* 46 wC | #p 0 d $ 48 §= C; md C th 4 J z.i C ‘¢‘ < l * $ t ** «@ a «**/ ® e w 7 ‘ & & 4+ If I thus far seem radical in exâ€" pression and harsh, let me deal forthwith with the sixtyâ€"five mute, meek millions of the Fatherland who craved for peace. For years they have been excoriated by the war party as a craven, corroding influence, destitute of patriotism, ignorant of "the real foundations of German greatness,‘‘ an element which was retarding the Fatherland mira‘ls and colonels and naval capâ€" tains, whose very names are a proâ€" stamme and a menaceâ€"Bernhardi, Breusing, Reventlow, Frobenius, Ktim of the Army League, Von Koester of the Navy League, and hundreds less notorious. earth, the props of divine right &n;i the monopolists of power and posiâ€" tion in modern Germany. And last, but noisiest, are the armâ€"chair warriors of the Fatherâ€" land, the retired generals and adâ€" in the feverish nights preceding the actual launching of the Kaiser‘s thunderbolts on the east and west. In the war party, too, are the Prussian junker in his thousands. the agrarian land barons of Pomer® ania,. East Elbia, Brandenburg and Nilesiaâ€"the Germans who look upon themselves as the salt of the Teuton Canailan Postum Cereal Co., Windsor, Ont. Following idolatrously in the trail of the political professors are the underâ€"graduates of the ‘varsities, or at least that overwhelming majority affiliated with the corps. YVerbinâ€" dungen, or Burschenschafterm the equivalent of our own fraternities. It was these youthful spirits who have had the sacredness of war drilled into their souls in classroom, who _ ran _ shrieking ‘‘Krieg! Krieg‘‘ through Unter den Linden Post Toasties make a mighty satisfactory dish at any time. This food comes in sealed packages, â€" always fregh, crisp and sweet ; and ready to serve at a moment‘s noâ€" tice. Choice white Indian Corn, rolled into thin flakes, and toasted to a rich golden brownâ€"delicious ! tessional element at the great uniâ€" versities, the Delbruecks, the Wagâ€" ners, the Schmollers, the Harnacks, and all the other superâ€"patriots who tread in the path blazed by Treitschke, the prophet of this, Germany‘s "final reckoning‘‘ with Eurone. for breakfast, lunch or supâ€" The war party, therefore, includes German upperdom. It embraces the intel lectuals of the empireâ€"the proâ€" too often of his martial ambitions, has set the world too frequently by the ears with his blatant apotheoses of Mars and Neptune, to merit the diadem of a peace prince. Prince Party‘s Archpriest. William II.‘s ebullient son and heir, the Crown Prince, is an avowâ€" ed adherent, almost the archâ€"priest of the war party. His fellowâ€"memâ€" bers are, first of all, the corps of officers of the German army, a body of 40,000 or 50,000 spurred and epauletted martinets, who have neâ€" ver ceased to pray for war. These gentlemen of _ the _ gooseâ€"step, through their paramount position in Gierman society, have infected the entire soâ€"called upper class with their belligerent views. been so in Prussianized, militarized Germany, writes Frederick William Wile in the Outlook. No list of members of the war tty has ever been published. It no official existence. But who compose it and what it has stood for wre an open book. The Kaiser would deny the most vehemently of all that he is affiliâ€" ated with the Kriegspartei. Unâ€" fortunately, his speeches are against him. He has talked too much and There are sixtyâ€"six million Gerâ€" mans. Sixtyâ€"five million of them did not want war. The othcr milâ€" lion is the war party. That its inâ€" fluence immeasurably outruns its numerical strength is evident from the fact that they not only wanted war, but got it. The voice of the sixtyâ€"five million was as one crying in the wilderness. It has always Post Toasties Kaiser Himselft at HKead of Smail War Party Which Overbore‘ the Nation. 