Robin Hood Flour

Daranteed to make more Bread ani Better Keead than any othess

A. REID

PONOKA DISTRICT, FIRST, LAST,

teoras Gonpon, Publisher,

von. xv

le

FALL AND WINTER ——— GOODS ——=

E have a Complete Stock of Dry Goods, Gent.’s Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, etc., Staple and Fancy Groceries, and are fully prepared fora .

GOOD SEASON’S BUSINESS

We carry only First-Class Goods, and Sell at

REASONABLE PRICES

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back

BIG KEY CONTEST for a SHORT TIME

With every $3.00 Cash Purchase you get a key. If

your key will open the Lock on Kitchen Cabinet on

Display you receive this Handsome Piece of Furniture FREE

A. REID

GENERAL MERCHANT PONOKA, ALTA.

9 | admission by Germany that she is

Running Up a big bill

SMART SWEATER ». COATS...

—FOR-

MEN AND BOYS

i SATS ee

fer Lumber isn’t at all neces- sary if your purchasing in that lise is done here. A great many people know our prices for all grades and sizes of herd and soft woods fot

the fnside and outside of a house to be moderate, Ask any of the “great many” aad

you will know for yourself,

Tuesz all wool Sweaters are highly interesting to Men and Boys who appreciate wearing something of a superior quality at their Autum and Winter sports

L. STEELE

W.

Lumber and Implements

They are knitted from heavy three-ply yarn in plain and fancy colors, The quality is right, and the Prices moderate.

PONOKA « ALBERTA

We [nvivz Your Inspection

Hardware & Furniture

Now 1! the Heating Stove Season!

Come in and examine our stock of

McClarys and Marswell Heaters

T. J. DURKIN,

Clothing, Furnishings & Shoes ALBERTA

You will surely Buy when you see them,

A GOOD SUPPLY OF RANGES ALSO

PONOKA

Let us have a chance on

YOUR FURNITURE NEEDS

Time Table.

Train i ; HEINTZMAN & Co., LTD. -—— as ones I have soured the agency fer the| South + + ° 206daily ccammnene 5 A i i nae 7 an above well-known company, Planes Tee Yer) A” tenaale B best made, and en easy vi > * 16,87 ex, Sun, R. K. ALLAN ne, ve made arrangements to dail have an expert Piano Tun ied North 2 } a aaaged labeed wees Te town : Ki. Tearaeion” Mite. Hardware and FPurnitare PONOKA, ALTA, ¥, H, Sreuax, Ponoka, > + wu dally

AND ALL THE TIME

PONOF A. ALBERTA, NOVEMBER 5,

| War Summary -

Dover, Nov, 4. German fleet has ed from Dunkirk Kiel,

Valparai:

The pr come out that four

, ( hile, Nov. ithat on Sunday, Novy, ing, during a heavy rain and 1 sighted the British men-of-wat

fiom its base,

jcommander of the Gorman fle 1, between 6 anc

* Gor Glasgow and the armored merehat Monmouth was sunk and the Cape of great explosion on board took fire,

I9L4:

rt is being clrealated that th It is also report users have put to sea from

Admiral Graf Von S in Pacifie waters,

pee, reports 17 o'clock in the even

weather off Coronel. we 1d Hope, Monmouth and! it cruiser Otranto. The Good Hope, after al The Glasgow and the

ct

uch

Otranto also were damaged, but the darkness prevented ou

obtaining knowledge of the ex

The German battleships Scharnhorst, Nurnberg

jnau, Dresden and Leipzig too j tained little damawe.

War News cntement | London, Noy. 2 —The backbone of the rebellion in South Africa seems to be broken, Ccl, Maritz’s jcommando in the northern cape | province has been completely de feated. Several of the raiders and most of their men have been cap tured, Gen, Beyers is in {light, and Gen. De Wet has opened

negotiations for surrender, it i sid,

London, Noy. 1,—The secretary | of the admiralty last night made} the following announcement: “The old cruiser Hermes, Captain ©. R, Lawbe, was sunk today by a tor- pedo fired by a German submarine

| returning from Dunkirk, Nearly all the officers and crew were saved but the exact ioss cannot be ascer- }tained until the men are mustered, |The loss of the vessel is of eimall jnaval significance.” Two men) killed, nine injured and about 45} missing represent tho casualty list,

Ottawa, Ont, (Oct, 31.—'The Canadian Government today | | placed an embargo on the export jation touny country at war with Great Britain of any articles which will be of use to them in ; secuting the war, ‘The far-reach- jing contraband of war adopted yesterday by the dominion cabinet also prohibits the exportation of| contraband to any neutral country | which would in turn re.export the materials to England’s enemics,

tent of it. Gre is

k partin the battle and sus

ae

HOW THE GURKHAS FIGHT vy. | :

The correspondent of the Daily | Mail in ribes how the | Gurkhas (British Indian troops) | blew up a amimuniticn thus causing the coast batteries to move

Paris dese

German park, German to the rear: | He says: “All the efforts of the |

j) fas appealed to Canada,

Subscription $1.00

NO. 2

PONOKA MARKETS

ene

Wheat, No, 1 Northern, per bush % .00

No 2 eee T Yay « 7

" NOS) Lier 82

bh No. 4 ieee 8 it) 4" 75

= Noaé em 1) a > 2 Vv NOW). ii vow ececrrvevecene 3%. 30 BAtlOy...scvsecsosdveciecteateune oF Rye, no, 2 0 lax VOC TNT ee NeEe Che ueRS oO Bran, per ew... seceve 1,30 Potatous, per bush........cceccce. OD Ege, per dowen.....cccccceceees ww Batter, HOW IB iii eevee creas BU Hoge, live, por cwt........cccece. am Beef, live, per” PRD te 400 Hides PER TERT

WHEAT FOR NEW ZEALAND

Oitawa, Oct, 28—There is a hortage of wheat and flour in

New Zealand, and the government Repree- entations bave been received from the New Zealand authorities ask. ing if it would be possi! le to pur- chase at once 250,000 bushels of wheat or elee flour,

Sir George HE. Foster, acting premier, has taken the matter up,

Allies’ artillery against these bat. | : , : : teries had been un ailing, and the jaad New Zealand will either te

| Gerinans were causing severe losses |82iPped the wheat or else orders jwhen the air scouts located the | will be placed for flour for the

in the Straits of Dover as she was) |

ammunition stores seven behind the German lines, }

“At nigbt the Gurkhas detach. | ment embarked on gunboats, which proceeded te the mouth of the | Yser. and after a long silent march |

ey reached the German stores wuarded by six sentries, Six silent | figures moved toward them, each | carrying a knife, Then al sound like the creaking of a frog was beard and the six sentries dis appeared

“Shortly afterward the statt of

long

general the Allies saw a wreat tlash of light on the borizen and heard a great explosion followed by many | others as the shells and shrapnel cases exploded in all direction, | Che Indians returned safely to the |

yunboats,’

NORTH SEA URGED TO BE CLOSED |

London, Oct. 30.—The news. |

} i | pipers continue to urge upon the Among the articles specitically pe eb

mentioned as contraband are vickel |“! tlty the desirability of the ore, woollen goo:ls, food, explosives | eatire closing of the North Sea in fodder, horses, leather, coal, copper | order to prevent the alleged action

|petroleum, aeroplanes aud barbed | | wire,

Paris, Oct

3O.—News that Tur key had joined issues with Ger Jmany ond Austria against the Allies overshadowed verything else here today It is accepted by}

|high administration officials ae an ting eithe:

The of the

between

unable to make o east or west, the conflict numbering

in the bringing into Tarkish army, | 700,000 and 800,000 men, literally oflicered by Garmans, expected to Irance looks to [taly the Balkane,

unable t

is force [ aly’s hand to dominate

she wil bo

» entering it will be ig

Rome, where it is believed a mom-| entous conference progrese

is in

already

reported to have left Bordeaus for REPUBLICANS MAKE GAINS

Danville, Ill, Nov, 3—Former| Speaker Joseph G, Cannon tonight made the following “The returns from

statement: the election

o full control and in

voters will havea rey ma jority in the Louse » and a republican p.esid nit will pr

at t! e@ national seat of ¢ nt that

the

side nt, The returns thow huve|

made sulstantial ,

= idly neutral in | t crisis, Because of thia kaowl

the attention of the Prench Gov. eroment today has bron entirely | directed to Rome, and a repres- entative of the foreiun oflice is | just closed give evidence of the intent of th» people of the United Stites to return the republicans Chicago, Oct, |

rail that for th ry, tricka, bar: | ata | and the like in t ( » at

neighboring markets amount to | between $1,000,000 and $8,000,000, |

itis

ign

Purchasing agents of the Britis} and French governments in the field Great Britain has | $3,000,000 gold ina local bank toy be used for purchases

packers are said to have enough} new orders to keep them running full time fora year, W.G. Bruce, se:retary of the Wisconsin Manu facturers’ association is autlority for the statement that the knitting mills of that state are with military orders

The meat

SW imped

Church of England service Water Glen on Sunday, Noyember|

Sth, at 3 p.m, |

4

| contract

fuiany cas

of the Germans in sending out} mine layers in the yuise of peace. | ful neutral trading vessels, In this| connection the Times says;—" We

refer again to the discovery of mines on the main route between) Liverpool and America, ‘There is| in inereasing conviction that this

danger will continue to grow and that the only remedy is the closing of the North Sea to neutral mari trallic,

‘The flags of neutrals have been | persistently abused, and we can take no risks with the fortunes of the Empire and the race at stake.”

London, Noy, 2 The entire North seu has been declared militury area, and merchant vessc d to the dangers from the mines which it has been necessary to lay | and from tho warships which are| searching vivilantly by night and by day for suspicious craft, Incid- | entally the closing of the North}

i would shut off large supplies of oil and foodstutfa German exports, from enemy derives a real strength,

OX pos vravost

and also which the source of

WAR CONTRACTS FOR CANADA |

Ottawa, Oct, Jl,- Further con- | tracts have been let by Fred Stob- art, buyer for the British Govern-

ment, amounting to no less than |

00,000, This last contract is for}

600,000 cater coats for the winter camyjaign of the British’ army. ‘lhe .verage price per doz,,

was $15, brinying the total of the up to $00,000, In ad- dition, a further order for 400,000)| more sweater coata will be let at | once, bringing the total up to a willion and a half, The contract

was divided among a number of};

firms in Quebee, Ontario and the Marilime provinces,

Mr Stobart bas already let con tracts for the British army valued at from five to five and a half mil- on dollars, which will mean that many Canadian factories which would otherwise have been closed will be able to ran full time and in 8 overtime most of the

Winter

LOST

Lellow Cattle Dog; also, one

large Red and White Cow, no horns

southern government with Cana- dian mills,

ARCHDUKE’S MURDERERS SENTENC2D

Sarayevo, Bosnio, Oct. 29— Judgment was passed yesterday on the assassins of Archduke Francis Ferdinand, beir-apparent of the Austro Ilungarian throne, and his wife, the Duchess of Hohenberg, Gavrio Prinzip, the actual ass. assin, escaped with a sentence to imprisonment for twenty years, Four of the conspirators were sentenced to death by banging; one to life imprisonment; two, in- cluding Medeljo Gabrinovie, who threw a bomb at the archduke which did not explode to twenty years; one to sixteen years; one to thirteen years; two to ten years; one to seven years, and two to three years, ‘The other defendants

| were acquitted,

SOLKS, ETC, FOR SOLBIERS

The following is a list of socks ete, Which bas keea Cconated by citizens of Ponoka:

Mrs R,. K. Allan 12 pairs Socks WW. 1, Steele paler ht. M. Whitecotton 4 00 Kd Peterson » We A. Lorimer 3 | pair wristlets » Graham ° u » Uo airs of mitts . G, James 2 » Id. West Me C, Beck 2 " Mie O'Brien . ry 6 an vy Hee S os cotton for bandages ». Creese 2 * » Scholes (at Hospital) 62 ° » Spackmwan . 6 ry linea tonr on i) yy Mrs Bittner ry 2 » Richardson 2 » W. Larsen 1 » M. Brady 2 ry , Givey 1 o9 viir mitts Miss lau Givey 3 Mrs Hoar 2 » Marnuim : | oe » Hlugh Miller 2 pr. mitts » Jamieson F ot 8 pr. socks » White : : 10 » Pranks 8 A » Bachor 2 . + Hussell 6 ; Me Hagan 1 » T. J. Durkin Oo tes » A. MeGilivary 2 | Miss Hagelin 1 o » Campbell 5 “3 » Brown l ° Mis Russyuiak & Girls s Don Hambly he De. Seott 1 os Mrs J. P, Horn 5 Mr Kennedy 2 06 » Russell 1 Mra Eliner Pendleton 2 » Davidson . 2 P Mr A, Hill 2 » Lleadley 2 » Few ) oe Mrs Kloeckner "Day Miss Ratledge l yi Mr i. M. Lee 1 » Linberts 1 + »» Sellars l " Jimmy | a Mis 2 ow

Kerbet

Mrs Ferrios ; i » H, BK. Peodleton l » Neff ; 2

Miss Nel? 2

Mr Maclntosh i)

A Friend 2

Mrs J. Stevenson 6

\ Wing 1 » K. Wing A , Herts 1 » Crovie 4 » Webster } , Jensen » Myer 4 » Alexander 2 » Dr, Bell

3 pairs wristle(s

Mv Patterson. x » Harold Edward iz

Mrs Kerr » GB, Driver ,

This list will b lded to, and the

Suitable reward,—Harry

Bie

ox, Springdale:

additional donations will be published

from time to tine,

_ ©HE HERALD, PONOKA, ALBERTA

J A Live stock MARKET ®* U Old Norwegian Pilot Defied Kaiser } —amee Cured of Piles An interesting story is being told k T| h '

ANY BRANOS OF BAKING POWDER CONTAIN ALUM WHICH 1S AN INJURIOUS ACID. THE IN- GREDIENTS OF ALUM BAKING POWDER ARE SELDOM PRINTED ON THE LABEL. IF THEY ARE, THE ALUM IS USUALLY REFERRED TO AS SULPHATE OF ALUMINA OR SODIC ALUMINIC SULPHATE,

MAGIC BAKING POWDER CONTAINS NO ALUM

THE ONLY WELL-KNOWN MEDIUM-

Farmers of the West Can Now Mar of a Norwegian pilot who would not | and Eczema they escape the sallow skin, the pimples, black-

{ ket Stock at Regina be interfered with even by his mightt- To make the raising of live stock ness the German Emperor. more profitable to the Saskatchewan | gy Using Three Jexee of Or. Chase’e Because the speed of his yacht was heads, facial blemishes due to indigestion or bilious- ness, At times, all women need help to rid the system of poisons, and the safest, surest, most

' er, the seine selde slowed down on entering a certain oa.to Getabtiols etock saris a nae Ointment Norwegian harbor, the Kaiser, in a convenient and most economical help they find in

industries which naturally ‘othe Mr. Abram Buhr, Herbert, Sask., with the least possible delay, The ex | Writes: “I want to say that I was Nibition grounds, which contain 7%] troubled with eczema and piles and vcres and a great many large cattle | suffered greatly from the itching, barns, have been turfed into a stock | burning sensations caused by these yards, until such time as the city is | annoying ailments. I sent ior a free

fit of impatience, rang the bell for “full speed ahead.”

To his great surprise, the pilot, an old Norwegian named Nordluts, who knew the dangerous character of tho channels, placed himself in the way,

Bc Te wire

and, leaning over the wheel, called

ible to secure a suitable site, and) sample of Dr, Chase’s Ointment, and

erect the necessary pens and build | this did me so much good that 1/cwn the tube to the engine room,

