"in: 7|an Light Q tho Rattle of Jutland ttt ON' THE BRITISH NAVY may “Mt wk xt M.P. Inn with mate you» i) mm»; Trade agar ttttro risks . devoted QUE tree, l6 Grand recently. a which it III I‘lied “ ill melt had " He boiled te.andarlred essential ttttings, such as doors, windows, rm. baths, bolts, locks. door handles, etc. A good man. In view of the meant famine in houses. the otBeinl ngtgtotmgqtttqttt that a model village is to b. "eeted m London is pinkumly timely. This village. the exact site of which ll not "seeified, will minute all the Olen- British Govern-en! Intends to Build One In Capital. What in the type of house that the Britfish Government regards " Meal'? According to ouch! details of the Loeat Government Board’s housing scheme, which is now pub- lished, the following ere the prinei-, pal requirements mt-tedt-- 12 houses per me in urban “an. 8 in rural distrletl. Maximum of sun in living and working rooms. Minimum of sun foe Index: and To sum up, there was shortage of machines. men and petrol. while the continuance ot had landinu, â€peels!- iy at training centres, smut: that sompotent pilots were growing tower and that training was quite inadequate. The†condition will inevitably aloe: Germany's postwar statue in acro- nautirs as matured with that of the Enigma nations. which enter peace i-nm aviation at the Ionith ot their ath The shot-use of petrol. already re- ported by prisoners tn reconnaissance and battle Hints. had the been felt in pursuit units. Punuit "hte In the sum German Army were snowed to By for an hour only every other day. and pilots were not permitted to carry out independent patrols. The situation is said to hue arisen from the tact that reports ot enormou- d'ammltles in pursuit "ttta had been rinmhtln‘ in the Gen-an “I service. where“ previously they but! Incl con- nidered very “are†units, and had even been dubbed "lite insurance can panics." There In “to s marked mortise of rennin types of muchlnes. With ro- nrd to personnel, tn attempt was made to meet the mom“ by compul- mrny transferring Zeppelin mechanics to the utopia†“nice for training and employment " pilots. (‘L-mfm'table living room, 8 bd- oms. wuhhouu and bathroom or Some four months no there was s dangerous shortage In Germany of pilots for scout necklace, and pilots w-re compulsorlly trsnsterred to pur- mxlt nights from other types ot units, or it coming trom training squsdrons we re not sllowed to so to two seaters. In this connection it may be noted that pilots formerly always volunteer» ed for scout units. Morale Crumbled More Quickly The in Any Other Section of Military Interprlee. Long before the "I come to its Ill- rlen end there was - of m 'hat the German elr Iervloe w you. , , pleaâ€. on much through the faulty Instruction of their machine. end- u A of material. and much at it bad w that -U.4 the (“leaky at “huh- _'-". an omelent personnel. It would »m from information that l have lwsn able to obtain from the beet pot-i my mum}. the! mettle In the Ger- m“. air service begun to crumble .2.le mum npldly than their any " ml grm'rally, utter the ttmt one“ w- an armistice. This III when. m: In], having regerd to two Impor- I tr." farm-s. Kirgt there we- the dead. ly 1uflt"yurt' In herhl work ot my menus or tieytqriortttion' tn equip- v:.-m and raw material- of eon-truc- I .,.. and, secondly. there we: the thet mm in an air service the standard of Immu- required for succeestul work ', ' xwptionally high, because so very _ 2-:an depends upon Indtvldnhl inma- j Mm nu’sido the observe!“ of “DM- , r authority. . ' ', Several German prisoners luterro- 1 “an-d on one day gave interesting evi- lit-â€we on various points about the German air sex-via The losses due to 5,"! landings, for example, were dee- mmd 213 very many. especially In " Lining mun-es. A mechanic who was m. the Second Pursuit Flight School for His' months during 1918 stated that Isl [on weeky M3 crashed machines were mm to Germany trom this school only. and that during the six months he mm there the Morgen-hr at crashes per day was eight. , Shorten of "lots. NUDE]. VILLAGE IN LONDON time WA BREAKDOWN 0F ", APPARENT LONG BEFORE THE ARMISTICE. EAKWWN ttt' 'il-ri,],','":':,',-", HUN All} SERVICEJ.L Fan! trength and "ieieney, I The Canada Food Board is calling itr, greater production of my. Isugar. Well, it will pay. I The hottest fim is made fmen ehar.. (coal, as the latter is virtua3Y pure 2 carbon. 