NO ALUM JE IN CANADA EBA??? Fer. ‘30.â€, < >“A:uz â€557:: “In my»; e""7er?r. "ISA LifiiiiEiE .7 NO ‘94 " l He Knew The Kind. A hobo knocked on the back door of n suburban house, which was open- ed by a large muscular, hard-faced Woman. "Get out of here, you miser- able tramp.'!" exclaimed the woman in a cereeehy voice, at the first sight of the hobo. "If you don't march Freight for that back guts I will call my husband!" “I guess not," wos the calm response of the tramp. "He ain't at home." “Is that so, Mr. Trump?†was the seornful rejoinder of the lugs lair. "How do you know he isn't at home t" "Because, "grin- ned the hobo, backing toward the aforesaid gate, "when a man marries a woman like you he is home only at meal time." l Suddenly his comrade with the bay- 1 onet, who had carefully crawled for-, ward, sheltered by the bodies of his; fallen mates, pulled himself together†and, dodging two bullets, aimed at, him, with one gigantic effort plunged: his weapon into the German's throat.: It was over; we held our trriGiiii, WP were saved. At that all-impelling cu':l the dead indeed had come to life. The man who had rallied us, the hero at whose word the dead had come to life, wot one of the shots right in the face. He reeled and fell. There, alone, leaning against the parapet and protected by a huge iron shield, stood an enormous German sergeant, sweating, p ting, splutter- ing with rage, and gravely emptied his revolver at us. Carmina NHtun tire, Window. Orr Made in the eup--in- tstantiy---with hot water. Convenient, nourishing, sat- isfying. "Tlitre's aRcason†I for At his shout three other men strug- gled up. Two whose legs were broken seized their rifles and opened fire, each shot going home with deadly effect; the third man, whose right arm hung useless at his side, graaped his bay- onet with his left hand. By the time I was on my feet, having quite come to myself attain, half our enemies were struck down and the rest were retreating in disorder. - _ ,, _....... ...- viola], I SIW l a band of Germans leaping over the! sandbags into the trerrih--twenty or; so of them-without riiUs, but with) rush baskets full of bomb. hung about’ their necks. ';, I looked to the right and to the left. All our men had gone; the trench was empty. Just then one of My men, who had been lying apparently lifeless, a gash at'ross his forehead, another on his chin and his whole face covered? with blood, sat up. seized I sack of) grenades lying near and shouted, "Des ! bout, les mortal" Then he trot up on his knees and hurled grenade after. grenade at the enemy. It is made from wheat roasted with a bit of whole- some molasses and is free from any harmful sub- stance. Instant But only for a second. A bursting bomb shattered my hand and the pain brought me back to life. As I opened my eyes, faint and dizzy, I saw n 1.._.,.a _. r, - V Suddenly from behind a mound of earth a perfect avalanche of bombs came hurtling down upon our heads, and before our men realized what was happening. ten of them lay dead or wounded at the bottom of the trench. I opened my mouth to rally my men, but a stone from the parapet, loosen- ed by a falling bomb, cruhed down upon my head and knocked me sense~ less. It’s easy, having at hand the delicious pure food- -_-v urn-m billl 0" scribes it: We were putting in order a trench we had just taken. At the barrier of sandbags at each end two pickets kept careful guard. heart. and so on, this sa.. aible thing to do is to quit both tea and coffee. How Wounded French-en Repulud a German Attack. One of the remarkable stories of the war in that of the French sergeant who in a position of peculiar danger sm‘cd the situation by his strange and piercing cry. "Debout, lea mans!" (Stand up, you dead men.') An otrieer who witnessed the episode that " c.....;; ". ache, nervousness. insom- nia, bilipusness, - jumpy A Sensible Thing To Do ‘When the drug. caffeine ---the active principle in tea and eoffee--ahows in head, Thousands who trtefer to Private wire connecting (Member Standard Stock Exchange) q me I“! “It. "Iona A Postcard Will Bring It nun with comfort and 559?.Map the Issue is Limited File YotArtrtieattion at POSTUH An isosiurn tGd tro., e, Windsor. Ont. is " HAMILTON B. WILLS Postum f 21 Lissa, tough? mun tleet a m tget J.'"'