Les archives de la ville de Dryden

Dryden Observer, 5 Mar 1920, page 3

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THE DRYDEN ag seneral Merchant, I h 37 co- ANE oA 5 Kens District Co-operative Clover Se cd«Growers 'Association.we will. In "the early part of March. rday, March 6th. Samples may be seen at W. J. inson's butcher shop, Dryden, the Association building at Ox- drift, or the store at Oxdrift. ided) off cars at Divden or rift. Ets rT i Ground. We are now equipped with the latest type of SKATE-GRIND- 1 and BOOT FINISHING MACHINE. We can therefore supply the best work with the ut- - most promptness and speed o! "RUBBER. BOOTS SOLED H. WILLARD, 3 1 . {| Boot and Harness Repairer. $l 6000000001 J000000¢ & RD. T. TRIST i) Dryden Livery. Transier and I an i DRYDEN ONT coo 6000000000; ! : 1 i No. » weers the first Wednesda. LE ach wonth ut 8 pm in the Tow Dryden - Lodge 169: l, Visiting. brethren _cordiall, W. J. Robinson, W.M. ~ D. Anderson, Rec. Sec. 41 0. F. Dryden lodge No. sineets at the Town IH. Vonday evening at 8 o'cloc <M. Nymark, N. G., D. Anders. ording Sec. Visiting hretbro: cordially mvited., every Y ba Golden Star Ledg 4 No. 484 AAR A.F. &A.M.,G.R.C tL ry mn the Masonic Hall, nd Tuesday of each month, 1tors cordially invited. fred Pitt, W. M. + A. E. Berrey, Secretary | Brotherhood of Bu and Paper Mill Workers Ren Lodge No. 105 Thursday eact . in the Stranc I. J. ADAIR, Rec. See v . sesesee. mp ao: + Sharolo's Bram Souaraiors Raw Furs Bought and Sold ry te Thi PII St Fire Tasurance _aas. MCFADYEN. OXDRIFT, Ont. dave your orders in before Sa rice $14.00 per ton (bags in- they eer many fell. 'were strewn on the hillside. To the 'have 'decided to approach the Do Td IX ical Mar an * I Won V.C. ®% 20% 420020 2% 4%." "oe! octet Tartar 7 a 0020.0% % 0% 0 a% of OR most conspicuous prey & and ideyotion to duty ony ony, Sep= _demberl 2, when | under r most intense shell, hina gu if and rifle fire, he went through the 'Queant-Droeeount © support ine + avith 24 have a car of land plaster shipped the battalion. Without hesitation and j | With utter disregard of personal safes : ty he remained on the field until ed to. He dressed the wounds of seriously wounded officer under tent rific machine gun and shell fire, an with the assistance of prisoners and of his own men, succeeded in eva- cuating him to safety, despite the fact that the bearers suffered i casualties. Immediately afterwards he Hie | forward in full view of the enem under very 'heavy machine gun 1 rifle fire, to tend to a wounded se geant, and having placed him by 1 shell hole dressed his wounds. Capt]; Hutcheson performed many mong] gallant acts and, by his coolness an devotion to duty, many lives wer saved.--Official Record. From Vis-en-Artois in the valley of | the River Sensee, the country clim slowly eastward to Dury. The slo is studded with little clumps of wood and through it runs the great ng tional highway from Arras to Ca brai. Cutting the highway almost two miles from Vis and flow) the line of the ridge into Dury is sunken road. A windmill with i broad earthern base and tower-li structure above stood out in front of Dury, before September 2, 1918, but | it has vanished from the landscape since then, bombed to a pile of ruins. September 2 was the date set for' the second phase of the big drive of the Canadians on Cambrai. The ob-! Jective was the Drocourt-Queant line| of trenches which followed the high, ground and ran through Dury. It broken through the week before. The] "jumping-off"> trenches for thel: Vis-en-Artois. A hard day's work lay before the men as they gathered before dawn in the assembly trenches behind the line. Five trenches p técted with wire had 0 be crossed. The sunken road was bristling wi guns. Every available cover had m chine guns in it. The Germans wel + pects, will avail 'themSelves in 