HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-12-06, Page 2CA
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111B .EtURON EXPOSITOi?
Al) A. RANGES (up Wargo Exp otter
u.
No scarcity of material or lack of hel
has had any effect towards lesseniag
the quality of the CANADA. It re-
mains to -day, the heaviest and most
durable Steel Range on the market
and it has not risen,in price compared
to other commodities. Buy from our
stock now -it pays. .
i_
Remember nearly 400 satisfied cus-
tomes in this district are using CAN -
.,L
A ADAS. You take no risks. They are
thOrmighly tried and guaranteed.
Moffatt's Wood Heaters, in two si7es, neat,
with aSh and feed doors ........ . ... .... ..
Coal and Wood Heaters from............ ... •• .••.
Ash Sifters... ......
Brushes.... ... . .. ... .... .........
Stove
••• to a•• ...... a
V
• a • • .
doub e -lined,
.$13 to 515
$14 to $22
• * • 0,* 0 • • • • 25 c
Stove Pipe \Tarnish 11,* .. a .... • 0 0 • a' •••00••• *0 • •sirs •••• 150 to 25c
Fit up the Stable
SEAFORTH, Friday, Dec. 6th 1918
• GERMAN ADMISSION ON JUT -
LAND BATTLE
Captain Perseus, the German naval
critic, has torpedoed the impudent
claim of his countrymen, and which
he himself in less truthful days has
maintained, that , the sea fight off
Jutland was a German victory. He
admits that the losses' inflicted upon
the German fleet were enormous, and
says the fleet only escaped because
of favorable weather conditions and
the skill in retreat shown by the Ger-
man admiral. For some itme after
this famous engageuent there was
much difference of opinion as to
whether it liar been a Germanor a
British victory. The admitted losses
of the Germans were less than the
admitted losses of the British, al-
though any figures of the enemy
were _partly contradicted by Admiral
Jellicoe, Who based his calculations.
Upon the testimony of experts who
were eye -witnesses. The deplorably
worded -first report issued by the Ad-
miralty indicated that we had suf-
fered almost a disaster. The Ger-
man announcement coming later
had the British mark to shoot at,
and it was a simple matter of
straightforward lying to make false
claisnA for Germany that would be
readily believed by those that way
Cattle chains are needed and new supplies are hard to get
and up in price. While oUr stock lasts we will selt our cow
chainsat.T . '.......... ............ ..... . ............... -.....35c each
Cattle Irons for chains... ..-..., .... -. 25c each
Crenoid, for disinfecting the stable... .. $125 per gallon
Scoop Shovels at
from
$1.85 to $2.25
Lanterns
fr 1m
$1.00 to $1,75
.G. A.SILLS,
,
1
inclined.
- However, without Captain Per-
seus's admission the man • in the
street has for a long time had no
doubt as to which was the victor in
the Jutland battle. If the German
navy had won, it would surely have
tried again. It would not after such a
great victory have made no fruther
effort to challenge the British mas-
tery of the seas except by U-boats. It
would not have relied exclusively
upon these pirates of the deep and
have gone the length of drawing the
United States into the war if it had
any reason to placv faith in its High
Seas fleet: No historian_ of the fu-
ture will be in any doubt as to whe-
ther the fight of Skaggerak should
be classed as a British or a German
victory. Yet there are certain facts
connected with it that ought to be
made public, as the New York Times
demands. This ought to be done in -
the interests of historical accuracy
and in juetice to Sir John Jellicoe,
who has been criticised because the
German fleet or what was left of it
was permitted to escape.
The official German admission
was that one old battleship - the
Pommern a three small cruisers, the
Wiesbaden, Elbing and Frauenhils,
and five destroyers had been sunk.
Later on the battle cruiser Lutzow
and the light cruiser Rostock were
added to the list with the explana-
tion. that their names had been
withheld for "political reasons!! On
the other hand, Sir John Jellicoe in-
sisted that the Germans had lost two
dreadnought battleships and a bat-
tleship .of the Deutschland class, a
battle cruiser, five light cruisers, six
'destroyers and one submarine. In
addition, he reported that another
ireadnought battleship, a battle
cuiser and three destroyers were
id hard hit that they never could
have „reached a German base, The
British losses were three battle
cruisers, three arniored cruisers and 1presidents and prenuers. such a.
after the engagement the German
113r ii meeting the world never saw.
hemispheres *III be reetreeent#4.
