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The Wingham Advance, 1921-02-10, Page 6
1.1...11..—.. 1111,..._ ,.. w,:. _ ,. T . 1. P4 - . ; . • Wi NOITAX ADY O. SIR MARTIN HARVEY 4N It seprate palit9.oal orgautzatfon CANADA. slro,uld Blast be formed. for ,.the poa•ltdcal, RA814171+d still fields it pOsslible to ,do Xictivdties of idol ftrnte<rs, any more honor to her artists, her Uteliatry men thlmrt ,objection +has bet u found .to the her eral 'enut'aotora and othwe Who' lndependeat IA►,bor Tamty as a :politi- harWe helped to make her glorious wtGb, cal i*e hhiole for the Tsa.des Union,s. ithefr gifts and tih itThe ,Farces, iaway 'year !that •the a; 1 line parties tiva•t ,Gatnada, Quos not yet dasctavered, would domina(be suoh A new political nor even giveniany evad,enPe a ,de- organization is lice, as tate old line oire to iuvatate. It has been al. Ott- part2oarn po'si•ti;cians have no Ildea of ditilon alt 'Obtawa, In sale ,>iglldrr ,poilti- deserting their respective banners. cal cirples Pat a man who,sbows Ili- There arae ,differences of ppinian elrarry ablXtY shotifid be voquciliVATed a am0ng otfiolals of the U. F. O. on Tito pasalce in, tare CMI servico. So Archi• question zalfsed by (live Preuldor. Mr. bald LUnpnvan was enabled to eke Morrison is in favor o8 •group govern. •out 111-5 Sensitive years until the dell- alvent and advocates the election by owto span of ills dile wa+s -out. Wti- 400tons and lawyers of repretserr%, Bred Campb© ll was also in ithe •civil tives of olexr own ,classes. This is, sprvige, and Frederick George Scott ,,however, dmpossible, .as such •psopea- ousts , has venae sionals must alwaTs be in a Popular eappolq vin ouutnoWe erau0 perhaps, on awooalnt of anis minority. -But under under propms- itningawanatio ability,. Burt we im,ve tfiouad represe.ntatiou ouch gron,ps, no houlon ibr Bliss Carman, and m,u whale voting ,for mon,they 4laivor, coaild recogtuirt. of any kind. Nor a5so throw their in+iUuenee and un - fax Cal sid Charles G. D. Roberts In Can,an- used votes in favor of men ,they ap- aria, tape poets mist airs Bus it pada proved do other classes. This Oature Brad die they must, ,bar Wil 0a of P. R. terids to improve the quaiit'Y r nares. Sia John Martin Harvey spoke ,spoke and dhaa+aoter of a:egPslartors -elected. alt 'lice G+anadiam Club do Toronto'of Mr. MOrriS-00 is n faryor of the •C.M.A. the need to -consider ,the .returned ,coming out and declaaiing wsll+oru tltie•Y men, who dragged tabont the ,country t supported in an election. 'Phis wwuld unable -to Mud emp:oym1emt He de be of advantage unless P. R. was • pre,cated his o3vl1, honor and ,said IAdy available to ,make second and owner Martin it was who reaPay deserved it Choices count in the •eveavt of baaautr0 as labs n'ad a,adsed $25,000 Uor ,Charity of the, first choice vote. Tawe main purposes durkw ,the w:ar. In ahls 'Own factgovern- a°.a ,po ted °ds that a govern Mon coin,pany every man aua,d gond] to she l memt is supported by,the •people when . front and he was glad to -say 'every its legislation, its coudaot of s,f eArs ma,n but three, ,had •come bs(ck. Those Buri its honesty apthes to them. If who earmme back, he eadd were better it i:oh .t any of these roug'culass, men at their jobs --•batter motors. Em- wlu.crh it uswaCay does ,through re- ' ployess The thought woulld find the dopeusai neglect .to Mellen , d scamdr. They should 'try at least one la dep,sisd'entt criif.cs and press, vnd by s, and y ;vis rg credence to ahaUl:ow flllewds ex-ooldier iii any job they avail .ope11. Sir 9!oawn •an:entll,oned the vase of a w(ho ,'apply iuborrua:tlon which is ,young1dieT .returning Buster the war n`nt to listen to, the Independent amid being oftened at 25 the same job at the opbe polls, at the wane dalaa•y he had heft at 18. tn. nitexpress, must n on Cat and it not be tie This employer told lulu he was 1=11c, a