West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Oct 1916, p. 7

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N BARS Eâ€"TAN UR NV d & f But with the zestful flavor there is in Grapeâ€"Nuts the enâ€" tire nutriment of finest wheat ‘and barley. And this includes the rich mineral elements of the ain, necessary for vigorous jg:althâ€"â€"the greatest joy of life. Every table should have its ‘daily ration of _ Graptâ€" Nuts It isn‘t alone the deliciously sweet nutâ€"like taste of Grapeâ€" Nuts that has made the food famous, though taste makes first appeal, and goes a long way. A new grain elevator of the Imâ€" perial Bank will be opened in Samara in the near future. It will be not only the largest elevator in Russia, but, in capacity, the largest in Euâ€" rope. Its capacity will be over 2,000,000 bushels. Elevator building is being pushed with all energy posâ€" sible under present difficult condiâ€" tions for the purpose of developing the elevator system in grain regions of European Russia and Siberia. Knives were formerly part of _ a bride‘s accoutrement, and were worn sheathed at the girdle. Adds to the The terminal elevators at Port Arâ€" thur have been making records also. Of the crop of 1914, the movement of which closed on August 3ist, 1915, the Canadian Northern Railway eleâ€" vator at Port Arthur, the largest conâ€" solidated elevator in the world, handâ€" led 18,000,000 bushels. Of the crop year which ended with August last, the same elevator handled 55,884,560 bushels. Its receipts of wheat alone this year totalled 38,582,531 or more than twice the handlings for the eleâ€" vator of all grains during the precedâ€" ing crop year. 2,182 trains, each with locomotive, caâ€" boose and train crew. The cars handâ€" led over and above the total of the year before, would constituteâ€"a train continuing without a break from Toâ€" ronto to New York. Coupled together, these 109,122 cars would form one continuous train from Toronto to Montreal and back, and up north as far as Parry Sound. Split this up into freight trains of fifty cars each, which is the average over the Canadian Northern between Winâ€" nipeg and Port Arthur, and there are During the twelve months ended August 31ist, the Canadian Northern Railway handled over its lines beâ€" tween Lake Superior and the Rocky Mountains, 109,122 cars of grain proâ€" duced along its rails, and inspected by the Government at Winnipeg, Calgary and other points in the West. This is an increase of 69,828 cars over the total of the last previous year, and represents a gain of 178 per cent. A modern box car carries 1,200 bushels, so that the figures mean really, that the Canadian Northern transported over its steel more than 130,000,000 bushels of grain. Grain figures are of interest wider than most. To the multitude conâ€" cerned in the movement of grain from the farmers‘ siding to the conâ€" sumer, they surpass in interest the latest fiction. To the business secâ€" tion, they speak of obligations met and credits removed; to manufacturâ€" ers, as foreshadowing a revival of orâ€" dering and a busy season for the inâ€" dustries; to the farmer and his peoâ€" ple, they take tangible form in new articles of comfort about the home; but to the men on the railways, they provoke reminiscences of days and nights on the road, and continuous striving to keep the ordinary traffic of the country is motion while the wheat was moving to the sea. The Figures Surpass in Interest the Latest Fiction. Western Canzda‘s crop year comâ€" mences on September 1st and ends on August 31st the year following. So it happens that during September, those chiefly interested in the marketâ€" ing of the crop, collect and compile statistics to show how the details compare with those of the preceding twelve months. meal in combination with sliced peaches. Aitclhienâ€"it cosf two milâ€" lion dollars and was built to furnish you with crisp, golden loaves of Shredded Wheat, the purest, cleanest, most nutritious cereal food in the world. It is readyâ€" cooked and readyâ€"toâ€"serve, delicious for breakfast with in the world. It is readyâ€" cooked and readyâ€"toâ€"serve, delicious for breakfast with milk or cream, or for any meal in combination with "‘There‘s a Reason Largest Elevator in Russia. MOYVEMENT OF GRAIN. Made in Canada Joy of Livingâ€"â€" the blood. Dix=â€"Qr a lack of pep in the conâ€" versation. The enemy notes the wake of the "tin fish"; there