These heads of kingdoms and re- ,
eight destreyersr a tennage of
1 300, while the estiniated Germati
losses were 192,000. For rironths
wtpulbilibeesgifnrobray abomth nstresalefAlcfeia... ii47,9„ri inif tens for 450 by- writ-
5:47,,oatilii2r.ortwtailriliaom. s' Medielne Co
dsirhyteasrtdsinfweorrerncaltoirnd,w:sndpernmotittthede sicratte4 ,itTiftg 01 the , vie . , .!
to leak out Now Captain Perseus 1 armies awe, gots. ,..,nd- giicii a re
i has nVer bgen i Seen in, th worlds•
i-ei -
admits that the losses were. "enor- i
MOUR." NO doubt. the whele truth_ , I. . e ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
,e51°-....46- allianet tigeinst Louis ' XIV., if
will appear in the near futiire, - '
The fikirrilar nigh, „Sdadd" Veet was
The i top 11 futva
lire Insurance Co
&ado ce: Seaforth, Oat.
DIRR6TORYI
OFFICRRS,
I. Connolly, Godericisi Wadden
J. Evans, Beechwobd, Vice -
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy. -Trees,
AGM'S
Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton;
fier.131ey. Seaforth; John M
BrUtefieldif phone 0 on 137, Seaf
•
Yeni Gedeeieli; R. G.. jar -
ninth? Brodhigeii.
DIRECTORS
iiiiNo. 2. Seafortlii, ;ditLiee
Ilkireaah Ps Evans,
stIteCkwood; MeEttehb
Connolly, Godericli; D. P. McGregor,
R. 11 N. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve!,
tic,. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
<
10 CENT "CASCARETS"
FOR LIVER AND BOWELS
Cure- Sick Headache q9q**tationi
BIlikUstiess, Sour ?-Sioni ,` id'
-.Breath-Candy -.04ith
•M•110:=10....0••••••.11•0
No ma IhZkai had your liver, stomach
o bowetie, h;:ea nn.eh your head aches,
eine miserable eria are from 'contitiade
itioo, indigestion, biliousness and siu-
ish always relief with
asearete. They immediately eleanee
aud regulate the etomach, remove the
sour, fermenting food and foul gases;
tithe excess bile from the liver and
carry °IT the constipated waate Matter
alr-poignis fann ilittediliiiirinne
bowel& sh .1363t. tr-ha.
gist -will keep your thief and,. eoWeie.
cleat: etomach sweet and .31thit dltar for
months. They work while yk;sa sleep,
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
• I0.5.5 a. in. - For -Clinton, Goderich,
Winghara and Kincardine.
p. - For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine.
11.03 m. - For Clinten, Goderich.
6.36 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west. Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
3.16 p.m., - For Stratford, Toronto
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
3.20
8.86
8.48
8.56
4.15
4.33
4.41
4.48
5.01
5.13
0.15
Going South aan.
wingham, depart .... 6.35
BeIgrave . . .... ... 6.50
Myth ....... ...... - 7.04
Londesboro . .. 7.13
Clinton, 7.33
Brucefield ..... • 8.08
Kippen ....... ... . 8.16
Hensall . • 8.25
Exeter 8.40
Centralia 8.57
London, arrive 10.05
Going North a.m.
London, depart 8.30
Centralia ... ... .......9.85
Exeter 9.47
Hensall -9.59
Kippen 10.06
Brucefield
10.14
Clinton 10.80
Londesboro ........ , 11.28
Myth 11.87
Belgrave 11.50 7.18
Wingham, 'arrive 12.05 7.40
4.40
5.45
5.51
6.09
6.16
6.24
6.40
6.57
7.05
P. R. TIME TABLE
SUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TORONTO
a.m.
idoderich, leave ........6.40
7.18
Walton 7.82
Guelph ........ 9.88
FROM TORONTO
p.m.
