HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1919-06-12, Page 4Oat
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A. G. SMITH, Editor and Prop,
1 :TUNE 1919
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. THURSDAY, JUNE 12th, 1919.
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%hands? lints xi 1011
•ONLY A CAT, SOT!
• (Toronto Times.)
A $5,000 Persian cat, surrounded by
American Beauty roses, is lying itt st ate
in a cozy bedroom on the second floor of
the Prince •George hotel, Close by sits
• Mrs. W. Kelly, a guest, who declures she
will never forgive herself .for having left
the bedroom door open. • To ehat little
act Bele ettribtttes her Present sorrow and
••the death of Persian,"Billy," who crashed
e• through the fanlight, fell three storeys
and expired on the 'rotunda floor. The
%' • `.1" euldicle theory ie net taken seriously.
• " The tragedy occurred about two o'clock,
10 ::44./1111,PlOehing, -es near as the night clerk
eta asmnreinernber; Hewes awakened by a cry
'':'-univafently. of a child, followed by a whiz-
ndise and a-tlittd: By the time he
is Properlyawakened little ")3illy" was
_kicking hiseast against a cuspidor. The
• hotel detective, who investigated the ease,
•" believesthat "Bine became dizzy with
the heat end sought a bit of fresh air.
• lie climbed up on the glass dome, it is be-
lieved, and hia tiny feet soon found an un.
secure fanlight which gave way and threw
• • the Persian guest to the floor. Mrs. ICele
ly when notified fainted. ,
The funeral will...take place to -day, Mrs.
•e Kelly will convey William in her Packard
: gar to the Woodbine: Race Track, where
; he ;has been •a regular visitor. Some
e." where on the green sward a hole will be
„ opetteci and "Billy" --interred The Amer-
, . ican Beauty roses, bought this morning,
. will adorn the littleigrave and a sorrowful
• •wornan will retail to the cold gray facts
.teftife once more. •.•
...•••••mariprommomm.goommoro•
• A shooting accident took place at the
• ,t)ciderieb Agricultural Park, 'Saturday
• morning, but fortunately the result wss
.not so serious as it might easily have been
•Version's of thenffa.ir differ, but a bullet in
• the hand af Harvey Griffith, the twelve-
year.old son of Mr, and Mrs. Charles
Griffith, establishes the . principal fact.
-The bullet came feoin .an'bid fashioned 22
;.calibei-revolver in the hands of Willie
Longmire, a boy a few years, older than
Griffith . It is said the boys were exam-
• ining the revolver When it went off enter-
' ng Griffith's right hand below the thumb
• and passing up into the. wrist, where it
• Still remains, The shooting was accident-
al, but some action may be. taken as a
warning.agaiest the carrying of fire arms.
-
"••••••••••••••••
1,EIVIONS WHITEN AND
What Is Real Value
Von ean bny it 1:our Cyliuder 5 Passenger Motor Car at a lower
price than the Dort.
Olt cannot afford a ear less good than the Dort.
Von de,not want servive less complete.
Mitasure the service and satisfaction it gives you.
Judge the power and quietness of its motor, the size and comfort of
its body, the so inehes canteleaver springs mean easy riding. Its .eentip..
Merit and the years of service you get from it,
• All these things the Dort gives yen abundantly.
As well as genuine service from the man yon 'tiny as is not so with
some other far called perliare who will promise you everything and give
your nothing,
full.line of parts for Dort Cars always kept in steek in ease you
do ueed.anything,
Buy a Dort and elimivate your troubles.
E. MERKLEY & SON, Agents.
Phone 84 WING -HAM, ONT. Box 6z ••
East Wawanosh Council
Council met on May 26th as a Court of
Revision on the Assessment Roll with all
.members present. The following appeals
were dealt with as fellows. James Laid,
law complained of being assessed too
high oe a lot ie Whiteehurch, assessment
on this let lowered $100 Archie Rad-
ford Con, 5 and Wm, Fear, Cost. 4, _also
stated.that they deemed themselves over
assessed. These assessments were re.
