benettecl by men _"s Break the Grip of that Cold! Rub the chest and throat with V Page Fourteen - _. _ `-1.-- - _....___ For Over 70 Years for digestive disorders has been Beecham'sPills.Youcanhavecon- ' dence in this remedy for bious- "ness, headaches, atulency, con- Itipation. Sluggish organs are` stimulated and the whole eystem benetted by ` :*.".z:::.:.'.t..`i"s*:%i::*s.?v'fft~':`.*:&?`% 'Cutlcun Soup shuns without null. `T T I I T Soldevoryu wherein Canada Te mom? TERRIBLYI K e-p;YouVr Skin Fresh And Clea: In one H Um. Mr. and" Mrs. Harry Reynolds motored to Midland on Sunday to visit the latter s brother. They were accompanied` by Mrs. Reynolds .broth!1, Harry Vint, who was on his way home to Midland from the West. Nov. l3.-Miss Reta Wingrove,- accom- She panied by her friends, the Misses Muriel E ' and Helen Gray, of Toronto, spent the hol- I 0 iday with Mr. and Mrs. G. Wingrove. -_.I I Mm ' vtnt AC `lflrnhan nnrl Maul-an (null synatnam, 0nt.-" I took Lydia E. I P1nkham's Ve etable Com und` for a run-down con tion after a birth of . my baby boy. I had_ terrible pains and backache, and was tired and weak, not fit to do my work and care for in three little children. One `day! receiv d your- little book and read it, and gave up tak- ing the medicine I had and egan taking the Vegetable Compound. I feel muc better now and am not ashamed to tell what it has done for me. _I recommend it to any woman I think, feels as I do. " -Mrs... J. R. -MCMAHON, 158 Harvey 8t., Chatham, Ont. Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com- und, made from roots -and herbs,_has ornearlyftyyearsbeenrestoringsick, ailing women to `health and strength. It relieves the troubles which cause such symptoms as backache, painful riods, irregularities. tired. worn-out eelings and nervousness. This is shown a ainand again by such letters as Mrs. cMahon writes, as well as by one woman `telling another. These women know, and are willing to tell others, what it did for them; therefore, it is surely worth your trial. ' Women who su'er should write to the . Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co..Cobour , -Ontario, for a free copy of L dia . - Pinkham s Private Text-Boo upcgi "Ailments Peculiar to Women." avuoa uuu Jute U1 um: xurnlers l18V8 none. A large number attended the Confirmation. service in St. Thomas Church last` Sunday.? Nine went forward seeking newness of life. The service was a very impressive one. Rev. C. R. Spencer's brother from Toronto will take the service next Sunday. _ ' There` was a good attendance at the Quarterly Board meeting at 0roV last Mon- da% night. J.'uu\. U A` IIAIII mane` -unnd-L-.. E-.. ....AL-_!_'_ LL-l uay xugub. 3 Not very good weather for gathering the roots but lots of the farmers have none. A In!-on nurnknn at-&..n.l.-..l LI... tV....:___-a.:..._ Nov. 6`.-:I:i;s:.-..5:b:1e; ggl is enjoying a! visit from her daughter and two little ones, ` of Toronto. for a week; o M. n...) It... 'u........ f`:I_`.._E_L ___1 `#7 ux Luuuuu. Iur :1 WEEK. I Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gilchrist and Mrs. Alfred Palk are away on 9. two weeks visit to Owen Sound. ' I ll... \7.._\\'___...._ ,,, ,I Inn -' I A an If ?-`E127 5n'4u5 uuy wuu J.V.l.l.'8o U. J.u._n1c1umg. Miss Grace McDonald of the Toronto .ach-ools teaching staff spent the holiday at her home. II_.. 13 __-!L_-_ __,;,_ I I ` H - um uuuw. Mrs. E. Switzer -returned. hdme on Sat- urday ufrom Crown Hill where she had been for a couple of weeks. DU UWUH DUNN. Mrs. VanNormanV and little girls of Strand` are visiting with Miss Sarah and Harry Palk. ' xuay vuwu ll. uuu nu`.