SLEEP & FQDD on WHEELS ~~ Buitd up the a me eae defensive forces | | iL {hl of your body Bovril is an essential "munition of war" for those at home. = In addition to its own fortifying powers (it takes a joint of beef to make a bottle of Bovril), Boyril has the es | plot. unique property of making the other foods er ; S BR Give SE «if you cat nourishing. It has been well said emai THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1915, TTT : Aaa tug rae Xa be that " Bovril makes just the * difference a EL i between your desing nourished and your nor being nourished by your food." ¢ It must be Bovril BRITISH , TO, THE BACKBONE. Of all Stores. ete. 1-0 B } as © 401. 70%. i i8or, $1.90; hor $3 as dial, urge, § az ig 1-07 johnston s Fioid: Beet (Vimbes $1 ie \ gn SR \ * { y BRY few of the travelling public are familiar with J requirements, the Canadian Pacific served an-average adian Pacific's foremost mottos! In order.that these re. { ® a 3 V. the extraordinary amount of care taken by rail Zo 1,000 meals per day," while during tiie year 1913, the quirements may be complied with, the company operatod 1 & 1 ® \ average was X.000 meals per day or over 3.0uh000 meals its own laundries logated at the principal terminals across 18 road gompunies to Taake they journey is pousail for the year. The amount of foodstuffs coushmed during the continent. These gre furnished with the most modern suid enjoyable as possible They se accustomed 109 ihe the past year was tremendous, and the following details equipment enabling them to turh out the, highest qua'ily s - * maxhuum 'of comfort, and do not give any time to cow of a few of the items will help tc show the magnitude of work In vast quantities. The washing 18 a luge under eC ric ixtures siden the enormous amount of energy and motey- Which the supply end of the department: Beef, 625227 Ibs. taking. The monihiy average 'or sheers 1& 354,083 pieces; HL b uss beéen and is being spent in securing and perfecting hant ands bacon. 383,048 1bs.; poultry, 578,891 1bs.; bread slips. 297.096 pieces; table cloths, 78.208 pieces; napkins, 'Hl Get your electrie repairs done b us. Satisfaction the organizations which enable them to travel mile after 488,319 four-pound loaves: butter, 275,128 lbs; milk L84060 pieces, and these are only a few of the many : y . mile with ease and comfort. On a train Which Is operated 639 648 qts.; cream, 325824 gts. eggs, 282.384 doz. cof articles which uve to go through the laundrying process | guaranteed. ; : between points hundreds of miles apart, it is necessary fee i a tea, S83 hs. ables 2588 ue; 'Lhe total aunbel = Blk articles for She year SHOALS 1 t - ' - a 3 > 3 3 scesaities oranges, 20214 doz; and potatoes. 24, ES gild mpproximately 20,427 900 pieces of linen. To facilitate i BH 11 d El t Sh not only to provide a good roadbed, but human necessitie costing in the peighborhood of $I10G000.00° each, in the handling of lipeg as well as from a sanitary ssand. HY a 1 ay S ec ric op } ] fier 3 to this end the larger rail ngs. B A smust biso Th ldoRed after and Lo we : which are housed she most modern equippdl Pomuiissary point, sheets are pat Wp fu par els of & each, slips 20 each Phone 94 - a 2} n stores, kitchens bake shops. are located at Montraal table clothe 10 ench, snd napkins 20 each few raliroads own and operate these Lypes of cars. The Winnipeg, Moose Jaw, Calgary aud Vangouver This The company. has over 4.000 nehly ficient (rained Canadian Pacific Railway stands preeminent io this chain of store-rooms, kitchew and hake shop: alfords din employees in itd sleeping wid dining car service. | It is not direction, and the Sleeping and Dining Car Pebartngal ing ear stewards the opportunity to sécure [resh supplies alone sufficient 10f the company to ge! good nien and keep has under its dire®ion seven hundred and seventSen every twenty-four Jours on the journey from Montreal them, bus all employees must bestrained in the Canadian pieces of equipment as follows: Standard sleeping, tourist to Vancouver. covering a. period of four days. These com Pacific way before being put to work, and the necessity wind parlor ears, 512; dining, .café and buffet cars, 140; missary stores. kitchens and hake shops are regmlarly of tis led to the establishment of schools of instruction observation co apartment cars 5: which if in a con: inspected to enforge efficiency in the matter of sanitary at the various employment points, Whether men have tinuons line, vould extend a distance of over ten miles and hygienic conditions. had hotel training or pot, it i$ cengidéred necessaty to The company has several farms situated at convenidnt At tie completion of every trip all food supp ies re- put all through a thorough course of instruction hafore points along the 'ine, serving the dopal purpose of demon- maining on the ear are withdrawn and closely inspected permitting them to