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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-07-18, Page 4rage r our 47, €k � ling! tnt a ba tet JOHN Jt)VNT, 1'a't)I,t•ic•1:,rr "^iurrlt. nl.entt Yc" POTATOES AND al.aaturnam, s The revs and Values Of :a Potatd., 'l:r'(' itenieruns•n^'-It is a Great Patriot potato is a ;treat lrrz,tri'Elt. It fieg te'ped tit leave 1I, tion(:, 1.tttit help to NM tate tsar by rele•aeit,t: ether es- ensal footle for export.. Potatoee and other starchy vege, tt(blee earl tette wheat. Fee theta ill eread-mak Once 1210h111 14112:041 potato ;viae ; you ins leech etn.rclt as two s 1ico, of bread.. Potato(,; give you the ;;alts you need to build and renew- all parte of the body, %etcetables are invaluable for grow- ing chil4ren. Adults most have xege- table e to make up the lettere eaus- • eel by work, Potatoes at home make more wheat for the ellicstl armies; it le your fight, t)octor a iety that the tired -out' feel- ing Spring fever—often comes from leek of fruits' and vegetables. Use perishable Canadian product:. 4vegetables. 1 ..hent 5 Increase in our consumption of vee. tables °ntieanti ail inereat'r' in the ite- port• of''s:lieat, , •'r'a.a:k(1. in footling the eoldiere over- s.etlrt Pat more cert'ake, fish, potatoes and t:elletables. IN patriotic. Share your, meat with the men at the front by using potatoes, carrot:: ereion. and turnips. • To wild the most. food possible in the least shipping, space, grow turd eat bulky vegetables at glome In Canada. LEMONS 134.4•K i KIN WRITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this. beauty lotion for a few cents . and See for -yourself Whal girl or wetpau hasn't heard of 1onit>.n, jtni,e to remove complexion bltemisla• es, to whiten the skin and to bring' out roses , the rt �, t.„. the freshness ( f sllnc ss ,rotib t 1te h•dc rr 1 1 u toa tyw Butlemon it.. tt t RI ” aloe,. 1 tt ah n. is acid, 1, therefore irritating anti should be mixed with orchard . white this way. Strain through a fine z lath the juice Of two fr.•.h lemons; into a, bottle containing; aheut tinge oun:e's of orchard white thou ':bah.: whit and you have a wit le quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at :.d, at the oast one generally pa}s for a small jar of ordinarily -e old crer.uz • Ile "sura to strain the lemon juice yo, ua. •piggy gar. iafo the bottle, then this lotion will r•etitattt pure and fresh for months \Vin applied daily to' the face, neck arms luted hands it should help to bleach., clear. smoothen and bran thy the skin, key druggist will supply three ounces . Gf orchard white at very littler cost and t he i;rortrhas tht' lemons COME ON, OEIT1I, GLORY, COME ON! Come on, Old Glory, time on. By all stars which stud Your banner's spaee, we men of l3rit- atn swear, with you , To make the foeman fear the Anglo Saxon race. With us,' the men of Prance—the Irta- Passible—stand Like a wall of steel While AIbert with his l oletien Ifni ghts Have vowed to make the tyrants kneel Ay& Hath not God "our help in ages past' again Parried their boasted thrust, And in His own good time Will make them lick the dust; - Come on, Old Glory, come on! Your women wear a star upon their • breasts, for gallant (nen 'Who fight for peace. It is the holy symbol which, • • Once in Syrian sky, proclaimed His advent "Who lnaketh wars to cease" Tyrants lost the vision of that star, •and reared a cross, But "He that sitteth in the heavens" placed o'er that ,tree The star and crown, anis by such sacri face as ours. Fulfills His own determined plan and ends captivity',: When ye return again to your great • western Shore, Y oll'il find God hath begun the reign of peace With war no more. And on your ban- ner fine Another star will shine: the star of His "Well done" The symbol of His son. Come on, Old Glory, Come on! Ilamilton, Ont. (Rev.) Wm. Ross • DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN CHIROPRACTIC Chiropractic Drugless Dealing aeeur ately locates and reproves the cause 0. disease, allowing nature to re:.tore stealth J. A. FOX D.C., D.O. ():tteopathy. Electricity Member Drugless Physicians A.,oritt•- t ton. of Canada. —I'honde 10I --- HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO Offers you and all the family the outing of your life, 1Ai GONQUIN j7tu ii iii uslittliA LAKE: GEORGIAN AN i3.,<Y ',ARE 011: 13,AYs .1 I gl.ifitl:lI l at'e all ia,txottn Irl tyf,reureli Motlt•rn lrt,tr:l:, •llil1I t tine tenifr't:ta lnrt anally prefer to live itt tet.