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The Goderich Star, 1926-09-02, Page 2Ile „..„.. ;) • t 155 rAlas rye JIPM1155154IIIIIININ511111145.1161. Ili 511/11,0111111151115111114•111.11150 Mi Grocers Stock # a11 111 INPOMIIIPPIPP Immo.* emosonnuoilowimic 1111 1h 41111 ease when Pennerelag to Inelend and. • hoist inetted the dignitaries of the cathedral to sup with him, wits so annoyed when Ilene or them put 1* an appellate* that he wrote with his climatd rime on one of the win - dew* of the tavern— ' "Rotten without ard mouldering *thin This plus and its clergy are all near akin." Our Weekiv rot' Lessons in English If rya want sestssetlistag bedtime—try it. BYV L Cordon of Jutland M the late Great .Wer. It Words Otto Eisend Shrines of BritaWsGfory w on this ship thatdJath -C Don't say "she is liable to co the boy hero, Irene un Ying Gfame. teclay,o say cutely!! The historic Castle, which- defends Don't say "I Am * year older than 1 111 1 1 1111 111111111511111 1 MI 1 1 1 PM/0.1U. I ill10,01511. 11.511155111155•11. 1••••01,5150.1518/551. el 1 1 1 I m THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. I�S 41111114IMPEOVVONIMInsom,.011.0 yeS sMi ee - 1141/2'' not 41111""4/21`t w'r tip- - cher. QtniTtroz; r•p•••; tronsrpiWty. lae,°6142*- Prellmul** th* * " in 'Ilse quietude of the how* is zest - 'red,' o es in 'of," g as ia "cog," taw, - Zoology. Pronounce sceol-ceeTi, the' name "A great power can be built went the r. ' NUC'Ll1116; * tenter of develop - first and third e's as in "no," the second 0 as kr "of." and not "soe.".eround thls nucleus." ULTERIOR; more remoter' beyond Cavalry t burs* °Adis" )* Calvin* something else either expressed or (the place where Christ worn ere- imaged, "Their ectivities betrayed 1443 !ulterior purposes." Amenable. Pronounce both ei .111.4. i STABILIZE; te make firm. "Such ,in "ask," e as ht "re41:1 not 14' in,e reoVarfallt Will Woe X tendency to °men," went on the "me." i stabilise the whole world." Preferable. Accost the 1, not the r.1 CONTROVERTto endeisvor to Wet*: Oft** fittospollo41 dieprove; to contind :Against. "These ; Modiste. lailiteP; two les' M*11- controverted question* must be sub- ageable; note the ea. Miespell; two =Wad to * higher court." s's. 1111Witille. Minnesota. 1 Synonym* l A* soon as reen and whales get to Argue, -contend, dispute, debate, the top they begin to blow. discuss, wrangle, question. me Generous, Ifberel, bountiful, mull - P" 30—Chester the river approach to the city, WW1 her." 'Say "than she." Chester the ecunty town Or Che. erected by henry !IL in the first timbered betties and its beeetieei ercrthwork constructed by the Rce u °Y.A Y. oaa,t my „It was a paintui acci j I Cry, about, scream, yell, tear, ex- ea,use---congestion of blood in the tathedral, in the best preserved med. mane The ellitle played a promin- ,,,..,..,, e. „ . , , . . , c situ, cal, sbriek, Abolish, annol, :Abrogate, lower bowel. Nothing but an in. isievel city in England, and i* second ent Tartlet the siege of Chester by u%,:'''''''orittlay P"lithnli;gw4 1774:I.:enmity as' eaneell,ternal rernedy can do this --that's to none for the steunch loyalty of its Cromweil's Roundheads, and amorig wen. omit eas.,, - - 1 eteee, efface, nullify, obliterate, re" why cutting and salves fail. Dr. eitizens in :come of the enost stirring the many notable persortsges who „Faisenees„ and "falsity." use.eokei rescind, repeal, Word Stedy . Leonhardt's Ilem-Roid, a harm - events in Britieli history. home been imprisoned in be walls referring to pea- less tablet, is guaranteed to quick - commences; in the year 47# when the the wife of goad Duke Humphrey. ' pie, "falsity** when referring rely:rills; 41:0trdusthirnece theee and it bisry reese our voca - and safely banish any form of The authentic', history of the eity ere Richard IL end Eleanor Cobham "t*Imenese" when Romans edvanced from the midlands There are ninny famous ancient things. Mena, fret, open-handed. Rill, asimesinate, murder, execute, nutsmere, slay, slauetter. Pile Sufferers ern* moons without begin- You can only get quick, safe Allot, apportion, appropriate, *p- adre whit its ancient walls its un. half of the 13th century and stands rdng or'"Everlasting" mean* land lasting relief by removing the ique and femous its' 'tenant on the eite of the first entrenched witha t end I PiY, assign, dedkate, devote. ulary by Mastering ehe ward