_PAGE SIX CROP BULLETIN ! Ari Agricultural Conditions in Ontario, THE. NEW FALL WHEAT WAS NEVER MORE PROMISING IS THE REPORT. There Will Be a Substantial Gain In The Quantity of Most Of the Com- Raised This Year On On- tario Farms, Th ing modities following regard icultural i in this Province contained a bulletin prepared by the Ontario Department of Agriculture, based uj informa tion furnished by a taff of correspondents under f April Ist: infarmation conditic is mn large date © Wintering Crops. Reports of correspondents vember described the new as never more promising, ing a good growth and a creased area The fields 1 protected by snow until the middie of March, when many ection they became comparatively bare, and suffered more or less from alter nate thawing and freezing, cold winds, ete., causing ome heaving and considerable browning of the tog The hope was entertained, however that warm rains and growing weather later on would revive these more backward fields, as the top only seemed affected Late sown fields are the least promising At present there is no cause for anxiety a8 to the condition of the main crop Clover did not make a good catch last year, especially in the eastern portion of the Province, owing to the unusually dry summer, and as a con sequence new fields were not so well prepared for the trying open spring weather More or less heaving has oceurred ic every district, and while #& number of correspondents report fields as giving good promise the prospects of the crop, taken as a whole, are not £0 encouraging as might be desired However, favor able spring weather may yet put a brighter face on the situation Rye appears to have to come bet ter through the winter than either wheat or clover, and glves promise ofl being -a good erop: . in be- in there much were w in good Orchards And Small Fruits, Fruit trees so far have not suffer- ed much from the winter, especially where care has been given the or- chards. A few complaints have been made of injury to peach buds in some localities in South-Western Ontario, but so far the peach orchards of the Niagara peninsula have been practi- cally unscathed from this cause. Sev- eral reports were made of girdling of young fruit trees by rabbits and mice, more especially in the county of York. Fruit bushes have come through the winter in good shape, but some correspondents speak of in- jury to strawberries from severe open weather in March where not mulched. Live Stock. The wintering of live stock, ow- ing to the light hay crop and the poor summer pastures of last year, depended largely upon ensilage, gtraw, roots and other roughage, of which, happily, there was more than an average supply, as many farmers were chary in using grain owing to the high prices prevailing during the winter. As a class horses 'have come through in generally good shape, al though a number of 'minor cases of distemper have been reported. Work- ing horses particularly are said fo be in excellent fettle, although perhaps not so heavy as usual, as owners have in most cases been sparing with feed. . Cattle also have the winter in fair conditipn--heal- thy but somewhat thinner than might be desired owing to the high price of grains and mill feeds. All come through : will require an increased production brake on the sheep industry of the 8s have been Kept thinner .han is said that they from crippling t nters past The high cost many animals ina somewlhs: A few gpr have an Methoits of Feeding. farmer has his own plan of feeding 4nd the methods re- ported vary from careful stall care the m being balanced and| no hing, to chopped stra and ens some other hage, with perhaps a trifle of or crushed grain, just sufficient bring the animals. over the Some breeders of sheep and e spe well rape for fall while ral use Nearly every feed rati a of ilage to Zrass. ol than not ap- to be as much grain fed to live stock as in more 1 it years, except they being finished for 3 Judging by the reports orrespondents, however, it is plain that a great advance has been made during the last few years in tiie economic wintering of al: classes f yet bringing then fair shape for early pas were 0 stock while hrough in tures. Fodder Supplies. fodder supply at largely a matter idual---experience wnere not rs at tempting Heient most The time is ind the of present local or Hay and sold tc 8, will be and there grains on Pro- sup- too ly pr cases cnough coar meet req r farmers an ample of roots for all needs, ile the llent crop of corn last year en- an abundance of either ensi- lage or dry fodder In this connee- tion a correspondent tersely re- marks Ensilara the feed problem." tirement have pl exce sures solves Increased Production. Correspondents are not unanimous regarding the response to the call for a larger production. A few are outspoken against the movement, fearing over-production with a lower- ing of prices, but the great majority of those reporting heartily endorse the Patriotism and Production idea, and most of the commodities raised this year on Ontario farms. Fall wheat already shows a de- cidedly