6,000,000 OF THEM WERE OoPâ€" POosED To IT. Here‘s GrRMAX PEOPLE AXD WA The Other Sixtyâ€"Gve, VYarsity Men Next. â€"â€"sold by grocers. Happy Hunch=â€" Intercourse with persons of deâ€" cided virtue and excellence is of great importance in the formation of a good character. "It was a ghastly sight. Upon the faces of many were no exprosâ€" sions of fright or horror. Except for the glaze of death in the eyes, one would not have guessed that their souls had passed the boundary of eternity. Neyer have I seen anyâ€" thing so terrible as that erect, giâ€" lent company of still figures in the chill dawn with the quj“ of a fmlh early day all about." ‘Since the angel of death passed above the camp of the Philistines I am sure nothing like it has been seen. It was as though some blight from heaven had descended upon the German ranks, smothering them in an embrace of death. ‘"‘Dawn was just breaking as I came upon the trenches where the fighting had been bloodiest, the grey light rested upon a ghostâ€"like silent company. Clusters of corpses with. rigid arms and legs protruding filled the bottom. Along the rim, with rifle to shoulder and head bent along the barrel, stood a line of dead. They had died as they stood upon the firing line and their bodies were held in an upright position by the bodies behind and around them. "I saw trenches filled with Gerâ€" man dead, just as they had been léft by the French guns. It was not so much the mere sight of death that was so appalling; it was the outlandish postures of these rigid corpses and the look upon the faces. Line of Dead Germans Stood With Rifles to Shoulders. "‘It was as though some blight from heaven had descended upon the German ranks, smothering them in an embrace of death,‘""‘ declared a member of the American branch of the Red Cross, who returned to Paris after a visit to the battlefield near Meaux. He had gone with an ambulance to collect wounded solâ€" diers, and thus describes the scenes which met his eyes : TRENCHES FILLED WITH DEAD I saw flaxenâ€"haired _ Prussian maidens tossing roses to guards and Uhlans as they started for the front, from which thousands of them will never return. But everywhere and always I found bearing down the spirit of the German, though only infrequently expressed by word of mouth, the sentiment that‘ the war was unnecessary, cruel, uninâ€" telligible, that it ought not to have been. I make bold to proclaim that the Germans went into this bloody busiâ€" ness with a heavy heart. I heard their reservists singing "Die Wacht am Rhein‘‘ as they began their march to death and glory from city, town and hamlet. These were the sentiments of the German public up to the very hour war descended upon their inoffenâ€" sive heads. They cared not a fig for Rarajevo beyond the wave of huâ€" man sympathy and horror which wanton murder always produces. They believed, many of them, that the question as to who should preâ€" vail in Europeâ€"German or Slavyâ€" must some day find a sanguinary solution ; but they did not look upon the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his consort as the occasion for forcing the solution. Brought On By Austria. It was only when the Austrian deâ€" mands on _ bloodâ€"stained Servia brought â€"Armageddon measurably nearâ€"made it, as we have seen, in fact, inevitableâ€"that German pubâ€" lic opinion, shrewdly molded, sudâ€" denly, reluctantly, came to the conâ€" clusion that the conflict between German and Slay might as well be fought out in this year of grace. _ _ These mute and meek millions, I say, did not want war. They wantâ€" ed peace and a continuance of the bounding prosperity which had brought Germany to the pinnacle of economic might. They wanted their army and navy to be that which the Kaiser had grandiloquently boasted they wore, and only thatâ€"bulwarks of peace, not engines of war. in the march to her predestined goal, attainable only by the employâ€" ment of siege guns and dreadâ€" noughts. (months ago by the Kaiser. A despatch prlnt;d by the inndon News toâ€"day says that the regiment under the Crown Prince Frederick William, declining ito surrender, were annihilated by British and French near Paris. ine picture snows the IMPERIAL GUARDS REPORTED ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO crack German regiment when on review a few | All Countries Are Paying Tribute s to Great Britain, ‘| The Chancellor of the British Exâ€" f chequer recognizes that money is l'the essential thing in carrying on |war successfully. The