wb wl n‘ M in o it inA M LN t it h/b ‘H. BULL ESE ESE IHEIH RUBBERS! RUBBERS! RUBBERS! 200000000000 0000 00 0008000000 0000000000000 000000 0004 W. B. CALDER, Valuator GRIMSBY . Pays 314 per cent. on daily balâ€" ances on Savings accounts of $1.00 and upwards. 4 per cent. paid on Debentures for one or two years, b, per cent. paid on Debentures for three or five years. Money to loan. o P H pjearcs, ; Hamilton Provident and Loan Society Remember always . satisfacâ€" tion or your money back. . After suffering pain, feeling nervous; dizzy, weak and dragged down by weakâ€" nesses of her sexâ€"with eyes sunken, black circles and pale cheeksâ€"such a woman is quickly restored to health by the Favorite Prescription of Dr. Pierce. Changed, too, in looks, for after taking Dr. Pierceo‘s Favorâ€" ite Prescription the skin becomes clear, the eyes brighter, the cheeks plump. It is purely vegetable, contains no alcohol. 62 King E. 4 Doors West of P. 0. Hamilton : | Established A. D. 1900 Hamilton, Ont.:â€""A few months ago I was stricken down and was confined to bed about tendays. Mystrengthallleft me. It was my first illness since a child. I lost five pounds and felt awfully weak afterward. I could hardly do my work. I was advised to try Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription in tablet form. I tried a couple of bottles and before I knew it, I was well and strong and had gained 94 pounds. I can recommend Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription to build one up.‘"â€"MRS. E. MARTIN, 397 Dundurn St. xn See Rouse Better facilities than ever for efficient and prompt service. Shell Rimmed _ Spectacles and eye glasses in every varieâ€" ty and style. Shell Rimmed all shades, either white, black, wine or brown, put on your own glassâ€" es while you wait. Corner King and Hughson Jas. Crawford Manufacturer of Wedding Cakes, Ice .Cream and Fine Candy. or repair to those you are wearing ? * l ow L ‘Favorite Prescripâ€" n / "6l,; tion‘ and it soon . m }}\ ) stopped the nausea, & ‘jnf T my appetite returnâ€" o S ) d 1 Sss l ed, also my es s [ , ">~ strength and I was > Alwwâ€"â€"s=@ soon feeling fine m Arâ€".z>/ \% and strong. My PP /g;‘/’f/ baby was stron y and healthy ang has always been so. I consider ‘Favorite Prescription‘ a great help to the expectant mother and am glad to recommen%) it,"â€" MRS. AMOS MILLS, Bc LUNCH COUNTERS CATERERS 14 King St. W., Hamilton. Weddings, Receptions, At Homes and Entertainments upplied. s j E> ns [ ., o #=otzes, 4, / » ~vome 76. 8 4 $ / a 1 2 NY ~,"*~ / stay t\ (/ e Choaks i % e JAE N# :# ~ ioi z/ ,,-;‘" Tillsonburg, Ont.:â€"‘"‘ITfound Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription very beneficial during expectancy. I felt quite poorly, was nauseated and sick, could not eat anyâ€" *thing and I was % extremely nervous \ we a and weak. I took What Prominent Ontario Women Say Wednesday, December 3rd, 1919 Try a pair of ours, and it will mean lasting satisfacâ€" tion to you and a permanent customer to us. § . M. CAMERON, Treas. Buy Rubbers and save your shoe bills. Cold wet feet means big doctors‘ bills. SHOE STORE DO YOU NEED GLASSES A HAMILTON WITNESS I. B. ROUSE Streets, Hamilton CONFECTIONER i h Phone 313 R 2 38 SSHHSHEH Ont. The Hydro Engineers‘ camp in Vicâ€" toria Park was blown all over the place. A big tree was blown down across one of the tents, but happily there was no one in the tent at the time. The next big blow that came along levelled all the tents and the men had a strenuous time of it for a while. j , f The fishermen â€" had thei;' weather eye cocked all day Saturday and deâ€" cided that there was going to be some bad weather before Monday and they took no chances. All their boats were snubbed and anchored and as a result little damage was done to their craft. Taking‘ it all in all it was the worst storm that this district. has évg; known and it will take thousands dollars to repair the damage and many months to bring conditions back to normal. & S. Hey, Napanee Mar. C. Gondon, Owen Sound Mch. J. C. Sutherland, Grimsby Nov. Mrs. H. Hummel, Grimsby May E. J. Biggar, Grimsby Dec. H. E. Martin, Toronto Dec. M. Ofield & Sons, Grimsby Apr On Monday two big gangs of teleâ€" phone and telegraph men arrived in GRIMSBY and started to get things in working order, but it wil be several days yet before the lines will be resâ€" tored to normal conditions. _ All day Monday "Bily The Glassâ€" man," Wm. Farrow, was besieged with customers clamoring for glass.