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The Huron Expositor, 1917-08-24, Page 2,aoeae,sw.rmFa.ps- oney Say ernia of in Canada .50, six to 40c. To $2.00. rat s& Whet din reams the rate is SOc. }doer. Subscribers who fail to receive Tho Expuitor regulaely i mail con - fez re favor by ting us of the fact at as early a te as possible. When change of address ler desired' both the old and new addrees should Jkl friveue s like having dollars handed to you the articles listed below are money savers. - Bought early they represent values that cannot be replaced at the prices. Preserving Kettles in granite Beautiful,,three coat, wbite lined, with wood ball and perfect balance -just the kind that every housewife requires.... ...75c to $1.50 One coat granite kettles, each .... 20c to 50c A Food Chopper is quite a common article but "The Uni- versal " saves time and labor in pickling or in making jelly. Easily cleaned and a child can operate them. 5E85 to 52.25 a The dry season kills the old wooden pump. We have a stock of thosestrong iron heads, com- plete with cyl- inders, to go at 58.50 A few good value m, stock pumps for 2 inch pipe, complete with cylinder and 4 foot pipe for $12.00 Pulleys do not last with heavy crops, why not keep an extra one on hand aac to 45e Special Ham- memnickle plat- ed, warranted steel, for 85 cts. a r e advancing in price every day. You need one for thresh- ing. Price...$J.35 A.SILLS, Serafort A416 inrommente "kaki fieA; Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY 01014B2S- 1. Conieally, President alasylkanip - Vice-Preddesi T. N. Bays, Seaf. Seey.-Treas. AGENTS Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Binahley, Sealottli; William Chesney, Eginondville; J. W. Teo, Goderieln R. G. Aram*, Bradlialfel- DIRECTORS William Bina, No. 2, Seaforth; John BennewieseBrodhagen; jamas Evan, Beeekwoode M. Maws, Clinton; Jas. Cannalii, &darkly; re F.MeGrwor, R. R. No. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris lock; asorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaorth. • a.m. p.m. ij�derlch rjeall°1:00 2.30 37 107 Walton 7.50 3.19 9.1 1)h FROM TORONTO 'Ilfeese;ito (Leave) 8.20 5.10 icarrive?, .v.ht 1.02.15 7.00 1W 842 12.10 9.07 ')Goderich 12.45 pAp 1220 9.19 f- Mb= ConPrtirlits at Gualpii ..fikerriOn with tiriiin---"Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon - idly Detre& and Chicago and all in - immediate points. Iron Pumps & pump Repairing 3 a prepated to tut aUKind of Fare and LttPumpSaJd a I }sizes pe Fitting- , e c. Galvan- i S teel ranist ad Water troughs astal c e ens ass d attle Basins. e A so a amdsof pump repairingdone on h or I notice. For terms, etc., apt ly at Pump Factory, Goderich Stn East, or at residence, North Main Street •J. F. Weish,Seaferth C. In R. TIME TABLE 413ELPH & GODERICH BRANCH. TO TORONTO. - G. T. R. Timm TABLE Trains• Leave Seaforth as follows: 16.65 a.m. - For Clinton, Goderich, Wingham and Hineardine. 5.88 p.m.-- For Clint°, Wingham and 'Hineardim 11.011 pen. - For Clinton, Goderich 1.81 a. m. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orilla, North Bay and is west, Belleville and Peter - and points east. 3.18 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, ALISON AND IBRUCR loath Passaggie... SOIL griemeheles &apart 11.85 , 1, J4 lAsaladasto.. .. 1.13 MMus, • •.... 1St 14 4* •-• "as • it 4.1It, • 41. 6 WO Xanden, Nara /1* -001 Lt4tr It.* - 6.3. :00 Er.gt: .f4.4 4.4 ;ft:1"C egetPiWA"NOt SO 44 .:1011141111"1 •L,A.111-1111111 Wilton Tbs. lire;ika They stimulate the sluggish liver, clean the coated tongue, tereeten the breath, dear away all waste and poisonous mat- erials from the systein in nature's easy manner, and prevent as 'well as cure constipation, heartburn, catarrh' of the stomach, sour stomach, water brash, floating specks before the eyes, jaundice, sallow or Muddy complexion, and all diseases arising from a disordered 0/ diaeased condition of the liver. As an "after aiuner" pill they an most valuable, relieving that "fall 01 bloated feeling" and preventing in digestion. • nailburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 256 per vial, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'fee -onto, Ont. ste We have our Creamery now in full operation, and we want your patron- age. We are prepared to pay you the highest prices for Your cream, pay you every two weeks, a. cfgh, sample and test each can of cream carefully and give you statement of the same, We also supply cans free of charge. and give you an honest business deal. Call in and eee us or drop us a card for particulars. 