The Huron Expositor, 1919-01-17, Page 211.
fr,
GOO
THE
•••••
EXPOSITOR
•
•
• _
' Every one concedes the money to be made at the pres-
ent opt ot the }rush, fire wood, logs, heading Volts all in big'
demand. A new cross -cut saw tightens the work and the
Mind. ViN can supply youn the vety best makes.
0
THE HURON EXtiOSITOR
The_Leader..... * • • • .1; • • • ass. * .... • • $7.60
The
The.....•.•...••
Y-1 dies per pair.. .........
an , p
Files 7 in., 20C
Lincoln Sets..........-
00 WO • .,,.$7.o
••• 1-0••••:50C
• • • • *It
it • in is a IN II II 11 II 11 a
The Choice of Canada's " Champs "
Canadian hockey experts recorrimerid
"A utompbile" Skates
Because they'relighter, swifter and Scientifically designed for speedy
stronger than any other skatestarts and sudden stops. , *
Nickel steel blades hold their edge. Automobile Skates are the choice
Light aluroluitun tops help to" eat of men. who need the -best. •
ups space.
3
-1••••••••••••••11•1•01•11,
$1.90 to $6.50
•••
•
SEA.FORTH, FRIDAY, Jan. .17, 1919
HOW HORSES HELPED BEAT THE
GERMANS
In the British retreat from Mons
the cavalry played nagreat part, and
in one engagement the Stets Greys,
imitated then* historic 'feat at Water-
loo when they went into action With, a
feat.- soldider, holding _ to 'a stirrup of
eaeli eav,alryman. - When trench War-
fare -Was established the mounted un-
jts Were dismounted and took their
tilaceslin the trenchei;othe-horees were
sent to the rear and for many months
remained inactive. Yet it is. an :in-
justice to the horse who "fought
not his fight, but ours," as Mr. Ent -
est Harold Baynes says in the New
York Tribune, to suppose that the
horses did not enact a great role
in the war. It has been said of se
many things that they won the war
that one hesitates in saying the thing
8f the horse, but the war could not
have been fought AO it was fought
without the horse; If neither side
had any horses the balance would
have been redressed, 'but it is not
without significance that the side that
had the. "best horsese, and the most
horses finally woxi,
Mr. Baynes, who -is known as
"the man who 'Saved the buffalo,"
and is _honorary secretary of the
Red Star Animal Relief, calculates
that more than 5,000,000 horses
were used in the war, and that
Great Britain had most of them
may be gathered from the fact that
she bought a million and a half in
the United, States alone. As the
greatest horse -breeding and loving
cuntry in the world it is not sur-
prising. that British facilities for
carting for ` her horses, sound `and
wounded, were the very best; and
surely it is a fine thing to be able to
boast that 80 per .cent. of the sick
and wounded horses that passed
through the hands of the veterin-
arians recovered. In the feat the way
the British eared; for their horses
would have made any race but the
Germans and the Turks 'blush for
42.4.4001400211112,4122191ailial
,
31 A -SIL LS, Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL tat
FIRE INgitiNCE COT. tea
HEAD OFFICEe-SEAFORTH, ONT. C A Sir Ote 1 A
ten Cri
. DIRECTORY
OFFICERS.
4. Connolly; Goderich, President
1. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -Presider*
Z. E. Hays, Seaferth, Secy.-Treaa.
AGENTS
atlex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clinton; Ecit
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on. 137, Seaforth;
J. W. Yeo, Goderieh; R. G. Jar -
;with, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS
William Rion, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewles, Brodhagen; James Evan..
leechwood; M. hicEweri, Clinton; Jas
-Connolly, Goderich; D. F. ItleGreg•or
P No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Harlock;
Leorge McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
i0-55 a; m. - For Clinton, Goderiek
• ,Wingham and Kincardine.
9.1511 p. 111. - For Clinton, Wingham
'and Kincardine.
11.03 p. m. - For Clinton, Goderich.
6.36 a. in -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, °Alija, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Teter-
• boro and points east.
4,16, pfire - For Stratford, Toronto,
' Montreal, and, points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
Going South a.m.
Whighara, depart .... 6.35
Begrave 6.50
7.04
7:13
SOUR, ACID
GASES OR INDIGESTION
"Pape's Diapepsin" neutralizes exces-
sive acid in stomach, relieving
dyspepsia, heartburn and
distress at once.
