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The Huron Expositor, 1918-11-22, Page 2- CANADA AN No scarcity of material or lack of help. has had any effect towards lessening the quality of the CANADA. It re- make; to -day, the heaviest and most lie/able Steel Range .on the market and it has not risen in price compared to other =modifies. Buy from our stock now -it pays. Remember nearly 400 satisfied cus- tomes in this district are using CAN- ADAS. You take no risks. They are thoroughly tried and guaranteed. Moffatt's Wood Heaters, in two si7es, with ash and feed doors.,.... Coal and Wood Heaters from.. AShSifters...................... . . ... Stove Brushes................Vf Stove Pipe Varnish..................., *so els.** • •on • • • IP neat, double -lined, .513 to $15 $14 to $22 . ........ 25ci • "15" ... et.o..:225: Fit up the St: hle : Cattle chains are needed and new supplies are hard to get and up ,in price..: While our stock lasts we will sell our cow chains at...... .. .. . ......... . 35c each Cattle Irons for chains............ ... ••• •4 .... .25e each Crenoid, for disinfecting the stable..... $1.25 per gallon Scoop Shovels from $1.85 to 2.25$ Lariterio4 fr 1m $1.00 to ;1.75 41 A.S1LLS, Seaforth Nritosommia, lie .111 cli atcp 31 outtio k ire lystaance Go &ado ce: Seatorth, On,t. DIRECTORY. OFFICERS. Ccmellya Godericht President Nee -Bewlremod, Vice-Preeid - T. E. s, Seaforth, Secy. - AGENTS Ma, R. R. No: 1, Clinton; Ed. , Seaforth; John Murray, Brueefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; Yeo, Goderich; R. G. Jar - =title Brodhagen. DIREMORS William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evan, •Xeechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas. Goderich; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 W ' alton° Robert Ferris, Harlock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trairs Leave Seaforth as follows: ).0.55 a. tre - For Clinton, Goderici, Winghara and Kincardine. 5.53 p. m. - For Clinton, Wingham and Kincardine. 11.03 p. ni. - For Clinton'Goderich. I sem. tut 0.88 in. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and 141411aval of points west, Belleville and Peter- boro and points east. P.18 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto. Montreal and points east. 10 CENT "CASCARETS", FOR LIVER AND BOWELS Cure Sick Headache, Constipation, Biliousness, Sour Stomach, -Bad lareath--C an deeeathartic. No au lbw bad your liver, stontael, or bowels; how much your head aches, how mia' entitle you are from constipa- tion, indigestion, biliousness and slug- gish bowele-you always get relief with Casemate. They inanediately cleanse aud regulate the -stomach, remove the sour, fermenting food and, foul gases; take 'the ex -cess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and !poison from the intestines and bowels. A le -cent box from your drug- gist will keep your liver and bowels clean • stomach sweet and head clear for raonts. They work while you sleep. CASTOR 1A For wants and Children. End You Ilan Always Bought LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE Going South a.m. p.m 6.35 3.26 6.50 8.86 7.04 8.48 '7.18 8.56 7.83 4.15 8.08 4.38 8.16 4.41 8.25 4.4? 8.40 ,5.01 8.57 5.18 10.05 6.15 Wingham, depart .. • Belgrave ilyth Londesboro Clinton, ...... Brucefield •...... Eipperi Hensel' . Exeter Centralia .. London. arrive 4. Going North a.m. 8.80 Centralia .... . . .....9.85 Exeter 9.47 Bewail.......• .... ippen . . ....... 10.06 Erucefield 10.14 Clinton 10.80 Londesboro 11.28 Blyth .... .. 11.37 Relgrave 11.50 Whig:ham, arrive 12.05 London, depart 4.40 5.45 5.5a 6.09 6.16 6.24 6.40 6.57 7.05 7.18 7.40 C P. R. TIME TABLE HITELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TORONTO a.m. p.m. Sederich. leave ........6.40 1.85 Myth .. . ... ......7.18 2.14 lvaiton ...... • . ......7.82 2.20 Guelph ......... ....9.88 4.80 FROM TORONTO Toronto Leave ..........7.40 5.10 Guelph, urive ... . .. ....9.38 11.00 SValton . . .... .. 11.48 9.04 Blyth ........ .. ... .12.03 9.18 Auhron 0•6••••••••60601215.....49.110 Godzeich 9.511 fteeeect:ous at Guelph junction with rain Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon - den, Detroit and Chicago, and all in - teen !i pints. SOU, ACID STOMACHS, GASES OR ONDIGESTION' "Pape's Diapepsin" neutralizes exces- sive acid in stomach, relieving dyspepsia, heartburn and distress at once. Time° it! In five minutes all stom- ach distress, due to acidity, will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas or eructations of undi- gested food, nf dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache, Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest otomach sweet- ener in the whole world, and besides it is harnaleft. Put an end to stomach diatress at once by getting a large fifty - cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indi- gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis- order caused by fermentation due to excessive acids in stomaela Li:W.9Z arr... TAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLING Save your Hair! Get a small bottle of Danderine right now -Also stops itching scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and Eicraggy hair is mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff -that awful scurf- 'Lflhere Is nothing so destructive to thase crowded hours in August, 1914, the hair as dandruff. -.11, robs the hair the British would never have returned as victor in the closm. g days of the , war. 'MB EILT 'arOSITO:: e'• , NOVIIIVIBER 22, 1918 fl?t4ttratt xpos it or SEAFORTH Friday Nov. 22nd, 1918 no•sosos GENERAL WHO MADE TRIUMPH POSSIBLE No one need now praise the First British Expeditionary Force that will be known in song and story as the old contemptibles. It were as superflu- ous as to dilate upon the reckless bravery of the Six Hundred, but the New York Times takes advantage of the official announcement mr Saturday last that British troops had captured the fortress of Maubeuge to briefly review some of the problems that con- fronted Sir John French on the, re- treat from Mons. A consideration of these events will prove to the military historian of this war that if the Brit- ish general had blundered in those terrible days of trial in August, 1914,, the great unliklihood of a British en- tering Maubeuge in -triumph in 1918. There were 80,000 British troops en- gaged at the beginning of the opera- tions which are known as the retreat from Mons. Such huge bodies of men - have figured in subsequent battles that one is inclined to think that the fighting of the Contemptibles, no mat- ter hew glorious, could not in the natural course of events affect rthe destiny of struggling millions. Moreover there has been a notion in some minds that the British army was blunderingly led. The truth is that considering the number of men at his disposal, .Sir John French gave as fine an exhibition of generalship as thiss war has produced. We are glad that this sshould be proclaimed at this time, when the world, as is right, is showering praise upon Mar- shal Foch, Sir Douglas Haig, General Petain and other military leaders who survive on teetive service to see the, great reaping that was sowed by Jof- fre, French and others who have been less conspicuously in the public eye for the past year. or two. Of General French, now Lord French, historians must say, viewing his career as a whole, and not forgetting the fine spirit he had shown ever since he re- linquished the command of the British armies.' "There was a soldier." We are gad the New York Times took en this occasion to point out what tre- mendous military problems he was• called upon to decide almost on the BEDRIDDEN 'I ° driaMMOMMSMA.MMIla “FRUIT-A-TIVES" Brought Relief. Felt That He Would NeverWalk Again NIR.,ILOYIENZO LEDUC 8 °t "Fruitire St., Hull, P.Q -a-tives" ceitainlyewonder. i.. For a year; I gulf red with Rheuma- tism ; being forc far five manias. medne but vri and thonght I w to walk again. d to stayin bed tried alt kinds of out getting better; Wel never be able "One day vrhiledying in bed, I read- siboua 'Fruit-a-tte ' the great fruit . medicine ; and it ceined jiist what I needed sol deci ed to try it. The first bar hed me, and I took the tablets regularly until every trace of the Rheumatism left me. 1 have every cotifidence in Fruit -a - lives' and strongly recomsnend them to every sufferer from Rheumatism". LORENZO LEDUC. 