( c)t• lot; C:ibin You Clr.ay.3 tit rear.si.able riecure goer. 1'.t:k) :) i s!t cl,.to (:ur aettat::i.et. Ltti(,n tt, :al'v.it:. e'.. ituli trf ,ru st r, %*•. • ,y t 1.:ad 'r ruck 1 icl.r 1,,,cat or C. Is' Ihn'nint;. 1' left t I'•trl_tCrr) en• Agent. 1st. 'I'ot.,nto. W. 1' idurg• man, Agent. I'ht,ne 50. thing; rho, seemingly looney wou'd lit , . The. Tlystallder hart learned that corhle but when till extra tlurge upon it .lgrie,tltvre Is a part of the coons(' was made it broke off. The kir,:, for .students in the High School and for t:o he scented, said, 'We can nwi.• that a schaol garden is planted and a new done ('defer than got the Wel taken care of by the pupils and teach - snag out but our hero for truly t er and that one at least, of the wits one said. 'I want to get thei a: trustee is actively interested in the and lie sweated andepuffed and \inrk Success of the garden and lie thought ed lentil at last; out it came. It is only that surely a tiling that unites school an every day incident but it took rot. to faun that unitee Spring term to in the Bystander who went thought- fall term,. that unites trustees direct - fully away saying that any yogi,; 1v to the work of the scliool( is a very chap who will do that will sure it beneficial thing. Happy. should those The metal Is ingrained in that bee' Hite School students be who help to make up. Ile Is a Canadian, worts make that first school garcon in of the n(tnte. Malty a boy would Ilrtv't wingtatn, chosen the easy path but not titin: la: Win or die' is engraven in his tn.' r• this Who is ihi. n at I boy? � 1 1 n '4 1 :•. The other day two members of the town council were arguing the F'ilbjeet of 'The value of a Day of Prayer fee Canada.' One maintained that it is not at all efficacious, as well not have It. He maintained that unless every Slay were the day of prayer, we might as well save the effort. Now, it is noteworthy that these gentlemen were discussing the sub- ject of prayer, but it might be that if they prayed more they would dis- cuss less. It seemed, moreover, to The Bystander that there was a tend- encythediscussion in cls use on to just knock the Drops from underneath our soc- iety. He said to himself as he turned away. No national day of prayer then and „quite consistently—No national Thanksgiving Day and why a special day foz' •1vorship, a Sunday if we do not worship everyday and why a special place of'worshlp-a church— Why a special half holiday on. Wed- nesday if we do not make every day a holiday and why any of our special festivals—Xmas and Easter and so on --These things of course are vital and one is led to the conclusion that a day of prayer—a Sunday --a church— a festival— is perhaps nothing as alf end in itself but only valuable in es much 'as they are made a means of at- taining to a higher and higher level. Nodding church members, empty ';)eves, are so, not because the day is wrong or the church out of place but hecaase we have ceased to make prop er use of it. " So with the day of pray- er. It, is quite useless unless we make proper use of it, A' certain Canadian statesman is reported to have said to a rather sanctimonious' NOTES BY '1 BE BYSTANDER !voter whom" xu*jletance ho watt solielit • tarn;; "Well i1' it maken no difference The Ityntanticr, noted in reading the to ,volt, vote for me but pray fox this notes of two weeks ago that the worn ,other fellow' but who can say that the 'planning" WWIut;t'd itt eonxtect1(1 unit Great Italian Victory was not an tho arrangement of Agnew. Tilde oufeome of. the National Day of Pray - of course iu 0, mlotake toes tslu)uld retied ,er in Ignited States? Who slxall rtty 'prexling', Jxlt t tl typographical error that prayo'a have not been. vital in tt,a the editor plight say. t;tt'anninrx the tide of the taubniarnne A young stripling of a boy was seen menace and greater than. these in un - trying to take tt post out of fh.' itina tie Canadians as they have nev- ground, Ile du; and pndlletl and t.ur or befnrt been and 'In uniting the god and hauled but the r•tlhbbrrl•.