¥ For conspicuous ravery, « rage cap- 1€ enen ma MADAME ROSINA FOISIZ 29 St. Rose St., Montreal, | *T am writing you to tell you'thag ¥ owe my life to 'Fruit-a tives', This medigine relieved me when I had given up hope of ever being well, I was a terrible sufferer from Dyspepsia--had suffered for years: « and nothing T took did me any good, I read about 'Fy tastives'; and | 'tried them, Afier fa boxes, I am non entirely : have my permiss } letter, as I ¥i persuade Other Dyspepsia to take 'Fruita-tives' and get well" Mabank ROSINA FOISIZ, . "Fruit a-tives' is the only medicine y ) of the line, an In the world made from fruit. | attack was ade on the Ger 0c. a box, 6 for $2.50 trial size 95a. | Man. entrenchments on the side and : ' Ce il oi | crest of the hill. The enemy had for | At all dealers or sent postpaid on | tified the position very ongly be- | receipt of. price by Fruit-a-tiveg cause it overlooked the ing town Limited, Ottawa, . {of Lens. The whole d was' dot- Ets erro erin, Stein iin. } , of which German: Reply to Allies. Berlin, Sept. 5 I Ply to the note of the Bard to the ret In. the the German sage." o'cloek ! umping rmed over N infantry left trenches and n's Land into the » "first" line was ta- The German gar- composed -- of Ne ign | German line. HON. PRESIDENT Sir Edmund B. Oster PRESIDENT I+.-Col. HL A.C. Machin M P.P. VICE-PRESIDENT "I. F. Hellmuth, K.C. HON. TREASURER " F. Gordon Osler couxcCiL Affred ©. Beardmore po. L. MicCurtig JK C_{ C. E. Lanskall - P. A, Manning Aemilius Jarvis Prof. |. J. MacKenzie village : : 'Major Axl. Snively . : ; kes | . : Wed : A James Ince many had ng penay 2TH that Ger. | wire, an Solinrate Xun rel ar : EXECIITVE Austro-German he S : above grot ve COMMITYEE a but w * James Bain X.C. lesir W. R. Johmston Fraok Darling C. Frederick Pad A. E Dymemt C. B. Cronyn R. A. Lyon Dr. A. B. Wright E. Marriott O. J. Hemmings N. McConnell E. B. Collett Emest Heaton F. Thompson J. Ralph C. O'Donnell J. F.- Marsh V. Kanes-Batchelor R. C. Wood John B. Vick- Lt.-Col. ~ 1e" posi- | ris ime and prevented many Carolyn Cornell.) ne had cume mn to pr } pe it will sufferers from : front line trenches a fter two remained 16 German i stone, 11 the 'ee Germ (8 peac sed 2 10 oppose | along the way. TE ' v.C spontaneous | 1ad lef 4 slope of cr coe ees HISTORY: 5 . OF GAN: 3 troops and put up a weak resistance to our troops. The first ks of dawn were lighting the ast when our walking wounc § ed coming back to the dre: ng sta- tions, all of them elated with the joy victory. After two years weary |, waiting they were moving on, and | 3 were almost forgotten ilaration of seeing the Han ne DAVIN agencies under proper re- strictions. These prominent citizens appeal to you to join the Citizens' Liberty League and assist .i effort to obtain sane, moderate temp- erance legislation. y! f.u2 yt "FRUIT-A-TIVES" na 1. wet . : ] A ASE ' 209 > Fl VC -- How Men From Canada Earned the Empire's . Ny / The Wonderful Medicine, Made From *, Highest Tribute for Bravery in the =. | Pout Juigen aad Valuable Tonics. ' Field of Battle. z : E v : | tutta Ahir es feed , : - and tion to dutv. After t Hill 70. Down in the va vhere the FOR SANE, MODERATE . : situation beeame --eritieal; alt Wires [the dark, past trenches named for the = I EMPERANCE LE ISLA ION ; being cut. It was of the utmost m- | troops who had passed that way be- © G i portance to get word back to head-| fore in the attack made on the hil] in . -- This soldier and one other 1£ lack: Watch lley, Cameron ~~ . Sal . Brown had his arm shattered, but | thér was sultry and moist. continued on through an Intense ba. Huldenly from Jekind them Brose rage until he arrived at the close up-| the first ably of es pening arut sciousness long enough to haud over | Rame with the discharge hi burning . themselves together 1n order to his message, saying." Hportan nes- | o and licuid fire ov Je enemy . wl . So Ty Seaton i obtain a sane solution to the Temp- erance problem. © - Representative men and women » 2 - . ' -. is known as the Citizens Liberty ue. : y The League is not a radical organization pro- -moted and dominated by selfish interests; but factory Temperance Act should be repealed. The League is opposed to a return of the open baras it previously existed iOntario sold generally and that pure spirituous liquors be ob- taimable at. Government / PAGE TWELVE : oh THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG : IMALQ 2 I : . ey ee JWES HER LIFE TO | The Canadian V.C.'s town of Loos once stood, eve build- ait, the wieriy mazes Cai at ro ous. The Even the message with rier to | Alley and English aif, - . Tot yl : 2s " > . Es . : - : Ll. . Private] first two weeks of August. The wea. : = The time" has come : when the . "He wan 30' spent that he 121, down | oy S2a0k, UK