50c. a box, 6 for $2,50, trial size 25o. At all dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit -a -thee Limited, Ottawa. Ont. - lutionists would hold him responsible with others of the group at the Pets - dam ,Conference, lee -here the die for spur of the moment,which, had they) war was cast. It ie not known that not been decided right, might well have altered the whole course of the war. The Times recallsss that Maubeuge figured in that critical retreat when Sir John French, engaged in his battle at Mons, his right resting on Binche and his left on Conde, and the fight going against him, received "a most unexpected message" from General joffre. It was ° -a belated message: the British commander should have known its ominous; tidings hours be fore.. While he was defending the IVIons position against a force at least twice as strong as his own'the Gere mans had thrown back the Fifth French Army on his right and were driving across the Sambre between Namur and Charleroi. At the same time the enemy was making a wide envelopig movement around his left at Tournai. The Rritish supports were gone, had beengonefor several hours, and when the message reached Sir John French the Fifth French Army was retreating before Von Below's Second German Armee' The British commander knew 'the terrain in his rear intimately, for he was an authority on the French campaigns of the past. His decision was quick- ly made: he would fall hack upon the line Maubeuge-Jenlain, and that very night preparations were made for re- tirement while -he continued to defend the Mons position as if he knew no- thing of what had befallen. Lanrezac, Langle, and. Ruffey. Back went the heavy transpot to clear the roads, and the ambulances carrying. the wounded followed. In the morning Haig's First Corps count- er -attacked to cover the retirement of Smith-Dorrien's second corps. The feint deceived the enemy, who reason- ed from the steady fire of Haig's 120 guns that the British had been rein- forced. When Smith-Dorrain had fallen back five miles from the Conde Canal he took up a strong defensiVe give the British right an opportunity to retire to Maubeuge,a fortress of the first clas4 on the Sambre. To the left of the British force the enemy had crossed the frontier, but the Brit- ish right resting on Maubeuge would have been secure if the French had made a junction with it. This, how- ever, was out of the question. The Fifth Army was not in touch with it and had no alteration but to retire to new positions, Von Kluck's design was to outflank the British left and tempt Sir John French to give battle under the protection of ,Maubeuge That would have been fa:tal to the ex- peditionary force without support It would have been Sedan over again. The British Army was of about the same strength as the French Army that surrendered at in the late summer of 1870. • The British commander left to his own resources by the irresistible "drive". of the Germans against the French on his right, rejected the plan of giving battle on the Maubeuge- Jenlain line, and ordered a retreat past the great forest of Mormal, the est Corps marching to. the east of it, the 2nd Corps to the west of it, for in its way the forest of Mormal was as dangerous to a small army as •che fort- ress of Maubeuge. It is not necessary to follow the fortunes of the hard- pressed British army failing back to one position after another trough Le Gateau, Landrrecies, Valenciennesss, Cambria and St. Quentin. The worst was over when the 2nd Corps reach- ed the Somme. Speaking of the British armies, the Times concludes: "They are flushed ivith many victories. They will never taste defeat again, and the Germans will never know anything eisse. But it is not to be doubted that if Sir John French had blundered at Maubeuge in i of ts lustre, its strength and its very life; eventually producing a feverish- ness and itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrinks loosen and die then, the hair fails oat fast. A little Danderine to- sught-now--any time -will surely save your hair. Get a small bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Dam derine. Save your heir: Try it! GERMANY -LOSES SHIPPING GENIUS Albert Ballin, the king of German shipping merchants, died suddenly