?,",',.',, o o . is , “11.914; 31.138? Admiral . -- . ‘lronclads and 61 an mariresta. prii% iii. Ptttuy - to I These three great engagements lgave England the command of the lseas. Her record for the two French _urrs--the one ending 1802 and the lone in 18l4--is is' follows in ship-of- "he-line, fifty-ttun ships, frigates, and 'sloops: In the first war the French lost 24l; the Dutch, 89; Spanish, 86, and other nations, 25, making a total of 541. In the second war, including the war with the United States of 1812, the United States lost 19; the French, 342; Spanish, 127; Danish, 1'64, and Russian, 17, with a total of j569. and a grand total of 1,110 amp-l ,destroyed or taken from the enemies‘ :of Great Britain in twenty years. T Battles of Armored Shiva. The tactics of the American moni- tors at Hampton Roads during the civil war were ilrtrt put to me in a large naval engagement " the battle f Lieu, fought July 20, 1866, by an A atrial! tlee) of seven ironclad: and at 1 wooden craft under Admiral :?iihi, This can the Italian Beet 1: er dmiral Persano 8 of his 10 ironclad: and 680 men killed. of the u- lna» got! I alltClllTIIL -. " IVE} i In the battl.e of the Nile, which end- i and daughters of C.P.R. employee: ‘ed Napoleon's scheme for an ',sasterryhave taken advantage of the fret leml’i". Nelson had thirteen Ships and i course of training offered, and nom lone fifty-gun ship. The French foreelno less than 825 ladies have taker 'was thirteen line-of-battle "ships amCout, the certificate of ttualifieatior "our frigates under Admiral Brueys.:rrom the Association. iThey lost all but two of their ships,' Under the auspices of the c.P.R :captured or destroyed, and 3,000 orcentre instruction was given to the "heir 9,820 men. The British loss ' Borden Battery and Ammunition 3WM! 896 of their 7,980 engaged. :Column before leaving Montreal for . . ' :the front. Afterwards the certificates Britain'. Early Record. lief merit were presented to the offi- At the battle of Trafalgar, in which Icers and men by His Royal Highness jNelson lost his life, the British fleet 'ths, Duke of Connaught. ‘consisted of twenty-seven line-of-i An important feature. of the work (battle ships and four frigates. This iof the C.P.R. Centre was the bringing Arree, in the most complete expres- 9 of a large number of the lady clerks sion of Nelson’s strategy in history, ’of the C.P.R. into touch with the Red attacked the allied French and Span- Cross Society, an organization to ish Beets of thirty-three line-of-battle [ which they proved a valuable asset. ships and seven frigates, compelling; Three men were saved from drown- twenty of the allied ships to strike C ing at Winnipeg by W. T. Davies, C. their colors. The allies had 21,580iP.R. ambulance instructor, and Wil- men engaged and the British 16,820.jliam Newcombe, a C.P.R. constable. The British loss was 449 killed. The fSir Donald Cameron presented the allies losses have never been ascer- ‘medal of the Royal Canadian Humane tained owing to a tremendous storm ;Sociotvy to each in recognition of their which swept the fleets after the en-,'bravery. “cements. l Particulars were obtainable of " In the last decade of the eighteenth century and in the nineteenth, three great naval engagements took place under Nelson's strategy and the old tactics. The battle of Camperdown, ctober 11, 1797; the battle of the Nile, August 1, 1798, and Trafalgar, October 21, 1805. At Camperdown sixteen British ships of the line under Admiral Duncan engaged a similar number of the Dutch fleet under Ad- miral de Winter. The Dutch fleet lost eight ships captured, and 1,160 men killed of the 7,150 engaged and 6,000 prisoners. The British lost 825 of their force of 8,220. it was nearly a century later, March! 