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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-10-17, Page 5thurecisiy,1 Oct. .rth 19 IS toolaill 11111Ii 1 1 11111 111 Hil,11.111 11 1,1 1 1111iiill1.'holviip111111111 1 .1 11 1 111 I 1 11 II II 111 11 1 11111 1111 41 7111111APP1 11111 I.lIIIIIIIIII. 11111111 11 I 1 I III 111111111 1 ,i011111 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 11 I 101111 1 III I 11 HI 111 111 111 11 11 11111 111111.1,11 11 11111 1 HI ,111 1 II II I 111 11111 11111 III 11,1 11 1 1 III 11 I I 1 11 "3\‘'te V.ousei Qxtalatg THE WING}EAM Abtrk 0 E 1 --- 1 110. hill 11,111 1 islowimommise 0444":":0:**:":":":":":":"8",)•:.:4+++4":")11 More Thrilling Yarns Austria Is Not a Nation. 1Rew Wool Materials for fatt %uit$ P. I Broadcloths, Cheviots, Serges, etc. are placed first among the new fashions and wisely so, because there are very few fabrics to equal these for smartness and wear. Our present stock is limited and will be difficult to replace. Customers considering a new suit or coat should investigate these special values. Dark Brown and New Khaki Chiffon finished Broadcloth, all wool and 54 in. wide. A beautiful cloth for Suite and Coats $4.50 a yard, Burgandy, Navy Blue, Black, Garnet and Green all wool serge, fine even weave, most serviceable materials for Ladies' and Children'e Wear, 54 in. wide, $3,25 a_yard, ibeavy Coatings We are showing a large stock of winter coatings in mixed Tweeds, Checks, Blanket Cloths and plain goods. These are all wool materials in Greys, Browns, Navys and Black, 54 and 55 in wide from $4,00 to S6.00 per yard, lanberskirta Just received a shipment of Underskirts in the new Taffeatine cloth. Guaranteed to stand hard wear, Fancy and Plain Black at $2 50 to $3.25. Also plain satin un- derskirts at $2,00 and $2,75 each. lbosiery an b lanberwear Headquarters for Ladies' and .Children's Hosiery and Underwear. Extra qualities and values. Give us a tali - Produce Wanted IS 1 • Canada Food Board License No 8-13535. H • 11....11.011.1.11.11111.011111.11111 'R. 'Maas figniffaiirjraiNiffiiaffirsailal11.1.0.111.1111.1 111.111.1111111111.111111......1 111 11ill HII H INEMMOL1 ism Telephone Service and Spanish "Flu" Phone 89 'common with the general community the operating staff has beers effected by the present epidemic of colds and influenza aed has been seriously depleted in con- sequence - At the same time the volume of telppbone calls has greatly increased. .So many people are ill at home that the telephone has been used continously and ,the load of extra calls on out' depleted operating force has been very heavy. Please keep this extraordinary situation in mind and Use Your Telephone Only When Absolutely Necessary. You will thus be helping to keep the service intact to meet the urgent needs of the com- munity in the present emergency. Helping Natiye, the Key to Good Health - Of the British Airmen Merely a Bureaucracy Fighting on Western P -e14.;",:e-Olet:+:01.e.I.O1.1eItO+1,41.**et cont With Very Sinister Past eeete0 14044:444i4X«,:.440.4,4.4.e."440.,..01,04.0,04.0 BRITISH was May 10th, 1915, up ale a single -seater ma Sighting German airp he went in pursuit and was see ing his hardest to pump lead int enemy. Then came the unexp While trying to reload his ma gun he lost control of his stee gear. His airplane, taking the its teeth, as it were, turned u - down. As ill -luck would have 1 belt round the airman's waist _ . pened to be loose, The jerk o machine when it turned compl ' over almost threw the pilot ou only saved himself by clutching of the rear centre etrut. His bel by then slipped down round his Thus he hung, head downward the airplane whirled down, spin - round and round the while 11 falling leaf, from a height of _ thousand feet to about two thou live hundred feet, malting fr efforts to free his legs from the belt; _ Iasi the pilot managed to dis- engage himself and reach the control lever—with his feet! By a miracle he succeeded in righting the machine, - which turned over with, dreadful slowness, completely looping the " loop, whereupon the airman slid back - into his seat. He had been within I a three seconds' journey of death! The late Capt. J. A, Liddell, V.C„ - was engaged in July, 1915, in' a long reconnaissance trip behind the 'Ger- , on ne in Watch for thou Symptoms chine. .......