Dill was'Soun louie * COUNCIL AD "pecple of this Province must band the dugout stops, but retained com. | wt lLpmioke lit followed hy a blaze of | EXECUTIVE OF : ater, pH otion $0 duty was of the whofeel thattheirliberties arebeing unreasonably encroached upon have associated themselves in what an organization of broad-minded . thinking people, who, having the best interests of this Province at heart, believe that the unsatis- under the old License Act. It simply asks that non-in. toxicating beer and wine be To=Day § Ja o=Uay is The Da 0 ee - Join Now! Send your membership fee of one dollar to Dr. J. G. Evans, Secretary But the day's work was not done and the men who held the newly won line had stern duty ahead of them be- fore nightfall. -The Germans were not going to let Hill 70 go so easily, M: ' mén re pourfd through ation trenches and scores of machine guns were turned on the victors. Hundreds of Cana- dians were falling, and new troops could not be brought up quickly enough. The German artillery had | smashed, all the telephone wires to! hefdquarter It looked as if the joy | of the MOorHINgE Was about to be turn. ed to bitter disappointment. : In the chalk pits at the northern | end of Hill 70 a terrible struggle took | place. The place had been turned | into a fortress by the Germans. | about ®ve o'clock in the afteamoon the | w-- Five years ago today, began, and the French ind two prisoners. Answer to Yesterday's puzsy September 6, 1914, the first battle of the Marng checked the German advance on Paris. : NOT APRN WITHOUT "THE "BAYER CROSS" Any Tablet Offered as Aspirin and Not Stamped with the "Bayer Cross" is Not Aspirin at All! . le: Right side down at shopider Ea rt : "Bayer" Now Made in, Canada--No German Interest--All Rights Purchased from U. S. Government There is not a penny of German money invested in "Bayer Tablets of, Aspirin" nor" will a German citizen profit by its sale or ever be allowed to acquire interest. : The original, world-famous "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" is now made in Canada and can be had at your drug- gist's in handy packages. 3 Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on Package and on tablets Jou-are not getting Aspirin atall. : ' "During the war, acid imitations were sold as Aspirin in pill * boxes and various other containers. But there is no substitute for genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which have. been. proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rheu- matism, Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Joint Pains, Neuritis. Proper and safe directions are in every "Bayer Package." Don't, accept Aspirin in a pill box. Buy a "Bayer Package"! Bodes o 12 tablets--Botjled of 24--Bottles of 100--Also Capsules. XS > hundreds of men. Tables of Bayer Company will tamped with de Bark (registered if Canada) of Barer Manufacture of Monoscetis. Apis Bd nt Ne well known that Ee meuds Bayer manufacture, dw * Tesl semi imitations, be a' te "Ba Fer i Germans massed for a counter-attack - jon the Canadian outpests who were trying to build a defence for their new | 10th battalion had been} lines. The sent up to reinforce the line. workers dug in the hard, chalky clay they were mown down by the enemy machine guns. Field guns were train- | ed on the position, and the Canadian | line withered under their fire. If help were not brought up the whole 'day's | work would be lost and hundreds of men had died in vain. : | Volunteers to carry back a message to headquarters were asked for, and | two of those whe offered to go were | sent off on their dangerous mission. | The ground over which they had to pass was swept by a barrage. The | men watching from the trenches saw the first hoy fall. The second started | out.' He too fell. Then both were | lost sight of. The curtain of fire fell betwen the valiant young runners and the 'men in the. shell-torn trenches As their | '| whose lives depéndéd on the delivery | of the message at headquarters, { Out on the shell-torn field a boy | was fighting" for consciousness, It} (was Pte. Harry Brown, who carried | | the message { comrade was killed. His | His own left arm | was mangled by a shell. He laye un- | conscious. for a moment, then strug- gled to his feet. Hatless, his clothing riddled. with shrapnel, he staggered on," falling into shell craters, rising again, crawling over the riddled earth, fainting often from pain, but always gonquering by his indemitable One thought only framed itself in his mind--on him depended the lives of to headquarters, The day had almost run its and the sun was lowering in the west. when the<pitiful form of a battalion ranner was seen stumbling down one of \the communication trenches. He approached the door of 'a dugout, swayed -for a moment on the