• great Anglo-Saxon races as one people i4'1;I)I)1:1) IN PROVIDENCE. The following from a Providence, R,S., newspaper refers to the marr- iage of a daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Wm. Stapleton of this town: The marriage of 1\iiss Jean Mae Stapleton of Eden Park and Mr. Jesse Graham Andrews .of Georgiaville took place of Saturday afternoon at t o'eloek at the hoarse of the bride's sister, Mrs. (rale 13. Champlin, 22Blackamore ave • Eden Park. The parlor was effect- ieele decorated with pink roses and large palms forming a background for the bridal party. The ceremony, 'which was witnessed by relatives and friends, was performed by Rev. Hugh B. Carpenter, former pastor of the Cranston, Street i3aptist Church The double ring service was used, Mies Jessie Lentaire and Miss Elizabeth Lemaire held. ribbons to foruf an aisle thrt a which the bridal party entered to the. music of 'The Bridal Chorus' from 'Lohengrin' played by Miss Har- riet, Cuinby The bride was given a- way by her brother-in-law, ,Mr Gale B Champlin, and was attended by her cousin, Miss Lilies A Morehouse, as maid of honor. The hest man was Janes H. . Andrews, brother of the bridegroom. The bride wore a gown of white crepe de chine with corsage bouquet of Bride roses, and"a pink pie ture hat. The maid of honor wore , white embroidered net with pink ros-' es and a white picture That. Itefreshnnents were served by the .Merry Workers Girls' Club, of which the bride is a member, assisted by Mrs Needham. • Later in the evening Mr. and Mrs. Andrews left by automobile for a wedding journey. They will be at home at Narragansett Terrace af- ter Aug. 1. ur rtit' WINGL[A, AMAZilti cKlV`!E}wt,iimirivirNT! The hardest thing, after all. that the Germans have had to contend .with in the German government or ittt rapekealnttn. Take, for instance, titat circular dietrlbutedl by German pro- -pagalltliets in Spain, and imagine its; efl'e,trt upon any decent, self-respect- ing neutral. A translation of this circular was issued a few days ago by the department of r:t•ale, aeeonn- l?rtllteti by thin coii17lmenIt; "The au- thenticity of the document as beim; tsf German origin has been establieli- ed." it i,, worth recalling this cir- ettlter now, in the form in which it was published in the Onlele' Bulletin, It will be remerbered that this cir- cular was intended to set forth claims as to what has been accaalxplisbetl by the German armies, and was written in Snwn.slt, for the benefit of Spanish leaders, Among the glories s of Ger- man mine" which it cited, was the fol- lowing; "Resides untold amount of war material captured on the battle- field, the Germans have taken posses- sion of incalculable booty in France a': n. d I3 lgluln, including. High -Grade \vet•;ches , , . . 417 Average Watches ... ... , 5,016 Underwear .. , .. .. .. .. , 18,073 1 mbroiderien and wotnen's , handlterchiefs ... .. .. 15,132 Umbrellas and parasols .. 3.705 Silver spoons . ... , , 1,870 :Bottles of champagne , ..523,000 "These figures show a large in- crease over those of the campaign a- ganst France in 1870-71, De Bel- gium, besides many art treasures they have confiscated old paintings valued at 3,000,000 pesetas." - Another glory was the handsome punishment meted out'upon houses of religion. The circular says: "Due to the treachery of Cardinal Mercier and other priests, who did their utmost to stir the priests against the good- hearted German soldiers,' they were for .. red toteach., a severe lesson to the Belgian and French Catholics. Cathedrals destroyed ... . , .. 4 Rendered unserviceable ... .. 8 Clturclies destroyed ... ... . , 27 Renderod unserviceable ... .. 34 Total .. , ... 73 "In Poland also a targe number of church% leave been destroyed for Inili- t..ary reasons, The figures concerning these have not yet been p7tbiishe`cl. Belgian eturidity was punished in a way which constituted another of these glories: "As a result of the st•ipid stubbornness of the Belgian people in continuing the struggle af- ter their bloody and final defeat on the battlefield, the German officers, were forced against their will, to int- i pose punishments on Leahy rich in- dividuals and wealthy cities. This I 1 AD)VANC litre contributed the following amount to the ('oz Tuan treasury." ponelas. Punishments, , , 87,000,000 ecurity ... ... .�.� , 13,000,000 Ittalsrl:'aht . .. 15,750,000 'Pricers contributions .. 