ast make n wrench ng wheel tter was ised, and oked out IRT wing the for the hen ane If he ~ ®. y ’HJ 4 ‘ ' \)"\- _ MA te‘ e // \ JQ aAAMiaf i( ® . L s {ï¬ O z44 w $4 and ing the He Ha mod ist m« yO# ha m 10 Intrinsically, Victoria Crosses are worth only a few pence. LOW FARES TO THE CALIFPORNIA Ex POSITIONS VIA CHICACO & NORTHâ€" wWESTERN RY. Four eplendid daily trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Fran. eisco, Loe Angeles and San Diego. Choice of Scenic and Direct Routes through the best of the West. Something to see all the way. Double track. Automatic elecâ€" tric safety signale all the way. Lot us plan your trip and furnish folders and full particulars B. H. Bennett, G.A., 4 Yonge 8t.,. Toronto, Ontario Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend One species of white ant produces 86,400 eggs a day. "Somebody‘s been fooling you. sex isn‘t that particular." Been Deceived. "Uncle, why did you never marry ?" "I never found a girl who would have me." Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. You can get these Pills through any medicine dealâ€" er or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. the right medicine, and after she had taken nine boxes she rad fully recovâ€" ered her former health and strength. I can strongly recommend Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills to every parent havâ€" ing a child suffering from St. Vitus dance or any form of nervousness." In troubles of this kind no other medicine has met with such success as we begar giving her Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, but she had not taken these l?_nz before we found that they were remmpdtniin 7 aits_epdidltr > BR utbadocsial bloodâ€"building medicine to their chilâ€" dnnltthoï¬nt:imofthe;pprouh of the trouble. Pallor, listlessness, inattention, restlessness and frritabilâ€" ity are all symptoms which early show that the blood and nerves are failing to meet the demand upon them. Here is proof of the great value of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills in cases of this kind. Mrs. Alfred Sochner, R.R. No. 5, Dunnville, Ont., says: "Our tenâ€" yearâ€"old daughter, Violet, suffered very severely from St. Vitus dance. The trouble came on so gradually that we were not alarmed until it affected her legs and arms, which would twitch and jerk to such an extent that she could searcely walk and could not hold anythirg in her hands steadily. She suffered for about five months before that St. Vitus dance develops. The remarkable success of Dr. Williams‘ Fink Pills in curing St. Vitus dance lllouldklead parents to give this great NMJ mak o _ s roiv 8 whe bliood, and the nerves fail to reâ€" f:i' e their fpll supply of nourishment One of the commonest forms of ner vous trouble that afflicts young chil "'ni'St.Vitusdnneo. This is ha 2. .. 1 i8 5t Vitus dance. This is beâ€" mo‘u"thMon the body by growth and development, Wflththlddedminunsed by study. It is when these demands become so great that they impoverish ST. VITUS DANGE _ _ > ~IN YOUNG CHILDREN Can Only Be Cured by Enrich ing the Blood and Toning Up the Blood. PURE ICE CREAM WILL tell you is a very nutritious and highly digestible foodâ€"but it must be pureâ€"Ice Cream to be safe must be made in a perfectly sanitary Dairy. When you eat City Dairy Ice Cream you get the benefit of the inspection of Toronto‘s Health Department. The more Ice Cream you eat in summer, the better health you will have, if it is City Dairy Ice Cream, because, "If it‘s City Dairy It‘s Pure that‘s Sure." We want an Agent in every town. For Sale by discriminating shopkespers everywhore, Your Doctor "Haven‘t you any perennials in your garden?" _â€""I don‘t think so. Are the seeds very expensive?" Let us follow the example of our gallant allies. "Delenda Est Gerâ€" mania." L For 43 years the French refused to list German securities on their marâ€" kets, have abstained from visiting or trading with Germany, and we can do the same. The British Empire can do without German trade; the loss to Germany of the British Empire‘s trade will be worse than the loss of her whole fleet annually. Permit