1 [of pleated lumen. McCall Patten: 3N0. 8750, Ladies' Waist. In 7 sizes, "rt to 46 bust. No. 8896, Ladies' Four- _ Piece Skirt. In 6 sizes, 22 to 32 waist. 1 Price, 20 cents each. The home of Evangeline at Grand Pre, N. B., immortalized by Long- fellow'. poem of that name, has been purchased by the Canadian PaeiBe Railway and will be maintained as a public park. A statue of Evan- treline, which was being sculptured, by Louis Phillipe Hebert at the time of his death, wilt be completed by his son and placed in the park. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond M., To- ronto, Dept. W. , With a pleasing grace this model dupes itself at either‘aide in a sort V This straight-hanging dress has [feats from under the yoke, and u convertible collar. McCall Pattern No. 8726, Mines’ Dress. In 4 sizes. " to 20 yearn. Price, " emu. Trans. fcr Design No. 912. Price, 16 cents.) Instead of tea or coffee T the cha for? ten “33: ' if health or other reasons appeal to you Park at Home of Evangelina Why . . . POSTUM U) "It woo whi 1 was doing some work with bad wire one night dono out under the stars in that ‘bles- led land' of Mesopotamia that I trot done ht. Thy got me, but it took a lot of them to do it, and 1 account. ed for a his number before I was bound nnd tortured and smashed into unconsciousness. " was put to work, um! I tried to mp0, and I VII caught and put 1 "People .have asked me why, if I ihad to be a soldier, I joined the Bri.. ltiah army. Well, what would you ihave me do? They wouldn't take me in the United Mates' outfit. I was too old, and. nnyhow, I wasn’t going no wait until President Wilson cave {the word 'Go." Bo over I came, and with the uppers I laid mines and built bridges and put down barbed wire in France for a spell. Was Decorated at Mon "I was " Mons, and I got the rib-: bon right here," and he produced a1 little blurred ribbon. "But I never} wear it. After Pd thtished with the Second Amy in France I won moved! to Snlonico, nnd then to Mesopotamia“ out! than whore Iaot caught. l "Well, anyhow-that was in 1913, and then came '14 and with it war. Me and war was old acquaintances, and we just had to get together, no I Joined up with a regiment of royal engineers that wan being recruited in the States, and over I come to the fUhting front. "Mr. A. Roughton possesses unus- ual qualification as an interpreter. He gives me to understand that he speaks twelve languages with facility." Enlisted Early in the War "Here, you can see the letter," and, with a bent and scarred forefinger, Roughton underlined the words of a letter from the General, "yintt: "Way back in 1918 I think there must have been some sort of idea co- ing round the military heads, of no.- tions that sooner or later there was to be a big bust up. Just about that tinte-April 27, 1913 to be exact .--General Sherman, knowing my rec- ord, cave me a letter to Mr. Tumulty, President Wilson's secretary at the White House, recommending me " an interpreter. i " 'My life has been one of adventure. I have been a "strong man" and an acrobat in circusses. I have circled the world with a herd of Eskimo does--" guess there ain't much in the wild adventure line that I haven't done. I have been mixed up in Bri- tish were for the last twenty yenrs~ in the Soudnn, the Boer war and now this greatest war of all time. _ 1 Famous as “Strong Mun†" 'Yes, that is what I have willow for my share in the great war,' aid the branded man. 