wealth of [ Great Britain is in the aggregate | prodigious. â€"It is in fact practically f inexhaustible, and a]though the cost |of the present war will make great‘ |holes in it, and capital will be much | in demand to replace present losses, yet its earnings, even under such circumstances as the present, are so large that there will continue to be a large surplus over, available ‘for investment in Canada. It must be remembered that industry and 'pmduction, which will be mostly afâ€" fected by the present war, do not represent â€" the total investment power of a country like.Great Briâ€" jtain. â€" An immense amount of |Great Britain‘s wealth is â€" among classes who have inherited it, who live on the proceeds of their investâ€" ments and steadily add to them, and who are in many ways unaffected by 'the fluctuations ot. igx:luyw production, or but 1 ‘ted. | Tbesebclum are. d:ndlylflodg \ most higher fu.dbp . F highorgost.ol‘__ 'ngg‘oneus;.i s back on this by hsisï¬ng\tpon & g?x:har return J:y- their invest ments, which <can obtain in | Canada. All countries are paying tribute to Great Britain in gold or inpmduceforthohngommtboy c have borrowed from her. Minard‘s Liniment for ur everywhere. 1 hsn id I“llJ TT the prestige of the present dual monarchy, outsiders have been lookâ€" ing for the dissolution of the emâ€" pire with the death of the aged Franz Josef. They have argued that a nation made up of so many different races, each antagonistic to the other, could not endure. When the war ends we. shall all be in better position to prophesy as to the future of Austria. ’ If the Balkan Slavs were to be included in the empire of Austria, or if Austria could be a triple inâ€" stead of a dual monarchy of Gerâ€" mans, Hungarians and Slays, it would dominate the Balkans and at the same time would be a barier against Russian Slavys. Undoubtedâ€" ly in such a contingency Austria would in time be dominated by its Slavy population. While it has been the ambition of Austria to make itself a great Slay power, without surrendering any of 9 OaAp ow w20 & 04 t Only 20 Per Cent, of Its Population Is German. Time wasâ€"before the war that it had with Prussia in 1866â€"when Ausâ€" tria was recognized as the leading German nation. The unification of (Germany, with the King of Prusâ€" sia as German Emperor and with Austria outside the confederation, changed the aspect completely, Austria has expanded since its sevâ€" erance from Germany, and the exâ€" pansion has been away from Gerâ€" manic ideals and purposes. Toâ€"day only twenty per cent. of its populaâ€" tion is of German origin, while the Slays, which include Czechs, Serbs, Poles, Croats, etc., have fifty per cent. of the population. The Mag-‘ yars, of Hungary, are almost as numerous as the Germans, constiâ€" tuting eighteen per cent., while six per cent. are Rumanians and the same proportion Turks, Hebrews, Bulgarians and miscellaneous. Baby‘s Own Tablets are the best medicine for little ones. They are guaranteed by a government anaâ€" lyst to be absolutely safe and never fail to cure constipation, coli¢, colds and simple fevers by regulatâ€" ing the bowels. Concerning them Mrs. 8. Shannon, Urney, N.S8., writes: "I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my two children and think they are just what little ones need. I would not be without them.‘‘ The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25. cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘ THE BEST MEDICINE FOR LITILE ONES AUSTRILA AND ITS PEOPLES. PRODIGIOUS WEALTH. ‘"‘Boy," called out Mrs. Clar somewhat sharply from awbove, your feet clean ?‘ ‘‘Yes‘h,"" was the pfompt. reply, as he continued climbing the stairs, "it‘s only me shoes that‘s dirty .