handy refinery o choose from. Montreal, your choice. gaium, arse grain 2. ue a ailaogh ® ie t 1 READ LABEL hat the Guns of 15â€"inch diameter in the meter in the Royal Navy discharge a shell weighing nearly two thousand pount‘s. As I lay there a scheme flashed into my mind. My rope was within five feet of me, and I thanked my lucky stars that I had not had time to fasâ€" ten it to my saddle. For the moment the bull was paying no attention to me, and I quickly drew my dirk, tore the red bandana from my neck and wrapped it round the guard. Then I threw it directly in front of Diablo. He caught sight of the hater red and rushed upon it. I jumped to my feet and tied the end of my rope to a post in the corral; then I drew it in and formed the noose. That time I did not miss my throw, and the rope settled round the bull‘s glistening horns. I drew it taut and ran for the gate, but the bull got ahead of me. I tried to dodge, but I was weak and dizzy, and, although I got out of his path, I stumbled, and the keen tip of his horn gave me this scar. I dragged myself to the gate, but I fainted there and. had to be carried out. Diablo had to. be tied into helplessness with ropes before he could be got from that cor-' ral into his own. When I was within thirty feet of him he charged, bellowing hoarsely. Star sprang to one side and I cast my rope. The rope, new and stiff, kinked and fell short, and Blanco Diablo stopped with only one foot in the loop. I saw a chance to throw him, and started Star; but the bull was wary, and drew his foot out of the noose beâ€" fore I could tighten it, Then he chargâ€" ed, bellowing fiercely, and with his red eyes standing out like spots of carâ€" mine paint on his white face. He struck Star full on the side, hurled} him to the ground and threw me| against the wall of the corral. , Canadian Postum Cereal Go., Ltd, Windsor, Ont, ie 5ols Grocers everywhere my lariat and leaping on my horse, I raced to ghe corral, and arrived just in time to see Blanco Diablo (White Devil), a big white bull, so ugly that he was always kept in a pen by himâ€" self, run a colt into a corner and gore it frightfully. I halted Star, my horse, and ran out my noose. There was no snubbing in the corral, and it was up to me to throw the bull at the first cast. Gathâ€" ering the coil in my hand, I forced my trembling horse toward the enraged animal. This delicious table bevâ€" erage, made of cereals, has a wonderfully satisfying flavor and is entirely free from caffeine, the drug in both tea and coffee. Posâ€" tum is a true, pure foodâ€" drink that has helped thousands to forget the tea or coffee habit. As I was about to knot on my rope, a new one that I had never used, I was startled by some shrill screams from a small corral in which there were several thoroughbred colts. Seizing I was riding that summer for the old Bar X. I was about twenty, and conceited, of course. One day I and two other riders were getting ready to drive in a small bunch of steers the boss wantd to sell. Nowadays, for their chilâ€" dren, wise parents choose These beverages contain drug elements that hinder development of both body and mind, especially in children. «There‘s a Reason"‘ Tea and Coffee For Children? POSTUM The scar was a long white line that crossed Mansard‘s check from temple to chin. It took some pleading to get Jack to tell his story, but as last he ; yieclded: I How Jack Mansard Was Marked From Temple to Chin. The riders of the Circle C ranch were gathered round the roaring fire in the bunk house, telling stories. Jack Mansard, the foreman, said little, though he listened to the others. When the conversation slackened, one of the younger riders said, "Jack, I never heard how you got that scar on your cheek." "EL BLANCO DIABLO." sell POSTVM 3 ip. Uingdâ€"s ~abltinnnt (aky #% o o PmRmmrTT sU For example, I found t‘\at fats of all kinds, oils, and butter are not to be hadâ€"at least, as far as the comâ€" mon people are concerned. Eggs are plentiful, Mutton, beef, veal, and sausages are practically unobtainâ€" able, but occasionally one can get the maximum allowanceâ€"half a pound â€"if one is early enough,. The prices, however, render that small allowance rohibitive for the poorer classes. ;Ihen I was there beef and mutton, when obtainable, cost from five to six. shillings per pound. It is not exagâ€" gerating to say that over twoâ€"thirds of the butchers‘ shops of Greater Berâ€" lin are closed on accour‘" of lack of It stuck to it four days. Thereâ€" after I took my meals in restawrants,| but I had learned