HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1918_06_28, , ' N "
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.,.FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1918.. -
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itt4...i tePleggfa.11444_ Cli g "b.. " .
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:ii Heavy --
ATHA
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. . IllortooL REPORTS • - :-
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.... • Established 75 years
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i'wW.T 0 ren. andt 0 .T 1 Dunkeld. apentat7-urda;
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Claremont Continuatioti dChool.
. : . eitin-order_oLmerit • Form 1 pro-
motion .exarnioatinn-Mary Pnrsy_th
Medical .
..Toll
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• Mill AN MnBrida -and da.nchter
ri L. CA-LDWELL. M. D.,ESuocessor
,-• • JI__ • to th• loteLDr. B..:Br,i)die, Phone. 303
. Claremont Ont. • .' • - - -
-_•__Has been . - • . •• --
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; , recent thunderstorm* • ..:.
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Burnt
friends. - • •
A number fr-orn here.are attending
the camp meeting now -being held at
Dixon's Hill.
Den't forget the Atha pienic to be
-bold on Saturday. next, June • 29th.
'All are welcome.
Orval and Miu. Byer, of Port Perry,
motored down on. Sunday_ and spent
the day -with Joseph an re. Byer._
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Floyd Johnston, Wilfred Doucette.
Promoted on fulfilling conditions re
farm work : Robert Rawson, George
Pegg. M. J. Wilk-er, Prin.; A. H.
Giles. Asst. -
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E CA.RTW.RIGHT,IFor-
Ip_raiR'sriVr_Of Gravaihnrst.Ont•,,i SIICOSINIOT 'tis
t • Dr.:31. E. Towlo, 'Pickering. Dna' Ofilcs hours
Tato a sad 8.10 se a P.. m • M112
-- :-.-'- Barnes. ,-',,,--.--..-:.,:'
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T., - , . Lives Lost. - ., ..-:.,..,-
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Which, might have been prevented i
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After Marreli
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. 11.11 ptirchasils at thc-mill mist.
. be paid for in cash.
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This applies to everyone -Do ex-
• - •. ception - made; ' •
This credit business wakes much
more office work and the shOrte
--a-'f labor. compels
- .e to do this. ' . •
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4 *mad member vt Ihei Ift„"2"411°111 "Ie.
Ivo:. FOASYTH-..D. of 0., Regis-
of Ontario, ' Spotial Eon gkeni to
• Et:kW of &law& Ern toolid firm. Nero
(Sammons. - . ' MK
•
. kkey had been protected kiy•
,',. .
.Dodd,System s_ of ,
& Struthers'
.. T......t.A.oing Rods., . i
- ' ,..' .'.-i-aLiSu a
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,Mrs. W. J. Devitt spent Wednesday
in the city. - - - "
Mimi Gladys-Dolpbin- spent &couple
of days with Miss Agnes Cowan. •
Cadet K. E. Devitt, of the R. A. F.,
Long Branch, was hqme. over Sunday.
- Millil Ethe/ Wilson is -visiting her
aunt, Mrs, Arthur Carlton, of Pick-
ering. ••• -- • -
The aprOn tee held at the home of
Miss McKinnon on Tuesday. June
25th, in aid of the Soldiers'.Comfort
'League. was a great success. The
proceeds amounted to some 843.00.
The League wishes to thank all the
. . : wfrollelped-tod. sailtsarta1u
. Brougham Union Sabbath School
will . observe •„'`Parents Day" next
-Sunday, June'SOth. at icro. m. Owing
to unavoidable circumstances they
were unable to observe the day set
apart by the Association. T: M. lien-
derson. of Toronto. fortzier.Btble_Olass
teacher of this place:is expected t,o
give a talk on "The Life of- ChriaL"
The Presbyterian•Choir will _furnish
music in their moat able manner.
parents • and cradle roll pupils are
specially invited. Everybody come
and wear a Buwer.
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- • ..'., MONGOLIA - -.:-: :
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i' itki 0. MoKINNON, M.I). L.R.0.8.,
.1.1 • Edinburgh, meatbar of tlio Collage Of
Phmlulana and Sunsets of Ontario, __Iieenteme.
SurgoOns, Edinburgh.
attention to daimons of woman and
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We erect and inspect. this itysteot.
.
See us and save your insurance,
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Mrs. George Bowers is qiending a
time in the city. "
The farmers in -this beat did their
road -work last -week.
Mrs. Richard Tarr spent a few days
with relatives in Toronto.' - -
Edward and Mrs. Walker and fa ,.-
ily. of Port Perry, spept Sunday. the
15th inst.,' at K. G. Tarr's. .:
Mrs. John • Ramsey and daughter,
Wa;:a. 0211m and illaidal". Br"4/161n. v,
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Gpn. ' E ..BaKer
• ' • - - - Lairtel. •
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LE; FAREWELL, K.C., BARRIS-
• i• MIL .consb'eavva etterattr. 6126Gooss7
. arms Emoo. Whitby. - 104 '
(Successor to -.... -•'
- - Baker- & •Heise) ' -- 0
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IOU. .
. • A E. CHRISTIAN, Barrister and
A • Slicitor. Notary Public. Etc. Mousy:to
- ' oanatiffloo Brock Bt. North. 'Whitby. S147
S LI ffV-1.11e la I •
.-s'
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., d. . mitb, Of---Torri. . : - . ”
relatives here one day recently.
- .A• number from here took in the
Janey Canuck . concert at Stouffville
on Friday eveCing, the 14th inst.
Nathan and Mrs. Tarr and family,
of the 9th line, spent Sunday, the lath
Inst.. with his brother. K. G. Tarr. -
Thomasiand Mrs, Smales and San.
David, Allan Wideman and Miss Vera
.
Tarr ppent Sunday, the ldth met. with
the latter's heather.. Charles Smales,
. Dunbarton. • -- - '
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, All acciiants now -on, the books
., must he paid by April 1st. .* - • •>•
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•• MF ILLIAM J. BEATON. B. A„ Bar-.
'VY riater, Se'lleit". N°17 Public* alligiatad
in, yes.ctica with Messrs. elunan, Do son &
".- Poster, Eisavisism. Toronto G•nersl Trusts
.- ndineet 88 Bay Streak Toronto. Telephone
O 3417
gli ifil 114. II A or AI .. L
ii a a' . 419.1114-14.11 VATOIXIOnt•
- --,-110USEFURN1SHINGS
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- •firk•o' p• p• in'- g'-• *0' it . 0 ays ______;_____,___e___„4
'M kid •
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• •••:`--• _and Fridays only... . :. - .- .--
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. - - ;,,, w. ma. csmasmaxsT. •-..,.....
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St
ot Dental
Bi k the lo est rices.
g '"" , ic - P
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Delivery tree.'
,. ;In LAKE B. BEATON. D. b. • s..
Graduate of the Royal Calelge: of Dental
... Someone land University of...Toronto. Office
i, - hours 9 to 2 : 1 to 620. Ind. 'phone 6.
ffeeW• M. Prialla's bildwam Mam• Wil.M.V.
441y
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Call and see. Ind Phone 824, -
- • • ...."- Claremont. .- : z.•
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. GLEN MAJOR : ..
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xxcrl4r23411:.:EztrolsT
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BLACKSMITH SHOP I: •' -- .
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lifisesjennie McDowell --is home for
the holidays..
• Delmar Hopkins visited Claremont
friends on Friday. - . .
Hugh and Mrs. Pugh visited- with
Stouffrille friends on Sunday.
ikd and M. Wells and Jautily
AlfMn.rs
visited Aurora ft lends On Sunday.
- William and Mrs.Wse and daughter
visited the Glen over the week -end.
Richard and Mee. Day and son.
Charlie, visited at C.-. Hopkins' on
Sunday. -,• •George
Sieeldniaon yrnpittas ins` and Annie Fies
'McDowell on Sunday
afternoon. -
Mr. Pepper will conduct the even-
1.n,g, service here next Sunday at 710
clock, by the new time: -
The Glen Major picnic will be held
on Monday, July let, half mile west of
Balsam. E•yerybodynodte and have a
good time. - . .
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Attend the garden party at.,
. Whitevale to -night. ... ,.
•INzi_Tn. Bonton'saboence Dr Cook
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oversom
. ne went*. will betas charge.
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Fruit Packages- •.!
• ' : BROCK .0lOACt •. ,. •
4
. . ' '...., famines* II1Fowlaah • .
1 have and expect to haver during the
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On April let the undersigned will Mikes: -
• - p9seession of ihe above shoti. • .•:',
Horseshoeing andgeneral blzickamithe • '
work promptly attended to. . -
- Lame•med Interfering hem". 1h142a
a specialty of. and money re-
.., fbnded if work • does not -•
. - prove satisfactory. •
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Mrs. White, ar„ has greatly improv-
ed in health of late.
Mr. Barry. of Toronto, spent Satur-
day at W. J. McDonald's. ,
Frank Alford Red wife visited with
friends in Toronto on Sunday.
Elliott is at present engage
ed on the local section of theta. N. R.-
We are sorry tO report that Archie
McDOnald contirities in • very poor
health.
_This locality was .well repreiented
at the funentl. of the late .George
Cowan. sr., on Wednesday. • .
W. R. -Jackson delivered et sawing
machine and blacksmith's blower to a
Whitby customer on •Friday last. • •
• Cadet W. A. Jackson, of the R. A.
F., Toronto, made a hurried visit tct,
his home on Saturday. He if at
Beamavilloat present taking a course
in_eserial.gunnery.
To many friends of George Cowan.
sr weregreat shocked to le of
his" sudden death on Sunday evening.
Mr. Cowan was highly respected by
On Monday evening about eighty
t nests assembled at the home of Mc -
maid Bros. to bid farewell to Ayl-
mer Barry, prior to his dOparture for
Ottawa,.where he will report for duty...,
The evening was spent in games and
dancini.. Choice music was rendez-ed
Dav dson and Milroy's orchestra.
Ltinch was served .:. . .
- ic . - son res. an address and Mr.
Barry was presented with a handsome
wrist -watch. Good wishes. folbtwed
and all erfireasea the hope -of seeing
Mr. Barry soon again in our district.
• cr, G. HAM -Issuer of Marringe
Idaitmos in Ma County Ont..
lLfruit ee1100 : -
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• of
Makertes 'meas. eny .
11 Quart Baskets and ewers
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. TIT i V. RICHARDSON - Real Es-
v v •• tate, Insurance. Conveyancing. Mousy
Poblic. Etc....Pickering, Ont. • 3117
-24 Quart Crates -
'. ' 1 Quart Berry Boxes_ • • ,•
.
-All No. I -.Order
Fr POT/CHER. Real 'Estate Aim-
F of • sionemavestror.ztereser.. estyseear
guaranteed quality.
enrly and secure your requirements
_ gie these are changeable times. •-
„Ale= 2frzooddie. 32:Exkl.
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9. I a
legering _larcige
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HOPPER Issuer of Marriage
- D Licensee in iba Octunt7 •
Cbopping and Oat Rolling every
•
day as usual.. _
• of Ontsido,
°Ben at stem and his roaiduanni. Claritoont.
•0
W0,. G. Barnes, Green River
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B.BEA.TON TOWNSHIP CLERK
1.../ • Clonvoyanoor, Oonunianinner lox lamas
Or address R. R. No. 1. Locust Bin.
.
All, automobile and Bicycle
repairing promptly - - , - , :. •:. - : ..-
-.. -, • .
. • • „ attended to.•
• Tires, Oils, Grease and reptile." ' . • . ..
always on hand. .
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Potter le Andreiv, • .. . .:...
•.
- PICKERING. Ont. . . „
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allblavits, Amountant. MN. . Money to loan
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ea hunt _nessporty. "Imam of Mania. id&
1. intuir" IChitovalo. ChM. f -v •
T"e' Constant Call
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..7.- - ' cutiworros --- -
VIIGH 8. PUGH. Glen Major. Ont.
Linicetwall.dponadanettrard Iii* oliostallbredliv. exesoek.Piir'.
Sal: conducted Writ* for Maas
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1
for tratned stenographeriand' office
assistants us to
Mrs W. H. Costar left on Saturday
• i i h
for Cookstown to v s t er parents. .
Mrs. McLean.and baby. of Toronto.
are the guests of Mrs. F. Morrison.
Miss R Falconer, of Toronto. spent
Sunday at the home of her mother.
Pte. Irving White, of Niagara:
the tireek-end with his parents hespentre.
Mrs. Marshall and family, of Toren-
IO. arrived on Monday and will spend
the smother here. .
Mrs. R. Milne and: son, Walter. of
Green River. were the guests of Miss
Brown and Miss Thompson on Sun-
The second .. ,... .. . .. .
•.it . at Mane on Sunday. Rev. I-.
F. Clugaton conducted the service.
Miss Morris, of Toronto, and Miss.M.
Clark, of Pickering, sang saint which.
were very much enjoyed. A very
laage gathering assembled from all
parts o'f the surrounding country. As
izeual-the-offerring•was moat generous,
in aid of the cemetery fund.
anylrhom.
ems particulars. Phone Ind.2110. neat
prompts continue
our work through - the tummer
: - P08+141,., Licensed Auctioneer,
, . F. for 001113014Ni of York and Ontario,
illion Woo of MI kinds stionuad to on atowssesA6.'
1.0taes. Address Greed fame P. O., Ont.
months. Enter any time. Shaw's
Businese Schools, Toronto. Free
Catalogue- W. a Shaw. Pre0-
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um- ber.
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‘017. MAW, LICENSED AUC-
TV TIONEER :for York. Qatari* and Durtam
Ossetiea. AU kinds of unties promptly attended
to. Torun symonable. Dates tor solos may be
aminged NEWF Ogfwv. Bell Indepen-
,9ickering :live
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9 ii.
at and
dent phones- Whitby. Ont. , 317
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Mrs' t for lure
. -by
3DIV,M3 ; I•Ii0V MI
-class rigs
• Day or night • • • • '
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vcrorovar r oy-SutarrmgttrWains
, - Honor Gtaduate of the Ontario Vete-
rinary College
and -Graduate of the Vetertriaty
Science Association.
Phone-oftlee NOS, residence 2802
'_.,
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'Teamiing•promptly attended to. ''''
Agent for Canada carriage Co. -
mr. H. Pea, piek.,.4...
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Patriotic garden party, Whitevale
- thief -Friday) evening. . ......•
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CLAREMONT, • ONTARIO
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.147atai
1141314e'Vater-
3D2. 32.• gt: .afth.4..E
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ern.. en •
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WM ITIVALE - •
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, : Veterinary Swgeaa ..,...- ,. • • •
. u aie the
Honor Graduateof Ontario Veterinary AI Y" we Idea yon I'd only
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• There will. be quite a turn out fli.
_ . . ty on Fred Rio
taws at pi elm on -Dominion Day,
Between thirty and forty men from
Whitby see 'working ht Oshawa fee-
tortesmotoring back and ly.
The first piano marforth daiin, this
country by aeroplane from Montreal
to Toronto was obeerved pnssing on
Monday, afternoon ajit4la after four
k,„; mazy °lassos. ••
so-IThhoole wattheienhdanoLeneat . the Sullunel
a e
Ontario Ladieetollege, ii -assured of
successful.numbers, apprcaching the
two hundred -mark.. The programme
addresses is a very fine one
e omen's Auxi ' ' of All
•Sainte in plia-----ce- -of 12----aVing theiriewin--
g
meetings n the school house are
... ... u „,,_ ..1_ _ the iewne ef
''''"r"Ing "‘""a `"`m ""
church members, this week Wednes-
de), afternoon on Samuel Trees'. •
4 hundred more soldiers arrived at
he military hospital one day last
7- eek. Two flne theatrical perform-
•
armee are Announced for this Thurs-
day and Friday, when n the Gariick
Club and Robins Players, of .Toronto.
present classic plays.
The meobinery in use by the gov-
ernment outfit at work on the Kings -
ton Road imnrovement arrived front
the east on lirvedneeday morning end
...
oegan cutting off the sides of the road
within the town limitencommencing.
at the County Home And workinf
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Westwards. -rfhis-1. roa
hat has been neglected by the Wien.
4 1 .
ay much improvement -is appal,-
-47 - • • . -
.The Comm., siteLodge of Masons par-
sated Sunday morning for serviee at
All Saints' church, the rector. Rev. R.
