Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Dec 1914, p. 11

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Finishing Touch To A Perfect Meal CHASE & SANBORN MONTREAL. SWEET CIDER | 30c per Gallon Coast Sealed Oysters, 60c per Quart D. COUPER Phone 76 R418 Princess Bt. PROMPT DELIVERY Kingston Cem- ent Products We Make OEMENT BLOCKS, SILIS, LIN TELS, PIER BLOCKS, BRICK . VASES and everything in cement. 'ah work a specialty. OFFICE 177 WELLINGTON ST Worse, Cor. Charles snd Patrick Sts mn Veran Bulk Oysters, Finnan Haddies Kippered Herings Dominion Fish Co. CHRISTMAS Suggestions USEFUL GIFTS Hockey Boots, $0il Tan Moccasins, Overshoes, Overgaiters, Rubbers, Felt Slippers, Evening Slippers, Ladies' Patent Boots Gents' Gun Lace Boots, Club Bags, Valises, Ete. The Sawyer Shoe Store Button Metal Seen killed by a mine in the North | Sea. 3 {fair sex the right to be manish. PARSONS AS WARRIORS MANY CLERIC IN ANNALS OF | ¥ROES ROUND RITISH ARMY. French Chaplain, Near Stenay, Cgle- brated Mass on Caisson While Shells Dropped About His Little Flogk--Clergyman Holds V. C, 'Won In the Afghan War--Padreés Won Honors In South Africas. + "Cloth and cassock cover many a stout, valiant, and the Bishop of Longpn, chaplain of the London Rifle Brigdde, said not long ago, referring to the valuable work performed by (he chaplains and priests at present with the fighting wrnifes. It was no exaggerated state- ment, for no men at the front to-day are doing nobler work and perform- ing finer deeds than the "padres of the regiments," as they are affection- ately known, both in the French and } British armies. But a few days ago a story was told of an heroic chaplain whe, on the battlefield near Stenay, celebrated Mass at the request of a number of wounded soldiers, to the grim music of the guns which dropped shells within a hundred yards of where he stood, An altar was improvised from 4 surgical dressing table resting on a box containing splints, and covered with a hospital sheet. 'On the altar were placed bunches of flowers in vases made from the bases of German shells, and when these arrangements had been made the chaplain proceed- ed to say Mass, undisturbed by the fact that at any moment a shell might annihilate him. Another striking illustration of the patriotic heart,' chaplains perform their duties is af- forded by a letter from a medical of- ficer in the fighting line, who says, "A parson having turned up, we had a service. What a funny service it was! Each man holding a rifle in one hand and sharing a hymn book with the other, while in between the verses of the hymns you could hear the shells 'whistling, one of which might well have killed, thirty or forty of us." In France, under the conscription law, priests are liable for military service in case of war, and that ex- plains why twelve abbes, who were either officerg, non-commissioned offi- cers, or private soldiers, figure in the roll of soldier-priests who have laid down their lives for their county. One, Abbe Luchat, was a sergeant in a cyclists' corps and was killed on the field of battle after being mentioned in despatches on the previous day, while another clerical lieutenant, Abbe Grenier, was struck down in leading his men in a charge. Many herole deeds, too, are being recorded of chaplains in the British army. Ome of these was with our soldiers during some of the hottest fighting at Mons. Witnessing the cruelties practiced by the Germans on the British wounded, he became so in- dignant that he shot one German and became a combatan: on the spot. An excellent shot, he did a good deal of on fighting until heweeeived a wound moval by the ambulance corps. The history of British campaigns of the past, however, contains many stories of brave deeds performed by one occasion has a V.C. been award- ed to an army chaplain, scores of them have distinguishea themselves | by gallant acts which merited the simple decoration--"For Valor." The V.C. chaplain alluded to was Chaplain J. W. Adams, who, during | the Afghan War of 1879, rescued two | troopers of the 9th Lancers at the imminent risk of his life, One of the | bravest men during the South Afri- | can War was Padre Robertson, chap- | lain of the Highland Brigade, who | risked his life a hundred times, car- rying messages where the bullets were flying thickest, taking water to wounded men, and ministering to the dying on the field. War, too, Padre Robertson, who ac- companied the Cameron Highlanders, specially distinguished himself by bringing in Lieut. Cameron, been mortally wounded. It was in South Africa that Padre Hill at Belmont succoured wounded men, and often stood amid a hail of bullets, book in hand, read- the sacrament for the dying. An- record of service behind him was the Rev. Robert Brindle, who was 'with Lord Wolseley in the Egyptian War, and distinguishod-L elf by bhi trepid conduct ut | hb. He was also in the Nile Expedition, and was men- tioned in Lord Kitchener's despatches during the Dongola