h dlva,t two and a half per cent, of lice t. of o voters can swamp any government or to be naive at tiM. "No, sir;" fie re- prxed, "the anmoky ones are tlhosle who party and ,the greatest Manges in t;ure dead,' ;Sir John's all on l'alt,tiaaa history have been thomght rhes was notable "I avape to God, aboid •by no 'greater chance of ,opinion genemolk alone of -as ,have ever tl anvong the independent voters than given a, young ,soldier reason, trot'a ,rte .these two or three in every hundred The (tendency of proportional repre- Ply sof a:nroh profound bitterness." Just sentwttoa rtrherefore is to stabilize Vov- befare looming EnOaud the actor hsd ernmea+t, while providing for the elec- bre darsted ..with Premier Uoyd tica of only Ove best men in each Gctcrge and robe Premier stroke almost party, and, ,a:,so of affording ,consid- emtireay 'of the explotts of Mhe Oama- emab:,e m nondties f>a13r representatiion. dian troops partiou:isray of the second Ctinico sheep seem to tae in very good battle aR Ypres waren in. sphe cR *11 Where Country ;Fairs Flourish. ruove=ty of ,the G,cTme,n ga+s attack, the There has been a h.t!Tk'y good Iran of Canadd+ans held tsar and saved the slit- The country fair, which is a nov- uat on; secondly, tthe amazing cap- CRY in Siam, fs so popular that the tore cf Y'imy Wd-,g2; cthirdl'y the 11111r- natives demand three or four ,during veil au3 piercing -at -the Illudouburg' the year. Tile eilaln featurb consists Lime which the Germans 'had regarded of exhlblts of ;native squashes, crazy Bus gMTTeg'neble; end Oolnrthly, When . quilts ,ltd 1)1gs with blue ribbons for the •Ganasdian.s an Aavgtlst 18 smashed the 'winners. And the Siamese have the effort of the ,Gwm=e to get hely added attractions of their own. 11bxb,ugh sad Ludendorff fuh=0f said As a result, lemonade vendors are out chat Germany was beaten. This was of luck, Sur ate natives arrive at the su ,i:mperishab4e, memory of w! Ach fair graUnds equipped with their own they mzna,slt +resolve to be worthy. They tea;Pots,, which they carry around and must net be ddoniay,ed• by the unrest Iteep ,lot during the entire day, re- in the woafsd. There ,hard, beery sinid3as .trashing themselves at intervals. The unrest after the Nacpoaeondc wars. tea drinking does, mot interfere with. They n:eaded more ,humanity between their enjoyment a the lair, for the eii>pc o,yera and eanp'oyed, and, the em- cups and saucers are packed with the ,pioyees must not ,regard the carpital- teapot in the ,caddy and the ,tea is fists as vampires who were sucking drunk standing. before an exh6b1t, rid - the life out of ,those who aocePtal fins 'on the marry,go-raund or having their wages. A5 -the Prince of Wales one's fortuns told, with not v moment ad said they Mmslt a,U putt toget>he'. lost from sightseeing. and as ,the Icing bad sadd and wise old Oliver CremlweDd before hien, "Don't TheMystery } t e+t to keep Your powder dry." Ha iii !x asked in conclusilon •th,A they anti play edhe ,game bogetiter as •they ha.d done SOME INTERESTING-P9INTERS In France, Duke's son,orooles sem, FROM THE,PEN -OR 011, son of .the miluorialre, and to the men, HAMILTON., -thhat ,they do not listen to the noisy - fe',10,,V% on the street corneas who 'The real cause ,of gout is clue to Woubd xreT=de them that there is 'the excessive ,use of ceatrain artidwles r* way tr an blzat of honest of food. and dr•la1k, which In ,time leads alone odic a disturbance of the functions of work to sat tire woTr_d right.bo the liver. As a result hartiuful ,pro- ' ducts sucl„ as uric acid rare thTowm THE MAELSTADID-M. N ' ' By FRANK FR171;IST. 11 Lato $uporintendent of the r,ximiral Investigattop po partment of $ootland Yard. 11 CHAPTER IV. An Unexpected Call. Weir +Menzies fitted his form to the big armchair that flanked Foyle's i desk: end •xhgged a handful of reports secured by an elastic band from his