PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Pannen @ J. E. TERHUNE Barrister, Notary Public and Con- yeyancer. Office on Wallace St. over Bank of Montreal. H. B. MORPHY, K. C. Barrister, Notary Public, veyancer, Solicitor for Bank Hamilton, Listowel, Milverton, At- wood. Offices Listowel and Milver- Money to loan. Con- ° - J. C. HAMILTON, B. A. Barrister, ‘Conveyancer, Soliciter for the Imperial Bank of Canada. Morey to loan. Office on south side of Main street, over Miss Gibbs’ Mill- inery Parlors. Bonds for Sale. é. MORTON SCOTT, B. A. Barrister, Notary Public, Convey- ance Office over Koch’s Shoe Store, Main 7 strect. Ww. G. E. SPENCE Dentist, Graduate of the Dentist Department of University of Penus- sylvania, Philadephia; also gradu- ate of The Roydl College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over Schin- bein’s Store. R. F. TAYLOR, L. D.5.; Dp. D.S. Graduate of the Royal college of Dental surgeons, and of Toronto unl- versity. All dental X-Ray work done. Ont of town appointments promptly filled. Phone 60. Office hours 9 to & DR. A. H. NICHOL. (M.B. Toronto; L.R:C.S., Edinburgh) Physician and Surgeon. Office and Residence, Wallace Street, Listowel. "Phone 95. H. D. LIVINGSTONE, M. B. Physician and Surgeon. Office ever Livingstone’s Drug Store, corm- er Main and Wallace streets. Phone 69. Night phone 115. w. C. PRATT, M. D. (Physician and Surgeon) Office and residence on Main streat, two blocks west-of postofiice. Phone 228. DR, JAMES MOORB (Physician and Surgeon.) Office Main St., Listowel, up Schin- bein’s stairway. Medi representative of Soldiers’ civil re-establishment, whereby sol- diers get free treatment for one year after discharge. Phone 17. DR. F. J. R. FORSTER, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in medicine- University ot Toronto. Late assistant vew York Ophthal- mic and Aural Iustftute, Moorefield’s Eye and Golden Square Throat Mos pitals, London, Bng. At the Queens Hotel, Listowel, on Wednesday, Noy. 30th, from 10a m. to 4 p.m. 63 Waterloo St. Stratford Phone 267 A. G. SHIELL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Diseases of Women and Surgery. W. P. FREEMAN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention given to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Phone 13 Office over the Banner office, Maino Street - . istowel the DR. R. F. PARDLLR Osteopathic Physician and Ophthal- mologist. All diseases treated. Byes tested. Glasses fitted. Hours 9 a. m. to &§ p. m. Office over Johnstene's jewelry store. ———_— W. F. McLAUGHLIN Embalmer and funeral Director. Graduate of Canadian embalming school. Residence and parlors, Main St., one and a half blocks east of Bap- tist church. Night and day calls promptly attended. Phone 227. Motor or horse drawn equipment as desired. FIRE INSURANCE In best companies; also accident, au- tomobile, burglary, plate glass and Autemobile insur- ance, 85 cts. per 100. Your busipess solicited. E. D. BOLTON. W. J. DOWD, Auctioneer Farms for sale. Get our terms. Want to-buy? See our list. Need a house? We have it. Require an auc- tioneer? Phone 246, Listowel, Ont. HIDES WANTED Highest market prices paid hides, furs and fowl. S. M. phone 136, Listowel. for Izen, Anyhow we made it fitty-fifty— three years to get into the war after it started, and three years to get out after it stopped.—Minnea polis Tri- bune. | | Liberal Leader. fing a | ! } Thomas, where he had been address- oj sap ae eR, ~ Our Ottawa Letter Ottawa, Nov. 5, 1921—As election day draws nearer there is an increas-| ing feeling of confidence of victory among Liberals in all parts of the Dominion, and a corresponding lack! of confidence among the Government’ Party organizers. The people are, realizing more and more every day! that there is no hope ot Mr. Meighen, leading anything in the next ‘House and the same ap- plying to Mr. ‘Crerar. Canada is not betting on a losing horse, and.) ei-i therefore, cannot afford to bac ther of these gentlemen in their ef-} forts to get into power. ; i On the hustings Mr. King has; eonvinced the people in all the cities) he has visited that a Liberal adminis-/ tration is the only one fit to be en-' trusted with the country’s future.; Men of all shades of former opinion | are realizing that in the policy laid) down by the Liberals is Canada’s only, hope of escaping from the ‘slough of despond”™ into which ten years of; Tory bungling has plunged her, and, that the policy of the Liberal Leader! is the only one which will ensure fair] trentment to all men and all classes. The ery ‘it ts time fora change,’ is being heard on all sides, and to! is now