ed, 'It is time these Nor-
wegians found out what it means .t4k
defy us. Let them see what happens
when, their own crops and stocks
burn and those on the other side re-
fuse new supplies.
"Then they talked about the Ger-
man spy ease in Bergen, and said
that this little exposure did not
amount to much, for a iiet was spun
ehanyeed to stand in his way, whilst over the whole Norwegian coast, and
fear of consequences had never, I a-tives Limited, Ottawa. oven if it broke/4a single point the
at any time, any place in his - net held all the same, thanks to the
}
understood immediately that it was a ••ed that the 1S -boats'
d-
putlook. Thus when his bre- hold of the Macau. The captain Norwegians trustfulness. They ad
,
that Ghani, who was in the work must be
service of °Abdul Hamid at the Yildtz' torpedo, and ordered the boats to be. supported at any price, : as it would
Kiosk, suddenly disappeared, as did lowered. We had scarcely made the b bring a quick Huish to the War. There
many other favorites of the Caliph, first preparations when a submarine was further talk of certain journeys
Essad -had no thought but to cari7 appeared, and its commander ordered and of various persons who had done
out, with the utmost punetilliou�s- our captain, Saturnine Hurtado de. great servibe to Germany.
"less, the vendetta required by the ° Mendoza and a steward, to go on ' "The conversation was overheard
""lass of the mountains." He left matboard his craft. We others, except a -and repnrtedt• to the police."
eedonia, where he held 'a command Brazilian stoker, who was doubtless; In connection the
this police
in the army, and came to brother's
buried' beneath the coal, made our stater ant the newspapers the a list
murde,• discovered his brother's r
murderer, and' with the utmost way toward land in two boats.'At of the fifteen =mysterious res refer -
cm down like a gena-
' daybreak, still in our beret, we perms
almness, "out hi
ceived the plight we were in, and our
tieman" on the Galata Bridge, and, ! lack of. provision. There were 21 of
lest there should be any doubt about ; us on board among them the second
red to and the financial loss in each
case. Tine loss varies from $20,000
to $50,000.
it, left on him a card which bore the and third- officers. For the /space of
name Essad Toptanl, 'Their he wait-- four days we kept ourselvedalive on
ed for a reasonable time for the ship's biscuit only; fortunately we
challenge to be 'takexp, up, and Ilnaily ` had a supply of water also. At 3.30
departed to resume :{his command in in the morning of the following Mon-
Xaccedonia. • day we, saw the lighthouse of Corun-
That, howevet, was not the end of nal and at 10.30 in tkbe morning we
the matter. Essad" Pasha .was a Top- . came up with a couple of fishing
teal. He was, torn of the Kastriota, i boats which towed us into the port."
a descendant of the great Scantier -
beg, and Deft nothing of that kind
unfinished. He did not write "set-
tled in full" on. IGhani'saccount Argelia, ,and that the torpedo that
until the memorable day in April,- ; struck the ship blew. up the deck and
eight years ago, when he strode into the bridge. The captain, andsailor
the presence of ;Abdul Hamid at the were hurled into the sea, and on
Yildiz Kiosk, as the envoy of the ,
Committee : of Union and Progress,
bearing the Caliph's deposition. In
accordance with the Peeves . and by
the decision of the national assem-
bly, Abdul Hamid was deposed, and
C Ghani was revenged.
Following the " deposition, Essad
threw himself whole-heartedly into
the work of the committee: In his
own way, he -vas a genuine reform-
er. Had he not improved his estate
• at Tirani till there; was none like it
A in all Albania? Had he not brought
ea -0 menu of experience from other parts
o$ Europe toinstruct his peasants,
The survivors of the St. Helen, ie -
late that on October 12 they lent
ewport with a cargo of coal for
s '
and were there not to be found on
his estate machines for plowing the
sMIONINIMM
the J1 ciiitcp viva
Fire Insurance Co
Jilt/0401: Seaforth, Ord.
DJREart ► li Y
OFFICERS.
1 Connolly, Goderich, president
Jia. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -Presider&
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treas.
AGENTS
Alex Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brumfield; J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R.
G. Jarmuth, Brodhagen,
DIRECTORS
William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bcnnewies, Brodhagen; James Evans,
Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
H. I No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
,10.55 a. m. - For Clinton, Goderick,
Wingham and Kincardine.
1.53 .p. m. - For ,Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine.
11.03 p, m. - For Clinton, Goderich.
Lim. a. m. -For .Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
5.16 pan. -• For Stratford, Toronto,
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m. p.m.