is a burst of flame from his secondary battery, and as the shells start on their screaming courses there is a fresh series of commands inside the submarine, and like a shadow her periscope has vanâ€" ished, and she is plunging down to sixty feet below the surface, and turns and twists away, steered by clock and compass. All the while her crew are listenâ€" ing. Water is a good conductor of sound and will bring to their ears a message if th tozodo has gone "home." Suddeniy ey* h"fi itâ€" just a heavy thudâ€"and on the inâ€" stant they slip towards the world fresh air once more. As &o pfi geope m{ects the commander starts and ejaculates, "Good shotâ€"right in her engineâ€"room," The â€"commander‘s finger crooks round one of the pistol triggers beâ€" fore himâ€"very «arefully he is aimâ€" ing with his whole ship (for the tubes are fixed in the hull). Then comes the single word, _ "Fire!" There is a heavy thud, a momentary alteration in the boat‘s trim (at once corrected by the alert coxswain), and at the same instant over 200 pounds of explosive in the war nose of the torpedo goes hurring away at forty miles to the hour. "(Giood Shot." 2" (the chief torpedo man has jumpâ€" ed round to bang down the firing ball in case the electric circuit fails). In the far distance a ship, grey from truck to waterline, is speeding along the horizon tossing a trailing haze of smoke from her belching funnels. Torpedo Stations Ready. "Torpedo stations, make ready!" comes from above. The firing reserâ€" voirs of the tube are _ instantly charged with compressed air, the caps covering the outside ends of the tubes are raised by "No. 2" of each tube, and water ‘ floods each chamber until a warning spurt from a tiny vent inside the boat tells the torpedoâ€"man that all is clear for firâ€" ing. . The silence which now reigns is alone broken by the hum of the motors. Everything depends on the judgment of one man; the others see nothing, know nothing, and have blindly to obey his will. . . . The cruiser is now standing up a dark silhouette on the skyline. Not one of her people have seen the "plume" of the submarine‘s periscope headâ€" ing straight and true to cut them off. "Dive _ fifteen feet!" comes the order, quick and concise. The next moment the bow has canted down ever so little and the boat like a shadow has slid below, guided by the steady hand of the first coxâ€" wain. Already a string of concise orders is coming down from the comâ€" mander; finally, "Starboard tubeâ€" stand by." . The tube is ready, "No. The roar of her oil engines has | suddenly ceased. The silence seems ; strange after their thunderous note,| and to take their place comes the | gentle hum of the electric motorsi which drive her below the waves.; The commander is in the conning tower, his eyes glued to the vibratâ€" | ing lens of the periscope. The stolid , coxswain has the wheel controlling| the horizontal rudders that work the boat in her trips below. The second | coxswain bhas the wheel that steers her to port and starboard. The leading torpedoâ€"man at the switchâ€"| board controls all the electrical deâ€"| vices that man has chained to his | will to work this strange ship. The| torpedoâ€"men are at the fullyâ€"charged | tubes. The engine staff have seen| that the water and oil are shut off ; and are now at the Kingston valves and "Blows" (blowâ€"off valves) on the main ballast tanks. _ Everyone| stands to his station, blind to the| world without, waiting for the comâ€"| mands of the one man who can see. l Look carefully and see how the grim shadow, almost flush with the sea, blends with the grey waters and the grey sky. Her narrow deck isi washed from end to end, her bow | hidden in a pillow of boiling sea, her | counter lathered in the foaming edâ€" dies of her wake. Behind the canâ€" vas "dodgers" of her tiny bridge her commander and helmsman ply their trade, the only members of her crew | visible, the others are at their staâ€" tions in her wellâ€"lighted interior. Sudâ€" | denly there is a sharp word of comâ€"| mand, more men appear on her wet : deck, all her movable gearâ€"the wheel, ) the ventilation cowls, the compass,| and other objectsâ€"is detached and | taken inside her hull. The rails are: turned down in one moment flush with the deck. Then everyone disappears; | the hatch is screwed tight, the main ballast tanks are filled, the periscope | is pushed up to its full height, and ; thus she prepares to