—„—....... lane, Kidney or Bladder affections don't develop seriouply until Nature has n do. given you plenty of warning that the o kis trouble has commenced, ected, Constant headacaes, dizziness, pains chine in the back or sides, swollen joints and ring- ankles, brick dust deposits, or painful urination should make you realize peel - bit in Lively and beyond doubt that your pside kidneys are eta of order and need t, the assietance, i hap- Nature is wise and never sends out f the *unnecessary or foolish warnings. Her t call is for help, and you must. do your etely part by bringing relief to those over, t; he burdened kidneys, or suffer the cense- f hold quences, t t had Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, e legs. Gravel, Stone in the Bladder, Neur- c algia, etc., are all caused by inflamed f 13, as or congested kidneys and the cense- b ning quent deranged kidney action. Don't 0 ke a suffer the agonies produced by these t eight diseases. Help Nature to relieve the o congestion—to heal those inflamed w sand antic kidneys and to make them strong once u more—by taking Gin Pills, akaftlaaansoja USTRIA is not a nation, not a state, not a comraonwealth, hut only a police adminis- tration. Her bureaucracy has the most ancient traditions. In no other country is there a bureaucratic regime 'with a more sinister past. The ruling classes of Austra-Hun- go.ry are German and Magyar and the majority is absolutely opposed to this oligarchy, The majority comprises ust the working classes, the farnl- ers and industrial labor. Owing to his system of government Austria- Hungery was already bankrupt be - ore the war. The monarchy was In he year before the war in the great. st financial distress. Industry and ommerce had collapsed, she had a ormidable budget, expenditures were igger than those of Great Britain, n every Austro-Hungarian inhabl- ant was an expenditure of 230 kr.; n every Briton only 110kr. That as before the war. To -day the sit- ation is absolutely desperate, The otal public debt amounts to more ban 100,000,000,000 kr. Cense- uently, if we consider that the in- erest on this debt absorbs 4,600,- 00,000 kr., every male taxpayer ust make an average annual con- ibution. of 640 kr, It is quite Im- possible that the population. of this neglected country could pay taxes of this amount. Without exaggeration it en be stated that Austria-Hungary is to -day bankrupt. Strong revolutionary forces are al- ready at work in Austria. But these forces want support from the Allies. Nothing is more discouraging than a revolution which does not succeed. Therefore the movement must be carefully prepared as it will free op- pressed nations, break the supremacy of Germany in Europe and establish democracy instead of autocracy. The peoples of Austria-Hungary do not see the stupendous treasures of Anglo-Saxon democracy, they do not see the clean and healthy Anglo- Saxon cities, the gigantic economic effort of a nation, which has no rivals in economic hietery, What they want ftre figures. They will then see that democracy is better than autocracy, that a democratic nation is patriotic and generous. Such information will be the greatest revolutionary stimu- lus for the mutinous nations of Aus- tria-Hungary. It is the chance of every lover of edom to help the nations of the al Monarchy. Remember, thirty Ilgzzs at human beings are to -day etically under the rule of Ger- ny, although they are opposed to Germans and hate them. If these ple are set free, that will be a eat deed for the cause of human rty. The world power of Ger- ny has its greatest stronghold in ascendency in the Hapsburg ent e. After the destruction of A us - tile whole world will breathe er, It will mean the real down - Of German world power. Jugo- va, Ceeeha-Slovaks, Poles will hail (lawn of their freedom, as their y feture is complete independence. - man lines, and had already'turne home when a shrapnel shell immediately beneath his airp - smashed part, ef the body of the _ chine, and shattered the pilot's