West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Sep 1916, p. 7

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m the MA ANADA FROM THB of the Places **There‘s a Reason Canadian Pos‘am Cereal Co., Ltd., Bobbie asked his father if time was invented in Ireland, because it was called O‘Clock. I could not help smiling myseH at. their lack of humor and absurd opinâ€" ion they had of themselves. Just pic-‘ ture these two German officers anyâ€" thing but smartâ€"in fact, very beâ€"| draggled after two days without al shave or washâ€"one in dark â€"green uniform, the other in a Prussian blue | uniform, with his long blue coat lookâ€" | ing very dirty and worn and he him-,’ self most bedraggled. Then, to crown ‘ all, he was wearing a ratWer light,' pair of kid gloves, which seemed to| give him an almost comedian‘s touch, & so absurd did gloves appear in his present surroundings. I felt almost sorry for him, he looked so ridiculous [ and yet so much on his dignity. He}|: seemed to cling to his gloves as an| emblem _ of respectability, because ]f when I saw him brought in yesterday [ evening he was still wearing them. | d I gathered from these officers they | v were rather surprised that we have | v done as much as we had, and that J our troops were as good â€"as they are | F and our artillery so accurate. I ask-' ed what they thought of the present | C situation. They said, "Yes, you have | 2 won five kilometres, but it is a hunâ€" | " dred miles from here to Brussels; but | you will get no further." They weref very much concerned as to whether | there was any danger of being tor. | 0 pedoed when they were going over to| K England, as they heard that very | P few boats ever got across. I told : r0 them they might get across safe, but * in all probability they would be sent | A8 to the Isle of Man, in which case ©O there was a very good chance of goâ€" | to ing under. They replied, "Isn‘t there th« a signal given on the steamer that it All is carrying _ German _ prisoners ?";th‘ which 1 thought was rather price‘ess. wa Gets Attentionâ€" For sound health, every table should have its daily ration of Grapeâ€"Nutsâ€" But the big "get atâ€" tention" quality is its abundance of wellâ€" balanced, easily diâ€" gestibie nourishment. Grape Nuts Then again, beâ€" cause it is ready to eatâ€"fresh and crisp from the package. First, because of its wonderfully â€" delicious flavorâ€" CEOT NC PUnf What seemed to stick most in this officer‘s gizzard was the fact that he was shut up in the same cage as his men, although there was a piece of wire between them; also that his position was so terribly uncomfortâ€" able. He said: "I am not used to sleeping in the open. â€" Officers alâ€" ways sleep in houses with us!" So I| reminded him it was war time. He! replied, "Yes, yesterday I was a I gentleman; toâ€"day I am a monkey beâ€"| hind iron bars." True, they were not} very comfortable, as they had to lie| on some chalky ground alongside of a sunken road. I wel EC C CUUde 1 had a long conversation with two officers who were taken prisoners and were in the prisoners‘ cage â€" before going back behind the line Ra+L .4 Shsus Clz POMW German Taken at Pozieres Was on His Dignity, An officer writing from the front says: Yesterday morning Pozicres fell inâ€" to our hands, after a terrific bombâ€" ardment during the night. I never heard anything like it for intensity, although it did not last as long as some of the others I have heard. The Austrialians who were here the other day in the village took the place withâ€" out great loss. Had an Irish Look men to hold out against i0 admitted that the Ausâ€" e "very brave and fearâ€" "They seem to have no n a P bPapiicanton d .. s I have heard. The were here the other took the place withâ€" a terrific bombâ€" night. I never | _ Louis Botha and Jan Smuts are | the leading Boers, and consequently | these two men, who wept as they | signed away the independence â€" of their countries fourteen years ago, are |\the greatest men in the white men‘s Africa, the one a civil and the other a military dictator. One has gone beyond the borders of his country and has added to the British Empire that vast territory formerly known as German Southwest Africa. Smuts has gone afield and is about to preâ€" sent to his sovereign another huge territory, German East Africa. Then these brothers