‘ His Feet WcroVClvoan. Billy, the grocer‘s boy, was lumâ€" bering up the kitchen â€"stairs at Mrs. Clarke‘s, with his arors filled with parcéels. Â¥ r<sik4 It sounds rather uninviting, but it worked well in practice, the nicotine acting as a coarse kind of antisepâ€" tic. And it had this one great adâ€" vantage in the eyes of poor, paâ€" tient, suffering Tommy Atkins ; he was able later on to dry and smoke the tobacco. Of couran, the wounded man in one of these establishments presents a very different spectacle from what he does when the stretcherâ€"bearers first bring him in to the advanced fieldâ€"hospital in rear of the fighting line. In the one case he is surâ€" rounded by every comfort; in the other he is dazed, sick, and helpâ€" less. He may have been given first aid, or he may have not. It all deâ€" pends. ‘ In any case, it will be of a very roughâ€"andâ€"ready : description. _ In the British Army, during the last Boer War, the favorite method of improvising a field dressing was to first clap a handful of shag tobacco over the wound in order to check the bleeding, and then bind it up with the tape of a puttee. Sooner or later, however, he is sent down the line of communication to the base hospital, there to reâ€" cover or die, as fate, and the naâ€" ture of his wounds, may direct. If permanently disabled, he is invaâ€" lided home. A wounded man‘s stay in the adâ€" vanced fieldâ€"hospital is usually reckoned by hours only, while ho may remain in the stationary field hospital for two or three days, or a week. It is when a wounded soldier is passed down from the advanced field hospital that he first comes in contact with the nursing sisters. Women are not allowed to serve with the advanced field hospitals, their place there being taken by male orderlies. Four or five or more miles in the rear, out of the enemy‘s fire, are the stationary field hospitals, as they are called, to which the adâ€" vanced field hospitals act as feedâ€" ers. They are much the same in apâ€" pearance as the others, but the operating marquees are larger and more commodious, and the number of bell tents is far greater. _ One fieldâ€"hospital of this descripâ€" tion is usually attached to each briâ€" gade, going forward with it, as the case may be. It consists, as a genâ€" eral rule, of a small central marâ€" quee, constituting a comhined operâ€" ating room and dressing station, with a number of bell tents around it, capable of accommodating fifty to one hundred men. Above each tent floats the Red Cross flag of Geneva. Its nucleus, so to speak, is the advanced fieldâ€"hospital. A modern battle may extend over a front of thirty of forty miles, or even more upon occasion. All along behind this farâ€"flung line, directly in rear of the advanced infantry, and close to the great guns, the advanced fieldâ€"hospitals are to be found. How Wounded Are Cared for in Presentâ€"Day Battles. The proper care of the wounded in war is a comparatively modern innovation, dating from the time of the Crimea, Before that things were left pretty much to chance. First aid was unknown. Those badâ€" ly hurt were often left to die or reâ€" cover as best they might. _ _ ‘ caNn vou sEat THis case? No ordinary liniment will even reâ€" lieve Sciatica. Nothing but the most powerful kind of a remedy can peneâ€" trate through the tissues and finally reach the Sciatic Nerve. â€" You can alâ€" ways depend on tne oldâ€"time "Nerviâ€" line." Nothing made toâ€"day is as good for Sciatica as Nerviline was when first produced, about forty yearsâ€"ago. All this time the same old "Nerviline" has been curing Sciatica, Lumbago, Rheumatism, and is considered to be without an equal in relieving pain or soreness anywhere. " *Nerviline‘ scouldn‘t be made stronger or better," writes James E. Edwards. "The way it cures Sciatica is to nfe simply a miracle. For years 1 suffered frightâ€" fully. I ruined my. stomach with inâ€" ternal dosing. I rubbed in gallons of ollsâ€"and linimentsâ€"none were strong enough. One good rubbing with Nerâ€" viline relieved. I kept on rubbing and shortly was cured. My father cured rheumatism in his right arm and mother cured herself of chronic lum-i bago with Nervi.ine. Our family simâ€" ply swears by Nerviline and we are never without a 50¢. family size botâ€" tle in our home. We find that for exâ€" ternal pain, for coughs, colds, earache, such minor ills it is a veritable family physician." Sciatica Vaniskes Instant!y & K Nerviline Is Used BROKE IN THE WARS. ISSUE #9â€"14, Mris. Clarke, are The farmer lad who stood at gaze Had one ambition clear : ‘"‘Bome day I‘lHâ€"quit this job, I bet, An‘ be an engineer!" The engineer half saw and thought, ‘‘Some