1.83
1.14
2.20
4.80
Toronto Leave 740 3.10
Guelph, arrive ... ..9.88 100
Walton ..... . ....11.48 9.04
Myth .. . .. . .. .12.03 9.18
Auburn ... .. .12.15 ,.9.30
eloderich 12.40 CM
Connections at Cuelph Jun.ction wh
Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon-
don, Detroit and Chicago, and all in-
termediate points.
CASTOR IA
I* Infants and Children.
lis Mod You Have Always. Bought
Beers the
Signature of
THE MAKING OF
• A FAMOUS
MEDICINE
How Lydia E. Pinlithain's
Vegetable Comperund
Is Prepared For
Woman's Use.1
A visit to the laboratory whirs &la
euccessful remedy. is made impresses
even the casual looker-on with the reli-
ability, accuracy, skill and cleanlinees
which attends the making of this great
medicine for womanis ills.
Over 350,000 pounds of various herbs
are used annally and all have to be
gathered at the season of the year when
their natural juices and Medicinal sub-
stances are at their best.
The most successful solvents are used
to extract the medicinal properties from
these herbs.
Every utensil and tank that comes in
contact with the _medicine is sterilized
*Ada* final .precaution in cleanlinese
the medicine is pasteurized sealed
in sterile bottles.
It is the itildorful eonabir,„„ of
math herbe, Pother 01 the
skill agIr este, used in its preparation
*hi,* litie,hdaile this famons tnedicine
so Supoessful in the treatment of
female ills.
Theletters from women who have .
been reetored to health by the use of
Lydia E. Pinkharo's Vegetable Com-
pound which we are continually pub-
lishing attest to its virtue.
•
emausei
Kingdom of Italy came into Vxistence
in 1861, the French Republic ,in 1871. '
The American Republic- is older
than either of them, older than any
of the European allies except Eng-
land, for it dates from 1776, or from
1789, according as one choose e to
be guided by the Declaration of In -
despondence or the Constitution. Ser-
bia was a kingdom long ago, but the
Serbian kingdom that arose when
Turkey began to fall to pieces forty
years ago was a new monarchy; all
the old aristocracy had been wiped
out by the Turks, and Peter Kara-
georgevitch is a peasant king, like
the Maccabees. Equally new is the
'Roumanian Kingdom, ,and even the
Greek Kingdom is not a century old.
When the soldiers and sailors from
the ends tof the earth are reviewed
by the Kings, Presidents and Pre-
miers of the Western world at least,
and by representatives of all that
counts in the Eastern world, it will
be useless to seek in history for any
precedent for the spectacle; nor will
there be any for that conference of
Kings and Presidents that will fol-
• low it.
1111=1.000
ICH, RED BLOOD
RESISTS INFLUENZA
Its Victims Are Largely Among
. Weak, Anaemic People.
In the epidemic of la grippe, or
influenfia that has swept over Can-
ada, M cemmon. with the rest of tip
world, it has been noticeable that its
earliest 'victims were the thin-
•blodded anaemic people whose power
of resistance is greatly weakened be-
cause of teh watery condition of their
blood. When a person is strong,
hearty, able to enjoy a brisk cold
day, chills and infections are set at
defiance. But when the system is
a men. run down, when the nerves are
Congress of Vienna more than
dred years ago did not Oval it or re. shaky and the blood watery, the
germs of influenza are quick to
semble it except in the h fact, that it
was a peace conference at which seize their opportunity. It is there-
fore good policy to. keep the blood
emperors and a king or two were
present. The fact is that the meet- always rich, red and strong, and the
nerves well nourished by the use of
ing next month has no parallel
such a reliable tonic as Dr. Williams'
either in the Congress of Vienna or
Pink Pills, People who take these
anything else in history. Reports tell
us that the heads of States, with pills from time to time are usually
able to resist colds, influenza, and
their Premiers, from allied and neu-
tral coutnries swill be present. At the other ailments, and enjoy good
health while many about them are
Congress of Vienna the Emperor of
-Austria, was on the ground, there weak, ailing and miseraable.
