HOW TO TREAT ALL SKIN TROUBLE Creasy Ointmonts No Useâ€"Must Bs Cursa Through the Blood. How to Treat All Skin Trouble. It is mot a good thing for people with a tendency to have pimples and a blotchy complexion to smear themselves with greasy ointments. In fact they couldn‘t do anything worse, because the grease clogs the pores of the skin, making the dis ease worse. When there is an irmâ€" tating rash a soothing boracic wash may help allay the pain or itching, but of course it doesn‘t cure the trouble. â€" Skin complaints arise from an impure condition of the blood, and will persist until the blood is purified. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have cured many cases of eczema and skin diseases because they make new, rich blood that drives out the impurities, clears the skin and imparts a glow of health. The following proof is ofâ€" fered. Mrs. Fred Trem:lo. Gunter, Ont., says: ‘"For more than a year I was steadily afflicted with salt rheum or eczema. My hands were «o sore that I could not put them in water without the skin cracking open. I tried all sorts of ointments recommended for the trouble, but they did not do me a particle of good. I was told Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills would cure the trouble, and began taking them. I took the Pills steadily for six or eight weeks and they completely cured the trouble This was several years ago and I have never been bothered with it since." at Medicine ( by a launreat he MFiQ first od The Callerâ€"Who is that singing! The hostessâ€"That‘s our _ new maid. She always sings at her The callerâ€"What a happy dis position. Mercy, how loud she sings. The hostessâ€"Yes. When _ she sings loud she‘s breaking someâ€" thing. A< Dr. W TY 0 < 4) Thin bits of choicest Indian Corn, so skilfully cooked and toasted that Sold by Grocer» everywhere. The Canadian Breakfast Wholesome Nourishing Easy to Serve Post Toasties Cweadian Postam Cereal Co.,. Ltd. 1e Vie w me ma One Was Enough. M Mr. Alfred Noves,. mM 1AtY Post Toasties Bridges, s a fastidi It The Singer. m n ‘ Pink Pills are sold e dealers or by mail box or six boxes for The Dr. Williams‘ Brockville, Ont. N as very long, and at Mr. Bridges leaped said briskly : id the and Cream the new poet ous critic, and admire in the s ~of Alfred 11 h aloud,"‘ the ind afterward ht 1t t H nd, I can her ode to rea that Mr. t he a ur h MISHAPS ON GREAT LAKES Investigations Are Followed Upâ€" Aids to Navigation Improved. Have the number of accidents on the Great Lakes been increasing during the past couple of years in & manner commensurate with the enormous â€" development of lake steamship .traï¬cZ ; Steamship managers give an emâ€" phatic "No‘" to this question, and quote many and divers grounds for their contention, except that which is usually conclusive proofâ€"figures. These they will not divulge: :t would bring the facts home to the underwriters in too forcible a manner,‘‘ they point out. It is well known amongst marine men, however, that despite the manner in which the tonnage on both the Canadian and American sides of the Lakes ha been growâ€" ing during the past decade the numâ€" ber of accidents has not only failed to increase proportionately, but has been on the downward trend. Rome Reasons. Steamship men attribute this to several things. In the first place, they state, the authorities have ‘abandoned the old practice of dropâ€" ping the investigations resultant u1 i ue ces Caplnils shew B ns s o o o o o to accidents unless definite concluâ€" sions have been arrived at within a ridiculously short time. Nowaâ€" days the matter is kept before the board of investigation until the hlame is attached to some party. Again, they point out, the men in whose hands the traffic of the lakes is placed are much more competent | â€"certificates of competency and | good character are no longer “ped-. dled around the streets and grantâ€"| ed for the asking,‘"‘ like they werel once ; the feclings of ship masters are no longer spared when there is% any possibility of holding them to | account for negligence. And last,| but not least, the aids to navign-{ tion are becoming perfected to such an extent as to make accidents, if' not absolutely impossible, easily avoidable, if even a moderate amount of discretion and ioresight] avordanie, 11 CVEN o9 .. mR amount of discretion and foresight is exercised. Small Number of Accidents. Last season (1912) the number of accidents