something of the ; difficulties under which housekeeping is carried on at the present time in | the German capital. X | I mumbled that I would take a quarter of a pound. He cut it off and wrapped it up. I laid down a tenâ€" mark note and reached for it. But I didn‘t get it. _ No, gentle reader, I didn‘t get it. He drew it just out of my reach, and asked for my Fleischâ€" marke. My what? My meat card! I fumbled in a pocket which I knew was empty and muttered something about having forgotten it. I had originally intended to buy half a small side against future need, but somehow I began to feel something like a thief in the act of stealing a communion service from an altar, so I merely indicated a modest slice of some five pounds which was lying on the counter and said I would take that. Conversation ceased. The proâ€" prietor stared at me. _ Everybody stared at me. After recovering his breath, the proprietor informed me in a notâ€"tooâ€"friendly manner that a quarter of a pound was the limit and insinuated that I was lucky to get that. At times there was the semblance of a line, but, generally speaking, there was simply a surging, elbowing mass of irritable women, with a few old men and children, all intent upon one objectâ€"namely, bacon! A policeâ€" man stood at the door and was letâ€" ting them in, five at a time. Finally, about halfâ€"past nine, my turn came, and I grew more cheerful as I noted that the bacon was not quite exâ€" hausted. The policeman indicated five, of whom I was the first, and we entered. it was merely an accident of some kind. Apparently they had carried the victim into the little shop wither I was bound. "How unfortunate!" I said to myself. I asked a man what the trouble was. "Bacon," he reâ€" plied, laconically enough. |_ Although the family with whom I lived assured me that bacon, ham, ;bee{, mutton, veal, butter, and variâ€" |ous other articles were practically ‘impossible to obtain, I asked to be | called for 7.30 the next morning. The shops in Berlin open at eight o‘clock, |and I intended to be "Johnnyâ€"onâ€"theâ€" spot." The fact is, while passing a little shop in a back street on the evening of my arrival I had noticed a dozen or so hams and a little stock of bacon temptingly displayed in the window. The priceâ€"over six shillings a pound â€"staggered me; but bacon and eggs being my piece de resistance in the culinary line, I decided to give the family a surprise as well as a treat by offering them a "mining camp" breakâ€" fast of bacon and eggs. I had reckâ€" lessly purchased a dozen eggs the evening before. As I went towards the little shop I thought there was a fire, but no smoke being in evidence I concluded _ In Berlin I had the good luck to find a room with a middleâ€"class famâ€" ily which I had known before the war, with the privilege of using the family kitchen. Having once upon a time done considerable amateur cookâ€" ing in a Western mining camp, I reâ€" solved to find out just how the peoâ€" ple were faring by cooking my own meals for a few days. The following morning I put the family market basket on my arm and sauntered forth. _ In order to get an insight into real lconditions while traveling in Gerâ€" many, I made it a rule to avoid the wellâ€"known international hotels and to stop in small pensions, or, whenâ€" ever possible, with a private family. That, in addition to being able to speak the language and having the advantage of "before war" acquaintâ€" ances, enabled me to see and hear many things which the ordinary traâ€" veler would miss, and to get a fairly accurate idea of actual conditions. _ It is true that bread cards and two meatless days each weekâ€"Tuesdays and Fridaysâ€"apply rigidly to hotel guests as well as to the general popuâ€" lace, and that dancing is banned everywhere, but, otherwise, hotel life remains practically unchanged. Moreâ€" over, the large hostelries are quite crowded, and one dropping in for five o‘clock tea would scarcely notice any difference were it not for the numerâ€" ous wounded officers and the still more numerous Iron Crosses. "Life in les gandes hotels is, I dareâ€" say, practically the same in all the countries at war. Germany is no exâ€" ception, and one travelling in that country and stopping only at the firstâ€"class hotels would gain a very limited and erroneous impression of life as it really is among the Teuâ€" tons. Only the Large, Expensive Hotels Look to Be Going On Normally. An American just out of Germany, writing from Bergen, Norway, to a frieAnf,{ iq England, says: AN AMERICAN