Wingham, depart .... 0.35 3.20
Belgrave 6.50 3.36
Bath 7.04 :. 3.48
Londesboro 7.13 3.56
Clinton, 7.33 4.15
Brucefield 8.08 4.33
Nippon 1 8.16 4.41
Kemal I 8.25 4.48
Exeter ; 8.40 5.01
Centralia..:.. 8.57 5:13
London, arrive .. ... 10.05 6.15
- Going North a.rn.
London, depart ...... 8.30
Centralia , ... , 9 35
Exeter 9.47
Hensall - - 9.59
Kippen....... .10.06
Brucefield '10.14
Clinton 110.30
Londesboro 11.28
Blyth. ° 11.37
Belgrave 11.50
Wingham, arrive 12.05
p.m.
4.40
5.45
5.57
6.09
6.16
6.24
6.40
6.57
7..05
'7.18
7.40
SHARP PA1NS
SHOT
THROUGH HEART.
•
Thousands of people go about their
daily work on the verge of death and
yet don't know it. -
Every once in a while a pain will
shoot through the heart but little at-
tention is paid to it at the time, and it
is only whena violent shock comes that
the weakness of the heart is apparent.
There is only one cure for the weak
heart and that is Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills.
Mr. H. A. Young, 83 Hayter St.,
Toronto, Ont., writes: -"I used to have
sharp pains shoot through my heart,
suffered from shortness of breath, and
was so nervous I could not sleep at
night A friend advised me to try
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and
after ane boxI found great relief. Three
boxes completely cured me." F
Milburn's Heart and Nerve 'ills are
50e. per box at all dealers or mailed
direct on receipt of price by The T. -Mil-
burn Ca.,JSmited, Toronto. Ont.
CARRIAGE FOR SALE.
I Two seated Gladstone„ natural wod, as
good as new and easy running, com-
fortable family rig. Apply at The
Expositor Office. Setfor'th. 2W18 -ti
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
;U[TELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TORONTO
a.m.
Goderich, leave 6 40
Blyth 718
7 32
9 38
jalton
Guelph
p.m.
1.35
2.14
2.20
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 ..............12.15 ,.•say 9.30
Ooderich 12.40 9.55
Connections at Guelph Junction with
amain Line for Galt, .Woodstock, Lon -
$on, Detroit, and Chicago and all inn-
ediate point*?
HAD A VERY BAD
COLDaI
CO'UGH
DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP
CURED HER.
Mrs. ! C. Dresser, Bayfield, Ontal
w
- rites: "I want to tell'you of the bene
fit I got from your medicines,
Last winter I had a very bad cold and
cough, but after taking two bottles of Dr.
Wood's Norway Pine Syrup I was cured.
think it is about one of the best cough'
syrups that I know of. I always keep a
bottle of it in the house so I can have it
when I want it.
The other week . I told an old lady
about "Dr. Wood's." She had been
sick for three, weeks with bronchitis; 'and
had been igetting medicine from the doc-
tor, but did not seem to be getting much
better. She got one bottle of Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, and she says it has
.done her more good than -all the doctor's
medicine -she had been taking."
Dr. Wood's' Norway Pine Syrup is
rich in the lung healing virtues of the
Norway pine tee, incl this makes it the
best remedy for coughs and c4rld:=.
The genuine is put up 1. a yellow
wrapper; 3 pine frees the trade mark;
price 25c. and 50e; manufactured only
by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
out.
land and reaping such as no Alban-
ian'had :seen before?
Then Suddenly came the first ,gun-
shot of the Balkan wars, and, almost
before the smoke of -it had cleared
away (Wei. the hillsides above Scu-
tari, Essad Pasha was on his way to ,
Albania, whilst within a few days he
and the Turco -Albanian army, with
Hassan Riza at it head, were shut
up in the city by the lake. The story
how Hassan_ mysteriously disappear-
ed, and Essad toc;+k command, . how
Essad eubsequentlr surrendered\ the
city to Prince Danilo of Mont iae-
w
oming to the surface saw their ship
eel upwards. Nobody else on board
was saved. The sailor, a Portuguese,
has had an, extraordinary record
!with submarines, for this is the fifth
time that the boat he was on has
been torpedoed and sunk. His first
experience of the kind was on Jan-
uarY 27, when his ship, the Norweg-
ian, Derostod, • 1,5ao ° tons, was sunk
when 72 miles: off Fibisterre, - The
second was less than a, month later,
on February 25, when he was one of
the crew of the Norwegian Elutori,
3,200 -tons, which was torpedoed, and
a few days•`later he was on board a
Danish steamer when it was sunk by
the submarine `U-293. Then the St.