To those who have keen attacked
were present the Emperor, of Rus -
by influenza, the after effects are
sia and the King of Prussia. The
more dangerous than the attack it -
King of England was not there, nor
self. They are left at the mercy of
it -
even the Prince of Wales; England
replapses and complications. There
was represented. by Lord Castle -
is a persistent weakness of the 'nibs,
reagh at first and then by the Duke
shertness of breath at the leai ex -
of Wellington.
lomats working under him, and the
The Czar had a corps of able dip- ertion, poor digestion and a tendency
to take cold easily. This condition
Prussian King was aided or gov-
erned, by Hardenberg and . Hum-
boldt, Austria, another of the allies,
was actively represented by Metter-
nich, France by Talleyrand, and Po --
land, which was still, a suppressed. netir, rich, red. blood, which reaches
DECEMBER 6
'
18
TIIL MOLSONS ',BANK
CAPITAL AND RESERVE me0,000
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:
Brucefleld St. Marys Kirkton
Exeter Clinton Hen.sall Zurich
1 rralhAULL21.1.1.1.LIX;
lo ed The small woman is deelared 'LI., Is a crack shot with the shotgun
to have greater force of character and
a better brain.
• The average woman lives two years
longer than the average man because
the -man does not eat what is good for
him, according, to Dean: Olin Templin
the heed of the collegiate section of
the United States food administration
staff in Washington...
Mrs. Frank C. Itenderson of Roslyn,
will persist and will grow worse un-
less the blood is built up and the
shattered nerves strengthened. For
this purpose there is no tonic can
equal Dr. Williams Pink Pills.. From
first to last- dose- these pills make
and partitioned nation, but had. every organ and every nerve in the
hopes of coming to life age*, by
Czartoriski as a member of the Nix- body.es Thus the lingering germs
he repiareer , are driven out, the appetite is ime,
'iseilinerned()Stie?lidtaitiY7h4sS. hailimitilea`94.941-1-hig, If l'tintintos of influenza
nhzaealttrye, transformed
interest, prov0, and weak,. despondent ,vic-
presenting the defeated country, , so
mpraensoen:uvrAleitii jes„ ,bythat, T eYralld# re -,I
againet another .as to bear oft the -
setting o!w learwz.l.athnrdeuwgreann. attffack'Y°04f influenza neredyou
will; find Dr.; Williams Pink Pills
the one thing needed to reetere you
greatest proportionate gams of theto full hvoth and strength. if ..the
Congress. • , -ftrouhle has passed you, you. can
This formal conference Till hil-- further strengthen yourseif against
preceded by •consultations of 't,h__02 its, ineidicna advance by the use of
heads of Many, nations, 'Kings and .
''' this . saine tonic medicine.
IVIedicina dealers everYwhere.. s,e4
o 'Dr. Williams Pink Pillsiens, -you- ear,
roeure them by naiilit 50 cents a'
SOUR, ACID- STOMACHS;
GASES OR INDIGESTION
'Pape's Diapepsin" neutralizes exces-
sive aoid in stoinach, relieving
dyspepsia, heartburn and
distress at once.
Time it! In Eve minutes all stom-
ach distress, due to acidity, will go.
No indigestion, heartburn sourness or
belching of gm or eructations of undi-
gested food, i1 dizziness, bloating, foul
breath or headache.
Pape's Dia,pepsin is noted for its
speed in regulating upset stomachs,.
It Is the surest, quickest stomach sweet-
ener in the whole world, and besides it
is harmless. Put an end to stomach
distress at once by getting a large fifty -
cent case of Pape's Diapep'sin from any
drug store. You realize in thre minutes
how needless it is to suffer from indi-
gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis-
order caused by fermentation due to
excessive acids in stomach.
•
1_
IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS,
FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED
Look, Mother! If tongue is coated,
cleanse little bowels with "Cali-
fornia Syrup of Figs."
Mothers can rest easy after giving
"California, ,Syrup of Figs," because in
a few hours all the clogged -up waste,
sour bile and fermenting food gently
moves out of the bowels, and you have
a svell, playful child again.
•Iitick children needn't be coaxed to
take this harmless "fruit laxative."
Millions of mothers' keep it hendy
be-
ca.use .they know its action ,on -the stom-
ach, liver and bowels is prompt and sure.
Ask your druggist for a bottle ,of
"California, Syrup of Figs," which con-
tains directions for babies, ,ehildren of
all ages and for grown-ups.
it had held a review after Blenher!; Mr. Clara A. Rodb.ers has been
would have been able to se e `hely ',made county clerk of Queens County,
German, English and Nigh New York.
diem, The "grand Alliance" against • Mary Pickford, the motion picture
Napoleon was net -so grand as this,
in whatever sense other word is used.