W. A.Ilen, preaching the sermon with
Tbe Temple at Jerusalem'?" as the sub-
ject for illustrating Masonic character.
In the evening. the Rev. A. E. Bruce,
of St. George s Metering. preached.ln
this church, his address being veiny
favorably received, being an elaborate
study ofpatriotiern as exemplified .-by
theworid war. .
.
Miss Bickell and Miss .Brown, of To-
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C. A • C REESORfp•
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.Y-.' LOGUST Tirtrz: • - - W ' •-..,-'. ,
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• college. Allcane as or sight • _Ideal well, -thillet-by-Obas, R. Rice,
promptly at ed to, who is agent for Wind MWs, Gasoline
_ .
Bell and Independent lPliones - Engines. all kinds of pipe and fittings
•
picKERING, - • , 0N-nutio. foc water works. Also bath room f. iz-
tures, etc. Eveiything
routo. are Vildtftig withigin. Albertir
Major.
A memorial service will be held in
the whiterate sapt ist oharc h on sun-
day.. June the 80th., at 11 a. m., in
memory of the late James Griffin. All
Rev. lir. dweo, who has been here
for the past three years, ii leaving for
EIO3vale. His departure is much re.
ratted as he has done good work
ere and_haa_made-st-hostLof- Ili ....
He 16 b(dzig-'suc-ceeded by Rev's ''-•
Kemp. of Mono Road.
On Thursday last our first hero from
theaztl:f iltbeeldsi5ofth Fbaratttorye,,srwergrt...Ed.
home carrying with him the-scari of
- , •
battle. On Monday evening it recep-
tionlveistenderedim-brotu. clarets
'
who met in the hall and presented
him with a wriet-watch as a mark of
appreciation of what he had done and
suffered for his country and civilise,
tion. An..interesting programme was
given consisting of speeches, drill by
sixteen girls, etc. Sergt. Bell enlisted
about three years ago, and it the bat-
tle of Lens; had one of his leis blown
of by z. bursting shell. •
Six hundred people are expected in
Whitevale this (Friday) evening tont-
tend the garden- party to be given on
the spec ous awn o t e et st
r 1 f h Br hodi
abut under:the_aui ices of the Red
_C)ross Society. A. op endit-program-
will be given In Which the followin:
able talent will taknpart r The Mil
tary Orchestra of the Whitby Ponval-
escent Hosjoital, Mrs. A.rmstronfi,
1101018t, of Toronto,' the •Locust u 1-
Fred, Robinson,tenor so,lo-
1s O&
f Toronto the Bo Violinist of
whitny, also a drill by sixteen rls„.
readings and addr . Re resh-
merits includina ice. _
1,-- *- - cream, Con-
island red -hots and hot tea, will be
served. Everybody come anil enjoy a
pleasant evening. eis well at ---assist a
worthy cause. Admission 25 cent*,
..
children 16 cents. .
given careful
• • ,. .-
jOHli IMILIP attention. ..'srewelcome
-.- ;RIOB's PUMP WORKS; -
Ras a fall lino of :rah and our- Home Tel. 6621. • whitevale ,_..
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arr • 0,..
. ad -Emote coastantly-Oa-baa&----
Sploe Roll, Breakfast Bacon,-
sBolognii, Weiner!, .etc.of
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• 1 Higheit prices paid for .
. • -Butcher's cattle .
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Quality Counts
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..-.7..,Everytjun. e . .,.
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LLIOTT .. .
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...W.111 - FIAIR . .- - •
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•••-••• . - '
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• RESTORER, . - -
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- '"-For Gray or Faded Hair
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', ar.
. . The Pickering - -
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Vigilance' -Co Itee
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• Yonge & Charles Sts, Toronto, .
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• - Tice object of this Association is to
4 lessen stealing and prosecnte
• - • the felons. ...._
Has lately been asked to fill Pod-
tions Worth from $1000 to $1500 per
annum. The demand for . our
grSduateels five times our supply.
.; -,:- .-
•• - - •- . . . - • . ,.-
Is not a.dye, but a unique cow-
.bination of mineral and yogi=
- table substances which have • • - •'•
been fonod to exert a ...marked ;,.: ..,-..... , .
• ' - • • .- -'
ifitiente upon the „growth a .;:1.-...:,-,
. . , 'the...human hair.
- • - '- -- . .- -• - - ,- --• - --- •-.- . -.
Persons whose hair has becoaie ...,_,.,; .,....
prematurely gray will find in . :., - :,.,.. :....,, •,•.:.
-thhydressing---an-ageat _ which ••'--'•`----, -:-.--•-•-.1'
---- , "
'will restore .it „to' _its original: • .• .
- colorand Vitality- - - - - - - -- • -.•
,•••••::-.. CI3- • ; ... , - '--..,.• -:
..' 4. . . .
.. 4.- ' •'•'' ."----.4"--- ' ••-• ••-• .....
.....,..,.•
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es B. .
Liddle, Phut..
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Members 'saving property Meilen actuated.
ode immediately with any marches
Boys 'of 14 to 19 years of age and
young ladies are in great demand
when _PRO. PERLY PREPARED. No
• - -
Membership 'fee • .• 111.00.
eacatione._ltnter now. Write for
. TIchote may be bad from nail Proaidiint se:
Searetver on applioation.
Exec. Oons.-L. D. Banks, 0. 8, Palm-
prOopectua. .
' -. •
- -- . W. J. Elliott, -Penni'
...---- ---- pai,
- en-WTV. Richardeoni-Plakeriz8.--- -
, ..
•ng f
J. R. Thextea: '...11. J. Clark. Eggs For Batch' 6
President; Becestary -
'from) Black Breasted Red
. ,
-TIME TAB.LIC-Piekeriag Staten G ..cianie-choice stook and
T. B. Trairis.gWag East las as folloiwe - „ excellent layets,„ ,, , •
- ZU---.'-' T5- Miff -7- --7-5:05 7 -; .... .r. ,
,,_,,,,,„„,__ . . , Also, z oung Joeigian Ha -res
10.,.W. .„..
. , _ ..
0 . 1 .. . 4 • ,- ..--
Ortiggistr-Graduate optician ., • . , ,0 , . .
' - . . .
'' •
..- ..,... -
..b. N. R, Ti Agent. • • . -•..,' .•;•,'--•
- -
351o3cesim.g,, 03:LtiarIca,
___., _:....„....
• " MI Local . . 6.04 P. M and -911 -ver Grey Siber-
O Trains going West dos as folio • ionfRares. _
AllaPedigreetStock. '
• . al . 27 Load . . 2.35 P. M.
" 7 Mail . . 7.50p. if, W. J. GORDON . 4E, PICKERING
. • . • .
- • '
0
.. •
1 • '..;••••;•! •
"" •
•
RETREATINGACROSS
PIAVE R1VE:INDIOBDER
Wiens Completely .Rout the .1nyaders From the...Monte& to the
• ,,,,„-;•.•:.,Adriatic With Great I..oss to the
•
Whether !the. . battle_
FIELD DAY F
• ••-••••:1*-----1
Cut Whirlwind swat.. h Through,•••
•
German Defences on Half-
". Italian Atmy Headquarters- in and German peoples r therieni of
• 14.00 to the see -the-
defeated and forced by the Italian
',troops to cross the Piave RiVer-indis-
, London, June 23. -With Tosses 491 -
ready eatimated • at 200,000. killed,
wounded sind prisoners in ale week's.
the arrival -of German aisistanCe or
whether it will prove to be a definite
rout the results. of .the next few days'
fighting will demonstrate. Disaffec-
tion amongthe -Czecho-Slovaks, which
has been reported froni tlie'front ,and
Austria'e greatest army is the food situation of .the Empire' aY
,falLing back across the Piave in great have been contributory causes tO, the
eonfusion. 'The Italian troops • are collapseof the •Auatrian army.
closely pursuing, cutting up the re- .. The drive W418 the most ambitious
• treating columns. Allied airnian are one that Austria has undertaken, and
raking_therik with machine guns and from the first day it was evident
the Italian ertillerY is keeping them it -Was -trio big a task for.her to handle
.•:• ..tinder fire. The Austrian losses are alone. The Germans apparently have
• -certain to -be greatly swollen. The re- sent no aid, although the move is 'said
'"•'--.,terence in the Austrian offici•ai -report
to the rushing waters of the Piaye be-
" • ; ing responsible forthe inability-- to
tiring •up supplies and reinforcenients
to have been dictated from Berlin, and
it should be remembered that when-
ever Austria has fought alone she has
-been defeated, even by little, Serbia, in
ic•wait intended to prepare the Austrian the -first year of the -war. • .
holes, $12.00 to $12.50; do. good,
1150 to $11.75; do., medium, $10.00
o$10.50; stockers,
$9.25 to. $11.00;
feeders, $10.00 to.$11.50; cannersl
and Cutters, $5.50 to $7.50; milkers,
good to choice, $90.00 to $140.00; do.,
am. and- med.. $65.00 to $80.00;
springers, $90.00 to $140.00; light
ewes, $16.25 to $17.00; yearlings,
$18.50 .to $20.00; spring Iambs, 28
t 25c; calves, $10.00 to$17.25; hogs,
fed and watered, $18.00; do., weighed
off cars; $18.25; do. f.o.b.; $17.00.
Montreal, June 25 --Choice steers,
$13.50 to $15.50,• good steers, $11._00
to $13.00; choice butchers' cows $10.00
to $12.50; poorer quality, , $7.00 te
$9.50; butchers' bulls, $8.00 to $12.00;
milk -fed calves, 19.50 to $15.00; select
hogs $19.00 t� $19.50.
AUSTRIAN. ARMY .
Markets of the World ;
t
....••••••••=m, ._
. ' . 13readstuffs • - I
Toronto, June 26 -Manitoba. wheat ,
••-_No.•1 Northern, $2.28%; No. 2 do.,
- p.20%; No. 8 do. $P .17%; No. 4
teheat, $2.1014; in store Fort William
lachlding 23,1e tax • ' •
• Manitoba oats -No. 2 C.W., 86%c;_
•No 8 C.W 83%c; extra No. 1 feed,
i••-•
83-%c; No. 1 feed, 80%c, in store Fort
4
American corn -Ne. 3 yellow, kiln
sifted nominal; No.- 4 yellow, kfin
c•-`• :dried; nominal.
With the British A21211011 in the '--- •
• 1.-terdity-heid-a-field-day-in-the
I trenches south-west of Gavrelle, ear--
rying out an extensive.and highly sue-
, cesriul raid along a 700 -yard front.
1. The Germans were taken complete--
ly by surprise, and. before they re-
covered from the sho4 the Scots had
cut a whirlwind swath through their .•
defences to a depth of 400 yards. and
returned to their own trenches, leav- •
ing a trail of death and destruction
behind. -
The enemy was caught in hie dug-
outs
andevery underground shelter • _ • •-•
in the big area ' affected was blown
to atoms, the occupants losing their
lives in all cases without "knowing
whence the blow had -come. These
caught in the open trenches -fared
no better, and scores fell- before well-
wielded rifles and bayonets. - ,"
-7--Thirrraid-was-owe of many under-
taken
during the week, and these in-
cursions into enemy territory, to- • •••
gather wtih some small operations
for the Improvement 41- local posi-
tions constituted the oKly infantry
activity along the British front. .
The Germane also have been busy .
trying to capture posts or raid the , •
British lines to enable them to Iden-
tify the troops opposing them, but
their attempts fared badly, dueto. 'I.-
the extreme watchfulness of the -de-
fenders.
_ The British artillery and airmen
Have continued their ceaseless pun-
ishment of the -GenLILlial, and have
been getting th4 most_ satisfactory' .
resulta. ,Hindenburg maintaining, -•
his troops and -artillery in a state of •••
intend to weep pribaredness, for a pcissible attack at
various palate.' -
Ontario oats-Ni
o. 2 79e, e, whteac,e07rd9ingto
; No. 8 white, 78
ton
-• to freights outside.
Ontario wheat. -No. 2 reWiatrea
inteonr, pari
EP% • • ear lot," Peasni haI.22 ;lt ain ste
17.4' 11.413. to $1.20, ac-
- cordi sr to freights outside. •
Buckwheat -41•80, according 'to
_freights outside. '
7 Rye -No. 22, $1.90„ according to
'716 frelbfaltistolut idallour - War quality,
510.95; new bags, Toronto and Mont-
real freights, prompt shipment. _
4,8"z-"• Ontario flour -War quality, *10.65,
in bags, Toronto and Montreal;
• prompt shipment.
Millfeed-Car lots -Delivered Mont-
-# real freights, bags included: Bran, per
" - ton. $36.00; shorts, per ton, $40.00,
.
_ Kev-No. 1, per ton, $13-50 to
$14O; mixed, $12.00 to $18.00.
track, Toronto.
• Strael-Cir lots, per ton; $8 .00 to
• - 145.50, track Toronto. ..
Country Produce -Wholesale •
• Butter -Creamery, solids, per lb.,
• . 42% to 43c; prints, par lb.r 43 to
43%c; dairy, per lb., 85 to 36c.
• Eggs -New, laid, 86, to 87c.
Poultry -Roosters, 28 to 25e; -fowl,
28 to 30c; ducks, 25 to 80e; turkeys
•
•-pj•w9-1•0..,
.4%. New
Use For the Gas- Mask. r_
An American soldier in camp
while he's peeling onions.
"somewhere" who does not
• •
SHORT OF FOODTAN
•
Prisoners Ate on First' Day All
Rations Intended -to Last Un-
tillheY Readied Italian
Stores. • .
A despatch from Italian Armi
Headquarters, says: -At the begin-
ning of the offensive the Austrians
in the front line each received three
rations of meat, one for each day of
the attack until- they reached ,the
- Wholesalers are sailing to the retail
O deet-the_follonringTnces,
Citeese-New, large - 23% to 24c;
• ' twins, 23% to 2424c; old, large, 25%
to-243c;-tw4n-26-to 26%-c.
Butter -Fresh dairy, choice, 40 to
4.2c; creamery p inta, fresh _made, 45
••- to 47c,. solids, 44 to 45c.
Margarine -28 to 33c lb.
'Eggs -New laid, 40 to 41i -i -new lsid,
in cartons 44 to 450.
' Dressed poultry -Spring Wakens,
• 6; roosters, WWI-foe/I; 38-tti 40c;
- turkeys, 40 to 450.
NEW ENEMY DEVICE
. OF FRIGHTFULNESS.
A despatch from Paris says:-"Flie-1
gent:mug," a device Of frightfulness,
the name given by the Germans to a,"
recently perfected bomb whic.h, ac. -1-•
cording to their -own claims, will:
multtply one hundredfold the precision'
and effect Of night bombardments. The
bomb weigh' less than two pounds, en -4
tbling an aviator to carry hundreds ab
a single trip and is said to be employ-
ed especially against crowds of peo-
ple. Instructions eland on ,the person"
of a German aviation officer made pri.!
toner the other day say that in order
to get the greatest efficiency and -per-'
rqtt the. Itelr flying aviator to_ see the•
result obained, the following method
is employed: First, the aviator mutt'
throw several incendiary bombs on
the object of attack. After a pause
of some minutes to permit the crow
t
the -btu -ping - objereti
as they naturally would sin order to'
extinguish the flames, .the aviators_
must swoop down and throw this
fliegertiaus • into the midst of the
THE FIRST TIME BEFORE HARVEST
British Carry Out 'Succetisful Fifty -Five Thousand'Men of 19
-Attaik Near Bucquoy and Years of Age Register
• . Titke Prisoner& .. - For Service. -
With -the British Army in Frante, • A despatch from Ottawa says'
Jane 23. -An enemy attempt to cap- Fifty-five thousand men of nineteen
tare some British positions on the high years of age have registered for ..r -
ground east of Strazeele this morning vice under the Military Service Act,
Italian stores. They wete so hungry, met with a complete reverse. The at- and, as indicated, it is not the inten-
however, that they ate all of there the tack was a local one and was preceded I tion of the Government to call any of
the men ht -..the colors probably before
the harvest it over.
Keen satlefection is expressed with
the way in which the young men re-
sponded to the call to register. In a
ndmber of castle the number of regis-
trations was considerablyligher than
the estimated possible registration.
first day.
