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The Wingham Advance, 1920-07-08, Page 4711111P141911111711", , rR%4WMrr-W. T WIMRAM "#AA02, A9 ION Iowa ............... ....... You Have 140ard the Song --Now See the Picture lie T 111V 1 V a u d v -i e 0. U 31 -1014N MORRISON and hreacts ELSIE CLIFTON A h G Id mong.t e o wl�l present Now Made Into a Picture Play, Replete With Their Original LAUGHTER and TEARS With AICARD JOSE, The LEE CHILDREN Comedy Sketch and a -Great Cast. With TEARS LAUGHS BEAUTIFUL MUSIC a' 'd Piano. Prices 25c and 50c, I row at 75c. Songs n At Lyceum,, Theatre One Big Night JOHN MORRISON Canada's Favorite Will Sing. SilverThreads See The Barn Dance -The Big Dinner 10111001-- 0 Nftest stSeen ) 10, 1"- Q A f attlefteld in a quarre new nothing, have ever, produced two billions sented with a wrist watch by scholars, of being the b n i'ltkry and political conaition� in Russia. f ot o"m Sir,, Edward Grey 's in ve years or s, ADVERTISEMEN F her making both hung in the balance. and , we c.01 u, In -'Irl an Apported hal a the Public school, and a nicely worded I -she made a suital of the agreement millionof troops. Ifthepeople Aho, can address, to whicl were decided by the action of others admits he did not know A. G. SMITH� Editor and Prop. To the Editor: She had no decisive word as to bd , r des- between France and R ' qia, but only do these things are too simple to. suspect reply, the remainder of the evening was. Sir, —At the -next general election. we us I' tiny. What passed between France ,and Great false news, too inert to wish to under- spent in social intercourse music, speech- HE vogue for Knitted Coats has been maintained bY shall have to , choose a course fo r the �timel�;iaking. Miss McKee will be much T' producing something different 'each -season and by Per Britain. Canada did not even know that, stand foreign events and at the sami judging from -the criticism he has been future. That choice involves both exter- I The Baer War arose out of a private - ' i , ma ing a d Russia. knew b6th ends. susceptible to flattery and social &luen. I missed having taken an active part in fecting the making of these coats so that they retain their er of Ont- nalrelations'and the rn�ans by which %% e and' -money k mbition. Going but France an .Dewa*rt, lead The action'of the Russian War Office in ces, they may expect to be exploited. I all good works, the new teacher will be smartness and give excellent wear. The name "Ballantyne", receiving H. !l, M be the next to g e4pect t6 �ay our way vital! north fr6in Cape Town along the high cis a Knitted Coat is a guarantee of its high quality and any arlo Liberals, M No more disobeying the Czar's order to stop mob- Most Canadians say, "never again", but I �Miss Gibson, Wroxeter, 2voman who examines the new models we are sho��ng will I matters have ever depended on the result lan�s Which st�etcb Jo the' Soudan were er Republics and ilizing. precipitated the -!German declar- tobe safe, we need abr�ad something , Mrs.Wni. Hard, Mr. and Mrs. John find an irresistible charm in their daintiness, their fascinating The more the voter in- Cape. Colony, the Bo - We are showing a fine assort - of �hyhelectiop. ation of war, The moral responsibility different from a desk in the office of a 0owdy are visiting the formers father. colors and'their chic.design f4 i idices, Rhodesia, the latter being a private I I mentof these coats -for this season—ttew designs, new color 'While bavirig his picture taken along I 'If and casts aside preit to get our 's. -I m e y speculation with a charter, st6ek and is not here the question.. The point is British Ambassador, we need at Lion's Head. tut the jar?je old dependable Ballantyne quality, to or' with the Canadian Weekly Newspaper- the �ore like he* is t6 help in arriving at that for years it lay� in the power,of any- information at the source and to weigh it n e Mr., -Win, Nichol and workable policy. lbopds a d th' temptations and difficul- one . who could gain the ear of a Russian ourselves, knowing how it was come by., George Lowry Sold by men who were ` being entertained at a sound an n, Government House recently, some 0 . Exl,;,nald circumstances and the play I ties irlddent to that kind of an enterprise. , autocraft to dispose of anada's future