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The Wingham Advance, 1919-01-23, Page 4
'ri-iE WING 1 ailed ziitih rn'3 iM ft, Jolter JoeNT, Peeprietor A, (t. S!xrTlt. lege ttis(ep easel Tr: s;l Wee Tine.1 Far i Se 1 2 3 I 4 6 & 7i 12 13. 14115 10 17 IS 19 20 121 ' x' 1 23.1 24 25 20 27 , 28 I 2 30 ; 31 TI3URSZ7AY, JAN. 23rd, 1010. TURNBERRY COUNCIL j���llli►ltl,�,a,.sobf,„1110011111 it4.. VANQUISBEDI Dethroned, disgraced, and lowed hee, neath the hate Of God and amara the war -lord flees • itt last. His reign of lust his quest for nicht is past, Ile but awaits his sentence and hip, fattt. That monster, in whose heart was nought but hell, Whose very soul reeked murder and as sault, !las learned at last his tyranny must halt, That crimes must cease, of which no pert can tell. - Four years of blood and carnage, years of pain, Have come from his ambition anis his lust, 4 Till now defeated, vanquished, cease be must Nor can he win his people's faith again. Downtrodden, beaten, humbled to the earth, The curses of the world alone, his share, Ile well may feel the anguish of despair•, And curse the very day that gave him birth. s. What fate awaits this demon? Who can say? The thousands stain cry out for von- geance now To make them suffer as have they, but how? What sentence must he passed on him to. day? Humiliation and defeat and woe, Combine their forces in the Kaiser's Be Sure to Get IViinutee of council meeting was held Jan. 13th, 1919. Ali the members pre- • sent viz.,,Jne. T. ffett, Reeve: James Por ter. J. J Moffztt, J. L Scott and W. A. Mines, emincillors An the members signed their declaration of' Qualification and of office. 'Minutes (1f last reguluu meeting, nomination and election were read ,and adopted in motion of W. A. blitzes and J. J. Moffatt. As the Town ship Hall was sold the council will meet in the House owned by Mr John Brooks, The following by-laws were passed Ng.' 1••'-3. Porter and J. J. Moffatt ap-. pointing the whole council Road Com- missioners. No. 2-•-'W..A Mines, and J, J. Moffatt appointing R. Black and B Cruikshanks, auditors. No. 3-•-W, A. Mines and J. Porter appointing W. S. King, assessor. No. 4---3. I. Scott and J, J. Moffatt appointing T. it. Powell mem- ber of the Board of I'lealth. The Audi- tors will meet at Treasurer's office on Jan. 23rd at 10 a. in. The accounts for this month will be settled at the meeting in Feb. Next meeting of the council will be held in Bluevale on Monday, Feb. 17th at 1 p. m P. Powell Clerk. The Use of Cigarettes .A little magazine of recent issue con- tains two significant items regarding the use of. cigarettes, which suggest a careful consideration of the same: The first, was, "No boys who use cigar- ettes'or that have been addicted to the use of cigarettes will be employed by the - Chicago Post -Office," and the secona is like unto it, viz., "The use of cigarettes hate been made a her to employment on the Rock Island tines of Railways." What is the significance of this action? What is the practical inference to be drawn from these restrictions? Is there a scientific and moral•basis for such regu lationse---• '- Scientifically, it has been proven that the effect of cigarette'smoking, especially in the case of the young, is to retard phys. ical growth, effect mental activity and vitiate the capacityfor .work and develop- ment. Morally, it ,has been. shown that the effect of this habit is to deaden the con- science, weaken the will .power and pervert the mind -in many cases leading so far as to develop criminal tendencies and pray cites PxaGticaily, it unfits for doing the hjgh- er grades of work and the better things of fife; •and is thus a menace to the best in- terests of the user arid ,the' eifiployer, of those who use cigarettes, and the action above mentioned is but inline with that being taken by the leadingg institutions and industries of the day. It is an object lesson. that boys will do well to observe, study and apply. The fact Veit occasionally a person may use Cigarettes without seeming ill effects isnot ' ail argument in favor of their use. All ob- servation and experience goes to prove the ,opposite, and that such cases are the exception and pat the rule. -Canadian Boy Builder; Wroxeter The Annual meeting of the Wroxeter Rural Telephone Co, will be held on Wednesday Jan. .22nd, • This company • • has been in business • for ten years and now has a net debt of only $189.00 with asii seta