During a tour of the battlefront the
correspondent talked with an Austrian
prisoner, a member of a madufactur-
by a heavy bombardment that began
about 6 o'clock and was maintained
with great intensity for a coneider-
able time. • • -
Ing firm with offices in all the great
eentre. . . _ At the conclusion of the artillery
world e
• preparation, the German infantry
"I have been fighting for fort"' along a narrow sector surged forward
mOnths," said the prisoner. "First, for the assault, but as they pushed up
on the Rallien tront," where" I had tri the incline which led from their owOv
n
easy time, and now here, where the
au are .717 n • ; ngs too
Live poultry -Spring chickens, 55e;
_ _ roo_atere, 26t: turkey, Rae,: hens, 33 to
•
Beans - Canadian, hand --picked,
-r - • -.bushel. kg- • _ P-• P
icke
Burma Or LndiOrly 16.75; Japan, $8.50
• -.to $8,75; Limas, 18 to 20c. .
Maple syru=lb. tins, 10 to a
- ease, $14.50, 1 gallon tins, per
tin $2.25; imperial five -gallon dans;
ot for
registration was 98.11 per cent. of the
defences they encountered midi a tor- intimated pcsisible registration.
us. Tfiere is no food for the people fled° of tnachine-gun and rifle fire Registration* by districts were as
of Austria, and:. next-to-8one for after-Itt.iiigling-sitead--e'llitle--follows-the-return for Quebec dis
army: _I had but a few pieces of they were forced to retire. ' tricts still being incomplete:
Li:widen, 5,888; Toronto, 9,248;
Kingston, 5,264, Hull, .916; Montreal,
924; St. John, 8,018; Charlettetovrn,
878; Kenora, .809; Winnipeg, 8,198;
Vancouver, 8,018; Regina, 5,042; Cal-
'-'1farYr8,1114; totaL-55,201..
Intproved conditions in this Province
-of Quebec are reflected in the Mont-
tricl---Jferfigures.-In Montreal
actual registration was 108.77 of the
bread and potatoes' before the fight During the night the British- con -
and since the fight began I have had ducted a raid near Bucquoy with
'none. • ' • • tanks, whcili had never been used for
"The army cannot last more than raiding purposes before. The big
a couple of .months at the best.. There engines went over the top shortly be-
-are-no-g‘ood-officers- left. We have-fore-madmightilenewed_by_irdautry
plenty of ammunition, but n� one to The riflemen met with strong oppo-
The sition and were .held up by a heavy
tively.small, while to the -known Aus-
or two
trian losses will have to be added the ceeded on their business and f
many Austrian dead which still en- hours trundled about the enemy ter-
timate, and in Hull 91,23 per cent
Estimated possible rectal:ration f
number the wooded mountain sides. ritory, leaving the -mark of their_ guns.
use it properly."
gronP• •
•••
ANOTHER BIG HARVEST • t- • .•-
OF THE SEA. •
.A dispatch from Ottawa says: Tits, ._ •
total value in first hands of sea fish! "
landed in `Canada -during -the month ofi
May was $2,288,626, as compared with'
$2,181,571, for the same month- last,
year, according to the monthly state- ..:
ment issued from the- Department of .
Naval Service.- The ,statement
says that the fishing was carried on -
under favorable conditions this year, -
but in the more easterly parts of Nava
Scotia ice, which was , slow in leaving
the coast, interfered with operations.
wherever they went. What casual the Dominion wai 56,244.
• were inflicted on the enemy are not
BRITISH DAILY DEMOLISH certain, but the tanks did good sawn.'
Theeim's light the Tropics is
ZEEBRUGGE REPAIRS. tion and prisoners were brought back.equal to 5 563 wax omdle?! at a foot
per can, $10.50; 15-gailon kegs, per .
gal., $2.001 maple sugar 14b. box, A despatch -from Amsterdam says: MILITARY SERVICE AG .
• - pure, per Ib., 24 to 250. • The entrance to the harbor at .
di to - 11A5k•SUPPLIED 74,102.
brugge is blocked,according
..A despatch from Ottawa says: The
following statement as issued on
Thursday by * Department of Mil-
itia and Defence: ; .
"In connection with the recent pub-
lished returns, covering the opera -
dons of the Military Service Act, it
is evident fn some of the 'comment
in the press that the form in which
-the statement . was made out has led
to misunderstanding as to the total
number of men obtained in relation to
the 100,000 --reinforeementsauthoriz-
ed bestthe statute. ,
"The total number of men obtain-
ed by the machinery of. the Military
Service Act up to June 19 was 57,295,
to -which. may be added for' the pur-
pose of determining the number ef
men available, 16,807 who have rt
: Provisions--Wholesiale • .
Lietits. George Coward and John Read,
of the British- Royal Air Force, who
landed in the Province of Zeeland,
Monday, and are to be interned at
The Hague. In an interview publish-
ed in the Teiegrsaf, they say the Ger-
mans are working day and night to
clear the passage, but each night
British aviators demolish the Ger-
man's progress. • The Cement ships -
sunk in the harbor are still there, and
the •e• ermans are afraid to blow them
up .for fear they will also destroy .the
sluices. The lieutenants assert that -
no submarines can enter or leave Zee--
rugge. The blockade of Ostend ' is
not so complete, but the Germans are
O having great •trouble there.
• - • ' • ' :
ENTIRE ITALIAN CASUALTIES
DO NOT EXCEED 40,000 MEN,
Rome, June 28.-A semi-official
note issued td -day -says: "The enemy,
obliged -to hide the -disastrous failure
of 'his offensive, has had to resort to
falsifications. Thurthe Austrian .017!
eial communication of June 22 an -
:winced -tho'captnre of -40,900 -prison-
ers. The truth is that this tigu're ro-'
rgesents the entire Italian losses in
killed, wounded and missing."
••• Smoked mee,ts--Him' s medium, 361
.
to 88e,• do.; heavy, 30 to82c; cooked,"
60 to 51c; -roll ,5 82 to 83c; breakfast
•
bacon, 41 to 44c; backs, plain 44 to
'• .-45o; boneless 48 to 49c.• • - • • •
•O Cured_meate-Long clear bacon, 30
O .• to 81e' clear bellies, 29 -to 304.
l.ard-Pure, tierces, 30% to-81.U,c;
-• tubs, 81 to 81%c; pails, 81% to 811Ke;
wines, 32%c; to 88%c. Compound
" ',tierces, 26 to 26%p; tubs, 28% to
26%c; paila" 26%. to, 27'; prints, 28
28% •
. • .
": • Montreal Markets.
Montreal, June 215:-Osts-LCaria-
Wester:4 No. 2, 97%' c. extra Ni
- 1 eed, 94.%c. Flour-N(1.wstandard
fosIllobs, $5.1$040tog5.16iouBm,
- Kay -NO. 2, per ;toe, .az
, 115.50. • •
geode $10.95 to $11.05. Rolled oats
' Live Stock Markets--
- Toronto, June 45 -Extra choice
beevy'steere-, $155010 $16.00; choice
Showy steers, $14.50 to $14.15; but -
Aare cattle choice, $14.50 to $15.00;
good, 01,75 to $14.00; do, mod -
$12.00 to g12.50; do, common,
•
11 . 00 to $11. 6. butchers' bulls,
co, $12.00 to 12.50; • do., good
-$11-.00 to 11 . 50; do.,,rough
7.50 to $8.50; butchers' cows,
- .4rei
• -
• '1
ITALIAN TRANSPORT TOR-
• PEDOED-: 640 PERISHED.
A despatch from Paris says: The
transport_ Santo- Anna, proceeding
from Bizeria for Malta, was torpedoed
sad sunk, metro -ding to the ifeirafr
Agency. There were on board 2,160
soldiers and native workmen, of
whom 1,512 were -saved.
from the cr5e•
.•
Rheims is Regarded as Local Offensive and the Germati Objee- •
- : • • . '.tiye as Still Paris and the Channel -Ports.
. • .
A despatch from Paris says: The
heavy defeat of the Gentans in the
Rheims salient again shows that every
time the French have had in front of
them more or less equal forces and
have not _been overpowered
b num-
bers the Germans have hien made to
feel the superior fighting quality of
the poling. -Never,' in 'the opinion • Of
Preach military authorities, will . the
Germans break through these lines.
At_Bh
teg- short , of his eleniantal surprise.
Everything had been carefully prepar.
ed. French batteriesTot field and
heavy guns, which had been placed in
position, quickly answered the Ger-
man bOmbardnient. French air pi-
lots,'who had previously reconnoitred
-the cOuntryi picked out the German
reserves and bombed them, had sir -
nailed their presence to the French
genii, Which poured forth a murderhm
• ..
5re on the enemY's lines and com-
munications, thereby greetly-impeding
the advance of his' shock reserve
'troops.
Germany's impressions of the sum
eerier quality of -Fretich resistance
are revealed by ' lettere found on
prisoners made in the recent attack:
tine 'of_these is typical of the morale
of the Gernian "soldier: This • letter.
says: Enthusiasm and ardor have •
sappea--7-t..---The German army now'
begins to realise that the time of ••
easy victories has passed, and that •
it will again see its soldiers piled up -
lute walls of corpses. The. memory
of Verdun is being refreshed.
•- •
French military circles regard the • r,
action. -They believe their -main 4-
German attack at Rheims as a local
fort •willeeill be either northward tap.
Iward the, ,rchannel pote or earthward
toward, Paris. • . •
•
• t-
• !"'
•
•
SnOLS LAMA suLeDOG"
V. Osidiaas suttee Prette—it repairs
. • - ot Water Bottles. not r, B107014.
Auto _Tires; Rubin; Bots. Guaranteed -
to satisfy. 36 lust 60 cents foLtrl.
ills!' your order lo -day.
lkesinies Nash Ruiz Rocesso.
• !
Serge
d Sathi
„
•fPraer...
Soniewhere across the infested se*,
Serving the cause of liberty,
'Deer Lord, is laybrove'son.-
I know not how he fares to -night,
But keep him ever in Thy sight,
For I. have but,the one.
• -
Thou gayest two to bless my life,
•But one fell early in the strife--
. My first -begotten son.
Be with_ his comrades marched away,
And then a message.ceme one day -r
Dear Lord. I have but one.
.•
ANY oonid
.DOESN'T HURT A 5111
No footishneas! Lift your corns •
•••.- • • •
•
- •
•-A Field in Flanders. ••
• 1
[retract from a leiter from the trent:
"I iaw a few wind -flowers the othir
day, 'and a vitist,ideadoif full a
kingcups, and. that was enough to
__and calluees off with inakeine happy for weeks."Y • • •
t-5-1t's like 'Imolai
• ... There 1. .a field in Flutters .,
Where yellow king -cups stand;
Like -fair princedses clad in gold
Their joyous court they puoudly hold
Ili the- gay meadowland.
There is a wood in .Franders, •
Sore Coma, hard corns, *oft corns- et
any kind of a corn, .an harmlessly be
lifted right out - wfth the fingers if you
apply upon the corn a few drops of
freesone, says a Cinoinnati authority.
AllUMM••••••• iffoommeemomm,,,
,•• .t .
Is;
•
• . •
. • ,
. • .
• . ••••
•
. "
Then, while so sorrowed and ber-
Though only he to me was left,
I could not say bins nay,
Who urged that duty bade him go -.-
His country called, he said, and so
How could I bid him stay
But oh, dear. Lord, 'tis lard to bear,
With not another child to share
The hearth when day is done!
I can but kneel. to Thee -and -pray:
Be with him through the hellish fray
And keep Thou safe niy7ion!
I know the cause is good and true,
I know that suffering must ensue
Before the fight is won.
But bear with me, 0 Lord, thia night;
Be Thou my solace in my plight
And guard my only son.
4,
It is false economy to use cheap,
inferior tea, for it yields so poorly in
the teapot. Use only the genuine
Balada to secure the !minium num-
ber of cups to the mound and, in ad-
dition, you will enjoy the unique
flavor.
French -Children Draw. Food posters.
School children in the Paris schools
'have been invited to submit designs
for food restriction posters,' says , a
regent Paris despatch. Among those
accepted is one by a. little 'girl repre-
senting a group of children gazing at
a shop window filled;witkponfeCtion-
_ . ery and cakes. "WC can. do without
This smart little model shows serge
'and -satin charmingly cembined. Mc-
Call Pattern No. -1726, Misses' Drees.
adzes, 16 to 20 years. - Price, 20
These patterns %may be obtained
„ from your. local MICaU dealer, .0T
- from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
• Toronto, Dept. W.
1
• -
SWISS WATCHMAKIMS CLOSE.
Demands of Labor and Export Condi.•
tient Force. Action. -
, • Many watch manufacturers have
- v closed the doors of their shops, -says
. •
•
a Berne despatch. Organized labor
• demanded higher wages, giving the
higher cost of living as a reason. The
•manufacturers are unable to pay high-
•. er wages, for export facilities are de-
' minishing rapidly and it is almost Ws -
possible te• obtain certain raw mater..
••• les. The men etnpIoyed'ais watch-
makers probably will find remunera-
.,
• tive work in munition shops, but it is
•- feared that the- Swistritch-RMSW-
• - will be ruined by .war conditions land
• never recover from the blew.- -
••••=•4••11111..••••••••••••••
• Cultivating corn shallow and level
saves moisture and adds a feir'inore
ushels to the yield. Ridgin and
p earring of soil are not recom-
ended. • Ridging expeees a greater
or
bottle of freezone at any drug store,
which will positively rid' one's ,feet of
every corn or 'callus without pain.
Tlxislample drug dries the -moment
It is applied and doer' not even irri-
tate the 'surrounding skin...while ap-
plying it_ or afterwards.
-This ann,ounoirient interest
many of our readers. If your drug-
gist %hasn't any freezone teU himto
surely get a small bottle for you from
his wholesale drug house.
•
' Tractors Still Available. . •.
The first thousand Fordson tractors
purchasable -from Henry • Ford and
Son by the Canada 'Food Board have
been sold to Canadian farmers.
Farmers who wish to . secure such
tractors in future should place 'their
orders with the Department of Agri-
•
culture in their own 4ovince, and un-
til further notice eucl) orders will be
handled in the same way as the first
thousand. •
•
womig•••••••
MONEY ORDERS. -
• Remit by Dominion Express Money
Order. If loSt or stolen you get your
money back.
44••••••••••••• . • „
Volunteer Rationing in Canada.
Each, Province M the Dominion haii
been asked to form .a scheme of ra-
tioning for its own people. Thus the
them" is‘the legend below. _ Canada Food Board hopes to provide
for each Province's own particular
conditions.
Minard's Liniment Cot., Limited.
D'ear)Sirs,-This fall I got throvns moutrovs zessimeat Sures nesesuseesS.
on a time and hurt my chest very
Since s__
bad, so I could, not work and it, hurt •°ois0 is soaring, even if you
me to breathe. • t tried all made ee have never done it before be sure now,
to put all bits of laundry soap into a
wire shaker and all bite of toilet soap
tie -into a small square of cheese cloth.
This enables you to use every atom of
soap.- --' .
Illanard'a Idniiisent Cares Garnet is Cows
..7.---
- .
The acreage. in. the principal field
crops of the United States is officially
given at 845,647,000 against 859,625,-
000 last year. •
Liniments and they did nie no good.
• One bottle • of MINARDPS LINI-
MENT, warmed on flannels and ap-
plied on my 'breast, cured .me com-
C. H. COSSABOOM.
Rossway, Digby Co., N.S.
Weather Fore-4rater for Arity.
The British Army is to have Cls
cial weather forecaster, says a London
despatch. Battles may be won or lost
owing to the unforeseen attdoepheric
conditions, and experts will be ap-
pointed to make daily reports of prob-
able changes in the weather.
211n-aidie Unguent Cum Colds. 1111t6
. 10047; Use of Vegetables.
The more general nee of vegetables
as substitutel cannot he too often reit-
erated: Their worth is net half ap-
preciated and with the war gardens
flourishing apace there is a 'tendency
RS10
PAIN
mutate
The GoodOld Family Friend
For over 48vart Pain Itatermleamor
boa bees Wrist the pew eve of fleanaffsno,
Iambus*, lame back. treeralaic eircalss.
teeAscbe and 11013a, coraplartes. Sep a
beak, read the direction. ea the chewier
le the package. At dealers. or trtl!fr rt.