Capt. Liddell fainted. The mac and feet. Being out of centre was then at, a height of seven t romptly nose-dived and fell lik perew for five thousand. feet. jladgiven up all hope," w • the observer, "The earth see rushing up to meet pfl, and I pr that our agony might not be prOl ed. I shut my eyes and waited fel final crush; when, wonder of ders, the machine began te right self.. Hardly daring to believe eyes, I looked to the pilot's seat. headlong rush through the cool must have brought him round le was making strenuous effort egs trfn /lytrlo 111.0 enemy had given U) for lest, bad epased to ehoot, we limed!' tel be toI . Then the Germane opened fire and only escaped with our lives thro the superb pilotage of Liddell, ono leg shattered and blood floe in streams. At eight thousand hp again seemed to be sinking, haptfily scrawled a note urging t9 descend. X10 read it, shook head declaedly, turned to me wit Smile on his d'rawn face, poleted tile direction of our lines, and ried on. At theee he weuld aln faint, and then recovering himeelf double his effortic, At last we w over the lines, but it seemed utte linnoesible that he should be able land the machine in hie conditi but he did. Choo,sing large gr meadow about three miles beh the trenchee, he landed as gently easily as if he had only beim up a practice flight, braukitt the Ilteell to a stop and fainted dead away.' While the French aviator, M. S gent, was flying over Douaumont March, Taubes. The emebine4gun del w 1T9h1:, 11;r:naop:ttlancakoeidinboy fylr struck by nundeocle of bullets. S gent's left. arm was injured and ni; helpleme. The next moment hie server was killed and — here cor the unexpected—his body fell a was pinned between the levers. T position was critical. The airpla was listing dengeroeely, the pet tank was pierced and the petrel w Gin Pills are the best remedy for t Kidney and Bladder troubles on the ,q market to -day. Thi e is a fact proven' e'• by hundreds of testimonials. Try them v and be sure of instant relief, For sale m everywhere at 50e a box. A sample tr box free if you write to— The National Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Ontario. U. S. residents should address Na-Dru- Oo,, Inc., 202 Main SteBuffale, N.Y. lee d for of the latest fighting type and were burst all fiown by expert men. lane, At every turn Ball, who was un- ma-hine derneath and thus at a slight dis- leg. advantage, found himself out- manoeuvred. Turn and twist as he ho u - 1, it uld, he always found one of the enemy on top -of him and another e an just ready to catch him if he turned the other way. Several times bullets rote passed within inches of him. Finally, med deciding to escape, he realized that eyed he must do something extraordinary; ong- LIO he dived toward the ground and, • the = her-. Picking (Mt large Oeld, glided into it, and landed. :won - The three enemy pilots at once my imagined that he had been shot and The forced to land, and they all glided air down and landed, either in the same and field with him or in the adjoining s to one. Then, jumping out of their machines, they ran over to Capt. Ball, us However, Ball, who had foreseen and what would happen, had kept his en - gam , p The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada -isairsimmoinimmonmimumanimmonammanmseftwai Thie Lord of Castle Niountai C Castle THE early fall had come in the mountains. Hunting parties pa- trolled the valleys still green and Untouched by treat. The lower slopes of the rislug ground were dark with spruce, brightened here and there with the lighter green of poplar and willow. Higher still the spruee forests climbed in ever narrowing tails up the water fed gulches, while here and there large patches of poplar gleaned golden yellow, for the frost was nipping things at six thousand feet, Above the timber line the grey crags towered, their highest Peaks and plateaus shining with the virgin brightness of the firet snows. In the midst of the mountains, standing alone in seeming aristocratic exclu- sion, the eoiored battlements of Castle Mountain teethed heavenward above the Weber. Castle Mountain is a freak of nature. For a hundred milts Muth there