TELLS OF HIS EXâ€" PERIENCE IN BERLIN. FOOD IN GERMANY |..,.ca SCARCE AND DEAR j * S>, Everything Very Dear. Shopping in Berlin. still be had in small out and contains many new classes | with attractive prizes. Among these is the Boys‘ Steer Feeding Competiâ€" | tion, open to the boys entered in the | interâ€"county Baby Beef Competition : conducted by the Department of Agâ€" riculture. The management are ofâ€" ‘fering a good prize and this class should be a popular one. ,Perhaps a little exaggeration mixed with your talk would make it more interesting. Uncle Georgeâ€"Come here, Willie! Don‘t you know who 1 am? Willieâ€"You bet I do! You are ma‘s brother who stayed here two months one time and never offered to pay a cent for board. Oh, yes; I‘ve heard pa speak of you often, Legislation was once threatened to prevent Toronto holding an Exhibition except in years specified by the Onâ€" tario Government. Fortunately, the matter never reached the House. I Both Changed. l An elderly married couple, each of | weighty proportions, were about to ;take an automobile ride. As the husband made no attempt to assist his wife into the car, she burned to him and said: "You are not nearly so | gallant as you were when you were | a boy." The Prize List of the Seventh Anâ€" nual Toronto Fat Stock Show is now "Ami you, my dear," he returned "are not nearly so buoyant as wuen you were a gal." Every mother knows how fatal the| hot summer months are to small chil-. dren. Cholera infantum, diarrhoea,| dysentery and stomach troubles are| rife at this time and often a precious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. The mother who keeps | Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tabâ€"| lets prevents stomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenly | as it generally doesâ€"the Tablets will bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.! Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville,| Ont. | Cases of strong men who faint at the sight of a drop of blood are fairly common. An extraordinary case is recorded by a doctor who was called in to attend a man who had a fainting attack as a result of slightly cutting his finger. On inquiring the business of his patient, it transpired that the man was a butcher! Though used to animal bloodshed, he could not bear the sight of human blood, and always worked in strong leather gloves to prevent accidents. KEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING HOT WEATHER. Ask for Minard‘s and take no othe§ A young and clever barrister, now serving in France, is said to have been so nervous when first called upon to ‘address a jury in court that he deâ€" termined to adopt strenuous methods in order to cure himself of this failâ€" ing. Dressing himself in his shabâ€" biest clothes, and taking only a small gladstoneâ€"bag with him, he set out on a _ tour, making "tubâ€"thumping" speeches in parks and marketâ€"places in country districts, and making it a rule not even to decide on a subject for his speech until he had collected an audience. In about an hour out he came, curâ€" ed for ever of his nervousness! "Get out of this, lad!" said the farmer, on seeing the carter. "I‘m stopping here quietly for a bit!" A certain large farmer was once very badly injured through a kick from a horse, and for years afterâ€" wards could not bear to go near the heels of one. He was found one day by one of the farmâ€"hands standing in the stable right behind the hindâ€"quarâ€" ters of the biggest and most vicious animal on the farm, white with anxâ€" iety, and his face wet with perspiraâ€" tion. Young soldiers at the Front who exâ€" pose themselves recklessly are often prompted to do so by a desire to batâ€" tle against their natural fears, just as many persons who are nervous about particular things, animals, or places, often court association with these things as a cure. How Some Martyrs to Nervousness Have Cured Themselves. Very many persons who have all the skill necessary for great success at games, and in some cases professions, are prevented from doing themselves justice by an uncontrollable nervousâ€" ness which comes over them when their talents are put to an important trial. Much having been written about the milk supply in Germany, I took especial pains to find out the truth. There is a dearth of milk everywhere in Berlin, and in other large cities for that matter. Sugar was almost unprocurable. Very little coffee is for sale; parched barley and other substitutes are beâ€" ing used instead. Tea, cocoa, spices, and other