• urface from which. soil moisture tan
escape aid may OHM severe root
pruning.
- awe
- -•s
-11
Conservatice means
the use of foods re= -
less sugi. r;
_ EessfeI,andThe
- minimum of wheat.
1
elilts
sNo SliOAR,
N0flJELiess milk
clureoltrenattra
nd-
-1 •/
• It's a concentrated,. -
nourishing, eco-
nomical and deli
cious food:TRYITI
• • 11, •
Ince of garden trunk is available.
As aMssatter of fact, their uses are
not exhamited whin they have been
served as fresh greens, made into
-salads .or boiled according to. custom.
Much of the sugar and mineral con-
tent, so Veluabla and pleasant to the
taste, is generally lost in cooking be-
cause women do not study ways and
-means.. to -conserve it _ Nene of the
elements should be, wasted. -For
%tenet, cnrrots,ecorn, peas, bets, are
rich in sugar and the water in which
they are cooked should be saved for
soup. Spinach should always be
cooked in its own juice- and every
spoonful saved. Onion Water maybe
Used for grates and soups.
Delicious soup is made by simmer-
ing potatoes "diced" pith skins left
on, peat, onions and., seasonings. A
thick puree which is combined win a•
*In cream sauce is inaele of this com-
position.
Peapods and the.. cobs from. which
uncooked .corn has been cut may be
used to advantage in malting soupt
Food Ss
11
awallan .Islands.
d Crouid 31;000 richer as, a •
• result of the first -reported violation of
Food Administration rules end regu-
lations. in the. Hawaiian Islands. Ah .
Leong, a Chinese merchant in Hono-
lulu, has been allovied to suspend bust-
nese for one week, and donate to the • - •
• Rad Cross $1,000 in f feu of further ac-
tion ou a charge of violating the
"fatty -fifty" rule in selling flour.
111AST COMPANY
Hamilton. Canada .
tsars family Salve, r50c),
11117'3 Pc COOf.l. Syrup of More. a*
bound and Ifecamplee, (4,) BOTTLE
•
ere. win - oW'
. .
•grass . •
And imila„,uPon you as you pass,- •
As country_maidens should.
• • ••••".
Thereis a bank in Flanders'
Where celandines a -blow •
Lift up their shining heads and peer
To see their lovely flume...clear.
In a bright pool below.
And youwhogo in g.oglish fields,. '
Oh think not that otir days
Are wholly dark or wholly ill,
For there are flowers in Flanders still
And still a•Gad o priase. • .
• -R. F.
IAGIC
BAKING
POWDER
.W.GILLIEFTCO.LTD.
IOR0IIYOCIIADA
riot N toga 140ElltrAt
Motion Picture Fishing Voyager
- The Canada Food Board is circular- .
izing a'film taken onboard a Pacific •
trawler from Prinee 'Rupert; showing
hoer Pacific fist -fish are caught and
•
handled, under the auspices of the
Board, for distribiztion in the -Weistern
Provinces, as a reasonably priced sub-
•' stitute for meat. •
SHOE POIJSH ES
u wow
PRESTgre"LaisHER
litlereaLLIV Cale0111111011 Len,INPULIOACINIMA
idattsnt Cares "znitgattatr.
1P031 SAES
(INE EIGHTY HORSE-POWEI1
17 Boiler. with 100 ft. of 911 In. pies:
stiff -leg Derrick: second hand Sawyer -
Massey Tractor Engine. Grey Iron
Castings made to order. The Dominion
Foundry. Tweed. Ont.
WSEELY NEWSPAPER 708 SALE
in New Ontario. Ownergoing_Sto
4 prance. -Will sell 12.000. Worth double
that amount. Appy .1. EL a/o Wilson
1 Publishine Co.. Limited. Toronto. - 1.
WILL EQUIPPED NEW APES '
and job printing elasi leatarI
Ontario. Insurance carried 1.1101.
Wilson Publishing Co.. Ltd.. Box
go for 11.200 on quick
71138.1.L11 3C112aP WAIFSID
WANTED
100 GIRLS
to work in .knitting mills. All
- kinds of operations on Underwear
and Hosiery. Good wages paid
while rning. Write or 'phone
acP
. •
PAR/S, ONTARIO
1
A BsoRBIN
,„4„ MAP r, PAT C I
Reduces Boreal Enlargements.
Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore.
nes. from Bruises or StraLusq
stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain.
Does not blister, remove the hair or
lay up the bore*. 61. SO e bottle
at drugglsu or delivered. Book 1 R tree._
AUSURBINE, JR., for mankind -an
• ' I I .11 • 4 . 1 • • I . 1 1 4 • I •••
1
strains, panful, swollen veins or ds. Is
beds and seethes,
*1.25 a bot e at drug.
gists or postpaid. 'WM tell you more if you
mita.
ILY.T091141. PAL R. Sit trews IMi. Ilestres1.
georbist sod Errerbitia .75.. Ire node 111 Caddli
THIS s
WEEIC
•
severe weeks no
Chinese pleaded ignorance of the
aw. and wars allowed to continue busi-
ness. About three weeks later- he
made another sale of .firdIr without the
required amounts of substitutes. J.
F. Childs, Federal Food Administrator
for. Hawaii, reports that action in this
/case has bad a very salutary. offset
upon other Oriental merchants, and
that practically all of them are now
' lined up lolid with the. Food Adinirds-
Watt%
.4.
•
•
•
•
• '
•
Fill up your pipe with Tv&. . Br -rich,
7ic ,
' mellowed, sun -ripened . •_
This genuine Southern -grown leaf
has a flavor and aroma all its own.
Full bodied, yet soothing, Mother
a
_
12est. •
o pipe smo er s ou • go rough -
"T & Week" without a package.
•
• No Word is necessary to old T & B
smokers. They smoke it always.
• I3ut you—if y?u- have never tried it, -
smoke er ac -B this week and realize •'Is .
•
•
•
•
• 1, 1
, Virginia tobacco.
Fill up Your pipe with "T & B."
•
•
•
•
•
a
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
SMOKE
. TUCKETTS
• 1711117.4117( a
•
lersesnzAirseas
A.NCER. TUMOR& LIMPS.
U..> internal and external. eared
roitytialias begroctrzesset.nt.
CUTICU
Heals Pimples With One •
Cake Soap and One
.• Box Ointment
Face name fres born them foe MG •
or three years. . Were sore and often
became large and hard. Left dark, red -
blotches that disfigured faca Nothing •
did much good till trial Oskar&
lace le bested.
From signed statement of Mies
Lorena Kennedy, R. R. 1, Willieme.
town, Ont., March 7, 1917. •
Use Cuticura Soap for toilet
assisted by touches of
Olntment to soothe and heal any ten.
--to-itriestioreVin and
ecalp. By using these fragrant,lutpr.
(seamy enrolUents for all toilet pot. •
poen you may prevent many skin
and scalp troubles becoming eteloos.
- For Free Sample Each by Mall ad- -
dress post-eard: “Cuticura. Dept. A, -
Balton, U. S. A." Sold everywhere.
HOW THIS
NERVOUS WOMAN•
GOT WELL -
Told by Herself. Her Sin.
eerity Should Con-
• vince Others.
Christopher,111.-"For four years I
i
suffered from rregularities, 'weakness, '
bervousfiess, a n d
was in a run down
11111111111milullififfliff
ur best doctors'
ailed to derma any
I heard so `:-
uch about what ,
LydiaE.Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound had done for •
theft, -I tried II, _-
and was cured. I
arn no longer ner-
vous, am regular ,
•
ealth. I believe the Compound4011
cure any female trbuble."--- ALICE,
MILLER, Christopher, Ill. • •
Nervousness is often m symptom of
weakness or some functional damage -
went, which may be gvare
ia.m_ous root and pri) rem,Lydis
FInkham's Vegetable Compound, all; • .
tbousimds of ,WOMell have found by -
evidence. - -
pifirarladroas Co,
for
figegesilios in %lard te your ailment.
or long experience is
strew onto& -
' ISSUE 28.-18‘
„ . „ •
41111„
A ••• „1„,,
••.„ • , , 3
,4 A:77 4,1La • „, •10:„, a ;1,4.4 .4.# 4 64,, „, • I A•-•'1,,
.6O per yeis ; S1,86.if paid hi advance.
;Y �1oUND—o11 Tuesdayy Jane the 25th
w . about halt mile east. of Pickering, a packet of
OR SALE -Two geldings. heavy
t. years otd.; Also one se
1' harpers. Apply to J. E. Eihnjey, Greenwood.40-41
ffYYOVERNMENT, Municipal, and
-.''lam Corporation Bonds For Sale -=W, D. Dykes.
x - ., Bond Broker, Whitby, Ont., Bell- Phone 193.
• - Ind. Phone 70. - 40tf
w'^ W
HORSE REGISTER
ing's _Courtship—(imp ), [14115],•
p r (14722), Clydesdale, property of Oacsr
Wilson, Brougham, will make season of
1918 as fol'owa : Monday, leaves bis own
stable for Geo. Cowan's, Brock road, ler
night._ Tries lay, 11. G. Wilson's, base
A • .line night We 1ueaday, R. Pm:krin's,
Aadley, night. Thursday, «ie,. Mlddle-
5_.., ton's, Gree.wood, night. . Friday, W. H.
llortoo's, con. d, -Pickering, noon; Albeit
Matthew's, con 7, i'iote•ing, night.
-,yam :Saturday, own stable until Monday mor.
ping.
�» ;Edward Darnley -(imp.), [9609]
.+ (18481), CIydesdale, property of Rohl.'
'.� Defoe Green River veil make the sea•
• Brook Road; noon;; S. Bleb's. Piokering,
Wednesday, G, 13. 'L113114.11'0, base line,
noon and night. Thursday, J, Barnes',
Cherrywood, noon; P. B. Rumor's. con.
6, Soarboro, night. Fri ay. H. C. Rees•,
or's, Cedar Grove,- noon; own stable,
night. Ba'nrday, B. Carter's, con 6,
Pickering. noon; own stable- until Mon
day morpiog. •
$elle Boy—(imp) [8524] (24018) Clydts
dal., property of Nelson ..Wage. Clare
moat, wall snake the seas n of 1919 as
• follows : Monday" his own stable for
Jess Davis', Glasgow; noon ; Goodwoo4
until Tues. • afternoon. Tuesday,
von of 1218 as foliates : Monday, will
leave hirown _ stable to- W. H. Major's,
Wbiteval., for noon: Brougham hoy1,
night. . Tuesday, W. J. McDonald's.
�iT7TFZi a ooa o 010 • ni : ' .
Wednesday, it, Winn's,. con: ei, '. • t:
Houle, Stonfl
gine. night.' �Thnteday aftern'on, T.
Nielswanda'a. pont 8, Pickering, night.
PICKERING-- RAKER?
Friday, W. A. Courts'. ooa. 7, Pickering
noon ; Irvin MoAvore con; 8,"P1cker
log, night. Saturday morning, his own
stable uutil Monday morning,
Montcredffe Aibeon—(imp) 012800]
V881901, Clydesdale, _property. of. Johu
ippoond. Brooklln. will maks the season
of 1918 as follows : leaves his. one .stable
for J. Corners's, Kinsale, noon ; H. van
`4tone's, Aadley, night. Tuesday, J. 0,
.Bryant's, con. 8; Pickering, noon : P.
Morrison's, Liverpool, night. Wednes
day, Jas. Protase's, bane line, noon ; W.
'J. Miliers, • Pickering,. night. Thum!
da , W. L ett's; base line, noon ; Ban
—Bonnetta'n, noon; Geo. Reeler'', con 8,
' East Whitby, night. Saturday, own
'stare until Monday morning.
Shawanoo - Sing -(imp.), 15708,
Ctydesdaie stallion, property of Nelson
Wagg, Claremont, (MK , Will 'make `the
season of 1918 at his own stable.. Terme,
• 815. atr
gall you can in -your garden
Full line of Ferrie's and Bennie's Garden Seeds,
• - Dutch Setts, Potato Onions; Etc.
Mangel Seed, . -. 80 cents per ib
''Turnip Seed, ' $1.25 • :r lb
ICE CREAM
-SODAS, SUNDAES and •
ASSORTED BRICKS
"Our Patrons. are. Pertiklar People."
- Soft drinks on ice : •
Bread, Bunsand Cakes
. Wedding Cakes our specialty
Both phones '
8• R.-Monney, Pickering
`Alaike; Red 'Clover, Timothy and all
kinds of seeds.
We -are in the market and are prepar•
ed to pay the highest market prices.
The beet equipped cleaning. mills '
in the country.
Send' us samples, or communicate with
• us before selling.
Take advantage of the best Seed Mark-
--
• eta in the world.
• .Batt or Independent phone.
Prompt, efficient and reliable aeryice
In handling Seeds guaranteed.
3, HI DOWI'TEY COMPANY"
WHITBY, ONTARIO
$2.50 per gallen=Pure Syrup
It _will pay you to buy 5 lbs. of our • Teas now ---50c .alb:
Black, Green or Mixed. They will
certainly be higher,
Buy all Sour "Grocery' needs. at the Grocery Store:
JR1-CHARDSON
We have a good display of Screen Doors, Window Screens, Wire
Cloth, etc., at reasonable prices.
r.
Milita Service Act, -1917.
: IMen 19 and -20 bears of Age.
•,:-Harvest Leave.
Leave of Absence• on Ground. of Extreme Hardship.
• . ;. ;• Procedu a to obtain Leave of Absence.
.A splendid assortment of these now on hand. Come in and let ria
quote pEi-ces before buying elsewhere.
Alec, a full line of HoesE Rakes, Garden Seeders,.ete.,
:Ensilage Corn for Seed
'Improved Learning. ` - • ..-Red Cob.
4. P. S. Ensilage.
FARMERS—Get your fencing here.
the Frost Wire Fence.
Brighten up with Sherwin•Williaiu'e Paint.
Place your orders for Binder Twine- With -us--
_: Ours is the Plymouth line.
We -are agents for
3. S. BALSDON, PROPRIETOR
Men Nineteen, and Twenty Years of Age. ,
It has come to the attention of the Government that there is'a widespread
impression that young men of nineteen years, and those who became twenty
since October 13, 1917, as well. as• those`vvho may become nineteen from time to
time, and who have been or will be Called upon to register under the Military
Service Act, are to be immediately called to the colours. _
This impression is quite incorrect. No -date has yet been fixed for Balling
. . - • .. nor_ hg`s the question been -brought before_
the Cabinet for decision. In view of the nee• : s a ur on is , is most—
unlikely that consideration will be given to- the matter until after the -harvest is
river, although of course the Government's action must be determined primarily
by the military situation
r ere is no
above mentioned who have registered or who do so hereafter, until they receiv• e
noticethe Registrars. - _
Harvesft aave.
• -- - Some enquiries have been received as to the possibility of granting harvest.
leave to such troops 'aa may bein the country at that time. No definite assur-
ance can be given on this point as advantage must be taken of -ships as they
-beeoine available. On the other hand, harvest leave will be . given if at all
possible.
Leave of Absence on Grounds of Extrenie Hardship.
It is desired that the Regulations . respecting leave of absence in cases of hard-
shipshould be widely known and fully understood. Such leave will begranted
in two cases:—.(a) where extreme hardship arises by reason of the fact that the
man concerned is either the only son•capable of earning a livelihood, of a father
killed ordisabled on service or presently in service overseas, or in training for
such service, or under treatment after returning from overseaa; or the. only
remaining of two or more brothers capable of earning a livelihood (the other.
. brother or brothers havingbeen killed or disabled on service, or being presently
in-service overseas or in trainin' for overseas or unde ,.: t. - t his --oma
t t eir return romr overseas) ; • rothers married before 4th August, 1914, living in
separate establishments and having a .child or children not to be_ counted,
in determining the fact that the man is -the-"only" remaining son or brother;
(b) where extreme hardship arises by reason of exceptional circumstances such as
the fact that the man concerned is• the sole support of a- widowed mother, an
invalid father or other h
is the Flour that makes the Bread, therefore. yon can't get beet t
results from an_infgrior grade... That's
why we recommend • ti
on its* Blend
o e • that in all these cases the govern in g factor is not hardship,
suf€ering neerned, btrt-to-others, th t is. members of
hie -family or tie depending upon'him,
Procedure to obtain leave of. absence:
• .A simple system for dealing with these cases has been- adopted. Forms 'of
. application have been supplied to every .repot Battalion and an officer - of each
battalion has been detailed whose duty it is to give them immediate -attention.