time perhaps I‘ll be In luck myself. A little farm Is what looks good to me !" "John,‘"" said the gentleman farmer. ‘‘Yessir." "I must get some of this blooded stock I read about. Remind me to order one of those Holstein horses and one of those Southdown cows." pes : Hepapled :T reiget + reli a s s 99 uis Dear Sirsâ€"While in the country laet eummer ‘I was badly bitten by mosquitâ€" oes, so badly that I thought I would be disfigured for a couple of weeks. I was advised to try your Liniment to allay the irritation, and did «o. The effect wase more than I expected, a few applications odmnleul‘ocnnnc the irritation, and preâ€" venting the Fites from becoming sore. MINARD‘S LINIMENT is alseo a rood mMA ARIZ S diLNIIDINE l6 aleo a article to keep off the mosquitoes. $ Youre truly, lors. The Prince of Wales is a Grenâ€" adier Guardsman, and his brother Prince Albert is with the First Batâ€" tle Fleet. Prince Louis of Battenâ€" berg, the First Sea Lord, has his eldest son in the Navy, while three sons of the Princess Henry of Batâ€" tenberg are also with the colors. Prince Arthur of Connaught and the Queen‘s brothersâ€"the Duke of Teck and Prince Aleander of 'Ibckâ€"] will probably be off to the front beâ€" fore long. Prince Albert of Schlesâ€" wigâ€"Holstein, who has applied for a commission in the British army, has the advantage of havingâ€"been an on-l cer in the German army. Minard‘s Liniment Co.\l:‘llml‘ï¬:; Minard‘s It cannot be said that the Royal Family is not taking its full share in the defence of the Empire, for nearâ€" ly a dozen British Princes are servâ€" ing, or about to serve with the colâ€" Easy to remove lumps by applying Putâ€" nam‘s Corn and Wart Extractor. This purely vegetable remedy acts painlessly and is guaranteed. Incist on "Putnam‘s" only, 25¢. per bottle. Are Your Feet Calloused? _ _As to the Flemings, although they are in a decided minority, they are in a most tenacious peoâ€" ple, extremely conservative, arâ€" dently Catholic, and so devoted to their own language that they have been almost ready to go to war with their Frenchâ€"speaking fellowâ€"citiâ€" zens for the sake of preserving its official place in the Kingdom of Belgium. The war of toâ€"day has obliterated for the time being in Belgium, as it has in Ireland, raâ€" cial differences that recently causâ€" ed mutual hatred. ing and Flemishâ€"speaking Belgium, though the upper classes all speak French, whether they speak Flemâ€" ish or not, and there are Flemishâ€" speaking workingmen in nearly all parts of Belgium, some of whom, even in Brussels, hardly speak French at all. The Walloons, a mere handful, live in the Ardennes highlands, far from the coast, have their own language, and maintain a somewhat suspicious attitude toâ€" wards both the Frenchâ€"speaking Belgians and the Flemings. Racial Differences Are Obliterated When Nation is Threatened. Belgium, which proved so grave & stumbling block to the advance of the Germans, is a land of three peoples â€" the Frenchâ€"speaking naâ€" tives, chiefly of Celtic blood ; the Flemings) or Flamands, a Teutonic people speaking a language that, in its literary form, is nearly one with the written Dutch, and the Walloons, another Celtic people, descended of the Gallic Belgae, whom Caesar declared the bravest of all the Gauls A line drawa from Liege south of Brussels to Calais comes near to marking the boundary between Frenchâ€"speakâ€" the world. A liberal sample of each, with 32â€"page booklet on the care and treatment of the skin and scalp, sent postâ€"free. Address Potter Drug & Cher» Corp., Dept. 12K, Boston, U. 8. A. loss of sleep caused by eczemas, rashes and irritations of the skin and scalp are at once relieved and permanent skin health restored in most cases by warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed by gentle applications of Cuticura Ointment. ‘The itching, burning, suffering and THREE RACES IN BELGIUM . CUTICURA SOAP ANDONTMENT Royal Princes and the War FOR ECZEMAS They All Have It. Liniment Retioves Nouraigla. Blooded Stock. â€" said â€" the gentleman Carterhall, Nia This offer has been gratefully acâ€" cepted by the Minister of Militia, and the chocolate is to be shipped to Valcartier, and from there will be reshipped with the Canadian Commissariat to Europe, The sevâ€" eral hundred members of the staff of William Neilson Limited, have also donated one full day‘s pay to the Canadian Red Cross Fund. 65,000 Chocolate Bars Going to YValcartier, a TDoronto, September 21.