similarly imported articles, are either extremely dear or not be had at all. quantities at about three times their normal cost. Onions are practically unobtainable. Other vegetables are scarce and dear. Tinned fruits, vegeâ€" tables, and marmalades are still plentiful, but frightfully dear. CANADIAN STORAGE BATTERY i Co,, LIMmiTeo 1 A Chance for the Boys. Willard Storage Batteries. Repairs to all makes of Battorios, Magnetos, Generators, Eto. Remembered Him GETTING USED TO IT. ting this notion out of the public| Our firm opinion is that there is in | mind. this war no room for a compromise q "Gradually the bitterness of feeling with England, says the Vossische ' toward England increased. It is now Zeitung. England is the enemy who |intense. _ The Germans had been has raised up and is still keeping {hopeful that, in the event of a Euroâ€" against us a world of enemies. We ‘‘ pean war, England would at least be can expect from England‘s goodâ€"will |neutral. Some even dreamed that‘nothing . . . for our national future. (England might be on their side. They We must for the sake of a reconciliaâ€" ; never imagined that she would declare | tion with England abandon none of the \ war upon them. The declaration of warâ€"aims which we have achieved by | war was consequently a great blow, conquest and which we deem it neâ€" | though the phrase of the King of Baâ€" | cessary to retain in the interests of ‘ : variaâ€"‘So much the mbetter; the more | our country. The only important | variaâ€"‘So much the better; the more thing is to weaken England‘s power | passed from mouth to mouth. At the and to strengthen our own to an exâ€" ;time I felt, and I still believe, that tent that would allow us to impose |had the attitude of England been peace upon England, willyâ€"nilly, and | plainer, Germany would have shrunk | to make her recognize our right to exâ€" from making war until she was quite istence, our right to the future, our | sure that England would stand aloof.| right to access to the world and to Only Thorough Defeat Will Do. ’ the world‘s oceans. ‘ "Now nothing short of t.horough| ® | military defeat will convince the Gerâ€" Almost. | man people that they can be beaten.’ Mrs. Kawlerâ€"I unerstand that the | Otherwise there will be no peace exâ€" | eldest.Jones boy wer.\t westâ€"and got | + | {cent on Germany‘s own terms. ‘The into politics. _ He became mayor | people are prepared to suffer, much didn‘t he ? | as they may dislike the inconvenience | s . & | to which the war has put them. This ; Mt:s' Biul;ger{)!;yâ€"l donl: tthlm}l: h: ‘is particularly true of States, like g;" y mayor, 0d ear \ Bavaria, where I spent some time beâ€" wae an €xâ€"mMmayor, |fore leaving the country. ty se t i h i on M d paa on n "The Allies may not have noticed how carefully the Berlin Government "If the Bavarians could be given a smashing blow there might be a rapid end of the war, but they are now as persuaded as they were at the beginâ€" ning that their Generals and their soldiers cannot be defeated. Even a Prussian defeat would not make much impression in Bavaria unless the Baâ€" varian armies were defeated at the same time. j "At first it was thought that the: war would be short and triumphanâ€"| |ant. Confidence in the army and its | chiefs was boundless. Ilustrated paâ€"| _ pers represented the spirit of Bisâ€"| _ marck as brooding over Paris and | |pointing to a repetition of the mighty | ‘deeds of 1870 and 1871. The Battle‘ of the Marne was taken as a proof | |that the task might be longer and ; | harder than had at first been supposâ€"| ‘ed, but all talk of a German reverse ; ]was checked by the explanation that,} on the Marne, the German armies had | merely stayed their advance for a| time, in order to take up positions | carefully selected fifteen years earlier | Iby the foresight of the General Staff.| | Fighting for Existence. ' "As time went on the conviction ; | grew and deepened that Germany was \fighting for her very existence. \Though obliged by the necessities of | | the situation to attack, the view con-f stantly inculcated upon the people was | that Germany was and is on the deâ€"| fensive. There are no means of getâ€"| ’ting this notion out of the public! | mind. | to "Statements by people like Harden | that Germany wanted war, and made‘ it deliberately, are regarded as hereâ€"| sy. Harden has been badly received . by audiences in provincial towns when | he has attempted to propound this' view. "‘Surrounded by a ring of jealous enemies who had conspired to assail and crush her, they claimed that her only chance was in breaking through the ring by all possible means and of ‘vindicating by the sword her right to free existence.