“Hlailf speed ahead, Never mind the

¥ PRICED BAKING POWDER MADE IN ings 9 | bou,ht three boxes more, and after bell!” HA . CANADA THAT GOES NOT CONTAIN ALUM, he exhibition grounds at Regina) using same was cured of both eczema ch ahh te , 4 Pe AND WHICH HAS ALL !TS INGREDIENTS ire well equipped to take care of all) and piles. - ae ‘an ou aoe) VP Sewer cents PLAINLY STATED ON THE LABEL. hipments of live stock from now on,| This-is the kind of letters we re- hy 0 ders? cried th aiser, again wid the farmer is thus assured of bet-| celve daily from people who have | ringing oll ge bell 1 t { r prices, Arrangements have been! been cured of these distressing skin} isregar 1e bell,” calmly repeat: * . E. W. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED mane for'packing houses to have buy: | diseases by tlre use of Dr. Chase's | 4 Nordhuns ae ane Lie pas See ota SRE TUL te Cnn Thar aiutects aot . “os Pa . rs on the ground, so that .he farmer) Ointment. No ..atter how skeptica! ror a momen ie Kaiser glared at entire sys i ui y relievés the ailments caused WINNIPEG TORONTO, ONT. MONTREAL i ured of a ready market and | you might be, you could not read these | the intrepid pilot, and then, drawing the : y' tern It quickly r f digestion a petitive Wuyine, letters for many days without conclud.| himself up to his full height, said, by defective or irregular action of the organs of digestion, \ rhe stock yards will be under the}ing that Dr. Chase's Ointment is un- Sent Fourie Ag Peel and re: headache, backache, low spirits, extreme nervousness. Shlain ntrol of the Industrial Commission-| doubtedly the most prompt relief and por yourself under arrest, ° ; r or, City Hall, Regina. He has already | certain cure for-these allnients, | “Leave the briage!” thundered the Purifying the blood, Beecham’s Pills improve and t 13 From Ale Crvfte WHERE FISH ARE PLENTIFUL ircularized many of the stock rais-! If you have doubts send for a free | Norwegian grimly, as he grasped the i . gy of bombs irom air , ers and explained the advantages to sample box and be convinced. It was wheel more firmly. This ship is in ' t deve.oped in the Unt.» Swarms of Fish Said to Keep the) be derived by marketing their live | 9y use of a free sample that Mr. Buhr)| path charge, and rm hay be no Inverter eu Stat Clonn Hf. Curtt ast Water From Freezin tock at the Regina stock yards. Prac-| Was convinced of the merits of this | ene e with my orders from Kaiser or ‘y o demonstrrte how 4 ; ar Mg hl tically all of these stock men are| treatment. For sale at all dealers, or) Seaman’” + ‘The directions with every box are very valuable—especially to women. be bombarded from fone te ihe lhe dad ma . greatly enthused over the proposition. | Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, To- The office rs on deck hurried sit P oaly by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, Kegland, 10 Curt tartled | Sor ere fe iatine wat a eres o") it will be remembered that five | tonto, | SAPY Oy reales, ‘7 Bio ne eteree everywhere in Canada and U.S, America, In boxes, 35 cents, th Amer } department ands yt otal ah t 5 - reves’ | procucers’ associations in Saskatche 2 ee ee Ou * » WhO, KnOwin wat ie pe by dropping oranges ver up n t t b wan recently petitioned the-provinc:-| SKYSCRAPER 3UILT BY WOMEN | had the law as well as common sense | ci f k. Carrying a load nter il government to take immediate! on his side, stood his post unshaken in aeroplane was in We rd of Brit Co teps to provide suitable stock yarde | Agent, Janitor, Elovator Operator, Por j by threats, unheoding commands, and | bia alt i r ing tat “aves 4 : n rer steered the Hohenzollern safely into ss . . e by nvolviag the pos) poe, r they Dual ieee in Saskate on for the marketing of tures and Office Clerk--Women. | port J } Guard the rising generation by using always ion in rour ~ - 4 ull Saskatchewan live stock it wat; x hawa ¢ . +y Ag . : river 1 nassed the ry by as); } t of Sansas City is to have a ten storey The next day the Kaiser came to s Goring Sf ds Nad y proof of the fe lity on hu t 1 ts Ld : nha t ay the office building which will be aevoted | nig senses, and decorated the pilot | im the home i during Might was) ian gination elty oF Resin Soleht rd meet. their! vutitely to business womea, No meu | the king at the -sheel—with one grade | ROB MI Te Be Sbint But int nnual report of the nesdé, ata st the wee time secure 4| Will be allowed to rent spacc in the! of the Order of the Black Eaglo,-and | » "” : 1 dropping Of bOMDS' eoutor of forestry for iv ist pub Meher pth seth ry ; : it building }also appointed him his life pilot in! EDDY’S SES-QUI NON-POISONOUS MATCHES 4 Jin lished by e department of the. {s stantial industr or ie capital The building ts to be erected by the | Norwegian waters , j limitations were I , it , sc : ;* ah iy : : : terior, Ontario. we ve ¢ amazin ; ten : Yoman’s Commercial Club, and a wo * Py * . . loally spec tale told in the midst of useful, inter: |, fe\ermment figures show & remark | man capitalist whose name was NOt! ae eeieng of All Suiersts.Lixe|| -OSitively harmless to children, even if accidentally ns ar | ting snd . . thenticated ble in hae In the num Aa of live made public, wil. finance the under} to “he snare My ' Sains —Like| eae e . Rp Pea tEeit = To tated torn Blue: Seek Im the province in 1814 es com taking, The sito has not been made | 1? ii") shadow © a rock in a weary |) swallowed, because the composition with which the at « nuis, Tony ' ' » , mired with the numb im . ' blic, as the wome lo not wish tne)” r M hee x ok i is gre by t way pu ra omen ¢ 1 ir . " 1 | . . . . lropped Albert Berry, weigh; ; Ad or : figures ar follow ri on the advance before all those who suffer pain, It holds out Ss r pounds, from an seroplang | if olten very different from the dry-a ivot 1913, | Price on the 4: to advance before! none to everyone and realizes it by | heads are tipped, contain no poisonous ingredients ne at son load) large UUSt governmental reports of me k , 820,575 The building will be : i stilling suffering cverywhere, It is a ' . I ol certalr 1 188.19 1 building will be designed by a liniment that has the blessi f halt ¢ up a battle coull ling snd. reads j 8 192 voman architect, with a special view |! rf . . u Ti wry nes of ha - He ining ‘ight without on writer set out from Fort way “SS! to the accommodation of women. ‘The | ana” vat , a4 a arwhes e everyw here | Oe Ne ee Oe tue E Later! smith, Alta, t k informatioa t how an incerase agent of the building will be a woman, | 920 CB be found wherever enquired What about your wife and children? Will they ; year ine Michalln bomb-lfOd| sasding wood bu i woul 10%; sheep, 4 the janitors will be women, the ele-| °°! pe cot Induced experiments at! concer to be exceedingly hard to ob Although the figur ators will be operated by girls and | a dress well after you are gone? Will your children pping fe resulted iltain. He sa TAC Tite: PSmINA FY" cover a pe riod cf twelve years, it may girls will be employed as porters. Battlefield is (lent to the Airmen | be educated? Havea talk to-day with an agent of Lt ey | bees placing | ort be stated that the bulk of tits in Office girls instead of boys wil be So far as the reconnoitering airman . / baby sib a the I started out the man and Tease las taken place within the employed by the tenants and mato! is concerned, a battlefield is quite THE EXCELSIOR LIFE INSURANCE C0. t ' ie § ) tt | dog-team, following t trail j iq | 298 ey or five years Stenographers need not apply. One. silent The noise of the engine rations were cor vir en to : h =p Up to the present the stock raisers | yan has asked for an office in the | drowrs eve her , shdhihisbh was given te vtath t pie 4 Vor re hk. d of atchewan ave been discour watdlne Xr el seit t at fie wanted tt “It i ‘: very “itt tare listingnisa OFFICES :— Winnipeg, Edmonton, Saskatoon, " ¥ o out af iwest irom ort mith wn Ps ; ; » h : a : t i antec 8 v Liftic : : : ; yet) turning due west after cr Salt | eer by re + fay fact that Mat) pecause knew it would be kept! anything,” says « Belgian aviator who Vancouver. Agents Wanted. ie ) p Sahin thin keting faciliti le! clean, Lut is request has been re-| flew over the battlefields at Diests | Tait Mnilitaec tw iy object was to visit a plac TE Pe Syd See eee te by fused when fighting was et its height. “Men | . ; a ; ang © the ‘Little Fishery known tu! je 4 + ( 4 - look so small from such a height. Por | LATEST METHOD TO FIND TIME | Corps Maintained by Private Firm - or many Indians up here, and which is fic Bat + ay Disappointment example, unless you are directly over ewes Throughout the empire many pat- P if Pa batty 1 on i upper tributary of the mént tO ab canterh Or American etock |< bie of it © stories that President dee al ti un searcely see even arti | ay One Has to do Now is Press/riotic employers lia offered to as- ' it the pro |! ; r ay" bi rive r ; \ e were short urd \ on t Is | of a shall boy whom i upee tek Pa Gee hand Button and Look at Ceiling sist in equipping their employes and , Of fish, ane Ir, Kell though: it a : : he encountered at Staunton, Virginia e bu truck the propeller ; enrolli hen he British arm oO An indicath he number of | , ake yy > nrolling them in th y good idea to aac e' nh indication of ¢ un r ot tiv he res i “nas of his machine and broke it slightly Awakening .: the night and wcader- ; © ' P ta niaea ascertain the tocation .; : ; i presiden. w speaking to a ' hd broke | tehtly, | for service at home or abroad. i t Mf the place and any other particu. | St0¢% shipped from Saskatchewan to) crowd from the steps o1 the ldwin but did not stay his flight. The ex-| ing what time it may be, who has not 4 To ) | » Ch . n i I 1e Baldwin | , r The firm of Shoolbred, London, shee : ; ; lar that might be useful. After fo! the Chicago market is given in the Seminary for Girls, The boy pushed plosions of she:ls were very disturb- | longed to see the clock without get- holds a unique record in military an- m effect fie loWing some very misleading and at following eateace fropl Provinewtl and shoved his way through the | iM& because they interfered with the |.ting up and striking a light? Sick | nals, : \ i i ty gether foolish directions received | FOvermment Feport P crowd until he found himself square } equilibrium of the machine | people are especially curious about "0 i four years the firm main- 1! 1912. 1911, 1910 T! \the time, T » this 1 g easy | , For fitty-four / from, we thought, reliable Indian |_. 3. ly in front of President Wilso There is officiel authority for the | the time, To make this longing easy | si it ; Cattle 4,227 - ing |to satisfy a firm in Paris has just puc| tained at their own expense a full ,, information, we located the phice | gy R4912 66.041 4 whereupon he shouted, excitedly following story | Tatars rlock that by press! | company of the Queen's Westminster , more by sense of smell than anything rr . {70's +4 110°7 1 881 “Where is it? Where is it?” \ French aviator was obliged by| on ine a th Ket vay a Ai Ceepietare Rifles, drawn from their own staff 1 ons : 3 78 ; : tr le e{ | @ button is made to projec c ok oe Mr. Wilson stopped his speech, and lack of petrol to land in the annexed / and officered b embers of the firm ‘tel he average » recels ' 2 , -_ a ff officered by members of the ° bal iaea'al CIAI MERU GL ay his ‘Little Fishery s very in PH nr ge price recel with a eproad sinile satd, good nat-| provnees While he w ag aillog hin | Gelling. in a ray of light upon the | Thirty-four men of the company took teresting and important, in that ft shire 012 019 rary, uredly, “Well, my boy, | guess J am | 8k @ strong German patrol appear. This ikea y art in the South African war; whiie . § only place near Fort “t) Cattle, e1 eee Ae ere ta pal jed. Calmly ignoring it, the officer} This clock, which looks like a ining they were away they were paid full Keep Books and Save © xpenses ere { ean be obtained during | GM . cwt 4.64 4 85% ‘O pshaw!” responded the young. | continued to empty his petrol cans. | aeeera ervey ba yp letra wages, and the situations were kept d rould the r with which to feed the 2lCeP ¢ ! Dad ster, with a lool of disgvat | The Germans were taken aback, | tree dry batteries. ac on for the 1 their ret 1 ' net » Ilogs, ewt S48 8.65 7.71 9.07% | ° : § Isgus - : lin g stal tube, at one end of whien | Open for them until their return p " t dog rl hortage of fish ac tho De d i 9.07% “hi 1 fie) and, unable to understand his actions, | 18 4& metal tube, , ; , ag We | dons mf rac th Tis) Caytiaba wilt eaksenlen thought it was a dog fight Salted a ( Ane , ~. | is an ordinary dial, In the daytime | What occurred fourteen years ago r Fort and re wcems to b thesiinnr tu tublist r - elhicansadgut lalted at two hundred yard¢ distanc hi w t foremost. But | [8 being repeated now and on a more } 1e@ u ce J ) 1] , y , lig i D 58 " * . . { ¥s a \ , 1 As ; al ' , ow big the run of Gtocle yards at Regina ihasmauoh | Miller's Worm Powders do not neet Whe ie te rowan t the 7 fate when “night comme you tara the can extended scale, Under the Terri- ! eho tot dat in the fall, This is, of course, due | o” oe 5 =e as toe the after-help of castor oil or any en the tank was full the aviator | ; torial system the old Queen’e West- Ir Kt nall pad; only to carelessness and laziness. But 18 it enue A ready of doing wr all) purgative to complete their thorough-| Started the engine and made oft | Soe EAT op ake st pe ABB snthatere shave ‘been nana ting into 11 1 Tack it in nient the Indians know that if they run! U¥e Stock aud bette oes, * CX ' ness, because they are tt ugh | Tie was well off the ground te-| reverse e 4 "Il the 16th Battal Cc y of Lon: 4 A : y re x ected that the P ve , 2 . aus y are thorough in sng 4 = ; 2 @ is a second dial,; the 16th Battalion ounty of Lon R 1 in r te ; nell f of ee OLA as ot aril Be greatly posers’ a d by this rider th he One dose of them, and | for; ning th bad. ver Wak, «| ob tanetteet wien with the figures|don, The corps is under the com- ne Co ean easily get all they want r this) 3 a oF vit feginn. they. Will be foun! palatable by all) Seeing they had been hoodwinker } : “e| Mand of Lieut.Colonel Rupert Shool- As you pay accounts make a note on piace step on the part of the city of Regina. | ontidren, will ont the worn trouble by the Germans commenced firing st the | Teversed and runae roca sit paoe | bred, and geventy-four men are out t Nttle pad. tear it off and p I at th « ence of a smali z making the stomach and bowels unteh- “€Toplane, but they were too late, and | pM rior: a "4 get aha ea 78) be- | and mobilized : é ld b> dated trout the upper part TULIP BREAD NOW able to the prasites. And not oniy te pilot returned safe ard sound to! Of this a uinall electric lamp attached | Full wages will be paid to the mar- | ' \ the Little Buffalooriver, some two this, but the powders will be certain headquarter | by wires to the batteries and by cther | ried men and half wages to the un- I - ! | tra n er,|'Tis Made From Ground Tulip Bulbs, to exert most beneficial influences in 7 ‘wires to a push-button. married, and the posts of all will be eg , ; ; f a ft tt ot : k and is Very Nourishing the digestive organs Minard's Liniment Relieves Neural- This push-button can be placed un kept open for them until their re ! \ nd MI r n uC wantit o that On account of the seareity ot gia. {der the pillow or upon a teble beside | turn, Moreove r ten 1orse drivers of tream from bank to bani heat in Holland, the Association of A Good Reason ae "i the bed. When one wants to see the | the firm have volunte ered for rene ( | Pa ' et oy ye Dut cera ha netioned the us It was a very youthful class in Nauoleon Bonaparte as a Recruit time in the night one presses the Lut-, port sery ioe with the regiment, the : iret er ed “tulip bread in whic ph siolog : The history of the last century and | ton; this lights the lamp, which pr \aereee 4) ng prited 1y Mesers ( or r tht t of ver u Jour used is made Why,” asked the teacher, it a quarter might have read very dif | jects upon the ceiling or upon the wali Shoolbred ; oy Ye { ow t point. 7 rather {OM Bround tullp bulb The bread | best to eat soup first when one is very | ferently, had not the Russian army | a@ greatly magnified picture of its face, | rrr vera a So etd Po dR ; : oe Pilot Ae to be very nour! and th wungry . refused a valuable recruit. in 1789, 80 that one can lie comfortably in bed & me day cried the outrages 4 dal ob third ; wey Hy war ministry has recommended it The pupils stared at her blankly. when Napoleon Bonaperte, disgusted | and read the time at a glance. An-| poet, “you editors will tight for my y Rud i e in the arn Then Jamie enlightened them from! with his prospects at home, sought to! other push of the buttou extinguishes | worl t r 4 \ vd A sy : ® London Daily Nes the depth of hic own experience, ter the service of Catherine the} the lamp “All right, ig ved the odiler, re- nprejudiced Sid udHal lect from | tys that the German You can get it down faster,” he | Great -_ nenane signedly, but fl I lose Pil be just as He many poople are ther ; aa ther ; nt min roof sericulture has issved snnounced Some time ago Count Cheremetlef The most obstinate corus and warts happy. Pa ad the Wug 1 0 bers [ ha not been able to ascor. | gitevlar destar that the cereai cro} : - | discovered a letter addressed by Nap-| fail to resist Mollaway'’s Corn Cure, ERMINE ET Ir su in Montreal “(i not so good as expected, ordering Vicissitudes of Antwerp oleon to the Russian war office, apply! Try it, “You, they are very nice gooseber- Oh ho tu hundred t i." ie <nikiind Tee auton them ta! te manufacture of alcohot cut down \ntwerp, the great stronghold ing for admisison to the artillery, As,; ~ entail ries, but aren't (hey dirty?” y (hought ther over | t ent, and recommending that) the Belgtans, which is rightly term however, he made it a condition that! “Dirty! Think I can wash ’em and I ind primitive. The r 1 ; E , tory From Japan A ae 4 - ms 1 pedout with ba \ tt rve the food suppl by | t Liverpool of the Continent, was he chould fttain his rank of Heuvcn-} af ‘4 Japan lg a little | Part their ‘air dahn the centre for tup- . 1." waid J 1 of poles \ p ‘davon Iryit potato a large i in deseribed by Napoleon Bonaparte as ant, the appilcation was rejected, He! A trave er * pp arerul and| Pence a paund in these ‘er. war Phrenet nm ¢ t 1 } : y structions are being given in the cour 1 “pistol pointed at the heart of Eng- then offered his services .> the head | Story showing how very ¢ ‘oy | tin.es?”—London Opinion the t ere the I 1 a anane ‘t I r { ig : " MN * try ditriets aa to t use of pota land f the Russian nav ind there again | Pardcular at least one Japanes nade \ nd w tay #0 . : : 4 6 HUSA BOG Were age nm as 1 » n t \ When we arrived th meal for the manufacture of bread \ntwerp is mentioned as earlg av) met with a refusal on the same} Me wig bey ae Re ne the | Crawford—So you found a package eh yor ¢ ! ul ear il but managed |} . the eighth century; in the twelfth) grounds | oaey t Raat Tar a few minutes at} Of old love letters you wrote your As “it 3 as t t ! bags full witho War and Weather ind thirteenth it gave signs of con-| ys oe \the station of a small village tam-| Wife years ago. What did you do nat well at sould tee ( un “yh : They must hav I > be noced that the sea filent a rt Mb prosperity and in wip Dea One Hundre’! Years Ago lous for a certain kind of Japanese with them? pect yet: ntl led cian.—Luel been thero In enormous quantitte of Heligoland was fought in a fog un Bee vttare tal tity teury It W451 Sometimes when we hear peoplo| cake, I thrust my head out of the| Crabshaw—Changed the dates and BYnIA Daysicran aC as} nia of them were frozen der cover of which the British cruis- | te commercial capital of the world.! sooak of the “good old days,” we for-' window, and bought a package from! sent them to her while she was away ts government was free, ¢ its neo- | ' r a 7 i dig —_—_—_—_- in the log re, and piles er fleet boldy sailed in upon t ni Moke A act oe i *! get how uncomfortable living must}a boy. He gave me a fifteen sen | in the country,-Puek of dea { could b een every-| my sheltering behind a sereon of sea » var a ¥ Ee. OF Wc wy have been in some* ways for our) package; but neglected to cite back | he, ee a fi ate f where behind suiken logs, driftwoot | mine ind under the guns of the | iN 2560 3) WAS Re ized by the) croat-grandpurents, Here are a few |the five sen due me, f laughed Fine night,” said Smithers, glane- y and hol bh the ban Of cour forty Spant A oldiery it is estimated that of the “discomforta.” which we don't} about it, remarking to the triend ing at the he Avens Point this will be of prime importance to rh ither has oft erved Brit ) human beings were murdered: | haye to put up with today, with whom I was travelling that [ No,” replied the Boston girl, “you

us, as we cal t 1 basis of sup ain well in times of war, The weath Vs. My iat buildings were burnt. Tho | “\jerchants wrote their letters with | might as well have bought a twenty: | ™ean infinite.”--Harper's Bazaar fply of dog-feed en in that part of er fi:ished the destruction of the Ar fot oF ti ani the assault of the) quill pens, sand was used to dry | sen package. | wn ent ane s 1e country mada, aud served well when the Duke of I arma in a caused Ant the | k, as there was no blotting pap-| As we pulled into the next station, Listen to the sail flopping in the so track any kin vere di Fron h invaded Ireland and) there “lp to sink Into decay and its pop

| , aaa t er, There were no street letter) scme fifteen minutes later, we hea od | breeze!

: covered by on the out rd ort ave beet ther time when a foe, |" Ay ts te rt ah re A ae boxes, no postinen, and no penny.a boy shouting at the top of his} Yes; perfect sheet-musie, isn't it? . ° ° . ns i trieial 0 (i) | e tie } ¢ } To the Merit of Lydia E. Pink. ard Journoy, 7 wa sous to rald British shores, found | | fOl tee at nN . ny Jt WeS) postage. ‘Traveling was by stage-|iungs as he ran wp and GOWN tlre | enn nn ny A ery soft and a hard crust formed o work rendered difficult by bad ' Mrench, Napoleon ats | goqch, |platform, “Where is the lady to | t tex oO make a gre " ham’'s Vegetable Com- t over t, so aninia ery weather Me come ye at & Brent military | day laborer received two shili:| whom the Isobe cake-soller owes five | ° 1 bout ttle ¢ m A nea thunderstorm at Crecy | # ec dercial centre fe non ings a day. Stoves were unknown,| sen?” Astonished, I informed him | pound during Change Ne lackened the ow-string of the ° ae aun {i Ho neRS ae tees orn All cooking was done with an open! that I was the person; but how on} : pent considerable ¢ ind ef Genoese archer of the Prench, | ter? Bee LL LAG COMMSECS BBM | Areniace, earth did he know about the matter? | of Life. rt looking for a good uation for hereas the English kept their tows |) u A oo perity oF Antwerp. By In the cities many of the streets ‘fo which he replied that the cure i hou t M iin You cased, and suffered nothing; and, t olution of 1830 it was lHoked | yop, unnemed, and the houses were! boy had teleplioned down the line to , 1 to the dest of televur but wher ? ; Weatbrook, Me. “T was passing Know that tr water is very sear come to moder: times, the gallant) | r vC py i caer :" 1) not numbered be sure to give back to its owner that} j ' , aps the utionars . aine « ) te through the Change of Life and had {bere, and we are fortunate tn haying 1 vons ma I heir famous charge at ' Ae * ! tal pod A ct Ne \ - - five sen, - ecummmm pains in my baci sted a geo 1. if vater lake, | Waggon Hill Ladysmith with onl’ eat tes ey 4; Hatin the neaal Birti place of Froissart and Watteau | ; ' ; and side and was so : oe ; add d | att at bat iM P sand, exa perate 1 y the breach of oth Valenciennes and Malines, Sweets For Nurses | Itching, Burning, Irritated Scalp. i I el i nist i owe ( 'y . 4 > 3 ; - . . weak Toei bandh 0 Kot his army acrows {uce, commenced a bombardment two of the latest towna to erie into | | Someone just returned from Lon} Kept Awake at Night, Used usewo f F rime sures 1 af lt thoug ( hich destroyed th arser t SS af pat OTE ee ret eel aNe, SONS B precty SLORY H f | a. y bone I {nard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff, | t 19 os tat ou } t eee Mey aac: Atiea " senal and Pode, ave nov dittle assoc jation with’ about Belgian appreciation of English Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint- mv an yuia \ b 4 ep WE y ' fuction of lace beyond giving | Red Cross nurse The nurses had inkhs : shed shines , $M lwo yours later 4 canes produ giving | Red Cross nur: ses ha . ; inkham's Veg A Touching Epitaph ARAL 1 * { yy vy oe ooo ou ; it de : RH. hal «ye fey their names to the famous varieties. | crossed from Kogland and were wait ment. Now Head Is Well, } table Compou \ \ in > sli ue en, arshe vi ; A ps Me table Compound and ' nde Noe Ind ' ane bh ; AOR p throu ippeared before Antwerp to demand | 4! Valenciennes, indeed,, the manu-\ing in a station in Belgium for the | | it has done me a lot 1 furious told a good story re-|* French fleet unobserved ihe surrender of the eltadel, whiten, {eture has been discontinued, but) train which was to take them to tn¢] | 58 De Salaborry St., Quebec, Quo— of good, I will re y Phe watiy nvert @ eX S . ' in d th \ + rif : AG { reft vy, but after the tuteri yr | the place ha in alternate fame as) front \ Belgian soldier seeing them, | About six yoars ago dandruff began to commend your med plained ur very pr 1 of the ye ' ' vaiped, > ; an of the ditadel ha heen reduced to the birthplace « Froissart, the his:|rashed off and told) his comyradeg,| form on my eealp, At first I didn’t notica : - I lee { oquail ant f terrible inter in the Crimesn Wa : sha Pitan ate Ret Ths tonern,; torian (nearly eis centuries ago) and!) They made a raiu on the sta: on coun-| !t but my hair began falling out gradually icine toemy fri s | vod ¢ t could ri uperiog | ul by rench artillery, General - and} aah po and give u pe t ne i f course ther re ' nd Colone ( isse capitulated of Watteau, the artist, (230 years ter where sweets were kept, bought and it kept getting worse, The itching and si n to H it i h 1 all of the unwary ' raitulat Ralf re t Sui r Wi rt | cil is handed over to the | °89? up all the chocolates and cukes they sormne, Rie so bad that IT seratchod and sic ubliah y P mi mar Kel a 0 ) 1OW-COY a an he . d.¢ 1 dow ral ritated my scalp. I was kept awake at , peur ae. : ) ft { varies died OU , ; 2 + ve leian nd since the treaty of 1839 me could tind, and then, loaded with thee r testimonial, : Mrs, LAw REN Mal } Lat tl funeral rvic edn hbvebay t reli rent ‘ey? . rp . be act Py A Kite This is the age of young men, but. offerings, approached and presented| Maht by the irritation, TIN, 12 King St., Westbrook, Maine tive pastor spoke feeling the t ative Derous carcer / ¢ with Ait hener at sixty-four, gum-, them, to the surprised nurses, ;: “L used - and ———— Oil, also a a , A t nas ra nl hea or the Iritis} muh = ‘ow other oils and they did no good, I then

Manston, Wia, At the Change of \ ud susta I ! and yp E EOE es moned to the 1 @

Life | suffered with pains int back uy ed the era 1, “ha Glehop Butler's Generosity A wise precaution has been taken | ®™y, and Genoral Pau, who retired A Great Expander tried a samplo of Cuticura Soap and Olat- and loins until I could not Resa the bucke ' Mutly | Op Ht bays by Gorm nh sending her Potisn | fF 88 at sixtyacven, and = who t “Pa, what is a dum dum butlery | Ment. washed my head with the Soap and d loins un yuld n ) vet Hanh i af olisn pt ees ashe ‘Pa is 1 Hs 8 . had night-eweats so that the heets fas abd thety mh : \ e : regit ts against Russia It wae! Minu 1 ne ar ao i sat, recalled to A dum dum bullet Is a sert of mit warm werer, and applied .the es

ld as py It Vathes No Time to Lose MP Mae ite) dpa by pp y feared that these troops might mut the co or of rance, it looks 4a tary dried apple, my son.’—Exchange, Aftor the first time my hair stopped falling. would be wet, ried ¢ : ; thinie (halt . " " disp forced to fight against thele thoug. the wisaom of year fait = | I got one cake of Cuticura Soap and one but got nor lief, After tab H hey . aa EE pit " own countrymon. In view of this the ly Ik appreciat by | Shute Shot Out box of Ointment, I continued using them tle of Lydia FB. Pinkham’s \ able te } ane ti alon a} slled att pAlACO | pi eaian and French goneral. staf tir athal haane ? @nni for a fow months and my head is now we Compound I began to impr and I i Vaitt | fe nae citing a subseription for £0Me |). reached an. underst anding thatt In rightand HindncaHAne eee 18 he OM) (signed) Miss Myrtle Davis, June 3, 1014, continued its use for six months, The y 4 ! then a eo rita a On when such soldlers are taken prison Irs, X, rel that while in Lor i t ting !

