Grimsby Independent, 14 Jul 1915, p. 3

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A. D. Lacey, Smithville. 3 4 Sales conducted either separately or together. Printing and :’t.' advertising done at the lowest prices. :zI: Jas. A. Livingston, Grimsby; A. D. Lacey, Smithville § sn on oo oSe ue oBe oo aBe aBe eRe aZe aBe aBe afe oo ofe cTe cBeaBeaBeoBe aBe afe afe afe aZeaBe afe oBe oo aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe ofe eBe oBe sBe oBeoBe obe oBe oBeaBe oBe aBeofe oBe ofe cBa ofe cE e oBe oBe e aBe eBe oBe oBe oBe eBe oBe aBe aBe aBe eBe aBe oBe oBe afe aBe on Be aBe oBe oBe aBe obe aZe aBe afe aBe on sBe aTo aBe aBe oSe oBe abe cBe abe aBe aBe obe ofe ebe eBe oBe aBe obe ofe sBeeZe McClary dealer or write for booklet. _ _ Sold by JAS. A. WRAY Sunshine Farnace‘®. CLE ANâ€"â€"â€"No dust or flying ashes. Ash chutes guide all ashes into convenient pan. Orders for sales of farm stock and implements, household furniture and real estate promptly attended to. Prices Reasonable Satisfaction Guaran: Licensed Auctioneers for the County of Lincoln AUCTIONEER S WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1915 P.S.â€"According to Lord Kitchener, the big war hbas onW begun. Orders may be left with Jas The Ford Runabout is $540; the Town car $840; the Coupelet $850; the Sedan $1150 â€" alt fully equipped, f. 0. b. Ford, Ont. Ford buyers will share in our profits if we sell 30,000 cars bet ween August 1, 1914 and August 1, 1915. : SMITH & SQN, Burland Block, Grimsby, Ontario No advance in tne price of the "Made in Canâ€" ada" Ford will be made because of the addiâ€" tional 5$%, War Tariff. We as loyal Canadians will gladly absorb whatever increased duty we are forced to pay on such raw materials as cfhnâ€" not be obtained at home. The Ford is manuâ€" factured in Canadaâ€"not assembled in Caneda. M‘Clary‘s LIVINGSTON & LACEY ord Touring Car Price $590 10 "MADE IN CANADA" ho C CANADA‘S§ NATIONAL NEWSPAPER Satisfaction Guaranteed No â€" ash shovelling necessary. See the The sporting pages, the financtal and commoercial pages, the woman‘s pages, etc., etc., with the additional pages in Wednesday‘s issue devoted to "Farm and Couniry Life," are maintained at a high standard® of excellence, a standard that has justified THE GLOBE in its title of Canada‘s National Newspaper, and has givea it by many thousands the largest circulation of auy morning paper in the Dominion,. By all means take your local paper, but in the field of metropolitan newspapers THE GLOBE unguestionably offers you the greatest value to be had in Canada. Order it toâ€"day. 25 cents per menthâ€"one doliar for four monthsâ€"three dollars per year Local and City Papers News Other Features Almost from the very day the great European war began in Aagust last, the outstanding feature in Canadiansjournalism covering the conflict has been "The War Sumwary" daily on pages 1 and 2 of THE GLOBE. In the concisest possible form the writer bhas given hbhis readers a pen picture of the developments in all parts of the world. While the details of the movements along the extended frontiers have not been overlooked, the readers of THE GLOBE have been enabled to follow intelligent!ly and with confidence the general outlines of the stupendous conflict.. "Theâ€"War Summary" of THE GLOBE is reproduced daily by several papers throughout the Dominion. f front unn Canadian per cent. "The War Summary" The Editorial Page vingston, Grimsby, or The ando Service ateh pap« VC THE fo d itures in Ca ures, in ri Canada and part GLOBE‘S i addition to a cable and letter service from the da, bhave placed THE GLOBE far in the lead of rtly explain the phenomenal increase of 33 1â€"3 ‘s8 circulation «luring recent months. lo THE GLOBE, Toronto. 