THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1011. WHEAT IN AUSTRALIA, WCARTHY'S RUSE. [0 200 Cr AGE TEN. > > A GALLANT GENERAL. of ides, who Frve sone inve VISITS TO IRELAND. | EIGHTEEN YEARS THE STANDARS Prescribed and recommended for women's ail | {yrieg by lls Li : i inventive ability ® - sieane write GREELEY & MoINTIKE, : Prtent Aldurneys, Wasuingron, Bb, C, 4 GRAND UNION a HOTEL EE maT 2 3 Gn Niet Fry { 8 a Dr. Martel's Female P { STARTLING EPISODES FREQUENT. LY OCCUR IN ENGLAND. | Retent Case at Portsmouth, When Twe Men Landed and Were Scared Away By the Sentry, is Only One ot Many Incidents That Mave Made Britons Uneasy -- German Officers Surveying the Reads, A lew days ago Portsmouth was dis- a_ very unusual incident. ments, u ocientifically prepared fomedy of proven | po. 0 1aided at midnight from a worth, permanent. For sale at oll drug stores, ® The result from their use is quick and | C--O ---- BICY BICYCLE CLE ky | YCLE MUNSON * the daring of foreign spies at Cut Prices Send ter Cut Price Catalogue. < Whipped Cream uy worn starch or gelatine, Ice Frult, 5 but very ceol In * CREAM, Ice 'ream with We do not u with Pineapple it's CF CREAM PARLOR, 54 Prigeens Street, S 249 Yonge St ay TD PESEEAL ELLA LLAMAS The American ~ Cafe 185Wellington St Up-to-date House, Separate Well furulshed Try our Full €ourse Dinner, THOMAS GUY, Prop. 8 Bessvssssvrsavssvsvere For Pickling 'Phone 76. Peorrevrssasassssassseas 6000S SOLD ON ¢ Pure Vinegar, all kinds of whole and Ground Spices. D. COUFLR, $413 Princess Street. Prompt Delivery, rowing-boat . meas the Tipuor i Powder Magazine, an important de- | pot used us a store for sll the military | explosives at Portsmouth, which is guarded night and day by armed sen- wrier. The sentry « challenged #hém twice, but as the men disregarded the challenge he fired. The intruders thereupon rushed back to the boat and vanished into the darkness, While in certain Guarters it is alleg- | ed that the importance of wus inci | dent has been e raled, and that is probable that the mentacted in ignorance rather than with any mis- chievous intentions, the general opin- | ion seems jo be that the incident pro- vides another striking illusteation of Porm! _ As a matter of fact, spying is greal- "ly on the increase, Lord Haldane, realizing this fact, has iptroduced a new bill, in which? it is sed to inflick heavigr penalties¥on persons found in prohibited places, and those who make any sketoh, note, model, or plan likely to be useful to an enemy | du the existing act, these offences | ure classed as misdemeances, the pen- with or without hard labor, and a fine, In the new bill thesé of- fences are classed as felony, and the penalty is not less than three years' nor more than seven years pepal servitude---a very drastic change. Per sons attempting to ogmnmit an offence of this kind, or inating others, are lable to similar penmities Another new proyision relates' to "harboring spies." ' This offence is classed ax a misdemeanor and the per- eon ix liable to #mprisonmeunt for twelve 'months, with hard labor, {and a fine. Power is alwo given to jus | tices to grant search-warrants, or in | cases of urgeney a superintendent of | police may himself' give written au. | thority for a search| 'in the interest of the State' It is not anjeasy matter, however, to catch these spies. A few months ago & German oer was arrested for aking sketches of the harbor de. fences of Portsmouth. Bd for every | py caught there are hundreds who-are | never discovered, or who, if they are (uietly despatched out of the coun internagional ' troubles I danger, however, lies in pers und sailors' betraying ieparate alty being imprisorunemt for one year, | or either try | $The ¢ fF British sald How the Lawyer Got Ahead of the | Railway Company. One of the first railways if not the very first built in the old previnee of Upper Canade was the Northern, mow s division of the Ggsnd Trunk, from the nity of Toronto 10 the Georgian Bay at Collingwood. Railway construc- tion was in its infangy and the ex- | pense of building was out of all pro- fo thd amount estimated. : the railway owned was mortgaged to the eam. The railway made a practice of fight. ing all claims made against it irre. spective of their being just or unjust, but the real