9th, 1862, when the first battle of: ironclnds, the Monitor and the Merri-) mac, took place in Hampton Roads! that the primary 'slements--heavy guns behind impregnable 'ii'iiiiiii'i'j llt naval tactics were established.‘ ‘With the use of steel for offence and ( defence, and with the revolution; .wrought in the application of each by _ high explosives, naval tactics ltave) periodically changed, but the strategy of Nelson has remained what he made I it. _ , A great battle was fought just be- fore he had the opportunity to as- semble the experiences of put en- gagements in practical form. This was the battle between the navies of France and England, fought " Ushant, June Ist, 1749. On this oc- casion the British fleet, under Lord Howe, consisting of twenty-five ships of the line, attacked and defeated the French force of twenty-six under Admiral Villaret. Six of these were captured and one was sunk. The French had on board 19,760 men; of these they lost 5,000; the British lost 1,148 from their total engaged of, 17,240. i Meanwhile, however, Lord Nelson had established the rules of naval strategy about as they are to-day, but To the French of the last half of the eighteenth century under Louis XV. and Louis XVI. was due the development of the original ancestors of the dreadnought and cruiser, re- spectively the line of battleship and the corvette, while it remained for the American navy in the war of 1812 to create the father of the battle cruiser. the swift-sailing, heavily armed frigate. hm".-- w. um, all-bu, wnlcn cost me Dutch four admirals and over 4,00 new men. In the great battles of the Ian pre- vious to the end of the eighteenth century the amount of tonnage of wooden craft enguged was compara- tively small, while the number of Ihipe in large. Thus the Emperor Claudius sunk 2,000 Gothic ships in A.D. 260; in the great battle of Le- panto, in 1571, when the western pow- ers, led by Venice, first united to dis- pute the Moslem dominance of the t1fediterranean, the Turks lost over BA'ITLB AT SEA Great GROWTH or manure NAVIm or Tm: won». Pr Famous British Victories. Defeat of the French. Dreadnought Ancestors Britain's Strength Ever.. Increasing Through the Centuries. Bosrutrs--"Never mind the neigh- bors. They deserve it. They pol- soned our dog yesterday.†_ Mr. Basso-"You must excuse me. It is very late, and I should disturb the neighbors." Botstess---"Prar, don't go yet, Mr. Bane. I want you to sing some- thing.’ f Particulars were obtainable of 3,-) The beauty 780 cases where first aid had been is lrotter than administered by members of the: Don't wait C.P.R. Centre. The cases were thus _ comes stale be 'divided: Atlantic Centre, 9; Eastern waters. IDivis’on, 130; Ontario Division, 136; 1western lines, 3,440. , Ln {or In: , Concluding the report of the C.P.R. 3 " Centre pays a glowing tribute to thei Mr. fhatrf-- late Lieutenant-Colonel Lacy R. John- complains that son, who had been chairman of the Thats not to" Centre under review and also of the “a“ mother.". whole Association. During his time) its you who,‘ as chairman nearly 7,000 employees xsnt me that: of the C.P.R. passed the qualifying ' Pa'-'""--'"'.", osaaunirurtions, and in this way made themselves better citizens of the Do. , minion. A g In all the departments of the can! iceWit of the Association, which; [spreads over the country, a greater; ‘zeal than ever was manifested fort ‘work. and the support of the superin- tending officials of the C.P.R. is in no) lsmall way responsible for a good deal 1 ‘of the advari8ement made. Wives; land daughters of C.P.R. employees! ‘have taken