â€"William Neilson Limited, Toronto, offered to supply the Government with 65,000 bars of chocolate, for use in whatever manner the Government should choose. Successors to Stanley Mills & Co. ‘‘Yes," assented the quickâ€"witâ€" ted attorney for the defence. "I heard it rattle and so did the court reporter; but he doesn‘t know whether you shook it up and down or sidewise." This is just a sam mers‘ lflwlk:‘h our se mm dE â€"Â¥ How we come to be able to sell this gun at$7.95, will not interest you The main thing; and we are goin,, to use it to get acquainted. This gun retails at $12.00 | â€lmw% mtde!lad-nd steel barrelsâ€"left barre) choke bore {M““"“'m*"'hflw-nhv&hcm Walnut finish, pastolâ€"grip stock, witl e C Cstrperthp ul misad. is sent with order F %",:-*“m-lmhi“. tools, horse goods. bi mere‘ c ] Wirotne io Nusi racics +. "I did answer," was the retort of the injured witness. "I shook my head." $ DOUBLE FSS®" BARREL SHOT Gun STORE PRICE $12â€"9 OUR PRICE ONLY . _ ‘‘Please answer that question," he said. ‘"Why don‘t you answer the question ?" Occasionally in court proceedâ€" ings which some reporter is trying to get into the record some witness will insist on simply shaking his head in answer to questions put to him by the attorney. There was present such a witness at a hearing recently held in the county of L.â€" Again and again the attorney was obliged to repeat the answer for the benefit of the ofâ€" ficial court reporter. Presently the patience of the attorney gave out. THOS. BARKER MODE Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills strengtoen the stomach, improve digestion;â€"strengthâ€" en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood of longâ€"standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. ACCEPTED NEILSOXN‘s GIFT "I felt better at once. Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differâ€" ent physicians had failed to help me. It is for this reason that 1 strongly urge sufferers with stomach or digesâ€" tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills." Halifax, N.8., Dec. 15.â€"When interâ€" viewed at her home at 194 Argyle St., Mrs. Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. "I was always ‘blue‘ and depressed, felt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick headâ€" ache and feared a nervous breakdown. Upon my druggist‘s recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. A Nova Scotia Case of Interest to All Women _ The correspondent also praises his own commissariat â€" arrangements. The familiar Paris omnibuses with the designation boards Madeleineâ€" Bastille, Clickyâ€"Odemon, Trocaderoâ€" Gare de l‘Est, or the delivery vans of the great Paris shops, rumble to the front with immense stocks of meat and provisions. ‘On one poiat, he says, he wishes the French offhiâ€" cers would imitate the English, and that is in their treatment of spies. It is false humanity, he says, not to shoot the spy when he is caught redâ€" handed, since he may begin again on the morrow, and his activity may cost hundreds of lives. Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help to Many People. The special correspondent of the Paris Temps in Belgium, M. Thieâ€" bault Sisson, is greatly impressed by the equipment of the British troops, which he finds highly pracâ€" tical. He remarks that there is no distinction, except by marks inâ€" visible at a few yards‘ distance, beâ€" tween the uniform of the officers and men. 3 He marvels at the method and calm shown in provisioning the troops at the front. The commisâ€" sariat is really the point that apâ€" pears to have made the greatest imâ€" pression upon him after the equipâ€" ment. An interminable line of covâ€" ered carts and lorries follow the army on the march, and the quanâ€" tity and variety of food carried apâ€" pears to him astonishing. There is compressed hay for the animals, | cases of tea, cases of cocoa, cases| of sugar, boxes of tinned meat nnd; vegetables, and immense jam pots a | foot high. When the c&mping] ground is reached everything is readly, and in a few minutes the, men are able to attack a hot meal.