difficulty was after a judgment had been obtained against the y an attempt was made io realize amount by sale under an execution in the sheriff's or bailiffs hands. One morning there came into te of- fice of Dalton McCarthy of Barrie, sheh a» young lawyer, a farmer, from the ship of Innishiail, named McNaughton. He said that he had some cattle killed by the Northern Railway Co. The cause of the castle getting on the company's line was thet the company's fence was defective. As the company was legally obliged to keep up the fence there could be little doubt of their liability. "Mr. McCarthy," said the farmer, "I understand 1 cab get a judgmend againgt the company, but if 1 can't g¢t the money 1 don't want to throw good money alter bad." McCarthy looked at his client out of a pair of very piercing grey eyes and "Mr. MeNaughton, 1 have an idea that I ean make the company pay the money, provided we get judgment, but { ber Dintnond {entered Ireland as King of England | and Ireisnd; the Emerald Tete sin it may be a bitter fight. 11 I start I don't want to back down." The farmer agreed and the action | was sued in the County Court of the County of Simeoce, and judgment re- covered for $175 and coste of suit. Exe- cution was issued in due course and this McCarthy himself carried to the sherift's office and handed it io the sheriff. When the sheriff received it he said: "Well, McCarthy, 1 suppose I had better return this now." | "Hold on, sheriff, don't be in a hurry. Who is your best bailiff?" "Simpson I think, bat he is out of town serving jurors." "When he comes back issue your warrant and send Simpson down to the office About the middle of the following week Simpson came down to MeCar- thy's office "Good morning, Mr. McCarthy; the sheriff told me to come down tw your office and bring with me the warrant under the goods writ in McNaughton vs. the Northern." "Yes. 1 want you to get three or four stout fellows and drive over to Allandale so ae to be there When the train arrives. I shall meet you there." The train arrived about half an hour behind time. When it arrived and be. Laughable Adventures cif Royalty In the Emerald 1sle. MN The visit of the King and Queen to Ireland which evcked scenes of the greatest enthusisem in the green island, for Irelani is not disloval xs | King George discoversd for him: i in 1897, when he went to that coun. try as the special renresentstive cf hi*+ grandmother on the occasion «of Jubilee. Now he has d wo visit the i The visit ob King Fdward shortly nfter His scesssion to the throne was one of the most successful any mon- {arch ever paid Received with ex- | {treordinary enthusiasin. His Majesty won the hearts of all by hie gracions. | ness and tact. One or two humorous incidents il lumined the series of state functions and festivities. Thus, owing 0 2 mistake on the part of a member of the royal suite, a «mall shopkeeper was presented to the King to receive | the honor of knighthood Th: individual in question was duly dubbed "Sir Knight" before the dis- covery of the mistake was made, and every y in the know wonder what would happen when the King learnt that his latest knight owned a tiny shop in Kingstown behind the counter of which he served in person. But death solved the problem. It may, have been 'ue to the ex- citement caused bs the unexpected honor, but whaterer it was, the knight died suddenly within forty- eight hours of receiving the accolade. Later on in the tour, when the King was in the south of Ireland. he at tended a loyal demonstration af which it was proposed to presen Queen Alexandra with a magnificent bouquet. : The little four-year-old daughter of a local magnate was given the honor of making the presentation, and for that purpose was led on to the plat form where their Majesties, surround- ed by a brilliant staff, awaited the child. ' When she arrived, somewhat breath- {less, and looked round for the great {fe reonage who was to have her lovely 0 uquet, the tiny tot saw a gentleman dressed in the conventional frock coat and silk hat and some quietly- dressed ladies. To her, these seemed of no importance. for on all sides there were men wearing magnificent uniforms and cocked hats with wav. | Tg plumes he quickly decided that the mos magnificent-looking of them all--a certain