'large +4 | inion LandsSettlement Act; are being: ' every wounded man had been attends | £ Col. was a loop thrown back from the| : = Hindenburg line which had beenj: Fourth Division were in front otf" for nearly a 'century, has-been visit- y : ing numerous Canadian cities yang ig ed 1 'determined to hold the Drocourte|: Settlers ing from England, | pe i | Imperial service 'men, who, 'he ex- | ! numbers of provisions in' thle' Dome: completed . by ; Lieut. -Col., W. .Obed Smith, Canadian Immigration Com-- missiotier in London, Eng, "In' view 'of thé 'fact thatthe Militaty Service a o| Acti pass 2d. by athe British! -Govern- | . ment has pr actically, made everyraple- badied man, an. ex-service an, we | 'anticipate a large 'percentage' of such Li | fo i Ji § be { Ey 1] fi | i provisions' efi: 'the act, + which ™ fers them free transportation, to a: port, of landing, in Canada," said Col. Smith. "With a view' to ensuring that' ny such men' 'as are likely' to'succeed as | settlers 'on the«land are selected; - Speniliy qualifying, .: committee - df armers will be appoin y. the Mi - istry of Subs araa neg ot migrati Yon. and 'will 'arrive in 'Bhgland 'sho tly for that purpose. EE pnd "Generally speaking, tions of settlement for such men will be the same as for the Canadian .quired to put down 20 per cent. in- "stead: of 10 per cent: ofthe Piteelinse ie Dbriceof their land?» ih Gn .JAs to the. 'tuture. general immigra- tion propaganda ; 'of the! department, 'Smith stated they would 'maid. 'tain 'the ame attitude and 'policy as before the war, that only workers, on { ithe "land and, household Workers should i : Nei 3 S : ob ; it their application. had bee | Sing 4 and 'approved by his, department. Ing this way the\Canadian Governmen 4 would admit only those approved b its répresentatives in: Londons - H ili Already;" saifl ithe coli inissionen, & ("we have, sent. over a few, Duich ang, Belgian farmers, and expect Es Hy ntinue With this 'class of Eto 'including' Scandinavian farmers; "but! we are'not'allowing any cintzition, from Central and Southeastern Hur | rope. Another development in; con ! nection with the Work in 'Europe charge of all Dominion - "Government. .exhibitions; dnd it is hoped to -great~; ly: stimulate tourist | travel to many! beauty spots in Canada through the': agency of sugh | exhibitions, if a A GHUKKA wargior, |! A Young Man From India will Live In i | oy Canada. ¢ A A one of th stiirdy In- dian fighters whose name "has prea error among the! enemies' of Britain towns during - the p few! 'months, 1d_attracting much atter ition PY Bis nisual bearing. Queant line at all costs. At five o'clock through a grou fog that lay on the hillside the Tough, go on men started on th Svs. Ses nd. ] fought bravely and | ron the » part of the ascent to the top of he hill. Then later in th 'morning came the men of the 75¢ Battalion behind them, pas through their positions and went through the Drocourt- -Queant line Capt. Bellenden Seymour Hutc 8on, medical officer of the 75th Baj tacking troops with his stretchei bearers. The enemy. was pouri down a heavy barrage over the hill side, which at that time of day w3 flooded with sunshine. Under t worked incessantly. The machine guns took 'a heavy toll of the mén attacking, and the gunners were not particular about the persons. dtn i they shot. Stretcher Iie althou as great 93 0 "weapons of self-d Wounded m Capt. Hutcheson ministered uncea ingly through the long day's fightin; Under direct fire from a machin gun a wounded officer was lying s8 verely wounded. Capt. Hutcheson went to him and dressed his hig 8 then pressing into service some the prisoners to assist his beare: derfire he rushed to-him and plac him in a shell hole, dressed wounds. These are only a few of Ilant acts of this medical offie a long day of service for t wounded -before the Drocourt- Queant