being added the! time for a change to; | that sentence thought ‘it is Liberalism.” Cauada has suffered a distant loss. | as has Liberalism particularly, in the demise of Lady Laurier during the ~ek. As the Nation was staggered py the death of Sir Wilfrid in the time ,when his wise counsel Was $v) sorely needed, so this week the coun} try has sorrowed at the death of the, dear Lady whose wise counsels and! inspiring help meant so much to the, Old Chieftain during his half century of public life. This week parties have! been forgotten as Canadians of @vcery shade of political opinion, have striv-| en by words and by other methods of expression to show how deep was the | sorrow of thesentire Dominion at her, going. Hoyalty and little children! vied in attempting to express a Tre-| gret too deep for mere words, @ re-. eret tempered only by the thought that the two great Liberals who have| been looked up to for half a century.) now undivided in death as they | are were in life. It is to be regretted that} Lady Laurier could not have been| spared for another month or so that | sue could again have seen the Party | of her illustrious husband in power.; llon. W. L. Mackenzie King. the travelled from St. meeting on Thursday night, to! Ottawa to attend Lady Laurier’s funeral and on Friday night returned | to London where he had arranged to | speak pecple of Ontario for a chance i So great was the demand from the) hear the Liberal Leader outline his policies that they would not listen to, . suggestion that he forego one of | the meetings to attend the tuneral) and then return to London or St Thomas later, so arrangements were) made whereby Mr. King could reach, Ottawa in time for the funeral and} fthen return to London immediately! t } i afterwards. By his frank and fearless exposi-! tion of the problems of the day Mr. | King continues to win friends for! himself and for Liberalism. In On } tario as in the Maritime Provinces he has laid down the principle of tariff} revision in the interests of producers and consumers alike.’ While Mr. Mel. ghen in ‘Ontario and Mr. Crerar tn Prince Edward Island have been hay-; ing their own troubles with people in, their audiences who questioned some | of the extreme statements they have made, the Liberal chieftain has gone aleng without an interruption. His capable denunciation of extravagan~ ces and double-shuffling on the part of the government and his exposure | of the seandals behind Messrs. Mei-} ghen and Guthrie's latest shell pur- chases have made people stop and ask themselves what manner of govern-) ment they have allowed to hold tice during recent years and decide that Mr. Meighen’s days in office are; numbered. Mr. James Murdock, formerly of the ill-fated Board of Commerce, and! now Liberal candidate in South Tor-| onto has been talking out in Ontario, and showing his hearers just how de-} termined was Mr. Meighen's effort to| save his profiteering friends from} any discomfiture | The Borden-Meighen government had safd “hands off our friends” and| now Mr. Meighen is without an un swer to Mr. Murdock’s statements Chosen as a member of that Board, because he was a Representative of) Labor whom the Labor men trusted as a-“foursquare upright man,” Mr.| Murdock is handing a volt to tho, government straight from fhe shoul- der*as he lays the facts calmly before the people, and because he is stating only what the Government knows to be true, there is nothing in the sem- blance of an answer from Mr. Mel- ghen or his satellites. As another instange of the hone- less nature of Mr. Meighen’s chances of returning to Ottawa as Premier af- ter December 6th, the Dominion this week has been treated ‘to the spect- acle of another Minister, rushing to cover in the Senate and Sir (Edward Kemp the doughty ‘‘tinpot’ Knight from Toronto, has sought seclusion in the Upper Chamber, and Sir Hen- ry Drayton is like the young mgp in he song, who was ‘‘all dressed up with nowhere to go." ‘ If someone will find a seat for Sir Henry Drayton where he won't be beaten they will have his thanks. He has coyly winked at several of the goverpment constituancy organiza- tions, such as, for instance, Park- daie and Kingston, but there was no hope for him in either. Now it seems more likely that he may be forced on the Government supporters in Carle- ton County though they don’t want him. The county, in any case, gives a strong indication at the present time of swinging into the Liberal column since the people are not, in 1917, being blinded by a false flag-flapping. g lot better than a group), | hand. tol it The’ Government is making a very belated