1,ie Seaforth Creamery Seafinth Ontario Thought She Would Lose Two Children With Bloody Dyrntery Dysentery manifests its degrees of intensity, but cases the attack is 1 With varying well marked y preceded by loss of appetite, and me amount of diarrhoea, which gradeetly increases in severity, and is accompanied with grip- ing pains in the abdomen. Tim dis- charges from the ,bowels succeed each other with great frequency, and first resemble those of ordiaary diarrhoea soon change their character, becoming scanty, mucous or slimy, arcl subse- quently mixed with, or consisting wbolly of blood. Never neglect whatat first appears to be a slight attack of diarrhoea or dysen- tery may set in. Cure the first symp- toms by the use of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. Mrs. J. Purdy, Leask, Sask., writes: "I have used Dr. Vowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry in my family for bloody dysentery with perfect results. / think, without a doubt had I it been able to procure a bottle just when I did, I would have lost two of my children." "Dr. Fowler's" has been on the market for the past 72 years, and its reputation Is such that there are many preparations on the market claiming to make the same cures as "Dr. Fowles." These no name, no reputation strawberry com- pounds may be dangerous to your bealth, so demand . and insist on being given "Dr. Fowlees" wheii you ask for it, 4.1!...112.2•1110.1.0., ADVERTISING RATES. • Display Advertising Rates - Made knowyeen application. Animals. -Ono insertion 60e; three bserUons, t1.01). Farms or Real Eatate for sale 60e. each insertion for one month of four hasertions; 25e for each subsequent in- sertion. Miscellaneous Articles for Sale, To Rent„ Wanted,' Lost, Found, etc., each insertion 25c. Local Read- ers, Notices, etc., 10e per line per in- sertion. No notice less than 25c. Card of Thanks 50e. Legal Advertising 10e and Se per line. Auction Sales, $2.for one insertion and $3 for two insertions Professional Cards not exceeding one inch -$6 per year. 1 Price $35c, burn Coe TaissideekTwe6kn Ogle Manufactured mik by The -4• SEAFORTH, Friday, Aug. 17, 1917 ONE .OF Til EGREATEST TASKS IN THE WORLD Sir Eric Geddes, First Lord of the Admiralty, may properly be idescrib- ed as one of '.England's great dis- coveries in the war. Before the war began he was a raileoad manager, be- fore that he had been a railroad en- gineer in various remote quarters of the earth, and he seemed to be almost unknown even in his own profession. Certainly he was not recognized as one of the most remarable men in it. Yet within a year he wao made an adoniral and a general, and probably itbs constitutes the record for a man when the war began knew nothing about naval or military aifairs. After all, there is nothing mysterious about the rise of Sir Eric Gedds. He sim- ply made gond, on one job, earned an- other, again made good in a most striking way, and goes to a post, that ,if ndt the most important in the world, certainly must be reckoned in the first half dozen. What he is ex- pected to do in his new position is thus summarized by the Boston Transcript: • 1. Reduce or suppress the menace of the German undersea boats. • 2. Tighten the mesh which the :British Grand Fleet can draw about :German ports. 3. Roll up tb,e red tape, cast ou precedent. and barnacled policies,' and release the impulse for initiative in naval action. 4. Utilize in a reorganized board the staff brains of the fleet and not • compose it of favorites or cai the basis of seniority, ilength of service in re- volving office chafes or executive com- mand afloat, but from • officers who have beeorne proficient rn the greater problems of naval warfare. • 5. Adopt and apply non -pill methods of promotion, new devices, and encourage new strategies. 6. Squelch With practicalities the lawyer politician delusion that paper agreements are as good as a squadron io stopping neutral contraband trade with the enmem." Peehapo oomething Jess than the ac- compliehment of this whole pro- gram would( satisfy the British pub- lic and justify the appointment. It semis reasonable to suppose that the chief assets. of Sir Eric Geddes are that be will take an outsider's vie W of the administration of the navy. He is bound by no tradition. He has no po- litical past, no social commitments. ge eeme.