FORONO ITEMSI is. M. Bice, Lawyer, Denvel Colora~do. is thie day, seven years ag( Gf,i-iianv and lin,.A llieo ÎFLORIDA CAIS ?PLAYGRO [inior matian. snd erVations throu.gh cifle agent. 44-5 Skinny Men Run Down Men SNervous Men, u're t, know THIS tipies Liver 1 fleh pni ;mare F food y may the warld neyer be eursed withi another, is the devant prayer of al This is a day of aecountin--tbo take spiritual stock and discern how f ar woýe have pragressed along the path anapped out for us when the United States entered the European struggle, anid how far we bave ta go ta reacli the goal sýet for the nations of the earth at that time. This day must be made-, also, a day of accounting and reerà~- brance, for the individual ta have an introspection of how far he lias fuI- filled the pledges made at that timie, ta those who were ta engage in the struggle. Hais he kept themI? Th1ey were soleinnlynmnde, rlot t ecs aside as soon as the danger was passed. We cannat, forget that the World War -was ta be, at least so fa - as Arnerica was concerned, a war t, end war, or mrake war as near asI iniglit be an inipossibility. The several million Ainericans who participatecl in the strugg-le, went into it as Crusaders in a holy c ause. They were buoyed by a fine Idealis¶n. Pressident Wilson, their leader, hn.d the genins ta lift wiith hiini the whole nation into a higher plane, at any rate for the period of the war. Can we ever forget that period of exaltation? Wouid it be well for us if we could do so? Some of aur politicians -would like it if we could get away from it and stick close to the earth; but for aur part, we detest sncb notions. andl jre er ta tliink of the promise of Apri 1917, and look f orward from y-ear ta year for its fulfilment, making- this day the one ta searcli the heart and çconsience. We afre' noti afraid.i The last year has been a -wondler- fui year of promise. The Genepva I Proto cal cornes first, and then the clirnax, the agreement hetween the nations signed up at Locarno! The world can well rejoice today, as neyer before in its tragie history, for sam.ething glariaus is raming ont of tAil1. Th'e Anierican idealisn of that year, when the bugle s.aund ed the truce on the field, which inarked the turning point in Ameni- can history, is naw coming into full fruition. There is liglit ahead. It was slow in appearing, but it la here, ai-d though it may at times falter and grow dimi, that liglit wili never again be extinguished. De- pend upon that. The Geneva Protocol is the ab- stract goal. Locarno is t'he -1reat irst step toward that goal. In eéhence, the Geneva Protacol was the branding of ligressive War as, an International crime, which it fly runners in the hurdle race, Attuned ta proper time and place. The lad or laqss wha driWes. ahead, When Hlope hangs on a single tiiread Will victors be, with brain or hard, Equipped ta iead in wvorld-command. Let this impress the languid youthi, That honor waits on toil and truth- The thinge that beantify the earth Arnd gIorifý1 the sauls of wortb! -Lilbnrn Hl. Townsend. ta adequately appreciate, sa close upý to the transaction as we are. Free, fropi theatricalismi or tinge of boastfulness, it can be stated that this country is the worMd arbiter, and1 if it cared ta be, a w\ýorld dictator. It is Vie envied of ail nations. Tatke in, at this distance, the scene at Washington now and f or mionths past, one by one the nations of Europe sùupplicating the U. S. for ternis an the war debts, sa that they miay have time ta recover their former condition. Today this cou~ntry cani lay wreaths of love upon the graves of those wha gave ta this A.merica-n Idealism of 1917-18, in the know- ledge, clearer now than at any other time in the years that have interven- ed, that their lives were nat sacri- ficed in vain. We can be thankful in the' pres- ence of the surviývors ,for we knaw full well, that their devotio)n was not lest ta the nation or to civiliza- tion. The United States hias been assigned a grave responsibility as a casquemce of the war. We pray that it may be guided aright in the days ta corne. The League of Nations was, the suggestion of an Amierican Presi- dent, upon the wrinding up of theý war, and it has abundaintly justifled itself in uniting ail the principal Eurapeam powers against war; and within the past manth, it hrouighz; ta an abrupt stop the open qnd ag- gressive struggle between Greece and Bulgaria, which bid £air for the opening of another