-1. U. VVll.lgl'0V6o Mrs.'. Vint of..Wyebridge and Master Cyril Riddell spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. H. Reynolds._ / I `Mk: `nnn nV:v\v\l\U\ "V1.-A..L- -`.:...:L-..I u. McMahon Tells` How Shql Found" Relief by Taking Lydia E. Pinkluun's Vegetalale Compound iiidf '"-m" "7." M Miss Janet McKinnon, Toronto, visited yith her cousin` Jean Hickling for the ho!- Ix ay. ' I M... `M (1 .... ...`..I ..I..:`u-.... ..........a.,l'lVL..'._l-- auay . Mrs. M. Gray and children spent Thanks-I givigg Day with Mrs. C. M. Hickling. I Mm: uvnnn Mhnnnnld AC 6|-m 'I"n....v.4.. ur wnu uur uuuanu, Mrs. J. 1'4. BWIUZGT. Dalton Doran amved home Sunday morn- ing after having spent the last three months in the West. In canal "in I71.---p 'D.......\I.I.. _.-...._.I 4- wuuam, at `Grown Hill. Miss Ellen Robertson was a. Sunday visit- or with her cousin, Mrs. J. E. Switzer. nnltnn Thu-an on-iunri `lnrvun u.-..l.... ............ hula wcun wuu.uu:uua_m Lorunw. 1 Mrs. E. Swltzer 15 vnsxtmg wnth her son, William, at Crown H111. m... n~n....`n..1....-;...... .....- .. o.._.u .... -:-n ........_ ....... uuwug uacu in one euu.sxum:. [ There is a sudden stillness. The closely serried ranks are rigid and motiuiiless; The shouts of command are silenced. The Kaiser. _ He comes slowly up thefparade ground on his `great white charger, helmet and eagle flashing in the sunlight, sitting his horse] as if helived in the saddle, his face turned to his men as he passes by. - . `Morgen, meine Kinder.` -His saluta- tion rings out at intervals in the clear mom- 1 .ing air. And back from the ranks in chorus `comes the response: `Morgen. 3\Iaiestat.' And an In: rirlaa nn vnanhun .: .. ....:n.-_ `. A No'_\;.'-7-.-:-ilgas-`-.;'a-a;1-I:Iiei this week with friends in Toronto. "IE gridiron :11 uu:a:6:nn- .q.L1. L-.. _-_ . LIVUUI Ten years ago the most powerful single human personality in the world was the Kaiser of Germany. Welrecail a doscrip? tion of him. given about that time by an English newspaper editor and essayist, A. G. Gardinerof The Daily News. It -is at Potsdam, the time of the',,Spring Parade. The choicest troops of Germany are assembl-, ed in all the perfection of equipment and -discipline. Officers and men wind and un- ~ wind themselves in and out in a perfect maze` of military manoeuvres, with never a mistake. the flawless movements of "a ` perfect military machine. Helmets, ban- v ners and lances ash in the sunshine.` 4 HrnL'-_. 5, , monerchof his day. He was the most wil- Vina ucuu; UUU HUI]. UVCQ uuu l'0lgI|E\}1- Louis XIV had obsessed men s minds. For seventy-two years he had been on the throne of France. He was the proudest ful ruler of his age; He was the most successful, most autooitatic, richest and most powerfulilldng that the world of that. day had known.` He had lived so long and had filled so large a place in the world that men had come to think that there was no such thing as limit to his power or end to his days. Men had been born since Louie came to the throne, had passed their youth and prime, had gone through middle agel down to old egg and the allotted span of i man, three score years and ten, and yet 3 Louis still reigned. At last the end had ` come. Louis XIV-wasvdead. Instead of the all-powerful `king the people of l aris saw a poor. senseless, lifeless piece of clay, Vt -it only to be buried in the earth and trod- den, upon. The king was dead. God still I lived, ullr U` I lived. mu Acman In the year 