Les archives de la ville de Dryden

Observer and Star, 25 Jul 1919, page 5

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in an ry before the anadian Club at Vancouver at a lun- eon given in his honor, Lt.-Col. = Dioainion President * of 2 "0 erseas we J frequently %0. at song 'There's a long, long inding into the land of my The G.W.V.A. are determ- prepared to live and strive for. We calize that it is no easy road we have travel that will. bring - us to our Through iron sacrifice of body, nd. soul alone can we reach it-- body of men who fought for and sav- _ed Canada when everything that our people hold dear was threatened and "in danger of being lost to us. Thous- ds of their comrades gave their 5 for the great dream of a finer, bett r Canada in the future; other thousands will go through life maimed : and carrying wounds; and all made ifices and. srffired to a degree one except those who went wil inferno of the war These men are de- that their losses, sufferings rifices shall | not have been returned satdiony are. the the Trernining factors in ional policy and establish- onal ideals. Iti is well that Connie who di; he comands Pp of | not experience the trenches, nor et arrogant foe? They, ust be animated by the same efmination to make Canada of their brightest, fondest S--a land of hope and glory, all men are free and squal and Canzda be elevated proud and happy i by ad, Loyal service and patrio- vith riches almost beyond the ams of avarice. Few countries in world have been so richly bless- d, and it. only remains for the Can- an people to wisely administer and develop the wonderful: resources na- ure has provided to make this Do- minion a peer among the nations. To make our dreams come true there must be, first of all, a greater unity in thought and purpose among 'the people of Canada than has here- tofore existed. There must be less of discord d religious bigotry. 1 and appreciate the "that all men are brothers, and Ian r may have been our an- re must be less "of looking as- at fellow citizens because by of birth they first saw 'some' far-off portion of the ntagonism Z oh : 'Canada--the best. possible education] [striving 'to raise the standard of 'edu- '| cation, and are making special efforts | goverments can do much by law and 'ladministration, their efforts will {only partially successful unless there all the people. |men | broad land should lend their assist- 1all 'to remove causes of friction and es- (feel that they are those who know what sadness is. | work. The nationalization of all in- | Bolshevism and t | be great and prosperous. ii determination. and a united effort on : the part of all to assure to the boys and girls of Canada--the hope of regardless of their present condition and place in life. The governments of our three prairie provinces are all in behalf of the children of our non- English speaking settlers, But while be is hearty co-operation on the part of Again, public spirited mel and wo- everywhere throughout this ance and give every encouragement to movements designed to develop the right kind of a community spirit, trangement, to make newcomers wel- come--in a word, to make one and all members of the great Canadian family, and that, while they have rights and privileges to en- joy and which will be respected, they have also duties to perform and res- ponsibilities . to discharge to their adopted country and fellow citizen, Saturday, July 19, has been set apart by His Majesty 'the King as a day of general empire rejoicing for the victorious peace which under God has been vouchsafed to the empire and its allies in the great war, Every Canadian citizen should join heartily with the Great War Veterans on that day in their patriotic determination to make Canada the land of. their dreams, and should consecrate. them- selves to the task ~unmindful of the sacrifices and the hard service which may be involved. Peace Day in Can- ada should be a day not alone of re- construction, but of regeneration, The War Idea Farmer Smith was painting his barn battleship grey, and every so far he would mark off a fake window and smear black stripes down it. "Are you crazy, Jim?" . asked a neighbor, "what you doing that fer?" "Cammyflage," was the pronipt an- swer, "at a distance of fifty foot, tramps will think it's th'. county jail. Believe me, I'm larnin' something new from th' war every day." -- Hoard's Dairyman. Gladness is appreciated only 'by How You C Can Tell ~ Genuine Aspirin only Tablets Marked With "Bayer Cross" Are Aspirin If You Don't See the "Bayer Crose" . on the Tablets, Refuse Them-- They Are Not Aspirin There is only one Aspirin, that marked with the "Bayer Cross"'--all other tablets are only acid imitations. 