FOR SiLe uchts. Mist ake _ Havored and fectly cooked make dtlido. sandwiches, nety coln.,..?" TION SUNDAY EATS L TELL YOU io everywhere. ANZEOU8. E'Yv cax, Watery o S-‘fl*-‘* Book of the Eys en Complain just as feelâ€" General HEN DE R3ON ty astonished borne S: FÂ¥OR SALE sad than & * feelingly literature W esnt vund LUMES. KTG, mal,. cured withe treatment. Writy Beliman ua UY OR SELL or l-’.ll' Far Brampton, or _ O â€"AVE Tows 1% onery and Boog h. Price only Wilson Puu.* Adelaide 'm ache â€"easy to in Extractor, ~four â€" houre. ises the only ire geo D moths Clukke oked CGod F iC D s the diâ€" ily good rom this l1 make 1 ou â€"â€" n t you with a mu’th.†L Me hum? it ave â€" t« B K E ED LN q ,220,000, ig at an and Serâ€" Belgium se of the cs, railâ€" soldiers her naâ€" : volunâ€" ‘ive onme bL 11 1t d «ulte LINTE t they receive nt ke Ds ut _ i6 forthâ€" rmOuUs t rance unteer . franc ild unâ€" next ldiers, #v are N« 1020.: ike all »ble her pANIC RULES IN AUSIRIA Viennad "CREAT SECRET" 1O BE USED Censor The Cool Tenacity of John Bull A despatch from London says:|is J€aMMGO, * 7/ s io Aust: The evacuation of Cracow, on the|oolnmlnd of the illfated Aust: western border of Galicia, has comâ€" | forces. & menced, accordiog to a despatch to| ° An interesting rumor, credite« Reuter‘s Telegram Company from | St. Petersburg, is that the Gerr St. Petersburg, and consternation | Crown Prince ,F"’d‘.mk will prevails in that town. Despatches| has been a.wombd. commander from Vienna, by way of Rome, as chiet of the Kaiser‘s forces ag* sert that the advanc@ guard of the | Russia in the East Prussian A Russian centre has started a march The Crown Pringe was suppo$® in the direction of Berlin, invading | have been in command of the C ; and immediately threatening ?sn centre in the campaign reslau, the most important city in | Frances Sv;..; eastern .,:ex-mflï¬.y, and y1ao A BHQ Pm;'oburg despatch fsta miles in from the frontier. _ |that ‘"’ï¬"‘ trobps are old The Vienna despatches also deâ€" jto fight the Russians, deserting clare that it is officially admitted in | whole battalions and. Qeung the Austrian capital that 125,000 Russian territory. 'Sumlar rep men, oneâ€"ipurth of the entice e afioat concerning the: civ operatiing in the CGa\wfan campaighn, g w have been killed, vounded or taken | are said to | F ed to"t g{::orer by the victorious Russians. | arms when ordered to the d The Archduko Francis Frederick, it of the city. Resume March Toward Ber.in H RIssIANS ARRIVING. HORSES ACCEPTED. 1 Despatch Intimates That Terrific Surprise Awaits the Germans icwan Notifled by the Imâ€"« perlal Authorities, patch from Regina says: It i announced by the Provinâ€" wernment that Saskatcheâ€" Conflrmation That They : Landed in France. ich from New York says: hips arrived from Southâ€" n Tuesday, the first ones here since the war began ind three left New York »an ports. The Red Star nd hrn\lg}l'; 150 Amr“‘ ding several who corroâ€" be persistent reports that troops have been passing England on their way to llied forces on the Contiâ€" o Royal Mail steamship ming by way of the West brought nine Americans war zone who had been unâ€" cach here otherwise than by r of fiiteen hundred horses accepted by the Governâ€" (Gireat Britain. This proâ€" : made some time ago by tchewan Government, but tance by the Imperial auâ€" was received only on T« 1, dra M \ from London says: Times‘ malitary corresâ€" ussing the attrition of [orces, SaYys : “Weahl-ll on men the first year, the second year, and i the third year. We very respectable army ence, and it is really s of the Germans to e when it will take us time to get into out : old Paul Kruger made e mistake as the Kaiser He was told by all the one that our army was Faced By a Famine, and Prices Are Steadily Rising rning by Premier Scott in Austria. The ind bankrupt Emâ€" luctantly at the v, is in a state of e and fear. Her rted at first, and d let you know the things in the preâ€" r situations, of our ‘aps I may mention that if the Gerâ€" ng in the progress ze guns, towed here _ we have a surprise ig for them here, o elose grips. . this, we are all m London says: n4 of Tho mn in, who has lately raws a gloomy picâ€" ,â€"Hungarian Em : to be defended to (ieneral Gallieni‘s