is none like it. To the north the range rime to the Arctic with no similar outcropping. East - wars to the prairies where the Dow Hirer crashes down freta the first steps Of the foothills it is not dupli- 64,ted, but westward, fifteen or twen. ty miles, there first appear signs of Similar formation. Natl. Mountain • Is igneetes rook thrust from the bowels of the, mirth by tor°. fierce beat ajPaaan mrottaa km, thrust upIn the midst of the tamer grey of send. ,ittotrato amid liniestcnie forniation of :She irk belt of the Canadian lieokiee 10ii the 04s et a sheer otselpiss Mountain in the Canadian Paeifie magnificent specimen the Reeky Mountain sheep, or bighorn, nibbled daintily at some tender lichens. A shadow flitted across his- eyes, but he paid no heed, for the Iambs that were small in the spring were now well -grown and could take care of themselves should some bold eagle try to topple one off the ledges. The big buck had no worries therefor The bears were down below fattening on berries; the wolves were in the timber getting good feed from among the partridges, rabbits and perhaps some wounded deer or moose. The precipice on which the sheep steed dropped sheer for some six hundred feet to the snow-covered rubble of the upper edges of the timber belt, stunted, Mattered trees barely eking out a precariours existence where the rock walls started to climb. Away in the valley bottord a Meek dot crawled unheeded. It wee a Cana. dian Pacific freight train laboring along from Banff to Lake Lottifie. A. man, rifle on back, crawled like fly up a ethep "chirettey"; sweat dripped from his brow, hie breath WM labored; be crept slowly up. wards, using hands and feat and fientetirees his chin, Field glaSsell had told him the splendid buck was above and he wanted a shot at the king of the peaks. At last he Molt. ed the plateau and looked. There, five hundred yards away on the fur. Chem side of a °anon, Whiek it watild take a half day to circle, steed the rpm eimtar wawa. VrailoilltAt1*1 Rockies. of concealment behind a rock until hie breathing grew normal and his strained muscles became steady, the hunter adjusted his rifle and took preliminary sight. It was late after- noon and the light was deceptive, Something struck the rock at the foot of the sheep, "whm-ee-d" off into the clear air, and then from a dis. tance came a short, sharr report. The. animal lifted.his glorious head and steed in splendid pose, very perfect nerve and muscle quiveringly ready to bunch and tauten to throw the big body to safety as soon as the source of danger was discovered. Tho hunter raised his sights a trifle, sighted a little further back, and pulled the trigger. The sheep heard no toned .of the rifle, Something struck him mid. crushed through his body; Something that sped faster' than sound. Blindly, frantically, he leaped up and out over the ehaetn. The hunter scrambled madly to the chimney and slid, relied and ran to the shale elope at the feet of the pre. ciplee, the Shale where the first new now lay thinly on the rubble, where the stunted trete shivered in the cold air; for he knew his garde IMO- lay there dear as the very rooks. And there he Nina It; its head lying up the slope, a dark blotch on the 81101V. And 14 had a Pair of horns that many a spored has writ a thousand dams te Obtain, but in %be.* L, , , II MO: 011 11111111 igialgitS211011.16.- fie Du • • giae rlloning Slowly while he was on mil we the grpend, and the moment he saw pee, ugh the .Germane get 014 Of their ma- ma will? wiles fl ew off and SO escaped. the feet wing —Wide World Magaitine, pep • gr • him CALLED THEM "HUNS." Jibe his its h a Kipling First to Recognized True P.11" .111M11.1.1•.