increased area. More fall plowing than usual was done, much of it was old sod, and while this may mean an increase of grain (especigl- ly of oats), and of corn or roots, it will also mean to some extent pasture In the cannery districts 2 smaller acreage will be devoted to supplying the factories and more at- tention will be given to raising gen- eral farm crops The cheese season will be earlier than usual, and this less of milk and consequently a greater consumption of fodders. Several correspondents point out that some of the gain in crop pro- duction will come not so much from an enlarged area as from a better | selection of seed, a more coreful pre- paration of the seed-bed, and a more! thorough cultivation of the grow- ing crops They say that poor seed | and poor tillage have been respon- gible for many of the poor yields of the past. One drawback to farm crop devel- opement is the lack of competent la- bor; for while help is offering fairly freely it often lacks quality. Not only in field work, but in the orchard and the stable, the idea of improvement and increase seems to! have taken hold of many, and the year 1915 promises to be one of the! busiest in history of agriculture of the Province. ------------ NO TOBACCO IN PRZEMYoL. Men's Most Painful Experience, Says Tageblatt Man. Berlin, via London, April 15. -- Leonard Adelt, correspondent of the Tageblatt at the Austrian general headquarters, sends to his newspap- er a denial of the chargé that the fortress at Przemysl at the time of its capitulation was trebly over-gar- risoned, and that the officers bad plenty to eat, while the men hunger- ailments have been of loeal nature, og no serious outbreak of diseases be Ing reported. Fat cattle were pick- ed up in large numbers in the fall --some of them rather unfinished-- | especially in those counties near the border; but in some sections a fair supply is yet en hand. Store cat-! tle are not so plentiful as usual, | and graziers are anxious to get them on the grass owing to the scarcity of | hay- and the. high value of grain.| Many of these animals are younger than usual, 'and some correspondents | point ayt Ahat, owing te the large! mumber of mileh cows now in use grazing cattle are tending more to-| ward the dairy type. It is also' stated that farmers are hold.ng on 10 their cows in the dairy counties | owing ' to the good prospects for! cheese, and that more 'ealves are | being retained than formerly. { Sheep have wintered better than any other class of live stock. They! are doing well, and lambs are com-| 0 ONE. The dread of the do howevei .is very apparent in repor 5.1 v a supply ts} leaves. was found a Herr Adelt, who professes to write on the basis of official Information concerning the interval between the first and second sieges, says the gar- rison during the first siege numbered | 85,000 men, as had been contemplat-| ed by the ante-bellum arrangements. The experience of the first siege, he adds, showed not only that the fort- ress could not have had less men, but that it also demonstrated the advis- ibality of enlarging the works and increasing correspondingly the num- | ber of the defenders and workmen in it. interval. The soldiers and officers shared the same rations, Adelt says. Neither bread nor cereals were supplied to anyone, even the commander, Gener- al von Kusmanek. garrison was of smoking materials. This 'was felt alike by officers and men; of TAW nd worked into of corrédpondents, and it acts as a| Cigarettes. SOAP ON HAIR CAUSES ~ SCALP GETS DRY, HAIR FALLS OU Girls! Get a 25 cent bottle and try a "Danderine Hair Cleanse." After washing your hair with soap DANDRUFF. Besides cleansing and beautifying the hair, one application of Dander- ine dissolves every particle of dan- CEPI IFPRI PIPPI IPFA P EPP P EPI bbb ddd db This was done during the! The most pain-| ful deprivation of the men inside the, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1915. TWENTY MASKED MEN HELD UP FREIGHT TRAIN NEAR BUFFALO, N.Y, And Got Away With $50,000 Worth Of Silks--Engineer On Locomotive And Secured a Posse. Escaped (Special to the Whig.) Buffalo, N.Y., April 15.~Twenty masked and armed men held up a York Central freight train near Sanborn, fifteen miles from this city, early this* morning I'hey uncoupled the engine and ran it a quarter yof a mile down the tracks and kept the train crew covered while the cars were looted. Ten big automobile trucks were in waiting and filled with stolen Engineer Goss New were goods. Syracuse, N.Y., whl vas running the train, escaped from his guard and ran down the track with the robbers firing at him. He reached the engine and started it running . to the Suspension Bridge, eight miles away, secured a posse of detectives and within half Hundreds scouring the but was back on the scene hour. armed an of country men for the of them began" rob- ar- at have been were fired bers, rested the crew. "The autos came in the direction of Bufiale and a-call for help was sent to this city I'he train the most valuable freight train that run over the