in politics, statesmanâ€" ship and arms may feel warranted in | turning their eyes toward Berlin and | to wonder what are the thoughts of |. that same Prussian Kaiser who virâ€"| tually promised Kruger almost a | score of years ago to be his royal |l protectorâ€"and then broke his pledge. |] Viliiiniirimesfihea ds â€"iclal o. to obtain new instructions, whether re they should surrender unconditionâ€" it ally or return to the field and renew )» the war. For days the convention s, was at loggerheads. At length Smuts gained a hearing. He told them the truth about the situation, that it was impossible to fight longer, that theyI s could expect no help from Europe or g | America, and that further resistancef | meant useless slaughter. " = | "Brethren," he declared in what is | | regarded among South Africans as : | one of the most eloquent and certain-'l ;ly one of the most momentous’ speeches ever made in that country, | ‘‘we have vowed to stand fast to the bitter end; let us be men, and ac-!‘ ; knowledge that that end has now | | come. ] f "The future is dark, indeed, but | we will not give up courage, nor our |\ |hope and trust in God." t C Let the Kaiser Answer. i The brighter day was not long in | * |coming. Within a few years the“l |United States of South Africa rose, ] | out of the ashes of the war, and it & comprises practically all the vast | * territory south of the Limpopo river. | Z Toâ€"day the Boer republics are out of | £ existence, but in their places has | * risen the Boer nation. The British | M Government gave the confederated | * colonies a parliament and a liberal | de constitution. nC It was as one of the Boer peace commissioners, who met General Kitchener and Sir Alfred Milner, the British commissioners, that Smuts rose to the rank of statesman. The commissioners had been unable to agree and the Boers returned to the convention of the national delegates lsw i abegestec onl Â¥ . F 8 Smuts went into the South African campaign as a private and ended â€" as 2 general and one of the peace comâ€" missioners. | _ Smuts was born on a farm in the |Transvaal, ten years after his father 'Jhad assisted in trouncing the British I‘at Majuba Hill. He was antiâ€"British up to the time he was ten years of | age. Then he went to England for [a university education in law. He |returned proâ€"British, but did not pracâ€" |tise it very long, because he began ‘the practice of law by going into{ politics. In those days, which was about the time Dr. Jameson made his unsuccessful run across the border for the purpose of annexing the Boer republics to the British Empire, â€" it did not pay a politician in the Transâ€" vaal to be very proâ€"British, so Smuts went out and shot a couple of Jameson‘s men â€" and became â€" antiâ€" British again. ‘ General Smuts is a Boer whose anâ€" s cestors, Germans, went to South t Africa to escape religious persecution s ;in Europe at the time the Hugenots > swarmed to America. The British s newspapers like to call him an Afriâ€" â€"|kanderâ€"a man born in South Africa > of British parentsâ€"but he calls himâ€" / self a Boer and he is proud of the | name. i !" Smuts is not quite fortyâ€"five years old and with the possible exception! |of Louis Botha, the South African \Premier, and his coâ€"worker in peace, | | war and politics, he is the biggest | man in public life on the continent | |of Africa. South Afican admirers say Asquith and Lloyd George are | not in the same class with the lawyer | | whom Kruger picked to be a great | ‘man. i Eh ind ningortntatsints h 2. it , 1 T 11c "of the Prussian colonies. | To Smuts the lawyer will go the | credit of adding to the British doâ€" \ main an empire four times as large as the state of New York. He will be acclaimed as one of the greatest generals of the war, and already in England the demand has been made that he shall be sent to the front in‘ France, where his surpassing mili-l tary qualities may be utilized in driv-| ing the Teutonic hordes back beyond | the Rhine. | "Jan Christian Smuts will yet play a great part in South Africa, He is one of the cleverest lawyers in the country and a man of versatile atâ€" | tainments besides. He is personally a very simple man, and to meet him one would not suspect that he posâ€" sesses so firm a will and so deterâ€" mined a character, Although scarceâ€" ly thirty years of