advantage of the free icoursc of training offered, and pow; inc less than 8'2,5 ladies have takenj {out the certificate of qualification; Ifrom the Association. l An important feature. of the work of the C.P.R. Centre was the bringing of a large number of the lady clerks of the C.P.R. into touch with the Red Cross Socie-ty, an organization to which they proved a valuable asset. Under the auspices of the C.P.R. Centre instruction was given to the Borden Battery and Ammunition Column before leaving Montreal for the front. Afterwards the certificates of merit were presented to the offi- cers and men by His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught. First Aid Work of the Canadian Paeitle Railway Centre. "A most successful year, notwith- standing the general depression." This is the pleasing statement con- tained in the sixth annual report of the Canadian Pacific Railway Centre of the St. John Ambulance Associa- tion. For the twelve months, ending September 30, 1915, no less than 1,816 passed qualifying examinations out of a total of 2,564 who presented them- selves for instruction at the classes. I The exception noted above was the }battle at Ten Shims. in the Russo- !Japanese war in 1905. On May 27 land 28 the Russian fleet, under Ad- Imiral Rojestvensky, was attacked in ithe straits between Japan and Korea ,by the Japanese fieet, under Admiral |Togo, and practically annihilated. The IRussian ftaeship, Kniaz Sowaroff, was 1blown up; a Russian admiral, Folker- Isahn, was killed; 21 Russian ships [were sunk, including 6 battleships, 4 ‘cruisers, a coast defence ship, 4 spe- lcial service ships and 3 destroyers, ‘and 5 were captured, including 2 bat. tleships. The Russians lost 4,000 kill- ed or drowned and 7,282 officers and men taken prisoner. The Japanese lost 3 torpedo boats, 116 officers and men killed and 538 wounded. _ The two other engagements of this class were in the Spanish-American war of 1898. On April 27 the Span- ish squadron of eleven ships under Admiral Montejo was attacked and destroyed in Manila Bay by Commo- dore Dewey with nine ships. Four hundred Spaniards were killed. On July 8 Admiral Cervera's squadron left Santiago harbor, Cuba, and was attacked by the American fleet under Admiral Sampson, and destroyed with the exception of one ship which sur- rendered. The Spanish loss was over 600, and 692, inéluding the wounded Admiral Ceryera, were made prisoner. In the battle of Yalu, Sept. 17, 1894, between the Japanese tutd.Chin- ese, 12 battleships were engaged on each side. The Chinese lost 5 ships and 1 disabled and between 600 and 800 men killed of a total of 8,000. The Japanese lost 294 men and no ships. Italian force of 10,880. The Austrians had 7,871 men engaged and lost 176. In the last decade of the last cen- tury three great navel engagements Were fought which marked the great- eat development of the tactics of steel before the present war, with one exception in 1905. delight to the palate, supply- ing the greatest amount of nutriment in. smallest bulk. A deliciously wholesome toast. It is ready-cooked, easily carried, is strengthen- ing and satisfying. ST. JOHN A MBULA NCE, Made in Canada. Retaliation. Fleets Destroyed. the; Don't wait until your bread be- thus , comes stale before casting it upon the 'tern waters. ', Mr. Chafrc---"Johnnie, your mother immplains that you are disobedient. That's got to stop. You must obey your mother." Johnnie-mot much. rIt's you who have to obey her. It litsn't me that's married to her" The Result is Millions of Letters and , Parcels of Literature. 