distinguished general in the service of the royal family, who was wearing his full uniform--was most deserving of the bouguet, so without hesitating any longer, she toddled off to him and handed him the flowers. The .general blushed from sheer embarrassment, but the child never discovered her mistake, for with a kindly emile the Queen took the child's hand and said a few gracious | words to her, quickly putting every. | man would be {E. A. Fan How a Gunner's Life Was Saved at During the progress of the Rayal | } the Royal Review In Dublin i review of the troops in the Irish com- | mand, at Phoenix Park, Dublin, re- | : { Once Desert. Land Is Producing Fir Class Grain Australia 1s rapidly bec of g the wheat rou 5 cenuly, there was a thrilling incident, | pri which, but for the heroic sct of a | general officer might have resulled iu | the death of an artilleryman. The latter fell from his horse as his baw | lery was galloping past His Majesty, | sid lay unconscious right in the path |. of the cavalry, who were coming along ¥ {in & mad charge. It looked as if the | § illed, but, with greas | | presence of pind, Brigadier-General ® @we, who, as commander llery, was riding ou ihe he column, at once wheeled round ia tume 10 meet the Iu consequence of the cloud | a wheat grower is the low cost of prc {of dust raised by the artillery, the befor ¢ Hussars had open their den down time to WW avert a catastrophe. Gen. Faun | shawe's two aides-de-camp had in the | the si weantime dismounted, and one of them placed his arm over the un. Conscious man, lest, by starting up on recovering conscious- ness, he should again risk his lie. In this way the whole remaining body of cavalry galloped dltle stationary group. As soon as the qaanger was removed and the general asd his aides-de-cainp rode off, and some time The incident was made known to the King wexi day at the garden party at Viceregal Lodge. Me sent for Gen Fanshawe, and expressed to him, in : aud presence of mind which had been displayed. The fol lowing order has now been issued by Major-Gen. Campbell, commanding the troops at the Curragh The General Officer Commanding the Fifth Division wishes t > record, for intorwation ranks, his ag ration of ousSpi uous gallantry di yed by Brigadier. General EE. AF 2, wha placed Limselt in front o len driver of the Royal Horse Artillery and pre- vented him being ridden over by the drd Cavalry Brigade past at Royal Review in Phoenix Park, Dublin, on llth inst The Gold Penny. T'iie most valuable peony ever coin. ed in Great Britain was the gold penny of Henry 111. On August 18 1227, a writ dateg at Chester was 19 sued, commanding the Mayor of Lon- don to proclaim in was city that the "gold penny which the king had ately current there and elsewhere within the realin of England, and all transactions of buying and delling, at the rate of twenty pennies a sterling (Le. twenly siiver peunres) lor every {guid one I'he tie was by no means favorable for the issue of the pieces however 1 iraia, au | as they should be, for wheat is not | the «cereal | the arid and semi-arid general ran a great risk of being rid- | ranks but the | Husasrs smartly opened just in time | suddenly | " past the | ches vas passed, the gunner | elapsed before the facls were known. | terms, his appreciation | Lot dingos | Mallee have been beaten out. It was found | { that the Mallee trees or bushes could drill, and the thing is done, | Agason it may be necessary to cuiti- | | Rete the paddock before sowing, but | when galloping | caused 10 be mude should bé immedi. | of any | nature of the labor { only at harvest that extra hands are and though a proportionstely | | greater wheat areas of pt t are un New Wales, the Mallee « y of \ otk i snd South Australia, and the Lghuy areas with slight rainfall, for high class laud, but fur a LUCAS. The great advantage of Australia as action, while the drawbacks are an ional drought, and the defect of in the method of marketing luce. In most of the wheat areas success depends on 1 which the farmer can display neerving the rainlall by means ving, and, what is now called farming Fallowing, however, year, and, therefore, "dry requires i 1. vig ples#fand perhaps the most able syStem of wheat growing i w Fpracticed iu the Mallee 1h of Vietoria and South