-aimed $150 and $200 respectively.
Wm, J. Cnrrie, Wm. Nixon, Robert
Thampsen, .eaeh had a dog struck off,
while Robert Mowbray was ordered to be
assessed for a dog, •
.-There being no further businees in this
connection, it was moved by Mr. Buell
anan seconded by Mr. Irwin that the
Court of Revision be now closed and that
the assessment roll as now revised with
these changes be the Assessment Roll for
the present year. Council resumed, and
-• ,• • BEAUTIFY THE STUN
this beauty lotion cheaply for your
....••
face, flea, arms and hands.
At the cost of a small jar of • ordinary
•cold cream one can prepare a full quar-
ter' pint of the most wonderful lemon
•' skin softener and complexion beautifier,
by squeezing -the juice of two fresh letn-
• • ons into a bottle containing three ounces
•' ,r • of orchard white. Care should be taken
'•• ' •• to Strain the juice through a fine cloth
sO no lemoti pulp gets in, then this lo -
'doh will .keep fresh for months. Every
• woman knows that lemon juice is used
•to 'bleach and remove such blemishes as
• freekles, eallowness and tan mid is
' the ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier.,
•'just try it I Get three ounces of Qr-
&aril White at aty drug store and two
lemons from: the grocer and make up a
'quarter 'pint of this sweetly fragrant
lemon lotion and massage it daily into
' • the face, melt, arms and hands. It is
' inarvelous to smootheu rough, red
• hands.
illigON COUNTY COUNCIL
May Impottant Matters Beloit Dealt
with at .luee_Sessien
The County council convened on Toes,
day afternoon for the regular jene session
The council room was at torrid heat, and
the members sat in their shirt sleeves and
tried to be as comfortable ae was possible.
AU the members were in attendance.
The Warden, Mr. J. N. Campbell of
East VVawanosh in his opening remarks
spoke of several important Matters that
would come before the council at this
session. One was the question of an ire4
creased expenditure for better juespital
accommodation in this county. The Y.
M. C. A. would ask for the continuation
of the grant voted last year. The village
of Exeter were asking that it be constitu-
ted a high school d strict, There was a
question as to a union school section made
up from portions of Millet and Tucker -
smith. The teachers of the county would
make representations regarding county
improvement. The matter of construct-
ing a new bridge at Grand Bend would
ccme up, and other ;natters were the
grant to the Navy League, equalization
bylaws, and special grants, The Warden
urged that all these matters be given due
consideration and that the members Co-
operate heartily in transacting the busi-
ness expediously and carefully. While
the war was on the council without hesi-
tation voted any sum that was necessary
for carrying on matters in connection
with the war, now that the war was over
it would be necessary that no grants be
inade without due consideration.
The Warden spelte at the formulating
of the peace terms, which he believed
were calculated to protect the rights of
the nations and to safeguard the world
against a repetition of the terrible events
of the last few- years,'
The Provincial Board of License Com
missionerd submitted a detailed seaeraent
of the receipts and expeaditures for the
enforcement of the Canada Temperance
Act in the County of. Huron for the lie-
ense year ending April 80, 1919. The re-
ceiptincluding balances of $218 68 from
the previous year and payments of
$2282.70 by the county treasurer. totalled
$3,250 and the payments were $2466 35
leaving an unexpended balance Of $783.65
The expenditures 'were; mainly for the
salary and expenses ef the two inspectors
and'for constables, magistrates and coun-
sel fees. •
Messrs. Proudfoot, Killoran & Cooke
gave notice of appeal from the action of
the township of Bullet in refusing to ap•
point an arbritrator in the matter of the
creation of a union school section from
the townships of Hullett and Tucker -
b.
81110k:her communications received and re-
ferred to committees were;
Claim of 'William Isle for $14 for dam-
age to his automobile on the Lake Shore
road in the Township of Stephen,
Request from the city council of Tor-
onto to co-operate in a protest against the
passing of the Railway Bill now befote
the House of Commons without proper
provision for the protection of municipali-
ties in the control of their highways.