5 Tommy Atkins has got the reputa- [ tion of being the most voracious read.. aer and indefatigable letter writer of all the troops in the field. The British "'ostmaster-General told an audience ‘in Kent recently that during the war i more than 450,000,000 letters and 40,- I000,000 parcels had been sent to the Itroops in France. Those letters and Iparcels weighed about 1,500 tons a ',week, In addition, about 800,000 (books and magazines were being dis- ’tributed week by week, and on be- ‘half of the troops he appealed for 1even more to be handed in. is better thah the kind that rubs oe.' i "The man on the crest, who was ‘lame, limped swiftly into his house, 1the woman scuttling before him. I jwas left on the bare road, conscious iot that fatal and beautiful thing pois- ied plumb overhead. I dared not look lup. Were I to do so, the falling bomb (would surely catch me in the face! 'and I preferred to take it in the :neck. i "There was a Bang! bang! bang! isnd out of the green hillside across ithe valley, two hundred yards away, (suddenly spurted great mushrooms of smoke, one after another. Bang'. chang! bang! and one of the houses 1' skirmishing on the outskirts of the ltown was enveloped in a dirty cloud. "Rut it was all over. And the crea- ture from another world was flying homeward in the light of the sinking Bun, the smoke of its handiwork pur- suing it leisurely across the waters in pillars of soot." "I made for the house opposite; it was empty and locked. "Then came the lame man running out. 'Come in here, sir!' he called. " 'Take cover!' Eried a fierce, author- itative voice near by, LII {or Inna-4'- sad “to no other "For a moment I was astounded. The loveliness of that remote and shin- ing something, on whose underwings the westering ago was beating up, possessed and dazzled me. . . . "I looked seaward. Nothing was visible but a remote destroyer. I gaz- ed up into the heavens. Not a speck darkened the distant blue. Then a man on the crest of the hill, fifty yards above me, a woman at his side, cried suddenly: ' " 'There she goes!' "I looked again. And sheer over- head I caught a flash and sparkle. It was infinitely far, a part of the blue; as if a tiny patch of heaven had sud- denly crystallized. The beauty tut ‘isAorAIly skin deep “Some primeval instinct warned me to beware. “I stood with ears alert, and sniffed. "There was a faint, strange smell in the air, and a faint, far humming. "I we: slowly" climbing the Itust hill home when of a sudden I was aware of I knew not what. "It was? a February afternoon of the fairest," says Mr. Ollivant. . . . And, if about the hour of dark, you went into one of the seaward rooms, you would be pretty sure to be greeted by n spectral voice from the ceiling, 'Pm not very happy about this curtain,' . . ' and you would be aware of a gaunt and vulture-like titture perched on atable or a chair, safety pin in mouth, adjusting a ehink." But when at list ts%ppeiin came it came by day. "All through the winter our lights were the colonel's hobby, his anxiety and delight. He wae terribly thor- ough.. Prom bathroom, Inventories, passages and holes the bulbs were re- moved to guard egalnst temptation and servants anlmt carelessness. You washed in the dark, and you said ttood-by to your friends by the light of the moon. And every night, when the blinds were down and the curtains drawn, the colonel went his rounds. TOMMY READS AND WRITES. "You're showing a strain of light through the curtains,†he said anxious- ly. "Do you mind if I arrange them?" He stood on a chair and mode certain delicate adjustments. setting to work as a dressmaker goes about to tit a lady’s gown. "They flne you ten pounds for the first offense," he said, his mouth full of pins. "The occupant of the room pays," he added with quiet gusto, “not the owner. And for the second offense you do time." According to this French author.. ity, if the Christian dispensation had not arrested this decrease, man by this time-200 years apr-would have been a mere microscopic object, and we may conclude that by our time he ‘would not have been at all. M. Henri- on did not give any explanation u to how he arrived " his estimate of the height