breast pocket, ,Foyle snipped the end off .1 cigar and, leaning -back, Puffed out a blue cloud of smoke. "It been quick work, though I sayJ It myself," observed Menzies coati- placently, "especially considering it's I a night job, Thia ,night worst is Poisonous -no way of getting about, no certainty of finding the witnesses you want, every one !angry at being dragged out of bed, and all your peo- ple knocked -out the next day, when they ought to be fresh." Foyle flicked the ash from his cigar, and a mischievous glimmer shone in his blue eyes. "It's tough luck, Menzies. Aknow you hate this kind of thing. Now, there's For- rester -he's got nothing in particular on, iflyou like-" Menzies's ,heavy eyebrows contract- ed as he scrutinized his chief suspic- I iouasly. .. Untold gold would • not ilzave I induced him to williog relax his hold 1 of a case that interested him. "I'sn !, not shifting any job of mine on to' any one Base's shoulders, MT. Foyle," he said acidly. "That's all right," said Foyle Im- perturbably; "go ahead." Menzies tapped his pile of state- ments. "As fav` as I can boil down what ,we've got, this is how it stands;. Old G•reye-Stratton was a retired West Indies merohent--dropped out of harness eighteen years ago and has lived like a hermit by himself in Linstone Terrace ,Gardens ever ,since. It seems there wos some trouble about his wife. She was a widow named Errol when lie married leer, and she had one son, "Five years before the crash there was a daughter born. Anyway, as I was saying, trouble arose, and he kicked his ,wife out, sent the b,sby girl abroad to be educated; and the, boy-die would. then 'be about twenty -with his mother. Well, the wo- man died a few years after. Young Errol came down to Greye-Stratton, ' kicked 'up a bit of a Ohindy, and was given an allowance on condition that he left the country., "He went to 'Canada, and thence on to the States, and .must Grave been a bit of a waster. A year • ago he re- turned to Excland and, turned up in Linatone Tolmance Gardens. There I as a row, and he went away swear- ing revenge. Old tGreye-Stratton stopped supplies, and neither . the laywere not, any one else have' seen anything of Errol since,' Foye Tolled a pencil to and fro across his blotting pad ;with the palm of his hand. He interrupted with no question. What Menzies stated as facts he knew the chief inspec- tor would be able to prove by sworn evidence if necessary. He was mere- ly summarizing evidence. The in- ference he allowed to be drawn, and so far It seemed an inference that ')ade fair to place a noose around young Errod's neck. "We have got this," went On Men- ziea,. "from people in Liustone Ter- ra,.nce Gardens, from Grreye-Strat- tan's old servants, from the house agents from whom he Tented his house, and from Pembroke of Pem- broke said Stephens, who used o be his ,solicitors. Greye- Stratton was seventy years old, as deaf as a beetle and as eccentric as a monkey. "I don't believe lie has kept any servant for more than three months at a stretch ---we have traced out a dozen, and there ,rust be scores more. But it Is on:y lately that he has taken to accusing them of being in a plot to murder him. The lust cook vie lead he made tanto everything she pr.e- uared in his presence. "He had no friends is ,the ordinary way, and few visitors. Twice with- in• the last year he has been visited by a woman, .but who or what she was no one knows. She came evi- dent.y by appointment, rerriuining Half an Hour and went away. "Practically all lits busiuess ,af- Pairs lied been carried on by corres- pondence, and he was never known to destroy a letter. Yet we have found few documents it the House that loan have any bearing on the case, except possibly ibis, which was found In the PREMIER DRLiRY ON CLASS .nto the blood, causing The condition fire -h vbitvatelly used used.