'Look for the "Bayer Cross"! Then it is real Aspirin, for which there 'is no substitute. Aspirin is not German, but is made in. Canada by Canadians, and is" own- ed by a Canadian Company. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin'? have been proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets--also larger "Bayer" packages--can be had at any drug store. Aspirin is the trade mark, register- ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic- aci Says Prof. Schuecking of the peace treaty: "The document is simply aw- ful." The professor is awful simple if he expected any other sort of docu- ment.-- Washington Herald. Countless have been the cures worked by Holloway's Corn Cure. It has a power of its own not found in other preparations. Bolshevism Has Failed Russia May Yer Be : Prosperous ~The scheme of Bolshevism does not Great and dustries is a fiasco. The Communist ideal leads--as it led in the state fac- tories of revolutionary France--to misery and ruin. - At last even those who lead realize their country's urg- ent peril. The led--the workers ont whom experiments have been tried -- |have now for long been weary of it all. Now the appeal capital to return to Russia and the foreigner to come n and save Russia. It may not be i overturned in time. 'But clock has been put back and blood 'has | from these "distressing. gifting, 5 British and American colors, a hat- | complications which threatened war goes out for] crazy. creed are f Russia may yet| the | Through the New Blood Dr. wat liams' Pink Pills Actually % : Make . #0 No mother should allow "nervous weakness to get the upper hand of her. If she does, worry will mar her|; work in the home and torment her in body and mind. Day after day spent amid the same surroundings. is en- ough to cause fretfulness and depres sion.~ But there are other causes, as every mother knows, that tend to make her nerves run down. A change would benefit her jaded system, and rest might improve her blood SO _as to give the nerves a better tone. But rest and change are often impossible, and it is then thatsall worn-out wo- men should take a short treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which make new blood, rich . with 'the ele- ments on which the nerves thrive, In this way these pills restore = regular health, increased energy, new ambi- tion and steady nerve. There isa 'lesson for other women in the case of Mrs. Harry P. Snider, Wilton, Ont, who says: "Five years ago my twin babies were born, and I was left very weak and very miserable, hardly fit to do anything. The doctor gave me medicine, but it did not help me. Then I tried another doctor, but with no better results. One day I went home to my mother, telling her how miserable I felt, and that the doctor's medicine had not. done me any good. Mother asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and as I was glad tor try anything that 'might help me, I got three boxes when I went back home. By the time these were used there was no doubt they were helping me, and I got three more boxes. But I did not need them: all, for by the time the fifth box was used, I was entirely cured, and never felt better in my life: Now when I hear people talk about fecling weak or miserable I always recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and tell 'what they did for me, and, in similar cases I shall continue to recommend them." At the first sign, that the blood is out of order, take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and note the speedy improye- ment they make in the appetite, health and spirits. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from - The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'The moralist no more thinks of put= ting all his ideas into practice than the shoemaker does of weating all the shoes he makes. rac. attended to, cause convulsions, and often death. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator will protect the children Buried Hatchet : At English Camp | and the Union Jack Bellingham, Wash.--Wrapped in chet was buried with ceremony by 400 Masons from Victoria, B.C., Friday Harbor, and Bellingham, at English Camp, San Juan Island, the scene of between Great Britain and the United States in 1859. As the hatchet was placed in the ground a staff bearing peace, was raised over it. A feature of the program was the| "wedding" of the Stars and Stripes| and the Union Jack on the flagstaff accompaniment of "America," "O, Canada," the "Star Spangled Banner," and "The Maple Leaf For Ever," by a band and the assemblage. f i) "Black: Watch"-- The Best Black Plug Chewing Tobacco on the Market Hun Call Treaty "Scrap Of Paper" 4 ture Worthless, Says the Vorwaerts Beglin.