33 did Nearly got a ticket to Eingland, or maybe farther, on _ Wednesday _ or Thursday, a piece of shrapnel, the size of my fist passed by my face by to fill ‘em inâ€"and this is bart of the line just now. We have dope now that we go out toâ€"morrow right for a night march to take up a new line but: don‘t know how true it is. ‘ Have done notring all day but try to keep dry with indifferent success as it has come down in sheets the whole day long and my kit and blan kets are soaked, so I reckon 1‘ have some pleasant sleep toâ€"night: Major W. R. MarshalH, our acting O.C., has been granted the D.8.0~ Capt. Alexander, my [old. Campany 0.C., now a prisoner, has got â€" the Military Cross and several ofâ€" the men of the 48th have the D.GC.M. Gen.â€"Turner, our Brigadier, has the C.B. too, so I guess the game is a good one. You should see parts of this coun try _ and the ruin caused by the shells. If its buil{ up for years and yeatrs, I‘m a liar and the trenches, Phew! It will take an Army years e ts me S C omt OO OB CA C te d c ~RAe C 0 APCAciOTe S TLC we are now ‘back where we started from on Tuesday night. _ We thought we were "up" for six or seven days but only put in two. However, the game suits me.. Didn‘t do anything yesterday keep inside and sleep, but at got ready‘ to be relieved as the Gordons took over our position we are now ‘back where we st; from on Tuesday nigsht. _| Last night I got yqur two and from Ross ‘and I ‘bave been bus:; ufternoon answeritg them all. Got a letter from Aunt Marth: night ‘before last, when I was in the trenches and a long one from â€" Mrs D. and one from that Mrs. Winte: whom I told you I met in Londor and she is sending me twelve tin: of potted meat, four tins of _ har pies, â€" six bottles of pickles, y um yum! A box of gingerbread biscuits some tobacco and a new pipe. Lordy! I guess I won‘t starve, ch? Toâ€"day I got a box of Cigarettes from Miss Shelford, â€" sister of Shelâ€" ford I worked with at Weymouth and a letter from Mrs: D " if you send anything else you better send it direct, as we get mail, the same â€" as we. would home. Except sucks and send t to Mrs. D. Jove, you people sure will t yourselves soemepody with your ney iservics, ¢6h? Some town. I sure have Icoads of. everyt} In fact I sent some of the kit brought out with me, back to _ Pretty: tough on the garden to another frost for the fruit,. What duece is tha® weather coming to? We poor fools continue to rush were ange‘s fear to tread. One two of our battalions got "hell fit knocked out of ‘em a week or ago, because "some one" blunder on their flank and yet we Have grin and bear it. G Best love to everybody Yours of May 31 and June 7 to hand last right and I sure was glad to get them. Gee! / I‘gsure am at the front and trying to do my tit, but so far have not done much y¢ét. 1 am not kickâ€" ing as there‘s going to ‘be lots _ of time for is all to get our stomachs full. f (Continued from page 1) still in the "unreadable" stage t! God. Dearest It sureâ€"is hell, but it has to be Do suess LLEUT. LIVINGSTON Mother sot everyt THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO | ing you rythin ART quiet on nan U d )1 With shell and shot, they‘ll make him hop, By air, by land and sea, And iet him know they are the foe Sir John, the Duke and Joffre, With their gallant fighting men, Shall overthrow his fiendish plans And make him shout Amen. The jolly tars of Jellicoe, Who load their gunrns and sing That Britons never shall be slaves To Billy of Berlin. Shame on the callous, pirate fiend, Who sent his hordes to slay The innocent babe, the hoary head, As on their beds they lay. His fiendish schemes, and pirate plansg The world to dominate, | Before the wind like chaff shall fly To join the hymn of hate. n (By Cattleman, Glass) Who is this Kaiser? What is he? A fiend or beast of prey? That