bf $15;000 and has only charged 10 ye; year for a service second to none. Une HR Overcame* Uiieeusnese, Cc:tstipa- lion, mics Headache. Quickly. Ido Griping er Pain, Oaearanteed. The oredne of dfyestion, assimila- tion and •elimination --the stomach, liver and bower. -are closely allied, arid the proper action of any of these 'organs is largely dependent upon he correct functioning of all the others. "Whipping" your liver into action witI1 calomel or forcing your bowels with irritating laxatives or strong cathartics is o, ;teat mistake. A. bet- ter s;tfer plan is strengthening and toning the 'Whole digestive and climino,- tive system *with Nature's Remedy ©'which brinImmediatereief but last- ing benefit. It acts on the stomach, iivei', bowels and -i e L dney.., improves -digestion and asshnilation, overcomes biliou ne,: corrects constipation and eraciily relieves sick headache. Get your system thoroughly cleansed and purified for once; stomach, liver rind bowels r I• t " together Yler in vig- orous OraIIS 1 � harmony, yr tl You will not a 9h vc to take modlefne every day -just take one iVl? Tablet occasionally to keep your syntctn in good condition and al- ways feel your beat, Remember- It ie raster anti e1L:1 ,cr to keep well .than it is to get well. Geta 25e box and try it *vtt,t the understanding tint it must give you •*rcater reefer end benefit than anY ben (1; or liver, 3ties1le}n(t you ever used or no nay. Nature's Remedy (NR Ial,1 t.) !s tiYd, guarantee,' and :commended by your druggist, J. Welton McKibben Wingharn, ilf i!/ of Ari- fR" Better than Pilis.Ii~1' A For Liver ' Ills. 1 25c Boy W. R. ELGIE D. D. !}., L. D. S. let Honor graduate of the Royal College of Rental Stnec ,ne ofontatiu. Honer grad nate tf University (.►f;,i'oronto Faculty of radars tweet It. E. Ideal at Cies Peri HE wax *wrapped sealed package with WRIGLEY'S upon it is a guar- antee of quality. The largest chewing- gum factories fro the world ---the largest selling gum in the world: that is what WRIGLEY'S means. 8EAI,E© TIGHT KEPT RIGHT! Made In Canada fall But can these things alone suffice for all The suffering his countless victims know? Nay! Nay! The voices of God alone can say The punishment of Wilhelm, King of Blood, And for the crimson stream that gory flood, On Flanders field the Kaiser soon must pay. . For babes and women murdered or defiled For cold relentless war on human kind; These things and more full reckoning .must find. The curse of wary. on which the denten 47 V llhI 1 smiled! The Flavour Lasts! 125 lbs`, fGUNNS 1. r t1tO 13.43 _ Regtstratiotr Re. 102.3 Fertnizeur Guaranteed Analysis Ammon,* • Phosphoric Acrid Potusfi . . Y"f+ GUNNS LTD. t � WEST TORONTO ' 1, i1 Gunn's Fertilizer lias stood the test. have used it cannot be persuaded makes. Order now for spring deiiver.•'We com- pete etc with all competitors. p Those who to use other E. R. HARRISON, Mgr. o Mr. of Winghain Branch. 4** *A' **•*'***'***k********** 4* ***le* **.t ** k* x,. ** **** to e< 44 44 4, 4 C OMMEI?cIAL PkIN TIN G Leave your order with ua when in need LiiTTIli1 HEADS MOTE HEADS HILL II A -D S IITA'PEIVIENTS i N1113L0PlgS ' POSTERS CATALOGUES CALLING CARDS. WEDDING STATIONERY CIRCULARS. Or Anything you may require In the printing line. Prier THE ADVANCE Pllolvti reg is' (?ur , `obby and Sorel -alive 13u,si"tres8, V "r o * 44 k • • * • 4 For heroes sleeping 'neath a foreign sky, Whose lives were freely on the altar laid: To down the beast for these we most be ` paid, H The un must pay, who once sought to U defy! Dethroned; disgraced, despised with bitter hate Of God and man the warlord stands alone A king of nought but death, whose blood -red throne Has fallen to the dust -behold his fate! AUBREY S, WILLIAMSON, Toronto. Nov. 12, Mr. Williamson is only 19 years of age and is a nephew of Mr. J. W. Beattie, Brunswick Hotel. Salem Ed. Bennett's auction sale of sto,.k brought good prices, The, 13'7 -young hogs which he ' purchased in Winnipeg from C. C. Munro, sold for $3,330, an av- erage of $25 each, The total amount realized from the sale was $1050. T. R. Bennett was the auctioneer. Fred McIntosh has exchanged his farm on the B line, Howick, for one out West, John Pringle of Wingham is the nem own- er, . . Mrs. G Barton was called to Goderi'h, on Saturday owing to the serious illness ;li- nes of her daughter, Mrs, Jim McEwen. Wrik THE DOUBLE TRACK ROUTE Between MONTREAL N RCA L TORONTO DETROIT and CHICAGO