The man concerned should on reporting to his unit state that he desires to apply
for leave of absence on one or more of the grounds mentioned and his application
form will then be filled out and forwarded to Militia headquarters, Ottawa. In
the meantime, if the case appears meritorious, the man will be given provisional
leave of absence for thirty days so that he may return' home and continue his
civil occupation while his case is being finally disposed of. -
-.r
WHITBY BRANCH`: 1.6ORDON HALL, a'. `at
-��
imekaisitaitmelranrauR Lamm Nunn' la ■ maile>emolie.nsana
nn>t}
n our stock of Turnip Seed we have
some Canadian Gems : to
;clear at 1.40;
•
Pine Apples, oranges, Lemons
and Bananas -'
A few odd sizes in Men's Find :Shirts
to clear at 1.00 each.
LAiler"WIT •:<•
t `',Mrs." Beal is confined to'"her bed
through illness. -
J. H. Beal had a btisinese trip to
;tlitouff vine on Monday.
Mise Olive Powell; of Toronto, is
-epending two weeks at herhpme.
•y; Mr. and Mrs. Willson visited at
'the Baptist parsonage on Sunday.
The men's Institute sent 50
pairs of Socks to the trenches last
week. -
_. The Baptist Sabbath Behoof will
• hold their annual picnic on July
5th. •
• Mrs. Wm,` Jewell, of Prince AI-
. bert, is with her daughter, Mrs. A.
Forsyth. for a week. -
• Mr..Wilker and Miss -Giles are
in Toronto for three weeks mark-
ing examination papers.
Hyman and. Mrs. Goldberg are
-:spending a week with the latter's
mother, Mrs. C. Florence.
.Rev: J. R. and Mrs. Real' left
for Toronto on Thursday.- They
will reside at 168 Havelock St.
R. Besse has secured the agency
for -the Maxwell car, and has re-
'~ centlysold one to David Pugh.
Miss Mabel Edwards, teacher of
domestic science in the Windsor
public_sehools is home for her sum-
mer. vacation.
George and Mrs. Craperthwaite
' and family motored from Manilla
on Sunday and spent the day with
A. and Mrs. Forsyth.
G. M. Forsyth accompanied hid
�w1.=:4nan. Joseph Timms, • to Niagara
with the object of getting his re-•
lease from duty,. if possible.'
Mr. and Mre. Phipps Mr. and
- : Mre. Tomei/ and Mrs. tobinenn,
of Toronto, spent the- week -end
with Rev. H. sad Mrs. Wood.
Cecil Ingleton, who is working
for hisrnnele, • Mr. Sellers, a mer-
cbant.of Brown's Corners, spent a
Couple of days here on business. .
The Women's instftute purpose
..holding a Red Cross garden party
in the near future. They desire
the men to sleet with them on the
morning of.the lst of July to pack
the papers, etc., for shipment.
If the person who- kicked the
football through the:hotel window
a few evenings ago would acknow-
ledge the fact and/replace the bro-
ken window, he would show more
inanlinees than by skulking away
•aaehedid.
• • - C. Sargent has Just received a
• carload of binder twine and Melo a
large quantity of hay. fork rope.
'Farmers requiringeither of these
should secure their needs as soon
as possible, as prices are in gener-
Ail steadily rising. e•
Anniversary serviette will be
-held in the Presbyterian Church,
...Claremont, on Sunday, June 20th.
" Rev. Prof. Law, D D., cif Toron-
'``.' ;`;'to, will preach, and special masks
•'will be rendered by choir. Special
offerings will be taken at both
- services.
• The B. Y..P. U. held their last
•
.summer session on 'Monday even-
ing and will not meet again until
:.September. They are doing more
'_lately to justify their 'existence,
• havin: undertaken to pay the ex-
ppeenses o an n • leu wor er • r -
-- Telgn Mission field:
On Sunday evening, through the
.s.kindness of Rev. Mr. Wood and
- Rev. Mr. McLellan and the officials
tie .:'p is an res'•y :flan
- • • Churches, the services in these
• i hnrchee were withdrawn and the
co gations worshippedin the
'.'y'Methodist church. J. R.
Real preached from Matt. 27:22.
The sermons proved very helpful
to the large -congregation present,
and the service, on the whole, was
.::very interesting. During the
meeting the pastor baptized the,
;; 'little dalighterof Henry and Mrs.
:'Johnston. The singing by the
;.choir and the solo by Mr: Wilton
were much appreciated.
A tory enjoyable evening was
'spent last Friday in the school-
room- of the -Methodist church,
when a number of friends of Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. Real „ -
ng with them before
their departure from our village.
• -During the entertainment Mr. and
Mrs. Ileal were presented- with a
'parse of money, accompanied by
: an address expressing deep regret
• at losing them from their midst.
Since coming to Claremont both
_'°Mr. and Mrs. Real had taken a
very deep interest in every braneh
The young menof the town pur--
pbse holding several wood -bees to
eut railway ties for some of the
old people of the village who can-
not otherwise get them cut. '
On Wednesday evening the
members of the -B. Y. P. U. met
on MIss Young's lawn and pres.
ented Miss Doughty with a hand-
some jewer case, accompanied by
an appropriate address, etpress-
ing regret at her departure slid
at losing. her 5.4e- valued tner,nber
Of the B. Y. P. Ur
AND FLAKING . •
-I am prepared to do chopping and oat
• • flaking on' Mondays and Fri •
-
• days only, beginning
on April 1st, • •
Some stone boats, wagon and binder
tongues op hand.
John F. Bayles, Greenwood
I have -been succe eful in sem iring con-
trol of the Greb Shoes. for this'
locality and bought a. •
;very heavy stock .before
= the -advance in price,
These goodsare here for spring and
should be seen by all men looking fur
a supreme working boot for spring
wear. Call And inspect.
All goods going at the old prices, Big
range to choo'e from. •
•
The' apdersigned bas opened u
a garage on his premises and-
. Is prepared to d ail kinds
•Of -automobile repairing
Will handle all necesbary'•parte
for repairs.
Is alio agent for Gray -Dort Fora,
Call in and see him- -
b fn---nreb=aYbig.
431 Thomas - E. -Stephenson,
td _ . CL_AREM_ ONT, Ont.
a
B
e..r. Sept
• LI
.o - Oat.
10 em w w a Nov
. Deo es
J nuary 2919-WhitbT 8, Oshawa 4, Stoneham
6, Port Parry 8, trzbridgs 11,.0aaninaton 10,
Beaverton 9, Uptergrove 8
Foe information, literature, tickets
reservations, apply to nearest
N.R. Ticket Agent. or write General
Iger Department.08 n= street •
CANADIAN NORTHERN
•We have a complete stock of all the latest •
styles in Footwear for •
MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN'
Ladies' High Cut Boots in black, brawn -and -grey leathers, --
with leather or Neolin soles. , ..
•
• Of alimaterialr and design 1
• kept in stook. It will pay you -
to call et our works and inspect our steak
and obtain prices Don't be misled
agents we do not employ them, consequent.
ly we can, and do throw off the ayes,IItl
commission of 10 per cent.;irhiohygn
oartainly save by purchasing from aa,
call solicited. .
WHITBY RRANITE CC.,
Office and. Works, Whitby, Ontario -`
Ytaremont livery(
- 'Bus meets all Trains
First-class Rigs to hire day or
might at lowest prices.
Phone 1805.
Let ns quote you on Glazed Bash,
stack sizes and made to order.
We can save yaw -money.
A heavy stock of B. C. red cedar
shingles on hand.
Orders filled for all kinds of
-.Hardwood Flooring.
-- Terms Cash
Money Orders and Drafts are
- issued by this Bank payable in
seT'n t e 7 a . all parts of the ° world. - ,;u
PICKERING BRANCH,
•-M. C. fit, Manager. Branch also at Whitley.
limamanaggmagmhomimminmgaludinummummaall
help is seams, but thio condition can be relieved -
a marked degree by using machines that accomplish
more work in a given time with lees man power.
-' Why should the farmer ' r • to horses—a slow, a • : • _; ve
:.. r. . .',••• =i • . _.• every . i. _ . c, . a- k :h •. eu,.
_ 'the truck and thereby reducing the cost of hauling, _speeding
up deliveries, and saving for human needs the food that
the horses wouldotherwise consume?
- The. motordriven truck can work
s�ntly at maximum -
load aider the burning summer sun, orin the coldest weather.
•Unlike the horse it needs no rests while working, it eats only
whi3g in 'actual use, and when the day's 'work is done it
requires very little attentio ' and leaves. oo free for other
"Chores" about the • : - ' v. = . _ • • -
' tare will be a distinct loss to . the
.church in Claremont. The address
expressed the best wishes of ►til for
their future prosperity and hoped •
that they might be frequent visi-
tqrs in Claremont. Mr. and Mrs.
,Rbal made suitable replies, ex-
pressing their appreciation of the
•ninny acts of kindness received
.^during the four years cf their pas-
, !torate in Claremont, and thanking
' :'those who had contributed tow:
--' Ards the valuable present. Revs.
:A. McLellan and H. Wood
gave
:very interesting addresses express-
"`Ing their pleasure in having been
associated with Mr, and Mrs. Real
during the past four years, and
wishing then continued success
in their new field of labor. Mr.
Thos. Stephenson made an efflc-
,^=ient chairman. Refreshments
were served and the meeting closed
with sin ng "God be with you
still we a iiet again." •
�..
space o a e . crass, wagon and harness it replaces.
It is a mistaken idea that a- truck is useful only for driving
upon paved roads. ' The Ford can be driven all over the farm,
and used for hauling grain, potatoes, fruit, roots, fertilizer,
wood,stock, milk or any other product. The speed it
traves, the time it saves, and its low upkeep cost appeal
very ' strongly .to all users of, the Ford Truck. If you need
°-help, order your Ford One. Tori Truck today.
rim UNIVERSAL GR
Oas-Tea Truck $750
Runabout • . 575
Touring • . . 595
The Universal
Sawing -:-Machine
Manufactured by
W. H. Jackson & Son,
*Brock Road. Pickering. Oat,
Blacksmithin and Woodwork g in
ant • es. = aw gumming
and Sling a specialty.
We stock Gasoline Engines. Emery -
-Wheels, Circular Saws. Saw
and En ery Mandrels. -- e
We have for sale a blacksmith's' bed -
lows in good order. -
Price, $6.00.
-Fruit 1rrees
.end Plants
For Spring Planting
We . need no further Introduction
than the fact that we have been in
the Nursery Business Stirs Ore -
Yaws, and are now prepared to meet
-existing conditions by offering our
high grade trees and_planta direct to
customers at Rocs Borroit Pawns
Send for our illustrated, circulars of
hardy varieties which you can order
"'diiect and save the agent's commis-
sion, of which you get the benefit.
Our prices will be sure to interest you
and all stock is absolutely first -claw
andtrue to name.
The Chase -Brothers Co.
WHITBY, - ONT.
--OF—
:Ontario
Farmers' Club meets in. Pickering
Town'Hall on second Wednes-
dayof each'month only; '
during summer months
Seed corn now on hand at A. J.
Allison's, Pickering -
Binder, twine now on hand at A,
J. Allison's and at Mr. Jack.,
Wilson's, .Pickering.
Mast be called for beforelkay 87
Declares Huns Were Gods Compared
.. to Germans of To -day.. - .
"You call them Huns—these crea-
tures. The Huna were goda cotnpafed
with these devils. I have met them
face to face when the flush of victory
turns them into ruthless beasts. I
have met them -when defeat has driven
them , for fiendish cruelties. And they
would rule the world! God deliver us
from such a fate."
These. words are from a letter to
the father 'of a petty officer in the
British navy who was taken prisoner
,at Antwerp and has spent three and
a half years in a' German ..prison
camp. '
The wrlter'i was a naval , volunteer
when the war broke out, and he was
Gent with the fust contingent of the
Royal Naval Reserve to assist in the
defence -of • Antwerp. hie was' taken
prisoner, but at _last escaped to Hol-
land. From there. the letters were
written.
"People who have "just returned
from Germany," he writes, "say that
the officers are dazed by the colossal
losses which the Huns have suffered
in their latest offensive. Some of our
returned men have seen horrible train-
loads of humanity passing through.
"Doberitz seems years ago now.
Here is one memory. If a guard wishes
to let a man know tit he may not
smoke the method of conveying the
information is this:. Remove the pipe,
cigar or cigarette from the mouth of
the offender by means of a blow from
the butt end of the rifle on ;the back
of the head.
"These 'guards are only expert with
-the butt end of their rifles; they .can-
not shoot for toffee. I saw two guards
lire five shots' at a Russian who "..was
lying wounded at the entrants to _his
hut before they finished hint; "the•
distance -was about twenty yards. One
guard, however; was a better shot; he'
killed Mathews, one of our fellows,
and severely wounded two Russians..
"A soldier "tried to draw an extra
ration from the--took--house. .Ha was
seen by a guard, who fired at him a
It was soon achieved. The Huns distance of about fifty yards and miss-
,- ed him. - But the bullet hit a tent in
aced I which the men were eating their soup;
it killed one man and caused another
to lose hie leg.
"At Rolsrbacfi camp a poor feriae
wept mad; he put his face through -
the Wire close to a ¢entry, who fired
and blew his head oflf. - • - .
• "In our dugout in :Germany we.,had
a sweet little canary that need to sing
to us all day long. We brought him
_ .course f.
"We've have with us,- and until we reached the
up this—way, •Mr�Drayton, Jerry
She shook hands with him and kern-Dutdt frontier -he -never even chirped
Bpd away. It ' was aalon time be -
k
•id d' b "When th6 train crdased the fron
_amore he spoke wlth•,her again.
losel/ht Heudtoo Attalla Company' lir 'epactal arrangement with Taos Allen;
•
,
•
• CHAPTER VL—(Coned.) . !you think you're entitled to, but its
Jerry nodded • cheerfully, .Taut whend the best that the company offers or; is
:itis mother turned aw8 , his brow! like! to offer. I honestly think—
,Already they were almost' and I've tried hard to be ,a friend to
hat the end of his savings; to be sures! you all—that most of you`will make a'
there was still to his .mother's credit anietake if you don't accept what's of-
fered. " Now I'm 'going to •ask you
to make apassageway,so that I can
enter with. these men.
.He paused and looked expectantly The
at the sullen thrc.ig.
wer
to hie speech was an inarticulate mur-
mur of defiance. - He scanned the
faces in silence; there was. not one
that was not forbidding. back
"Step aside, "fellows,—fall
•now.„ He advanced motioning to
those' in the front rank°.to clear a path.
One young man quailed under his
eye and stepped aside, only to be flung
back into place by his neighbors. The
treatment• stiffened his courage, end
he -resisted when Drayton pressed
against him.
"Come on, you men!” Drayton
shouted. Break a way through.'
The example that he set, burrowing
with his own broad !Moulders into the!
thousand dollars/roralia father's
lie insurance, ,yet he did not like to
tthhtink they Must draw on that. He'
stood looking out of the window;
• presently he saw No a Scanlan ap-
proachingand .`went ofat • to meet her.
••They walked on together for a little
-way, talking in subdued voices.
"That means we'll never be mar-
ried," she said listlessly, when he told
leer of tha responsibility that be and
•
his mother bad undertaken.
• "Oh, yes, we will," he declared.
;"�nW�hy, Nora, you won't get tired wait -
Ana, will you?" •
• I 'don't know. Maybe I'm tired
'• 'Oh, Nora, don't say that." • I
"I guess it's true. Yon can't go on
Jeering very -much for a person when
• you're always worried . and anxious
• and unhapp "•
"Why dent you all give in and take mass, thrusting with his powe
the hard life. that's uttered you?" arms, inspired his hitherto hesitant
Nora asked listlessly. "Or else go followers; in a moment there was a
away and start in fresh somewhere lively - scrimmage,. 'which soon dete-
altogether? What's to be gained by, riorated into a number of separate
carrying on this siege?"
fights, Jerry, back in the middle of
"It's justice we're,fighting for, the thfong, did not see clearly what
Nora. A man hates to quit, even was -happening but with an ardor
for his own good, when he's fighting equal to that which filled him when he
forustiar." ' took part in football games he heaved
ere's no use in being obstinate. and pushed and struggled, and es -
•'Dave and father are just aa obstinate,ently to his astonishment found him-
: as en." self with three or four others free of
"'You'll belad we - were •yrhen it's the throng and rushing Drayton
all over. I don't believe you'd want acmes the street. They all desisted
,� to marry me if I quit, Nora."