: . t r ' \ P P Rutl : 3 0 acting as if le were e pains left me, ther rht-eweate and hot Lille : ; , i 1 |) ers they sha. recetve special treat: | don she enquire din a she il they | the tt place and the bosa Samples Free by Mail flashes prew less, and in one year | was thsdir tsi y att Aer | ‘ey Ory AUSF! ment, j had any fresh eggs, fire ! For pimples and blackheads the following

life 1} y I hove t ( pat visi recent-| '! tle ation eplied that there was EE “Yes, mum, plonty,” sald the cler's | is a most effective and economical treat. a different woma! now Ave 10 ; ; £500, “Give it to him, then,” replied Fit t lay will } |*them with a hen on 'em are fresh ! that F we | mont: Gently smear the affected parts witl thank you for my continued good health : A ; the philosopher bishop, “few it-is a] ifteen cents a day will be paid by| ©) ee I hear that Brown has failed,’ | ™en ve \ arts willy

“eg Bee) Mre. M. J Us OWNELL thought ad #, Owing ig _o that 4 bist “4 should have eo | the government of Belgium to every } I don t see any with a hen on gaid Jo I thought he made noth. | Cuteura Olntment, on the end of the finger; ever since, one ino of the peasants, to inform | SA" wv om oat srowre Have 8°) Belgian woman in America whose | them,” said Mrs, X., looking around) ing but gilt-odged investments.’ | but do not rub, Wash off the Cuticura Manston, Wis. : bai : advance, that the phenome | ™¢! om Glob husband is with the Relgian army, [f| for a nest de 8 | ilo did,” replied Smich, “but they | Clmtment in five minutes with Cuticura

The success of Lydia FE. Pinkham’s | yon was a natural occurrence, It wha mearan’ Blase | she has children she will receive, in ‘The Jetter hen’ mum, not the} turned out to be gold bricks.” " | Soap and bot water and continue bathing Vegetable Compound, made from roots | feared that the ignorant ldier i @ Frop 5 nye } addition, five cents a day for each bird Hen stands for ‘noo-laid, | ee WB | for some minutes, This treatment is best and herbs, is unparalleled in such cases, | country people would look upon it a he Ms we wah ore) if a A: it at be |. hild, which will be increased to ten | mum By unwritten law, only noblemen) 0 rising and retiring. At other timos use

it t special advice write to “" 1 amen ; eee g ahan o% cents a day in case the husband is Se eee | are admitted to the commissioned | C¥ticura Soap freely for the toilet and bath,

you want sp } see at put abo , Ot the) slain, This applies to all afmilies o: | <A reporter was interviewing Thos.| ranks of the German Death's Head | % ®sslst In preventing inflammation, irrie Lydia BE. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confi. ence Ah got onto de watery river soldiers, indistiretive of their fnan-| A, idison Hussars, of which the Crown Prince | tation and clogging of the pores, the comms dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will | o: id Rast Johnsing, “Ah su eye Per a ts cial situation | And you, cir,” he said to the in-|of Germany is commander, mon cause of these distressing facial erups be opened, read and answered by a | Pecks dat ef de debbil w to lose hi Just Like Him, the Brute \ ventor, “ma e first talking ma. | tions, Sold by druggists and dealers Pp ry tail, he’d go to de nearest saloon to l ! ba \ pat t a Nichol Why don't you get a new ine?” fae ., { everywhere. Liberal sample of cach mailed

woman, and held In striet ) tT | A manufacturer is making gloves . | get a new one suse cat's d plac », dream u : sit . | “No,” Mr. Edison replied; “the first | with coin pockets in the palms, A free, with 32-p. Skin Book on the treatment == ; : } Gey retail bad spirits,"—Philadelphia iH A Dream, was it rhen wake Nocoyne t can't find a new tallor, jone was made lon, Yelor, my time—| one-armed man is going to have a@| the skin and sealp, Address post-card

W. WN. U. 1022 | Ledger. | up, | Bilt lranscript, lout of a rib, line time getting at his change, “Cuticura, Dept, D, Boston, U. 8, A.’t

HOW TOGOLAND WAS WON FOR GERMANY

BAND OF FREEBOOTERS AIDED TEUTONS IN CONQUEST

Germans First Occupied the Country Some Thirty Years Ago, Enlisting the Services of a Savage Tribe to Conquer the Natives.

‘The first of the German colonies to fall into the hands of Great Britain, Togoland, on the North West coast of Africa, has an interest for the ladies, as being the native home of the birds from \henee come the high- ly prized marabou feathers.

Lome, the capital, is quite modern, It is a clean little town with well- laid-out streets, shaded by palm and other trees, The principal building fs the palace of the Duke of Mecklen- burg, the governor of Togo, To Overcome the difficulties caused by the heavy surf which breaks almost {ncessantly on the low sandy beach, a pier, a third of a mile long, has been erected, and connected with a mas. sive wharf or quay at the seaward end.

Unfortunately the natives are for-

etting how to handle the surf-

ats, and some years ago, when the bridge connecting the wharf with the shore was destroyed by a tidal wave supposed to have been due to a sub-

Miarine volcanic upheaval, Lome was

almost entirely isolated from the out-

side world,

What is believed to be one of the Most powerful wireless stations in the world was completed in prepara- tion for the present war a few months ago, from Lome. It is the chief receiving and distributing centre for the Ger- Man colonies in Africa, and since Messages can be either sent to, or Teceived from, Nauen, just outside Berlin, a distance of 3,450 miles, it Was a most important link in Ger- many's world wide intelligence ser- vice

Atakpame is the terminus of the Tailway, but the Germans have built a good road as far as Sokode about 100 jailes to the north, anu a large motor car has been provided to sup plement the iron road for further pro gress into the fine hunting country nearer the interior of the continent,

There, however, the inhabitants are hostile and treacherous, and have the disturbing habit of taking pbdt-shots at the passing traveller with their polsoned arrows.

In this little-visited part of Togo- fre immense quantities of game Antelope, leopards, and elephants abound, and many kinds of birds, in- eluding the marabou stork, come the greatly-sized marabou fea- thers. The rivers swarm with croe- odile, and there are numbers of hip- popotaml,

As regards Togo history, this only extends back about thirty years, at which time eupled the councry, They found it In possession of many different tribes, all hostile to one another, the domin- ant tribe of the south-central region, dwolling round about where Sokode now is, being the Tschaudjo,

These people were originally a con- quering tribe, like the Masai and the Zulus, and they swept down from the north somewhere about» a hundred years ago, devastating the country as they advanced, They came riding on horses, and as these animals had never before been seen in Togoland, the terror they inspired almost suf ficed by itself to ensure the defeat of the aboriginal owners of the soll

When the Germans came up from the south, a motley but brave and de termined rabble, led by a certain free- lance adventurer named Kersting, they endured their first real check at the hands of these wild horsemen,

Impressed by their fighting qualt- ties, Kersting, following, in a small way the example set by Cortez, in Mexico, and by Clive in India, allied himself with the uro—or king—of the Tachaudjo, and, aided by him, he eventually subdued the whole coun: try and placed it under the German flag. The present uro, an old but dignified and amiable savage namea

Djoba, is the son of the man who,

fought under Kersting’s Danner. He resides at Bafilo, near Sokode, in « “palace” provided for him by the Ger Man government, who also grant him a small yearly subsidy,

Although the lulk of the Togo na tives are, as has been said, in a con- dition but litthe removed from bar- barism, some of the tribes, neverth« less, show considerable skill in handi- erafts. “Thus, at Bassari and Benjali, in the Konkonibwa country, iron fs Thined, smelted and forged into var fous atricles, under exceedingly primt- tive, though fairly effective, tions.

Other tribes cultivate cotton, which they weave into strong and service: able cloth on curlously primitive wooden looms, Beautiful leather macs are also mate, and large, strongly woven baskets of palm-libre, which sell for about half a cent apiece,

In the far north, the only currency is salt or cowries, Amongst the Kon bombwa copper and brass rods will purchase almost anything,

Killing Off the Young

The German, like .he French, stand. fug army is, of course, composed of boys between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four, Mach year a third cf the army goes back to civilian .ife and a new third is recruited, None -{ these are, of course, married; hence there are few widow. being mude by tae Germans fighting around Liege, if this is any compensaticu for the loss of the flower, of the coun try'’s youth, It is only when tie French and German reservists join the first line that married and older men are in action, This is, by the way, quite unlike the record cf our own volunteer regiments in which so manyr of the men were married, As for the French and German noncom milasioned officers, they are, of course, in large part professional solaer and family men, like their officers. But their soldiers are too often mere boys Just out of school, without the faint- est appreciation, perhaps, of what the war is all about, In a sense, these armies are democratic, because the sons of rich and poor alike serve; the educated for a year only, and perhaps in crack regiments; but thore is no

clagp in France or Germany that will’

not pay a terrible price in young men for the inhumanity that is going on today,-New York Kvening Post,

‘Deutschland, Deutschland, uber alles’ The German soldier's song in this

war is not the “Watch on the Khine," |

popular in’ the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, but “Deutschland, Deytseh- jand, uber alles” sung to the air of Haydn's Hymn fo the Jémperor, the Austrian National anthem. The words

were written in 1841 by the poet Hof.)

mann von Fallersleben, in thé island of Heligoland, then British territory, during his exile from Germany on account of his sympathy with the German reform party,

at Atakpame, about 110 miles |

whence |

the Germans first oc-;

condi: |

TIE HERALD, PONOKA. ALBERTA,"

THE DUTY OF THE BUYER

Preference Should Always be Given to Home Products (From the Toronto Globe)

If the patriotic manufacturer doos his duty to Canada by keeping his em- ployees together, and doing without profits till the dip of depression is over, he has a right to expect that the buyer will stand loyally beside him and buy Canadian goods wherever possible, and British goods in prefer- ence to those of foreign nations, The instinct of self-preservation should teach the Canadian people that this is no time to import things that can be made as cheaply and of as good qual- ity as home. he point is so clearly made in a letter addressed to the Globe by a ig et | concern in Ontario that space is gladly given for it:

“We note from your excellent jour- nal that you have been endeavoring during the past few weeks to impress upon Canadian manufacturers the

UNITY OF THE EMPIRE

Influential New York Paper's View on the War *

As might have been expected from

a responsible banker, and statesman

with a real knowledge of this country,

Dr. Dernburg states the case for Ger-} THE NORTH SEA STOREHOUSE

many In a way which does not insult American intelligence. He admits at tlre outset that Great Britain was not responsible for the war, It is true that he belittles the importance of the vio- lation of Belgian neutrality, on an am- biguous utterance of Mr. Gladstone in 1870. He places the burden upon the Pan-Slav peril.

But he cannot rid his mind of the fatal belief that Germany is destined to exercise an unquestioned world supremacy. No nation, and jeast of all Germany, has any such destiny. Cerfainly not the jritish, and the Germans themselves have immeasur ably strengthened the British empiro by demonstrating its astonishing vol- untary solidarity. The obsession ot

duty of keeping théir plants running! world dominations has rung the knell

to the fullest possible extent. have pointed out that by so doing the manufacturers will be largely to the country in this present crisis. With this we are quite in ac-| cord. attention to the fact that there ts a| limit to the possibility of any manu-/ facturer keeping his plant running.

“We are a small concern, manufac:

turing small tools. Throughout the whole of last winter and up to the end of July we ran our factory full time, notwithstanding the fact that our pro- duction was considerably in advance of our sales. Last month our sales took a tremendous drop, and we have {had to slightly reduce our working |hours, Our object in writing to you jis to point out that even in these times of depression there is more than sufficient business in our line to keep us working full time. We are the only concern actually manufactur- ing our line of tools in Canada, In point of quality we are second to none, Our prices are competitive, There seems to us to be no good and suf- ficient reagon for any of this business to be sent outside of Canada, yet it is a fact that this is being done, We suggest to you that you couple your advocacy of keeping the factory run- ning with that of the duty of Canad- jans to buy only Canadian-made goods, {always providing they are competi- tive in quality and price with foreign goods,”

This is a most reasonable request, | and it is to be hoped the readers of the Globe will give it favorablo consid- eration. The buyer naturally wants the best value he can get for his money, but if Canadian goods are as cheap and of as high quality as for. eign goods he is a very thoughtless | Canadian who under existing cond!- tions does not give the preference to home products. In this connection the Globe may be pardoned «= personal word. Many Canadian manufacturers making standard lines of goods do not know the meaning of the word pub- ticity. They expect their goods to sell themselves. They never give the pub- lic a chance to learn the brand or the | quality of the articles they make. The greater part of the foreigs articles soki in Canada are sold because by constant advertising the buyer is taught to ask for-a certain brand or trade mark. In yesterday's Globe scarcely a dozen manufacturers of the | thonsands in Canada thought ‘t worth | telling the people about their gcods. | ‘Two-thirds of the space occupled by manufacturers’ announceme:ts was purchased by Canadian branchiés of American concerns that knes the worth of publicity. The buyer's duty is to give the preference to Canadi.n goods, But the manufacturer's cucy }does not end when he makes the

sxoods, He cannot hope to sell them in

competition with well-advertised for- eign products unless he jets prospec- tive buyers know that Canadian goods

competitive in price and quatity are | on the market, Cannons of Paper there was a time when cannons were actually made of leather, |

though they were never very efficac: | jious, In the Canadian rebellion of) 1837, the Papineau cannons were | made of wood hooped with tron by blacksmiths,

During the insurrectionary war} carried on in Cuba against the rule | of Spain also, the insurgents, being in need of artillery, constructed a cannon of wood, A piece of tree, five feet in length and one foot in diam-| eter, was placed on trestles, and a bore burned in it by means of white: | hot iron pipes, This weapon was | bound round with oxhides cut into} long stripes. It was fired over a hun- dred times before it burst, the pro: | | jectiles used being fragments of iron, stones and fire-hardened clay balls. |

Paper cannon have been used by the Chinese in warfare, The can- non were made of paper, hard-| ened and toughened by means of litharge, wax, tallow, and white lead, } and fashioned in the shape of a long | tube, A steel core was then insert: | ed, the exterior being bound with jand rope, and steel bands added for, | extra strength

Considering the hardness to which | | paper can be compressed as seen in! | paper polishing rollers, there might | be more practicability in this idea than is apparent at first sight,

Tales of Atrocities by German Troops |

every day one hears worse tales of German atrocities, Undoubtedly many of these have growh in the tell ing. For instance, it is recounted on the boulevards that when the legions of the kaiser marched through Brus: sels, displaying their famous goose step, they dragged along two Belgian officers with hands shackled, tied to the Uhlan’s stirrups with straps, The crowd showed indignation and. offic: ers thereupon pushed their horses through the spectators, threatening them with their swords,

‘The Germens are also said to have insulted the Belgians by dressing up a bear to represent King Alvert and making him bow to his guardians

German soldiers, it is rested, tore from the women's dresses the Belg jan flags ‘vhich they all wear, At Blawont the Uhlans are said to »ave shot a young girl they met walking through the field, They seized Prof Colin of the college of Louis le Grant at Paris, as hostage, and compelled’ him to walk through the streets ir his shirt and barefoot

Parisians firmly believe the Ger mans actually kill their ow. wound ed privates because they keep them back in their flight, | It was the accumulation of alleged inst.nces of Teuton atrocities which caused M. Messinny, the minister of

| war, to issue a decree that no special favor be extended to prisoners by tne} French, |

Germany's Increase in Population

} The imperial statistical office has recently issued a year book which es-) timates the population of Germany on | July 1 of this year at 67,812,000, a} ;gain of 831,000 during the twelve months, Since the war with france in 1870-71°Germany has gained 26,000,- 1000 in population,

| the serfs are considered

| goods in

You | of empires since history began.

Another German writer of less con-

contributing | sequence recently spoke of the coere- Sion of German citizens in England

“by pistols of the London police.” He a @ vay 7 4 las ar : . » . We would, however, draw your| could not imagine a policeman with. | a anchorage for torpedo craft.

out a pistol, just as the statesman in Berlin cannot imagine an empire based upon mutual advantage without coercion, The London policeman car ries no pistol; and this is typical of the incomplete assumptions which the German expectations of a disintegrated British empire were founded,

India was to rise in rebellion, But

every indepenient Indian ruler has) vied with the three hundred others in|

volunteering men, money, jewels and themselves. The Boer does not want to “take” South Africa, In the best and safest sense, he has it, What he proposes to take is the German colony in West South Africa, while he sends a detachment to fight in Kurope. The same is true of the English-speaking self-governing commonwealths, and of the French-Canadians not less than the others. The Sultan's “Haly War" is absurd in the light of Moslem vol- unteers in Egypt.

And the Irish were to rise in rebel- lion! For the first time in three cen- turies there is not a “red coat” In Ire- land, tle of the British. ing of the Irish.

These constituent parts of the Brit ish empire are not conquered races but partners in the business, They make their own laws, raise their own taxes, and receive authority and re sponsibility to exactly the degree in which they choose to qualify, This represents a degree of freedom such as the world never saw before. Tut the German mind cannot understand a g.overnment carried on without an au tocrat, a bureaucracy, or a conserip army. P,

The Pan-Slav danger is a fear, and little else, Democracies are not war like; and this movement must neces sarily stimulate self-government among these peoples. This is true in an extraordinary degree in when the gains since the freeing of lt is true of the Balkan states, It may be that the days of dynasties are drawing to 8 close. But this is poor ground upon which to appeal to the sympathios of the American people.

What is wanted of self-government by uonalities, with the principle, enough established in) the United States and the British empire, that commercial competition is not lrostil

They know noth-

language na well

ity, but exchange, and that 1 ean be)

carried on without a soldier or « bat tleship for anything but police pur

| pose.—Wall Street Journal,

CHANCE IN 4ER TERRITORY

Great Oportunities Lie at Canadian Manufacturers’ Doors Without

Seeking Outside Country

The department of trade and com mene is daily receiving many in qtiries from .radesmen in all parts o Candida as to whether goods tormertly supplied by Austria and Germany can be procured, There is evidentl: am ple opportunity for Canadian manu facturers to enter into many Hhies of economic production in Canada, (ings should be manufactured as well | this country as in Germany or Austria Sir George Foster has been having an inquiry made into the characters and extent of German and Austrian im

ported goods, and the result has shown some surprising failures of Canadian manufacturers to realize op portunities,

The present effect of Vie war, he b lieves, will be permanently to replace with Canacfan made goods many lines of manufacturea goods which have hitherto been purchased outside o Canada, Developments along this tin is expected to) e much greater than along the line of picking up a share of the trade in South America drop ped by Germany ang Austria, At th present time there is a great scarcity of ready money in the southern re publies, and Canadian manufacturers seeking new business must, under ex isting conditions, keep (n mind the necessity of quick returns on inves! ment,

For South American trade they might have to wait for a year before reeeiving payment from the time the goods were ordered in Canada,

There are also accumulating evid ences of the fact that the war is stimulating the demand for Canadian Great Brita., Canada’s ready response to the call of the Moth erland for assistance is having its ef fect In the preference given ia the United Kingdom for Canadian food atulfs and all other lines of Canadian export.

Sir George Po.ter has stated that in all orders placed by the Hritish gecy ernment for food supplies, ete., prefer ence was given in the overseas Do minions, and the total of orders al ready placed in Canada amounted to nillions of dollars,

The American Attitude

As for the attitude of the American press, it never more accurately retiect ed the sober judgment of the American public than in condetnning Germany course in the present confilet The indictment against Germany is found ed upon the statements of her owa defenders, whose admissions ire far more damning in their evidence than any chorge of the Allies. & nathon whose linperia!l chancellor ridicules aa a “scrap of paper,” the olighted faith not only- of his own but of other

| governments, can find nothing hut con demnation on this side of the Atlantic!

#0 long as America remains tree to her idcals as a nation.-Boston Trans cript Deposit Enormous Amount of Gold It is estimated that nearly one hun dred millions of American gold foe the Bank of England will be in the vaults of the department of finance before the end of the war, heavy United States loans, it is stat- ed, are maturing in England and the obligations will be met by the deposit of American cold with the finance de- partment at Ottawa,

upon |

The Germans may know a lit-}

Russia, |

Some |

PUTS BAN ON AIRSHIPS !