Exredition ceiving from the hands of Qu:en Vie- toria the D.S.0. A brilliant feat, too, was that of Chaplain Collins, of the Royal Irish Fusiliers, during 'the Soudan cam- paign, when a desperafe attack was made by the Arabs on Sir John Me- Neill's zareba. So sudden was the attack that the British soldiers were scattered, but quickly forming into a number of little squares, they faced the foe in a gallant and determined style, Chaplain Colling, standing back to back with Major Alston, doing deadly execution with his heavy re- volver, Among other heroic chaplaing miybt be mentioned the Rev. James Bellord, who was severely wounded at Tel-el-Kebir, the Rev. G. M. Gor- don, who was killed in Afghanistan while attending to a stricken soldier on the field of battle, and the Rev. E. Ayrton, who during the Indian Mutiny was surprised and attacked at Chanda by a small body of rebel Weaponless, he plied his stout stick to such excellent purpose that the enemy was kept at bay until some British soldiers rescued him from his perilous position. re 'Whale Killed by Mine. An enormous whale drifted ashore near Margate the other day. It had He who waits to laugh last may find little or no occasion to laugh. Woman's rights never gave to the | few weeks ago, | system of esplonage | been effectively scotched." plucky manner in which regimental | execution among those of the enemy | who bad aroused his anger, and kept | in the leg which necessitated bis re- | army chaplains, and although only on | In the Egyptian | who had | many | other chaplain who had a brilliant | DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1014. "SPY, PERIL" IN BINTAILN. Germany Seems to Get About All the Information She Wants, Peeling against what is known as the "spy peril" has grown very acute of late. It is wonderful how many can tell, from personal knowledge, instances of how the Germans have heen kept informed of British naval wovements. Says one prominent personage: "l was talking a few days ago with an American who had just returned from the German .fapital, where be for objects perfectly honorable and compatible with his duties as a clti- zen of a neutral nation, had been In touch with the German naval head- quarters. In the course of conversa-- tion he mentioned the very matter which was supposed to be a British naval secret. I asked where he had learned this, and he told me Rt was common knowledge at German naval headquarters. Evidently those 're: stricted circles in London were not restricted enough to exclude a Ger- man spy." The recent trial of Lody, the Ger- man spy, who has since been put to death in the Tower, showed how easily information could be ftrans- mitted to Germany through Holland and Denmark. It has been estab= lished beyond doubt that information which led to the 'loss of British war- ships and shooting of British sen- tries went to Germany by means of carrier pigeons. lord Harewood tells of ashiigt signals from. a house on a cliff, the same being sent from fast motor cars, which dash up, flash their sig- nals and dash away again. There seems good reason to doubt the as- surance of the Home Office, made a that 'the German in England bad Toy Making a Success, So immediate has been the demand for the hand-made toys produced by the workers under the direction of the British: Women's Emergency Corps, that ln four weeks 'the staff has been enlarged to 60 regular workers, The most interesting developments are seen in hamd-cut wooden toys. These bear the individual character inseparable from the hand-made and finighed articles and the clever little wooden figures 1%e enlarged chess- men, which Mr. Wildman, A R.C.A has designed, are conspicuously in- teresting. There are figures of Lord Kitchener, and others of the typical "Jack Tar" and the "Khaki" boy, each carefully colored appropriately, Other attractive and toys include a "Tudor" hou structed with Elizabethan timbering, built in sections, a floor may be added at the awner's desire. Hay Wagons, mail carts, guns, Noah's arks of distinctly futurist tendencies, a goose girl with her flock upon an expanding frame, are among the clever results of this new toy making industry, while dolls varying charm range from an Alse tian peasant to a shock-headed rag doll, which will be known to an ap preciative public as "Tipperary Tom mie." The Toast to England's Ruler. A' the mess dinner of every Br regiment excepting the Black Watel and on board every Britis! i | the toast of The King is given each night of the year. Very few people have | this is a custom dating back lend of the 17th eceatury, when pathy for the lost Stuart caus: 80 widespread that it was cons necessary to requ re officers {army and navy to pledge {in this fashion their loyalty liam and Mary Many who were cret adherents the Stuarts us | when toasting the sovereign, 10 b {their glasses over their finger hoy | thus drinking the health of the Ki ng | "over the water"--that is to sa} | exiled James II. Hence the reason wl | finger bowls was prohib naval and military mes | to-day it is comsidered | etiquette to have them appear on the i table when any member of the Bri {Hsh royal family is present The 'Black Watch re gimen lone | claimed exemption {fom the daily | toast of The King. They were raised | to fight the Stuarts, and they always claimed that their loyalty was thus above suspicion. Beeman a that Lo any i of bh da) Wit ea 0 o d, VE « t Answered. During a military review at shot last summer one of the Alder foreign | attac bes had made himself obnoxious to several staff officers by asking ri 1 dic ulous and often impertinent ques- tions. At last he caught a Tartar. Turning to an old infantry officer he said: "How .is it, colonel, bugle call 'Advance' while the 'Retreat' verse?" "Because, sir," replied the old veteran, "when a British soldier goes into action it only needs a little note from a -bugle to make him ad- vance anywhere, but it takes a whole brass band to make him retire!" | that your is just the ré= Admirably Equipped. Cardinal Mezzofanti, the famous Italian linguist, who died at the age of seventy-five, knew and could speak more than fifty languages. He could enterjain his English friends with specimens of the Yorkshire dialect and his French or German visitors with the patois of their respective coyntries. "Dear me," exclaimed Lord Byron, to whom this was told; "he ought to have heen the custodian of the tower of Babe]! State Bakery. " The New South Wales Government has decided to supplement its enter- prises by the creation of a state bak- ry at Sydney. iequire a bakery and make bread for its own institutions. It is expected 'hat the Government will be able to deliver bread to the public imstitu- ions at 1 peony a pound. It is not ntended to supply the general pub- liv (rem the ET. bakery. Even by the Joan ol your influ- nce you can help some. A loan against our will very often urns out to be a gift. Borrowed ability is a shaky capital } with which to engage in business. Keep in mind the fact that compe- tency commands the { A r| ii : | Lord Claud Hamilton knew it. is so very short; The Government will. RAZOR AND TEAPOT. British Soldier on Service, A Frenchman who seems to have been attached to a Scottish regiment as interpreter since the beginning of hostilities tells the following stories of his comradeship in arms with the British: "Their courage," he writes, "is admirable. These fellows §o into action as if they were going to a pic- nic, with laughing eyes, and when- ever possible, with a cigarette be- tween their lips. Their courage is a mixture of imperturbability and ten: acity. One must have seen this im- movable calm, their bervic sang-froid under a rain of bullets, to do it jus- tice, "Our British allies have, as every one knows, two main preoccupations ~--to be able to shave and to have tea, No dapger deters them from their allegiance to fhe razor and the teapot. At in the department of the Nord, 1 heard a British officer of high rank declare with delicious calm between two attacks on the town: 'Gentlemen, it 'was nothing. Let's go and bave tea. Meanwhile his men took advantage of the brief re- spite to crowd repund the 'pump, where, producing soap and strop, they proceeded to shave minutely and con- scientiously, with little bits of broken glass servipg as mirrors." The writer was profoundly amused by the new British war cry, 'Are we down=-liearted?"' and the resounding "No!" which follows if. After a vol- ley has swept the ranks there is al- ways some joker to shout the ques- tion and all the rest roar out in the midst of general laughter, "No!" The writer was associated with the British troops in Belgium, where, he says, 'God knows the shock was ter- rible, and the defence, one to ten, admirable. I bave seen & erack cav- alry regiment almost annihilated in a desperate charge against the Ger- man artillery. 'I have seen the he- roic Scots. mown down. These are visions which will take long to fade. "Yet the British have already for- gotten those tragic days when they alone bore the weight of the German onslaught. When in 'my presence those British soldiers were told of the dlgasters to their best regiments they never flinched. 'Never mind. We'll have the best of it one day," was the invariable answer after a moment's silence. "And that imperturbable convie- tion that they'will get the best of it is the best support of their courage, is the secret which with absolute cer=- tainty will give them the victory." Hicks' Story. It was in 1874 that Hicks first made a county name as a witty raconteur. In that year Sir Samuel Spry, who had been member for Bodmin since the great reform bill, lost his seat and in a petulant mood took legal proceedings against Hicks on the ground that he had abused his official position to influence vot ers at the poll. In the course of the trial Hicks was called upon to state what he had to say in his defence. In the course of his statement . he asked leave of the court to