Time RI In five minutes all atoms*
acli distress, due to acidity, will go.
No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or
belching of gm or eructatiena of undi-
gested food, it6- di hinesg, bloating, foul
breath or headach
Pape's Diapepsi
is noted for its
speed in regulati g upset stomachs.
It is the surest, q ickest stomach sweet-
ener in the whole world, and besides it
1 is harmless. Put an end to storaaeli
distress at once by getting a large fifty -
cent case of Pape's -Diapepsin from any
drug store. You realize in five minutes
how needless it is to 'sniffer from indi-
geation, dyspepsia or Day stomach dis-
order caused by ferineetation due to
excessive acids in stomach. • * -
Myth.... •00•iseastc,.•
Londesboro
Clinton,
Brucefield- . . ....
Eleven
Hensall ........
Exeter
Centralia ...
London. arrive
Going North
London, depart ...... 8.30
Centralia .Q 935
Exeter ....... .. .... 9A7
Hensall ' 9.59
Klippen
a -m.
3.20
3.86
33.186
eaaa • 4.15
8.08 4.33
8.16 4.41
8.25 4.48
8.40 5.01
8.57 5.13
10.05 6.15
it.1%. " Look, Mother! If tongue 7Is coated,
4.40
5.45
5.57
6,09
6.16
6.24
6.40
6.57'
7.05
7.18
7.40
int' Wants and Mn.
TIN Mud You Hue Always
Pears the
st4gnat3rs of
•
their treatment of prisoners. No
We Are As Full of Deadly
Toisorui As A Germ
Laboratory.
AUT O.iNTOX1CATION
OR E
"FRUIT-A-TIVE.9" Absolutely Pro.
yenta This Dallger0116 Condition, ,
_
The' chief cause of poor' heali4 13
•• •
instead
tteal tohtertsboswinegis, Waste
from the
ourlin ista:le:roue wre'ge d t o remain there, geneyating
intestine regularly every day,
- • poisons which are absorbed by the
blood. 1.
Jie.other words,,a person ,who
habitually conatipated, is poisoning
hirnslf. We knowtnow that i11410;
ittiO.ZiatilOn, due to non -action of the
bowels,' is clirecily responsible for
seriousitianeyandBladderTroubles;
that it upsetsihe' Stomach, causes
Indigestion, Logs of Appetite and
Sleeplessness rifeet chronic Mown-
etism„ Gout, Pain In The Back, are
relieved as soon is the bowels become
regular; and that Pimples, Rashes,
Eczema and Other Skin Affections
disappear, wive:, "Fruit-a-tives" aro
taken to correefGoastipation, _
"Fruii-a-ifeestr will prOcci you
against Auto -intoxication because
this wonderful 'fruit medicine acts
directly on all the elintlnating organs.
50e. a bex,Or $2.50, trial size 25c.
At all dealers :or sent on receipt 'of
pricebyFrattel4ivesLimited,Ottawa.
Parliament with 0..nate and_ Camera
di Deputati, or Chamber 'of Deputies;
- Sweden a diet, with first -chamber and
second chamber, All ,the South Ara
-
erica]." republics, being modeled on
the government of 01(3 'United States,
have -S.• congress compoSed • of tWo
bodies, Senate and Chamber of
Deputies.
War Nurses,.
"War nurses," paid Dr. Alexis Car-
rel, 'in an interview on the :western
front, "differ amazingly in their
touch. The tdueli of one war nurse,
will be uneympathetic, hard, Mildest
rough., while that of another -vvill be
positively soothing. A nurse of the
former kind was dressing a soldier's
wound one day, • The .soldier squirm-
' er and grimaced and the nurse said
to him reproachfully, 'Why,where's
your fortitude?' Tortititde?' _grum-
bled the doughbOy'1 tell yon.what
it is, .or sixtitude
•couldiat stand your handling'."
fewer . than 30,000 men were em-
ployed in the veterinary department "- ••"
alone and it wild not be surpris-
ing if more had been -learned about
animal surgery and medieine in the
past four years ,end a half than was
learned in the -whole of the Nixie-
teenth century.
The writer says that of the heavy
draught ,horses, those used for move
- Drown Coen an'the Axgentina.