ition has created a ston. l‘ )" comes hting, the few surâ€" oute xing in each different races ‘mpire has had is no esprit de Many of the o trains at the ct, and scores officers to terâ€" into obedience. sian avalanche re are prepared burning about mdon says: A ndent in Paris censored mesâ€" are beaten by the Rus drives on, Bosnia is in open revolt and Triest paralyzed by fear of an attack from the sea. Austria is bankrupt ; trade is at a standstill, and thousands of business men are ruined by a war which they hate. ‘"‘While the harvest remains unâ€" gathered, Vienna is menaced by a famine, and prices are steadily risâ€" ing. In resentment the popular anger has turned against the forâ€" eigner, and Serbs have been torn to pieces in the streets. Two Russian newspaper â€" correspondents . were shot by the police, and five journalâ€" ists are in prison. "In utter fear the Government has begun to fortify Vienna, and arrangements have been made to flood large tracts of lowâ€"lying land around the city. Riots have occurâ€" red in many towns, and to the terâ€" rors of the Cossack and the Serb will be added those of revolution and famine." asking ourselves how far their exâ€" traordinarily nice sense of humanity will prevent the French from qx_glg- ing use of their great secret. This is a war to kill and to be decided by the number killed. And then, Lord Kitchener is an unknowmfacâ€" tor. We know a great deal about it now. f "(General (Gallieni is an army in himself, an administrator of estabâ€" lished reputation and a fighter by temperamentâ€"one of the dangerâ€" ous, intellectual type. I. met him on his round of the fortifications. He is never away from the vital points, but at the same time his inâ€" ternal administration of the town has got into working order with miraculous rapidity. He passed, with a salute? in a cloud of dust, tho car in front guarded by a black orderly." only 70,000 strong, and when we produced 400,000 he was positively pained, and was quite disappointed at being so misled, (In the same way we began this war with a little army 170,000 strong, but we a_nd America have a talent for turning out immense forces when we are put to it, and our present job is to work day and night for some years in orâ€" der to prevent all the States with a penchant for hegemony from chalâ€" lenging us in the future. Meanâ€" while we aro getting on very well. Trade is reviving after the first shock." "ANGLOâ€"A MERICANS" EAGER. Will Be Offered as a Unit to the British Government. A despatch from London says : Almost the total number of 1,200 needed to fill the ranks of the "Anâ€" gloâ€"American Contingent‘‘ organiâ€" zation, started less than a fox:t- night ago, are enrolled with the probabilities of twice this number. The men eventually will be offered as a unit to the British Government. Although by far the largest numâ€" ber of these recruits are citizens of the United States, there are repreâ€" sentatives {from _ several South American countries and several scores of nonâ€"British subjects from Canada. The scheme was started by Lord Lyveden, who made an iorigina.l appeal to Angloâ€"Americans or Britishers. A despatch from Bordeaux says : The following prediction by an Inâ€" dian magi, which was published in the Godhpor Almanac last January, completes the eycle forecasting the downf{all of Germany : "In the month of July, 1914, all Europe will be overwhelmed by a war between the great powors, and terrible disasters will result. But in November a great Emperor will \Ioso his crown and hostilities will cease."‘ is learned, has jorces. An interesting rumor, credited in St. Petersburg, is that the German Crown Prince Frederick William has been appointed commanderâ€"inâ€" chief of the Kaiser‘s forces against Russia in the East Prussian field. The Crown Pringe was supposed to have been in command of the Gerâ€" o on centre in the campaign in France. A Bt. Petersburg despatch states that Hungarian troops &re refusing to fight the Russians, deserting in whole battalions and fleeing into Russian territory. | Similar reports S CIC? . eReaighe on + s Fa aa c css h c Arcnth: ds are afloat concerning the: civilianm rifle chubs at Cracow, some of which are said to have refused to "takeâ€"up 