Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 13 Oct 1920, p. 9

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J D. MG GREGOR & 6O L4 y * ba ba b4 * ba + * * b4 La * * * be e * * * * * ba * e La + * * 0 ba * e * ba ba e L * * * e * e ba ba * P * + L ba P e b4 B a e * * + e * ba e e + a e La 3 e * * P h LOADING ICED CAR EVERY DAY Call us for AAASNRAAEiHAATHTH If there are any complications about which you need advice write in conâ€" fidence to Ifivdia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. â€"The success of Lgdia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparafleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from nervous prostration, displacements, inflammation, ulceraâ€" tion, irregularities, periodic pains, backâ€" ache, bearingâ€"down feeling, flatulency, indigestion and dizziness. Lydia cfi. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound is the standard remedy for female ills. _ CAAA FAASSAHT Ont. THIRTYâ€"SIXTH YEAR Smiths Falls, Ont.â€"*"I suffered with falling of my organs, pains around my heart and in bowels and down my I:E.’ neuralgia in my face and head, and that terrible sinking feelin%. I felt that I could not live and would fix my house in order every night so there would be no trouble if I dropped off in the night, My husband went to the druggist to get the best remedy he had and he ggve him Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" ggund. I took six bottles and felt a lot tter. I will alwags recommend the Vegetable Compound, and you can use these facts as a testimonial.‘‘ â€" Mrs, J. 0. CuurcH, Box 845, Smiths Falls, Everything growing out of the grourd Beems intended for some use in establishâ€" ing natural conditions. Dr."Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., long since found out wha$ is naturally best for women‘s diseases, He learned it all through treating thouâ€" sands of.cases. The result of his studies was a medicine called Doctor Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription. ‘This medicine is made of vegetable growths thas nature surely intended for backache, beadache, weakening pains, irregulartâ€" ties, inflammations, and for the many disorders common to women in all ages of Vregon gtape root. Dr. Pierce knew, when he first made this standard medi« eine, that whiskey and morphine are inâ€" jurious, and so he has always kept them out of his remediecs. Women who take this standard remedy know that in Dr. Prerce‘s Favorite Prescription they are getting a safe woman‘s tonic so good that ameggists everywhere sell it, in liquid or headache, backache and worry, turn to the right prescription, one gotten up by Dr. Pierce fifty years ago. life. Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription is made of lady‘s slipper root, black cohosh Foot, umicorn root, blue cohosh root and Ended by Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetuble Compound. Reâ€" markable Recovery of Mrs. Church. THIS WOMAN‘S MISERY When The Day Is Over QUOTATIONS H. HILLIER, Representative Phone DJ or made you une happy, and there is nothâ€" ing in lifo but When the household cares and the worries of everyday life 925 THE INDEPENDENT Welland Tribuneâ€"The new clock presented to the city by the city solic itor, Mrs. J. F. Gross, is being installâ€" ed in its quarters in the fire hall towâ€" er. It is a fine clock, and one to be proud of. The spaces between the numerals are so large that a man can easily put his head and shoulders through. The face of the clock is green, with Roman numerals. It= is expected that it will be at least two weeks before the work of installation will be finished. Bridgeburg, Sept. 30.â€""Chief .« Jimâ€" my" Edwards of the Ontario police, who since his transfer from the White River district of .Ontario, has established a record here, today <reâ€" ceived word of his reward.> He is now an inspector of the Ontario poâ€" lice, and will receive a substantial inâ€" crease in salary. Insepctor Edwards has been at the frontier about. five years and his work has /won him recognition all over the Niagara Disâ€" trict. , Wm. Hayes‘,a New York Salesman got out of a first floor window at the Trennick Hotel, Niagara Falls Friday morning between 8 and 9 o‘clock and hags not been seen since. He was on his way from Toronto to Buffalo and is said to have been suffering from hallucinations â€"following â€"domestic troubles. The Humberstone school closed Wednesday morning by order of Dr. Laing, Medical Health Officer for Humberstone village, on account of the prevalence of scarlet fever,. The disease seems to haye been spreadâ€" ing during the past week, as many cases are reported although of a mod erate type., The school was closed for an indefinite time. Beamsville, ept. 29.â€"John Henry and Mrs. Culp, two of Clinton townâ€" ship‘s highly esteemed _ residents, celebrated the golden jubilee of their wedding anniversary on Saturday, when some seventyâ€"five relatives and friends gathered together at theit home by the lake to do honor to the old couple. The tables were spread on the lawn, and afterwards speeches of felicitation went the rounds of the gathering. The County will replace the Twenty Creek bridge atâ€"Smithville with a new structure at once. The old iron bridge now doing duty will be placed at another point on the creek. Smithville Reviewâ€"The half holiâ€" days on Thursday afternoons will be discontinued after this week and the stores will also close on Wednesday nights after this date at 6 p.m. Satâ€" urday â€" nights will be the only open night of each week. ‘~ St. Catharines, Sept. 29.