-e to the problem free .from t • - ill praiiittiZeO: The new head lif the Admiralty I'd still in his early forties. He was born there We veil -gaed and had S01110 1 in India of Scotch patents, and was teeny exeelleht dugouts. "D" Cams sent to England to be educated. At patiy's 0,0. hadan excellent dugout the age of 15 he doncluded that the to himself there and a splendid mess job had been completed, and left for dugout was shared as a sleeping place 1 the United States, but so little is by his subalterns and then had a bunk known of this remarkable man that to spare. On a bitter cold night at it eannot be said definitely whether the end of 1915, "0" Company went he ran away from school or emigrate g into reserve, having been relievd in ad with his parent's consent. In any the front lineiby "A' Company after a event he worked for some time in rather hot turn in which the 0 . C . "0" had had no sleep at all. After 'posting his various support line dut- ies, and having some food in the com- modiiii mess dugoat, the 0.C, made off for the luxurious solitude of his own d-agout, thankful for the prospect of a good sleep. ..,- Half- an hour later he returned tothier4ess dugout,where there was a claery ,little Ere- of coke and charcoal. Nov he crouched over the little fire in tile mess dugout to light a pipe and warra himself before climbing into the, pare bunk. While be crouched there he heard the whir- ring moan of a biggish Beebe shell, which landeel not far away with a tre- mendous eliplosien. Then another, and then a third. and then silence, I When the 0.Q. "D" went back, he found that his dugout. had suffered three direct hits, and its contents scattered .for hundreds of yards but soldiers have seen so many of these lucky escapes that they have almost ceased to note theme The sergeant -major of "A" Com- pany was recognized as a man of parts. He had once shared a mode- rately substantial. business with a partner. But there had come a day of disaster. The sergeant -major's partner has disappeared, and the books and accounts, which had been his special charge, disclosed quite a long series of systematic frauds, the upshot of which left the sergeant - major picked pretty bare by the time he had honorably settled up with all his creditors. When the war came it found him employed iri the counting - room of another firm with which he had previously had dealings as a fel- low wholesaler. With a wife, an in- valided sister and three children de- pendent upon him, he bad not been able to satisfy himself in the quite early days of the war that he had the right to enlist, thone,a he was an old volunteer and ex -Territorial. How- ever, the early Spring of 1915 saw him an enlisted man. He was a pla- toon sergeant within a couple of months, and company sergeant -major three Months before this unit reached -, France, He was liked nd reced by everyone who knew him but -"Can Iyou see the sergenat-major holdhig his' end un in the scrap?' a.sked the iunior etab of the company, in a tent on the hill outside Boulogne during their first night in. France, And his brother -officers nodded thoughtfully. "You'll find hell do hi a job." Dining those early months in France he often used a rifle in the trenches, and was occasionally out on patrol, and more than once fired a dram or two from a =chine gun. The O.C. fomnd him very helpful in the discussion and arrangement of minors strafes and the .severest critic . •-would never 'have found a hint of n Ileigitmns rnuet be b`alli inclination to shirk in the sergcant- isheci. wbiio the war nietet The-Teit major. As the O.C. said he was al- erals approved of 'his .statement 'o ways "on deck," and never forgot But at the end of four aPbrhileBCtoiPjwrdes' teandX•s°P.13afirtet•rillei:011°Iilamw is e• t anything.Thohshe never, had laid hands It is poSsiblelto lay too much strees !upon a Boche, or even seen one, upon what the First Lord will ac- I save as one does catch fleeting complish or capaccomplish in time glim.pses a men in trendies a couple of war. Sir Edward Carson had the right idea when he said that he of hundred yards away. And then there came the first daylight raid in would not interfere with the experts that bit of line. It was a Boche raid. others e to interfre with them. Tbeee -very hot bombardment on an ex - and it came at the end, of an hour's of the navy, nor Would he permit naval probbn is, after all, the prob- t lem 1 of Sir David Beatty and Sir remely narrow section of our front, It really did not touch the ction of John Jellicoe rather than the prob- se lern of Sir Eric Geddes. In making the sergena,t-major's own company, but it happened that he was on the promotions, or increasing pay, 111 extreme left flank of his company s rolling up red tape and otherwise line when a handful of Boches rushed maldng it possible for efficiency f"-- a machine gun emplacement ef the have first call, he can do a great next company. work. Some men of the - next company , ataaas,. MARRRIAGES VALID The clause in the Military Service Act which says that any man married after the ,6th day of July, 1917, shall be deemed to be unmarried, appears to have been mioconstrued in some quarters. Letters received from clergymen indicate that marriages helve fallen off as a result. Apparent- ly wouldbe contracting parties have come to the conclusion that marriages