(HELIGOLAND ISLAND 3 WELL FORTIFIED

Cannot Fly Within Ten Miles of Forti- fied Points

An order-in-council has been passed prohibiting airships from flying with

adian cities or fortified points, unless

dono firearms, explosives or photo graphic equipment will be allowed on board. Any military ale craft in Can ada must be the property of the Can adian government or Great Uritain or her allies. One reason for the strict

lor purposes of protection, a cliff} of granite was built, so that now the island to a large extent possesses cliffs which are purely artificial, In addition, hundreds of tons of cement | were used to strengthen the face of} | the natural rock. ornmental regulation of airsly

Most of the people depend for their | 18 With w view to preventing any see livelihood upon the lobster and other | Tet fitting out of airships by Germans fisheries, together with their harvest | OF Austriaus in the United States wit jfrom the summer visitors, They live|* View to bombarding operations, of to long years, and have a stheir na-| Scouting at fortified or inilitary points tive tongue the North Frisian dialect. |i" Canada

In 1807 Great Britain obtained the! It fs @ remote, but possible island from the Danes. Wher she took possession of the island it was the “jumping ground” of a horde of smugglers, there being practically ne room left on the island which was | haf free from kegs @nd human beings. In) offictalism aor Manet earemn Minin 1890 we gave the island to the Ger [ tortie bo Sto A edged Malai mans as their consideration for our ty telegraphists thecd A i ee oH taking over Zanzibar and Pemba. | Vico with the army, Ax Meh oficial

At the time of the bargain thero| formed Tord Kitchener that the wis great dissatisfaction shown in| men could not be apared, as the stan

danger

When Kitchener Aske He Gets Action

\ story is going round about Lord Kitchener's way of dealing with

Ni F ady vr seriously depleted |

each country, It was recognized by | Lica faery ja - we . é 4 th +

many farseeing men that so lore ae sont! bac i a nes ie to ‘an that if

we possessed Hellgoland the island | * So eat ‘sant 1 i

was in the position of ) | tae men were A ‘erat esa ts as I 1 of a menace to hour he woald come fer them hin

Germany,

Those Germans who objected to the bargain were sore that Germany did hot obtain a much larger territory even HKismarck said they had ex changedea pair of trousers for a mere

self. Needless to svon fortheoming

way the on we

British Fighting Families

Lots of cases are on record of en

button. [t was then that the plateau | tire families being In one or other o was rlitied, the British fighting forces. A wide y

Quite recently some of the most! ed lady named Coppard, of Penge massive guna produced by Krupps';has seven sons serving in the West |} were placed there, while provisions! Kent Yerritorials and she | er

Were laid In suilicent to withstand &) proud of the fact, Another instaner | siege of three yeeor Money iv feet, of an Erith family named Iie i Was spent like water that the teland father fought at Tebellvebir X son should become the North Sea store jare in the Royal navy, and the mot house of the German fleet jis anxious to serve as a nurs:

is a world-system |

Good Times Ahead for the West

HE attention of the world is now

being attracted to the vast areas

of fertile wheat lands of Western

Canada. Only a small fraction of the

agricultural lands are at present tilled

and their cultivation is necessity,

now a world

| There will be a world-wide shortage of food and the demand for wheat and all farm pro- ducts will be enormgus. High prices for The the greatest throughout the West.

«rain are sure to prevail. coming

year will witness activily

The Hour of Opportunity has Arrived

! NEWSBOYS ON HORSEBACK

Shackleton Departs For Polar Trin | Sir Mrnest Shacklot bth Carricrs Make Quick Time to the Sub. bers of lis trans \t ntare mditio ave left Jaondon in t urbs in Montevideo Petiion \ tions for the South Polar reg o \iost \merican newsboy think ate of t party +" ya ier themselves well off if they oWn a BOOd | est Shackleton, depart a suit of clothes, but in the Drugunay America, t ther f ped tion left for R py t N an capital of Montevideo there are 4oul \ , ealand side o eA ret over fifty newsboys who own hor 1 , and peddle their papers-on hormebact sad ' tel ' tt i

100,000 ibe

Montevideo has vitents as 7 ae

but it spreads over more territery O°). 7 4 ay " aie than an “American city of the sain rhe ennai alan - ae / poprlation; there are almost no tene | yoo Pe RY ment houses, and there are several ri eee sal Pa al of ah l he i Ih have } dog large parks One great difficulty that confronted Like Americans, the’ Uruguayans | tie expedition an lack of ien want their evening paper as S00N 48) Efe jnatrume | d been or possible after it comes from the pres lered from Germany but had not beer The horseback newsboys supply this) qelivered becau of the war and it demand with astonishing rapidity, Lo) was necessary to repl them in np Ktazon, one of the loading evening jour jang nals, is issued at 5 o'clock Abou’ The Ro eu party will lth twenty minutes before that hour th xploration p Aurora Y newsabo mostly young men from town lasmania Sir Mrnest Shac elahteen to twenty-five years of age leton hove to |e Lue ayre gather in the street tn front of the Oetober is ) ah pi ! n pewapaper office When the paper whi now ¢ t te to it Ler aro brought out the clerk hand

bundle to each, and away-he start at a full gallop, All the business ta the centre of the town ia done by or-| dinary “foot newsboys;” the horsemen race away to their “beats” in the sub

Germany's Commerce Annihilated Ciermany annihilated

foreign trade is virtually

German ships to the

value t $25,000,000 ave he urbs, shouting with all their might, OOF faerie on d Lit Hazon! La Razon!" troyed by British cruisers, and other ) i

at . to an estimated value of $60,000,000

A customer who wishes to buy 4 aye interned in neutral ports, There i paper steps to the sidewalk and holds yo estimate to be put on the number j ous his arm, The horse knows the 8i8-\ or value of the German ships laid up nal and pulls up so short that it is {yn Hamburg, Bremen and other Ger wonderful the ridder is not catapulted man harbor Nowhere on the high ) over lis head seas is a German afloat except a

So efficient Is this system of eques- | fugitive

trian newsboysa that a dweller in the outskirts of Montevideo gets his even- ing paper almost as soon as teh man) is the result that would atten! a con who lives in the very heart of the} filet between England and any power olity.--Youth's Companion, | -—-New York Journal,

This is the immediate result of Eng land's supremacy upon the seas It

j \ hundred years have 7

in ten miles of any of the chief Van-, on

of the allies lost their lives,

ee me ee ee

con, Ne wevor™ TPADITS AND LOSSES seen eee os{ OF THE GREAT WARS

THE ENORMOUS EXPENSE OF

issed since the great nations of Europe gathered battlefields in titanic struggle, vombining their hatreds and their men

OF THE GERMA by special government permit and) to curb the genius of Napoleo 4 <ommmntine N PLEGT, prohi iting any air craft carrying, That century ha r ange ‘a very MODERN WARFARE Millions Have Been Spent in Fortifica- passengers to cross the international t ao lod of \ arfare, bringing new im Huge Sums That. Are Necessary to tions and the Constructi.n of Pow- boundary except under special condi-| plements of death and increasing the Fi : der Wadastiie 8 tions. power of cach soldier as a er mas nance the Prosecution of War—- gazines—Provisions For The action is taken by the govern-| fold Vanquished Called Upon to Meet | Siege Lasting Three Years. ment as a precautionary measure and! Napolecn gathered 200,000 men at the Bill of Expense Enormous sums of money have} because airships have recently been! Leipsic in October, 181 » stand Modern warfare te a costly. Dr {been spent upon fortifications at} Seen approaching various places near} against the armies raised by Austria,J yeast.” xo ee | deta Heligoland, the border of Canada. Guards have) Russia, Sweden and Prussi The al gome years afo eadine Get | The island which has an area of} been stationed at all prominent points lies liad a total of 350,000 m Soe li hd stifn ted | aes e Fr idoedg only three-quarters of a square mile,| With orders to fire upon any airship rhere were mixtures of ra onl German war, wndeF todern “oni is looked upon as one of the most| Which comes wthin the preseribed ten each side, To tl agles of Napolec ry would cost $50,000.00 : al ont | treasured possessions of Germany, mile area, rallied not only his own Frenchmen,| while if Great Britain, Austr a Rus | Since the Germans obtained pos The places named in the orderin-| but Italian Spaniards, Portugue ia and italy were on ~ A aie rhe | session of the island, enormous sums | council as being those over which no| Belgians, Dutch, Swiss, Poles and] ures would soar t 8 8,000,008 ¢ have been spent upon fortifications, | “itship may fly are Halifax, Sydney, | Germans nonth! sac bin pais to rhd : , and 80 on, including $30,000,000 spent | St. John, Quebec, St. Jolin, Valcartier, Against hint were pitted Slavs, En There is every indication that these on protecting the coast from erosion.} Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Toron- | lish, Germans, Swedes, Hungarians | figures are being atta éd,, if t wut Probably it will never. be known| to, London, Winnipeg, Regina, Cat-| and savage Bashkirs, a mixed Tartar} passed in the big war in | urope how many Millions Germany has| Sty, Kdmonton, Victoria, Vancouver) tribe from Northern Russia, whe When one hanatie y the: ned > of spent in strengthening the place. But | 4d Charlottetown fought with bows and arrows the vast armies in the fighting line it is known that a million and a hall It also provided that no airship may) It was fighting at close range. The]and engaged keeping o n communts was spent in improving the harbor | Pass within ten miles of any wireless | infantry carried fintlock muskets. Vo] cation to the Base) 2 his ral need- telegraph station ' reload Was a matter of minutes. Their] od to food t e rif ud b air 1 id Millions have been spent in for-., Airships crossing the international sharp bayonets were often more dead: | tye continuous head ote i on oat | tifleations and the construction of boundary line and carrying passeng ly than their bullets the figures quoted do not nonear powder magazines, while refuges ers are allowed to land only at poin.s I he artillery of the period wa large in proportion to the rorce on: have been built for the inhabitants ag} Within three miles of Annapolis, N.S, primitive. The guns were muzzle} eaged in the conflict & protection against the island being | Woodstock, N.S., Lake Megantic and loading, fired with fuse or mateh. The Hut there is money to be made in shelled by an enemy. ; Hlemmingtord in Quebec; Athens, round ball schrapnel, or chained shot) war, as in every haetnwhey < erm ny Two hundred teet from the water| Welland and Essex in Ontario; Mor-| carried but short distances. The clash | for instance profited much from the there stands a series of big gun bat-| 8, Manitoba; Hstevan, Sask.; Let. was between men who could look into} prancoGerman war of isto. Her teries and armed turrets, an attempt bridge, Alberta; and Chilliwack, B.C, | each others eyes, who rode down each) war pill amounted to $150, uy having been made to turn the jsland| Canadian officer must be carried | other with circling sabres }but when pea proposals ere } into a German Gibraltar | any airship that lands in Canada} [nm that’ battle, the first important! made, Germany pres nted Franc

battlefield defeat of Napoleon, 54,000 Or Nap. oleon’s army 40,000 dead and wound ed were left behind when the retreat began towards Paris. The battle last

ith a bill of $1,000,000,00 It got every cent of it.

lt was the great Bismarck who ar ; ranged the terms of the treaty, and though he chuckled mightily at t

ed from October 14 to October 20,| idea of getting this buge un from Sts {the Freneh for stopping the war, it Now with millions of men under} jg gaid that

he was sorry when he changes of carnage are) saw how readily the Mreneh scraped niultiplied not only by the number en-| the amount*together, that he lad not gaged, but by the new weapons of war asked for double the amount! Ger jare, which titns each soldier into 4) many had previously squ en an in platoon }demnity of over $10,000,000 out of

Hombs, capable of killing hundreds | her present ally, Austria, after hos

aris, the

of tearing down great fortifications | tilities lasting only one month.

may be dropped from airships in the} Other countries, too, have found

night war a very profitable business, not- rhe tnnons have grown to mechan lably Japan, who, after the war of

jeal monsters, ‘The flinetock has; be-| 1894-1895 with China, arising out

come a repeater, sending not one bul

y , of the state of Korea, made the Chia- let but a volley The Gatling guns) esa pay her an indemnity of $185,000,

peak a hundred death sentenco a * 990. As the war cost Japan only $34, econd The machine guns multipl 000,000, she made a profit of $155,000,- the man behind into a squad, while | 900, in addition to which she gained pom the eat great steel ships Of certain towns and territories. death carry the teans of wiping out Hut Japan gained little profit from cities from distances almost beyond the vir with Russian in 1904-06, in the range of vision spite of an inde minity of $500, H,000, Even with the primitive weapon which was demanded, for the cost of wast sorrow, starvation and UO that campaign to Japan alone was peakable suffering blighted the citie cotimated at $600,000,000 ind countries these armies visited A country whieh bas never found Kuch contested city became a group war profitable is Hussia, Her en of hospital Livestock and crops) cointer with Turkey in the 70's cost were swept away, taking the resus) her an enormous amount of money of years of industry in an hour, She would only have been a little out Following the beaten army of N of pocket if she had received the oleon, the allles entered Paris, a $250,000,000 indemnity which she asi forced him to abdicate, He was ban:| eq for in her bill. Ultimately the ished to Elba, but within a year had! indemnity was cut down to $160,000 escaped and gathered an army of 360.) 909 with which to pay her out-of 0, Britain, Russia, Austria and) pocket expenses, of which sum Tur rr “# gathered an army of 600,000

key up to the present time has paid

wid Kngland and Prussia ended the juse over half, and there seems Jit last war tit hich all great nation tle likelihood that she will ever raise ere involved, at Waterloo the ful) amount In inen involved in the present war, The cost of the Russian-Japanese the arm uve increased nearly 1) war was staggering The campaign thine In addition, the armament Of) jasted about if months, and alto hattleships brings to the contest) gether it is, estimated that the com ter death power than existed hi bined expenses of Russia and Japan ' eqipe tof a century” amounted to no less than $2,225,000, pst ooo rhe loss to Japan's navy and Nhe \ rama of ath ef oll mereantilc marine alone amounted uh | the militar to $250,000,000 pert This was the fourth ¢ The clash of battleships at sea, Of wpon which Ru had euiered tien on land © fire Trom distanes ree- quarters of a centurt l beyond t ronge of human eye, ot alr rat und second were with Turkey, iy ite lurt ih great vultures | former involving an expenditure through the air, presenta a peetacl of $100.000,000 and the lo of 120,000 it tor " never yet produced met rh 188, and twenty rhe orld kt ' fulie o rs later came the Crimea, it Is | i ogl 00} 4 \ pleture i} 1) paint " tot ost of thi err i vil 1,5655,000,0 gland DEMAND FOR FLOUR bill alone a nied to $90,000,000 rhe Napol t while { Canadian Flour Mills Will Run at Vater comparat y Full Capacity ; apt an Orders from tl Dominion ul On t r t overnments for an agered or whi « ror and of 1250,000 barrels of flour are on auished Miready Germa i \ the beginning of the increased demand oping to partiy recoup herself by be on the flour mills of Canada as a ve ' enormo exact " P 4 sult of the war nl tt ul 1 in ne of Vhe mobilization of the armies OF yyoy 1cro } W her 1a hurope Hl result ina large reduction in Ib ib ' lers in the crenage sown to wheat in tha ure t nl acre the fro er miinent That reduction in acres ul er tors possible t t neds quent reduction in yleld wil) y tely 1 ne ubmit calmly grou nerense eCeamand for wheat yy evorbit le siude upos { flour from other pro®ucing comune py, y el y Ww has turned s ire Canada will find a ready mar pjeautiful ex ry Into or of deata ket for allt heat and tlour eca and de port during the war. The flour mill Kut Ger u NY 4 ole ad il he kept busy grindls herself reprisals, Canadiat reat into Cancdtan four for when ‘the indem for sport to the Mother Country at) nity to be ier will be 1 tin trial mply enormou reat Britain In the home market, also, there ill, never has deliberately set about mak tL demand for four, The 4, money out ¢ er wars in mod t kk nany Will be to use mor ern day It he 1 be perfectly bread ! other staple arti OF 1000 justified eall pon her enen alo ome of the luxuri of tac to mee the expe they have wat table I vill mean an inerea tonly run ber into tion of flour " ould appear that the 7,00 March of the Men of War wre working in the flour i a difference in the length Canada are assured of con t r 0 v] ol Une olde now eb ! employment throug)out th wed ‘r ur It is po ble the numbe ro rhe ¢ tep of all t of ployees In flour mille will ive to the B nfantry, which is t hed I, Hut, eve of an increa on ia ual Germany and id b imnece iry, the continues witverland ome n 1, o@Aac “doing operation of thi ndustry will ea" thirty-one inches, and France, Italy the cirematy of approximat +4 ind) Austria each &tep out twenty ached. edd Cur Bes to Canadian) ying inches rhe hortest all vr found in the ian my fue a saris soldier's step is tLwenty-seves French Colored Troops Heroes of 1870 and % half inches, and does 3 The Alperia sharpshooter he hundred and twelve tot iinut operating it thre Prenes rh beaten by the Gern army in ure popularly | does one hundred and nown as “Tureo minnte rhe susiriar top These dashit colored troo] uve the rate of a hundred fifteer behind them a plendid fighting re Vreneh and itallar undred ut ra of t ir of 1870, The French twenty oldiers from North Africa distin It therefore follo that al as suished themselve particularly at, will take twenty minu tou Wissemburg and Froeschwiller, their, mile, the Austrian elghtee: 1 two peclalty being reckless and gallant | third minutes, t Freneh | lla bayonet charges lian eighteen minute md er It | iid that the terrible memory | man ten or eleven | of the charging rurcos” remained | - - vith the German troops for years af-| Carriet Pigeons on the War Strengt) terward The ir var in pie it was in Upper Alsace that the were used a me ne rarco did most of thelr Sighting) vranco-Prussian, and bird in ISTO They are there again, “but! pied news into and nt hot ‘ays a Frenelt: writer, as th Parl A post a tabl ! erot of deteat, but in the first} Tours, and right t £ t leg runka of the heroes of revenge and regular mail were ried bet en vietory, Paris and Tours by pigeon apa at dy ya! It is not gener own t ll Favor Adoption of English Language! ihe armies and es of the rid A remarkable proposal cones from) can fall back o1 ff 1 pigec f some Belgian leaders, “We realize,” pnecessary, and birds belong: they say, “that our pation is one va-| ing to the Brit y ive tele tional language, It is impossible to | official standi ! wer tad make either Flemish or Waaloon uni-{ the handyme versal because of the rivalry of races During the } t army, We do not wish to encourage further) had its car systen : he use of French wishing to ma.ntal. our! birds brou 48 from all the , distinct individuality and cultivate | towns be I Boer In- , British rather than French character: | vaters, ui: r ( White’ istics, therefore we propose taht Bel-| ferce w cooped Ladysmith gium should adopt English as a na. | winged rs verat | tional language, making herself the| despat e ~ England of the continent and sister} to th« ig 'natlon of England of the Isle,” sheir

INE PERALD. | export FLOUR PRICES

eemeed Ur - raaais aman om

ADVERTISING BATES. t areata

“at 0, 19m taal “en Sim “asertlen, 6 oe fer i dunscqpent te

. caver : ts ia

bh ef aaction Mo og cents pee teen avet wed and 194 ceate wer isch for cach oubesquent

x *"Comrecrened as-ertisomente carried for

5 gente et hinps the foremost paper in the mill- Gevteyes | '05 trade on this continent, and A)

eres mentae or loager 600 per moatd.

each ta Protesstopal cards, te the extent of sis

.rter, + accompanied & will be set ap wi esd inee en!

wend Serdar tte tbl ta BY srastday teee toy Ssorigercis

yop PRIN

eaINrive, tere grevared. to de

free inte

\vertion

Aocow mente ers pep arte ts

aranees oon

+ acter? “ork. TO CORREBPONDERIV.

be int 1 saoral inte oA to thy pate. pet s number of points n

perve te os the oat.

‘ne other

and every Fy Job * et reasem | of their attacks on the millers, Mr. | ble rat me Priating @ spew | | bite” * eollait or bealnocs o «

na countre | attention pv I the “Northwestern Miller,” took occa

UNDER DISCUSSION

Valuable Contribution by “North | Western Milier’—"Grain Growers’ | Guide” Concedes Few Pointe

“The Northwestern Miller” {s per |

recognized authority on all matters | pertaining to the cereal industry. It will be recalled that during the past year some antagonism to Canadian | | uilllers has developed by reason of the charges that they were selling Canadian flour made in Winnipeg and | other Western points, in Great Britain | and elsewhere cheaper than in the places {n which it was manufactured, “The Grain Growers’ Guide” has been the leader in present- ing this side of the case. As a result

for export

r; THH EWALD, PQNOKA, ALBERTA. :

ee

THE CANADIAN BANK

OF COMMERCE

SIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.0.,LL.D., D.C.L., President ALEXANDER LAIRD, General Manager V. C, BROWN, Superintendent of Central Western

JOHN AIRD. Ase’t General Manager Branchee

CAPITAL, $15,000,000 RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000

BANKING BY MAIL

Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the same careful attention as is given to all other departments of the Bank’s

business, satisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank.

Ponoka Branch Mirror Branch

A. H. Balley, Canadian manager of

sion to correct their statements on a the following

letter, which the “Guide” was con-

e hat we) (vee piqhees SS yd We dectre Arr thet) strained to publish, Im fairness to the

thetr names an

respondesw tia Maunicatioms, thoegh tse sablicethon,

te aeene | millers in a recent Issue:

err > H i— ur issue of NoTICe TO ADVERTISERS. | Editor, Guide:—In_ yor ao iagere prompt jon, often April 29 you have an editorial on

eNer tates he neces oc Mes

prices of Canadian flour at home and

eos | abroad in which quotations from the

ACREAGE OF ONTARIO WH&AT LARGE |

Toronto, Oct. 3O.—Outario hee sown this season over one million acres of fall wheat more than 1 has erer sown before, and as the avernge Was 724490 in Wd the} area is thus nearly double! Sab is the estimate wiven out by tle provincial department of agricul ture, and the estimate is stated t The yiell fo 14,000.00 of the

ba conserrative O14 was estimetel at bushels ins the last report Dominion government, The farmers of the province ba over 3,009,000 acres devoted t pasture when the appeal of th vovernment went fort: to “yro

wheat’ Detinite :euros as t acreage sown are not due at th departinent until Nov. 1. and 3 may be nm week later before th precise fignres can be officiall made known Tuformation show that at least one third of the poet

ure acreage floue hasbeen with fall wheat, and the Huare ui amount to a considerably large prop rtion

“Tne response of the far nera he been magnificent, Hlor

sof

declares

| !@ unfair te

| to Imve thein properly related to each

| those who are not familiar with the

market reports of The Northwestern

Miller are used by way of illustration. These figures, as used, require some qualification and explanation. As they stand they convey an impression which the Canadian milling in- dustry and since the quotations are ours, we presume you will be glad other by the authority from which they were obtained.