•}lttl•e bedroom he Gtry Rr r 1 NT, known esgout, °Kiansequeiet •n fmaint •thnt, live- Ile extracted from, the pflo of state- Premier Drury has not ,tailed to lag pry, a diet Bind ibe of e-ote laver activity, a ,euro can ,be effected." ments a square of double 1 glass, which ire passed to lnoyle. It centaiued stir up excited interest by 21is speedli probsblq no p0lysloian. has achleved sevcr?i+ml charred fragments of writing at Milton Liu which he ,twr't'her elabor- ,such stnocess in liver disease ae Dr.. paper, with a few detached words and letters discernible: ated the ;,deo, previcu.sdy expressed, Hamilton. His of Mandrake and Eu`+tes'- J. E. Gre . . . Will see that iit was impossible to carry on a ,pills nut are everywhere twknrw1o4_ ; to 1d you . ues . , . mother Government VMa ttaminerd 9overn'tnent be a specific for slow, we :t;. to her -death . . . our swine alone, but ,that the party supporting -gash diver; they give tone a,.nu 4' 1,i:ity to Tihds ,¢wart that enables Si. Vmr_ . . let me hes, . . - . „Errnl'a !!titins?" queried Foyle.form the -government must broaden aait to its danties• wle ease and :; -c.a.in- "I haven't got a sample yet, but afttolude all who were In sympathy tyI've little doubt of it. Now, here's l It with, the -Programme !firs g,Overnment Once ,theliver is eorrooteai, Dr. another. was +Greys-Stratton'a ; and adopted, He thotvnht +tare V. F', H%n%41t0n'9 P1119 appy their Pecu"Inr to ,,he kidneys and eliminating custom to lock up the house every night at dusk himself, He would dzation should renklin. vs it was a`nr ,merit o g ahial. This cleanses the blood and. go round with a revolver, and see to Organized, nou-p1,0Ud0A said klt'at the serifs it back through the ,system, foil every one of the bolts and fastenings, pieili'ticaa admbs of •its moll ra shau'Id of nonivshment anis strength. and no one was allowed In or out be venttila•t+ed •thra,ttgh u new organlza- Rh,eamado tendencies ere no longer for blood ',tiffs ,the proisr thereafter. it was one of the i grievances of the servants that they I Clop. " Th.e F,a'rracm cannot and ought not do rule 11110oauutry. To notwed, pure on that causes rheiimodio tactiles. Dull, aching twinges, stlff joints, weve prisoners soon after four o'- ! clock each -day in winter. And though do so woall;i bre a Sort of tyranny- We ~and diffietf ty Of exertion became he always slept with that rovolver i ere in a 'MinojrSty, and tine Must not things of the Past. ur.dor vie pillow, Wo can't find it. I.'}1,res another ,thing. G>veye- 1, t to do it, bee mse we are ='t a.ttem p C,t •course by xhoumlatiem such oomp:raiuts as sciatica, lumbago told 11 St rattan had a little study, whsle h0 i doanocracy;' tny+s the Premier: This neuralgla must be .includ'ed, Vor at- spent most of tlt0 day, a1tc1 there was into It 1 rovOCt 01,minsit wdthat some ThOugbt ter all, what cru they ,but manitesta- . sate built the ws:l. may nsran nothing c:' omything. but the " might pn" 'fo' be a, +Blares rmatrement tions of rheumatic VOLS' n7 ".plucks it i9 ea,sily seen •th%t a world safe ,vas Open and tttore was not a is vary pope lar, although one or two of good i8 accompli*he,d by Dr. Ilam- thi:rt; in it. Now, we Have been able loading me'm'bers of the V. P..O. •par' iiton's I'il:s. Acting via a b+:o-id re- to discover no oiie Who has ever ,tkndirtl Seeredary Morrison, tla not Y navator -Intl tt genelixi tonic for the Men that safe !.pen before. It's ngzr0o 1pPt21 1110 I'rotru,a,p The lis- - ° is iticatrwt x.ca. sy,.st,ont their five box five boxes for $1.00, It alk curious, too in view of Mallett s i;tcry about the checks, that we have t armemontn howerr•c r, ttpp be ciiL• dea,1•ca's, and be some Yon gel 1110 eft w hilt b^en able to lay our •hands on (t the resv4t of ra ntisapprabiensdorl, for .gnnulne Dr Iia•m•iltor1% Pills. slugs. tiring that refers to a banit- the fat iltr's w1ra aunt rohs0 the 000- -- ---- . ing