-
• In aArgentinaa- the cultivation of
malz de •Guinea, 'or broom corn, is
eonducted*along sitnple lines not dif-
fering Much from that of ordinary
corp. The brawn cern is frequently
sown after the *heat, flax or oats
-crop on the property has been har-
ing the. heaviest guns, the Percheron vested; and ifeiliere is abundant ram
stood the test better than any and- if the frost are late ' a good
others. This may be due in part to . yield mar be 'albtaltied, thus_ giving
the fact that the Percheron Was Iwo harvests bitthe.jeame year from
fighting on his native heath, and a single piece graund.
also becaue he •is not decorated. I The cost ots produetioneof broom.
with the immense ."feather" or long • corn in Argeatina is calculated more
hair about the fetlock that is the
show ring glery of the English
drafter. There seems to be a con-
sensus that the Clyde end the Shire
were failures. While tire heavy
trucks did wonders in transport
there were many occasions when the
trucks were useless. A truck that is
sunk to its hube in thick mud is
• stationary eagiaet but a team of
hors ea• can ,1*aultibada. Intel:Out-
reaches their bellies. There were
thousands of instances of guns and
necessary supplies hauled to • the
• front by. hones when the gaSoline
.
• tractors were useless. They were
hundreds of instances of horse -
mired and the loads: then being
packed on the horses' backs and
sent forward.
The organization of the horse.
hospitals was wonderfully complete.
There were horse anibulances as
• cohstantly on the job as other am- Argentina's• exports of broom co en
bulances. When a horse went down have increased rapidly duriag the
and. it was seen that he was not last few years. In 1913, 409,454
- Fogs. '
.
Official records Show that fogs are
. _
race a frequent on -the Coasts of Maige,
j:i•i N 37W‘ Hanipshire than anyeetti:ye -
eee to, ties tfaited State.:
"PLAYING DPIAD."
Strategy et Animals -Is Hard to
Explain.
Old ,Possum is playing dead. 'Why '
does he do it? Of course, it is a
piece of deep'strategy peculiar to the
, sagacious intellect of the beast. The
scientist, .however, is a very sceptical
person, and he questions , even the
subtle brains of the poitsum, although
It is perfectly certain that the worthy
animal does lie mute land motionless
until a Convenient time arrives for a
getaway. -
Dr. Etienne Re.baud, Maitre des
Conferenees of the Sernenne, voriting-
in the Scientific American, .deniee any
"Playing dead" or 91e etill" theories
on the part of animals.
When. one suddenly seizes a
eetinold insect it immediately folds
its legs against Its *body, draws
down its head and. its antennae and
remaias motionless. Other artheo.
poids (erustaceans, spiders, myrla-
pods, ,ineects) behave in a very -simi-
lar fashion.
This has suggested comparison
with death, and it is a common say-
ing that the animals are ',Playing
Dead." A phenomenon which Is
stiperficially similar.has been observ-
ed among vertebrates. Some observ-
ers agree with Darwin that the im-
• mobility leads the enemy astray, that
.they appear not to attack dead
creatures. Moreover, the attitude and
the coloration, together with entire
immobility, often render the animal
completely invisible, hence it can
'more readily escape.
In birds and mammals Immobili-
zation can be occasioned at -will. In
the seventh -century Kircher IMMO-
blitzed fowls merely by turning
or. leas at 161e Raper pesos Per hec-
tare, nn. the - bellowing basis: -
Rental of land,' 30 Pesos (the Ar-_
aentirie paper 'peso is equivalent to
about $0.4475 Canadian curreeey
present); preparation of ground and
sowing, 18 pesos; $eed (10 kilos);
0.30 pesos; creltiv atioir, etc., 25
pesos; ha,rvestine and bags, 90 pesoe;:
total, 163.a. p4gg,.
The 't04-0, lat:e beggro eiteragee
280 peat's,' de up oi 220 bunchez
ef corn at 1 peso each and 20 fantgas
(abent 12 tons) ot geed at 3 pesos.
per fanega. This gives a net pront
• at 116.7 pesos -per hectare (2.47
res) of land cultivated.