1 & uin curt ogk 10 0 TBR Lose His Crown in November. , has been personally in of the illâ€"fated Austrian FaDM ERINS MMEFN ISif NEWS BY MAIL FROM <IRE LAXD‘8S SHORES. In Dublin many Jews have been mistaken for Germans and attacked. Happenings in the Emerald Isle of Iuterest to Irishâ€" Mr. John Redmond Phas stated | that the British Government inâ€"| tends to intrust the"defence of Ireâ€"| land to the Irish Volunteers. | The death has occurred of Capt. William @ibson, D.L., J.P., at his residence, (Glen Druid, Shankill, County Dublin, in his 79th year. The war has not so far caused much _ unemployment in Dublin. Some dockers have been reduced t(]) temporary work, but this is about all. Miss Tunnions, for 21 years a member of the Mulligar Post Office staff, has been promoted to the posiâ€" tion of postmistress at Cootchill. A soldier, belonging to the 3rd battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles, while doing duty on Killing Hill, accidentally slipped and broke his leg. The resignation of his position as Chief Commissioner of Dublin Meâ€" tropolitan Police by Sir John Ross of Bladensburg, has been finally accepted. John Watters, aged 23, of Belfast, was fatally injured when he fell off a pantry to the ground 20 feet beâ€" low, while working on the Queen‘s Island. At a meeting of the Athy Board of Guardians a resolution was passâ€" ed that the positions rendered vaâ€" cant by the war be kept open until peace is restored. Anexcise officer named G. A. Young, of Salop, who had been staâ€" tioned in Armagh for some time, has lost his life as the result of a motor accident. Nearly twenty men have left Rosâ€" common as volunteers for the front. They are all exâ€"army men. Some of them are pensioners under 45 years of age. f i. Two threeâ€"storey houses in Durlâ€" ing Street, Enniskillen, were desâ€" troyed by fire and it took both the brigade and the militia to check the spread of the flames. & Mr. Skeffington of the Post Office, Longftord, was called upon by the military authorities to join the staff at Limerick as telegraphist, whence he will proceed to the front. _ L During a thunderstorm in the New Ross district, four head of catâ€" tle, the property of Miss Bridget Murphy, Ballyanne, one cowâ€" and four sheep were killed by lightning. Killucan Show owing to the Euroâ€" pean crisis has been abandoned. The committee of the Boyle Agriculâ€" tural Show have decided to adjourn it to a future date, owing to the The death has occurred at his residence, Monaghan, of Colorâ€"Serâ€" geant John Barbour, who is beâ€" lieved to have been the last of the Crimean veterans in that part of Ulster. A poster has been issued by Sir Cln.rY:s Cameron, Medical Health Officer of Dublin, warning the pubâ€" lic regarding eating cockles and mussles before they are thoroughly [Deited. hss war Actingâ€"Sergeant Brian Taylor, a wellâ€"known member of the R.1.0. in Belfast, was knocked down and killed while doing patrol duty on the Great Northern Railway line at Windsor. Signalling from the coast, near. Dublin, to his children, who were: bathing, Dr. McDonnell of Dublin was immediately arrested by the military guard. He was released on giving an explanation. The Board of the Royal City of Dublin Hospital has arranged to take in a limited number of ladies as temporary probationers for a short period in order to qualify them in preliminary hospital work. Must Undergo a Further Medical Examination. A despatch from Bordeaux says : President Poincare has signed a deâ€" cree calling all Frenchmen previâ€" ously exempted for military service on the ground of defective health to undergo a further medical examiâ€" Liz & 1 mi s3 ut eamrnnn n o 10 Pete e ols io t * nation. Those found fit will at once be drafted into the army. British Airships Will Cruise Over London. A desnatch from London says: A despatch from London says . The â€" Admiralty announced _ on Tuesday night that one of the Briâ€" tish naval airships would make short cruises over London in the next few days and at night. _ The t Â¥omelA. JaVF sak public are the airship MUST NoT sHOOT AT THEM. ALL FRENCHMEN CALLED. are warned not to shoot at Forty Thousand Troops May Fall| Into Our Hands. Â¥ A despatch from London says : A| Paris despatch