after 6th of July are invalid. This is, oftnourse, absurd. The object of the clause is to provide that unmarried men may not avoid being called out in that class for military service by reason of marriage after that date, 6th day of July. ODD FREAKS OF FATE IN WAR In the distant, eaiyegoing pre-war days we ;used rather to poke fun at some writers for waht was called their babit of stretching the long arra of coincidence to fit the exigencies of the plots. That idea is perhaps one of the many that we shall have to revise in the light of the war. For the rnost extravagant •among the us- ers of the long arm rarely ventured upon any stretching of it that would equal fate's almost daily exercises of it in this war. One day last year two b.ospital ships were,berthed at the same time alongside the landing stage at Southampton, says A. J. Dawson, author of "Somme Battle Stories," in the New York Tribune. One was from France and the other from the Near East. For the most part the cases removed learn one ship saw nothing of those taken frcon the other'but • havened by chance that (ace of the firsat*treteher cases from the Near East ship was laid down in the shed alongside one of the last stretcher cages.from the French ship. But the t1.79 men did not see each other, because their heads were ed in in opposite directions. The writ- er, waildng between .the stretchers, offered a newspaper to one of these men and as he spoke both turned their heads and saw o and recognized each other. Thay were brothers. Both had been serving since the Autumn of 1914, and neither had the remotest idea what had become of the other. Ill a sector on the Ancresbefore the majority of people in England bad ever heard of that little river'the company in reserve was reckoned al- most as well placed as a company in rest. By compariaori with a very' vile tiVnt 1u,Ili'''. alinaert line trenehad Vieginian logging camps, after which he cocupied an obscure position on the -Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Probably he was a station agent. Thence he went to the Homestead Steel Works in Pittsburg, which fact may give the modest Andrew Car- negie an opportunity to claim Geddes as a portege. His next jump was to India, and at the age of 21, he cut through the jungle to lay a railway there. This work, it appears, was important enough to draw to him general ,attention from railwaymen, for he was summoned to England for the North-Eastern Railroad. He was assistant manager when war broke out, and it was in the first few days of August, 1914. that Kitch- ener came into contact with him. The result was that he was retained by Kitchener to see that munitions got -swiftly and safely from the factories to the front. • Then he was sent to France to reorganize the congested roads back of the -lines. He was made director-general of -transportation and -attached to the staff of Gen, Haig. When a special government depart- ment for the control of munitinos was established with Lloyd George at its head, Geddes was chosen to be his deputy. Subsequently he wes made controller of shipping, and ander lais auspices was planned and partly exe- cuted the campaign that now promis- es to turn out 4,000,000 tons �f mer- chant shipping iii a year. When he became first sea lord it was necessary that he should have a seat in one of the Houses of Par- liament, so the member for Cam- bridge reigned and Sir Eric • was returned by acclamation. In a letter to the Unionist party leader in the constituency Sir Eric announced that he teas a Unionist, but said that Children Cry RIR WM= • CAS_T-CoRiA were out on the parapet and seine - thing made the sergeant-rnajor climb out, too. It was tnen that he had his first close look at Boches. Two of them had collared the next com- pany's Lewis gun from that emplace- ment; big, beefy looking Bavarians they were, one in a helmet and the other wearing a cap. Now as though he were listening to some other fellow a good long way off, he heard him- self yell with quite singular ferocity, and felt himself leaping forward at those to Boches, his bayonet held low. The one with the cap let all go and holed into the greenish smoke. but the ;fellow in the helmet swung round at bay witb a revolver which he fired just as the sergeant -major swooped down upon him, yelling like a South Sea Island warrior. The Boche grunted as the steel found his vitals, and his body pitched forward almost dragging his rifle froin the sergeant -major's hands. He was still alive when the S.M. bent over him to look into his faze, and the eyes of the two snet in a cateer, flickering glance, all curiosity on the side of the Englishmen and vindictive that on the side of the German, who, by the way, was an "unter-o zier. With that look of hatred