1715 Louis `XIV of France lay dead. The great monarch, the king who was a king above all others 01 his day. had died as the. common man,dies. Massillon, the priest-orator, the greatest orator of F rancesof his time, was designated to give the funeral oration. Notre Dame` of Paris was crowded to the doors, and be- yond the doors, far through the streets stood the massed thousands. Masaillon entered- the pulpit, and there was silence, a silence which could be felt. Then he uttered one I word once, twice, thrice. "God! God! 3 God." "That oneaword three times uttered < said more than any oration that might fol- 1` low. "There was the contrast.` The king 1 was dead: God still lived and reigned-~ 4 Louie lint` nhnnaantl lD'|nn`{` I;:I\l'n `A uuwa me response: luorgen. .\1a|esrat.' And as he ndes on, master of a milhon SEAN" PAY 1'74? LORD'S oogue llll Mil` h is s, A - V on 69 10' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 66 11 .., ......... 44 . 60 12 ................ .. 44 68 13 ............ .. 48 72 14 ............. ..43 54 15 .... ....... 36 61 . 16 ........ .. 39' 65_ 17; ...... ..1 ...... .. 52 66 18 47 66 19 ................ .. 49 6-5_ 20 ................ .. 42 so 21 ................ .. 35 54. '22 ............... 28 48 23 ; ....... ..... .. 31 34 24 ................ .. 43 44 25 ...... ....... .. 42 44 26 ................ .. 38 47 _ 27 ................ .. 30 50 28 ........ 37 53 8 29 ....... ..\ ...... .. 35 . 56 30 .... ......... .. 34 -10 31 ............... 27 32 The mean temperature for the month lwas 46 degrees, being 1 degree below the average. Rainfall was nearly 1 inch less than the average amount for October. The ,first snow of the season fell during the !morning of the 5th. There were only 3 days on which no sunshine was recorded. the~mean proportion of registered sunshine for the month` being 56%. 1 ' ' 7 T1 DTVFFDDV 0ct._"1 TTIIV A quiet wedding was celebrated in Tor-' onto on Saturday, Nov. 10, when Miss Mar- garet Irvin, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Addison of Edgar, became the bride of Mr. James Edgar of Toronto. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Mr. Watson. The bride and groom are spend- ing 9. few days here prior to returning to their home at King Edward Ave., Toronto. Their many friends extend congratulatio;1.s.: uuu uuuuus U1 wars, we-can Keep our peace `of mind` and poise of soul because God stxll rules and guides-the destinies of men. .a~eMsasw=;oAFi ~~ at t} ME 7 '1-"Mk,'.[H Hobo %"svy8-x:mM.. .=E: $:#' ....u: m n uuu U1 ugmeousness. `through all turmoils and troubles, through all up-- heavals and overturnings, through all wars and rumors of wars, we-can keep Of and Di (1; RIM)` hnnnnoc nan` ,.--- V... ...........v um uvuuacuus autumn I I Men.die; but God "lives. Princes are`ca.v=tl down; but God still reigns. Captains and kings depart; but God remains. At this time of year which commemorates a victorious peace and gives thanks farj [continued preservation, there is no greaterl cause of thankfulness than this: We be lieve in a God of righteousness." Throu `*1 . trnublos. thmnah .n ...._. - xugaue uuu unpnnclpleu men. a Some men never seem to learn this. No . matter how often the lesson is taught. nol , matter how heavily the stroke falls. nol ; matter how evident the hand of God in the judgment. no sooner does one violatcx of the rights .of his fellow men go down"to. destruction than imother little man gets up. 3 struts, spreads his feathers. crow.