Helen was sunk, and .next the Macau,
which had rescued him and his cap
tain.' This roan; Jose Antonio Dos-
selo, seems, little disconcerted by
these eepefiences, and expresses his
wiiling> ens' to go to sea again in the
first ship that will engage him.
Apart from the personal side of his
story, however, he makes a state,-
moat
tate
m. ant which is of some international
nd ,diplomatic importance. When
e U-293,sank the Danish steamer
n which he was serving, the com-
mander took him prisoner, and he
gro, and how, after shaking hands remained on Aboard five months. This
with the Prince in the market place, was the same submarine that recent -
he marched out at the head of his ly ,escaped from Cadiz, and which has
men, . carrying everything with him placed Spain in a position of some
but the siege guns, was one of the difficulty. When it entered Cadiz the
mysteries of Europe, faur and a half egmmander stated h
years age. - `turn short of lubricating
thathe oil, ad andsimply was
In the tortuous times which Poi- ndt,, suffering from any injuries. Des -
lowed the second l alkan war, when
great po'w.ers were endeavoring to seio, however; states that while he
settle the Albanian question, Essad was on board the craft she sunk
Pasha was Italy's man," just as the many ships, one being the Patricia
redoubtable chieftain Prenk 13ib
Doda was 'Austria' man." The Al-
banian question was still unsettled,
of course, when the present war
broke out but Essad Pasha remained
Italy's man, and is Italy's man still.
Attired in an Albanian uniform,and
wearing among his l decorations the
French Cross of War conferred upon
him a few days be ore by General
Sanrail, he was int • rviewed recently
by a representative of the Paris
Matin. He spoke o the importance
of the Salonica cam . aign, and of all
it had accomplished, and told of how
. he had been touche by the warmth
of the welcome ac' orded him in
Italy, as he had pa sed through the
country a short tine before, on his
way -to Paris. Ess• d Pasha is cer-
tainly still Italy's an, and, more
than that he is the = Hies' man,
TORPEDOED IN F ' E BOATS AND
STILL AT SEA. S
LETTER ti•u . iVladrid saga.
A most. ext aordinary story
of aclventueir -with German
submarines, and of succes-
sive and marvelous scapes, is ,told.
by the_survivors -of the Brazilian
steamship Macau, whi h was sunk off
Finisterre, and the rew of which
have been landed at Ferrol. Inci-
dentally it furnishes s me new, inter-
est-ing, and important facts, bearing
upon the proceedings of the subma-
rine U-293, which re ently escaped
from Cadiz.
Among,' those saved from the Ma-
cau, and landed at Fe rol, is the first
officer, Antonio Javier Mercante, who
makes the following s atement: "On
the 18th of September the Macau
weighed anchor at Rio Janiero with
a cargo of meat consig.ed to France.
On October 18, when 2, 0 miles north
of Finisterre, we made out signals
to us from some shipwrecked per-
sons, whom we took o board. They
were the captain and •sailor of .the
North American stew.. er St. Helei ,
of 3,500 tons, which lad been tor-
pedoed in that vicinity t 3.30 on the
afternoon of the 2 4th. They were
the only survivors of t ,e crew of 26
of the St. Helen. Bot of them, on
their ship being sunk, were able to
grasp a piece of timber, and so they -
remained for four days.
"Wecontinued 011 our course, and
at five o'clock 011 the sa e afternoon
there was an, explosion 'n the after -
a Spanish vessel, the torpedoing of
which caused such excitement in
Spain last May and created a con,
siderabl.e public demand for the 1
break•ng of relations with Germany.
when at last the U-293 was making
her way between Ceuta and Gibraltar
she fell in with an English destroy-
er, one of whose projectiles pierced
the shell of . the submarine - after a
fight that lasted two hours.
The ,submarine then made good its
escape, and :effected some temporary
repairs, but she was obliged in the
end to put In to Cadiz, where it was
interned, and subsequently escaped.:
When near to the point, Dosselo jump
ed into the water, swam ashore, and
then went straight to the Portuguese
Consul.
GERMAN SPIES IN NORWAY.
Considered Responsible for Many In- '
cendiary Fires.