‘ ’ "Unless I am entirely mistaken â€" Iand my experience of life in Germany has been continuousâ€"no _ essential !change has taken place among the |German masses since the beginning of | the war; or, if there has been a change lit has not been in the direction of disâ€" couragement. The utmost which orâ€" |dinary Germans can be got to say is ('that ‘it is high time that peace were \ made,‘ but they mean, of course, a |German peace, one which shall conâ€" fsolidate and correspond to German victories. They not only feel that they are victorious, but they are firmly perâ€" suaded that they cannot be beaten. Conscience Is Easy. _ "It must not be supposed that the: German people have an uneasy conâ€"| science. The Imperial Chancellor‘s deâ€"| claration to the Reichstag at the beâ€" | ginning of the war that Gernany was | ‘doing wrong‘ in invading, Belgium| was never taken as a confeSsion of guilt. His phrase that ‘necessityl knows no law‘ meant and still means | to Germans that Germany found herâ€"| self in a condition of what is called‘ Notwehrâ€"that is to say, of legitiâ€"| mate ‘selfâ€"defence. | "Scarcely less astonishing than the discovery that the position of the Allies is not what Germans fondly beâ€" lieve it to be is the mistaken conâ€" ception prevalent in some allied counâ€" tries of the real condition of Germany and of the state of mind of the Gerâ€" man people. I propose to describe as simply as possible what that condition and that state of mind really are. "The press of German Switzerland, from which my first impressions of the outer world were derived, certainly tells the impartial truth in sufficient degree to save its readers from sharâ€" ing German illusions. What more can be asked of a neutral press? The London Times publishes the folâ€" lowing account of the true condition of Germany "from an unimpeachable source." The article is based on the experience of an observer who recentâ€" ly reached Switzerland, after having lived in Germany and enjoyed special facilities for observation from the beginning of the war. He says: Peace Is Desired, But It Must Be On Terms Dictated by the Teutons. THE EXPERIENCE OF A BRITISH OBSERVER. PAINTS GERMANY AS STILL HOPEFUL The attendance the first year of the Canadian National Exhibition was 101,000. It ran three weeks. Last year there was a daily average attendance of 72,000 for 12 days, a total of * "Well," said the man, judicially, "it was then; it wouldn‘t be now." "Yes, your honor,"‘ replied the culâ€" prit, "I am the man." "Exciting, wasn‘t it?" continued the justice. "Let me see," said the judge. "I know you. _ Are you not the man who was married in acage ofmanâ€"eating lions ?" Used To It. The man had been haled before the magistrate on some trivial charge. Mrs. Kawlerâ€"I unerstand that the eldest Jones boy went west and got into politics. He became mayor didn‘t he? Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend ,l Addison, Herbert, carpenter, Winniâ€" , | Peg, wounded; Anderson, John M., _ clerk,~ Calgary, wounded; _ Arlke, lIHarry, tariff _ compiler, Winnipeg, _| wounded; Atkinson, Arthur, cook, iMontrea], wounded; Boushear, Henry, |engineer, Fort William, wounded; | Burritt, Edgar M., clerk, North Bay, .‘ killed in action; Chapman, Edward, l§machinist, Angus, killed in action; + Diver, John W. car repairer, Toronto, ;{killed in action; Ellis, Thomas G. G., {record clerk, _ Montreal, died _ of | wounds; Foster, James B., car repairâ€" |er, Fort William, wounded; Gilchrist, \Thomas R., draftsman, Ogden shops, suffering from shock; Hamilton, Edâ€" _ ward, deliveryman, Winnipeg, woundâ€" |ed; Haswell, John, boilermaker‘s helpâ€" 'er, Moose Jaw, wounded; Hilliard, Samuel J., porter, Edmonton, wound-“ |ed; Hogg, James, clerk, Montreal, killed in action; Hunt, Thomas, ï¬t-{ iter’s helper, West Toronto, suffering | ‘from shock; Kinahan, Ernest, switchâ€" | man, Brit. Colum. Div., wounded; Kirâ€" { | wan, George I., brakeman, MacLeod,j ‘ wounded; McCourt, Samuel, laborer, ; Strathcona, killed in action; MacLau-l ‘rin, Douglas C., student fireman, Sor-l itin, died of wounds; Maslin, Walter, Iwood machine hand, West Toronto, wounded (2nd time); Morrison Harâ€" | vey, asst. agent, Pilot Mound, woundâ€" | ed; Moss, Albert, car inspector, Saskaâ€" |toon, killed in action; Parkes, Herbert | W., clerk, Montreal, wounded; Price,‘ {John, loco. fireman, Montreal, woundâ€"| ‘ed; Ross, Lorne, fitter‘s