line. The British war authoriti awarded bin the highest honor ) born Docenbor 16, 1383, at Mou) Carmel, 11I. He graduated from t Northwestern University, Chica and before going overseas practi as a physician and surgeon at Mo City, Ill., where his father still liv] the tall of 1915 to join the arm; and was first attached tg the 97! Battalion. Previous to winning 'Victoria Cross, Capt. Hutcheson the Military Cross, the official rec for which reads: "Before the battalion reached | jumping-off position the enemy pi down a heayy barrage, and ma casualties were sustained, This o cer worked unceasingly in _attendi] ar heavy fire in open ground. Duris the mopping-up of a village he ed through the streets several times attending to the wounded. He al voluntarily dressed nearly 100 enex wounded who had been left behin --Carlye, £ornel) in Toronto Sti inion representatives here concernis the' .problem of wives deserted dwellers in the dominions who sp some time in Britain. They pr 1the- establishment.of courts: her in the dominions to consider ma monial cases where one party res in a different part of the' Empire, that the authority of such cowrts respected gll over the Empire. 8 re across No Manls/ talion, went over the top with the a broke fire Capt. Hutcheson and his m nl -a,, third - time, in Returning to Franc ed again at the battle of Cambial.. : this, d Kh indesSantly: 'about tak. Rant his: pl e ne "Two 'o'clock in the mo time, but fight all night and Ghurkas,"! pd 9 | mans in'® ! { ' the same Sg i) wid share, the. 'flashing, the. return with the noses and a of 'his advérsafies' in (his) 'pocket t _ show as "souvenirs. = y Poiting to a "sca ar of | by the eva thes: .. Plans for; the, . emigration; of 1 ex- d men' anxious to take 'ddvantage' of the b; Li the condi-[§: veterans' except 'that! they Will' be re- | $ y wl Ribbon Tea, p per. 1b. der my supervision" will~ be.' taking: $ "sees ~~ fae qr Lado or URE ELE aH Ha OTR Monday Tuesd : it 63 Hoa diy Flour; 101b ili AER: SU » Bylk:i Tea, rh wg a) oo .52 Plums, per can'... o. To mr mete y 9 Salted Pork, per TEE Quaker Rolled Oats, 4 tb tibes™ ge i 5 ; Ocean Wave. Baking Powder pe per ib can. 25 = Lard, per tb br NB ST 2 Strawberry a and d Raspherry Ja, 41b pail. 1.20 Dairy Butter, 11 1 EE - bd ... 25, fora Blakes 2 pte o.oo Tea a2 Sauer Kraut, per pHEE ZF Ee Xk | © APPLES, "PER L3L Cm mn Sue => ; - net ¢ picked o gver . ! wit a Ld ar Hid out' ie 'Was a. fnlly trained | ldier.. i : 3 here; "Durizn 8c i! special 'perntission: to do 8 11ow anyo ) all. th "Canadians I 'was a "Canadians take pri CIT aim. in. --=Mo= Ba Late ! SUNDAY, MARCH 7th; 1g20 2 cone ed by Rev.' gs Ww. Pratt. presented by Mrs Wi and Hd kers. Sli the = aun) TIN [4 En a ol IERCH, Sunday Sei Fi AE A | Services. 5 ris] i | DRYDEN: Hh KH] i | moe 0 N KODAK SUPPLIES CONFECTIL. PER ! Mrs td CHGCOL LATES v 7 is wk wll = gale eR ARS nthe r morning Wirke any of This he guards:jealousty and will. not' the TF orward . Movement will be le, Mrs Pitt, EB will SEGRE ERE NY Pl EPIC RRR Whi you want : a sively § iy i % Rt mr Hardware, Tinware re, Stoves FE s Beds gnd Mattresses ati ; I 7 a TRY : iy Dealer in all kinds of RE Pest "arb Wire 7 aed fesrle - 2 ey Mp A in io R. Raymond, Si F.S he 'nme New Williams, Singer Family Sew: Machine Needle: -%° Do: estic, Standard, hacking = kukri 1 "a dugout' : Beyptia i is ne k "and. use them d rowing; knives as ya pan's threat at one hundrec ~--every time. Kamel Khan ig Hy, but by no means dark, and features are good. He speaks| ish fairly well and expresses his hn of attending school while da in order to complete his ay eines D. ANDER _Fbre, Ele. ee al id = SON] AwrITE | tui ste Superior FE rring DRYDEN, ONT. RR IR TR NESE we TG LT a : CASH STO 3 A aad Trout. 1 Th Hic. per it L 6c pei Ih bad Haddie

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