Austrailia scrub is a small bush-like tree, | 10 sixteen or | anything from four twenty feet high, growing on light saicly soil ina ten or twelve inch | rainfall. The Mallee was former'y eless even for sheep om account of e scarcity of grass, and theghordes | Many sheepmien 'tried the | country, and most of them be rolled down by heavy rollers, ually Hundreds of acres can be cleared in this way in | & few months, the stumps and roots Fonly being left. A small quantity (about a bushel of seed is drilled upon the ashes by a stump-jumpiog it need not be plowed. Three crops are sometimes grown before plowing | 1t is usual then to fallow the ground | and remove some of the stumps which | | have been kicked out by implements { This is a peculiarity of the stumps { in the Mallee country They are so shallow rooted that a blow from the | plow or the disc of a cultivator will { often draw them ous, when they are collected, and | wood make excellent fire- One drawback to the wheat region 'country 1s the required. It is needed required on the still even with number are bushed country of We Aus | | Has been tried and | preservine and (always right loss of aPcrop during at large area of | old boilers, and the cra i and flattened vegetation burned cow | pletely off when dry Next | iutermitient UNDERWEAR WORN BY THE BEST PEOPLE CLD BY THE BEST DEALERS Manat Lute C. TURNBULL CO. OF GALT OUR CRYSTAL BRAND Of Sisndurd Grasuinted Sager found excellent for Price 1s table use, ANDREW! MACLEAN, Uutarie Street BIBBY'S CAB STAND DAY OR NIGHT Phone . 201 \Every Woman MARVEL Whirllug 3 ut send gis WINDSOR SUPPLY Cg, Pladose. Ont k | Pn Ysa ssssss esses COAL! Canadian wheat farm, the combined harvester, as used iu | Australia in place. of the binder, some | extra men are necessary. Naturally { the farmer prefers single men, as he | { usually has no provision for married | couple, especially i they have ch | dren Tis unfortunate fur Aus. { Ualia's sake, as lucy are the best iumigravts, and for want of accom modation many of i might be employed ic { all the year round are ¢ fore 1 ran up the spur to Barrie the sheriff's Oe got on the locomotive | body at esse, and seized the wood in the tender of | the engine, and he and his men piled | it on the platform of the station. The | engitieer grinned good-naturedly and went in and saw the station agent. He was told to back.up to the nearest wood Pe and refill the tender. This he did. Again as soon as he arrived at the station the wood was seized by the sheriff's officer and taken out of the tender of the engine. After this EASY PAYMENT FLAN All kimdee of Dry Lioods, Fur Collars and Muaffe, Lahied' and Men's Clothing, ' and dling plans which ¢ ¢ ' ' tui, (nlelosey, thse nll of ' ¢ ¢ ' ¢ i alps impossible for a foreigne®it, obtain, To the credit of ! re. #4, should be said that « ure ory rere indeed. But i sriheloss sa fact, that some i © ago «plan fof thesdefences of great! Meditermnean fort ot & denomination so uch higher thau had previvusly been kopwu. Ae. : cordingly, the city of London peti- ey Lene Jiothe. fashiohable tioned against these coins, and the ife the Coun rSay as il hing issued a proclamation that no Mr. Teignmouth Shore's biography of | |." hould be obliged to take them. him: . The coins, nevertheless continued to oan before the Giaues hour 8 pas LEewrrent, and in 1266 their value was y cook's boy presented Iimnse {| raised from iwenty to twenty-four Buse House With 8 So ing. wr nee; probably Syuivalont in pur. > chasirt ower to tw rounds sterlin left this in the kitchen, he deliberate-| | rw He vom Thug : had been filled and emptied five or six ly walked upstairs to the count's It is unlikely that any great num |. gj in the town sod add to the dressing room. ber of these was struck. It |, 40 sted population. times the engineer went in once mere | "Well, who's that? 'asked 'DOreayd | | probal in » 4 3 probabl hat, by reaso the --n -------- to see the agent and reported that he | 1 ALE i $ . | It was sheriff's officer. high value the z : i high Yau, AES State Sword Mislaid. > ' " | X ? 