Any political p4r�tY can afford to, make motored up from Niagara, Saturday to Boer Republics were the seat of visit their parents here. r ey,Dewart what paper interests remote, from. ours . I . that wished -for and the lives of thousands of,'her - citizens. "entire and direct control of our Foreign in with- ompanies Affairs" -a plank in . its platform. ' All Mr. Alex Finlater and Miss. Pipe, s . pent CON he'u on t� t6 decided our destiny, t mining c nald, a r asked Mr. Ha'tl' 'T il dhe drolly replied that Ile hpve-�htteh&of greea He E. ISARb represented an ris tan Civil forced native labour in the mines, The Sir. John MacDo P is well known,, pledge a few days last week in Fergus.. wits, sporting editor of the Ch i t I out o& knowledge. The'American Canada a Kingdom not a candidates should be made to War, South African War and 'the - World Rhodesi * an Company would be benefitted desired to call We have this week to announce the Guardian. or at all'events better advertised by be- Dominion. It was not a mqe fancy as to themselves to it. War are cases in point. ing on a- trunk, line railway. Hence tht) names. He foresaw .,ninny risks, and . C. S. CAMPBELL, marriage of �diss Annie McGrogbm to' o a great Most wars, are made, possible by some Cape to Cairo cry and -the Jamieson Raid. would h Bedford, �.'Q, May'30th, I . 920. Mr. McDonald, Toronto. Miss M cOr,� FaR Term Aug. 31St --- Graduates placed in positi6fisq -A'man with a scythe could d ave made provisic, ' n against them. gan is well known he.re having clerked in deal of gobd'al -our back streets cut- underlying condition so 'important. that- The mining interests and the Rhodesian As a Kingdom, Canada -would have rank- qng 'it would have her fathers, store for sometime. ting I 'weeds.,before, they go to. seed. If hostile iiit6resO prefer to ;take everything Compimy fell out just as the raid started ed with other Kingdoms. Belmore There was a large attendance at thc wo c' not ­r-oadwork done on 'our rather than make concessions to oPpon� because former wished to pres�rve conducted it . own foreign, affairs. It's .. �n . ave Canadians The sad intelligence reached the� vil- Presbyterian church, Sabbath afternoon 9treets nor 'Ater. 6 lay the dust, we can ents. and dominate the , Boer Republics and subjects would not have been 's&ely be proteqt*ea from -noxious weeds., The Southern States exported cotton conditions a in Canada and British subjects outside, litge Friday, of the dr6wning of Stewpxt when M�. Gale. returned Missionary thus make their own labour Aitken third squ of Mrs�' Win. Aitken, from Korea, was listened too with- much - thing !hey,were not likely to be able to but Canadian subjects within and without. and were not manufacturing. The North berry boundary, the drowni.ni -.took interest, Revs. Bradley, Harkness and was largely manufacturing and cheap do if the Republics became Colonies. Last but' not least,. no one - serving her Turn WINGHAM, ONTARIO PI40NE 166 s sole place some where in the West. PArticul- Sinclair, also assisted in the service, 'From repo'rts',bi Liberal papers the Cot- could have been in doubt that, hi I LeadetShip­o Hartley Dewart ap_ freight carriers were not yet known These int.rigues and the interests be- not yet know. Miss Unice Hackney sang a solo in a Send a card requesting the principal to call on you during the vacation., We ton was the exportable cash crop that �lut� was to her. It would not have been ars , artment. Register now for -the. fall liffid them were wholly rernote from Can. have competent teachers, one for each dep pe been.,wbject to a Currie- paid interest on debt and put the bleas it is xiow for an able and con- A very pleasant evening, was spent very pleasing manner. ars to have whole ada and we were ignorant of them except P0331 d Mrs. Web ster Willits, Miss 01- ' term. ay of last week at the home f M 7. a - comb. Union in funds in Europe for most pur- through highly' coloured abuse of the scientious public servant to feel that it is I Mond 0 r. I M e his duty to place the Empire first and Henry Weishar. In honor of Miss ti,4ie lie, Willits and Minnie Jeffray took in th rin. IN poses. , . ILI Old Boys Reunion at Harriston, Tlitirs- D. A. McLachlan, Pres. Murray McLeish, Prin Bqers and their Governments furnished One by one: the, Ontario Liberal Lead- The South could live with free trade to gratuitouslY to ounpress by the propag- Canada second. McKeebefore leaving for her home ii u ' No words are strong enough to imptess Gorrie, During the evening she was pre- I day and report a good time. ers are assisted ftom the throne by theii E rope. It had a choice between that anda of their adversaries. The raid,how- followers, Row ell,Proudfoot and Dewart. and free trade within the Union, The ever, led to the South African War which upon the voter the importance.of nfaking North had no such choice. With its,vast A I That war unhismindasto our status as a nation mattere enon......y system of unobstructed internal trade, did what Jamieson failed to do and what and being represented by someone who Truly, a man!s politics cannot be there was no future before the North com- the mining interests w6re averse to doing. thinks as he does. The situation created guessed at any more. All over Canada pa'rable with that promised by the Union. is an artificial one, . It wiped,.out the Boer Republics. It did by the Peace Treaty they are voting against the parties so This promise time made good and incid- t ight to some factors, ignoring dear to the hearts of their fathers. entally ghowed that the South would have no produce a Cape to Cairo Railway nor giving we forced labour for the mines. As is often others. France insisting on her position IN 011 0 done better not to -hav . e elected for seces- the case, the conquerors stepped into the in Europe with a diminished population Hav , e you paid your initiation fee to sion. At the time, however, the South troubles 6f the conquered and could not and relying party on negro troops may the National Liberal and Conservative thought it could separate without dis- find any new solution. Kruger beaten not receive the sympathy she did as the Association? advantage and the North knew it could and dead had his judgment vindicated by victim of'1870. The seventy-five millions not let the South go. Eicept for this events. TheDutch majority bad to be of German -,speaking people leven if 3�lit underlying circumstance, the war c ' ould recognized as predominant. No forced up over several states are still the molt im- Show Your Colors not have happened, and the pa,sions, labour was available for the mines. The portant commercial group on the contin politics, literature, eloquence and military railway, after twenty years, is, yet to ent. For centuries they held back the A couple of prominent citizens from a glory bf that epoch are best understood come. �'Frombeginning to end of this war, Slav Europe. Now large Slav states neighbouring town remarked to the editor when it is borne in mind. Canada's part was to furnish troops, not have been created in Central Europe, ,of Ti-iE,ADVANc,.,u how very few business It was the Civil War and the way it to consider the policy that led to it nor, whose facial affiliations are with Russia. men went to the trouble to decorate or ended that brought about Confederation. the conduct of it nor the final solution. The heading off of German enterprise bang out a flag t . 0 commemorate the The end found France with an army in from the West and from over sea must anniversary of our fair Dominion. The Mexico trying to set up an Empire under The world war is recent. In the result in a change of the role hitherto visitors are the people who notice the the auspices of Napoleon III., and Great. diplomacy that led up to it, Canada had loyalty of a town by the way in which i no part. Without full details it is known played by the Germans and they may Britain bad one in Canada. There were cultivate these new Slav States and Russia i that the situation was brought about in they use their natiohal flag. Should we in American minds grievances against I 1 which if Russia went to War, Prance had as well. Canadians not love our Union Jack more both. The Fr�nch in Mexico were a; than any other country. should love their menace and a violation of the Munroe to go in. If France went in, England We can only see dimly what is emerg-. bad to go in, and so had Canada. Of ing from the Peace Treaty and only the flag? I -lave we not reason to? Doctrine. Against the English 'were i high spots through the fog, but enough to 'Everything points