in his eyes, he died, having clearly recognized the man who killed him. This first Boche seep in the war by the sergenat-major was his ab- sconding partner. IUMINIM,11111110116. inent, however, offered to purchase machines -from him. if he would make a successful flight and landing at Hel- goland. Then it was that the British Government began to be asked if it was aware that the brains of the Eng- lishman had been sold to Germany be- cause the Admiralty did not have en- ough brains to recognize a great in- vention when it appeared. About this time Winston Churchill became great- ly interested in aviation as it affected the British navy and told Roe he would- purchase machines from him if he would build them -with pontoons constructed on certain lines laid down by tell department. Roe said he would build the machines, but he said that they would not be practicable. How- ever, he made the hydroplanes, and his prediction was justified. Satisfield that he knew more about the subject than the Admiralty, Churchill entered into a contract with him, and he has t Miss Fay Moore, of Kansas, Mont., been doing Government work ever whose fatehr is a wealthy ranch own.. since. • er, has applied for a job as a farm It ought to be recorded to his last -al a hwoirdeerl y. known Philadelphia more responsible thee any other man 1 attorney mg credit that Lord Northcilffe was Mrs. Marion N. Horvvitz, widow of in the British Isles for stimuating in- has been nominated for mayor' e. terest in flying before the war. He Moorehaven, Fla. promoted great races and offered huge prizes for unusual feats. He intreduced an Avro hydroplane at the seashore resorts for missionary pur- poses, and sent other Avro aeroplemes through the country, inviting the gen- eral public to make free flights with Roe or some of his assistants. Credit, too, is due to Mr. Churehill for his MAN WHO BUILDS THE FAMOUS AVRO There 'will be a wonderful history after the war about the development of the aeroplane. The story cannot be told now for military reasons, ami beside, it is not complete, new chap - tel.'s being added every week. One of the heroes of this history, though, whenever it comes to be written, will A.V.be Roe, a young English in- ventor and engineer who has bat practically all the famous Bm'tish fighting planes and who, is now in charge of the largest -aeroplane fac- tories in the world, .He works now under the British Government, and is regarded as the great British aviation expert. Something about his early struggles is told by Harry E. TUder, the American aeroplane expert in the Philadelphia Public Ledger, Details of his greatest invention, the biplane type of Aghting machine, are not given for obvious • reasons, although it is difficult to believe that there is any good -flying craft in the world of ,Whinti -genially dm not Innisese at i least One sample. In the early daye when the Wrights I were 'begirmig to become famous, '0/hell 'they had actually flown for "short distances, Rea was a Lancashire marine engineer who was attracted bY stories of the Wrights and set himself to the task of turning out a flying machine. In 1906 he built a maihine and mitered it in a competition pro- moted by the London Daily Mail. His flying machine was a crude and home- ly -looking affair, but it proved that it was more practical than the hand- some models, and Roe won a prize. Thus encouraged he devoted. himself wholly to his invention, and 'finally was given permission to continue his expeiments at Brooklands, the fam- ous motor racing plant. Here he built a shack, but presently he was ordered to move out as he was interfering with tbe racers. In the course of his ejection a policeman carelessly smashed his machine. He then ap- plied to the War Office to carry on his work at a• great military training ground, but was refused. Then he "squatted" on some public property known as Lea Marshes, where he got in some important work before being again chased as a trespasser. He next appeared in 1909, at the "Blackpool Flying Week," where his machine caused great merriment to the crowd. He was patronizingly spoken of by the various experts, but was warned that he would never make any real progress as long as he persisted in carrying his engine at the front of the pilot. He was not discouraged, however, and this engine 1 arrangement has resulted in the trac- tor biplane, which has since set the fashion in the world of aeronautics. Just before the second great Black- pool flying exhibition a fire injured the two machines he had entered. He was able to repair them just in time to enter the contest and was heartily cbeered by an even larger crowd than that which he had so -mightly amused' the year before. In 1911 the British Government began to