| LIKE BRITISKHK EQUIPMXENT. French Have Great Admiration for Puzzled the Lawyer. * [ 95 Irish railway guard (to man smoking a cigar in smoking â€" compartmentâ€" want to smoke in this com: sir, you must either put 1 out or go into the next « Bome people prune i logical trees by cutting relations. ""Pop what do you ing discretion is the | valor ? Druggists or Murine Eye Reme«; C ‘"Generally speaking mean â€" that discretio faster." ‘‘No," answered t one, with a woebegon ring‘s safe enough ; bu lost ma enthusiasm." Granulated Eye OFE «: iss cure to Sun, Dusiand quickly re} i by I yes EycRemedy alcad .4 °* just Eye C t nnda out what the trow ‘‘What‘s up, Jock ! ed. ‘"Hae ve lost the : During a marriage Beotland recently th looked > extremely v he got so fidgets sta one foot and then on i the "best man" deci< find out what the tr« in the nature of the cas« realized for years, yet .\ stated that there will | 1,095 miles of double trac Port Arthur and Calgar gaps of only something milesâ€"one gets a realizi of the work involved, of tance covered and of th and persistence involved large and notable under duplicating _ the whole which comprises some 132 of track. Of course the . sideration is the West, â€" pid development called io policy; but the East will larly treated in time, the lines which connect ! tres of population, and bigger business. The c0s so enormous as to baffle . ures at the moment; th tracking, too will be buil: ly different way from the railway, which was put <} a& tremendous hurry. Th double tracking will offer ed uilw;y, in every resp as regards the weight of r strength of bridges, and : fection of roadbed. Th the new policy will wor immediate return. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Bu The East Will Be Similarly Trears As the West. While the vast enterprise g double tracking the entire Canady Pacific system is one that canno[‘ Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruf g'b{o?o too late. Dr. Beliman mited. Collingwood, (n; *J internal and external, cured wit out rain by our bome treatment Way Ferw W PW reve mo mou. L. §EED PoTATOEs N“ BRUNBSWICK sEED 1 On account of the war, : be probably the best time : be probably the best time to buy y geed pouunhlot next year ow:ï¬.": for price 1 of Varieties C Fre Fawcett, Upper Sackville, N n VoF _ ARBBLE IN LIVE Towx L G York County. Stationery ang Boa Business _ in connection Price ony 34,000. I'orn-'llberu Wilson Publiq. ing Company, T8 West Adclaide §i., @Paranta ll' ;00 WANT TO BUY on s t. Stock, Grain or Dairy write H. W. Dawson, Brempton, Colborne St.. Toronto. K. W. DAWEON, Colborne S: FREE ON REQUEST. NANCER, TUMORS8, LUMP3 E14 ) (Antapmal anud Aeqencsa C 000. on DOUBLE TRACKING ( tools, horse goods, bla OoD WEEKLY IN Livk WEWEPAPERS FOR Saug hull _A J _ TLE Swedart 1888. â€" HAMILTON. C YÂ¥. LIMITED too late. Dr. Bellman Mey MISCELLANEOU 8. t"s 50c per Bottc 25¢. ForBook oi h Discretion Cold Feet An th 1 Col bomt "en mm ty POTATOR vairy Farg irough . e présen ect 1 n&Z nol great d urise Et ¢Frecas , Chio 1egrood xA first vonds M ind Wist y utd T e rI@nd rt aJ BELL a Toromy C ng ne hi te rag t Â¥h n3 ° TTom The evilamei!. &" ï¬.ï¬hm did not perse % .'= . of her face. 1i ce T 1700 fate that ahe oould :‘.‘l was telling you Exchange is half tm say the sharee w\ , per cent. premium m‘: and if you‘ve . got #DAFP®, guy‘nor, 1 should {gg-'we' a little futte _ Mr. BHeron ‘ecemed :o ; Tfln( if world armon imed _ w ;‘;_l.!rfl-b;;'ufl to v'n f ';-'» while she was -.nlun: her meal; but when it wae fin weph «tretched himeel{ ou: .lw W an @a OW;L‘_..nq_mlhe the things will mies here, hon. "co are a plain, bu fearing family, and we are the interest which springe tr round, the common u.f y no excitements at Laburnun C e t P PE C "Regular busy time in remarked to hhyhther 6 a hum. It‘s all over thi Mt_‘i:l._ ‘They‘re foaiing ers, on inciple." The otnr mem bere | c ed down uncomfortably prise, ae if they were l you must tell me all « ‘Lv†he eaid, with an a eenfidence to .conceal his . n« "and we must show you abou bit; i« & tidy little place Me grinned with an ai and seemed rather disc« did not return his emil« _ _"Bhall 1 give you eome you any wine. We hav« in the ‘out We nre“ i "I have geen «o little of "I have only passed throv on -" wL“lrom Frane l..