on the Inland Seas wes small, so small, in fact, as to create considerable comment in marine circles the world over. This year the traffic has been even heayâ€" ier, and yet the monetary loss folâ€" lowing wrecks, groundings, exploâ€" sions on board ship resultant to deâ€" fective machinery _ and _ collisions has been, to date, even less. The season is now over half over, and yet only two total losses have o0¢â€" curred, both amounting to only about $70,000. The stcamer Peck, which was a total loss as the result of an explosion in her boilers in Milwaukee harbor, and the barge Crete, which was declared a total loss as the result of damage susâ€" tained in collision with the steamer Damage to Bottoms. Damage to bottoms, apparently, has been the main item of expense this season, about the most serious accident of this nature being that of the steamer D. B. Meacham, which totalled in the neighborhood of $17,000. The Meacham touched in the new Livingstone Channel at the foot of the Detroit River. A â€"number of uninsured ships have met with similar accidents, but none of these has been as exâ€" pensive as the Meacham. Comparâ€" ed with last year, the damages covered by insurance are under those of 1912, and the uninsured Among the recent big cases was the steamer Lehigh, which, besides carrying away a couple of lock gates in the Welland Canal and creating considerable expense for the Canadian Government, was damaged in a series of accidents in that canal and in the St. Lawrence River. At the present time she is having some forty new plates rivetâ€" ed on at Ashtabula, Ohio. No Canadian Statistics. The cases cited above are all American, statistics pertaining to the Canadian ships being practicalâ€" ly unobtainable, as none of our steamship companies are connected with the Great Lakes Protective Association. The serious accidents on this side, however, have been confined to the grounding of the Merchants Mutual Line steamer Pellatt in the St. Lawrence River risks have had comparatively little work for the shipbuilders. and the Wexford, of the Western Steamship Company, which is now lying in Collingwood dryâ€"dock unâ€" Jverguing repairs to the damages sustained a couple of weeks ago, when she stranded on the rocks in the Sault Ste. Marie River. Ian Maclaren tells a sweet story of his native Scotland.. While sauntering along a country lane oune hot afternoon, he met a bonâ€" nie weo lassie who was very red in the face from the heat, and who breathed heavily under the burden of the chubby youngster she carâ€" ried in her arms. ¢ ‘"‘Isn‘t he too heavy for yout‘"‘ inquired the kindly and sympathot ic minister. "He‘s no‘ hivvy, sir,‘‘ came the reply, with a smile of loving pride, "he‘s ma brither |!"‘ At Theâ€" Telephone. "Was that your sister calling you up ,.’ 1 12 12. No: it was my wile calling me Love Made Him Light. uire, were both old vesseis > valued at $10,000 and respectively. â€" The former LESS ACCIDENTS ahuc. We Are You Droopy, . Tired, Worn Out? Here Is Good Advice to All Who Feel as if Their Vigor and Life Had All Oozed Away. This Condition Can be Quickly Cured by a CGood Cleansing Medisine. Your erperience is probably somewhat similar to that described by Mr. J. T. Fleming in the following letter from his home in Lebanon: "I think I must have the most sluggish sort of a liver. In the morning my mouth wase bitter, and that foul, soft feeling that tells you, No breakfast needed here this morning.‘ A cup of coffee would sort of brace me up, but in two hours I was disposed to quit work, all energy having cozed out of me. Supper was my ounly good meal, but I guess I didn‘t digest very well, for I dreamt to beat the band. A friend of mine put me wise to Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. I think they must have taken hold of my liver, perhaps my stomach, too, because at the very start they made thinge go right. Look at me nowâ€"not sleepy in the dayâ€"time, but hustling for toe mighty }dollu and getting fun out of life every [minuux. That‘s what Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills bave done for meâ€"they have reâ€"built and !rejuvonated my entivre eystem." To keep free from headaches, to feel young and bright, to enjoy your meals, to sleep sound and look your best, noâ€" thing can belp like Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, 2%¢. per box, five for $1.00 at all druggisis and storekeepers or postpaid from The Catarrhozone _ Co., Buflalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. Tommy was fourteen, and Tomâ€" my‘s father and motherâ€"both seriâ€" ous peopleâ€"had decided that it was time to fix on a profession for him. |\ _ When chests of tea come into the possession of some dealers, they, unthinkingly, cut the lead open and leave the tea exposed to the \moist air for weeks, while all the ltime it is fast decaying. Rememâ€" (bor. tea, however preserved, deâ€" |cays with age, but it will lose more ‘in a week exposed to the air than ‘in six months in a lead packet. 