to the Daily Chroni-{ cle says: "In the haste of the Gerâ€" mans‘ latest retrogrado movement many regiments of Germans have been cut off and remain in the woodâ€" ed country within the triangle of Senlis, Gonesse and Dammartin. It is believed that they amount in all to about one army corps. They have been cut off from the main body by the allies‘ lines between Compeigne ’a.nd Meux, and their situation is precarious ENCCRPECCPC CY ‘""The remarkable resistance of the ‘ fortress of Maubeuge to the invadâ€" ing Germans is one of the most inâ€" teresting features of the campaign. Because of its stubborn stand it has undoubtedly seriously embarâ€" rassed the Germans in bringing up field guns against Paris and mainâ€" taining their communications. Near Nancy the Kaiser‘s forces have succeeded in making & slight advance, but elsewhere along the centre the allies have made comâ€" pensating gains. Field Marshal Sir John French, commander of the }British forces, reported that the )Germnn-s had been driven back a.ll‘ In.long the line ; that the British hul‘ crossed the River Marne ; that the Germans had suffered severely, and that their men were supposed to be in a very exbausted condition. Wherever the Germans have yielded ground the British and French have been eager to pursgue them, and have followed up relentlessly every advantage. The British cavalry has been especially active in â€" driving back the retreating enemy. HOTEL DE VILLE, LOUVAIN. One of the most beautiful buildings in Europe and centuries old4. was thought to have been destroyed in the destruction of Louvain but 1 \despatches say the Germans preserved it People Fed on Monkeys and Eleâ€" phants as Last Resounrce. Business may suffer and rpriceil go up while the war is in progress,| but we in Canada will probably never know such experiences as those suffered during the siege of Paris by the Germans in 1870â€"71. With the Prussians fast advancâ€" ing on the capital and before Bisâ€" marck had fnally bottled up the city and refused to permit food to be taken within the @gates, there was a scurry to gather provisions from the surrounding country. Bo long as the railroads remained open cattle, hay, grain, mreserved meats, salt, and everything edible was hurried to the capital and stored in public buildings and parke. 1 t Pn it o aet ARMY CORPS ISs CUT OFF. But there was the utmost coniuâ€" sion and cruel waste. On Septemâ€" ber 19 the railways stopped _ runâ€" ning, the fftyâ€"one gates of Paris were closed, the railway stations bread and reckoned at the end PARIS IN 1870 SIEGE. of the siege «21 skirmishes by Prussian bullets. i The attention of the butchers was soon drawn to the Jardine de Plantes and its cages of strange animals. â€"Presently exotic meats ‘began to appear in the market. Those who could afford it ate anteâ€" lope steak at ©$8.60 a pound and | found it not so good as stewed rabâ€" | bit. Mule meat was found delicious, \much better than the best beetâ€" |\ steak. Elephant‘s trunk was a deâ€" licacy at 88 a pound. Those who could afford it regaled themselves with yak, ostrich, kangaroo and bear meat, at prices in proportion to their scarcity. More often than |not, they didn‘t like the strange meats at the price paid. that no less than 3,000 of the little ones had passed away for lack of nutrimentâ€"about the same number as the soldiers killed in the various skirmishes by Prussian bullets. . Ohristmas, when it came, was & sad holiday. Nothing was plentiâ€" ful in the markets but champagne &nd English mustard, a mixture which the Parisian taste did not approve The saddest thing was that everyâ€" one‘s appetite increased as the visâ€" ible supply of food decreased. Thinking constantly of eating made folks hungry, and when Christmas had gone and New Year‘s Day hove into view there were serious appréâ€" hensions of famine. Then, toolï¬te. the reckless waste of two months before tears. _â€"To add to the misery the winter of 1871 was one of tbitter eold.. . â€". Terrible Work of the 75â€"Millimetre French Gun. A despatch from Paris says : One woman in Paris, Mme. Bonnard, has received news that all of her nine sons have been wounded. She is a widow. A French sousâ€"officer just back from the front, after praising the terrible work of the "brave little cigars,‘‘ meaning the "5â€"millimetre French gun, u.id: "‘The Germans fight without enthuâ€" sinsm, but they fight well. One would say they were automatons. They never stop to rescue & comâ€" rade, nor do they pay any attention to their dead or wounded, but march on over heaps of slain comâ€" rades, victime of our quickâ€"frers. They are like ants, innumerable ants.