age and without | the slightest previous experience of military affairs, he developed in the |later phases of the war into a most | brilliant general. I Fifteen years ago "Oom" Paul Kruâ€" ger wrote this prophecy and characâ€" ‘ter sketch of the Boerâ€"British genâ€" | eral, who, as indicated in the war | fdespatches, is momentarily expected | to give the final thrust to that part | of the Kaiser‘s army which for two‘| years has been fighting in _ the swamps and forests of German East Africa to retain possession of the last Of the Prukgiom anfesi... Farmer, Momentous Eloquence s to the Britishflf;nivire, it pay a politic_i;m in the Transâ€" Ancestors Were equcation in law. He British, but did not pracâ€" long, because he began of law by going into those days, which was Lawyer, Politician. ‘ars ago "Oom" Paul Kruâ€" his prophecy and characâ€" f the Boerâ€"British genâ€" | is indicated in the war | is momentarily expected ; final thrust to that part: Germans. â€"â€"It is satisfactory that the creation of the new office of Labor Adviser is not to add to the already somewhat excessively large total of Cabinet Ministers. Lord Crewe is adding the work of the Education Department to his duties, largely nominal, as Lord President of the Council. ionâ€" | A Tireless Worker. 1ew | _ As a fact, these are the very quesâ€" ion | tions to help in the solution of which uts he was called into the Cabinet. And the in contributing to their solution he vas has done work of immense national 1@y | benefitâ€"work to which he has applied or himself with that tireless energy and | 1ce persistence which are so characterisâ€" |tic of the man. For fifteen months is he was engaged, with great success, as in dealing with labor matters submitâ€" . inâ€" | ted to him by the Ministry of Muniâ€" us | tions, the Admiralty and the War Ofâ€" y, fice, sometimes in turn and sometimes | he | all at once. It is small wonder if, | câ€"| during that time, he was unable to | w " give the requisite attention to the deâ€" S partment of which he was the head. I it His new appointment as Labor Adâ€"| ir ) viser to the Government, and his reâ€"| 1 tention in the Cabinet in that capaâ€" Y city, constitute a recognition of the|'J importance of the services he has s , rendered, and will continue to render . e | in connection with labor questions, / e | In the newlyâ€"created office he will be m ; |the right man in the right place. The | ; ) work which he has done in the or.! 4 ,gnniution of labor for war purposes | _ ¢) generally, and, in particular, in the w , | adjustment of difficulties under the w | Munitions Act, has been work of exâ€"| |treme difficulty and often of great st | delicacy. And there will certainly | ca !not be less scope for his great gifts ta | when the difficult problems in conâ€"| th nection with the readjustment Of | ue ’industry at the close of the war come forward for solution. ’ No Increase in Cabinet. | The new Department of _ Labor which has been established, might very well have been set up at a conâ€" siderably earlier date. It is to have separate officers and a staff under the direction of the Labor Adviser. Its present work will largely consist in investigating labor problems for the information of other departments and of the Cabinet at large. ‘on his time and thought he was not | able to give sufficient attention to | the exclusively departmental work connected with the Board of Educaâ€" | tion. For, almost from the moment | of his taking office, he was required | to devote himself very _ largely to |labor questions. I t | Arthur Henderson Is a Wellâ€"Balanced : and Patriotic Leader n of Labor;, F', It is well from every point of view 5!that the resignation of â€" Mr. Arthur‘ |Henderson, the one representative of labor in the coalition Cabinet, froml the post of President of the Board of . Education, is noet to involve his reâ€" lJtirement from the Cabinet. He is llcontmuing in the Cabinet, though in |a new officeâ€"that of Labor Adviser | |to the Government. His Cabinet colâ€" ; |leagues and the country at large could : ,ill spare at this time from the innerI ‘counse]s of Government, a labor lead-I |er so wellâ€"balanced, so able, so patâ€" | ‘riotic, and so wise as Mr. Henderson | has shown himself to be. ' |_ Persistent criticism from (-xtreme,1 |Radical quarters, had had the efiectf‘ | of