The 1918 crop of liroom corn was
quoted at 0.90 to 1.20 pesos the vara
or bunek, a bunch measuring 111 cir-
cuniference 1 vara ' or about `43
inchee. Seed was `Quoted at 8 pews:
($1.35 Canadian money) a fencga
(about 220 pounds).
done for • the ambulance was hurried
up and the animal hoisted in it. He
was then rushed to the nearest hos-
pital and examined by an expert.
ri a surgical operation was neces-
sary a specialist was immediately at
work. The horse was placed on a
mattress and chloroformed As
many as twenty-three shell splinters
were taken from one horse, 'which
lived to•go back to duty agem. As
a rule the greatest sufferiag of the,
horses was not due to wounds, but
to sickness of various kinds. result-
ing from the rigors . of the climate
which so many of them had to be
kept. Sometimes they had to go on
half rations. They had to spend
,daysiptlt a time standing in deep mud,
theft* akin perhaps. in contact with
septic matter of many kinds. From
standing in mud there were many
• cases of cracked hoofs. -Thousands
wept partly or wholly blind from
•loplethalinta, * induced by overwork
and exposure.
Sarcoptic mangle, however,. was,
the great scourge of the army horses
in Flanders. It was caused by • a
parasitPfrom the mud which- clung
to the bodies. and laid its eggs ander
the. skin. It caused large patched of
skin to become dry and hard, . the
hair .dropped off and the part itched
intolerably. One cure consisted. of
placing the patient in a closed etall
with only his head exposed and,
then flooding the stall •ctith sul-
phuric acid gas. i Another care was
-to make the horse swim in a bath of
calcium sulphide. , Mules were not so
subject to this disease as horses, for
a reason •that is not explained. In
other respects, too, the mules had ad-
vantages over, horses. They could
stand "grief" better. They are surer-
fOoted if slower, and fpeing not so
`highly organized their nerves are bet-
ter aS a rule. Here a seeming para-
dox might be mentioned; the most
highly developed of horses is the race
horse, the thoroughbred; yet while. in
one sense, he is the most nervous, in
another he has his nerves .under the
best control; he has the most brains,
and pourid for pound, or perhaps
cause alley know its kV 11 fon the atom- even polind for peund and a half,
aeh, liver and bowels i rompt and sum his blood did betrer Work in the
Ask your druggist or a bottle of war than that. of all other horses
"California Syrup of Figs," which con- put together,
tains* directions for babies, eletideen of
all ages and for gown -ups.
-Death came with startling sud-
denness to the home of Mr. Fewest
Wilson, Bluevale Road, on New Years
Day, and bereaved hint of his beloved
partner in life. Mrs. Wilson whose
maiden name was Essia Almena Pos-
liff, wag a daughter of the late Aaron
Posliff and Mrs. Posliff e Winghatn,
and was truly an estimable woman.
She contracted influenza dare
ago which culminated in
Her only brother a:o- • • e o, .d
arrived home from -0 VC ' z
She is survived by her hesband and
two small children.
-
......4•••••••••••••.•.
IF YOUR CHILD IS CROS
FEVERISH, CONSIIPATED
10.06
krucefield .... ........ 10.14
Clintori .... 10.30
Londesboro . . 11.
Kyth . . 11: 7
Belgrave .. . .. 11.0
Wingitarn, arrive 12.05
i•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••--•••••••••••••••
C. P. R. TIME TABLE
GUELPH & GODERICH BRANCH.
TO TRORONTO
a.m. • p.m.
Goderich, leave ........6.20 1.80
Blyth 2.07
Walton ........ . . . ... 7.12 2.20
Guelph .. ....9,48 4.53
• RtROP/I TORONTO
Toronto, leave 5.10
Gnelph, arrive ........9.30 6.30
Walton 9.04
BOth . . 12 . 16 9 .18
Auburn ... .....12.28 9.30
Godericla , - .12. r5 9.55
Connections at Guelph Junction with
Nlairt Line for Qalt. Woodstock, Lon -
‘don, Detrtritt and Chicago, and all in-
termediate points.
cleanse tithe bowels with "Cali -
ferrite Syrup of Fijog."
Mothers can rest easyilafter giving
aftCaliforais, !Syrup of Fieni," because in
a few hours all the elo ed -up waste,
sour tille and ferinentirt ..lood gently
Moves out of the wels,tland you hafe
a well, pla3rful chit
a
Sick children. n t be coaxed to
take this harmless it laxative:"
Millions of mothers ee it handy be
CASTOR IA
Por Infanta and Wares.
Tti COMO NM araYS
awx t).);v
kilos (kilo equals 2,2046 poriaret)
were exported; in 1914, O`12.70t
kilos; in 1915, 762,601 ltilos; in
1916, 1,012,961 kilos, ad in eti./.
3,235,202 kilos.