of these ancients. M's mm mum’s ram. {When Adam and Eve Walked Around l They Were as Tall as Trees. i In recent' ycurs antttornists have {shown in a practical way that the height of a man or woman can be increased to a considerable extent by appliances for stretchingf, says the Indianapolis News. These exten- illions, however, have only been of iinches or fractions of an inch, and Iginnts have not been, nor are they ;likely to be, developed by .rtificitsl means. It: was a French savant, named Henrion, who, 200 years ago. gave to the world authoritative state- ments as to the height of Adam andl Eve. He said that the father of the race was 123 feet 9 inehe, high and Eve 118 feet 9 inches. He noted that from the creation of there enlarged editions of humanity, degeneration, Ind been rapid; that Noah was only] 27, Abraham only 20, and Moses butt " feet in height. I La/y-Nile girl. have you anylheumatism by MINARD'S LINC near relatives?" Little Mary-"Yes'm. MENT. My Aunt Mary lives just around the: Mnhone Buy. JOHN MADER. corner." ). I was cured of a severely sprained -.---- leg by MINARD'S LINIMENT. (up Klan-G'- mlncl! II the noun 1 JOSHUA A. WYNACHT. They will ulso tell you that Dodd's Kidney Pills cure rheumatism, dropsy, heart disease, diabetes, gravel and Bright's disease. That is because all these diseases are either kidney diseases or are caused by diseased kidneys. . a Aâ€; "H I were only rich." "Well, what wbuld you dot "Try to get rich.†The testimony of people who have been cured is better than all the theory in the world. Dodd's Kidney Pills are purely and simply a kidney remedy. If you have kidney trouble all you need to do is to ask others. They will tell you that Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure you. - “I have recommended Dodd's Kid- ney Pills to many people. I cannot speak too highly of them." "I have used Dodd's Kidney Pills with great success," Mr. McLeod states. "For years I had kidney trouble and could get nothing to help me. Hearing of what Dodd's Kidney Pills have done for others led me to use them. Five boxes cured me com- pletely. , What the Year 1816 Was Like in This : Country. L The year 1816, that is, 100 years ago, says the Perth Expositor, was , known as the '%mttnerlenu, summer." Snow commenced falling in the middle ', of June, by the middle-of August it , was one foot in depth, and from the , first fall of snow in June until the following summer the earth remained _ under the covering of the wintry blanket. Absolutely nothing in the I (iii of harvest was garnered. Every- thing in the way of crops rotted in lthe ground. What did the people live [ ont Meat-meat and oh-there were no vegetables and there was no flour; it was venison and fish to-day, reliev- ed by tUh and flesh to-morrow, taken from slaughter-cattle. Hay had to {be shipped from Ireland to save the starving cattle in quebec, and it sold ‘there for $45 per ton; flour sold at ,817 per barrel in Quebec, and pota- Cty, were one penny a pound. This ;ycar was called "the year eighteen 'hundred and frozen to death." The cause of the cold was believed to be :sunspots, which were so large that ;for the first time in their history they (could be seen without the aid of a ,telescope. It was also known as i"poverty year." In New Hampshire ihay sold at $180 a ton. The next,' tspring the market price of corn was' le; a bushel of wheat, $2.50; rye, $2; .oats, 90c; beans, $8; butter, Me per, glb. (It usually sold in those days at "sight or ten cents.) Further particle- : l lars of the "trutmtterless summer," The l Expositor adds, are among the files of ithe Grenville Historical Society. l anbot, Victoria Co., C.B., June 19th (special.)