4,320,850• 'l'otai . . .120,070,850 'i'h:s•e'reular is worth recalling now bi'e' t e it might have appeared to 'Anl"rican rt'aderta to_ be too amazing to he genuine. But listen to this ad- -dm:is by Kaiser Wilhelm to a Ge"rou city last 'event: " I inspected half of devastated i rance. There, only, OOP ebtaiats ;11e right impression of the tt•sr<tut state that has been spares. the Fatherland. Whoever should grow fainthearted ought to came to the 'front and see the devastation. Then he woahl cease to lament his fate and be eittlefieri with his tot and bear pat- iently the hardships and privations of war's orl'ars" They have saved their silver spoons thus far, those Germans,. so their kale or exhorts the into bear their lot and not t'Ppitle! The etraa„est feature of the case Is the fact that the severest critics of (termini have alwa.ye been fellow Ger many • They have criticized each.other worse titan any outsider has ever. crit- 1eiled'heln What a tremendous flood at critieiste is accumulating in Ger- many, to break forth after the war; \Vat till decent Germans come to free their minds about the spokesmen of their !unite: y government, about Spanish propai t^ndists and about rul- ers who tell thele that they ought to see what German soldiers have clone to Franco! I)esliised cannon fodder will then find a voiee Measured by sliver spoons and ruined churchoe, the "sharp (Lerman sword" has been a success But the old Germany which gave the world gifts for which the world is thankful hay lost in moral respect more than all the spoons in the world autouut to ---Buffalo Ex- press.s WOMEN Tr )RTURED Suffer terribly •with corns because of high heels but why care now Women wcar.high heels which buckle up their toes and thev suffer terribly from' corns. Women then proceed to trim these pests stoking relief, but they hardly realize the terrible danger from infection,. says a Cincinnati authority. • Corns an easily he lifted out with the 'angers if you will gut from any' drug store a quarter of ars ounce of a time- called Ireezone, '1 his is suflicscnt to remove every hard or soft corn or callous from ono feet. You simply apply a few drops du.:ctly upon the tender, aching torn or callous root and all, lifts out without one particle of pain This freezone is a sticky substance which dries 1 a moment. it just,shr'ivels up the earn without inflaming or oven Ir- ritating the surrounding tissue or skin, fell your wife About this. •0416SOftIll.4 10110.14•1•01•011 via # '±rs Mus • So please help the Royal Air Force by going out to pull Flax. You may work in the fields right near your home town. The local Flax Mill will take you to work:.. and bring you home each day without cost to you, e In no branch of active service is heroic sacrifice so marked as among our aviators. Their splendid spirit is well revealed in a letter to his parents written by an aviator five days before he made the supreme saeifice. It says in part: "If the news ever reaches you, which sooner or later reaches every flyer's parents — don't mourn. We R. F. C. men never think of death; the only thing we think of is the effect our passing may have on our dear ones. So if I go the usual way, don't let dear inurosy cry, wear black, and all that sort of nonsense. Dad, don't you get all upset. Keep the show going, smile and carry on ... " "Keep the show going, smile and carry on," that's the spirit. Many boys and girls are WOMEN GIRLS and Men,you can earthy $4.00 or more a ay palling flax. too young to enlist to "keep the show gee- ing" but an opportunity is offering to be of service now: the flax -growers want help, and the Organization of Resources Com- mittee are behind a movement to save the fibre for making the cloth for aeroplane wings, of which the allied armies are in very urgent need. Boys and girls, young inen and women, and even old men, inay enlist their services for this work. For the convenience of the workers, automobiles will be provided to take them to the fields and back. Six strong boys giving attention to the work should be capable of pulling an acre of flax a day, and as the offered wage is $15.00 an acre (which is the recog- nized rate of the Flax -growers' Associa- tion) this means an average of $2.50 a day to the lads. over 15, you can earn from $1.50 to $3.00 a day pulling flax. BOYS over 15, you can earn from $1.50 to $3.00 a day pulling flax. You can work for the Local Flax Mill, the address of which is given below. Help Is Wanted