1 That is why "SALADA‘" tea is sold only in sealed lead packets: ‘its native purity and garden freshâ€" \ness are perfectly preserved. Accordingly Tommy was led to a room in which were a knife, an apple, a fat theological book, and some small change. _ _ C His fond parents had decided to leave him alone with this assortâ€" ment to discover which he liked the best. If the book took his fancy, they intended to make a clergyman of him; if the knife, a surgeon ; if the apple, a farmer; and if he chose the money, he was to go into a bank. _ e mens _ At the end of half an hour the mother went to the room, but reâ€" turned immediatelyâ€"in tears. _ ‘"What‘s the matter, dear?‘" askâ€" ed papa anxiously. "It‘s no good!‘"‘ she sobbed. "‘Tommy is sitting on the book, with the knife in his hand. Heâ€" he‘s eating the apple, and the money is in his pâ€"pocket!" "Good!‘ said the father. "That settles it! Me‘s evidently cut out for a lawyer!" The last process tea undergoes at the gardens is firing, to exhaust all moisture, as moisture is fatal to quality.. The tea is then much drier than the air. It is then quickly placed in the airtight lead packets, or leadâ€"lined chests, which are soldored up and made airtight. ] A wellâ€"known violinist adversely \criticized his own portrait, which had been painted by a celebrated | artist. The family had agreed \ upon this harsh verdict without a |\ dissenting voice, until the artist .appealed to the youngest of the | household, a bright little })oy. "Who is that, Dick?!‘ he asked, pointing to the picture. ‘"‘Papa,‘ was the immediate answer. . ‘‘So it is, my dear. , ‘"‘You see, sir, your son is a better judge of the likeâ€" ness than you. So you think you‘d know it was papa, my boy ?" ‘"Oh, yes, sir,‘"‘ was the innocent reply. "It‘s very much like him about the fiddle." The teacher meant to convey & profound lesson. ‘‘You must forâ€" give your enemies, boys,""‘ she said, "‘and then your enemies will forâ€" give you. I want you 'al{ to try 16."" ~The next morning Johnny Jones came to school with & very black eye. ter t‘ â€" "Aw," _ replied Johnnv, "I‘ve been forgivin‘ Scrappy Gren, an‘ makin‘ him forgive me." "Can anyone name a liquid that doesn‘t freeze?‘ asked the teacher. THE YÂ¥IRTUE OF THE LEAD PACKET. There was a moment‘s silence. Then a voice in the rear of the room answered, eagerly, ‘‘Please, teachâ€" er, hot water !"‘ ;thy, Johnny, what‘s the matâ€" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. &A Point of Resemblance. Precocious Talent. Un{reezable. Made Up. IS8UE #8â€"‘13. Characteristic Looks of Some Famâ€" ous Houses. King Ferdinand of Bulgaria is & Bourbon, and even those who might \ not be aware of his family connecâ€" ‘tions and yet were familiar with |\the characteristic features of that ‘famous Royal House, could searceâ€" \ly fail to connect him with it the moment they set eyes upon him. All the Bourbons, practically without exception, have inherited the bony aquiline nose of their great _ ancestor, Henry IV. â€"of France and Navarre. The most familiar example of this nose, s0 far as British people are concernâ€" ed, is possessed by that popular Iyopng ruler, the King of §pain. o SCALES, DANDRUF .AND ITOHING Head so Itchy Could Hardly Stand It. Dandnt* Showed on Coat Colâ€" tar. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured in One Month. was suffering with since over a year. 1 had an infammation of the lungs and a very strong fever. When I recovered, my head was covered with scales and dandruff, and it was so itchy I could bardly stand it, The dandruff showed on my coat collar. I had used various medicines without relief. I heard of Cuticura Sosp and Ointment and decided to try them, and I am very glad of it, because I am perfecily cured. I used two boxes of Cuticurs Ointment with the ma J taky piessure in recomunending Cutkâ€" cura Soap aud Ointment to anyuane who is (Gigned) Hectar Perrss, Dec. 30, I§1L. scales, and allay ftehing and frritation of s e ty e e y es en o L d oi G Te io e Our own Royal family have the "Guelph eyes."" It is not too much to say that if only the eyes of phoâ€" tographs of our faw beloved King Edward, his own son, King George, and his brother, the Duke of Conâ€" naught, were visible, ninetyâ€"nine people out of every hundred would recognize to whom they belonged. It is a large and protruding eye, and all Queen Victoria‘s descendâ€" ants possess it. The King and the Prince of Wales have it in a markâ€" ed degre, and it is very noticeable also in the German Emperor. _ low.ï¬t-ihynz‘mflmm Cuticurs Ointment, aferd the speediust and most economical trestment. They assist in promuoting the growth and beauty of the hair by removing those conditions which tend to make it dry, thin, and lifeless, often leading to premature grayness and loxs of hair. Cuticurs Somp and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world. Liberai sample of each mailed free, with 32â€"p. Skin Book. Address post eard Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. Everybody knows the Cavendish lip, and the remarkable way in which it has persisted through many generations, but it may not be as generally known that the House of Hapsburg, the head of which is the Emperor of Austria, has a similar feature. It is a protusion and enlargement of the lower lip which, though highâ€" ly characteristic, is far from graceâ€" ful. It is a remarkable fact that the young King of Spain, already mentioned, not only has the Bourâ€" bon nose, but he has also the Hapsburg lip, derived from his moâ€" ther, Queen Christina, who was &A member of the Austrian _ royal family. No More Neuralgia; Headache Cured Fifty years ago Nerviline was used from coast to comet, and in thousands of houses this trusty liniment served the entire family, cured all their minor ills and kept the doctor‘s bill amall. Toâ€"day Nerviline still holds first rank in Canâ€" ada among _ painâ€"relieving remediesâ€"â€" searcely a home you can find that doesâ€" n‘t use it. From Port Hope, Ont.. Mr. W. T. Greenâ€" away, of the Guide newspaper staif, writes: "For twenty years we have used Nerviline in our home, and not for the world would we be without it. As a reâ€" medy for all pain, earache, toothache, cramps, headache, and disordered stomâ€" ach I know of no preparation so useful and quick to relieve as Nerviline." 223 Elizabeth St., Montreal, Que.â€"* Let every mother give Nerviline a trial; it‘s good for children, good for old folke â€"you can rub it on as a liniment or take it internally. Wherever there is pain, Nerviline will cure it. Refuse anything but Nerviline. Large family bottles, 50c.; trial size, 25¢., ;: :l-l -é;alo'ru. or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingeton, Ont. A youthful stoker was brought before the commanding officer of the Devenport naval barracks. Tne charge was insubordination, says an English paper; he had refused to enter the swimming bath. When he was asked what he had to say for himself, the youth replied : "SBir, I‘ve onlyv been in the navy three days. The first day the docâ€" tor drawed six of my teeth; the second day I was vaccinated, and the third day the potty o hicer he says, ‘Come along; we‘re aâ€"goin‘ to drown yer!" _ _0 __ 13@ to drown g:r 6+ It is to be hoped that his punishâ€" ment was not severe. Dobbins: ‘‘Iâ€"say, old fellow, you are getting thin since you retired from business.‘‘ Tobbins (exâ€"shopâ€" keeper): ‘"‘That‘s right, You #ee, I don‘t weigh as much as I did." Customer: ‘"I must say, waiter, this is the first time I‘ve ever had a really tender steak here." Waitâ€" er (nghut): "Good gracious, I must have given you the proprieâ€" tor‘s portion !