â€"The popâ€" ulation of St. Catharines, according to the returns of the Assessment Commissioner, is 19,860, an increase of 660 over last year. The total asâ€" sessment ig $18,625.050, or $2,581,â€" 595 over that of last year. Niagara may have a cadet camp next‘year. There will probably ‘be about 4000 stationed there but the duration of the camp will be short. Rabbit shooting opens on Oct. 15th and is good for a month with an exâ€" tra week at Christmas but it is statâ€" ed that new game laws may be is suedwhich may lengthen the season. C. Caspar, manager of the U. S. Factory, shoe store, Welland, did not anpear at his place of business, Hast Main Street Friday morning. It is alleged he collected his books,â€" boots and shoes and a roll of cash and disâ€" appeared. The | Canadian _ Credit Men‘s Association representative arâ€" rived there Friday morning but could find no books for the benefit of the creditors. . All‘ that was found was piles of empty shoe boxes. The busiâ€" ness had,. been a large one during the past year in Welland. The Welland Board of Trade. has passed an unanimous resolution callâ€" ing upon the Board of management of the Grand Trunk Railway to electrify the Welland division of that road from Port Dalhousie to Port Colborne, over a part of which the through freight between Toronto and Buffalo is carâ€" ried. The board also went on record in favor of having the Dominion Govâ€" ernment fill in a portion of the bed of the Welland River, or Chippawa Creek north of the present ‘aqueduct, after the ship canal is completed, and that the new land thus made be given . to the city of Welland. Welland, Sept. 29.â€"An amalgamaâ€" tion has been completed here beâ€" tween the offices of the Tribune Welland Tribuneâ€"The two â€" trolley cars that are scheduled to travel to and from the North Ward, as an addiâ€" tion to the local street railway, arrivâ€" ed in Welland this morning, via Grand Trunk Railway. The cars are of the one man type, and are painted vellow. Work on the poles, etce has been in progress for some time, but it is not know yet just when the new service will be in operation. There is no question that it will prove a boon to people living â€"in the North Ward. and it is hoped that no delay will be allowed in putting the new cars into operation. printing company. The new paper which will be known as the Teleâ€" graphâ€"Tribune, â€" will be published next Tuesday for the first timeée. The new Telegraph office, at the corner of South Main and Avenue place, which is now in the course of erecâ€" tion, will likely be sold, the new comâ€" pany moving into the Tribune office on Cross street. The two papers, for merly run as Conservative and Liberâ€" al, will now be run as one indepenâ€" dent paper. N St. Catharines â€" Standard.â€" Sam Solyman is confined in the Welland jail charged with stabbing Mike and George Basul, the outcome of a fight near the Ontario Paper Mills Monday night. Three men were stabbed,, all of whom received cuts near the heart. Mike is in the General and Marine hospital where his condition was first said to be most serious but he\is now said to be progressing favorably â€" towards recovery. The fight took place in a house on Morton street, off the© Niagara Falls road and near the Ontario Paper Mills. Solyman was given a hearing© thig morning and remanded for a week to ascertain whether or not his victims will live. Welland. Sept. 30.â€"The _ second scene in the third act of the great Thorold drama did not commence this morning as was contemplated. At the reauest of the Crown & further remand was asked for and granted by His Worship Magistrate Frasor, â€"«f Niagara Falls. F. W. Griffiths, of Niagara Falls, counsel for the deâ€" fence, also agreed to a postponement. All the seventeen accused of being memebrs o fan unlawful assembly at Thorold: were on hand at the Welland County Court House at ten o‘clock, accompanied by their bondsmen. â€" As each individual ~answered the roll call Magistrate Fraser remanded them for another eight days. the Crown beâ€" ing not qauite prepare dto proceed, the reasons being that the evidence taken at the Fire Marshal‘s inquest was not ready. Bail was renewed in every case. James Collins andâ€""A. P. Doonan, canal helpers, were burned to death shortly after 2:30 o‘clock Wednesâ€" day morning in a shack near the guard sate of the Welland Canal above Thorold. The fire was discoyâ€" ered by the lockâ€"tender when he left his.shanty to lock a boat, but the shac kwas practically Gdestroyed at that: time, the flimsy construction making it an easy prey to the flames. Collins, a brother of Chief ofâ€" polic> Frank Collins. was &known to be in thr shack and the second mar â€" was identified through a name in a noteâ€" book found in a partially burned suitcase. The bodies of the two men were burned to a crisp and they were removed to Williams Undertaking Parlors. How the fire started and the cause of the men‘s death is a mys tery. The owner of ~ the shack, known as "Yankee Jack," has been taken into custody by the police and will be questioned when he becomes sober. It is expected he will be able to state if Doonan is the correct name of the man burned and perhaps throw some light on the tragedy. Cayuga, Sent. 30.â€"The trial of Josenh Avert on a charge of murder continved on Wednesday morning at St. Catharines,~ Sept. 24.