"I don't believe 1 want to anyway.
- We might as well, stop t -!king about
that. We both of ns have too attich
-late on our Minds."
• Jerry was silent. He. felt disheart-
ened and crushed. If Nora wasn't
-willing to give him in the struggle
Such support as his mother gave him,
she was no doubt right in' breaking
the engagement. Yet after a while
be resumed desperately the 'effort to
convince her that she was wrong.
"Oh, Jury," she answered, "don't
.try to throw dust in my eyes --and
your own. There's deet enought fly-
ing to -day without that. .1 should
'like to get away from this town."
She set her lips and narrowed her
eyes against the puff of wind that
caught up the dirt of the roadway and
• sent it swirling upon her. "Such a
:filthyslightly, nasty little lace!"
.:: she said. "Don't you. hate it, place!"
"I never have," he answered mood-
fly. "I don't know but what I -may."
"1'nt tired of walking," she declared
after a few moments of silence. "I'm
going koala now. And if you knew were unorganized -and offered a
how !'hate my hoateI" • leas resistance; their leader, iso
E r At the steps of her house she bade against a bouts wall and firmly held
him rjood-bye. "Don't come to see me there by four sturdy young men, of
any more, -Jet y For the present at whom Jerry Stas- ow , vainly shouted
least." - adjurations and imprecations.* In a
"I've never liked anything the way few moments the invading force was
I've liked loving you, Nora. I can't retreating down the road, pursued
"stop it off short, yon know." ! merely with threats of dire punish-
"I wouldn't have you do that, Jerry. ment in the event of another attack.
' -- 'erha a it will be come help to me to Jerry and his, comrades released tate
- ' fed that for. a while anyway. you'll
superintendent. •
stili o on caring for me -•all to „
„ W W sorry toh a to hold you
with a somewhat chastened sense
triumph, but v. -hen Drayton again
strove te-advance .they'biocked him off
stoutly. There was a hill is the fight-
ing; the strikers obviously held the
upper hand. •
I warn you men," said Drayton,
breathing bard, "you'd better open up
a passageway."
"We'll let you go through any time
you `want, Mr. ayton " said Dob-
bins. "But we won't let you take
that gang of Huns with you.
Resenting the epithet, one of the
invaders stooped and hurled a brick,
outraged Anglo-Saxon nature rose to
that! brick. Fists only—no- brick-
bats; "those were'_ the weapons of
Buns.- -In the course of the disorder•
the town police dutifully made their
appearance and after. an unimpres=
'sive effort to Esser, their authority
were deprived of their, clubs and
good-naturedly told. to about their
usiness; they remained, interested.
and not. unsympathetic spectators of
the final triumph of the defenders.
IYIItE.FENCE
• r
8,000 Rods, from 38- centsper-rod,
up. Shipped promptly .from stock.
:Write for 'Price List.
A. R. LUNDY ---26/3 King St. West.
Toronto
•
ration of 1 1.10 ; pound of sugar per
person- per manth. '
The rough, flour used in France is
mixed with wheat substitutes to make,
the dark French war loaf. It should
be ;remembered in this connection that
bread has always formed?2 per cent.
of the French diet, as competed with
89 per cent. of the. Canadian diet.
m•ars
OR GLOMMING
Baas. nal express
daily.
.70/e7_ snarl �wsees
Kill the Slugs.
TEUTON FURNITURE FAMINE. These soft -bodied moliuses are • de-
am
e- -
a wanxea
SWEET CREAM
We supplyoharem
and remit
Masai 1143-i.=iagIfemati
•
- zidedhy. daatrnatiue in • vegetable ger-
closed round -him and by threatening Cities Will Soon bei7orced to Make dens. They are likely to attack any
his assailants Secured his release; '
several of the strikers who had hur-
ried.•to their house near by had re-
turned with gong. Their example • in-
sw
in -
!spired others; in a few minutes it as
'a formidable armed 'mob that con-
fronted the officers of the.le*:..
(To be c_ntinned.L.
WAR PRISONER'S LETTEil::
The. superintendent looked' im
sternly in the eye. ---tier-line.all wall still, as every one was
'!" Je ked still` re- ur canary, burst 'into 'full song." ,
"You will learn, young man, that straining his eyes to get a glimpse of
r - ,.. CHAPTER VII. ' lawlessness never wins." . the new country. And just then 'Joe;
the, last week of -July a notice ' "Not even when practiced by cor-
Drayton kept his eyes on him: "I'm ,
not likely to forget you. And you'll FOOD SITUATION IN FRANCE.
have reason to remember me." He . — '
stepped forward and again addressedlFacts About the. Shortage Which is'
the mob, which but of interest in Very Great at Present Time.
what he might have to say, centred for
a tow moments its uproar of jubila- In 1914 production of wheat in
tion.• France was about 82 per cent: of the
"You men have done a very foolish normal consumption. In 1917 the pr-
thing. You may realize it by to -mor- duction was but 45 per cent. 'of the
row, and if in that case you disperse normal production (and this, remem-
qquuietlyy and make no further trouble, ber, never was enough for her con-
drop.I opbe oneing to let the gotttto 'gumption). After deducting the
But fact- you have to
recognize• you can't bully the corn- amount necessary •for seed, the 191?.
.
a
•
sr.
•
• . .
'11 .0
•
I �TAP
PR
Suites for Poor.
Germany is suffering_ from a furni-
ture f • owing -to the suspension.
of furniture ma g'- the -war,
to such an bxtent that the municipali-
ties of Greater Berlin have been com-
pelled to enter the industry in order
to\provide 'the ' absolutely ceaaary
furniture for the poorer clajbes. '
Hospitals • and other municipal in-
stitutions serve as gathering places
for furniture belonging to deceased
Berliners and the collected furniture
k d of plant. They are. nocturnal in;
habit, hiding during the day beneath
stones, clods of earth, etc. As they,,
come--out-to-feed-in-tb " n an
excellent remedy is to spread bro
cast over the soil before nightfall„
freshly slaked lime. This adheres to
their bodies end soon kills them. Three!
applications. on consecutive evenings,
are advisable. Shingles, placed here
and there throughout infested gar-
dens under low growing plants, will
attract many slugs, for they will form -
is repaired and put in shape in muni suitable shelters for the little tees-
cipal carpenter shops. Recent Berlin tures and, .inctdentallg, will lure them
papers add that the municipality is to their doom.
also having_ designs made for simple
suites of living room and bedroom fur-
niture and has applied to the army au-
thorities to supply the ...n ' S
woods to 'make the -desired pieces
moderate -cost. -
e
AVOID ALL EXTRA MEALS.
at
Serial Customs Must -be Altered .to
Conform to War -Time Needs.
All banquets and other meetings at
'which refreshments are served, when.
such are considered necessary, should
be 'so arranged as to take the place of
regular meals, and not constitute ex-
tra meals. Banquets, etc., at other
than regular meal hours represent a
very considerable waste of food. With
a little thought they could be arrang-
ed so as not to -constitute an extra
meal. -
• A person who eats more'tood than
he needs is today helping the enemy
because he is not giving to our sol-
diers and Allies that support which is
necessary to win the war. War has
changed many things.aild it is now
necersary that we•should alter -our so-
cial customs so as to conform to."the
need of the food situation, .which is
serious indeed. •.. -
- Goitre Investigation.
Dii. F. J. Shepherd; late Dean of the
Faculty of Michie of McGill Uni-
versity, Montreal, and en authority on
goitre, has just completed an invests
gation of the prevalence of this dis-
ease in Alberta for the Commission of
Conservation. The investigation was
Undertaken as a result of representa-
tions made to the' Commission that
goitre was becoming unduly prevalent
in that province. - -
ng ktter made
•
'Nothing better be
be
.1;READ MIXED\
tarns t hastens
pts
' Rua•
work. WINN
6.
the . .
11
welds. -
ComeiseserkiereisellA thewI
to asslow or
&
l..e ha the 12.2y
oda 1.41 in. 33.25-
T. YYRIOMT 00.
MAMI.
u".
' a was posted at the entrance to the porations
oy a or s announchng
rry as ,
Purr Ste 1 W k that spectfuL
the mills would resume operations on
the first Monday in August, and that
the places of those employees who had
not by that day signed the new wage
scale -would be filled. Dobbins -called
a meeting of the men; they, . voted,
with no ' dissentingvoice; to remain
. firm. Most of tem held the opin-
ton that the .threat on the part of the
tnanagement to introduce new work -
pen -would not be executed; neverthe-
less, there was earnest discussion of
the tactics to be employed for the
frustration of such a measure. Dob -
`:`bins made a bitter speech. "You'll not
let any outsiders get a foothold• in
the Works!" he cried. "You'll keep
them out—by force, but not by viol-
ence!"
iol-ence!" "
nction appealed to the
udience. They wen
a
—11Ccatie
Bungalow Model
P
Canada'
1410.00
CO., LIMITED, OSHAWA, ONT.
and Largest Plane Mabee
THE outward b e a u t y
that • distinguishes a
Williams New Soak Piano
Is an Index of Its Intrtnalo
worth. Ideals are built
Into every one of these
famous Instruments—
ideals of craftsmanship.
that make for the most
i enduring qusbty.
■
■' I.111111,iHiilt•1I1,11•1111,1114i.1111111iT:' 1111111111I'.IIi11111111III,Ii111111
•
► - production was one-third • France's
Tile next morning Drayton and
another trainload of workingmen %ar-
rived and marched up to the Purroyy
Milts under the escort of the sheriff' mal food consumption always has been
needs.
Food never has been wasted in fru-
gal France. Consequently, . her nor-
...
• ing-sardonically, ejaculating some of
• them, with pleasurable anticipation,
"Force; but no violence!"
At seven o'clock on the morning de -I
aignated fifty men hired by the Purroy
Management arrived by train. ' They
were of various nationalities and taxi;
our" Saari— haggard, ' anxious, elderly,
'
men and' aggressive looking youths,
' % • all poorly dressed, armed only with
dinner pails. Drayton, the superin-'
tendent of the mills, led. them from•
the station to the Purroy Works.;
The news of their arrival had preceded
them; at the mill gates the dull force
of the strikers was assembled argi
barred the entrance. Drayton add -I
dressed the hostile gathering per-
▪ inasively.
'For every one of you men, if you'll
some in now, there's the old job—no-
1
s body blas wtges its good as
are paid in au frills in this gee-'
tion. There's a 1 for you here.,
It mxs--ntt!be as good as living as
-
•
, •e
•
even stronger . guard was assembled
to oppose them. The sheriff read, aL
proclamation calling on the mob to
disperse under penalty of fine and
in.prionineat. • The mob remained
stubborn and sullen; the sheriff call-
ed on his deputies and the strike-
breakers to follow him; the clash
of the preceding day was reenacted.
But the resistance of the strikers was
of a rougher characters instead of
hustling and shoving, they battered
tfreely with fists; clubs made their ap
nominee in the hands of the, attack -
Ing party. A deputy, feeling that his
weapon was bele wrested from him
by, one ruffian while another seemed
bent on throttling him, dropped the
club and drew a revolver. 8 degly,
then, in. the midst of the throng there
was an, explosion; a . striker dropped
with a bullet in hip thigh; the de-
puty who had fired the shot was hurl-
ed to the ground, kicked and beaten;
his comrades, drawing revolvers,
ve
Great Britain ' -has been lending
France large amounts of food and no•
body disputes the fact the British
Idled are short of food.
Seventy per cent. of the men of
France have been forced to go from
the farms ,for military service, leav-
ing the women to carry on the ardu-
ous work of food production.
In 1917 the French home food sup-
ply was kept yip to abput 85 per cent.
of normal. This year it has fallen to
between 60 land 70 per cent. '
There is only one-third the normal
supply of milk in France.
The ration of the French soldiers.
has been reduced twice, ,because' of
e grave sshertage-iif"aupplsea.-
• France is on a ration of one pound
of meat per person per week,•includ-
ing horse flesh.
- For months, France bas been on a
•
}
."'7•":tt”
•
/„-' ;'l,'%lr�//i%lig iiia !/�, � •,
/1/;,
1
Iz�!rnS
i%/�� ola...
OII V /j Wilt
11111nroeill Cream . SOe and $1.i0
Velvasla Sesaralss lass hankie We
Row (3 aha i) .• . Set
Wigs . . • ".. tis
110kw.d Croft Soap a . tie
aarat.d Talcum . • . . tie
\Face Powder, •
The daintiness of a complesiQn always
free from oiliness and shininess is the de-
sire of every woman. Bestofall powders
is Ingram's-Velveola Souvetkine Facs
Powder. It keeps the skin.amooth
and attractive. Hides minor blemishes,
the little wrinkles, and blends so mar-
velously with the complexion that it le
scarcely visible, It adheres even tho
the elfin be waren and moist, and h lass
a refined and gentle fragrance.
For the sake of youthful charm mei In
gram's Milkweed Cream. Its daily tui
enables you to retain the charm and
Ce r'IaWep ; --a —mss - •eolot-of-girlhood.-It-Is-
healthful for the akin tisanes. Your -
PRED'1[-F.ING>hAhli.C0.-" mot eomplet,iineefI gtstn's-
WnrrDSOa. CAN. . toilet products including Sodomite for
the teeth. -
:(96)
•f
,
•
414., ,' -.,‚ -.- .-ify;
or tea
The AutoStrop an-
swers the _call effici-
ently—it is the only
razor in the world
that automatically
sharpens its own.
blades. therefore,it is
the only-razor...that
•is always ready for
service.•
Tice Antal-it:op
teyour soldier or sailor
ens clean.comfort-
able shave ha enjoyed at
borne, menaces. where he
is or under vrEat condition,
he uses it.
Cave hhu Autnikrop
--ins die inh he needs.
83-42 Oda b. - Tamini„
- DIFFERENT IDE
IMBisTlInnrailInnnTIATannInerrallietee,
. •
hitherto unknown to most Canadians,
and, thee greatleist of these is thrift.
We hear it on every hand, from the
kitchen and linen closet, through
every, branch of homemaking—and
in the .streete purses ie the
form of placards- beseeching us to
save for the different funds which. the
war has made necessary. n' _
Food we must save, arid We're. do-
ing it gladly and willingly. Lieen we'
can't buy anyway, and wool is al-
most out of sight. And -we are find-
ing that we can get along beautifully
with the Japanese lunch cloths for our
tables, and that while shoddy isan so
satisfactory 'as pure wool_ fo. gar-
ments, we can wear it and be wann,
if it is going tonhelie win the war.'
• The Sduthern Canada ,
-Povrer Co., Limited:-
- _ Controls Water Powers on the St. Francis River et/table
of over 100.,000 H.P. development, and through stock 9WA:
ership tontrole severe,' Light & Power Companies.4
The Company supplierpower and light to over 46 munn -
cipalities • in the -Provike of Quebec, priacipally in the
,Eastern Townships.
11119.411 -.TIMVP'r•ilMt7Irrin
May women in some way miss just
what the food board desires of them,
and undernourish their • families. It
is not thrift, but dm worst sort of
extravagance to rob thte growing chil-; b
dren of the foods they need to promote
the healthful growth of bone -and mus- i a
cle. Adults may get along for quite 0
a while on. diminished retie:is, but
children need certain foods to make
the -eelts which build up the organa
and It is nothing short of nriminal to a
deprive them of these thieigs. Milk, a
which-juet now is plentiful in Ontario, e
though there are differences of opinioin ;
about its cheapness, is one of the best
things for the growing boy and - girl.
And -we are not asked to save on that.
