mm; HF Rf! EDER El public jr F at This victory of the Northclmo press is Incidental to the victory of militant England, and augurs s new determina. don to force the eonMet to the bitter end. until German mum-um is wiped tom the face of the earth. We mourn the loan ot Kitchener. but rejoice in the survival ot Lloyd George. Kitchener gave England an army; Lloyd George gave the army guns and ammunition, and thus these two re- markable men havemedthe Empire as no others have done in the war. This is why Britons n0 now turn- tug to him with eontidettee in what he proposes to do. They soon learned that when Mr. George became committed to a course of action . meant that he would suc- cessfully so through wtttt it. He has displayed a marvelous in- genulty in escaping the political con. sequences of military reverses and a lack of it in avoiding the repetition of costly blunders. His main detect in in being over cautious, and has failed to recognize that the best answer to criticism is success, and that this de. mend.a energy behind resolution. It h here that Mr. George differs so widely from him. I As chancellor ot the exchequer be. fore the war Mr. George set himself to achieve certain ends in the face of the severest criticism ever levelled against a cabinet minister, but he did, not debate and parley. 5 He fought his way through to suc- cess. and was then accorded his due, need ot praise. Ot course, such a:" man is bound to have enemies, but in ' the end they are forced to respect him , tor his courage and persistence. l “a has spent too much time In quietlng his critics in the cabinet, while the strategists ot the enemy have been out-generaling him. Mr. Asquith has proven himself tof be a better pacifier of dissatisfaction ! ttt home than as organizer of success- I mi offensive: against the enemy. The former ministry have unfortu- nately been indecisive at critical mo- ments. nnd the ball ban slipped from their map. been found wanting in execution rather than in resolve. The little Welshman. we trust. who thus comes Into power, to use a sport- iva phase, will not “tumble the ball." noted tor perni.:teut. vigorous action. and this was dissatisfyiug to many pa- triotic Britons, hence the demand for a change in the cabinet. We may now '?onti0ntly expect the war to be prosecuted by the Allies with much more vim and determina. tion than in the two years and eight months Just past. The situation that led to this change is the fact that the present method or waging the war would never win, and some more strenuous movement characteristic ot the true British spirit should be adopt. ed. No one questions the loyalty of the men who have given place in lead- ( ership to others; they have simply 1 been found wanting in execution , rather than in resolve. I my may love company. but it kn! time makingadato with it. (I accident Mars Hi Mr. J. A. K. Garden, a well-known drugglat of Woodstock. N.B., died and- dmly. He hm] not been in robust hralrh of late. There In much all: of gam'utlon to establish a! between Prince Edward J mainland. -, "Br. A". Dickie. ot Nova Scout. Whilst testing a snow plough David Curmur, an LCR. employo. Mouton. was struck by a chain, and died ot In- Juries Mme Ralph McMutrle died " a re- nult of an overdose ot patent medicine. He found the tablts in his mother's handbag. " " "Briardene,†by a submarine, was by Mr. Alt. Incite, of Whiist tecstine . an One of the rated throng: Week. nrds of t The Steamer dwin- the m. John. George Hope, tttyo tor selling cease. cent ME Tt By Chas. M It "an. of -- "r""-"'--.------------:,--,,,, From the Ocean .SIDTC'Puttigg Punch in BITS *doricton amnm's Néw lth of udiow A cigarette Mt. John. Fredericton or a militant Engla Asqunvh governnu for persistent, visa are I"Mormon Bour 8 In! week. " NEWS FROM THE MARITIME PROVINCES. 