on Saturday. last. Rumor hints that he eommitted suicide when he learned what humiliating terms of peace Ger- many would be forced to accept, or else that he feared the German reen- 111111111ft Bailin was in favor of the wet. Ae the owner of what was the greatest single shipping c mitany in the world, the Hamburg -Am riean Line, he must have seen that ne of the first re - suits of the strug le when. the British Grand Fleet was ordered out would be the certain los of business of his company as long a the war lasted. It. is possible thatiie calculated that while he would lose at first, he wand gain with interes in the end. So far . as we know, whether' he approved or advised the war n the first place, he was a supporter Of it. He was no Lichnowsky or Mi4eblon. However he inar be reckoned by the Germans himself or whatever may be, the view of the nhutral nations on his influence with the German Govern- ment, there can be no doubt that in the history of influential Jews of the last half century he would be given a lead- ing place. He was a Jew, but not, it wisassaiad!bausibniirstes inclInneindFisrin.fteaheallWbase the son of - 'poor -roait and educated himself, and built- up Hamburg as one of the greatest\ ports in the world, it would not he ei(cessive to call. him a genius of 1311426BL As a:. lad he went to England and Served a commer- cial apprentice,ship, later returning to Hamburg, and, having rnade a special' study of emigrant traftie, he found himself the efossessor of a goldleine, for in those days and in the forty years to follow emigration from Ger- many was a veritable gold mine for those who were in a position to take toll of the traffic, As his steamship line grew, Hamburg grew as a port until it reached and passed Liverpool in its shipping. Bailin is given credit for resolutely opposing the idea of the Pan -Germane which was shared by the Kaiser, that the German Government, by means of subsidies, should be permitted to ob- tain a controlling interest in the ship- ping of Germany. He combated this on business grounds, and while the grandiose dream of an official sitting in Berlin or Hamburg controlling. the thousands of German Ships in all parts of the world, appealed to Wil- helm., Balhn considered it unworkable, and in the end bound to result in. dis- aster. In other wordsehe set his will against that of the War Lord, for time and again he declined to be made a member of the Prussian House of Lords, and attach the "von" to his name. Nor. did he view with any more favor the suggestion that he should abandon his own religion and become a christian, as the word is understood in Germany. Whenever the Kaiser urged him to take one or other of these steps, it is said, that he always com- promised on accepting a royal Photo- . graph. Bailin was reported to have lost favor with -the- Emperor, because of his moderate war views or his 'wish for an early peace, but the truth of this report has not been established. Bai- lin in letters and interviews, repeat- edly declared for a German victory and a streng German peace. . Regard= i ing his part n Germany's war policy, Sir Valentine Chirol wrote in a letter to the London Times., in 1915: "Lord: Haldane was quite right in describing Herr Bailin as one of the most re- markable personalities in Germany, for to him probably more than to any other German do we owe the sinking of the Lusitania. lie has been for many years past -one of the Kaiser's most trusted advisers in all matters of maritime polity. It wag a matter of common notoriety in Germany in 1912 that it was largely owing to his od- vice that the Kaiser shrank fro A a war over the Agadir queatton. Bai- lin held that at that th4 German submarines were not sufnetently de- veloped to exercise effective reprisals 'on the British mercantile marine for the -tremendous which the mere pres- sure of British sea power would in - ilia on Germany's mercantile rnar- ine. Diriug the present war it is Bal- Ain's organs- in the press t'W have, from the first loudly advoed the policy of ruthless submarine warfare against the British merchant steamers of ..which thesLusitania has been the latest and molt ghastly victim, and I lave heard on _pod authority that his influence with the