7 w---- 2 could not get away from the platform | "Really I" exclaimed D'Orsay and] |. lug ny ge be Only a few people I The Mud som are Io (he kind we sell Scranton Coal s good cond and we gaurantee louklug for S------------ Playing Off a Tie, 1 their tre Carpets, Cu kinds of Household Furaisiings can be had on ow | tient plan. Call aud see Tor vourself s#, second only dn vahie, to Gibral 914 Division Street war sold by a renegad who had L Cc oO H E N ¢ | worn the uniform of the British army. . ¢ there was an wutery against the ssesatsssseres® inadequacy of the sentence of twelve ean month cil ay Manchester on this Boe@ov@es@es@e ered | ayed. information which ¢ | would eunbic a pgssible eneiny to pre- i i sulisnie Jor the redusing of | Multa and the wresting of the isfand from the British erown. It was not the judge who was, to blame, however but the defects ip the law which en abled a spy to/enonpa What was mbre startling still was the fact revealed by the military cor- respondent of The London Times, that this spy, when arrested, was actually bargaining lor plans for the selling of Gibraltar itsell 10 a foreign power About th ame time it was learnt that a dety i description of our sub- delivery EOOTH & .CO. FOOT WEST STREET. esses ssssssssasss ng prompt TERT LRTTISRB TTT SS : : : $ : $ PPV TV TRV RNTBTC® BT". - without fuel The agent came out look- | demanded that he should be permitd | 15 "9% of anv Kind' He ot ing red and angry and said | ted to complete the tying of his tie. Bye" ut hs 'of : a nes' knew at ue "How long are you going to keep up | Salon or prison, his tie must be per : Mis EAme of hide and seek, Mec: |go0r gles sold n $200. another for | ceremonial at the Investity 'arthy?"' 1 eg we oid 0 YA, stolher 10F | ince of Walds tt: CRidervo; . "Until the company. pays the dam- | Bt, Suny All in good time." $100, and another for $1,000. ! Prine yu 8 ai aly bor ages and costs in McNaughton and | The officer was quite interested in | betore the King in the royal proces the Northern, if it takes all the ress the tying of that tie. Few men had sion, % wddenly missed, an i of the season," returned the lawyer. | peen so honed as to be allowed to s left { . t Chester hind to be has- "Well, wait till I hear from Toronto. | geo how DiOrsay tied his tie, and, lo} 8, aud 1 made my first. acquaint " sy I have wired for instruetions." | by the time the tie was tied the sun!|ance with England. 1 recollect be- 4 6 absence of t 'All right, go ahead." | had sunk to rest and D'Orsay. was||ing very much struck by the gas In about an hour a message came | lighting in the streets and shops, lectors of to-day know of only three or four specimens. One of these was | Wa & Ba he of the Plums Peaches REES Plums Peaches A A. J. Gas and Matches Were Novelties. Geneva somewhere about ' Ganong's, G. B. * THE FINEST IN THE LAND ie Sword of State u scovered when the | was about to" commence, and cere. : 148 Prinous Street, AVOIDED ----------s---- By Lydia E. Pinkham's E. Pinkham would not be & | regular pe jinflammation of Vegetable Compound re, -- 'Without Lydia egetable Compound | For iv: months 1 had and ir- the uterus, 1 suf fered like a marty: and thought often of death. I con- sami? marine defences had disappeared from the room of a high official, whieh meant to say that the whole scheme ol our island's submarine defences was reposing in the archives of a foreign power, and that the latter knew the site of every mine ai Ports. mouth and Plymouth, so that, at the oall to battle, it" warships could "thread their way with ease through the passage left for the passing of British squadrons. f course, - the schemes of defence in such cases are being continually changed; but the mere fact that such plans could dis. appear provides a remarkable illustra. f | tion of the success with which these | International spies meet. : { Tt is net long ago since Lord Me- thuen and Col. Haldane met in Berk. shire, a foreign spy who, not know- ing who they were, asked for detailed information about the width of the roads. Plans for the invasion of Fng- {dand by synchronous raids are now. {in the possession of the War Office. | One of them was tested a short time ago by a party of English officers, and it was found that the main festures of the spot chosen for the raid were more iuvorable jo the invader than the defender. Then, again, no little uneasiness was caused by she discov. ery that 'a party of foreign staff officers in. multi made an extended riding tour on the east coast