16 I Intern! Frem PUees up. tted By when of the [er Hope, of St. John, was fitted selling liquor without a tl. Ibo wildcat storms In Itghnut New Emma-h Mer Algiers broke adrift his gale last week at St. McMutrle died " a re- dose or patent medicine. tablts in his mother's Bios, Denver, Coto.' rmed by recent des. e Hon. Lloyd George ado prime minister of caused are on a steamer A tla ntie, waging the war and some more t characteristic of of Burton, Sunbury fatally injured in an lumberwoods, near “an formerly owned may! storms In year. New Brunswick last I): of I “0,000 or- ish airship aervlca ard Island and the which was sunk PREMIER dropped fourteen plie nol tion near de, T Discussing what it calls "the United States commercial invasion," The i Monetary Times says: I' Since informal discussion in vari- fous quarters has been heard as to the Jpossibility of favorable tariffs among "he Allies and the Dominion,, after the ,war. there has been an impetus given {to the movement of United States (branch plants to Canada. and a num- 'ber of inquiries continue to be made 'by United States firms with a view to) 'their establishment in the Dominion. l In the event of favorable tariff treat- ment as between the Allies and the Dominions, these United States manu- facturers in Canada expect to be re- garded as Canadian manufacturers, and thus entitled to the benefits of any such favorable tariff legislation. These tirms are now in a position to eater at close range to the demands! of the Canadian market, and impel also to be in a position to handle some ,_V..a ... ...%e AuVIlCWI’ I Times of Toronto, is $978,000,000, oft which $150,000,000 represents the} branch factories. I " There’s a Reason" and electric furnace products, grain! and elevator machinery, silk and.,' chamoisvttc gloves, refined nickel, andi cottonseed oil products. i The total of American investments. in Canada, according to The Monetary; ".504 J... . . -_,,_ Railway accessories. overalls, chemi- cals, silverware and flatware, automo- biles, horseshoes, steel goods, patent medicines, spices, soaps, perfumes, glue, beet sugar, pumps, greenhouses, railway signals, fuses, boxes, spread- ers, silk gloves, stoekinstrtires, steel, steel products, canned goods, automo- bile varnishes, beltins,r,.stove counters, explosives, pulp and paper, sewing machines, alexite and other abrasive; and electric furnace products, grainl and elevator marhinnrv am- .my POSTUM F $150,000,000. For years prior to the war, a num- fber of American industrial corpora- ftions, such as the International Har- :vester Company, the Singer Sewing .Machine Company, and the WQSting- ,house Electric established plants in H'urious parts of Europe, including Russia. Since the war, however, the extension has been largely in the dir- ection of Canada. Many concerns have found it advantageous to have plants in Canada because of the saw; ing in the co=t of distributing their; product and also for tariff reasons. I Following is a partial list of the,’ articles manufactured by Ameriean,i companies that have recently located in Canada: i Why Wait try Postum. the popu lar Canadian beverage Better quit tea coffee now, while are riding good, I Since the outbreak of the European Par, about fifty American industrial corporations have opened branch es- tablishments in Canada. Most of these have gone to Ontario, several to que- bec Province, and a few to Western cities of the Dominion. It is conserva- tive!y estimated that these fifty plants‘ represent an investment of $ttr,000,-i 000. Prior to the war there were about 450 such companies in Canada,! so that the total investment of the: 500 Concerns must at least amount to, The sure. easy way to keep out of tea and coffee troubles is to use the pure food-drink- M r. Te a o r Coffee D r i n k e r, till heart. nerves. or s to m a c h " give way? " Cost of Fifty Branch Plants Estimated at "5,000,00tt. paredasaa is not a ques- tion of guns and shells alone ,----it is a question of men--- and you have to build men out of food. Be prepared for the critical moments in life by eating Shredded Wheat. a food that supplies the greatest amount of mus- cle-building material with the least tax on the diges- tive organs. For breakfast with milk or cream or fruits. Since the MILLIONS TO CANADA Made in Canada. and and l, Exporters have held conferences: [urging the Japanese Government to :â€drive for the rescinding of the or- l‘der. It is claimed that the order is not a friendly measure of an allied nation and that it will injure the friendship between the two countries. git is also feared here that similar ibans will affect other lines of Jap- lanese manufecture. The immediate effort of the British ofder will be the suspension of many factories and the throwing out of em- ployment of thousands of workmen. As a result of the Japanese repre- sentations the British Government has announced that the enforcement of the prohibition,order would be postponed until January 1. The press is expressing hope that the authori- ties will further be persuaded to take into consideration the situation fue- ing the manufacturers and workers in Japan and see whether there is not some Way of permanently modifying absolute prohibition. I ed into can for deiiafir-iiiiri"ii,vriii goods up to next June, amounting to $6,000,000. a “wow...