In this review will march Japanese
soldiers and sailors as well as
Cubans, and soldiers and sailors of
the United States and Canada.
Doubtless there will be sailors from
Brazil, who has nobly fulflilled her
duty of keeping the South Atlantic°
safe, and not without fighting Near-
ly all the countries of Europe will'be
represented, and in Asia there are
several besides Japan that have a
right to be Armenia, not yet inde-
pendent, but which furnished trans,:
whose good service was specialty
commented on by General Allenby;
Arabia, fighting for independence,
"and sending troops te Allenby's aideth"
China, who has had at least a little
fighting. Siam was in the war, but
had no actualfighting to do, unless
it is true that she sent an airplane unit
to the western front. -
In this grand convention of Kings
and Presidents should meet, Who
would open it? By seniority the
Japanese Mikado would have the
right, since his is the oldest mon-
archy save that of Chiba; but the
Mikado, ,it is safe to say, will not be
there. It Will be some one of the
Modern rulers and of these the
Kingdom of England is the oldest.
6itaged by, Sire rihvid Beatty with
his cruiser squadron in the effort to
grip them in action until the Grand.
Fleet under Jellicoe arrived. % Of
Beatty's part in the engagement
Sir John Jellicoe said: "He once
more showed his fine qualities of
gallant leadershimefirin determina-
tion and correst stfftegical insight."
Getting the worst of the engage-
ment, the Germans endeavored to
break off, and favored by the early
closing of night succeeded so well
that although Jellicoe had placed
his squadron between the Germans
and their base they slipped round
or through and when day dawned
there was not one of them to be
e e n , though the British scouts
ranged many miles in search of
them. Critics of the Admiral insist-
ed that when night fell he should
have made every possible use of his
searchlights to hunt down and de-
stroy the escaping Germans. It has
been intimated that if sir David
Beatty had been in charge of the
fleet on this occasion this is the -
course he would have pursued.
In contradictioeof this ungener-
ous theory we have the assertion of
Mr. John Buehan that independent-
ly of Sir John Jellicoe and simul-
taneously with him Sir David had
arrived at the conclusion that the
tactics' of Jellicoe were the proper
tactics. It would be interesting to It goes back to 1066 for it is not .al -
know what instructions from the lowable to push its :claim further
Admirality .the fleet commander had. back into the Saxon, Kingdom. The
Was he supposed to risk his capital
ships in a night engagement over a .
course that might be littered with
mines or guarded by torpedo boats
and submarines? The conditions
were admirable for an attack by
these craft. In the view of the Brit-
ish- admirals they were highly dan-
gerous, even impossible, for battle-
ship, operations. We know how
vexed Nelson was if an enemy ship
escaped him which he thought
might have been taken, no matter
how many others he sank. There
is little doubt that :---dellicoe and
Beatty were equally disappointed at
the escape Of the surviving units of
Von Scheer's fleet. A statement of
the Admirality might clear Sir John
of the suspicion, probably unjust, of
undue caution. Official figures from
Germany may show that it was the
mere remnants of a fleet that es-
caped.
GREATEST -GATHERING WORLD
H -AS SEEN.
If the meeting of sovereigns, Presi-
dents, Premiers and Chancellors which
is to be held in Paris conforms to the
reports about it, it is nonsense declares
the New York Times, to say merely
that "there has been nothing to equal
it since the Congress of Vienna." The
and more, people with chest and
throat troubles have tried to cure
them by pouring cough syrups,
lung tonics and the like into their
stomachs. All a mptakel The
Peps way is different.
Peps are tablets made up of Pine
extracts and medicinal essences, •
which vv -hen put into the mouth
turn into healing vapors. These
are breathed down direct to the
lungs, throat and bronchial tubes
- not swallowed down to the
stomach, which is not ailing. Try
6jo. box -of Peps for your cold,
your cough, bronchitis or asthma.
All druggists and stores or Peps
Co., Toronto, will supply
star, is now herown ager una pro-
ducer. -
Women conductors h ve ina.de their
appearance on the stre cars of Jap-
an.