At Once for these reasons: max is used to make the wings of aero its being pulled at the right time. If the flax is over ripe'f€s quality deteriorates. planes. The grade of flax depends upon C ANZI/4 i1ON Off' RESOURCES COMMITTEE, PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, TORONTO Apply, at ons for employment in this neighborhood to Win ha n, A. Tipling Seaforth, Flax Mill Blyth, flax Mill French PkiiloRoplier Is Certain '1'ilw t Victory 1lViiy + i(• it lin 'Rill gle I11iPk'..t' and 1t'aa'tenlupd wor'i,.s S Fipoken by » :it! titration, the Frond' ph ' onto jt�r, titer the beginning et' the 1'tteet lit -Twee (hive: "Now that the lull• in rte ole battle Is over, :;e are 'ear: :vele for Dow {Igbtinrg than the enemy. But 1 do not owed the "'enure of the pres- ent offeusivo to vein tiro war. The Aitiee ,should not :teatime thaL slink. It would be a log'c:il Ping '1f the (creole people colrtrol:ed their Cov- ernIlU'htt, hilt they lo• not. 'the (;..r man nnitite,r'ists will trot teaee will, the tenure thee weenie coticiueive to all rational beiega. Ilc,wever, irr'a'ie:' and her Allies will go on to a victor, that will eons -ince &t .•n 1110 t'ierteee Govcrnrlteslt, Tin' 1e t ,ilt•h met fll;ktiu:; their own war, of their own v,t:t:oti, for a„.goverurnent.all their own, ee,- tirely subject to their opin;on." And speaking of Earle in p t' iicu- 1a c s rl x said: "Paris in not t l , 8 r: . to -day as. in August, 1914, Yee tieer, n0 excitement now, but you feel .(tui are sure of much more deiur,il.u;tion to win than in the iirt>t Viiia do:tlon- titration of ptitriotism when tete war began, That first mental ;(tate was too intense to. endure,. To-d:ty you pee Paris itself -under bombardtne:it and . the •,great battle reauz.iing with- out a trace of public fear of exe•dte. men(, • Fighting, suffering, avriilc- ing have ceased to be a novelty; ; they have become tete indispt as hie roti- ,. ,,. tine d .0 uty. lic b ranch never meted a necessary routine. There 1., 'to question of .the outcome," Not that. there evert has been any serious .question of the outgo:le i:t � , the minds• of judiciauu and reils.t•t• ing persons, but there" are moluents when the limpid reasoning and the calm, clear • words of a pluro .,a;,li:+t like M. Bergson aro as a well in the, desert to a lean athirst. Some of o.1.- practical .1.practical rnen of affair's, wreee pr: t- ent service in speeding up ptoductiou and delivering h the right ,, o d•in the g � f. c ga right t1 pace mallet be overvalued, neverthelesa err" on .the .side et tlpe::•dl and early delivery in the quality of then, otnerwieo admirable optimistn. It is extre0tely unlikely that Germany as a sequel to her great victory in the east is going to collapse through internal Seet:kne, e the middle of next week or the middle of next month er the middle ':f the month after. That sort of prophecy leas been current for three year's -and a half, -aud it does rot deceive M. 13ergsan. .Ills em- phases on the doeteed calmness of Prance "Sud stet' Allis, on their re- lentless persistence, en the ever- growing strength of their psychologi- cal attitude„ is the valuable point in Itis utterance, He knew:a that` vic- tory will conte betetuse the allied peoples are moulding its substance with their daily bread. - Vont-Pound Egg.. Naturalist doing fiol4 work in China pleked up an egg whioli the natives declared was the eget of• the 1'Itoonix--tithe Fung-Whang Ifo-l�ia bird. The investigations rzutJe oy naturalists has resulted in .the deer sion that' disregarding popular leg- end, the . initacrnse tete, forty times the size of the domesticated hen, is that of a gigantic prehistoric oatrien. Two imperfect eggs of this fossil emelclt are In existenee and ate 01:11- ed by museums in the United-Staien, but titin is. the only pet -feet o:' knov31i—•-"perfect with the exception of a small hole through which the original contents may have dis- appeared.,, • Its discoverer was e, peasant hi the Province of Henan, China, who one day found it sticking in the bank of the Yellow river and kept it as a curiosity, treasured it as the egg of the legendary Phoenix, tvliiclt is still revered by designers of Chinese deco- rations. The fossil shell was filled with water when it arrived at the museutne and was found to have a capacity of a trifle more than two quarts. Two quarts of