On the other Band, we are singed to
buy it and save on meat. Few chil-
dren dislike milli and they should be
i o
given it freely -n -to drink,, in euatards c
and puddings, milk gravy.and vege-
table cream soups. /n the soups, es- s
peciallye it is 41111. ideal dinner or lunch e
dish. The milk furnishes the protein e
the cream is • not taken out, while the
necessary for growth, and the fat, if
vegetables give the mineral salts nec- bu
esaary. .• Any vegetable may. be cook- 1
ed until softeput thrqugh a ricer, and la
the.water in which it is cooked, with ea
the pulp, added to scalded milk, the. y
whole thickened with- a little corn-
starch,
ra
starch, and served piping hxit, •
u
'Plenty. of milk, eggs, vegetabl‘e, th
fruit, and a certain amount of simple !
sweets may be 'Oen the children! be
without Interfering with the thrift ! re
not hear some of the old folks say
they dislike the barley,- potato or
oatmeal breads, they wilL eat them
with a rebs Ftn-ed-the children well,
Fuld don't neglect gourself. Only see
that your food conforms to the pro-
gram laid down by the food 'board, in-
stead of to the program arranged by
the finicky notions -of the family. This
- • . • • a ; • .41 at at ;•
.1Ia a .91,10- reps rsAii
. • • ' •• m • of one oininnns ompan.y's large powers-
. , on the St. Francis located at Drummondville.
e 'Phis plant is being developed to supply the increased
- -demand for power in the territory served by the Company
and enable more .manufacturers to locate in'this .dtitriet.
The development of water power now is a .patriotic duty,
•
ens well as a oonianercial advantage.
• • • We recommenn the 6% BONDS -ot • the SOLITH.f ERN.
--.CANADA POWERNCOMPANY, LIMITED, -which we are
• qffering e. bonus on -Common stoek thusvin
• - •
is not a time to humor your stomach.-- \ 'asters sin apportunity of participating the future sun
There is another form of thrift 7 ems of the Company.
which- is misnamed. And that in the - Send for circular `and map showing territory served.
mistaken notion which impels a wo-
ao3rDS 1SAT as 31017110NAS3131 ?Wm VS
man to get along without kitchen con-• •. teer stonvszar VATICISSIV MAN
them. I am not speaking now of . , NESBITT, 1 HOMSON & COMPANY
. . .....
power washing machines and ,vacuurn Investment Bankers. . ' ' • Limited
cleaners, , mangles a.nd acetylene - - . -7, ' -
ranges which. every woman longs for . -Mercantile Trust Bldg. ' .
but which many cannot afford, Re the .222 St. James Street
veniences when she can afford to have •
• •
Hamilton
Montreal -
dozens of little things which every woe •
man could have and doesn't buy for ,
the peke of saving a cent. • For in-,
tance, a' carpet sweeper can be
ought for, $4.50 which -will last for
years. Brooms are to -day $1.00
piece and the carpet sweeper will
utwear twenty-five or thirty brooms.
Yet how many women go on without
his very handy article when they
might just as well have it. Charcoal
ed gasoline irons coat no more than
iferl set of the sort which must be
ease on the stove. But how many
omen sweat through the heat of July
nd August •because they won't invest
in a different iron?
And the host of little things venteli
help. Think of getting along Without
a pancake turner, when you can buy
ne for a nickle. Or without a ten
ent paring knife, or an egg -beater or
whip, either of winch coats a dime.
trainer, spatulas, ware potato mash-
rs, knobs for covens, dippers, can fill-
rs, can openers, measuring cups, soap
akers, basins of all sizes, market
asketa, scoops—why, what dan't you
y for ten cents? . Turn a woman
case in a ten -cent store with two.dol-
rs and she could Tick up enough to
ve herself hundreds of steps a day.
et how many woman keep on saving
anger ani losing time and temper,
nder the mistaken ininnession that
ey are thrifty.
Let us be thrifty, by all means. But
sure that' what we practice isn't
ggardlineus.
•
o• •
Wash Boller as Canner. side to allow the' boiling water to
thoroughly circulate around the jars.
A honie-made rack can be nesde, how-
ever, of strips of wood or wire mesh.
• - Exercise. '
_• Ail writers and all lecturers on
-health topics urge, the advantages and
indeed- the necessity of abundant ex-
ercise. Their prescription is, how-
-over, somewhat indeflni
• never say exactItallt7land wthey do not
much exercise
tenPereotenlIsh"1dus what is the beet form
•
OP•- -of exercise; unless, indeed, they are
-
writing or speaking of some course of
--.ent ditected t�spaciarn
nark for example, as gymnasium ex-
- ercise--which is excellent if yeti take
it in moderation, but entirely hied,-
e.___Leenuate if it is the Only, form -Of-exer-
• cise that you take.
• In Certain conditions of ill hearth,
particularly in heart disease, the
- 'Phrsinian often prescribes _exercise in
'doses that are as exact as his doses
of medicine. He measures the exec:-
- n 4Sbe by means of paths laid out on
- and graded places and marked
-111sith distance and elevation signs. He
' .gives the patient instructions to walk
such and .such a distance on level
- ground or •on a designated ascent.
Sometimes, also, the physician pre-
- '-iscribes resistive movemertts, such as
tontractioes Of the arms or of the
legs.
In health there is no need of such
- exact dosage; yet even then some at-
-tempt at regulation is useful. A per.
pon receives the advice, "You ought
take a let of exercise." If he is
detente that man mean to him a
f -mile stroll once or twice a day—
enough to send the blood through
bther peeson, ambitious and conscien-
% lions in doing what he is told to do,
will take "hikes" of ten or fifteen
' • To Go in the Wish Boiler. --
The. s _
•
good' old family wash boiler
makes a very good home canner. The
neenon a rack perforated at-th.
This is a home-made wooden rack
to be placed in the bottom a wash
boiler. that is used for home canning.
. .
. .
How Little Bear Helped Tfie Wildcat circus man wandering round here, and
. One time the wildcat babies 'ran into the house this minute "
_. Baines. 1 it is a wonder be didn't fill -you! Scoot e
• _ ..,...
swan. It .was late in the afternoon 1 "Little Bear is good!" piped RI the
when Little Bear found them cryingshrill voice of little sister Fluffy. He
from their home, but the trouble was
beside the brook. They 'were nlit fare; made a stone bridge for us a
tul
brought ua homer, Little Bear loved -
that they were .on the 'wrong side of , her for owning up like that.
1
the brook.. - I. "Well," said Mrs. Wiklcat, "if he
•re43-1quirret But the -wirdcanbabTeirneside the gate, where he had bean the top of their -voices. Little Bear f that
could /tot help laughing; but he felt , Father Bear played a „merry game ot
_would not even. try to float. the path from the house to see what
did not dare to junip on a log.
tails wide and sail acroes!" said the nee. ne Jumped the_etreee manfrant _
"Float over, float overt" advised At the same moment Father Bear "-
the duc.ka. But the baby wildcats
dle over; -they were
ter; they did not like to get wet. i mew!" in her most impolite fashion.
wildcats would not elide in and pad -1 tee
suggested Mrs. Otter. But the baby !
front paws tied would not vrade-inetoH
the water; they did not like to
tryafraited , ova imth.e water and would not
Deer. The baby wildcats shook th ir
"Wade in, wade in!" advised Father
"Jump on a log and spread your was the matter; an at that very mi. •
"Slide right in and
afraid 01 tha Wien stopped and said, "Mer—rrow! ?der—
advisee the bee_ fl knhavowe sms.erhatetkeishezdh,ebeene, willerbethegelirricee ,
paidle overfel;they are worried. Anyway. she took
The hiding, and ran away as fast Cl he n _,
get Wildcat ncrneant wiell, andfrrihtsablzewwheteit. -.
1 1 Little Bear knew what was good .
, oome o s are a vrays
; paw into Mrs. Wildcat's paw and trot.
,man mey get him."
end Mother .Bear came running down e
Ling. Bear home; and great was late
for him; JO he gladly put his little wet
ted along by her side. Mrs. Maria -
Itner'sgesteurp, rmisre.wwheniid,e:nt. eureaddentyching
evening until • bedtime he and .--,-.e.
.‘"
tq
r i
l'
!'
,.
e
/-,
i
).
"Swim across!"to ,e,
vers. But the baby wildcats were 0
sorry for his tittle neighbors,e
and Mra. Maria Wildcat scaring a cireus
determined to help them out of their 1 men — "mer — rrew; Igor — rrewe ' l'.
trouble. He__•
e
and thought and thought! - At last he '
.
asked the baby wildcats how they • Aunty's Joy.
•
happened to be vo near home and eet
on the wronrside of the brook. , "I told you last Sunday, Children,"
"Mother went away *Jul didn't come I, said the Sunday -school teacher, "that
4.,
you should an try to make someone ---e,
back," Yowler explained, anti I said i
" - - happy during-theweekenellow man, ', n x '
we ought to stay home and be gond,T
of you have?"
e- e,
but—" . -...,
"He did not!" - interrupted Billy 1
"That's nie, Johnny. What did you
"I did," answered a boy promptly. ee
wkirywn. difidnwne 1117,
Wildcat. "He said,
"Yes, he d" . arisweren Fluffy.
riwaufflkyin,„ juin a 1\ittle 1
'Ma *ill never do?"
always- happy when I go home again."
"I +'ent to see my aunt, and- she's
re
V,
"And we walked and we walked untl • ..-- A EP
..3,'
q-..,
:r=
4aire,,.
r,
miles a -day and spend an hour at
gyrnnastice—perbape much to his in-
. The amount must depend on
whether the person. ie stout or Rain,
young or oldn-d active or phlegmatic
disposition.'
„There is for an of us -a happy med-
ium between too little and too much;
the Wiry to find it is to use cotnnemf
sense. - Exercise should natter' be car-
ried beyond pleaeant fatigue—a point
that ,varies, of course, according to
the condition of the persnn. For
most of us, brisk .walking is the best
and most availabla form of exercise.
A' good plan is to 'begin with a mile
a day and to increase the distance
gradually, keeping short of real fati-
gue—not lazy inertia—until you cover
four or five miles every day. If you,,
are' under seventy and in average
health, -That is not too much, when
taken in two or three installments. • If
it .causes undue fatigue, you are pro-
bably not no well as you think you are,
and you should go to your physician
for a thorough examination Of your
tem.
WORKED METEORIC METAL.
The Cause of
Heart Trouble
Faulty digestion CUMIN die
generation of guess in the
stomach which inflateeed press
down on the h•siutand interfere
with its regular aetion, causing
faintness and pain. 11 to 30
drops of nether SeigerinCeralise
Syrup after meals sets digestion
rUlinwhich allows the lean to
neat fon and regular.
•
Aztecs Made Iron Knives from Gifts
- • From the Sides.
In the old world the art of smelt-
ing ores was discoyered about 1200
B.C. It hes sometimes been suggest -
led that iron tools and weapons may
have been made at an earlier period
from meteorites, and recently a con-
siderable amount of evidence in be -
Olen of this hypothesis has been pre-
sented by C. .e. Zimmer. .
• He has compiled/0 list of. the known
liron-containing meteorites, nearly all
accumulated within- the past century,
and he shows from these alone about
2515 tone of iron might be obtained.
Of this amount more than 99 per
cent. is malleable, consisting of nickel -
iron alloy. He -also show!! by means of
a series of illuetrationt hbw easy it
is -to detach from the meteorites frag-
ments of iron meltable for use as tools
or implements whenmounted in
handles.
Thus it seems fairly probable that
*widespread use may nave been made
of meteoritic iron in pre -historic times.
At the time of the- Spanish conquest
Of Mexico knives and daggers, which,
they declared, had been obtained from
the sky. Moreciver, the use of meteo-
ric iton by Eskimos and American Ln -
diens is a matter of recent history. •
•
GIRLS! LEMON JUICE
IS SKIN WHITENER.
How to make a creamy beauty lotion
for a few coati.
The juice of two fresh lemons
strained into a bottle containing three
a
whole quarter pint of the most re-
markable lemon ‘, skin beautifier at
about the cost one mute; pay for a
small jar of the ordinary cold creams.
Care should be taken to strain the
lemon juice through a fine cloth so
no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo-
tion will keep fresh for months. Every
woman knows that lemon juice is used
to bleach -and- remove such blemishes
as freckles, sallowness and tan and is
the ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier. •
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orchard white at -,any drug store and
tete, limons from the grocer and make
up ka quarter pint of this sweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and massage it
daily -into the face, neck, arms 'and
hands.
were afraid that it would turn- ovine nen& go -so fast that he looked
find dump them into the water. a strgight line eying down the road!
By the time .Little Bear. came along, T For the first time in his life Li
the baby wildcats were crying big Bear kissed Mrs. Maria Wildcat
tears into the' -brook and wailing at night without being told. And all
we were best— and Yowler was ith
• "P int quarrel," Said Little Bear. "I
worst .one of us. Why, -why, Yowler!" Cabbage _Plante
want to know how you happen to be, Of all 'leading early and late
on the Inning side of the 'brook ?" varieties, 45c. per hundred. mail pre-
paid, ;2.50 per , thousand. express r' ,
' "Yowler, he made:. use cross the collect
away-offeseven-lnile bridge," was Also Cauliflower. Brusaels Sprouts .
and Onion Planta. -
Onney's answer. - - • Plants ar• being -snipped success:. '
"If you -don't stop this quarreling, rimy to all foot* of Canada. Ask for
price
I shall leave you," threatened Little_ listmenden Yarma, Fruitland. Ontario
Bear. • "And now I know whatno do, Dept. !if" 3riaaara menus In;
if you • will be good. ' We will bend
a bridge. III carry big stones and
drop them into the brook, and every
one of you shall bring little stones." ,
So straightway Littre Bear began
Udgee of stones. It was
-hard worn, btg.
rolled stones and lifted stones and
splashed and struggled and struggled
and splashed until at last there was a
fair bridge of stones across the sing- .
ing brook. The baby wildcets did
not help much because they were too ,
busy quarreling and crying.
"Now step, neer," advieed Little
Bear, "and be careful that you do not
slip." ' .
One by one the little "f;aid-cats,"
careful not to slip, crossed the brook,
stepping_nigh and carrying their tails
in the tin At last Little Bear left
them at their own door, just as Bleth-
er Wildcat appeared. -, ....
"You naughty , children!" she ex-
claimed. "I bave-,searched the woods
far and near for you! There .is a
bo phi their wool
direct to- in ge
than fanners who fell to tile
general store. •
ASK ANY FARMER!
who has sold his wag both
ways, and note whit he **yin-
c.rbetter dill, u-rii.6 us for our
priees ; they will show yowhow
much you lose by selling to the
General Store. •
We pay the highest prices of any drat
fa thecountryandarethe la rgeg wool
dealers in Canada. Payment is re-
mitted the someday wool is received.
Shinto yourwool-Wday—you will he
more than pleased U you do, and arg
assured-odasquant deal from us. -•
•
`.,
• r. -e
„eene,
#
• =
is
OOALIBM
- The iadie�a' said of the Method•
get Church will meet on TN/eines-
Mrs Thomas) Lbw .:Are regret home; of Mrs. •J. T:. -Stephenson.
to state, is on the sick; list at pres- - —Rev.-•D•e,-• Marsh motored to
est °` - $olstein on Friday. last and has
Dcpnty.reev.e'F. H. Richard—been spending a few days with
rori`has perchased a new-Chevro- friends there and in other towns
in -that part,of the province.
Mre. Dennon, of Frkford .-Marty-throughout the country
visiting her parents, C. H. arid Whose financial' affairs have beenEra. Burling. arch that they could afford to take.
,oerrl carloads_ of coal have life easy, are finding to their
n.received in Piekering during_ sorrow thatt the. cogntry in these
® past week.
. A. and .Mrs. Bunting spent
ay with Wesley and Mrs.
of Kinsale.
number from here attended
especial service in. the White
burgh on Sunday. :
-Dr. Henry will be her* as usual
t •Tuesday to attend to Ms
nfessienal'duties.
•
-Frank and Mrs. -Briggs, 'of
;Myrtle, agent Thursday last with
and Mre. Philipp
J. D. end Mre. Reinmer 's spent
-Monday with Warren and Mrs.
. illson, of Brougham.
e -Mr. and Mre. Powley and the,
'.tatter's sister, of Toronto, spent
; Sunday with the Misses Ranting.