Brazil has been the most extensive
buyer of Argentina broom corn, al-
though during 1917 it is probable
that at least one-third of the amount
exported went to the United States.
Lawataking Bodies,
Any legislative or lawmaker boar
may be called a coegress or parlia-
ment, but different countries heve
different names. France has a na-
tional assembly, with two hotetts,
called Senate and Chamber of Depu-
ties: Germany has an upper and a
lower house, Bundeerath and Tic ita-
stag; Belgium. has Senate and (fear:-
ber of 'Representatives; Spain late a
• cortes with two -houses, Senate and
Congress; Denmark, has. a rieedeg
with uPper house -called Landthing
a,nd lower house '"- '1-'; Daly ft
:2102.20
NOW THIS
NERVOUS WOMAN
GOT WELL
Told by Herself. Her Sin-
• cerity Should Con.
voice Others.
.
Christopher, 111. -"For four years I
suffered from irregularities, weakness,
nervousness, and
was in a run down
condition. Two of
our best doctors
failed to do me any
good. 1 heard so
much about what "
Lydia,E.Pinkhanee
V egetable Com-
pound had done for
others, 1 tried it
and was cured. 1
eam no longer ner-
vous, am regular,
• and in excellent
health. I 'believe the Compound will
cure any female trouble." -Mrs. AMON
lb:US% Christopher,
Nervousness le often a symptom of
-weakness or some funetional deran
them upon their backs; The expert-
,
• rnent can be successfully made :with
any kind of bird, I have performed
it with sparrows, with a wryneck and
With the finch iinthedietely. after
their capture, thus excluding all idea
of .trraning, The same result can be
obtained tv4ith various mammals, es-
pecially with mice.
e What is the nature of this Immo-
lenity? Some nateraliets-there are
few. nottetietre to be sure ----still thank
that this action is 'both voluntary and
C0718Ci0118. The majority, however,
following Darwin • and ttomenes,
re-
cognize that it is scarcely reasonable
toi attribute. it to eny idea of death,
which. would be the siinulation of a
state .whieh is unknown to the ani-
mal sinenlating it. ••
In the presence of either real or
imaginary danger the animals may
xe perietice an intense and paralyzing
terror. Whether they remain unseen
or whether theie corpse -like appear-
ance decetves the enemy, those who
remain perfectlirmotionless for the
longest time would have the best
chance to escape. Having thus sur-
vived, their deseen.dants would ine
• herit the faculty of remaining mo-
tionless in the presence of danger,
so that by the operation of the 'hat-
urial law of selection the so-called
instinct would be developed little by
little. • a
This • is the explanation most
! generally adopted. What real adven-
t tage could an animal derive from im-
mobility? Naturalists have accepted
the hypothesis that the appearance of
death would drive away predatory
cre,atures since these do not care for
corpses; but on the one hand many
animals, far from beteig repelled by
dead flesh, are especially attracted
by it; and on,. the other hand the
mere absence 'of Movement is not
sufficient to impart to any 'organition
all the properties of a Cadaver. In
Particular the odor is leaking, and.
this is far more important than the
external aipect, eo far as predatory
animals pate concerned.
• An inset is caught by One leg and
immediately finds itself paralyzed
and delivered up defenceless to its
enemy. By retaining the possibility .
of biting or struggling it. might be,
able to liberate itself, whereas the
immobilizing reflex deprives it of ,all
chance of MS.'
•
• • • • • • •
•
JANUARY 17
INCORPOINTD 18
•
9
ot) .. 444 444 114 411 114
CAPITAL AND RESERVE -$8,800,000
96 BRANCHES IN CANADA
A General Banking Business Transacteti
CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT
BANK 'MONEY ORDERS
SAVINGS BANK DEPA.RTMENT
Interest snowed at highest Current Rate.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRIer:
Brucelield St; Marys • Kirkton
Exeter Clinton Hensel Zurich
THEY FOUGHT AND WON. ..
Battles In-Whielt Boys From Canada
• Took Part.
• The followink statement, showing.
what has been.aeeemplished, from a
military point of •view, by the Dont-
inion since the beginning of the wa.i.
was issued by the Militia .Depaett
ment.
When. Canada entered the war I)T2
Aug. 4, 1914, she had e permanent
force of only 3,000 Men, and, an ac-
tive.inilitia of 60,000.: When hostili-
ties ceased. on Moe 11, 1918, - Can-
ada had sent overseers 418,980 sole,
• diers.•
At Canada supplied a division.