dive to the wet | shadowy realms of the cod and the | conger eel. l A graphic description of the "life" in a British submarine about to atâ€" tack a German ship is given in the following account. DESCRIPTION OF A TRIP ON BRITISH "TIN FISH." Crew of the Submarine Know Nothâ€" ing of What Is Going on WHEN THE SUB. GOES INTO ACTION Causes, â€"A physicilan says that yawnâ€" eaused by a lack of oxygen in Single Word, "Fire! Silence After Noise. Order to Dive. M 199 \_ It frequently occurs that Societies have to be reminded that they are |\ making improper use of their chilâ€" \ dren‘s shelter by permitting the inâ€" mates to remain therein too long. ‘General Gough ................ ‘General Birdwood :.; ... . ... . :: General Hunterâ€"Weston ....... \General Lord Cavan .......... |Genenl TKell i. ...Â¥ s¢v«tr6ss «xt \General Fanshawe ............ (General Morland ............. CGeneral Snow ...........r.11. \ General Cosgrove ............. AVOrdUE ii.0...r.s4.l+} German. General von Scholtz .......... \ General von Fabeck .......... ‘General von Elchorn ......... | Prince Leopold of Bavaria .... ;General von Woyrsch ........ \ General von Linsingen ....... \General von Bothmer ........ ‘Field Marshal von Hindenburg ‘Field Marshal von Mackensen . ‘General von Heeringen ....... General von KEinem .......... General von Strantz ......... General von Gaede ........... ‘General von Falgenhauson .... General von Kluck ........... General von Beseler .......... \General von Bulow .......... General von Below ........... Mabelâ€"Was your bazaar a sucâ€" cess? » Gladysâ€"Yes, indeed; the minister will have cause to be grateful. Mabelâ€"How much were the profits? Gladysâ€"Nothing. The expenses were more than the receipts. But ten of us got engaged, and the minister is in for a good thing in wedding fees. } XYCrARE . .......+.+1. | French |General Joffre ............ \General de Castelnau ..... General Foch ............. \General Langle de Cary ... General Petain ........... J‘General Dubalk ......:«».. \General Villaret .......... [General Roques .......... \General Humbert ......... General Gourand ......... General Franchet d‘Esperey General d‘Urbal .......... General Hely d‘Oissel ..... General Dubois ........... \ General de Maudhuy ...... In rural England it was a custom to strew the path from the hou~es of the bridal couple to the church with herbs, flowers, and rushes. To carry the foregoing into effect :,u MV wnv“\u E* .l“WyCl, ©C BICC MICWICR requires homes in which to place the ;?yvavdd'e,fi, That Jsâ€"â€"erâ€"to be a good children, and as time passes the imâ€" aWIJSf: To e e afg on rochnnase pression becomes a conviction that M 6 » > y more thought and energy should bej IUR.ONTO FAT STOCK SHOW. directed to the finding of high class | c Hikest o y ¢ homes, that is where there is a wealth A evidenced l.’) Y adve):nse.ment of affection. _ Too much reliance is‘Wh“"h app"‘"?“ in last week‘s 1§@UEs being placed upon the casual applicaâ€" !'he Torqnt.o Fat Stock Show are givâ€" tion fortuitously reaching the Society ing: special attention ".0 farmers and at the time it is needed. There are | Preeders andfare (;fl'ermg r}rllany h’:"d‘; many good people who have desirable SOM® Prizes for Classes where stoc homes, who are considering the proâ€"; must be bred, fed and owned by the position of taking to their hearth and | exhibitors. This is work along the heart some needy childâ€"but they get . right lines and should bring out a no further. An active campaign judiâ€" good entry, ciously managed would result in many «l1 of these "prospects" becoming "actâ€"‘ _ GOLD CORD A WAR PERIL. ualities," to the blessing of the child mss and home and the honor of the Soâ€" Now Very Difficult to Distinguish An ciety. The best homes have to be Officer. sought for and it is a quest worth| while. | . One of the earliest lessons of th_e The thought of the shelter as a huâ€" man "clearing house" should never be permitted to be pushed in the backâ€" ground by other considerations. One of the tendencies seems to be to aim at having a large number of inmates. This is a grave mistake. Get the children out into homes where good mothering is assured, and you will not only obtain satisfactory results the more quickly but at the same time multiply your society‘s capabilities for usefulness and efficiency. The naturâ€" al shelter of a child is motherly arms â€"not bricks and mortar. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Nenuraligia. Average . .;...1...4 (American Civil War.) General McClellan ....... General Hooper .......... General Grant .......... General Sheridan ........ General Sherman ........ Ceneral Lee ..;.;...:..... General Longstreet ...... General Jackson ......... Should Not Be Kept Too Long in the Shelter or Orphanage. In his annual report on the Chilâ€" dren‘s Aid Societies of the Province, Mr. J. J. Kelso says: AGES OF GENERALS IN WAR. Average of Germans is Highest, With neral Lee .................. 58 | Thousands of thankful mothers meral Longstreet ........... 44 _ throughout Canadaâ€"many of them rneral Jackson .............. 41 _ your own neighborsâ€"speak with the _â€" greatest praise of that splendid mediâ€" Average . ................ 44 |cine, Baby‘s Own Tablets. Many wer emmlfgremmmmans mothers would have no other medicine REAL HOMES FOR CHILDREN. |for their little ones. Among these is Shewmes Mrs. Albert Nie, St. Brieux, Sask., ould Not Be Kept Too Long in the who says: "I have been using Baby‘s Shelter or Orphanage. Own Tablets for the past seven years . ... and they have done my four children In'hls _annua! r?port on the (.’h'l’ a world of good. I would not be withâ€" en‘s Aid Societies of the Province, out them." The Tablets are sold by r. J. J. Kelso says: . ... medicine dealers or by mail at 25 It frequently_occurs that Societies cents a box from The Dr. Williams ve to be reminded that they @r€ progjcine Co., Brockville, Ont. True Success. faria ... ;. 66 39 51 43 34 45 58 44 41 71 67 64 64 65 72 gl 67 71 63 690 67 63 69 70 70 60 .5 66 There seems, however, a chance that this danger is being revived by the regulations making the wearing of chevrons obligatory. These chevâ€" ‘ rons are in the form of an inverted | V and are worn on the right arm beâ€" | tween the elbow and shoulder to deâ€" | note that the wearer has been woundâ€" ed, and on the left to show the length of time he has been at the frone, one showing one year of active service, two for eighteen months. They are worn in all sorts of material and colâ€" ors, officers wearing them in gold and sllver, When worn on leave or durâ€" Ing convalescence their visibility is a good %lnt, but at the front they draw | upon their wearers the same danger | that badges of rank formerly did. | One of the earliest lessons of the war was that of the danger to ofâ€" ficers in allowing them to wear badges of their rank, gold cord around their coat sleeves, gold deâ€" corations on their headgear, etc., which marked them out to the enâ€" emy‘s picked shots and resulted in unâ€" | necessary and avoidable losses among | them, says a Paris despatch. This lesâ€" |son was learned, and now it has beâ€" | come so difficult at the front to idenâ€" tify an officer that a failure to salute ‘is overlooked on this ground. An Italian proverb says: "On Friâ€" day or Tuesday neither marry nor set out on & journey," Minard‘g Liniment for sale everywhere. Mrs. G. was talking with the wife of Judge H. about her son‘s choice of a profession. "I don‘t want him to be a lawyer," she said. "Why not?" said the judge‘s wife. "I think there is nothing much finer than the legal profession for a bright bfly," "Well," said Mrs. G., bluntly, "a lawyer has to tell so many lies." Then it dawned on her that she was talking to the wife of a lawyer; so she hastâ€" ily added, "That isâ€"erâ€"to be a good lawyer!" It is a dangerous thing, when you have let slip an unfortunate remark, to try to cover up the blunder. First of all the Bombardier beetle ejects a peculiar liquid which, when it comes into contact with the atâ€" mosphere "bursts inte a sort of a nale blueâ€"green flame, followed by a kind of smoke." Instantly the purâ€" suing beetle seems to be overwhelmâ€" ed ard quite stupefied by the sudâ€" denress of the attack. The smoke apncars to have a blinding and suffoâ€" cating tendency, and the effect lasts for a minute or so. During this time the Bombardier beetle makes good its escape. Mcthod Employed by Bombardier Bectle to Defend Himself. A little British beetle has been emâ€" ploying poison gas to defend itself for untold ages. One of the strongholds of the Bombardier beetle (Brachinus crepitans) is along the shores of the Thames in the Gravesend district. The Bombardier beetle is very liable to be attacked by some of the fierce ground beetles, or Carabidae, as they are proâ€" perly called. These ground beetles are