to, a monster crowd claims for ships sunk by the Al6ama i iti Wingham on Monday, July 12th, I see a very unstable and doubtful future. and for enormous indirect damages for i We have in the Cairo to Calabar. Rail- 117ti &4m Never before have so many. Orangelodges 4 way project the same alliterative jingle interference with trade. General Grant was �7 signified their intention of celebrating in at the head of 980,000 well equipped and and the same possibilities for trouble as Wingham. You do not need to belong to victorious soldiers. Napoleon 111. with- 1 Tha Double Tpack Route with the Cape to Cairo cry. Here are the order to show loyaltyyour by hanging drew from Mexico and Great Britain i independent states on the route just as out a few Union Jacks. Try it and see largely withdrew from Canada her troops Between. were the Baer Republics. The only if Wingharn will not look better to the and stores, retaining the naval stations. montpeai difference this time is that it is oil and 'crowds that will throng our streets on Some disposal had to be made of ToPonto not gold mines. Monday. Canada. She was exposed to be the; Detpoit and The Poles are making the first use of scene of battle if the Alabama clairils were not settled and the indirect claims' Chicago their liberty in conquering countries two if You Have High Blood amounted to a sum impossible to pay hundred miles beyond the limits of Polish - I Unexcelled Dining Car speiking lands. As their country was a Pressure You Must except as tribute to a eonqueror. I Service. battle ground twice overrun, they must Be Careful It was believed at Washington that It get the sinews of war from one or other of Great Britain would withdraw all troops 0 and stores and arrange for a plebiscite the great powers who so recently pledged Wholl the Blood Pressure is much throughout Canada as to union with I the Sleeping cars on Nigbt trains- us to peace, -above, normal there is always the 1 and Parlor cars on,prin- The French show their disregard for the dauger of Tupoture of a, blood vessel, States. Sir Edward Thornton, the, ciple Day trains. , I most frequently in the 13rain and British Ambassador, was the source of the � I League by enforcing their own views of producing a stroke, or in the Kid- belief. The plebiscite and the unioni the Treaty with their own troops, and of neys, producing spight's, Disease. would be a payment in full of the Ala- 1 Full information from any Grand Trunk public 6pinion by using negro troop2. Ticket Ag " V,. Horning, District They show us what future they look for Ila ellt or (_�oronto. one '0410111d gifarA a-gainst over-exer- baMa �lairns. ssellger At, ent' W I tion ov e:zcJte:meut and take Meantime Canada was Federated and Bur�inan, Agent, 11110 by introducing conscription in their negro Ile 50, or HACKING'S was to undertake her own defence. 1_1. B. lliott Town Ticket Agent, Hone colonies. HEART AND NERVE MEMEDY An alternative plan was based on Gen- A turn of the wheel and we may be off 4)0 digsolve the Tjrlc A�q_qd dol�Dsitq eral Granes humanity and common again to prop up the watered stock of that form in the Veins and Arteries, sense, It involved throwing overboard DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN Land or Oil Companies in Persia to save Inailthig thein hard and brittle�. Thiz the indirect claims and payment of the the Poles from their own folly or tb put rem(,-dy Ls a, wond<,r; it bullds up the direct only. The indirect damages were OSTLOPATHY downPrench Militarism in Central Africa, eiltire �)Ysteiil by pullifying the ruled out of court at the Geneva Arbitra- A little sochd recognition among promin- Blood, Strenwthoning 11W 11"Tt -and tion by the adroit and friendly action of DR. F. �. PARKE R ent and Plitible people, a little suppression by pnlduvin�" a )TOrInaf and healthy Osteopathic 11hysician. only qualified of truth and expansion of falsehood in the -condition of tho Nerv,64. the American repiesentative, Canada path in North Huron. of PAInierston, remained in a state of suspended anima- 0�'Ic(5 news, the baitof large gains spread be - Adjustment of the spitio is more quickly f, quite a number of box,08 ot tion politically until her future was decid. cured apd with fewer treatment's than ore Profiteers and a slight imperialistic