This wire Increased until by 1916 she-
lled in France an army -corps of four
divisions,. a cavall'y bilgadi; and
nuraerous other services, such as tide
of communication. troops, railway
• troops end forestry corps. On Sept.
30, 1918, the Cana.diett troops in
France numbered 156,250. The -cav-
alry brigade included a -strong draft '
furnished by the Royal Northwest
• Mounted Police.
• The Canadians engaged in the
'United Kingdom and France in con-
• structing and operating railway lines,
and in cutt4ng down forests and '
trig the timber nuraber about 60,000,
Of the Royal. kr Forces, some*
'
0
0
SOOsvi. ...... 04O0SOSASSi
• Capture ot Dein, October 2u.
• Encirclement and capture of Var.
leneiennes, October 25 and November
2.
Advance and capture of Mons,
November 7-11.
merit, which may be overcome by tbis
f.amous root. and herb remedy, Lydia
E. Pinkham'a VegetableCompound as
• ilioneards of women lire found' by
cc
7)1;. iona exist, write Lydia. E.
CM,' Lynn, Mass., for
tegard to your ailment.
. .11: ita long experience is
Lee,: Lee
• Statue of Edith Cavell. \
A moninnent to Edith. Cavell and
the Canadian nurses who were killed: "
bY the Germans in raids on Canadian -4
aospitals -will be erected in Ottawa,
iu Major Hill Park. The monument .
will be erected by public subscrill- ••
Hon and grants from. the Dominion.
Et is being execpted by Hamilton
Ma.‘eCarthy, R;C.A„ the Canadiam
eculptor. The monument will he. -
exceedingly handzome.
There will be ail heroic figure% of -
Fame, holding in one hand a
trumpet and in the other -1 wreath.
.of tinnier-tell...2.. Tie figure will Ito: 7
shown in the t -...t; of crowning tbo _
bust of the artrtyred nurse, "whic
rests upon. the summit of the.
pedestal. D.- r•^4 around its base jate-
th,00nUneliottnei,l.:-„eilt:
the pedestal;
prbminent ;t panel oue-
side depleting Ite turse attendin
wounded r ;:%re ot h German. .
Allied, ^.11i1. the. or_1..er shoviing tilos
tragic der.th of the brave womau.
-The insctiatIon of the. pedestal
14 000 or 15,000 were raised wile cludcs the last words spoken •int
traiined in Canada; in 'addition many
joined the R.A.F. after going over-
seas in thetCanadien Expeditionary
Foram
On Oct. 31, 1918, the casuaItier,
numbered over 211,000. There have
'been over 50,000 deaths, 152,0.00
have been wounded, and when hos-
tilities ceased the prisoners .of war'
numbered 2,800.
The roll of Canada is;
1916:
• Second battle.of Ypres, April -Matt ' -
you?" inquired the clerk,
•tober and November.. - .
' 1917: ter give me a return, all the:am:nets!'
.-t
•' "What's that?" . ,,i.
-Why, you'll want to come Wake -
won't you/"
'Woe, that I shan't; but we'd hetet
Battle of Vatny RI:too aril 9. ro a 141' in)But,"yE expostulatedh'anlwanwant
hert h ecotimeerkb,a4aa
40,',
•
13.
April 28, 29 and May 3, "Look 'ere, young man," ITO
Battle of tens, June,
•Edith Cavell. The pedestal is to ,bet
eet gill:lite and the -figures aete
• to be in bronze.
Case of Necessity.
A man whose every word and see
tion Betokened a son of the soil step-.
.ped -up to the booking ()thee of a Igoe
vincial railway station. After at
elieery "Gate. ino..rnin' to yerl"
be -
asked the. civet: fear a ticket, te*Le
• 1916: * "Yam will have a return, won „
St. Eloi, April 3- to 19.
Senctii:Lry Wood, Juiue 2 and 3. ,
Hooge, Julie 5, 6; 13 and 14.
Battle. of Somme, September, Oe-
•
Immobilization, in fact, whether
c1 not it resembles death, fails to play
any essential part in. the life Of an .
animal. It is a property of the nerv-
ous systent- very Widespread,
As to its nature we still possess
very incorciplete data. Various auth-
orities hoe sleeken of hypnotism,
but this term offers no solution, since
it itself designates a. phenomenott
which is far from being well under-
stood. At the Present time we can
do nothing more than set forth the
features without undertaking to ex-
tract from them an explanation
which wilt1 respond exactly to all .
cases.