Unexcelled dining car service Sleeping cars on Night Trains rains and Parlor Cat's on principal Day Trains. • Fulinforma' nforms' ion from any Grand Trunk Ticket Agent, or C B Horning, District. Passenger Agent, Toronto. W. F. Burg - man Agent. Phone S0. THE BEST YET rr-- Fine 100 acre farm, with first class buildings, good fences,well watered, rural mail, telephone, school 40 roads away. Immediate possession, Don't miss it, Priee4S,700, half cash. Victory Bonds bought and sold at Toronto prices, Ritchie & Cosens Insurance and Real Estate W inghasn, Ontario U4 o*t Assasins I,ead, But History : t: ill.lnbers yy 444,,y,Their Iniz4kiiAms Recor'dsA MONcf third' ll:trtteq which, must Survive the Wax and remain forever Isla a part of Ito history and "(character, tour may be selected from Vliet not of 160 +t erman submarine eofeimantlers killed or captured by our naval forces which was receenlIy made pub- lic, To them, says the London Daily Telegraph, is inwttrs'd ruelt an im- mortality as perhaps a German naval officer may desire. Pivot in that category, comes the loan who placed upon submarine warfare its crown Of supreme aeh}evc met=Fat, wlio fixed for- ever its detracler and repute by the torpedoing of the Lulir;uiia. He was !Captain-I,toutena111 chwieger, -com- manding 11-20, and later U-88, :[•Ie lead entered the na-vy in 1903, and ra,telted, therefore, the summit Oil leis" career, the gr( uta s1. murder the world has known, before lie was 3fi; it was only in Nue ember last -year that a mine in the a;.trrth. Sea put an end to his memories and to 1118, pure limes. . it now appears that his sullrene deed was not of his own initiating; he was selected by bet superiors as .a suitable officer to carry out a plan devised arid prepared as a port of the deliberate policy of the. German Ad- miralty—that is to say, of the Ger- man government. According to the evidence wltielt is available, Itis sue- eess appalled hint rather than other- wise; the world's outery of horror was audible even lei Berlin, and upon his rattail there lett .thawed himself little-•-.ponnlbly by order of .his su- periors. EY his reward. was atealth- ily conferred; it took the form of the Order of the IIonse of Hohenzollern, the Raiser's personal clecoratiah, tirtrtfitog oil and air; lam survivors reties tete the surface'. The otiseer who torpedoed the NW* estas in Mach of 1;t 1t; .van Cf'e.'rleut• rient-xur See ti, r',, • i 1'unikoci wn, eou.utaudiztg Uel -'a. lir ons younger than the othcer" • ; '•t':i•tod above, leaving *ntered 'c . l,uvy only in 1e08, but he h'(' had time, in his brief sei•vie e, to 1 •i :ur' kints'9f the Iron (:rosy or Line t bu's and the Corder of the Hoe,: • • f rtcilu:nxvllern of the Third Clans lie ettert and WAS . given con/Maud rat tile U13-60 and wart lost to, his co.untey in June, 1917, when a trawler sighted the jumping wires of a partially submerged sub- marine, which was proeeeding at four 4r five knots. The trawler immedi- ately headed for the submarine, which diaappeared below the surface of tire" water. A. depth bomb was dropped and found itsmark, for a series of heavy explosions followed, one in particular causing an upheaval" three times the height of the, others. In the nioanwltile -other trawlers had joined in the fray and,had dropped depth bomb charges. Then there was a great silence; not a sound was heard by the eager listeners on the trawlers, batt a plass of oil on the surface bore witness to tile fa,et that tete submarine had. met the doom that she richly deserved, These aro but four in drat long and growing list of names that shall endure unfergotten as long as the war is remembered, To titozn there has yet to be added that other list, the names of the submarine com- manders—such an he who sank the hospital ship Llttndovery .Castle and murdered the Canadian nurses, and the'v eu. in the boat—who Are yet ing. For all of them, the fame they sought is secure. Yout.MQney is Safe in WarSavings Stamp. Buy now for $4,00 Self lst° day of 1924 f ;r $ 5.00 Government Security Your W-S.S. can be registered to secure you agaliatst loss theft,. by reft, -i i re or otherwise.. Thrift Stamps cost 25 cents each. Sixteen. on a Thrift Card are" exchangeable for one War -Savings Stamp. MORA,T,E, Explanation Given of the lttttch-used Word, Toward the close of the wai' a new word began to come to. the front in all discussions of tire struggle. The word was "morale." The term is