â€"As a C. P. R. train was traveiling east from Winnipeg a few days ago, Howard, fourâ€"yearâ€"old son of Mrs. Jack Bone, was missed by his mother, who had been givng her attention to her 19. months‘â€"old child.. The only theory was that the little lad had walked through an{open door on to the plat form and had fallen or been blown off. The conductor ordered the train backed up and about four miles back little Howard was found sitting along side the track contentedly playing stones. He had not even sustained a scratch. Mrsg. Bone, with her two children, is visitingâ€" her uncle, Edâ€" ward Gee. 29 Russell avenue. 7 WELGOME RELIFF FROM FOZFMA Wasma, Oxt. "I had an attack of Weeping Eczema so baid that my clothes would be wet through at times. Altogether, I hare used three boxes of ‘"Soothaâ€"Salva" and two of "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives", and am entirely well," 6. W. HALL, Both these fevorite remedies are sold by dealers at 506. a box,. 6 for $2.50, or sent on receipt of pda? by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" is also put up in a trial size which aselin for 256. For four months, Isuffered terribly, I could get no relief until I tried "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives"? end "Soothaâ€"Saluq" . Complete Treatment That Gives Grafffying Results GRIMSBY, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1920 9 p.m. when the crown and defense lawyers addressed the jury. Georgse Lynchâ€"Stunton, wha defended Aperts made a masterly address, while Mr. Marcus went carefully over all the evidence and delivered his charge on behalf of the crown. Higs Honor Justice Kelly in charging the jury SAILORS‘ WEEEK CAMPAIGN October Death Always Hovers Over the Wheel Have you ever been at sea in a storm ana seen the clouds lowering, the wind rising and the waves running mountains high, decks treacherous and the crew anxious? Unless you have, you cannot imagine ‘its awful majesty, or the courage it calls up and the spirit it commands in men. Many Canadians Have Never Seen the Seaâ€" The Sea is Our Heritage and Our Strengthâ€" The Real Sailor‘s Ship is the Tramp Steamerâ€" "O hear us when we cry to Thee For those in peril on the sea‘!" +o ~enlkghten people upon the importance of the to formulate a fundamentally sound policy for the training of our present seaâ€"farimng population, to sea; so that Canadian products may be shipped, through Canadian ports, in Canadian ships, ofâ€" ficered and manned by traimed Canadians. to encourage and to undertake the training of Canadian lads to man Canada‘s Navy and Merâ€" cantile Marine. In proportion as we develop this Seaâ€"Conscious Spirit so shall we advance in world civilization and trade. We can only develop our Seaâ€"Conscious Spirit, by making life more endurable to Canadian Sailors. And it is for this purpose that a portion of the Navy League‘s Fund is set aside. To carry on its work next year, the Navy League must have $760,000. This money must be raised next week. â€"It is not a large amount and borne in proportion from Coast to Coast it must surely be subscribed. . Is it any wonder, then, that the Navy League wants to make life comfortable for our sailors when ashore? â€"After all, Canada is their home; and the home, while they are here, of the sailors of other lands. The Navy League endows, maintains or assists in maintaining every Sailor‘s Home, Institute and Welfare Society in Canada. And every dollar subscribed for the maintenance of these Homes and Institutes will be money well invested, and redound to our national prospeéerity. or Windjammer, beating against galesâ€"decks awashâ€"sleep a stranger for days and nights on end. Frozen in winter, dodging icebergs in spring, groping through fogs off treacherous banks, beating round the Horn, fighting through typhoons, or becalmed in the Yellow Sea. Tough going all the way. ' Yet the sea is Canada‘s Worldâ€"Trade highway. The sea and the Merchant Sailors make us prosperous. But the Merchagt Seaman‘s life is hard and perilous. He wages continuous battle against the forces of nature. The real sailor is not the deck steward or attendant on comfortable ocean liners. His ship is no floating palace. His voyage no pleasure trip. The Navy League of Canada The work of the Navy League isâ€" 23. went carefully into all the details of the evidence on both sides, making the task of the jury as easy as posâ€" sible. The jury was out from 12.45 till 3.30 p.m. when they brought in a bill of guilty of manslaughter with a recommendation of mercy. Justice Kelly in addressing the prisoner beâ€" Dominion Objective $760,000. meet an emergency, so that Camadiuu overseas commerce will be adequately protected. : to support facilities for making the Sailor‘s life ashore endurable. to provide for dependents of those who died. to protect Canada, Nationally, Imperially and Comâ€" mercially. oL $E $rig & flfiggjects can only be achieved through an organization representative of public responsibility and outside party politics. - fore sentence handed out some good advice and also gave him a chance be fore passing sentence of stating hisg reason why he should not be senâ€" tenced. The prisoner, in a. feeble, broken voice, asked for mercy, deâ€" claring he was not guilty and that as one of the bullets, was still lodged in $2.00 Per Yearâ€"5 Cents opy

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