SET ------ YEAR 81 NO, 249 Wolfe's Schnapps For sharpening the appetite and stimu'at- ing the digestive organs you will find nothing to equal Wolfe's Schnapps. Take it as a "toddy" with hot water, sugar and lemon and a wineglassful of Wolfe's. You will find Wolfe's Schnapps the greatest tonic energiser for the vital organs. Obtainsble at all Hotels and By 11 "vores, We make CEMENT BLOCKS, SILLS, LINTELS,| PIER BLOCKS| BRICK, VASES, §and everything in ce- Iment. Verandah work | a specialty. ' i | if Office 177 Wellington St. Works, Cor. Charles + and- Patrick Sts. Horace F. Norman, "* Manager. In Thousands of Homes early 'and certain relief is found for the ailments to which all are subject--ailments due to defective or irregular action of the stomach, + liver, kidneys or -bowels--in - the most } famous family remedy, the worlig hag ever® known. to cleanse your system, purify your blood, tone your stomach, stimulate your liver and regulate your bowels, you will know why so many rely on Beecham's Pills to Insure Health and Happiness Largest Sale of Any Medicine In the World, , Sold everywhere. In boxes, 25 conte ~~ The "Baily FIFTY YEARS A CLERIC TES THE ANNIVERSARY He Is a Native of Belfast Ireland-- Has Been Rector of St. Luke's "Church Since 1905, Rev. R. S. Forneri, rector of St. Luke's church, Kingston, who to-day celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of his ordination into the priesthood of the Church of Fmgland, is a pative of Beliast, Ireland. Hig father came to this country: with his family in 1853, and was one of the first pro- fessore of the newly-created umiversity of Toronto, The Kingston rector, after taking his M.A. and BD.. de grees, was admitted to boly orders on the 28th 'ef October, 1864, by the! Right 'Res: John Strachan. His fifty years in the ministry have been spent | in Penetanguishene, Uxbridge, Belle ! ville, Adolphustown, Merrickville, - and | in this city, sivee 1905. Spiritual | results cannot be tabulated, but: as pa ees ee bors are six chutches and a parson age. His ambitious effort was the erection the United Fmpire Lovalist church in the historic lo eality of Adolphustown, the corner stone of which was laid by Lieften ant-Governor. Robinson during the United Fmpire Loyalist centenary celebration in 1884 It is a beauti ful little Gothic structure of Kingston Junestone. The interior surround ed with a band of memorial tablets on which aré inscribed "the "Waies of leading U. E. Lovalists of Cana da, namely, Bishop Inglis, - Stuart; D.D., Cartwright, Macaulay, Robin: ann, eto. Mr. Forneri was for some time rural deal of Lennox snd Addington nd examining chaplain to the present bishop of Ontario Since his in duction at Luke's, with the co operation of the congregation, one improvement after another has mark- ed the progress of the parish. a This tribute was recently paid to the aged vector by a writer : With the right to sign his name as the nobles do, there lives in Kings- tos, in humility which is almost meekness, a clergyman who has brains 3 the average scholarship, of manner which this "the charm of the old school." He is known as the Rev. Richard Svkes Forneri, M.A. "B.D. and he has never risen to a high place in the chureli because he has persisted in remaining Su the background, con tent with t adoring afiection of par ishioners », nightly, call bim "saintly." v Mr. Forneri is the sag' of the late Pr. Forneri, an Italian of high birth, who held the chair of moderns at Var sity, in the days of Dr. McCaul, and college contemporaries tell 'us "that "Forneri never saw the outside ofa (ireek grammar il six months before hie matric., but™\e headed the honor list." After his graduation he went in for divinity at Trinity, and it was hie good pleasure to champion the late Provost Whittaker, when contro. vergy raged round that cleric's high chitrchmanship. "On my reputation as | low churchman," Mr. Forperi has most 1 { mong the tangible fruits of his la | | of | 18 ~t a far -bevond and a oharm generation calls often declared, "I never saw the clov- en hoof of the Scarlet Woman any- where near the provost in all my days at Trinity." And he declares it with the slight foreign accent, which, min- gling with a touch of the brogue he REV. R. 8. FORNERI CELEBRA- KINGSTON, ONTARIO, got through an Irish strain, his speech delightful, | As an instance of the way the man who. does not advertise ia often allow- ed to blush unseen it has been notice able that amis all the freshly Fused interest in the U.E. loyalists there has been no mention of the work done by Mr. Forneri it Adolphustown. Fair Iv pushed by his bishop into the par ish, which though in the country,is an endowed rectory, Mr. Forneri found little heed puid to ot place where 0 many of the loyalists settled and his sensitive soul was greatly troubled over the meglect of the loyal- ists' burying grouhd. Inaction was impossible #ad so this priest, who looks so absurdly like a Roman "'fath- er" that the little R.C. boys invari- ably cap him, talked and wrote and worked, with the result that the beau- tiful church of St. Alban the Martyr, full of meniorials of the dead, stands near Quinte's shore, overlooking the Ranging place of those who fled from the flag