‘" This man praised the scoutâ€" ing work of the German aeroplanes, saying that the moment a regiment change6 its position it is certain to receive a visit from a German aeroâ€" plane and shortly after this the ‘[German fire changes its direction l&nd shells begin to fall thick on the new position. 300,000 Britons Havre Joined the British Army. A despatch from â€" Washington says: The British Embaesy received from the London Foreign Office the following despatch: ‘‘There is inâ€" creasing enthusiasm for recruiting in Great Britain. Three hundred thousand men have joined the reguâ€" lar army since the war began. The eagerness to enlist has. grown markedly since British troops have actually been engaged with the enemy."‘ XINE SoONS WOUNDED. was bemoaned with bitter EAGER TO ENLIST. It DISCORDâ€"AMONG GERMANS The Soql_g,!,st Democrats Begin to . Deplore the ... Terrible Loss in the War A despatch from Copenhagen says: ‘The first sign of discord | among the German people is revealâ€" ed in Berlin newspapers . which reached here on Tuesday. The Soâ€" cial Democrats are beginning to deâ€" plore the terrible German losses. All of the citizen parties except the Socialists have formally notified Admiral yon‘ Tirpitz, Minister of Marine, that they will continue to support the Government financially with the programme of 1915â€"18, but the Sbcialist ‘newspapers, which have loyally supported the Governâ€" ment heretofore, complain bitterly that they were not consulted with ]the other parties and while they |are not «@ctually refusing to supâ€" | port the naval programme for ships A despatch from Paris says: ‘‘On the left wing the British and French troops have crossed the Marne be tween â€" La â€" Ferteâ€"Sousâ€"Jouarre, Charly and Chateau Thierry, purâ€" suing the enemy, who is in retreat. During the course of this advance the British forces took a number of prisoners and captured mitrailâ€" leuses. Pushed Back Over 37 Milés "During the four days‘ battle the: allied armies in that section of the theatre of operations gained more than sixty kilometres (about 37 miles). Between Ohateau Thierry and Vitry leâ€"Francois the Prussian guard has been thrown back. The action continues with great severity in the region between Camp de Mailly and Virtyâ€"leâ€"Francois. _In the centre and on the right wing the centre and on the right wing there is no change in the situation. On the Ornain and in the Argonne district the two opposing forces are maintaining their positions. â€"In the region of Nancy the enemy has made slight progress on the Chateau How Recruiting Is Being Done In Great Britain. A despatch from London says : An effective recruiting bill is being shown in iblack and red, with the following lines under crossed Union flags : "We‘ve got to beat Germany, "Because her arrogant brutality is a menace to civilization, "Because she breaks treatics, "PBecause she murders nonâ€"comâ€" batants, ‘"Because she destroys b« cities, "‘Because she sows mincs erush Great Britain ‘""Men of England, Tyranny. valn. iE C Come © "Do you wish to share the fate of Belgium ! $ 7 Bill Introduced Providing a Fine orl Imprisonment. A despetch from London says : Attorneyâ€"General Bir J. A. Simon introduced & bill in the House of Comtons on Tuesday which would considerably enlarge the ecope of! existing provisions for the suppresâ€" sion of trade with the enemy. It would even prohibit the making of any payment to an alien anemy itbough the obligation arose out of a contract made prior to the out break of the war. The bill provides for the imposition of a fine of $2,500 or imprisonment for twelve months on a summary oogviqï¬on, and seven ye..;s"' pend servitude on conviction after indictment. Abandonment Of Campaign A despatch from London says: A private message from Berlin passed by the German censor says :â€" "‘The