prevend. nee Sophy cE is without a ST because: it is. a squaretmesh ; itis a' feck oe y fence, therefore ; im) to bend the stays in fact. best" fence. made - ny other country. re urchasing a_ Wire Fence Had LL inspect the Dirros fy to inform the ladie that she. hat: mis Ihe ? 8 lormerly . occupi Mr: B ry "Drag Store Y ene eis red to execute 'all or | ers: fof, Dress aad Mantle Making |, in a mapner nepassel for 'Correctness od Ci Sidr E fect. - Our har, ua «ts not complicated #1 which causes Scientists lave | known fort 1 years that one phase of its life berry fu the Helo of 'grain elds. e gclentists do not expect {ta see Fust La borer i#ithe B.A. ADAMS, H. 6, HUTCHESON, Bell Phone Office No. & _ Bell Phone No, Residence No. 4 HUTCHESON: i ZS5ORS TO ~ DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS FIRE : INSURANCE iii LIFE ACCIDENT Roa! Estate Mortgage Loans Steamship Tickets When you oka 5 those Vietory Bond coupons on May 1st exchange them- for their par value in War Savings Stamps. = Your Country needs this money in these days of readjustment and recon- struction. The purchase of War Sav- ings Stamps is an easy way for you to save, as well as a patriotic duty. 5 Stamps. The Easiest Method of Saving. three Ynehes long, bristly teeth, The Jellow and borne , The ber- and. sour; , The y.is similar ex. thé leaves, which ely, the Bar- anted in some lo i oroamiental Vhas: become wild In Barberry Humless. re requiréd for or- the 'low growing, | panese Barberry gil, D.C.) may be ghergtl, do#s not har- | pirat, J. Bs Howitt, elph, on insect enemy of . Eogseberries is ry Worm. The .eaterpillar, about an inch long when a black head and oul blck spots ever the body, ; The larvae x k the foliage of of red and white currants dat oldon injure: that of black en At firal they work ehieny "eentral part of the bush, st E tho leaves nearly ali ; doing much damage -aré observed. Later they may devour the 'foliage any place. I mon to see nearly all ten off nuwerous 'are |'spatches. 8 ackish in color. The male fhe 10st part blackish or Salo tics appear in 6pring very #r the leaves have bxpanded: laid on the under surface leaves in chains along the B¥cins. The young larvae on ig feed upon the folfage and fuli grown in (wo or three >0 Livy drop to the ground m litule cases im which they w brood of flies emerge, and from these there uw sweond brood of larvae, wy be scen on the plants at ¢ when the currants are ripe. larvae are full grown m little casce Pons, and remain there till the par, when they pupate and ms adults, od of Control. -- These are finsects (Lo kill, All currant nd gooseberries should be with from 1wo to three arsenate of lead paste or half jount of the powder form in ons of water as soon as the have become well expanded. nr care should be taken to horoughly the inner parts of This will kill all the @rst "It a second brood appears should be used instead of of lead, in the proportion Bbunce to one gallon of water, je of lead would be dangerous pe Ir The inseet occurs flere "in the province, and should prevent hi§ plauts Reakeded and Jerlousty injar- i especially as It is so easy TN L1iellebore loses {ts insecti- ¢ foperties unless kept in alr- kages. -- Prof. L. Caesar, | Olicge, Guelph, ) Dally Yor Haye that be offered the Earl of 'of - the Quedn, eeded (he Duke or-General of for his duties the | | mediate service, | shoulders and walked away. "ng eari 18° a real soldier and would' have succeeded the Duke of Connaught but for his active duties at the front. In the army the "Tom- | mies" 'love him because he has no "side," and knows his business. a fellow-officer put it, when As they {| went out with the prince's regiment ! the Seventh Hussars, and first saw active service in the Matabele, War! in 1896, I'elothes-horse, "he was not a military but one who knew what soldiering meant." He was no shirker from 'roughing It, d he took risks with the most reckless of pur soldiers out there, being on gev~ eral . occasions : mentioned in de T the ears South' African War broke out the prince at once volumteered for im- and within forty- eight hours sailed with the Inniskill- ing-Dragoons, who took .part in the operations round Colesberg, the routing of Gen. Cronje, the relief of Kimberley, and the march to Bloem- fontein. Ot one of the prince' rican fights an interesting story is told. An Australian war correspon- dent who rode towards one of the khaki-clad regiments was approached by a young, unassuming man, who was anxious to. hear news of the outside world. "Have you been under fire?" he asked the correspondent. "I should smile," was the reply, "and [I don't much appreciate it. Anybody who likes can have my share." "We have to go under fire whether we like it or not," sald the quiet South Af-. | young Englishman. "At a salary," chirped the Corn- stalk. The shrugged his Then the Australian heard that the un- assuming young soldier was Prince Alexander of Tegk, as he was then known, and he "went back in the direction from which he had come. That, however, was just his way. Says ope who met him during the war: "I once traveled half' a day with Hin, not knowing who he was. Then 1 lcarned how earnest a soldier the earl is, and how thoroughly wed- ded he is to his profession. He is a Sond trekker, and; a good amp-man, As a boy before he went to Eton, young man the earl spent bis days at Kensing- ton Palace and, the White Lodge, Richmond Park, 'where, with his two brothers snd sister, the Queen, he romped and ran lke a merry, sand- boy. He was her Majesty's favorite, and it was a black day when he first went off to school--a "preparatory" for Bion, for, in spite of the meven years' difference In thelr ages, the sis and brother were constant Princess Alice is a daughter of the late Duke of Albany, and a sister of the reigning Duks of Saxe-Coburg. She was mar when she was twenty-one .years of age. . Exactly how much truth there may be in ro- thantic stories that are told of for- eign aspirants to the hénd of "Prin- cess Alice of Wonderland," as. she 'was called in her younger days, be- cause of her passionate devotion