The Christiania pollee officially
have warned the population that re-
cent' mysterious fires/in Norway are
known, to have been caused by for-
eign agents, ane urge everybody to
be on his guard:. A communique `is -
Send your soldier friend a box of
Zam-Buk, which for .its great heal-
ing power and compactness is,called
" A surgery in a two-inch box." It
is indispensable in France fpr bad
feet, poisoned wounds, frost bite,
cold cracks, chapped hands, chil-
blains and sores of all kinds.
Pte E. Westfield, of "C" Company,
3rd Worcester Regiment, writes
home: `"I wish we obuld get more
Zara-Buk out here instead of so
much tobacco. We need Zain-Buk
badly and nothing can take its
place." °
Be .sure to include at least one
box, of Zarn-Buk in your neTt panel.
All dealers or Zam-Buk Co., Toronto.
50c. box, 3 for $1.25.
77•
s.
c
JANUTA ,
rtaiKane�a��.
INCORPORATED Ir
11441/5
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Capital $4, 000, 000. Ree e r v t.
98 BRANCHES IN CANADA
A General Banking Business Transacted.
NK DEPARTMENTA A t
SAYINGS BA all Branches
Interests allowed at highest Current Rate.
Farmers' Accounts Solicited
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT:
BRUCEFIELD CLINTON
ST. MARYS KIRKTON
EXETER HENSALL
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..
ing thieves, are stir. .e4c . ; _sia.iayan
policemen. The customs of catch:.=g
fish at night. by torchlight prevails
both in Japan and in the Malayan
Archipelago. An ordeal with boiling
water, a special sort of football
game, the, popularity of cock fights
and the custom of 'keeping singing
insects in,
little
cagett
are
found both
th
among theJapanese
an
and Malays. s
All
this speaks in favor of the descent of
the Ja1anese from the Malays.
Eat, Drink, and Get Smallpox. •
Fancy yourself a guest for the first
time at a C'nese dinner. In front
of you, as y u seat yourself on your
backless chai , are a small plate, a
spoon for soaps, and a :pair of chop-
sticks. Of ate intricacies of the man,
ipulation of the latter nothing need
here be said; itis a matter of prac-
tice. Each course is brought on in
a large dish and placed in _the center
of the: table. The - service, then, is
simple; each person serves himself
and pee service is direct.
You will, and so will everybody
else at that table, put your sticks
into the dish in the center, convey
therefrom food to your mouth, insert
the ;sticks into -your mouth as far as
you choose- r -and return to the center'
dish for more. ' By the .time each
guest has had three helpings it will
require skillful manoeuvering to get
a piece that has not been -- to t eked
over by sticks that have mate at
Least two trips to one other person's
mouth.
The sanitary consequences are ob-#
vious. As the chain is as strong as its
weakest link, so the health of that
company is as good as that of its
sickest -guest. And if you have been
• brought up•under the tutelage of Oc-
cidental doctors and have an uncom-
fortable knowledge of ' germs, your
mind dwells . uncomfortably, as you
eat, on the condition of your fellow -
guests. If be- chance your vis-a-vis
remarks in passing that he has a bad
cold, your hunger may be appeased
quite suddenly.
Little by little, however, this is be-
ing changed. To -day is the homes of
many upper-class Chinese, who have
been educated in Europe or America,
or have come into contact with .for-
eign influences, the system of indi-
vidual dishes and individual service,
is coming more and more into rise.
Each diner is served on his own plate
with a large spoon. -World Outlook.
What Are Shooting Stars?
Our knowledge of shooting stars
extends into the oldest history of hu-
' manity, back into prehistoric times.
Yet to -day no one knows exactly
what a shooting star is, or from
where it comes. An hypothesis; pro-
posed in 1875 and generally accepted
to -day, is that meteorites are frag-
ments broken from small planetary
masses - by volcanic explosions,
brought about by a sudden expansion,
of gases,`steam, and probably hydro-
gen. The broken bits, after their
separation, are believed to arrange
themselves. in' swarms which cross
the orbit of the 'earth in, accordance
with a definite law. Shooting stars,
then, undoubtedly come from within
our solar system and are broken bits
of a world body destroyed, by vol-
canic events. Many meteorites have
been found in, Arizona.
JAPANESE NOT MONGOL'S?
More Probably, Malayans, , Though
Origin is Still Very Uncertain.
The question of origin of the
Japanese has frequently occupied
ethnographers, but the problemhas
so far remained unsolved. The
latest opinion, however, is that; the
Japanese cannot, as was generally as-
sumed, be descended from the Mon-
golians or Aryans. All inhabitants
of the temperate and cold parts of
the Asiatic continent wear shoes and
boots; not so the Japanese. The
former provide their children with a
covering for the head; the Japanese
shave their children's heads. The
Japanese raiment is ultimately noth-
ing but the ancient loincloth, and
both chief articles of women's dress,
tbe koshimaki, a pieee of cloth
wound 'around the loins and reaching
to the knees, as well as the short
Jacket, jihan, correspond respective-
ly to the savong and Habaya of the
Malay women.