.-Mrs. Arnot and daughter,
: -tilt eb Nellie, of Toronto, are: spend-
ing s'iew weeks with Pickering
„friends. ,
�• �--F. M. and- Mrs. Chapman, of
:Toronto, spent- Sunday with the
farmer's brothers M. S. and Mrs.
fha man.
< -= rost.occurred Ori ft couple of
ni'ghts last week, bat not sufd-
elently severe to cause damage of
•aDy account. •
=Mrs. D. Simpson spent a' few
aye during the past week with
r daughter, Mrs. T. M. McFad-
den, of Durham..
--Geo. E. and Mrs. Lawrenee
:returned home on Thursday last,
after spending a couple of wee
,;arith friends to Allendale.
Mian Julia Holt. who wait ea-
.:.: ported seriously ill last week, is,
/fp: weare glad to report, now some-
". -+what improved
—Mies Mary Heading, of the
-:teachtn staff of the Mount Forest
._,High School, is spending her vaca-
--�tioa, at the home of her parents
w� On account' of Monday being
a holidatele-
one central will clthe oseatn
dor the remainder of the day. The
other places of business will close
as usual. - ' -
—T. W. MeLean, principal. of
Port Perry public schools+, con-
ducted the Entrance Examina-
tions in our.school on 18th, 20th
".;and 21st June. Eighteen candi-
•dates wrote for cord/bates.
' —Bugler Robert Rankin, who
has been at the Convalescent Home
at Whitby for the past- few -
months, has been sent to the
—Special Dayof Prayer for the
nation. at St. George's Church. on
and evening.
—W. L. abd Mrs. our .ice, e-:
net an - Mrs. Courtice and bliss
Reta Peak went to Oshawa on
Wednesday to attend the annual:
CourticeDfamily picnic. "
, . • ,'
DALE 1 EGIST1tR.
SATURDAY, JUNE 29TH—Auction sale
of household furniture. good- no-,
etc., - belonging—to—Miss A.- d,
times' )?ae crit use fur,•Pickering
of stress Vi11,.P�- E1a1e at 2dclock. r
idlers, and they are now. cotj l• -- 8 e dodger's. W. B. Powell, aue . !`� l7� . A.-GILLESPIL� � 1�
led to engage in :some useful work.
CHOICE GROCERIES an
Corn Flakes 15c, $rumbles- `
nut 15t Kest
• for 25e, Puffed -Rice 15c, rea • ata
• -Mitred' Pickles -20c, 25e and 85c, Stuffed Olives 80e,
H P Sauce25c, -Worcestershire Sauce 20c. Catsup•15c and-25c,•Corn-26e
Peas 20e, Tomatoes 28e. Salmon 25e to 40c,, Sardines 10c, 15c •
and 20e,. Kipppered Herring 20c, Lobster 80c, Marmalade
'-15c and 80e,.Jtim-15e and 80c, Cauned Peaches.. - • -
Plume, Raspberries, • Peseta 25r, -Strawberries 28c, Peanut and Maple -
butter 15C and 25c3 Cheese 80c lb,. Bananas Bye, Oranges 75c, •
Tomah 20e lb, Fresh Strawberries at lowest price.
1 •
.•. 't •
--_ G-tio la delivered-anahortest`notiae ..' Bell and -h d. phones --
The professional idler, , *hoes
means of support is a myetety to
all, is becoming . alarmed . at the
situation. . ' •
— Registration here was com-
pleted on -Saturday. • The -work
was delayed on one or -two occas-
ions on account of the supply of
cards becoming exhausted. These
were replenished, however, and
the. work completed on schedule
time. The slips of pappeer,received in
by the registrants are significant
looking affairs, but they 'will be
found very • .useful when their
owners leave home _for a time.
They will be found - ueeeasary be-
fore a railway ticket or a meal
can be purchased. So no - one
should leave home without having
it in his possession. '-
--On Thursday evening about
eleven o'clock, Murray Simpson
r p heard a peculiar* noise on . their
•i+` veranda, which he thought was
caused by a cat On investigat-
ing be found an infant crying.
The child, which was about tiro
weeks old, was .evidently deposit.
ed there by some .unknown party
from a pasailig auto, as one was
heard to stop a fewminuteabefore
the infant was 'found. Police
Magistrate Jephson was notified, -
and he at once -communicated
with the Rev. E. C. Hall, of Osha-
wa, who is agent of the .Children's
Aid Society, and --who, aceompaoi-
ed by the matron, came up the
neat der and took the child away
to the shelter. There is no clue,
whatever, asto the heartless
wretch who eomniitted the crime.
Rev. Mr. Hall is now anxious to
communicate with souse person
who is willing to_ adopt the child.
An'advt. appears in . another
eolumn. - -
-Oo` Sunday afternoon death
came very suddenly to one of -our
oldest and most highly respected
residents, George Cowan, er. The
deceased had been in rather poor
health for the past two years, but
was able to be around town as
usual: On- Sunday evening as he
was about to sit down to hiseup•
per, the fatal attack came, and in
a few moments he Erresthed his
last, the immediate cause of death
being t eart failure. The de steed,
dim : General, Hospital. Toronto, for who was eighty years of age, was
ry �... further treatment. !born in Tomato, but early in life
` —A union -prayer service of the came to Pickering township to
• • women only, of all the churches in
"'`_1' __the vlllsige,will be held in the
Presbyterian church on Sunday
.tnori 1ni. June 80th at 8 80, and
not Pian the town hall as announced
engage -in farming. With the ex.
ception of a few months, during_
which he lived in Pennsylvania,
he 'has ever since resided in the
/Pew ddeert$aements.
- ,
VOR SALE—A number .of oak bar .
cels, some suitable for vinegar barrels. Apply -
at the Pickering Bakery. 15tf • •
l5tOR SALE -8 young brood sows:
i' Apply it lot 2I con. 7. Pickering. Frank
Ham.�Claremont. Ind. phone Cla2708, 35.40
LOST --Between Claremont and Lab -
.1.1 one red yearling Shorthorn' heifer. A
-reward will be paid to the persoa notifying
Robert Miller, Stoufiville of bet whereabouts,: 40
CANADA'S VICTORY BONDS
for sale. Denominations --$50. $100. 3500
1000.' Price. 991-2 and accrued interest. W.
D. DykesBond Broker. Bell Phone 198, Whit-
by, Ont.. Ind. Phone 70. 401f
COULD FOR ADOPTION -If any
generous woman in Pickering desires to
adopt the little innocent baby girl thatllwas left
at the door of D. Simpson Iast Thursdaynight,
she -may send appiichtion to Rev, E. .C. Hall.
Agent of C. A. S,. Oshawa, Ont.
•
Every kind imaginable in the
Fleet Foot Line
A few for. Men
DOG STRAYED—From the premis-
es of the undersignea.Bickering, on or about
May 29th. a black. white and tan hound. with
slit in right ear. Reward for bis recovery. Any
one retaininghim after this notice will be prose-
cuted. -S. W. Davis, Pickering. 37tf
QAFETY "'FIRST—Protection is'. a
safeguard of Production. Use our system of
lightning rode and save your barn. and save in-
surance. Our rods bare proven over 90 per cent
efficient: Call. write or phone us.. Phone 2303.
2,700 qqrr 2703r3.. Geo. E. Baker, snccesior to Bak-
er & Heise,-StouSville. 35tf
tar OUSE AND LOT FOR SALE-
Good frame house, 7 good -cellar:
cement foundation and floor, hard and soft wat-
er. House in good state of repair. cif acre of
land, large and ,mall fruit. Apply to WmrDing-
rnan. R. R. No. 1. Whitby. Ind. phone. Mier -
mg .1925.. 37-40
I1ARM FOR SALE -100 acres. lot 5.
con. 3. Pickering. First-class buildingswith
windmill and silo, never -failing stream of water.
well fenced. clay lam. Good 9 -roamed house
with furnace. a of hard -water. • soft
water sink in kitchen and sink in basement for
washing.Forparticulars apply to John Bell.
R. R. No. 1, Pickering. 49-43
MORTGAGE SALE
Coder and by virtue of the powers
contained in a certain Mortgage which
will be producedat the time of sale.
there will be offered for sale -by Pub-
- lic Auction on
Saturday, July the 6th,' 1918,
At the hour of 12 o'clock noon. at the
Auction Roams of C. 51; Henderson &
Co.. 128 King St. East. Toronto, by
C. M. HENDERSON. - Auctioneer, the
following lands. namely :
All and singular that certain parcel or
tract of land and premises, situate,
'lying and being in the' Tuwnship'of
Scarborough. In the County of York.
and being composed of the North 50
acres of- the South half of --Lot No: 3
in the Filst Concession of the said
Township of Scarborough. The pro-
ty is said to be very desirable
farm pro rtv, conyeniently situat-
ed near Highland Creek. Subject
to a prior mortgage encuwbrau*.e of.
$5,957.b1, as of lot. 1918. parti-
rulars of which may be obtained
from the Mortgagee's solicitors,
TEaxs-10%uf the purchase money to
be -paid to the Vendor's solicitors at
the time of sale, and the balance to
township, and the greater pert of
Wrist week.. - - the tiur on hit farm on the Brock
- —Don't forget to cgme to the .road. He was very successful as
Methodist Sabbath School picnic a farmer, and about two years
to -day (Friday), at Simcoe Point. ,ago came into the village to reside
'There will be autos at the church and enjoy a well -earned -rest. He
• :-'at •1 p, ni. to convey the members married Mary O'Neill. a resident
and friends of the school to the of this township, who survives
,= ,,picnic grounds. hint. He is also survived by six
—There will he an auction sale sone and one daughter.- These
to -morrow (Saturday )of the house- are George, of the Brock road,
hold effects and d good ,piano. Thomas at home, HareretToledo.
I etonginit to Mies A. Field, at her Joseph of Pickering Village, James
onKinRSt. east. Every- of Toledo, Joh° at home and Mrs.
isin-ftret-elasecondition and John Garland of Cherrywood.
shield attract many. One daughter died at the age of
—Misses Latera Andrewand five years. His funeral took
• Gladys Down, who have been are. place on Wednesday to the R. C.
4 ttending the - Toronto Normal cemeter and was very 'largely T h e 'w t i5 ' s •
School for the past year,:fiaished attend -
' 'Ufa r final examinations last week - —A deep gloom was cast over Confectionery
spendingrenow v the Yearly Meeting of • Friends
being held here, When on' Mobda ' - . _ - --
morninga telegram wile received NELS N% ice Crean •
by Moreesi Starr, of Newmarket,
stating that his son, Nelson Elroy
Starr, had been seriously injured
at alevel crossing' at Aurora, by Popular Patriotic Music.
being struck by the 9 o'clock train. Tobaccos, Cigars, etc. •
A second telegram stated that be
was not so seriously injured as at — _ IN•DILLINOHAM BLOCK
fret supposed, brit later one was Pickering,_ Ont.
received telling of his death at
the Toronto General Hospital, he
having died without regaining
conscionsnees. The unfortunate
young man was driving into Au-
rora, and a man whom be had
picked up. on the road, 'warned ' Manitoba Wheat.
hint of the approaching train. Be .Royal Household and Glenore -for
did not heed the warning, but Bread. Try a bag. •
whipped his horses.in an effort to Pastry Flour Fresh Rolled -Oats
es+
Men's Yachting Bale, in white. at - . 14,5 per pair
Athlete Bab In blue black, at ' t 1.50
". Lakeside Bala, in white 2 25 "
A few Specials for -Women :.
- - Ladies' White Maxixe Pump, with heel at "1`85 per pair
" • White Lakeside Bala, with heel,- at 2- 00 '
White Yachting Bale, with heel, at 1 60 ".
Now f as+ the Boys and Girls
Boys' Rover Bale, tan in color, at • >' • 1 50007 r pair
Athlete Bale, blue black, at 1 til +!
- " Yachting Huls, white at 1 :: '. ". _
:. Misses' YaehtingBale, white, at 1 35 "•.
Child's Yachting Bala, white,'at 1 1.5 -4s
" Yachting Bale. blue black, at 95c.-_ "
Children's Pixie Sandals, white, at ,.1 00
Ladies' Fine Shoes
-Four-'strap Kid Slippers, at - • 3 25 per pair -
• Low -keeled Patent Pumps, at 18 60 "
• Plain Kidi'umpa, at _ .8 00. "
. Patent -Pump, narrow style, at 800 - '•
Crossed -stray Patent Slipper, at 8:50 ' "
''"Mary Jane Patent Pumps, at .2 50 4e
,One -stray Kid Slippers, at 2 00 -44
Albany Oxford's. all-aizeer, at 8 00 ••`
White Canvas Pumps, at .. - . 2 00 . •'x _. _.
•
,Ellsd, good selection of Ladies' Boots andChildren'e Shippers.
-Call and look over tiur stock. - We have styles
and sews to -suit all.
CHAPMAN
The property will be sold subject to
a reserve bid. -
For• further particular: -.ad- condi
tions of sale... apply to _
Jolirxm'ox, MCKAY, . -
DoDs, & GIAtri,
. Vendor's Solicitors,
• Traders Bank Building Toronto
Dated at_Toronto this lot - -
day of Juns. lett : 29-40
O!TWEA
leion at their • respective homes
_
be The Friends have just conclud-
ed "'thelir Yearly Meeting, which
has been in progress during the
past week. Year by year, many
gold faces which had become famil-
iar by their being seen regularly
at the annual meeting for many
cars, are becoming fewer in
number. This year there has
been more young people in attend-
ance than usual.
—Don't forget the big garden
fete to be held en Monday next
(Dominion Day) at the home of
F1' H. Richardson, under the aus-
picee of St. George's W. h. At
2 •. m. a football match will be
nd at.a o'cloek, tea, ice-cream
._and- et er re res •� = , = • -
_;.served in the Japanese tea room. but failed. Both horses were
At 7.80 a good programme -will be killed, but the other manumped,
felven consisting of character dans- thereby saving his life. The de-
, ibg by Master Edgar and Mise ceased, who was 21 y t.t.l a of i:gc,
,Dorothy Jeffrey, of Toronto, H. was married a year . ago, and is
C. Hesse, society entertainer, Miss survived by his widow and a
'Wright, vocalist, Miss K. Fawkes, month old baby. He attended the
reader, Mies Mildred ' Jepbson, Yearly Meeting here on Sunday,
dancer, and others. Addressee but returned home that evening.
will be given by Dr. Jas. Moore, On Monday morning his father
.of the 116th Batt., N. D. McKin- .and mother came to Pickering,
-non, of Cannington, Warden of only to receive- the -tad news
• •the County; and Reeve- John For- which compelled their immediate
• ie, of Claremont. The Empring- return home. The heartfelt sym-
ham. Orchestra will furnish mnsic ppathy oftheir many Pickering
tiering the evening. Admission- friends go oat to the bereaved
cents, children 15 cents. ! Gamily in theirlteur of sorrow.
constantly on hind in bulk or bricks
Gum,'Chocolates sod other Sweets.- , •
ELM DALE MILLS
P2CCKERIIV'C#' '
You can .always 'get the best Mani-
toba Flour made from No. 1.
calel in and see the varied lines of goods
`before buying elsewhere.=
•
We have` our new line of Canvas Boots and Shoes epee&
All sizes for -Ten, Women, Boys and,..GFirle.
B. A, 'BUNTING, :----e'PIC3HERING
- - - • established 185T.
Be•
-Ready.. -.
Brig in.your Harness and Collars npw, to get -
repaiied, and spring rush.
Shoe repairing needy done.' Prices reasonable.
PICKERINCl- 'HARNESS EMPORIUM
Home Phone 3800. W. J. COAHWELL
Y:N
- • MI% FEEDS' -
OAT CHOP
-CR1JSHED'O ATS
C OPj,
WHEAT
. ' Cf ACKED CORN
M %ED HEN FEED
:Cald'well's Cream substitute
- Calf Meal.
- Molasses Meal
-'CHOPPING AND, OAT
RUSHING EVERYDAY
Get prates on feed an ton lots.
BELL PHONE. - •
Chopping every day. •
I' Happy Thought"
Thetke stoves are acknowledged..
- -to be the best stoves ----
- on the market
oto -day. _
Splendid bakers,easy on foe id:-
= handsome in :design.; - --
Cal1 and see our full.etook:
.fie H.BUNDY