From the Soldiers' Aid Commission,
Toronto, asking that returned soldiers be
given employment in connection with the
county's road construction work.
From the Department of Education,,
Toronto, stating that the Legislature
grants to Huron sehools this year. are:
For public schools, $2,140.77; for separate
schools, $106.20—total, $2,246.97. The
county is required to make grants to an
equal amount.
From the National Council, Y. M. C.
A., asking that the balance of the grant
of $24,000 voted to the Y. M. C. A. in
June, 1918, be paid. This grant was dis-
continued when only one half, $12,000,
had been paid: The Y, M. C. A. claims
that its budget was made up on the basis
of receiving the whole amount, and non-
• payment of the balance would emberrass
the Association in the prosecution of its
work.
From the township of Ashfield, endors-
ing theproposal to vote $50,000 for the
hospitals of the county.
A similar resolution from the Goderidh
Townsh p Farmers' Club.
From the couuty of Lambton, notifying
the county council of Huron that its re-
fusal to act with Lambton in the construc-
tion of a new bridge on the boundary at
at Grand Bencleexposes 'both counties to
responsibility for any accident that may
happen, and stating that in aoy such case
the county of Lambtoti will seek to have
Huron county made wholly responsible
It appears that this bridge is wholly
within the county of Lambton, but Hur-
on helped to build it and has helped in
maintaining it, and there is some question
as to the responsibility of this county in
these circumstances.
From the council of Exeter asking that
a high echool be established in that vil-
lage, in place of the coatinuation school
now in existence.
The amount received by the county
from the Provincial Government in con-
nectiort with highway cohstruction and
maintenattee for .the yea r 1918, was
$20,68$.67. 'this amount was made up
as follows:
For Provincial courtly roads -
60 per cent of the county's
expenditure
ordinary business proceeciee wttii. Min-
utes of previoes meeting were read and
approved.
A representative of the Sawyer -Massey
Co., waited on the Council in reference to
selling the township road machinery. It
was finally arided that the township
wculd purchase tsvo road graders, the
same being delivered at once.
a Dunbar made applic,ation to. have
the north branch of the Hallahan Drain
cleaned out this summer, . Councillors
Buithanan and Stranghan were instructed
to attend to this matter.
The Reeve presented the plans prepar-
ed for Taylors bridge Con's 0 and 7 for
the council's approval,On motion of
Irwin and Currie the same were attached
and the clerk was instructed toadvertise
for tenders for the above inemtioned
bridge tenders to be opened next Council
day, June leth. Three accounts one for
$30 for ball rent, Assessor's eatery $70
also $30 to that official for equalizing
union school sections were erdered paid
after which the Council adjournen to meet
again on Monday, June 10th, at 1 o'clock.
A. Porterfield, 'Clerk
anasocommoodasainsmsaamiamagsas
Salem
. .
. Mr. Thos. • Bolt and family wish to
thank the Salem Willing Workers for the
iovely platy of flowers donated in honor
• • of the memory of the late Mrs. Bolt,
They also desire to thank •their many
friends for kindness and sympathy,
• .......maawsramomeama
• Are At Clinton
Fire of unknown origon caused damage
eetimated at $8,000 to the Smith Block at
Clinton late on Saturday evening, when
Roy Ball's photographic studio, where
;the fire started, was partly gutted, and
• the three stores in the building were dam-
• aged by water.
,116bey's drug stare, Johncon's jewelry
•dare and IVIedd's barber shop are housed
in the building, and were 'damaged by
water thrown into the building to control
• the blaze,' Bill and his family were out
of town when the fire started'.
Banquet For The County Workers
In connection with the Huron Co.