--The Berlin Vorwaerts, ma- Worms in children, if they: be not] welding wo 'the Store and Stripes : on its apex a white dove, typifying a of the old English blockhouse to the | Extortionate Pressure Refiders Signa- |. | Farmers Determined to Secure. Sur- veys Without Delay secure. irrigation for the district ly- ing between the Watertown 'Belly rivers, with its 'southern extre- mity 12 'miles due west of Cardston, is under consideration. The proposal is_to take the water from Belly river to the southwest tip of the Blood Re- erve, and by carrying it north parts of four townships can , be watered, some 30,000 acres in all, it is thought. No surveys -have yet been 'made. When farmers interested held a con- ithe irrigation branch, they were told 'he had no appropriation for the work. They inquired as to the cost, and it is possible that if the government does not take up this work the farmers 'themselves will engage an engineer to make the necessary surveys. Not on- ly are the farmers determined to se- cure surveys without delay, but they 'have signed the necessary petitions for the formation of the district into an irrigation district under the Al- berta Irrigation District Act, and these petitions have been laid before the government. If the surveys are completed this year, the district may next spring be in a position to pro- ceed with the awarding of the con- tracts for 'the ditches. Much of the land to be served by this new project is owned by the Mormon church. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. = Would Purchase : British Dirigible | United States Seeks Model Airship for Practice and General Training . New York.:-Purchase by the Unit. trans-Atlantic dirigible, or its sister ship, the R-33 as a working model for dirigible building here was urged by Henry~Woodhouse, chairman of the dirigible balloon committee of the Aero Club of America in a statement issued here. Mr. Woodhouse added the army and naval aeronautical ex- perts favored the plan. The R-34 and R-33, he sid, cn be used as d pattern in building larger airships in the United States, and as a practice ship for training of person- mel for rigid sieship servine Ath Is Torture, -- No. one who 'hasn't gasped for breath in the power of asthma knows what such suffering is. Thousands do know, however, from experience how immeasurable is the relief provided by that marvel lous preparation, Dr. J. D. Kellogg' Ss Asthma Remedy. For years it has been relieving and curing the most severe cases. If you are a sufferer do not delay a day id securing this rem- dy, from your druggist. We wonder if the Lord loves a cheerful giver as much as the cheer- ful giver: loves himself. : Some poets are always a-musing 'but not necessarily funny. How TEDDY LOST THE BEAR They say a sore corn interfered with his speed. Always apply Put- nam's Corn Extractor. For fifty years "Putnam's" never fails. Use other, 25c at all dealers. no * Gallipoli Farewell Song Speaking at Newport, Isle of at the evacuation, said as soon as the be silent ceased the British ng, "Good-bye, Johnny, I you, though it breaks my " "This was supposed to" have been jority Socialist organ, described tre peace treaty as "a scrap of paper." "Extortionate pressure renders. 'signature of. the peace treaty worth-| less," said the Vorwaerts. "We must Treaties based on violence can keep their validity only so long as fotce exists. Do not lose hope. The resurrection day comes.' - The Prussian Kreuz Zeitung, in an editorial headed "Finis, Germania," declared that "it is our duty not to permit the Prussian spirit to be crush- ed." never forget it is only 'a scrap of pa-| '| per. a beaten army!" he said. "You may fill the British soldier, but you can never beat him. He has a spirit which is indomitable." When a gallant man is asked to guess a woman's age, he first makes a silent guess and then knocks off| one-third, : A silver lining may have a copper cloud. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper, BS Sulphur-Laden Rain in Yukon A sulphur-laden shower of rain, a rare- phenomenon, fell over Dawson City, Yukon, and vicinity a few days ago. pools and sidewalks streaked with a yellow substance, which chemists de- clare is sulphur, and which they think A similar precipitation : has reported at Eagle, a hundred miles north of Dawson, and also in mortem British Co tmbia. Whiskey is 0 of the wiles: that Macleod, Alberta --A project to and |- ference with Commissioner Peters of | ed States of the R-34, the big British | sion, but with Chief Cuddy at | cupation which requires the use it has been curing corns and warts. | Wight, Brig.