attempt to pose as the [friend of Labor appolating a Railway. man,| Calvin Lawgence, to tie vacaal seat on the Raflway Commission, bat Ue muve is too plainly apparent as; campaign bait to labour to be swal- lowed as the Government hoped it would, It ts also promising again to put a Railway man on the. Canadion National of management. While/ the Meighen press agente sought to tell the people that Mr. King was “‘running away” from the fight in Ontario and the West, it is significant to,note that after a series of most successful Ontario meetings, Mr. King .s about to siart on # sched- ule which will take him to every im- portant point from Winnipeg to Van- couver. He has a series of over 20 meetings in the West during the next three weeks, which gives the Iis dir- ect to the Meighen stories. The final ten days of the Cam- paign will be spent in a whirl-wind drive of Ontario and Quebec cities where the Liberal Vead-r will put the finishing touches to his eamyr gu and make certain the vietory. Tha it will be a victory on December 6th is certain from all indications now to All that is needed is for Lib- erals all over Canada to continue tiie good work they are ucw doing und to leave nothing undone which will mean the bringing in of every lest vote that’can be secured for the L.h eral Candidates. Search For Liberal Leader is In Progress Toronto, Nov, 3.—The search for a Liberal leader in Ontario stiil goes on, with Wellington Hay, the acting leader, as the chief searcher. Mr. Hay was in conference with Major Tolmie of Windsor at Queen's Park today. The name of Hume Blake is being mentioned as a possibility, the’ fam- ily name being one of the recommend-. ations. It is understood that Mr. Til- ley, the prominent King’s counsellar who is one of the lawyers'acting for the city on the street railway arbitra- tion, has declinegl to be considered us available for the leadership. R. Fleming has not given‘a positive re- fusal, according to reports, but would not give his consent at. this! slage nor without an anthentic call by a provincial convention. Mr. Hay himself is not'seeking the honor. No appointment will be made until after the Dominion electious. Trouble With Girls Is That They Get Married During the war, the banks found necessary to fill the places of the men who had gone overseas, with girls. In many of the branches of the bank, the staff’was about 50% - men. They made good at the work, most of them , and it looked though they had become a part of the bunking organization. A few days ago, the announcement was made by one of the largest banking institu- tions in the country that they were going to replace their girl employees with men. As a result of this, the girls have been’notified that their services would not be required after the end of the year. Other banks are practically doing the same thing, but possibly not to the same extent, It is gaid that the reason for this was that the ultimate aim of a girl was to get married, while men made banking their lifqa work. There was nothing but praise for their work, but owing to the fact that so many were being umarried ithe staffs kept changing and this meant breaking in new girls continually. The present unrest and lawlessness in the country, was another ‘consider- ation. These auto bandits that have infested the country to the South, are ho respectors of women, and women are not physically capable of coping as ‘with them. Should Co-operate—! National advertisers spent millions of dollars a year for newspaper space, giving local merchants wonderful op- portunity to increase their sales by displaying nationally advertised goods, but the local’merchant must remember that he has a reputation to establish and maintain and must carry on a consistent advertising campaign of his own, W! ‘ewspa- pers advertising can Ho na- tional advertiser, it w do for the local merchant. s . s s . s . . s s ABOLISH WAR PROFITS. The gentlemen who are to Confer at Washington find that they have not. the power nor their nations the in- clination to abolish or even limit armaments. But if these gentlemen are really set upon doing something to abolis war, that fact need not deter them. There is more than one way to abolish war. War is so vulnerable at so many points that, strike it anywhere, and it is morally wounded. If you cannot abolish armaments, gentlemen, why not abolish war profits? And if that would seem too much like a rebuke to certain notables, there is still another course; why not abolish interests on war debts? If you cannot do what you like along the military line, try it along the money, line. You will find that in