13.
of Arleux and FresnoY, a waste of .4"me371"
the/old fellow, in a tone of subdue
Battle of Hill 70, Augtint 15. erniadeace, "that's nay business. -/
sartinly shatritt wante ter come baek
Battle of 'Pesschendaele, October
25 and November 10. - but I shall just as sartinly have tot
lais;
Second battle of Somme, Marth , The Huns. . .
and e April. . 1 _Senator Pindexter, of -Washington,
Battle of Amiens, August. 12recently read to the United Statni
Capture of Monehy-letItieux, Aug- Senate a letter from Dr. T. H. How7:-
ust 26-28.. ' aril, of K.t Louts, Stating that a brie -
Breaking of talleant-Drocourt line, ther of Sergt. A. B. Cole, of East
September 3 and, ii.
..
1 Liverpool, 0.,eareho served with the
Crossing of Canal du Nord and
Fla
Vanadien Batleditionary Force in,
Bourlon Wood, September 27-29uaftidir bitsrotthoer,theproveser.con
Encirclement and capture or Gam -
elusively bathdltth
brei, October 1-9.. • gea,nt, was crucified upon a door with
'Capture of Douai, netoher 19. • German bayonets. ;
-• Fear Not Cowardice.
An English observer calls atten-
tion to the fact that our world war
has , destroyed • the fear of being
afraid. Heretofore,even to most z,
distant antiquity, the one quality in-
sisted on in the soldier was .that he
should bet fearless and-the:more cal-
lously so ithe better. t The 'faintest.
tremor of ;timidity waste, black mark
against the most resplendea knight
as well at; the Iowliefit bowman or
halbardier and the schooling for war
wasan titter defiance of the per-
sonal risk',
The Geefnans, if we are to accept
reporte, induce ail apparent bravery,
but 1/0 coMeterfear--the terror of a
discipline :disobeyed - yet doubtless
even among the enemy there are
many deeds of tile heroism of reso-
lution and certainly among the Mlles
this quality has reached it highest'
developments. The re.r. of Vertlun
admit to ghastly fearo, b at tiler gene
no backwerdi step.-
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ember. Sr.'
Farnham, '
flugill, Sra
Wilfrid Glaz
Jr: 11/ -ret
Frank. Fowl
-Walter Da
McMichael.
mri
an, Flossi
Adama, Mr
e Walker, Feti
Michael. .3)
Walker, Wi
Wright' (Mel
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GUARD TIll
To guard
elothing cane
The 'Tablets
• will keep- thj
and bowels 1:
• recegnized
-ach and Bowe
-colds will 210
the little one
'will thrive
• natured. Th
medicine dea
a box item t
Co,, Brockvil
• Death of 1
town was sh
ternon when
Mrs. Hari%
liV4Y2 Few w
tleeen ill and i
fl sinee.Mont:
• own faly
11 •
ill It
illnes SE
Xrs therefoie a
Wittse
vats Annie Pe
Hullett towrt
of the Lite
• marriage to
place ii the
zonage in Chi
LusbainVs hon
where they
before comin
they did
Since that tii
teemed reside
Wiltse was a
church. and
terest in its
• than all else,,
gyei
Lustand and
tlutnkfulness
home when h
came,. her el
Lis W1fe 4111C1
only last Wee
other, Bert, '
Sask., fors t
bsenee of sei
the home folk
• that their hel
dened by thei
Besides these
two datt&teri
her of the Pul
Elva at home
sister also aul
• Clinton, Lewh
Ilullett towne
T1100113E14
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•the greatest ir
Lord Fishe
old BegbisOf
dreateherrinaineiti
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it may °emit
author of th
a great part '
j
eUrsu, taiiins'"hares a cl
ptarkor Brepgblacie.e.
si,
to appreeiati
tli li niAli sl,:ia 43 iglan :err del i cs Qa;ciwt nrar gri when
pi ies • ithemet as t.ii,irerei eat nuctrd: Ih.gr i txt iri
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tobzooffthtehew:
at the Adziair
Re rasigned ,
the undying
tionized Bri
This is wl
'413u:azi Fa:I:halt:es:
fare; kft that
No one
the ever
est ships in
nought; he ti
Fat t ni i easily
egvetf
. :et
NA, re be