extremely active, hunting about all over the place and at once giving chase when they see the timid Brachâ€" inus appear from beneath a stone. Ofhand one would think that there could only be one ending to the chase, but, as scoon as the pursuer draws close, a very remarkable thing hapâ€" peps. THANKFUL MOTHERS ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Vaseline Making a Bad Matter Worse. blister the skin. Sold in sanitary tin tubesat chem» Breaks up colds in throat and chess Beter than a mustard plaster for rheuâ€" matism, gout, sprosims, CHESEBROUCH MFG. CO. Free booklet on request. ____ _ _ (Consolidated) 1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal USES POISON GAS. In the words of a report by Dr.] \Carl Kling, Professor Alfred Potersâ€"| son and Dr. Wernstedt, "virus car-‘r riers are very common and often in | number greatly exceed the clinically | |positive cases." Disease carriers are almost _ inevitably â€" found _ among| healthy members of families where, cases of poliomyelitis have occurred." Investigations proved that the secre-; tions of the mucous membranes of the mouth of a person who had reâ€" covered from the disease contained | virulent microbes of infantile parâ€" alysis 204 days after the onset of the | disease. _ Investigations with other | patients have repeatedly shown the | presence of virulent germs of the disease four months and more after ‘the patient‘s recovery. | Mr. John McMillan owes his sucâ€" cess to a genial and tactful disposiâ€" tion which made him one of the most popular C.P.R. officials in the West, where his work centred until he was called to the head office in Montreal last year. Although less than fifty years of age, he joined the C.P.R. at its inception, working on construction in 1883. After acting for a number of years as operator at Donald B.C., ‘he became Inspector of Telegraphs | atâ€"Winnipeg in 1902, Assistant Superâ€" | tendent in 1906, Superintendent |at |\ Calgary in 1907, General Superintendâ€" ent at Winnipeg in +1913, and finally Manager of the whole telegraph sysâ€" tem in March, 1915. Just put it onâ€"it penetrates. Kills pain. You will find relief in it from rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, stiff neck, toothache, etc. _It‘s really a friend of the whole family. Your druggist sells it in 25c., 50c. and $1.00 bottles. â€" For strains, sprains, bruises, blackâ€" andâ€"blue spots, Sloan‘s Liniment quickly reduces the pain. _ 34 _ Sloan‘s Liniment is cleaner and easâ€" ier to use than mussy plasters and ointments and does not clog the pores. The shooting, tearing pains of neur algia and sciatica are> quickly re lieved by the soothing external appli cation of Sloan‘s Liniment. Quiets the nerves, relieves the numbness feeling, and by its tonic efâ€" fect on the nerve and muscular tissue, gives immediate relief. In China bacon and sugar are hung on to the bride‘s sedan chair as a sop to the demons who might molest hek on her journey. Animal _ experimentation appears to have demonstrated, however, that the microbe gets weaker soon after the termination of the acute stage of the discase, probably in eight to fourteen days after the onset. The Swedish authorities, however, advise isolation for some weeks after the disappearance of the acute sympâ€" toms. Hundreds Find Sloan‘s Liniment Soothes Their Aches. Swedish Investigators Confess Inâ€" ability to Find a Remedy. Sweden, almost alone among Euroâ€" pean countries, has been repeatedly scourged by infantile paralysis, and, as a result, a number of physicians and bacteriologists _ have â€" devoted themselves for years almost exclusiveâ€" ly to the study of the disease. These authorities admit that they, as yet, do not know what can be done to prevent or cure the disease. Now Possible to Send a Day Letter by Telegraph. Mr. J. McMillan, who has initiated many notable improvements since he became General Manager of the C.P.R. Telegraphs eighteen months ago, has just decided to inaugurate an important service entirely new to Canada over the hundred and ten thousand miles of wire under his immediate control, namely, the day letter which may now be sent between points in Canada on the Canadian Paâ€" cific system at a rate very much reâ€" duced as compared with the usual commercial rush telegram. Mr. Mcâ€" Millan is convinced that many of those who send telegrams would be quite satisfied if these arrived on the same day, whereas a