Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Jun 1922, p. 9

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_"UESPAY, JUNE 13, 1522. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. come home in all their strength-gnd It's Best || | "THE GREAT WAR AST SAW mr" | ER FS 3 ull of co n \ z Ss est ; E . { The men called out "Speech "Speech," as they used often to do mo hi both ip -- | half in jest and half in earnest when for white shoes, By Canon F, G. Scott, C.M.G., D.8.0_, of Quebec, Senior Chaplain | we met in concert tents and estam. | buckskin and canvas. - of the First Canadian Division, | inets in France. Sone : I told them what they hag done! 9 ; , for Canada and what Canada owed | 4 8 hn The 10th Battalion was relieved | off immediately to an ambulance in| them and how proud I was to have | i | SE PET; that night by the 8th, the C.0 of | the road,.and placed in it with four | been with them. I asked them to S 4 \ 1 . hi ' : It | continue to play the game out here complexion indicates per- i is 1 } | others, one of whom was dying. A fresh, ros which made hig headguarters with | Hin Fiance. » y an et o } ht / ' | w g journey of four h nd | 8s they had played { fect health. To - ', g the C.0. of the 5th Battalion in a | Wasa long Journey o ours a | [eC " . te Cleaner g + |large dug-out by the sunken roaq. (a half to No. 1 C.C.S, at Agnez-les- | Then, telling them to 'remoye these all that is necessary is to take one to three = 50 t Duisans, and we had to stop at|taps as this was our last church Royal Yeast Cakes a day for a few weeks. | | 3S {There late a 5 " {17ere late at night I shared a bunk | bes . . WILL NOT RUB OFF NEST [with a young fi Tomi officer | Queant on the way. Our journey lay jparade, 1 prosounced. the HeSedie. Royal Yeast is a food. It Supplies the ; 20d had a few hours of somewhat |L3rough the area over which we had tion, sald, "Good-bye, Boys," ang| I water soluble vitamine which the diet may {Just made the great advance. Strange | turned homewards. | EH lack. Scientists tell us that this vitamine disturbed sleep. The next morning, | or . p : [thoughts and memories ran through THE END is essential to health. Royal Yeast is : : BAER AF BEimens oo a Septem the 29th, the fourth anni- i |versary of our sailing from Quebec, |my mind. Faces of men that had | | highly benefic in lany State In which > [our men were having a hard time. |8one and incidents that I had for- | E the system Seems 0 un wi. Nae [The German defence at Cambrai was |Botten came back to me with great | TO-DAY"S FASHION : Las cak FY am icine. {most © determined, ang they had a vividness. Should I ever ggain sees ha : " p in fruit : * . ['4TB6 quantity of artillery in the {the splendid battalions and the glad | WV Dissolve a Royal Yeast Cake A Trying Period. Through Which Every neighborhood. 1 went back to the |and eager lives pressing on contin- By Vera Winston. { luices or mix it with cereal and milk, and tre {uously to Victory? Partly from shell | | take it at meal time. The chances are in a oman ust Pass |road and into the trench beyond the | 3 Y f ks th lexion will be clear. For e------ |Wire and found a lot of men there, |holes, and parity from. {he wear of el 2 13% comple 08 to one- half or i {The parapet was so low that the men | heavy traffic the Toad wag very J ? am Practical Suggestions Given by the Women Whose [ins are they. called, "Funk |bumpy. The man above me was in one-quarter of a cake with each meal. : i Letters Follow {holes" in the clay, where they put |terribie agony, and every fresh jolt | wind name and addrgss for Ires booklet ; ichiean-- "Dur : as much of their bodies as they could, [made him groan. The light of the | oy cast Cakes for Better . Change of Lit. Tigan-- During _ the ea toon! recommended itta | 18 much of their bodies as they where | Autumn afternoon was wearing away | trouble, and was bothered a great deal | women with troubles like mine." Mas. [1 got a good view of the men I Bad a |[Roily. _Tuioseh the ape gone 2H ) EW GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED with hot flashes. Sometimes I was not, Daxter J. Tracey, Knightington, [service for them, and, as it was that | the end of the ambulance, as we sped oy | Snoarze TORONTO, CANADA. MexTREAL able to do any work at all. I read | Ontario, frente. I read out the epistle for St. |onward, I could see the brown col- | " . about, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable {Michael and All Angel's Day, and |ourless stretch of country fade o| i ttle: tt \ ' 4 Sophdund in your little Dosis and Lat the Compound HelpYou lspeke of the guardianship of men the twilight, and ten vanish into | TE . Rs vita yay pe od regu} A pd BL eritioal me of 3 woman 3 iia [which God had committed to the | complete darkness, dnd I knew (hat W