N.Y.C. lines. It taker from the Boston and Albany road and is destined for Chicago and, other points It is estimated that the stuf mostly 250,000. noae Several shots is is over west, bv railroad officials stolen by the rob in bolts, is worth silk bers, | 3 | * NEW WHIG FEATURE. + re ry Following up our desire to give our readers the very best 4 newspaper service obtainable, 4 the Whig is now pleased to an- nounce that it has arranged to publish each day an article rrom the clever pen of Walt Mason, the poet-philosopifer. These sketches----which are in realty verses in prose form--will ap- pear daily on page four. Publishers of the biggest and best newspapers in both the United States and Canada de- clare Walt Mason's articles to be the greatest small feature in the newspaper world. These prose poems play upon three wonderfully responsive cords inthe human mind. They ap- peal powerfully to the love of humor, to the universal appreci- ation of whalesome philosophy and to the love of simple truths: They have a melody snd a swing that captivates the read- er, Their invigorating truth and cheerfulness optimistic out- look upon life will brighten many a weary hour. The Battle of Uszok Pass is Still Raging London, April 15.--The battle of the Uszok Pass is still fiercely rag- ing, thé. fighting favoring the Rus- slans, who capture daily thousands of prisoners, and are steadily ad- vancing. 'The conflict chiefly cen- tres around the summits of the Uzsok Pass, which are still in the enemy's hands. East of the Uszok Pass the Russians captured a vil- lage and are threatening the Aus- trian right in the region. In Bukowina and eastern Galicia the Austrian offensives have failed, and the German attacks on Koziouw- ka have so far met with no success. REFUSES TO PAY BULGARIA. Teutons Expect Bulgaria Is To Join Allies. Paris, April 13.--Germany has fail ed to pay Bulgaria the portion of the loan she agreed to remit April lst, according to a Sofia special to the Petit Parisian, which says it is « be- lieved Germany "distrusts the Bulgar- ian attitude and suspects she aiready has decided to join the Allies. When it was announced in February that negotiations had been completed for a loan of $30,000,000 to Bulgaria by German and Austrian bankers it was stated that no political condi- tions were attached 'to the arrange- ment, but it was regarded as signific- ant that Bulgaria had refused the profiler of a similar loan made sev- eral months before by the powers of the Triple Entente. : -------- First Baptist Church. The First Baptist Church held its annual business meeting on the even- ing of April 7th, when the election of officers took place and the financial Statements were presented. In spite of the dull times and the many extra | expenses incurred during the year, | treasurer reported a deficit of only | On Wednesday evening a meeting | was held at which brief reports were | given from the many departments of | work. All were encouraging and | showed the church to be full of ac- tivity. io A rr------------------ In A Serious Condition. Timothy Lawrence, who was in-| ken, but to give the Canadian papers {Jured in a runaway accident at Syd- | enham on Monday afternoon, is in a very seriousa condition and small | hopes are held out for his recovery. i Mr. Lowrence's head was badly eae, oe Letters to the Editor Help For Serbians. St. Andrew's Manse, Kingston, Ap- ril 15.--(To the Editor) : Will you kindly give me space to call atten- tion to a simple way by which those knitting socks, wte., may at the same time help the cause of Serbia. The Women's Fmergency Corps, of Lom- don, England, is asking thet all odd remnants of wool and short pieces left over 'from other work be knitted into squares which are joined togeth- er to make blankets for the Ser- bians. ! If any one who has odd of wool would knit or crocket them into . squares twelve inches by twelve inches (or factors or maltiples of twelve square inches), and send the squares or the odd pieces of wool to St. Andrew's Manse, I shall Ye glad to have them forwarded to the pro- per gquarter--RUBY C. COMPTON. lengths Releasing Wrong Man. Toronto, April 14.-- (To the Edi- tor) Will you allow me through the medium of your columns to call the attention of your readers to 'some of the methods (?) of the Departments of Justice at Ottawa which may possibly open the eyes of the public regarding the slip-shot way the employees at Ottawa and Kingston manage --or rather mis- rianage---the affairs of the Depart- ment When I was in the Kingston Penitentiary I often wrote the -ap- plications of men for parble On one occasion a man obtained a par- ole sheet and passed it on for me to filk'up. About two weeks after- wards 1 was down to see the War- den and found the man for whom I was to fill the parole sheet also there. At that time 1 had not filled ' up the applicatibn but had it in my | cell, as the man was waiting to ob-| tain information from his friends to, be inserted in the application for his parole. When the man went in- to the Warden's Office the Warden informed him that