••••••••••• in car- An inPqjiltai7yetneyr ofapae;lemesanielsn'dent as fee 1°8.1 to Ihe reason for the exclusion of fall re- Rpdyerd Kipling's poem of "The Sia. are legyeere" from the VOluine of his col- the Fly lected poems has not yet so far as teal 1° the Boaten Transcript ha e learned, on, been afigWel'ed, Thlli poem, which einead Wan a scathing arraignment of the E and ficiallnd, oneVaTs inPluesbl iisnh eodr 1 tiincis1m9,0021 inablse for Imo of working arrangement which die ane the Britiali Government entered into meo With the Genian 00Vernment: about er- lighthouses and other naval matters wor in in the North Sea. So far as the Tran- tion acro our script has observed, this poem con- pure as tains the first application of the term tho as Myr tg ths modern germane, bit Vh`i er- preel8ely the epee sense as that in Git ng which ;t is new empleyed. The pint ph- Awe geelele to have Made so deep nes an itnPressien that Although the ''' te 111 Ad PQM slumbered frera 1908 to 1914. the he the word "Hun" sprang into instant k ne and universal Anglo-Saxon use as n° they rol soon as the war broke out. "The .„ naa dds 1 ili,g4rep'F'eligiAdyeiloi4elnoU1ChltiOpfl int hg e,,?i ut hpari, ordl tit,. er work -- p1 l'Temlineon,!! and rPri ip,„ "Mandslay'i; and why it should not Unit pn hare bpen Ineillled 11 YeleMea ef —ab *O3 ni his verge isstied. subsequentlyto t. trifle eryptio 1002 the Nemad cannot say, It i a a tl ihnee: d- represents soldiers of the Boer war in its symbolism, it gilt. In the form of galley -rowers return- gree Gevroolte In the Air. ach pilot has his own mechanic, does nothing but look after his , and is usually a finished come - n in addition to being a crack halite. In truth, I never ran ss a more comical, likable, hard - king crew than the French avia- mechanics. They are mostly Parisian "gamine ,spealsing MOM extraordinary jargon, in • eveeything. but the verbs (and at them) are slang, of the most uresque sort. Quick-witted, ener- sly interested in their work, in - gent and good-natured, they are a gr 01 s t oo nc r aletsave0.1 jtheeninr otrade,Q4nalontd4 narily the Most Oily and ttndlg- cl of n'ten, steps out of the squad, office arrayed in a superb blue orm, orange tabs on his collar, rrerlike tan belt about his waist aveu, shorn, shining with clean - a, pufilng an expensive -looking, banded cigar. Is it fancy—or is e a slight condescension in his ting? Well, it is natural--ygn never hope to look n superbly thly, a, field marshal, Atlantis, Food Books Criticized. 't your life extremely fiat thout nothing whatever to gruns- le at?" lbert's lines are very applicable he case of the Ministry of Food its critics in Great Britain. So is there cause to grumble that critics have had to fall back up - he makeup of the new ration s for a subject, th housewives and traders corn - that the new book is more sy than the cards, and that the "sed advantage of haying the ns for the various foods col- d together under one cover is than counter -balanced by the vantages which have arisen in etkibnusiehers, who in future have turn their coupons for ehecking, hilly complain of the time wen - In turning over the leaves of the and cutting out the coupons. contrast this with the ease with h several cards could be placed ver the other and the coupons off at once, e fact that the coupons in the are not perforated being a die- tage• has already. been dealt by the Ministry, who promise rated leaves in the next book, e quality of the paper, which is and hardly likely to stand the and tear of four months usage, ho system of binding the books be dealt with before the next if proved necessary for effective NOTICE TO CREDITORS running out. With his one eou hand Sergent dieellgaged his de comrade. Then he dyed Bolen v ticaily, resuming a nOrMal positi within about three illindred feet fro the ground. An amazing instance df the u expected happening at the front en ed a French and a German pil landing together geed Wiping ov their unusual adventure. Tills w the way of it, The Frenchman a the German were circling .and dippi for battle position, Seddenly t French pilot, thinking he had the vantage, charged hie enemy from t rear. But the Gore= did not swer sufficiently and the left wing of t lereneli machine struck the righ hand struts of the Gentian. The co lision caused the French airplane spin round violently until its ta whizzed between the wings of th German --and stuck. Apparently being too busy—or pe haps too astonished to shoot each other, the opponents spiralis side by side in a close embrac ultimately crashing into the bough of seine trees, Neither pilot was hur so they clambered out, looked at eac other—and laughed heartily! The as they were behind the French line the German was reminded that h war, a prisoner. • Some of the exploits of the lat. Capt. Ball, V.C., were of an astound ing nal ore. He was only ninetee when he was killed, and for long he) the record among British aviators having "downed" forty-three Boch maehines. 