It {s a mistake to compare the price of first patent flour In Winnipeg as | given by our correspondent there with the price of Canadian flour quoted in our cables from leading British mar- kets. The flours are not the same— “First patent’ in Winnipeg is a very high quality of household flour which ts hardly ever exported tn quantity, while “Canadian spring patent,” Glas- gow or London {s a strong bakers’ which {s gold to the baking Both are called patents, but they are not the same, This con- is extremely common among

grade

trade, fusion

technicalities of the flour business and arises from the unfortunately too promiscuous use that millers have made of the word “patent” as a de feriptive term of flour.

James Dall, minister of agriceliu iv giving the estimate “Oi itare will havea wheat crop,’ gait he “the like of which she bas news before contemplated.”

“The west will do her full share fowan! feeding the Einpire,” ce clared J. G, Tarif, MP. fo Assinibois, and Liberal whip f Saskatchewan an the Domin en

Varliame it, who is in Toronto on]

Me Turriff states! tha in his district the crops this seas pn have been exceptionally larve, ave that the appeal tourow more whient has reanited in sowing thousunce of adtitional aeres for i ect os son's yiel |

business,

BRINGING BELGIANS TO CANADA

Ottawa, Oct.

ment

30, —-The

has under consideration »

govern

proposal to bring one thousanc Selvian refugees to Canad’, and i this is done they will be distribat e! amongst the farmers of the Domiuion., Many sugaes'i ne have bsen received by nembers of the government regamding the Bel. wisn refugees, and every communi cation shows that it is the desire of the Canadian people to bave some of these brave Belgiaus coue to this country, No deeision has been reached but it is very probable that some action of tis kind will be taken,

——

LARGE ENROLMENT AT SCHOIOL OF AGRICULTURE

Daring the tiss frewistration some dT students

three doya of Inst ven, a total

tere eurolel t

the sahoo! of Aer cultueo I’ 8 yene the first theo diya bay en ten total enrolment of 5 stat OF these 75 ace bova ane IS fod there are still on hand some to 25 signed applications Many Ve me el outs mos il to form opoaml yet tee ary se peeritou that moms PD ve ! (looper ued thee ext teow oo he

Lie fiata are chat the prevent |

aucl tieal weathor f rfall plow We

that many farm boys ara loath tol >

leave notil this work ja Huis ed Ic is expected that when the oe rolment is finally completed, the will be from 100 to LILO students i attendance attho Olds school «! griculture, there are ctill a few places { 1 boys in the first year's class, and i! anv are thinking of attending, it will be well to write at one same thing may be eaid with re gard to the girle’ classes, » Up to ‘tye present 18 have registered

Further, I +hould like to point out that besides this confusion of grades,

Rates: $1 and $2 per day

New Houne’and * Newly Furnished,

Fol el Lelan !

© GEORGE LINBERTS, Prop.

® Special Attention to ® Commercial Trade. $ ew'The Ber is steoked with a Fine Stock of .iqaore ana Cigar

Ponoka, Alta

Money may be deposited or withdrawn in this way a Ww

L. G. CRUZIER, Manager T. 8. LITTLE, Acting Managor

@OH OO $OOOOOOOOOOOOOOH

@O@OELOSGH OOD

% 00009000 0000000000000 %

W. W. BATSON. I", H, COX

ooo

The Batson & Cox Hardware Co.

If you are thinking of purchasing a Kitchen Range, call and see our line. We have the Round Oak and Enterprise

Monarch, the best that money and skill can produce, Also the Stewart, Albion and Brittania at the very lowest prices.

We have just unloaded a car of Wire and Nails, and can supply Woven Wire Fencing, Barb Wire and Nails and Baling Ties at right prices.

your editorial confuses the terms and conditions under which these quota thena are made, The price you name at Winnipeg is the local jobbing price for mixed car lots on open account to city and country buyers, while your British price fe that at which flour ts sold in large quantittes In vessels’ hold at the dock side; cash on pre- sentation of documents

To arrive at a proper comparison of prices for Canadian flour in Winnt peg and Glasgow, you should take as your basis the grade known as strong bakers. This i@ the flour described In our Hritish cables as Canadian spring patent. It is sold mostly to bakers and ts, therefore, the kind In which of bread are in terested, This grade sells in Winnl- peg in straight car lots at $4.00 per barrel delivered, while the same flour fs worth in Glasgow today about 26 shillings per 280 Ibs, c.1.f. terms, which means in ‘vessels’ hold. - This price ia exactly equivalent to $4.20 per bar. rel, To land the flour and deliver it in a Glasgow bakeshop would cost an- other 40 cents per berrel, Including importer’s profit, which makes the delivered price Glasgow $4.60, as against $4.00 Winnipeg.

To sell this flour in Winnipeg the mil'sr must send out a salesman to solicit the order and he must later, in’ many cases, send out a collector to bring back the money, ‘Io sell the flour {n Glasgow he pays for one or two cables and the money ts credited

consumers

| to his account as soon as he deposits | his draft and bill of lading tn his bank.

The]

By looking at this matter tn this way, you get a fair comparison of domestic versus export price for Can-

f Adian flour and it will be seen from

the figures given that the Canadian miller {s not discriminating against his domestic customer 80 outrageously a6 some have thought, THE NORTHWESTERN MILLER Per A. H, Batley, Canadian Manager

In commenting on the letter the editor of the "Guide" states that they are always glad to furnish authorita- tive information on any subjéct, so that there can be no question about thelr recognizing the Information BUD:

plied by Mr, Bailey as authoritative.

and there are places for 8 to 1 more. Those thinking of attend ing had better write at once to W. J, Exuiorr, Principal, School of Olls

Agricultur

LOST

One Sellow Cattle Dog; also, o e large Red and White Cow, no horn ,

White face, Suitable reward,—Harry

' Sfelfox, Springdale.

Before buying a Gasoline Engine, see the Lister at our store—there is no better.

We carry a full stock of Heavy and Shelf Hardware, and our aim is to give Satis-

faction with every purchase,

| Batson & Cox

AERIS MERE VE PZ HAR SE KE HE AME § ANNOUNCEMENT

is

M. JENSEN having sold his Livery Business, Begs to announce that

(\ he is out for Trade,

it i rt

wR

HORSES, CATTLE and HOGS

Highest Prices

~

ym,

Satisfaction Guaranteed

y

Bb WS AB BSH WS WS We WA SE SE

APA APAAAS eonoka

Engineering orks

We are still here to do all kinds of MACHINERY REPAIRS

AGENCY FOR THE—— , Renowned FIELDING KEROSENE and CRUDE OIL HNGINE

teach us that 0 per cent, of Gasoline Engine trouble is ignition, «that isa thing of the past, as they are self igniting, requiring neither Patlevies nor Magneto,

v 3

:

Experience

Ty the

H. J. REES, Proprietor, “Box 18

ese eeeEsEeEcE wR

f

Ci nwwnnnnnnnnnnnann?

:

“oe

O.L, WEBSTER G.N. FIELD i. W. HUTCHINSON Commissioners for taking Affidavits

The Ponoka Land Oo.

LOANS, INSURANCE, AFFIDAVITS

References: CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Hat Insurance. GAME LICENSES. Lock Box 55 PONOKA, ALTA,

We show you our lands free of cost at any time. Write for descriptive catalogue,

Agents for Atlantic Steamship Companies

0. L. WEBSTER

AUCTIONEER

Time to Spring the Question Again

Are you going to build this Season ?

» Do you want the best stock and “just right” prices? If that is the combination you are looking for, the best thing you can do is to “hot foot” it for our yard. When you've made your purchase, you'll realize that a full measure of satisfaction has been handed to you in both quality and price—nothing else,

When it comes to Lumber and Building Material of any kind, we've got the goods, the real goods, and the real good goods,

Step in—look around—ask questions, serve you,

Revelstoke Sawmill Co. YARDS: CHIPMAN AVENUE PONOKA + »« ALBERTA

Telephone No. 26

We're here to

N. DAVIDSON, Manager SSS RES NTS

BATH ROOMS—HOT AND COLD WATER

Royal Hotel

Kleckner & Morgan Proprietors

PONOKA, ALTA.

HEADQUARTERS FOR COMMERCIAL MEN

STOCK FEEDERS

ATTENTION !

A car of Plax Seed Oil Cake just arrived, You will find it in just the thing for young Stock, and will save'you: grain, and is cheaper than ordinary feed, us it does sot take much for a feed

Mr JAcon Brex, of Ponoka, has taken Eight tons. Mr Dickav, of Ponoka, has taken Four tons. You can see what they think of it, Call and get a Sack and try it,

Cav of Anchor Brand Flour just unlead+d, There is no better made, Bring us your Grain and lay in a

supply of flour before it goes up. Npecial prices on 500 Ibe. and over,

Coal Users! Don't forget that we have erected a coal shed, and have coalon hand at all times, and quality cannot be excelled,

Don't forget to look us up when in need of a Gasoline Kngine or Gradiag Outfit of amy kind, Our experience with such will enable usto give you an Outfit that will

give satisfaction, and price to suit you,

Alerandet & Tugman

Dealers in Implements, Ete. PONOKA, ALTA.

DIRHOTORY

THOS, W. FRANKS, B.A,

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIO, sro.

Money to Loan. Fire and Life Iasa: ance, Offices, Vhipman Avenue Phone—Offiece, 31.

Ponera, : . Alpen

W. H. Opene (Crown Prosecuter)

Odell & Russeli

BARRISTERS AND SOLICITORS WETASKIWIN + ALBERTA

Offiee: STAR STORE BLOCK ——_—_—_———_——— ee PROFESSION AL

O, MH. Ressziu

Pk. W. A. CAMPBELL, Gracuate Trinity University Toronto, 1999, Office over Drug Store. Residenec

in the Dodd's Building, 3 doors Drug Store, Chipman Avenue ae bo

Telephone 7, PF DAVID BRLL,

Physician and surveon, Office over Drug Store Rese uve Opposite Schooltions

Telepbone 27

GRAHAM, M.B, 4’ M * Physician ‘and Suen

Residence, Donald Avenuy,

a EY CL IRA LR Britannia Lopuz N : xx AF &aM Bro A, Savers, W.M. Joun A, Kerr, Secretary,

Meets first Tuurspay of each Month in Masonio Hall, Donald Avenue,

Visiting brethren welcome,

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERIG@A

No,13,491, of Poneka Meetn Ist Wednesday in each mouth. at 8 p.m. A. Rerp, V.C, W. L, Staece, Clerk,

AWS PONOKA LODGE No, 11 Meets in 1.0,0.F, Hall overy Moaday evening at 8 p.m, Visiting brethren welcome, J. J, Paw, N.@, A. Sarena, R39,

S?. MARY's CHUR./4, Ponoxa (Angiinan)

Service First and Third Sundays every month at 11.304 m and 7.20 p.m,

Sunday Nchool, 10,30 a.m. Service on other Sundays, 11.50 a. me. Visitors welcome. Books provided

HG: } was, BW Alanna

Olergyman in change

GEO.E. BOWKER UNDERTAKER EMBALMER

H. C. SCHMIDT, Manager

Phone 28

E VIEW DAIRY FARM

ASKER,—Breeder of Purebred Registered Holstein Cattle and Berk hire Hogs. For particulars, prices, ete.. communicate with O, 8, Knerr ING, Asker P.O,

——+——~

THOROUGHBREDS

‘YOUNG BULLS AND PIGS for Sale, Apply,

J.C, Bec, Morningside,

een epneemneee

fexeb 2.

SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH WEST LAND REGULATIONS

rene. sole head of a fe

over

mily, er an: 1S years old, may nan? male svailable Da

Drexy may be ma. © ary (bas not Bub.

tesidence

each of thike years, °

nate eas ores

of at + « On cortaim conditions, A babitable hy alred except cee reap! Viedniy” Where residence is perfeime O pertain districts a hemestesder is 4 standing ma. . slanting Menarrcegs genres ction afeage Dating Sis months dence yoars after earni pears after varniag Omens &! pateat: alse

A sottler who has exhausted bis hemestead

right may tak

tale districts *pribe 9860 > ren dhaad

gpretbles Bass real: ous Mentaein each of itivate

th sav8 oe WW scree and erect o

#/ cultivation is sabject te iy yt 3 vy eS fo they lana under sertaln sonMtions. rar CU reties

W. W, CORY, c. . Deputy of the Minister Py) +

N Pent wi at eg aliga vow of this o@

Phone 57,

a i esd wooed es

dj

\

( > \

yw)

TOWN anr

W. J. Muir was in Camrose the week-end.

Miss Jessie Wileon is down from Edmonton on a short holiday.

Mrs and Miss O'Donnell were in Edmonton the week.end.

A very large shipment of hoge was made from this point on Mon. day. ;

G. F. Root was south last week and pnrchesed a number of pure bred Shropshire rams.

Bett.—On Saturday, October 31st, to Drand Mrs David Bell, a son.

School was closed a couple of dayn last woek, the teachers heing at the convention in Edmonton.

The response for clothing to the starving Belgians is most gratify. ing, practically every family, ir. respective of nationality, coming orward to lend a helping hand.

Two ronaways in town Monday, Considering the amonnt of traffic and the cironmatances, this is not to be wondered at,

Qaite a nomber of yonng men resident in this district are attend. ing the Agricultaral College at Olds, They will surely gain know. ledge to their advantage,

On Tuesday, November 3rd, Rev. J. J. Samuel united in marriage Mr Pearl Louis Sheldon and Miss Amanda Skinner, both of Chester. wold,

Mr and Mrs Preston, of Buck. horn, were in town on business Tuesday. Mr Preston has been in rather poor health for seme time pest, but is improving, though rather slowely,

J, R. Jones, of Wood River, brought a beautiful white owl to town on Satarday, having wounded it on his farm a fow days previous. The bird islarge, and attracted a good deal of-attention.

Special services aro being held in the Baptist church this week 41 8 p.m., every «ight except Satur day. Song service at 7.45 Topics of interest to all. A strong rally on Sanday night. You are wel- come to all services,

This might sound queer to some. Pat O'Donnell was in town Satur. day, went home, unbitched, and is positive that be hang tho har. ness on the proper pegs, Bat, just

hink, on parties going to milk in he morning, found a team of his famous Ayrshire cows bedecked in a fall sot of driving harness. This was strange, and looked rather suspicious. "Twas Hallowe'en,

The writer was one of a company to accept an invitation from Joe Broulick to shoot over his preserves. The sport was Al, and Mrs Brolick Gotertained the eompaay to dinner ia fine style, thas the day was most enjoyably spent. Apart from the fact that we were pleaeare bent it was an opportanity to observe how the country is being developed. Right from town out marked im. provements were to be seen, new buildings, fencing, a deal of new land broken up, and altogether the farmers becoming prosperous,

Rey. R. W. W. Alexander will hold a lantern service in Eastside Sohool on Thursday, November 12, at 8 pm. Bubject: * The coming of the Lord,’ illustrated with beantiful pictures. All will be weloome,

Church of England service at Mr Parry's, Woodriver, on Son. day, November Sth, at 11 a.m.

which produces eggs in

package and your money y you to make a test,

according to direction.

THEN NCTE

FOR SALE BY

The Campbell Drug Co.

Telephone Centeal, Open

Start your Hens to Lay by using Dr. Hese Poultry Pan-a-Ce-a

Pan.a-Ce-a is not a stimulant, but a nutritious tonic, time keep your hens warm, don't get more eggs, and lots more, fowls for two weeks i'n one enclosure

fowls in another enclosure, ar en the same food with Pan-a Ce-a in addition,

abe | ow

THE PATRIOTIC FUN

es

ot the Patriotie Fund begs to acknow

Ruthertord School.

The Treasurer of the Ponoka Branch

ledge the following contributions RED CROSS CONCERT to date— oxbenssne ik bonen' easter Pamediite $100.8! 4 Grand Eutertainment will -be Just about a month to nomina- Pierrots) .. .. ~~». 16 [given in the Nchool-house by the tion day, and on the surface noth- ane yg at Thanksgiving echool children, assisted by outside ; mer at the Phillips ing doing. Will'there be munt-| rauch,Asker .. .. 2&7 talent on cipal upheavel, or just let the old tae eg pe Te 2% FRIDAY, aa 6th dads rest in peace aren, § Fonoka AT 7,80 P.M. ssa send gt nepal The Programme will consist of— Hallowe’en passed off as usual, Total .. «+ $168.00/Songs, Dialogues, Recitations,

A good deal of pranks, and some| A subscription list for individuals destruction to property. The most | wishing to donate to the fund has

regrettable part is tho injury to one opened at the Canadian Bank of Constable John Schnoor, he hay. |comms®, Povo ox dentione may ing 4 couple of ribs broken through | nrawer @ Penk a Pees some rough play. Perhaps it is che Tene of pesieee perving wie he British or a armies entit t to be expected that something will] an allowance from the fund are re happen on Hallowe'en night, and quected to commutmicate at once with it ip nice to see the young peeplo| po. Drawer O, Ponoka, ao that thels enjoy themselves—wo were all|claiins may be forwarded te the pro- young once upon atime—neverthe. |Poaut rites. a ssurer will less pranks oan be carried too far. willingly supply any information ree and when it comes to destroying eiocal branch ley fe ms Soleoe property, then a halt must be called, | clothes or money in their respective No doubt the town council will | Ustrcts, . A Public Meeting of the Ladies take action, Branch of the fund will be held on Saturday, 14th November, at the Town Hall at 8 p.m., to arrange working parties. The special wool required for cholera belts, etc,, for the soldiers can

be obtained at 75c per Ib, Country orders for same with remittances

their concert in ai should be sent in at once to the Hon, art in abd of the Paistotic Secretary and Treasurer, Mrs T. W,

Fund, ‘This party has already| Franks, to avoid delay. ‘A collection given several saceessful concerts! will be taken up at the meeting to de- in the country, and will have all ite| ‘"*” “*Penses-

items in the best of shape by Nov, 20th. Besides the complete Pier. rot program, as advertised, Mr J. W. Weodhall will present a display Brooks

of conjuring entitled Magical warts VII. George Fowler, Gordon Mysteries.” Mr Woodhall was!’ Grade VI. Jean Johnson, Bernard known in the old country as Pro-| Johnson, Martha Mattern, Gladys Mc- fessor Mysto,” and his first per- Nigh, Loree Maret. Alma

Grade IV. Helen Stretch, Johnson Georgia Mattern, Charles

Everyone should remember the date—Friday, November 20, when the Ponoka Patriotic Pierrots give

SCHOOL REPORTS

Grade I., Sr,, Charles Streteh.

Grade I. Jr,, Clarence Cook, Willard Johneon, Albert Mattern, Lorne Fer- guson, Attendance, 83.71,

NEtuiz ©, Swext, Teacher,

GRAND MEADOW

Grand Meadow school-house was crowded to the door Tuesday even- ing, when a very enjoyable enter- tuinment was given, under auspices

The readers of this paper will be

of the U.F\A on tad leased to | that th is at least Thos. H. Draycott presided, and one dreaded disease that doloncs has

H been able to cure in all ite stages, and made an ideal chairman, his open-| iit is Catacrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure

ing address being warmly applaud-| is the only positive cure now known to

east the meuical fraternity. Catarrh being ed, Songs were riveo—Miss M, a constitutional disease, requires acon Brasch with banjo accompaniment, |atitutional treatment, Hall's Catarrh

Cure is taken internally, acting direct! winning unstinted applause. The upon the blood and mucous surfaces of

Elkborn band had to respond to a/the system, thereby destroying the

; . iyi .| foundation of the disease, and givirg well merited encore, ‘This com the patient strength by building up pany should be heard of in a wider} the constitution and assisting nature

; in doing ite work, the proprietors field, and, at no distant date, ought © ore .= twih to Fc ayy wk ne to make Elkborn famons, Mrs/ ers that thoy offer One Hundred Dol- Jas, Froman gave a couple of

lars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials, recitations in her usaal masterful qasidrese F. J, CHENEY & CO,, way, whilo Geo, Gordon oloséd the rr aby a Dreugglete,, 750.

program with a few remarks, Take Hall's Fawily Pille for con-

A splendid lanch was served by | stination

the ladies, the company separating woll after midnight,

$100 Reward, $100

FARM FOR SALE

—---

North-west quarter of Section 24 Township 44, Range 1, W. 5 One mile from Home Glen P.O., and one mile from School, Place is fenced all round, 39 acres broken, and more cen be broken without much clearing. Good spring and well on place; house 12x16, Nore 16x18. No waste land, Will take $1000 cash for same, F further particulars apply to

Anton EXLunp, Box 36, Ponoka, Alberta,

CONCERT AT EARLVILLE

Earlville Charch was visited last Tuesday by the Ponoka Patriotic Pierrots, who gavo their program of voeal and instramental masic, meeting with an enthusiastic recep. tion from those who were present, Mr Rigby’s volin solos were espe- cially welcome, and received a pati well dressed encore, Mr Allan's} Six Rooms, good Closets; perfectly monologues created great amuses|dry Collar, Wood-Shed and Well. ment—in fact every item was of a Pepe i bi rd fonds ion, high standard, and all together the Miraae Poeeke: ensy terms, i 0GH concert was the best ever given in the church, Dr Oampbell, M.P.P., briefly spoke of the pure poses of the Patriotic Fund during the evening.

or

HOUSE FOR SALB

DENTISTRY

J F, TAYLOR, L.D.S., D.D.S,, ¢ (Dentist), has opened an Office in town, on Chipman Avenue, opposite the City Livery.