†uul mg um ten months ending October 31 the total value of this line of goods PX- ported tn Great Britain reached $9,- 000,000. In addition, contracts enter- Great Britain's war ban on importa- tion of knitted goods will probably prove to be a great blow to the Jap- anese knitting industry. During the ten months ending October 31 the i. ', as I ate it, and I would turn so death- - i, ly sick that sometimes I would fall on r' the floor after vomiting. I trird a lot -jof home remedies, but they did not ,;help me. Then I went to a doctor {who gave me some powders, but they Cseemed actually to make me worse in- I'stead of better. This went on for [,nearly two months and by that time limy stomach was in such a weak state gthnt I could not keep down a drink of water, and I was wasted to a skeleton :and felt that life was not worth IIV-" Iing. I was not married at this time; iand one Sunday evening on the way, ito church with my intended husband' ll was taken with a bad spell on the) lstreet. He took me to a drug store, I where the clerk fixed up something ', to take, and my intended got me a box 50! Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. By the, lend of the first week I could feel' (some improvement from the use off fthe Pills, and I gladly continued tuk-l ing them until every symptom of the; >trouble was gone, and I was again en-i 1joying the best of health. These Pills! 1are now my standby and I tell all my? friends what they did for me." E Britain'sa Ban on Imports Effects Growing Eastern Trade. You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. E, Thin blooded people usually have " stomach trouble. They seldom recog- ‘gnize the fact that thin blood is the /trayse of the trouble, but it is. In IIfact thin, impure blood is the most :leommon cause of stomach trouble; it '[af’fects the digestion very quickly. The 1'eland:4 that furnish the digestive fluid, Hare diminished in their activity; the, 'istomach muscles are weakened, and, ithere is a loss of nerve force. In this, |istate of health nothing will more' l quickly restore the appetite, the diges. ', ition and normal nutrition than good,» rich, red blood. Dr. Williams' Pink' (Pills act directly on the blood, making it rich and red, and this enriched blood strengthens weak nerves, stimulates tired muscles and awakens the normal' activity of the glands that supply the) digestive fluids. The first sign of im-; proving health is an improved uppe- tite, and won the effect of these Hood. making pills is evident throughol t the' system. You "find that what you eat) does not distress you, and that yx-u are'; strong and vigorous instead of irrit-, able and listless. This is proved t the case of Mrs. J. Harris, Ge-rurdl St., Toronto, who says: "About three,' years ago I was seized with a severe) attack of indigestion and vomiting.) My food seemed to turn sour as soon; JAP KNIT GOODS HIT HAltlt, People Who Complain of This Trouble Usually Are Thin Blooded. h CAUSE OF INDIGESTION I Prior to the war there were estab- ‘lished in Canada branch factories for 'the production of asbestos, barrels, buttons, carpet sweepers, corsets, con- densed milk, bags, corks, carriages, couches, brass goods, billiard tables, cash registers, disinfectants, fly paper, files, fire extinguishers, fountain pens, phonographs, hardware, pickles, presses, pulleys, razors, rubbers,) shoes, scales, typewriters, watch] cases. tobacco, &e. I Probably 90 per cent. of the corre- spondents desire no publicity regard- ing their inquiries, apparently not de- siring their competitors in the United States to be advised of any intention of establishing in Canada. Industrial commysionen through- out Canada are receiving numerous inquiries in connection with sites in their industrial districts from United States ilrms contemplatng the estab- lishment of a new. industry here. The outstanding feature in connection with the inquiries of these United States concerns seems to be that they are all awaiting the much-discussed preferential tariff of the Allies. l Canadian factories under priiddt-G refused ttriffs of various countries. ff all}! their export trade from their ED. 7. , For he is a great business head. No man living knows better than he how to make a great business succeed. It was no successful, sensational specu- " lation that built up his enormous for- tune. It was industry, integrity, and (,t':ii,'e','.in)ri)-rf'iil; hands, a stout heart, and a clear, capable head--. 