illustrate his position by a story. His request being assented -to, he related how a few days previously he had been to see a lad whom he knew. well who was laid up from a fall from a vicious donkey, which had kicked out all his front teeth. The lad, said Hicks, had taken the matter in the most { kindly way and had said to him, "Pign't the fall, Mr. Hicks, and 'tisn't the valley of the teeth what annoys me, but 'tis the nashty, ghast- | ly wishous disposition of the jack- | ans." Sir Samuel Spry sprang up in the well of the court in a fury and ex- claimed, "He has called me a jack- ass!" The court was convulsed with laughter, and Hicks was promptly and fully acquitted of the trumpery | cparge brought against him, Ripe For a Change, One secret in executive work is put- ting the right man in the right place. Lord | Claud was traveling over his line | when a brakeman---or guard, as they say in the old country--shouted at Acton station: "Hacton! Hacton!" Lord Claud smiled. A little further on, arriving at Hanwell, another guard shouted: "Anwell! Anwell!" Quick as a flash Lord Claud said i to his companion: "You see how difi- | cult it is, Thornton, to get the right man in the right place. We must have that Acton porter brought here and we'll send that Hanwell fellow to Acton." Egypt Needs Money. The financial adviser to the Egyp- tian Government has been guaran- teed a sum up to $25,000,000 by the British Government in case the Egyp- tian Administration finds it neces- #ary to raise a loan to alleviate the situation arising out of the diminish- ed demand for cotton on account of the war. This action serves as a de- monstration of the fact that the calm attitude of Egyptians and the numer- ous expressions of their sympathy and friendship towards . Great Britain meet with the appreciation they merit, A Way to Wealth. Upon one occasion the late Earl Poulett, who, by the way, was a great spendthrift, was paying his physician and on handing the medical gentle- man 400 guineas in gold asked him if he knew how to grow rich. The doc- tor replied in the pegative, and the earl advised him never to pay an ac- count by check, but always in coin, "for," he added, "the more you look at your mon€y the less inclined you will be to part with it." Scotland's Farests. Scotland long ago lost its forests. In the time of James VI. it 'was la- mented that the country was almost naked and "mony yeiris ago spoiled of all the timwer within the same." Within the last 100 years, however, great tracts, notably in Perthshire and Forfarshire, that once were bare have been reclothed with "timmer." The man anxious to tell his war record may have run at, the first sniff of powder, but that part is omit- The Two Main Preoccupations of the ted. The man who does ot drink may! egind dain, hin ion ami a. B. SHAW MORALIZES, Sine He Declares Others Besides Kaiser Are Guilty Warlike Passions. George Be Shaw gives his remarkable views on the present war in thé supplement of a recent issue of New Statesman, under the title, "Common Sense About the War." While attacking the Prussians, he contends they are not the only peo- ple in Europe guilty of warlike pas- sions in the years preceding the war. He adds: "Let us have no more nonsense about the Prussian wolf and the Brit- ish lamb, the Prussian Machiavelli and the English evangelist. We can- not shout for years that we are boys of the bulldog breed, then suddenly pose as gazelles now. J "When Europe snd America come to settle a treaty that will end this business--for America is concerned as much as we. are--they will not deal with us as lovable, innocent victims of a treacherous tyrant and savage soldiery; they will have 10 consider how these two incorrigibly pugnacious and inveterately snobbish peoples, who snarled at one amother for forty years with bristling bair and grinning fangs, and now rolling over with their teeth in oné an- other's throats, are to be tamed into trusty watchdogs of the peace of the world. "I am sorry to spoil the saintly image with a halo which bristly jingo journalism sees just now when be looks in the glass, but it must be; done if we are to behave reasonably in the imminent day of reckoning." Mr. Shaw regards the present war a8 & war on war, "on military coer- clon, domineering,* bullying, brute force, military law and caste inso- lence." He says: « "In the West 1 see no insuperable obstacle to a treaty of peace. In the largest sense this war has smoothed a way to it. We cannot smash or disable Germany, however complete- ly we may defeat her, because we can do 'that only by killing her women, and .it is trifling to pretend we are capable of any such villainy, Even to embarrass her financially by leot- ing her would recoil on ourselves, as she is one of our cqmmercial custom- ers. We and France have to live with Germany after the war, and the sopner we mak up our mind to do it generously the better. The word af- ter the fight must be 'sans rancune,' for without peace between France