-, his de-l fiance and `proclaims himself the autocrnti of the earth, or.of some portion of it. And in a. few days or years the same hand which A -has smitten the tvranlts of the past. will, smite him. too. and his pride and-presump-1 ltion will become his everlasting shame. I "An Al... Ln! M .11-.-- I'll But God still llves. God still reigns. .God still executes His judgments upon at- rogant and unprincipled men. Snmn fnnn nnunr ennm 6.. 1..--.. a.L:_ \Y-l an ulauuuur. uerxueu and aesplsea. I me ; suuu cruau E0 pieces. ' That was ten years-ago. What of to-. day? The Kaiser is worse than deud. If, lhe had died in battle. if he had given his` life for his country even in an evil cause. as.l he drove two million of his subjects to do,! we could havehad _it in our hearta c re! spect him. But he lives, hidden in a utch country-house. cuts saplings, toys with a new wife,, married while his former wife` had scarce growncold in her grave. Dead in dishonor. derided and despised. ' But nd still Hun: rim: .m1 -..:-.... I u: uxuuwn suiuuunus. ' l f H The most powerfulemonargb in the wcrld., - Ln some senses the ablest. Certainly theg l. nfost ambitious and self-confident. -No man`-H l- in modern history has ever aspired ,to the: 2 No `man has claimed the autocratic author- ' ! ity over his people. He forever coupled his l own-name with the name of God. In some, v instances he put himself second to God;` ; but sometimeshe put himself first and; God second. He wrote in the Golden Book` of Munich, Suprema `lex regis voluhtas."i (The highest law is the will of theking) N6't of God. but of the king! When iectur- ' ing the bishops and. clergy. he told them that they were servants of My church. at; which I am summus episcopus:" He, the` . king, was the first bishop and head of thei church`. Again and again he declared his Bposition: There is only one master in 5 position that Kaiser William aspired rm` thiscountry. That am I. Who opposes me I shall crush to pieces." That was fnh `yuan. nun 1lT.L..L .: 4.- `men, the most powerful figure- in Europe, . reviewing his troops on the-"peaceful parade; ground a.t.Potsdam, one wonders whether` ; the day will ever come when he will ride: 3 down these ranks on another errand, and? when that wcheenfnl response of the soldiers; I91 `Te morituri salutamus. "EL- .........L ...-...-_J.'..I .__,n__, I ' -I I ' will have in it the ancient ringer` doom-*` OCTOBER WEITER uu /0 . W. H. BUTPERY. The Soap i cleansesand puries the o r e s, the in t m ent soothes and 11 ea 1 s any irritation, redness or rloughness. reatment: \ . 4/ On retiring smear the affected surface `with the Ointment on end of finger. Wash oil` in ve minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented Cuticura Talcurn in your toilet preparations. V luv 25:. Ointment 25 end 50:. `Menu 25. Sold roughout the Dominion. Canadian Depot: nu. Limited. 3415!. Paul St.. W.. Montreal. 0! 38 32 29 32 30 36 An 11-1'2 ABAHRRIE .xAn;nn_1-:_3_. THURSDAY, NbvEMBER 15, 1.923. ` -T 1 quart crunberrh 11/; cupful: . 1 pint water. Pie crust. _ _ Simmer thv mm":- very soft. add the .- line 8 deep pl:m- \\.' cranberries aw`. {`I\`o of pie cru.~1 l;.;'.w. vt`Wn?_\'-fi\'e In Ihirtl lmnnr oh. -n'..~o..I .....r..-. THURSDAY, N the Hit with Serve ti A Millzm A beverage A tonic Nourishment Strength Flavor < Economy ll. (ST, 6651 9? Chutham, Ont.-I tobk Lydia ?inkham s Veie:table`g>__rr:gour`1j`_f_or g 1I'I-!'l\II!II A4. A-- - For the In tins of4-.10.`: becaus has tw butter of . ordi . uid Free Rec Write the Limited. ten 14 wE_EKL| rod llm The Pa-9ple s Choice - E... IL.-- `in V.---