Office Hours; 9 a,m, to 12 Noon; 1 p.m, to 6 p,m,

London, Ont., Oct, 26,—Huron Connty farmers’ patriotic gift to the Empire, 36 care of the finest apples, potatoes and oats, went forward from London last night, | eeeeceee@eosesores eoeoeoece The county has furnished special

~— GO TO

bags and everything bas been lcaretally packed, ;

C. H. Cunnings for a Nice Box of

No. I Apples

Every Box Guaranteed

Headquarters for High- Class Baked Goods, Con- fectionery, Groceries, Etc,

nature's way. [n winter feed Pan-a-Ce-a; if you return the empt will be retunded. My / eep a certain number 0 wy Ar and feed them Keep an equal number of and givegthem exactly

Butter and Eggs taken as Cash Tue Resvite

Eggs 30c Butter 25c

C, H., Cunnings

Phone 53 PONOKA 3000040000 6808008

8 to 8 p.m. ; Sunday | to 8p.m,

Duets, Solos, Drills, Everything of the Finest,

Admission, 25c; Children, 15c

.- Ponoka ..

Patriotic Pierrots (In Costume)

Will present the tirst performancs of tle kind ever given in this dis. trict, including :

Vocal Solos, Duets, Male Voice Quartettes, Banje Songs, Readings, Violin Solos, Orchestra Selections, Ete.

By Miss Johnson, Mesers Allan,

Barrett, Chandler, Mooney, Rigby and Williams.

Admisnon, We; Children, 25c, Proceeds to Pattiotic Fund Commence 8.30 p.m.

Hagel Hill, Friday, November 6th. Wood River, Friday, November 13 Ponoka, Friday, November 20th. Asker, Monday, November 16th

STRAYED

Red Yearling Heifer, branded W,S, half diamond below, on left hip. A reward given. Wanner Situ,

4-44-26, Ponoka P.O.

Auction Sale

Having received instructions from the owner, I will Sell, by Public Auction

On SATURDAY, November 14 At Larsen & Petirson's Bann

Railway Street. Ponoka, at 2p.m., the following :

Sorrel] Grade Stallion, white face,

atook Clyde, age 7 years, weight about

1800 lbs, A good stock horse,

Two A-l Milch Cows, 6 and 7 years old, one milking now, and both to freehen in early spring.

No Roverve, DP

O, L, Webster, J, D. Stewart, Auctioneer Owner Hutchinson & Field, Clerks.

November Notes .

Idaho Honey in Comb,

Choice Jonathan Apples, Stir- ling and Pitcairs, Nothing better We $1.75

Cooking Apples, a few at $1.25 Apples in crates .. $1.40 Labrador Fat Herring,60c doz

Flag Gum. Cushion Flag with every 5c package

Don't worry! Use “Purity Fleur,”

Edwards Bros,

GENERAL MERCHANTS Penoka

Buttorick Patterns always in Stock Phone 22

Wild Rose Creaanery

ZINS PONOKA

The last Independent Creamery on 70 miles of the C, and E, Railway,

Eee

Cash Paid for Cream on same day as received

Fortnightly or Monthly Settle- ments if desired,

Cuurnina Cream 24¢

Sweer Cream 26¢|

Per lb, Butterfat

A. Barrett

PROPRIETOR

Sale in town,—App

in tlarger numbers, Apply, Myer, Ponoka,

3 Two-year-old St aor;

THE HERALD, PONOKA, ALBERTA, = -

——

War Prices on .. Flour. .

ER

KE is a Chance to Seeure your SEASON'S SUPPLY

of the Best Flour in Canada at an exceptionally reasonable

Price

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

SATURDAY, Nov. 7th and MONDAY, Nov. 9th

WE WILi SELL IN 500-1n, LOTS OR OVER

Five Roses Fiour |

* $3.A0 per Cw.

Harvest Queen - - 3,10 ,, »

There is every reason to believe (owing to the steady advance of

wheat) that Good Flour will be selling eve long at $4.00 per sack

so don’t fail to take advantage of this opportunity to save money, EE

Kennedy & Russell

GENERAL MER

FOR SALE

Small Bay Mare asd Two Sucking

Colts for Sale.—Ap ly, A. J. Sharp

noka,

i

CABBAGE FOR SALE

A quantity of very fine Cabbage for ly ut Herald Office or Messrs Cook Myer or Hl. Strouse,

GOATS FOR SALE

Augora Goats for Sale, in pairs or Cook

CATTLE STRAY

19 HEAD CATTLE LOST

6 Heifers, 1 white Cow with horus, should bave calf by side; 0 Mileh Cows, $10 ve ward given,—John Gallei, Manfred P.O,

LAND TO TRADE Quarter Section of Land near Clive to Trade for [lovses, or sale for Cash,

Apply, Ed, McMillan, Poneka,

White Star |

AND Other Leading Lines TERMS—CASIL

G. D. CLARK & SON

City Livery.

TAKE HER FOR A DRIVE

CHANTS

PONOKA, ALTA.

A decided economy in fuel consumption is

effected by using nickelled steel in

M‘Clarys ~~ Kootenay

oven. It

Renge

4

®

attracts an

heat far better than most oven materials, See the McClary dealer.

Made-sin-Ganada

Sold By R.

M. ME | SIGHT ROYAL

NOV.

2nd

ee

CALGARY OFFIOE : OLS Herald Building Phone MOV74

CKLENB

M.A. SPECIALIST

K. ALLAN

URG HOTEL. Ponoka

KDMONTON OFFICE Opposite Bulletin” Office Phone 53%

BEA SHIRE SWINE

YOUNG STOCK of

Some Choice

either Sex fo Sale, PEDIGREES GUARANTEED

Also, ny Herd Bour, Northern King 'BIG, Wanentia old, weight 425 Iba, | Twill sell ths og cheap as Tam only keeping Your Sows which are his stock,

John G. Wilson,

Sonway Farm, Box 16 Ponoka,

|BEN | Painter and Decorator | PONOKA

and you will enjoy it} yourself a well as she will. Hire a rig from us, by the hour, or by the day, and

HAVE A GENUINE

GOOD TIME

We supply safe and speedy horses | and conduct a first-class livery business in every particular although modest in our charges

PETERSON & LARSEN, ProP

| First-class Workmanship, | Estimates Given, A full line of Wall Paper carried, | rknMe KEASONABLE VETERINARY SURG@HON Av, f BP, SCOTT, Veterinary Sur- | * weou and Deabiat, graduate /Montreal and Chicago Colleges, At rsen & Peterson's Stable, Ponoka,

* Phone VT

DENTISTRY

| Dr SaHurs, Demtiet, Laromte, wil | Visit Peneka en the fotowimg dates—

| ange Sra and Sept. te ma n Odbober Tak. iwth b) meer an re WANTED A number of Snaps in lenproved Fram Lands within 8 miles of Ponoka:

slso, sevewal Farms for Reat, Have

several oash renters,

W, BR, Puneeien,

A,

FARMS WANTBD TO RENT

Have you a Farm you want © Rou”

rif you want to Keates form, see w. There is 4 demand for farm, Ponoka Lavy Co

/ “f a

ee st en ee et oe

{HE HERALD, PONOKA, ALBERTA.

TL,

THE GERMAN WAR CHES. | WHY 18 BRITAIN AT WAR? | ETIQUETTE ON BATTLEF‘E'D

Se = ——————

meow | 1 have a great deal to do,” said La

| vinia, “I shan't be in until midnight, a ae meee ay but I won't disturb you; you must) The Kaiser Has $30,000,000 ir Gold By Mr. D. W. Bole, President the Na-| Rules Governing Opposing Armiss in ring your bell when you want at-| Stowed Away tional Drug & Chemical Com- Conducting Warfare ie age Mrs. Russell would at | The German government has 120,/ any of Canada, Limited The etiquette of the field of batile| POG Set SE ee that 70 i Sia a en 000,000 marks (about $30,000,000 stow: } ‘Our leaders in both the imperial -_ is quite as important as that of the - Po ' . , J be *- ed away in its “war chest” in the fam-| Canadian parliaments tells us it is not | home. | , sultuval districts it is very expensive If you stay warm and snug in bey ous Julius tower at Spandau, an is | for love of war, or lust of conquest,| For instance, the Germans violated | In os etisinae Rae ok ‘catia tee beh price of lumber and the ane uater Hh Aye an Gy veur cana land at the confluence of the Spreejor territorial greed. In Great Brit'| the etiquette of war by disregarding | tO erect bu 5 one ne d 0 2 0 0.0,

hic 1 tables roofed and Havel rivers. It is a secret horde | ain the people are happy and prosper: | their promise to preserve the neutra- distance which it has to be hauled. Oftentimes sod or log 6 you will soon get your cold under,