no Germans to enter Canada except on higher terms than Chineseâ€" a head tax of $1,000. Never to travel in Germany nor perâ€" miï¬ any of his family to visit there. Never to deal with a merchant who keeps a single article of German manâ€" ufacture in his store. Never permit a German article in his house. Never to buy from or sell to a Gerâ€" man. Never to have any intercourse with a German, either social or commerâ€" cial. John Bull, an influential London weekly, with a circulation of nearly a million, has sounded the tocsin: After the war the Vendetta. We must have a Solomon League and Covenant, to which every British subject should subscribe for the protection of himself and descendants:â€" If we give her anotner chance to recuperate and make other alliances, in a few years she would repeat the Belgian atrocities in England and burn London as they have always threatened to do. Germany must be so dismembered that she and her kultur shall never again menace civilization. Her great prosperity and resources are largely the result of England‘s trade policy. England has permitted Germany to buy at the same price as English conâ€" sumers 12,000,000 tons of coal (1913) annually, which supplied her factorâ€" ies, warships, and forged Krupp guns. England also sold her (1913) £15,000,â€" 000 worth of raw wool and yarns. Germany prospered by selling finished goods to England for twice the amount of her imports from Britain. Editor World: Your article "Never Again Must Germany Come Back," is most opportune. The notorious Dernâ€" burg is already talking peace and says their hate is only artificial, and thinks that mutual interests will make us forget their treachery, their abomiâ€" nable crimes, cutting off the hands of women and children, murdering the wounded, roasting eaptives alive, cruâ€" cifying Canadians, and committing onf‘nges too horrible to print. â€" h Crimes Be Forgotten. The following letter, referring to such an extremely important matter, which appeared recently in the Toâ€" ronto Daily World, is given in full: Toronto, 14th June, 1915. This Man Hires a Gardener. hss 109 5e is . 1 <o io: 6i ant e ty â€"GERMAN PROGRAMME. J. ENOCH THOMPSON. the Sign. Look for and Awful success in treating stomach troubles, and the secret of it is that he puts his patient on Grapeâ€"Nuts foodâ€"it alâ€" ways brings back the power of digesâ€" tion." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There‘s a Reason." Ever read 'tM l:'.-': l:tton A _new ‘:E.:"é%::i‘n'o‘. l;.:. and Nl.l t".’f"’lmml,o leave it off for a few days my health "My digestive apparatus now works perfectly, and chronic constipation has been entirely relieved. I have gained in weight materially, and life is a very pleasant thing to me so long as I use Grapeâ€"Nuts once orgtwice a day. I have found by experiment that if I "That ended my experiments. For in Grapeâ€"Nuts I found exactly what I wanted and needed. From the day I began to use it I noticed an improveâ€" ment, and in a very few weeks I found my health was being restored. "For 9 or 10 years I had suffered from indigestion and chronic constipaâ€" tion, caused by the continued use of coffee and rich, heavy foods. My ailâ€" ments made my life so wretched that I was eager to try anything that held out a promise of help. And that is how I happened to buy a package of Grapeâ€"Nuts food last spring. When It Comes Along Don‘t Let It Get Away From You. "I really feel that it is hardly possiâ€" ble to say too much in favor of Grapeâ€" Nuts ‘as a hea_lEh.food,â€_vgrit_es a lady. "The third method of protection is rather a way of saving lives after the ship has been struck. There should be on every steamer selfâ€" launching rafts that would float the minute the water reached them. It is certain that a number of rafts of this kind would have saved many lives in the loss of the Titanic, of the Tourâ€" aine, and of the Lusitania." * "In the second place, torpedoâ€"nets might have been used. It is a popuâ€" lar belief that these can only be used when a ship is at anchor, and in that way they have been used on warships fqpr years. A protective screen may be constructed