'r have seen a lot in my life. I was born fifty-seven years tgo in Chicago and I guess there are a good many men there yet who remember the name of Roughton, famous for feats of strength and phy- sical endurance right through from Maine to California. "In some horrible frenzy of imag- ination this creature, which had been iprieked with red, white and green inks It pon his forehead, has been given three bodies. One lies over the other and each outline is clearly visible. It shows first the shield of Bulgaria, above that the military drum of Ger- many, and superimposed upon these, the fez, the star and the crescent of Turkey. On either side stretch eight human booted legs, while from the, middle, or head of this horror, hangs: a ring showing that the man branded thus is the property of the Turks t) eternity. me is called 'The Spider of Death' or the scorpion. of room for a sinister sign that stretches from temple to temple and from the arch of each eyebrow to the edge of the scalp. It is a heavily tattooed design of ' huge crablike creature which he afterward told he lives In a miserable slum near Waterloo, hating to go out in day- light. On his forehead wns a dis- fieurement, any: this English writer, "that seems almost unbelievoblo in these days of Io-cnlled civilization. Bland Coven Entire Forehead i "The man's head is covered with short stubby my hair, and his Ila-l turaily ttm, forehead gives plenty Following up tho claw given to him, this correspondent found the man he was After. His me is Roughtou ‘nd L- I!†I - the A Prisoner in Turkey, Horribly MI“- lates-au Wu .Peeeed To Wit-en In: Athenia- Many have been the tales, en‘s"- ated or 'Vithont foundation, which have punt! from mouth to mouth, and even found their way into with} " ws-.'-,, - AN AMEtttCAN mus STORY or mum. BRUTALITY WAS Irtiaiiiiijiiii' I Let folkit step on your feet hereafter; i wear shoes . size smaller if you m. ‘lor com will never again send electric l sparks ot pain through you. according i tofhia Cincinnati authority. " In claimed that a quarter of an ounce of tnezoue obtained at any drug store will cost very little but is sttlB- clent to remove every hard or soft corn or all“ from m’u teat, Cat this out, especially If you are a Wuman reader who wears high items. This drug in a sticky ether com- pound. but dries at once and simply phi-itch! up the corn without innaming or even irritating the surrounding dune. 4.1.3 says that a few drops or a drug called Malone. applied directly upon a. tender. whim com. lnatantly re liens lame". and soon the entire corn, root and all. linsrrlghl out. _ According to this official statement, l thtrvirus in each case has been proved to be a minute globular cell, varying in uize and behaviour in the three types of disease. Investigations which have been conducted have re- sulted, it is believed, in the isolation of the germs of mumps, measles and typhus, the causes of which have hitherto been obscure and the bacilli of which have never before been ino- later. British Army Doe-ton Trace Causes of Typhoid and htiluenza The virus of trench fever and that of influenza and of some forms of ne- phritis have been isolated and iden- "Wd, according to a report submit- ted to the director general of the army medical service in France by a number of army medical oftkers, who have been investigating the causes of these diseases. The report, which is pre- liminary to one promised soon, is signed by Major General Sir John Rose Bradford, consulting physician with British expeditionary forces in France; Captain Daehford and Cap- tain Wilson, and is printed in the, British Medical Journal. I "The British navy also led the way in the use and development of the weapon and in the fittiug out of spec- ial vessels for its extensive employ- ment. The invention of the 'thrower' and other devices in connection sirith the use of mines was purely British." i "The eonunnnder-in-ehief of the Grand Fleet recommended in 1914 the formation of a depth charge de- fense, and experiments and investi- gations were made. The Vernon Ex- perhnetal School took the matter in hand and the submarine attack com- mittee of the Admiralty ultimately recommended the adoption of a design which was virtually the same as that used throughout the WIT. There were improvements from time to time, but the British navy adopted and devel- oped the depth charge method of de- fense two years ago. I British Navy Has Many War Inven- tions to