, tT ——a known in Baedecker as “the imperia:!ous, and less than any other country | lity of Belgium, and by invading} ith brush and sods are used, which anererte etal nate pecbiocr ered and be up again tomorrow. ary reserve , ' nillion|in Europe is th ulf between reac: |! py rmal de-/ ily until such time as the farmer can afford somewha 7 | military reserve fund of six I I 8 the gu France before making a fo i ketches are intended to offer | I. Meade hen Miss Lavinia put on her new! storing.” Early last year it wes re-| tion and progress; there is, therefore, | claration of war. | quarters for his stock. The accompanying § thod of erecting temporary | i iil purple cashmere dress, over which) norted from Berlin, which is only | no domestic reason for war. While} At the outse: of the war it was!a@ suggestion as to a cheap and ee ey “| ian And the blewiae | / & Co, Limited e wore a rich mantle of velvet, and eight miles from gpandau, that the} England is bound by treaty to respect | falsely reported that a French docto: | stables by means of making a frame o wire over p themecives | selte® ! / urne and Toronto \ very large hat on her head. Sh| Gorman war programme contemplat-|the neutrality of Belgium, she is not} had infected the water supply of the | of a straw stack over the whole, The drawings an ito sult any pat ( = was dressed a la twenty, but her) oq tripling the creasure, but if such a/ bound by treaty to defend it; she is | German fortress of Metz with cholera! planatcry and alterations can be made by the individual to sult any f years were approaching forty; still) move was made it has not been an-|not bound by anything that is sign-| germs, Had the report been true, the | ticular conditions which may arise. he Vice: 'residen poran par | 770 wee. 8 good looking woman, and ourced ; ed, sealed and delivered to help | octor would have beén guilty of an} Tneee cuts are furnished through the courtesy of the at 1 tch prided herself on her appear The .ulius tower has been hroud | France; she has no direct interest th | act of barbarism opposed to all the! of the C.P.R. 1 should | S2ce:, Miss wea told her that ane | ed in mystery. it was first used by | the quarrel between Austria and Ser | ueages of war. | ro canny OTtew : ad to hein | oked perfect y. beautiful. Miss “\' erederick the Great as the Prussian via, yet when English diplomacy fail-| ‘The rules of war allow the cutting | nnn . . % "| Vinia said that she was going to take | “war chest” and then turned over to|ed to confine hostilies to these two! off of an enemy's’ water or food sup: | ry \) . a cab, which would contain her even the empire for the storage of the $30,-| countries, war involving Great Brit-| ply, but not the poisoning of water. | etna é | t orning,’ |ing dress, and go straight to the 00),000 which was a part of the $1,-| ain and the empire, was as inevitable! [t is not etiquette to try and kill | fact is friend with whom she was (o dine | 999,090,000 indemnity paid by France | as it was honorable and necessary. ‘the enemy's commander-in-chief. He | vi i, and Pam and with whom she was afterwards) after Franco-Prussian war, Although! England was a party to the crea-| may be captured, but if killed in the going to the theatre, it has been estimated that the money | tion of the new Kingdom of Belgium | process that is but the “fortune of | 1 treated So you won't cee me again until) would be exhausted in a day and a/in 1831, and was, therefore, morally | war,” ) ppishness, ¢ tomorrow morning, my dear, Don't on if in case of actual war, th: fuad | obligated to assist her to maintainher| An enemy has a perfect right to! ~_— peculiar, sitting UP any account disturb me when I come s been reserved for the expenses of | indepetdence, especially against @ na-| bombard a town which refuses ta! : : old, rather dirty red jn, The is nothing I detest More! 4 quick mobilization of the German) tion bound by treaty to respect it. surrender, but to deliberately destroy | Seer, 4 t oulder ind © than iness when I am enjoying ™Y-| army, to pay for horses and supplies| This is apart from England's trad!-| unprotected places and national in: | Or aaw mans STRAW COLONY PIG HOUSE d, glanced at_the | ge I expect to have a thoroughly | ajready contracted for ou emergency.| tonal policy of encouragement and) stitutions is an act of vandalism; | o,. inside of this structure can be partitioned off with rougt limber if so desired inte f happy day, and do not wish it spoilt The tower of Spandau stands tn the | help to weak nations fighting for Iib-) that is, unless the buildings are used | separate pig pens. : What do you mean hy grumbling at the end midst of a citadel surrounded by bar-\erty and a free government. HOW) for military purposes against the ! 4 = " Are ou throwing s rustied off in her finery—for, racks and officers’ quarters, not far} much littl Belgium has deserved enemy. | ry } th me her purple cashmere dress was line) from the great American arsenals and| English support was demonstrated The reason so many towns in Bel- ep me with and swept down at urs ° tanufactories of war implcments. it | during the month of August. For three | gium were evacuated on the approach t moment came | {jttle x was carried behind Ler by | js eytindrical, built of .eavy, Massive | precious weeks she stemmed the tide} of the enemy was because the Bel- Hannah; a cab was fetched and she) masonry, about 40 feet high and al-) of an army intended to crush Europe; | gians trusted in the good faith of the This—this ehar dr way. Little did she think of most as thick, The tower is guarded) then when the military strategy of! Germans to adhere to the rules of} 4 call her, has absolut t poor, sick sister upstairs! Han) py three steel doors at its only en-; the Allies required it she sacrificed | war etiquette, Louvain with all its tell me that she i4 fo na owever, was far more thought\ trance, each opened by a system o.| her beautiful Capitol as a pawn in the) glories would still be intact but for J p ii tavinia had not even simultaneous keys held by different; game of war, Such valor and self) this breach of good faith. | H } id svt of ordering a fire to bo light-| persons, The chancellor of the em-| abnegation are rare in history. | ‘The rules in regard to prisoners of | i red and! ed for ss Octavin's benefit but) pire holds the set and the presiden Then with respect to France, the) war are clear enough. Anyone wear- t some if rusher upstairs and lit it,! of the committee for debts of the em-| good feeling which has existed fotjing the uniform of a recognized —e Last night my rought bot water and washed) pire another. The trea ure ic pro-| some years between the two nations! military force must if captured re | . »- MARS - Messrs. Par nat \ ‘lady's face and hands jtected by constantly changing n-|developed into ap understanding treated as a prisoner of war, provided, | ataan Wkiae TU eS pare U it ce mo owing to you'll te quite ‘comfy, " she) tries, under a guardian, who was} which, to an honorable nation, was) of cgurse, that hacan show that he is | STRAW IMPLEMENT SHED yt rote to Dean \nd Miss Barbara ts coin | nade curator by a decree in 1874, | as binding as a treaty. So coniideat| not a civilian miequerading in unt-| The {dea is to show how easily and cpeaply a comfortable building may be f it once rhe treasure itself, made up of 29) were the two nations of each other’s| form, if a soldier in uniform is farmer’ whé cannot at first afford to build a modern frame b 1M r eyes look very red, Han-| franc gold pieces, the same that was) spport, that England surrendered, in| caught trying to gain information Iw rite!” oy paid by the Freneh, is stored in bage a great measure to the safe-keeping | within the enemy’s lines he must not Roce, Uist fon \ ! we for art in a doven small cabinets built in the | of the French fleet, her interest in the | pe treated as a spy, but as a prisoner os VENTILATION Ha of her 60 walls of various levels reached by a} Mediterranean, while France trusted of war. secrecy and disguise make | -_ at iltogeth: ing Sunshine | spiral stairway. The guard is usuatly| ber western and northern shores to| thd spy, who, of course, has no rights P Jopt and iM) made ur of gi imen, each cf them on| the friendly vigilance of the English | whatever, | to accept his in in duty constantly, changins every two] feet If Eugland had been the first to) A prisoner of war cannot bo com: | } rl i y darling father Don't talk of it! Don't talk of) jours \ parr! is inade about the | feel the stroke of the enemy, no Brit-| yelled to give his parole. Should he, T sys t i e asked jt aid Miss Octavia I can't bear hase of the tower, inside and om top.) on bas any doubts as to what the at not being on parole, attempt to escape ss ) a Mth read: jt ' too dreadful It Koo for! Once a year the gold i elgbed mj titude of France would havo been be may be shot while in the act of) » Octavia r--she deserves It puik for a official account rhe In Uiore circumstances, both with escaping, but if captured he is not to . ; t r or ye gue 1 from the ery amount of 1 tt re never! regard to Belgium and France, Great! pe punished beyond being placed in| § ' ead Mh flr at she lidy born ld nges Uritan is at war because honor de-| more rigorous confinement. rs ‘Loe Si Te STRATEN Wine . " 1 \ ! il rhere we t tempt at robbery | mang: it If she had made herseii A prisoner of war cannot be forced stand WALL stants A Gra 1 br 1 hen little Barbara came in lon the part of a drunken cobbler, wt a party to the shameful bargain pro | to aid in operations against his own rf YARD Butt On re her best black dress, and sat} got into the t I teous | posed by Germany, she would n ver! side, or to disclose information about | Poare 1106 PEN ty! La down and began to read to Miss © fashion, but fell wher : ; halt ath recovered srom. the shame them, but he may be made to edrn This frame is constructed of a pole frame over which an ordinary fence wire framing te snd yo y We tavia. She read ateadily in her usna 1y up the staircase 1 bre his Now, as to the quetsion of the nee: hig keep by working at his trade or! woven and the whole stencture then covered with straw, This is a cheap and economical it rhe little nobody Must sy vr vice: but suddenly Miss Oc neck, Oaly one Amer nh essity of war for the protection of he) doing non-military work. thod of erecting a warm winter house for the brood sows. ted it London forsooth. | tayia asked her to stop nown to huve glimp: it ter material interests, a glance at the A general is entitled to make full! ' P urely en. wrote t vould rather talk to you, 1” jor of ve Julius fower. H tu t map of Kurope will an Great) use of traitors and deserters, bat he ) e, and 1 not even I want to a you to forgive W. oPindexter, of Los Angel ‘olin Britain's total annual trade is nearly | should not tempt men to be false to Fence Wine t all n lexter, according to t ry ed seven billion dollars, onethirs of) tnejr allegiance. WW vi ( child reive \ y so, dent tis the sentinel to see U ( mat r whieh is with Continental Europe. The A comamnder is entitled to disse Lalways knew she was a - Oo ia snd then slipped into the t open door to this vast Duropean trade | pijinate false news: indeed, much \ Octavii i 1 you r all t crossness and snap. the sentinel turned his ba He got is through Hotland and Badgium. If) the art of war lies in hoodwinking l In't bell \ ness into serious trouble with the Spandau England had rematned neutral, and) your opponént. There are, however I led osity,” ae | r thought of them. You authorities for going too Sear ¢ France found herself unable to drive limits to the way in which decett may! i Lavir 1 cer nany things to try you; | treasure, but finally convi f them the Germans back into their own’ yo practised, ; 1 begg lored you put don’t forget that Lam coming to. of the innocence of his perpo I country, these doore would haye been Thas it would be most unsports- te to Dean ¢ lidn't) you erv da 1 shall look forward | tower has excited great curiosity on cosed in addition to this bly at maniike of a general to tell an officer idl Misa Octavi iT eing you and T shall bring you) the art of German tourists, but sight | Mngh nd’s trade and prestige, Ger lor soldier to go over to the enemy, 1 kn ou did, » r | now I of news from the big world) seers are not welcomed oo the and many would have dominated burope and pretending to be uw traitor or de- ot you stay ith ter for ere Tam going of Spardau ind whipped into ser ranks ali the) sorter, to give false information and \ Barbar do don't tell any Other nations bave considered it a. weater nations, a8 Napoleon did 4 ; then make his escape oT afraid | n i e her thing te Lavinia first, Lavinia will waste of money for Germany to keep, hundred years ago. Thue fortitied On the other hand, if a soldier is | two rat mornir r Mr. Sun be pining to know, but t it to mel the treesure storea at Spantot, bee} uermeny Would regard her nargata | tempted to turn tra.tor he is justified Loe Sit To Gran ten Wine ale ming for 1 iimaelf private, my love cause it was known that it could last it England as lightly as she re- in pretending to listen to the t-mpter, et irl the afternos hut le lam I will Miss Octavia 1} am your, only about « day and alt if in gardel treat, with Belgium, and and in this way gaining any informa- Liner aan Warer re | will read to her and do every. pald seeretary, don't forget that, and) case of war, It oft tif make fresh demends whieh, if com: tion he can which in due course 1s HORSE BARN t ! can for het Por u've both part of my duties consist In mo tell) Germany Se Mh yeep ite st ial py oleae aries Bovis Be conveyed to. his command.ng officer Showing a wire and vole frame which only requires a straw stack to be biown over it im b kind to me, and you in espectal, ing you the news per cent # coul t British empire and then laid before the commander | * F order to make a very satisfactory stable, M Octavia, have been kind, and 1 That's right,” said Octavia rineip o thy. the ager te fund But the kaiser reckouer vitiout | inonief of the army, Who may bene orry to part with you, Hut you nd so the two hours passed, and t "b tune host—HBritata did not barter her ft thereby matejally and vy a|— . ofr aioe) IPT TAP Le r . erstand that 1 like to go back | yy Octavia ed little Barba f t ‘right to defend her honor o> her | Ghange in his plans bring success t Pets on ths Battlefield ! Serving In the Ran+ t t y own people 1 Mr. Sunningley to e her one | terest Her poeple ab Rome, and nis troops What sort of a pet have the Brit Another point ought to be mention hele oumy own peop m | don’t think you will take t Making a Fool of the Kaiser Aron rt ae eae pn pen —--—— ish Grenadiers taken with him tor! ed, and this concerns those who are father's COMM ABAD J -sOve. tha: don! bl RR pl ad dt Mn int ry told t oth aitarecb s counadtnanis Ai: wat Particular About His Diet the fray? In the Crimea it was a hovering on the brink of enl.stmons \ ‘e joe exne { le : 4 fee “At thou she that irs al ate 6G - r J u rather than that the flag shouk. suf If beggars cannot be choosers, con cata pretty, playful creature pick: sue who think that their duty iv to huger } ! ang Une : Us A dt tache at Be +r diabonor, or that it should be low. viets ought to have even .ess priv. ed up in the mareh across Bulgaria, yecome officers rather than privates m, ehild ae me. nery with) me at es " t ue t the | wrod in the markets of the world lees, but some of the gentry think and taken via Varna to the Crimea, No doubt there is dearth o. oficera, t y secret ud Barbara 1 shall look forward t mF) onaracter ¢ the Kaiser's et : ae fae aed ¢ therwise During the battle of the Alma, but aiso it is not too much go0d for that moment Mr Kussel ng tomorro What t Will) scoures Great Britain, the little jaland oll gto +r in we Marshall county,| When the fate of empires appeared | a man to offer to be an officer untess ind withan Riper eA ih me, dearie?” it ill ' her that aed ndield aM iM ARIA A Aes i" Dako 7 iw rote the follo ving trembling in the balance, - Colone!, he bas had some previous training or red the roon I shall be with you, M VEAVIRs | Beit general ti plet PA pond ad dete et a fairs tne ahertn the other aky * Wheatley, with the cheerful non | has some special knowledge. NG one Vu leiity busye thi Morning » o'clock, of Y, half-past twe ypoiniment int Germa » rtdbndaphtneededi tp , ta wears yor hl air we u is | may hoa at chalanee of the merry men he com} who wants te serve his country te ths | bar he sald I} have got an of for | don't know exactly Mr. Sunning whe aa ihe Ps 6 rep ose art ind ravy are manner : * ar Bir ue “hy aa ; twill manded, cried out: “Where's the, best of his abliity, and that means eralready for your room Have you te plan Rut, if pe ble. not later ' : ; aan thout a single conseript, and w howe with zo f pl ae ) é ‘As + its abcut | cat, boys?” 3 practically everybody, should apply broken it to the two ladies that you than halfpast two, 1 end you ' rit. The place at oversment ss free and democratic | specttully sumKe eat tt Be af li “Here she is, sir,’ answered © aj for a commission without adding that a awayetoday?) Miss Barbara a sed ; tollly . the exa / wo. Re er republican ally, is fightiag for my bill of fare. Fir rere are me 1y ey . Paps and sigantic if he cannot have one ho will enter , . ; the principle of boner between nations things | cannot eat without injury to stentorian volce, and a 8B | : is found her feet, madam t rt an t I ' . » thing bearded Grenadier stepped forward | the ranks. No mar is too good to 1 it » wi io } id that British pluck, industry and) my health The following things |! a a) < | 2 , z . } ire Will Leas much a ! \ lear, 1 ys mael \ ft oo r J hal id at at all: 1. pork: 2 Openod his kmapsack as 1@ spoke.) serve his cou try as a private sold rof you. Tot We alway 1 b letter mm yeu Mme i ou ! hit t seal tele aS world over, Ee POL mEDING. Ht re Ne “4 fre ; read’ There was puss, safe and snug. She ier, That must be hammered into the it r face, didn't we, Ties Vnd en - need not FU AT hears ut SAKA é pale before the unbridled lust of ® nnene . oug ee Ay. , " tyiial (ots peeped out at the battle, stretched | iwinds of the youths of the upper } turned to Miss Octavia ord about to Lavinia, I love to) 5, tly 4 I multary autocra ie Canadians th rye +4 eet a ae OY at 10 no J herself, yawned contemptuously at classes and of the middle class. Hap “We did iid Miss Octavia. “Bar keep things trom Lavinia, she keep rt of t t An LOS DITOR Ps acle mn 1% Habe y ee ea wees the enemy, then settled down agali, pily plenty of them are already: set Q ira, | shall mi you. terribly rything un from me Nha wae ine nara) denis It In to maintain her pikes Mathes) Sgote of the chief things 1 may in her nest, to b@ carried through 3/ ting an example by going into the } tears F to the poor, halébind ey é n Tp vTap ay the ito me: ‘Lam told, Colone! Gr fat <0 Moh art te pba ba 1 AR Net eli ay sl ‘veud, or thriling’ charge, survive the battle ranks, There they will fare just as . o ver read with quite ich tv . , ie tr the burdens of this war of) eal 1, rye bread, graham bread, o ; be due time, | ell as the officers while campaigning ) : but | od raly y Uon, tf snada offers jn thle) graham ns and corn bread 2, upburt, and to become in . A nteel accent he said. “I have r \ Harbare our tea read fom't for Of pe belle we NOt (anes bhi had BA } te aut a joyful mother of kittens and will be just as well looked after at ofte iven't | ter r Hning Arringe 1} rf we given iy to t i ; 7 tg hi oy Hy te “first ki M anoreides ti ie tateall pecttyk Mcmething of the same sort of, if they fall sick o. are woun ed re me. by maki \ rowad wat the secrets of our QF. A , CAR eat ard pte bs Ab a gence various ki ds thing happened in the sanguinary! In the modern army tere are no indi Lavinia Well, at Rarbara ft ed off rhe inst sl re mi would Gnd out . of her industry 1, soup bel Acne . a Borys ly engagements between the Russiang | soft places fot. officers. Indeed, th ate, | must have my day out of the little old lady wa © WIth: | that’ statement comes frot 1 pa good; 5, epee pota ree nse i wud and Japanese. During the terrible |efficers are worked distinet'y hurde: \ ' look after my sister when ered and tore’ iin the form or an ofiieal yerort A Huge Undertakin, ones sigh HN si het, naira He fighting around Mukden, a Japanes*! than the men, !ave to expose them Chance ta gone, Mrs reaming down her face 1 send it in to me through the w ik the vast enterprise of double aan are font ait GE ‘hey are not too Heulenant saw a pretty fittle Pekin | selves more to danger, and owing to foam quite unhapp at le Ties ng Mat you do so by t vlbing the entire Canadian Pacitle te ® eS enod dish of sauce either ese spaniel wandering distractedsy their leadership are unable to loo« "| do my best,” said Mrs Ru ' e sald to, Mra, Russen pecial onal request yatem is one that cannot, in the Oeh: bf Boo tn per: &, good cof. between the two lines of fire. Evil-/out for casy berths. Of course a ! Hither Hannah or me'll see vo Cutt ‘Put y sove she trea In ke t! o r James natur it the case, he fully realized [O° Rarer: “fy De aitiie vari ty fp ently it had been taken into the bat | man with a special knowledge and y ry bad, its right you well toda it she'd be as bad) Continued, “1 fousd t it had ori | for yeor et when Jt .8 stated that) £e¢ pitt ho (ea; 3 fell Ay canno: ctle by a Russian vficer, who had sins spqeial brain-power will do well to ter should do the as ever if you were | our old taal wil exactly as T expect © will be shortly 3,096 miiea of | the bil of fare, go inet chat he ta, been Killed, and it was now wander | become an officer. We are convinced, for her, But) her ( situation, whieh—t ' d. and so Ut duly nt it in as re louble track between Port Arthur and te i] al Bion ss ahead Me . ma Lith 3 ing sadly in earch of him, The Jap | however, that the ordinary man of 4 to say to it le can't ou are not ont oi \' ted” ahve ewards { we Calgary, leaving gaps of only somo:| folng to have for supper o , anese officer whistled it, and the dog): @ueation and cultivation belonging » ration and atte ough ther ber yt ' i bout a menth, and thing like 165 miles--one gets a reel. TS ran fawning to him, and became his| to the well-todo classes will do bet t 1 | arbara in | tm you, my dar I recurned ¢ tt the omne gon of the work involved, of " devoted pet. ter by joining the rank promptly ear Mi 'o be Continued) sid tot Oh, ! Griersc t ime covered and ot the “Scraps of Paper | ‘fhe time came for a great Japan | than by hanging about waiting for . \ vad A Inont ou never t me that report t rage and persistence involved inj The New York World, in discussin’ ese charge upen the Rursiaa | commission Remember that if us titt made it one of Dut yut ure now oing | anke mu for ut rap. Ar lat ind otable undertaking of) editorially the causes of the Kuropean | trenches. The dog accompanied its iu es soldiering he can always qual fy kolng to Mr , at Satine nanting ry plicat the vhote system, whiten! \ ar and the flippant manner in Vv hic | pew master, but with its long coat and | for his commission from the -anks t she was to come to | #bout ith = =harrow collects i ter your # t pat iprine ne Js,000 melee of track. the German authorities treated short legsvit could not go the pace| The ranks of the German army are, t day | ; CIEAT OLR pny ate aie ‘id, ‘but Fo we t can ' 0 ourse the enlef consideration is! “scraps of paper" says : of the le Japinese infantry So) of course, full -f men of birth, eraed I i iry to or soldiers at the re nt More c ook afier you a ked for tt We the wert hose rapid development ‘That ‘scrap of paper’ was the the Heutenant picked it up again, with | ing, wea.th and education, and so are I twee thousen SUPE. CRS wi ald the } er, ‘| have never receive illed f this sew policy; but ch@ treaty guarantecing the neutrality of his sword in his right hand ana the | the ranks of the French, Indeed, we i" n two hours, Many passera-b i Rut | i inquire about it gerry § imilany treated fa time, Belgium. The whole histoy of humar|gog under ois left arm, charge! | believe there fs an Ox cabinet miaister \ piled chert Cigar Sealers i re enat the ve t \ ines Which cosvect! iberty is written on just such scraps. jome at the head of his men, and the| -houldering his rifle as an ordinary for ra pr nted = full bo m s it colore \ \ t of population, and pro. paper dog shared with him the safe posi | private in the French army, The men kers contributed mone { officer er " y phi ie iniuees, Phe coe. Wht be The Magna Charta was a ‘serap of tion which the attack secured of light and leading mius* oct the ex the J e of clears adcd by neelf, makit , Hous ae to baffle exact fig-) paper ered ae ample, and there is no example: which I { profi apole for the Fi it the moment: the doubl: track “The Pll of Right vis a crap of rhe fact shat over one hund¢ed they can set better, | or wi cht Ww inte i r entleman Ove wht 1 report to hi be bLullt in a vastly dit paper. members of the Birtish house of setting me re at this momen ti ) har t rom t xeon delayed say from the original railway, ihe Declaration of Independenc commons will be engaged in the mii | theerfully ente vine the FAnKS as pri ont means a As t through in a Ay. m “4 was a ‘serap of paper tary operations, some in the Line ab galt iere < etree SiGe lM rT ri rt rhe present dot we track ‘The Constitution = of the United tegients and some in the Territor 8 in the army whe itary ithorts I who bile Short Address will offer finished rallwey, IN) state in a ‘scrap of paper Herbie iy pet Ot ihekeee ren ie will know how dest to make use ot I tr \ lecturel , ery respect both as regards the rhe cmancipation proclamation ily attendance at various centres, | any special talents he may possess t ane Jocal gathering, and being nm y t of rails, the strength of is @ ‘scrap of paper makes it necessary for many of them, London Spectator » degrad v4 HW known to the committe \ t wud the perfection ot road For a hundred years a@ ‘serap Of to apepar in parliament in uniform, ————— i \ placed last on the Hist) of speake ' rm applied, the new Polley paper’ has maintained an unbroken Reuler’s Simla correspondent states | Famous Temple re i] th The chairman introduced a numbe ii} work out for immediate return peace between the United States and ‘Ox the occasion of the Mahometan The cemple of Heaven, at Peking out ; ' tomerr Difficult Navigation of speaker AA and Be nh renee. an the Briltsh possessions ol Capads Pestival the mosques throughout In-} was formerly visiled once a year by : eta on her first ocea | Aree Bee eae ee nae will Ow Riv Conclusive Evidence Hong an unfortified frontier of 3! dja were thronged with Mahometans,| the Chinese ‘Smperor to give an ne link ul Octavia the lecturer; “Br, Bones will n , ald 000 miles ) praying for British victory count of his empire and his affairs I I t t i) ) us his addre Mr, Hones arore atl ' I jannounced that sh pantie Tho Hay'Paunceforte Treaty was a! - -- during the previous twelve months / ! t>-1t 1 i on oh said, promptly My addronm is 4141) b 80 Sea, Dut at wt + i NONE | og rap of paper,” and one of the most Since the war began the women > This was set forth im writing, and the it oO close about the affe ; lam.” he | Park avenue and TE wish you oll good: | 4 ven baronet abt isk | Uriliiant moral victories by Presi have been taking the places of the) manuscripts were then placed in (he ! ho up they be ta it | . ous night.” Where have you been, ' dent Wilson is the act of congr men on the Paris street cars, {furnace and in that way consigned to here, Miss Barbara has fou : —_—— er mother ante which voluntarily repealed a violation Well, they’d do it here, but he) the Emperor in Heaven, -The temple oting at last, and will be looked Od 1D SUTDEIA Technical Language WV a LI ek Ae " wha of the terms of that “serap of paper.”| men are too ill-mannered to get up.” | jg one of the moat bkautiful anddnter ter us © ought to be y t Repe An arn chaplain came across 4 : : e rie ere t nah Respect for there scraps of paper Buffalo Express ‘esting sights of picturesque Peking. Barbara and Bre. Russell Ie ; bugeage column with a atu : att WEOEe ene F easures @ nation’s honor, no less rene . The walls enclosing the temple, the - " ul d Or tavia nd Lavin ' ; ery par fast 0 ree my dear? Are you quite (van tts freedom wy A A Pious Advertisem nt royal apartments, the altar, and the a Bainvik nid ; iy mee 7 aa Men, | see you're in diffieutties are TS OFTAS TAO Se ORs: . Sethe The following advertisement was grounds ate tree gplles am Gat un Talay . \i . a i ; ' f aid. "Can - be of any assitance No one repeated Ethel, a he paper rut A " The German army | printed in the Pennsylvania Gazette | ference, eae a \ : warble 8 ru Duld ve \ hay tuto | niasa vl sir,” exclaimed one of (ie iy pulled an endless hatpin from }Y ocrat CAN stays, 29 1 Ms aeh-| for June 24, 1787, The author of this} tures have blue and green porcelain oul have t yed t ; Ye Aer j } ery by making yourself searce Hehe in the most wonderful mi itary mach little misterpicce is supposed to be no tiles COMEOFE BF sar | , : 9 sd, You see, we can't very well say to) iit ese," continued Ler mother, | He ever constructed by the hand) oier than Franklin himself, ‘D.¥,,” neater ere after all,” sho said suddenly you ; the horses what they'd understand |... 1} uu please explain how {t is that | 42d brain of man, but in thé final) toe) stands for Deborah Franklin: “Do you really think that there { did right, Lavinia, you did right. And nim) while you're aboot!" 4 ave PetuT rod with a walking: | feckoning of history "a scrap oF yee: “Taken cut of a pew in the chureb } nothing in a name?” the child will be in a prover hot f » are Se 1 etek instead of an umbrella” jer’ will prove more powerful than’ oie months since a Common Prayer} “Yes, I do.” where she ought to he Anyoue cat j set offered to seiithis autole e = jall the kaiser's logions Hook bound in red, gilt and lettered| ‘Well, I don’t agree with you.” 699.90 is @ lass Ob sittle ¢ pinaster |mobile at a low figure.” 7 | DF, on each cover, The person who} “Why not?" “Oh! She's 1 tii ture sii Wiel broke--Jones or the ma She Was Ready “He's won & jot of money beGins | took it is advised to open it and read| “Because all of the property that | Oh! She's a aw blo creature ; a Boston Transcript \Ir. Shyboy—1 love you more than! on tennis matches the eighth commandment and after-|used to have is in my wife's," now 1s she?” paid Miss Lavi It per. )~" ; l tongue can tell ‘Yes, and the worst of it is he re’ ward return it into the same’ pew] Judge. was always grumbic grunibie ; “J A military arithmetician finds that ‘lias Clineher-—"Then let the parsoa! fers to his winnings as net pretits.”| again, upon which no further notice —-- aon but yd “0 eine. like | t costa $20,000 to kill a man in war,| ‘o the talkin Boston Transcript, , Buffalo Express vill be taken,” A British army division at war 1 h kk ( ¥ bedded Be, | : . Bobcateiae Bew—Oh! tlow like A | ¢ M Nobody but Harry Thaw Ande it 8 a cea, gareneneee |, jstrongth has po fewer than 246 cletis AMERTACRCE NG Tavini. for that pensive in times of peace iret Old My dear, whit do Wife--O, George, do ordar @ rat \ii'm not portial ter exercise,” | attached to Me 7 ' ger clerks, tter,.” : ry think of t war’ Isn't it ter) (rap to be sen ome rua? , poig, Rastus Tohasing, but 4% Goan shorspené bee y oe bale weetest- rit aA : F ; iall ' 1%, } George ut you bought one last) mind diggin’ fer de root o evil, | arts, 7 eee ner aa 7 Or Benton ie tak & data afflie ees Old LadyeAwful, But it) week, : {so long as Ah doan’ hev ter dig} hvadquarters of the diviston, 1 , > | Hut sve lo t ? a! tion? ; loan't last long: the Powers will sure | Wife-—Yos, dear, but there's # rat doawn inter mah own pockets." | ades, batallions, batteries and co 3 W. a U, 1022 | just t."—13 I Unspeakably :9,."--Exehnge | ly iutervene.-Puueb, | in that.--Universalist Leader, | Washington Star, a tes, ¢

The Army of rome

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The Costume of a Monkey

Have you ever wondered why ly all the monkeys which accompany the foreign organ-boys could be dress ed in a red coat, with a sort of jockey cap?

The explanation is very simple This costume is no fancy one, bul is

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dress worn by the organ-boys’ fath ers 1 the distant valley of Piedmont, where the peasants usually wear a red coat rudely cut, with very stiff little tails, and knickerbockers aud jockey cap of the same color

These clothes are spun and woven the peasants and dyed red with madder which grows in the vai The long roots are boiled, then with alum and tartar, and the ull is a red dyewhich, though not

by

the ley mixed re

very bright, does not fade, The mon key coats a made of the bit which are left over when the peas ‘nts coat is cut out,

Do you know, my dear,” said t your husband, “there's omething wrot with the cake’ It doesn't taste right.”

That is all your imagination,” an yered the bridge triumpuantiy, “for +) tys in the cook Look that it is de Mrecocious Child-—Mamma, wii Peoyle get sullrege, does it just come for two or three days and then go away, or dees it last a long time lik yhooplng cough and measies

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Business Activity in Regin. If Regina can be taken as an e@x- ample, it would eppear that westerr cities are already recovering from the , barly effects of the war. The mer- ) chants are taking a calm view of the ; Situation, and many have combined | to keep the price of goods as low as | possible, Some 20 merchants have al

| goods at a very low margin, and the | result Jadvanced, and in a great | Stances have begn reduced, | The city of Regina has taken stepa } to assist the settlers in the drow |areas of Western Canada, All such settlers who have etock for which | they have no feed, have been notified | to ship thelrystock to the Regina ' lo } Cece ) returned

many in-

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sures the farmer of good return: for hia stock, A proper agreement which protecta both the farmer and the city

has been prepared,

food land In Weatern Canada ar

fecultivated has resulted in the Regina | >’ " | hoard of trade starting a “closer set-| The First Lord of the Admiralty will| of Summerville,

{tlement” movement. This movement } has been started with the idea of in creas ng the production of Western ' Canada, as it is felt that the present is a very opportune time for such a scheme,

| Sven the ladies of Regina unre avall

jing themselves of the opportunity to

to economize. The Regina Local

| the holding cf special garden produce ; market days, when produce will be fold at low prices. Up to the present | hittle use has been made of the muni cipal market for such purposes, the average citizen having purchased auch coods from the grocer or butcher. The ladies now, however, are makiny the market an entire success

Public works to the value of approx imately $ will be proceeded with at once in Regina. The works to be uncertaken or completed inclu ie the 5,000,000 gallon reservoir; filtra tion beds at the sewage disposal works; completion of walls and roof of the isolation hospital, and compte } tion of proposed water and sewer ex- tensions. In addition to these works, a number of other contracts are al- | ready carried out, including the erec tion of the new power house ana the } pavement of the Broad street subway It is expected thta these works will provide employment for a large num ber of men

The 8

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ing 1,500 Ruther

no

wnnounce itention of gt mpire Dean saskatchewan Univeralts Regina and will have lection of the horses

have been tuken b in regina ference for British good

arrived charge of the Already step panulacturing ing in viev ined Canadian

concern

pr

An Uncomfortable Night cently resident of an in the United States wen that fuchuided an albnigh on a steamboat Accompanying was & nephew more accustomed ways of travel I! uncle,” asked the ol. man “did

K inland on

voy

a town trip age

| hin to the

“WwW

ting

the on

nephew me deck the following morning have good night?"