for a liner which would extend below the water line and explode any torpedo which came in contact with it before it could reach the side of the ship. Such a screen would lower the speed of the ship perhaps oneâ€"half, but when you think that the Lusitania was struck when proceeding slowly you can see that a net could have been carried without reducing her speed any furâ€" ther than it was already. Three Ways to Save Lives on the Lusitania. The loss of the Lusitania might have been avoided, or the loss of life much minimized, according to Hud: son Maxim, inventor of high exploâ€" sives and authority on warfare, if three methods of protection had been utilized. He says: "In the first place, there should have been a convoy of torpedo boat deâ€" stroyers. A protective convoy should have patrolled the course of the ship and blown out of the water any submarine that dared to show a conâ€" ning tower. ‘ "In the second place, torpedoâ€"nets sHOULD HAVE HAD «CONYVOYS He would hazard the statement that an imperfect world was necesâ€" sary for the production and training of moral beings. A world of comâ€" pletely unerring, finite beings creatâ€" ed and maintained so by the condiâ€" tions of their life would be a world of marionettes. Not such were the beings whom God was conceived to have created for communion with Himself. Those spirits must fight their way upwards from the lowest beginnings. In this progress they had to attain reason and freedom so that the good might be known and chosen, and, tried by every kind of circumstance, to find and assimilate !the values which could transform the world and make themselves fit for the higher spiritual life. This meant that it was possible to regard God as the author and Ruler of the world as it appeared in space and time, and at the same time to hold that the moral values of which they were conâ€" scious and the moral ideal which they had come to comprehend with increasâ€" ing clearness expressed His nature. On the view which had just been sugâ€" gested they would explain all reality, nature and persons, laws and values, as depending on a Supreme Mind whose purpose was being unfolded in the history of the world. "A physician in our town has great It is Necessary for the Production and Training of Moral Beings. Professor Sorley, of Cambridge University, has been engaged in deâ€" livering a course of Gifford Lectures on "Ethics and Theism" at Marischal College, Aberdeen. In one of his lecâ€" tures he laid down his own position in the following words:â€" ï¬'. e h IMPERFECT WORLD NECESSARY Because of their mild, soothing, and heah;s effect, Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are safe, and are recommended for girls nnd women of all ages. 25 cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any substitute for Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. .To give vitality and power to the kidheys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there is no remedy so sucâ€" cessful as Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known. it‘s dangerous, because due to diseasâ€" ed kidn The minus, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kidâ€" :‘:Y comx)ltintth can‘t cure themu;lvl;:, ey require the assistance 0 % Hamilton‘s Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. 67 with nervous exhaustion. © In the stores, factories, and farm are weak, ailing women, Fed.down with tortaring ba _ Yuck saferne es neturel. but t"Cttlrlnstantly :? their fe:t,nd attending e wants a large exacting family, women often break down When a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache A GOOD THING on . & m_,gg:.muutwwum Austrian Adriatic Coast ...... Southâ€"east France ........ Morocco, Tunis and Algiers Madagascar . ............ Annam and Tongking ..... Germany. German Coasts in North Sea and Baltic ;..is1..texx«s s British lIsles ......::rw«:1.% AUStYAHR : . ...rl.lsrssakac@s Canada :7 .. .scir.sck*%@arhirs India.and Ceylon ............ New Zealand and Tasmania ... South Africh .......+2......% Egypt and British East Africa. New Guinea ................. Nortk Borneo ...........