Us Credit The development of the depth charge method of defence against submar- ines, which had a great deal to do with the lessening of the submarine menace, we; the work of the British navy. The actual circumstances are declared to have been as follows: "Among the msny women slaves in this place there was a young Arabian who had been stolen and sold to the man who was our muster. She was unhappy to the verge of madness, and the horrors through which she went on many occasions nearly drove me out of my mind. I witnessed things done to women that are past belief, and I was helpless, a branded; prisoner with a price upon his head. By methods that are too lone to tell you, this Arabian and myself plotted and planned together and succeeded in escaping. Finallv we managed to get in touch with British troops.' DEPTH CHARGE USED IN 1914 who DISEASE G ERMS ISOLATED 5‘3 Use hall of s raw Mute for - ing knives. Dip the out side of the potatoinw brick dust or my dan- in: powder and rd. the blade. It will dun-o the knives quickiy and give them a high polish. laurel Luna.“ can. mats-m Almost " many of the people of Canada died of tuberculosis during the four year! of war a there were Ctnadian acidic" killed in battle dur.. ing the same period. . "Anyone-a fool or w idiot-an be exclusive. It come: easy. It takes a large natun to be universal,"-- Ralph Waldo Wine. Admiral Jellicoe says be avoided night union with his big shim " Jut- land because the British Ienrchiightl and tire control: were defective. He recommends a. greater superiority ot ttll classes ot vessels than in 1914. The book contains rcyelntions ot British unpreparedness at the begin. ning of the war. The Grand Fleet had to run out of harbor several times because submarines were reported in. “do. ed, give: the cause of the linking of the British cruiser Hampshire, on which Lord Kitchener lost his lite. Admiral Jellicoe expltins that the Hampshire “ruck a German moored mine, which had been laid by trub. marine. Admiral Jelllooe's Book Reveal. Bri- tluh Unpreparedncu In 1914. A book written by Admiral Viscount Jelllcoo, tho. former commander of the British Grand Fleet, and Just publish- _ Selected areas on the coast that _ were fully restocked have been found , to produce an annual Increment of 1,000 board feet per scre in forty years growth. Obviously, this figure is much too high tor s. general average. even for the coast where the rate is ex- ceedinst high " compared with the interior. Taking tho foregoing tho. tors into consideration. it has been assumed that the average annual in- crement might be estimated at 100 board feet per acre, over approximate. ly 60,000,000 acres of teomparatNetr accessible timber-land, under reason- sbly effective protection from tire.' This assumption will give 1fil1ffylot board feet as the total average an- nual increment for British Columbia, and consequently, this amount could be out annually without endangering the present forest capital. This is ap- proximately tive, times the actual cut.l The results of the investigations un-' dertaken by the Commission of Con- servation show that there is 95,580,000 iacres capable of producing merchant- able timber, but a large part ot this, area is commercially inaccessible stl the present time. With the. develop-I ment of transportation lines. large areas, especially in the interior, will become moreeat:cermiblo. On the! whole, therefore, the estimate of 5,000.- l 000,000 teet is considered conservative. I HUN MINE BANK "HAMP6HiRE." Conservative Estimates Made For Forests of British Columbia. To maintain the forest capital Intact the annual cut must not exceed the annual growth. In British Columbis it is very much less than the amount which could be cut without endanger- ing the productive capacity of the Iforest. British Columbia includes so ‘iarge an area and contains " many ditterent site classes that it is ditBeult, to make anything more than a rough} estimate of its growth. Moreover, the probable loss from fires must be con. sidered. Again, where natural resen- eration is depended upon tor refores- tation, all