top step and then fell to the ground below, officer-- bent over him: Pte. struggled for consciousness. ficer raised him gently and opened his eyes. "Important message," he whisper- ed, as he handed over a crumpled Harry Brown was born in Gana- neque, Ont, in 1898. For two vears after.the wir began he continued working on a farm, and then, in Aug- ust, 1916, three months after. his eighteenth birthday, he eonlistéd\ in London, Ont.," in the Canadian Mount- ed Rifles. He was sent to Hamilton Ont, sixth draft to the CMR. He spent the winter in camp in England, gnd | in 1917 was drafted into the 10th at- | talion, in which 'unit he was serving | when he performed 'the heroic act for | which he was awarded Cross posthumously, mother, | a. is never a- course, Brown The of- the boy the Vietoria | is now" Mrs. Helen McAuliffe, lives in| Omemee, Ont. | A pretty young widow miss, . will. {- An|- first and then overseas in the |. W. G. Thompson Sv -------------- -- -- Sot po Citizens Liberty League, Kingston. ® CITIZENS' LIBERTY LEAGUE | CITIZENS' LIBERTY LEAGUE MEMBERSHIP FEE, ONE DOLLAR lease enroll me as a mem close my subscziption. Name are needed, You are in s object, please send donation -- | THE MAN ON WATCH | Sathorn The only fault the Lampman has with Brer Bushell is that his exhibi- tion gate entrance fee is too small. It is still one bit or quarter dollar for the big 'show, Let everybody get ready to attend. The posties are not as popular as they once were. They were fine boys when they were overburdened with work. Now, they have come out for their rights. Y Wellghe Hest thing we may suffer in no tall delivery on Christmas day, so the critics had better subside and not make the posties too angry. Some people who did not get their mail for three days, and who once upon a time opposed even the post- office lobby being open on the Sah- bath for boxholders, would now vote for a Sunday morning street mail de- livery. How times have changed! "It takes the. Free Mefhodists to loosen up. Their meetings of last Sabbath broughtd over two thousand dollars from the pockets of the wor. shippers. They must have had a Billy Sunday amongst them who caused this coin parting. Don't im&gine that foodstuffs alone are the only things that have gone up in price. "Bob" Reid tells us that furniture has taken the mod- est little advance of thirty. per tent singe the spring. The old arm chair and the kitchen table will have to suffice a while longer. LT Col. Hynter is still fining farmers who water the milk they sell. The colonel! says that when he was young « I I Contributions to aasiat in carrying on the work of the League | ber of the League, for which I en- | 3 ympathy with the League and its to the Secretary. Some Iie joined a sect that pr ing and he has lived up t fession ever since ot is too milk diluters did fot join also. No doubt «i ulk of highly respected in the reli munity. A suggestion special prize for the exhib Kingston fatr of a ninety-pound bag of potatoes. A full weight bag. wauld certainly be 'deserving of a prize in these days. They say ths h le around Hartington ar } who give full potato we n. at the Well, people, the m Uinery open- ings are with us, Much } UNION MADE B OVERALLS : SHIRTS & GLOVES i A I "0 as we ou pl : missed and people asked, Where is man? If George Gi ef 22 College Street, Toronto T. L. CARRUTHERS, Secretary HON. PRESIDENT: y SIR E a DMUND B. OSLER PRESIDENT: ~~ LIEUT.-COL. H. A. C. MACHIN, M.P.P. VICE-PRESIDENT: L F. HELLMUTH, K.C. HON. TREASURER: F. GORDON OSLER He was only an vendor, but now t} People mourn his Smile for treet is rn because even Or & stormy the popcorn own how m And 5 he should by fire Tha: estab og jadvocated tn the | jator Underw i Fire br ¢ {in one of the & Oil Company at W { harbor from Half ed force. if {ed to have {There is a Iz of fied, United States ts m n to has been and it ' Nevember a ight from him Good wl of by the company's five fighting | sendery are report. lV Ltiut in Petrograd. | IS ) i TALK] e is looked | MACHINES All makes cleaned, of repaired, Parts for all makes i NG Plhionographs adjusted, supplied, expert workmanship, moderate * charges, quick service. old Greek popeorn | is dead, passing, » Had a the | the | monn, not for on & very Wintér one, | i | | J.M. PATRICK ia} 149 Sydenham St. Phone 2058 OR UA uch the ed him it would have mada his heart may we not wonder why suffer a frightfal tonn | people lik. | old popeprn ma -- Ld esd govern- 'board y 1 J.B. senate by Se Alabama, i ut Friday morning | of the Imperial | rodside across th { 3 ax was extinguish! tf medicines and! " 250 erce, Gas tendered President Wilson ved, effective ac i I | IE -. aw. 100 with Private figthy EUROPEAN PLAN *. Trounson Prince George Hotel TORONTO In Centre of Shopping \ and Business District