dis- cussed by William Ernest Hocking in the Atlantic Monthly. Pointing out that "It is seldom physical force that decides a long .war," he says: "Perhaps the simplest way of ex- platning the meaning of morale is to jay that what 'condition' is to the athlete's body, morale is to the mind. >dorale is condition; good morale is ;nod condition of the inner man: it z the state of will in which you can let most from the machinery, deliver lows with the greatest effect, take - lows with the ieast depression, and 201d out for the longest time. It is both fighting power and staying pow- er, and strength to resist the mental infections which fear, discourage- ment and fatigue bring with them -- such as eagerness for any kind of peace if only it gives momentary re- lief, or the irritability that sees large the defects in one's own side until e they seem more importatrt than the need of defeating the enemy. And it is the perpetual ability to come back. "From this it follows that good morale is not the same as good spirits or enthusiasm It is anything but the cheerful optimism of early horning, or the tendency to be jubilant at every victory. it has nothing in eor- iiiont with the emotionalism dwelt on by psychologists of the 'crowd: Itis hardly to be discovered iii the early stages of war. Its most. searching test is found in the question, How does war -weariness affect you? "No one going from America e ca to" Europe in the Last year could fail to notice the wide difference between. the hinds of nations long at war and that of a nation just entering; Over there, 'crowd -psychology' had spent itself. There was little lime, waving; the common purveyors of music were not everywhere playing (or allowed to play) the national airs. If, in some Parisian cinema, the 'Marsell- laise' was given, nobody stood or sang. The reports of atrocities rous- ed little visible anger or even taik— they were taken for granted. In short, the simpler emotions had been worn out, or rather, had resolved themselves into clear connections be- tween knowledge and action. The people had found the mental gait that can be held indefinitely. Even a great advance finds them on their guard against too .ouch joy. As the news from the second victory of the Marne begins to conte in, we find this despatch: - "'Paris refrains front exultation.' "And in the trenches the same is true in even greater degree. All the bravado and illusion of war are gone, also all the nervous revulsion; and in their places a grimly reliable re- source of energy lutld in instant, al - host mechanical readiness, to do what is necessary. The hazards which it is useless to speculate about, the miseries, delays,• tedinnIs,. casualties, Have Lost their exclamatory value and have fallen intothe sullen routine of the day's work. Here it is that mo- rale begins to show in its more vital clirrtensions. Here the substantial dif- ferences between man and man, and iwtween side and side, begin to ap- ear tis they can never appear in raining camp." IKAPTAIN-1AEV-e. SCi*1ViEtER. U-20 finished obscurely; she strand- ed in a fog on the Danish coast in November, 1916, and was blown up by her own crew. A year later Schwieger, riow •in commend of U-88, was groping submerged through a minefield in company with another U-boat. The crew of the second sub- marine suddenly heard an ekplosion and felt the jar' of it in their awn vessel.' They tried with their special signaling devices to get into come lnunication with 11-88, but failed, and rete never returned to her base. The officer who sank the Belgian. Prince on July 81, 1917, coelected her crew on the deck of his su'1 marine and then submerged was Kapitan-Lieutenant Paul Wagenfuhr, corzlzzeanding 11-44. He was a tiftle older than Scltweiger, having entered the service in 1900; the quality of his work and his sueeesses had been recogzitzed by the Order of the Red Eagle (Rater Adler) and the Hohnit- zollern Order with Swords; but a swift •retr•ibution was at }rand. While returning from the very cruise dur- ing which he sank the Belgian Prince he encountered a ship white' could fight back. A British destroyer saw Mini on the surface, headed for him at top speed, and meanwhile opened fire with every gun that would bear. The submarine was bbviously hit at once, for she failed to submerge in. time, and the destroyer sm t seeded in ra nuniug. . 