of revolution to the flag of liberty; and the church-yard, with its monuments, shows reverent care makes / being he signs of CAUSES NO ANXIETY. German Successes Offset By Tremen- dous Losses. Paris, Oct. 28--The news that the Germans had crossed thé Yser has occasioned the French press little anxiety. The Intransigeant com- ments '"It has cost the Germans enor mous losses (0 penetrate the allie lines, bug it is doubtful whether they will gain thereby, since the country at that point intercepted with a multitude of canals, which, with the nearness to the sea, greatly limit the area of the battlefield, forcing them to frontal attacks and to advance over their own Gead, Such tactics were possible for the highly-trained and fresh troops at Namur, but it is beyond the power of the second line levies, which the Germans are now reduced to employing against us." The Temps remarks "It is only a local sfecess that their violence has obtained, which is far from. compensating for the los- ses in other parts of the fighting area." NURSES ALREADY WORKING. Canadian Corps Doing Duty in Mili- tary Hospitals, Ottawa, Oct. 28--The Canadian corps of nurses who went to Eng- land with the first contingent is al- ready at work. Word received by the authorities here is that the nur- ses have been detailed for duty in the military hospitals in. England They 'will remain there until the Canadian division goes to the front, when they will, of course, leave with ston. Meanwhile, they will be receiv- ing a splendid training for the work they will do. S---------- Well, why shouldn't a green grocer fall in love with a grass widow ? Laugh auh the world laughs Crippled With And Skeptical After. Trying Many Medicines--Dr. Olmse's Kidney- Liver Pills Cured Him. When thé kidneys fail to purity the blood the poisons left in the sys- tem cause pain and suffering, such as backache, lumbago and rheuma- tiem. Read how this skeptic was cured by Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Mr. F. W. Brown, Kingsbury, Que. writes: ----"1I have been completely cured of backache and lame back by using Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. I also recommended the pills to a man Who was a cripple from rheu- matism, - He was skeptical, as he said that he had tried nearly every- thing on earth.. Finally he consent- ed to try them, and to his surprise was greatly henefited in the first week, and the pains left his legs un- til he was so.supple he could walk without pain or difficulty. Dr. Chase's Kidnéy-Liver Pills\have worked won- is no medicine like them." Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 25 cents a box, 5 for §1; all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Rheiimatism ders in this place, and we think there | LOTS OF POTATOES) AN IMMENSE YIELD FOR FRON-| TENAC COUNTY. Herman A. Buck Has Made a Record -- His Acre Yielded 473 Bushels by Actual Measurement. The past season has larly favorable for been particu- r potato growers, especially those men who planted their potatoes rather late, remarks C. C. M#fin, agricultural representa- tive for ¢his district. We have re- ports to hand of yields per 'acre con- siderably above the average but the one in particular I wish to mention seems almost incredible. The yield per acre was 473 bushels by actual measurement The quality of tubers were absolutely free of scab, smooth in outline, shallow eyed, good quality and of varying weights, being from one-half pound up to 1wo and three-quarters pounds per tuber. While the large potato is not desirable, vet it 1s possible for the grower to pick out a splendid sample of potatoes for seed purpos- es and I believe it would be. inter- esting to know the methods followed in the eulture of this potato field, as it is just possible that they may be of value to other farmers in the lo- cality. Herman A. Buck, Sydenham, on whose farm, and under whose super vision, this immense crop of potatoes was produced, states that he never plants his potatoes until after the| 15th of June, and by following that rule during the last five years he has always had an excellent crop of potatoes, and has never had to use one ounce of paris green for controll ing bugs. The field for potatoes is | prepared the fall before, being plow ed as soon as possible after haying and cultivated at frequent intervals during the fail, If manure, be re- quired, this should be applied either before the land is plowed out of sod or immediately after and under no conditions use horse manure, as it has a tendency to produce scabby po- tatoes. The field is again plowed in the spring and worked until the 15th of June, then planted to potatoes The potatoes are harrowed until | about three inches high, then a hand | | | | them as an integral part of the divi-}- with | vou--unless you are telling the joke cultivator is used for the rest of the cultivation, If the fall and £pring | work has been dome thoroughly i will not be necessary to cultivate 4 potatoes very often as the will be pretty well eradicated. The name of the variety of the po- ! tato is the Green Mountain which is | one of our standard varieties and was grown this year by the competi- it he weeds | ing contest, and any farmers wishing to obtain excellent seed of one of the best 1914 ' PAGES 9 TO 12 Experts Who Know They speak from their own ex- perience; years of practical work in the preparation of perfect food for particular people. Their testimony cannot be gainsaid: €C . {0 obtain the best results we use and recommend for use 'Royal' Baking Powder. We find it superior to all other t Absolutely Pure --*"The International Mutual Cooks "and Pastry Cooks Assn. " Adolph Meyer, Sec'y."