Transaction -•not so much as a eporatdon of twth,er pardea or iri,dlv,:td- Tho avera,go sa'.,xry teP t}1tr mate paying -in book or a bunclt of Doan- : ' tial.?, dance, it&od, they ih ,o to Wellyt0a.chens wits $1„004 a year, end the terfoils. „The doctors say T1to old inch wits ' nom M&f ,nce 4 ,carry on W. uvera:ge ,salary art thO fUlla,1e ttitch rs Idiot about ,throe hours, before wo not lertmlfut, ls;w is trite "y rt3xwaal 'wiry teas 1600. there. That would be aboilk Rt • 'Past nine. I don't know-how Hallett struck. you, Mr. Foyle, but uccordiug to his own account he must have ar- rived at Linstone Terrace Gardens at nine.” Foyle rubbed 11is chin thoughtfully. „You mean lie may have -been there When the •shot was fired." Menzies made an impatient ,gas. ture. "I don't know. He may have got in immediately afterward. I own freely I don't quite take in this yarn, and yet the man struck me as genuine. Ice's got good credentials, and if'i1e'•s mized up with the mur- der why did lie 'phone to me?" "Search me," said Foyle. "What about the daughter? You said there was a girl,' Menzies stuck his thumbs in the sleeve holes of his waistcoat. "That's another queer Mint, :She was brought -up abroad, and scarcely ever saw the oil man. Pembroke says she spent her holidays with an old couple down In Sussex, to whom he had instruc- tions to pay three hundred pounds a year. When she left school he rnad the allowance paid to her direct. She had a taste for painting, and was ap- parently quite capable of looking •af- •ter herself. For two years she has not called or given any instructions about the allowance. "Ice wrote to GreYe iStratton, who retorted that it was none of his bust- ness--that the allowance would be paid over to his firm, eAd ,that if the I girl did not choose to ask for it, it could accumulate. Tie did not seem at all concerned at her disappearance. Take it from me, Mr. Foyle, wb ,shall run across some more damned 'funny business before we get to the bottom of this, There's not even a ghost of a finger -,print. If . only we can find Errol-" Foyle was too old a hand to offer conjecture at so early a stage of the case. Nor did Menzies seem to ex - Peet any advloo. ' Hard as lie had driven the investigation, durin; the utgnt, the ground was not yet 617iared• Until he had all the facts in .his pos- session it was useless to absolutely pia himself to any one line,,o't reason - lug. There was now one man who on known facts' might have committed -the murder. But plausible as, was the supposition that Errol was the man, the detectives knew that at best it was only a suspicion. And suspicion now-o,days does not commit e, man. It does not always justify an arrest. There must be evidence, and so far there wile nota 9orap of proof that Errol diad been within a thousand mues of Linstone Terrace Gardens on the night of the murder. (To be continued.) i WIFE OF HARV ES1 Lgt KING SGA V'r ,r.• .9TIll`QE 1`•1i '' '. Vie" t.* .,i ""'G - ' + [4 _ t, e : .r}r,.a4 : .•3 ` is J i` 1`- +'a . SCE N . ; F. .,' ! y`[)r i ,',.r", 476..5ri That thousands and thourrsatrds of dollars paid by American farm- ers for agricultural maebinery w the NfeCormickt International Hs1r- vester Co went right hack into charity was brought out in the recent serious illness of hirs. Cyrus' hicC.ormick 111 at Chicaage. Mrs. McCormick's charity wits not the kind rtreompanied by a brains band. is tht- complitnent pail by all tnid-western philalnthropie or. gunization.4 Silk Thread ,Direct §tom the Spider, A singular Yarn -and yet who will venture to dispute i,ts possdblldty comes from Madagascar, the home of the most fudustmiouis species of the spider tribe in the world. In other parts of the world they are ingenious, irelesas end useful. In Mad,%ZaZeVz, alawever, they worst on the theory i that their function, is to p:vlduce and still produce silk ndit'by the yard, but by the mile, And now It is SUPXsed to be possible, by means of a tapecial- iy •aonstrueted instrument, ,to wind off as much as two milers of silk thread from an ordinary spider ,once or twice a week! In Madagascar silk is ;be- irlg manufactured from the spider Willi •cons6derahle sniceess, and +the thread has been utied, too, ,for awaking stoelring,s and groves. 