Hacking,s JAeArt and Nerve Remedy edas it the I n was by the liberty of action by any other method. bias at Ottaw ' A, would be enough. A and they lboiefutiA her oo much and which President (;rant allowed to the re- Blood pressure and other examinations timed outburst in the suWidized press she P 11 0 PleftPed with theln'thitt presentative of the United States on the made. appealing to our compasaion thowing us them to all her 119—vet1iit trouble orwho, Arbitration Commission at Geneva it, All Oisvases treated. moral obliquity in the intended enemy -She 1872, Phone 272, and lauding the fighting capacity of our o all ran down atid lNerv011s. I olmcl,-, OVVIZ CtITUSTIE'S STORE yotAng men would fire the mine, "y,; 4 you must be sure to get Mack- Not contemplating any foreign wars Inals.00 and recognizing both the power and the We should never forget that tb* sippeal comAktiptition Is obeor tbo agpTav- Sir John pretended to have been made from John' good will of the United States, atiburg to save the women and, children atinr tau,�(�tt of High 6016od Pressure MacMnald-did not at any time spend awl it ;g, advVAIAn to We Hack1rialt upon troops or armament tnore.than a I BELL there, an appeal with which, out praw Kidney nind L;ver Pills to drlvP Out 1, Towo and Farm propaties. Call and wrung the country's 6oul with horrible tb() 1,4qf5r1nF; thot X4\nmto In tht ayx. nominal tium. IIii emphatic refusal of b*V0 memories of the Indian Mutiny was sign- preparAt,tong g;) men or money to the Soudsin Campaign #to ray, list and get my pdta& ame excellent valuu. in Cape Town* month beforehand, the well ar4 ynix *rAild WY a and Cartwright's saying 'Cam4a owes, tow lhoyor, fr�xii ymir (IN&V 1)040- nothing to Went lhitain txcapt a good! date being loft blank so that M Jamie - G. STEWART I All it in to correspond with the lhttklnn�s lAmIted, Ustoviti, Out, dftl of chrixian forgiveness," cen best, J. i son coud be undetst(tod in the light af what had! WINGHAM. owting of the raid. Hacking'* Remedies are sold in Cytiltoo 1%, Tow"ll. NO Oil ftlds or gold mines in any Wingham by J. W. M*KlklA11- hopperied. Canada's exi2trm and bor 1 plofto I" I A ,J � &,La It is Dangerous to Use Counterfeit Parts: for thi 00'. 4,000C Y allowing your garage rman to use imitation parts M. epeated re,"ai Brepairing your car you not only in'vite r, r bffls and more serio n- us breakdowns, but you actually enda. ger your own life and the lives of others. Cheap'and inferior parts use m conn"ection with the steering control are hablb to cause aceid.entz of a ver.y serious nature. You Risk Your Life When You Use Genuine Ford Springs versus Imitation Spindles Imitation'Springs In a recent test the tensile strength Genuine Ford front and rear springs of the genuine Ford Vanadium are madO of Vanadium spring steel Ste6l spindle arm was found to be havin a tensile strengt4 of 210,000 over 100% more than that of the p ou N per square inch, and C.ounterfeit machine steel part. an elastic limit of 200,000younds. The arms were submitted to shock, Every genuine Ford spring is tested and the counterf eit arm broke in the factory. Front springs are at a pulling f orce equivalent subjected to a pressure of 1,85,0 to 11,425 poinds applied to a cross section. pounds. In the fatigue test thia average gen- The same pulling force applied to a corres- uine sl3ring will stand 60,000 strokes before ponding cross section of a genuine Ford breaking,. Rear springs are subjected to a spindle arm did not even change its original pressure of 2000 pounds and the average size or shape. In order to separate the genuine genuine spring will absorb 40,000 strokes i before brea�ing. spindle axm it was necessary to apply a pulling force of 25,000 pounds. Imitation springs are genemlly made of car - The spindle arm is one of the vital parts en- bon steel having a tensile strength of only tering into the control of a car, and by using 130,000 pounds per square mch and an elastic s parts in such places, Ford owners are limit of only 115,000 pounds. In ordinary lives and property. serviee they soon flatten out. You are merely protecting yourself and avoiding repeated repair bills when you d6mand genuine Ford parts. -Only Genuine Ford Parl-s Can be Used with Safay Lookfor, the Sign X1*6 we Ao Me CRAWFORD� Dealvx$ lnngham I