'Upon one occasion he had. gon 501110 twenty miles across the enem linos, when he encountered two o their machincs, Without hesitatior he attacked them and fought then until his ammunition had von out The two enomy planes had apparent ly had eneup,11 and seized this oppor tunity to escape by diving down to the ground. 3alieves tench disgusted at this and eine( ied six rounds froth his re volver itt the two diving aeroplanes Ile then seized a piece ef paper and a pencil which he had With him and wrote out a challenge for the sam two machines to Meet him at th same Peet the next day, At the appointed time Ball turned up at the rendezVous, and a few min ot Ing from sea battles, and finding can er weillSelres compelled by their com- like manders row it, epmpany with gild Mau enemies whom they despise. nli4e Theysang; "What reckoning do ye eion d' An4cleesteer' her by what star. he If we come unscathed through the ve Southern deep ha To be wrecked on a Baltic bar? Gi to t Last night ye swore our voyage was and 1- done, little to But seaward stili we go; And.yo tell us now of a secret vow the Te have made with an open foe: on t book That we must lie off a lightless coast And haul and back and veer Bo r- At the will of the breed that have plain at wronged ps most alum d For a year and a year and a year. su.pp e, The dead they mocked are scarcely coupo celd; lecte t, Our wounds are bleeding yet; h And ye tell us now that our strength dMisoarde la sold re To help them press for a debt! opera 'Neath all the flags of all mankind Th o That use upon the seas to re Was there no other fleet to find, e That ye strike hands with these? esiee n On Mill rate to fall, d What brooding judgment let ye loose - Of evil times that men should choose oTbookpnlheeedyo , To pick the worst of all; Y 0 With the Goth and the shameless booTkhs With a cheated crew to league anew O'er half the world to run Huai" at'svo hdt :rnial o In sight of peace from the narrow Mae, The little German bargain had but with 1 a brief career, and it is probable that nerfo this diatribe had much to do with Th its going crosswise. thin ' Another poem of Kipling's which wear deal notappear in his collected and t works Is his charming "Gipsy Trail." Will It begins: issue use. - The white moth to the closing bine, The bee to the opened clover. And the Gipsy blood to the Gipsy blood Ever the wide world over, 0 Evertithe widetiwgrled ever, bass, ing any Natio 6 Ove theWorldatted under' the world ;ehrGutter! tractor, And back at the last to you. thirteen quested The last twO etanzas Wild attaa stretim take tuitioe that after the said lett utes laler the same two enemy Ina chines approttehed him from the. east Ire flew toward them to engage in it light, lett at that moment three more of the onemy came down from the sky and iitiacked him. It 'vas a care - laid trap and he bad fallen into fully It unseepretiugly. The three enemy machines that had atteeknd him from behind were e is hereby given that all persons hay - claims against the estate of Frank dee, late of the city of Sarnia, Ottn• deceased, who died on or about the th day of July, A. D. 1918, are re to deliver or send to the undersigned, ent of their claims on or before the h day 01 00tober, A. B. 1918• ed date the Exeontorti will proceed tO OlaiMs they shall MA then have bad lirat tne time of am* distribablot. this tenth day Of September A, b, Cowan, TOWers 8C ran, Solicitors ler the xoutire, llama leekhere aud Tbomes arse* be at the tip of th six e t tongue: mention e 'Wanderer's And The Wild hawk to the wind-eiWept sky, tilitevibt The deer to the wholesome weld. whieh t And the heart ef a man to the heart of tece ea * mate, pari. tbe As it was in the days of old. Wenn or The heart Of a Mtn to the heart of a bled nude-- 19 ft, to the estate amongst the parting en - In regard Only to the