in 1908. Of course, it is easy fo exaggerate the importance of such incidents; but there is no doubt that there are hun- dreds of foreigners mixing among si! direct to McCarthy from the solicitors | of the road, undertaking payment of | the damages and costs. The train was | permitted to go on its way unmolested, and McCarthy had drawn the first bjood. He alterwards became a cele- brated lawyer and one of the most prominent politicians in ¢he Dominion of Canada Looking for Himself. | Pte. Wm. Clifford, who won the King's prize and the Prince of Wales' badge at Bisley this year, is a very | unassuming man, so much so that he hid in a baggage car on the way | from Montreal to Leaside Junction, | near Toronto, on his homecoming, | in order that he might be spared | from being the one man of interest | on the train. 'At Peterboro Private Clifford was still in his civilian clothes, and stepping from the train noticed 20 ar 30 men running around looking for the .crack rifieman, and so he started running with the crowd and hunting sll through the cars for the man who had won such dis. tinetion When the train puffed | away from the station, Private Clif- ford gave up looking for himself and went back 10 the not altogether com- fortable car It was not until five minutes -be- fore the train pelled into Leaside Junction that Clifford put on his uniform, and it was not until then that the passengers on the train knew that tne Bisley prize-winner | no doubt. from "John," said IV'Orsay, calmly walk ing off to the drawing-room, "kick this chap out of the dgor." . ol The which was executed, and th writ was not. Elephants Killed by Rats. free till sunrise! J In 1868 three of Hagenbeck's ele-! phants, just brought from Africe,' were &étacked by rats, which ate through the wooden floor ow which they (the elephants) stood and gnaw. ed the animals' feet. All three died, fright rather then from pain. Mr. Robinson, in quot ing this story as "the most dreadful" apparently in his collection of aneo-' dotes of elephants attacked by puny enemies, seems to be unaware that the same thing has happened in Eng- The first chronicled instance, we believe, belongs not to Regent's Park Zoological Gardens, but to Clifton, and has been duly recorded by Frank Buckland. Bui there has been trouble in the London Gardens before now with rats attacking the large animals; the old hippopotamus Quy Fawkes was one of the sufferers. --London Spectators. * ! Teeth as Sentinels. i "When thou sittest to eat with a ruler consider diligently him that is before thee," says the Hebrew pro- verb, warning & king's guest to regu- late Be appedie bb Josts tem- | . Ww, Tr. nson's biograph- | ive in his notebook a modern then recently introduced and still a watter of interest The a lodging house tsught me how gas was made by means of a tobacco pipe, the bowl of which he filled with coal dust, covering it with put ty and placing it in the fire. Ian khort time gas enough was generated to be lit at the mouthpiece. . Lucifer Inatches at that time were quite wvelty. All lighting had previously n done by flint and steel. At first there was a complicated arrangement by which the Lucifer had to be held in a bottle of some preparation, which lighted Rubber Lucifers were of later date. --~From Wolff's ¥Rembling Recollections," Revenge. Admiral Sir Arthur Moore occasion: ally permits himseld what may be called "'the soit answer that stimu. late wrath." On one ocesgion, dar- imng-gun-practice at a floating target, one of the guns made rather a Lad miss. The officer in charge was swm- myned to the admirsl's speaking tube, Down floated the gentle iuquiry Sir Arthur's most suave tomes: 'My dear sir, do you think the Lords of the Adwmiralty supply you with live shell for tue sole purpose of shooting mackerel?" The officer had his re- venge, however, for knocked the target to pieces and stop- ped practice for the rest of the day. Juvenile Gems. master of | {| blundered Wm not Wales is not known here. At all |§ { events, the Ear { For this purpose he the next shot | oue she clicss from the gun he was in charge of | 1 prince was due to arrive at the asthe Whether some official had sending #4 on Ww and his stall were in. 4 state of perplexity The Duke of idea of a substitute emblem borrowed the upon the r