to the works of Lewis Caroll, is not known: but it is stated that sfie carly a like her cousin the Prin: Pn that she he. would not 'marry ee gree The warridge PUY-Sno. aid endear hersel hatstariatis "of the pri have en, ATE to dion i Ini a her mar-,, BADEN-POWELL'S POEM. Head of Boy Scouts Honors Canadian Battalion, ' Here's a story in prose and poetry, the subject being an incident which occurred when the 15th Battalion were repelling the numerous coun- ter-attacks made by the Gerinans to recapture HH! 70 on August 15, 1917. The Battalion was attacking Hill 70, and was under orders to execute an outflanking movement on the left, Two companies were in the line, one in support, and one ia reserve, An Hngtish tmit on the 15th's left did not get Set in Ha , and in some "Way a part rough was heading for Col. Fos headquarters. The brigade or telephoned Col. Bent, and told him that Huns were observed coming down a trench, and that he was practically surrounded. 'To ------ you say. We are not surrounded," it Is sald was the an- swer of the colonel. "But you are-- they are on top of you." Just then a sentry ruthed in and said: "The Huns arc here." Col. Bent looked up and the Huns were swarming down the trench. His staff was sadly depleted, owing to battle casualties and he and a Heutenant were the only two officers. Col. Bent hurriedly called out batmen, cooks, shoemakers, and other headquarters' clerks, and drawing his revolver stepped into the tremch and drove the Hurs back out the way they came, guns trapped them with a deadly fire and not one Hun got back. Gen. Sir Robert Daden-Powell, the head of the Boy Scouts, and who is now credited with having been one of the most valuable sccret service men during the war, having even penetrated into Cermany, had read in an English paper the story of the Huns' surprise by Col. Bent and his cook with the ham knife, fellow-passcenger with the 15th Bat- talion on the steamer Baltic, and took the opportunity of asking if the story was true. On being told that it was the Hero of 'Mafeking sat down in his state room and compos- ed the following: -- The Gormans came down like a wolf on the fold, A lot of strong Schnappes had ren- dered them bold; They made for a spot marked Bat- talton's ii. Q.. Its sign a red patch with a top mark of blue. They thought they'd a cushy job, making a haul ot colon} and officers, batmen and all, Don't count your eggs before they all hateh--doeen't do, Especially eggs with the bonnte red patch---topped with blue. For suddenly forth from the dugout there comes The colonel, quite pecvishly hurling out bombs, And Slorks who had bithérto shone th iy mighty as sword- wielding men. But the thing that made Wilhelm *~ just run for his life, Was the cook with a bally great ham carving knife, The Bosches discovered they'd met with their match--and they flew When they tackled the stuff of the bonnie red patch--topped with blue: a They'd went out much When th y found that thelr prey was veal thelr master. they were getting away on the run,' They Lewis gun. One of the battalion machine - He was a | e in quits fast, but they got the Ki-bosh from 'a smart LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND | ieeaea tne western world five cen | turies before Columbus, landisg on the eastern coast of Canada. Nothing proves that either of them was Erics- son's galley; nothing proves that it wasn't. The ancient pagan custom that buried the craft of the sed-hero preserved the galleys away in the | soil of Norway, thanks to a covering | of potter's clay, and a twentieth cen- tury farmer recovered the second | ome. The savants looked it over, and dated it from the ninth century, con- temporary, with the adventurous Ericsson, possibly his own ship, About seventy feet long, the w !'is shaped not unlike a Jouble-pointed { rowboat, flat, and low, with. We uprights. fc | bo and stern oder th | the compartments where the ro | gers doubtiéas - stored - thelr pro- visions. One can imagine the wateh~ er at the prow, the helmsman tug- ging at the tiller, the galley-master high in the poop heating with his great hammer, the rhythm for the 30 onrsmen. It is far more difficult to imagine how they slept and ate in; rough weather. a4 --- 'The Sizc of Canada. Fionigan, a railroad worker, | though not he of 'On again, off again" fame, returned to Ireland re- 1 cently on a visit, On being question- ed Ly his relatives concerning the wonders of Canada, he described its | gize es follows: "'I'hwy, Canada ls | 80 big thot If ye wor to dr-rag Eng- | land through the country ye would- n't lave a mar-rk in (h° dirt, an' ye | could lose Oireland jantoirely in wan . 0' thin gr-great inland oceans we. hov, phwat we call lakes, an' if ye bad Scotland to get rid of there are a thoosand corners to hire her im, an' nobody could tell phwere ye'd put her, cxcept, begorra, for the strong swell av whiskey." Journalists Honored. A special service was held in St Paul's Cathedral, London, England, recently, in memory of the journals. ists, printers and others connected: with newspapers and periodicals who have fallen in the war.. A voll of honor for the profession has youn, | prepared. - MEETS CANADIANS, vig ii { Quecn of Roumauia Guest of Hono at Reception. ! The Queen of Rout fa obviously" enjoyed mecting face to faec somes of the people who had helped hee country during the war, when she: was the guest of honor at A Jott enjoyable reception given Qeorge and Lady Perley at th. Ritn Hotel All the Canadians who were . in London, and 'who were availa were invited to the reception, 0, Sad to 'glance zbout the toon was youllzg how. Sunesintativk 'the ng was. to be present, hd Sp me there, and the army was well to the. fore with many officers. The Medical Services were headed Ly Gen. Foster andivy the matron-in-chief, Misi hoy 1d, who is quite a war vel as she has been in from the Sorin ning; also bythe Orpingion 0.0. Col; Maepherson,. who . was present with his 'wile, and by the of that hospital, Migs Smith, who the 1914 ribbon. The Cinacian Cross was represented by" commissioner, Col. Siaylotih