noticethe Avro machines and purchased his 50 -horse- power Gnome. It also ordered others, and this type was really the prede- cessor of the 80 to 100 -horse -power Avro tractor of to -day and the here ee a hundrd air fights and vict-ories. Next Roe turned to the hydroplane, and developed a maelaisie that would rise frora the water and light on it aftee a -flight. He tried to sell this to the British Admiralty. He was tivrad dawn. The German Gomm - unieipal positions in Philadelphia, Woinn workers making =gonna for the Mexican soldiers receive ea per day. High school girls at Leyalton, Cal, have donned overalls and gone to work in the harvest fields. Women are employed as ammuni- tion workers in the United States naval torpedo plants at Newport, R. Miss Dorothy Jones, of Montclair, N.J., has sailed for Franeembere she will drive a war arnindance. For the first time in the vsorld's teem, Jewitli women have voted foe •representation in a Jewish congress. Girls with flat feet are being re- jected as stenographers by the United • States naval department. The first woman recruiting officer in the United States is the honor laela by Miss Neva-McKinna, of Tifton, Ga, THE FIRST LINE OF DEFENSR., Pure blood is the body's first lint of defense against disease. Strom, healthy glood neutralizes the poise= of invading germs, or destroy the germs theraselvi. That is wi • ey- 'many people exposed to disease eon- exPdropeniandieturess for °thner e ana;Plalie before anrethde be- ginning of the war. - Probably no- and watery and therefore lack -tract it. Those whose blood is weak in defensive pow•er are nienet lia"- body had the slightest concept•ion fo • the ,tremenduous role the flying men to infection- EverYbodY maY serve that healthy, red-blooded pe ewlieffree U3andplaChyurinchthillewwerare, but t Naret are less liable to colds and the gril3P4 before August, 1914, and they must than pale, bloodless people. It is the. share some of the honor with Anii„ bloodless paple who tire easily, wha Roe, whose abbreviated name is ear- are short of breath at slight exertion, ried wherever a British fighting ma- who have poor appetites, and who chine flies. • i wake up in. the morning as tired ss 'when they went to bed. While we - 1 men and girls chiefly suffer front ACTIVITIES OF. WOMEN i bloodlessness, the trouble also affftts Old maids are very scarce in Eng-, both boys and men. It simply af- land. 1fects girls and women to a greater Constantinople has a store for wo- ; extent because there is a greater de - men only. 'Island upon their blood supply. It is claimed that women make the To renew and build up the blood best scupltorsthere is no remedy can equal DraWils Great Britain has over 21,000 V70- EaP.18° Pink Pins. Theo tone up men in the army service. entire system, snake the blood ric Over 1,000,000 women are now era -1 and red, feed and strengthen starving ployed in agriculture in Francenerves, increase the appetite, put col - Queen Helena of Italy has a hobby or in the cheeks, give refreshing sleep of collecting curious footgear. and drive away that unnatural tired The Prussian unties employ over feeling. Plenty of sunlight and whole - 30,00 women in'va.rious ca.pacities. ; some food will do the rest. Women are being employed as long- 1 You can get Dr. Wfilianie Pink ! shoremen in New York City. !Pills through any dealer in snedicke, • A large sawmill located at Kiln, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six Miss., is run entirely by women. boxes for $2.50 from The, Dr. Wil - Over 1600 women are employed in ilams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ID! .IMP.Mreene ndfireeme 1 The Gum of Gumption Clea-ases the teeth - sweeteas tka mouth -allays thirst and fatigue. The Forces in Europe are finding it a great comfort. It gives them vim and staying power. It is refreshing to wcrkers everywhere. Smokers will find it soothing and cooarg Ckcw 1 atter every meal MOE IN CAN/184, ale ran had his P time azei - the 0-1* swallower• three inehE 'eat de le wee or tei Lon i 0' stenfl. fort of M1 hid go, e ton lx: %rigs b intienny calos me tits, an r e si d e n t s being in th longnight pects ef in • been forin :Rfar,11:114:ilisYuthure;Se 137theerri: itel.sr13.1k3sim:1:1 bride of o nto, ed -by E. :er.t.'neGesresievai property t and The pricew propil ] the course famiO ton. The ozi mystery, the rear much the Routledge this part for repa Possroly ontini.ssio Chevrolet stonis trunk Mr. time withl nothing up the S tad him d. o ade work ir gm" « A Cl Gregsr, legiate in ywin arship Mathern Miss M Exarnia She wa. Mr. Ge Pupils next tw neestic tute_.-3ag ntatmd at once mehip was si her fri players urn eld lc eriate games ,sr's s Qxcelot inlcrwer 191 ha Nit. her e umme tbs. 'Po with h the Se feente