Kaiser Went so far ast� overcome the natural repugnance which lingered in professional naval circles against the adoption of such shameless methods of warfare." The power exercised by Albert Bai- lin in the political affairs of Germany was always greatly overrated, accord- ing to ambassador James W. Gerard, who came to know the late shipping ruler of Germany quite well in the four years Mr. Gerard held his Berlin post. "I do believe that Bailin was con- sulted about the beghming of the war," said Mr. Gerard recently. "At any rate, I do not think the militarists bothered to ascertain whether he was in favor of beginning hostilitiee. I know, indeed, that once the war was begun, Bailin immediately seemed to lose favor in court. Prior to August, 1914, Bailin was high in the favor of the Emperor, but with the coming of war days a gulf came between the Hamburg -American Line head and the Kaiser. "Bailin was nothing like ae power- ful in home affairs as the public gen- erally supposed. The real industrial rulers of Germay, at least, during the days of the early war they were much in evidence, were the iron and steel magnates of the Rhine of Westphalia. Although Bailin, through his shipping connections, was well known to the world, his supremacy even in that field was not complete, for he had a strong rival in the North German Lloyd people." Peps will giiee you relief.' Simply dissolve a Peps tablet in your mouth. Your breath carries the medicinal Pine vapor, which is released, to all parts, of the throat, nasal and air passages, where a liquid medicine could not possibly reach. This vapor de. stroys all germs with which it comes in contact, soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and fortifies you against coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis and grippe. Pep §: contain absolutely no harm- ful drugs and are therefore the safest remedy for children... ri0 E TRIAL Cut nut this sase, spesesseseas article, write across it themame and (Weef this paper, and mail it .(withIlc. stamp to pay return postage) to Peps Co., Toronto. A free trial packet Will then be sent you. All drug- gists and stores sell Peps, 50c. box. frIME BEAMIN6 USK • ACIIViti.e.S OF WOMEN Two million women have been plac- ed in industry in this country since the declaration of war. The war has brought out patent invention genius in many women of the British Empire, At the .New ?fork shod of instruc- tion for women ticket agents a two- month purse of instruction, is offered. Students are paid $25 a month' and when qualified for positions they de- mand salaries ranging Mom $75 to tt/50 a month, according to effieiency. - The • French war department em- ploys over 17,000 women in its vari- ous departments. In Germany female laborers are paid 22 cents a day for twelve hours' work. Over 15,000 female workers in Swe- den are members of trade organiza- tions. • • Women engaged in munition work throughout tip countries, at war 'num- ber -1,302,000. Miss Helen Diller, of Chicago, has knit 1,000 pairs of socks for the soldiers in Titmice; The women bowlers of Kansas City have formed a league and will hold tournaments, 1111111111111111.11111111111111110 THEY TOOK HIM There is a man in Bozeman, Mont., who will probably go through life be- wailing the injustice of the draft board that certified him for service, despite, the fact that he presented a letter.written by his wife to prove that he had a dependant family.. Here is thet letter: -"Dear United States Army: My liuslehnd ask me to write a reccomend that he supports his family. He can- not read, so don't tell him. Jes' take him. He ain't no good to me. He , ain't done nothin' but play a fiddle and drink lemon essence since I mar- ried him,eight years ago, and I got to feed eight kids of his. Maybe you can git him to carry a gun. He's good on squirrels, and eatin'. Take him and welcum. I need the grub and his bed for the kids. Don't tell him this, but take him." S BANK CAPITAL AND RESERVE -$8,800000 98 BRANCHES IN CANADA A General Banking Business Transacted, CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT BANK MONEY ORDERS SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest allowed at highest Current