+.... Aden and Somaliland ........ Straits Settlements .......... Solomon Islands ............. Gold Coast and other territorâ€" Russian Coasts in the Bailtic and Black Seas ............ 1 Britain‘s Value on Sea. The great value of Britain‘s partiâ€" cipation in the war is more readily appreciated when the extent of the sea fronts defended by the allies are considered. The British fleets alone protect a sea frontier of over 30,000 miles. ©~France, which comes next, has a totalâ€"with her colonies â€"of some 5,400 miles. Keeps Open the Oceans. In order properly to visualise the great part the British Empire is playing in the present war, however, it is necessary to bear in mind that not only does the British navy proâ€" tect our own sea frontiers, but it also keeps open the great ocean trade routes by which the ships of all the friendly and neutral nations can bring the supplies necessary for their wellâ€"being. Have Small Sea Fronts. Germany and Austria have relaâ€" tively very small sea fronts to proâ€" tectâ€"700 and 390 miles respectively. The Austrian sea front is, of course, confined to the Adriatic Sea, whilst the German colonies having, since the beginning of the war, been abanâ€" doned by the German naval authoriâ€" ties, the sea front to be protected is correspondingly reduced. Sea Fronts ‘of the Powers. The following figures represent the sea fronts of the belligerents: British Empire. Western front Western front â€"..;.«1« 124111 1s Servian and Montenegrin. Austrian front i:.@.Â¥x1«.i«.««% Turks. Black Sea territory near Erze * Russians. Polish and Austrian front ...... French Western front:....+..:....++:.. 502 Polish front .........+.,«.««+« 500 Austrians. Austroâ€"Russian front .... Servian front ........... |are opposed to all three nations in combination against the allies. Things to Consider. In considering the 31 miles held by the British force, the nature of the country held and the character of the fighting must be considered. 4Iong certain parts of the French line, as around Belfort and Epinal, stronglyâ€"fortified areas render the passage of the Germans almost imâ€" possible, and the task of the French is correspondingly easier. At other points, as in the Vosges and the Argonne, French and Germans opâ€" pose one another only at certain strategic points, and in such places there is no connected fighting line, but only a discontinuous line of small detached bodies of troops struggling for points of vantage. British Face Great Odds. With the British force, however, this is not so. Every inch of the ground is held only by the severest attack and _ counterâ€"attack. The ground is quite open and exposed, and is constantly swept by artillery and machineâ€"gun fire, Also, a short j time ago the German attempt to break the opposing line was made and repulsed along the British front at Ypres, and before that the British had held, in the face of overwhelmâ€" ing numbers, the positions along the Aisne, where the Germans were exâ€" pecting to retrieve partly the rush back from Paris. So that it will readily be conceded that the holding of this 31 miles means the holding of a stormâ€"beaten bastion which meets the full force of the gale. Land Fighting Lines. The following table shows the exâ€" tent of the land fighting lines of the warring powers: "byltndmeuumnehmore to the allies. thanâ€"the number of miles she is holding at the front would indiâ€" cate. The various land fronts of the belligerents in the great war make a total mileage of 1,867 miles, of which the British army occupies a front of 31 miles. The Germans have the longest land front, of which part is opposed to the Russian and the remainder to the French, British and Belgian armies. The Russians, who come next to the Germans in point of mileage, maintain contact with the enemy for 1,056 miles, and| British Western front .... 30,800 Miles of Sea Frontier and 31 Miles of Battle WHAT BRITAIN IS HOLOMNG HOW IT COMPARES WITH OTHER Britain‘s participation in the war Belgian Germans. ssrirree+. 218 s Â¥eirÂ¥a‘r+««*800 Erzeâ€" 30,800 Miles. +% . 608 Miles. 