civie sword OI Chester, which, in ac cordance wilh precedent, had been mayor in his pre rough LUernarvon sword of Chester was presents y city by Henry VII before lhe Village Boy to Ruler, # Gachkwar of Baroda, a figure al the cotouativn, oi ug Mabuarajah onsequence. lu de 3 ptiian 4 ol the hrone. Parliamentary Snul. + Parliament Suaff i Norfolk, however, hit X iit A. LREES } "Phone B35, x 166 PRINCESS STHELET. o OOOO WOO yOM> VOC) The Wretchedness of Constipation - Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegrisble sess, and ladigestion. [hey do thew duty. Small Pill, Small Dots, Scuall Price. Genuine wus bewr Signature paraphrase of the old Jewish proverb: x pr a rich men who entertain. ed us luxurious!y that, although he was exceedingly . ridiculous, we vre- [examinations was on board Here are some instances of curious mistakes made by school children in classes in thi 0 and soon commenced to feel better. 'foreign uy 1s the phy of : and my appetite came back with the | yor oonring valuable naval and mili. Teo Emohatic. Saat hoot. iow Aan bug mek ge tary' information. In commas with other students, | grained vareelves from talking af || Oxygen is & thing that has eight cured. Your re aE ng Many of these spies mix in the best | the boys of the Ondirie wericultural bim as we might do lest we should {side ¢ . Mrs, EMMA CHATEL | ciety. ure wctomplished linguists, | College, Guelph, love 1s net oi + a 4 sides. B guy 4 Ad rect Be ay that peg be ¥. Lloy: Ea ih tie: ha his feasts. 'He makes our'| jhe cuckoo never lays its own eggs. | 11° labor for rt ; % No MBE ae ed tinels tongues,' sud O08] i " : ee a SEN ut other's comn coms in Ume naturalised British sub. | the heads of ihe shlloge No it was (for - 4 ~ pmol ois 9) black wid A Profitable Whale. tha joeis They jars as lishmen, and ohanly SMa wach joy that the . A blizzard is the inside of a hen. Pittysevsn wholes found -« shorts | for BE ee Mn Ap Shment in an Ahr st dears 1 inted in the 0.AC. A meridisg is the name of the place [time sgs on. Perkin's Island, Iss age academy op ning Young men ey ew for ) Bite iahowing sup where they keep time. mania, yielded two hundredweighs ol : far ins ary and wavy. Their creden- posedly rug ine ent, in which Presi. "Parasile" is the slang name given | amb ori, a soil, resinous substance THE CHANCES Al tals take them into the 'highest offi- dent teorge Sry man figured fo an iohabitant of Paris; it should Lyicts used lor periamery, which was cial circles, and by their le President Ore Iman (to exXCursion- be weitten "Parisian." feed ut $43,000," A Wik He Ought to Pe. The above ¥ Festi bok og £ racy tables vininons sod the py, € providea with it s can tak: r leave the A puch as af Louse, ° HL i --. apni her A The Pitch Lake. eotiferred The. of asphalt taken from of ah, rovers an area of 100 acres, ex- ceeded tha y the ne Th depth of the deposit of - . e i y ete of the lake is, [celled bim 'Judicious Hooker"."-- | hes 11 « urn mows. Liverpocl Post. {of woud A va Sn + ---- 4 WHESTER'S #12 i COURKED ON A GAS STINE manners they become guests fists who re bugzint on the side . sliowing has sn | in society, matters being discussed in door) ~The oier door. if you please, fe tollouing be aed fing about i their presence. in a manner which Farmer (ar pewiat beateti~ic ton was such a good fisher that wea The man is is the picture of 3s be carefully guarded against pd ally Ju a pleasant frame id the fact become known that they wale foreigners, 1 Preside %r No rood That's net the Pes heim be Psat Cit, i "ALWAYS BEADY To <SEveE" EL fam-------- : : i mae ------ | CHEAP, CLEAN, CONVENIENT. Grief for the dead should never i } COOK WITH GAS, interfers with the duty you ewe thel your trouble instead of extending! over pricked fingers at harvest tp | Ea pel, pity. § Don't jose sight of your own mis | ople The transgressor also" may make | takes in coademting those of others | the way of other beside his Sanction {ajustice hy your en] i i i "Nir Wilind has done a great + deal for. Canada. Trust him and he will vou," is the ndviee ofiered by . McDougall, president of = the i oot £0 and HH you sow thistles don't i i : § Consider: The world way laugh ai whine! % The tan with many ideas to er Jrioie ustslly harbors a lot of worth Defend wour rights, "but at "the