-mtilip McLeod is just one more of the many residents in this neighborhood who have found new health in Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Philip McLeod Tells How He Sulered from Kidney Trouble for Years and Found a Quick and Complete Cure in Dodd's Kidney Pills WHO HAS FOUND NEW HEALTH LN DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. He is Just he More of The Many MANS' DECREASING HEIGHT. ff.'e1E_Ae_t,r2d5Lrtr_tl..e!lt THE SUMMERLESS 'YEAR. "' -" ennui (Irish, “0);“énéhg, sir, when you speak to In otneer." Decided†Built-I. Cumin of the troops to 'roldiasr- "Your gun-barrel is d'ttnrraeefuily dirty. I've I good mind to--" “Pri- vate yen.hrae-Nure, Borr, I nim "When your wife gets angry won't she speak to you t" "She 'won't do any‘hing else." Ila-ram mam-c tad by Emma. Rich Uncle (to his phrsieinn)--No you think there is hope for met" Physic Doctot"'-)ot only that, but I can assure you that you He nut of danger." "Very well: I wish you vmuld inform my nenhew; but break the news gently to him." (, In the provinces are some of the ‘greatest potash mines in the world. ;These mines alone yield S4,000,000 [worth of potash every yer. Naturol- Ily, while the Germans hove owned them they hove made many millions out of them, supplying the world with poush, ttnd with fertilizers from the rock salt which in mixed up with the [ potash beds. Granulated Eyelids. ore Eyes iuiUmed by expo- sure to SCI. Hand “I uickly relieved by “It“ yeMii My. No Smart? lust E e Comfort. t Your Druggict'l $0e per Souk. “but†"iainrdtiuese. F or“ Ollhtnfmuk Druggiau or 'h'tit"r"atstedrei..eht- [was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD’S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LIVINGSTONE. a sentimental one to the recapture of the lost provinces. Altogether, the return of Ale-ce- Lorraine will increase Prince's In- reual income by some k'i0,000,000, so there is a business side us well u Altmee-Urraine Ira. Vast Deposit: of Potarhn, Iron and COIL 1 ', Quite apart from strong gentl- <menal reasons. French people want to met their lost provinces of Aluce~ ;Lorraine back because of their actuAl value. Another fact about Lorraine which will surprise most people ia that it has half the world's supply of iron ore, u well as huge untapped cool deposits. For the coal alone France would like Lorraine for she its short of coal, and has to import 10,000,000 tong a year. l, The Women's Canadian Club of m. John, NR, is doing an excellent work in encournging the an of tor 'mnking in New Brunswick. They ex- Epect to hold an exhibition of "Made in IN.B." toys early this summer. Manor Gerald Birks. who was In at. John a short time ago In order to se- cure funds for the Y.3rc.A. work on the western front, announced recently in Montreal thnt the fund would Ilka- ly reach the immense sum of $350,- 000. Capt. Dan McKinnon. formerly one of the best known followers, of the harness, racing game in the Maritime Provinces, is now commanding ofticer of the Mth Battery It Fredericton. Dartmouth, Na., in about to be mp- plled .wlth electric power for night and day. At present electrical power is avul'llble only tn the evening. Mu. Benuile Dufresne. Quebec. so cured the gold medal for highest per- centage in all classes at the Brooklyn King's County Hospital Training School for Nurses. Premier Murray ot Nov. Scodn Iva- presented with I. silver tea set, ether and an nddreu by the Liberal mem- bers of the Province. Bridgewater, The St. Mm": Army and Navy dub of Hank: gave an entertain- ment recently. for the St. Franc!- Xtyier hospital unit. "Joe" Mitchell. the “mom Indian tox trapper. recunlly trapped three foxes at Ashton, P.E.l.. two of which were silver (rays. Lot 5, P. E. l. I was cured of a severe stack of The {trike oiauriiirira ot the Dominion Caruso Co., Montreal, bu interrupted freight traffic around St. John. Pte. Glade, one of the two Ilium-c Indium. who enlisted with the 112th Battalion. died at Digby, NR. ot pneumoniu. Capt. Courténay chin; 76111.3." left St. John's, Natl, recently. for Barba- dot, to get a curse of molasses. Trees vi'ere mrriGfimriii"set no. sown at the Experimental Sudan Chfrlottetown, PILL. on May 1. The ma! sGlt/iiitG,' of Thou. Laney.