11. is claimed in Gertnil.ny for rfapi- tan-Lient.enant Rudolf Schneider, of U-87, that he sank Itis Majesty's ship Formidable and destroyed altogether 130,000 tans of merchant shipping; the claims do not. specify the number of defeneele ss lives that were de- stroyed with the tonnage. One of the metes sunk was the steamship Ara- hie. Although at this time, Germany had not arrogated to herself the rightto sink all vessels at sight, tItp Arabic was torpedoed and sunk with- out any warning. There were some 400 0on board at the tune, but, thanks to the admirable discipline which prevailed, only about one-tenth of this number was lost. At October ttf 1$17 Schneider wee washed over- board from the •t ;. of his prat and drowned, alt : e in hex next cruise the subznai ('t a British Patrol boat in the let i Sea and was destroyed. It wa , ;stt • s Day; she saw her enetne . fie and su merged to escape. e 't • patrol boat, one of those antie eiteerine ships, wentto work actor dizt to t ze rules oflr new e 'x le z l . reef depth g h Il . a_ charges were let go over end around the spot. where 11.87 hod vanished; their terrific explosians, tt•urlemitting themselves undiminished through the incompressible medium of the water, tore her delicate electrio 111,6. eizanit,zn to pieces and forced her to the surface. The gulte above were Wtititr;;, but there Was little need for them, for the patrol boat bt,re down on her at racing speed., 1'..t'•ntt•d her ur+lidtti,il,; t;it}t a stent lila' art axe - h,;,, and eut her in half. ;11t; sank, • DRUGLESS H Y MCMAN CHIROPRACTIC Chiropractic Drugless healing accur- ately locates and removes the cause of disease. allowing nature to restore health. J. A. FOX D.C... D.O. (jkteortttty Ir,lectric•ity ,Member Drugless Physicians Aisteia.. ttott of Canada --Phone 181- n A House That ,.wS' s g Among the many strange ngs ball•til„" ':t India one of the most envious is i i.ouse which actually tinge. I:xeeit(. ''or its extraordinary exterior decoro • }vias, it is, to all appearances. eo ,:;t stent from other buildings in ti1:e rizlierbood, but as the wind ;Weeps round its niches and eavea. a V(•t'y curious singing noise is emitted, �, hiclt can be beard fordis- tance some dis tance down the street. For a long time the 21101410 remain- ed e. mystery, but at last an engineer sole h solved the puzzle. He discovered that the sound was t * •t Caused bythe ma- terial terial •with which the house was befit-- a porous Cork stone, and the wind, blowing through the little holes, was the cause of the music, The buiiding is known as the Palaeo of the Winds, and is situated at Ge'ypore.• i1-13118. N.:tier izrti a Picnic-bttiltter. Areortiing to a B1'itish scientist, •• hi for weight, Macaroni is as bit' a fic:nit-building food as beef , ; r4titcton, Gentian Deeerterba Oetalwiay . Vasey dramatic was it Germen 'Soll- dier'b flight across the Geri*its fron- tier into Switzerland it few day* ago. The than kept the German sentrte5 en- gaged in a Tang conversation, Wad *then he eorieidered the: oliilortune moment had arrived be suddenly gave one of the sentrietf it terrific blow In the tate and threw pepper in the tea* of the ethers. Ey the time the mel' bad kstthered their scattered tienNeft tootle, 'r the deserter ware already ole riTttrtf !on whence he waved them a Joy y11 SOLD WHERE YOU SEE This SIGN 18 'i ISARD'S. :, STOCK REDUCING SALE I January is stock taking niontht'and in `°order to v. reduce our heavystock of Winteroffer 1r goods, we Big Bargains in seasonable goods. 4, LADIES" WEAR STORE Cut prices, on Fur Coats, Fur Collared' -Coats, Ladies', Mis- ses and Children's %, . Winter Coats. All kitrtls of Furs, Stoles and Sets. Ali sizes in Sweater Coats and Pullovers. Special - ,,y� pretsices. woollon Blan- b 4, 4 MEN'S WEAR STORE Men's and Boys' Winter Wear at Money Saving Prices. Men's Overcoats, Boys' Overcoats, Men's Ftt r Coats and Fur lined Coats, Fur Collared Coats, Men's and Boys' Sweaters did Pullovers, Men's Fur Caps, Men's Suits, soys''suits„heavy winter Underwear, Highest Prices for Farm Produce H. E. ISARD & Co. 4 4. 4 4 4, 4 4 4, 4 4, t ,rif •t( r. . S 'M 4144444 4&�� MJFACTJON Has been responsible for the growth of our business. Let us prove this to you, we have to others, ask them. Try us for overhauling this winter. Axles and oversize piston rings made to order. Electric work and wiring a specialty. We have the machinery to help els out on our re- pair work, hidependentuarage ANS MACHINE SHOP Mersey, Proprietor. Phone 84