rendering Mr. Henderson‘s conâ€" ‘, tinuance at the Board of Educationv‘ |extremely difficult. And while it is;‘ possible that in that particular deof‘ partment he may have been some-;‘ thing of a square peg in a round hole, | n it is notorious that, by reason of the{s large demands of other kinds made | * BRINGS TIRELESS ENERGY wWORK OF NEW POSITION. LABOR ADVISER _ WiLL BE USEFUL Hon h L3, 1, "TCAVE â€"ZCL to "the front" in any busiâ€" ness with a poorly nourished body. Delicious for breakâ€" fast with sliced peaches and Pream, yourself in topâ€"notch conâ€" oucn by cating Shredded Wbe;t ?hi“llif. a food that Supplies the greatest amount of b°dY-building material with the least tax upon the r“a.ao-:.... a» estion. You canâ€"rn"ot get "the front" in any busiâ€" in raucia t 50C of L Made in Canada Arthur Henderson ire the very quesâ€" solution of which he Cabinet. And heir solution he immense national e creation Adviser is somewhat f Cabinet ’ Striving to Please. ."John," said the minutely observant woman, "didn‘t you forget to tip the waiter ?" ‘"No, I attended to that right at tha start. I handed him all the money I can afford to spend and told him to take his tip and then bring us someâ€"‘ thing to eat with the change." l Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. By this méethod the: ;l;t;r;."or;:hnrd was planted in less than 15 days of nine hours each. !_ The man who undertook the work first mounted a two and oneâ€"halfâ€"horseâ€" power gasoline engine on the running gear of a light wagon and arranged it to operate a soll auger. With this outâ€" fit two men were able to put down as many holes in a day as 30 men could have punched with a bar and sledge. . In these holes light charges of dynaâ€" mite were exploded to form an excaâ€"| vation in which to plant trees, a numâ€", ber of holes being fired at a time. t 1 PTETY CC ‘RCuL, 2 Bed Cards to take a walk are the very | which it is expected \\Srtl:{\u(lu?r\?:irnta latest form of "rations" in Germany. ,‘ bought by the tenants, They have just been introduced, acâ€" cording to the Vossische Zeitung m’;l hornâ€"snglyâ€"romes ce July 22, by the police authorities of | ANGELS UNAWARES. Munich and Leipzig in order to betâ€"| on ter “control"‘the youthful population | Women Are Doing Their Share These Im the evening hours. Henceforth; Trying Times. youths under 17 years of age may apâ€"| r | pear in the streets only when provid.| _ Before the war there were five ed with permit cards, and these wili M!!OD, five hundred women wage be issued to none but members of soâ€" !eamer-s in Great Britain; toâ€"day there )called youths‘ organizations. â€" The 2"C S8id to be over ten million. Five system has been established in the !iOn men have enlisted for active hope that juvenile crime, which has SC"Vi¢@ and a woman has taken the seriously increased during the war, P!A¢¢ of every ableâ€"bodied man who may be checked. In Brandenburgâ€" MSht have been engaged in peaceâ€" onâ€"theâ€"Havel, near Berlin, children| 4 0¢cupations. England has never unaccompanied by adults may not P°C" 80 busy a manufacturing and use the streets after 9 p.m. | industrial country as she is in 1916 | The town of Freystadt, in West: Prussia, is described as "a butter paradise," as the ration cards just | introduced provide for half a pound of butter per day per family. Berâ€" lin‘s butter ration this week was two . ounces per person. | PLANT TREES BY DYNAMITE. ’ trousers . :...%............‘$I7 46 Tweed and sporting suits .... 15 00 !Frock or morning coats ..... 14 25 |Two coats ...~............ ~$00 (Waistconts . ....*...1......â€"~ CAb0 (Trousers . :.:1.%:.:..«....... â€" .860 | Winter overcoats ........... 20 00 |Summer overcoats .......... 