arid own work. I recommend your and 50, ; (Heavenly Hosts. Going down the | that great adventuré of my life, | oH Wedding at Pittsferry. cuff links. The happy cotple left, 3 eC and is often beset with annoy- ! medicine and am willing for vou to ing symptoms such as nervousness, trench later on, I came to a place [among the most glorious men that ' Pittsterry, June 7. Wednes-Bamid showers of confetti and good ublish my testimonial." Mrs. J. 8, irritability, melancholia. Heat flashes from which 1 could see with my |the world héis ever produced, was | i day morning about half past ten, a wishes, for Belleville after which IVERNOIS, 2051 Junction Avenue, | or waves of heat appear to pass over rlasses a German machire-gun em- jover. | {wedding was solemaized at the Meth-lthey wil return to Pittsterry where Detroit, Mich, the body, cause the face to be very red placement and its crew. I went back | -- | {odist parsonage, when Norma Orr Mthe groom is a prosperous young Queer Feelings at Middle Age and aften bring on Beadacke, dizziness {and asked a sniper. A man who sald | : Chapter 22, ¢ [daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Braden@farmer. Sheboygan, Wisconsin--*I was run- Another annoying symptom which [he was one came up to me and 1 Victory--November itth, 1918 | | Orr, became the bride of -Josepa a T------ down, tired and nervous. I could not comes at this time is an inability to [showed him the enemy and then di-| They took me to the X-ray room | ' { {James Edgar, son of Jose,h Edgar! On Saturday, June 17th. even do my own housework, could not recall names, dates or other small rected his fire, Feould see from little (and then to the operating-tent that | After-the ceremony. which was perl On the above date the Whig's new sleep at night and all kinds of queer | facts, This is liable to make a woman puffs where his bullets were landing. | night, and sent me off on the fkllow- | ormed by Rev. C, W. Hollingsworth serial story, "On Wings of Wireless" $hoi 18 would some lo in lose confidence in herself. She be- He was a good ghot and I think mus! | ing afternoon to the Base with a {a dainty luncheon was served. Will start. Don't miss it. It's a ru] ff oS To dams | erm, sri, arid meng fa: 107% ford shot and 1 hink mis | In wero (he Base wih 3 | or Vegetable Compound. After the first ey Pinkham's Vegetable Com- [sudden the machine-gun opened fire | well advised to have my foot taken | | ver grey crepe-de-chine, and wore a ---- bottle I could sleep better and I have pound is especially adapted to help [on us and we had to dive inte the off; which, thank God, was not | ' |gray picture hat to match. Miss El- To hate a.man for his errors is ae kept on improving ever since." Mrs. women at this time. It exercises a trench pretty quickly. I told him | found necessary. From the C.C.S. ' | sie Orr, cousin of the bride, attend-Bunwise as to hate one who. in cast- B. LansEr, 1639 N. 3rd St., Sheboygan, restorative influence, tones and streng- that I thought we had better give up lat Camiers two days later I was sent | {ed as bridesmaid. and wore a dress |ing up an account, has made an er- Wisconsin. i thens the system, and assists nature in the game as they had the advantage {to London to the Endsleigh Palace | | of grey Duchess satin with a hat lo ror against himself, Knightington, Ontario. --* I took | the long weeks and months Sovering | vor us To snipe at the enemy seem- | Hospital near Euston Station, where match. Robert McFadden acted as Why is most of the bread cast up- Lydia nkham"s Vegetable com- | this period. Let it hel oarry you ed to be 4 curious way to spend a |l arrived with another wounded of- best man. The grooms gift to the on the waters stale? aie Clanee of re Soroush ie me y be BR | Sunday, afternoon, but it was a temp- | ficer at 2:30 a.m. 1 was put in a it- | bride was a beautiful necklace of There is only one thing more ge: | I had not been well for a year and was aged woman. It is prepared from tation too hard in resist. I crawled [tle room «on the seventh storey, and | - / A | pearls and to the bridesmaid a bar termined than a woman's will and not really able to do my work. A medicinal roots and herbs and con- [hack through the trench to the road. | there through long nights I thought | f } { { pin. The best man recejved a set of | that is a woman's won't. friend who had taken the Vegetable | tains no harmful drugs or narcotics, . , |and there finding a man who had just {Of our men still at the front and A / | -------- son, A ttn mm 's Private Text-Book upon "Ailment i {lost his hand directed him to the ald | wondered how the war was going. rr Wont par 1 d's free a request. Write to the Loo Siar te rost near Battalion Headquarters, | The horror of great darkness tell ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable ---- [upon me. The hideous sights and 1 ne information. . | sounds of war, the heart-rending | | rns ed Wounded! Sorrows, the burden of agony, the (pe Cape of This Smart Costume of | T accompanied him part of the way | pale dead faces and blood-stained | Gray Kasha Has a Curved Yoke and had reached the edge of the swe {bodies lying on muddy wastes, all | ken road when a major of the Engin | these came before me as I lay awake | 0ers camie up to me and said, "I have | counts got a better pair of German glasses soén han you have." It was an interest. | rattling through the dark streets be- | > E "| Favor is divided between Jackets and g Shallene, so we Sea there on 3 [low That concourse of ghosts from [capes and the outfit above assures | Gentle EXCEMA i spires | - imei ' - men : Jie sise ooking at the spires > { the subconscious mind was too hid- | one that capes are very smart. Ihave $day had occasion to see Joseph Murphy ACambrai and comparing the strengt {€ous to contemplate and yet one | ' of kasha in the softest pearl gray: 2 boy at the hildren's Shelter, who was suffering of the lenses. Very distinctly we saw could not escape them. The days | vy rom Runtiig incurable {the dress shows a novel treatment in t ok ¥: * we 3 he town, looking peaceful and a jwent by and intimations at- last a very long waistline which curves tractive. Suddenly there was = ¢sull reached us that the German power | ! : E down at the back. The little cape in front of us, a lot of earth was Was crumbling. Swiftly and surely finde individuality in its curved yoke ou ointment a ARNT. blown in our faces and we both fell | y The ointment should commend {tsel to anyone , : | the Divine Judge was wreaking and looped-up straps. suffering from this dreadful scourge. down. My eyes were full of dirt but | Tengeance upon the nation that, by | Of cherty felt, the hat worn to off- Chairman of the Childdnts Bhstt pi on County of Welland, I managed to get up again. 1 had | its over-weaning ambition, had | set the gray is extremely youthful in S0c. AT ALL DRUGGISTS ¢ FOR ALL aBMIN .a er ented 25 Joth legs. and trom | drench tha world in Jigoa. in | G€8180. Its-brim turns up from the ERUPTIONS throne tt My right 1008 | ino mort h o, 11th. at eleven in lr and extent nt. long ends which - ough WY putites. My rig |the morning the bells of London are tied into a saucy little bow at the Lad been hit and the artery in the jrang out their Joyous peals, for the back calf of my leg was cut. I fell down Armistice had been signed and the : = again with a feeling of exasperation | War was over. There was wild rejoic- Ys that I had been knocked out of the | ing in the city and the crowds went Sharing the Hospitality the war. The poor major was lying crazy with delight. But it seemed! An English traveller was being on the ground with one leg smashed. [to me that behind the ringing ot {driven around the Killarney district EFFICIENT The same shell had wounded in the [ those peals of joy there was the toll- by a typical Irish coachman. it was AND PROMPT TO ACT chest the young machine-gun officer {ing of spectral bells for those who |® hot day, and the traveler being of who had shared his bunk with me the would return no more. 2 kindly nature, gave the "jarvey" a right before. I beliove an imperial foto ue futility of war as a test of [drink at a waysidesinn. "Well," he | * officer also was hit in the abdomen | national greatness, the wound in the | 28ked, "has that made another man . . " he 10 Bl has Of rs pon oss 56 35 acu, ae Sor | | Special Sale of Folding Ironing Boards ENN rt i ts tit, or. the 10th Battalion who happened io | those werethe thoughts which in me | SOT!" anewered the Irishman, "And be standing in the sunken road ot | over-mastered all feeling of rejoic. | that other man would like a drink, some men together quickly and came {ing. too!" No housewife should be with : ! s to our help. I found myself being | tf th t . -- . v gh out one of these convenien ul C er V 1 C e carried off in & German sheet by four a Oat Mild Epidemic FOLDING IRONING BOARDS. prisoners. They had forgotten to ome One More . give me my glasses, and were very | On Sunday morning, the 4th of Going Round They are Siiongly made of fine that brings repeat orders niuch amused when I called for them, May, 1919, on the Empress of Bri-| It is. due to iupuritios i. the I NE but I got them and have them now. | tain, after an absence of four years | water, - causes «eramps, arrhoea, e up &. : The major not only iost his leg but (and seven months, | returned to heddache, Those who take twenty are unusually rigid and sturdy. Use Long Distance lost his glasses as weil. The enemy | Quebec. On board were the 16th |dreps of Nerviline in sweetened Easy to fold up and put in a had evidently been Watching us from | Battalion with whom I had sailed | water usually get quick relief. It is small space when not in use. A most attractive offering at $4.80. some observation post in Cambrai for | away in 1914, the 8th Battalion, the | really wondert L.how good old Ner- Each complete with sleeve board. Regular price of this board . Jt ; they followed wus up with another | Machine-Gun Battalion, the 3rd |viline fixes up & sour upset stomach, is $5.75. "Let me get him on Long Distance, shell on the other side of the road, [Field Ambulaiice and some of the |how it stops hiccoughs, how quickly and I'll soon settle this' says the which caused the bearers to drop me | Engineers. Like those awaking from |it puts a stop to those nasty attacks Lemmon & S d busi quickly. The chaplain walked beside |& dream, we saw once more the old [of gas. Every home should keep a ons rewd business man, as an emer- me till'we came'to the aid post where | rock eity standing out in the great [bottle or two of trusty old Nerviline 187 PRING FSS STREET gency, arises, there were some stretchers. I was river. There was the landing and jon hand. 35 cents everywhere. placed on ome and carried into the | the greeting of loving friends on the 1 dressing statfon at Haynecourt, They | wharf within a stone's throw from His personal} ' with the Dersuseive had been having a hard time that [the place whence we had sailed nes al ped him on day, for the village was heavily shell- away. While I was shaking hands ess in the old days, is still the ed. One of their men had been kill: | with my friends, an officer told me : {ed and several wounded. I felt al had to Inspect the Guard of Hon- | greatest force at his command. It : 4 . . great pain in my heart which made | our which the kind 0.C. of the ves- | seldom fails to bring the needed re- it hard to breathe, so when I was [sel had furnished. I qiq not know | ts. | brought into the dressing station I|how to do this properly but I walked | said, "Boys, I am going to call for | through the rows of stalwart, bronz- | © : s . my first and last tot of rum." I wag |ed men and looked into their faces | Long Distance permits him to retain immensely teased about this later on [which were fixed and immovable, | that personal contact and influence by my friends, who knew I was a | Each man was an original sng ev- i : drunk | ery unit fn the old 1st Division was men in distant places on which Jectotajier, . Tney said 1 had " up all the men's rum fssue. A Gen- represented. For four years and success was built. "If one of our eral wrote to me later on to say he seven months, they had been away travellers fails to secure an impor- bad been terribly shocked to hear I from home, fighting for liberty and tant order, he ng is- Was wounded, but that it was noth- | civilization. Many of them wore de- before the is ing in comparison with the shock he corations; many had been wounded. 3 over, felt when he heard that I had taken No General returning victor from a and I nearly always land it. [to drinking rum. Everyone in the | war could have had a finer Guard of |dressing station was as usual most Honour, - Sy - TRE ANA AA ttt htt. tts re on SAT 8 at tetra : kind, The bitter thought to me was The troops had to wait on board The power of Long Distance as a . | that I was going to be separated fron: | the ship till the train was ready. All only beginnin to [the old 1st Division. The nightmare along the decks of the great vessel, {that had hdunted me for so long had crowded against the railings in long | at last come try, and I was going to | lines of khaki, were two thousand [leave the men béfore the war Was [seven hundred men. Their bright over. For four yeams they had been | faces were ruddy in thé keen morn- my beloved companions and my con- ing air. On.their young shoulders stant care. I had been led by the |the burden of Empiré had rested. sy example of their noble courage and | their willing saerifice Canada had mon dunn Gb 1 he, | ee Le BAe 8 Er lu A full-size, full-weight, solid bar Jung ang death, to a grander con- And Shisie of what they had gone ie : . 66 S th God would ploughed roads of France and Fland. : of good soap 1S S U RP RI E. ers. Never again will one see them : Front Sronches. All ha emaed | Best forany and all household use, Along the coasts of the Atlantic and . Pacific, among our cities, by the For use in washing machines shave or slice shores of lakes and rivers and in the a portion of the "SURPRISE" bar direct . -- '| vast expanse of prairies and mount- Out of the War. ain passes the warrior hosts have to thé machine. -- it will do fine work. When the doctors had finished | melted away. But there on the ves- g . : : . binding up my wounds, I was carried 'sel that day the fighting men had 3

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