“ Swift Point. N.B., an completely dvstroyed_by tire. A wnve of crime has been wool“ over Fredericton. many robber-ion be. ing reported. In. Mice hug and two daarghtaeu, of Chennai. are dead In . reolt at a shooting tiny. Edna Porter, a lG-yearold girl, ot Moductic, ts missing from her home. Foul play is sulnected. Malcolm McPherson, aged " of Union Vale, was arrested. charged with the murder of his wife. urred By Wave. d tho Atlantic. Bt. John'l oldest resident. bowl Smith, In dead u the use of 104. Hon. C. W. Robinson. for your: City 39mm: of Ioncton. N.B., In: redn- 'rm, to“. sue LOST I'ROVINCES RICH. TORONTO ED. t. bslt drivcn. All in first class condition. Would be sold logclhcr or separate- ly; also a lot of snarling at a very great bargain as room ls required immedi- ately. . 8. Frank Wilsg ' Sons " Adelaide Skid West. Mackinaw For Saie WhCCIUCk Engine. ISO H.P., 18 I 42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wide, aM Dynamo 30 " “Only mice. Then I churned a /Ut5.. toner thirty cents for attrwmtription instead of fifty." "Did you ever make n serious mis- take in I Prescription " [Dunlap 'l'ire t Rubber (ltgyh Company, limited le" Ave, . . Toronto i A The Ihiiihr? Rubber Poilijiiiy Wants Workmen for Toronto WANTED-GOOD COOK OR G E N E tt A L for Hurlinglon. Other servants kept. Best wages. Apply Mrs. Proctor, RR. No. 2, CANCER, TUM0tttg, LUMI'U. FIFO. Internal and external ctuqd with- 001.99". " ottttcrttf, 't.yttittrivstue out can by our htme argument Vail I}! tteretttro Late, Dr. Bellman “0'0ch III - Too "HI. Alf, hellmh Cr, Lich-d "(slungwnml m" cts-tty, for rush buyer. Hamilton. Hm PWi?2P'/W"?1", NEWS AAA: Ju' out“! for “A. in gum] Ontario town. The than usual and Intern-51.. er all Marianne- Full tntotmtsrton an application In Wilton Puhlllnlna com. uny. " Wrst Adel-Mo Strut. Torontt BOX NAILERS. SAWYERS. LABORERS. good wages. Apply or write Firslbrook Bros. Limit. ed, Toronto. Fiéeinan. Luna] WANTED .0 no PLAIN And light new!" at hvunr. whole or In." time. good pay; mark but any dir. u“. Charge. mud. Send rump for articular; National Munufuturlnl rug-ray. Montreal. a GOOD ALI. Rows" Iun' annual man to lake charge of Fund. Delft and “I." in -tusl manmmrnt or Dry Goods. Bandy rmMnnm-m. Would prefer mm: who rould be mad. gamer nnrlner. F. u. “chunk: & Pm. (rum-a. 0m. a; tii2,ftsiiijt L7G'iruGitiG""ci',', mars. cl. Imam. t. o ___ ...-.V..... .v.. an... in We. of PlnlIlnnf trade. In. at“ Rubbing and Polshinx. aim the ' and 'l'rlnunu-I Study work w, good wan tor "utrttrraretit nun. 'hon npulylnn sum- chperleriso tef tytt.t mums! "I: Manly 3“»:eg For Freozlng we dieing: FEE»?! " g'ed,r."Ni, qood Gored. â€[313 an“. o.. Limit-I, u. T It) lt'ht It. {can Toronto. you [u but ruullu with CRUIHED nook SALT A more ovon "our Smoother ice Cream. Take. otte-tt.sru less we]: and knu- Croun hum twh " aa lung Write mom Bur VII-RI. M (ml- Bt., Toronto. On. a ruin-on tuna con- , " Oi!- dNrt mu 2'tel?. PAN“ HANDY _ Sled Wheat l' t1xA'1Pyy.tr.=p AND INEXI'I'ZIH- A "hltt. am. for Hook-r3 gnu Under- â€-11. NC. a few Young Men. 3:30.} M. twe. Mercury Mun. {Eh‘WAF‘EFD run ALI. to keep up with tho 4.- mM- of I Ito-Ally Snore-a- ln; business. Hon In . chance for medium:- or untkulod wot-lunch who with to become mohanlca. to In": t trade that com. manda [and In.“ every- where. No pal-lou- - nal-{once In "Abbot- Maury. The L,'NitF of men all [run the Dun- lop Gummy for I Ion-r0 dad. Sent In your mm. and "dream ror nn “unlim- tton bunk. Adana: Morn m "a needed In the Toronto factory of Th. Dunlap Tin & Rubber Good. Company. blunted. gym-unm- ron unl' Danger: of Pharmacy fur “I! .09! IL! IIEOUI. (ittok de, W r m tBeet' F, ar-i.'.. u ts'tl Minx Ru . air. In fun 61, (‘H HAP. two “I.