1`040,118 Vito next process will be, as the i:illc thre+ d Is thrown, ott, :tiro "instrtltrlN't" will at once •convert 3t into •Socks, Teach the young idea how to shoot, but don't afford, a clear conscience, fur fn•itane0. 1 '+( i n,.,:1 ll l OC $PH0bINMr. A ;`, Ir 1`h0 Great I• rush Preprarafwa. ! f• l:oneq and invigorates the whole 'f• n fl 1 R . C:Va 1$ 4t Fat n' C,i ,1 ,Pr ' _ t v a: ick ,Hera li,o d or 4 Douglas Stewart, former inspector of penitentiaries for Canada, died at his .hcme in Ottawa from heart fail- ure. lie was -70 years of age and was :born in Williams•dale, N.S. lie entered The Civil Service in 1879. 'Lie acted, as secretary at several imp'ort- ant meetings, 1wei.nding the Canadfan- Newfoundland convertion In • 1892; 1 was :secretary to the Canadian arbi- I traitor at the Behing Sea Tribunal in Paris In 1893, and joint secretary at the Intercolonial 'Conference Here in i 1.894. Y After a. most active career, Louis Vincent. Bouvier, Toronto's oldest eiti- zen, passed away reeentlY. Ile lead attained +the age of 101 years and ,8 months and, NvIis hate and hearty al- most alp to the Gast. Deceased -was a great lover of tlowers and every Summer might .be seen busily erigw- ,ad In his garden. France expects a new war this spring. Amies ,totaling between. 2,- 000,000 and 3,000,'004 anon wil: be thrown agaaust each other in a war between' Bolsaievik Russia, on the one hand, and Roumania, Poland' and other outpost stwtes, on the other, ae- cording to French military experts. Sir Trenry. Dmytron ds acting as Secretary of State pending the ap• ,pofntment of a new Minister .to 'fill bh,e vacancy created by the death of Ilight Hon. A. L. Sifton. That the Canadian Government has adopte3 ai merchant marine flag• resembling the Swiss Slag and has thereby caused consternation in Switzerland, which hopes some day to have a merchant marine flying the rational standard, -is denied in offlccfal circles at Ottawa. J. G. Desba mts, Deputy Minister of Naval Service, states that the red Union Jack ,ensign with. the Canadian omt of mans in the I fly Is the only flag that has been in I use by the Canadian merohant mar- ine for many years. Mr. Desbarsts explained, however, that each Cana - d n, ;tine opemdrig Canadian re>;is- tered vessels had in addition to t.,e Union Jack ensign a distinct house Vag. The opening of -the Federal Par- liament at Ottawa on February 14 .Will be ,narked by all the old-time display. The ceremony will. .be -full- I caress +and will be Ire :d In the new Chamber of the Senate and for the first Eim,e since the outbreak of the War. peir Excellencies, the Gov- ernor-General •and ,the Duchess of Devonshire, will subsequently Hold a dxawingrocim- This will be held In Ithe Senate -Chamber on .the Saturday ,after the opening of Parliament. Fol- !I lowing the exampi * set in drawing- 'I rooms at Buckingham Palace, feath- ers and voile will be worn. There will -be the usual guards oS honor berth for i enc 'o Par icemen and fo ctl a ,ap ng f 1 t r the dnawingroom. I Walkerton has decided; to hold an Vid boys' and Girls' Reunion from Just 23 to 30 next. Former citizens of Walkerton, and Bruce County will be welcome, .A very ,extensive :pro- gramme is being estranged for the wIvAe week and visitors can rely an having a pleasant ,time. The •Bc,ard of Education at aspec. ial meeting adapted ,tile report of the { teachers' Committee, recommendinti I setiry Increases to six teachers of the Collegiate Isst5 •itte, including Prin- cipal W. 