. American girls who went to France
as telephone operators have more
than 'made gooct . .
Five women cow testers have recent -
der been appionted by dairy agents of
the United States department of age-
eulture.
The first woman traffic cop in Wash-
ington, D.C., is Mrs. Loola N. King,
wife of Slept Ell. King of the army
medical coaps.
Six young women dressed in cap and
gown act. as ushers in Saint Luke's
-Episcopal church in Philadelphia,
Prineeas Mary, only daughter of
King George and Queen Maty of
England, is colonel -in -Chief of the
Royal Scots.
,
Sixty-one per cent. of the total
'amount subscribed to the last Liberty
Loan in Deleware was -secured by
women.
Women will ke admitted in the civil
service examinations for railway mail
clerks to - be held in the District •of
Columbia and throughout the country
on November 30th.
Wages for women in the shoe trade
in • the United States have been in-
creased from $2 to $4 a week sincethe year 1916. .
The British house of commons has
passed on third reading, the bill per-
mitting women to sit in parliament.
Ten dollars a week for 48 hours of
work is the minimum wage for women
engaged in the fish canning. industry
in California. •
New Orleans has a school for teach- /1
ing colored women to drive motor eerie
and delivery trucks,
- The Kansas state war industries
board is asking that an eight hour a
day and a minimum- ziliell ge of $1.1. a
week be granted to wo workers.
Female employees -of the war de-
partment in Washington will in the
future wear gray uniform.
Danish women became eligible for
Parliament in 1015 and this year four
women have been elected as members
of the lower house.
In Netherlands, where women have
eligibility but no vote, one woman has
been elected to its legislature.
Seventy-five per cent. of the states
in the Union now employ women as
scientifici investigators and they are
makinggood.
Mrs. Chas; Schwab, wife of the
director general of the Emergency
Fleet Corporation, has knit over 100
sweaters for the boys in France.
Small women make the best fore-
women, aecording to superintendents
of munition and other wartime fac-
tories where wemen are largely ewe
as wel las w thtnehreflt fLkES5saa
as well as with the rifle and in her
many journeys through the mountains
in the west she has never yet failed to
bag some of the biggest game found in
those parts. ,
In the state of Washington women,
who are employed on the street cars
art prohibited from working after -
5 pan.
memanilMa
Rescued from Huns
to Die of Starvation
Hideous Plight of Belgians
Demands Immediate Help
Peace does not mean Plenty in Stricken Belgium!
Germany's hellish policy has been too thoroughly
administered for Belgium to be able to feed and
clothe herself again -at least, until the Government
has been thoroughly organized on a permanent basis.
Little children, thousands of them, are bunny for
a slce of bread, shivering in their worn-out rags.
YOU can help to feed e• and clothe them. They
haven't a. cent to buy even what supplies are available.
The deititute Belgians need your help about as
badly as a human creature could need it.
HOW TO HELP !-
Alt the machinery of the Belgian Relief Fund is at your
service to convert your contribution in money HERE into
food and clothing 'MERE.
A dollar here and now means LIFE to one of the starving
subjects of King Albert, but look here .
NO ONE will come to you and ASK you for your
andribution. If you do not voluntarily send it to the Belgian
Relief Fund, Local Committee, or Headquarters, the oppor-
tunity is gone, and the Belgian you MIGHT have saved, dies
of -itarvation or perishes for lack of clothing or proper'
Proteaon.
maw cheques payable and send contributions to
.,
n RIC1 Furl
.
(g14111sttrid under the War Charities Act)
.. Huron &linty flelgian Belief rund-Mrs. J. B. Thompson,.
Irretittrer, Sid , Ontario, or to ONTARIO BRANCH-
• Belgian Relief Fund, 95 Bing Street, West, Toronto."
40.1110M•v
Vision, for a moment, those far off Ports
beyond the trackless seas
r
From Arctic ice, to the torrid lands
beneath tlie Southern Cross -
From towns tucked in the mouilOins, to
the busy river's mouth- .
'WRIGLEY -5 is there!
There, because men find
comfort and refreshment
Ln' its rdontinued use.
Because of its benefits
and be4ause
Tie Fiavour
Lasts!