Rate. BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT Brucefield St, Marys Kirkton Exeter Clinton Hensel] Zurich a was acquired in 1815. Next ,in ,size is Alsace-Lorraine. Torn from France after the Franco- Pruesian war, its , restoration to the mother country has been one of the chief points upon which the allies have insisted in outlining their terms. Its area is 5,600 square miles, and its population about 1,875,000. The prin- ° cipae towns are Metz, Strassburg, Mul- hausen and Kolmar. It contains the great iron ore district of 13riey, one of the principal sources of German sup- ply, and the extensive Saar coal fields. Its textile industries are . among the most important in Germany. The Palatinate is part of Bavaria, -which acquired it in 1315. It is 2,372 square miles in extent, and has about 950,000 inhabitants. It is chiefly a farming. and wine vowing country, although there are some large menu- GERMANY GOES ACROSS THE RHINE. The claitse in the armistice terms providing that the left or west bank of the Rhine is to be evacuated by the I Geimaris indicates that pending final I adjustment of filb boundary at the peace conference the Germans will be I required to relenquish control not only 1 of Alsace-Lorraine but of the reinaind- er of Germany west of the Rhine. The territory is roughly 20,000 square piles in extent, with a population of f7 about 9,000,000. . It includes some of the most Mi - portant mining and mannfacturing districts of Germany, and such great. centres as Cologne, Strassburg, Metz, and Essen, home of the Krupp works.; The territory west of the Rhine con- sists of Alsace-Lorraine, the Palati- nate, the Rhine Province, Birkenfeld, and about one-third of Hesse. The Rhine Province is the largest of these districts. Its area is 10,423 ! square miles, and the census of 1910 I gave its population as 5,759,000. It 1 contains great coal and metal deposits and some of the largest iron and steel manufacturing centres of Germany. I There are also textile industries on a vast scale, as well as extensive farm.- : ing and wine growing. regions. The most important cities are Cologne, Es - eon, Dusseldorf, Coblenz, Bonn and Ain la Chapelle. It is the most west- erly province of Prussia, by which it 1 factuting industries. The capital es Speyer. Berkenfeld is a principality belong- ing to, although detaehed from the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg. It is en- closed in the Rhirie province. Its area is 194 Square miles, and its population about 45,000. The total area of the Grand Duchy of Hesse, about- one-third of which lies west of the Rhine,is 2,965 square miles and its population 1,800,000. The capital of Hesset which is on the -west bank of the Rhine, is Mainz one ef the principal fortresses ef Gerraany. Evacuation of this territory also frees from German control the nomin- ally independent Grand Duchy - Luxemburg, Which, invaded by Ger- many, at athe beginning of the war, has been , completely under its con- trol sincethat time. Inautgrameassasnorarss xliar.alwairArSforn..t • wal ezr7,1 * 0 The P a,11 Range is yO: J.» friend on was (14 Change the around, set the boil- er on the fair srj_ and use the thrre _ nearest holeSt- you. can boil on all of them. Dimiler oa time; no extra fuel, iio rush.Orconfsion. FOR SALE BY Ficciarls' London Tomtit* Montreal St. John, N.B. Itamilton Calgary Winnipeg Vanbou.ver Edmonton Saskatoon • Keep WRIGLEY'S in mind as the longest - lasting confection you can buy. Send it to the boys at the front. alum, ona MIN Moe aes MIR WOr Time Economy in Sweetmeats - a 5 -cent package of WRIGLEY'S wilt give you severa( dm* enioymeht: It's an investment in benefit as well as pleasure, for it helPs teeth, breath, appetite, digestion. CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL The Flavour Lasts :v- s's / • e 'dfif .1.74%:;;,--...,....„...-4_1--,-._ • oy.,7• . - ,.........S....' .."...e,r.,„.0 .. ,...., --.-.*:';'...::•4".".*:e: .; I 't 14'4 ''': :;'-itlic''..,4'i_1.-11 1 ..........*„._ 'ILIUILY lF) RIIIT'vs .,--;-7,,,, , , ss. e is,,,,• ....„a - . ,,.7.