each Pile misery or money back. H. Words Often Mispronounced of England to atteck the Welsh end hostelries In the eitY. and at One, • day. Words for this lemon: C. DUNLOP and druggists every - 'established • military station on the the "Yischt Inn," Dean Swift stayed Temperature. Pronounce tem -per- IDEALISTIC; pertaining to an where sell it with this guarantee. river Dee. It speedily developed into a strongly fortified garrison city and impotent commercial centre, which was given the name of Castra De- nim, meaning "the camp on the Dee," and for over three centuries it was the headouarters of the femur, 110th Roman Legion, known as Val- eria Victrix. Par nearly two hundred yeara ter the departure of the Romans from Britain in the fifth Century vethine is known of the c:ity, bet it apparently became a British strong- hold, for in the year 607 Ethelfrith, the Wee of Northumbria, marched an army aphid it ,and, after defeating the Briton, put th' whole of the revelation to the sword and left the city in ruins. •During the next three centuries it was several times partially restored by, the Saxon kings, who guve the the name of Yaeger:ie.:ter, and in ;107, when Ethelred, king of Mer - else practically rebuilt the place it entered upon a new era of pros - verity. /t opeeed up an •extensive trade ,with Ireland and became the most flourishing commercial, centre on the west coact of Britain. In 973 Edgar, the Saxon king, visited the city and reeeived the homage of eight powerful British chieftains, who acted as the oarsmen, of the boat in which the king Sourneyed up - the river Dee. At the time of the Norman ten- iQue$t the 'city offered 4 leng and etutrherit reeietance to the invaders,. and it was the last Waco in Eng- land to surrender to William the Con- • queror, Later it became the head- quarters or the English kings dor,. • Ing their campaigns against the Welsh, and wee mended by the army of Simon de Montfort during the War of the Barons. It supported the cause of the intrepid Lancastrian queen. 'Margaret of Attic% and wee rortopieu• us for its loyalty -to Charles I„ on whose 'behalf it sus- tained a long siege- by the parlia- mentary forcee, but was finally :starved into sebmiesiote The most notable characteristic of Chester is the well-rreserved wall, *Melt completely encircles the oldest • portions of the city and forme n con- tinuoue promenade of nearly two miles in length. It was front cute of the many towers whieh rise above the wall at intervele that Charles I. 'watched the battle between his troop* and the r lrliamentary army on Rowton Moor in September 1646. Nothing routine of the wall built by • the Romana nearly nineteen hundred years ago except the foundatione, and it wee upon these that the pre. bent wall WAP ronetrueted at various times 'between the 13th and 166 centuries. • The Rowe, which date back to 1276, are a moot reinsrke'ble end unique lerrn of etructure, end there is nothing quite like them airy. where elee In the world. Ths7 eon - *1st of galleries or *remits, which form tontinnous peesages, *hove the that floor* of" the houses with ore aide open to the street below, and Am* approached front the roidaviky by tights if stePs. ' Their origin is * mystery, and no satisfactory repots liars ever been found te *count for this peculiar form of builjing. 'rho esithedral kends on the site of an early Saxon thumb, which was enterer d' by -Elfrede,. the• -daughter of Alfred the Great, in 925. The oldest yart of the preeent buliding,, which! bee been many tinter restored and! reconstrueted, chase back to Norrnani deys. Here is to be found the flag which wan %rapped around the body of Gen. Wolfe after hie glorious death at the battle ef Quebec,. *leo the flag whish was borne by, ILM.S. "Chester.' throreh the Battle' OW An CLIPS ' 1111 11111111110.11. Thin% Illsiddsog boa% 1 sad eilleseeil, sat I* tshozretre oller•liturIeest * sit" fil*** pot wit* tip 1 Shrial. TIMM Oat I 144 ell1e,, 4,11 Early Showing - of FALL GOODS FALL HATS FALL SHIRTS GOLF HOSE FALL CAPS SLICKERS GOLF KNICKERS WINDBREAKS FALL SUITINGS. ARE IN! Caine and See Them CHAS. BLACK - The Leading Tailoring and Men's Smart Wear Store North Side Square Phone 21 9 1 With the customs investigation still fax from finished,the King Government already stands convicted of having co-operated with smugglers, bootleggers, dopesters and thieves, and of having thus been a party to defrauding the National Treasury, strangling legitimate business, debauching officials, high and low, thwarting the administration of justice, and bribing the electorate ! To cite but a few instances --already proven -- From its appalling record of malfeasance: • •I Stolen automobiles, smuggled into Canada with the connivance • of Customs officials, were sold for a pittance to friends of the - King eoverninent, and those found guilty were allowed not only to go unpunished, but to continue thei*. nefarious trade. 