albumen, yolk and protonlasmie material—say four pounds of foodstuffs --evidence that the high cost of living was one of the modern things ancient China• did not -invent, No scieiltiet has ever seen IS, bone or remnant"' of the biped which laid ovoids like this one from the -inter of the Yelow river. It may be ilnag- teed that the travelling .uaturalisls had some difilettlty. in atxtufring it for the Phoenix to which it was lo- rally attributed stands in Ckdneso art and• tradition as the. symbol of immortality and resurrection. .far- ther west- one of the legends of the bird has, been that every 500 years It flew out' of Arabia o'.d and decrepit to Hello/toll, and thet•,e ori ai? nitei burned itself and robe train It aethe:; young and beautiful once Iinore—.Io bad symbol for the China of the i,reseett hoar: It:eat Tiny Be:tidees Jupiter. it Jupiter were cut up into 7,300 'pieces, eae.t \:,,uld be larges' tette:ton fii.c'tle t t Malde a scientific ititer:,. Al! the aliment ti:'.'tuer do .tot. Weigh half as ranch am. .1up::.er.' Only the sun surpaesee Jupiter in :nee. A year on 1i10.,pialttt I:softer is equt.l to 'festive of our y(a1':. 3ui,?,et rotates on its axis in less tint t half the tine; of the earth, but, bee use oP the planet's enormous Sista, the io'zut'Uel 81.00(1 is ntueh Water. While the earth travels aevonteen miles a min- ute,. Jupiter tray+ole 4116 miles 'a min- ute, If Jupiter tur:aeet on lin avis at little faster, it would buret :111 t>nitle 'sty 'wisiele do when. they extent.] a taafo tipped. Jupiter raay lie regio •• t.1 either as a d ecaylirg ..un or net velopillg earth. %i.; l:'_. ,.et yet lied time to cool. He is 31 rivet globe, of i atteoue and molten minter the Stoat entsaartliti :ry Went in the en- tire solai,,syetem, Japan 11a9 eupeteeded Sillies art the chief emu; (if etilvlily i::r t. t t, It the rinit:d -,t.ttee (AMUCIi.'S Rih1I VIii, Sent t'1) 'Lyon Trial Vet' tttteriltg Treasonable Staten -lea. Walkerton, July 4. -MOses ere peeve of Carrick, •a 1ownsialp r which is peopled largely with Ger- mano, was arraigned before riMagis- i !irate Talton here this afternoon On n t charge of having made treasonable land iveditiotis utterances before a number of ttxdtvidnats in the. village Iof ittlld11fltt , ' hi ittform')atiog was laid against 1 b1.11cscia; jtl. a8th 1918 perfect couxfort, and easy fitting are assured to every wearer of C/C la Grace Corsets Come and see the New Models. d&CO, l< rf r._ 1 +cam.., (' ' .. NCREAS1✓D production of wealth is the ' a�, ..the �� in which f•egtlli eme,nts of the nation can be met without excessive taxation„_fol the next decade. The e pan- cion of legitimate business is essential, and the 13anlc of Flatnilton is prepared to en- courage courage it by the judiciotty extension of, credits. WINGUAM BRANCH C. P. SInitII I?'iisinger by Dominion Police J: •E. Grieves and T. A; Muxworthy of Lon - 1 don. According to the evidence ad- duced at the trial, Filsinger said to 'Mrs. Jacob Schmidt and her mother i Mrs. Susan Rioepfer, at the latter's home in Mildmay before the Dominion elections Last December; that they 'were shipping the women. overseas by '(anload fox the men to use. the n' ,dent,, also showed that on later •Jt;rIisl(n 110 told two men In IlIfildtnay that ll.c. e t%'•ey were taking over=n.bw, were sold in England for $8 auroce, like little pets, i y the Bord t' • ii -r t }s91tc l Governnent. At the trial'Fi'isinger admitted say- ing this, but claimed he had heard it .while a-1 endin; the farmer's Conven- tion at Ottawa and Toronto. Filsing- er who speaks with a rather German accent has for some time been, Reeve sof Carrick, a municipality which gave +a majority of over 500 against Union ',Government at the last election. Upon the conclusion of the evidence ,the accused was committed for trial, land on the advice of Crown Attorney,"' Dixon, who prosecuted, was allowed his liberty on furnishing bail $500. tr Following the sun with Vision, for a moment, those far off profs beyond the trackless seas -- -From Arctic ice, to the torrid lands beneath the Southern Cross— From towns tucked in the mountains, to the buss/ river's mouth --- 1NRIGLEYS is there! There. because men find comfort and refreshment In its continued use. Because of its benefits and because The Flavour Lasts! "After Every Meat" MADE IN CANADA SEALED TIGHT— REPT RIGHT