enter upon the performance Of their stratiop farms for the district. as well as supply farms in store-room, and supplies not in first class coadition duties. . In order that employees may enjoy proper rest for the dining ear service. From these farms are obtained are donsted to some worthy charity or destroyed. There and healthy recreation at layover points, tie company supplies of poultry, eggs. milk, cream and other daiyr is a competent staff of inspectors, travelling ste'vards and has built and férzished large hungalows These houses products. flowers. vegetables, etc travelling chefs attached to each district. who are con consist of separate rooms for he different classes of ém- Ten years ago the compny had only <3 roads operate dining ' parlor and sleeping cars Ouly a ! 1a a { \ \ dining, cafe stantly inspecting the system and sessing that thesvarious pioyses, with separate recreation rooms, sail in charge aud huffe! cars in the service day it g 140 of thele service regulatigus are b.iug lived up to by the employees, of a competent earetaker. The accommeuation is furnish \ ~ Cars in operation. During the time when 43 cars ausyve ed Cleaniiness uw very in pofant feature is one of the Can. "ed employees without charge. h . Pt nr SY nme AAA Ai oom tn ~ TY A ' i : "{\ FORSAKE PEN FOR SWORD. | "AMERICA AND THE WAR"' | WASHINGTON AND LINCOLN. | PRISONERS OF GERMANS. BREAD RIOTS IN BOHEMIA, | {V; \ f Sa --- : : | Many French: Aunthors, Poets and | Temps' Editorial Columns Devoted to | Sir George Perley Asks Which Side Foiled in Attempted Escape by In: | One Town Without Star of Lite for | Dramatists At Front, Roosevelt's Book. i They Be On. \ Jury To Friend. } . *everal Pays ye i On the Witness Stand. Paris, Feb. 15. "Many French au Paris," Feb. 185. The Temps de Uandon, Feb. 18.--Ou which side London, Feb, 18.--Lieut. Gillespi I Nenice, vi y i i i i y y Frer s . The > (Lk . oR side y y 18. --Lieut. papie, a enice, via London, Feb. IN. -- 3 58 6 } 3 thors, poets and dramatists are ser- | voted its loading editorial article yes: would ° Washington and Liticoln he Ganadian in the Gordon Hizhiamons ' reported that bread riots have 3 fv de rte fay in his Statements ruins the evi- ving in She army in various capa terday to , ex-President Rovsevelt's {in the Present struggle was the query and 'Second Lieut. Gore Browne, whe {red in Bohemia.: A despatch from ati 'b ie Witness. It may be a slight exagger- cities. Henry: Bernstein, the drama- 'hook an "America and the War," {Siu George Perley, acting Canadian recently appeared among the missing, | Carlsbad says that at Altrohlau,mear | [AR ISY 21107. but the opposing lawyer seizes it and uses List, is serving. us a. gunner at Fort | which, it considers, might equally well | high 'sommissioner, submitfod in a | ave now prisoners of war. The story | there, no bread las Been procurable | [EGHAM it to impress upon the jury that this witness is Havre; Marcel Prevost, the poet and the addressed (6 all neutrals instead | speech at the Lyceum Club dinner or- | 18 told that Browne was captureds) for several days. and, that 400 wo- J not reliable. © : author, is a captain of artillery -in | of only to Americans. - After a ro- | ganitell by the American section of | While seeking a position for an obser- | men, bringing their children, came The Ad dn y 4 - the entrenched gamp of Raris; Ftien- | sume of the ex-president's principal | the #luly to honor the memory of the | vation post before daylight and tak-- into Carlsbad from that village to If 4 Veruser Yo-day is oni the witness stand. ne Rey, the writer, and Robert De | qrguments, the Temps says : two presidents. : en to Lille, where he was joined | beg that the authorities send them r : he makes Mis-s(atements he is judged accord- the front, as alsd is Reynaldo Hahn, , "His energetiv dpropaganda has. not Referring 10 the friendly relations shortly aiterwards ghy . Gillespie. The | food. 5 ( ingly and his entire advertising is mistrusted. 'the Jotine u » siviple soldier in the i rested long without: an echo, for the |onisting between the United States | #90 officers determined to attempt an i metre § A Wide-awake business men realize this. They Tiers, 4 plays right, are sery ing at | withdrawal of the Ship; Purchase aid Canada, Sir /George Perley point- Scape at night by jumping irom the Big Smuggling Scheme. . tell the truth in their advertisements: not because trenches in the Argonne. ilill and the threatening note to ier. | ed.out that the two countries had | ighest wall of "the citadel into a | (gpenhagen, Feb. 18-By the seiz: ) they are better than tl I Marcel -Boulenger, the writer; has {maby shows that the America® if | fwirly "similar forms of government, | ditch, a drop of forty-five feet. Piout. |. of 'the copper cargo alionrd = the if thev h: B1hey used to be: but because heen taken half frozen from the {not ready to follow