wcvrld %var. This couId fot have been achieved under the aid regirne. We have flot forgotten that a simlar out- break on the sane soul, with no League of Nations as a stabilizer .brought on the World War. But everytiiing now points ta the reali- zation of the great Master's Epi*grami, Peace on Earth and go'od will ta men, nay it ever be so, world without nd Grýant1 anld Uncle, James Laing, Clarke, and lorgan, Detroit, are visiting., dlpli Henry. ýence of late Mrs.! Jane Mii- bought by Mrs. Harrison, the e price, we understandi be- Carns cannot exist when Holla- way's Corn Remover is a'ppiied tai thein, because it goes ta the rooti and kills bhe grwh Mn. Frank Bowen, Port Elgin, vis- itedl friends here iasýt week, his first visit in six yenns. Frank bought an 80 acre farm recentiy. Mr. and Mns. C. J. Thornton will be at home Tuesday, November 24, froni 3 to 6 p. ni., it being the fiftieth annversarvy of their wedding. Orono Lodg-e A. F. & A. M. will receive an official viiit from. Dist. Deputy Grand Master Wj. E. Clarkie, 6Yhaw,,a, atreu1i meeting No)v. 26th. Messrsz. C. A. Chapmnan. and George Convier were uccessful poal-1 try exhibitors at Toronto Wïnter Fain. Mr. Oswald Cowan exhibited hans-es. 'INext W C. T. U. Silver Medal Contest in Town Hall on Friday,~ Nove-mben 27th. There will be five contestants and a good miusicalý Pr opram. Mr. Allen Harper, Toronto, and Mr. Harper Allen, Pickering, recent- ly visited Mr. and Mns. R. H. Allen, and Mr. and Mrs. 1. R. Bragg, Providence No cliild should be allowed ta sufer an hbrir from worms when prompt relief can be got in a simpfle but strong remedy-mMother Graves' Worm Extermnatar. At Rirby anniversary -Uhe very pretty duet was sung by Misses Gladys and Dorothy Henry. An er- ror was also inade in the proceeds, correct arnaunt being $195. Nine acres sýtanding thumber auc- tioned by Gea. Jackson & Son for Mr. J. E. Flett, f'ormerly the late Thos. Cochrane fanm 9th con. Clarkçe, brouglit an aver~age of $65 an acre. LFIFTYI BOWMA Brancdi THE OLD RELIABIl-, GROCERY STORE We Pl Svery highly the .ed through years the public. And time have we give and newc also please you. AlRCHIE TAIT Phone 65 Bw long natiors It calîs yL of ilzatlu led toalal wa nkind. 'orid fedenatiý 1 at - the a tle ri 1 arn prepared to handle'ý fowl this Faîl an~d wifl pay hiÈhest cash price. Cet My price.9 f your poultry. artune . -weary-vv ni a i Phone 81, arge, ord il came ri away.> STEIN, kitby' wonmen reported - a recent canyas this snedichse. C bulUUa Jew ione LUi. man- deciared to Germiany and ta France, that, there shahl )re war; and the other tis- re'sented at that Confer- aranteed that new pledge me. are coming out as the ýecan saw in his-niind, but could not express in ex-À , before hie recomm ended ople that decisive step. Thel 1ieft no distinct vîtar; id be noa winner in sncb a business; it ieft the vict- field as badly off as the hs the one exception of the ates, whieh, alone had the treng-ti at hanid ta struggle ta a close soon fter it entered it ta escape n. a year, then, the natii'n.s vely engaged in the great which sufered the mast [ared pulblicly, so that all imight know and profit, iternational war means de-1 if not total annihilation, tions that engage. in it. e reasan why disarmament iger an abstraction or a 'arn. tnay be asked, what of the -ates as a nation, as a .-ov- in ail that bias been dcne elve-nonth of the world's kening? Has it lîvedl up mni VsnYesand n. I Proved Safe Take without Fear as Told in "Bayer" Package OBITUARIES Mrs. Mary M. Cornelius, After su iilne.ss extendii year, Mrs. Mary M.i daughten of the late Willig Adaline Winter RogeTs, away at her residence,-Cl Cobourg, Friday, Nov. 2(0. speuit hen lifetinue in Cob vicinity. Mrs. Corneliuss ed by one daugliter, 'Mi Cornelius and by two sistel Louise and Ideli Rogers, ai in Cobourg. Miss Margaret J. Fare .Cob.dhi ing ovie ai Corne 1 s,1 O'%NE man ag Uthe Gaine Canada vives yi -- t1.."f-- "J A mf' In the Mutual Lîfe, more than 100,000 policyhold. ers are unïted for Mvutual protection. Theirs is the strength of uniteci purpose. 1You s1ýouzld have a policy ini the Mutual Life of Canada. The Mutual Life is safe, strong, beneficent. It~ will protect you and your deperndents, at a minumn dishes mole ore the fresh, rs-when you 0 Cook Bock) a oyte OXO ntoine Strect. are egeta- - rldabIO ls 1~ Rheuima A Bladde Gel- a b( wear a as T he name guararitee& .iver a Day. »p h for The ovel 1, Druggists ewc arbra.