'that in seven years raised him from ,li' lad of seventeen in service at a tea ulcaicrs at $6 a week to a successful ‘man of business earning $15,000 a char by the time he was twenty-four., 'man of business earning $15,000 a ’ycar by the time he was twenty-four. (To-dar, at the age of sixty, his in. Home is estimated at anything Ire. itwegn $500,000 and $1,000,000. The son of a small farmer, young Hudson Keavlcy having learnt the tea business in all its various. ramifr. cations at two different tea dealers, at the age of twenty founded a tea firm of his own without any em- At once masterly and masterful is Lord Devonport. "I know how a business must be conducted if it is to be. successful.†That was what he said when he started in to organize the Port of London. It is on business lines, we may be certain, that he will organize and control Great Britain's food supply. cialist orator, publicly sul Almighty, at a huge ', Tower Hill, that he would Devonport dead. "And al said 'Amen.' " However, '3upplieation was not ant" Lord Devonport is to-day alive. onport in 1912, I Later in 1912, the dock strike com- 1ing along, Lord Davenport, in the ‘capacity of chairman of the Port of London Authority, took Mr. Thomas' place in the public siew as the typi- cal stern, unbending employer. But he came in for a larger amount of abuse than usual. For it has not hap- pened to many men (or had not until we knew the Kaiser) for thour sands to pray for their death. Yet that was what happened to Lord Ihw- , George diviaiiiii"." The First [10:11 ployes and with no capital: He was , of the Larder, n he has been aptly principal, manager, cashier. sales- _ termed, is already making himself felt man, traveller, and all. In {our years in the Old Country. Be is likely to he had made a sueeess off this busi- ’do so with increasing stringency. For :95" and w? dramng $15,000 , y ear that is Lord Devonport's little way. rom it. T en it. occurred to him to [You may admire him, or you may Ityit 2:†International Stores (gro- ldrcad him. But you can scarcely be cers 5 ops tt over t e country). At unaware of him. the present these stores number be- l F' , tween two and three hundred. our years ago Lord Devonport's . . . I lname was anathema to a large sec- . P. Active Life. ( tion of the British working classes. That, m briefest outline, is the) So also was that of Lord Rhondda, story of Hudson Kearley's successful‘ also a member of the present Govill1elnty career. To-day Lord DGVOR'; yernment, as president of the 11rrli?.t'it', 1.'.t.er of the Realm, landowner, [Government Board. In all great and millionaire, deolures that there is, tattikes there is some one 'ii:iii'ii)ij,eiir:iiiii, about it-nothing in it whom public opinion fixes on as the which cannot be emulated by others.) quintessence of the employing typejFor he. attributes his succese to his In the coal strike of 1912 it was Lord l possession, not of exeeptional talent.‘ Rhondda, then Mr. D. A. Thomas/or exceptional good fortune, but of and at that time all unaware of what I "-'tyeptiontl industry. the future held in store for him ini .1.r.is early energy is still unimpaired , the way of acquaintance with ova-l----' so many of the men Mr. Lloyd l dian munition methods. [George has gathered around him ho 1 I A strong mam-strong physically as (well, as mentally-with a capacious head firmly set on sturdy shoulders, a decisive mouth, and a determined, clean-lined ehin--that is Lord Devon- port, Food Controller in the Lloyd‘ George Government. The First Lord of the Larder, " he has been aptly termed, is already making himself felt in the Old Country. He is likely to do so with increasing stringency. For that is Lord Devonport'., little way. You may admire him, or you may drcad him. But you can scarcely be, unaware of him. --t'"r,"Et"""._"rH. Day All - . Vol»: at out )tl'8ta",t'it't.Siiiiif Organization of Port of London \\ as iitttii?irt,tite?i"tll.t, 'ra'ittptx ' " - In" M In a Remarkable Accom- frflï¬gï¬:f4‘ï¬Â§:aï¬x . Hill-o.