degrees ot restocking occur; fully restocked areas are the exception rather than the rule. Also, a certain percentage of the are forested with merehantable stand contains maturel and overmuturc timber where the de- cay approximately ottsett, the more-i merit. I TO PERPETUATE FOREST CROP. - -_ ____......o “a, nu unwve, me {only euro hair grower. destroyer of ‘dandm! and cure tor itchy scalp and it never tail- to non tailing heir at once? It you went to prove how pretty and Bott your hair really in. moisten a cloth with a little Denderine and carefully draw it through your utr-uk-ine one small strand " a time. Your heir will be Bott, gloeey and bountiful in just a few mommtttr---n delightful surprise unite everyone who trier this. i I To homeland othenvy.’ .beentii‘nl hair: eon. mm. “In, {nu end (me from "ndrutt is mere-i ly e miter of min; a little Danderlne. ( " in our and inexpensive to be". nice, not! hair and Iota of it. Jul! (at I l". smell bottle of Knowlten'n Den-j ‘derlne now tor e tow eettttg--all drug' atom recommend it---apply e little on l directed and within ten minutes them wlll be an uppeenmce of abundance, l freshness, aniline-e and In murmur. able gloss and lustre. and try as you, will you cannot and a trace of dead- ruff or falling hair; hut your real an! prlle will be after about two week! use, when you will see new tutir--ttne i and downy at first-rea-trut really; new htrir--sproutine out all over yourl’ yitlePytiiet:ine is, we believe, the Try this! Your hair gets wavy, glossy and abundant EMS! WWI N, BEAM!†“III illllll jlllll SHIP MIMI!†Isaui‘No. EIGHT atone. TORONTO There is an eager export market for Canadian 'ttaph products in the States where there has been 1 m decline in the home production. Enz- lnnd and France we also enquiring for our maple sugar. The Allies fought to ave the world as certainly as if they were striving to save the plnnet from being consum- ed by a comet.-4 K. Chesterton. Maple trees on unified land in Canada could be made to produce all the - Canada conwumez. â€an". an.“ Om. lulu-us The smallest roadside pool has ita water from, haven, and it: gleam from tho sun, and an hold the It.“ in its bosom, " well " the mat ocean. Buy your out-of-town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. Wee Dollars coat; theee cents. What Great Britai done was to the world before the war, Great Britain and the United States together must be to the world of the tuture..-Mr. Maarlcp1llivan. and“. mm: 0m 00“.. " ,,,_._ V~---' MNPPP_ cw“. rut IV . - delivmd. Hot-u look ' I (no. A "mm" "mm" ABSORBINE. Mu_thrantiserticuutimee Princess Patricia is one of the most for mankind, More! Painful Swellim‘h- beautiful Royal Princesses in Europe, tgt/ f,ilefe.tttoypt.ises,ye.r.i.rsiyeiiiu tall and fair, very simpio and unaffN-t- he" ttores. Alleys Pain Will tell you ed in her manner. and a great favorite 'ttore it you write. "-25 I Mile It “In. wherever she goes. She is one of the "t'e.1"."Gtu."r7,'r".',1lttl,t22t.,trg'u.ed most versatile members, of the Royal “a“ u Atqettas 1;. - . c...“ Family. and besides being a painter of - _‘_, ,__.___ - merit she is a noted toortswortttur-- f, ERCING prottetettt in tennis, ttorhey, golf and , riding. She is very fond ot skating and ski-tug, in which she was able to mum PAM indulge to the full when in Canada with her father when the Duke of ------. Connaught was Governor-General. I â€or; o-s-e-dau' MINARD’S T' JFirffrllllT6i'p""ft"'"i"'q"iq I PALM†c5,g1rtijltNjltifJttttit The Liniment that Cures All Ailments-. THE OLD RELIABLE; V - ,_ -- - """"""e. m "e! the leeeeu. Ught end euetrfeltr we being - into his mm he an lined, tom en pleat-M so repidly that lie an beat the ordin- ary proeeu of Nature by meny weeks. One method iaito treet eeed, have planing it, with smell doses of high- tension electricity. In 1010 e um was made of the method neu- Burnhem- '!omCroueh, in Essex. Spring wheet in 'usuelly sewn in March or April. On this occasion, the whet, of which the “he eeed had been treated by this fepeciel process, was not eown until July 19th. It wee up in five deys, and l on September 