-.! Sealed tight -Kept right NOVEMBER 2:1' .11111111.1001004010MONINP*111117,0MINNIRMINIi e. Fortune Is If you have t money make hard for you. Our Savings D annum and this principal twicea °SEAFORTH BRA Sli1011[1011‘11****11**11111001 Pr Wurgat ExPooli DLSTRICT MATTERS BL rfif Tragic Accident-Blyth's eel tion on Monday had a most sad big with the sudden death of town's executive head, Reeve Taylor, who was killed. by his plunging over the side of a b near J. C. Stoltz's on the Hullett- Wawa:nosh boundary west. Just the accident happened -will nein known as the victim was alone h auto when it occurred. No one 0 vast throng assembled. in Blyt Monday to do _honor to the occe was more enthusiastic or interest seeing that the town's means and rer of commemorating the signii the armistice terms was done tt full. From early morning to Is eight he had but the one end in and the success of the celebratior largely due to the interest take him. About 10.36 a.ra, he took and Mrs. H.McGee (the former o the entertair.ers) to their home Auburn in his auto, and when re ing it is presumed that some went wrong with the steering as it approached Stoltz's bridgi the auto struck the side of the h tore away the railing and plunge to the ditch, pinning MrdTayle derneath. Mr_ Stoltz, who lives by, heard the crash and at once to the scene of the accident. found that Mr. Taylor Was then his neck having been broken. ¶2]mains were brought to town to Chellow's morgue and later home on Mill Street The late.] N. A.,Taylor was one of Blyth's most citizens, a manwho held the and esteem a a large ci friende, and his untimely passir is lamented by all. He was be the township of Morris 45 ago, the sixth of September lasi the major part of his life was in, that township, where he WO confidence and support of a ma of the ratepayers, as was evid by the number of time's he was e to. the Council Board, and thi years In which he sat in he'R chair are saidby many to e the mot prosperous the town* enjoyed. Eight years ago he, farming and moved to Blyth w purehaeed the bikery and eonfd ery business Conducted by Mr. 3 Stothers. Three years later la; -posed of the business and most time since has been engaged as Lor the Gray -Dort and Ford cat 1916, at the January election b returned as Coencillor of Blyth, office lie held for two years, a January laet was .elected as • and was the town's chief execre the thew of his demise. He member of Myth Lodge No. 30: and AM.,. also of the town bal Presbeterian in religion and t tics.,a.esteunch Conservative. I ed leaves -to mourn his loss a ve ene ditineiter, Miss • Annie, three rothers--J. A. Taylor, - Inspedtore St Th.ornas; Alexan Port Stanley, and James in the also one sister, .Virs. Thos. Elyth;alI'�f whom- have the By] of a wide circle of 'friends in ti reavenient. The funeral took on Thursday afternoon under t pices M Myth Lodge No. 308 and AIL, the remains being ed from the family residence Andrew's Church, where sere held at two o'clock, followed terment in Idnien Cemetery. MADE IN OfINEIDS 7 GUARD THE CHILDREN ' AUTUMN COLDS The Fan weather is the mos seasozi of the year for colds -- 5S warm, the next is wet a and unless the raother is ou in the little ones are seized wit that may ;hang on all winter. Own Tablets are mothers' be in preventing or banishing coi act as a gentle laxative, kee bowels and stomach free au An occasional dose win prea or if it . does come on sudd rompt use of the Tablets .0 Y eure it. The Tablets are 'medicine dealers or by ma cents a box from the Dr. I Medicine Co., Brockville, On - MUSSELS .Cen eel Hotel Sold. - Go Donald has disposed of the Hotel to S. Carter, of town, remove partitions and ma tions, arranging it for a gar i and mplement show &parte gets inarn.ediate posessione 1stand. The building is cen eated, well built and shoul good buy for Mr. Carter. brick barn has been retains McDonald and will be util *aid, as a sales stable f horses, etc., by the propri closing of this hotel a good accommodation for the ublic in the American an There was a day in Bras there were six: hotels, if doing business, Teut times h The Late Mrs. D. MeQua lowing an illness .of six we was marked with intense su spirit of Janet McIntosh, vn late Donald McQuarrie, eternal rest on Friday mote week. For years Mrs. Mc not enjoyed good health, pessessed of a, remarkably stitution she was Ole to Staunch fight against the