‘ ‘TO REKOYE DANDRUFF Journalist Tells of The Advanâ€" tages of Keeping Nerviline Handy On the Shelf. ROYAL FEATURES. No Wonder He Balked. I% took ane month to cure ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO and scaip itch that I Nes L ope Criminals Are Now Divided Into The new system of detecting crimâ€" inals is based upon the facts that the criminal claes is composed of many classes and subâ€"classes, and that each subâ€"class is composed at last of individual human . beings each with a distinct and distinâ€" guishable individuality of his own, says the London Times. The crimâ€" inal is an artist in his own departâ€" ment and stamps his individuality on his crime. If this seems on the surface of it unlikely, it is easy to show that certain crimes of widely different nature never are and never could be committed by the same criminal. | The tramp w{o snatches â€" linen ftrom a hedge, or the area sneak who steals the milk cans, could not | be a fraudulent trustee or compaDy | promoter, nor could the fraudulent trustee pick a pocket, nor would he | steal the milk cans. The truth is | manifest enough in the case of| crimes so different, but is still true of crimes much more alike. The mumping sailor with his false tale of shipwreck could not change places with the bogus parson _ OT doctor with his false tale of having been robbed or lost his purse. The welcher and the raceâ€"course thief both carry on their operations on the turf, but they never exchange parts ; the man who passes base coin does not pass flash banknotes ; the railway thief is not an hotel thief, and vice versa. NEW DETECTIVE METHODS. qoi Srcrdndiis ol dullh Antct t B Ni Scientists and _ doctors explain the popularity of hideâ€"andâ€"seek by the theory that hiding and seeking are two of the inborn characterisâ€" tics of every human being. We get \the bhabit from our savage ancesâ€" | tors. Then, the predatory habits of \the people led women and children lto hide from strangers in fear of | their lives. |\ Hideâ€"andâ€"seek is mimic _ war. |Scoutcraft for boys has developed |it on scientific lines, Bo the next ‘time you see your kiddies playing ‘hideâ€"andâ€"seek reflect that it is the outward and visible sign of an inâ€" stinct which has dwelt for countâ€" less centuries in human beings. Game of Hideâ€"andâ€"Scek Is An Inâ€" born Characteristic. Not only in the home of the duke, but in the home of the workman, you will fail to find a more popular game with the children than hideâ€" andâ€"seek. i § Two of the first words baby lips learn to lisp are "peep bo." Then when the kiddies can toddle one of the earliest games they play is hideâ€"andâ€"seek. â€" And don‘t |they just love it! The little brain in its excitement is working at its highest pressure. And the shouts of wild glee when the quarry is found ! To hear them makes your own heart beat â€" fasterâ€"particularly if the players are your own little ones. . Tight Money Pinching Many. Thoneands more are being squeezed by aching corne which can be cured quickly with Putnam‘s Corn Extractor. Being free from caustics, Putnam‘s is painless. Used successfully for fifty years. Use no other, 2%¢. at all dealers. "Oh! Shame, Tommy. You‘re too old to ery.‘" *"Yes, an‘ 1 bet I‘m too young to have what I‘m erying for." On a tree grew apples green. Little Willie, seeing them With a grin, came on the scene And was bent on eating them. Try Murine Eye Requy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids, Doesn‘t Smart â€"Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25¢, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25¢c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. _ An Eye Tonic Good for All Eyes that Need Care Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Bt. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903. Minard‘s Liniment Co.. Limited. Gentlemen,â€"I was badly kicked by my horse last May and after using several reparations on my log nothing would 30. My leg was black as jet. I was laid up in bed for a fortnight and could not walk. _ After min{i three bottles of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT I was perfectly cured, so that I could .tart on the road JO8. DUBES, Commercial Traveller Madge and Alfred had just had a row. In a fit of temper he remarkâ€" ed: "I was a fool when I married you.‘"‘ ‘"Yes, dear,‘ she replied. "‘I knew at the time, but I thought you would improve.‘" Alfred now thinks twice ere he speaks. Minard‘s Liniment Relioves Neuralgla. wHY YOUNGSTERS HIDE. ‘"Fach dog has his day,"‘ Is a proverb e‘er trite., Baby‘s Own Soap ) we add, if we may, "Fach cat has his night.‘"‘ Various Classes. Those Tomeats. The Bends. WANTEDâ€"iMore Workers inal Process. Bimpl« Kf’;-.u xv.::alv' i’!fl:h:l:ï¬:&"i’lï¬' Ne canvasns, V P P m uC un ited for our work. If you want < ;11‘:::&::“';5; ï¬&"%‘& for w‘oh gr-"u‘ time, write us and we wili 1 we & IGhoeati»i®aht wohke, 57 ys COLLEOE STREET, roronto, * opnmmmmmenmmnnammeammmmmmememmemmmen "I‘d like to have an Xâ€"ray phoâ€" tograph taken of Cholly‘s brain." ‘"Do you think there is anything the matter with it /‘ ‘"‘No; but I‘d like to be sure he has a brain before I marry him.