"After Zversr
Meal"
MADE IN CANADA
SEALED TIGHT -
REPT RIGHT
About R
Ari empty p
full penis a
farmer.
Raise Flogs
market for
further capita
hogs, have a
SEAFO.RTH B
1314.1111neenrialsailernint*Wlial
.p.a.MOOMS,
Pr iumn Et
'DISTRICT MATT
WALTON
The Beef Ring -The thirte
zal meeting of the Walton B
was held at the home of
Mrs. John Bennett, ou prid
ing, November 23rd. John
Walton, who has taken over
tittering for the ring, as a
duty'', when J. Bell's son -
.away by the Military draft,
dividing 13,882 pounds of be
patrons. The 32 beeves aver.
pounds each. The sum of $10-
iexchanged to settle accounts
other and everyone was se
*very ticket taken for the
season which was araple proo
satisfaction Mr. Watt had gie
William Murray was appoin
retary instead of Met James
zea, who has filled the pes
allay since the beef ritig be
ing to his leaving the co
he having sold his farm. He
greatly missed. The other
were re-elected: adz: John
Chairman, with John Bennett
Lawson, Wllianz McCall 111'
committee; J. Bennett .and D
ston, inspectors, whose dutie
light. Mr, and Mrs. Benne
tendered a hearty vote of tha
their eourtesy and kindness
liging manner to the patron
thnes. Walton beef ring is
managed concern.
. MORRIS
Making Money. .- Last S
three pigs about six montho
marketed by Mr, Robert Scott
oixth line, at Brussels. They
700 pounds, and at $17.50 ne
Scott .0.22i50. The pigs w
property of Mrs. and Miss S
fed four but reserved one for
use. This is no new ventare
ladies and should encourage
get busy in the biesinees of
iss pply the world's needs. ,
IVIceraelten - Wensley, -4
dding took place on Th
t week, at St. John's
c urch, West Tomoitei when
Reba, third daughter of Mr. a
, - H. Wenley, Qollingwo
iteid in marriage to John nem
Cracken, M. 13., of HagersviI
bf th'e- C. A .M.C1, France,
'Major) R. McNamara °Meat
and Mrs. MeCracken. after
trip, will reside in Hagersvil
groom is a son of Mr, and M
liam McCracken, 4th line, and
known here.
hicKILLOP
Soldier Dies In British
The people of this locality,
regret to learn of the deathio
idney Hewitt, who assiiite
Wine Knechtel with the far..
On the 14th concession of thi
Alit, two years ago, and ifrook
primary examinations of
year students of the Methodist
under Rev. Mr. Craik. Bert,
was comraonly called, heard
of his country and humani
laboring as local assistant on
*dist eircult in Essex county,
ever dearly he loved his wo
Master's vineyard, yet he f
bound along with other youn
hoot' of Canada and offered
in the infantry, training at
Not long after enliiting he
Dieted to the rank of Genie
was esteemed as an efficient
fi;ohieunn teiterws afsorthtsaervitheee ca
in
signed up with that Bat
was on his way to that diste
when influenza overtook
plated.in a hospital in British
bia, the *beaded disease Dille
the ardent 'life on October
was a youtg man of stirling c
and noble ambition and had
spared a bright future await
but the Master ealled him to
higher service. While we re
untimely death we cherish the
of his manly Christian enclose
the Walton circuit, both ii
service and Sabbath school.
plains were brought home to
rewing family and laid to res
Kitchener cemetery. A. rich
sion of flowers and the many
ions of sympathy were token
respect of which the decea
held both in civilian and ns
A DANGEROUS HAB
When a, Soy of s'
a munitions factory
was thought that h
Ing. The suggestibii wets
however, and it was proved
lad never touched alcohol;
cause of the mistake lay in
that he had the hahn ()tate
elite the smokeless explesive
is- in the manufacture of sma
Corditedis a very stimulati
and quickly revives weary ne
sides ,being extremely atti
the take; but the mere fact t
composed chiefily of nitrd-g
and guncotton makes it a mos
and dangerous drug .and qui
elaves its victims.
There was a rather mem
stance of some soldiers discove
stimulating effects of cordite
the South African war; but t
was really unknown un.til the
or three years.
To -day the habit of ehetvin
Isv