German papers evidently have been too optimistic as to the situation in western battlefields where overwhelming victories have been claimed. The enthusiasm of the newspapers is not found at the German headquarters. Undoubtedâ€" ly the German army has its hardest work to do. The great advance of the Germans into France has not ended the eul AZAECAHDY "Because her avowed object is to Germans Defeated in Africa A despatch from London says : The official press bureau mnounoel‘ that British troops have met and defeated a German force of 400 which entered Nyasaland, British Central Africa. m:ng,om.n, lost seven o%o:n killed €wo woundâ€" ed, two field and two machine guns. The loss among the rank and file was m The British loss among the whites was four killed and sevâ€" eral wounded ; loss & the rank and file fot A Britich force advanged the Gerâ€" mans, who, howevér, gyaded them, "REMEMBER LOUVAIXN." PAYXMEXTS TO ENEMY. not, enlist now."‘ she fires on the szored war, for the fact must is Democracy versus destroys beautiful TORONTO remember Lou in the to replace those which have been lost, there is an apparent feeling that a hitch has occurred, and that continued military losses may widen the breach. Berlin newspapers received here say that the Zeppelin airships are working under great dificulties, The aeronautic engineers say it is necessary for the airships to fily at a great altitude in order to escape the enemy‘s guns. For this reason ao curate bombâ€"throwing is very diffiâ€" cult.© The bombâ€"throwers are enâ€" cased in armored steel baskets, which are suspended hundreds of feet below the cars of the Zeppelins. This entails great risk for tho ongiâ€" neers, one of whom has already been shot, although the ship was not damaged. Salins road. On the otherâ€" hand, we have gained ground in the forest of Champenoux. The losses have been considerable on both sides, but the morale and health of our troops reâ€" main excellent. There is no conâ€" firmation of the news published in German newspapers of the fall of Maubeuge The British Statement. A despatch from London says: The oflicial press bureau has given out the following statement :â€" "The battle continued yesterday. The enemy has been driven back all along the line. Bir John French reâ€" ports that our first corps has buried 200 German dead and taken 12 Maxim guns. Some prisoners also were taken. Our second army corps has captured 352 prisoners and a battery. _ The Germans suffered heavily. Their men are stated to be very exhausted. _ British troops have crossed the Marne in a northâ€" erly direction." A despatch from Ottawa says: The Earl of Derby has offered has private grounds for mobilization of the Canadian expeditionary force in England. It is understood they will be attached to one of the new armies now being raised by Lord Place Has Been Found for the Canâ€" adian Expeditionary Force, Kitchener Monday, October 12. Will Be Proâ€" claimed. Ottawa, Bept. 9.â€"Monday, Octo ber 12, will be proclaimed as Thankegiving Day in the next issue of The Canadian Gazette. ERETRET T TTTTCT en ET TTIETT P General Gallienne of the Frencla Army, who has been appointed Gov» ernor of Paris. MILITARY GOVERNOR OF P‘ARIB. not be overlooked that the allies are still in possession of armies fully fit for battle. It cannot be denied that the Germans, in their eageorâ€" ness, have brought hbeavy losses upon themselves that ought to have been avoided.‘‘ x This message is taken to mean that the world is being prepared tor the announcement of the retreat, of the Germans from France. Eviâ€" dently the Germans do not feel quite safe on account of the rapid and probably too extended advance to the west Karonga (on the northâ€"west shore of Take Nyassa, at the terminus of the Stevenson Road), which was defended by one officer, fifty African Rifles, the police and eight civilians. After three hours‘ resistance, a column @rrived from the British force and drove the enemy off. Laâ€" ter, the main British force came up, and after a day‘s fighting, in 'iidl the Germans fought with determination, and had to be by repeated _ boyonet s, drove the enemy toward e Rivez, The British were orhludï¬d to continue the put: wanlh J WILL JOINX NEW ARYMY. THANKSGIVING DAY.