17 75 | Mackintoshes or Alpine coats 10 00 ’ Women. ‘ | _ _Soap is now allotted at the rate of 50 grammes (about 1% ounces) per person per month, including shaving soap, with an extra ration of nine ounces of "soap powder." Any child born on or after August 1, 1916, is entitled to a soap card on the above basis. Special allowances of four‘ cards are allotted to physicians,‘ nurses dealing with infectious disâ€" | easos, dentists, veterinary surgeons, and midwives. Stokers, coal-heavers,: and chimney sweeps are entitled to two extra cards. f This is the clothing "free list": ‘ Men. ‘ Morning coat, waistcoat, and ‘ in Germany only on the rationâ€"card system. The new regulations came into effect on August 1. Clothes for both men and women can be purchasâ€" ed without special permit cards only if the articles in question are conâ€" tained in a soâ€"called "free list" of maximum _ prices. Anybody â€" who wants a suit or a dress costing more than the moderate prices fixed must obtain special permission of the “Im-’ perial Clothing Office" and assign | valid reasons for such "extravaâ€" gance." The object of these unpre-l cedented and drastic regulations, of | course, is to conserve the supply of ; textile materials for the clothing neâ€"| cessities of the army during the third | year of the war. ) ONLY 1% OUNCES PER MONTH TO EACH PERSON,. Clothing and soay now can be had FOR GERMANS NOW A Butter Paradise. ist at Which People Are Alâ€" lowed to Buy Clothing ISSUE 38â€"‘16. Soap Cards. iO PP .. 4t ouic in cA i 4 h 211 Among the ) tion in _ industrial life, but many application . new occupations are being â€" opened to Canadian women, and the deâ€" rchard Of / mand for women workers in factorâ€" d as vlvinter ies and in the great industrial life ]r:ol‘;dte::lpf the railways is steadily on tl!e‘ 'ground.' increase If Sir Robert Borden is the work to secure his 500,000 Canadian solâ€"| halfâ€"horseâ€" | diers, 100,000 women must temporâ€" | 1e running arily step into the shoes of men rranged it, so that the latter may be released? :l;hls outâ€"‘ for service, as the limit of available | ‘ nwn ae ic _ â€" "Then I can be one of your "Assuredly, sir, for $10 a said the great artist. "And a pupil for $2 extra." "Darling, I wish you‘d treat me like one of your good customers." "I don‘t get you, my dear ?" "And blow me off to a dinner downâ€" town now and then." "You say you‘ve driven your «( seven years and never had an ac dent. How do you account for it ?* ‘"When I‘m driving I figure th every other driver is a fool and I gi him plenty of room to do the wro thing and mostly I‘ve been right" | to held by men. They are acting in ‘some places as Station Agents with ,sntisfaction to their employers. But | Canadians who visit England are surâ€" | prised to find women ticket inspectâ€" ors and guards, women as elevator attendants, women as chauffeurs, and ,'train conductors, women as red caps, porters and ticket cierks, women as locomotive cleaners and track greasâ€" ‘ ers. 15 00 20 00 10 00 3 T5 4 50 20 00 17 75 10 00 men seems almost to be reached. ."',‘ Women are already working _ alongâ€" Your Dryg side of men in sacking and hauling | SelveinTu of grain at the Great Lakes e‘.evn-: Druggists tors, in the Canadian Pacific yards] and shops where they are cleaning ‘ ‘ cars, in the telegraph services andf Spenditt in many clerical positions hitherâ€" would lend In Canada there is not the same supply of surplus available women, so that in this respect Canada has not experienced so great a revoluâ€" tion in _ industrial life, but many ibrgis Ts dsc i d M i but this would never have been sible if women had not steppe the breach. )| _ The Slingsby case is now in the |hands of the House of Lords. Comâ€" | mander Clingsby won in the lower ;.‘court, when the presiding judge based his decision largely upon the advice of a famous sculptor that the boy must be the son of the commander‘s wife because â€" of peculiar ear tormauons‘ found in both. The case was a.ppealed,I \Sir Edward Carson acting for the; | brothers of Commander Slingsby, and | | under Carson‘s crossâ€"examination Mra./ | Slingsby admitted that she had adver-; tised in a San Francisco paper for a foundling which she wished to adopt.‘ _ Lord Ashburton, the husband of the | former New York show girl, Frances | Belmont, after disposing of much of,» his family inheritage, is selling Eving-j ton, in Kent, a beautiful property | which it is expected will be cut up and | | bought by the tenants. | ~Ourt, when the presiding judge based his decision largely upon the advice of a famous sculptor that the boy must be the son of the commander‘s wife â€" V 90 boast that visitors from abroad going to England after a lapse of twenty years would find their old friends established in the same old homesteads is vanishing in the war, ’ulong with many other traditions. Estates are changing hands with startling rapidity every week, bringâ€" ing new announcements in which town and country houses long associated with their owners are offered in the public mart, In former years mlnyl such sales would be made nrivataly rngl l _ Some of the All Business. His Method. am _ Her Wish. ENGLISH Mansions soLup. 