and Germany and England there can be no peace in the world." Regarding the Kalser's responsi- bility, Mr. Shaw says: "It 1s frightful to think of the powers which Europe, in its own snobbery, has left in the hands of this Peter Pan, and appalling as the result of that criminal levity has| been, yet being by no means free from his romantic follies myself, I do not feel harshly toward Peter, who, after all, kept the peace over twenty-six years. "In the end his talk and games of soldiers in preparation for the toy conquest of the world frightened his neighbors into league against him. That league has now caught him in just such a trap as his strategists were laying for his neighbors." Endorsing For "Bobs." Among the many good stories told of the late Lord Roberts is one re- lating to a '"'character" which was once naively written--for him by a certain soldier servant. "Bobs" d sent the man over to the bank cash a check for $250. The cle wanted it endorsed before he could hand over the money. "What for?" demanded the soldier. "Well, it's the rule, and I can't pay you the money until you do endorse it," he was told. 'Oh, all right," grumbled the mes- senger, taking back the check and biting the end of a pen in strained meditation for a minute or two, Hav- ing cudgelled his brains, he wrote, and this is what the astonished clerk read on the back of the check when it was pushed over to him again. "I beg to say that I have known Lord Roberts for several years, and he has proved himself times without number to be as brave as a lion, but always kindly considerate to those who serve under him. And I have, therefore, pleasure in respectfully endorsing his check." The Name, Macgregor. Many of the Macgregors, when their own name was forbidden, took that of Dochart. This was in grati- tude for the escape of a number of them, who, being pressed, got away by swimming the stream that issues from Loch Dochart, Dean Ramsay has an anecdote of a young *"Doch<« art" from Dunblane, who in being sent to Glasgow College, presented a letter from his minister to the Rev. Dr. Heugh, of Glasgow. He gave his name as Dochart, but in the letter it was Macgregor. "Oh," said the doc- tor, "I fear there is some mistake about your identity; the name don't agree." "Weel, gir, that's the way they spell the name in our country." When Napoleon Threatened. Over a hundred years ago Napoleon I. threatened to invade England and assembled at Boulogne an army of 160,000 men, 10,000 horses and a' fleet of 1,300 small ships with 17,000 sailors on board. Nearly half the male adult population joined the Vol- unteer Corps to resist the invasion and Martéllo towers, or circular forts, werd built all along the coasts of Kent and Sussex. On Aug. 6, 1805, Francis, Empéror of Austria, declar- ed war against France and this caus- ed Napoleon to withdraw all his troops from Boulogne and give up the invasion of England as a bad job. Weller and Pickwick. The death of Sam Weller in the workhouse of Bath, England, where he was for many years the compan- fon of another inmate named Plek- widk, reminds one that the name was not the invention of Dickens. At Eastbourne one can see a tombstone to the memory of Samuel'Vale, a well-known comedy actor, whose whimsicalities suggested many of the characteristics of Mr. Pickwick's immortal valet. A lot of times temptation appears by invitation. Good work is quite likely to pro- dues good luck. Pe sure yuu have making enemies, for t a just cause " MIRACIfES OF SURGERY. Men Living Who Have Been Shot Through Heart or Brain. Many a man is walking about the streets of London to-day who was shot through the brain In South Africa. Many a lover, brother or husband is lying stricken on the Belgian field with a bullet wound in his heart og his head. A few yéars ago sweet- heart, sister or wife would have given him up for dead and wept bit- ter tears over the loved oné who would pever return. But not so now, says an English correspondent. The modern surgeon--a miracle worker if ever there was one---has changed all this. His X-ray and his lancet are a few of the magic means of bringing the apparently dead to life. A remarkable case of this kind oc- curred during the South African campaign. Corp. Thomas, of the Worcester Mounted Iofantry, was leading his pony up a hill at Arun- del when a Boer, about 400 yards away, fired at him and bit him four times. One bullet went through him in immediate proximity to the heart, and another passed through the up- per part of the abdomen. Had this happened at Waterloo Mrs. Corp. Thomas would have been bereft of her husband and the Thomas chil- dren would have been orphans. But it was in South Africa, and Sir William MacCormac was in at- tendance on the corporal. He ex- amined the patient and found there were no symptoms of internal injury to either the chest or the abdomen. The corporal had a slight rise of temperature for three days, and a week later he was sitting in a train condemning the fate which