helper, Lon-’ |don, killed in action; Scammell, Edâ€" ward J., clerk, Bull River, wounded; Sheen, Wilfred J., clerk, Winnipeg, suffering from shock; Sweetman, L. H., ass‘t agent, Strathcona, died of wounds. f As particulars of Army Reservists are not available, these lists of those who have given up their lives for their country or been wounded in action are necessarily incomplete, and do not therefore indicate fully the extent to which the Company‘s officers and emâ€" ployees have participated in the great struggle. Several thousand officers and emâ€" ployees of the Canadian Pacific Railâ€" way Company enlisted for active miliâ€" tary duty with the Canadian Expediâ€" tionary Forces, and the majority of them are now in Europe, bravely batâ€" tling for Canada and the Empire. plays upon the feelings of the various German ‘tribes.‘ Toâ€"day it is the Poâ€" meranians, toâ€"morrow the Brandenâ€" burgers, next day the Saxons, and then the Bavarians who are singled out for special praise in the official bulletins. Everything is so organized in every detail by the Government in order to carry out its policy that the public has no opportunity of acquirâ€" ing views of its own. Popular conâ€" fidence in official management and in the official accounts of things is still absolute." A tasty Summer snack, supplying the greatest amount of nutriment in smallest bulk. Delicious with butter, soft cheese or marmalades. stomach. Happy is the man who listens to the call of the wildâ€"who goes fishing, hunting and canoeingâ€"who takes with him Triscuit, the Shredded _ Whole Wheat wafer. Triscuit is made of the whole wheat, steamâ€" cooked, shredded and baked. gestion. The battle with hotel menus is a losing one for the man with a weal The Joy of a Vacation Britain the Enemy. Made in Canada ROLL OF HONOR. turned to the sorâ€" ing. It is more blessed to give than to be given away. Two hundred and twentyâ€"four milâ€" lions of people are engaged in agriculâ€" ture in Ldlia. "Stopâ€"Look! _ Have you any thing left?" thing ? He was running a summer hotel, and to keep departing guests from forgetting their belongings he put up a helpful sign. "Stopâ€"Look! Have you left anyâ€" Of course the drummer had to get gay with it. thus: Granulated Eyelids, ore Eyes inflamed by ex sure to Sun, Dust and "I?i â€" uickly relieved by Murine yesgyele.o‘y‘ No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurineEys SalveinTubes25c. ForBook ol theEyeFreeask Druggists or MurineEyeRemedy Co., Chicag® incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured' him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'SI LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. ; Profit on Liniment, $54. "Don‘t know about that. ~ There‘s the medium soft boiled egg." "If a man has the price he can get anything he wants and the way he wants it." The Toronto Board of Trade urged the C.N.E. directors to run the Fair for three months as far back as 1885, but the management thought two weeks quite long enough. ONTARIO ARCHIVES "Great, For the first time I‘ve seen my wife shed tears that I‘m not reâ€" sponsible for." Joffre looked calmly and reflectively upon him for a few moments, and then he answered: "What I have won, I hope, is a right to rest the sooner in my little house in the eastern Pyrenees." .“How night?" Perverted Proverbs. Strike while the iron is hot. The more waist the less speed. A thrown kiss spreis no germs. One swallow doesn‘t make a »upper. It‘s a long loan that has no returnâ€" "Do you know, general," said one of his staff, who thought it strange that at such a time a victorious commandâ€" er should not almost sing and dance: "do you know that you have won what is perhaps the greatest battle in hisâ€" tory When you think of the great comâ€" mander directing the operations and shaping the fortunes of the armies of France, think also of the best and the truest story that is ever to be told of him. The battle of the Marne had been fought and won. Gen. Joffre was apparently unmoved. i The Tageblatt correspondent was quite charmed to notice the respectâ€" ful behavior of the Turkish audiences. Nearly everybody sat quietly, and it was interesting to note that few ladies, except the very ancient ones, indulged in cigarettes during the perâ€" formance. A number of very lofty pieces did not meet with the recogâ€" nition which was expected, but on the whole "the concerts were a marâ€" velous gift of the Germans to their Turkish friends and allies which they will long remember, and which touchâ€" ed their hearts