claim of hor then shall have notice, and that 11 not be Relief for the eget() or any reef to any person or persons Of whom Light ot M3r tent*, be neett Morning watts et the end of the World. A.ed use world is all at ear testi Page Pive 11 Iiii11110111011NlaiNipoililt 111 11 1 1111 1114111;.'11 The Lungs of Your Range good range should do; Zondotf $t johe,N.. 1 1 1 ,1 There is no flue sys- tem just like that of the Pandora Range. Before you buy a range learn about the Pandora method of heat distribution —it is the secret of good baldng and of every kind of good work a It le the lung system of the range. FOR SALE 13Y R R MOONEY FICCialYS andora Range Toronto Montreal Hamilton Calgary Whitechurch Miss Margaret I1. Gillies of Toronto was home for Thanksgiving. Mre. Thomas Wilson of Wingham spent the weekend at the home of her son, Mr. James Wilson. Mr, John Waddell held a successful auction sale of cattle on Tuesday last. Miss Lillian Longman attended the Teachers' Convention in Goderich last week. Mr. Alex, Kennedy of Guelph was home over Sunday. Miss Edythe Peddle is holidaying with friends in Hamilton, Centralia and Hn. sail. Rev. Mr. Thyne of Palmerston preached in the Presbyterian church on Sunday. There was no service in the Methodist. church on account of Bethel anniversary. The guild leader on Sunday was Miss Lily Patterson. Next Sunday's leader is Mr. Fred Davidson. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kennedy of 2nd con. of Kinloss were notified last week that thtir second eon, Corp. John J. Kennedy, had been wounded. It is over three years since he left Canada. The pupils of No. 10 school had three holidays last week on account of Wing - ham Pair and the Teachers' Convention. Miss Eva Brown of Lucknow spent Sunday with her friend, Miss M. Gillie. Mr. J. Moore of Toronto spent the holi- day at the home of his brother, Mr. Ar- thur Moore, Mr. Carl Lott spent Thanksgiving with relatives in Ripley. Belmore Miss A. M, Bax, Ripley, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Lowry. Misa Bessie Gowdy has returned home from the West after visiting her sisler, Mrs. Jas. Doig. Dr, Jas. Mulvey has returned irons overseas and called on old friends here Winnipeg' dmonton Vancouver Caskatoon so before going to Winnipeg wheie he is to report for duty. While Mr. and Mrs. Mundell, Boundary, were going to Witigham their horse took fright at an auto. Both were thrown out and Mrs. Mundell received a broken arm. The funeral of the late David Galloway was largely attended on Wednesday af- ternoon. Mrs. Seamen, Listowel, spent the week' with her mother, Mrs. 'I'. Richardson, who accompanied her home. Mr. S. Richardson spent the weekend with friends here. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Livingstone, Mon-. crieff, spent a few days with friends here. Mr. Carter McKee of Galt spent the weekend with uis parents here. Mr. and Mrs, Otto Johann vieited &lens in Hanover, on Sunday. Miss E. McKee attended the teachers' convention at Southampton, last week. Mr. W. B. Edwards is confined to the house with the cold. Mrs. Geo. Edwards of Millbank„ spent Thanksgiving with his brother W. B. Eywards. . Services are withdrawn in the Media. dist church next Sunday on account of the anniversary services in Wroxeter. • Mrs. M. J. Law of Toronto, is visiting - her sister Mrs,. R. Nickle. Grey The family of Angus Brown, 14 cone who have been very ill we are pleased to state are getting better. J. D. McEwen, merchant of Mencrieff; has disposed of his stock to Curtis Rath - well. We have not learned what Mr, McEwen intends doing. Mr. and Mrs: Wm. Hollenbeck visited at Wiegham. MrseWeben, 12 con., who has been very ill is not improving as fast as her many friends would like to see. • 1 ,1 Following the sun with Vision, for a moment, those far off Ports beyond the trackless seas— From Arctic ice, to the torrid lands beneath the Southern Cross— From towns tucked in the mountains, to the busy river's mouth WRIGLEY'S is there! There, because men find comfort and refreshment In its continued use. Because of its benefits and because The Flavour Lasts! "After Even; Meal" MADE IN CANADA SEALED TIGHT— KEPT MAT • ..