‘ ’r NI‘A&\(* her r. was duly i hA 5, ucce & e Mr. Meron. "I regret t . Thank you," she said lor wine." "Oh, I‘m worn out, he eaid, ae he sank i garded the certainly with an eye of diefav all the evening"â€"he ney mocent, Oity acce uncertain about hie like a nigger." _ My dear Joseph regando very much the eame ex; bestowed upon the mut He hesitated hbefore th« and got it out rather defia was eomething in the dign. refined face which awed hi haps the first time in hie | had sat at the same tabl for Mr. John Heron had m him, and for money; and 1: the Bar, at which zo had i failure, had eunk down hu_v_lfo'c class. "Labor is prayor," rof as if he were enur strikingly original. *A plighed without toil, my instead ofâ€" being, @8 one pale from overwork Tda disliked him al the f disliked him «till more a she caught his shifty ey« rl. a curions and haltin ng. expression. . He can !._00* handsâ€"bis were dam his father‘eâ€"ae Mr. lHe thom, and in a voice whi« Jda?" he asked â€" "Wired, Jo.s»h. de mother, regarding h pride and commiser: He was an unpreporse»> with emaill eyes and thick it would have been wise & hg.-o-uche. but it w in City to be clean«h .Ionr:n considered â€" himsel! faehion. Bis clothes fAtted ly, he wore cbeap neckti« ::‘! boote, of course, of dark hair was plaster retreating forehead; hi 1: reason Jda could not whe was wondering, ( at the outer door, an entered. â€""Me is kept ai the off mother. ‘"Poor boy! i h ‘"“n (l;)o hard ; h(-.hm- nearly every nigh t hl,g-ild wlily at z’."i‘"â€"-’iv&loâ€"lh. halfâ€" as they noted the beauty When lda we! the need for wh kindly informed her proom was < able, «hough i etrange after th one at the Hall. and uneubstanti and thin; in pla Jv iDuminated like freehly ma< had a bare, ho Ida abudder. While she wae trying | of gory mutton, Mre. Her watched her, as if she wer inal from a wild and di and (,._gv_-.!;ot' lllnv:.z wt a of the figure in i Mind: "plain lar Nawen "ocl thairs «till more dowdy an the midet of his lugubrious the .::oyuuo- and worries ney, . Meron broke of to *Where is Joseph® . H« night." _ L nc a dsn PP < 7 in the room:; the pictures wes gruccome ones of Dore‘e, and a text over the mantelpicce wive and as hideous in oolor:: in her room. A lukewarm leg very underdone, wae on the olotl of which was by no m the dishes, which contained vegetables, were cracked an match; the bread wae of the kind, that which is called the knives were badly cleane fl“‘ was worn off the forke . was M inclegant + in the "A-m‘-room. !h;.‘:'rlur ’u. amp was i1 the cen table, and was more liberal o! },M. The ourtaine to the w that u::"l'nc red which e) any other near it; they tired eyes ache. CUCEE 0 un one at the Hall. The furniture w = .;.‘-uh‘t.ulltul. the towels w« m ; ace of pictures, ag lÂ¥ fll-‘ll“: terxts soarred th like freahly made wounds, and 1 Lad a bare, bomelese look whi« '““"; for here, too, new and shiny with a « ness, A6 if the treaclyv y dried, there was not a in the room ; the pictu gruccome ones of Dore a text over the mante wive and as hideous in in her room. A ludce w a When Ida went upstairs )"n h Miss leatbs *.H_Mwhr af whe Ida «hudder. The diningâ€"room, wh to t did not jmpress vorably; for here, too, new and shiny with a e hass. me if the treacly | me o (mMng on record, and ";O the amarket, A}! ihe > a *, Grifferberg and W irso! l:.-‘ M #ay Nir stepho “ a million of money ou! : 't::.:' will make a ~0. Te he has done wi} B @A PAMOP in the City +oâ€" atched hig face, said I em afraid there A Foolish "“"‘. â€";Q;ul ad TR CL__ -“ her of, ehe found was clean and fairly o0 '. its appearance . m ter the huge and old Sas) Hall. The furniture was» t tracte unde: wlÂ¥ ization., . n ‘0'!""“ . at the hands tomme turuet thi CHAPTER XXVIN 4p your vOu x“n «me i m w@at perfecily «t news it de #ip ie Or, the Beli t _ has ad m ir her a the fu foky k n ish uPy xm 1 4 ng i per Pr i fomeer