• Temperance Convention to be held Tues-
day afternoon and evening, June 17th, in
the Presbyterian church, Clinton, a ban-
'quet will be given at six o'clock to be fol.
lowed by after-dinner speeches. In view
of the coming referendum vote this con-
veretion is of utmost importance. Dele
egates are expected from all the churches
and temperance organizations of the
County.
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of the late Mrs, Thole
Bolt,
, Thou art not forgotten mother dear,
Nor will thou ever be
Ae long aslife and memory Jest,
We will remember thee,
She has gone from pain and furrow,
• She ha' gone from toil and care,
She has gone to be with Jesus
And we hope to meet her there.
Mr. Bolt and family .
"SMOOTHER THAN VELVET"
Ice Cream like mother used to make?
No indeed! Ice cream far superior to that.
Nothing but pasteurized pure cream, cane sugar and
pure flavor extracts go into Silverwood's ice Cream.
That creamy, velvety taste that rnother never could
• have given to her home-made ice cream is the result
of homogenizing and scientific freezing.
SILVaiit'alooD'S LnvirrEn, LONDON, oNT
Bricks in all
Flavors
Lode for the
Silverwood's
Sign
For sale by Z. LOCKMAN, Wingham
teived a letter froth hat: A. .D. Canitkon
deputy eherifie Stating that While wolking
In the sheriffte office at the court house on
January 17th he was overcome by coal -
gas from the furnace below, and had it
not been for the timely arrival of jailer
Griffin there wIuld haVe been a fatal re-
sult. He had since been practiealler ncap
acitated, and he pelt that the eounty pay
hia medical expenses. Referred to execu-
tive committee.
F. Anderson and about fifty other rate-
payers of Morris and East Wawanosh
petitioned for the extension of the county
road systen to include the short piece of
road from Belgreve to the G. T. R.
station, Referred to good roads com-
mittee.
Messrs. Laporte and Trewartha moved
that a statement be prepared and present-
ed at this meeting a the council showing
the total amount contributed by each
municipality on tbe good roads system,
the amount expended in eaeh municipality
on construction and maintenance and the
amount of grant due each municipality
based on the percentage granted on each
of these two expenditures, . Referred to
good roads committee.
Messrs Laporte and Sanders moved to
eontinue the effort to secure the building
by the Outario Hydro -Radial Commission
of the line from Parkhill to Goderich. Re-
• ferred to special committee.
Messrs, 13eavers and Erwin moved that
a by-law be passed at this session desig-
nating as county roads all the roads in
towns and villages within the county
that are connecting links in the county
system,. Referred to good roads com-
mittee,
(To be continued next week) •
In the
sealed
package*
All of Its goodness
sealed In
Protected. preserved.
The flavour lasts!
SK for, and be SURE
to get WRIGLEY.S„ it's In,
a sealed Package, but look
for the name—the Greatest
• Name in Goody Land,
.WRIGLEY
Made In
Canada
Seated Tight—Kept Right
• I.
_taste
LIFT OFF CORNS!.
, Apply few; drops then lift sore;
touchy corns off with
• fingers •
$ 3,894,43
For county road tonstruction
(including bridges) -40 per
cent a( county expenditure 12,438 64
For county road maintenance-
-20 per cent of county ex.
penditttre •6 4,358.50
The Warden explained that hereafter
forty per cent would be rebated on the
expenditure for maintenance.
A MOtiOn was introduced by Messrs
Baillie and Dalton to the effect that the
Dominion Parliament be asked to substi.
tute electrocution for hanging in cases of
capital punishment. According to the
words of the resolution hanging is held to
be a bairbaric method anp one which can-
not be efiectively carried otit in tatterty
jails- The resolution was referred to the
special committee.
On Wednesday morning the council re.
r44444444444$444
111S kt 4
0 •
:11Co1chailes Capital . il
,,..„.....:..,..,.......,...,....,..,.......,...,..,
0 letSle, Beat of the etoveriernent
headed by Admiral Xolehalc,
as temporary (Rotator, to
which the Archangel, South
ern Russia, and other anti-13alshevi1
groups beeve pledged co-operation, is
an bietorie city, despite its eompar-
,ative Isolation.