his appMcation for parole had been refused. The man told the Warden that he must be mistaken as his application had not even been filled out and that 1 had it in my cells. The Warden then said that perhaps his friends outside had made the application. The man wrote to his friends and} they informed him that no applica- tion had been made. In my own case I wrote the Min- ister of Justice asking for the re- mission of the whole of my unex- pired sentence on the grounds of my absoliife innocence and the fact that I was debarred in putting wit- nesses into the box to Rrove the charge was the result of 'a conspir- acy, stating in my application that "under no circumstances would 1 ac- tept a parole as upon my release i did not intend to have my - hands tied in any way, and that I intend- ed placing the facts of my case be- | fore the public immediately upon | my release." Some eight months later I received notification that my { abplication for a parole could not be | granted. 'I saw Inspector Stewart and explained to him that I had not as he well knew, y parole but had stated clearly an distinetly that I would under 'no ciroumstances except Inspector Stewart han re: { bably a clerical error and allowed {me to write to the Minister of Jus- tice drawing his attention to the fact | which 1 did, Some weeks after | {received once more a notification | that my application for 4 parole was refused. again wrote to the Min- ister of Justice asking how such a mistake could have heen made, telling {him that for the sake of the Depart- iment, as well as for my own, it should not go on the records at Ot- tawa that 1 had 'asked for a parole {when IT had refused strenuously to accept one when promised by the K. P. officials that I would get a par- ole if I applied for one. Some time later 1 received a notification from the . Department that my anplica- tion for the remission of the remainder of my sentemce was refused. About a year later 1 again wrote asking for the remission of the remainder of my sentence, and once more received a notification that my application for parole was refused. | saw the Deputy and called his at- tention to it and asked to be al-. lowed to write to the Minister of Justice pointing out the fact that 1 -had not. applied for a parole. The Deputy refused to allow me to do so, saying that it made no difference what I had applied for, it was re- fused. Now, sir, possibly the publie wil |able to understand why Tom { London, was released on parole, a {that Tom Riley, whose release was in- 1 be tended, was effected. One man was | was | {sont down from Hamilton and | forty-eight years old; the other man was sent from London and was twen- {ty-five years old. Comment is unne- | cessary ! {| 1 can, if necessary, give many-- | very many--instances of the slip-shod | methods of the K. P. officials, also of | those at Ottawa.--W. G. HUCKLE i Ww. L. GRIFFITHS JOINS. Tour of The ' The Official Journalistic Allies' Lines. | Londen, April +15.--Sir George | Perley states that W. L. Griffith, seec- | retary to the Canadian High Commis- | sioner's Office, has joined the official | journalistic tour of the Allies' lines, not as a substitute for Sir Max Ait- | @fi authorized report of the tour. Sir {Max is the eye-witness for the Can- { adian troops only, but the British authorities, through Sir George Per- { ley, have invited the Dominion Gov- always apply a little Danderine to the {druff; stimulates the scalp, stopping scalp to invigorate the hair and pre- {itching and falling hair. Danderi vent diyness. Better still, use soap |is to the hair what fresh showers of as possible, and instead [rain and sunshine are to vegetation. as ly have a "Pander; Hair Cleanse." | It goes right to the roots, invigorates draw it care through your ing e"producin air, taking one strand at a time. |cause the hair to grow oe strong ex_land beautiful. Bl 3 ts you | - Men! Ladies! You can surely have lots of hair. Get a 25 cent | gashed and bruised, requiring twenty | ernment to send a journalist to cover | stitches to close 'Lc wound. His | the general movements, In the mean- {| daughter, Luely, who was driving time, Sir George has persuaded Mr. wiih him escaped injury by jumping Griffith to undertfke the duty, of re- | from thé vehicle. » | presenting Canada on the tour now + : being started. Nicholson and hendon wy r : they finally | tending to conlirm Emperor William the veports that | Constables Jenkins | . pad a visit late had a lively 1 Jast month so Emperor Francis Jo- | street Lscrutineers party, to OK ZAI Death Of Pontypool Lady. On Wednesday night the death oc- curred here of Miss Annie Staples, daughter of the late Henry Staples. The deceased was born at Ponty- poole, forty-four years ago, but for Some time she had been confined to the hospital undergoing treatment The remains were transferred by James Reid & Company, undertak- ers, to -Pontypoole on Thursday morning at 11.15 o'clock aboard the C.P.R. train. Captain Stalker ac- companied the remains. ERP rbd dtr EE PIPES EPI IPE > WALT MASON'S POEMS. re The Whig