a- bolishing war profits and war interest you have abolished 99 per cent of the danger of war. —Ford's Weekly. I eeteeue en evreveereeeeae renee ezreer er eeaan ees toeneaeeevnaetaeeevevneeaeseveveenevreanevae UNMISTAKEABLE : (Stratford Beacon) The swing towards Dr. Rankin and Liberalism {s unmistakable in North Perth, ‘ HEARST: HATES TRUTH. American School Histories Now Have Facts Jn Them. Just when a Canadian journal ts denouncing the Americayizing . of Col, William Wood's volume, “Flag and Fieet,” itis refreshing to learn that an American journal is denounc- ing ihe “Anglfeizing” history of the United States. Barnes has been the clessic sce i history, and has done its bit towards keeping alive ancient Afat- reds, but now it is denatured, just as “Flag and Fleet,” authorized by the Ontario Department of Edu- cation for the schools of the pro- vince, has been toned down. But the new Barnes arouses the ire of no less patriotic and flag- waving a newspaper than the Boston Sunday Advertiser, one of William Randolph Hearst’s choicest publica- tions. What an opportunity for the brand of journalism represented. in the United States by Hearst is af- forded by an American text book which defenés Benedict Arnold and calls the War of 1812 a mistake! The patriot, Nathan Hale, wnose only regret on the British scaffold was that he had but one life to give to his country, is ignored in this Ficegieell history, as are Ethan eeron, Mad Anthony Wayne ana the Battle of Stony Point, while, as the Boston Sunday Advertiser says in biack-faced type, there 1s a full page of praise for the traitor, Benedict Ar- nold, whom “‘Congress had treated unfairly." Pains are taken in this book te | teach American children that ‘‘the i first signer of the Declaration of In- dependence was a smuggler; so had | been his fa-her’’; that the Contin- ' ental)Congress ‘was a scene of peity | bickerings and schemings among ‘selfish, unworthy, short-sighted, narrow-minded, office-seeking and office-trading plotters’; that “half of ‘the coloniws were loyal to England"; that the rest were united in resis:- ance only “because they dared not be otherwise’; and that if in Eyg- land the wise coucse had only pre- Vailed against the “foolisn king,” “this great county w6ald probably now have been a great dDranch of the British Empire.” : { “Turn this pieture to the wall,’ | Says the Advertiser, in sorrgw of the | most lachrymosely watridtic ind, ‘' printing the famous painting “Th Spirit of '76 The text-book whici for fifty years has been a stimulant to patriotism has been filled with Poison. No more are the English “tyrants and the Amerieans self- emancipators, Ichasod! the elory has departed. John Paul Jones ceases to outshine Horatia Nelson; and Calhoun become “rash statesmen’? who brought on Yin 1812; George Mf. is merely “foolish and headstrong"; the Revolutionary War is made out to be a struggle of “Briton against Briton.” The Adve-ctiser’s exposure, which ; the Advertiser admits to be as- 0 | tounding, may yet call back to earth t some of the For of maligned heroes. instance, there is Ethan Allen, Vermont, who tried Lord Dorchester when the then Sir Guy Carleton was keeping Canada out of the Revolution. Allen was not held to be worth buying. The Brit- ish Government still has the docu- .ments proving Allen's treachery to the Continental Congress, and they would make good reading at a Fourth of July celebration in the Green Mountains, but, if the Adver- tiser has its way that bit of history will never reach the people of Vermont. The Pig Club. Wall street has many club and Taternity men, put probably no members of the Pig Club. Indeed, such a club could not flourish in lower New York. Yet it is one of the greatest clubs in the country. The promoters are usually country banks. Membersip is obtained by borrowing money from the bank to buy a pig of distinguished ancestry. Little freckle-faced farm boys make up the membership. The notes are always paid in full and the embryo farmer becomes a producer of thoroughbred live stock. One little member in Oklahoma who started with a pig and a debt at the bank recently walk- ed out of the fairground with a big cash prize in his pocket, and now he owns a herd of pure-bred Poland Chinas and a bank account. The middle west is swarming with such members and s:ill new clubs are forming. Wall street is interested be- cause in one year the packers alone paid the farmers $1,758,000,000 for hogs, and these little club mem- bers are adding immensely to the value of the future production.