deeply." For more than a week, we are told, German imt:-ument,lisu and singers, male and female, have been delightâ€" ing the Turks with the works of Beeâ€" thoven, Bach, Brahms, Schubert, and Schumann, as well as with the liveâ€" liest strains of Johann Strauss. Everyâ€" where the audiences wore delighted, ,:nd applauded vigorously. We hear that the Sultan and Imperial houseâ€" hold were frequently regaled, and that in these august circles music is cultivated with a passion and success of which few have any notion. Nearâ€" ; ly every member of the Sultan‘s famâ€" ‘ ‘ily is musically gifted. All the prinâ€" ces and princesses play some instru-! ment or other, and several of them have developed such talent as to be «almost artists. w MOISE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Philippe, Que. I bought a horse with a supposedly More than a column is devoted by the Berliner Tageblatt to a description of German concerts in Constantinople. The leading Liberal journal is strongâ€" ly of the opinion that the performance of German music, instrumental and vocal, in the Turkish capital has not only "important kultural significance," but is also fraught with a deep poliâ€" tical meaning. 9+ More than GERMAN MUSIC FOR TURKS. ly a Few Ladies Smoked During ?†The Altered Sign. A Kind of Relief. did you like the show last Everything But. Joffre‘s Ambition. 9 m Wheclock Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x 42, with double main driving belt 24 ins, wige, and Bynamo 30 K. W. belt driven, _ All in first class condition. Would be sold together or separateâ€" ly ; also a lot of shafling at a very great bargain as room is required immedlâ€" ately; 8. Frank Wilson & Sons Machinery For Sale _ Premium Lists with many new clarses mow rou‘l‘y. $ aX anndngnr anre mole Cumes December S8th and 9th, 1916 The same chance for a bright boy at the Seventh Annual Foromto Fat Stook I Boy and i0 Hogs Made $350 at Our 1915 Show. CANCER‘ TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC, internal and external, cured with« | out pain by our home treatment Write #s before too late. Dr. Rellman Medical | Co., LAimited, Collingwood. Ont. We want a few good mechanics. Have steady work and good wages for lathse hands, fitters, handy men, also a few woodâ€"working . machinists and handy men for wood shop wanted. Apply in person only, Dodge Manutacturing Co. g BOOK ON zy |DOG _ DISEASES it And How to Feed * Mulled free to any address by America‘s the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER €O., Inc. Dog Remedies J 118 West 31st Street, New York MECHANICS WANTED For Frsezing Ice Cream A more even freeze Emoother Ice Cream. Takes oneâ€"third less salt and keeps Cream hard twice as long. Writ« TORONTO SALT WORKS, 60â€"62 Jarvis St., Toromto, Ont. PRoFlT-uM\'l.\'u NEWSs AND JoB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting Of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. QEED POTATORS, IRISH 4. blers, Deleware, Carman at once. Supply limited. Write for tations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton "What is the work of a telephone operator?" Mrs, Thomas further inâ€" quired. The United Kingdom imports more wheat than any other country, and the United States is the largest exâ€" porter, must sell Accredited hy th> New York State Educstion Dept Offers a twoâ€"and â€"oneâ€"ha‘f year course i« trainis # jor nurser with aliown»<ce d maintenance. Applicant must bave one year high school instrnotion â€"r its edueational equ valent. For particulars addrere B+) lerse! Hospital, 66 Jefferson 8t., New Y ork ‘Why is it that the telephone operâ€" ators are all women?" Mrs. Thomas asked her husband. ‘"Well," answered Mr. Thomas, "the 73 Adelaide Strecet West, Toronto. '!flm!ll' wanTtup ’l‘EAM.\'THI(S WANTED R employment to competent Apply HENDRIE & COMPANA Become a Registo ed Nurse Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house You can double your profits by storing up good green feed in a "Talking," answered.. Mr. Thomas. you get best results with CRUSHED ROCK SaALct and receive pay while learning A Gold Mine On Your Farm OR SALE BISSELL SILO Beth leracl Hospital of New York City Founded 1890 €. F. TOPPING, Secretary, Union Stock Yards, Toronte. NEWSPAPLRS POR SALE SALE. _ Good 100â€"ACRE FARM Huronn(‘nun(_\'. Morris Township Ll9s uen tdl d . SHOCOES Hit We ie reermmmeen td toninbnges n by Every Member For particulars write F. 8. SCOTT, Brusse} MISCELLANEOUS SEED POTATOEDS West ‘Toronto. Why, FoR ISSUE 32â€"‘16, Yards, ‘Toronto, Hamil STEADY by M