is now publishing daily, on page four, one of Walt Mason's prose poems. There has been no newspaper feature in many, many years so popular throughout the United States and Canada as this. The whole- some humor, the homely philos- ophy and the spirit of cheerful- pess that breathe from each poem find 2 response in every heart. There ave thousands of peo- ple who are retaining these po- ems in scrap book style, clipp- ing them out each day from the paper as they appear. They are well worth preservation, and so we pass this idea along to our readers. LAE RE ES SE AE A EE EEE ER + * + -* + + * + * + + 4 + + + %» * +* + \ * > -* * PhP Pe PERL PRL PEEP IEP PIP THREAT OF PRISON WALLS MADE BY PREMIER BORDEN. (Continued from Page 1.) had been employed to do this work by Col. McNeill without the know- | ledge of any member of the govern- j ment: Col. McNeill never should have {appointed him and Mr. Foster never {should have accepted the appoint- {ment. It was most unfoMunate and regrettable thing. But having un- dertaken the duty. it developed upon a M.P. above all other men to see that the most scrupulous account was kept of all money. But the evi- dence showed that he did not keep such an aecount. There was $70,- 000 at the present time not really ac- counted for. Threat Of Penitentiary. In the Public Accounts Committee | said the Premier, men had stood up| and stated that they knew they were defrauding the Government and | rejoiced in it. | { "If the law of the country," said| | the Prime Minister, "permit restitu- tion to be enforced it will be en- | | forced and if the laws of thé coun-| | try permit of walls of the peniten-| tiary enclosing these gentlemen | | they will go there." The Govern-| | ment would continue further investi- | | mier said. In connection with the resolution to it that' legislation calculated {make any improvements thought ne. Marshal cessary should be framed. | The Prime Minister declared that | there had been a great deal of ex-| |aggeration connected with so-called | | frauds. The Premier went on to | state that a principle had now been | | | lald down in the Department to buy | direct from the manufacturers and! | to eliminate the middleman, also to | | do away' with Canadigh agents of | The Minister of | | American firms. [superior numbers. It is an old story| TO FIGHT WITH BRITISH, Try This If You Have Dandruff There is one su fails to da and that is to dissolve it This des- troys it entirely To this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordin- ary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to mois- ten the alp and rub it in gently with the finger tips By morning, most if not all, your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, end your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces is all you | will need. This simple remedy has never been known to fail. THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987. Drop a card to 13 Pine street when wanting anything done in the carpen- tery line. Estimates given on all kinds of repairs and new work; also hard- wood floors of all kinds. All orders will receive. prompt attention. Shop Tones and invigorates the oo dency, [oss of Energy, Palpitation " ice. New pamphlet mailed free. Young American Student Quits Stud- ies At Columbia. Ned York, April 15.-William R Gwathmey, a twenty-two-year-old son of Dr. James Taylor Gwathmey, a surgeon, disappeared three weeks ago from his room in Livingston Hall, Columbia University, where ho was search was conducted by Dr. Gwath- mey, and it - ended yesterday © when letters from the young man, writ- ten in a training camp for British soldiers in England, came to his fa- ther. Young' Gwathmey wrote that he had tired of his studies, had offered his services to Great Britain, and had heart accepted on condition that he ake the oath of allegiance to athe ling and present his birth and bap- tismhal certificates. The boy asked his father to send on the necessary documents at once. While he did not say so, he wrote in such enthusiastic terms about the gommission he was expecting in' the Ninth Royal Irish Rifles, that Dr. (iwathmey concluded that his son had decided to swear allegiance to King George and renounce the United States citizenship. While the situation was far from pleasing to his father, he finally de- cided that there was no possible way to make effective protest or to pre- vent his boy from becoming a British soldier. Dr. Gwathmeyv, who makes his home at the New York Athletic Club, had Started his son out follow his own footsteps in the medical pro- fession. The letter received by him indicated that his son crossed the ocean as a steerage passenger. The father said it was disconcerting to him to read that one soldier in every seven was being killed or crippled, but that if the boy should come through all right it would bp an experience for him worth while. remove do 8¢ of to 40 Queen Street. pn f) The Great Emglish Remed We boll nervous system, makes new Blood in old Yeins, . Cures Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, De on 1 Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for 85. One will please, six will cure. Sold by alt druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on 1 <eipt of THE WOOD EDICINE CO.. TORONTO, ONT. (Forv ort Windy oy Special Pure Fruit Jelly Crabapple, Cranberry and Grape. Large Tumblers. 