proportion of the cost of the rush telegram is due to the cost of speedy delivery. The day letter of fifty words will be rated at one and a half times the cost of a regular rush message of ten words and can still bring an answer the same day, which is as quick as many people desire. There are sixteen hunâ€" dred C.P.R. telegraph offices throughâ€" out Canada, at each of which the new service will be in force, so that this will be a Dominionâ€"wide â€" service stretching from Louisburg, _ Nova Scotia, to Victoria, B.C. Messages will be taken in either French or Engâ€" lish, code words not being permissible. CAN‘T CURE PARALYSIS. A NEW SERVICE. Arabs of Besra Are Learning to Enjoy Modern Business. The frontier city and river port of Besra, in Asiatic Turkey, has since its occupation by the British in the presâ€" ent war enjoyed more prosperity than in twenty years under Turkish rule, says a British eyeâ€"witness account. Besra is a green spot. . It is like an oasis in a great desert. The date palms are festooned with vines which make a canopy, and fig trees and pomegranates â€" with scarlet flowers grow beneath. The very air seems to sweat, the weather is so warm. Strike a match and it will burn dully without a flicker as if the flame were choked. The Arabs of the city are learning luxurious ways, â€" The four new theâ€" atres which have sprung up during the war barely meet their demand for entertainment. And they are no longer content with their simple diet of dates and khobez (a coarse bread), but purchase English stores and eat pineapples and salmon and biscuits and butter out of a tin. What Forest Fires Cost Canada in Besra was never so rich; money is pouring in, trade is brisk, prices are high. â€" Three banks have opened. equals more than six times what has been spent on forest protection work from coast to coast. First Girlâ€"Your remember Kitty Fowler, don‘t you? Second Girlâ€"No. First Girlâ€"Oh, you must remember Kitty. She was the plainest girl in Blankville. â€" But J forgotâ€"that was after you left. Lecturerâ€"The idea of eternity, my friends, is something too vast for the human mind to conceive. Dear Sirsâ€"I can recommend MIâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT for Rheumatism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Yours truly, the Year 1916. Canada has lost through forest fires in 1916 over nine million dollars. This New Brunswick escaped the risks of 1916 with a very small timber log, Nova Scotia having a similar experiâ€" ence. The records of the Dominion Railway Board show that the privateâ€" owned railway lines of Canada have not been responsible this year for any damaging forest fires. Those that were started were promptly extinâ€" guished by railway employees. Only an average of one person in every 350,000 is killed by lightning in the British Isles every year. Voice from the Audienceâ€"Did you LIMITEBID, ever pay for a $700 piano on the in-i; BRANTFORD, _â€" 1 The enormous sum wasted through this year‘s forest fires most of which were preventible, would add another $480 to the first year‘s pension alâ€" lowances of nearly 19,000 Canadian soldiers. staliment plan The Way of Man, Mrs. Wilkinsâ€"Did Fussicigh take his misfortune like a man? Quebec had some heavy fires in thei Lake St. John and Saguenay disâ€"| tricts, also in the Gaspe peninsula and | west of Escalena on the Tnnscontin-l ental railway. It is a striking fact, however, that within the 24,000 | square miles of Quebec, covered by! the two wellâ€"organized associations of limit holders, the amount of green I timber burnt is practically negligible. This immunity was not a matter of , luck but of consistent patient effort ; to educate settlers, lumberâ€"jacks and others in care with fire, coupled with; a system of promptly reporting all | outbreaks, and attacking forest fires in their incipiency with large forces of men and modern equipment. | A heavy average of raimfall kent fire troubles at arm‘s length in A!â€" berta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba and this weather condition was unâ€" doubtedly responsible for the escape of the main areas of big timber throughout Ontario. â€" The Claybelt fires at the end of July and first week of August provided a tragic sacrifice of 262 lives and what is estimated to be six million dollars worth of proâ€" perty. There was practically no forâ€" est guarding organization in the fireâ€" swept district, except along the railâ€" way track. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. It is noteworthy that while some parts of the Dominion owe to rainy weather their immunity from fire damage, the season‘s record proves beyond gainsay that in areas where first rate fire protection systems were in operation, losses of life and proâ€" perty were held down to a remarkâ€" able minimum. British Columbia faced fairly faâ€" vorable fire conditions through the summer months and the cost of fire fighting was reduced by about 75 per cent. over the record of 1915, The number of fires was about half of last year. The British Columbia forest protection service is the most comâ€" plete in Canada thus far and the savâ€" ing of timber is a logical conseâ€" quence. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandraff. Mrs. Williamsâ€"Precisely ed it all on his wife. Sore: Eyesi Un Eyes inflamed by expoâ€" VIC sure to Sun, Dust and Wind uickly relieved by Murine yes ayel!e-edy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort,. At Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurineEye SalveinTubes25c. ForBook of theEyeFreeask Druggists or MuriaeEyeReme¢y Co., Chicag® PROSPERS UNDER BRITISH. Conversational Pitfalls NINE â€"MILLION DOLLARS He Knew. T. B. LAVERS, Granulated Eyelids, Eyes inflamed by e St. John. He blam Mechinery For Saie Wheciock Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x 42, with double main driviag belt 24 ins. wide, and Bynamo 30 K. W. beit driven,. _ Ail in first class condition. Would be sold together or separateâ€" ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is requ‘ired immediâ€" ately. S. fFrank Wilson & Sons "fur"? Thomasâ€"Yes sir; fâ€"uâ€"r. Teacherâ€"That‘s right. _ Now can you tell me what fur it? "See the spider, my son, spinning its web," said the instractive parent to his small son. _ "Is it not wonderâ€" ful? Do you reflect that no man could spin that web, no matter how hard he might try ?" "Well, what of it?" replied the upâ€" toâ€"date offspring. _ *"Watch me spin this top. _ No spider could do that, no matter how hard he might try." Thomasâ€"Yes, sir, Fur is an awful long way. A woman isn‘t afraid to trust her husband anywhere so long as she makes the trip, too. Good wages paid in all Departments, und steady work assured. . We have several openings for inexperienced help, where energy and ability will bring proâ€" motion Wages paid to apprentices while learning weaving. Special induceâ€" ment to family workers. Write, etating full experience, if any, age, etc., to pr » + ' The Sings:7 Manalactaring Co,, ED. 4 J â€" Offices for sate in good Ontarie towns. The most useful and interesting Of mli businesses Full information om #pplication to Wilson Pablishin@k Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelatde Street, Toronto. C internal und external, cured with» out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. TDr. Beliman Medical Co.. 1imited. Collingwood. Ont. Carders, Weavers, Fullers and Napper Tenders. at once ta tions WANTED ! Help for Woolien Mill. l)ROl-‘lT-M.\I\'I.\u NEWs AND JOB } Offices for sale in good Ontarie America‘s the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOYER €0., Inc. Dog Remedies | 118 West 31st Street, Ne‘ York 4 _ hands wanted. _ Steady work t ighest wares. _ Apply to The Bell ‘urniture Co.. Southampton, Ont. Accredited by the New York State Kuestion Dept Offers a twondâ€"oneâ€"ha‘f year course i . trainl w ror uureca with aliowance and maulutenance. Applcnits must heve one year high school instruetion â€"r its ciuiBs eA iA 1P d oo cA V edueutional «guvalent. For particnlure addrers B Jersal Hompitai, 66 Jofferson Bt., New York Becomse a Registered Nurse and receive pay while learning The Beth Israc! Io‘rhl of New York Clty Founded 1890 Teacherâ€"Tommy, NANCE / inte "Made in Canada" | DOMINION RAINCOATS ABINET MAKERS AND MACKRINE "OTTO HIGEL!Y PIANO ACTION 78 Adclaide Street West, Toronto. Best for quality, style and value. Guaranteed for all cMâ€" NEWSPAPFRS PO3 SALE D _ POTATORS iRSH lera, lfoleware. Carmyn. > Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the R.â€"TUMORS, LUMPE §# MISCZLLAKEOUS As He Knew It DOG DISZEASES And How to Feed Mailed free to any mddress by ply limited. Wi Even Up. _ lMimited. Write for Dawson. Brampton. ISSUEB 42â€"16. can you sp« Ask Your Dealer ONTARIO, ETC, wit h« 1

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