Located on the Trtuisk river, long-
er throe the better-known Volga and
approximately as long as the AM-
sissippi, Ornsk, erstwhile seat of gov-
ernment of the Steppes region of
West Siberia, under the moaarehy
was the crossroads of the routes to
Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little. Pree
zone on an aching corn, iestaetly that
corn stops hurting, then you lift it right
out, Yes, magic!
A tiny bottle of Preezone costs but a
few cents at any drug store, but is Suffici-
ent to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and the callus-
es, without soreness or irration,
Freezone is the sensational discovery
on a Cincinnati genius, It is wonderful.
RAILWAY TIME TABLE
GRAND TRUNK RAMA. SYSTEM
TRAINS LRAVE VOR
London ...... 7.30 a. m. 3.15p. m.
Toronto and East 7.25 a. in. 3,25 p. m
Kincardine 12.20 p. m. 9.40p.m
Anneva mom
Kincardine. 7.15 a. m. 3.IOp.m.
London ........12.05 p. m. .7,35 p. m.
Toronto and East 12.20 p. m. 9.40 p. m.
W. F.,Burgman, station agent, Wingham
H. 13. Elliott, Town Agent, Wingham,
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY
TRAINS LRA.VE FOR
Toronto and East 6.45 a. m. 3.05 p. m.
Teeswater .1.04 p nt 10.32 p.m
ARRIVE VROM
Teeswater . 6.40 a. ib. 3.05 p. m
Toronto and East 1.22 p. nt. 1a20 p. m
J. H. Beenaer, Agent, Wingham.
J. W. McKibben, Town Ticket Agent.
Central Russia, Orenburg and Turlee-
;it tat aakIinitiri,tethirteenr u, mi
formerly made
aloag the twaseSiberian
'Vladivostok, a 5,385-m11e jetlrneY,
from Moscow to
in an express train .equippe4 with
bathrooms, dispeneary and library.
Amid the ruins of an old fort, be-
hind the musemn of the Imperial
Russian Geographical Society, stood,
until a few years ago, the house in
whiclt the famous Russian. novelist,
Feeder Dostoievsky, spent his four
years of imprisonment ten years be
fore the Civil War in America.
Here Dostoievsky wrote his 'Saler.
inn novel, "Recollections of 'a Dead
House,"translated into Bngliali un-
der the title, "Duried. Alive in Si-
beria," which is the "Little Dorrit"
of the Siberian exiles. Indeed, his
aubJeets and 'characters- have been
compared to those of Dickens, though
his treatment is far more grim. Out
of his experience witit criminals
ewbele at Omsk also came his "Cirime
and -• Punishment,", in' which, with
semi -prophetic vision, he pictured a
future Russian people freed. from
bonds of force but united by ties of
mutual trustand kindness.
In the principal square of Omsk
.0tands the, Church of St. Nicholas, in
which hangs a banner reputed: to
have been, that• of Yermak, a died -
sack bandit of the Volga, who turned
over the vast domain of Siberia to
Ivan the Terrible' in order to proeure
Itis own restoration to Moscow court
favor. •
Thus that tyrannical and talented
Czar ea:me into possession of the ek-
tenSive territory • which had been
wrested' from the Mongolians by Rus:•
slim who had fled. from. the 'rna'd
vagaries of Ivan. nisi same Ivan, it
will be recalled, threw his regents
to the dogs, dared to proclain him."
self Czar, though Ills father had7aet,
then summoned the first Russian
National Assembly, killed Ids $011 Th
a fit of anger, and took the hooti ot
the strictest monastic order lust be-
fore the end of a dissolute personal
and brilliant, political life.
Pounded only about 200 years.ago„
Omsk now is a city approximately the
size of Hamilton, Ont. It is neither
well built nor industrially important.
Its nearest neighbor along the Irtuisk
is Tara, an older city, where Peter
the Oreat ordered 700 citizens butch-
ered because they declined to take
an oath of allegiance.