- - pl mlunent. I." [an “an...†aha." WORKINGMEN PRAYED GOD TO STRIKE HIM DEAD. Great Business Head VERY worm} 'll) Lord Iyevonport 912. Ben Tillet, the So- t publicly supplicated the at a huge meeting on that he would strike Lord "And all the people However, the devout not answered. And g at» a.'.. sais"- tss L' E l--'l7. wry much RF 'qN,p nub-iii" .5 TORONTO Seven ivomen from Zia I gained prizes or eertitleate. One, Miss Rosa Kingston, of the head omce of the London and South Western Bank, gained the ttrat place; with a note of approbation from the; examiner, Sir John Puget. I . Are “In! h'ureissful, Say London , Womeu. I In the recently published Govern- ‘lment schcmc for a British trade bank (oceurred the phrase: "It is fair to as- 'sume that. women will in future take la share in purely clerical work. The {Federation of Women Workers, how- ever, thinks they should not be confine led to clerical work, and brings out thel ffollowing facts: I i A woman has been anooinua man-’ At the exams, following the Gil. bart lectures on banking at Kintt's College four of the 22 candidates gaining over 80 per cent. of marks were women. Others are being trained for similar posts. A woman has been apoointed man- ager of a branch of the London City and Midland Bank. , when it is noted that it involves: ' Building 1,000 houses, building 1,000 barns, constructing 1,300 miles of _ fence, digging 1,000 wells, breaking and cultivating 50,000 acres; the build- ings will require about 20,000,000 feet Inf lumber to erect.' The preparation 'ot the farms will entail an oxpendi- "uee of about $3,500,000. One thou- ‘sand farms will of course provide for an extremely small proportion of re- turned soldiers who will want to ob- tain farm homes, and the Dominion Government must adopt some general 'policy of providing these homes. How- 'ever the Canadian Paeific Railway has led the way in trying to solve the {pressing and troublesome question 'and no doubt the Dominion Govern- ment will announce its general scheme. An examining committee will select the prospeetive farmers. There will be inspectors and advisers to help the soldiers from the time l they get on the land. Under the im. l proved farm scheme 100 acres may he allowed to a settler and under the assisted colonization scheme as much as 320 acres may he allowed. The' terms of payment for the land are I very ear)“. :1 What the C. P. R. Is Doing For Re- turned Soldiers. The decision of Lord Shaughnessy to provide. through the department of Natural Resources of the C. P. R., farm homes for many of the returned soldiers, is a further proof of his desire that those who take part in the war will have recognition of their services. This subject received much attention during the past your. The extent and magnitude of the work of preparing 1,000 farms will be realized Lord Devoiipuit, m up»: " all his hard work, is great at outdoor put- suits. He loves a tramp through the stubble after the partridges. He is a great gardener, and yachting and boating are also among his hobbies. --like so many of the men Mr. Lloyd George has gathered around him he i is a tiger for work-and to it he has 'added large stores of business experi- ‘enee and experience of public life. A ‘Liberal, he represented Devonport in Parliament for eighteen years, and ’from 1905 to 1909 he was a very use- Hul member of the Liberal Ministry. , He saw the Port of London Act safely 'into law, and then became head of the :public body which was to he ran as a public utility. The salary of $20,000 a year is attached to the post. But Lord Devonport refused to touch a cent of it. The honor of serving the country was enough, he said, for him. As has hem said, that service brought him into almost unparalleled uttposvn- larily, than!!! it gained him the re- spect of those who like to we a man stand through thick and thin by what he believes to be right. 5 “(HI I'LN AS " tNKF.P.s FARMS FOR VETERANS -..i----- “.2; a 202 Hallam Building, Termite an] FWWIQ'J Cold-id I'm mun Bur Par tt,'ht'lttt lnnun‘u , " Mm oak o: pad and he. a "and . Ann“ " my." lnu-u--..-.