155.5.‘55.51. 0 Smuggled liquor eoelling was engaged inon a large scale by 4" Customs officials whose duty it was to protect the Treasury. 3Corrupt officials were unpunished and promoted; honest officials were puoished and demoted. A Prison -made goods are on the. prohibited list, yet tons and —5 tons of such goods, produced m prisons where contagious diseases were prevalent among the inmates, were smuggled into Canada for sale to innocent Canadian -consumers, with the direct knowledge and co-operation of Goverment officials. Police officers—members of the incorruptible Royal Canadian Mounted—were withdrawn from the Quebec boundary 4ine at the request of the smuggling ring. Honest traders had asked for increase4 police protection, but the King Government preferred to grant the request of those who were defrauding the public revenue. 6 Guilty knoviledire:nven in 1923 of the frauds that were being se- d has `net the Governm prom *gat ent the shadow of a, doubt. Time and ag�1n, in 1924 and the Commercial Protective Aosocisttiorn ot hairless men—placed before Mr. King irrefutable evheflces alit, that they had succeeded in tracing down at their own las It evens*. With bits Goveriansent hopelessly entangled with Canada's crbrdnsil element, Mr. King did not—dired not take any action to remedy the appalling condftions. vs• 47 A total revenue loss estimated at $35,000,000 per year was the result of the smuggling thus condoned by the Ki'ng,Govern- ment. sk A $54,800 loss was sustained in one case alone when Mr. '44' Cardin, Acting Minister of Customs and Excise, settled for $3,200 with a dishonest importer, who, according to Mro Cardin's own officials, had cheated the Treasury out of duties amounting to $58,000. This deal was consummated just previous to the last election. ch Free liquor, from Government warehouses in Montreal, was s' supplied in generous quantities to members of the, Xing Gov- ernment and to Government officials in Ottawa, in contra- vention both of the Federal Law and the Prohibition Law of Ontario. • The habit-forming drug traffic is one of the worst curses in " 40 the world today. tinder the protection of the King Govern- ment, Montreal became one of the great dope -distributing centres of Korth America. ^ I 1-1 The peak Of this Corruption, and this interference with the • Custom* collection and the administration of justice, is proven by the evidence to have been reached just prior to the genersi election of October, 1925, when, at the written request Liberal candidates, Ministers of the Crown called of the • Royal Canadian Mounted Police because they were enforclvg the law, kept convicted crooks out of jail, and esnctloned Treasury frauds as a means of scenting the return of the King Government to power. Despite tiz;tp i4;)ct that with Mr.emtedysupporting them, the Liberals bad a majority on the Investigation •COMInitbsist thla the, Chairman Mr. Mercier was a Liberal, and that the Prasiiaiiting- Counsel Calder was a Liberal candidate in the last election, and despite the further fact that the committee sat almost daily for five months, thus affording Liberal members ample opportunity to uncover malfeasance on the part of previous ministries, not one word of proof, not one breath of suspicion, WAS brought against the whalaistxtztion of the Customs Department under the Laurier, Borden and Meighen govern- ments, lout only avdast its administration under Mr. William Lyon MacKenzie King Has anything more disgraceful ever besmirched the pages of Canadian history? Can .4 proud and honourable nation -whose peoplelear.Go4 and eschew evil, ;Auld to condone such dishonesty, such corruption, on the part of its leaders and public servants? A... 11..5111.1555555,151 • voTE for H. J.A. MacEWAN,Iim N Huron 14 And avoid another Ejection filiol•Ommerwolos Warr 00•0111‘• IPS Mg Swot Wm^ Tworlok a 111 , 1