he the world would dominate And no one say him nay. Some people call him Butcher Bill And somea devil born; I think the name most suitable Is Fiend in human form. The funeral took _ place at St. Luke‘s Church Cemetery, Palermo, on Tuesday, July 13 and was largely attended by relatives and old acâ€" quaintances. She is survived by five sons, George, of Vancouver, Mark, of HMHamilton, â€" William, Thomas and John ~of Palerino, Ont. and one daughter, Mrs. Frank Sifton, of GRIMSSBY. The deceased lady, whose nameé was Jane Vanstone, was born in 1827. She was matried in Engiand in 1857 andi came witin her husband on their wedding trip to Canada, beâ€" ing on a sailing vessel for fiftyâ€"one days. They settled in Trafalgar where they resided up to the time of Mr. Dearing‘s deain, when he WaS&aCCidELtly killeq at â€"a bara raisâ€" ing twentyâ€"eight years ago His widow lived. inâ€"that neighhorhood ever since, except the few years she spent in this locality. She was bright and smart right up to the time of her| death, which was the result of an attack of parâ€" alysis, with which she was seized on July 9. f Mrs. Thos. Dearing, who has been a residen; of Smithville and GRIMS BY,â€" (living with her â€" gonâ€"inâ€"law, Mr. F®rank Sifton) for the past three or four years, passed away at the home of her . son, Thos, Dearing, â€" of Palermo, Ont. at the advanced age of cightyâ€"eght years on Sunday even ing last. : yA S Mrs., Dearing,; who was exceptionâ€" ally bright and smart for her age, made many friends â€"in North and South GRIMSBY during her stay and they ‘will pregret to learn of her deâ€" raise. ; DEATH OF MRS, THOS, DEARING Saturday, July 17, Monday, July 19 THE AFRICAN ‘ DIAMOND CONSPIRACY to Toronto by Steamer Macassa A special excursion will be run from BILL, THE BULLY TORONTO EXCURSION Wednesday July 21 A U DITORIU M GRIMSBY BEACH Boat leaves the Beach at 11 a. m. Boat leaves Toronto at 7. 30 p.m. â€"_â€"S1ix hours in Toronto RETURN FARE 75c Thou â€"most illustriousâ€"pirate friend, Your name pollutes the world, The gates of hell shall open wide When through them you are hurled. Down from your lofty perch, come down! ; f The Allies on you call To drink the cup prepared for you, The cup of bitter gall. > Your hate and scorn shall not prevail, Your hands they must go up, And to the bottom drink the dregs. Of the Allies bitter cup. He‘s Bill the Bully of nations small, And Bill the Agitator; He‘s Kaiser Bill upon the throne, And Bill the English hater. His dreams and visions of the past To dominate the world « Are vanishing before the blast That‘s now against him hurled. To conquer Germany. Our gallant lads on land and sea Will let the pirate know He‘s got to deal with good cold steel And a tough, tenacious foe. He‘s Bill the crown All honor to our gallant lads Who bravely fight to win, Their shot and shell, a tale will tell, To Billy of Berlin. He‘s Butcher Bill and Pirate Bill, And Bill the great Potsdammer: That In Four Parts _â€"_*~ and solicit your consignments. Our books are open for your inspection and we will . gladly furnish you with the names of purâ€" chasers of your fruit. Send us a trial shipment and be convinced. Stamps upon request & References :â€"Bank of Hamilton, Hamilton, or any ; Mercantile Agency. 132 Princess St., Commission Fruit Growers and Shippers coming Commission House in Winnipeg Bill amd Pirate Bi great Potsdammer Clown, that wears TO to HYSLOP & SONS the hammer We have opened up a the GRIMSBY BAKERY THEAL BROS. GRIMSsSBY â€" PHONE 108 BREAD, BREAD and CAKES a community. . It‘s here to day and gone toâ€"morrow, but there is always more to follow. Give us a trial and you will surely fall in line. ; The staff of life, aud the life of WINNIPEFEG, MAN. 10%

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