13. Shales. The •increases are as requested by the teachers, who started that If they were not granted, their resignsdon could be eensider- I ,ed to taste effect 'March 1, but are tor a six months' ,perlod. The asratige- ment will terminate June 20. Thr Norma. and Model School teachers of the Province Qent a dep- utation ,to Zion, ll, II. ,Grant to press tor an Increase In salaries. Last year the teachers evked for a 25 per, event. Increase and received about, fiftee-n per cent. They are now sscrkintg the ,balance of the original requcst. Thi ndtiloter promised -con- sideration, " - In view of t4,vn "c,lamn,ed "tt!tntle+" of many t*ar-1 1,an brokers tow•a!d ';za arrangement •m•ad;e by Sir Iienry Drayton, lntnfste3r Of finance, with agent-, •brokers and bankarM not t3 lend, (heir -:anilines for the purchaso c:f •fcreign-bold •scaurh !o?.s, the volun- •t..ry comnl.ittee, by ulhich. +this e,r- .ran,:•, :vent w:.ts made a-pmebfca•1 e1n- baso, liuvo 1>aen dissolved. The T'1. -A1 Sorvice, Con m+is'sion in- nounces thea promotion at G. S. Iluer- tis, from Custanls ,examiner at Belle - v111,0 •to ,cal'o:•.cto,r of r`ustoma, P,Tade 1 iwrA . A. 1'. Gundy, •pe?laeipa? of 4311% Col- . legate Insstttide, has been dr,p.airted to that rnena.*.,o Of Alio Uni vexsity of Toronto. eepina Fit $Y Alt. 0A74%vi'm 1'.t gr,ToN It is because of the war that : - I I Ir, the perfect physical luau has all at once become the. idol o£ the world. You can make of yourself, even ; . , rather late in life, 41mot anything you like. You are not ,going to get fit :n one day, one month, or, perhaps, a year, ( unless you tape enough outdoor exer&m to keep the circulation going and practise 11, I/ the athlete's first principle to l.eep tho, system clean. He does not give his body a chance to absorb poisons. He not nnly takes his cold shower, after exercise, but he knows a cleansing of the intestines is important, and he takes occasionally a good regulator and liver cleanser, eurkl I :. as a dose of castor oil , or, what is znl_Gh , 1 f"A f better, a tiny ,W made up of May -apple, :+':: i Ir. aloin and 'ala and sold b alinept l I II:, jalap, y al. druggists in the land ;as Dr. I.'i^r%e'a Pleasant Pellets. Keep the kidneys in good order !.Iso. Avoid too muco meat, alcohol or tea,. Drink plenty of pure water, preferably hot water, Before meals, and drive the bili ,.cid out of the system by taking "Anuric" (anti -uric -acid). This can be obtained at almost any drag store. Send a, bottle of water to the chemist at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and you will receive free medical advice as to whether the kidneys are affected, When your kidneys get slugpi"sh and clog, you suffer from backache, Fick -headaches, dizzy spells, or twinges and pains of lumbi ga, rhouniatism or gout; or sleep is dir,- ', turbed two or three times a night. ' .-Ite heed, before too rate! Eget Anuric (anti -uric -acid), for it iAll put new life into your kidneys and your entire s} `em. Ask your nearest druggist for it or send T)r. Pierce ten cents for trial prehoge of "Azuric." -_ ..._- ._____._ ._ __ ._ _. _--_--_--_,_.._. • Of Wincbmtes by M•r. CShTfatle, Tice LIVE t g yB ST OIbG K EP R nepoatt Of whddl ns as follows, el. E 1, Frcpn appfl51ing 200 lbs, per &ore of '3.8-3 fal-Kizer sheate -was an increase (Union Stock Yardai):- of ,tnvo lona! par e,aiie, tram 400 l+bs. Of.Toronto 1 3-8-3 mere was an increase lot five A. during ,the week consisle:l, rsf . toras per ocre. TM oora was well ,162 cattle,, 538 calves, 3,229 sheep i rOemed and well eared. An earlier , i land 4,807 hogs, wdldis+t 409 hta„s w -re i r o(nt remcds the tact d wt ",thfe i benheW dal +effect of fertilizers received on through billing. With could sj be distinctly •noted. Each forWlzed arppmoxtmately 3,700 eatbl,o on sale op I Plat was Vi, ler and of a dark green Monday, trading opening very doiggy i , :