16th we: in en. It was I reaped twelve weeks from the time it l was lawn, when“ the ordinary time ',for wheat to meture in England in I eighteen weeks. Another Mind of forcing crops in to run a current of electricity through overhead wires. In thll way the yield of oats and beam, he. been neur- ty doubled. Experiments-tried lest year in Lincluden Heine Farm, in Dumfriesshire, were pertlculerly Butt- ceuful. A third method u to use artifieial light, either electric or, bet- ter still, acetylene. Plants an thul made to grow by night on well by day. Cnbbngel and lettuce ore eully forced in this way. but other plente. such " curate, seem to resent it. Flowers, bloom earlier under arti- ciel light, and are More brilliant. For Spanish Influenza Items-m. luauâ€. nun-nigh. sun ache. are urroat_tVn mm and I tulle!“ by Hut. Pain ttutemr'natoF," an should he in cm " hwvhola- has 411400an or write at. “HIST ML! MINARD'tg â€mumm- co.. Lui Yumouth. Nag. when. museum-a... mucus-mu. "if“;‘fm'm'iiimmintnum stays rtrrr)yfr? FFiiii)rifi5 iiiatitG? MONEY ORDE RS. suxucm To own IIN Spohn's Distemper Compound 1 " " th.. on mdiumnnm. ray~Vl-uv r... â€mu-h..- --= . _ I I W sposm MEtstch"dgll'r'a",'ev: 'd,%tt In the use imbue-name remedy for out Mom aluuu anon; horn- 1nd mule: prov-nun and cm. for DISTEXPI PINK BYE, COULD"! and COLD! for 1 an you." n the â€(but mum. to It. I It I. radar-0d by tho but harm a in Amoricu. guns? tiiiifiaWiii, unfair; "US$355? W y.1e tye mired In. , 1 'm. hum “athlete: 3.32:3: gym; “he! ye - nun‘ not". and mule; In can? u I cult for DISTEMPER. mm. INZA mus "It! (‘0le for more than (wont!- hlcho-t (rib-m to m - u a “at“ y the but nor-wan at "v. m not; m Eyertv anus PM?" that mun m9â€- Fot Wee 81.96 “by nun It the» ward: um M, 'lllll2'l,' u. S. A." sum TCu'tiiurididnomokttt-tu PtdtrueetP-ttes.stettirteGr-sd tl;ltt'it'tget Mm» ' die men. women and children tt would be alluded to the Inch-awâ€. Hulda-nun. - W the Sup "dttatveVdite toil. m. allowing no an. up to 1ertttreiattrr-ttuetat.etr4G 'erttthte, WWW. 1115mm. but: The use of applying, the tttsickness of relief, the Junitive results, the cleanliness. an the economy of Sloan's Linimeut make it universally preferred. Made In Canada. “I". a“... M “3‘ " o." not been much an of helix» thb you no far. In 1911 the price at ample lullr MN femn the to tea can“ I pound only. to the farmer. So do those rheumatic twins“ and the loin-aches of lumbngo, the acne- inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck. the joint wrenct the ligament main. gigmusclc strain, and the throbbing misc. Ind-after using them. No; iiaa. Prom signed mm: at In. wu- tie9tWr,yrimuor, K. B. Give way before the pene- tnting deck of Sloan's Aha three weeks got Inky and h- arem Wu ted launching mused tl'grl,,T, nights. Got Cumm- Boapand “mum. Itching not so Pdees last your for and. can and maple amp were the highmt ever known. Good - told " " cents a pound, - from 62.26 to In high at $8.00 a “In. Them h.. L_-_-e--"--.--- Lteitt WANTED To Do PLAIN and “uh! new». n home. wholo or In" “In. (and my. work In! any (I.- ano. chun- pdd. and lump for naturalsâ€. Nation“ Manufacturing Con-mum Mantra-u. in than: GFta'i7ato,%T. 537'. I. on baton L' Inc. Dr. Bonn“ Idle-I 00.. Limited. CoUtnewood. Ont. Cue-m tunoru. HInt.srayt um um: 7 mL-_-""'-'"'-"------ l? ARI. STOOL luanuum.mD. N,Pt.t,1;. tiytutnt building lot-9mm um loll; u. m; aktuuiiiia Home. P. Lime: auntford. Ont. “Emmi-3: l running. a. " d" an}. - an titidQ no â€a hlfti'b) to " . on n 0. “11m hymn-u tfl'. Lu. T, .--=r'"--------.--- Mr cm. UIPPID "Nauru ' Al','.',',"),',',', mm. nun-mg Ont-'1‘ .----, - ,, _ Fie=t,,"T,T.,T'=tr=tTtre-_-re, " f.", Fla'. 'ii,tMPteUyeoe.e J.)Lti1tlljjilljtut, " was lymn‘hu ic, 'iiciar/i.i? has; [man the - u it - not it urn â€all: animal REfuttNtr._AsuttrHttttiiis-r leals Skin Trouble With One Cake Soap and Two Boxes Ointment. m â€an? nFLEvFo VT? r, be worked. M iiGi Mini.“ ttch had: tell- ht"t. _lg.50 I bulb irTiG an" aura-n "urrr. I' #fl, Y.'ll 'iiicii. '%,Mt 'i'ihli was"; my ' JJ.. .., 707.153, Indiana, U.I.A. 'T phi-('0'; and Inhe- antacid-ck.