0f the Noted OHd Castles Are Changing hands. * oldr DOASt â€" that vikltkAné | Fuse for $10 a lesson," t. "And a favorite "~*°* nauve been posâ€" had not stepped into men as ele(vntor; bimintnnt as chauffeurs, and | "People ide up of eighteen strings brought $430. Another the second one given to n by the Indians, brought a fool and I give to do the wrong e been right." she is in 1916, pupils ?* an acciâ€" that |_Heâ€"Oh, it‘s the same old story. Started out to be gooi friends, you iknow, and later on changed their (mindl. marry ? "People don‘t bother Wombat with remedies for his ailment." "What‘s his ailment?" "He‘s deaf." Smartâ€"How i'ol'lld â€")_olâ€"l m;k:a 'lix-e other twentyâ€"five ? ERCC CC SCH, DOSaNG Wwidd auickly relieved by Murine | yes yeRemedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort At Y our Druggist‘s 50¢ per Bottle. Murice Eye Salvein Tubes25c. ForBook of theEyeFreeask _ Druggists or MarineEyeRemedy Co., Chicag» Spendittâ€"I say, old chap, if you would lend me :50,_!_ could make $75, Sore |â€" "It‘s a queer world." ’ , "Why ?" | _ "Stand up and say that riches don‘t | | make for happiness and everybody | will agree with you heartily." l 1~_**That‘s so," | ‘ "And everybody will go out and| l keep right on trying to get rich. [ ’ Gentlemen,â€"I was badly kicked by my horse last May, and after using several preparations on my leg nothâ€" ing would do. My leg was black as jet. I was laid up in bed for a fortâ€" night and could not wailk. After usâ€" ing three bottles of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT 1 was perfectly cured, so that I could start on the road. 1 JOS. DUBES, | St. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903 Minard‘s Linim_ent Co., Limited. _ "Where did you get all those medals, _colonel ?" a friend asked him. _ "Did you win some big battle ?" The ofticer pointed to the biggest, brightest medal of all. "Dot‘s de first one," he said. "I got dot by mistake. Und I got all de oder ones because I had dot one." w A Dutch arm; public with his medals, | wor :r Mothers who keep a box of Baby‘s ’fl | Own Tablets in the house may feel '; _ that the lives of their little ones are 'I-h. ,!reasonnbly safe during the hot weathâ€" i eve or. Stomach troubles, cholera infanâ€" | Ma tum and diarrhoea carry off thousâ€" |ands of little ones every summer, in | .__ |most cases because the mother does Pl ‘jnot have a safe medicine at hand to | fow; give promptly. Baby‘s Own Tablets | Of a | cure these troubles, or if given occaâ€" | ::,,", Jaionally to the well child will prevent | ==== their coming on. The Tablets are I 6eltte 'g'uaranbeed by a government analyst Nl‘ j to be absolutely harmless even to the | $oo, newâ€"born babe, They are especially | A. 1: good in summer because they reguâ€" ‘ *4z late the bowels and keep the stomach C sweet and pure. They are sold by :'.: medicine dealers or by mail at 25 Co., 1 cents a box from The Dr. Williams lâ€" Mcdicine'b%o., Brockville, Ont. .ff Immune From Suggestions. s Liniment Relieves Neuraigia. . 1 Om PCEMC ME PEBUR UnBC there is a saving of time, which cerâ€" tainly has increased its efficiency fifty per cent. _ The same is true of the ammunition columns, of the sanitary and Red Cross work, and every other branch of the Russian service I have seen. And last, but not least, we have shells and rifles." Their Marriage, How did they ever come to | _ *n addition, one now note: provement in technique i branch of the Russian service. trenches are as good as, if nc than those of the Teutons transport is infinitely better 01 than ever before, with the res 20 e CAE RE ETe "What was at the beginning a war between Governments has now beâ€" come a war between peoples, _ and ‘there is not a soldier in the army who does not understand now that he is firhting a hated enemy, and willing to die, if need be, to dislodge Gerâ€" many from the soil of Holy Russia. It is this conception which brings the troops forward singing and longing to get at the Germans This feeling against the Austrians is quite differâ€" entâ€"perfunctory hostility, lshould} call it. Lil y Q iCEA ®TASCe avesel fought through