> In the â€"west end of the village there was hardly a house that did not have one or more broken windows in it. When it was learned on Sunday morning that there was no chance of getting power Supt. Randall ordered the water shut off at the foot of the mountain to conserve the supply in the reservoir for fire protéction. Sunâ€" day night three extra policemen were on duty all night under Chief Konkle and the town was patrolled from end to end all night long, on the watch out for fire and other trouble. ‘All day Sunday gangs of linemen were busy throughout the whole disâ€" trict but owing to the high wind which still prevailed they were unable to accomplish much. ; endous,. Bushel! boxes and lumber was hurled through the air like matehâ€" wood and it was hardly safe to walk around the building for fear of getâ€" ting hit with a flying nox. The old building tha: stood on Main Sreet opposite the Robinson and Warâ€" ner Mill was turned clean over on its: roof andâ€"~smashed to smithereens. W. J. Dalton had his automobile in this building but luckiiy it escaped unhurt. x $ All day Monday "Bily The Glassâ€" on the jOD were rake wind down 1 causea several Night watchma stepped around er house in tin Below the mountain telegraph and telephone poles were snapped off like tooth picks and in places there were fifteen and twenty poles in a stretch blown over. f ® On the F. E. Russ farm the big barn was‘ blown righnt off over the heads of the horses and cattle and not one .of: them injured. Robert Cosby had the silos on both his farms blown down and the parn on one of the places. Other barns were blown to pieces and others were left roofâ€" less and. twisted out of shape. < tened to the ground,. ‘Ihe power lines all suffered. The D. P. & T. linge parâ€" alelling the T. H. & B. was blown down for miles and in many cases the steel towers were snapped off as if they were pipeâ€"stems. Where the big high tension wires struck the ground the countryside was lighted up for miles and Grassies people say it was tlie finest pyrotecnic display that they have ever had the privilege of watchâ€" ing. In GRIMSBY the flashing of the electric ares over the" mountain could be plainly seen and the sky was lightâ€" ed up for two and three minutes at a time... Many people were of the opinâ€" ion that it was lightning. thirty and the showâ€"shop closed. search of On Main Street citizens were feelâ€" | ting into ing their way along like blind people | Finally t while the store keepers and their the auton clerks tried their best to wait on cusâ€" | cushions, tomers by the. light orâ€"candles, oil | assistance lamps, flashâ€"lights ~and most every |ther warn other kind of light that could, be |the house commandeered and in the, meantime |a cellar d the hungry people were goingâ€"+hungry |ered. Ot]l for Steve McCoy was unable to cook | and the for them as all his meals are cooked | door, bein by electricity and Steve like the rest | Miss Lee, of the town was up against it. witness st Hundreds of people were marooned ; tinually ds in Hamilton and along the H. G. & B.| stating tl line in cars. Most of those in the cars | "Georga . were sentrafter by ~their folks with‘chief attr damage 1s tain where sweePr mal from the pretty e: pulled up at Depot streets the lantern. GRIMSBYIT] about. two pretty bus doors to 1 nan the All through th ut STORM KING HOLDS SWAY antern. A very great number o1 MSBYITES managed to get home the city in this way, but it was y expensive, while dozens of othâ€" rad to remain there until Sunday noon when they zxot home x G. en through the district very heavy e is reported. _ Over the mourâ€" here the wind got a good clear many barus and silos are flatâ€" to the ground. The power lines fered. The D. P. & T. line narâ€" job and ked doy StaC K tely he st He w PAID UP LIST (Continued from page 1) an W C Hearyy Damage dispatche I1. firema 16 O ( m‘to»tne Doil im oif and get s badly scalde irms. Cowell 1 I the big banl wn and put o tl lightning. . Russ farm the to mMmxs$ 1 about tw s sometniing tremâ€" xes and â€"lumber the air like matehâ€" irdly safe to walk s for fear of getâ€" 2 DOX. ned on _ Sunday was no chance of Randall ordered it the foot of the ve the supply in orner 0 pu m € _ messeng f the boile boilerâ€" hou Dein 0 Chief held number of was the boilâ€" #¢ hit by 11 1 € 30 21 19 19 31 31 e parâ€" blown es the as if 19 20 21 20 20 20 17 r.and | on aA ‘held ‘ further er of | lice w home | tried oon () }' "We must establish our name for quality in live stock as we have done for quality in grain. ~Quality must be our slogan if we are to successâ€" fully compete with the Argentine" says the Hon. S. F. Tolmie, Canada‘s Minister of Agriculture, in The Agriâ€" cultural Gazette for November. "It is by better sires, better feeding, and ‘better finishing that we can obtain a position second to none in the live stock world. The serub sire is doom ed and is now being prepared for the block.. An accrédited herd system is being established with a view. to stamping out digease and insuring health in our herds. In whatever direction our trade develops it is our duty to see that only first class stock, free from disease of any kind, is exported." 4 There is no other paper just like Tho‘Sun, and none in the same posiâ€" tion to help you. Over 30,000 Onâ€" tario farmers subscribed for the Sun. Why not you? Send your . order direct to THE FARMERS‘ SUN, TORâ€" ONTO, ONTARIO. Send in your subscription at once and get your neighbor to take adâ€" vantage of the present subscription price. During 1920 thereâ€" will be many improvements in The Sun. Every department will be enlarged, reâ€"modâ€" eled and _ strengthened... Although the cost of the improvements to be made will be great, and an increage in the subsiription price necessary, the price has not been raised yet and $1.00, if remitted at once will seâ€" cure for you, without , doubt, the greatest farm newspaper for 1920. cember 16, 17 and 18. This gatherâ€" ing will ibe of great significance to the farming community. You should keep in touch with every move made. You can do this by reading the farmâ€" ers‘ own paper, The Farmers‘ Sun, which will give most exhaustive reâ€" ports of every matter discussed at the great Convention. An event of the: greatest \impor. ance to every man and woman interâ€" ested in Agriculture in this Peovince is th@ approaching Convention of the U. F. O..‘to be held in Toronto. Deâ€" on a :charge of handicapping the police in tracing the whereabouts . of theâ€"girl. It is alleged that he knew some partculars about where the girl was but did not give the police corâ€" rect answers to questions and thereby put them off the trail, °_ . T to the evidence, the girl in questiqn is an orphan. Her parents dGied q few months ago, and she with three other. children < of the family were committed to the care of the society. Owing to her age she was put in the County House of Refuge, but a short time after,jescaped. She was caught in Brantford, brought back and was committed #o ‘the Salvation Army Res cue Home. She then broke away from this‘ place and ‘got as far as GRIMSBY.:‘The runaway . girl was traced as far as that place, but the Central police station and had flatly refused to conform with the order, and had been far from polite in doing so. in quest10Ol impounded written to bring the consequene the proce A third seen Miss but neith stead had car <actu: having 0 ace olice gua the Ing 1 cey of ind h Serg O1 U nim wWith «@A CI ind declined to Minally the ‘doo1 irrested. Constable Spr search of Lee, being Gesirou ting into a barn where the Finally this. was accomplis the automobile was without cushions, . Miss Lee again assistance, and both she and ther warned the officers not the house. Entrance was 2 a cellar door. four tires bein n Ire 118 tta im L( In QUALITY IN LVE STOCK lic MUSI L( GRIST AT THE MILL OF wa being immediately attacked by Lee, who scratched his face. Lee, ss stated, during this time conâ€" lly dared the officers to go ahead ng that he was not afraid of rga Jelfsâ€"the Chirper." The attributed his conduct to the that he had been drinking.. He Lee in the neighborhood of the s car, and later found that the had been purctured by means O( nol stable »pringste vidence, adding was exceedingly ‘oceedings. hira officer stat 11 € 1 € (Continued from page 1) o d en los found cupie o the h & GREAT EVENT ‘from the > is not as fternoon, will face Bi h prerert serve byv â€"Mi ~and 2 James Le iutomobil« ) James # 1c een purctured shoe nail. THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO icer stated that he had > scratch the chief‘s face e nor Constable Springâ€" n the tires of the police punctured. the latter on to U1 of th L] L( 1Ve saiq that the Ccar een ordered to be . letter had been Lee, asking him to ile to the city. In Lee nad called at ion and had flatly n with the® order, )e1n £ 11€ it. of <this, accompanied . the the previous eviâ€" dgely knew nothâ€" that he â€" had the riere the car was n vel pia«( of livi b )li« g drunk and a auiting the poâ€" When the chief umons heâ€" was e. ‘Magistra licapping t rereabouts that he kn I 1€ desirous of n )1 )V O who. struck d the door brother up. )T Mond n l HelSw the‘}:".