? ROYAL BAKING POWDER .:No Alum {the best varietites of potatoesshrdlu varieties of potatoes grown, it would be 'to their interest fo Mr. see Mayor T. R. Deacon, supporters i J re-election. tors of the Frontenac potato grow- {been mavor for formed his not - seek Nailing down, a lie Buck's | purchasing, their seed elsewhere | polatoes before Winnipeg, in that he would Mr. Deacon two. years won't alwavs keep it has ! possible to restrain them from WORLD'S RECORD DIVING APPARATUS. An American invention of an all-metal" diving apparatus enabling a diver to work at much greater depths than previous. Testy in Loug Island Sound showed that a diver could work with ease at over two hundred feet of water in this appaiatus. | recruits {land Mr ! of the death { Gould, | port | the { Some thousands of {have { published here | TORONTO MAN ESCAPES. Held Prisoner in Brussels By the Germans. London, Oet. 28-- Charles L Gould, of Toronto, of Gould, Abra- ram & Co., bond dealers in Brussels, has succeeded in getting away from the Belgian capital after being held a prisoner there by the Germans since August 20th. Under the cover of darkness he escaped to Antwerp ten days ago, and with the the Belgian refugees croseed the Dutch border, He is certain he would have been shot if his identity had been discovered. Mr. Gould tells of wanton cruelty by the Germans who are killing their own seriously wounded. Besides destroying -churches, and houses the Germans in Belgian are demolishing { tomb stones in cemeteries, which they use as practice targets for their who have just arrived on the fighting line Arriving in Eng- Gould received intelligence of his father, H aged 97 years, 4 retired merchant of Toronto. "GERMANY GETTING PETROL ex. IMousands of Tons Exported From Rumania. Paris, Oct. 28---The attention of Rumanian government is to be called to the manner in whic petrol is being exported to Germany in vio- lation of the rules of neutrality tons of: petrol its way into Germany apd Austria and the railway lines are positively blockaded in part by the enormous number of tank cars conveying oil to the belligeremts. Communications from Holland demonstrate that despite the difficulties that govern- ment is doing its utmost to preserve neutrality. One writer says that the Dutch regiments on the frontier have been changed constantly be- cause they get so worked up by the sights they see that it is_almest im found al tacking the Germans Unrequitted love is one brand of heart failure. Bot it's never fatal. Diplamacy is the art of concealing our dislikes Contrariness fs often taken acity. for ten- P. | Ce ---------------------- - FARM HELP TO BE SCARCE. Immigration Official Advises Farm- ers to Offer Yearly Engagements. Toronto, Oct. 28--H. A. Macdon- ell, director of immigration for On- tario, is of the opinion that . hext spring there will be a larger demand for farm labor than ever kmown in the province, and that it' will be to the advantage of: farmers to seeure help at the present time. Owing to the facts that immigration from the old eountry. «has. been: Practically. . brought to a standstill, and that so many farm hands have gone with the Canadian contingent, a shortage of labor will be experienced When the spring comes. There i§ no rea- son, Mr. Macdonell thinks, why far- mers cannot make" arrangements now by hiring help on a yearly en: gagement In response to the cir- culars which have been sent out to farmers, it is stated that a good many applications are being recelv- ed each day for help. i INVASION OF CANADA. * : Led By Pro. Brewery Workers to Be Germans. { London, Oct." #8. = 'Discussing {Count von Bernstorff's statement { that, because Canada Is sending | troops. to fight for the motherland, { Germany would be justified in disre- | garding. the Monroe doctrine and landing troops in North America, the Daily Express declares that the Ger- man ambassador to the United Sta- tes has replaced "Mr. Doojey" as a humorist, adding that possibly the count will find a way to invade Can- Jada by enforcing conseription in the Milwaukee breweries, and descending upon fhe dominion With forces led by Hers Riddef, Bartheldt, Mupster- berg, Schiff and Speyer. FARMERS' WIVES QBJECT, Won't Bring Ohickens to Market With Heads and Legs On. Chatham, Oct. 28. « Farmers' wives say that they will not bring chickens (o the market if the by-law providing that heads and legs must be left on the fowl is enforced. This by-law will go into force on Novem- ber 1st, and is causing much eriti- cism and discussion. The by-law does not apply to stores. _-- "Don't Blame Jeff, You'd Have Done the Same Thing Yourself, By "Bud Fisher" No E mre me, Cer HELLO QrTo, AYE M DID T KEE? You WAITING LONG T Fy I WAL A TTLE SELF I HAD TO STOP 0 SIGN ARTICLES TO Flan JACK, JOHMSON