---r 7 All noun “in l A. .1 -etyefe, 4" u0itYiiiii"ha 'ir"LLt21"i "8bMtrtt-hd it! All would. m" "2Petter at}... to, tho-- _ H ii L. _ Fro!!! all over America they testify ye5_.11s. hohbit no the merits of MINARD'S um- VETERANS. EMENT, the best of Household Re.. - Imedies. Itt Doing For Rv-i MINARD'S LINIMENT CO.. LTD lame bank IF ttsm no "emivii. ram-"9m- Sloan'l Liniment in so any lo apply. no tubbing at all, it uinkl right in and fixes the pain. Cleaner than mulsy plasters and ointmento. Try it for gout, lumbngo, neu- "le, Muir. led angina; - The real knocker doesn't drop hammer the moment the whistle bh "Oh," said the other, "he's a-settin' round tellin' what's troin' to happen next election." "Then he's a prophet'." "No, he ain't. So far as this family is concerned. he's a dead loss." Mtannr. Mam-n Ouc- Duunpcr. l Properly Charged. ' Two women were discussing their marital troubles. when one asked, "By the way, what is your husband doing now "Goodness!" exclaimed , "you nearly had one out in out." keep an eye out" Two ladies were hurrying down the street in the rain, carrying their umbrellas low for protection. In turning the corner sharply the point of one umbrella struck a passerby in the forehead. / "Goodness!" gasped the woman “I’ll Hanna's mnunont Guru Golan. Rte, munials. not prcse:".ap,./s, from well-known people lery manoeuvres. "Oo-oo'." screamed the pretty girl, a nice, decorous. surprised litiic scream. She stepped backward into the arms of a young man. "oh'." said she, blushing. “I was fyightened by the rifles. I bear your pardon." ii The discovery of the "Spy'e post -)omee" in the Caledonian road, Lon- I don, in 1912, was e most fortunate "iineident, because letters sent there 'rfrom Germany to be re-forwarded to [spies were intercepted Ind copied.! 1'They gave us the clue to the exiit-l hence of a very remarUble state of .lattairns, md revealed the identity not! {only of the spies amongst us, butI also showed that German militery: liiiriiiii'CQ had been despntched toi 3England in humble guises. but with' lspecial instructions to carry on oer-f Itain sinister work, quite distinct) from espionage. These Hun, were' 'rniders whose hope it was to strike,' ion the outbreak of war, sudden and I 'dendly blows with explosive: and thy other means, with the object of 1 crippling our naval and military or- I ganizntion. For a time they consti» tuted a very Crave menace to our I country. What blows they actually , struck cannot here be revealed. Cer- . tain disasters Were, rightly or wrong- , Ip, attributed to them. J To the average man or woman the working of the Intelligence Depart- ments of both branches of the ser- l'vice is shrouded in mystery, as it Pe? obviously be. mun-am mum-u 9n counter-eapionace and. having secured a verit hold upon the enemy" Wm. LeQueux in the I man. tl MUN SPY TAKE NOTICE His Weather Eye? blish simple, straig "I Didn't Pena Him. ' went the rifles in the future." >exclaimed the man said the y and math svsm BLOCKED. t . enemy" 'pies. write; in the Weekly Scots- Oiu-u Diphtheri- ~RQS ight testi interviews CO., LTD, the pres- up his blows "r" "e,9, £14.; at th 'ttttd and Ptettt, “eighth“: GM Int-Inn accord-s. If“ 'dtt1rd,'ttgeti',tdtiaaia hrl a] Manila! ' I- it-r" _ 'htegg.t"eu'". Write us for price list. Send u! your turn and not the Mann! market ttrice. Raw Fur Dealers HIRAM Jlf1l1tilli "wt"... IOI "V P"',ti,Tcv,yyty NHWS AM, trtthvey In! adv m rum] tr Mann TG. m-N urwlul and Inn-u of all husinmvm Full :ntnrnmv appiimnhm In Wilmot, l'..).!:\hmn luau-d" â€about Cum “(on In COWI “MATEO. - 110 ST. PAUL STREET W MONTREAL "We all make mistakes," said tbs careless youth to his irate employer. "Nat's so," replied the boss, “and thet, ingest one I ever made was in hiring you.' C EDWARB POLLAK & M. Established over 39 you: a _ __ ,.__...nwu luludn. 'll'l'lt,tre,et by our Own-u.» mu 4 '00 - but “bed In nut-w um: Pu have for In." )vul! Now an the Palm" and mm by â€rug; .4- . Ionic. Murine r xe h 'Ixe h. Arum! Ere and for. Wri.e 1.. bank 01hr I â€who no Rom-av bompnnr. Chm: n will pay you to lbw att you tux- " I relfcdv no“... when you on: (at full mm“ van». but for our price nu on My!“ hut-cum. RAW FURS When YogrrEyeis Med Care sin it; ... firi; gywruooo no Br. run. Ir. m. uh -"-'"'. .1 - Iettto, 5.. Am A p, 'oor Emma ' GUI. fuck ot In; F., .- in mm, Chin‘s. Ad Publish“; "f"'-tutt- he". M, “1.“de I'ttt Eyeinln. In- LIL-"A nut 1",.†wuhquuM... Now dv “vat-1 " r"! Al: I! ttte per P h. Ann-(m Tttc-e "d Anton-u Mot-manor tt AND Jul! Hm tt