© ay WW*WW »La «Be oBe aBe oBe Be oBe aBe oBe aBe afe cBe oBe aBe aBe aBe oge aBe oBe aBe oBe aBe oBe oBe oBe oBe aBe aBe aBe Te cGe oBe oBe aBe «e aBecGenTe cBe ofeaRe se aReaQeaReoRecSe afe ofecfa In these days of expensiv the question with most peo; get the best.value of one‘s n His knees were: stiff, his coat was long j A sorry sight indeed; The butt of many an idlers jest. l The farmer‘s old grey steed. And some were seen to Those.bearded men in | A tribute to the old gre Who was a veteran too 80 W W He seemed to see from fat The marching squadrons c He threw his broken harnk To cavort to the drum. TT With every we The vision on Of trumpets cords And lines of m He As He MEMORLES A Veteran Too He stood before 1i:he village store Unkempt and weary eyed. His shabby harness here and there With bits of rope . was tied. Across the .h« And up the ns Arose a burst And bugles I¢ p h it up ‘Im :| all the ve turned his head he pr ears ; shook his tangled mane memory with its magic lled his withered beins oldier he ech he w s the ,hot andâ€"dirty square ip the narrow street ‘â€"a burst of rollinigâ€"drums bugles loud and sweet. f1 118 MONEY WELL SPENT ag Ln V hand to e i grave salute veterans passed h and fifeâ€"and flute of meé VAip na( J int frame see from far and n« squadrons come. Spapers or magazines o doubt ‘about The ind Weekly Star of the greatest value n the continent. The aind Weekly Star is a nation of newspaper, gricultural paper. It a year and each subâ€" a handsome souvenir T1 11 re him with blind and p had left remembered nots 1 grew in bluk in blu in hin their cap people pricked horse op money. In him by im crimson sCcal OT1 livin in l his to iunSineers are wWwOorking On _ pidl for a more direct railroad betwe« Paris and Madrid that will cut t running time for trains from fou teen to seven hours. A new knapsack refrigerator f« pedestrians use swater instead of i and cools its contents on the .evay oration principle. In a British radium institute a: glass enclosed, muisture proof scal« A new typewriter at matically feeds cards, small forms into a ma« which have been writte withdrawn. filled magazines the weapons as needed. Spiral grooves ‘that are inten( to return a wire that has slipt back into a central groove feature California inver{tor’s trolley whe« An attachment for automatic pist invented by an Englishman â€" enab It has been demonst1 French scientists that the v iodine and : bromine pass thin glass even at ordinary tures. front ering w1 owné pigment simi autumn leave in addin SHILOH " 302%°0rsCOUGHS NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCH h« th L DC n d In have arme in t] O1 iment n V ible sub their U wWoOrkIin to be rapidl w in 1( 0 )C )€ king on pilans ilroad â€" between at will cut the ins from â€" fourâ€" ittachment auto envelopes or achine as those ten upon are Cl t whicth olden hue rit€ olorel loadk ma« tempel a intended slipped pol De 1 C . pIStO enabl« d in 1ev () n U into ap anrc O1 )1 )T n ier covered An adjus motorcycle it to loads ils inventor â€"cilalms thnat ; camera will photograph ver objects, such as buldings, at range without distortion. Of English invention is a _ flammable, nonâ€"breakable sul for celluloid that weighs abouw sixth as much as glass.. When not in use the, spare of a new extension ‘table c stored within the top, a‘ door i side hiding them from view. A‘ machine invented in New 7 for picking up and cutting crops consists mainly of a lar ler covered with sharn tines. Â¥at l ’l E | remponeterrripn=ritnr en en reprensmanenw.â€" +Ze BRA TeE 7 202 ECC ce SCs C ol i raPerilee dhace L | de l p tines atur L( ommodate SEVEN nonâ€"inâ€" ubstitute ut . oneâ€" can in Zez}land ig > root rge rolâ€" le close a V be one