2,100 1,200 5,400 1,092 390 300 700 200 218 856 543 574 31 17 Admiral Beatty‘s flagship, the Lion, which is an eighth of a mile long, and is half as heavy again as the Dreadâ€" nought, was the first British warship to cost over two millions sterling. In five minutes‘ continuous firing she can discharge 100,0001b. of metal, and her shells leave the muzzles of her guns at a rate equal to. 1,841 / miles an hour. ED. 6. ____&@ __~_~~_ just Eye Comfort, At Your Dmhg"n'l 50c per gottle. Murine Eyo Salvein 25¢c. For Book of theEyeFreeask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage Light takes 8min. 13sec. to travel from the sun to the earth. "Yes. But yesterday I loaned him five that he was surely to pay back toâ€" morrow, and it is doubtful now that I shall see him for a month or two." Doubtful. "Yhen do you expect to see Mr. Green again?" "I don‘t know." F "But don‘t you usually see him once or twice a week?" Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Granulated Eyelids, ore Eyes inflamed by ex sure to Sun, Dustand m E es auicldy reliev’:d |s>y Murine ye Remedy. No M“Al- CC y ____ just Eye ’?on.'.for!- At "Please, ma‘am." he said, *‘I put five toes into one stocking this mornâ€" I was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LIVINGSTON. Lot 5, P.EL °> e tm I was cured of a severe attack of Rheumatism by MINARD‘S LINIâ€" MENT. Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. JOSHUA A. WYNACHT. ing!" A teacher was examining a class of small boys in arithmetic. Addressing a particular smart boy she asked: "Can five go into one?" P "Yes," came the answer at once. "You stupid boy!" she said. "How do you make that C.P.R. Will Represent the. Russian Government. The traffic arrangement by which the C.P.R. will represent the Rusâ€" sian Government in providing for through freight services from the Dominion to Russia by the Transâ€" Siberian Railway and the Russian Volunteer Fleet, which is an auxiliary of the railway, is an amplification of the connection which the company has sustained with the Transâ€"Siberâ€" ian Railway, which is a stateâ€"owned system. The Company has offices in Moscow and Petrograd in which it does business, the only railway on this continent to have such offices in Russia. If it would seem strange that the Company should do business in either city, it need only be menâ€" tioned that the C.P.R. is the only railway in America which is a memâ€" ber of the Round the World Conferâ€" ence of which the executive of thei Transâ€"Siberian Railway is a chief element. The Canadian Pacific, in its roundâ€"theâ€"world _ tours, uses, of course, the Transâ€"Siberian Railway line, which the average Russian alâ€" ways calls the "Transcontinental" lineâ€"this being the notion the sysâ€" tem conveys to his mind. On this line there are three types of engine the wood, oil and coal using engine. The wood engine is a special type, which is not built at all on this conâ€" tinent, but it serves the purpose in | the physical circumstances on the system, which is differentiated in several ways from those on this continent. I â€"" Many a one would have "been upset by such an unfortunate beginâ€" ning to the proceedings, but not so the minister. "I am grieved to find," he said, with a mock seriousness, "that your chairman is disappointed in my size, but this is owing to the way you have here of measuring a man. In Ayrshire, where I come from, we measure a man from his chin up, but you evidently measure him from is chin down!" | FREIGHT SERVICE TO RUSSIA At a meeting at which a minister, who is short in stature, was to speak, the chairman, endeavoring to be witty, observed that he was someâ€" what disappointed about the miniâ€" ster‘s physical proportions. "I had heard so much about Mr.â€"â€"," he said, "that I naturally expected to‘ meet a big man in every sense, but Bridgewater. Ask for Minard‘s anc take no other. When he is troubled with <onstipaâ€" tion, indigestion, vomiting or worms, give him Baby‘s Own Tablets. They sweeter the stomach, #egulate the bowels and cure all these troubles simply because they banish the cause. Concerning them Mrs. Philias Duval, St. Leonard,~Que., writes: "We are. well satisfied with Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets, which we have used for our baby when suffering from constipation and vomiting." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. , WHEN BABY IS ILL To A Smart Boy. out ?" ISSUE 26â€"‘15. C c pealaiick Pal onl cte ts m en .84 ONTARIO ARCHIVES § TORONTO This Bicycle is positively @uarâ€" anteod. &l- abâ€" oo solutely the brt value on the Canadian market, fitted with Powertul coaster brake, wood rims, beautifully enamelled, _ strong mudâ€" guudn. tool bag and tools, mdâ€" etachable tires. ‘Write for our handâ€" some FREE Catalogue. Our low prices wgll uucg(o):tthe most sceptical ’ï¬ur- chasers, our agents‘ proposition. Remember we wz.y dnry&h.. Our goods are delivered to your door for the same price you see in the Catalogue. k Roy: _ "C" 008 1446 St. hwfl(l’:o" llvd.? Montreal Que. Germans have been using shrapnel composed of glass instead of lead. Cure No Gu M e ngl h+ | Oore pain in 24 Corns s«‘%.. Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in n Ontario. Length 18 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In., Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. ANY MOTOR FITS. ESpecification No. 2B giving engine prices on request. Get our quotations onâ€"‘"The Peretang Line" Commrercial and Pleasure Launches, Row boats and Canoes. tion has been conferred eight have been killed, as have four of the thirtyâ€"two nonâ€"commissioned officers and men among the recipients. KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS EDUCATION â€" MEDICINE "The latest official list raises the total nmumber of ‘British soldiers who have received the Victoria Cross durâ€" luflun:ttow-o::. The line . regiments, course, having secured the largest proportion, twentyâ€"fqur having been divided among members ofâ€"seventeen corps, in addition to five %::ntotboBdgudeofFootGurdo, ‘he artillery has received as many as eight, and the engineers five. The cavalry and the navy have each obâ€" tained two, the Indian Army one, and the Native Army three, while the Royal ‘Army Medical Corps has seâ€" cured one, as well as the clasp awardâ€" ed to an officer who had won the Cross in South Africa. Of the nineâ€" teen officers upon whom the decoraâ€" JP .n . QUEEN‘S THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAY. CHEMICAL CIVIL ». â€" â€" SCHOOL OF MINING â€"___â€" ENGINEERING _ _ _ GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar Received the Victoria Cross. * "*"*W _ . No reméedr ao | A_ _ Offices for sale in good Ontari0 out. g:“‘mm.:“.: | (t’gw:ï¬. b"fl;o most u-!:tinll Hd m“u":qu safe and sure ao oc d pe sinesses. Full informatio ‘ | application to Wilson Publishi Cofite orn Extractor. . Bold every> qpany, 78 West Adelaide St.. Toronto _ _‘ __OFa nar ml._ U N EV Just scratch a match â€"the NEW PERFECTION lights instantly, like a gas stove. Your meal is prepared and on the table in no time A NEW PERFECTION in your kitchen means cool, comfortâ€" able cooking all summer. _ Made in 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes. At hardware and department stores everywhere. If your dealer cannot supply you, write us direct. ROYALITE OIL BEST RESULTS THE STOVE THAT HELP3 YOU HURRY YJ JITH a NEW PERFECTION Oil Cookstove UNIVERSITY MINING Castirs PERBDEOAION you don‘t have to wait for the fire to come up Arts Courses only. JULY and AVGUST s U M M ER $ C H 0O O L Ns e es e K w00 C m" hours, is | NEWSsPAPERS FOR SALE. » # .‘\ takes the -“;:;:__' | proFitâ€"MaAkiNG npws aAnp JoB MECHANICAL ELECTRICAL HOME STUDY "Overstern" V Bo‘tom a match â€"the NEW PERFECTION iI!' LOOKING FOR aA FARM, CONS “M .# I h"l. over :‘:: Ilul:dud sp , located in the sectione m | tario. All aizes. H. W Dawson, Brampton, W | gmmmmmememmmmmess _2 5 1000000 PPAE Motor Boat Pays for lt-q.. _ay, In Seven Days 1| D SOLD BY ALL GOOP SHOE oEaAiERS WETTLAUFER Improved Concrete W. Spadina Ave., AUTO AND BOAT TOPS Ford owners write for our catalpgue. SEARSâ€"CROSS Speedometer â€" Station. 179 Queen Street West, TORONTO, â€" ONT. CUTTEN & FOSTER h‘bï¬ MISCELLANEOUS. FARM FOR RENT. $55« BROS., Machinery Toronto, O: cear P | 4 {% #*%