— Wall Street Journal. New Cure for Malaria. Discovery has been newly made of an efficient substitute for quinine in the treatment of malaria. of par s of Bengal, in India, and it tribes use as medicine for it a tea made from the leaves of a forest tree known to botanists as Vitex pedun- cularis. A British army surgeon, experi- menting’ with it, found that~- the malarial parasite disappeared from the biood when doses of the leaf- infusion were administered.’ It is hoped that the active principte, when extracted from cinchona bark, will, because of its concentration, prove even more satisfactory. The new drug has advantages over quinine, being a stimulant rather than a depresser, having no bitter taste and being suitable for children or invalids. A Waste of Time. Mrs. Banks—'‘Do you think it is right for a wife to go through her husband's pockets?” rs. Binks—‘I don’t know about it being right, but I .do know if all husbands are like mine it is a waste fe) ” Everybody a fine cup of Tea. someraliverencaetaien aveieenmiaside of Barnes’: . | 1F YOU DRINK JAPANS “SALADA" GREEN TEA Infinitely Superior to * the best of dapans. DA" is truly delicious at all times. 30 years’ re- putation for fine teas. HEAD office § HAMILTON ( himsel!. H. P. WANZER, i = ESTABLISHED 1872 —-_ C NV ANY people only reckon the that they tention of saving it. ® e t to keep the promises he makes to money they have to spend by i what they have in their peckets. | Whet they have in the bank Ss more or less secured by the fact put it there with the in- A man likes BANK OF HAMILTON | Loca! Manazer ¥ to sell out to! A malignant malaria is the curse | was recently learned that the native | De 4 Foreign Exchange The widespread organization and ample facilities of the Bank of Montreal enable it to quote close rates on American, En- glish, and all foreign exchanges. By means of its private wire . connections and Foreign Ex- is in constant connection with BANK OF MONT ESTABLISHED MORE THAN 100 TOTAL ASSETS IN EXCESS OF $500,000,000 . Listowel Branch: N. L. SCOTT, Manager. t, the Bank REAL YEARS o * > . * . . s . » = . e; . ” ; ¢ ADVICE TO HUSBANDS * . > . . * . . LJ J * 8, Don't k because you have to a] | button your wife's blouse. ' | Be glad your wife has a blouse and doubly glad that you have a wife to! button a blouse for. i Some men's wives'have no blonses! to button and some men's’ wives’ | blouses have no buttons to bution. | Some men’s wives’ blouses which, i have buttons on*to button don’t care !a button whether they are buttoned: ‘or not. j Some men don’t have any* Wives with buttons on to button. | \ So button on the buttons of your; | wife’s blouse and be thankful for! i what you've got Weckly Report, Room I— Total 100, honours 75. pass 60. R Smith 93, M. Ross 92, R. McDonald 92, H. Donagan 90, M. Prueter 88, T Baker 88, CU. Bean 88, E. Faulkner ep- j ; 83, H. Boyd, 85, H. Keeso 85, C. Pep pler 83, I. Riehm 82, C. Kennedy 80 J. Eisenhofer 80, J. Walters 78, W. Hawke 77, W. Finkbeiner 77, ™ Wanzer 75. L. Peffers 74, R. Pelton 72, A. Weber 65, F. Bricker 63, 1. Osborne 60, M. Brothers 60, A.’ Ink- ley 58, N. Moore 48, R. Kaufman 48 | } 10 Years of Eczema A Sample Relieved Her Are you reading the weekly Canadian letters, telling stories of suffe skin di and new cute wneceneaat — Here is part of a letter from Mrs. Henry Har- vey. Lake, Que. Write her if you desire. f eczema on the iy by doctors, A . D. cured me, etc.” lief from itching torment is immediate. Just try one bottle of D.D. D. today on our tive guarantee. $1.00 a bottle. Try D.D D. * Hacking, Druggist, Listowel. 4 The November issue of hod end Gun in Canada will delight the portsmen of ‘the Dominion with its s resplendent cover -painting showing a picture of a ring necked duck in nat- ural colors. The many interesting stories and articles in this issue in- clude a splendid ducking story entitl- ed “Twenty-six grains of ballistite and one and one eighth ounces of number six." A thrilling account of The W M. Huggins 47, Moore 45. illiam Galbraith of Elma B. Champ 47, G. Famous William up Again— iui i town one of Captain Josepii Bernard's ex- | ploratory trips in the Arctic regiors ; also appears in the November issue. | For the trapper and lover of the out- | door life there is the‘Trapline depart- mént ably edited by M. U. Bates, from material obtained on his own @trap- ship, pleaded guilty to be drunk ov/|}ine. The usual departments appear in the night of October 28th., at a danre/ in Minkt costa, totalling $58, Haraiiton on Tuesday. ny is issue of Canada’s ‘National , and was fined '$50 and) sportsmen’s monthly. Rod and Gun in Magistratr Sonate is published monthly by W. . Taylor, Limited, WooAsteck, Ont.