trans- ferred him down country "all en ac- count of a little stiffness in my finger joidta." Men are alive to-day who carry in their hearts bullets which have made their home there. In the last campaign in Morocco a French soldier was wounded by a pistol ball which lodged in the left upper chamber, or auricle, of the heart. For a week or two he walked about as if nothing had happened; then he began to feel the pain, and his breathing became QiMeult. The X-rays were applied to his chest, and the bullet was seen lying embedded ' { wagging like a péndulum at every heartbeat. It was the work of an hour to get him 'ia hospital, open the chest and extract the bullet, and long before the fighting ended, the gallant troop- er was out with his rifie again, At Magersfontein there was a wounded Boer who was shot, while lying down, through the top of his "head above 'the right ear. The bullet traveled through his skull and out at the back of his jdw on the left slde. He was not pretty to look upon, but he made a marvelous re- covery, which was the main consid. eration. "Toy Oceans." Nearly all the great shipbuilding plants of the world where naval ves- sels are constructéd, maintain a "toy ocean," upon which miniature models of the vessels are launched and op- erated, in order to determine whether certain details of construction have been carried out correctly. This idea originated with Froude, the British naval constructor, more than 30 years ago. He performed a series' of experiments with scale models designed to predetermine the resistance of ships about to be built for the navy. He made small models of the vessels to be constructed, giv- the scale; and these models he then towed through the water under vary- ing conditions, by mechanism ex- Hemely sensitive to variation in the pull, The tension in each | case was carefully recorded, and conclusions were drawn as to the lines most fav- orable for speed. To verify his re- sults, a British man-of-war was tow- ed by the other vessel, and the ac- the results of the experjments made with a small model. The two sets of | answers were so nearly alike as to scale models, 0 1a eu "% Good Tactics. story of thé captain of Hussars who gave a dinner to the men of his squadron the night before they left for the front. "Now, my lads," he sald, "treat this dinner as you will the enemy." And they set to with a will. After dinner he discovered one of the men stowing away bottles of champagne into a bag, and, highly indignant, he demanded to know what he meant by such conduct. "I'm only obeying orders, sir," sald the man, "'Obeying orders!" roared. the cap- tain; "what do you mean, sir?" "You told us to treat the dimner like the enemy, sir, and when we meet the enemy, sir, those we don't kill we take prisoners." Annihilated! A certain Staffordshire, England, regiment had a very small band; but the commanding officer's feet were-- well, rather broad. One day the regiment was to march out on par- ade, but the music was not forth coming. queried the adjutant. For some time there was no reply; but when the question was repeated, a ron voice from the rear rank said: "I believe, sir, the colonel trod on it be accident!" Cannot Dig Potatoes. Potatoe-digging has been stopped by farmers in certain districts of East France, owing to unexploded shells being in the ground. Animals In Chile. There are 461,908 goats and 698,- 880 horses and mules in Chile. in the soft flesh of his heart and" ing great care to the preservation of | tual pull on the tow rope was care- | fully measured and compared with | leave no doubt of the 'practicability | of actual experiments with reduced- | Mr. F. E. Smith recently told the |/ "Where on earth is the band 1° . Column of Good Things OLIVE ALL SIZES "ALL PRICES Olives stuffed with Pimentos Olives stuffed with Nuts Olives stuffed with Celery Olives stuffed with Capers Olives assorted stuffed Olives, per bottle, 10c. Olives, per bottle, 20c. ®lives, per bottle, 25c¢. Olives, per bottle, 35c. per bottle, 40c. per bottle, 60c. per bottle, 75c¢. Our complete fall importa- tion of Crosse & Blackwell's goods arrived as usual, and, while costing us more, we are selling at old prices, with one or two exceptions-- Cross & lackwell Mixed Pickles Chow-Chow Walnuts Gherkins Olive Oil Malt Vinegar Olives, Olives, Olives, Taragon Vinegar Chile Vinegar Bengal Club Chutney Mango Chutney Tirhoot Chttney Bombay Chutney Anchovy Sauce 'i #:] Mushroom Catsup China Soy Parisian Essence Browning for Gravies Harvey Sauce Anchovy Paste Bloater Paste Chicken Paste Potted Ham Potted Tongue Potted Ham and Tongue Sardine Paste Crystallized Ginger, 1-21b, tins. Parmesan Cheese Etc., etc., etc. Cadbury's Chocolates and Rowntree's Chocolates are ready for inspection. Make your selections early. Jo Cai The chronic lar eventually comes jo Delieve that his produet is truth- fu Too rigid discipline has often been the snl» cause of revolt and rehell- |

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