Mr. Roosevelt to | woth based on a democratic principle. | Frown jumped and broke his leg. steamship Karmen the authorities 3 ey have learned that it pays. trenches near Nancy and placed in a | the utmost, are bginning to realize | As the present war was a stinggle | /Lespie then jumped: snd escaped in- | pve successfully, frustrated a smug. The advertising ¢olumns to-day contain real, hospital. Francois De Tessan, the | how civilization would he endangered. | between. - democratic. and military Lard tiny, ith, Stat, galt sujerilios Stay: | gling scheme at.its very outset. f; he, dependable informhation that will save money for journalist, and secrotary-geneeal of | by (German triumph. | forms of government it was evident | wit ' nie till 'bath were re. 'appears that the Hamburg firm con | BE you if you follow them intelligerit} the French commission to the San | "The American attitude ought to | that Creat itain was alse waging seaptnres, cerned bought four vessels for smug- 4 > i Franciseo Exposition, i wounded j encourage other neutrals © who are | Amerivh's haftle as well 'as her own. | _-- . gling purposes apart from the vessal | : some time ago, but has recovered 'still hesizating. Though: we are c¢on- a [ : RV which was carryi t i ) i and it ready to return to the front tident 'of Ney, we: arestill: grate- | ' i MAY RID WORLD OF EVIL. { whig vas carrying the first Soper | dun ¢ a 4 ------ Ueargo. The vessels were German, hut -- tuk to other 'uations 'Wha -$9p0uss TWO ZONES IN ALSACE. hoes RR i ols w many AN INDISCREET GOVERNOR. |. "oC a ho, have i Hopes for Stronger reeling for Peace | "7¢ flying the Swedish tolors. i hitherto followed the line of least | Germans Mark One for Operations, | After Present War. ' Ao ; i 1 Sir Henry Galway Against "A White | icience be urged to' activity by the . ! One' Neutral. Lohdon, Feb. i8.--Presiding at a 3 Australia." | noble. appeal to the duties of the Derne, (Switzerland, via Paris, Feb, of Scientific lecture in London ast night, London, Feb. 18---Sir Henry Gal (higher morality which Mr. Roosevelt | 18, Alsace is mow divided by the | Viscount Bryce, formey British am- way, governor | of South Australia, | "Hers go eloguently. > | Germans in two great partsKa dis- Bussador to the Fnited States, said has been guilty of gross indiscretion, | ae | trict_of operations and a neutral | LM 4 Cher was a chaice of ridhing says the 'Times's correspondent. In a WANT JUDGE CENSURED, gone. The frontier: is marked hy {LL CV the horst evil of the public speech last Saturday, it ap ] pd-wire fences hundreds of miles I Taal Shance oug al pears the governor deprecated the in length. ~All foreigners, with a few to come now. f this does not cure government's policy of "a white | exceptions, have expe { us.' said Viscount Hryce, '"'nothing | American-Gierman Complains of Une fe . - rom... a2 Australia," and urged the develop nentrat i sca BI ibe. ep ake Venti he Revs thai 1 ment of The: DoFthern (eFEITary-- hy | Washington, Feb, I8.--~Charges by | | A , Rbi le re Santa He Hope Sha colored labor." the German-American Alliance and | which constitutes a 'neutral zone, the peace after thi: a than beh " nd This intevierence in politics is | the German Historical Society ai-} Subjects of neutral countries are per- | strong me of the detentable -- causing adverse "comment, Ths prime | Toledo that Federal Judge John M. mitted to ain. Many foreigners sequences io which' the worshi oa minister declares that" Sir Henry's | Killits® delivered an unneutral speech | Who, were 'may bring a great people Tt he words, area" grave , official indiscre- | recently, declaring he *'did dot . care been! t over the Rhine to Ba- | qi the hws would nor he tion, which cannot be allowed to | how soon: somé dropped a thou: | den and v made in vain LEE , pasy for a single day without pro. [sand bombs on ror William's | being joreed to i : test. He .is faking steps 10 -confirm | head," were 'referred, to-day, by. Pre. {for a fortnight hefors he accuse "of 'the report before | sident Wilson to, the ctr sore Famiteed to Felurh to protesting. BER a justice. - Oficial pointed 'out, hows | : = ever, that neither the peidon tor | ] A : 'What it means | Lt frase suri mapas ses! BI The gain of nearly $4,000,000 in the assets Fe Eas BERR Rl ade Te wa vs fl of the Canada Life in'1914, means 4 sub: | PRICE ON ENEMY SUBMARINE. | De: a ta roserved to wigs ot A bn Ma : a a retard $2500 Io nf stantial Increase in the Company's earning power, which already was exceptional. - In each of the past six years the Canada Li earned .a greater amount of. surplus Bila Lite has In 1914 The Canada Lif ~~ $1,533,000 surplu . 3 * I In this respect, us in many others, the year 1914 : very Dae Compan Ry hers, eat 1914 was one of the 'N.B.--New business of over $14,000,000, wis paid fof in cash. | H erber rt ©. Cox, Fat, for report will shortly bs x ¥ 5