-Gen. H. S. Davey, who was in the last ship to leave Gallipoli A thirty-minute downpour left] was carried in the upper atmosphere '| currents from some distant 'volcanic | eruption. | been ) A! SLUTS PN CT CTO OTT = = 'Shoes are the most in the fields. F507 are abo wisde for men and women; for work and play; for every-day and Sunday wear. Ask your dealer for Fp, The name is stamped on every pair "FOR THE CHILDREN serviceable," most TEI : most economical shoes for romping kiddies--for girls who help mother about the house--and for r boys who work with father 22 STI TR RHE ---- Heads Alberta Police Force Calgary.--It was announced from Edmonton that. Chief Alfred Cuddy, of the Calgary police, had been nam- ed as head of the reorganized provin- cial police of Alberta. The police force was formerly under a.commis- the head it will now be directly under the control of the attorney-general's de- partment. Chief Cuddy has been here for eight years and his loss will be a serious one for the city. Sawing Wood With One Arm For some months now no dispatch nN on the life of the former German em- peror at Amerongen, Holland, has omitted to say something about his favorite 'exercise, which is said to be sawing logs of wood. The faithful correspondent who sends out these stories, or the loyal secretary who gives them to him, evidently is not sufficiently familiar with manual la- bor to know that sawing logs is an oc- of two arms. The retired emperor, un- | * tortunately, has but one. Is it mere vanity which directs that the world be offered this characteristically Ger- man camouflage, or is there a more sinister political design back of it? -- Buffalo Express. "The German delegates are now di- gesting the peace treaty," says a dis- patch. No wonder Von Brockdorff- Rantzau looks sort of green around the gills--Washington Herald. The same old sins and sinners oc- cupy the stage of life, but they fur-| nish a multitude of variety shows. I fell from a building and received what the doctor called a very bad sprained ankle, and told me I must not walk on it for three weeks. I got MINARD'S LINIMENT, and in six days I was out to work again. I think it the best Liniment made. ; ARCHIE E. LAUNDRY, Edmonton. Strike Statistics for Canada Ottawa--According to the Labor Gazette, the official organ of the De- partment of Labor at Ottawa, at the beginning of May the percentage of unemployed among members of trade! unions was 4.38, as compared with 5.62 at the beginning of April. HI ld riarl you come from a great game country?" said the lady on the committee to welcome the grizzly warriors of i western plains. "Indeed, yes, ma'am,' 'boy's reply. "What is the biggest game you have in Wyaminghy ey "Poker, ma'am.' Ld Patience i is the right bower for suc- THE iE RAE REMEDY. Nou. No2. N i T HE Used ia 2 Hospitals with - great HER CURES CHRONIC WEAKNESS, LOST VIGOR Hy VIM, KIDNEY, BLADDER, DISEASES, BLOOD POISON, PILES. EITHER No. DRUGGISTS er MAIL $1. POST 4 CTS FOUGERA Co, $0, BEEKMAN ST. NEW YORK OT LYMAN BROS ~ TORONTO. WRITE FOR FRI E BOOK TO DR. LE CLERQ xD. Co, HAVERSTOCK RD, HAMPSTEAD, LONDON, ENGw TRY NEW DRAGEE (TASTELESS) FORMOF EASY TO TAKEN THERABPION fii LASTING CURR. THAT TRADE MARKED WORD ' THERAPION' 18 OM T. GOVT. STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE ZEACKETH \ Wood's Phoaphoding | The Great English Fonedy %/ Tones and invigorates the who. vous system, makes new Blood Cures Nervous n Wor on he $1 L per. 3 x Sold by > La or maile Da fii Ae on Sn os : rice, New pamphlet mailed free. THE WO RaEBIcin ©., TORONTO, ONT, Corman Wisin , Desp the Facts about SHORTHORN CATTLE 1 The breed for the farmer or rancher, Write the Sec- retary to-day for FREE PUBLICATIONS, and get your name on our free mailing list. % DOMINION SHORTHORN BREEDERS ASSOC'N «A. Dryden, Pres. G.E.Day, Sec. | Brooklin,: Ont. Guelph, Ont ' was the cow- CHILDREN NEED HELP Spanking doesn't cure bed-wetting --the trouble is due to weakness : of the internal organs. My success- ful home treatment will be found 'helpful. Send no money, but write me today. My treatment is equally successful for adults, troubled with urinary difficulties MRS. M. SUMMERS, Box 42 Windsor, On MONEY ORDERS Tt is always safe to send a Dominion Exe press Money Order. Five dollars costs threes. cents. y : The Bottom Of The Sea The bottom of the Pacific oceah -- approximately six miles below the surface--is an exceedingly wet spot,' but the * in accorddnce with the usual meaning of the term, is Cherra Punji, in As- sam, India. Here the rainfall aver- ages 458 inches, a deluge of 300 inches falling during the summer months. This is a summer average of three in- ches a day, but more than 30 inches - '| a day have been recorded on five suc cessive days, approximately 150 § in- ches falling i in 120 hours, " MARATHON" "LEADER" "ARGUS" "ROYAL" "One or another of t 'taste and fit your purse unknown where Davids 'wettest place upon earth," =

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