10c. VON HINDENBERG'S VIEWS, Talks Of Kitchener's Army As "Just a Uniform Crowd." Berlin, by wireless to London, April 15.--General von Hindenberg is quoted as having said the follow ing to a neutral correspondent: "Kitchener has a million soldiers, but no real army. He has just.a uni- formed crowd. The officers and non-, J. R. B. Gage, coms lack the experience of German ns | 254 Montreal St. Phone 549. officers, who have generations of mi-| litary training behind them." i And, speaking of the Russian sol-| \An absolutely harmless antacid diers: "Nobody need all cases of fermentation and e d belching of food, gas, teaspoonful in a "We have observed many unfailing | glass hot water usually gives I? signs that the Russians are becoming | RELIEF Bold by ah druggists exhausted. Their war material I8{ Cont a ag! tablet form being terribly wasted. The manner in which they fight indicates clearly! that the war cannot last long." I The Field Marshal, continuing,! fear the Russians'| that numerical superiority does not| decide battles. At Tannenberg the Russians were threefold as strong as | the Germans, but nevertheless we annihilated them. | | gation 'into the horse deals, the Pre-| Said that the Russian soldier is a goed fighter, but his bravery is in! consequence of his blind obedience to 8 urging a better system of purchase| the orders orn superioy Yibeery | d'and audit the Government would see| The Russians learned importa | to | Sons in the Russo-Japanese war, the continued, especially in| trench digging, but outside the tren-| | ches they fare badly. FIND $12,000 IN CORSETS Printer Falls Lifeless Carrying For-| tune While Crossing Bridge. | Menominee, Mich., April 15. | Miss Louise Stebinger, aged forty- five linotype operator on the Her- Militia had stated that this prac-|ald-Leader, dropped dead of heart tice had never been depgrted from. | "If any man in Cana failure while crossing the Meno- permits | minee river bridge. | fraud," said the Premier, "and is| Stock certificate bonds and a bank | s0 concerned in connection with war | | contracts, let him remember that the! | doors of the penitentiary are yawn-| ing for him." 1 The Prime Minister expressed dis- satisfaction . with M.P., Carleton, and Fotter, . M.P., | Kings, for their connection with the | Tablets. [iit fails { Powell drug contract and the King's | County horse deals respectively, and, | while he declared that further inves- | tigation would be made, the Premier | announced that a Commission of three of the best business men in the | Dominion would in future take charge of all war purchases. After the Premier's statement Sir Wilfrid Laurier spoke for a few! minutes before the adjournment for luncheon. He said the Opposition | had never blocked an investigation | when in power as insinuated by the! Premier. gation, the Committee had merely !seratched surface. There were | many things that should be Investi- | gated. The Militia h Department should | Messrs. Garland, | As for the present investi-| ave known it was the Member of] Parliament for Carleton and not his| employee they were dealing with. | We can make It worth your while--when you're ready--to en- age us. ye are simply taking this method to get acquainted. Tw We are Expert PI Steam Fitters, you "eo learn by Investigation. DAVID HALL, 66 BROCK STREET. book showed $12,000 in cago bank were found in sets. A sister in Keokuk, said to be the only heir. To Cure A Cold In One Day. i Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Druggists refund money to cure. E. W. Grow's signature is on each box. 28e. Big Discount Off Electric Fixtures Get your electric repairs done by us. Satisfaction guaranteed. Halliday's Electric Store, a Chi her cor- la., is Phone The Premier said Sir Wilfred, made] _ the inistake of taking credit to him- | | self for the investigation, whereas | would | | public opinion "was such it have been fatal and criminal | there not been an investigation. The Soldiers' Fo Franchise Bill (Special to the Whig. ) | Ottawa, April 15.--~The bill to tend the franchise to iers was | passed by the Senate to-day in its amended form. The most important amendment adopted was on the Yines proposed by Hon. William Pugsley in 'the Commons provided that before the bill comes into effect the consent of Lord Kitchener, Secretary of War | in the British Government, mist be secured. A a t pro- had the the wore ot ihe SORT, known yet THE FIRST CARE OF EVERY PARENT IS | The Children's Health Pure Milk is the best food known. Pasturized Milk in sealed bottles is both clean and pure. I Phone 845 ® Oo oe About SUN-KIST packages--just as distinetive as the quality of their contents. UN-KIST Seeded and Seedless Raisins. "GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, LTD.