i. moâ€".DIâ€" ho.Sw through discipline and with a meagre realization of what it was all about. This year it is quite different. _ihe recent fighting has shown ,’tlnt Germans shells and German numâ€" bers could not blast or bayonet the Russians out of their positions this year, when they had something with which to shoot, and could at last listâ€" en to the music of their own shells bursting over the Teuton lines "There is another matter in reâ€" gard to the morale of the army this Sntdave * 4. esn a um ocA t As Good as a Gift SAVE THE CHILDREN Merit Grows Like Queer But True Eyes inflamed â€"b'y-;;r--' sure to Sun, Dust and "l‘:-‘ Granulated Eyelids, ommercial Traveller and officer appeared in breast covered with good as, if not better, }h, VTeutonl Their technique f in -ey;â€"râ€"-y now notes an imâ€" Fat. r organized result that Wheclock Engine, 150 |WP., 18 x 42, with double main driviag belt 24 ins." wide, ard Dyp2mo 30 K. W. beit driven, _ All in first class condition. Would be sold together or separateâ€" ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as reem is required immediâ€" ately., 8. Frank Wiizon & Sons 18 Adela':n‘qgrsgreet West, Machinary For Saie 1 hunv »4,) __"_CCeret fr Of all chufle to any girl or you lnd who will sell 80 of our lovely llx“ Inc eolored Oflograph pletures at 10¢. each ! The Braceet is of rolled gold Plat richly engraved. Bend us your hame and we wil men ou the Pictures, When sold send v {ho money and we will send you th Bn.celot__‘ Addrens 1 °P eneneeneinnnt _ We will give this beautifu) bracelet free of all charge to any gir; .. ""A°®l*t fre have Their FREE TO GIRLS ternal and L2,2._ C ~=Z8, PP * internal and external, cured withe out pain by our bome treatment. _ Write ts before too late. Dr. Beliman Meiicad Co., *Amited, Collingwood. Ont. n..°n""'='..! You can double your storing up #good green Abdâ€"Ontchalf mome w 4 00 COM ORpE Offers a twnsand m.r-!.':;-u tource Lo trabniug for nurece with allowanee hn::hun. A"'u-;u must hove ong yeur onl 4 t oor dte oflmmhn-' ;m‘“‘m'hgw grltlrnlm Beti Terael Houptta‘, 66 J efferson t., New Y ork eatnmsema T t "OTTO HIGEL~ â€" nmi.,, J NC NEWS AND JOB r Offices for sale in good Ontarieo towns. ‘The most useful and interesting Of all businesses, Pull information on application to Wilson Pnbluhln{ Come pany, 73 West Adelalde Street, Toronto. Emmomrmmer mommmemsmes y ... .l 0. 20. 32 OO C e e The RBoth Lorael lo?lm of New YÂ¥ork Olty Founfed 1890 dveratitnd tor onenecy, op L1 00e PBPD The "Bummer FPood all Becoms a Regyistored Nurse and receive pay while learning es â€" au n acd es A Gold Mine On Your Farm \nxlllKill[v Kood green feed in a BISSELL SiLtoO 1od d 1 7U _ Peterboro (pop. 22,000 Bituation and superb buildine ie SUR : a Graham, R.R. 4, p. 150 *¢*®® Gets Them Out in the Air. Dixâ€"Running into debt is poor exercise, Bixâ€"But it gives good exercise to the bill collectors. Minard‘ ¥¥ _ be capuble and ort Arthur, Ont. "I wish I were ¢ the quarrel, His wife did not choly yearn. e Soul of a Pianois the Action. insist on the The Dear Young Womanâ€"Not alâ€" ways. Ideutenant Smyth told me that there were 400,000,000,000 people in the world and I was the prettiest girl of the lot. The Professorâ€"I‘m afraid young woman, that you find very dry things, "I wish you woere insured," she did ited by the New Piano Action A PCHMAKIER â€" w Box Sawyers Box Makers 2838 King St. East, Toronto H. CLAY GLOVER €CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York HICHEST waces3 , 2 NCOE PRCbL Sold by desiers or address us direct, Get free folder, Write T. E. Bissell Co., Ltd, Dept. U Elora, Ontario. RES, POUR AMILBs rROM Inbarhama Znas AwaRiZt * Scientifically bu‘lt to Keep sliage fresh «weet und good to the last. Built of welectâ€" ed timber treated with wood preker val ves that prevent d“.b The BISSELL S1Lo | d 2 NT CC SHd has strong, rig1d wardlls, adrâ€"tight doors, hoops of heavy Stoel, H;;Ld by deslers or And He Knew It. York Htate X4ueatton Her to any addross by ut Ablker râ€"â€"I‘m afraid, my dear that you find statistics eterbore WaNTEp IA GC ODâ€"EILTHER vise hands ; general for good men. The d, Owen Sound. dead," said he after join in this melanâ€" WANTED, xMrtsT reliable, A. Ross, profits by . £2,000). Choiog {;ml‘ldlnxm Robt. plate, Goon power Bay l

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