"Can't say that T did,” answered uncle wearily When | sent to my room, | seen taat card which tells ye life preserver, and 1 didn’t git much rest.”

how to put on after that

‘I don't get you, uncle, ly returned the young had that to do with it

wondering

man, “What

“Everything, answered the uncle “I couldn't sleep with the derned thing on

Minard’s Liniment for sale every- where,

Dad-—'T want, m Daigrhter

kind of weddir you id, would ;

Thon what ls to be done,

| pape Dad

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to Boston

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have

You

Iny

| Another story Is told of an Amert- lady w was taking the rest ra dey a London boarding

cere f house 1 shall when t shall be up ne more | the

in

she up tea There’

ho more meals” maid brought for dinner ant.’

next breath she added,

want said af |

no

Then it Oh, 3 ther water bottl

The cockney

that hot to eat.’ for “Oh,

want but that'a not maid stood silent sald, gleefully, You

ia!

moment, then it is to ‘eat! it for you ed

a | yes ‘eat

Want me

a touch of frony in the fact that the nucleus of the German fleet was provided by Great Britalo

in the shape of a small vessei which

There ia

to the

our government presented King of Prussia in 1814 Mme. Kin Seno, though a great

aundmother, is one of the important She ts

financial personages in Japan the president of a large bank in To- has excellent business the idedly * stinents

abil native coa- conservative in her inve t is sale to belleve heartily in giving womer in equal opportunity everywhere,

and but still and is dec

kilo, ity, tume

wears

Let Corss Torment Yeu

Putnamsa Corn extractor, ‘orns in one night, with Putnam's has rut

Don't l wiien out pain been the Tain and

cure For 00 years tandard cure of Gr I'ry it

at America Russia probably owns of china than any world, He haa all the Rus is Catherine the

Ihe Cyar

1 ( of quantity ou in the belonging to bac! tored terabi

a v*reater other the ¢ fan the Great ter Palace

per ina jlers as It

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f ere married you called me an zeal I know it “Ant no you don’t call me ar thing,’ You ought to be glad that | pos s such self-control, Houiton Post, | a> canenenene Greene—How much are you going t pay for your auto? | Gray—I don't know yet how much [ can raise on my house Judge, | wWiret Bather-—Why, Katherine, your

foot is bleeding. How did you cut it?

Second Bather

I suppose Philadelphia Record

A Mean Me. ning Wifey-Do you recollect that once when we had a quarrel I sald you were | just as mean as you could be? Hubby—Yes, my dear, Wifey—Oh, Tom, how little did J

know you then! Where the Injunction Failed

‘Why, Willie,” said the teacher, “have you been fighting again? Didn't you learn that when you ere struc k on one cheek you ought to turn th other one to the striker?”

“Yoes'm," agreed Willie; “but he hit me on the nove, and I've only got one.”

ready announced that, they will seit)

has been that prices have tot)

Municipal Stoékyards, where they will

iu, less the coat of feeding, will be

The fact that Uiousands of acres of not

to |

On the water's edge

THE HERALD, PONOKA, ALBERTA, *

RS OF TORTURE |

ee

War Experiences of a Canadian British newspapers contain a de seription of the trying experiences of| All That Canadians Have To Do Is To & Canadian lady who showed a noble Stand Pat eemethabee ele rine c tag clr The following cheering words cal 8. e J t by ; were travelling tonsiker. sy A culated to instil confidence in the peo- ing siccoeded with difficulty in get-| Pie of*Canada, come from the pen of ting from Innsbruck to Munich, they | non eae ot pth ghee ote, We thee bag age consul aoquatntan o with the people rahe e then started for Switzer-| °° a AL , land,” she said, “but at Lindau, on the| Vest than the genial Geo, Ham, and

NO BLUE RUIN

NOT A WAR oF EXTERMINATION | TWO) YEARS OF TORTURE een eine Without Oppescion | FROM STOMACH TROUBLE

Peace Without Oppression it na our life against Germany's. uP oO. that there must be no compromise! wane or truce. We must go forth unflinch- | Cured by the Use of Dr. Williams Pink ingly to the end.—Winston Churchill's | Pills for Pale P le There are two ways usually adopt

London Opvra House Speech. Unflichingly, of course. ed in trying to cure indigestion or stomach trouble—one the wrong way

PRESIDENT

SUSPENDER

«7? VE - SO-EASY That is | And to not|

the British soldier's way. aay ewe —— fend, but the end of the war will not |. EWSBOY H «TED B’ THE WAR

|

: A Py . ce ance his message will be read\by many

be the engl for either Germany or Eng-| by using purgatives and the other! Lake of Constance, we were ordered y y

}land. Empires are not easily destroy-| drugs which only act locally and | 8 out and detained in the railway | \ the interest and careful atten: “Pittsie” R :

}ed. Unlike reputation, a breath can| which in the long run causes more! St4tion refreshment+room. That was | Tt fy tae tore ines. et Wer Leck Hatta wacarter neither make nor unmake them. The | distress by weakening the whole sys-| Filday, August 14.. We were detain: | t is the very irony of fate that, World, Last Heard From in Roman Empire, like Charles Il. was|tem, The other way and the right| {1 in the refreshment room for eight eee “8 We were preparing to celo- Paris

jan unconsclonable time adying. The |.way is tho Dr, Williams’ manner of hours, Seven other British subjects | Of the world ot a ag the nations! One of the globe-trotters wom wat

| phantasmagorical artifice, the Holy} treatment—that is to nourish and| Were with us. There was plenty to] (acy Meee toe tec itchins 8t! overtook in Europe ic “Pittsle” Ryau,

| Roman Empire, endured for a thous-; build up that stomach by supplying eat for those who had the money tol each other's throats—destroying, an American newsboy whose face, it

| " 4 . cae a h A wounding, slaying, aug i and years, Even Napoleon IIl.’s bom: | plent) of new, rich, red blood. Give the | PY for it, and, on the whole, we w ere| The nee 1 aaah bughtering. =| not his name, is known to thousands bastlc venture in imperialism lasted | stomach this much needed supply of | Kiudly | treated, althougu wo were! ror conditions had agison th at ite ‘DIOr | of people, including not a fow dignt- cighteen years | new blood an '" much alarmed hen ¢ : " | for conditions had arisen that it couta 7 : / years. v ud « istress will disappear armed when @ Bavarian col- wi T taries. “Pittsie” t two When there is an end of fighting } and stay banished forever, he wow onel came in a tate of great excite ery be otherwise, The appalling sac: | years “as to wall Gepeha ee vori4 there will be peace in Hurope without! blood strengthens the nerves of the | ent and informed us that the ? rencty| Tce of life, the widespread devasta taking his time doing it, and when 0} oressively harsh terms. There may| stomach and gives it the necossary | @"4 Russians were behaving to his tion, aod the wanton lous of pricele last heard from he was in Pasta sell- | be a bit of territory transferred he ower 70 . | countrymen like wild beasts sp | easure, however, shall not have been . ' . bly Pt y transferred h power to digest f F . ) ild beasts. After sricg 4 4 ; c ge: ood Thousands bear ther in vain Mighty onse. | 26 American newspapers to tourists. and there, and bills of damages will| witness to the value of the Dr. Wilt | ¥° had been detained for eight hours, . ain, Misty Conse: | mint was three weeks ago. He wrote {be paid. But none of the belligerent! iams’ tre " i we were told that che women could go | TUences may resuct Stricken Poland a nek. ~ . geren is treatment through the blood . BO | will regain her nationhood aft ny. | 0 #@ “newsie” in New York that he nations will have its life choked out.) Among them is the Rev. P. D, Nowlan, | DUt the men of military age would tury and a hal "Ot t¥PaB te ‘ie ppres, | &Xbected to be back in this country if Rev. . Nowlan, " rot / i y and a half of tyrannical oppres ; N.S., who says: “I have to remain in Lindau, | and my sion: the parae pire MA August, but he has not vet appeared j live to see British ships sail the seas} certainly have great reason te recon-| COMpanions got away, but two Hang | Witt une , if aA ven a. mt rope | on Broa way and his wherpabbont are proudiy as ever. The British board of | mend Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills, as they lish ladies who were with their hus- ots Pat te ou ul right 3 rest red ; junknown, His riends, however, de trade returns will be once more stud-| were the means of saving my life. Tiil| !8%ds declined to leave them. The) out, was ominouely temdian mrite mene | clare that “Pittsie” is well able to ied attentively in circles where thera) I reached the ege of thirty 1 never pt paed ybity ha Pate del tA twain, Willereuntt ele theslat 1. j take care of himself, as he is re is a taste for such literature, an knew wht i abe se simply told to go to a hotel and re- and aad adi © Mothe*iang, | ' . tous ath vous bankers will t "ye ceaaeel b t m ncat, Dain or sickness meant main there. What will become of them | YO™4H Will be given the suffrage, and | sourceful and self-reliau’ and makes ankers wateh for chang>s! but after that my stomach failed me Gon thal \. a fearful menace to Britain's home| lends everywhere he Rove. in the discount rate of the Bank of | and food of any kind caused untold, ¥"°" vie r.money fs all gone [ dO! pute removed; and, above all, the n: Young Ryan, who lias sold’ papers England with the same emotions they distress, [ became constipated and| "Ot Know. Our journey through) tions must unite policing th in most of the large cities of the ave always felt. Germany's manu-| Was forced to use injections daily | Switzerland and Franco was a most There shoul ‘be no m re vast "| United Sttes, began his long tour in Council of Women have-arranged for! fcturers will go on making dyestuffs! This went on for about two years; {| UWPleacaat experience. We were six) oring of countless billions to main. | October, 1912, sailing from San Fran: and underwear, and German profes-| grew weaker an. weaker; my weight days on the journey, and all the time] tain gigantt riy il fleets and eOle + sco with only a pedestrian’s pack " e ' A i . , ~ Ld bY { ate " rr f S s « ( ue ts & 4 ISSi j ye A sors will supply the world with an un-( fell off from 185 to 126 pounds; I had wie ud to 8 Ate in ae kUNEWAYS Of Conosing land fighting forces rhe | #ad &@ Remington rifle. From the Has diminished output of their dreadfui! @ hacking cough and appeared to be te trains or sit on the luggage that} untold wealth expended in non-pre walian Islands he went to Australia. syc ems of philosophy, each desrac. going inte a deciine. All this time | “88 Piled up in them. I have lost ductive war material--for Ps rene | After walking across Australia he tive of all the others. Germany will| was being treated by the best of doc |! My luggage, but I am thankful to destroys and does not produ abe ra took a boat to South Africa, anc set find and enjoy her place in the sun,| tors Sut without the least benefit | U&¥e Bot back alive. Lam only sorry he profitably spent in the be tterment out on the long and difficult trans but possibly the rays of that kind | Night after nigh 1 could zet no sleep , 2°™ for those we had to leave behind ofthe world 5 Burope shall pi longer | UP the African continent from Jeh- es “naa ; sha nf luminary will not be reflected from. the pain and agony was so severe, On! > hile [ was in suspense at Munich 1 be ah armed cat ip. Wntifely tev ahd annesburg to Cairo. He did Burope quite so many polished trappings of | Consultation the doctors decided I was | “&S. strongly advised by friends to» happier conditions will naturally afoot and reached Pari several war France will attend once more suffering from cancer of the stomac _ Need ataten: Was a citizen ot the sfihe, Kha Gawada’. must nat janis weeks ago Fonu of adventur he to her silks and her vintages, and Par-| and advised an operation as a mea nited States, but f would die rather! ore , ; doubtless was not greatly trouvied by ges, ar J 1 ' share in the better time iat are te & is publishing houses wil) continue to! of saving my jive, This I refused to|'@" deny my flag come ; : “| the outbreak of war, but his lccts of a by the world with 1o8e delectable | ergo and began to look forwar: to az [ers yy * 4 riends, hevertheless, are anxious tor upply tl Id with t} lectable | under tt to look f Even today, embrotled in war aa)! 1 t! romances which are never omitted {n/n early death, Just then a friend ad How’s This? she is—for when Britain's at war.) of “Pittsie” Ryan the packing of a vacation handbag vised me to iry Dr, Williams’ Pink | Caneda is at war—comparativels Russian caviar will come to us again,| Pills. I had no fatth in any medi We offer One Hundrea Dollars Re of our own industries are suffe others can put sway anxiety and let us hope it will be cheaper, cine and at rset refused, but my ward for any ceso of Catarrh that and many are working overtime ng their sufferiag childre? Doubtless, too, the Russian institution friend was so persistent thet finally cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Never were these so bu Naver they have Mother Graves’ Worm will make another of ita periodical ad-' 1 save in and purchased half a doze.‘ Cure. were the products of tl oll and exterminator to give relie! ts of vances in Itberalaim, for which thera | boxes. By the time these were gone F. J, CHENRY & CO, Toledo, O the factory in such demand tects are sure and Jasting is still a suffictent margin, Prophecy |! felt much stronger and the distre Chat ee tee ile nd, have kne wn F. J, God forbid thet we should <a as to Austria might be premature, but) W@8 not so severe. 1 continued their! him perfectly hone iar alloc ieetis A srosperity ont misfortr Passing of Darwinism we mey retary ntily look for further "se oe rer su needing box wrought transa a and fir anolally able to carry thers, bu. it is the cousen Scientists from aH parts of the Brit agr »le light operas from Vienna & marked improvement in my ecndi- Out any obligations made by his firm, m that the New World, far sh empire a ibled in Australia And the life of the people will go{ tion till by (ve time I had taken NATIONAL BANK OF dead et a cenes of strife ll gain by for the an n of the British on in all these’ now unhappy countries dozen boxes every pain and ache had rrh Cure is taken tnternale Tiblo disruption of the Old Association for vancement of much as it has gone on in the left me; iy stre ngth increased; my ctly upon the blood and mu enues of trad n 1 clence, ps 1 ove by Profe i ) will be wounds to heat, Welglt was bac where it was befort i as of the system ? ypered, new mar pring William Bate who wus inducted sorrows to be nursed, bur. | Wa ill; I had a good appetite ant i yh ie priigetetas” mente. a greater demint for our product by that great lent Sir O debt to be borne, but the Was completely cured, In the yea: Take Hall's Family Pills for pa- So there is no cauce for d Lod changes this war brings about wil) that have elapsed since I used the) tion satint spectre of Ble Ruin | ’rofessor “Ba sadn ou hot be so gr but that with the Pills not a twinge of the trouble has Canada is sending her | Heredity and Evolution’ was lapse of time they will become famil.| retur ed ro «we Dr. Williams’ Pink her best food and munitth Fi | direct attack on the Darwinian theor jar, Winston Churchill was speaking Pills are the greatest medicine on . Sea Prizes lritain’s cause We canna " ft evolution—not on the great fact under the strain of a perfectly natural | earth and I never lose an opportunity} wring the Civil War in { atl firine line, but every of evolution them but on Dat emotion and it was therefore naturat! a recommending them to other suffer. States privateer: became has a duty just a acred net ac. Win’s explanation of t that he should exaggerate, When the | 6s. for I feel that were it not (for S‘ecessful business that t Om perilous ur gallant trocp i suppose,” he sa that every peace conference assembles he may) their use | would have been in my | Merce carrying busin of t I 10, mv illing iy, ma at one is familiar with ¢ theory of the be one of ite members, Then he will| Stave long ago.” tion which was just recovering from! \ome can help Canada by not be origin of species which Darwin pro understand that the life neither of! What Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills did) the war of 1812, was swept off the stompeded with ihe panick ot mulgated, Through the last 60 yea’* England nor of Germany is at stak or Rev. Mr. Nowlan they have done | Seas, and has never been of import urd time by not going up a tr ; thels theme of the natural selection of in this war New York Times } for thousands of others and will do! ance since Possibly the destruction 4 pairing of tl P t hy not | favored races has been developed anu piaidentaeeal for you if ailing. They not only cure | of German sea-borne commerce b mely ibmitthr to extertions | expounded in writings innumerable, Stirring Story of Youthful Heroism °! of stomach trouble, but rheuma. | the British navy will have t same unscrupulous price-raisers, by eco-| Favored races certainly can repla: Un.e: the dine “A Monster’ lism, partial paralysis, lieart palpita- result in Germany perating in miacnizing int. be lew others, The argument is sound, but . Bvig dee r’s : shi , - . j } . Je. and Hero's Death,’ the Paris Mati tion, St. Vitus dance and all other Ships taken at sen, theoretically b ning the numbey of the u Noved.| We are doubtful of its value; for in prints a wi at Ir cy thful he ' tro bles that have their origin in a) long to the nation capturing hem, and, with a staunch irt trust that debate stands adjourned at : It ha Kod‘ Saha the hero: bad condition of the blood and nerves, | #nd they are either retained by that jug in Providence, by doins At for The president thus offered no thi . F . st gupa hy omihad - re ats ©!) The Pille are sold by medirine dealers | mation or sold, and the profits de Canada h will len the Dove of ory ot any kind to replace the but a ne ne a ae vie’ One s complete jor by mail at 50c a box or six boxes | tived therefrom divided among th) pogoe More descends up arth, Winton explanation, but while «de WIE BASS ANG “10 DIACES, | for $2.50from The Dr. Williams’ Medi | Officers and crews of the ships re plac first amone the natic yy) Btroying it he pald a high tribute “M,. Paullat a senator of the depart cine Co., Brockville, Ont sponsible for their seizure, t ia world en ri i y ? ' N to it propounder ment of Cher,” says the Matin, “tells ; J | In Great Britain, vessels that ¢ eiw pews ove! ' Of } how at the village of Lourchis, é . Ah sTIERID, sated Hat are portunities ina ful Prosper If they could not low a fowl 1OW a oe c sourchis, 1 A Hope For British Victory seized become the property of the \onuile mournir t Appa p ri gave rise to a chicken or how o Northern France, a wounded French , Crown, and ft is the custom for the ; ry Spat bt ba) ayy * t her. 't sergeant, angered by German brut Of one thing we may be certain, 2B. : ' ' fiee of | deploring the « tlor et pea produced another, they a it Hy st ot * Prus ian offic ; Hof ® that while all Christendom will liave |men on board'the fronclads that cap fair lands, the awful ' least could watel the tem b y. sho t" bg a J offic r or to stare tho burden of distress it ‘s ture them to be given a sum equal to peaceful home and the utt 0 vhich the difference betwe th being shot he was given water by « £5 for each person on board the “pri ; is or betweon tl dauntless lad, Emile Depez, who there , "POO Germany that the larger part) oo) ss I countless peop! it may be that the vrious kinds of fowls or between upon also was condemned to immed-) Will fall in useful ves extinguished, | OC! ; rd of this Ag War and Death and, Various kinds of sweet peas were dis jate execution. Just as the soldiers ! flanancial misery, idle shipping, A good many years ago, how Destruction will be 1 y a ttibuted among the offspring wate bandaging the boy “4 aves ro. Closed factories our sailors farcd better en shins priguter and a Ay rn allotment of characteristi niaging ys eyes, pre That this je cll due to the insaan| Were captured Between the yen: the Dominion ill pla un s offspring was accomplisher paratory to rétiring, the German cap \y te Ta . 1 80 twe " . 4 1 a) rrowth of armics and navies stimu-| 1740-7 Admiral Annson seized two ves | quential part through a process of cpll division i gr a ac spr aimnile, « de cynical tated; y neces:itated by Germany's | 3 Is, one having on boara deur All that Can . te hic the elements were sorted out y rly you e on condition that ‘@ a 3 an) > i. 4 . re : anad a yt at oaa at vat er Ar this "| practice, no one can deny. This war and the other £300,00 he whol+ stand Pat and keep thei Viiat those elements wer did not dod on He ante i t ' ; Ra ot ip)! not a bolt out of the blue, It ha jot this money was divided among Aue Ali's well snow, but it seemed to him unlikely gean e askec or ate you . i son's crew that thes re terial ti ile } ' long been recognized as unavoidable ~— i ey were material partict rive a 7 i w he val wher ag nts hesitat! and it bears the earmarks of deliver: | 't is Interesting to know that th Drives Asthma Like Mayic. Ti) suspected that their properties de er a moments hesitation the | 5 a » hye Pe-Vate individual is a lawful object medtate hel i) li ev'a | pened on some method of arrange boy agreed, Seizing a rifle he imed planning, Nothing was lack.rg bu wk at rift ind ! re HER ANGE. § 4 be yi Hels a au * 1 excuse 8 0 aa K Oo « hat idividval t Asthma Remedy on lit , mit at the sergoant’s breast. Then, sud.) & BOO Caen And this excuse has in some way or other, the)» tee My diy y : Pe es Plants, fowl! log orees. « idenly turning, he shot the- sneerin been found, or manufactured, as you hat " Neverthels it is only a natural ren ' ; Gern nd FE. himself fell ut ry. pleane it ht that Germany t Mat are at war vl e sreat. edy usea in a natural way. Tl molk own children exemplitied thi low: serman ane ime en, Ss | should pay t powers have acknowledged that any oy vapor, reaching the moat ene trine of segregation of the lactors of pleces by bayonets His act will live Let us hope the plea for bloated | trading ship smuggling caal, or ra passage of the affected tube she inheritance The body of evidence in biatory armaments as essential to national, 4008, or ammunition can be seized. aside the trouble and opens a way for| WaS now very large eS safety may never again be heard. We! sunk if she refuses to surrender, fyesh air to enter. It Is \ 1.| In plaice of what they now knew t Decided to Let it Ache | now perceive what they lead to. And In a neutral country’s waters private rs throughout the land cope claimed for natural selection fhe Sultan of Turkey is very mcct ! let us bope that victory may rest with | ships cannot be interfered with, but eee must be greatly reduced, We went to . { mate he > . ' ! bt ) re of an Oriental in his ways. The other! the British who, as a hundred ears | °" the high » of t coasts, and Rear-Admiral the Hon faurice | Darwin for his fact ith no | ne }day he had a toothache. He wanted! ago, are fighting in the cause of hum-| /! the harbors of t hemy they can fjoratlo Nelson died at Pe n spoke with philosophical authority to have the tooth removed, but dared | an progress and world-wide peace| ¥° ‘elzed recently. He 13 a desc t of The doctrine of the survival of the not Eleht slaves had molars drawn against the tyranny of perserss, ar the great #ea fighter of t ( fittest he Iped wearcely at all to uc : ] ae | # als , i out In his presence that he migh*) bitrary government \ Naval Offic-} being the third son of t ony; count for the diversity of t have an opportunity of judging the. er” in the New York Independent ! Karl Nelson, The late te A\dmira! There w bo proof that the do extent of sufferi.g entailed, but he de | was born on January 2, 18 u vas me aninals had been aevelopea cided that he could not undergo sucu The First Scotch Newspaper educeted at bton ind at e loyal dea Ms few woe, (yt i owls | Yy TT , at