The Tengu, the lowest gods of the
Japanese religion, represent two
types with excessively long noses,
but while the one kind, with the
exception of the nose, look human
like, the others have the body of a
bird. The prototypes of both are
found in the big Malay ape (Sem.no-
piteous nasicus) and the Malayan
rhinoceros -bird. All this points to a
southern origin of the Japanese, and
in particular -to the Malay race.
There are besides some more par-
allels. The Japanese hat resembles
much the Malayan. So also:_loes the
Japanese umbrella. The ancient Jap-
anese helmet was adorned with horns,
of animals. Similar helmets exist in
the Malayan Archipelago. The old-
fashioned weapons of the Japanese
police, used in particular for catch-
Arneriea has the distinction of hay-
ing the first woman dentist at work
in the war zone.
To Prevent poison entering their
skin, girl munition workers in Englanti
varnsh their idose and hands each day
before starting work.
• Mrs. Whitelaw Reid widow of thele
late' ambassador to London, has bee
ap ei ssi
n°r de
pP eel a putt' eommi.,.sioner
the American Red Gross for Great
I Brite.:
A
1R�[�
The Cow
'f the nem
wnship I
tzars'y' 14
4resent, an
their deet
e. Th
A. Coil
s, Th
And thiel
THE PEOPLE AIM THE BEST
JUDGES OF MERIT IN THE
LONG RUN. THAT'S WHY
COMFORT SP EXCELS 1T
E
R1 . - i• .
ar
as Mt
Medic
1i; a
artli,
_Wright; Ce
.Accounts a
paid. The
eprmtmtr
corder. .J
eto meet ag
3:8th, at on
sClerk.
' (Too'3
Breezes: -
:ante. hotel
-their supe;
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'wilt
wttii and
iu
is now re
*the storm
m mails we
roads'
s
to 1x3
otic
essive eti
Tuesda
The La
�44.urch are
It/Agra-num
secreting. of
Tars wet
edge, of
putting up,
uhnrner.--;
the Goderie
a nd
Mrs.
in the ,=ia
s of the West
.or Mr. at
and Mr. a
present.-
Bayfield C
-purpose of
year and i
and other
.this weer
anxious to
•interested
this meetir
:at two o'cl
Bayfield.
Address a postcard to as now and
receive by return mail a copy of -our
new illustrated S0 -page catalogue of
Garden, Flower and Field Seeds,
Root Seeds, Grains, Bulbs, Small
Fruits, Garden Tools, Etc.
SPECIAL ---We will also surd you
glee a package (value 15c) of t ur choice
Butterfly Flower
This Is one of the airiest and daint-
iest flowers imaginable, especially:
adapted to bordering beds of taller
flowersaad those of a heavier growth.
The seeds germinate quickly and
come ,into bloom , iti •a -few , weeks
from; sowing. The -florescence is
such' as to completely obscure the
foliage, .making the plant a veritable
pyramid of the most delicate and
charming bloom. The Butterfly
FIower make admirable pot plants for the house in late winter and early
spring. For this purpose sow in the autumn.
Send for Catalogue and lean of other valuable premiums sg
Formerly
DOMINION SEEDS LIMITED, rebs aA BARCH & HUNT CO. LIMITED
Mothers
- his little, ,
of order-,
constipatte
ing is tai
Tablets --t'
tle ones.
ihonse Pe
says; "Bt
grand rely
them for
milts." T
medicine
cents a l
Medicine
WRIGLEIS
It's aiv outs z' e-
ing feature of
the war. "Ell the
Allied Armies are
-chewing it.:
Relieves thirst
and fatigue.
Refreshes
and sustains.
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ACT
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-teller.
Women
Hungarian
Wions
Jiundreds
Women
now nun
Two wo
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One o
Brest -Lith
Women
stockyard
.There a
in the vas
France
'widows c
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Miss N
New Y ori
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Young
f 17, ai
military
Carolyr
that she -
a story
Of the:
by steels.
forty per
children.
Miss A-
an elects
is an . ex
kitchens.
Cases`
en have
Eliglaxid
var.
The Fi
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fessionai
placing
Men*
corps of
West Va.
In
khaki
Mane-
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