- The Omsk Museum was a principal
point of interest for tourists because
of its collection of ethnological relics
of the Steppes, or barren blains of
Western Siberia, which ineludea
many prehistoric specimens.
Long a Cossack centre, the Siber-
ian Cossacks found Omsk a, conven-
ient rallying place to resist the Bol-
shevik influences which appealed
strongly to a foreign or mixed ele-
ment In RUsSia that has no counter-
part in Siberia. Descendants. of
many of the colonists sent to Siberia,
by the Government, and also of many
political exiles, are of :good Russian
stock,
DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN
CHIROPRACTIC
Chiropeactie Drugless Healing anew.
ately locates and removes the cause of
disease, allowing nature to restore health.
J. A. FOX Da., D.O.
Osteopathy Electricity
Member Drugless Physicians Associa-
tion of Canada.
—Phone 101—
M • • .
41'ot‘, Vn,k
Life Insurante
Fire Insurance
Accident insuratice
Windstorm Insurante
• Plate Glees insurance
Bailer Insurance
Guarantee Bonds
Canadian National Tiekete
Steamboat Tickets
To buy a house
To buy a farm •
To rent a house
To buy Victory 'Sonde
Ta sell Victory Bowie
To get a fora loan
Or just to talk over the poiiticstl
situation, call on
ABNER. COSENS
mem-sacs and Real Ilatate
successor to Ritchie & Coterie,
Wingharn, • Onteri
MOM
4C/t1..
ISARD'S
SPECIALS I
. IN . •
DIES' WEAR I
Is complete with all that's new for Spring and
Summer Wear. • As usual the stock is large, the Av
variety big, and representative of all the latest an4
most desivahle styles..
Our policy of asking only a fair legitimate mar-
gin, depending on quick turnovers for our profits, is
reflected in our,priees.
Our Ready -to -Wear Department
Ike ltAINCOAT,,S—Another shipment of tbis popular Rainodats 're-
ceived, it's a:winner "the' Dutex 13rancl" every coat guarahteed.
Made in dressy tweed effeets. Our price . • :$.15.00
X X .
X
LA. .DIES' WAIST....F—All the new styles are here, pretty 'models X
vy
iiin fancy silk, plain silk and voiles. See our specials -at $1 50 41432. WY
. ..*
X
...S.Pitli)VG COA TS—Snappy styles in Ladies' Spring and Summer
Coats, nade of tweed effects; Serges, Mei'. Silks, Serge Coats., at X
... .. '.. ... ;',$20.oci. mid $32,5o A.
• Watch
There are in every good watch
from seven to twenty-one "jewels."
Sounds rich, doesn't it?
Some of them are rubies, others
sapphires—iwo kinds of gem stones
rated Much higher in market value
than the diamond,:
Thesesapphires and rubies, fur-
thermore, must, to servo the watch-
making purpose, be flawless.
Ilow, then, can the watchmakers
afford to buy them? Surely they must
get thein cheap. As a matter of fact,
they do, because the gem -stones used
for this •parpose are of inferior &tor
and brilliancy—useless, even if they
were bigger, for jewelry. •
Twelve hundred thoesand first-
class watches manufaetured on this
continent annually call for 12,000,-
090 jewe1s-5,000,000 rubies and
sapphires and 7,000,000' garnets.
A watch is said to "run" on so
many stones. The more valuable the
timepiece, the greater the number of
stones Used in its make-up. The
tiny gems, pierced to receive the
axles of wheels, offer a minimum of
friction, and do not wear out easily.
Ditormous quantities of thee
watch -jewels are cut itt Switerland
and marketed itt boxes of 500 and
1,000. To each stone is given a
rounded form with a hole through'.
the centre,
1
The Earliest Elevator.