‘" Via Chicago and North Western Railâ€" way. On eale daily Sept. 25th to Oct. 10th inclueive, from all points in Canada to Los Augeles, San EFrancisco, Portiand, Salt Lake City, Beattle, Victoria, Yanâ€" couver, Neleon, Roseland, and many other pointe. _ Through | tourist «leepers . and free reclining chair ears from Chicago. Variable routes. Liberal stop overs. For full information as to rates, routes and literature, write or call on B. H. Bennett, Generai Agent, 46 Youge Street, Toronto. ‘"‘You want to get marri fifteen dollars a week. Wh: vou thinking of?‘ ‘"‘The gir r "If he is immoderately fond of sweets he is of a nervous disposiâ€" tion and will nag. If it be cheese and roast he prefers, he will be muscular and placid. If he be a breadâ€"eater at times, he is fond of the country. If a lover of fine old wine, he bas the soul of a landed proprietor. h a "The best test of your future husâ€" band is to watch him at the moment of dessert. SBee how he handles a peach. Does he take it distractedâ€" ly or like a man in a hurry ! Does he swallow it hastily? Then you say to yourself, ‘He is not the husâ€" band for me.‘ But « he takes it slowly, tenderly, like a connoisseur who appreciates what he eats ; if he does not swallow it at once but peels it with the air of an artist and treats it with devotion, then don‘t hesitate to marry him as quick as you can.‘‘ Low Colonist Rates to Pacific Coast When the Xâ€"rays were first adopted for making radiographs for surgical purï¬oses they would show oply such things as the bones, and bullets or other foreign objects in the body. Now pictures of this sort are being made of nearly every organ of the body. Salts of silver, lead, bismuth or other metâ€" als which are opaque to the rays are fed to the lu{)}eci OF injected into his cirer‘ation and this causes the various organs to cast shadows that are recorded on the Xâ€"ray plates. ‘‘Now, Johnny,‘"‘ said the teachâ€" er. ‘"If you had six pennies and Charlie had four and you took his and put them to yours, what would that make!‘ ‘‘Trouble." Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. How Xâ€"Rays Have Improved. Her Reason. /â€"â€"- '“Or. '.l‘k‘f. t h:-“-lm our 'o.": &: loal Process. Bimple, rh.nll&mul a-wnlynocl&crmmm‘. ohrnl‘ Process ly you with tures to color, which {ou nunnu us. y by the or month. Ne canvassing Of pgâ€"our trarâ€" i« and the D is nu-mlluonvcrk. nm'usd= unlimit© 99" *"" _ic> us and we wili For and ett, nto. â€"â€" _ FOR SALE Pulleys & Shafting Na . fas \DC mre. Need Sugar Fredâ€"I should say as much. He won‘t even tell a story at his own expense. ' Too maaneople spend toâ€"day what they hope to earn toâ€"morrow. The Heart of a Piano is the Action, Insist on the "OTTO HIGEL" F‘redâ€"Brown is an awful tightâ€" Pure sugar is necessary to the health of young or old. Good homeâ€"made candy, sugar on porridge, fruit or breadâ€"not only pleases but stimulates. Buy St. Lawrence Extra Granuleated in Lg! and be sure of the finest Bags 100 Ibs., 25 Tbs., 20 lbs., &":on: s’lL., a lfl. FULL WEIGHT GUARANTEED. Sold by besi deaters. 1 St. Lawrence Sugar Refineries, Limited, â€" Montreal. n:.lhnhhn.. uu-h.sl- P-mu,w:l- ='1 llhug.:{um-l ure cane sugar, untouched by hand rom factory to your kitchen. You will find retiof in Zamâ€"Buk ! Piano Action > â€"* § dt A NOTES AND COMME trai Besides, German 800,000 men with th in the reserves < men, and when th the law of 1913 ha ed, that is, in 1937 $ully trained rese The building up 0 has been the work persistently and ried forward year Kxod principle 0 principle is that : pl‘i\‘ltel with the about 1 per cent Thus the law of aMbout 661,000 pri tablishme have been the militar 1913 is supposea io military results © Purkish war, «ince fhed by the interâ€"B the weakening of 4 and the methodica Russian army, C and takes up the The chancellor, ex gaid : ‘‘The sacrific God has assigned people a piace in ND M role in history which d tinual sacrihces, Our J maike hearl Substitute for #i mes finaly is in ©V and the «igned lamp wi so plact evie d S TD mediat« is mad hC A VC Jves » has a indust turing ill th M Dr. Hert rie t 1« In at A n 11 n n L€ st 0 with us bear them RIVAL To TH nt ct, Germany w approximately | on her French.] e or less. Thi ented ssigned W D U n B uns in e =s the Davlig she 0 . O(K L )KAN U @41 Y m i ne aini m me