The earliest mention of a device
In any Way resembling the modern
elevator or lift may be read in Vitra-
vius, who describes a heisting ma-
chine whieh Was invented Int Archi-
medes. This elevator of the second.
centuey B. C. was worked by ropes
which were coiled upon a winding
drum by a eapstan and levers. The
same writer refers to another einxility
inaehine whielt Was made to rotate by
a.man Who Walked inside the capstan,
Such a ptimitive elevator is still in
use to lift passengers and, luggage
from the Met to the second story or
convent on efount Sinai.
. •
Dutch Tanneries.
On account ot the inability to bee
port tanning materials overseas, sev-
eral Butch taaneriee have built small
extraeting ple,nte at an expense of
about $20,000 eaell.
,..57(..l1t7W—We have just received a shipment of tcp skirts, in pretty g
• styles of Serges, Black and' colored_ poplins and eilles, values
y HOME 7.)74SSZ.S—Good washable dresses in. CiuglaaM;. and
• Print: Bargain prices, '
CHILTVREN'S D 'R Z SSE J.—Stylish
aft Wash DressesT for Girls in all sizes. Made of
1 M : fancy patterns. Prices begin at Sr.50
WHITEWEA it — Big variety of Ladies',
--,
k .t, Misses' and Children'e. Whitewear, Corset
•Covers, Drawers, Skirts, Gowns and. Princess
Slips and Bargains Prices.
7
14.4• New Idea Patterns, all sizes, alway in stock.
rit
X rA PIZ
1 H. 1 ISARD &Co. X
74
a
,
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DRUGLESS 1PH1SICIAN
OSTEOPATHY
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Oototnetrist Outician
API
I v For 20 years we have made a special,, study of
04 Optics.
1
Iry In 1903 I tookiny first course.
eer, In 1905 graduated at the Canadian Ophthalmic College, Toronto.
•11,,.e. In 1912 took a special course in muscle treatment and shadow testing.
,"
And in 1918 took a Post Graduate Course in the Caitaclian Ophthalmic
or.. -
t...ollege, Toronto.
' In every eese graduating with honours. .
AA,
lay Our optical parlour is equipped with the most up-In7dete instruments
1-)igi for sight testing that can be procured, and is second to none in Canada.
We examine yeer,eyes free, and rec.:in-mend glasses only when abso-
DR. V. A. PARXER
Osteopathic. Phyeiciaea only qualified
osteopath in North Huron.
Adjustment of the epine it more quickly
secured and with fewer treatments than
by any other method. .
Blood preemure and other examinetione
made,
Ali die*asts treatad.
OFFICE OVER CHRISTIE'S STORE
lutely necessary.
•
R. M. NicKAY
. Vatehmaker, Engraver and Optician,
Formerly with Ryrie Bros. Ltd.; Toronto. tIgto
'44! Successor to A. M. Knox.
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,13114
tr.401/-
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\ 1240.
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Save the Money
You Waste and Make It
Earn You More Money
In lune
Cost $4.05
Wset Savings Stamp*
ll'oft 4.1 ikegralst who%
ever Ale dig it
Row much of your wages do you fritter
away each week on trifles
If you reckon it up .you will probably find
that at least five per centdisappears thus
"like snow wreaths in thaw."
If your weekly wage le $15.00 you spend
easily 75 cents of that on "mere nothings"
before you know it.
But suppose you said to your employer:
"Each week I want you to keep 75 cents
out of my pay envelope and invest it for
me in War Savings Stamps. As you buy
each War Savings Stamp put it in my pay
envelope, and go on doing that for a year."
You will never miss that 75 cents. But at
the end of the year • you will have over
$30.00 invested in Savings Stamps. By
then they will be worth considerably More
than $36.00, and by 1924 they will be
worth $45.00.
War savings Stamps are guaranteed. by the
Dontinkm Government. They have the
whole resources of Cada as their security,
the same as Victory Loans. And they bear
ttn rinutrually high rate of interett. You can
eash.theta at any time, however, if you
need to.
Make Your Savings Serve You and
Serve Your Coornhy--Invest Thou in
War Savings Stamps.
•